russklettke.com

November 11, 2009

Weight lifting and getting past the “mirror muscles”

From a personal health and physical function standpoint, it will always make sense to adopt an exercise program that tries to utilize all 600-plus muscles in the body. But the push for aesthetics – the social pressure to achieve an appealing musculature – often leads to the phenomenon known as “mirror muscles.” This is when the exerciser works only the body parts he sees in the mirror, ignoring his backside and legs. This is folly on many levels, not the least of which is how large muscles in the back and legs generate natural testosterone production, which contributes to results everywhere. My blog entry, “Getting Buff: If You Want Bigger Arms, Work Your Legs” on UrbanStag.com discusses ways to do it right (I am the site’s fitness blog writer).

The absolute importance of exercise form

“Dude, how much do you bench?”

This is the most amateurish question asked most frequently, guy to guy, in a gym. It’s not the pounds you lift, however, it’s how you lift them. For more on the whys and hows, see “Getting Buff: It’s Not The Weight, It’s Your Form” on UrbanStag.com where I am the fitness blog writer. This is an e-commerce site where I write about smart weight lifting philosophies in support of a business.


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