Re: Well hell may be freezing over (workout)
Posted: Tue Sep 23, 2008 7:48 am
jules, every time i read one of your posts i realize you're an absolute moron
Your world is waiting...
https://quake3world.com/forum/
Throw yourself under a bus.[xeno]Julios wrote:i experimented with HST for a while but that required too many calories. Yea I've kinda stuck with what worked and have been happy with the strength and mass gains and it's hella convenient for my schedule (twice a week in gym for 45 min each session).
I just hurt my shoulder doing either dips or chins and it scared the hell outta me - without my shoulder my ability to lift with my upper body is severely compromised. My form is pretty good, but I get the feeling that one bad rep with the weights i'm doing can have long lasting consequences. And i'm not even confident that my body can handle the weights even with good form. I know from rock climbing that beginners tend to injure their finger tendons because their muscular strength is stronger than their tendon strength. But finger tendon strength can be gradually conditioned. I wonder if it's possible to injure tendons and ligaments in the shoulder in a similar fashion. I go very deep with my dips - perhaps I should adjust my range.
Though it is possible I injured myself doing a set of just bodyweight dips during cooldown - hard to tell exactly when and what caused it since i didn't feel it at the time.
I like the idea of experimenting with a different scheme, while still doing the heavy weights once every few weeks. Will be interesting to see how my body responds to the increased time-under-tension.
Yea, any program with heavy dipping and low reps should place considerable emphasis on keeping the cuffs healthy and there are some very simple and effective exercises to do it. All that being said, I've talked to a lot of people who lift recreationally, competitively, whatever...jules you are more analytical about the whole thing than any of them...even my old colleague who was the world record holder in the squat at 1,149 lbs. The guy was on the cover of powerlifting magazine, wrote articles for them, his livelihood depended in large part on the effectiveness of the training strategies he used...and I think you have him beat hands down in the attention to detail you apply to your training and the eventualities you are always preparing yourself for. Not being sarcastic, but I think its quite possible you are over analyzing things and micromanaging your training to the point of diminishing returns. Everyone strains a shoulder or a pec or a leg from time to time - injuries can happen from time to time no matter how careful you are, but you shouldn't it 'scare you to death.'feedback wrote:You probably hurt a muscle in your rotator cuff from doing dips too deep. Spend time on RC exercises.
Possibly - next time i go in for treatment for my groin I'll ask for a diagnosis. RC is comprised of four tendons right? The pain is coming from the part of my shoulder nearer to my pec - so it's more medial I guess. It's actually healing pretty well right now.feedback wrote:You probably hurt a muscle in your rotator cuff from doing dips too deep. Spend time on RC exercises.
ek wrote:jules, every time i read one of your posts i realize you're an absolute moron
Yes you're waiting for your groin to heal BUT IT ISN'T EXACTLY A GROIN HERNIA, IT'S A STRAINED QUADRACEP.[xeno]Julios wrote:it takes forever for my tendon injuries to heal - i've been trying to heal a groin injury (not exactly groin, but rectus femoris) for a long time now and it's a stubborn motherfucker. I also have two foot injuries and a hamstring tendon that are taking forever to heal (everything but the shoulder is from sports).
I'd rather play it safe for now and lift lighter - this whole idea was actually one of the guys that works at my gym who's seen me lift for years.
Nothing to lose by trying, and I'm frankly curious to experiment with a new rep scheme.
The RC aren't tendons, they're muscles. The muscle you probably hurt is teres minor, on the anterior and medial side of the humeral tuberosity. The RC muscles are very important, because your arms aren't locked to your body in the shoulder joint- the shoulder facet is actually very shallow and the only reason your arm can stay attached is because it's held there by a kind of nest of muscles. If those muscles are weakened, then they will strain themselves trying to hold your arms to your body, or worse (tear and create permanent injury).[xeno]Julios wrote:Possibly - next time i go in for treatment for my groin I'll ask for a diagnosis. RC is comprised of four tendons right? The pain is coming from the part of my shoulder nearer to my pec - so it's more medial I guess. It's actually healing pretty well right now.feedback wrote:You probably hurt a muscle in your rotator cuff from doing dips too deep. Spend time on RC exercises.
But yea, I've been thinking about doing RC exercises for a while now - will look into it.
it's the tendon at the upper end of the quad. I clarified earlier that it wasn't exactly a groin injury but it's right around that area.feedback wrote:Yes you're waiting for your groin to heal BUT IT ISN'T EXACTLY A GROIN HERNIA, IT'S A STRAINED QUADRACEP.[xeno]Julios wrote:it takes forever for my tendon injuries to heal - i've been trying to heal a groin injury (not exactly groin, but rectus femoris) for a long time now and it's a stubborn motherfucker. I also have two foot injuries and a hamstring tendon that are taking forever to heal (everything but the shoulder is from sports).
I'd rather play it safe for now and lift lighter - this whole idea was actually one of the guys that works at my gym who's seen me lift for years.
Nothing to lose by trying, and I'm frankly curious to experiment with a new rep scheme.
MORON MORON MORON