• H&R Moderators: VerbalTruist

Exercise you can do without Equipment (or money)

herbavore - I would totally carry boulders around town with you lol :D


extreme gardening sounds pretty fucking awesome. totally my speed. too bad i dont have a yard right now!
 
If the group of us walking around carrying large rocks gets too large we may incite repercussions from Homeland Security, but you would be welcome to join us!=D<3
 
i only have 1 dumbell,
(can load it up to 11kg though)
So what i do is this:
Have it aroud 9kg atm
Bicep curl, with bottle of water in one hand dumbell in other


Then i do bench dips on my computer chair and i do some ab exercises on my bed.

Do this every other day lol
 
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I moved to New York City a couple months ago and since I've been here I've seen at least 3 different people doing pull ups outside using the poles that hang over the sidewalks/buildings that are under construction. At first I thought these guys were pretentious fucks (oh look at me, I can do pull ups in front of everybody, I'm so strong) but now that I think about it it's actually a legit way to work out in a city where gym memberships cost your left nut.

Anyway, body weight exercises are good and can give you some strength while staying lean, but one thing a lot of people don't realize is that you don't actually get stronger unless you do more reps every time you work out. Doing 50 push ups every day is a good way to maintain your strength, but you won't actually get stronger until you do at least 1 more rep (51 push ups the next day, 52 the day after that, etc). If you can't do more reps every time you work out, chances are your body hasn't fully recovered yet, and you need to rest more between workouts. Also, if you lose weight, you have to do even more reps. If you can do 50 push ups when you weigh 200, and can still only do 50 push ups when you weigh 180, you've actually gotten weaker because you're lifting less weight for the same amount of reps as before.

This is why I prefer lifting actual weights at a gym if you're trying to get stronger. You don't have to do an insane number of reps, and you can just throw 5 pounds on the bar every workout and it's progress.
 
^ You need to be pretty fit to even start with that, though. It would be a great way to kick past a plateau, though.
 
not sure if anyone suggested this yet, but diamond push ups are an INTENSE work out, i highly recommend them for your triceps and pecs
 
^ good call. i live in an apartment too and i'm conscious about noise, another exercise that really murders the triceps and is also good for a core workout is to grab two chairs, place them on either side of you with their backs toward you then suspend yourself with your arms holding onto the chair backs and dip down for tric burning or pull your knees up for abdominal work. Isometrics really help boost your efforts in the gym too because when you're lifting weights the toughest part to get past is the middle of the range of motion. That's always where the muscles won't go further typically, if you're before the middle or after the middle then it's possible to keep going but not when you get stuck at the middle. Isometrics improves your strength in that area.
 
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