A Vital Tool For Your Fitness
Success
by Gregg Gillies
A
Training Diary is a Vital Tool For Your Fitness Success
I know you've heard this before and it seems "basic". But it is
an important key to success. And apparently, it isn't heard enough
because I'd say less than 1% of the people I see in the gym keep
track of their workout.
An essential part of the organization needed to get each workout
day right is a training diary. At its most basic minimum this
is a written record of reps and poundage for every work set you
do and an evaluation of each workout so that you can stay alert
to warning signs of overtraining.
After each workout reflect on your evaluation and, when necessary,
make adjustments to avoid falling foul of overtraining.
A training diary or journal is indispensable for keeping you on
track for training success. No matter where you are now — 180-pound
squat or 500, 13-inch arms or 17, 135-pound bench press or 350
— the systematic organization and focus on achieving goals that
a training journal enforces will help you to get bigger, stronger,
and leaner.
As simple as it is to use a training log, do not underestimate
its vital role in helping you achieve your fitness goals. Most
trainees are aware that they should record their workouts in a
permanent way, but few actually do it.
And even those trainees who keep some sort of training log usually
fail to exploit its full potential benefits. This is one of the
major reasons why most trainees get minimal results from their
training.
Your training journal is extremely important and should be more
than just a list of weights, sets and rep.
When used properly, a training journal enforces the organization
needed to get each work-out right, week after week, month after
month and year after year. By recording your poundages and reps,
you log your entire training program and the week-by-week breakdown
of how you work through the routine (s) in each training cycle
in the journal.
A training log eliminates reliance upon memory. There will be
no, "Did I squat eight reps with 330 pounds at my last squat workout,
or was it seven?" Refer to your journal and you will see precisely
what you did last time—i.e., what you need to improve on if you
are to make your next workout a step forward.
With a well-kept and detailed journal, you'll know with absolute
certainty what is working in your program and what doesn't. Are
you stagnating? Not making the progress you want? Go back and
consult your journal at a time that you were making fantastic
progress? What were you doing then that you are not doing now?
You must be 100 percent honest when entering data. Record the
quality of your reps. If you did five good ones but the sixth
needed a tad of help from a training partner, do not record all
six as if they were done under your own steam. Record the ones
you did alone, but note the assisted rep as only a half rep.
It is not enough just to train hard. You need to train hard with
a target to beat on every work set you do. The targets to beat
in any given workout are your achievements the previous time you
performed that same routine.
If you train hard but with no rigorous concern over reps and poundages,
you cannot be sure you are training progressively. And training
progressively is the key to making progress. But for accurate
records of sets, reps and poundages to have meaning, your training
conditions must be consistent.
If at one workout you rush between sets, then at the next workout
you take your time, you cannot fairly compare those two sessions.
If one week the deadlift is your first exercise and the following
week you deadlift at the end of the workout, you cannot fairly
compare those two workouts. And the form you use for each exercise
must be consistent and flawless every time you train.
Likewise, if you do 3 sets of the bench press and one workout
you take 1 minute between sets and the next workout you take 3
minutes between sets, you can't be sure that you've progressed
from one workout to the next.
Get all the details of your training in black and white, refer
to them when appropriate and get in control of your training.
In addition to control over the short term, this permanent record
will give you a wealth of data to analyze and draw on when designing
your future training programs.
Keep accurate records of each workout, each day's caloric and
protein intake, how much sleep you get, muscular girths and your
body composition. Then you will remove all guesswork and disorder
from your training program.
But all of this is just a bunch of words. You have to make the
theory and rationale come alive with your conscientious and methodical
practical application. Do exactly that now, and take charge of
your training!
Most trainees have neither the organization needed for success
nor the will and desire to push themselves very hard when they
need to. But these are the very demanding essentials for a successful
fitness program.
Find out how you did in trying to make today another step toward
achieving your next set of short-term goals. Have all of today's
actions— training (if a training day), diet and rest—met or exceeded
the goals for the day? If not, why not?
A daily critical analysis of what you did and did not do to take
another step forward will help you to be more alert to improving
tomorrow.
Take a few minutes each day to review your journal.
Take as much control over your life as you can. Learn from your
mistakes. Capitalize on the good things you have done. Do more
of the positive things you are already doing and fewer of the
negative things.
About the Author
Gregg
Gillies is the founder of http://www.buildleanmuscle.com His articles
have appeared in international publications such as Ironman Magazine.
He has written two books and is a regular contributor to Body
Talk Magazine. Check out his site http://www.buildleanmuscle.com