jago25_98
New Member
If my muscle is sore I feel I've worked it hard enough and it's time to move on. However, I hear that this could be irrelevent?
I've enjoyed using soreness as an indicator of a good workout and when ready to train again. Can I continue to do so?
"Get a plan, and make sure it works. Don't rely on "da pump" to make
you big and strong.
If this style of training has been meeting your goals...then don't
change it. However, if it hasn't, than don't get apathetic. Find the
changes that need to be made, and make them. "
hmm... well there is definately progress but I think its slow and all I know...
from the sticky: https://thinksteroids.com/community/threads/8507
"Sometimes the training means that
induce soreness also happen to be the same ones that provide a
stimulus for progress in strength at a particular time. Alas,
this is not always the case or training would be a simple case
of making yourself sore, waiting for the soreness to go away,
and then making yourself sore again."
^ what I've been doing :/
"Hogg you mentioned that soreness in the pecs, bi's and hams was a
good indicator that more rest should be taken for those areas. Why
is that? Succeptibility to tearing?"
"By not training when
you are sore, you can (and may) decrease your preparation."
"One thing i know for sure, is that it has nothing to do
with progress"
" One thing is certain, that old "no pain no gain, you should not miss a
workout even if you are sore" gym-lore recommendation is
bullshit....when a muscle is sore, it is definitely not recovered"
" training while sore will not lead to muscle tears, if it did,
every strength athlete"
"If your quads
are still sore, are you going to ramp your training poundages up
past 80% 1RM? Many on this board commonly do the same routine week
after week, session after session, increasing the weight,
decreasing the reps, using momentum to complete a lift rather than
calling it quits when the muscle is no longer able to drive the
load.....and training in this manner can have severe consequences,
perhaps not if you are mildly sore....still feeling a little
tenderness when you stretch out a muscle, but chronically
sore....when your glutes hurt sooo bad that you have trouble
getting out of your chair or when your arms hurt so bad that you
wince in pain when you pick up a coffee pot.....obviously degree
of soreness is something that needs to be defined"
"This is
why most (not all) of the elite Powerlifters train
bench and back in the same plane of movement
(horizontal). In addition to that, many train both
bench and rows in the same day"
^ interesting, maybe dividing days into back and front isn't such a good idea
I've enjoyed using soreness as an indicator of a good workout and when ready to train again. Can I continue to do so?
"Get a plan, and make sure it works. Don't rely on "da pump" to make
you big and strong.
If this style of training has been meeting your goals...then don't
change it. However, if it hasn't, than don't get apathetic. Find the
changes that need to be made, and make them. "
hmm... well there is definately progress but I think its slow and all I know...
from the sticky: https://thinksteroids.com/community/threads/8507
"Sometimes the training means that
induce soreness also happen to be the same ones that provide a
stimulus for progress in strength at a particular time. Alas,
this is not always the case or training would be a simple case
of making yourself sore, waiting for the soreness to go away,
and then making yourself sore again."
^ what I've been doing :/
"Hogg you mentioned that soreness in the pecs, bi's and hams was a
good indicator that more rest should be taken for those areas. Why
is that? Succeptibility to tearing?"
"By not training when
you are sore, you can (and may) decrease your preparation."
"One thing i know for sure, is that it has nothing to do
with progress"
" One thing is certain, that old "no pain no gain, you should not miss a
workout even if you are sore" gym-lore recommendation is
bullshit....when a muscle is sore, it is definitely not recovered"
" training while sore will not lead to muscle tears, if it did,
every strength athlete"
"If your quads
are still sore, are you going to ramp your training poundages up
past 80% 1RM? Many on this board commonly do the same routine week
after week, session after session, increasing the weight,
decreasing the reps, using momentum to complete a lift rather than
calling it quits when the muscle is no longer able to drive the
load.....and training in this manner can have severe consequences,
perhaps not if you are mildly sore....still feeling a little
tenderness when you stretch out a muscle, but chronically
sore....when your glutes hurt sooo bad that you have trouble
getting out of your chair or when your arms hurt so bad that you
wince in pain when you pick up a coffee pot.....obviously degree
of soreness is something that needs to be defined"
"This is
why most (not all) of the elite Powerlifters train
bench and back in the same plane of movement
(horizontal). In addition to that, many train both
bench and rows in the same day"
^ interesting, maybe dividing days into back and front isn't such a good idea
