Post your workout routine...

bGIveNs33

Golden Member
Jul 10, 2002
1,543
0
71
I'm getting back into lifting after ~1 year off. Any suggestons for 4 days a week... (MT-RF) for about 1-1.5 hours a nite. And if you have no suggestions, I'd still like to see what you lift. Not necessarily the amount of weight, but the reps, sets and muscle groups.

TIA,

Billy
 

silverpig

Lifer
Jul 29, 2001
27,703
12
81
Put me in the "no suggestions category"

Here's what I did for my training (I've been really lazy of late though):

Mornings M,T,W,F:
Row 21 km on the water

Morning Sat:
Row 28 km on the water

Afternoons M,T,Th,F
Row 10 km on machine
10 km run
500 crunches + 20 mins additional abs

Afternoons Wed
3 x 10 squats
3 x 10 leg press
1 x 100 leg press (only going down about 10% of the way and very rapidly)
3 x 10 of that lat pull machine thing... you know, the one where you sit on the ground and pull the handle towards you to lift the weight...
1000 crunches (take like an hour and a half to do)
 

bolido2000

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 2001
3,720
1
0
I got this from musclemag forum. I take no credit for this:


I am posting typical 3 and 4 days routines since a lot of guys ask "what kind of
routine should I do"

The only difference between the routines is with a 4th day, you can do a little
more extensive work per group (such as one extra exercise) Depending on time
constraints either split can work well.

All my splits pair synergistic (such as back and biceps) groups to minimize
overtraining. I also think working synergistic groups is beneficial since one
muscle is already warmed up from it's use in the certain exercise (since the
bicep is used when you do back muscles, it's already warmed up when you do bicep
work). Some poeple feel they get better results doing opposing groups like chest
and biceps. It's a personal preference.

A few things to keep in mind

-workouts should be kept from 45 mins to 1 hour in duration

-For beginners, I'd keep it simple - used 8-10 reps per set

-Shoot for 3 sets for each exercise

-Rest between sets should be around 2-5 minutes. A "bigger" lift like a squat or
bench press is going to take more recoop time between sets vs. a curl. Allow
enough rest between sets to allow you to fully complete your reps in each set
within the 2-5 min constraint.

-Progress is measured by progressively adding more weight on (with good form) as
you continue to lift over time. Not how sore you are or how much of a pump you
get...

-Go by the mirror not by some bodyfat percentage measured with a caliber. You
know how you want to look and when you've looked better or worse. Don't get
cuaght up measuring bodyfat all the time.

-Time permitting, try to keep a day's rest between each day in the split meaning
don't workout consecutive days if you can prevent it

-Try to use some form of resistence in abs such as weighted crunches or and
incline. The goal is to build a strong midsection which will allow you to lift
bigger. A strong midsection is crucial for the big compound lifts

-To find out how much weight to use on a given exercise, use enough weight that
A)allows you to keep good form & B) you struggle on your last few reps of the
set but can still get it back up.

-Always start light until you learn good form. If you use good form, you'll be
lifting for a long time. Poor form is probably the biggest cause of injury. Use
a mirror or a spotter to help you.

-Just keep things simple in your first year of lifting. Standard reps and so
forth. Avoid specialized techiniques like specific types of training and so
forth. I think you should learn how to lift corrrectly first before you start
doing more involved training programs.

-Focus your routine around your core - back, legs and chest. You're not going to
get big doing curls or lateral raises. If you shoot for a big back, you're gonna
get big arms. If you squat big, you'll get big. Always work the body as a system
for best overall results, don't skip legs or back... This is very important! And
dedicate the approriate time to each muscle group. Meaning don't do 10 sets for
your back (larger) and then 11 sets for your biceps (smaller) That's a senseless
way of training

-Keep it simple, set a basic routine with basic compound lifts unitl you find
what lifts and so forth work great for you. I think a lot of people complicate
lifting much more then need be. Stick to the basics (mostly effective compound
lifts with some isolation moves) and you'll be fine, just do your thing. Every 6
months a new program sweeps through the forums here that supposedly gets you
"huge". I am not saying they do or don't. What I am saying is avoid a lot of the
heresy and the "try this and that". Keep it simple til you learn how to do the
basics. There's no point in doing a a program which forces you to add wegiht
each week or do 20 reps schemes... if you can't lift properly. You aren't going
to benifit from it.

-Put your bigger lifts first in each day and finish with the smaller lifts such
as the isolation moves last. Prioritize your demand for energy.

-If you miss a day here and there, it's not a big deal. You do have a life
outside of the gym, just resume the day you left off at.

-Few things about the "six pack" - They're made in the kitchen, not in the gym.
Getting a six pack is 90% diet. If you have bodyfat at levels higher then 10% or
so, you're going to gradually not see your abs. So lowering bodyfat it the key.
Crunches will not do it. Diet and/or cardio to. But the flipside is keeping your
bodyfat levels low means keeping calories down. And those sacrificed calories
you're probably going to need to grow. Abs are like any other muscle - they too
meed time to recover. Working them out 3 or 4 times a week is probably doing
less then more for you.

-For a beginner, you'll probably make your biggest gains in your first 6 months
to a year. After that gains slow. It's normal.

-Don't think of working out as a chore. Think of it as part of the day for you.
Something you're doing for yourself. Hopefully it will just become part of
you're lifestyle. Sometimes it's a pain to get back into a routine if you fall
off, just persevere through it till you get back into the swing of things. And
there are just days when you don't feel like it and can't get in to it. It's
normal (just as long as it's not frequent) so maybe call it a night and tryt he
next day.

-Diet is just as important as lifting. Lifting just tells the body you need to
grow more. Diet/rest is actually how and when it happens. Lifting is where you
put most of your effort in though. But without a good diet and plenty of rest,
your lifting efforts will be in vain.

-If your current routine is working, don't change it. If you're gains stop
(platuea) examine your routine as well as diet and if your getting enough rest.
It may not be just your routine.

-I wouldn't get wrapped up reading and taking advice from muscle magazines.
They're 90% advertisements (with bogus claims attached ) and the other 10% are
usually routines which would benefit steriod users vs. natural lifters. Most
natural lifters would never recover from 20 set routiens often published. Bottom
line is most muscle rags are advertising vehicles aimed at getting you to
believe supp claims. If you want to read a good book - shoot for any of the
books by Stuart McRobert or John MacCallum.

-Free weights are often superior to machines. Liftin with free weights recruits
more muscles into the movements making them more effective. However, some
machines are good and one can benefit supplementing their free weight routine
wiht some machines if available ie leg press. I personally haven't touched a
machine in my over 8 years of lifting. I've done fine wihtout them.

-If I included a specific exercise below it's cause I feel it's that effective
to make sure you do it.

Here's the splits

3 Day split (Push, Pull & Legs)

Day 1 Push (chest, shoulders and triceps) 3 chest exercises 1 shoulder exercise
(preferrable and overhead press) 1 tricep exercise

Day 2 Pull (back & biceps) 3 back exercises (pullups, rows and dealifts) 2 bicep
exercises (I would include a hammer or reverse curl to include forearms)

Day 3 Legs (and abs) 2 quad exercises (inclide squats) 1-2 hamstring exercises
(include stiff Leg deads) 1 calf exercise abs (weighted crunches or incline
situps)



4 day split - the days and groups worked per day can vary. You have mroe
freedom. The groups I put together are what work best for me. Some people might
choose to give arms and shoulders their own day for exampler. I personally think
thats too much for arms. Others might feelt hat way about me dedicated a day to
shoudlers. Day 1 (chest & triceps) 3 - 4 chest exercises (include dips and I
count that as both chest and tricep) 1 tricep

Day 2 (back & bicep) 3 - 4 back exercises (include pullups, rows and deads) 2
bicep exercises

Day 3 (shoulders, traps, abs) 1 overhead press lateral raises rear delt raises
(2 sets) shrugs 1-2 ab exercises

Day 4 (legs) 2-3 quad exercises (squats) 2 hamstring exercises (stiff leg deads)
1 calf exercises

-Word about supplements. I personally think the supp hype is probably one of the
most biggest problems most newer people have. Most supps are highly overrated
and I'd say 90% of the crap on the market is just that. Too many people focus on
supps "making you big". Wrong, focus on supps fine tuning your diet instead. The
only two supps I'd reccomend to a newbie in his/her first year of training are:
******a good multivitamin (I like Twinlabs Dual Tabs ) ******post workout whey
protein powder. I'd go for a brand that is reputable but CHEAP. Protein is
protein (I prefer Optimum Nutrition ). Don't buy into all the claims that this
brand is superior over that. Most brands contain the equivilent amount of
protein per serving (around 70-80%).

After about a year of workingout when you know what you're doing regarding
lifting, diet... you can try ******creatine ******glutamine

Those are the only four supps I personally think will do most people any good.
The problem is that NO SUPP is going to help you if you don't know what you're
doing with respect to lifting and EATING correctly. So you'll be wasting your
hard earned $$$$$. And that is the bottom line. Too many people think creatine
will magically make you big or just taking a fat burner will magically make you
thin. It doesn't work that way. Just don't depend on supps, they're not entirely
necessary.

There you have it, if I think of more stuff I'll editted it in
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
Three days a week (T-Th-Su), hour and a half.

Fifty minutes lifting weights - bench press (150), squat (430), bicep curls (70), military press (100), lat pulldown (130)
Thirty minutes running - anywhere from a mile and a half to three miles
Twenty minutes - situps (20 @ 5 seconds, R, L, C hold for 40 seconds each), pushups (20)
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,344
126
I've got a pretty ghetto setup in my basement that doesn't allow me to do a lot of stuff so here's what I make do with -

It's only a three day a week workout -

Arms/Chest day -
- Dumbell bench
- hammer curl
- incline bench
- barbell curl
- incline curl
- concentration curl
- butterflies

Tricep/Legs day -
- behind the head tricept lift w/ dumbell
- nosebreakers(lay down on bench, extend curl bar hind head, row it over the top of your nose)
- bent over tricep kicks(basically a running motion with dumbells)
- lunges
- leg extensions
- hammy curls

Back/Shoulder day -
- dumbell raises out to the sides
- dumbell raises to the front
- military press
- bent over rows
- upright rows
- shoulder shrugs

Every day I do some crunches, back extensions, and oblique exercises.
 

zbalat

Platinum Member
Oct 9, 1999
2,501
1
81
I mix up muscle groups but I do 2 body parts per day 6-8 exercises per body part with medium weight (10-15 reps) and I do the last set of each body part to complete failure.

Sample week :
Monday: chest/triceps
Tuesday: back/biceps
Wednesday: shoulders/legs
Thursday-Saturday repeat above
Sunday: rest
abs before workouts every other day.

I lift in the evening and run in the morning 3-4 days per week for 20 minutes at 6-8 MPH on my treadmill.

I like doing each body part twice per week. Some will say that once a week is plenty but I've been doing it this way since 1990 and it's worked well for me.

I'm 5-8 155# so it's obvious my routine keeps me in shape instead of making me bulk up.
 

StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
I work out 2 days on one off, one on one off, so that any muscle group gets worked every 5 days.

Day 1: Chest and bis
Day 2: Back tris
Day 3: rest
Day 4: Shoulders legs
Day 5: rest

I then do a half hour cardio. Each weight workout takes around 30 min.

I used to do chest/tri and back/bi, but thought I'd mix it up.

Combined with frequent consumption of protein I'm doing well on this. I do 5-6 sets per particular bodypart. Over time from the age I was 16 to now I've generally decreased the frequency. When I started I used to work out for 90 min every day doing a bodypart every 48 hours. That was gross overtraining, so overtime I've increased the time between workouts and decreased the duration.
 

Entity

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
10,090
0
0
M-Th, I do 30min-1hr (depending on time, schedule, etc.) on my elliptical machine.
F, I play Ultimate for anywhere from an hour to three hours.
Saturday I usually rest...
Sunday I try to do 30min on the Elliptical machine again.

I also lift two to three times a week, but not in such a regimented fashion - I only have a bench, a few dumbells, and one bar. :(

Rob
 

ProUser

Senior member
Apr 6, 2000
554
0
0
Monday & Thursday:

Bench (Chest) 3x8
Fly (Chest) 3x8
Barbell Pulldown (Tricep) 3x8
Dumbell Kickback (Tricep) 3x8
Lat Pulldown (Back) 3x8
Back Row (Back) 3x8
Weighted Abs (Abs) 3x20
Supermans (Lower Back) 3x20

Tuesday & Friday:

Squats (Legs) 3x8
Leg Extension (Legs) 3x8
Leg Curls (Legs) 3x8
Calf Raises (Legs) 3x8
Standing Barbell Curl (Bicep) 3x8
Seated Preacher Curl (Bicep) 3x8
DB Shoulder Press (Shoulders) 3x8
Strip Set Barbell Raises 2 sets of 8, each set containing 3 sets of 8

Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday:

OFF
 

PG

Diamond Member
Oct 25, 1999
3,426
44
91
2 or 3 days per week tops for me

workout 1

warmups...little of stretching, etc.

20 reps squats

Overhead press

Pullups


Workout 2

warmups ..little stretching, etc.

a couple sets of deadlifting

bench press

bent over rows


once in a while throw in weighted situps and heavy side bends



 

Anghang

Platinum Member
Apr 30, 2001
2,853
0
71
monday
deadlift, 15 reps
squat, 15 reps
arnold or military press, 8 reps
chinups, 3 set of 8
bent over row, 8 reps
calf raise, 15 reps

tuesday
cardio: run 2-4 miles, then jumproping

thursday
squat, 15 reps
arnold or military press, 8 reps
chinups, 3 set of 8
bent over row, 8 reps
dumbell flyes, 8 reps
calf raise, 15 reps

friday
cardio: run 2-4 miles, then jumproping

weekend: i'll rockclimb when i can

on differences between my monday and thursday is that i deadlift on monday and work my chest on thursday.

i do a couple of warmup sets if need be with half the lbs of my usual, then go the full for 1 set of 8 reps...if i can finish the 8 reps easily, then i do another set or until failure for that workout session...then next time i workout i'll add 5-10 lbs. to that exercise, and go the same routine...

as for the chinups, i'll strap additional weight around my waist when i'm able to complete my set easily...

 

SagaLore

Elite Member
Dec 18, 2001
24,036
21
81
Sex.

Works wonders as a cardio-vascular workout. And it only takes 30 seconds a day!
 

Deeko

Lifer
Jun 16, 2000
30,213
12
81
every other day cycle.

shoulders/triceps - military press, close grip bench press, tricep pushdowns, lateral raises
rest
legs - squats, leg press, leg extension, leg curl, calf raise
rest
chest/biceps - dumbell press, incline/decline bench(every other cycle switch), flies, 21's, reverse curls
rest
back/lats - front lat pull, row/rear delt, lat pulldown, reverse flies, shrugs

works wonders. one rest day a week is abs/lower back.
 

Yossarian

Lifer
Dec 26, 2000
18,010
1
81
Originally posted by: bGIveNs33
I'm getting back into lifting after ~1 year off. Any suggestons for 4 days a week... (MT-RF) for about 1-1.5 hours a nite.

I also just got back into lifting after a long time off. I recommend you do what I did--full body workouts 2 to 3 times a week for a month plus cardio. It will get you back in the gym habit and condition you to the point that split workouts will do some good. I started back with this program--

crunches
leg press
leg curl
calf raise
bench
pulldown
military press
curl
tricep extension

One set of each, nominal weight. It's good to go light so you can get your form down perfect. A month of that and you'll be ready to go nuts with a good split routine.
 

dman

Diamond Member
Nov 2, 1999
9,110
0
76
I workout on the chairmaster everyday and many nights.

(Drinking Motion)
(Remote Clicking Motion)
(Eating Snacks Motion)

Anyone who lost weight, I know where it went. :D