A few years back, I could bench 250-275 lbs (113-127 kg) as my max out, now its closer to 180 lbs (81 kg).... I gotta get back in weight lifting shape
A few years back, I could bench 250-275 lbs (113-127 kg) as my max out, now its closer to 180 lbs (81 kg).... I gotta get back in weight lifting shape
Last time I tried it was 50 kg, my friend laughed at me and said I was doing it wrong.
I benched 30 lbs once. The strain almost caused me to poop myself.
But seriously though, weight lifting is a useless "sport". If you want to get into shape, do something that is actually useful like learning martial arts.
Lifting 180 lbs won't actually do anything useful for you in the real world other than get more friends to ask you to help them move.
Last edited by Saverem; 2017-10-05 at 10:33 PM.
"It's not what we don't know that gets us into trouble; it's what we know for sure that just ain't so." ~ Mark Twain
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time" ~ Jesus of Nazareth
"把它放在我的屁股,爸爸" ~ Dalai Lama
can put up 175 2 or 3 times but i only weigh 135
thats not interesting
About 500 lbs for reps while only weighing 120 lbs can't match my gainz lol.
But seriously, I rarely ever max out because of risk on injury. But I barely reached 220lbs about a year ago.
All of it.
But really I think my max is around 180 lbs. But I'm kinda unsure about the whole rules around what counts. I only count it myself if I can do my 10 reps. Could probably do a bit higher if I was only doing 1, and was one of those guys who only lower the bar halfway.
Last edited by Very Tired; 2017-10-05 at 10:45 PM.
14 months ago it was 150 kg, haven't touched weights since. I would be lucky to bench 100 kg now.
I'd say 310+ for reps, but that's with a hoist machine so it only goes to 310, and they are notoriously poor at exact calculations to convert the work weight through the pully mechanism. It's probably closer to 280 or so.
I definitely get that, but my point is why bother just lifting weights and getting stronger, when you can get stronger while also learning a useful skill like martial arts for self defense?
Joining say a BJJ gym would both help you get physically stronger while also teaching you how to take down people several times your weight class should the situations ever be needed.
"It's not what we don't know that gets us into trouble; it's what we know for sure that just ain't so." ~ Mark Twain
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time" ~ Jesus of Nazareth
"把它放在我的屁股,爸爸" ~ Dalai Lama
Seems like people that do a lot of cardio tend to live longer than powerlifters. Lifting weights is pointless, if you want to be healthy just run around the neighborhood.
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Bulk up and fight Conor McGregor and show me how much that weight advantage helps you.
Right shoulder prevent me from benching as much as i could :/ Have to stop at like 75-80 lbs
Originally Posted by Blizzard Entertainment
^Hes right you know.
Making sure to avoid weight-lifting injuries aside you are essentially strengthening your bones that will help later on in life. This is doubly important for female women especially Caucasian females as they tend to have lower bone density to begin with genetically. Add to this that the chances of someone weight-lifting is also probably doing cardio as well then you are pretty much investing in your future health.
I myself just stick around 90 lb and I'm happy with lean muscle.
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