How to Develop, Analyze and Evaluate Your Physical Training
Program
With all the advice, workouts, methods and philosophies about
strength, conditioning and fitness out there... How do you
develop a physical training program that is right for you?
First of all, there are may reasons to get involved in a
physical training program... and you must first determine yours
is you are to choose correctly.
Some people's physical training program are targeted toward
muscle growth, others toward burning fat, others toward gaining
strength, others to meet general fitness goals, etc.
I personally believe a physical training program should be used
to improve the physical abilities of cardiorespiratory
endurance, strength, power, speed, flexibility, balance,
coordination, agility, accuracy and toughness.
A physical training program should improve the physical
abilities that are needed to face the challenges of sport, work
and life with excellence... basically, allowing us to become
better suited human beings for the unpredictable environment in
which we live.
Here are the guidelines I use to develop, analyze and evaluate
my physical training program:
1) A physical training program should commit to functional
strength, superior conditioning and fitness excellence
OPTIMIZATION... Not muscular size and aerobic conditioning
MAXIMIZATION.
Your physical training program must address the improvement of
all the physical abilities... and not just one physical ability
at the expense of all others.
The sad fact is, most people get caught up in becoming the best
at one particular physical ability... and completely ignore the
others.
Who cares how strong you are when the life challenge calls for
balance and flexibility.
True physical fitness is a compromise between all the physical
abilities and the seamless transition from on ability to another.
2) A physical training program should continue performance
improvement through deliberate variation of training methods,
intensities and stresses... Not monotonous, unsustainable and
long term routines.
There is no one best, one size fits all physical training
program that universally fits everyone's goals, needs, abilities
and limitations.
Use variety to produce an environment that keeps the body
improving... long term routine will only bring about limited
results.
3) A physical training program concentrate on quality physical
training and proper technique and then increase the quantity of
your training... Leave your ego out of your workout program.
Your physical training program is where you work on your
weaknesses and seek improvement... and not a place to show off.
Make sure to perform the exercises correctly before increasing
the quantity.
4) A physical training program should focus on core strength and
developing a body that functions as one complete unit... Just
say "no" to machines.
Isolation exercises on machines teach you to do isolation
exercises on machines... a skill which is of little value in the
real world.
Make your core strong by including it in all your exercises and
use the body as one complete unit... just like you would in the
challenges of sport, work and life.
5) A physical training program should train movements through
compound exercises, single limb and alternating limb
exercises... Not muscles through "isolation" exercises.
Who cares how big your muscles are if you can't use them to
complete a task in the real world.
Train movements that translate into real world performance
improvements.
6) A physical training program should train muscular strength,
muscular power and muscular endurance for functional strength
improvement... not muscular size for appearance.
Strength training should address all aspects of strength... and
not be treated as the secondary effect of size seeking.
It is better to be stronger than you look... Than to look
stronger than you are.
7) A physical training program should train the anaerobic,
anaerobic lactate and aerobic energy pathways for superior
conditioning under the greatest set of circumstances... Now only
one energy pathway for "specialized" conditioning.
Metabolic conditioning training should address all the energy
pathways for versatile conditioning.
Extreme aerobic conditioning is not the measure of fitness
excellence.
Sport, work and life challenges are made up of intense flurries
of activity broken up be periods of less intensity and rest...
not one long, continuous, monotonous, rhythmic activity.
8) A physical training program should train the physical
abilities of cardiorespiratory endurance, strength, power,
speed, flexibility, coordination, agility, balance, accuracy and
toughness for fitness excellence... Not just one or two
abilities creating unbalanced fitness performance.
True fitness is not the maximization of one physical skill at
the expense of all others... But the optimization of all
physical skills in fluid interaction.
Fitness is a compromise.
9) A physical training program should fortify your strengths
while concentrating on improving your weaknesses for the
greatest over-all fitness improvement.
It is a waste of valuable physical training time to spend all
your energy trying to improve your strength while your
weaknesses go untrained
Greater fitness improvement can be made by turning your
weaknesses into newfound strengths.
10) A physical training program should be personalized, short,
intense and frequent.
Keep the training sessions short and intense for the best
results... but don't forget to throw in some medium intensity,
medium duration and high intensity, long duration training for
variety.
Varying your workouts this way will allow you to work out more
frequently without the fear of overtraining and injury... and
prepare you for a greater amount of physical circumstances in
the bargain.
Ultimately, any physical training program must be personalized
to the goals, needs, abilities and limitations of the individual.
These are the guidelines I use to keep my physical training
program on track and the physical improvements coming that will
allow me to meet the challenges of sport, work and life with
excellence.
So how does your physical training program stand up to these
guidelines?