Vary Your Workout by Changing Reps, Not Exercises!
May 11, 2015Variety in a workout can definitely be a good thing, but there are some fundamental exercises you should always include and improve upon.
The problem is—they're hard! Ask any trainer if they have a client who gets excited about lunges, for example. Odds are, aside from a few crazy weekend warriors, not a single exercise participant seeks these exercises out of enjoyment. Instead, many fitness enthusiasts seek variety in their training programs via newfangled exercises as a means to shake up a stale workout routine and to try and get around those awful lunges.
Fundamental Movements
While including a diverse set of exercises in your regular rotation is beneficial, it's very important to maintain these top movements and strive to improve your performance in them. There's a very good reason every trainer on the planet forces his or her clients to do lunges; they may not be fun, but they work. In fact, any of the following exercises can be considered a fundamental movement that should be included in almost everyone's training schedule:
- Presses: With free weights, body weight, machines, or cables. Performed horizontally, vertically, or at varying angles.
- Pulls: With body weight, machines, or free weights in a vertical (pull-ups), horizontal (rows), or total body movement (deadlifts).
- All varieties of squats and lunges.
Training these large, multi-joint movements on a regular basis will help strengthen the body, build muscle, and burn fat, which virtually everyone wants!
Variety without Changing the Movement
As you can see, there are an unlimited number of ways to vary your program while still getting in these time-tested movements. Now, rather than skipping lunges in favor of something newer and, well, easier, let's get creative and get back to work!