As most people who visit the gym will know, attendance and results hardly go hand in hand. There are normally numerous ways to improve the efficiency of your workout, but here are five mistakes that I specifically notice in women’s routines on a very regular basis:
Doing aerobic exercise before weight training
About 70pc of my clients are doing both cardiovascular work followed by
weights when I start seeing them. This is almost always down to a habit that
has remained with them since they started using the gym, and then it was
because a fitness instructor told them to do it... 'because it warms up the
muscles'. It also drains them of the high-intensity fuel they require
(carbohydrates) and means you no longer have the strength to cause the
microtrauma required to make your session worthwhile. You need carbohydrates
available to make weight training efficient. At the same time, if you want to
burn fat, you need to deplete your stores of carbohydrates before your body
will begin to turn to its secondary fuel source. So you need an absence of
carbohydrates to make cardiovascular work efficient. Doing your CV before
weights achieves neither... by swapping them around, you can achieve both.
Using ab rollers or ab machines
These machines will not help you. The ab rollers may put you in the right
position so you feel the burn in your stomach, but they take away enough
resistance to render the exercise aerobic. Aerobics does not strengthen or
tone muscles; resistance work does, so don't make it easy for yourself! You
will also find that using an ab roller take away any requirement for
stabilization, so besides working hard for little pay-off you are also
teaching your core muscles (trans-abs, obliques, quadratus lomborum, etc) to
deactivate. You'll miss them when they're gone. The ab machines always
involve bending at the hips, not the midriff - if you look down to see where
your abs are situated you will see that they do not cause hip flexion. This
job is performed by your hip flexors. This is why it takes so long to feel
anything in your abs whilst using these machines; they are now only
supporting your hip flexors. Forget about these silly machines and stick with
crunches on the floor or using a swiss ball.
Using low resistance/high reps 'to avoid getting muscly'
The best example of this is normal-sized women on a leg press machine using
30kg resistance. It can also be seen in others using tiny little
dumbells to do bicep curls with. Sometimes I ask them if there is a reason
behind their chosen level of resistance, and I generally receive two
replies; “Thats the weight I was given on my induction,” and “I dont want to
get muscly”. Even if the weight was a little challenging the first time you
did it, you must still ensure that you continue to overload the muscles by
pushing up the resistance (this is what is called Progressive Adaptation).
And to all the women who are trying to tone up without getting muscly...
relax, you cannot build a man's body – you simply do not have the hormones.
Men create around 7mg per day of testosterone, women just 0.3mg. If you want
to improve body composition, the same principles still apply – it has to be
intense. Reaching failure, or near-failure, in 9-12 reps is a good way to do
this.
Using the hip abduction machines to 'tone up the legs'
The hip adduction machines are the ones that involve sitting upright and moving your knees away from another. Fitness instructors seem to love putting this on members’ programs ‘because it tones up the legs’. It doesn’t. This movement uses only your abductors (tensor fascia lata, gluteus medius), very small muscles at the hip – not your quads or hamstring, which together give your legs their shape. To activate both of these muscle groups, you should try exercises that involve extension at the knee and hip, such as leg press or lunges.
Counting calories on the treadmill
When I ask clients what their routine has been up to that point, so often part of the routine involves running on the treadmill ‘for 300 calories’. Now, calories are just a unit of energy and using them up will not necessarily improve your body composition. Training this way may even damage composition as high-calorie exercise is high-intensity exercise – this requires carbohydrates and, if they are low, the shortfall will come from protein, eg. Skeletal muscle. However, by doing your cardiovascular exercise second, and at a lower level of 117-120 bpm, you can isolate fat as your primary fuel source, whilst giving protection to your lean mass. It sounds simple, because it is!
Written by Marek Doyle
