Been running this for the last fewweeks, arms appear to be responding well and measurements are up. Which I’m buzzing about at my arms have been pretty stubborn over the past years.
I’m having a bit of a problem with my forearms, I’m getting pain down the inside when doing the heavier sets. I’m assuming this is down to a weakness. Biceps are holding up find and recovering well, which means I’ve been progressing with the weight, it’s only the forearm pain that’s slowing my progress
is there any forearm assistance you would run, either alongside this or after I’ve finished this block that can help improve for next time?
"Been running this for the last fewweeks, arms appear to be responding
well and measurements are up. Which I’m buzzing about at my arms have
been pretty stubborn over the past years.
I’m having a bit of a problem with my forearms, I’m getting pain down
the inside when doing the heavier sets. I’m assuming this is down to a
weakness. Biceps are holding up find and recovering well, which means
I’ve been progressing with the weight, it’s only the forearm pain that’s
slowing my progress
is there any forearm assistance you would run, either alongside this
or after I’ve finished this block that can help improve for next time?"
The pain associated with inflammation of the distal biceps tendon localizes to the forearm. For years before my tendon finally ruptured, I had chronic ‘forearm pain.’
I just finished an article on overtraining. Overtraining is NOT “training too much”. Overtraining is a physiological state that takes months of excessive training AND OTHER stress to build up. Overtraining is not something you recover from in a week or easy training, a real overtraining state takes months to recover from. In my career Ive worked with athletes from 28 different sports including pros, Olympians and pro bodybuilders. I’ve only seen 2 REAL cases of overtraining in about 15 years.
Now… Olympic lifters snatch, clean & jerk and squat 4-6 times a week, sometimes twice a day. The new breed of powerlifters from Norway and Russia train the competitive lifts 4-5 times a week. Crossfit athletes use their whole body every day. People working manually also use their whole body every day. The body can handle frequency a lot better than excessive intensity and volume.
Just got done with day 6, didn’t know it was a 5 day a week program. (it did feel weird to go in and train just biceps for 10 minutes on Sunday). But much like an earlier poster, my forearms are killing me. I just mashed them with a lacrosse ball for a bit, so hopefully that helps, but I was wondering if this is expected, and will go away in a few more days (like when you start squat every day and it hurts like hell for a week, then it’s not so bad); or if I should stop until my forearms feel better, then restart, I don’t want to screw up the protocol. My biceps have been a glaring weakness of mine forever.
To me this indicate that you are using your forearms too much when doing arm flexion exercises and thus stimulating the biceps less. This might also explain why your biceps are lagging: your forearm take too much of the workload.
Try keeping your wrist extended when curling, it will reduce reliance on the forearms.
Oh! That’s perfect, just tried a couple reps out with wrists extended and it was IMMEDIATELY better. I was starting to dread my bicep workout (never a good thing). Thank you so much, can’t wait to see what my bi’s are capable of.
Yes but you might want to pick pulling exercises will less biceps involvement (horizontal pulling has much less biceps activity than vertical pulling for example). Straight-arm pulldown variations are good fit too.
Hey @Christian_Thibaudeau
Is most effective with only one kind of exercise or you can take some
Variations everyday? Do to lets say 4-5 different exercises in those 5 days
CT, you seen only “2 REAL cases of overtraining”, and learn and know too much for overtraining ?! … that’s mean - you know what is overtraining, but u didn seen/exist ?