Test Yourself
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posted by The Glowing Edge Lisa Creech Bledsoe: Speaker, writer, media ninja, Apple fangirl, boxer chick. Online a bunch. Otherwise in the gym. |
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After recently learning my body fat percentage I decided to incorporate heavier weightlifting into my training in order to trade a bit of fat weight for muscle weight. I dreaded it, frankly. For some reason I had decided that I was already lifting heavy enough weights, and in fact I think I had it in my mind that I couldn’t lift heavier weights.
One day in the gym I challenged that assumption.
Normally I do chest presses with dumbells, and I will pick up two 20 lb weights and do three sets of 15 reps. I’m feeling silly even telling you this, because on Test Day I picked up 22.5’s and did an easy set, then 25’s, then 30’s. With absolutely no difficulty. None whatsoever. I was sure this was a fluke.
I finished out arm and back exercises as usual then went over to the leg machines, still suspicious. Normally I’ll set the extensions on 30 lbs and do three sets of 15 reps. On Test Day I loaded 50 lbs and moved easily through two sets. Then 70 lbs. Another set, no problem. This was becoming embarrassing.
On leg presses I always pick 90 lbs, simply because anything over 100 sounds enormous. Test Day: I loaded 150, since it is more than I weigh and it seemed like a serious challenge. It was easy enough to finish two sets. In a moment of “Oh, this is just stupid, I’m not Superwoman,” I jacked it up to 210 and found I couldn’t even get the plates off the stack. “See,” I told myself, pulling it back down to 190, where I completed my last set, but had to work for it. But 190! A cool hundred pounds more than I had been doing! Why didn’t you tell me I was such a slacker?
I’m stronger than I thought. I’m Super Jr. Woman. Miz Up-and-Coming.
I’m going to keep shifting more of my exercises up until I can’t complete my long sets, but I’m going a bit at a time to avoid over-stressing anything. It’s been about 6 upgraded weightlifting workouts so far, and there have been no negative repercussions, problems, or difficulties.
Let my oversight be your lesson: test yourself! You never know what you can do until you try. Trite as hell, but also true. I’m not sure how I missed it all this time.
But I’m on my way now.
Image credit: mrflip on Flickr
View Original Post at theglowingedge.com
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- Filed Under:
- Boxing, Sports, SportsPLUS, More, Training












There are 5 comments on this post. Join the discussion!
robm
Nice report. Perhaps it will inspire other women to do the same. Congrats, also, on your newfound strength. Who knows, Lisa? If you keep going like this you might end up with guns as mighty as Tina Lockwood's:
http://www.athleticwomen.com/blog/archives/150-The-story-of-Tina-Lockwood.html
:-)
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 11:39am EDT
Lisa Creech Bledsoe
Loved the post you ref'd. Wonder how long it takes to really see solid musculature start to make its appearance...? It will be fun to find out!
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 11:59am EDT
robm
It depends somewhat on natural ability (genes, if you like). Many women start seeing results from consistent heavy lifting almost right away. (I would guess that you fall into this category, based on your lifts so far.) Sometimes in as little as a few weeks. For others it may take a little longer, but with time any woman can make tremendous gains in musculature and strength.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 12:53pm EDT
AnnGaff
Lisa, you've definitely inspired me! I've always been too stuck in the "running rut" - i.e., that's all I do to keep in shape, besides a few core exercises. I need to mix it up to kep my body guessing. Um, but I'm not brave enough to get my body fat tested just yet :)
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 4:23pm EDT
Lisa Creech Bledsoe
Ann, I think there's some kind of cross-training principle at work that our bodies need to perform really well. (That's a blatant appeal for a WTS sage to post me up something!) Thanks for the comments, y'all. Color me encouraged.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 4:30pm EDT