Training journal/log

element00

Member
10+ Year Member
Been wondering about the benefits of keeping a training log. Exercises done, weight, reps etc to be able to more accurately map my progression. I think I've got a pretty good sense of where I'm at, but I go by feel each workout.
How many of you guys keep a journal and does it really help?
 
Been doing it for 20 years.Helps us from going in circles and continue change.As by nature we go in circles.
 
I've turned my cycle log into more of a training/journal log. Its been helpful to go back and see what weight I used. The only thing I didn't care for at first was carrying around pen and paper in the gym, but I've gotten use to it now.
 
I've turned my cycle log into more of a training/journal log. Its been helpful to go back and see what weight I used. The only thing I didn't care for at first was carrying around pen and paper in the gym, but I've gotten use to it now.
Haha yes I am wondering how I'd go with a clipboard :) do you just write after you finished with an exercise? I'm getting a bit shaky in my old age so doubt I could even hold a damn pen between sets
 
I've been logging workouts on forums for less than a year but I have notebooks and loose leaf paper of recorded workouts dating from the late 90s to early 2000s. IMO every serious lifter keeps a notebook or log of their day to day lifting.

What I write in mine includes the date, the lifts performed, reps/sets/weights for ALL work done including my warmups, little notes occasionally about how nutrition and hydration was on that day, how much sleep I got the night before, how the sets felt whether had good bar speed or shit was moving heavy that day, etc.
 
I would definitely recommend at least recording your main lifts. I just log weights sets and reps in the notepad on my phone , then just try beat that the next time. I use it for music when in the gym so already have it in my pocket anyway. There are however many days where I just go by feel, but when doing the main bigger lifts I always log them
 
I've been logging workouts on forums for less than a year but I have notebooks and loose leaf paper of recorded workouts dating from the late 90s to early 2000s. IMO every serious lifter keeps a notebook or log of their day to day lifting.

What I write in mine includes the date, the lifts performed, reps/sets/weights for ALL work done including my warmups, little notes occasionally about how nutrition and hydration was on that day, how much sleep I got the night before, how the sets felt whether had good bar speed or shit was moving heavy that day, etc.
Yeah a dude I was talking to last night also logs how he felt, ate that day. I like the idea but wonder how I can ensure to keep it up. Don't want to start then 3 weeks in forget to take my pen and just let it go. You log immediately after the set or end of workout? If I start I want to ensure it is useful
 
Yeah a dude I was talking to last night also logs how he felt, ate that day. I like the idea but wonder how I can ensure to keep it up. Don't want to start then 3 weeks in forget to take my pen and just let it go. You log immediately after the set or end of workout? If I start I want to ensure it is useful

Simple: leave the notebook and a few pens in your gym bag and never take them out. That way youd have to forget your bag to forget the log book lol. After a few weeks it becomes habit also. It will be as useful as you make it to be and by that I mean how regularly you update it and how detailed the info you put in it is.

For the internet logs I go by memory. I normally remember my last 2wks of workouts down to the weights, reps, sets, and lifts done so it's pretty easy in that regard for me. The notebook I take to the gym I update in between sets and at the end of a certain lift. Sometimes I also add in rest between sets but that's usually enough rest to ensure I can get all the reps in on my next set whether it be 2-3min or 5+
 
Haha yes I am wondering how I'd go with a clipboard :) do you just write after you finished with an exercise? I'm getting a bit shaky in my old age so doubt I could even hold a damn pen between sets

Yeah I write it down after every set, I have to....memory isn't what it use to be. Sometimes its a bit difficult bc of the pump and yeah my hands tend to shake also makes it hard to read what the hell I wrote. I always thought my shaky hands is from the pre-workout and pump, but it could be age....I ain't no spring chicken. Lol It will definitely be a big help to your training. Docd's way of logging everything is impressive and is the best way to do it. Lets us know how it works for ya!!
 
Doc and I have a lot in common on the lifting front. I have workout notebooks from the late 1980's through about 2010 at which time I switched to logging everything online.

It is interesting to go back and look at where I was at 10 or 15 years ago. I never recorded things on a set by set basis but rather put everything down whether on paper or by computer after the workout is done.

It is definitely worth keeping a log as remembering what you did a week or even a month ago can usually be accomplished but you will be surprised over the course of six months or a year how much your numbers may differ from what you remember. I also have found a lot of value in videoing the same lifts at least once every couple of months and comparing form.

Often times when I go back and look at my logs when things were going very well on a particular lift that has now stalled and then go back and look at a video from when the lift was going well I notice some form differences from my current form which gives some a good place to work forward from.
 
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