4 Reasons Why You’re Not Getting Stronger
I’m diving straight in with this article and getting straight to the point. I discuss 4 key points and I have placed them in what I believe to be order of importance:
1. You’re not ready to get strong yet
Many clients who walk into the gym on day one are not in a position to start getting stronger. They simply don’t have the flexibility, mobility or neurological co-ordination to start performing compound lifts to start building strength. Office workers often have offensively tight hip flexors, no glute activation and a very poor range of motion overhead (no offence). Is this client ready to start a barbell program of Olympic lifts? No. You will only be loading up dysfunctions and making them worse.
Phase 1 of their program should be to activate muscles and improve their mobility. Spend 6-8 weeks doing this ‘boring’ stuff and then they will be in a far better position to start a program.
You’re never going to build strength if you can’t perform squats, deadlifts or overhead pressing variations due to lack of flexibility and mobility.
2. Too impatient
Again, this one is so common. Someone will start on a new training program, e.g. German Volume Training (which in a nutshell involves doing 10 sets of 10 reps on a compound lift e.g. squats with a short rest period in between). They will start this program, say for 3-4 weeks and then hear their mate talking about another program or training protocol and start following that.
You need to be patient, and actually stick to programs for 10-12 weeks to give them a chance of actually working.
People are too impatient and I think what makes it worse nowadays is that there is so much information out there, it actually confuses people more. You only have to load Facebook or Instagram up and someone will be preaching about their way of training and how it’s the best and anyone who presents something with enough passion can be convincing enough to change someone’s mind.
3. Always Testing Your Strength Never Building It
This is a huge factor and I see it all of the time. You could call it “ego lifting.” You will find people constantly trying to lift the most weight as physically possible, every week. For example, with squats if someone’s max lift is 100kg, the best way to get stronger is to build strength lifting at 80-90% of their max ie. 80kg for 5 sets of 5 reps or 85kg for 5 sets of 4 reps or 90kg for 3 sets of 3 reps etc.
You need to be patient and think of the bigger picture, build strength over time, it doesn’t happen overnight. True strength can take years to build.
This is boring to some. It’s more exciting and makes for a better gym video to go all out and try and lift 100kg, even push themselves to squat 110kg and seek that new personal best even at the expensive of their back rounded and vertebrae cracking under the bar. I’m not saying never test your strength, it’s good to know if you’re getting stronger, but there’s no need to do it every week.
You will find many exceptionally strong athletes who never really test their 1 rep max, unless say in a competition or something similar. This means they will probably go years without ever failing a lift. Where the average ‘gym bro’ will load that bar up as heavy as possible every week and constantly have their training partner rescue them from a near death experience.
4. Wasting time on stuff that doesn’t matter
Program design is a huge factor in getting strong. If your program is designed around sitting on a machine, tricep rope pushdowns and lying on your back doing crunches then your strength is never going to progress.
To get stronger you need to invest time into exercises that have a bigger “bang for their buck” e.g. multi-joint compound lifts. The program doesn’t have to be fancy; it just has to be EFFECTIVE and I am a big believer in simplicity.
Then you need to start training these movements more frequently, remember frequency is KEY in getting stronger and I have spoken about this many times. Want to improve your squat? Then you’re going to need to squat 2-3 times per week. Just training one muscle group per session, per week is very 1992. Things have progressed since then and people are getting stronger and stronger, so make sure you don’t get left behind.
After reading this you feel like you would like some help with program design, whether you’re a complete beginner to the gym or advanced lifter we can help you out…
For more information please email info@ajperformance.co.uk
Thanks a lot,
Adam
AJPerformance