4 Vital Components of a Successful Resistance Program
April 28, 2015Want to do some weight lifting, but have no idea how to make your workout effective? Get these four basics down and your resistance program will take off!
4 Essential Components of a Resistance Program
1. The Foundation Exercises:
While getting some variety in your program is important, many popular programs put too much emphasis on variety and not enough on the basic exercises that have been shown for decades to produce long term positive changes in the human body. These exercises can be broken into the following three classes:
- Presses: Bench press with a barbell or dumbbells, using a horizontal, incline or decline bench. Overhead presses with a barbell or dumbbells, and all manner of pushups and dips.
- Pulls: Vertical pulls such as pull ups and cable pull downs with all grips, rows with a barbell, dumbbells or cables, and deadlifts.
- Legs: All varieties of squats and lunges.
For a program to be well rounded, it must contain at least one or two exercises from each of the above three classes. These movements will elicit the greatest gains in functionality, performance, and physique improvement in the shortest time, every time.
2. A Practical Schedule:
- Total body training focuses on working the entire body in each training session. This style of training is great because it allows you to spend fewer total days in the gym while still training each muscle group regularly, and it also burns a lot of calories. The downsides are sessions may run long and the workouts tend to be grueling.
- Split programs focus on breaking the body up into different muscle groups which are worked in separate training sessions. This allows you to get more variety during your week, which will prevent boredom, and each individual training session is generally shorter and less strenuous than working the entire body. Some great split routines to try out are Upper Body Day/Lower Body Day and Push Muscles/Pull Muscles/Legs.
3. Adequate Frequency:
A good rule of thumb given the above time frame is to train 2 to 4 times per week with a total body program, or 3 to 5 times per week with a split program to make sure you're hitting each muscle group often enough to maximize results while still recovering properly. Just remember, the more often you're training hard, the more mindful you must be about adequate recovery and injury prevention.
4. Periodization (Changing the workout over time):
We can all intuitively guess that doing the exact same program week in and week out will eventually lead to stalled progress, frustration, and boredom, and the latest exercise science supports this. The way to ensure sustainable progress over the long run is to make sure your program utilizes some form of periodization, or changing of variables over time to allow continued progress. There are many forms of periodization and most belong in a strength and conditioning textbook.
While it seems there's a new great exercise methodology hitting newsfeeds every few months, the above tenants will always be true. Strength training is extremely beneficial, and to get the most out of it make sure that the program you choose to follow includes the foundation exercises, a practical schedule you can easily adhere to, adequate frequency to stimulate progress, and some sort of periodization to keep you progressing over the long haul.