Cathe - Not going up in weight?

newmommy

Cathlete
Hi Cathe. I have absolutely fallen in love with your workouts and for the first time in my life I actually look forward to working out every morning.
My question is, I have been doing your workouts about 7 months and for about the past 5 months I have been able to use the same weight as you do in all your weight workouts. However, I can't seem to increase them. Every time I workout, my muscles get completely fatigued and I'm slightly sore the next day. I feel that if I tried to increase the weight I'm using (and I've tried) I either lose my form or I can do it at all. But I feel that I should have gone up in my weight in 5 months time. It just never seems to get to the point where the weight seems to be getting lighter and therefore I can try to increae. I want to increase my weight so I don't come to a stand still. What am I doing wrong? Am I just not challenging myself enough?

Thanks for your time and for all of wonderful inspiration.

Katie:7
 
What kind of weight training are you doing?

I mean, do you do total body workouts like MIS al the time? Do you do split workouts where you work chest and back one day, shoulders, tris and bis another? Or are you training just one body part per day?

If you have been doing total body workouts for the last 7 months, maybe you need the change of doing the split training? It might help you to break past this plateau by working fewer body parts per day but with greater intensity. One reason is that other muscle groups always come into play no matter what the muscle group we are currently targetting, therefore pre-fatiguing the other muscle groups before you have a chance to realy work them. If the muscle groups are already pre-fatigued, this can limit the total amount of weight you will then be able to lift.

For example, when you work the chest, which Cathe often places ahead of shoulders in her workouts, you are also calling upon the shoulder muscles. I often find that after doing chest, by the time I get to shoulders, those mucles are already so tired that they cannot be challenged by my attempts to lift heavier on shulder exercises that day.

So, trying split training can help.

Also, in light of the above discussion, if you have DVD's it is easy to change your training in another way to help get past a plateau. Change the order in which you do the exercises. So, if chest always comes before shoulders, and you have tried and failed to increase the poundage for shoulders exercises, then today, do shoulders first and see if you can select a heavier weight and complete the reps with that.

Increasing weights is something that has to happen slowly. For example, say you target shoulders first. Cathe will typically include 3 or 4 exercises to target the shoulder area. Now, you may find it impossible to increase the poundage for all of the shoulder exercises at the same time. I do. So, select 1 or 2 exercises, say military/overhead preses and lateral/side raises, and make those the exercises where you lift heavier today. Then for the remaining shoulder exercises, lift the amount you usually do. Over the following few weeks, you can play aaround with this and gradually include more exercises per session in which you up the weight until you find you are liffting heavier on all shoulder exercises.

Also, you have to be prepared to stay in trasition phase for a while ansd not inteerpret it as "failure." What I mean is, say you decide to lift heavier on biceps today and you pick up the 12 pounders insstead of your usual 10 pounders. Great! Start the first set and do as many reps as you can, with good form, at the higher weight. You may be able to complete the set, you may not. If you cannot, you do not worry, all you do is immediately drop the weight to the 10 pounders and complete the set at that lower weight. The next workout, you strive tocomplete more of the reps at the higher weight until you have to drop down, until you reach the point where you can complete all the reps of that set at 12 pounders and you start the secomnd set on the higher poundage too!

Remember, when you aare striving toi conquer a heavier weight, the muscle will reach failure at some point, but that doesn't mean "you" have "failed!" Quite the contrary! It means you are making good progress!

Another thing you can do is try out the Slow & Heavy series which is the "perfect series to break through any and all strength training plateaus" to quote Cathe from the introduction. In this series Cathe performs slow reps with the heaviest weight posible, and the slow count takes all the momentum ouit of the lift. THe only thing lifting that weight is you, your muscle. During a 3-4-5 week rotation of this you can definitely increase your weights.

I have nearly completed a 5 week rotation of S&H and I am now lifting the heaviest eights I have ever lifted in my life. I have increased the poundage on chest, back, shoulders and triceps! I am very pleased!

Hope some of these suggestions help!

Clare
 
Hey Clare,
I was intrigued to read your answer! I was doing full body weight workouts and wanted to work more to fatigue on one body part at a time. I was thinking of S&H with cardio - one body part per day to blast the plateau and perhaps lose a few pounds. Did that work for you??? TIA! Debra;-)
 
DeannMomofThree

My dumbbell (db) weight set isn't as diverse as Cathe's, but I lift close to Cathe's weight when I work out with her at home--for example, in UBP. But when I take a weight class at the gym I usually use lighter hand weights because they don't keep heavier weights in the group exercise area. (We use a bb for heavier weight chest presses, squats, lunges, etc.) The hand weights in the studio for shoulders---front raises & laterals, rotary cuff, supine chest fly, etc., only go up to 8 pounds. I find a cumulative workout with 8 pound hand weights killer because every set is right on top the other, yet I regularly use 10-20 lbs at home to Cathe when doing the sets in pyramid style. You get a mini break in between sets!

My point is that I reach the same fatigue level with much lighter weight because we're hitting the same body part over and over. I don't get sore, like I do with heavier weights, but I'm challenged to make it through all the reps. From this alone, I reduced body fat and gained a lot of muscle definition. (I just started UBP last month.)

In the past six months I've only increased my bb weight twice, and the 2nd increase was just last week. Be patient. As long as you're working to the point of muscle fatigue you are getting the benefits. In UBP Cathe says that when you find the weight too easy that you have to move up...if you're getting sore it doesn't sound like you're quite there yet...don't rush it :7
 
I agree with what everyone has said. To bullet what has worked for me:

1) Split your weight work up, don't work more than one or two body parts per day.... You are less likely to be able to work to the best of your ability on a body part if you are already fatigued or have fatigued another muscle set. If I do cardio on a day that I am also doing strength, I do the strenght first or split the workouts up during the day.

2) Try a few reps at a higher weight..when you lose form or have exhaused the muscle drop back to the lower weight and complete the set. Also in PUB, I find that I can go up in weight for one of the exercises before I can up the weight for the second exercise for the same body part. For example, I always up the weight for hammer curls before I can do so for traditional bicep curls and I can up my weight for bench press before I can do so for flies.
 
Thanks for all the great advice. I usually do cardio in the morning and then do one or two body parts later in the evening. I AM seeing more tone so I must be doing something right. But it just seemed weird to not be going up in weight. Several years ago when I used to lift weights at the gym I would go up in weights every couple months. But I guess there I was setting my own pace and had my husband with me to spot me if needed so I was more inclined to try a weight that I may only be able to lift twice.

Thanks ladies.

Katie:7
 

Our Newsletter

Get awesome content delivered straight to your inbox.

Top