Fitness - Anaerobic Training
by: Gaby Munteanu
Anaerobic fitness is the force component of fitness in general, which
also contains at least two other essential components: aerobic fitness
(the part of cardio-vascular resistance) and joint mobility. Speed and
skill are native qualities and they are not very relevant for the health
state – which is the main concern in mass fitness, the one meant
to keep the body in good shape.
The purpose of anaerobic training programs is developing the force,
the fortifying of the body or the muscular mass. There are situations
when only force or muscle fortifying is intended. The typical example
for these situations is given by the sports organized in categories,
in which physical force (with the interdiction of going over a certain
limit of weight) is tested. Growth of muscular mass determines increase
of force and fortifying of the skeletal muscles. In this case, the fitness
programs are very similar to body building trainings, without being followed
by the spectacular, yet dangerous changes, specific to body building.
The purpose of anaerobic fitness is uniform, balanced and harmonious
development of all the muscles, without ignoring their functionality.
This last idea is important for making a clear difference between fitness
and the tendencies, many times narcissistic, manifested by body building
practitioners. The sportsman who takes up fitness wants to be able to
and is able to do something with his muscles, more than showing them
in contests or in different other occasions and places (disco, swimming
pool, clubs, etc.).
One of the important characteristics of anaerobic fitness trainings
is the use of general programs, during which all or almost all the muscles
are worked out in one training session. In body building the programs
are divided and trainings are focused every time on one, two or at most
three groups of muscles; while in fitness one training can be focused
on a certain area, but it does not exclude the other muscles, which will
benefit, directly or indirectly, of at most one exercise for each group
of muscles. This way, the programs are not excessively long; they take
an average of one hour and fifteen minutes; thus the catabolic faze is
avoided; this usually appears in very long training sessions (two hours
or even more).
Another modality of reducing the time of training is doing super-series
whose object is to train two antagonistic groups of muscles (chest and
back or biceps and triceps, etc.). Thus, for each group of muscles must
be performed a series of exercises, without a break in between; the break
is taken only at the end of this double effort. The programs can also
contain triple series or even giant-series (more than three exercises
one after the other). The intensity of the training can be considerably
increased: many muscles can be trained in a short time.
The weekly frequency of the training remains the same (three sessions);
so the aerobic phase can be covered in the free days. If only three or
even two weekly sessions are possible, mixed programs can be adopted:
after the anaerobic fitness, always done at the beginning of the session,
15-20 minutes of aerobic fitness are added for balancing the two phases
(anaerobic and aerobic). In this case, also, training must not take longer
than one hour and a half; otherwise the phase of catabolic processes
is initiated – a phase in which muscles 'self-cannibalize'.
Anaerobic fitness is recommended to all somatic types, with specific
differences of modality of training.
In the cases of ectomorphic and mezomorphic types, all the series (3
or 4) performed on the same machine must be finished, and then the machine
and the group of muscles which is trained must be changed at the same
time. This system is also called 'workshop training'.
In the case of the endomorphic type (the overweight), circuit training
is preferred: the group of muscles trained is changed after every series
and the whole circuit must be repeated three or four times. This type
of training consumes more calories because an aerobic component is introduced
by not having breaks between series and slightly increasing the cardiac
frequency.
Growth of muscular mass through fitness programs can't exceed one weight
category (5-6 kg), but they do not misbalance the other motion parameters.
About The Author
Gaby Munteanu is a fitness trainer, with over 15 years experience, and
editor at http://www.healthfitnessworld.com. HealthFitnessWorld.com -
Health, Fitness, Body Building, Weight Loss, Nutrition - Articles and
Resources.
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