Thanks for the info guys. I plan on starting the program next week. I am getting the book in the mail tomorrow. Is it necessary to read the book cover to cover before starting?
When you guys did the program, did you have a spotter?
Only exercise that you may need a (human) spotter for is the bench press. For all others, a spotter is not helpful and likely to get in the way. I posted this in another thread, so I'm just copy/pasting it here:
* Squat: should be done in a power rack with safety rails set-up just below full squat depth. If you get in trouble, just leave the bar on the rails. Alternatively, if you have bumper plates, you can also easily dump the weight on the floor. Spotting the squat is very difficult and most people do it wrong, which actually makes things more dangerous. If you train in a PL gym with trained spotters, they can be helpful, but that isn't the case for 99.9% of the population.
* Bench: this is the one exercise where a spotter is very helpful. Alternatives are a power rack with safety rails just below your chest, doing DB bench press, or leaving the collars off and letting the weights slide off (worst case scenario, but still better than being caught under the bar).
* OH press: if you can't finish a rep, just lower the weight back to your shoulders.
* Deadlift, rows, and most slow lifts from the ground: if you can't finish a rep, just set the bar back down.
* Any o-lift (clean, snatch, jerk): best done with bumper plates so you can dump the weight if you miss a rep. At any rate, there is *nothing* a spotter could do to help any of these exercises.
No problem. It's worth noting all of this info is in the book and is one of the many reasons you should read it cover to coverThanks for the info.
How long have you been on the program? What kind of gains have you made?
From November, 2009, to end of January, 2010.
Weight: 157ish, like 18% (Not sure if these were my maxes, but I struggled with them)
Squat: 165x5
Dead: 245?x5
Bench: 95x5 (lol...)
to
Weight: 170, 14%
Squat: 275x5, 315x1
Deadlift: 335x5, 405x1.
Bench: 155x7 (Too scared to max)
Diet consisted of about 220g of protein a day, separated into 6 meals. Minimal cardio, massive strength gains. My whole body changes massively in two months, losing fat and gaining size everywhere (especially the quads, dear god, I was ripping once-loose jeans).
Unfortunately my knees couldn't take the stresses of squatting 3x a week, so I'm taking a few weeks off to re-coop. The program worked miracles for me, but your diet must be in order. You NEED protein on this, it's a pure raw strength builder. I did the GOMAD for some of this, and that helped a lot. I had to eat about 600 calories over maintenance to see any gains, and about 800-900 for acceptable ones. When in the gym, hit it hard.
I had a mindset everytime, especially for squats. If I didn't come close to failing the last reps of the last set, I'd up the weight and go until my body couldn't physically move the bar anymore. It was kind of an all out, animal mentality. Before my mil pressing, I'd get myself pissed off, and run up to the bar and just start beasting reps out, using every ounce of energy in me. It worked for me, the only downside is, I was always sore, always drained, and always tired.
If squatting is seriously bothering your knees, you need to reconsider and revamp your form. Squatting really shouldn't be that hard on them. If you're squatting low, you may be sensitive to hyperflexion and might want to reduce your squat's ROM just to parallel. If that's not the prob, then I bet you're shifting your weight forward and it's putting too much stress on your knee during a particular glide movement.
I had a mindset everytime, especially for squats. If I didn't come close to failing the last reps of the last set, I'd up the weight and go until my body couldn't physically move the bar anymore. It was kind of an all out, animal mentality. Before my mil pressing, I'd get myself pissed off, and run up to the bar and just start beasting reps out, using every ounce of energy in me. It worked for me, the only downside is, I was always sore, always drained, and always tired.
Although working out with intensity is a good thing, constantly going to failure is not a good idea and not the intention of SS. It is much harder for the body to recover from going to absolute failure, so if you are doing it multiple times per week with heavy weight, you'll actually be slowing your progress. Keep it up long enough and you'll start to see symptoms of overtraining, which is probably why you were so sore, drained and tired. In other words, consistently adding in those extra sets/reps until your body "couldn't physically move the bar" probably limited your strength gains, rather than maxing them out.
If your CNS was thrashed the entire time, there is a good chance you did limit your gains. That doesn't mean you didn't see impressive improvement but it's possible you could've ended up even stronger without the constant soreness/exhaustion/etc.With the gains I made, I can promise that it didn't limit anything.
My body trains so much better if I'm in a mental state like that, I can physically move more weight. I taxed the hell out of my CNS, and I know that's exactly why I felt like that. Nothing a de-load week can't fix. =] I might lost 5-10 pounds on my lifts over a week or two, but I'll accept that.
Uh, that is the definition of going to failure. It's not that you lift until you literally collapse (that's just reckless) - it is when you work up until the point where you are sure you could not squeeze out another rep. It is ok to do it occasionally, but doing it consistently can absolutely maul the CNS and contribute to overtraining.And it's not like I went to complete failure. If I hit my 5 reps in my last set of squats, then I'd keep going until I knew my body couldn't push one more out.
How much variation is there between SS and Stronglift's 5x5? I just started working out this week, and am curious which one is going to give me the best results?
I'm 6'1 140. Shooting for 200-220. Doing gomad + 3-4K calories/day.
How much variation is there between SS and Stronglift's 5x5? I just started working out this week, and am curious which one is going to give me the best results?
I'm 6'1 140. Shooting for 200-220. Doing gomad + 3-4K calories/day.
I love SS. I'll repeat what is written most often in the SS forum: drink the milk!!! In my case, at 35 I wasn't interested in max gains and I can't grow as fast as a teenager, so I drank about 1/3 gallon for a few months. I've never been able to gain weight before - had been at 160-165 since age 25. I easily put on 5lb per month to hit about 185. So easy. Plus I ate a lot, but I've always eaten a lot without gaining.
My second feedback is:
I've had chronic, but minor back pain for about a decade. When I started SS, I would occasionally ignore a small back pain, and after squats or deadlifts it would get much worse. Then I changed - instead when I get a minor ache I'll cut out the squats/deads, and only work on bench & press & some accessory exercises as I felt up to it. That was clearly a good decision. I've tried to manage problems with stretching with only some success. Needless to say, my progress has been much slower because of my back.
Also, my back has been giving me more problems since I began SS as compared to before SS. May be coincidence as I get older. Maybe more stress. Or maybe it was at least partially because of SS. My latest optimistic theory is: because of SS my back has visibly gotten a lot stronger. But I don't think my abs have. I've done very few ab-specific exercises. I'm currently taking time off from my latest back incident which was quite severe (couldn't move for a day) and am going to be building up ab strength and making it a regular part of the program. I'll see if this helps to prevent back problems.
(And FYI - I see a chiropractor regularly, and was at an orthopedist this week. I have no major structural problems in my spine like a herniated disc. Just "normal" pains.)