Sunday, October 11, 2020

Sample Weight Training Program

I'm ready to try weight training!

...What do I do?

I hear that from lots of folks, and it's a totally reasonable question. Often, though, you either get mysterious, not-useful-for-beginners answers, or you get so inundated with information that it's downright paralyzing.


Have I Got a Deal For You!

With this post, I'm going to try to give you a solid starting point. And I'm not going to charge you a penny! But...there's still a cost. I'm gonna make you read. And you might have to do a little bit of internet research. First, the disclaimers: 
  • I'm not a professional trainer. I'm just a guy with experience who reads a lot. 
  • If I list an exercise you're not familiar with, Google it with the word "form" added. For example, "face pulls form".
  • If I use a term you don't understand, take a peek in my mini weight training dictionary.
  • If you're trying an exercise for the first time, practice the form with a very light weight (an empty bar or very light dumbbells or select the lightest weight on your machine)
  • Your first few workouts will be for figuring out how much weight to use. For more details on how to do that, read this post.

I'm going to suggest a 3-day split. That means you will be doing a cycle of three different workouts, each one on a different day. You don't have to always do "Push Day" on a Monday, just make sure that any day you work out, you do the next workout in the cycle. For example:

MONDAY - Push day
TUESDAY - Pull day
WEDNESDAY - rest (no workout)
THURSDAY - Legs day
FRIDAY - rest
SATURDAY - Push day
SUNDAY - rest
NEXT MONDAY - Pull day
NEXT TUESDAY - Legs day
...and so on...

Here's the Program

Each exercise, I will also specify which muscle group is being trained. That's important, because if you want to try a different exercise, you should find one that works the same muscle group. For each exercise, do 3 sets of 8 to 10 reps and rest about a minute between sets. To get more detail on what that means, please check out this post.

DAY 1, "Push Day" for shoulders (delts), chest (pecs), and triceps

  • Bench press OR dumbbell chest press (chest)
  • Incline butterfy OR cable fly (chest)
  • Decline press OR dips OR assisted dips (chest/triceps)
  • cable press downs OR close-grip bench press (triceps)
  • Military press OR overhead dumbbell press (shoulders)
  • Dumbbell OR cable side lateral raise (shoulders)

DAY 2, "Pull Day" for lower back, upper back (lats, rear delts, and traps), and biceps

  • deadlift OR sumo deadlift (lower back)
  • pull-ups OR assisted pull-ups OR cable pull-downs (upper back - lats)
  • cable low row OR chest-supported row (lats and biceps)
  • bent-over reverse fly OR band pull-aparts (upper back - rear delts and traps)
  • hammer curls OR concentration curls (biceps)
  • face pulls OR dumbbell shrugs (upper back - traps)

DAY 3, "Legs Day" for lower body (quads, hamstrings, glutes, and calves) and abs

  • barbell back squat OR goblet squat (quads)
  • lunges OR reverse lunges OR step-ups (quads)
  • leg curl machine OR leg press with feet high and wide (hamstrings)
  • Romanian deadlift OR bridges OR hip thrusters (hamstrings and glutes)
  • calf raises OR leg press calf extension (calves)
  • weighted crunches OR planks (abs)


How Much Weight Should I Lift?

Here's a post all about that. But in a nutshell, select a weight for each exercise that you can do for 8 to 10 reps. Figuring this out might take up your first three workouts, but that’s okay. Then aim for doing 3 sets of 8 to 10 reps of each exercise. If you succeed at doing 3 sets of 10 on a certain exercise, then you're probably ready to increase the weight for that exercise by 5 to 10% next time.

Don't forget, this program will get you started, but it's not perfect. Over time, be willing to make changes! My favorite website for learning new things about weight training is t-nation.com. Unlike me, those folks have actual degrees in this stuff.

Hope this all helps!

The Friendly Lifter

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