By varying the stresses,
methods and intensities of
your physical training you
will continue performance
improvement in the physical
skills of cardiorespiratory
endurance, strength, power,
speed, flexibility, balance,
coordination, agility, accuracy
and toughness needed for functional
strength, superior conditioning
and fitness excellence.
Why do we physically train?
Well, for most of us it is
to bring about desirable performance
improvements in the physical
abilities needed to meet the
challenges of sport, work
and life with excellence...
and to improve body composition
through physical activity.
That's right... performance
improvement first and appearance
second.
Or, at least that's how it
should be.
The body adapts to the specific
stresses it is subjected to...
making it easier to perform
the activity in the future
and the body more efficient
in handling the stress.
Well, that sounds great...
so what's the problem?
The problem is that if you
do the same thing over and
over again your body will
adapt to a certain point...
and then slow down and stop
performance improvement.
Anyone that has ever trained
before is guilty of doing
this...
We train a certain way and
see great performance improvement
in the beginning... then the
improvements are far and few
between until they just stop
all together.
Then we start asking for advice
about "Breaking Plateaus"
or consider using some kind
of "Supplementation" to keep
the performance improvements
coming.
The fact is... there are better
ways to spend your valuable
training time and money than
trying to force your body
to do something it doesn't
want to do by using elaborate
load and repetition training
schemes and costly supplements.
Routine is your enemy if you
want long-lasting and sustainable
performance improvement...
you must break out of the
mold of predictable behavior
to keep the improvements coming.
When you fall into the trap
of using monotonous and unsustainable
routines you inevitably end
up wasting your training time
trying to force improvements...
instead of shifting the focus
of your training to other
areas in need of performance
improvement.
While you grind out boring
workout after monotonous routine
in search of the elusive "one
more rep"... the other physical
skills are receiving zero
training.
Therefore, you are gaining
NO performance improvement
in the physical skills that
you are training and NO performance
improvement in the physical
skills that you are neglecting...
meaning that you are making
ZERO positive improvements
in any of the physical skills
regardless of all your hard
work.
Now, I don't know about you...
but that does not sound like
a very productive way to spend
my time training.
Yet, that is how the majority
of people train!
Albert Einstein said, "Insanity
is doing the same thing over
and over again and expecting
a different outcome."
I guess you know what I think
of most "fitness" workout
programs.
To combat this problem, you
must plan to continue your
performance improvement by
deliberately varying the stresses,
methods and intensities of
your physical training.
Train all 10 physical skills...
Train different aspects of
the skills... like maximum
strength, explosive power
and strength endurance.
Train different intensities
of activity... like the anaerobic,
anaerobic lactate and aerobic
energy pathways.
Train combinations of different
skills together... making
you more versatile and prepared
for any challenge.
Adding variety to your workouts
will not only keep your over-all
performance improvement on
track, but it will also make
it interesting and sustainable...
meaning you will not only
make the initial performance
and body composition improvements,
but you will continue to improve
as long as you keep training.
Well, that sounds more like
it... getting positive and
lasting performance improvement
results for all your physical
training efforts.
About the author:
Coach Lomax is a strength,
conditioning and fitness coach
dedicated to building better
humans for sport, work and
life. Learn more at Optimum Physical Training
or take his FREE Tabata Calisthenics
Workout Mini Course.
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