Great stuff Sig. Not sure if anyone has told you this before but your have a natural talent at writing/story telling. Im looking forward to hearing more about Mr. Form Police and Kid Who Tries Too Hard.
Thanks! I hope to continue with my tales of the gym regulars. My work schedule changed a little, so I'm not always lifting at the exact same times - as a consequence, I may be a bit out of sync with them. I've only seen Mr. Form Police in the parking lot lately & KWTTH when he's already in his intense post-work-out cardio sessions (amazingly, he's not bulking up! ha-ha!)
For yesterday's lift, the amazing thing is how EMPTY the gym was! We (me and my spotter, who was doing his own program) had the whole place to ourselves, with the exception of 1 or 2 other people. This was a good thing, because I discovered a few things on my first day of this heavy lifting program:
(1)
Deadlifts are LOUD. I'm usually pretty quiet and controlled in my breathing. Something about picking up heavy stuff from the floor inspired the secret grunter in me (hehe). Oh, and then when you've FINISHED lifting the bar? It's a lot less energy to let gravity get the bar down, instead of putting it down gently. My gym does not have bumpers or a special deadlift place. I am not sure if I've ever seen anyone do deadlifts there before, and I'm afraid that after the first 'busier' gym day that I do deads, they are gonna put up a sign on the wall that says, "No Deadlifting Allowed...and this means YOU, Sig!"
(2)
Patience is NOT a muscle you can exercise. That quote comes courtesy of my spotter, after watching me try to deal with the long rest intervals. Heh. Then again, maybe patience IS something you can improve through exercise; however, all I ever exercise is IMpatience. Hard to know! Anyway, I was having some "issues" with waiting 3-6 minutes between sets for full recovery. B-O-R-I-N-G! I really WAS spent after each set. But I can be physically tired and mentally...eager to go. Perhaps this is the mental toughness I need to learn after all.
(3)
You don't have to lift to failure to get in a good work-out. I completed all my prescribed sets for squats (1x8@70%, 2x6@80%), deadlifts (1 x 12@60%, 2 x 10@70%), and bench (2 x 8@70%, 2 x 6@80%). I did not fail and I was not that close to failure, even though the last reps were more challenging, esp in the last set. It seemed strange - thinking I could have done more. But this week is supposed to be lower intensity, to help you get ready to do more in future weeks. So I know I did it right. In fact, I resisted the temptation to add secondary/isolation work this time. I know I'm still adjusting, and I want to see how sore I am from this before I start adding in other work. As it is, the workout takes long enough.
In other news, water is still wet
Played hockey today. Hockey is awesome. Heh. Good pace to the skate. My legs and hands are coming back. My brain is still adjusting from playing with weaker players too often (so my decision-making is a bit off when I'm finally with people who are a bit better and faster). I'm feeling good in general, though.
Oh, that bruise from last time only bugs me when I'm walking around. Not skating or the gym. Hehe. And I blocked another shot with my foot that at the time hurt & within a shift, I couldn't even remember which foot it was. Maybe I'll find a mark in a day to remind me. Hee!
Tomorrow, it's back to the gym....