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Thread: Balancing Beginner gains with recovery

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
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    Default Balancing Beginner gains with recovery

    I am only 2 weeks in to the SS program but think that I need to switch to squats only on Mondays and Fridays for recovery and dropping the Power Clean until my DL is stronger. My hope is that if I go to 2 days per week I can get a 5lb per session increase in squats and DL for at least a month or more. Please tell me if I have gone crazy here. Oh, I am 46 sleeping 7-8 hours and eating pretty clean.


    I started the SS program on 8/1 with
    Squats 120
    Press 95
    PC 95
    DL 140
    Bench 140


    After 2 weeks 8/15
    Squats 135
    Press 95 started too high I'll RESET to 85lb
    PC 100 I think I should drop this until DL is better
    DL 150
    Bench 145

    The changes I am thinking would make my program look like
    Mondays
    Squats add 5lb per session?
    Press add 1lb per session?
    Deadlift add 5lb per session?


    Wednesdays
    Squat & Deadlift bar only for 10x3
    Bench increase 2.5lb per week
    Chins 3x5 don't know if I should add these or not


    Fridays
    Squats add 5lb per session?
    Press add 1lb per session?
    Deadlift add 5lb per session?

    Thanks

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Default

    Yes, these changes would probably make a lot of sense for you. You probably don't need the chins though, and you can probably go heavier than the empty bar on Wednesdays, maybe 65-95 on squats, and you might consider using the RDL since it's a very high quality exercise and a good option to help recovery. Your proposed jumps are on the money.

  3. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by MikeC1 View Post
    Yes, these changes would probably make a lot of sense for you. You probably don't need the chins though, and you can probably go heavier than the empty bar on Wednesdays, maybe 65-95 on squats, and you might consider using the RDL since it's a very high quality exercise and a good option to help recovery. Your proposed jumps are on the money.
    Thanks Mike. The Romanian Deadlifts look interesting.

  4. #4
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    Default

    Wow! I over did the RDL. It really gives a stretch.

  5. #5
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    Default

    Yeah, it gives you a great stretch!

  6. #6
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by MikeC1 View Post
    Yeah, it gives you a great stretch!
    Mike, I think switching to RDL might help me as I have pretty poor flexibility and weak back. Between the stretch at the bottom of the squat and the RDL maybe I can improve my flexibility. Do you think once my flexibility is good I should switch back to regular Deadlift and just keep Wednesday a light day? On my new modified program I am only working bench on Wednesday and doing Squats and RDLs with warm up weights to 80% of Monday's working set.

    Also, at 4 or 5 lbs a week I am looking at hitting 200lbs for squat in about 10 to 12 weeks and 225lbs around December. Do you think I am being too conservative with the weight increases?

  7. #7
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    Apr 2011
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    Default

    I wouldn't worry about being conservative on weight increases. Even if you are squatting only 2 times a week, a 5 lb increase would equated to 40 lbs every month. It may take a couple more months to get there but this is better in the long run.

  8. #8
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    Actually about 20 lbs a month (2-3 per session)

  9. #9
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    RDLs are great for flexibility, which you'll notice the second or third time you do them when you are able to go lower than you did the first time you try them.

    At 46 years old, it's almost more important to have a pleasant training experience than it is to push up the numbers as fast as you can. Which is to say I think keeping Wednesday as a lighter day will be a better idea for you. But if you personally enjoy the punishment that is lifting heavy every workout, then more power to you.

    5 lb jumps on squat and deadlift is plenty fast enough. The real question is, how many months can you stretch it out for?

    The RDL works very well as a primary lift, and my opinion is that if you're going to do them, you should keep doing them as long as you continue to get stronger in the movement, that is, the numbers keep going up. Once it plateaus a little bit, that's a good time to put it back on the shelf and start pushing harder on the deadlift.

  10. #10
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    You didn't mention your weight, but your age and start weights are similar to mine and I'm making good progress with the novice program just by adding an extra day for recovery, so my 3-workout "weeks" are 8 or 9 days each.

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