
Originally Posted by
The Baron
You can modify form and get the same stress on the muscle with less weight and less stress on bone and joints. For instance, with BP, don't go all the way up to lockout. When you lock out, you are at a point of skeletal support, and the driving muscles aren't doing anything but resting. So with a rest between each rep, you are capable of lifting more weight. Cutting that rest point out of the exercise means you must use less weight. Ditto any posture that leaves a weight dangling. For instance, doing T-bar rows and letting the arms go all the way down. Keep the elbows back and slightly bent, the upper arm slanted to the rear, and you will always have stress on the targeted muscle. Always avoid points of skeletal support! No dangling, no lockout. Use a slower negative. With flys, keep arms nearly straight. Some guys do them the way I do dumbbell BP! Speaking of, most guys do DB BP with the weights over the chest. NO! The weight and the forearm should be balanced directly over the elbows! If you clack the dummies together at the top, you are doing it wrong, and using more weight than you need. Think form! Forget about how much you can lift... it is all about how much you can stress the targeted muscle in a 45 second set, keeping to your target rep range. You say you can't do squats... try loading up a pair of 100 lb dumbbells and squatting with them but don't go all the way up. When you are almost up, start back down and go almost to where your ass rests on your calves. Try holding for a second, halfway up. Just a measly 200 lbs and I bet you hate me before the set is finished! Form can be manipulated to give a far bigger bang for far less weight.