Anonymous wrote:Stupid question…..how do you use heavy weights at home for lower body and legs?
Anonymous wrote:Stupid question…..how do you use heavy weights at home for lower body and legs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those women who lift at home, what amount of weight is considered heavy enough to give the health and strength benefits? I only have dumbbells (heaviest is 12 lb set) and kettlebells (heaviest is 35 lb). My heaviest weights are very challenging for me and I follow a YouTube trainer, no interest in returning to a gym, and i don’t have the space for bigger pieces of equipment or a real weight room setup. Thanks!
What you have is good enough for building strength up to a certain point. Because eventually, if you keep with it, the amount of weight you're using will no longer be a challenge. To see real gains, you need to be able to lift to failure through progressive overload. Thats what causes muscles to grow.
Can you lift to failure with lighter weights - sure, but its takes a lot longer to get there and hence not as effective/efficient as lifting heavy.
Anonymous wrote:For those women who lift at home, what amount of weight is considered heavy enough to give the health and strength benefits? I only have dumbbells (heaviest is 12 lb set) and kettlebells (heaviest is 35 lb). My heaviest weights are very challenging for me and I follow a YouTube trainer, no interest in returning to a gym, and i don’t have the space for bigger pieces of equipment or a real weight room setup. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:For those women who lift at home, what amount of weight is considered heavy enough to give the health and strength benefits? I only have dumbbells (heaviest is 12 lb set) and kettlebells (heaviest is 35 lb). My heaviest weights are very challenging for me and I follow a YouTube trainer, no interest in returning to a gym, and i don’t have the space for bigger pieces of equipment or a real weight room setup. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a very similar built and weight, and am having similar issues 110 lbs at 5’3”, a runner (albeit a slow one), seem to have lost my butt over the years. Yes, it’s the loss of muscle due to aging. You’re staying slim due to the cardio but it’s not helping you maintain muscle mass. You have to get serious about weight training (and I need to take my own advice too).
I am a runner too and same thing happened to me. But I don't think its necessarily muscle loss due to age (I'm 40) because I am very fit and active otherwise. I think its just that running eats away at at the glutes and hams. Add a sedentary office job sitting on your butt all day and even worse. I recently started lifting weights and really going heavy on lower body and its already made a huge difference in just a few months. Not just aesthetically but I feel more powerful during my runs as well. I am kicking myself that I waited this long to start lifting.
are you a woman? Did you need a trainer to get started lifting?
Yes I am a woman. I am not completely new to lifting - I have worked with a couple trainers in the past. Plus I used to take strength training group classes at my gym pre-pandemic. So I didn’t really feel I needed a trainer going into it this time - I mostly use resources online - YouTube, FB and also follow a lot of female body builders on IG. So far, so good. But at some point I probably will do a couple sessions with a trainer for a form check and to maybe add some more structure/variation to my program.