2900: 6 Mistakes Women Make When They Start Lifting
You're putting in the work at the gym, eating what you think is enough, and still not seeing the body you're training for. Sound familiar? In this episode of Mind Pump Show, Sal, Adam, and Justin break down the six most common mistakes women make when they start lifting — pulled straight from over two decades of training real clients, not from theory. These mistakes are still showing up everywhere, and they're the exact reason your strength training isn't delivering the results you were promised. From stacking too much cardio on top of your lifting sessions to underestimating how much weight your lower body can actually handle, the guys walk through every mistake with the kind of blunt, experience-tested clarity you only get from coaches who've seen it all. The biggest surprise? A full 60% of the time when a woman calls in saying she's not seeing results, the fix is simply to eat more. Your body cannot build what you refuse to feed it. They also make the case for ditching the scale entirely as your primary progress metric, and explain why strength, not body composition scans, is the single most reliable indicator that your training is working. If you've been chasing the scale while your PRs sit flat, this episode will completely reframe how you measure success. Plus, Adam shares exactly what happened when he started training Corinne with proper rest periods and a calorie surplus, and the PRs she started hitting speak for themselves. In this episode: • Cardio and strength training compete for the same adaptive resources: doing too much of both simultaneously means you get less of each, and the fix is often as simple as removing the cardio entirely and watching the muscle finally come. • Women chronically underestimate how much they can lift, especially in lower body movements like squats, hip thrusts, and deadlifts, where female clients often match or exceed male clients' numbers once coached to load properly. • Singles, doubles, and triples (1 to 3 rep sets) are not about hypertrophy directly but about recalibrating how much weight a lifter should actually be using for their working sets of 5 reps. • Roughly 60% of the time a female caller asks why she isn't seeing results, the answer is undereating: bumping calories by 600 to 700 per day consistently produces leaner, stronger bodies within 60 to 90 days. • Programming specifics, including exercise selection, order, sets, reps, and how the week and month are structured, can dramatically alter progress, and following a well-designed program from a credible strength background almost always outperforms winging favorite exercises. • Progressive strength gain is the most objective and reliable proxy for muscle growth: adding weight to the bar removes all the noise of lighting, bloat, and daily mirror perception, giving you an undeniable directional signal. • Three to five minute rest periods between heavy compound sets feel like 'not working out' but produce consistent week-over-week strength gains that shorter rest periods simply cannot, because you return to each set fully recovered and able to apply maximum effort. • The scale frequently goes UP in the early stages of correct strength training as muscle is built before fat comes off, making body composition testing a far better metric than body weight, and even then, at least two tests are needed to identify a real trend. Chapters: 0:25 MAPS Upper Lower Intro 0:51 Sponsor: Legion 1:52 Episode Intro: Six Mistakes Overview 5:46 Mistake 1: Too Much Cardio 10:44 Mistake 2: Lifting Too Light 12:35 Using Low-Rep Sets to Recalibrate Weight 14:41 Mistake 3: Not Eating Enough 16:47 Mistake 4: No Structured Program 18:24 Mistake 5: Not Tracking Strength Progress 21:52 The Long Rest Period Challenge 22:33 Mistake 6: Chasing the Scale 24:32 MAPS Upper Lower Outro Plug Products: MAPS Upper Lower — https://mapsupperlower.com (code: launch) Sponsors: Legion (code: MPB2G1) Mentioned: Corinne — Adam shares Corinne's training journey as an example of how proper rest periods and eating in a calorie surplus produced consistent PRs and visible progress.
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