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Thanks. FWIW, I don't know a thing about lifting. I am naturally athletic though, and imo this is the only thing that has sort of helped me along achieve some level of success in this endeavor to be somewhat fit again.
I have read a couple of things that have helped me out a bit:
a) When lifting, do the extension move explosively, but do the retractions slowly.
b) Breathe in on the retraction, exhale on the move. This is really important
http://ezinearticles.com/?Proper-Breathing-Technique-For-Weight-Lifting&id=1110411
c) Don't do all the sets of one routine at once. Rotate after each set. This sort of gets the benefit of what some people here talk about with special (cross) training. It also allows that set of muscle to rest for longer intervals, greatly reducing risk of injury. Hard to do in a small gym with lots of people and few machines.
d) Stretch. If you are below average height like me, this is even more important, as I need to keep my shape looking lean. Otherwise one will look too stocky.
e) In the face of no personal trainer to tell you if you are making progress or not, take scientific readings, look in the mirror, and be honest. If you don't, you will have no feedback and you will be like a chicken with your head cut off, working with no idea if what you are doing is going well or not given the amount of effort you put in. This is the one advantage that the athlete has, she knows what it feels to work out, and he knows that times don't lie, weight and/or reps increased don't lie, speed and length of time on the treadmill don't lie, length of workout without fatigue doesn't lie, etc. The more of an athlete you are probably the less of this you need. But some minimal amount is imperative to measure progress.
f) Don't go on fad diets. Change your eating habits to something that you can live with and enjoy food and get your nutrients. Understand the different properties of foods, and always read labels. Get to the bottom of myths. Listen to your body. If you drink milk and you get constipated, guess what, you have some sort of protein intolerance. But you can only do this if you keep track of what you eat and understand nutrition and the way food and your body interact.
g) Don't try to look like someone else. Decide what kind of body you want, and work towards that. But keep in mind genetic differences and don't judge yourself by what someone else looks like. We are different for a reason, and you exist as the result of fierce evolutionary competition, and you made it! Make the best of what God gave you, believe me someone is turned on by exactly the way you look.
I am sure that I will learn more as I immerse myself in the self-training jungle. For the eight weeks I have been doing this, I may have been able to have gotten even more killer results, but results I have gotten.
"No one can teach us anything. We must learn to teach ourselves with the help of others." - I forget