When to change your training routines?

Year’s ago, Arnold Schwarzenegger advised his followers to change their weight- training programs every six weeks. The idea was to shock the muscles, which were becoming acclimated to the current training program. The muscles would become sore when the program was changed, and Arnold liked the feeling of being sore. He believed that meant the workouts were more productive. Arnold has been such an influential character in bodybuilding and fitness that his opinion carried much weight, and the idea of changing routines became commonplace in most gyms. The question is, does Arnold’s idea have any validity?


Do not overadapt!

When we do any activity we are not accustomed to, we will experience sore muscles in the following days. It’s known as delayed onset muscle soreness or DOMS. It would resolve in about 72 hours. Soreness lasting 96 hours or more is most likely an indicator of muscle damage or injury.

Does simply making muscles sore again help development? Today’s athletes perform a great deal of weight and strength training. Most do not change their training programs every six weeks – the last thing they need is sore muscles that are at risk for injury – yet their muscular development is very good.

What about other components of training and fitness? When I was a professional strength and conditioning coach, I was careful about introducing new exercises slowly to athletes were accustomed to training for their sport and their weight program a certain way. Changes could produce significant muscle soreness at a point when they could not afford to lose time in practice. New ranges of motion and new movement patterns could also expose a weakness that was actually fully functional in their sport.

The thing is easier than you think - you should change routine when you feel it!
The thing is easier than you think - you should change routine when you feel it!

Recreational trainees can run into the same types of problems. A friend of mine who has more than 15 years of bodybuilding and weight training experience decided to change his routine and start walking stairs for cardio and leg work. The results? He started limping due to pain. An MRI revealed meniscus tears and another problem in his knee. He had been functional and pain-free before walking the stairs. The problem was, he was no longer accustomed to walking stairs repeatedly and most likely aggravated existing meniscus tears that were not causing him any pain previously.

The change in the workout is not always beneficial. There are risks, and it is important to realize that the changes may not be benign.

How to cange training?

There are ways to change the emphasis in a workout without shocking the muscle. Athletes shouldn’t add or subtract an exercise during the off-season or in-season training. He might, however, reduce the exercise in volume and intensity and perform one set of an exercise with lightweight rather than eliminate it. That way, if he wanted to do more of the exercise, all he had to do was increase the weight and volume. There wouldn’t be any delayed-onset muscle soreness because the athlete had been performing the exercise continuously.

Part of the idea of continually changing routines is to avoid boredom in the gym. If you are a life-long trainee, you may find later in life that aches and pains appear when you try new exercises or some of the new fads. It may be best to alternate exercises that you know have worked for you in the past and use caution when adding brand-new ones after 10 or more years of training.

Tags: training, training plan, training routine

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