Quick Warmup Question
- matter2003
- Posts: 987
- Joined: Tue Apr 19, 2011 12:36 pm
- Location: Depew,NY
Quick Warmup Question
I am starting my feast workouts 1-5, and have a quick question regarding my warmups.
When I am doing warmups, am I supposed to do warmups for both exercises or just the 1st one...ie, should I be doing warmups of both bench and pullovers, or just warmup with bench and after my work set, go straight into work set of pullovers?
I did some warmups for each one, but wanted to see if this was correct or if I just need to do the warmups for the first set but not the superset
When I am doing warmups, am I supposed to do warmups for both exercises or just the 1st one...ie, should I be doing warmups of both bench and pullovers, or just warmup with bench and after my work set, go straight into work set of pullovers?
I did some warmups for each one, but wanted to see if this was correct or if I just need to do the warmups for the first set but not the superset
- matter2003
- Posts: 987
- Joined: Tue Apr 19, 2011 12:36 pm
- Location: Depew,NY
I'm 36, and I totally agree with that! I did some warmups for both, so I will just continue doing this unless Rob instructs me not to...drtda wrote:You can really do it either way. It depends on how quickly you can warm up. Some of that depends on your age as well. At 20 I only did minimal warm-ups and could get away with it. At almost 40, I'm smart enough now to do plenty of warm-ups as injuries don't heal nearly as quickly.
Always incorporate warm ups with every wo, even a brief 10-15 minute "low intensity walk on the tread mill" can be benificial before training. It helps to icrease blood flow to mucsles, and thus decreases tendonitis issues. I know Rob has a post discussing this, but not sure where to direct you to find it. I'm 48 years of age (old) and have found warming up and post training stretching very critical to staying healthy and decreasing injury. Hope this helps.
- matter2003
- Posts: 987
- Joined: Tue Apr 19, 2011 12:36 pm
- Location: Depew,NY
Thanks for this...I usually do a quick 5 minute warmup on an elliptical at a fairly low pace...perhaps I will stretch it to 10 mins after reading this...KE wrote:Always incorporate warm ups with every wo, even a brief 10-15 minute "low intensity walk on the tread mill" can be benificial before training. It helps to icrease blood flow to mucsles, and thus decreases tendonitis issues. I know Rob has a post discussing this, but not sure where to direct you to find it. I'm 48 years of age (old) and have found warming up and post training stretching very critical to staying healthy and decreasing injury. Hope this helps.
The post linked to in his signature contains the warmup resource.KE wrote:Always incorporate warm ups with every wo, even a brief 10-15 minute "low intensity walk on the tread mill" can be benificial before training. It helps to icrease blood flow to mucsles, and thus decreases tendonitis issues. I know Rob has a post discussing this, but not sure where to direct you to find it. I'm 48 years of age (old) and have found warming up and post training stretching very critical to staying healthy and decreasing injury. Hope this helps.
I do warmups for both. Look at it this way, you're greasing the groove for both movements, via the CNS. It's not just about blood flow, it's the CNS...matter2003 wrote:I'm 36, and I totally agree with that! I did some warmups for both, so I will just continue doing this unless Rob instructs me not to...drtda wrote:You can really do it either way. It depends on how quickly you can warm up. Some of that depends on your age as well. At 20 I only did minimal warm-ups and could get away with it. At almost 40, I'm smart enough now to do plenty of warm-ups as injuries don't heal nearly as quickly.
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Best warm-up I have found is 8 -12 minutes of brisk full body joint mobility work - full range of motion - every joint in the body. Do reps at approximately the same speed as you will be working out. ie if lifting, go at moderate speed. If speed or fight training, go each rep faster than the last .
Tunes in the CNS connectivity, bathes the joints, soothes the tendons and ligaments, balances the myofascia, warms the muscles sufficiently – especially if you’re already tactically fit. It’s prehab! Reduces the chances for injury significantly. Much slower paced full body joint mobility work is also a great warm down… helps solidify gains and proprioceptic ‘learning’.
Locally it’s sad to watch - I observe that lifters are the ones who need it most and are also the ones least likely to do it…
Tunes in the CNS connectivity, bathes the joints, soothes the tendons and ligaments, balances the myofascia, warms the muscles sufficiently – especially if you’re already tactically fit. It’s prehab! Reduces the chances for injury significantly. Much slower paced full body joint mobility work is also a great warm down… helps solidify gains and proprioceptic ‘learning’.
Locally it’s sad to watch - I observe that lifters are the ones who need it most and are also the ones least likely to do it…