Just like to ask for some feedback regarding weight lifting / strength training and MA's.
I've recently started lifting weights again - this past week I've been doing it directly after a rather intensive kickboxing regimen (spaced out by 15 minutes... I hit the gym on my way back home from the dojo).
now, based on what i've read online - this goes against the weightlifting mantra which seems to be 1.lift first, 2. cardio second.
Do any of you have a particular preference? Do you know anything about muscles going into a catabolic (eating themselves...) state after 1.5 hours of intense exercise? glycogen levels being depleated by martial arts thus lending a more ineffective strength training routine?
and finally, do any of you have any preferred strength training routines/exercises? I'm not looking to be a bodybuilder, or gain 200 lbs of muscle as fast as possible - just solid, functional strength with some mass gains. thanks
Hi dok, this is just my take on the problem you mention. First of all, it's definitely true that aerobic exercise, if done the wrong way, can have catabolic effects on stored body proteins, most of which is in the form of muscle tissue. It's not that muscles `eat themselves', but that protein is accessed by the body for energy production, because the last thing that the body goes after is stored fat---it really hates to give up stored fat, alas! So if you want to do aerobic exercise for fat burning, but keep your body from attacking your muscles, you have to do two things: do aerobic exercise to burn fat, but do weight training at a high enough level of intensity that the body goes into recovery/overcompensation mode, seeking to build muscle tissue because you've put in a world of pain from your weightlifting routine. The only way to satisfy the need for energy and the need for more muscle is to metabolize... well,
fat (stored carbs too, but that gets burned off pretty quickly quite early in your aerobic routine).
What's really important is that if you do very high-intensity type workout, the body will
stay in a muscle-growth mode for a long time---muscle biopsies have shown evidence of muscle repair and growth as much as a week after heavy-duty training. If you're lifting heavy, you don't have to worry that every time you do an aerobic workout, you have to finish off with a set of bench presses. Short, infrequent, very high intensity routines of the Mike Mentzer Heavy-Duty program type, or the Sisco & Little `Power Factor' system, will keep you in growth mode even if you do frequent MA workouts---and remember, training mid-to-high kicks for balance has the benefit that it does add a resistance component to your workout.
My suggestion is to go to your library and look for Mentzer's books or the Sisco-Little books and build your workout program around them, or some other high-intensity routine---you'll see results fast and you will have absolutely nothing to worry about so far as catabolic effects of training are concerned. The Sisco-Little system is especially good, I think---the only requirement, really, is that you have access to a power rack, because you'll soon be using extremely heavy weights that no one is going to be able to spot you safely with.
I would suggest something very simple: three big compound exercises---bench press, shoulder press, and leg press---using only the top four inches or so of your lifting range, where your leverage factors are good enough that you can quickly double the weight that you're stuck at in a full range of motion. You can do biceps, traps, lats and so on, but the real payoff comes from the first three I mentioned. Look at the analyses of the most efficient approach to weight training in the sources I mentioned and you'll be able to
work out your own best routines. Just make sure you
keep increasing your lifting weights over time. Once your body has added enough muscle to enable you to do a few reps at 315 lbs, it will not add morem muscle if you stat at that weight. If you want to do more than maintenance in any give session, your weights have to go up.
Hope this helps a bit...