When I’m teaching a new client how to lift a weight and perform proper repetitions (reps) within a set, I like to break it down into three parts. Most new trainees don’t think too much about lowering the weight or slowing it down before changing direction and raising the weight. Most of their efforts are spent trying to raise the weight. Afterwards they just let the weight fall without control before raising it again. I have found that many weight-training injuries occur at the transformation point of lowering to raising the weight.
When lifting weights (and that includes your body weight, as well) for the goal of increased muscular strength, endurance and hypertrophy; breaking down a rep into three parts can prevent injury and produce better results.
The three parts to a safe rep are:
Eccentric Speed: Lower the weight relatively slowly. I like to start clients out with a five second eccentric or lowering speed. By lowering the weight slowly, you are in more control and can decelerate the weight safely at the transformation point to pause and change direction to then lift the weight.
Transformation Pause: This is the point where injury is most likely to take place if the weight is being lowered out of control and you have to quickly change direction with it. Make sure you are in control of the weight to slow down and pause for a second before changing direction.
Concentric Speed: You can raise the weight a little faster then you lower the weight. I like to start clients out with a three second concentric speed when raising the weight. But be careful not to go too fast because there is also a point of transformation when it’s time to lower the weight.
If you are relatively new to resistance training or just want to be smart about how you lift weights, follow the guidelines above. Building your body up and staying injury free should go hand-in-hand. Don’t take risks in the gym. Try my three-part rep technique and let me known if it works for you.
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Mike Cola has well over 30,000 hours of hands-on personal training experience. He started his own personal training studio in1989, Mike Cola Fitness, which is located in New York. Mike has advanced certifications from the American College of Sports Medicine and other National certifying bodies. In addition, Mike is a Muscle Activation Techniques Specialist and has a BA with studies in exercise physiology, nutrition and biomechanics. Mike started Fitness Contrarian, a health and fitness web site, in 2009.
My name is Mike Cola (yeah that is me in the pic above). I've been called a "Contrarian" since I believe that most mainstream fitness approaches are extremely inefficient.
I achieved the look in that photo just training 3 times per week. My specialty is helping people reach peak condition without having to hit the gym 6-7 times per week.
Make sure and get my free "Forever 27" workout plan above. This is the strategy I teach my clients to have a 20-something body, regardless of their age.
Great post.
How many reps do you typically do. That is a long time under tension. But I guess that is what hypertrophy is all about.
Hey Jason,
I keep changing how many reps I do to mix things up. I range anywhere from 45 to as long as 90 seconds depending on what my goals are.
Now that I am older I like to lift lighter weights & move them slowly until I close the muscle down.
Thanks for the comment.
Best – MIke