Questions about lifting

I have some questions regarding lifting. I feel compelled to lift - typically 2X per week - for two reasons: 1) just good strength training in general for an aging body. 2) Shoulder and knee injury prevention, but, I really don't enjoy it. I'm beginning to think that lifting is not helping my swimming, and probably hurting it. The fatigue makes it harder for me to follow through on my intended training sets - intervals, # of reps, or speed. I also wonder if lifting is contributing to the soreness/tendonitis I often feel in my arms. I do a variety of exercises using the weight stacks as 3 sets of 12. People tell me that 12 reps means I'm lifting light. Sheesh! to me it feels difficult enough, tiring/burning by the 12th rep, and definitely more so with progressive sets; in short, my weights don't feel light! I'm thinking I should persevere with my lifting schedule because maybe its helping me "get slower, slower". I'm afraid to run the control experiment. I'm wondering if I can abandon lifting completely 4 weeks out from my target meet and still maintain whatever strength I have? I'm wondering if I should drop all lifting from my program now and permanently, and only do shoulder pre-hab, planks, yoga and things like that? Anybody have any insight on how lifting affects your swimming and how you manage it close to a meet?
Parents
  • What kind of warm-up are you doing before lifting? Have you recently had someone look at your form? For some machines, form really isn't a big deal, since you either do it or not. But for some other machines, and especially free weights, if you don't to the lift properly you may not work the muscles properly, you could work different muscles, and could even hurt yourself. I try to have someone look at my form periodically, just to make sure it all looks good. Sometimes they'll give me tips on improving, trying different lifts, and it never hurts to have someone spot you.
Reply
  • What kind of warm-up are you doing before lifting? Have you recently had someone look at your form? For some machines, form really isn't a big deal, since you either do it or not. But for some other machines, and especially free weights, if you don't to the lift properly you may not work the muscles properly, you could work different muscles, and could even hurt yourself. I try to have someone look at my form periodically, just to make sure it all looks good. Sometimes they'll give me tips on improving, trying different lifts, and it never hurts to have someone spot you.
Children
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