if you over train how do u know it? and why is it bad for you? Isn't working till faliure the same thing as over training?
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Thread: why is overtraining bad?
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12-04-2004, 07:12 AM #1
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12-04-2004, 07:14 AM #2
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12-04-2004, 07:48 AM #3
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12-04-2004, 07:54 AM #4
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12-04-2004, 07:57 AM #5
- Join Date: May 2004
- Location: Massachusetts, United States
- Age: 40
- Posts: 4,681
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gaining muscle is about recovery. your body is responding to the training and with the right fuel (good diet) and enough time to do it (consistently getting a good night sleep), it will build muscle. but there is only a certain amount of training and if you do too much, it will be impossible for your body to recover from. going overboard once in a while in one workout wont hurt you too bad, but consistently doing too much will keep you from growing.
going to failure isnt overtraining, thats just a technique while lifting, overtraining is a long term thing thats actually called overtraining syndromeThe Chronicles of Gibblets
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=806401
Gibblets' Summer of Hell: Cutting Phase 2005
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=461571
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12-04-2004, 07:57 AM #6
I don't think overtraining is that big of an issue, provided you get proper nutrition. Example: I used to do 12-15 sets for large muscles and 6-9 for small muscles when I was eating all the right stuff I had to eat. Right now I simply can't afford to eat that, so I've dropped my sets to a max of 9 for large muscles and 6 for small ones, because, if my body just doesn't have the resources to repair my muscles, what's the point of training them so hard?
One thing that might happen is that your body will take resources from some of your muscles to repair the damaged ones. Then you train the muscles from which the resources were taken, then you don't have enough protein from your own food so your body takes aminos directly from other muscles, and the cycle continues, and you simply won't gain mass/strength this way.
Eat right, train right, sleep right, and you should be fine. Overtraining is really not that scary.
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12-04-2004, 08:11 AM #7
I used to over train when i was younger cause i dident know anything about training or reps and sets so id just do as many as i could 1 time infact i got my first sign of a bicep after a friend challenged me to a barbell curl to see who could do more i dont remember how many he did but i did a little over 200 (only 20 pounds on the bar i was like 10yo) and i considerd that to be over training i couldent even put a hot pocket in the microwave for 2 days it was to heavy
Age: 16
Height: 6'1
Weight: 150
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12-04-2004, 08:17 AM #8
I remember the very first time I did a legs-only day. Before that I had done the occasional squat, leg extensions, curls, whatever. Then I started coming here and I put a decent routine together, and off to leg day I was. Four sets of squats, of leg extensions and curls, and presses, followed by lunges and glute kickbacks. Holy ****ing ****. I couldn't walk properly for 6 days after that, and when it was actually starting to feel 'ok', it was leg day again. What a crock of ****.
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12-04-2004, 06:23 PM #9
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12-04-2004, 06:27 PM #10
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12-04-2004, 06:56 PM #11
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12-04-2004, 08:16 PM #12
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12-05-2004, 05:18 PM #13
- Join Date: May 2004
- Location: Massachusetts, United States
- Age: 40
- Posts: 4,681
- Rep Power: 402
not necessarily. a friend of mine has been toiling in mediocrity for years now, hes gotten weaker. he came on here once, posted some pics, someone told him he had a weak chest so bam, he starts working it almost every day, doing way too much volume, he went from benching 185 for about 5 reps to getting 155 on a good day. its sad to watch. then he came on here once asking for help with bulking, and some idiot just said something about pita wraps and posted a bunch of pictures of food. its unfortunate. hes waaaay overtraining, but hes in denial about it and thinks one of these days hes gonna magically sprout a chest by continuing to do what hes doing. i dont think you can always know.
The Chronicles of Gibblets
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=806401
Gibblets' Summer of Hell: Cutting Phase 2005
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=461571
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