Are you feeling overloaded by the information presented to you on the internet about health and fitness? Are you unsure of what your next steps should be? Have you gotten so much information that you are almost paralyzed by it?
Head over to http://fitnessexpose.com for a free eCourse on how to get into the best shape of your life using basic principles that apply to everyone. Comne learn how to conduct the Experiment of One.
My Training Philosophy
You can never work hard enough because you can always go harder than you just did.
Honestly, I was not happy with my workout today. I did not feel the fire in the belly that I think I should have felt. I made progress on most of the exercises. I am now at the full rack on my standing calf raises and will have to start using a barbell across my back if I want to lift any heavier than where I am at now. I took it easy on squats because my lower back was stiff and sore and I didn't want to risk injury. As you review my log you probably wonder why I am unhappy with the workout. An example would be my deadlifts. A few workouts ago I did 255 x 8 and this time I managed 250 x 8. When I quit I immediately thought "You probably had 4 more repetitions in you if only you'd tried harder!" I was angry with myself. At the same time, I am not going to beat myself up over one (perceived) bad workout. I simply thought of my training philosophy — You can never train hard enough because you can always go harder than you just did.
Exercise the brain with the Thought of the Day!
Don't sweat the small stuff. Have a bad workout? Vow to do better the next time!
Get a discussion started by answering the question!
Do you feel you need to increase the intensity of your lifting workouts? Comment this post to answer the question.
Timed reps certainly make a big difference and increase the intensity.
Reply to this