bignate73
New member
wilson6 said:"
That's total bullshit.
W6
total? how relevent would accentuating the eccentric movement be for muscle gain then? controlled rep speed is paramount, especially in the eccentric, for safety and hypertrophy.
if i were training a new person, rep tempo is very important in the beginning before we talk numbers. set the quality of movement before you set the difficulty. many new trainees will speed through a set to make the rep goal, or twist and buck to lift the goal weight. for the sake of progressive overload?
ya gotta think outside the box and look from a trainer's perspective. new trainees can be eager to please and if weight is the concern, improper movement patterns and compensation will rule over good clean reps. no one knows how this woman works out. nothing wrong with lifting heavy but only after the basics are mastered. if a bench press starts getting hard, first thing you see a new trainee do is twist their body to compensate, and press at all costs. many times a compound movement done with free weights can get massacred if the fundamentals of the movement arent taught and practiced in a controlled setting (machine work). example: seated row vs. bent over barbell row.
(not to you W6) all too often i see people jump on the back of a trainer because everyone has an opinion. but quite frankly, the trainer knows more about the client than the client does. there are reasons for not doing a particular movement. why its done slow, or fast. sometimes it feels like pulling in the reins on a trainee but its so they progress in the proper manner instead of building bad habits or risking injury.
as a final note, i hope that you have a good trainer, that monitors your progress and has a plan as to why you may or may not be doing things the way you are. im not defending said trainer, but the overall misconception that i see too often on here, that the trainer is wrong and everyone else has a better way. if thats the case.....why arent there more people working as trainers? its easy to be a backseat driver, but getting in the driver's seat is a whole different ball game.