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Training Myths Debunked

by Sean Hyson, C.S.C.S., and the MF Training Team

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Most of the ideas you hear circulating in your local weight room today have about as much basis on scientific fact as the notion that the world is flat. MF calls out these myths once and for all and tells the truth about how to train.

1
THE MYTH: Lactic acid causes muscle fatigue.
HOW IT STARTED: Research conducted nearly 100 years ago (on frog muscles, no less) suggested that lactic-acid levels within muscles increased with fatigue.
THE TRUTH: “Lactic acid increases with fatigue because it’s fueling your muscle contractions,” says Chad Waterbury, a strength coach in Los Angeles. It causes the painful burning sensation in your muscles that makes you want to stop lifting, but your liver is also converting lactic acid into more energy, so it’s actually helping to offset fatigue. Muscle fatigue is prompted by an accumulation of protons within the muscles, which is caused by the breakdown of glycogen, the stored carbohydrate that helps to fuel exercise.

2
THE MYTH
: It’s safer to lift weights slowly.
HOW IT STARTED: In rehabilitation settings, patients are told to perform exercises at slow tempos in order to retrain their bodies to execute a movement pattern smoothly. Consequently, some trainers got the idea that training slowly reduces the risk of injury.
THE TRUTH: “As long as you always control the lifting and lowering phases of an exercise,” says Waterbury, an expert in neurophysiology, “you won’t set yourself up for injury.” In fact, Waterbury tells all his injury-free clients to perform their reps with speed “because it trains the muscles to react quickly in unexpected, real-world situations, which is how you really protect yourself from injury.” Furthermore, lifting weights with speed activates more muscle fibers, leading to greater muscle gains.

3
THE MYTH
: Light weights and high reps tone muscles.
HOW IT STARTED: Bodybuilders have long used lightweight, high-rep sets in the weeks prior to a contest. The more reps they’re able to perform, they figure, the more calories (and fat) they burn, helping them get as lean as possible.
THE TRUTH: Bodybuilders always accompany this kind of training with low-carb, calorie-restricted diets; that’s what accounts for their rapid fat loss. “A toned appearance is dependent on your level of body fat and muscle development,” says Jim Smith, C.S.C.S., a strength coach in Sayre, Pa. In other words, to see more muscle tone, you need to get bigger muscles and lose flab.

4
THE MYTH
: Machines are safer than free weights.
HOW IT STARTED: Exercise-machine manufacturers advertise that their equipment isolates target muscles and prevents injury by having the trainee perform an exercise through a preset path of motion, thereby eliminating room for error.
THE TRUTH: The restrictive movements of machine exercising might actually increase the risk of injury. “Machines are fixed and rigid and therefore limit the natural movements of the lifter,” says Smith. They can’t accommodate a person’s individual limb length and strength curve, and as a result can place shearing forces on joints. “When you use free weights,” says Smith, “your body naturally makes adjustments throughout the exercise’s range of motion according to your strength level, speed of movement, and proficiency at executing your reps.” Machines don’t allow this.

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READERS COMMENTS:


Man oh man it's nice to have some of these myths cleared up. It's always cool to base your reasons for not doing things up with facts. Thanks MF
-- Mils

Looks like there are one or two good tips in this article (wearing a belt when squatting light & letting my knees go past my toes when squatting). I will use them!!
-- Daniel

thanks for the facts, this article was VERY informative and helpful.
-- Mike P

I'm glad to hear this information!
Hopefully you will continue in the future with answers to other myths..
-- vernon parrish

when in doubt, just ask vince.
-- j.glover

Vince Del Monte, rocks! Having some of these myths cleared up was really useful!
-- Thiago

Thankyou so much for the information, I circuit train everyday with relatively heavy weight, for my size and people are always telling me I over train. Thankyou for the science behind my madness!
-- Yusef Thomas

i'm disabled my whole right side of my body is contracted from a motorcycle accident but i was a personal trainer but i would like to know what execises i can do
-- ryan hirsch

Bologna.
-- Jason

My age old myths have been blasted. Thanks for the eye-openers.
-- Major V V Narayanan, S.India

good article except for the information on squats. It is physics that will tell you that when you do squats with your knees past your toes where the stress will be...at your knees.Check out some of the research sites such as NSCA, ACSM.
-- A

Think about walking up stairs, don't your knees pass your toes? I think so. Allowing the knees to pass the toes is completely natural, compared to leaning forward and throwing your back into the exercise just to keep the knees behind your toes. The key is where you are weightbearing. If you are allowing yourself to push your weight on your toes then you are putting added stress to the knee. If you keep the weight planted on the heel and and midfoot, you will experience absolutely no added pressure in the knee and even less pressure on the back. And a side note, a real squat should be performed through the full range of motion.
-- Brian, CSCS, HFI

I'm over 6 feet tall. If my knees don't go past my toes, my knees AND back hurt. Each person is different.
-- Chris

Good article.
-- mohammed omary

great article, thanks.
-- AO

incredible article!
-- M Calliste

I haven't read the squat article, but i am a heavy natural squatter who believes that each person is structurally different. thanx for the muscle tone and fat issue also!
-- Milton Crayton

Very good article. I will now stop playing my wii and get back to the weight training.
-- Tropical Storm Noel Arzadon

Ok Thats good
-- Moe


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