this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2024
20 points (100.0% liked)

fitness

21621 readers
1 users here now

We are not a crisis service. We can't guarantee an immediate response. This does not mean no one cares. If you need to talk to someone at once, you may want to take a look at this directory of Hotline Numbers.

Rules

  1. Absolutely no fat-shaming, skinny-shaming, or shape-shaming.
  2. Be positive about people’s bodies but don’t be fetishistic.
  3. Don’t shame or disparage people for their fitness level.
  4. Do not offer unsolicited criticism.
  5. If you post a selfie, make special care that identifying marks are removed.
  6. No doomposting about your body.

Quotes

A fascist worked out today, did you?

“I’m an ardent believer in equality, and being in the Communist Party is a way to spread this form of socialism and freedom for all the people”-Jeff Monson

“Every worker sportsman must be a soldier of the revolution”-Spartakiad

Resources

Beginner's Health and Fitness Guide: https://liamrosen.com/fitness.html

Databases for lifts/muscles:

https://exrx.net/

https://musclewiki.com/

Flexibility:

Becoming A Supple Leopard

Yoga poses for athletes

The R*ddit Wiki:

FitnessWiki

TDEE Calculator:

Please be aware that this calculator will ask if you're male or female

TDEE calculator

Other cool shit:

How to make your own foam roller

Athletes guide to foam rolling

Beginner Triathlete

Couch to 5k

Enter the kettlebell

WIP Schedule

Friday: Weekly check-in. Discuss what went right and wrong in terms of goals from last week

Saturday: Declaration of goals+community focus. What tangible, numerical goals are you going for? Don't know? We have ideas!

Sunday: Gals and enby pals take center stage

Monday: Meme Monday

Tuesday: Toot Your Horn Tuesday. Brag about what you've done, how good your progress is, who's making googly eyes at you, etc.

Wednesday: Wing Chun Wednesday. All about martial arts

Thursday: Nutrition. What's been bothering you about nutrition? Maybe we get some comrades from c/food to see if we can't get you where you're trying to go.

If you don't see the megathread just make the megathread. AMAB and our posts are just like your posts.

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
20
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Been working out consistently for about 3 months now using a beginner plan (Grey skulls lp) and I think I'm hitting plateaus just using linear progression. I'm up to:

DL: 120kg

Squat: 120kg

Bench: 75kg

OHP: 55kg

And I've had to deload all those weights twice, so I think now is a good time to find a different routine. I was looking at 5/3/1, but I'm not really sure I understand it well and there's a lot of variations (reddit also seems vague on details cause they want you to buy the books or something, idk). The volume also looks kinda ridiculous and I don't wanna spend more than an hour and a half at the gym everytime.

So yeah, sorta progress update, sorta asking where to go next.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I see, I've been focusing on traps/delts when it comes to auxiliaries because my pull-ups/OHP are still weak. But I'll try changing what I do more often.

For some routines on 5/3/1, the rep/set scheme is just written as 531 and I'm not sure what that is (I think it's 5/3/1 reps with increasing weights, but idk).

The base plan with 5/3/1 also has too much volume (I'm trying to avoid high reps because it's given me rhabdomylosis before) and I'm not sure where to find routines for variations on it.

I'm also not certain what a "cycle" is with 5/3/1 - there's a 4 week cycle described where I think weights are increased until you deload on the 4th week, but I've also seen that 4th week deloading is unnecessary.

Finally, I'm not sure how you go about increasing the training max since the cycles described earlier only increase weight based on a percentage of your TM.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I see this really good plan on t nation which, despite its... branding... seems like a solid layout for a plan [1]. It makes for a good read, but if you feel confident with it, the table with the percentages and the table with the example workout would be sufficient. The idea appears to be that it's a 4 week cycle on any given primary compound lift - the first week is the 5 reps, the second week is the 3 reps, the third week is the 5/3/1 so you can blast that 1RM. Then the fourth week is the deload since you're attempting to max out your central nervous system. I imagine if you're getting too much volume from 3x5 then you have issues beyond our scope (we can't do medical advice). I like this idea that, in the pursuit of getting bigger numbers, you're focusing in precisely on getting that progressive overload in by increasing intensity and decreasing reps. It's all based on your (calculated) 1RM and I'd probably just type in my working set into the exrx calculator and then put that number into a spreadsheet with the percentages from tnation [2]. There wouldn't be any guess work in what weight or how many reps you're doing on any given day, it might just take a couple cycles to dial in what your 1RM is so you can make the cycle be the appropriate amount of intense. Does this answer your questions? Does it seem like the move?

[1] https://t-nation.com/t/5-3-1-how-to-build-pure-strength/281694

[2] https://exrx.net/Calculators/OneRepMax

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Yes, this answers a lot for me, thank you so much