BEGINNERS

howrobin

Cathlete
Here are a few things I wish someone had told me when I started exercising regularly. Other people, please feel free to add anything that would have helped you or might help new beginners.

(1) Cathe and the people in her DVDs have probably been exercising for years. Don't get hung up on comparing yourself to them. Instead focus on the fact that as time goes on, with regular exercise and good diet, you will look more like them than you used to and less like you used to be.

(2) Anything is better than nothing. When I first started exercising, I was going to kickboxing classes - 45 - 60 minutes with people in the front rows who looked like Cathe's "crew". I was in the back row, gasping for air. For each set of 8 repetitions, I would do 6 of the first set, stand there and gasp for 5 reps, then do every other rep for a bit, stand and gasp, then do 1 and 5 of the final set. Over time, I was able to do more and more. So in work outs where you can't do everything, don't think about the reps you're not doing. Think about the reps you are doing. Each one is better than doing none. Each rep is working a muscle and moving you in the direction of better conditioning, rather than poorer conditioning. Success is keeping going, improving, and not quitting.

(3) Think about the long haul. Getting and staying in shape means exercising regularly for a few years. So stick with it, even if you have to stop for a month here or there. You can't do it all over night. Trying to do too much may cause injury or burn out, either of which will set you back more in the long term than skipping some of Cathe's reps, or using lower or no weights, taking extra rest days.

(4) Don't give up all of those things you like to eat the most. There's a book/weight loss program called Body for Life. The author has you watching the food 6 days a week, but on the 7th day, tells you to eat whatever you want. If you are too punitive with yourself, you're less likely to stick with a regular exercise program.

(5) Variety is really good. Doing different exercises and activities works different movements and different parts of the same muscle which promotes muscle balance and helps prevent overuse and injury. If your legs are tired from Kick punch and crunch, take a long walk or bike ride. If your upper body is too tired for Musclemax with heavy weight, then do Musclemax with very light weight. If its a beautiful day and walking seems wimpy, then take 1,2, 3, or 5 lb dumbells with you and do curls, side lateral raises, overhead presses, overhead triceps presses, straight jabs, hook punches, undercut punches, while you walk.

Good luck.
 
I would add that you don't have to use the same step height Cathe does. Maybe you're tired or trying a new workout--use a 4" step height if you have to--you can still get a great workout. I definitely use a 4" a lot if it's a new complex routine. Then on days when you are feeling great, bump up to a higher step. You might even feel like doing 8" when Cathe's on a 6". If you can do it, go ahead.

The same goes for weight amounts of course. I decide what weight to lift based on what Cathe lifts--but I usually lift lower amounts than she does depending on what I can handle and what challenges me personally. I just use hers as a guide. When I started I couldn't even lift half what she lifted most the time, but I'm getting closer with time, and on some things I lift the same she does (though I'm sure she lifts even heavier on her personal workouts).

***Lainie***

http://web.mac.com/lainiefig/iWeb/Site/Exercise.html

"The worst loneliness is to not be comfortable with yourself." -- Mark Twain
 
Remember that overall fitness and well-being is your goal. I can get really hung up on that number on the scale. But remember that LOTS of things can cause weight to fluctuate. And the reason we are all here, all doing this, is to be FIT!
 
I love that enything is better than nothing! True!

Give it all you got!








"Life is short so be the best you can be every day of your life!"

"Running feels great for my soul!"

:) CHEETAH :)
 
Remember that exercising is not about losing weight or keeping at a certain weight. Exercise will increase your life expectancy, decrease your chances of depression, strengthen your heart, produce mood-enhancing endorphins, make you stronger...you get the point. I think we (myself included) tend to focus on how many calories we burn or how much weight we are losing, but exercise does so much more!

And yes, doing a little is better than doing nothing at all.
 
Great info! I am not new to exercising but I am somewhat new to Cathe's weights workouts so I do less weights than she does...with the knowledge that with more workouts I will gain more strength. I am completely new to step workouts and so I am not using any risers and I started on Basic Step so I am sure to get down the basic moves with the least frustration.

One of the things I love so much about Cathe's workouts is how easily you can modify them to your own level.
 
I think the original poster's comment on being patient is very important. When I first started working out, I figured it would take a few months for me to be the size I wanted (I only wanted lose about 15 pounds). While I did lose most of the weight quickly, I am still seeing major improvements (1.2 years later) as far as muscle definition AND fat loss. It does not happen overnight and everyone's body works at its own pace.
 
Cathe says in Pyramid Upper Body (during the bicep section) "You are going to be sooooo happy that you pushed yourself to finish this!" And you know what...she is always right! You will be surprised, over time, how much you can do. Keep at it everyday...and push yourself to overcome whatever barriers are in your way.


Debra

we do not remember days....
we remember moments
--Cesare Pavese

http://www.picturetrail.com/aschendell
0101_10009001662.gif
 
Dittos. I don't have a step. In the household is a small kitchen stool about 1 foot high which I use for the Legs and Glutes segment on Kick Punch and Crunch. To the extent I do any step work, I just do them without a step and can still get myself huffing and puffing. Some of the work outs (lower body - lunges, squats) I use no weights at all and still feel it the next day. It all depends on your starting point.
 
thanks for everyone's input. Here's another for beginners (actually it applies to everyone).

Injury becomes more likely when you are tired.

Injuries are the worst, because they can stop you dead in your training tracks. In the first couple of years that I did kickboxing, I had bunch of leg injuries, inner thigh muscle pulls, tendonitis around knees. These, I finally figured out, occurred in two ways when I was tired.

(1) I became too tired to do an exercise with the proper form. E.g., round house kicks. Very important is to kick in line with your knee. Ideally, you want to rotate your hip so your knee (and thigh) is sideways/parallel to the floor prior to starting the kicking motion. As I got tired, I couldn't rotate my hip fast enought and was kicking too soon. Result? My knee (pointing at the ceiling at the start of the kick and facing the wall at the end of the kick) was twisting and torquing and rotating as I kicked. Ouch. Several bouts of tendonitis from that one.

(2) Plie squats. Lots of these in kickboxing. As I got tired and more flexible, on the downward movement I would go lower (good thing), but my muscles couldn't put on the brakes, and I would drop too low too fast and pull or strain an adductor.

Bottom line, as you tire, pay extra close attention to form and to not doing too much too soon. Those injuries, just when you are making progress, are really frustrating. And when you are making progress is a time when there is a temptation to go a little too far too fast.
 
Here's a post I did elsewhere that I was copying for someone else. Thought beginners might find it helpful, so I am adding it to this thread.


Have noticed that the difference between endurance and strength work outs is an issue that surfaces in these forums from time to time, not just in discussions about weightlifting, but, e.g., is kickboxing muscular endurance training or cardio (or both).

Just came across a very short and interesting discussion of this subject which might be of interest to people. This comes from Getting Stronger, a book by Bill Pearl, at p. 53. He is a vegetarian bodybuilder (I never realized that was possible).

Bill Pearl's comments:

There are 4 elements to fitness: strength, endurance, cardiovascular endurance, and flexibility.

"Strength is the ability of a muscle to produce force. It is measured by the amount of weight you can lift in one repetition; for example the most amount of weight you can bench press or lift in the squat."

"Muscular endurance is the ability of a muscle to produce force repeatedly over a period of time. It is measured by the number of repetitions of the movement."

(here is the key statement:) "IF YOU CAN DO ONLY ONE OR TWO PUSH-UPS, THEN, FOR YOU, IT'S A STRENGTH MOVEMENT. iF YOU CAN DO 35 PUSH-UPS, THEN, FOR YOU, IT'S A MUSCULAR ENDURANCE EXERCISE."
end of Bill Pearl

In the forums, people sometimes ask whether a particular Cathe work out is strength or endurance. Pearl's clarifies the need to take into account the level of the person doing the work out, not just the work out. The same Cathe work out could be either strength or endurance, depending on how strong the person exercising is and how much weight they are using, and whether they complete all of the reps.
 

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