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Lean, Sexy and Hard -- Part 1
Weight Training for Women
By Joel Marion
First published at
www.johnberardi.com, Dec
1 2003.
I don't know about you, but I'm getting rather tired of all the stereotypical
nonsense surrounding women and weight training.
"Deadlifts? No, no. That's a man's exercise; we don’t want to hurt ourselves
now do we? You better stick to this here butt blaster instead. Don't go too
heavy now; that'll just make you big and bulky like those female bodybuilders.
If you want to ‘tone up,’ you need to go for the ‘burn’ with high reps and
just a little bit of weight. Okay, now over to the hip adductor machine. This
one is great for targeting and toning up those inner thighs."
And as if the abundance of misinformation spouted out by the average lay
person regarding women and weight training isn't enough, these words actually
came from the mouth of a "certified" personal trainer.
A man's exercise? What the heck is that? Are women so incompetent and weak
that they can't manage to conduct exercises with barbells and dumbbells or
something? Higher reps to tone up? Big and bulky? Man, I wanted to clock this
guy; however, instead of "laying the smack down" on his misinformed butt, I
decided to write this article instead. Let's take a look at how a woman should
train and at the same time dispel some of the common misconceptions regarding
female trainees:
1. If you want to be lean, sexy, and hard, you should train with
weights.
A desirable female physique is one that can only be achieved by moving some
serious iron in the weight room! But what about all the talk about weight
training making women big and bulky? First, it is physiologically impossible
for you as a woman to put on large amounts of muscle mass; your body's
hormonal makeup is not one that will allow you to do so. God never intended
for women to look like men (go figure), so he made the chemistry of each
gender's respective bodies different. Regardless of how you train, how often
you train, how much protein you eat, etc, you're not going to even come close
to the big, bulky physique of a female bodybuilder. It will not happen. That
look is only obtainable by one means: steroids. Because their natural hormonal
profiles would never allow them to get that "big," they resort to changing
their body's chemistry through the use of illegal drugs. Secondly, if the
right training method is chosen, the hypertrophic (growth) response to
resistance training can be even further reduced. This brings us to our next
point.
2. If you want to be lean, sexy, and hard, you should train HEAVY.
Yeah, I know what they told you, lighten the load and go for the burn--
hogwash. To comprehend why this is indeed nonsense, we have to understand a
few things about muscle tone in general. There are two types of muscle tone;
myogenic and neurogenic. Don’t get thrown off by the sciency words; the first
simply refers to your muscle tone at rest. It is affected by the density of
your muscles; the greater the density of your muscles, the harder and firmer
you will appear. Heavy training increases your myogenic tone through the
hypertrophy (growth) of the contractile proteins myosin and actin (myosin and
actin are by far the most dense components of skeletal muscle). Training in
higher rep ranges promotes more sarcoplasmic (fluid) hypertrophy, which in
turn yields a "softer" pumped look.
If you want to be hard, firm, tight, etc,
the latter is certainly not the way to go. The second aspect of a muscles'
tone is neurogenic tone, or the tone that is expressed when movements or
contractions occur. Again, lower rep training comes out on top as training
with heavy loads will increase the sensitivity of alpha and gamma motor
neurons, thus increasing neurogenic tone when conducting even the simplest of
movements (i.e. walking, extending your arm to point, etc). Finally, as
alluded to in point number one, training with heavy loads and low volume (sets
x reps) is the best way to get hard and strong, but not big. Muscular
hypertrophy is generally a response to a high volume work output; therefore,
by keeping the sets and reps low with heavy training, you wont have to fear
getting overly big (this really isn't even an issue due to the physiological
reasons mentioned earlier).
Why then is it commonly recommended that women
train with lighter loads? Well, there are a couple reasons. First, there is
the typical stereotype that women are weak, fragile creatures who can't handle
anything more than pushups on their knees and bicep curls with pink dumbbells.
Try telling that to 123 lb Mary Jeffrey who bench presses a world record 275
lbs and you'll likely get smacked upside the head with a 45 lb plate. Give me
a break. Secondly, the belief that high-rep training increases muscle tone is
100% myth. Strength training guru and Muscle Media contributor Pavel
Tsatsouline explains this quite nicely, "Your muscle fibers are like mouse
traps—they go off by themselves, but need energy to be reset to contract
again. A dead body is out of ATP, the energy compound that relaxes the
muscles…A high rep workout exhausts ATP in your muscle and leads to temporary
hardness…The only way to make such 'tone' last is by killing yourself." Hmmm,
sounds like fun to me. Pavel goes on to note, "You better get on a first name
basis with heavy dead[lift]s if you are after a hard butt!" This brings us to
our third and final point.
3. If you want to be lean, sexy, and hard, you should train with
compound, multi-joint movements.
Forget the butt blaster, forget leg extensions and leg curls, and forget
"muscle sculpting" with Susie the hyperactive personal trainer. As stated in
point number two, if you want to sport a hard body, you better start training
heavy. Big, compound movements such as the deadlift and the squat are superior
to machine, isolation-type movements for hardening up your thighs and butt as
they allow you to use maximal weight while training a number of muscle groups
simultaneously. Another benefit obtained by performing multi-joint compound
movements is increased confidence. With strength comes confidence. Also, there
is nothing like claiming your ground in the gym by loading up the squat bar
and proceeding to execute a few heavy, crisp repetitions. After all, 90%
percent of the guys in your gym probably don't squat, and those of them that
do most likely resort to using the smith machine and/or doing partial
repetitions. Know why? Because free squatting with a full range of motion is
hard. It takes will power to get under that bar week after week and squat all
the way down. Simply put, most people fear the squat and the deadlift (along
with anything else challenging in life). So, after that macho guy gets done
barbell curling in the squat rack, throw the bar up on the J-hooks where it
belongs and show 'em what kind of woman you are!
"So, ya want me to lift how much?"
Don’t get the impression that I'm telling you that you need to be able to lift
"x" number of lbs to obtain a hard physique. Heavy is a relative term; 600 lbs
is considered "light" to some of the guys on the Westside Barbell powerlifting
team; however, the average gym goer would deem that same load monsterously
heavy. In fact, if I loaded 600 lbs on the squat bar and proceeded to attempt
a repetition, I would be rewarded with a few broken legs, but I digress. It's
not important that you move big weights; what is important is that you are
selecting and lifting loads that are heavy for you. Over time, you will get
stronger and the poundage you can handle will increase. So, for you as a
female trainee, a "heavy" load can be defined as a weight that you can lift in
good form for 3-6 repetitions. This is in agreement with the recommendations
of Canadian strength coach Christian Thibaudeau as he notes, "Women do not
have the capacity to recruit as many motor units as men do. As such, they'll
need 1-2 more reps to fully stimulate their muscles. So when training for
strength, a man should use between 1 and 5 reps while a woman will benefit
more from doing 3-6 reps. Also, most women will need to perform 1-2 more sets
of an exercise to achieve the same degree of stimulation as a man, once again
because of their lower motor unit activation." The weight training routine
that we will outline next month is modeled around these recommendations.