Published on February 12, 2025 5:15 AM GMT
Who this post is for? Someone who either:
- Wonders if they should start lifting weights, and could be convinced of doing so.Wants to lift weights, and doesn't know where to begin. If this is you, you can skip this first section, though I'm guessing you don't know all the benefits yet.
The WHY
Benefits of ANY EXERCISE:
- Great mental benefits. I personally have ADHD and lifting gives me an attention boost similar to my Adderall. I'm not talking about the long term abstract of being happy that you are healthy. Post exercise your mood and cognitive hability will probably me accutely better.Improved sleep quality, which will then improve about a million thingsStrongly improved health markers, both blood levels and your body composition. Most people probably would be healthier with more muscle and less fat.It fits the hobby-shaped whole your life might have. Something you do divorced from work, with progression, community, and so forth
Benefits of LIFTING compared to other exercise:
- In spite of most of the lies you will hear, most exercise won't build muscle. If you are a fat guy and start jogging or playing soccer, you'll probably actually lose muscle mass along with your fat loss. Athletes that play sports professionally are both genetically gifted, and probably lift weights to support their performance. But why do you want more muscle mass? Benefits in order
- You'll be more attractive to others and to yourself. You'll probably largely hedonically adapt to seeing yourself look better, as will a long term partner. But you don't hedonically adapt to being treated better by strangers and to having access to more options in dating, if you are interested in dating.
Images of outlier physiques you can't probably even reach aside, more muscle is as close to universally attractive as anything you can get.
The number of times someone who didn't take performance enhancing drugs was described by anyone as "too muscular" in the entire history of humanity can be probably counted in one hand.More muscle and less fat again, benefit your healthy greatly. The latter is easy, the former not so much. If you're interested in quantified self, I'd suggest getting your blood markers before your journey to see what lifting does, including your A1C.
Costs of LIFTING:
- Time. But my prescription is two to three sessions of 45 minutes per week. Marginal cost is zero if you "have to exercise anyway".It will take between 2 and 8 weeks of active discipline to stick to it, like most habits. Forcing yourself until it's a habit is a cost.Like all new things, you have to learn it. That's where this post comes in.You might not like it. You'll feel unconfortable in the gym at first, and for a very small fraction of people that never fully goes away.
My Prescription for those who want to start lifting:
The tacit advice
Not all you need to know is just the program. I will at the end of this both give you a program, and a framework to make many more programs. But first I need to go through an infodump with all the basic things I either get asked / have to correct in people. Each of them is formatted as my suggestion, then the explanation in deepening levels. Feel free to skip as much of the explanations as you won't, unless you disagree with the prescription.
- You should train your full body every time you go to the gym.
Why? This is called your "split", other common splits being Push-Pull-Legs or Upper-LowerWhen you go to the gym, you initiate a signaling cascade that tells your tissues to grow, but you also damage your muscles and tendons and deplete various resources. This is why you do lifting then rest, and won't get much jacked by just starting to do curls and never stopping.
The time course of both these processes (recovery and adaptation), however, will not require you to rest a whole week after squats before squatting again. If you go to the gym 3 times per week, on a full body split each muscle gets trained 3 times per week, on a Push-Pull-Legs, only once. Direct research has shown higher frequency (times you train a muscle / week) is better
If you have less than 6 months of consistent lifting under your belt, I strongly advise you against lifting more than 3 times per week. The extra marginal gains are not worth the extra hassle, and the increased chance of you burning out on it.
Whenever performing an exercise, your first priority is learning the "good technique". Then do as many reps as you can until you think you can't keep good technique on the next rep. Youtube search the exercise's name, followed by one of the following keywords, and you should get a better than default explanation: "Renaissance periodization", "Jeff Nippard", "Max Euceda". If it is one of Squat, Benchpress or Deadlift, add "Starting strength 5 minutes"
Why?: "Good technique" is on the extreme margins not universally agreed between people who are really into fitness. This is not the type of technique disagreement I'm instructing worried about. Beginners who have never been taught willl often make mistakes everyone agrees are bad, significantly harming results, and will improve from almost anyone instructing them. Good technique is defined as achieving some mix of the following goals, ordered by how much I prioritize them:
- Repeatable. You only know that you got stronger in the exercise if you're doing the same thing set to set, week to week.Ensures you can push hard, via being stable, and using the proper range of motion.Takes the already very small injury chance and makes it even smaller.
Why?: The list of fads that range from useless to beginners all the way to provably worse is long, here are many: Resistance band workouts, "circuits", Special loading techniques like dropsets, specific warmup exercises, mobility work, stretching, activation drills, foam rolling, kettlebells, weird timing (resting too little) and so on*
Don't complicate your eating. Try to eat something resembling protein on every meal, don't go beyond that. Don't start meal prepping, don't count your calories, don't change the foods you eat too much. If you're vegan and hate tofu, just buy any tub of vegan protein powder and drink some.
Why?: If you just make sure you're eating a measurable amount of "protein foods" (dairy, animal products, soy, protein powder) you will NOT miss the gains because of bad diet. You are picking up a new habit, don't pick up three or four packaged habits at once. Conditioning on this having any point, you'll be lifting for years. You can go back and re-analyze food if you want once lifting is sedimented in your lifestyle. Too many people fail because they try to "Do Fitness". Instead, just lift weights same as you would start going to a dance class. You'll get plenty of benefits. I'll make a post about more serious food optimization for when you're there.
Warm-up like this: For each exercise, if do two sets of that exact exercise, with less load/repts than you'll do in your "Work Sets" (which means non-warmup sets). This will both physiologically get your tissues ready, and gives you a chance to practice your technique.
What lifts to do?
A program I've prescribed often:
Here is a very basic sample program. I heavily encourage to at least go through Program Design 101 below, which will teach you how to substitute exercises if you need to.
There are two different routines, labeled "Day A", "Day B". Do day A. Rest at least 48 and at most 96 hours then do day B, rinse and repeat. You can do them on the same day of the week always, or not, does not matter.
NOTE: WHAT IS A SUPERSET? The entire program is "supersets". In fitness this is a loaded term, and the specific type we're using is "Antagonistic Supersets". Fancy sounding as it is, it's simply a way to cram more productive lifting per time unit. Take the first part of Day A: "DB Shoulder Squat" superset with "DB Lateral Raise". This means you do a set of the squats, rest only until you're no longer out of breath, like 30s to a minute, then do a set of lateral raise, rest 30-60s, go back to squats. Repeat until done the correct number of sets.
Workout A:
- 3 Sets of Squats with DB on shoulder , superset with DB Lateral Raise3 Sets of Barbell Bench Press, superset with Barbell bent over rows.3 Sets of Barbell Overhead Press, superset with pull ups (any grip, assistance form machine or band if needed)
Workout B:
- 3 Sets of Barbell Squats, superset with DB Lateral Raise3 Sets of DB Bench press, superset with DB Bent over rows (both arms at once)3 sets of DB Overhead Press, supersets with Chin ups (assistance if needed)
Program Design 101
This is just a template with which to make programs. It's the template I used to make the program above. The template for any day of this workout is
Workout _:
- 3 Sets [Legs] , superset with [Side delts]3 Sets of [H Push], superset with [H Pull]3 Sets of [V push], superset with [V pull]
You just fill in the brackets with exercises from the following lists:
- Legs: Barbell Squats, Leg Press, DB on Shoulder Squats, Front Squats, Goblet Squats, Bulgarian Split Squats, Reverse Lunges, Normal lunges, Walking LungesSide Delts: DB Lateral raise, Cable Lateral Raise, DB Upright Rows, Side Delt machine, Leaning chair DB Lateral raiseH(orizontal) Push: Bench press with dumbells or barbell, incline or flat. Push ups, Chest press machine.H(orizontal) Pull: Bent over rows with barbell or barbell, Inverted rows, Chest supported rows on a variety of machines, cable rows.V(ertical) Push: Overhead press with barbell or dumbell.V(ertical) Pull: Pull ups or chin ups assisted by band or machine if needed. Lat pulldown (cable) machine, DB pull overs, Lat Prayers.
How to pick from within a category? You need to have the equipment, and not hate the exercise, and if you can don't use the same exercise multiple times per week.
Final thoughts/ Random
Who is the author? I'm 24, have been lifting seriously for 3 years, and have not missed a week since I started. I've lost around 70lbs of fat and gained 15lbs of muscle in the meantime. I have spent an unreasonable about of time reading and watching things related to everything adjacent to exercise. From old soviet textbooks, modern textbooks, the vast knowledge dump from the 2000s blog era, to the modern youtube landscape where PHD's with professional bodybuilder level physique will talk your ear off about lifting. I don't follow much of my own advice. I lift 7 times per week for around 1.5 hours a day, and optimize my food and sleep for maximal gains. I train each muscle group approx 3 times per week, eat 160g of protein per day, and wake up without an alarm (can you tell fitness is my only hobby?). I have done paid personal training in the past, but it's no longer worth the money.
Is something in this article not quite right? comment and I'll try to explain why I said it in more detail. I don't know if there is a market for people to hear my more complex advice for more advanced trainees, since I'm guessing lesswrongers who get into lifting quickly consume a lot of knowledge on it and don't need my summaries. This was inspired by an Anonymous friend who said he'd be interested, so I quickly wrote it up, since I believe nothing I am saying here is controversial advice.
Comment if you need anything answered, or DM me (does lesswrong do DMs?)
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