Gym Habits That Increase Injury Risk: 5 Bulking Mistakes

Gym Habits That Increase Injury Risk: 5 Bulking Mistakes


Bulking is a really common phase in the fitness sector. For those wanting to build muscle mass, increasing calories to around 10–20% above maintenance for 4 to 6 months allows for muscle growth and prevents atrophy. For bodybuilders or those looking to grow muscle, this phase is crucial to move through before undergoing a cut to drop body fat. It’s not quick, it’s not always easy, and it requires determination and consistency to push forward to get the desired results.

However, while on the surface a “bulking season” might sound great, after all, more calories in, more to work with to push through PRs, there’s also the increased risk of injury as you’re pushing your body to do more and be capable of more. And if not done correctly, this can be dangerous.

This post is going to look at some gym habits that increase your risk of injury, so you can avoid them andprotect your body during this phase.

Ignoring Joint Irritation

Joint irritation doesn’t show up immediately like muscle pain, for the most part. Typically, it’ll be tightness in certain areas, it’ll be a mild clicking or a dull ache that fades once you’re warm. And during bulking phases, when you’re lifting heavier weights or working out at a high frequency, these background niggles will be amplified, and what feels like a harmless discomfort can quickly develop into tendonitis or inflammation, or worse.

To combat joint pain, you need to be reactive to any signs that something doesn’t feel right. Sure, “no pain, no gain” is a motto people live by in the gym, but there are two different types of pain, and a sharp pain or a pain that is suddenly severe should not be ignored. The pain should solely refer to mental pain as you break plateaus or DOMS in the following days, not painful joints.

Mobility exercises can help you out here, as can correcting your stance and posture as you feel. Widen your grip or stance and find a more suitable position for your body. Try swapping out bars for dumbbells or cables when you can, and add controlled tempos to reduce time under stress. Early intervention, working with your body, is what you need, not the brush-off.

Letting Form Drift

This is one of the most common issues for people when they lift more. In an attempt not to fail a lift, the form disintegrates, and here lies the issue. Everyone is guilty of this at some point or another, and while a one-off lapse in form won’t likely do too much, the concern is not correcting it, and this is now your form, thus increasing injury risk.

Because over time, even the smallest breakdowns in your form —incorrect bracing, using your back and not legs, not positioning your body correctly for that max PR on deadlift, etc. — can cause injury.

To correct poor form, you need corrective feedback. You need someone who can tell you where your form slipped, and you need to track your progress. This includes when you get any pain or discomfort and ease of movement. Because with the wrong form, things won’t feel right, and you won’t feel it in the right muscles.

From here, reinforce setups, get your feet in a stable position, get your breathwork under control, pull those shoulders back and brace your core, and remember to control the eccentric. It’s progression you’re aiming for here, not ego lifting. If anything collapses, the weight is simply too heavy, and that’s that.

Skipping Progressive Warm-Ups

Every lifter knows that you shouldn’t be doing static warm-ups prior to your sessions. But also, you shouldn’t be jumping into lifting from light cardio either. Cold muscles and tissues stretch less than warm ones.

You need to replace minimal warm-ups during bulking and give your body the chance to prepare. This might be more warm-up sets to get into the groove, it might be a more elaborate warm-up routine with dynamic movements that mimic the lifts you’ll be doing, but whatever it is, warm up properly, as this activates what you’ll be working on: glutes for squats, scapular stability for pressing, and posterior chain recruitment for pulls.

Relying on Random Supplement Choices

Supplements are a fine line between effective and junk. And if you’re taking random supplements for odd reasons or sporadically, it’ll likely be doing more harm than good.

You need to shift your usage as your workouts change. And you need to pay attention to how each one impacts you. Does your supplement stack impact sleep quality, hydration, blood pressure, or connective tissue readiness? If so, these are increasing your injury risks.

Corrections need to be in place as you start the cutting phase. Evaluate what you’re taking and its benefits. Read the evidence, check out suppliers’ verifications and authenticity, and pay attention to how each one makes you feel.

This is especially true for those buying supplements online. Not all supplements are bad, but not all are beneficial, and using verified providers to sourcesteroids online, creatine, or any other supplements means you can trust what you take and make more informed decisions on the supplements used during bulking.

Overloading Volume Beyond Recovery Capacity

Some lifters, especially those in their first bulking phases, often think that doing more equals progress. It doesn’t. It’s quality, not quantity, here. Extra sets, added accessories, and frequent failure training all allow fatigue to surface earlier, and this impacts training. And if your body isn’t getting the rest it needs or the sleep quality to repair post-workout, then it’s going to affect your lifts. No question.

Calibration is the answer here: tracking your progress, noticing patterns, and rotating intensity rather than stacking maximum-effort sessions. Integrate lower-stress days where you drop the weight and reps but focus on slowing down eccentric movements. And when you notice signs of fatigue, stepping in, you need to step back and give your body the time it needs to rest and recover properly. Oh, and don’t forget this includes rest between sets and exercises too. Longer is better. Stop rushing.

Want to unlock greater wellness?

Listen to our friends over at the Wellness + Wisdom Podcast to unlock your best self with Dr. John Lieurance; Founder of MitoZen; creators of the ZEN Spray and Lumetol Blue™ Bars with Methylene Blue.

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