smartygoldenfis
New member
Hi, I am M/20 yrs/72 Kg (158 Lbs)
I have been to gym for the last 3 months and i lost weight from an inital 77 Kgs to 72 Kgs..a reduction of 5 kgs or 11 Lbs.
My gym schedule usually involved 15-20 minutes jogging and then exercises for specific body parts. Like biceps one day, triceps other and so on. I do 4-5 exercises and 3 sets of 12-15 reps each. I also take a protein supplement. it says it has 84% protein.
Please note that Push Ups, Dead lifts, Chin Up, Squats, Bench, Row are already included in my schedule + isolation exercises
My aim is to gain some muscle and lose my extra fab. And i think i should start taking my waist size as a measure of fat loss instead of my weight. Its 34''.
____________________________________________
PART I
Now, i read this article By Steve on this forum
So am i doing it wrong. Should i avoid all Isolation exercises? And is it wrong to do "one body part each day"?
How can a body part be trained if i don't do 5 different exercises. I searched the web, i could not find more than 8 exercises. 8 for all parts? Less!
I just fail to understand how concentrated working on one muscle may be inferior to working on a group of muscles working together?
Arent the compound ones too less in number?
Also, Steve said that Overload is necessary. Assume that i am able to do
5 Kgs hammer easily. Then all weights more than 5 are overload. If i take like 7.5, i am not able to complete more than 8 reps. So should i consider it an overload. Whats an exact criteria for overload? how many reps should i be able to complete in a overload?
____________________________________________
PART II
As i said, both weight-loss and muscle gaining is in my agenda.
I have this query that what is better, jogging for 30 minutes, vs running for 15? And what about taking breaks? Are they good or not?
Which takes more calories, running on treadmill or in park [considering speed and time in both cases equal of course]
Also, as Steve said Overload, it must be applicable to running too? If i run 4 kms comfortably today in 1 hour than in like 1 month should i increase it to 5 kms gradually? Is fat loss also stalled if i stall growth in length of running?
I would highly appreciate if members of this forums could answer my queries belonging to both sections.
PS: believe me or not, i thought like 4 days to frame this question.
I have been to gym for the last 3 months and i lost weight from an inital 77 Kgs to 72 Kgs..a reduction of 5 kgs or 11 Lbs.
My gym schedule usually involved 15-20 minutes jogging and then exercises for specific body parts. Like biceps one day, triceps other and so on. I do 4-5 exercises and 3 sets of 12-15 reps each. I also take a protein supplement. it says it has 84% protein.
Please note that Push Ups, Dead lifts, Chin Up, Squats, Bench, Row are already included in my schedule + isolation exercises
My aim is to gain some muscle and lose my extra fab. And i think i should start taking my waist size as a measure of fat loss instead of my weight. Its 34''.
____________________________________________
PART I
Now, i read this article By Steve on this forum
and it says this method of doing one part at a time is really bad, and its sinusoidal waveform shows it all.
So am i doing it wrong. Should i avoid all Isolation exercises? And is it wrong to do "one body part each day"?
How can a body part be trained if i don't do 5 different exercises. I searched the web, i could not find more than 8 exercises. 8 for all parts? Less!
I just fail to understand how concentrated working on one muscle may be inferior to working on a group of muscles working together?
Arent the compound ones too less in number?
Also, Steve said that Overload is necessary. Assume that i am able to do
5 Kgs hammer easily. Then all weights more than 5 are overload. If i take like 7.5, i am not able to complete more than 8 reps. So should i consider it an overload. Whats an exact criteria for overload? how many reps should i be able to complete in a overload?
____________________________________________
PART II
As i said, both weight-loss and muscle gaining is in my agenda.
I have this query that what is better, jogging for 30 minutes, vs running for 15? And what about taking breaks? Are they good or not?
Which takes more calories, running on treadmill or in park [considering speed and time in both cases equal of course]
Also, as Steve said Overload, it must be applicable to running too? If i run 4 kms comfortably today in 1 hour than in like 1 month should i increase it to 5 kms gradually? Is fat loss also stalled if i stall growth in length of running?
I would highly appreciate if members of this forums could answer my queries belonging to both sections.
PS: believe me or not, i thought like 4 days to frame this question.