Home Gym help

dgarner2620

New member
I'm in my teens, and i'm "chunky" you could say. I've been doing good getting into the habit of working out about 30-45 mins everyday for the past week 1/2.
I have also been watching what I eat, not eating in between meals, and avoiding high sugar/fat foods.

What i need to know is, what exercises i should be doing to help improve my body's look within the next month...im going to a new school and everything, so i have a new outlook on life..

I do basically everything on the machine, different things everyday. Then i always go to the ablounge last, (since i'm wanting abs, i've been doing this until it burns like crazy). And i occasionally throw some cardio in, going up and down a step for 10-15 mins.

Any suggestions on what i should do, as in sets/reps of whatever(not sure if doing different things everyday helps). I'm really wanting this new body ,and im fully focused on getting it. Whatever you throw at me, i'm sure the home gym has it :)
 
Im a "chunky" teen too :( But i've started counting calories and going to the gym. Im no expert on this topic, so anyone please feel free to correct me!

First things first, diet - Its good that you've cut down on the high sugar and fat foods, make sure it stays that way. And watch your portion sizes, take what you think you need, dont go over the top. Finally ask yourself, "do I really want to eat this?" Just make sure you dont starve yourself otherwise your metabolism reduces ("starvation mode"), to save energy, and when you start eating normally, you will put on even more weight.

I reckon the best thing for fat burning is lots of cardio, for example 20-30 mins jogging, running or alternate 1 min fast walk/1min running.

I reckon you'd look best if you concentrate on cardio eg treadmill, rowing, cross trainer etc, to lose weight, then do muscle building later, otherwise you could look a bit bulky. However, do muscle building as well as cardio, as muscles need more energy, which increases your metabolic rate.

For muscles, I would go for 3 sets of 15 reps, and give a 2 min rest to your muscles between those sets. Do things such as bicep curls, pec machine, lat pulldowns, chest press, rope pulldown etc

However, ive heard that machines arent that good as they restrict your muscles, where free weights eg dumbells can build up muscle surrounding (or something like that)

Im going to the gym at the moment, so my trainer has given me a fat-burn/muscle building programme which I can scan for you if I nab it.

Just remember, theres no fast way of weight loss, and even if there is - there are consequences. Just stay positive and determined to lose weight. Losing weight takes time, just like learning a new language!
 
What i need to know is, what exercises i should be doing to help improve my body's look within the next month...im going to a new school and everything, so i have a new outlook on life..

Renegade has some of the right ideas...

But, make sure you keep your expectations in check. Unless you're already very close to your goal, you're not going to reach it in a month. You can make some great progress in the right direction, but to reach your goal and maintain it will most likely take years of constant work. You shouldn't expect to "do a diet" or a "routine" for a month or a year or any amount of time and then stop because you've reached your gold - it needs to be a permanent lifestyle change or you'll never be able to maintain it.

All that being said, the most important thing is your diet. There is a lot of good information around and in the stickies about how many calories you should be eating to lose weight, and the proper ratios of fats/carbs/protiens, and lots of other good information in general. As the saying goes, "abs are made in the kitchen". In order to see your abs, you will need to have under 10% body fat. All the crunches or other ab excercises in the world won't matter if you can't see your abs through the layer of fat. If you get your diet down just right, you can lose weight without working out at all.

However, if you want to lose fat and not lose (as much) muscle mass, you need to incorporate some heavy weight lifting. I learned this the hard way - I once lost a hundred pounds doing cardio 6-7 days a week. When I stopped running and went back to my old eating habits, I gained 200lbs back over the next 4 years! There are some good stickies here about starting out with free weights, and the basic lifts that should be the core of your workout - squats, bench, overhead press, deadlift, pushups, rows, pullups (assisted), etc. Don't worry about things that only work small, isolated muscles, such as bicep and tricep exercises. Read the stickies to get an idea of sets and reps - I would recommend something like 3-5 sets of 5-8 reps of the free weight exercises, and 3 sets to failure of the bodyweight exercises. Maybe some people can give you advice specifically working with a home gym machine, but for best results, I think you'll need to have access to some free weights. The machine is certainly better than nothing though, and if its all you got, it will help your boddy retain muscle mass while you're trying to lose weight. If you're worried about "bulking up", or if you actually want to gain muscle mass, you have to realize that if you're trying to lose weight (eating less calories than you burn), you will possibly gain a little muscle mass if you haven't lifted before, but you won't "bulk up" or gain a lot of muscle mass - you need to be eating more than you burn in order to do that, in other words gaining weight.

The last component is cardio. My views on cardio have recently changed. I used to do steady state cardio every day, i.e. running XC and biking at steady state. Thats how I lost weight before. However, the results weren't sustainable - Its too much to have to do 1-2 hours of cardio a day (when I was in my best shape) for the rest of my life just to feel like I was getting a workout. On top of that, because I wasn't lifting weights, I lost a ton of muscle mass. When I regained weight, then, not only did I gained more weight than what I started at, it was all fat, so I ended up with a higher body fat % as well. Now, since I've incorporated weight training, I have a different view on cardio. I lift weights 3 days a week (M, W, F). I decided I wanted tuesdays and thursdays completely free to give my muscles a good rest in between workouts (when you're losing weight, its harder for muscles to repair, so rest is extra important). So I do my cardio immediately after lifting weights at the gym. I've also switched from steady state cardio to intervals. For example, instead of doing 30 minutes on the treadmill at a speed of 5.5-6, I'll do 15-20 minutes of intervals going back and forth between 3.5 (fast walk) to 7.5-8 (fast run/nearly sprinting). Right now, I can do intervals of 1 minute running/1.5-2 minutes walking. I did that 5 times yesterday followed by a 5 minute cooldown jog/walk. I'll give it a month or so honest try before judging the results, but for me, a combined weight lifting followed by cardio 3 days/week is a sustainable routine I could continue indefinately.

Thats basic it - diet, weight lifting, cardio in that order. And the most important thing to remember is: find what works best for you, with what you have available. Everything I've said works for me right now, but it probably isn't the best for everyone. Everyone is different
 
I'll add one other thing to the good advice you've been given:

Give your muscles a rest. If you're lifting weights, you need to do that every OTHER day, not every day. What causes the muscles to build and shape is the recovery time ... if you don't give them recovery time, then you're just building damage upon damage and eventually you'll weaken the muscles rather than build them.

Ideally you could alternate weight training one day with cardio of some kind (ss, interval, HIIT, whatever) the next.
 
I'll add one other thing to the good advice you've been given:

Give your muscles a rest. If you're lifting weights, you need to do that every OTHER day, not every day. What causes the muscles to build and shape is the recovery time ... if you don't give them recovery time, then you're just building damage upon damage and eventually you'll weaken the muscles rather than build them.

Could you alternate which muscles you're focusing on, like pecs and triceps one day, legs and biceps the next day?
 
Could you alternate which muscles you're focusing on, like pecs and triceps one day, legs and biceps the next day?
You can, yes, but you're also better off incorporating a lot of full body or compound exercises, rather than focusing on individual muscles.

But there are a lot of people who do upper body one day and lower body the next. It works for them. :)
 
Could you alternate which muscles you're focusing on, like pecs and triceps one day, legs and biceps the next day?

you can. my view on this is a bodybuilder type split is best suited for bodybuilders with a few years lifting experience with a good solid existing muscle mass base. for 99% of the population when first starting out, a full body type routine, or at least a split based on movement patterns will be much better suited. By movement patterns, I mean something like push, pull, legs.. or a westside for skinny bastards 3 template when it's upper and lower body where the split is based upon movement types, not body parts. This is due to, isolating the biceps for example, using curls is useless when you don't have any biceps to begin with. And not to mention that with isolation movements, a lot of motions that take best advantage of natural body kenetic chain movements are left by the wayside. Olympic lifting to name one. Kettlebell training for another.

I see little need to do isolation when peoples primal movement patterns need work. Once you're able to bench your bodyweight and dead/squat close to 2x your body weight, I would say you're at a level where you can start to think about a bodybuilder type split. Till then, stick with the full body compounds.
 
Thats how I lost weight before. However, the results weren't sustainable - Its too much to have to do 1-2 hours of cardio a day (when I was in my best shape) for the rest of my life just to feel like I was getting a workout. On top of that, because I wasn't lifting weights, I lost a ton of muscle mass.









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Get some free weights for lifting, a jump rope, and for you cardio... just run around your neighborhood. Also you should try workout videos, find one that you think might be fun. When you get sick of the regular daily grind, pop in the video and it will keep things intresting.
 
I can really understand what you are going through as I have been there myself. The most important thing is consistency. Reduce the junk food, eat fruits & vegetables and get a home gym system that works well. I dont' like to go to gym so I got myself Bodylastics resistance bands for less than $50 and I've been working out regularly. It works really well for me and I'm really happy that I got pretty fit.
 
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