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[W1021]Workout Schedule For Women
by Jason Diggs, Jas
But this is a completely wrong notion. You must realize that if you continue with your daily gym schedule and rigorous workouts on all the 7 days of a week, your muscles can get over-strained and you could end up losing all the lean muscle mass that you have in your body.

Therefore, your body needs proper diet as well as sufficient rest in addition to rigorous workouts in order to repair, recover, replenish and grow the muscles that have been damaged during workouts.

For the ultimate increase in strength and size of your muscles, you must train one part of your body, just once per week and allow it to rest for the rest of the week. Cut out your gym visits to just 3 sessions per week and allow 2 days rest period between consecutive workouts. Overtraining or over-exerting your muscles way beyond their original capacity could also lead to injury.

You can either begin your workouts about one hour prior to your dinner, or during the late afternoon. However, most people prefer to begin their day with early morning workouts. You must avoid working out during very hot or humid weather, or within two hours after taking you meal. You must set your fitness goals and plan your workout schedule considering your age, health, and requirement.

You must prepare your muscles for a rigorous workout session ahead by performing warm-up exercises daily for 5 to 10 minutes. You can include exercises like walking, jogging, cycling or knee lifts, which facilitate movement and warming up of all body parts. You must follow this up with exercises for developing muscular strength and endurance. You can include strength training exercises of your major muscle groups for improving your muscular endurance.

This should be followed by exercises such as walking, jogging, swimming, or skipping to improve your cardio-respiratory endurance. Three sessions of cardio exercises per week, each of 20 minute duration, for improving the cardio-respiratory endurance should be sufficient.

Cardio exercises should be followed by 10 to 12 minutes of slow stretching exercises daily to improve flexibility of the body. Finally, to allow regularization of the heart beat and to allow the body to get restored back into a state of normalcy, you must practice 5 to 10 minutes of cooling-down exercises daily such as slow walking or 'Shavasana'.

Sometimes following a fitness program or workout schedule is not quite as do-able as the folks writing the advice make it sound. I suppose the idea is to tell you what you should be doing to achieve your fitness or weight-loss targets, but you know sometimes life gets a bit in the way of all these plans, and there is just no way you can follow your intended program.
I know, because I am in exactly that position myself right now, and it is very easy to get derailed or discouraged and start to wonder if it's all just a bit too much to keep up in the face of uncontrollable obstacles.
My difficulty is that the local pool has closed for six weeks, and that's quite a blow to a training program designed to take me into the World Top Ten Swimming Masters again this year, so I've tried to find somewhere else to get in the necessary daily workout routine, but it seems everywhere I turn, I find the same refurbishing going on and pools closing all over the place; so what do we do? Well the point of all this personal story stuff is to say, "yes we have a real problem in sticking with the training plan but we can, and have to, adapt just to keep the ball rolling to our benefit". The last thing we want to do is give up or say, "let's forget the whole thing".
I guess I sound repetitive, as I say this in several articles, but you must, "keep on keeping on". That's the key to maintaining weight loss or maintaining fitness. It's so easy to get discouraged by the events and obstacles that life puts in the way, but the "can't beat me" kind of feeling can be nurtured by finding an alternative to your workout, and I bet that most of us have some aspect of our program that we have been meaning to work on, but have been too tied up in the regular main activity to focus on.
For example, here's what I have done to combat the lack of pool time. I'm doing some sit-ups, heaven knows I've been avoiding that pleasure for ages now, and I'm getting in some push-ups and a little work on the arms with some light weights, or if you have no weights, try two milk container jugs (the ones with the handles) filled with water, as barbells. Yes we all know that one, but you get the idea of what I'm saying, improvise, you don't have to have all the gear just to keep a maintenance level of fitness and you can also do all this stuff if you're on the road and in a hotel with no weight room.
Now one of the things you don't hear much from the pundits pushing their fitness or weight-loss programs is how they are doing and, if we do, it's all upbeat and rah-rah. Well let me tell you, I went quite some distance to find a pool that was open, as it had been close to two weeks without any swim workout, and boy, oh boy did I feel pretty bad! Arms of lead and legs that reconfirmed to me that if you don't have those legs in shape, you're "cooked". This is the other area I'm always harping on about, but you know it is true that the legs are the key to core strength and if we don't get them in shape, it really doesn't matter how good the rest of the body is because the leg fatigue will suck all the power from the engine.
So I struggled through my session and at the end it was a little better, but knowing I had at least put in a maintenance type session made me feel better and back on track, if not improving at least holding steady and not rolling backwards and that's my point. Whatever is temporarily disrupting your plans or throwing you off your schedule, work around it by adapting and using inventive thinking to keep you from slipping backwards. Like I've said in my articles before, the key phrase is, "keep on keeping on!" So keep on and don't give up!
Good luck, all the best.

Article Source : Pg. 132

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Both Jason Diggs & Alder Debid are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Jason Diggs has sinced written about articles on various topics from Health, Build Muscle and Health. Personal trainer/bodybuilder, Jason Diggs, gives quality, non-biased reviews on the nets top " " instructional programs. His #1 pick goes to. Jason Diggs's top article generates over 2400 views. to your Favourites.

Alder Debid has sinced written about articles on various topics from Makeup, Treadmill Exercises and Fitness. Author writes articles on different topics. To know more, visit:,. Alder Debid's top article generates over 6600 views. to your Favourites.
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