The 7 Deadly Workout Sins

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Friday, October 09, 2009 - 4 Comments
By Raphael Calzadilla
eDiets Chief Fitness Pro


"Your PURPOSE explains WHAT you are doing with your life. Your VISION explains how you are living your PURPOSE. Your GOALS enable you to realize your VISION."

-- Bob Proctor, Author and Speaker

Exercise is the best thing for your health regardless of your age, level of fitness or goals. However, it can also be dangerous if you don't avoid some common mistakes and take the proper precautions. Engaging in an exercise program with little foresight and planning can lead to burnout, frustration and possible injury.

If you want to maximize your workout and look your best, it's going to take a combination of motivation and the correct information. eDiets will always help provide the motivation you need and all the necessary information to make you the healthiest and fittest you can be.

Let's take a look at my version of the seven deadly workout sins:

1. Skipping the warm-up. Doing too much too quickly will send your heart rate soaring and put unprepared muscles and joints at a high risk for injury. For beginners, rapid increases in heart rates can lead to lightheadedness, nausea, dizziness, fainting or even heart attacks and stroke. Muscles need time to adjust to the demands placed on them during exercise. Before hitting the weight room or jumping into your regular cardio workout, you should take a few minutes to gently prepare the body for heavier activity -- walking slowly is one example.

2. Jumping into the sauna or hot tub immediately following a workout. The temperatures of saunas and hot tubs can be detrimental to a body that already has elevated temperatures and blood vessels that are dilated from activity. Your body needs to dissipate heat in order to bring your heart rate back to a resting zone and re-circulate blood back to your organs. High temperatures in hot tubs and saunas will cause lightheadedness, dizziness, fatigue, nausea or worse: heat exhaustion, heat stroke and heart attacks. Instead, try a cool shower or allow your heart rate to return to resting levels before getting into the saunas and tubs.

3. Holding your breath while lifting weights. Breath holding, also known as the valsalva maneuver, during weightlifting increases blood pressure significantly, leading to lightheadedness, dizziness, nausea, hernia, heart attack or stroke. To avoid creating high internal pressures, inhale and exhale with each exercise phase of a repetition and breathe naturally during cardiovascular activity.

4. Not having a physical prior to beginning an exercise program. You want to have the most benefit with the least amount of risk and it would never be wrong for you to get a complete check-up prior to beginning activity -- especially if you are over 45 or have other risk factors like smoking, hypertension, high cholesterol or obesity. If you meet two of the above criteria, you are considered to be at risk for heart disease, diabetes and stroke. While exercise is the best thing for your condition, beginning a program without the proper guidelines can do you more harm than good.

5. Exercising above your determined heart rate range. Continually pushing your heart rates to the maximal limits during your cardiovascular workouts is overstressing your heart and lungs unnecessarily. When your heart rate is up to maximal loads, there is a greater chance for irregular heart rhythms. You don't need to place such high demands on your heart to see cardiovascular benefits or to burn fat. If you are apparently healthy, the recommended range is 55-85 percent of your maximal heart rate.

6. Using hand or ankle weights while walking or during aerobic classes. Many fitness guidelines indicate that the use of hand weights during the aerobic portion of step training produces little, if any, increase in energy expenditure or muscle strength. The risk of injury to shoulder joints is significantly increased when weights are rapidly moved through a larger range of motion. It's recommended that hand weights be reserved for strength training, where speed of the movement can be controlled.

7. Not listening to your body. Abnormal heart beats, pain, chest pressure, dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea, prolonged fatigue or insomnia following intensive exercise are signs of an over-trained body that may be at high risk for a heart attack or injury. Take a hint, and slow the down the pace or reduce the number of routines. It would be advisable to have a medical professional assess your condition if you experience any of the major warning signs of cardiac distress during an exercise session. If any symptoms persist during or following an exercise session, have your signs evaluated.

Want flatter abs? Leaner legs? A better butt? Let eDiets help you shape up and slim down with one of our 20 personalized diet plans! Click here to find your best way with a FREE diet profile!

A competitive bodybuilder and former 2001 Mr. Connecticut, Raphael Calzadilla is a veteran of the health and fitness industry. He specializes in a holistic approach to body transformation, nutrition programs and personal training. He earned his B.A. in Communications from Southern Connecticut State University and is certified as a personal trainer with ACE and APEX. In addition, he successfully completed the RTS1 program based on biomechanics.

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Comment: Monday, February 23, 2009 12:33:00 PM - Blogger mikelomar said...  

Dear Raphael,
I love your columns and videos—always clear, concise, and sensible. I'm writing here because I don't know how to contact you otherwise. I'm a 61 year old male who has been active all his life (handball, racquetball, swimming, golf [walking and carrying always], walking the dog, etc.) but who has battled weight problems at the same time. i want to work out every day, but find that my old bones get really sore if I do. Is there a general plan you have for 60 and above to help me get the daily exercise i need (including weight work) without all the soreness and aches & pains? I'd be willing to pay for it. I really have been impressed with your approach. Thanks a lot. Sincerely, Michael Bartz, St. Louis, MO. mikelomar@nerinxhs.org


Comment: Thursday, May 07, 2009 3:12:00 PM - Anonymous Anonymous said...  

Dear Raphael,

Like others, I love your videos. They clearly show how to do the exercise.

I am writing because I also do not know how to contact you otherwise.

I suffered a permanent injury to my left arm, called Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome. I have pain in that arm constantly, I cannot lift weights to tone the flab on this arm. Many times I have decided to ignore the pain but I have to stop. The only exercise I do right now is swimming lengths. I have 100lbs to lose and my knees can only tolerate swimming at this time. I have lost 25lbs.

Do I have any other choices in toning that underarm flab? I know that the arms will tone up as I continue swimming.

Thanks for listening! Angela @ summersday54@yahoo.com


Comment: Thursday, May 07, 2009 6:16:00 PM - Blogger Suzy Q said...  

I agree exercise is required at every age. I started at a well known health club and want ed to make the most of my workouts with the desired results so I obtained a trainer. After only 3 months I lost some weight, inches but wound up with tennis elbow. My doctor thought probably a direct result of training improperly. I dont play tennis or any other sports either. I am 50 and I want to continue after my injury heals. How do you know what is the right type of exercise for you? How do you know how to pick a good trainer? Thanks alot for any insight. Susan Greenwood Ottawa, Ks jewel75711@yahoo.com


Comment: Wednesday, November 04, 2009 5:36:00 PM - Anonymous Anonymous said...  

Dear Raphael,
I'm a 26 yr old married female, I'm 5'5" tall and I weigh 120 pounds. I want to reduce 8-10 more pounds from my hips thighs and butt.I have been trying since 2 years and I can't achieve my goal. I have tried eating 5 small meals with a balance of protein, carbs and fats. I workout 6 days a week for 40-50 minutes, and these workouts are really tough. I'm doing the insanity workout which is really tough. I was consuming 1500 calories and I started putting on weight and therefore, I switched to 1300 calories a day. It has been 3 weeks and I have not seen any change. Why am I not reducing after all these efforts? Please help.
Thank you,
Vandana


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