So, I’m pretty new to working out. I’m deceptively strong, but I’m more into losing weight than strength building. Still though, I paid $600 for a year of gym membership, and I bought these things called Powerblock’s, which are like dumbells, but you can customize their weight up to 50lbs (and you can expand them later up to 90lbs). So I figure I should just do some strength training anyways. Not like there’s a downside, right?

So for the first month of this, I had a very wrong idea. I thought “go to the gym, every day, and just do whatever”.

So most days were arm day. I’d go on a Monday, arm day. I’d go on a Tuesday, arm day. I’d go 4-5 days a week.

Since then, I’ve been told NOT to do that, and only do arm day once per week. As the muscles need time to heal between lifts.

Here’s the thing I don’t get. I’ve been doing curls, and another machine where you pull these pulleys downward, and set the weight. With Curls, I’m up to 30lbs for that. Sets of 12 is what I was told. I was doing sets of 20, but I was told that was too much.

When I got home, I tried doing this other exercise with my Powerblock. I’m sure there’s a name for it, but bear with me. You stand straight up, with your arms at your sides, holding the dumbells. Then the exercise is, you raise your arms. Not forward, not towards you, but to your sides. So your body makes a T shape. Arms fully extended left and right at shoulder height, still holding the dumbells. and then you lower your arms back to your waist. It’s kind of like flapping your wings, but in slow motion, and more stiff.

I can’t do that at 30lbs. I can’t even do it fully at 20lbs. I’ve been doing it at 17.5 lbs. But here’s what’s weird. Even from day 1 when I did curls, I could either do it, or I couldn’t. Based on weight. My first attempt I tried a 50lbs dumbell. Mistake. On day 1 I kept sizing down until I got to the 10lbs, and then over the coarse of a week, moved up to a 20lbs, and now a 30lbs. But if I tried to do another weight that I couldn’t lift, I just couldn’t lift it. There’s no pain.

But when I do my T arms exercise, even at 17.5lbs, there’s pain. It’s not a lot of pain, but there’s pain.

There’s no pain if I go down to 15lbs, which is the powerblock with no weight, and completely empty. So it’s practically weightless. Which is what I don’t understand. Why can I lift curls at 30lbs, but this T exercise not only causes pain, but I also can’t even do 20lbs?

Am I doing something dangerous?

    • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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      21 days ago

      “the evidence is mounting” unfortunately isn’t really a substitute for decades of high quality evidence. You shouldn’t have to link through dozens of studies if what you’re saying was established, because there would be metaanalyses and reviews doing that summary for you. Maybe it’ll turn out to be that way eventually, maybe not, but it’s not the state of the evidence right now.

      • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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        21 days ago

        Read the article, then read the sources. Not just the headline. Do a little more research on your own and read all the other studies. I just picked the first thing I had bookmarked.

        There are no comparative meta analysis between the two because it shouldn’t be a one or the other choice, you should do cardio and weightlift. But if you can only do one, weightlifting has the best benefits for longevity. This is almost an undisputed truth at this point.

        LISS isn’t even the best form of cardio for long term health. It’s prescribed for its accessibility because it’s much better than sitting on your ass all day. You’re not gonna tell an office worker whose hobby is watching tv to start running 5 miles three times a week at a moderate pace, they can’t do it and they won’t do it.