tomcatflyer wrote:A younger family member asked me how he could start strength training. He's never trained in a serious way before, although he has played around in the gym so is at least familiar with the various exercises (if not a master of them). He's not going into a tactical profession, rather just looking to get strong.
My advice was he start out with Stronglifts or Starting Strength, which is what I did. I told him to milk the linear progression as long as he could.
Curious to know what you would have told him.
I'm late to this party, but I wanted to share some advice I recently gave a similarly situated young man.
Train smart early
Smart training in your 20s will have a compound effect later in life. It's like investing. Long term thinking always wins. If you put in work at 20 years old, you can get in great shape using almost any program. If you put in work
the right way, you can sustain that progress for the rest of your life. How you get there matters.
Be smarter than your peers. Stay away from risky workouts (CrossFit without a qualified coach, for example). A healthy male in his early 20s is basically on steroids naturally. You can push too hard and get away with it for a while, maybe several years. Ultimately, that pace is not sustainable. You will pay for it sooner than you think.
Work an intelligently designed program. Make progress. Stretch, ice, recover. Do it again. Boring. Not featured in magazines. Simple works. Simple does not mean easy. You can't accessorize your way to real fitness. Too many people fill their time with complications because they want to avoid the simple things. Simple things tell the truth, and the truth can hurt your feelings. Cable crossovers lie. Pull-ups tell the truth.
Beware supplements
This industry is shady. The good stuff (meaning clean, reliably tested, etc.) is really expensive. So many kids are stuffing down gallons of the cheapest protein, preworkout powder, etc. they can find. I shudder to think what garbage they are consuming along with it. At best, they are wasting their money. Real food and vitamins go a long way. There are plenty of better ways to spend money than buying questionable supplements.
Finally: Stop wearing huge headphones in the gym. You look ridiculous. And get off my lawn.
"You oughta know not to stand by the window. Somebody see you up there." Talking Heads. "Life During Wartime." Fear of Music, Sire, 1979.