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Pushup Problem Errrrrr

  • Thread starter Thread starter Jmacca
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Jmacca

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Ok I posted here a few months ago about me pushups problem and I will recap.

At the point of last summer I could easily do about 40 standard pushups with very little strain, well when I decided the army is what I want I went to do them and for some reason it strained so much I couldnt do one, it was simply I pushed up but my arms couldnt support me it seemed. I was very shocked as it didnt seem right. That day I had been working out at out school gym with that chest press thing where you bring your arms in together using the machine ( You know what I mean ). So I figured I had done something to my arms and bruised them using that causing the strain.

After about 5 days I tried again and could do about 15 but could probably hit 20 if really trying. Still not as high as I would like.

So March 12th ish this year I headed down to the gym to get a pass and pump some iron as some of you said something about working out.

I did that and have gone about 4 times a week ( 2 days straight then one break then two days etc. ) since then til now and whenever I try to do pushups I simply cant, maybe like 1 or 2 then Im totally dead.

I have no clue what is going on, I used the basic machines, I did no freeweights at all...

I wanna know what the frig is going on? I dont want to not get in because I cant do a pushups.

I weigh about 150pounds even, im not what you would call built but I would think i could lift my weight easily.

Ahh what should I do? I can workout fine, but I cant do pushups????
 
the only way to be good at push ups is to do them.... a lot of them.

go at a speed of 25 per minute for a max of 40, 2 times a day. that will help.
 
I had the same problem, doing pushups cold was easy I could bang off 30 or so but after doing some mild exersize or working out even just machines no free weights like you...yeah I could do maybe five. My arms felt like noodles which is scary because I‘d hate to have that happen on course.
 
A few things, that machine you were using is more for adding mass to your chest not strength. If you are doing weight resistance training, get some knowledge first. Read some of the many books on the subject. Also if you are experiencing a sharp pain, when doing chest flys (the machine you were using), you may have torn a pec muscle, thus machines are notorius for those kinds of injuries. If that is the case go see your Doc. You should see him before you start anything anyways.
 
No pain at all when I work out, its a good workout and I dont do super weights. I do 45-60 on them with reps of 12-15......

Its just like Jason said, I can do a workout then when I do some pushups to see if my workout helped any its useless, its as if I weighed about 700 pounds and had the same size arms as my sister.......

When I dont work out say for like a week I can do them fine to like 20 or so. But when I work out so that I can do more I cant do them.

So what machines would you guys reccomend for me? I said when I went to the gym I wanted to increase pushups and strenght, and he said to do chest, tricep and shoulder workouts.

Also I was reading on a site and it said if you have a hard time pushing off from your pushup then your chest is weak, if you have a hard time doing the transistion between up and down its your triceps and if your shaky and find it awkward its your shoulders. But I dont find a pain its just dead when I do them.
 
For all of you that want to know in helping my diagnostic here is the machines I use ( I will describe them as I dont know the name )

Ok the first one I do is the shoulder press, I know that name, then I do the chest press I think where you have the bar and you pull it down to your chest then back up, then bicep curls on very low weights as I am super weak there, then tricep pulldowns, then chest flys, then I do another chest machine that is sort of like a rowing motion, you push these two handles forward then back to a 90* angle then back out.

Oh then I do one where I get a grip thingy where you put both your hands and pull, its called the something row.....I do at the moment have a tiny bruise I must have achieved on the lower end of my shoulder near the bicep and tricep.........That could do it but even if, I could do at least 3 pushups with one hand before so that cant be entirely to blame....

HELP HELP HELP
 
Your muscles feel dead and useless, because they are. When you lift weights, you get stronger and build muscular endurance, but if you try to do any push-ups right after a workout, and sometimes as long as 2 days later, you will not be able to do very much, because your muscle have not healed yet. For workouts and other info go to www.bodybuilding.com , but also read some books (my bible, "Arnold Schwarzenegger: The New Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding"), talk to knowledgeable sources like Personal Trainers and your gym teachers.
 
My situation is kind of the same. I would do 3 sets of pushups one night. 40, 30, than 20 (normally straining to get to 20 on my 3rd set). The next day I would do pushups again but would struggle with them and hardly able to do 30 on my first set. If I were to wait longer then a day I would be able to do my max amount of pushups again.
I have come to the conclusion that my muscles are just tired and still healing from the night before...maybe that's the same reason for you as well?
 
That makes sense, so should I hold off on the gym a bit? Change my schedule, I mean the whole reason I went was for results in pushups, situps and chinups and grip test which I all need.

So maybe I will do it so that on some days I only do running and legs, and others I do upper body stuff.....That would work eh?

Oh and thanks Falcon, you have been much help
 
yea myself i go to the gym one day its cardio the next upper body then lower body then a day off and start again. and Jmacca the one with the grippy thighs or somthing row its called seated row its realy good. and if your out there infanteer im traing to be a super jtf2 ninja pathfinder lol
 
Here is a link for some serious *** kicking PT.
www.navysealteams.com/Warning.htm

Also look into these books by Stewart Smith (ex Seal)
1.Maximum Fitness.
2.12 weeks to bud/S workout.

I have both and seen amazing results.You can pick them up at almost every Chapters store.

Also take a close look at your diet.If the diet isn‘t upto par it might hinder your workouts and also recovery time between workouts.
 
It may not be the style of training that you are doing. Problems that I discovered on course were:

A) People forget to breathe (this will severely limit your ability to do pushups)

B) People do not stretch before doing them (causing rapid muscle fatigue).

C) People do not warm up before doing them (doing other exercise first elevates your heart rate, making the pushups come a little easier)

D) People pysche themselves out. Don‘t let it. Evaluate your problem and prepare yourself mentally before attacking it.


Hope it helps,

Potter.
 
Speaking of the right mindset.Instead of counting 1,2,3.......11,12 and so on try to count 1,2,3,4,5..5,4,3,2,1 and then repeat the sequence until failure.I find that since im not counting to high numbers and knowing im close to failure its easier to bang out an extra 10-12 pushups before failure.Its just a little trick i read about and thought i would pass it on.
 
Yes that would help the mask the mind of the upcoming failure but those of you that just knock them off until you can no longer support you body wieght in that poistion (pushup) its kinda useless especiallyu for me becuase I like to know how many i‘m doing so I know if i‘m improving or not plus it can be used as a motivational tool as well to know how many you can do and then the next day or so try doin an extra 5 or 10 then so on...Just a question here for those of you that like pushups how mny ppl can only like knock off a set of 40 or less before having top stop for like 1-2 mins then only bein able to do like maybey another 30 after that set.
just like Civilain does his.

but dont get me wrong i‘m knocking your technique its actually a good idea and I know a couple ppl that do it that way as well. ;) :p
 
When you train with just machines you don‘t work any supporting muscles. Free weights are always better.
You could also be overtraining. You should have a minimum of 48 hours of rest between workouts.

When you workout you are destroying muscle and in return your body responds by rebuilding it and making it stronger.

Try varying your grip on them. Having your hands really close together with your thumbs and index fingers touching uses mainly your triceps. A really wide grip uses your outer chest.

Go to: http://forums.menshealth.com/forum.jsp?forum=1

They will be able to help you alot more.

I just re-read your post

I did that and have gone about 4 times a week ( 2 days straight then one break then two days etc. ) since then til now and whenever I try to do pushups I simply cant, maybe like 1 or 2 then Im totally dead.
Thats overtraining. Take a week off and see how many you can do.
 
If you‘re training for strictly Military exercises like pushups, situps, and ch9n ups, then why aren‘t you doing push ups, sit ups, and chin ups?

I positively guarentee you that if you did push ups and sit ups first thing every morning and last thing every night, you‘ll be vbery good at them. You‘ll also get fit.

Put a chin bar outside your door, and everytime you go past it, blet out a few chin ups.

After awhile you‘ll get good at those, too.

If you‘re hitting the weight room for a reason, great. If you‘re doing it to excell at the military pt entrance tests, then you‘re wasting your time.

Run every day, chin when you poass the bar, and do sit ups and push ups twice a day, morning and night.

You‘ll be fine.
 
Just a thought, but if you are unable to do even 3 or 4 pushups a day after a chest workout, then you are going to be in serious trouble when you get to basic training.

I understand that it can be nearly impossible to do any pushups immediately following a chest workout, I sometimes try to do a few while I‘m wrapping up a workout and if I can do any, I‘ll go back to the bench press and finish fatiguing my muscles until I can‘t lift any more.
However, an hour later, when the pump is faded I can still do about 90% of my pushup max.
It feels way more uncomfortable than usual, but it can still be done.

My suggestion would be to get off the machines and get onto the free weights.
Benchpressing 200lbs on a machine is nowhere near benching 200 with a barbell, and in turn benching 200 with a barbell is DEFINATELY not benching 200 with dumbbells.
Then, when you get aquainted with the exercises available to you in the world of free weights, you‘ll need to split up your workouts. I don‘t know for sure, but it sounds like you may be going to the gym and working out your chest/arms/shoulders all in one session.
While some people do split a workout between 2 muscle groups, it typically takes them a minimum of 1.5 hours to get all their workout done. Add cardio to that, and you‘re at a minimum of 2 hours of working out.

So (IMO) better to work 1 muscle group per day, or 2 per day if you do one in the morning and 1 at night and eat a lot of protein after both.
Going into the gym and doing 2 exercises per muscle group is not going to help you develop strength very well, or very fast. You should be doing an absolute minimum of 4 different exercises per muscle group with a minimum of 3 sets of each preferably 4.
(Example: For your chest, to cover the basics of a complete chest workout you should do the benchpress, the incline press, decline press, and some fly‘s [at different levels of incline from sitting up to lying down and a stop or two in between] and there should be a minimum of 2 FULL days off in between workouts for each muscle group.)

I‘m currently on a five day split, which means 4 days between each muscle group workout, and I‘m making good progress even though there is much more stiffness the day after than when I was on a 3 day split.
When I was doing 3 day splits, I never felt like I had the time to do any cardio, but by keeping my workout under an hour, I have way more time now.

I know everyone has their 2cents about improving your pushups, but I would argue that someone who struggles to do even a couple for a day after doing some machine presses really needs to build some muscle, before they worry about conditioning it.
I guarantee that if you buy some protein (supplement, or lots of tuna and egss) set up a workout schedual (preferably made by a trainer) that you stick to and start doing free weights with good form, you will see remarkable difference in as little as 4 weeks.
Lots of people who start working out say they feel a difference after as little as 2 weeks, but thats just the chemical changes taking place in your body. Working out begins to make you feel really good about yourself, and it even becomes a little addictive once you get into it.

I‘ve heard it said many times that a basic fitness standard is to be able to benchpress your own weight. Make that your goal to bench press 150, and pushups will not be a concern anymore.

1 more thing, I‘d advise against targeting only those muscles needed for doing pushups.
I‘d look into doing more of a whole body routine. When you get to a more serious level of weight training then "maintaining" certain muscle groups while you target others and go really heavy on them is a fairly common thing, but for someone just starting out its totally unneccessary IMO.
You see guys who get carried away with the "impressive" muscle groups and don‘t focus on anything else. They typically have huge biceps, pec‘s and sometimes shoulders, but have extremely scrawny legs, and a totally undefined back.
Don‘t be one of those guys.

Anway, good luck with your progress whichever way you go about it.
 
Originally posted by md200:
[qb] Speaking of the right mindset.Instead of counting 1,2,3.......11,12 and so on try to count 1,2,3,4,5..5,4,3,2,1 and then repeat the sequence until failure.I find that since im not counting to high numbers and knowing im close to failure its easier to bang out an extra 10-12 pushups before failure.Its just a little trick i read about and thought i would pass it on. [/qb]
Cool, I‘m going to have to try that tonight.

I‘m pretty much in the same boat training wise. My schedule goes as such
Sunday-Intensive stetching, running, pushups and situps
Monday-Morning run, pushups, *** relaxation(school), then to the gym where I work chest and triceps, night run
Tuesday-Morning run, pushups, *** relaxation, gym where I do biceps, shoulders, abs and back, night run
Wensday-Morning run, pushups,*** relaxation, rest day
Thursday-*** relaxation, gym where I do legs, abs
Friday-Morning run, pushups, *** relaxation
Saturday-rest day

All of this mixed with steady high protein diet. It‘s working well for me and I still have 5 months before I see basic(my educated guess, I just dont see myself getting to see basic in the summer)...
 
OK, so sorry to stray away from your comments, but what exactly should I do at this moment? The last I went to the gym was Sunday for 2 hours so I got done at about 4PM.....

I just tried doing some and got 10 and died. So it got better then 3

But I dont understand how I can LOSE performance by working out? THATS WHY I WENT!!

So should I hold off of the gym for like a week in upper body stuff?

The whole strain comes from the side of the upper arm....Like I just cant support the motion if you know what I mean.....I get shaky and more a less cant pull up again.....Im going to try some of this protein stuff from that GMC health store....

What I wanna know is, straight up what do I need to do to get my pushups back and be able to do more.....Im not fat, Im 12.1% bodyfat.....im 5"9, 150 pounds and I gained 7 pounds after going to the gym for 2.5 weeks for some reason....

I dont care what it takes, Ill sit there all day doing whatever just give me the exercise that does it plllease
 
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