I'm starting to believe that some of the exercises I've been doing for years actually do more harm then good. The first one, is tricep extensions. For the last couple years I've had some nagging injuries, one of which is my elbows. I could actually crack my left one and they were sore alot of the time. Well, my schedule has been insane. Between my day job, personal training, and my kids I have almost no time for the gym. So, in an effort to save time I cut out most of my isolation work.
After a few months of doing nothing for tri's but dips, cgbp, and other presses, guess what? No more elbow pain. I haven't lost any size in my triceps and I doubt I ever will. I also stopped doing raises and the mild pain I had in my left shoulder is gone and I'm pressing more weight overhead for more reps. Could be a coincidence but I really think that isolation movements are the cause of many joint problems. It's a theory I'd heard before but didn't want to listen to. The list of exercises I now do and have my clients do is now pretty small:
Presses (dumbell/barbell various angles)
various deadlifts
reverse hypers
various rows
various pull-ups/pull-down
Squats
leg-presses
calf-raises
ab shit
leg-curl (if there's a good one available)
glute/ham raise (if your gym has one)
pec-deck (I still like that one)
Various bicep curls
fore-arm work
Shrugs (if there's time)
IMO that's more than you need to grow and everything else is either dangerous and/or a waste of time. BTW, I know powerlifters and strongmen do alot of other exercises that may be beneficial, but I'm just addressing "bodybuilding" exercises.
After a few months of doing nothing for tri's but dips, cgbp, and other presses, guess what? No more elbow pain. I haven't lost any size in my triceps and I doubt I ever will. I also stopped doing raises and the mild pain I had in my left shoulder is gone and I'm pressing more weight overhead for more reps. Could be a coincidence but I really think that isolation movements are the cause of many joint problems. It's a theory I'd heard before but didn't want to listen to. The list of exercises I now do and have my clients do is now pretty small:
Presses (dumbell/barbell various angles)
various deadlifts
reverse hypers
various rows
various pull-ups/pull-down
Squats
leg-presses
calf-raises
ab shit
leg-curl (if there's a good one available)
glute/ham raise (if your gym has one)
pec-deck (I still like that one)
Various bicep curls
fore-arm work
Shrugs (if there's time)
IMO that's more than you need to grow and everything else is either dangerous and/or a waste of time. BTW, I know powerlifters and strongmen do alot of other exercises that may be beneficial, but I'm just addressing "bodybuilding" exercises.

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