Common Beginner Mistakes.

Krueg

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Just a quick list of mistakes I see beginners make and some mistakes I even made.

Form: Whether your doing barbell curls or squats, you need to learn how to execute proper form. If you don't, your just risking injury and not training the muscle properly. If your not sure your doing the exercise right, ask a personal trainer to watch you, read an article or book on how to perform an exercise or watch videos of experienced lifters or trainers. Its about training smart.

Weight: Some beginners jump into the gym and start throwing on more weight than they can handle and end up getting hurt or plateau quickly. If you cant control the weight and maintain good form, its probably too heavy. As a beginner you need to start out light, learn how to do the exercise and do it the right way.

Training to failure: You don't need to train to failure all the time. If you train to failure all the time and are missing lifts, your just beating yourself down and most likely loosing strength. Its okay to push yourself time to time but, you want to feel empowered and confident after training.

Rest: Rest is also important. Some guys think they need to train 5-6 days a week because thats what some advanced bodybuilder is doing or what some muscle magazine tells you. As a beginner you only need to train 3 days a week and try to get 8 hours of sleep.

Changing your routine: Too many guys are switching up their routine every week, month, or every X amount of time thinking they will plateau if they dont switch things up. Beginners seem to have A.D.D. and screw everything up by wanting to change or add things because they saw someone else doing something. Stick to the program for atleast 4 months so you can actually see some results and learn what works for you. You wont know that if your constantly changing things.

Training Methods: You hear about; Forced Reps, Partial Reps, Negatives, 21's, Stripping, Supersets, Staggered Sets, and ect. Basically techniques for experienced lifters and really arent for beginners. If you want to get better at something, keep working hard at it!

Progression: Some guys have been Benching, Pressing or Squating the same amount of weight for months or years and never try to progress and usually look the same week after week. If you want to "Shock" your muscles, keep growing and getting stronger. You need to increase the weight. Try adding 5lbs to your lifts each week.

Intensity: Some guys just arent training hard enough. Get focused, squeeze the sh!t out the bar, psyche yourself up, get motivaded. I see some guys in the gym that look like their just doing motions. Get serious about your training. But, don't be the annoying guy screaming every rep of a bicep curl... Some grunting is ok.

Diet: This will vary on the person and what their goals are. But, if your skinny or arent seeing much muscle growth. Your not eating enough food or your not getting enough protein. You need 1-2 grams of protein per pound of body weight. If your trying to gain weight you should eat 3500-4000 calories a day.

Choosing a program: Alot of guys want to dive into some program or copy an advanced weight lifters routine thinking, "If I train like him, I'll look like him." Not necessarily the case... Remember your a beginner and need to stick to the basics. Even the guys you want to be like had to start somewhere. Find out what your goals are, do some research on programs that will help you achieve that goal and get after it.

Good Luck!

-DJ Krueg
 

The Gambler

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Krueg said:
You need 1-2 grams of protein per pound of body weight.

-DJ Krueg
Repped for a great post! My only question is about protein intake. I see protein bars that advertise the fact that they have 30 or 50 grams of protein.... Are you saying that you should be taking in much more than that? Daily?

Again, many thanks!

The Gambler
 

Krueg

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The Gambler said:
Repped for a great post! My only question is about protein intake. I see protein bars that advertise the fact that they have 30 or 50 grams of protein.... Are you saying that you should be taking in much more than that? Daily?

Again, many thanks!

The Gambler
Yes, if your lifting weights and wanting to build muscle, you should be taking in atleast 1 gram of protein per pound of your body weight.

Example, If you weigh 164 pounds you need 164 grams of protein. (DAILY) That may be hard to achieve with just food. So its a good idea to get a good quality egg-milk protein powder and drink it between meals and after your workout to make sure your getting all the proteins and Amino-Acids for muscle growth.

Now we do have to be realistic. Sometimes we cant afford supplements, or cant afford a bunch of food or personal life gets in the way. Its okay as long as we try to stay consistent .
 

The Gambler

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Krueg said:
Yes, if your lifting weights and wanting to build muscle, you should be taking in atleast 1 gram of protein per pound of your body weight.

Example, If you weigh 164 pounds you need 164 grams of protein. (DAILY) That may be hard to achieve with just food. So its a good idea to get a good quality egg-milk protein powder and drink it between meals and after your workout to make sure your getting all the proteins and Amino-Acids for muscle growth.

Now we do have to be realistic. Sometimes we cant afford supplements, or cant afford a bunch of food or personal life gets in the way. Its okay as long as we try to stay consistent .
Gotcha. Many thanks.
 

betheman

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Krueg said:
Yes, if your lifting weights and wanting to build muscle, you should be taking in atleast 1 gram of protein per pound of your body weight.

Example, If you weigh 164 pounds you need 164 grams of protein. (DAILY) That may be hard to achieve with just food. So its a good idea to get a good quality egg-milk protein powder and drink it between meals and after your workout to make sure your getting all the proteins and Amino-Acids for muscle growth.

Now we do have to be realistic. Sometimes we cant afford supplements, or cant afford a bunch of food or personal life gets in the way. Its okay as long as we try to stay consistent .
Good thread overall but this point needs clarifying. the 1 gram of protein should be for each pound of lean body mass. if a guy is 200lbs and carrying a lot of fat, he should not be eating 200grams of protein. you need to calculate your lean body mass by identifying how much fat you carry and subtract those pounds. as a general rule of thumb though, you should be consuming around 120 + grams of protein per day
 

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d!ckmojo

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I don't know... I reckon the best natty results can be achieved by working out all day every day, maybe one rest day per week, but yeah, spending HEEEEAPPPS of time lifting HEEEAAAVVVYY weights, and spending the rest of your time eating.

And getting 10~12 hours sleep per night (or including a day time sleep as well, or whatever).

But yeah, I know its not a reasonable schedule for guys with jobs or commitments or whatever, but, well, I just think the best results come from training long and big, eating long and big, and sleeping long and big.
 

Krueg

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betheman said:
Good thread overall but this point needs clarifying. the 1 gram of protein should be for each pound of lean body mass. if a guy is 200lbs and carrying a lot of fat, he should not be eating 200grams of protein. you need to calculate your lean body mass by identifying how much fat you carry and subtract those pounds. as a general rule of thumb though, you should be consuming around 120 + grams of protein per day
True, protein in-take can vary to a persons needs. I was just using a general rule of thumb for building muscle.
 

Krueg

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d!ckmojo said:
I don't know... I reckon the best natty results can be achieved by working out all day every day, maybe one rest day per week, but yeah, spending HEEEEAPPPS of time lifting HEEEAAAVVVYY weights, and spending the rest of your time eating.

And getting 10~12 hours sleep per night (or including a day time sleep as well, or whatever).

But yeah, I know its not a reasonable schedule for guys with jobs or commitments or whatever, but, well, I just think the best results come from training long and big, eating long and big, and sleeping long and big.
I agree training hard, eating good, and getting enough rest is important to getting good results. Everyones goals will be a little different so, you have to train accordingly. Some guys recover more quickly and can hit the gym more often, others need more rest. The point though is just to get the beginners started off on the right foot, training with the basics and learning the exercises and not over-due things at first.
 

Kerpal

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The biggest one I see is overanalyzing everything. Guys weighing their food portions, reading scientific papers about supplement biochemistry, and fretting over which max effort upper body exercises to cycle between on their conjugate periodization program, when they can't even squat their bodyweight. This **** isn't complicated.
 

XMinister

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Great thread for a beginner. I totally agree. Now to measure the 1 gram of protein...What do you guys think about using BMI for that? I know that BMI is garbage, but that got me thinking.

I agree that a lot of people over analyze. My workout motto is lift heavy, controlled and steady until failure. Eat protein until your full and rest a lot!

I think rest needs a lot of emphasis as well, especially for a beginner. Using machines isn't a bad idea either, depending on one's goals.
 

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