Just talking - but if you only work the " mirror muscles " - the things you see in the mirror that get most men focused on training you'll probably only be working 30% of the muscles you have - the Legs , Upper and Lower back make up a good 60% of muscles - if you focus upon the front muscles you'll be making the situation worse. You need to look at someone who benches ALOT and see the way that their shoulder round forward and they 'enclose' their pecs by corrupting their posture. By contrast look at an Olympic or competitive Rower or Olympic Lifter - upright full posture and developed rear delts ,, upper back and good mobility.
Good advice there!
I'm 41 and quite possibly in the best all round shape I've ever been. My programming revolves around four things: power, speed/quickness, strength, and proprioception.
I dont train for muscle mass anymore (I did years ago and bulked up, walking round like all 'swole', which was awesome for my confidence but terrible for my cardio and I had zero flexibility
). I don't just run anymore, because my ankles and knees suffered over the years from poor boot choice and far too many twists and rolling of my ankles, so running 10 miles would leave me limping for days after.....
What I do now is try and train everything in sensible chunks. I have a garage gym, its not flash but it functional. I work on the weak points, and replicate real life movements where I can. The best part about how I train now is that its always different. I can walk in the garage and think 'well, it's a power day, what shall I do?'I Then I look at what I did on the last power day and make something else up!
Long gone are the days of:
Monday: back and bi's
Tuesday: chest and tri's
You can give yourself a beast of a workout with just your own bodyweight, add one kettlebell and some resistance bands and you can transform into a machine! (A good physique is a bi-product of good training, not the aim.....
)
(Sorry, Saturday sermon over, my bad....
)
Sent from my SM-G970F using Tapatalk