Resistance training is a great way to achieve strength and overall body fitness. Weight training, strength training, or weight lifting are alternative names for resistance training.
People will engage in resistance training to achieve various goals, including:
- Maintaining a level of fitness as part of a lifestyle.
- Weight loss
- To improve performance with specific functions, like a sport.
- To rehabilitate muscles. Physiotherapy programs for rehabilitation often include a resistance component.
- Body building to increase muscle mass or to appear a certain way.
The benefits of resistance training include increased muscle, tendon and ligament strength, bone density, flexibility, tone, metabolic rate, and postural support.
Weight training can either be done at home or at a gym. The advantage of training at home is low cost and ease of fitting workouts into your schedule. The benefits of joining a gym include access to more equipment and advice and encouragement from fitness trainers or other members. There are also online communities that you can join, such as CrossFit that give you some of the benefits of joining a gym but let you work out at home.
Strength Muscle Distributor Machine vs. Endurance Muscle Distributor Machine[]
When you go to the gym, you might see a variety of people in the weight training section. Not everyone lifts weights the same way. Why is this? Well, it is because there are two different ways to train your muscles when working out. Muscular strength is defined as the ability to exert a maximal amount of force for a short amount of time. Muscular endurance, on the other hand, would be defined as the ability to do a repetitive task for the maximal amount of time possible. The stereotypical person who would be lifting weights with a muscular strength goal will most likely be big and bulky, whereas someone who will be lifting weights with a muscular endurance goal will be more cut and defined. The training plan is simple but different for the two. Muscular strength oriented workout plans will have the participant lifting heavier weights for less repetitions in a set while muscular endurance oriented workout plans will have the participant lifting lighter weights for more repetitions in a set. A muscular strength workout would be something like: bench press 200 pounds, 3 sets of 6-8 reps. A muscular endurance workout would be something like: bench press 150 pounds, 5 sets of 12-15 reps.
Dynamic Muscle Distributor Machines[]
There are various forms of resistance.
- Weights (mass under gravity, like a barbell or sandbag).
- Springs and elastics, which roughly follow Hooke's Law. Although the resistance will increase with the distance of the motion, the resistance is typically more consistent through the lift than a weight. This is because of momentum—it takes a lot of force to get a weight moving and very little to complete the lift once the mass is in motion.
You don't need an expensive gym set to start training. A simple bar and a few weights are all you need. Even if you don't have any weights, you can lift anything heavy or even your own body weight with push-ups or chin-ups.
There are a lot of fancy machines and equipment out there, but most serious weightlifters generally prefer simple free weights. Sandbags, water-filled kegs, and tractor tires are examples of cheap and functional free weights. The benefits of free weights include cost and that they don't over-isolate a single muscle. The problem with over-isolating a single muscle is that, in general, to lift something real, your body relies on all sorts of different muscles to stabilize and balance the weight and your body. If you train only a single muscle, then it will be strong enough to lift a really heavy weight, but the muscles around it will give out, and you risk injury. The benefits of weight machines are that they are good at targeting various muscle groups that may be difficult to target with free weights. Also, weight machines can be safer, as they avoid the risk of injury from dropping weights.
Lifts[]
Some free weight lifts that can be performed with a simple bar and some weights include:
Lower body[]
Upper body[]
- Bench press (WP)
- Chest fly (WP)
- Bent-over row (WP) can be done 45 to 90 degree bend for various emphases.
- Upright row (WP)
- Shoulder press (WP)
- Military press (WP)
- Lateral raise (WP)
- Elbow extension (WP)
- Elbow curl (WP)
- Back Exercises
- Bicep Exercises
- Chest Exercises
- Leg Exercises
- Shoulder Exercises
- Tricep Exercises
Bodyweight movements[]
Machine movements[]
- Leg press (WP)
- Knee extension (WP)
- Knee curl (WP)
- Seated calf raise (WP)
- Pulldown (WP)
- Pushdown (WP)
- Back extension (WP)