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Old 08-31-2006, 06:22 AM   #1 (permalink)
musicman77
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Default Teenager using S2B

Hello,

I am 15 years old and have just started the S2B workout plan about a month ago. Are there any risks associated with working out as a teenager? I have already noticed improvement.
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Old 08-31-2006, 06:27 AM   #2 (permalink)
musicman77
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I have heard that working out before 21(about when yu stop growing), can make you shorter. Can anyone verify this?
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Old 08-31-2006, 10:14 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by musicman77
I have heard that working out before 21(about when yu stop growing), can make you shorter. Can anyone verify this?
No, it will not make you shorter.

Please read Dr. Faigenbaum's comments on youth strength training.
Youth Strength Training

Here's a news release with Dr. Faigenbaum's credentials.
News Release

Also, you might enjoy taking a look at Kevin T's training log. He is 16 years old and making great progress with his lifting. His log is found here.
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Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
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Old 08-31-2006, 10:20 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Here's another article with a specific discussion of growth plates.

Exercise Prescriptions for Children
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Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
--Alan Aragon
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Old 08-31-2006, 10:36 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Take a look at Brian Grasso's special forum here at jpfitness. He is the go-to guy for questions about training teenagers. This thread is particularly intersting: How YOUNG to start weight lifting...
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Exercise and nutrition play equal roles, and the motivation and discipline to stay consistent are really the glue that holds a program together.
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Old 08-31-2006, 10:54 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Music man: Here's a teenager perspective. Quick story.

The setting: my friends basement
The time: The summer before 8th grade

I had just turned 13 when my friend Doug said "Yo I joined this weight lifting club at school. Wanna come over and lift?" Amazed, and not quite fully grasping this new idea, I replied "Yea sure why not?" Long story short, here I am 3 years later, in love with lifting and now training 4 days a week and I'm looking to add either a 5th day of agility stuff or just space it out over my two rest days. Then, I was about 5'6" 160 pounds of chunky not-so-goodness. Now, I'm 6' and 175 (I think my scale is crap, but I go to the doctor's tomorrow for my physical so I'll get what I really am then-hopefully more ) pounds of lean, muscular goodness with the abs starting to come out of their shell. Then, I was slow. I was tight everywhere: hips, hamstrings, etc. Granted, I was still a good athlete, but not that best I wanted to be.

There were a lot of stops on my quest of fitness. Freshman year, I plummeted down to 145 pounds at 5'9" I was madddddddd skinny with a full 6 pack. Surprisingly, I wasn't happy with it. My defining moment came during a baseball practice, when I barehanded a slow roller down the line and tried to sling it sidearm to third while on the run. My coach bluntly said, "You need to put on 10 pounds of muscle before you do that." So, this year I showed up 35 pounds heavier, and not much of that was fat. Granted, I grew another 2,2.5 inches, but thats still a lot of poundage. It wasn't fat gain, I could fit into medium baseball pants while freshman year i couldn't even button them.

How I got there was a lot of eating, a lot. Good clean food: veggies, fruits, lean meat, eggs, etc. I'd have protein shakes here and there but mostly just post workout. So, I assume your goal is to put on some mass, as you are doing S2B. Myself personally, I haven't tried it, although I own the book and have read it a few times over. It's just not my goals at the moment. I know a bunch of people have done it here with some great success. The key is to eat; which I'm sure you learned when you read Dr. Berardi's section of the book.

OK, so I got kind of off topic and rambled a bit. The bottom line: no, I didn't shrink. I grew 6 inches in the 3 years I've been lifting. I believe some of that height came from the postural improvements that came from getting stronger. I don't slouch anymore and have pretty good posture. It makes you seem taller. I lost 15 pounds, then put on 35, dropped 5, now looking to put on more, hopefully until I catch bigDman at around 198 :p.

I highly recommend starting a log here to help keep you motivated. Myself, bigDman, and EdChap are all using the same program (EC's Ultimate Off-Season Training Manual I think this is like the 3rd time today I've plugged it, and it's still only morning :p) and we're all about as far into it as each other. Ed and I are actually in the exact same spot. It's pretty cool to have 2 other people doing the same thing. It adds extra motivation for me since I workout at home alone. I'll think of slacking and then say to myself "Don't be a sissy. I gotta catch up to bigD and Ed" They're both ahead of me right now, which only gives me more motivation to push myself and get stronger.

OK, rambling over. Break time is over. Back to summer homework.
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Old 08-31-2006, 07:33 PM   #7 (permalink)
musicman77
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Great posts, guys! Thanks fo the responses. Kevin, your post was very inspirational, only I am a good bit skinner - 5ft 9' and 124lbs.
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Old 08-31-2006, 08:12 PM   #8 (permalink)
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So start eating! :p
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Old 09-05-2006, 06:28 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by musicman77
Great posts, guys! Thanks fo the responses. Kevin, your post was very inspirational, only I am a good bit skinner - 5ft 9' and 124lbs.
Then my story is a little more fitting

I was always an athletic kid. I was always the tall skinny kid. I come to high school and decide to join the wrestling team and lacrosse team. I had never wrestled before high school, but I did play lacrosse for 2 years and was pretty good. I ended up wrestling 145 and doing pretty good. Then after wrestling season I came into lacrosse season. I was looking to start on varsity. I ended up making the varsity squad, but not starting. I figured it was because I was too small (I play defense). So I made a bet with my coach and told him next year I would come back weighing at least 180. He thought I was kidding. I started lifting weights right away (at this time I was 14). I got on the Internet and read all I could get my hands on I continued to learn and grow. I ended up having to eat a whole lot more then what was comfortable, but I fell in love with lifting. I steadily gained weight throughout the summer and came back to wrestle 189 the next year. I was bigger and stronger and it showed. I ended up being undefeated. I come back in the lacrosse season to surprise my coaches. I ended up starting on varsity. Then this summer I decided 200 was a good weight for now and I would stay about there. Then I found out I have to wrestle 215 this year (roster problems) so I started to gain weight again. Right now I am about 215. I’m also tall. Standing at 6 feet. So don’t think lifting will make you smaller

My tips to you
1) Track your workouts. Make a journal write everything down. I have a journal from the day I started lifting weights
2) Don’t let your ego get in the way. Form first. Weights second. I made this mistake had to step back and fix my form. Make sure your form is perfect so you don’t get hurt.
3) Read Read Read. Read everything you can get your hands on the more the better. I read at least an hour a day
4) Don’t be afraid to eat. Eat as much as you need to.
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