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<I
am 52, in reasonably good shape and have been lifting for approximately
30 years. I have a rotator-cuff injuryno tear. MRI says I
need some surgery. I have since developed pain in my other shoulder,
both elbows and pretty much both wristsguess I'm falling apart.
Today benching is intensely painful. I know the difference between
the right type of pain and the type of pain that warns your body
of potential injury. Therefore, I have stopped benching. The gym
owner, an avid bodybuilder, encourages me to work out with the machines
instead of free weights. I must say the machines do not cause nearly
as much of the (bad) pain I was getting with the free weights. However,
this type of working out is very hard for me, because I really feel
nothing during or after my workout. In your opinion, can good results
such as strength and size be maintained and possibly increases be
made using mostly machines vs. the GOOD OLE free weights? I recall
that years ago Mike Mentzer trained alot with Nautilus equipment
and raved about it. I don't know if this was realty or just a paid
promotion for and by Nautilus. Dan>
Be
strong. Take heart. It's time to give the shoulders, elbows and
wrists a rest. They are designed to work hard with proper care and
respect. Think of all the stress they undergo workout after workout
while we push them beyond their healthy capacity. In me I see it
as obsession, insecurity, self-centered-ness, ignorance and meanness.
That doesn't make me a bad person; just a poor sap who needs to
give his joints some peace while he reconsiders his purposes.
How
about light dumbbells, warming up and going moderately heavy...
flat and differing levels of incline? Moderate-weight flys supersetted
with stiff-arm pullovers of medium weight. The change is smart,
recruits new muscles that support the structure as the joints get
relief, stimulates novel interest and broadens your training understanding.
You'll come back strong and encouraged instead of leaving torn and
discouraged. Those impressive numbers will be around for a long
time.
The
machines work well (Hammer chest press, etc) but get off the heavy
trip and commit to moderate with form, pace and supersetting as
a substitute for heavy-weight intensity. Not for a day but for the
summer... live and learn and grow... nothing to lose and everything
to gain.
Mike
Mentzer supported Nautilus theories to an extreme with whole-body
failure training once a week. I prefer volume training with the
basic equipment (weights and cables and some Cybex and Hammer stuff...
power training mixed in 3-4 days a month.
See
ya... Dave
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