- Apr 30, 2002
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** long post, clif's at bottom**
Hey guys,
Im lifting with a friend of mine now.
Hes a big dude. Theres a lot of excess fat to get rid of, but the plus side of being a big guy is carrying all that weight for all those years develops some pretty solid calve muscles. I only write that because I have skinny legs and Im jealous.
Anywho, hes about 310 lbs, and around 6ft tall.
Weve been talking a bit about attitude, and whats really going to work for this guy to lose fat.
Running, not going to happen. Swimmings out too. Pretty much all cardio other than light walking is just not going to happen. This guys in the Clydesdale class. One on hand, its tough for him to do cardio, hes just not built for endurance. On the other hand, hes got the body type for heavy lifting or being a defensive lineman. The path of least resistance, or at least the path of logical progress is to go with what works, and lift. Maximize what his body type is geared for instead of forcing the big guy to run like a Kenyan messenger.
What Ive been explaining to him is if he just ignores body weight and concentrates on body fat, he can lose the fat by lifting weights (gain muscle, burn calories, gain more muscle, burn more calories, etc). So were lifting, heavy lifting (working our way into it) twice a week. Were going with one rep sets to failure. Starting with isolation exercises like triceps presses, curls, hamstring curls, extensions, side raises and calve raises. Stuff like that to hit the main beach muscles and get them worn down.
After that we move to compound exercises. Dead lift, row, military press, squat, pull downs and bench press on a slight incline.
The reason were doing it this way is to get past the mental block of how much lifting sucks, you mean I have to do that 2 more times?!?!. Me, I like the pain and the grinding through the last set. Him, not so much. But if its one exercise, one set, just go until you can and then its done, thats something he can stick with. One task with an end in sight then move on to something else.
Okay now the problem were coming too is the dead lifts and squats. While being a big guy for a decade or so does built impressive calf muscles, it also puts a lot of pressure on his knees, and he knees are hurting and popping when he goes into a squat.
Knees and lower back are the two things I would never mess around with or push too hard. Once you hurt your back, like, really hurt your back, its hurt for a long time. And from what Ive seen, the people that have knee surgery or back surgery never get back to where they were or how they felt before the surgery.
Long story short, my buddys a big guy, Im trying to help him and he agreed to a heavy lifting/power lifting type program because thats what works for him, his body type, and his mental approach.
How do we get squats and stuff in there without him blowing out his knee? So far the only thing Im thinking is to start with no weight, just the 300 lb frame, and slowly add 10-20 pounds here and there.
Problem is, if youre lifting for muscle mass and NOT doing squats, youre missing a hug piece of the puzzle.
CLIFS:
Friend is a big boy
Heavy lifting routine
How do we do squats and stuff without wrecking his knees?
Hey guys,
Im lifting with a friend of mine now.
Hes a big dude. Theres a lot of excess fat to get rid of, but the plus side of being a big guy is carrying all that weight for all those years develops some pretty solid calve muscles. I only write that because I have skinny legs and Im jealous.
Anywho, hes about 310 lbs, and around 6ft tall.
Weve been talking a bit about attitude, and whats really going to work for this guy to lose fat.
Running, not going to happen. Swimmings out too. Pretty much all cardio other than light walking is just not going to happen. This guys in the Clydesdale class. One on hand, its tough for him to do cardio, hes just not built for endurance. On the other hand, hes got the body type for heavy lifting or being a defensive lineman. The path of least resistance, or at least the path of logical progress is to go with what works, and lift. Maximize what his body type is geared for instead of forcing the big guy to run like a Kenyan messenger.
What Ive been explaining to him is if he just ignores body weight and concentrates on body fat, he can lose the fat by lifting weights (gain muscle, burn calories, gain more muscle, burn more calories, etc). So were lifting, heavy lifting (working our way into it) twice a week. Were going with one rep sets to failure. Starting with isolation exercises like triceps presses, curls, hamstring curls, extensions, side raises and calve raises. Stuff like that to hit the main beach muscles and get them worn down.
After that we move to compound exercises. Dead lift, row, military press, squat, pull downs and bench press on a slight incline.
The reason were doing it this way is to get past the mental block of how much lifting sucks, you mean I have to do that 2 more times?!?!. Me, I like the pain and the grinding through the last set. Him, not so much. But if its one exercise, one set, just go until you can and then its done, thats something he can stick with. One task with an end in sight then move on to something else.
Okay now the problem were coming too is the dead lifts and squats. While being a big guy for a decade or so does built impressive calf muscles, it also puts a lot of pressure on his knees, and he knees are hurting and popping when he goes into a squat.
Knees and lower back are the two things I would never mess around with or push too hard. Once you hurt your back, like, really hurt your back, its hurt for a long time. And from what Ive seen, the people that have knee surgery or back surgery never get back to where they were or how they felt before the surgery.
Long story short, my buddys a big guy, Im trying to help him and he agreed to a heavy lifting/power lifting type program because thats what works for him, his body type, and his mental approach.
How do we get squats and stuff in there without him blowing out his knee? So far the only thing Im thinking is to start with no weight, just the 300 lb frame, and slowly add 10-20 pounds here and there.
Problem is, if youre lifting for muscle mass and NOT doing squats, youre missing a hug piece of the puzzle.
CLIFS:
Friend is a big boy
Heavy lifting routine
How do we do squats and stuff without wrecking his knees?
