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Personal Fitness

Personal Fitness . I. Language of Lifting. Language of Lifting. Abduction- Movement of a limb from middle of the body. Language of Lifting. Adduction- Movement of a limb toward the middle of the body. Language of Lifting. Agonist-

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Personal Fitness

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  1. Personal Fitness I

  2. Language of Lifting

  3. Language of Lifting • Abduction- • Movement of a limb from middle of the body

  4. Language of Lifting • Adduction- • Movement of a limb toward the middle of the body

  5. Language of Lifting • Agonist- • Muscle directly engaged in contraction, primarily responsible for the movement of a body part

  6. Language of Lifting • Antagonist- • Muscle that counteracts the agonist, Lengthening when agonist muscle contracts

  7. Language of Lifting • Atrophy- • Withering away-decrease in size

  8. Language of Lifting • Barbell (bench bar)- • A steel bar five to six feet long with an average weight of 45 lbs.

  9. Language of Lifting • Cheating- • too much weight used on an exercise therefore relying on surrounding muscle groups for assistance in the movement

  10. Language of Lifting • Body Composition • The proportions of lean tissue as compared to fat tissue in the body

  11. Language of Lifting • Concentric Contraction- • When muscle contracts of shortens

  12. Language of Lifting • Eccentric Contraction- • Muscle lengthens while maintaining tension

  13. Language of Lifting • Curl Bar • A steel bar designed with bends for ease with curling exercises, weighs an average of 25 lbs.

  14. Language of Lifting • Dumbbell • A short barbell 10-12 inches in length

  15. Language of Lifting • Endurance- • Ability of a muscle to produce force continually over a period of time

  16. Language of Lifting • Frequency- • Number of sessions per week for each muscle group

  17. Language of Lifting • Hypertrophy- • Increase in size of muscle fiber

  18. Language of Lifting • Isokinetic Exercise- • Isotonic exercise in which there is a accommodating resistance. Nautilus and Cybex are two types of isotonic machines

  19. Language of Lifting • Isometric Exercise- • Muscular contraction where muscle maintains a constant length and joints no not move

  20. Language of Lifting • Isotonic exercise- • Muscular action in which there is a change in length of muscle and weight. Lifting free weight is a classic isotonic

  21. Language of Lifting • Muscle balance- • Balance the program to include opposing muscle groups

  22. Language of Lifting • Negative reps • When you lower the weight

  23. Language of Lifting • Progressive overload principle • Duration-the length of time spent exercising • Intensity-the degree of exertion put forth by the body during exercise • Frequency-the number of days per week an individual exercises. (at least 3-4 days is recommended

  24. Language of Lifting • Range of motion • Movement allowed by the body’s joints and body position in a particular exercise

  25. Language of Lifting • Repetitions • The specific number of times you repeat weight training exercise

  26. Language of Lifting • Set • A group of repetitions that make up a unit • Example 3 set of 5 reps

  27. Language of Lifting • Maximal strength testing(Max) • Lifting as much weight as possible for one repetition

  28. Elements of Fitness

  29. Elements of Fitness

  30. Elements of Fitness

  31. Elements of Fitness

  32. How many reps • In the beginning program stick to 10 reps

  33. How much weight

  34. Rule of thumb

  35. How much weight • Rule of thumb • Use as much weight as is comfortable for 10 reps

  36. How much weight • Rule of thumb • Use as much weight as is comfortable for 10 reps • The last rep should be fairly hard to perform

  37. When to Increase weight? • Once you’re able to do more than 10 reps, increase the weight

  38. Low reps/high weight= strength High reps/low weights=endurance Two types of Lifting

  39. It takes approximately 8-12 weeks to achieve gains in strength

  40. Weight training programs

  41. Weight training programs

  42. Weight training programs

  43. Weight training programs

  44. Weight training programs

  45. Order of exercise • Start with large or multiple muscle groups(chest) followed by small muscle groups (triceps)

  46. An Ideal exercise program • Incorporate aerobic activity • Resistance training • Flexibility exercises

  47. When you are physically fit • More likely to be at your ideal weight • More energy • Cope with stress • Less likely to be depressed • Have stronger bones • Relax and sleep well

  48. Order of exercise • Start with large or multiple muscle groups(chest) followed by small muscle groups (triceps)

  49. An Ideal exercise program • Incorporate aerobic activity • Resistance training • Flexibility exercises

  50. Lifts Back • Dead lifts • Bent over rows • Lat pull overs • Lat pull downs

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