|
Home
Categories
Blog
Ultimate Health
Links
email
this page
Submit Your Article
|
|
Nutrition and Supplements - Cracked Up Glossary Of Common Gym Terms
|
Cracked Up Glossary Of Common Gym Terms
By: Nick Nilsson
If you’ve ever had occasion to visit a gym, you’ve no doubt heard people talking about "feeling the burn" and "pumping up." But did you ever wonder what people were really saying? Here are some common terms and phrases that will help you to learn what is really going on in the gym.
- In The Zone - Tired and incoherent during a workout. Commonly described out of the gym as "spaced out."
- Extended Warm-Up - 20 minutes at low tension on the stationary bike then 20 minutes of casual stretching then a shower.
- "Just One More Rep" - Said to a spotter during a set. Really means: "Lift the weight for me."
- Forced Reps - For the reluctant exerciser, every single rep of a workout is a forced rep. This is especially true when they have a mean trainer.
- Hack Squat - The position a cat gets into when he’s coughing up a hairball, commonly mistaken as a leg exercise.
- "Can I work in with you?" - Translation: "Can I remove all your weights and sweat all over your bench?"
- Drop Sets - What sometimes happens after doing a hard set of dumbell bench presses. A triple drop set occurs when you drop two dumbells and yourself to the floor.
- Bulking Up - Name for the phase during which an otherwise healthy trainer will try to get bigger and fatter on purpose.
- "I’m maxing out" - Translation: "I was going for 6 reps but I put too much weight on the bar and only got 1."
- Cool-down - Sit on a bench and drink from a water bottle while talking about how much more you’ll lift next time.
- Olympic Bar - Athlete’s nightclub.
- E-Z Bar - "How dare you! I’m not that type of bar."
- Squat rack - The lonliest piece of equipment in the gym.
- "It’s all you!" - Said by spotter during the last few reps of a set. Translatation: "It’s mostly me."
- Pro-hormones - Hormones that have lost their amateur status.
- Meal Replacement Supplement - Cold pizza and warm beer.
- Clean and Press - Surprisingly enough, it’s a shoulder exercise, not laundry instructions. A variation of it is even known as the Hang Clean and Press.
- High Intensity Interval Training - Occurs when there are two or more flights of stairs leading up to the gym.
- Skullcrushers - An exercise where you make like you’re going to bash your own head in with a barbell, a.k.a. lying tricep extensions.
- "Hold the contraction at the top and squeeze for 10 seconds" - Said by a personal trainer when he or she wants to punish the client for missing a session.
Now that you’ve got an idea of what is being said at the gym, you’ll be able to converse comfortably with the natives. You will be completely understood in any gym in the world when you walk in and say "I just did two sets of high intensity intervals and now I’m ready for some forced reps" or "I’m taking a lot of meal replacement supplements because I’m bulking up."
This article was posted on November 22, 2002
email this
page
Return to
Nutrition and Supplement Index
Haven't found what you were looking for?
Try this search:
Free Email
List Reveals health,
fitness and wellness tips - secrets and information - delivered
directly to your inbox
How to Benefit from the Mind-Body Connection
(excerpt)
You are about to gain insight into the
mind-body connection. The number of
people who truly understand these principles on our
planet are relatively few.
There is an undeniable connection between our minds and
bodies, you can learn to use this fact to your benefit.
Dr. Bernie Siegel, author of "Love, Medicine and
Miracles" was once a distraught cancer surgeon until he
began to understand the greater principles of the mind-
body connection. He felt dragged down by the artificial
barriers that existed between patient and doctor, and the
helplessness he often felt as a result of his inability
to effectively serve those patients. Eventually, those
barriers were disintegrated by Dr. Siegel's recognition
and growing understanding of the mind-body connection and
how it could serve his patients and himself.
Dr. Siegel, or Bernie as he began to have his patients
refer to him, had some
startling realizations as a cancer surgeon. He found that
there were actually
quite a few people in the world that successfully beat
the statistics on cancer
survival. He began to recognize that a patient's ability
to defeat something as
serious as cancer had to do with the patient's mind and
attitude about their
disease.
If you would like to see the rest of
this article, please go here:
http://www.tobeinformed.com/repository/mind-body.html
copyright 2004 - David Snape
|
|
*The products
and the claims made about specific products on or through this site have not
been evaluated by tobeinformed.com or the United States Food and Drug
Administration and are not approved to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent
disease. The information provided on this site is for informational purposes
only and is not intended as a substitute for advice from your physician or
other health care professional or any information contained on or in any
product label or packaging. You should not use the information on this site
for diagnosis or treatment of any health problem or for prescription of any
medication or other treatment. You should consult with a healthcare
professional before starting any diet, exercise or supplementation program,
before taking any medication, or if you have or suspect you might have a
health problem.
Humanitarian: Family
Rescue
Affiliates and Webmasters
Disclaimer and
Terms of Use
Copyright 2002-2005 by David Snape
David Snape
-
12806 West 110th Terrace.
Overland Park, Ks. 66210
email:
david@tobeinformed.com
913-269-6952
|
|