A Beginner’s Guide to Training
Coming up with and starting a training plan can be very daunting and intimidating for beginners. Many beginners often get overwhelmed with the plethora of information out there.
Trust me, it can be confusing. My philosophy is simple for beginners. Pay close attention training newbies, you’ll want to remember this SECRET!
KEEP IT SIMPLE! TRAINING PLANS DO NOT HAVE TO BE COMPLEX!
Joe Hashey and I have very similar philosphies when it comes to beginners and training. I had the opportunity to meet Joe at the Fast Track to Fitness Millions event back in May. He knows his stuff. Reading his blog over the past few months and meeting him in person, I’ve learned so much.
Below is Joe’s take on what beginners should focus on when beginning to train. Get to his site and read it everyday!
Beginners Guide To Training – The 8 Rules
June 25, 2009 on 7:08 pm | In Strength Training |
I get a lot of questions about dead lifting and squat from guys that are 100 percent new to training. I love dead lift and squat, don’t get me wrong, but I hate when people try to go heavy with no form and relative body strength. It looks terrible and the only results they get are injuries.

However, I can’t always blame them. You glance at the magazine rack and its packed with bodybuilder and star athlete’s training programs. Ask yourself this, who are they marketing to? Do they expect other start athletes to pick up the magazine and try out the programs? No!
They are marketing to youth and guys that are new to lifting. Unfortunately, these programs SUCK for someone at that strength level.
I’m going to try to lay the ground work that these new lifters SHOULD follow, not some marketing BS!
The Great 8 Rules of Strength Training
1. Relative Strength – Some people might call this ‘a strength base.’ What I am talking about is an ability to control your own body weight through exercises like push ups, pull ups, dips, body weight squats etc.
Long story short, don’t bench if you can’t do push ups well. Don’t squat if you can’t do bw squats efficiently and with good form.

2. Compound Lifts - Focus on compound lifts for quicker results. Don’t get obsessed with all the fancy machines. Keep basic.

3. Form - Especially with compound lifts, form is essential for maximum gains and safety.
4. Plan - Write down your workout before you go to the gym. Don’t just choose a body grouping and go.
5. Test - How strong are you now? What’s your goals? Choose a few lifts and test them. Perform your strength training program and then test to see if you are stronger. If not, it’s time to re-evaluate your program.
6. Don’t Obsess with Numbers - Compare yourself to yourself, not to some pro athlete or someone that has trained for months. Along with #5 and #6, don’t lie to yourself. If your bench is 50 lbs, don’t write down 100. Keep things relative.
7. Don’t Train Like a Pro - I don’t care how the top athletes train via their magazine articles (which is only a glimpse at their program, if that). Train to your own strength.
8. Ask Questions - Get on sites like this and ask your questions! Check my post on Top Strength Sites, but don’t get overwhelmed, that’s why I’m stopping at 8.
Follow these simple rules to set up your program. There is no doubt that this will be effective.

Final words of wisdom – enjoy training, be passionate, work hard AND smart.
- Joe Hashey, CSCS -
If you couldn’t tell by my list name, I enjoy a good rhyme (I’m one of those guys that thinks all poems should ryhme, get that “near rhyme” garbage out of here…but we will leave English class out of this). GET TO TRAINING!


Jamie,
Thanks for posting that! Gotta start from the beginning sometimes!
Joe
http://www.synergy-athletics.com