By Aaron M. PottsIn order to maintain the
effectiveness of your workouts over the long term, you have to employ a
concept known as cross training. Although there is no hard and fast
definition of cross training, the basic idea is that you continually
change your exercise program to work both your muscular and your
cardiovascular systems in a variety of ways.One of the biggest misconceptions about
exercise is that there is "one" program that works for someone all the
time. People think that they need to get on a particular workout program
and just keeping doing that program over and over again. Although
getting on a good program IS a necessary first step, ensuring that your
body doesn''t adapt to that program is critical to ensuring that your
results don''t slow down or stop!
In order to maintain the
effectiveness of your workouts over the long term, you have to employ a
concept known as cross training. Although there is no hard and fast
definition of cross training, the basic idea is that you continually
change your exercise program to work both your muscular and your
cardiovascular systems in a variety of ways, forcing your body to adapt
to a new stimulus. Remember that the whole idea behind exercise is to
make your body do things that it is not used to doing. In response to
that effort, your body naturally adapts in order to meet the changing
energy demands of the activities that you engage in. This process
happens with your muscles, as well as with your heart, lungs, and
circulatory system - collectively known as the cardiovascular system. To
ensure you get the most out of your cross training efforts, you should
make changes to the activities that challenge your muscles as well as
your cardiovascular system.
Challenging Your Muscles When
you are putting together the muscular training part of your exercise
program, remember that the primary mission of the activities is to
challenge your muscles and connective tissues - tendons and ligaments -
beyond their normal boundaries. For example, if you were to pick up a
suitcase that only weighed 5 pounds, it would probably not be very
difficult for you. However, if that same suitcase had 50 pounds worth of
items inside, it would be significantly more difficult to pick up and
carry. In response to that increased demand, your body would recruit
additional muscle fibers to assist with the work, and in some cases
would even recruit a different type of muscle fiber. Although we won''t
get into the details about the different types of muscle fibers in the
human body, you do want to take away the fact that the number and type
of muscle fibers recruited for any given task is proportionate directly
to the difficulty of the task.
Let''s apply this concept to
weight training - or resistance training, as it is often called. If you
were going to do a basic bicep curl with 5 pounds, your body would
engage a certain number and type of muscle fibers. Doing exactly the
same exercise with a more challenging weight would cause your body to
need additional resources in order to handle the increased demand.
However, is that only true of picking up a heavier weight? What would
happen if you used the same weight, but did a higher number of
repetitions? The same basic concept applies - your body will recruit
additional resources in order to accomplish the task. What can be
determined from that fact is that in order to change the stimulus on
your body, two easy ways to do so are are to increase the weight and/or
increase the number of repetitions.
However, there are other
ways to challenge a particular muscle group in addition to simply adding
weight or repetitions. What about changing the position of your body
when you do the exercise? Using the same example as above - the bicep
curl - most people do the basic version of that exercise standing up,
with their arms extended, elbows at the side, and palms facing forward.
What if you were to do the same exact movement, only this time, you turn
your palms to face the center of your body throughout the entire
exercise? Do you see how that would change the stimulus? You would still
be engaging the biceps of your upper arm, but you would also engage the
muscles of your forearms in a different way, just because of the
position of your palms.
Further, what if you were to change the
speed at which you did the exercise? Most resistance exercises should be
done as a basic count of 2 seconds during the initial phase (also known
as the concentric phase), and then a count of 3 to 4 seconds during the
second phase of the movement (known as the eccentric phase). What if
you were to reverse that process? Count to 4 during phase one, and only
count to 2 during phase two. Do you think your body would need to react
differently to handle the different stress? Of course!
There are
many, many different kinds of exercises for the biceps. If you normally
do bicep curls, hammer curls, and cable curls, what would happen if you
started using 2 or 3 of the bicep curl machines instead? Your body
would have to adapt to the new stimulus! By sitting down in a bicep curl
machine, you are no longer using your leg, back, and abdominal muscles
to stabilize yourself like you were when you were standing up doing a
bicep curl. However, by locking your body into a certain position on the
machine, you are isolating the biceps, allowing you to focus more on
the contraction of the bicep muscles during the movement. Does that mean
that the machines are better than the dumbbells? No. It also does not
mean that the dumbbells are better than the machines - it just depends
on what your goal is. What you need to take away from this section is
not that one exercise is better than another - just that they are
different, and that is cross training.
To summarize, here are but a few of the ways that you can cross train your muscles:
* Heavier Weights
* Higher Number of Repetitions
* Change the Position of Your Body
* Modify the Speed of the Exercise
* Use Machines as well as Free Weights
Challenging Your Cardiovascular System Just
like the muscular system, your body will find ways to adapt to the
cardiovascular training that you do, and before long you will stop
seeing a high degree of results. Let''s try to use some of the same
concepts that we applied to resistance training, and see if they also
apply to cardiovascular training!
Heavier Weights How
can you make yourself heavier? Most people are trying to make
themselves LIGHTER when they exercise! However, if you are able to find a
safe way to increase the total amount of weight that your body is
moving during cardiovascular training, don''t you think that the
activity would be more difficult, and force your body to adapt? Sure it
would!
A common method that people use to do this is one that
you should NOT do, and that is strap on wrist weights or ankle weights,
or to carry dumbbells while you are doing cardio. Although this does
increase the total amount of weight being moved by your body, it also
puts a stress on your joints that is not natural, and therefore, not a
good idea. However, alternatives that DO work include putting on an
adjustable weighted vest, or even just strapping on a backpack with some
weights or books in it! The idea is to keep the additional weight as
close to your body as possible, away from easily damaged joints.
Higher Number of Repetitions Although
you don''t normally count repetitions when you are doing cardio, you DO
take a certain number of steps, have a certain number of revolutions
per minute on the elliptical or the bike, or you take a certain number
of steps on the stair master. Do you think that increasing those numbers
would help? You bet! Whether it be by staying on the equipment for
longer, or just working out harder to get a higher number of steps or
revolutions in the same amount of time, either way you have changed the
stimulus on your cardiovascular system (not to mention your legs!), and
by reacting to that new stress, your cardiovascular system will burn
more calories while adapting to the new program.
Change the Position of Your Body You
may be asking yourself at this point just how many positions can the
body be in when you are walking on the treadmill? The answer is PLENTY!
Changing the incline of the equipment is an obvious way to change the
position of your body, provided you continue to STAND UP STRAIGHT. If
you hunch over, or grab the machine for support, you are defeating the
purpose. What about leaning backwards or forwards when riding a bike, or
peddling an elliptical? By changing the angle at which your legs are
pushing
on the machine, you are most certainly changing the stimulus, forcing your body to adapt!
Modify the Speed of the Exercise This
one pretty much goes without saying! Go faster, and you''ll burn more
calories, and elicit a new adaptive response from your body. However,
what about going slower? What if you are used to the Cycling class where
your instructor seems to be made of steel, and can spin his/her legs
around 80,000 times a minute for 30 minutes straight? Can slowing down
be as effective as that? Sure it can! Trying reaching down to tighten up
the resistance knob on that bike past your normal comfort level, and
it''s guaranteed that your body and your legs will have to find a new
way to provide energy, even though you are actually going slower than
you were a few minutes ago.
Use Machines as well as Free Weights Other
than what we discussed above with weight vests/backpacks vs.
ankle/wrist weights, you really don''t use free weights during cardio.
However, you DO ride a treadmill or an exercise bike or a stair master
on a regular basis, right? Trade those machines in for the real thing!
Go outside and go for a brisk walk or a jog. Use a REAL bike and get out
for some fresh air and an invigorating ride around your area. Find a
tall building in your area and walk up and down the stairs. It''s a safe
bet that after a few flights you''ll be wishing you were back on the
stair master with it''s motorized movement assistance!
The
examples above have been just a few ways that you can cross train your
body. There are many different training protocols, and literally
thousands of different exercises that the human body is capable of. You
should research as many different training protocols as possible, and
even enlist the aid of a personal trainer if you need help setting up a
program for yourself, or to change the program that you are already on.
Remember, the key is to make your body ADAPT to new stimulus as often as
possible!
Now get out there and get some exercise!