WarpGirl wrote:I was thinking about watching Observer Effect tooit's one of the ones I missed.
It's one of my favorites. Can't believe you haven't seen that one!
Moderators: justTripn, Elessar, dark_rain
WarpGirl wrote:I was thinking about watching Observer Effect tooit's one of the ones I missed.
Misplaced wrote:Trying to decide if I'm going to watch "Observer Effect" or the second episode of the first season of DS9. (I'm watching the series for the first time and am determined to plow through all 7 seasons before I judge the show. All I can say is ENT had a better premiere... and I don't much care for ENT's premiere -- though I like it more now than the first time I saw it. LOL)
Distracted wrote:My advice is not to do weight training on the same set of muscles two days in a row. Give your muscles a day to recover. After that, you may want to lighten up on the weight. If you're incapacitated you likely went too heavy to start.
Aikiweezie wrote:Distracted wrote:My advice is not to do weight training on the same set of muscles two days in a row. Give your muscles a day to recover. After that, you may want to lighten up on the weight. If you're incapacitated you likely went too heavy to start.
Oh, I definately went too heavy on the weights today. I waaaay overestimated myself. My friend says Cardio sculpt is a much easier class that does target different muscle groups so I should be okay. A little ibuprophen and a lot of tiger balm for me this evening. My husband is out of town tonight so I can rub the stinky stuff on liberally.
Elessar wrote: [Some soreness is normal - you just have to make a judgment call on whether it's "soreness" or "pain". My lifting coach always used to say soreness is good, pain is bad, lol. Simplistic approach perhaps lol
Now, what's REALLY GOOD for you - really really tough step up cardio - is jump on the treadmill and do something... scaled to your level of fitness, whether it's a 2 minute jog, a 2 minute sprint, a 5 minute walk, whatever - and then jump off and do something else, a different muscle group (again scaled for your fitness level). I found that totally threw me out of my comfort zone, even after months of workout. I'd run a sprint, go do a set of pullups, do a sprint, go do a set of bench, go run a sprint, go do a set of crunches (this is no rest in between mind you), and I could just feel my heart pounding away at what I guessed was my max HR (180-200). Gotta be careful, though. The recommendations are generally that you don't push above 80% max HR. I'm usually at 100% tho and I haven't keeled over yet
Aikiweezie wrote:Elessar wrote: [Some soreness is normal - you just have to make a judgment call on whether it's "soreness" or "pain". My lifting coach always used to say soreness is good, pain is bad, lol. Simplistic approach perhaps lol
Now, what's REALLY GOOD for you - really really tough step up cardio - is jump on the treadmill and do something... scaled to your level of fitness, whether it's a 2 minute jog, a 2 minute sprint, a 5 minute walk, whatever - and then jump off and do something else, a different muscle group (again scaled for your fitness level). I found that totally threw me out of my comfort zone, even after months of workout. I'd run a sprint, go do a set of pullups, do a sprint, go do a set of bench, go run a sprint, go do a set of crunches (this is no rest in between mind you), and I could just feel my heart pounding away at what I guessed was my max HR (180-200). Gotta be careful, though. The recommendations are generally that you don't push above 80% max HR. I'm usually at 100% tho and I haven't keeled over yet
No pain (at least from my new work out), just soreness. When I joined I had a session with a personal trainer to asses my fitness level and get some recommendations. He suggested working you much like you did. Good stuff.
The thing is that I have been working out regularly, ie 4 -5 times a week for the past 6 years, just doing too much of the same thing. I got in a rut. And that's a bad thing.
Elessar wrote:I found a new gym to join today. It's awesome, so much nicer than my old one and 3 times the size. I think I'm gonna start going tomorrow. It's about 1.25 m down the road so I think I'm gonna run down there, lift and then run back... I did the treadmill running thing for awhile at my old gym, but it's so hard to run distance (for me) because you have no sense of destination, no purpose. It's even harder than running on a cyclical track where you have to log 12 laps for a mile. I ran 2 and a half miles the other day without even thinking I was up to 2, because I was going somewhere, it was so much easier to handle psychologically.
Now, what's REALLY GOOD for you - really really tough step up cardio - is jump on the treadmill and do something... scaled to your level of fitness, whether it's a 2 minute jog, a 2 minute sprint, a 5 minute walk, whatever - and then jump off and do something else, a different muscle group (again scaled for your fitness level). I found that totally threw me out of my comfort zone, even after months of workout. I'd run a sprint, go do a set of pullups, do a sprint, go do a set of bench, go run a sprint, go do a set of crunches (this is no rest in between mind you), and I could just feel my heart pounding away at what I guessed was my max HR (180-200). Gotta be careful, though. The recommendations are generally that you don't push above 80% max HR. I'm usually at 100% tho and I haven't keeled over yet
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