Good Afternoon.
I just came up with a great idea that I'd love to see
on many fitness sites. I think random workouts should
become a trend.
I put up a prototype here:
shapefit . 110mb . com
For now, I just used the exercise ball, bodyweight, and elastic band
exercises from Shapefit.com so that I can give people an idea of what
I'm thinking. From reading many articles, it seems that a common
mistake is to do the SAME exercises over and over every week. After
a while, your muscles get used to the exercises and you don't get
as much out of the workout as before.
So here's my solution:
I organized each exercise by body part. For each body part,
the computer picks a random exercise. You have a random exercise
for nearly all the major parts of your body. This prevents people
from doing the same exercise over and over and, at the same
time, gives them a complete workout.
And it also guarantees that your body will never know what to expect,
since your workout is completely random every day. And so you'll rarely
do the same set of exercises 2 days in a row. Different exercises will
stress different muscles, but in the long run, it all evens out since each
exercise has an equal chance of happening.
In addition, you could have a slideshow view(instead of using tables). So
that after each exercise you click a button(or hit a key) and it moves
to the next exercise.
Lastly, you'll NEVER have to micromanage your exercise routines
ever again. And if you're not near a computer(or don't have a
computer), you can also use a deck of cards to do the same thing.
In short, this system is:
1)Comprehensive, since it can cover all the major groups.
2)Balanced, since its comprehensive and each exercise
(within each muscle group) has an equal chance of occuring.
3)Unpredictable, since it different day to day and so your
muscles will never get used to your routine. So you would
continually "shock" your muscles.
The real challenge is choosing a good mix of exercises for each
muscle group so that you hit all parts of the muscles at different
angles.
Tell me what you think.
I just came up with a great idea that I'd love to see
on many fitness sites. I think random workouts should
become a trend.
I put up a prototype here:
shapefit . 110mb . com
For now, I just used the exercise ball, bodyweight, and elastic band
exercises from Shapefit.com so that I can give people an idea of what
I'm thinking. From reading many articles, it seems that a common
mistake is to do the SAME exercises over and over every week. After
a while, your muscles get used to the exercises and you don't get
as much out of the workout as before.
So here's my solution:
I organized each exercise by body part. For each body part,
the computer picks a random exercise. You have a random exercise
for nearly all the major parts of your body. This prevents people
from doing the same exercise over and over and, at the same
time, gives them a complete workout.
And it also guarantees that your body will never know what to expect,
since your workout is completely random every day. And so you'll rarely
do the same set of exercises 2 days in a row. Different exercises will
stress different muscles, but in the long run, it all evens out since each
exercise has an equal chance of happening.
In addition, you could have a slideshow view(instead of using tables). So
that after each exercise you click a button(or hit a key) and it moves
to the next exercise.
Lastly, you'll NEVER have to micromanage your exercise routines
ever again. And if you're not near a computer(or don't have a
computer), you can also use a deck of cards to do the same thing.
In short, this system is:
1)Comprehensive, since it can cover all the major groups.
2)Balanced, since its comprehensive and each exercise
(within each muscle group) has an equal chance of occuring.
3)Unpredictable, since it different day to day and so your
muscles will never get used to your routine. So you would
continually "shock" your muscles.
The real challenge is choosing a good mix of exercises for each
muscle group so that you hit all parts of the muscles at different
angles.
Tell me what you think.
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