It has been months since I went for a Les Mills BodyPump class. The gym opts for the 45-minute class, and it's great for people like me. It's entirely up to you how hard you want to push, but the high reps mean that you can get injured if you aren't careful with form and control.
Truth be told, I'm terrified of this class. It's crazy. It's both strength and cardio. And I'm usually tired mid-way through. It's not a class I want to do if I didn't have a full-night's sleep.
I bravely popped into one that day. We could choose our spots. Mine is usually at the side, near the door. It's a psychological thing for me. Hahahaha. My PT coach walked by, stuck his head in and grinned. He pointed at me and told the class instructor, 'Keep an eye on this one!' Whaaaaat. Oeh oehh oehhhh! Tsk!
I'm lazy, and I find changing weights a hassle. So I prefer to go with 5-kg a side on the 2.7kg bar, and use 2.5-kg as free weights. I can pile on weight if I want to. To my surprise, after not doing a class for months, this is now a breeze. I don't know if I've grown stronger or my stamina has gotten better from running with the Hyrox-bound friends, but this class is almost no-sweat for me now with these weights.
I realized that for back squats, even at this pace at high reps, the 13-kg-total bar is too light. Oops. LOL. But I wasn't bothered to add on weight. Forget it. I rather squat deeper then, and went all the way down and all the way up. When we had a break before moving on to the front and arms, I added 2.5-kg to push the bar to a total of 18kg. That was a respectable weight for clean-presses and power-presses.
I did entire sets of push-ups and tricep push-ups full. I didn't take the option of going down on my knees. I'm excellent at not using weights if I don't to. No shame. I already threw away the bar for lunges, so I should work a tad harder in other sets.




