Defining your goals – Bowflex Motivator Strength Training System User Manual

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Defining Your Goals

Your body will do what you train it to do. That’s why it’s important to define your goals and focus on

those goals. Here are some fitness components that will help you define your goals and choose your fit-

ness program.

Muscle Strength is the maximum force that

you can exert against resistance at one time.

Your muscle strength comes into play when

you pick up a heavy bag of groceries or lift a

small child. It is developed when a localized

muscle is worked both positively (concentric)

and negatively (eccentric) at a resistance - great

enough so you can perform only five to eight

repetitions of the exercise before the muscle

fails. Each set of repetitions is followed by a

rest interval that typically runs three times

longer than the set. Later, between exercise

sessions, the muscle overcompensates for the

stress and usually increases in both strength

and size.

Muscle Endurance is the ability to perform

repeated contractions. It comes into play

when you cross-country ski or work on your

feet all day. Endurance training addresses the

slow twitch, endurance muscle fibers, which

depend on oxygen for energy. To develop

muscle endurance, use low resistance and high

repetitions - about 15-20 repetitions in each set,

three sets to each exercise, working the muscle

only to fatigue.

Muscle Power is the combination of strength

and speed of the muscular contraction. This

is often misinterpreted as a)being directly

associated with certain skill or sport and/or

b) meaning that you must move fast. Load is

actually a more important factor than speed

when attempting to improve power. When

training to achieve muscular power, pick a

resistance that fatigues you in the 3-5 repetition

range. When performing these reps, it is more

important to think of contracting the muscles

faster rather than attempting to move faster.

Performing sport simulation exercises usually

results in a deterioration of the motor pattern

or skill. The biomechanically sound method

of improving power in your sport is to train

for power using the correct joint movements,

as described in this manual. Then practice the

skill associated with your sport, learning to

apply this newly achieved power.

Body Composition is the ratio of fat weight

(fat) to lean weight (muscles, bones and tissue).

As you age, the ratio shifts. The fat weight

increases and the lean weight decreases.

Training for muscle strength will generally

increase muscle size and aerobic conditioning

will help burn extra calories. Performing these

two forms of exercise, either at different times

or together, will create the greatest changes in

body fat weight.

Balanced Strength and alignment are the result

of equal strength developed in all parts of the

body. It comes into play in your standing and

sitting posture, and in your ability to perform

just about any activity safely and effectively.

An over-development of the back will round

the shoulders; weak or stretched abdominals

can cause lower back pain. You want a

balance of muscle strength in front and back.

In addition, you need a balance of strength

between your middle, lower, and upper body.

Flexibility is the ability of a muscle or group of

muscles to move the joint through a full range

of motion. Flexibility comes into play when

you execute an overhand serve or stretch for

the top shelf in the kitchen. It is a cooperative

movement of opposite muscle groups. When

a muscle contracts, its opposite muscle group

must relax for the action to occur. Increased

flexibility means an increased range of

motion, made possibly by this simultaneous

contracting and relaxing. Good flexibility is

important in protecting the body from injury

and can be achieved through the balanced

strength training programs that are included in

this manual.

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