What's going on here, I've never heard of barbell squat causing shoulder pain like this. Is it rubbing up on some long term injury?relieves the excruciating pain in my shoulder I have when trying to do squats with a normal bar.
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What's going on here, I've never heard of barbell squat causing shoulder pain like this. Is it rubbing up on some long term injury?relieves the excruciating pain in my shoulder I have when trying to do squats with a normal bar.
What's going on here, I've never heard of barbell squat causing shoulder pain like this. Is it rubbing up on some long term injury?
my tendonitis flares up on barbell squats from time to time (elbow)
Keep doing barbell bench and incline press with 3 plates per side and check back when you are in your 50s about how squats feel . . .What's going on here, I've never heard of barbell squat causing shoulder pain like this. Is it rubbing up on some long term injury?
Perhaps I could also in such a home gymI can live in your gym. I could sleep on bench or floor.
When I got injured, I couldn’t get used to a safe bar, the feeling that it doesn’t suit me. When I squatted, I felt that my hip joint and knees were breaking. everything hurt terribly.I like airline (assault bikes) for cardio and a belt squat machine
Also I would build a platform out of plywood and horse stall mats that extends into the rack with a nice poly finish over the top sheet of ply, for deads and squats
Safety squat bar as well...
Ah, now I understand everything.I second what another poster said above, I would get a good hack squat and some type of leg curl machine for hamstrings.
Of course, my shoulder frequently hurts just doing normal stuff like getting a cup out of the cabinet.
I second what another poster said above, I would get a good hack squat and some type of leg curl machine for hamstrings.
I 100 percent agree. Squats are good for overall strength and maybe some can grown quads with them but I really didn't. My Quads have grown more from hack squats than any other exercise. I squatted heavy (for me) and made good strength gains but I don't feel it enough in quads.Squats are the most overrated exercise in existence. I built good quads from leg presses over the years. I see no reason to put anything on your shoulders if something is fucked up, the best workaround is to realize that squats are not the end all be all, go but yourself a good leg sled
I believe a lot of it has to do with genetics, I was in the same boat as you when I was doing squats back in the day. My best squat was 405/23 reps and my quads were nowhere near as developed as they are now. It was never a quad dominant exercise for me, all glutes and hams and little for quad development in my caseI 100 percent agree. Squats are good for overall strength and maybe some can grown quads with them but I really didn't. My Quads have grown more from hack squats than any other exercise. I squatted heavy (for me) and made good strength gains but I don't feel it enough in quads.
I do leg presses, too.Squats are the most overrated exercise in existence. I built good quads from leg presses over the years. I see no reason to put anything on your shoulders if something is fucked up, the best workaround is to realize that squats are not the end all be all, go but yourself a good leg sled
A friend of mine has the same problem I think. Can you share your recovery workouts?Have you looked into physiotherapy? I only got back into lifting about 18 months ago after about 18 months off, and I had an issue with my shoulder where I couldn't raise my arm to put a plate back into the cupboard. Putting on a coat was excruciating and I couldn't bench anything more than the empty bar before the pain crept up. In about 6 sessions (1x per week) and giving me various stretches and exercises to do at home, it was cleared up and immediately I was able to work back to benching 2 plates without pain not long after my last session.
I'm guessing your issue might be different and more longer term, but wanted to share this with you in case it was something you could find helpful
MicrowaveI rearranged a few things and cleared the area in front of the television to open up the basement a little and create a small 2-person area suitable for yoga, core work, stretching, and meditation.
These are all things I tend to ignore but are pretty important for both my physical and mental wellbeing, as the healthiest and happiest I've ever been did incorporate all of the above into my routine.
Gym includes:
Power rack with adjustable cables & various handles, pull up bar, dip attachment;
Landmine and cable row;
2x York 2001 Universals, one set up for push downs, curls, cable rows and shrugs, the other set up for machine bench, lat pulldown, pec deck, decline sit-up board, leg curls and leg extensions;
Adjustable dumbbell set 10-90lbs in 5 lb increments;
Heavy bag;
Spin bike;
TRX suspension cables;
Northen lights adjustable bench + 3 flat York Benches;
Kettlebell, 1" & 2" plates, various curl/tricep bars.
The York weight stacks goes up to 140lbs but thats easily increased by adding plates to the handle bars.
The power rack stack goes up to 220lbs and also has pegs to add plates for additional weight.
What would you add to this setup?
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