A Look At Overtraining
When I started lifting weights, I fell into the same trap that most novice lifters do; I overtrained. I didn’t overtrain on purpose. I just loved training and believed that more was better. If I lifted for longer or more frequently I believed, I would get bigger faster. I loved the pump that I would get in the gym and like most newbies I believed that you grew inside the gym. Soon I was starting to develop the symptoms of overtraining:
Below are the most common symptoms of overtraining:
- Chronic fatigue.
- Injury
- Sore joints and muscles.
- Lack of ability to get a pump.
- Lack of desire to train.
- Strength loss.
- Lack of appetite.
- Weight loss.
- Insomnia.
- Depression.
- Sickness - constant runny nose.
- Moody.
- Lack of sex drive.
I read an article on a bodybuilding website about overtraining. Honestly I thought it was a joke at the time. I said to myself “how can you overtrain.” After reading the article, I realized that my knowledge of training was the joke. Almost all of the symptoms that this article referred to I had. I decide from then on I would do my best to listen to my body and train smarter not longer and more frequently.
Below are some common mistakes that Novice trainers do, which result in overtraining:
Train Everyday - Most novice trainers love the feeling of the pump and decide and make the mistake of training there body everyday. Training results in microscopic tears in the muscles that will only recover and grow when you have rested and given your body the proper nutrients outside of the gym. If you don’t spend enough time outside the gym resting and eating properly your body will never make those gains.Train Muscle too Frequently - I find that chest and arms are the muscle groups that novice trainers fall victim to the mistake of too much frequency. In the hope of increasing their “GUNS” or there “Bench” novice trainers will end up hit these muscle groups too often. Without adequate recovery time outside the gym your muscle size and strength will not increase and in the case of an over trained muscle most of the time it will atrophy or loss strength. Give your muscles at least 72 hours of rest before hitting them again.
Too Many Sets Per Muscle Group - This is the area where I fell victim too in my early training days. I would do endless sets for all muscle groups in the hope that the more I did the better my results would be. Well, my results were not as good as expected and it was not until I started lowering the overall number of sets and increasing the intensity that my results started to get better.
I have a base line for the average natural lifter for the amount of working sets for the main muscle group:
- Legs (Hamstrings/Quads) - 12-15 Working Sets
- Back - 12 Working Sets
- Chest - 10-12 Working Sets
- Shoulders - 9 Working Sets
- Biceps - 4-6 Working Sets
- Triceps - 4-6 Working Sets
- Calves - 4-6 Working Sets
- Forearms - 2-4 Working Sets
Protein is used to maintain and increase mass muscle. Try to get your protein from:
- Whole eggs
- Egg whites
- Chicken
- Turkey
- Tuna
- Top round steak
- Fillet
- Quality protein powder
- Other lean cuts of meat
Carbs are used as an energy source to fuel your workouts and are store in the muscles as glycogen. During the day opt for a complex carb so you have a steady stream of energy for the day:
- Brown rice
- Sweet potatoes
- Whole wheat pasta
- Whole wheat bread
- Oatmeal
- Sugar
- Dextrose powder
- Wazy maise
- Fruit
- Fruit juice
- Honey
- Olive oil
- Flaxseed oil
- Fish oil
- Cashews
- Walnuts
- Almonds
- Natural peanut butter
- 2 grams of protein per kg of bodyweight.
- 1-2 grams of carbs per kg of bodyweight. This will depend on your body type. The more of a hard gainer you are the more you will need carbs the easier you put on size the less carbs your body will need.
- Include simple carbs only in post workout meal.
- 20-25% of calories should come from healthy fats.
Improper Training Split - This mistake is a little more complicated than the previous ones listed above. One of the biggest reasons is that most of the symptoms of overtraining are not present. Usually the only symptom present is atrophy and strength loss. Most trainers think that they have hit a plateau but actually they have been overtraining muscles because of a lack of knowledge on how to make an effective training split.
When making you own training split you have to realize, direct training of some muscle groups results in the indirect training of others. For Example:
- When performing any kind of press for either chest or shoulders you are indirectly working your triceps.
- When performing and kind of pulling exercise for your back you are indirectly working your biceps and forearms.
- Deadlifts recruit your entire back but indirectly recruit your legs and forearms.
- Squats recruit all leg muscles but also indirectly recruit your lower back.
Below is a sample training split:
- Day 1 - Chest/Triceps
- Day 2 - Back/ Biceps
- Day 3 - Legs
- Day 4 - Shoulder/Arms
- Day 5 - Off
- Day 6 - Off
- Repeat
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