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Weights and Plates Podcast - #85 - The Illusion of Safety

#85 - The Illusion of Safety

10/18/24 • 56 min

Weights and Plates Podcast

Many people who start barbell training say something to the effect of "I just don't want to get hurt" when asked about their fitness goals. It's understandable -- no one wants to get hurt -- but the statement displays some ignorance about the reality of aches, pains, and sometimes injuries that occur during hard physical training. When we train with barbells, we are pushing our bodies to the limit to grow muscle, get stronger, and become more resilient. Even if we aren't great athletes squatting and deadlifting several hundred pounds, improvement requires pushing the limit, and pushing the limit increases the risk of aches, pains, and injuries. Moreover, as Coach Trent points out, life itself is non-zero risk, and many people get hurt without ever touching a barbell. So, the idea that you can control "not getting hurt" is false. You can bend the curve in your favor to reduce the likelihood of tweaks and injuries, but life happens. The best you can do is be strong and resilient so that you can bounce back from tweaks and injuries faster, and develop the mental fortitude to deal with the setbacks they cause.

Online Diet Coaching and Strength Training with Dr. Robert Santana

https://weightsandplates.com/online-coaching/

Weights & Plates on YouTube:

https://youtube.com/@weights_and_plates?si=ebAS8sRtzsPmFQf-

Weights & Plates: https://weightsandplates.com

Robert Santana on Instagram: @the_robert_santana

Trent Jones: @marmalade_cream

Email: [email protected]

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Many people who start barbell training say something to the effect of "I just don't want to get hurt" when asked about their fitness goals. It's understandable -- no one wants to get hurt -- but the statement displays some ignorance about the reality of aches, pains, and sometimes injuries that occur during hard physical training. When we train with barbells, we are pushing our bodies to the limit to grow muscle, get stronger, and become more resilient. Even if we aren't great athletes squatting and deadlifting several hundred pounds, improvement requires pushing the limit, and pushing the limit increases the risk of aches, pains, and injuries. Moreover, as Coach Trent points out, life itself is non-zero risk, and many people get hurt without ever touching a barbell. So, the idea that you can control "not getting hurt" is false. You can bend the curve in your favor to reduce the likelihood of tweaks and injuries, but life happens. The best you can do is be strong and resilient so that you can bounce back from tweaks and injuries faster, and develop the mental fortitude to deal with the setbacks they cause.

Online Diet Coaching and Strength Training with Dr. Robert Santana

https://weightsandplates.com/online-coaching/

Weights & Plates on YouTube:

https://youtube.com/@weights_and_plates?si=ebAS8sRtzsPmFQf-

Weights & Plates: https://weightsandplates.com

Robert Santana on Instagram: @the_robert_santana

Trent Jones: @marmalade_cream

Email: [email protected]

Previous Episode

undefined - #84 - Why You Need to Understand Advanced Programming

#84 - Why You Need to Understand Advanced Programming

One of the interesting consequences of the success of the Starting Strength methodology, and the growth in popularity of strength training in general, is that genetically average people are lifting weights and sticking with their program for multiple years. No longer are only gym rats and serious athletes dedicating themselves to years of sustained progress in the weight room -- now there are 55 year old moms with 5+ years of barbell training experience under their belts. Most of these people are advanced lifters, even though they aren't competitive athletes. And advanced lifters have different programming needs than novices and early intermediates, especially when they aren't athletically gifted or possessed of a high training drive.

It's important, therefore, to understand what advanced training looks like, not just for very strong, competitive lifters, but for average folks with more pedestrian numbers but similar long recovery windows.

Online Diet Coaching and Strength Training with Dr. Robert Santana

https://weightsandplates.com/online-coaching/

Weights & Plates on YouTube:

https://youtube.com/@weights_and_plates?si=ebAS8sRtzsPmFQf-

Weights & Plates: https://weightsandplates.com

Robert Santana on Instagram: @the_robert_santana

Trent Jones: @marmalade_cream

Email: [email protected]

Next Episode

undefined - #86 - The Rep Before the Set: Don't Make The Biggest Setup Mistake

#86 - The Rep Before the Set: Don't Make The Biggest Setup Mistake

In today's episode, Dr. Santana and Coach Trent discuss a common mistake lifters make before they begin a set -- the unrack. As Coach Trent says, the set doesn't begin when you descend into your first rep, the set begins when you step on the platform. Getting your mindset right, visualizing a successful set, and unracking the bar with authority and controlled aggression is oftentimes the difference between a successful set and missed reps, especially when attempting a limit set or new PR.

Online Diet Coaching and Strength Training with Dr. Robert Santana

https://weightsandplates.com/online-coaching/

Follow Weights & Plates

YouTube: https://youtube.com/@weights_and_plates?si=ebAS8sRtzsPmFQf-

Instagram: @the_robert_santana

Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/weightsandplates

Web: https://weightsandplates.com

Coach Trent

Trent Jones: @marmalade_cream

Email: [email protected]

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