How does being strong work? Do weights start to feel lighter or do you just have a higher capacity?
>>42397865
The higher the weight, the heavier it feels, but your capacity increases.
>>42397865
The same weight will never feel lighter until you've lifted more weight than it.
It's all relative.
A strong person deadlifting 650lbs feels the same way a skinny person feels deadlifting 100lbs.
Any weight below the 650lbs mark for the strong person will feel fairly easy to lift. Just like anything the skinny person lifts under 100lbs will feel easy for him.
weights do start to feel lighter AND your capacity increases
my warmup sets are like butter all the way up to around 140kg where after then it starts to feel a bit slower and grindy
>>42397865
t. dyel
>>42397963
e.yy?
>>42397912
>A strong person deadlifting 650lbs feels the same way a skinny person feels deadlifting 100lbs.
Nigga you're retarded. Deadlifting 600 is never easy, period. A 100 1RM, 300 1RM and 600 1RM aren't equally hard (relative to the lifter's ability), your work capacity increases a lot with training.
>>42398116
>Deadlifting 600 is never easy
No shit. No one is saying the weight is relative (in the way you mean), you fucking retard. But to someone who's never lifted before that 100lbs would be like what the 600lbs is to the dedicated lifter i.e: hard to lift. Now that relation is due to the person, not the necessarily the weight.
Of course 600lbs and 100lbs is fucking miles away between weight.
>>42398179
>But to someone who's never lifted before that 100lbs would be like what the 600lbs is to the dedicated lifter i.e: hard to lift.
Again, no, you completely misunderstood my post.
A guy that can lift 600 lifting 600 is significant harder than a guy that can lift 100 lifting 100.
>>42397865
Weights feel lighter, yes
>capacity
Too many syllables bra just lift the weight lmao