if you had 4-5 hours a week to spend in the gym over 4 sessions, what would you do?

mvelis15

New member
Busy parent here, as I'm sure many can relate to.
I go to the gym 4x and run 2x per week. Currently do an upper/lower split at the gym, with one upper day a push bias and the other a pull bias, one leg day a quad bias and the other a glute and ham bias.

With warm up and a bit of a stretch or a bit of core work at the end I can only really fit in 4-5 solid exercises of 3-4 sets each. I try to focus on compound movements first with some accessory lifts at the end.

Im tracking my progress and progressively overloading. Is this the best way for time strapped 30 something's to spend in the gym? Are there better programs to focus on? I feel like when I research routines most of them assume you have 90 minutes+ at the gym. I get to the gym when it opens at 5am and have to be out the door by 6:15. With warm up/cool down I get around 45 minutes of solid lifting time.

Any tips or advice would be appreciated.
 
@mvelis15 45 minutes is what most programs shoot for, any starting or intermediate strength program would get you in and out in 45 minutes. Warm ups would be included in the programming and personally I'd do the core work at home while playing with the kids. You could keep doing what you're doing and just alternate your days a little so one week would look like Push Pull Legs Push then the next week would be Pull Legs Push Pull, next week Legs Push Pull Legs. Lots of ways to make PPL work on 4 days.
 
@mvelis15 I'd recommend cutting down the cool-down and warm-up first. Just start with an empty bar for whatever primary lift you're doing that day and get a few sets in. Superset with face-pulls/pull-aparts, kicks, jumps, etc., if you feel you need to. From there, focus on work capacity: timing your rests will be key. 5/3/1, which someone else suggested, would be a solid choice. You should be able to make it through your 5/3/1 sets and something like BBB sets (8 sets total) in about 30 minutes. Superset the push, pull, and single-leg/core work and you'd be out in an hour easily. Cool down in the car.
 
@mvelis15 I have a similar situation. 4x90 min sessions is what I do. Upper/Lower split. I do a mesocycle that ends with one week of myoreps. I only warmup with the first two movements, no stretching or anything like that. I start with compound lifts and then move to accessories. I've had a lot of great progress over the years. I'm 35 with 2 kids. I'm 6'1" with 17" calves and arms, 28" thighs and 52" chest at 192 lbs. Let me know if you have questions. I don't mind being specific in what I do or evaluating your program.
 
@mvelis15 I'd recommend switching to full body training. With the extra session do mobility and flexibility work. Do a proper program. 531 is great. Chad Waterbury has a ton of great programs online (TBT is super flexible).

The fitness wiki has a ton of great info.
 
@mvelis15 I haven't thought this through at all, but it makes sense off the top of my head.

1: Clean and Jerk, EMOM clean and jerk or just clean variations for endurance and cardio

2: Deadlift heavy, EMOM deadlift variations

3: Chest/back whatever exercises you like, pullups and core focused finisher

4: Squat variations (front/back/overhead), EMOM squats

For heavy exercises do something like 5x5 or 531 (maybe alternate weeks)
 
@mvelis15 Sit in the corner rocking back & forth from overstimulation.

I know people love the gym, & more power to them. Nature is my gym. Exercising in nature is the closest I get to a spiritual experience.
 
@mvelis15 This won't be accepted well on this sub, but with a warmup and stretch 4-5 hours a week you will likely see good maintenance with little visible progress (assuming the same diet). If you did 5 hours of lifting plus 3 hours of real cardio or vice versa you would see much more progress. Some is better than none, but if you want fitness it will cost you about 8 hours a week.
 
@mvelis15 Exercise guidelines for healthy adults.

150-300 min of moderate to intense activity.
2-3 sessions of resistance training per week.

Otherwise, depends on your goals.
 
@blessedotty Right! The same guidelines say you can cut the aerobic time in half by performing HIT , 75 total minutes. That leaves plenty of time to do the two to three weekly resistance sessions also recommended by the guidelines.
 
Back
Top