I was told that I should:
1) Warm up with light weights, doing the same lifts I will do with heavier weights and some range of motion..
2) Then start at a weight I can do 10-12 reps at, and do them. Then 3) move up to a weight that I can only do 3-7 reps at, and do 2-3 sets, resting and or alternating in the other lifts for a different area, then after that, drop back to the next lower weight and finish with 10-12 reps.
thoughts?
1) Sounds good. One thing to keep in mind for time saving is that you generally just need to warm up the muscle once per session - if you're doing multiple lifts hitting the same muscles, there's not as much need to warm up each individual lift, since the muscles are already warm.
2/3) This is a little less clear - not sure if I'm understanding the advice you were given. Is the 10-12 part of the warm up, and then the working sets are in the 3-7 rep range, followed with a back-off set?
If so, there's a few different things here to think about - none necessarily wrong.
Warm up sets of all types are usually not done at higher rep ranges than the working sets - the main goal here is just getting the muscles warm and priming your nervous system. You don't want to fatigue yourself in general during warm ups, so it's mostly a matter of doing enough to get warmed up without adding less useful general systemic fatigue.
Rep ranges mostly matter in regards to the factors I had mentioned - a lot of the "this is the rep range for strength and powerlifting vs. this is the rep range for hypertrophy" is overblown, with the ranges having quite a bit of overlap. 3 is pretty low, though - definitely more common on the powerlifting side of things than the hypertrophy side. As long as you're getting close to failure it should keep providing growth stimulus, though. I don't like to live in rep ranges that low, but if it works for you, no real issue with it. At worst it might be slightly less efficient than the "hypertrophy" rep ranges.
Back-off sets are fine. One thing about them, drop sets, and similar techniques is that your muscle doesn't really care about how big the weight is or how many reps you did when it comes to growth stimulus - it's about putting tension on it when it's getting close to failure. If you get it close to failure in a few sets at low reps, and then get it close to failure in another set with higher reps, it's going to be pretty much the same impact as doing the same number of sets all at the same weight/rep range. Personally I'd prefer to not have to deal with changing weight, but some people like mixing it up.
I was sharing more to speak of what I understand rather than trying to educate. I’m a noob, not going to try to pretend to be an expert. Yes, LabCorps values. Your comments make sense next to some comments my endo made but didn’t expand on. Thanks.
My personal goals going on it was mental clarity, my prescriber approached it as a “see where we land” on levels. I have a thinking job and frankly menopause is a bitch. I’m due for a check, going in for a draw Monday. Sounds like it’s be a good idea to drop down?
I think it really depends on you. If you feel good at 100 and it's not impacting your health, keep at it. Plenty of men run higher than reference range and like it. For TRT/cruise doses I stay in reference range, but that's just me. Mental stuff was what originally resulted in me learning my test levels were in the garbage too, and I would have taken whatever dose I needed to get that fixed as long as it wasn't trashing my body.
I’ve not been training nearly consistent enough for any type of competition except office chair Olympics, although the idea of giving novice it a try has crossed my mind a time or two. So no, not trying to fly under anyone’s radar as natty. If I ever walked a stage It wouldn’t be for fame or influence, more of a “get out of my box” and try something new. The questions of “could you tell” came from curiosity.
Last I checked I was at 32%bf at 192lbs, (InBody, so huge +-) so am in no position. 🙃 I’m not here to cut the last few %bf off. 😉
A good amount of the readily apparent visual difference comes into play when people get particularly lean - before that if you've kept your size to reasonable levels for either men or women it can be a lot more difficult to tell. There are some features that tend to stand out a bit more when on gear, like a common facet people will look at for determining natty or not being shoulders, with delts and traps often being a solid clue for being enhanced, but they're not necessarily definitive.
100 ng/dl if you were to get down to competition leanness after training for years is going to probably be in the "suspicious but not conclusive" category - there will be signs that people who pay attention to it will pick up on, but it won't be the blinking neon sign that an IFBB pro would have. (This is also assuming reasonably solid genetics/training discipline/etc. and competing - change those factors and the outcome does too)