Have fun getting stronger 🔥
Love,
Karen x
Honestly, Karen x |
|
I initially had a small, cheapish set of weights, where the biggest weight was 5kg. I brought them all down into my conservatory (my gym room lol) and spent another good few days just looking at them. One afternoon I got bored of just looking and finally decided I would just try out some deadlifts. I loaded up the 6 x 5kg weights (3 on each end of the barbell) so my starting point was 30kg. Not very heavy but I wanted to work on my form first. I managed 3 sets of 10 so I was well chuffed for my first attempt. Not long after that the weights that I was borrowing from my (almost) brother-in-law turned up so I decided I needed to make a plan. Without a plan I would just be randomly trying out exercises which would: a. Take a chunk of my time each session, working out what to do and how best to do it, b. Not work consistently towards any particular goal & c. be really difficult to track progress. Firstly, I thought about particular areas that I wanted to work on. I decided on arms (biceps, triceps & lateral deltoids), glutes, quads & hamstrings to start with. I then looked at exercises that would work for those areas, which took a bit of time because I only wanted exercises that could be done at home. I actually spent a lot of time finding exercises, watching videos and then jotting down the key points of the exercise. I draw little stick men (or women 😜) alongside my notes so that when I’m about to do the exercise & I’ve forgotten what it’s all about I can just refer to my diagram & notes quickly without watching the video! Here’s a little sample for you to enjoy 🤣 I have them grouped into different areas, so for each session I just open my notebook at the area I’ll be working on, i.e. glutes. Each time I make a note of the date, the weight & the number of reps I’ve done. Next time I’m working on the same area I’ll try to use a heavier weight & if that fails then I do more reps with the same weight I used previously. My strategy for a starting weight for a particular exercise is to go extremely light until I have good form. For example, when I started lateral raises I could barely lift any weight. If you go too heavy you’ll end up trying to use momentum to swing the weight up rather than the correct muscles. At best it’ll end up hit and miss with regard to what muscles you’re working and at worst you could end up doing some damage. Once I have good form & know (roughly) what I’m doing then I go heavier. The first session is kind of like a test for where my starting point will be on the following session. I’ll keep trying out weights until I get to a point where it’s heavy but just about doable. Then I just keep trying to progress. For my lateral raises I started at 2.5 kg per arm as that was all I could lift using the correct arm muscles. I can now manage 4 kg and the last session I tried 5 kg but just couldn’t lift it without some momentum (which is not what we want) so I dropped back to 4 kg & did 4 sets of 10 instead of 3. The other incredibly important thing to think about is the mind muscle connection. Are you feeling the exercise in the muscle that you’re trying to work? It doesn’t matter if you’re lifting the heaviest weight you’ve ever lifted if you can’t feel it working in the right place 🤣 For example changing a squat exercise from bending a lot at the knee to just bending a little or raising your heels can change the focus from glutes to quads. You really want to think about what exercise you’re doing and where you’re feeling it. Hopefully that's given you some things to think about in order to get started. Please remember that these are only my ideas/thoughts that I've researched & I'm in no way qualified to tell anyone what they should be doing or how they should be doing it 😉
Have fun getting stronger 🔥 Love, Karen x
0 Comments
So actually this is a bit off the beaten path with regards to weightlifting but when I took the photo last night, in my deadlift pose (between sets), I noticed something else. My hair! Or more importantly my hairline. Look at the difference between the following two pictures. The one on the left is from April 2021, and see how far back the hairline is going. Then compare it with the photo from Dec 2022 & look how much better it’s got. My hair is not dyed or anything (haven’t been to the hairdressers in over 6 months (lol, shhh!) and I’ve not done anything to it in yesterday’s photo other than tie it back. See how amazing it is when you fuel your body properly! I knew I was feeling better (because I’ve been mentally clearer and actually wanting to do things) but I hadn’t actually paid much attention to my hair for ages. As it’s not something I’ve taken much notice of until now I can’t really say what has contributed to it, apart from raising my metabolism. Back in 2021 was also when my teeth were cracking and falling out (that’s for another post though!) and my anxiety was back through the roof so it was obvious that something was wrong (v high stress load). One of the things I had to eventually consider was my blood sugar, which I think was just all over the place, as my body just couldn’t seem to handle the amount of sugar I was eating. [To clarify: by sugar I do not mean that I was tipping bags of white sugar into my mouth! I mean things like stewed apples, orange jelly, milky coffee with sugar etc.] I swapped back to having some potatoes (yes I still love them 🤣) instead at a couple of meals and that definitely helped a bit. I also make sure to have some butter with my potatoes (& a protein source) to help keep blood sugar balanced. Even though I was trying for a diet mainly based on sugar (sucrose, which is glucose and fructose) it just wasn’t working for me. Potatoes are a starch which are converted into just glucose and adding those back in really seemed to help. I also still have a fruit dish & a hot milk drink (coffee, hot chocolate etc.) with most meals.
Another thing I’ve been doing over the last few months is making beef liver pate, which is just delicious. I’m lucky in that I’ve never really minded the taste of liver (& actually quite enjoy it with onions and mashed potato) but I could never really get excited about cooking it🙄 . Once you’ve made the pate it freezes really well so it lasts for ages. I just have a little bit on some sourdough toast and enjoy it with a good cup of coffee. You just have to play around with what works for you. I actually loved the pate so much that I was having it every day, which for a while was ok but then I had to calm down lol. I think it was just too much liver for me and I started to feel a bit weird and my lips got sore. Hello over excitement 😆I’ve never been there before hey 🤷♀️ Nosce te ipsum! Today I am slightly tired from my weightlifting last night, but am beyond excited about my hair growth & hairline. This is the first really positive, tangible improvement I’ve seen in years. So listen to your body & eat all the good food! Love, Karen x Weightlifting is something that I’ve considered for quite some time. I bought a smallish set of weights (with barbell & dumbbells) about 7 or 8 years ago. Used it about twice, made myself feel terrible, and never really used it again. It got a passing glance every now and again with a ‘I’ll get stuck into that when I feel better” passing thought. The last few years have been a kind of living hell for me, not only with my health but my daughter’s too (but that’s a story for another post!), so with cortisol levels riding high it never seemed a good idea to try to utilise more energy lifting weights when my body couldn’t even cope with daily life. Over the last few years I did lose some weight but never intentionally and never from where I wanted it to be. Cortisol stripped my muscles from my legs and glutes (#sadtimes). So over this last year I’ve made a few changes that calmed me down and made me better able to cope with life. Stress is the best and worst part of life, depending on the stressor and how we deal with it. After all, weight training is a stress to the muscles that they then adapt to which makes them stronger. Stress in life can be a dreadful burden that raises cortisol and reduces muscles. Which brings me to one of my main reasons for weightlifting:
“...make the muscle know that it’s been active, warm it up a little but not enough to make you get out of breath or anything” - Dr. Ray Peat
So these are some of my reasons for wanting to lift heavy weights. There are many benefits to strength training though and the Strong Sistas have written an excellent article if you want to get more in depth information: https://www.armstrongsisters.com/blog/strength-training-is-one-of-the-best-things-you-can-do-for-your-health-and-longevity I was going to start writing a longer piece with references but then I thought: a. I’m not in academia anymore so I don’t have to 😜, b. Why reinvent the wheel when others have already done it, and c. I’m not here to prove anything to anyone, just sharing my experience and ideas, so please never, ever take my word for anything! In my next post I’ll share how I finally got started after a fair bit of dithering. I’ll try to keep things real and share all the info: the good, the bad, and the ugly, hence the ‘honestly’ in the blog name. Lots of love, Karen |
Archives
December 2022
Categories
All
|