Lifter problems
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my shins are always scabbed up from deadlifts. I consider my form pretty good. Have tried adjusting it to stop this but it always felt like the bar was getting away from me thus making the lift harder.
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my shins are always scabbed up from deadlifts. I consider my form pretty good. Have tried adjusting it to stop this but it always felt like the bar was getting away from me thus making the lift harder.
Yes! I have the same experience. I'm short limbed with a long torso which makes it worse I fear.
I've just read up on it online and the thing that's repeated is that if the bars hitting your shins then it's because your knees are bending too much and tracking outward. But that just isn't the case with me. My shins stay more or less perpendicular with the floor.
I'm very conscious of keeping my back neutral and tracking the bar vertically and I think my T-Rex arms need to keep the bar very close to my body. Fekk it though, it was a good workout.
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See I was always told the bar should be touching your legs throughout the lift. Or as close as possible.
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See I was always told the bar should be touching your legs throughout the lift. Or as close as possible.
I've been told that too. We're right and the internet is wrong. Fake news.
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Not sure if this has been posted before, but this is a good video to watch…look at those shin pads!
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When I first started getting into deadlifts this was the guy I watched a lot of.
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If Rippetoe says it never leaves your legs that was always good enough for me.
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Started on the 5-3-1 program this week. Absolutely loved the first workout. The actually main lifts weren't too bad because it's starts pretty light. But god dam
The assistant exercises kicked my arse. 5 sets of 10 reps on chin ups was a killer. -
See I was always told the bar should be touching your legs throughout the lift. Or as close as possible.
This is what Rippetoe says. His explanations make sense to me.
Deadlift day is sweatpant day for me.
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See I was always told the bar should be touching your legs throughout the lift. Or as close as possible.
This is what Rippetoe says. His explanations make sense to me.
Deadlift day is sweatpant day for me.
Agreed. The only sweating you should be doing is at the buffet.
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Finished day 2 of prehab for a fracture transverse spinous process C7 (those knobs sticking off the central column). 1X5 88% (120kg). Under or within my left Trap there's a floaty bone splinter.
Front squats 3X5 42-43kg, hanging/belt squats for mobility/range of motion. PVC overhead stretching and some barbell clean pulls from a knee high box.
4 weeks mon-tues; thurs-fri. similar light weight exercise focusing on execution/precision and integrity of positions of my shoulder girdle and core stability.
I don't do the powerlifting style squats of deadlifts, and rarely bench press (almost never). The measuring stick on DLs I was taught was that scraping the shins is caused by pulling to hard/soon, or being too reliant on the back too early. Shoulders forward allows the lower erectors to play the proper role of, well, erecting; in the isometric sense. As the barbell crests the quad-insertions points, just below hip lock out, the erectors play a huge role, but not vertically. Straightening up and standing "tall"–that last couple of centimeters of vertical completion of the DL is carried out by the glutes and traps. Between the knee and lock out, that vertical distance, "shoulders forward" demands isometric stability in the middle-back (especially the Lats, Rhomboids, and Lower-Middle Traps. We call this "sweeping" the bar. It is the physics of how we keep bar path variation to 0 in the transition from the 1st pull (appx. floor to just above the knee), to the 2nd pull (or lock out for powerlifters). "Knees through"-->"Big chest" (for posture: core-to-Lats/obliques vice grip on the "trunk"). this will cause the shoulders to internally rotate to free up the shoulder girdle to shrug the barbell.
Simplified: lower spinal erectors should never be recruited to lift weight vertically. Nothing over 100kg, and that's elite level athletes. If you look at back raises, back extensions, glute ham raises, these movements aren't linear but arcing. even "good mornings" have an "f" shaped bar path
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If you unfold in the wrong order you can definitely exacerbate scraping the shins, but some people just scrape them despite no form errors.
I have long legs and a short torso, and never had any problems with scraping my shins. I do think athropometry (your general body shape/limb lengths) has something to do with it, as others mentioned. I, however, also ascribed to the sweatpants deadlift dress code, as I mention above.
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I suffer from depression, and am (probably) at the high-functioning end of the autistic spectrum, so I see a psychologist every couple of months. My last session was on Wednesday.
Anyway, I raised a concern about body dysmorphia issues, and that I was worried I might slip into bigorexia. His suggestion was to track gym activity, and get a baseline. If it starts to increase, then I know I have a problem.
I just realised that I've been to the gym every day for the last week. Ah well, I'll be fine! :o
My PT had a better suggestion: Do I want to look like Phil Heath? I replied no, and she said that I wouldn't have a problem in that case.
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Other lifter problems:
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You get your diet under control, and drop a shirt size. This causes you to spend loads of money on Iron Heart gear to replace all the stuff that no longer fits.
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Then you build muscle, and put an inch or so onto your chest. All your shirts feel a bit snug. So you have to replace them all. Again.
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Other lifter problems:
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You get your diet under control, and drop a shirt size. This causes you to spend loads of money on Iron Heart gear to replace all the stuff that no longer fits.
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Then you build muscle, and put an inch or so onto your chest. All your shirts feel a bit snug. So you have to replace them all. Again.
so true! I can totally relate to this.
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@TrickHell:
How do you guys calculate calories burned by lifting for your macros / caloric intake during a cut?
With difficulty. I used to rely on My Fitness App which gives a fixed calorie sum per minute but its bullshit. I now use a calorie sum based on a Very Active level for someone if my size/age and don't count exercise at all. It works.
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@TrickHell:
How do you guys calculate calories burned by lifting for your macros / caloric intake during a cut?
What is this "cut" you speak of?
#gainzfolife
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With difficulty. I used to really on My Fitness App which gives a fixed calorie sum per minute but its bullshit. I now use a calorie sum based on a Very Active level for someone if my size/age and don't count exercise at all. It works.
What @neph93 said.
Estimating calories in and out isn't that accurate, so I'd start with a number that looks about right, and adjust from there.
I've heard figures of around 12 calories per pound as a rule of thumb.
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That's probably not miles off, depending on how long a session you do. But that's the problem, I do a 50min leg work out with heavy squats, bulgarian split squats and leg press work followed by high rep isolation exercises and I bet it burns more calories than my 60min + upper body workout.
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