Bodybuilding.

NYC_GUY

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Problemi me creatine edhe suplementet e tjera eshte se trupi mesohet shume lehte me ato dhe " u get addicted " keshtu je i detyruar te vazhdosh te maresh gjithmone suplementin . Por ne qofte se per nje arsye mjekesore apo dicka tjeter te duhet te ndalosh marjen e suplementit , trupi nuk eshte ne gjendje te kryeje te njejtat ushtrime me te njejtin intesitet dhe fillon bie shume shpejt . Plus shumica e ketyre suplementeve kane dhe pasoja te tjera dytesore . C do gje qe arrihet ne menyre te natyrshme dmth pa suplemente eshte me e qendrueshme dhe me cilesore . Sa per ushqimin une mundohem te ha 4 deri 5 here ne dite me racione me te vogla , perpara se te filloj work out dicka te lehte shume psh nje got orange juice dhe nje frute , dhe pas stervitjes dicka me nivel te larte proteine mish peshk pule etc. Cdo gje varet gjithmone nga qellimi per te cilin stervitesh .
 

Rangers

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Eshte shume e drejte qe trupi mesohet me creatine shume shpejt. Une nuk po them qe te perdoresh creatine 12 muaj rresht se nuk ka kuptim.
Te ngrenit eshte shume important ne bodybuilding,por varet nga trupi qe do te besh,po deshe te kesh sa me shume muskuj dhe mase duhet te hash shume sepse nuk eshte njelloj sikur te punosh me 180pound dhe me 315 pound.
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Kush di ndonje ushtrim pa vegla fare e te kete rezultat te afert?
 

Rangers

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

/pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif /pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif /pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif
Push ups
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

push-ups-eve ia kemi nzjerre lezetin mo 800 me 20 sete total per me pak se 1 ore /pf/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 

bengu

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Re: Bodybuilding.

atehere ste ka mbet gje tjeter pervec veglave /pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 

Rangers

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Mbase doni te konsideroni paralele dhe hekurin njesh.
/pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif /pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif /pf/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

paralele dhe hekurin njesh i lame shendene qysh ne 8-vjecare se na beheshin duart kallo
sa per notin, eshte mire per tretjen e ushqimit dhe qarkullimin e gjakut.
ketu po flasim per ndertim muskujsh bre djema
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

kush eshte i interesuar dhe merr vesh anglisht ketu keni disa njohuri per zmadhim te muskujve

Q. Isn’t Static Contraction Training the same as the old Isometric training?



A. Isometric refers to exercise involving no movement. Using the bench press as an example, an isometric contraction would involve holding the bar in a stationary position with no up or down movement. Conventional exercise is isotonic and employs concentric and eccentric movement. Pressing the bar from your chest to the full extent of your reach is the concentric movement and lowering it back to your chest is the eccentric movement.



Fifty years ago Charles Atlas made isometric training famous. His mail-order courses to help ’90-pound weaklings’ from getting sand kicked in their faces in front of their girlfriends showed trainees how to get strong without using weights. His Dynamic Tension method involved pressing your arms outward against the frame of a doorway or grabbing a doorknob and trying to lift up on it.



Soon the York Barbell Company offered a special power rack that trapped a barbell between two hold-downs and allowed trainees to generate much higher power using isometric movements. But both of the above approaches had a serious flaw.



How do you measure?



If you pull up on a doorknob as hard as you can on Tuesday, how do you know you are pulling up harder next Saturday? And how much harder…8%…17%? The same problem exists pressing a barbell against hold-downs…exactly how hard are you pushing?



In 1999 John Little and I wrote Static Contraction Training after doing some experiments with bodybuilders. In a nutshell, we had them hold heavy weights in their strongest range of motion and measured the effects on their muscle mass, measurements and static and full range strength. The results were startling. Mass gains up to 29 pounds, an average of 51.3% increase static strength after only 10 weeks doing workouts consisting of 2 ½ minutes of actual exercise.



What made this accuracy of measurement possible was that Static Contraction Training used real weights that could be quantified whereas the old Isometric systems could not be quantified from workout to workout.



The other very significant difference is that we’ve conducted continuing studies to determine the optimum hold time for a contraction. We started out using 20 to 30 second hold times, which did work…but we’ve improved results remarkably with reduced hold times.



The latest form of Static Contraction Training offers something the old Isometric methods never did: ultra-high intensity and consistent, measurable results. I recommend you give it a try. What have you got to gain?




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“It works! It is fantastic! It’s revolutionary… It's a fantastic way and I discovered it a few months ago.”

Actor Anthony Hopkins talking about using Static Contraction on NBC’s Late Night with Conan O’Brien



“A month ago I began doing Static Contraction Training…I've gotten a lot stronger in every area. Most notably, my thighs have grown two inches in circumference while the muscles in my quadriceps developed ripped separation for the first time--and it only took two leg workouts!”

Adam Ferrari, Customer


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Discover Your Optimum Training Frequency and Unleash Huge New Growth



Want to know the #1 mistake made by people lifting weights? This single mistake inevitably causes long training plateaus and frustration that saps your motivation. Needlessly.



OK, you probably already guessed the answer from the title of this article. The #1 mistake is training with the wrong frequency. Frequency refers to the number of days per week you perform weight lifting workouts. The most common training frequency is “3-days-per-week” often performed on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. If this is your training frequency, I’ve got some great news for you. You can do far, far better!



Knowing the proper amount of time off between workouts is the single most misunderstood concept in strength training. The truth is, even if you do everything in the gym perfectly – number of reps, number of sets, optimum weight, proper rest between sets and proper exercise form – all of it can be worthless if you aren’t training with the right frequency.



The Dirty Little Secret of Strength Training


Fixed training schedules are insane. Every fixed training schedule, such as 3-days-per-week, will ultimately fail you. Here’s why. As your strength increases, your workouts are more demanding and require more time from which to recover.



The average guy sitting in front of a computer has the capacity to increase his muscular strength by 300-400 percent. However, recovering from physical activity puts demands on many of the body’s organs, such as the liver, kidneys and pancreas, to name three. These organs do not have the capacity to increase their metabolic functioning by the same 300-400 percent your muscles can.



When you think about it, this is something you already know from experience. If you do a light workout it hardly takes anything out of you. Your recovery is swift. But when you do a grueling workout involving heavy weights and a high intensity of overload, it can take days to feel fully recovered.



And since the indispensable key to strength training gains is progressive overload, you must find a way to increase the intensity of every workout and allow more time to recover from that workout.



Why “Splitting” Your Routine Won’t Avoid Overtraining



To keep workouts less demanding, it is a common practice to “split” workouts, such as: Monday – upper body, Wednesday – lower body. While this is a sound tactic (one I recommend) it alone will not solve the problems of a fixed training schedule. The reason is stated in Sisco’s Maxim: “Every day is kidney day.”



The fact is, whether you work your chest, arms or legs today doesn’t make the slightest difference to your kidneys. They still have to filter all the metabolic waste products out of your blood so you can fully recover. And remember this – until you are fully recovered you will not grow new muscle. That’s a physiological law. So a split routine helps reduce the amount of work your kidneys and other organs have to perform, but as you get stronger and hoist heavier iron, your kidneys will need more time to perform their job.



Amazing Progress by “Doing Nothing”


Once you understand how to adjust your personal training frequency, your results will soar. Here’s an example of what happened for a very tough-minded client of mine named Stanley.

After we discussed his training and lack of progress – particularly in the barbell shrug exercise - I told Stanley to take three weeks off of all training. He said there was no way he could stay out of the gym that long. Actually, this is a common problem with serious bodybuilders. Psychologically, when you want to make progress, it is very difficult to do what seems like 'nothing.' Not training feels like throwing in the towel or admitting defeat in some way. But the truth is your body needs time to recover. Time off is not wasted time; it's time that is critical to the growth process. It took a lot of talk to convince Stanley but, to his credit, he took three weeks off of all training.

Two months later he called me back with results that will shock you. His strength increased in every area of his body and his shrug power had skyrocketed. His first workout after the layoff was a personal best. Now he's training once every nine days. That's 18 days between workouts for the same bodyparts, because he uses an upper/lower body split. Before this correction in his training frequency, Stanley was training four times in just nine days. Look at the numbers that he sent me.

October 11
November 8
December 17

365 lbs. 20 reps
405 lbs. 20 reps (easy)
405 lbs. 20 reps

400 lbs. 20 reps (very tough)
455 lbs. 20 reps
505 lbs. 20 reps


505 lbs. 16 reps
600 lbs. 12 reps


Stanley did not include his times for lifting so I don't know his Power Factor or Power Index numbers but his total shrug weight went from 15,300 lbs per workout to 25,280…after doing nothing for three weeks. When was the last time you had a three-week period that was that productive?

Think about that. Three weeks of no training whatsoever, nothing but sitting on his *** for three weeks and his progress outpaced everybody he trained with! His training buddies couldn't believe their eyes. There's Stanley, who found it 'very tough' to do 20 reps with 400 lbs. now hoisting 505 lbs. for 16 reps - after doing 455 lbs. for 20 reps! Next time back in the gym he's playing with 600 lbs. And as far as his bonehead buddies are concerned he's 'missed' the previous 20 workouts! That's what I mean when I talk about 'training smart.'

How to completely and permanently avoid overtraining.



The key to avoiding overtraining and finding your optimal training frequency is to closely monitor the progress you make on each exercise in your workout and identify any sign of slowed or arrested progress. Not progressing in one exercise out of 5 is a yellow flag. Not progressing in two or more is a red flag and means you need to add time off.



3 Quick Measures of Overtraining:


The weight used on each exercise did not increase. Strength training is all about progressive overload. That means you should return to the gym fully recovered and able to lift slightly heavier weights than you did last workout.
The number of reps or the static hold time on each exercise did not increase. If your weight on an exercise did not increase (see above) then your reps or the time of your static hold should have. (Note: recent research suggests that static holds beyond 12 seconds yield less benefit than increased weight with shorter hold times.)
It took you longer to do the same workout. Progress is driven by intensity of muscular output. Intensity is a function of time. So even if you do the identical workout today that you did three days ago but manage to do it in less time, your intensity has increased. But the reverse is also true, so watch out for taking extra time to do the same routine. Lower intensity can not build new muscle.


Try This On Your Next Workout


Try this simple test on your next workout. On each exercise multiply the number of reps you do by the poundage. For example: bench press 175 lbs 12 times and you get 2,100. Next time you do the bench press see if that number has increased. If it hasn’t, you have not fully recovered and need more days off between every workout. I work with advanced trainees who do one workout every six weeks. That’s not a misprint. That means it takes them twelve weeks to get back to training each bodypart. And they make progress on every exercise on every workout and they lift enormously heavy weights. You can too.



How long have you been training with the same frequency? Look for the yellow flags that indicate your training frequency is not optimum. Adding an extra day or more off can turn a stale workout into a fantastic mass and strength booster.



Have a great workout!



Pete Sisco
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. How can I train for better muscle definition?


A. Muscle definition, or ‘getting ripped’, refers to having your muscles appear more visibly and dramatically. A guy with a twelve-inch arm can have much more noticeable muscles than a guy with an eighteen-inch arm because he has better definition.



Muscle definition is a function of two factors: 1) muscle size and, 2) percentage of bodyfat. If you want better definition you have to work on both elements. First, you reduce bodyfat simply by burning off all the excess fat you can. The way to do that is with lots of very low intensity fat-burning exercise like treadmill, LifeCycle®, slow jogging, etc. The key here is to make sure the intensity really is low. Running hills with a 40-pound backpack is not pure aerobics. The higher intensity will cut into your recovery ability and your weightlifting workouts will have to be further apart. Fat loss is a matter of calories in versus calories out and your objective is just to burn a ton of calories over time, not to burn them all in one day or one week.



The second factor is increasing muscle size. And let me dispel a common myth right here. There is no such thing as “training for definition.” A muscle can only do three thing related to size: it can get smaller, it can get bigger or it can stay the same size. There is no way to specifically train it to be “more defined” apart from making it bigger! And the way to make it bigger is to force it to engage in very high intensity overload. High intensity is defined as “a great amount of work in a short unit of time.” So it is better to do six reps with 300 pounds than it is to do 20 reps with 150 pounds. Yet the common gym mythology is “high reps for definition”. Bull! High reps means you have to use low weights and that won’t pack on new mass.



Sitting on a bench curling a dumbbell all afternoon won’t burn as much fat as the treadmill or other activity that involves moving your entire body. And when you pick up a weight make sure it’s a very heavy one. The muscle you build doing that will help to keep the fat off because it will burn calories 24/7.



If you pay attention to these two principles, soon you’ll have the ripped look you desire.






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“The cutting edge in bodybuilding [and] strength training that can show you - no matter what age you are - how you can produce the greatest result you ever thought possible in the shortest time.'

Anthony Robbins, from his 'Get the Edge' program

featured on nationwide infomercials.











“It's amazing to keep getting stronger at the age of 56. I weigh just 140, but my most recent SC deadlift was 655 pounds. I truly believe I'll keep improving. Age seems irrelevant. Also I think it's the safest way to weight train.”

John Buckman, Customer




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A New Training Method to Avoid Injuries



If you’ve been around a gym very long and talked to a few of the regulars, you’ll soon discover nearly everyone, it seems, is nursing some kind of injury. Sometimes it’s a recent pull or strain and sometimes it’s a “bad knee” or “bad shoulder” from an injury many years ago. The sad thing is these limitations never had to exist. There are simple ways to avoid injuries and one of them is fantastically effective at building muscle. What? A safer way to lift that increases muscle building? Yes.



Warm-up and Focus



First of all, before you do any heavy lifting you should do a two part warm-up. The first part consists of a general warming of the whole body by doing ten to fifteen minutes on a treadmill, LifeCycle® or similar cardio exercise. The actual time will vary depending on your age, level of conditioning and even the temperature of the gym. A college athlete can warm up in five minutes, whereas a person whose is 50-something might require 15 or 20 minutes to feel ready for an intense workout. Only you can subjectively evaluate when you are sufficiently warmed up. The object is to get blood flowing vigorously though the body and also permit you a few minutes to mentally focus on the lifts you will be doing and the goals you want to achieve.



Don’t underestimate the value of “psyching” yourself before a weightlifting workout. Productive strength training comes from progressively overloading your muscles. That means today’s workout needs to be better than your last workout. Like anything else in life, making improvement requires focus and a sense of purpose. Use your time on the treadmill to do both.



Specific Muscle Warm-up



With your whole body warmed-up it is time to move to your first weightlifting exercise. This is a revolutionary method to maximize the intensity of your workouts while minimizing the chances of injury. To get the most benefit and reduce the risk of injury, you’ll need to warm up a specific way.



Use a weight that is one third to two thirds of the goal weight you will be lifting today. Lift this weight through only half the range of motion you normally would: the stronger half. For example, on the bench press lift the weight from your position of furthest reach to half way down, then back up. Avoid the lower half of the movement. Perform this muscle-specific warm-up for 10 to 12 reps.



These half-range warm-ups can be performed on virtually every common exercise. They are the perfect warm-up for the following strongest range partial repetitions.



Strongest Range Partials



So much has been written about getting a “full range of motion” during exercise that many people have not examined what the trade-offs are between full range and partial range of motion. The fact is, “partials” have been used for over a century as a means to maximize the intensity of exercises and break through training plateaus. Doing some partial, strong range bench presses with 300 pounds can provide growth stimulation that a full range rep with 200 pounds can never do.



What is becoming more apparent is that this type of training can also prevent injuries. The vast majority of injuries occur in the weakest range of motion. For example, the bottom of the squat position is places outrageous stress on the knees and bottom of the bench press position can tear the ligaments and tendons of the upper arm and shoulder.



By contrast, when a power rack or Smith machine is used to limit the range of motion to only the strongest and safest part of the movement, enormously more weight can be used to safely target the same muscles. How much more? I work with clients who have build up to 600+ pound partial bench presses, 1,000+ pound barbell shrugs and 3,000+ pound leg presses. (My 13-year-old daughter can do 1,000 pound partial leg presses.)



What percentage of range must you use to get results?



Perhaps surprisingly, the range of motion needs to be somewhere between very little and none. Studies have been done with bodybuilders and with golfer’s that demonstrated that increases in strength (even some full range strength), muscle size and athletic performance could all be achieved with very heavy exercises using zero range of motion.



That’s right, a static hold in the strongest range of motion can trigger substantial muscle adaptation and improved, sport-specific performance. The golfer’s using this method increased their overall strength as measured in 12 muscle groups by and average of 84% and added up to 30 yards to their drives. (A movement that truly uses a full range of motion.) They did this in an average of 6.6 very brief workouts spread over several weeks.



Try This On Your Next Workout



Here are two common exercises you can try using strong range partial reps. Please note, it is very important to limit the range of motion using this method because the weight you will use are heavier than your usual lifts. The best way to limit range is to use a power rack or Smith machine. A very reliable spotter can also be used, but you must have absolute confidence in him.



Perform a warm-up as described above.



Bench Press



Place the bar inside the power rack so it is resting about 6 inches below your farthest reach. Place 150% of your normal bench press weight on the bar. Using a shoulder-width grip, press the bar off the supports and perform 12-15 reps. Do not lock out and do not let the bar all the way down to the supports.



Rest 30-90 seconds and increase the weight and perform another set. Keep increasing the weight until you can only perform 3 repetitions. You’ll be amazed at how much you can lift! An tomorrow you’ll feel like you truly got an honest chest workout.



“Performing a strong-range bench press using a power rack.”

Bench_Press.jpg





Lat Pulldown



Position the seat under the lat pulldown so that you can just reach the bar with your arms fully extended. Select a weight that is 150% more than your normal lat pulldown weight. Using a wide, overhand-grip, pull the bar down 4 inches (Tip: look at the weight stack to measure the distance.) and perform 12-15 reps.



Rest 30-90 seconds and increase the weight and perform another set. Keep increasing the weight until you can only perform 3 repetitions. Don’t be surprised if you can lift the entire stack. I work with clients who can now do 300+ pound partial range pulldowns…with one arm!



Try this method of warm-up and safe range training. You’ll avoid needless injuries and maximize the intensity and efficiency of your workouts. Intensity ensures that every exercise is productive. Efficiency reduces the wear and tear on your body and decreases your recovery time between workouts.
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. How often should I train?


A. There are a hundred variations on this question. Usually it’s prefaced with ‘I do cardio 3 times a week’ or ‘I do intense martial arts training’ or ‘I’m just getting started…so how often should I train?’



The greatest single pitfall that bodybuilders and other athletes fall into is accepting a flat, cookie cutter answer to this question. And I can hear that awful standard no-brainer answer now…”You should train three times a week.” Bull. If you want to distinguish yourself as a thinker amid a herd of obedient sheep, read on.



The frequency that you, and everybody else, should train with is variable. Not fixed. When you lift weights as a means to develop more muscle the intensity of your workouts has to progress upward. If it remains at the same intensity there is no reason for new muscle to grow. Show me a guy who has been lifting three days a week for a year and I‘ll show you a guy who hasn’t changed his physique whatsoever for at least ten months.



If you want to train efficiently and effectively you have to understand the relationship between the ever-increasing intensity of your workouts and the ever-decreasing frequency of those workouts. As an example, when a person is just starting out, he could, indeed, train three times per week performing bench presses and leg press of, say, 150 pounds and 350 pounds. But he should only lift those weights during one workout. On his second workout he might be hoisting 165 and 375 on those two lifts. On his third workout they should increase again. (Or, if he just can’t get more weight off the pins, he should be increasing the number of reps he performs. Something must increase.)



But soon a Monday will arrive where he either doesn’t feel like going to the gym (a sign of overtraining) or he’ll discover that he can’t even lift the weights he did last time. He’s gotten weaker! When this happens to most bodybuilders they decide to ‘try harder’ in the form of more frequent workouts, or switching to a new ‘system’ or they head to the supplement store to buy something that promises new muscle from a can. But all they really need to do is adjust the frequency of their training…allow more time for full recovery by training twice per week for a few weeks. When the problem shows up again they need to train once per week or once every ten days…and so on.



Maybe your proverbial Monday arrived a long time ago and you haven’t seen changes in your physique ever since. If so, do this: Take two weeks off of all weight lifting. (No, you won’t wither up. I work with advanced trainees who train once every six weeks.) When you return to the gym make sure to increase the weight on every lift you perform. Then cut your training frequency in half and try to get increases every trip to the gym. So if you’ve been training once every three days, change it to once every six days. As soon as your intensity goes up you’ll feel that new muscle growing and soon see the changes you’ve been wanting.







· Totally awesome! My strength has improved each workout! I never realized that I was capable of holding that kind of weight.



This is amazing; people can't believe I train naturally!!


· I'm absolutely blown away with the awesome results I have received in just three very small workouts.



These are the biggest gains ever for me!!


It was very motivating. I was amazed at the amount of weight I was working with.


This is awesome! I feel like I have been wasting my time before this!


User Comments from the Static Contraction Challenge





Add Up To 1 Inch to Your Arms in 3 Workouts


Every guy wants bigger arms! There really is no bodypart that says “big and powerful” as clearly and obviously as a big pair of python arms.



I get a ton of e-mail from guys wanting to maximize their arm training. I’ve created optimized routines for many but if you want a ‘quick and dirty’ method that delivers high intensity overload and results that you’ve never experienced before…here it is.



The Big Hurdle



First I have to tell you the biggest hurdle most people face when wanting to increase their workout intensity and their progress in the gym. This first step results from the fact…yes fact…that over 90% of the regular trainees in your gym are overtraining. And once your body is in an over trained condition no routine can help you.



The first priority of your body is to fully recover. Then, and only then, will it go to work creating new muscle. So step one of my Add One Inch to your Arms Workout is to take two weeks off all strength training! I can hear the groans now. “But I “need” to work out 3 times a week.” No you don’t. More likely you’ve turned a love of the gym into a too-frequent training schedule. Hey, if I liked getting my hair cut it wouldn’t help me to go to a barber 3 times a week. Growth takes time. That’s a fact you need to face if you want to train rationally.



So if you lack the mental toughness to handle the above hurdle, you might as well stop reading this. This routine won’t do anything for guys in an over trained state. These are the guys who haven’t added any size to their arms in months. But they train more than anyone else. See the connection? The exception, of course, is for guys just starting out and for guys who understand training frequency and have adjusted their training days to compensate for their ever-increasing intensity of workouts. Those wonderful people can do this workout today.



The Workout



Years ago I conducted a study to measure the relative intensity of all the common arm exercises. (And other body part exercises, by the way.) This brief article won’t permit the space to explain all that was measured and analyzed so I’m going to give you the conclusions. These exercises will add the most muscle to your biceps, triceps and forearms. Guaranteed.



Biceps



Seated Biceps Curl: Sit on a bench and rest a barbell in your lap. Take a shoulder-width underhand grip on the bar and curl it upward toward your chin. Use a weight that is so heavy you can only perform eight reps. This exercise allows you to use more weight than you normally would because the seated position limits the range of motion. Try to curl 150% of your normal biceps curl weight. Perform one set of eight reps, rest 30 seconds then increase the weight 10% and perform as many reps as you can.



Triceps



Close-Grip Bench Press: Do yourself a big favor and perform this exercise in a power rack or on a smith machine. Limit the range of motion to the top third of your range. By limiting the range of motion you will be able to hoist a much heavier weight and it’s that big weight - not the range of motion - that triggers new muscle growth. Grip the bar with your hands spaced about six inches apart and contract your triceps to lift the bar off the support and to full extension. Use a weight that is so heavy you can only perform eight reps. Again, with this restricted range you should be able to use at least 50% more weight than normal. Perform one set of eight reps, rest 30 seconds then increase the weight 10% and perform as many reps as you can.



Forearms



Forearms tend to be neglected in most workouts but these two exercises are fabulous at generating an awesome intensity of overload to these highly visible and impressive muscles.



Seated Wrist Curls: These are performed from the same position as the biceps exercise, above. With an underhand grip on a barbell, rest your wrists on your knees so your hands extend beyond your knees. Allow the weight of the bar to force your wrist toward the floor. Use your forearm muscles to power the weight back up. Perform one set of eight reps, rest 30 seconds then increase the weight 10% and perform as many reps as you can.



Wrist Curls Behind the Back: These are performed by holding a barbell behind your back with your palms facing backward. It helps to have the bar on a rack to start or to have a training partner place the bar in your hands. The heavy bar will naturally hang down and your wrists will be in a relaxed position. Use your forearm muscles to power the weight up by bending your wrists. You can use a lot more weight on this exercise than you think you can. Go heavy. Don’t worry about getting a full range of motion. Perform one set of eight reps, rest 30 seconds then increase the weight 10% and perform as many reps as you can.



Each time you perform the four exercises in this arm workout try to increase your weights by 15-25%. Doing the same workout each time gets you nowhere. It’s all about making progress. Progress drives new muscle growth.



Go Buy Some Bigger Shirts



Perform the above workout three times over the next twelve days. Avoid any other arm training during this time. You can also train your other muscle groups and you can perform all the low intensity aerobics you want during this time. But remember, if you started this program in an overtrained condition you won’t see results.



Done the exact way described, this routine will add new muscle strength and very significant size to even the most developed arms.



Train Smart!

Pete

Peter Sisco is co-author of Power Factor Training, Static Contraction Training and other books. He is also the editor of the five-book 'Ironman's Ultimate Bodybuilding' series.
www.PrecisionTraining.com
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. I’ve hit a plateau in my training and haven’t made any progress for weeks, what can I do?



A. Some plateaus in training are inevitable but they should be very short lived. That’s because there are things you can do to get your progress moving again. If you are training very efficiently and effectively you should spot a plateau the first day it occurs. In fact, the slow down in progress will likely show up in one or two exercises out of an entire workout. These yellow flags indicate it’s time to make an adjustment in your training before full-blown stagnation sets in. This is a simple concept, yet I’ve known guys who’ve trained three days a week and never noticed they had five months of no progress whatsoever!



Here are three things that will bust any weight training plateau.



1) Take time off. The number one cause of lack of progress is overtraining. By simply not lifting weights for a week or three you allow your body to fully recover…and to add that new muscle growth you’ve already stimulated…so you can return to the gym and resume training effectively.



2) Space your workouts further apart. This keeps you from falling into the same trap over and over. A fixed training frequency will not work for building new muscle mass. It works for aerobics and for martial arts techniques and kayak padding skills and many other things…but it won’t work for building new muscle. As you get stronger your weightlifting workouts need to be spaced further apart.





3) Do heavy leg training. By far, the best exercise you can do to increase your body’s anabolic activity is heavy leg presses. Surprised I didn’t say squats? Squats are a great all around exercise but they are limited by how much weight you can comfortably support on your shoulders. Many people I work with do 3,000-pound leg presses. Accounting for the 45-degree angle of most leg presses, that’s equivalent to a 2,100 pound squat…and nobody in the world does that. The legs contain the largest muscles in the human body and when those muscles are forced to operate at the limits of their capacity the systemic anabolic effect spills into every muscle group in the body. It is literally true that heavy leg training gives you bigger arms!







Using Static Contraction Training I have managed to go from 33% body fat to 15% in about 6 months. I have gained 25 lbs of muscle in that time. All on 30 minutes every one and a half weeks. About time that someone bought this knowledge out to the world.



Johnson Varghese - Customer





Exercise – How Little Do You Need?



Most people work out way too often.



I’m talking about lifting weights here, not jogging or cycling or yoga. The primary function of cardio exercise (despite its name) is to simply burn off excess calories. Since fat gain is a result of “calories in” versus “calories out”, running or cycling provides a way to increase our output of calories and keep our weight in check. That’s why even walking, which barely taxes the heart, is still productive for weight loss. This type of low intensity activity can be performed every day.



Yoga and stretching can also be performed every day. Flexibility is probably the most neglected aspect of fitness. How many people in your gym are stretching compared to those doing cardio and pumping iron?



So it’s very ironic that when it comes to lifting weights and building muscle, virtually everyone is training far too frequently! You’d be amazed at how little high intensity exercise you really need!



Our Study



We recently conducted a study using eight middle aged golfers. We wanted to determine how little exercise could not only result in increased strength but also how it would transfer to athletic performance. We chose golf because swinging a club uses a very exaggerated range of motion and our abbreviated workout used no range of motion. That's right, no movement.



The subjects were given a workout that consisted of six exercises perform on one day and six different exercises done on a different workout day. Each exercise involved a 10 to 20-second static hold. A weight was lifted into position (sometimes with assistance) and then held statically without locking out.



These workouts had an actual exercise duration of only 60 to 120 seconds. Over a six week period these subjects performed between 4 and 9 workouts, averaging 6.6 workouts in the six week period. So that’s as little as one minute of actual exercise about once per week for six week.



So what happened?



Their Astonishing Results



Measurements of their strength in twelve muscle groups were compared for before and after calculation of improvement. The results of their fourteen minutes of exercise over six weeks were as follows:



Chest +58%

Lats +60%

Shoulders +57%

Quads +86%

Hams +78%

Abs +170%

Lower Back +58%

Calf +51%

Triceps +133%

Biceps +72%

Forearm (Flexors) +87%

Forearm (Extensors) +93%



OVERALL +84%



Compare the above results with a conventional training protocol. Most people do at least two exercises per muscle group, perform three sets and perhaps 12 or 15 reps per set. Allowing just five seconds per rep, that makes for at least 36 minutes of exercise per workout. This is usually done three times per week. So in six weeks a conventional program would involve 648 minutes of exercise. That’s 42 times more than the subjects on our study! Are your results in the last six weeks 42 times better than their results? I doubt it.



Performance Improvement



Remember, these golfers were exercising in a way that did not involve stretching or moving the weight over a full range of motion. So how did this affect a full range of motion activity like a golf drive?



Every one of them showed an improvement. The increase in drive distance varied from 5 to 31 yards! Keep in mind that these subjects had been golfing for up to forty years and had handicaps as low as eleven. So getting any improvement in golfers who already play at this level is impressive. Getting it with 14 minutes of exercise spread over six weeks is truly revolutionary.



The fact is, every sport – even a finesse sport like golf – is improved by an increase in strength. Muscles are responsible for all movement in the body and stronger muscles will deliver more power to every aspect of movement, irrespective of its range of motion.



Since this study we’ve gone on to improve this method of training. Further research showed that static hold times could be reduced to even less that what the golfers used. Workouts can be spaced further apart as a trainee gets stronger. I work with advanced trainees who train once every six weeks! Yet they gain in strength on every exercise each time the work out. The weights they hoist are enormous.



We believe the time is coming when most people will have a better understanding the role of proper, efficient strength training methods and frequency. For the guy who wants maximum results with minimum time invested, an ultra-brief but ultra-intense workout will be performed about as often as he gets a haircut. Anything more is just lifting weights as a busy-work hobby.



Train Smart!
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. I need to focus on my lagging chest development. What are the best exercises?



A. We did a study to measure the relative overload intensity of common chest exercises. The results were published in Power Factor Training – Chest and Arms.



The rankings of these exercises was as follows:



- Straight arm Barbell Pullover 12.8%

- Nautilus® Machine Pullover 33.7%

- Flat Bench Cable Crossover 43.9%

- Dumbbell Fly 45.5%

- Incline Barbell Press 53.8%

- Nautilus® 10 Degree Chest 57.5%

- Unilateral Cable Crossover 70.2%

- Bilateral Cable Crossover 91.5%

- Decline Barbell Bench Press 96.9%

- Flat Barbell Bench Press 100%



Just look at all those time wasting exercises! If you are doing those exercises to work your chest you are operating at far less than maximum intensity and shortchanging your progress! Build a specialization routine around the last three high yield exercises and your chest will start growing like a weed!



Let’s say you’re at the point where you now train once every 5 days. Your new schedule would look like this:



Day 1: A workout (no chest exercise)

Day 6: B workout (no chest exercise)

Day 11: Chest specialization workout

Day 16: A workout



After you cycle through this 3 or 4 times your chest development will be caught up and you’ll be able to revert to your normal A/B routine. Just make sure your weights go up on every exercise every workout!



This method has worked well for me and I have actually enjoyed lifting more because I don't have to perform a super-human feat every time I workout. And, I am making continued progress where I had previously hit a wall.

Kevin Lowe – Customer



Just wanted to let you know that your e-book is awesome. I must have read it about 10 times. I really see my progress and I am able to do my training the correct way. I am really thankful that I was one of the people that was able to buy your book. My numbers on the PF sky rocketed and I was amazed seeing the numbers go up. I have bought everything in the market for about 20 years and your e-book was my missing link.

Ricardo Renteria - Customer





Bodybuilding Myths - Pitfalls to Avoid


I suppose every sport has its own supply of useless lore and half-truths that get passed on to newcomers. But I’d put bodybuilding up against any of them in a contest for what has the most time wasting and even dangerous mythology.



The fact is, there’s a ton of free advice dispensed in gyms that, if taken as gospel, can really set back your progress. That can lead to the kind of frustration that makes guys think they are “hard gainers” or need to resort to the needle to get the physique they desire. Not true.



I’ve already shown you in previous AskMen articles that simple, fundamental principles apply to generating all muscle gain. (High intensity, progressive overload and variable frequency.) Now lets take a look at some of the pitfalls to avoid while you train rationally.



Myth #1 “Big muscles slow you down.”



Muscles are responsible for every movement your body can make. From the wink of an eyelid to a thousand pound leg press, it’s muscles that create motion. This “muscles slow you down” myth is a carryover from the days when people used the term “muscle-bound” to describe bodybuilders.



But in one sport after another, from baseball to kayaking, athletes are discovering that a stronger athlete is a better athlete. If you want to swing a bat faster you need more horsepower. If you want to paddle faster you need more horsepower. That power comes from your muscles.



We recently conducted a study on middle-aged golfers who had been golfing an average of about 20 years. We made them stronger over a six week period and guess what? They all hit their drives farther. No change in technique. No change in equipment. When they were stronger they played better golf. Big muscles make you fast and powerful.



Myth #2 “Muscle just turns to fat later.”



Muscle tissue and fat tissue are two different things. It is impossible for one to “turn into” the other. Here’s where this myth comes from. Muscle is called “active tissue” because it requires a lot of energy from the body in order to be maintained. A pound of muscle burns about 60 calories per day. If you train well and add ten pounds of muscle to your frame, your body will require an extra 600 calories per day in order to maintain your new bodyweight. (Incidentally, this is why adding muscle is a great way to lose bodyfat.)



With more muscle on your body you’ll tend to have a bigger appetite and consequently you’ll eat more. Fine. But if you stop training, that new muscle can begin to atrophy, or shrink, and you’ll no longer need those extra calories you’ve gotten used to eating. And sure enough, if the 10 pounds of muscle disappears and you keep eating as if you’re still training hard, you’ll soon have extra fat on you.



So this is a pitfall you can easily avoid. Build all the muscle you want. Then go to the gym often enough to make sure you maintain it. That keeps you looking great and the extra “active tissue” wards off the accumulation of fat.



Myth #3 “You need to shock your muscles by doing things they don’t expect.”



This one really hands me a laugh. The idea behind this myth is that you need to change your training routine and exercises as a way to surprise your muscles and get a fresh reaction out of them. Yeah right.



Think of your biceps muscle; like your other muscles, it attaches between two points and contracts in a straight-line direction. When it contracts, your elbow bends. Your elbow always bends in the same direction. There is no variation whatsoever. So you can lift bricks or you can lift the bar on a $5,000 exercise machine and the action of your biceps is the same. So where is the shock? Why would your biceps say, “Whoa, today we’re suddenly lifting a dumbbell instead of a barbell! Better pack on some more size!”



Here’s another variation. The gym lore goes like this: “Train, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Then your body ‘expects’ a workout on Sunday…but you ‘shock’ it by waiting until Monday.” Apart from the false premise that your body will “expect” a workout when your brain knows it isn’t going to happen, is the presupposition that your body never figures out this is a repeating cycle with the Sunday workout always missing. Week after week your body is “shocked” that the Sunday workout is skipped. Please!



Muscles are not shocked by variation in exercise. They are designed to tolerate it. Similarly, your stomach is not shocked you ate spaghetti on Tuesday after not eating it for a month. Rational, productive strength training is easy. What’s difficult is seeing past all the bad advice that is freely dispensed in the gym.



Train Smart!
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. Is it possible to gain lean muscle mass while losing body fat at the same time?



A. The short answer is yes, but this is a tricky issue. The body has only so much capacity to recover from exercise, and new muscle growth will not occur until that recovery is complete. So if you perform a great workout that will stimulate the growth of a half-pound of new muscle, you can prevent it from ever happening by doing so much more exercise that your body never completes it’s recovery.



For example, suppose on Monday you do a super productive workout that stimulates new muscle growth that would manifest on Friday after your full recovery was complete. But on Wednesday you go for a six mile run and on Thursday you go back to the gym and pump some more iron. Guess what? On Friday your body will be busy recovering instead of growing that new muscle you would have gained. That’s why the “three-day-a-week” crowd sees no improvement after the first month or so.



The way to gain muscle and lose fat at the same time is to perform very brief but very high intensity weight lifting workouts that are supplemented with very low intensity calorie-burning exercises like one hour walks, jogging and the like. But…and this is very important…it is critical to measure the intensity of your weight lifting workouts so you know they are always increasing in intensity. Achieving an increase means you were fully recovered and your fat burning efforts did not short-circuit your muscle building efforts. If you don’t measure, you’re blind and you will not reach your goals blindly.





"After just 4 workouts over 2 weeks my strength gains have been astonishing and some growth is already evident. On the intellectual level, it really is the discovery that the Earth circles the Sun and not vice versa!”

Allan Russell, Herts, England



"I am a true believer in Power Factor Training. After incorporating your system into my routine my strength has skyrocketed! At an all-natural bodyweight of 190 lbs I now bench 405 for a full rep max."

Brian Nassar, Alaska





Truly Effective Ab Training


Training of the abdominal muscles has recently been the subject of more misinformation and mythology than any other part of the human anatomy. Gizmos and gadgets abound that are alleged to give you those coveted “six pack” abs. But here’s how you can rationally train your abs to their absolute maximum limits of development using everyday gym equipment.



What Builds Abdominal Muscles



There is nothing unique about abdominal muscle as far as their training and response to training is concerned. The principles that apply to biceps and triceps apply equally to abs. So the three critical elements of your ab workouts are:



1. high intensity of muscular overload

2. progressive intensity from workout to workout

3. proper spacing of workouts to avoid overtraining or undertraining



Most people do sit-ups or crunches as an ab exercise. While these are basically good exercises that can satisfy point 1, above, how many people use them in a way that satisfies point 2?



Muscles will only increase in response to overload that is above normal overload. So if you do 20 crunches every day for a year, why would your ab muscles develop beyond that capacity? They won’t. To force new development you need to increase the intensity. You could add a few crunches every day but that really just increases duration, there is a better way to get fast results.



Why TV Abdominal Machines Are a Joke



You’ve seen all those exercise gadgets on late night TV - lightweight gizmos that make it easier for you to rock back and forth on the ground while doing a crunch. Have you noticed that none of them allow you to add serious weight to increase intensity? Some have rubber bands or similar devices to add a bit of overload but it’s a trivial amount.



I work with clients who have progressed to the point of doing crunches with 300 pounds! That’s the kind of power and level of development your abs are capable of. Really! So fiddling around with cheap exercise equipment or those electric belts that “stimulate” your ab muscles using the minuscule power of two flashlight batteries is beyond laughable. Let’s see two AA batteries generate the power to lift a man’s torso and 300 pounds 20 times in one minute. Please.



The Best Ab Exercises



We tested common abdominal exercises and ranked them by their ability to deliver high intensity muscular overload. We tested ab machines, vertical leg raises, Roman chairs and others. The three winners were:



#1 Weighted crunches

#2 Weighted incline sit-ups

#3 Weighted sit-ups



The best way to do weighted crunches is to lie on the floor with your head close to the low pulley weight stack. Using the rope handle attachment, grasp the ends and pull the cable until it is tight and your hands are resting at the side of your head near your ears. Now contract your ab muscles in a crunch that lifts your shoulders off the floor and draws the weight stack up an inch or two. Choose a weight that is so heavy you can only to 8 to 12 reps. Even better, if you know how to do SCT, do a static hold with the heaviest weight you can hold for 5 seconds.



If you don’t have access to a low pulley, there is a good alternative. You can use the high pulley that is normally used for lat pulldowns. Kneel on the floor or sit in the seat directly under the rope handles that you attach to the high pulley. Lock your legs under the hold down. Pull the handles into position next to your ears then contract your ab muscles into a crunch that raises the weight stack an inch or two. Choose a weight that is so heavy you can only to 8 to 12 reps.



As a further alternative you can lie on the floor and do a sit up or crunch while holding a barbell plate against your chest. The limitation of this exercise it that, as you progress in strength it will not be possible to hold enough plates on your chest safely. But that’s a good problem to have.



On each successive workout, shoot for a 5-15% increase in the weight you use. If you can’t get a 5% increase in weight it’s time to add more days off between your workouts.



Conclusion



There is no mystery to developing your abdominal muscles to the limits of their genetic potential. And you certainly don’t need quirky gadgets. High intensity exercises that can be progressed from workout to workout will have you sporting that six pack!


Train Smart!
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

The Day the World Changed!

I’ve been waiting more than 10 years to write this. I promise you’ve never read a message like this before.

Back in 1992 I started experimenting with finding more efficient workouts to build muscle. Everybody already knew that twenty sets per bodypart and hours and hours in the gym every week would yield results. Obviously. To me that’s like knowing morphine will relieve the pain of a stubbed toe. Talk about overkill!

The question I’m fascinated with is, "What is the minimum amount of exercise that will build new muscle?" That leads to a much higher technology of exercise than the Neanderthal-like approach that heaps more and more wear and tear on the body and requires enormous amounts of time. Searching for the minimum effective dosage of muscle building exercise leads to massive benefits not just to the individual but to all humankind. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

As many of you know, Power Factor Training proved to thousands of trainees that lifting a very heavy weight through a partial range of motion quickly builds new muscle mass. After several experiments reducing the range of motion it was proven that a static (isometric) contraction was even more efficient. Static Contraction Training proved to many more thousands of trainees that holding a weight motionless for 15 to 30 seconds would stimulate new muscle growth. The further study that accompanied the book, The Golfer’s Two-Minute Workout showed that these strength gains transferred to improved athletic performance even in a full range of motion, high finesse activity such as driving a golf ball farther.

As reduced static hold times proved more effective and weights being used by trainees went sky high, it became clear that conventional equipment was obviously inadequate. Young women were reaching the limits of gym leg presses and guys were resorting to doing weighted chin ups... with one arm! Such were the strength and muscle gains being provided by this ultra-short, ultra-high intensity method of training.

Clearly this new paradigm of training required a new paradigm of equipment. Trainees wanting both the ultimate in training efficiency and the ability to reach the furthest limits of their genetic potential needed equipment that:

Could be adjusted to their own perfect position of strongest range
Could provide tons (literally!) of resistance
Eliminated the dangers of being crushed under enormous weights
Eliminated the dangers of being forced into exaggerated ranges of motion
Could be used by total beginners and the most advanced professional athletes
Was simple to operate and affordable
The new Explosive Fitness equipment is purpose-designed to do all of the above and more. This equipment ushers in a new day for strength training and bodybuilding. This changes the world of exercise and permits people from every age and walk of life to quickly and efficiently obtain the benefits of increased strength and lean muscle mass.

Take a Careful Look at These Machines:


Notice the XF Meter that sits on a pedestal between the leg press and the upper body machine? That meter displays large red numbers that tell you the maximum resistance you achieved on every exercise.


Using the close-grip bench press as an example (pictured above), you simply position the bar exactly where you need it to be for your strongest range of motion. Then you push a button to zero the meter and you perform your close-grip bench press. You can go all out and press for all you’re worth! Everything you’ve got in the tank! When you’re done you simply push another button on the meter and it displays the peak resistance you achieved. So grandma might do 53 pounds and a pro football player might do 786 pounds...on the same machine, one after the other, without making any adjustments, loading any plates, needing a "spotter" or risking having a heavy bar descend on them.

In the world of exercise, that truly is revolutionary!

And every different exercise can be set up in seconds, the meter reset to zero and your new maximum for that exercise displayed on the large meter. The Explosive Fitness equipment is designed to deliver the best, highest intensity exercise for each muscle or muscle group. It doesn’t offer a lot of useless, fluff exercises that only operate muscles at sub maximal loads. That would be a waste of time... Explosive Fitness is all about maximum health and fitness building efficiency.

Does it work?

It works so well it will change the world of exercise. I guarantee it! We’ve known for years that Static Contraction Training can put up to 40 pounds of new muscle on some trainees. What we are yet to learn is how much more is possible with Explosive Fitness’ purpose-designed static contraction equipment that provides far higher resistance (up to 5,000 pounds!) under perfect training conditions. (i.e. correct range of motion and ultimate safety.)

Here are a few comments from customers who purchased the first XF-2000 Upper Body machine and/or the EF-5000 Leg Press machine:

17 Inch Arms at 65!

I love this system. I have 17" arms now, and can see 18" arms in my future. In just the first month with my system my wife was commenting on how much stronger and bigger my arms looked. This machine has cut my workout time in half. The most amazing thing is that I am seeing results with every workout, not just on the meter, but in the mirror. Richard Zekman - age 65

Best “Secret” of All!

I just love this machine!!! I've been working out for twenty-three years, and have used all of the greatest body builder’s secrets and have enjoyed some success. Explosive Fitness is the best secret of them all. I get maximum results with my efforts. I also have more energy at work and my bones don't hurt as much. I’m not sure why, but I’m glad. Thanks again Tony and your team. Brian

Elite Female College Athletes Make Huge Gains!

Our players increased the size of their quads by 1.5 inches in 6 weeks... and these were not under conditioned athletes. In fact, two of them had just got done competing in the Track and Field State Finals! Without question, the Explosive Fitness Equipment has increased our players work capacity and in turn has made the various demands of our sport much less demanding. One of my players recently told me, 'Coach I could hold this defensive position all day.' Music to my ears, to say the least! The Explosive Fitness Equipment has allowed us to spend less time in the weight room and more time on the court. Due to the increase in work capacity we are able to train harder and longer on the court, where it really counts. John Hunter - Barton College Volleyball

Feels 20 Years Younger!

I bought from you a leg press machine in June and I love it. My first trial with the leg press was 491 lbs. In six weeks with 15 days of rest I am doing 1,100lbs. By the way, I am 52 year old and I feel like 30 years. Thank you, thank you for the Explosive Fitness machine. Diogenes Zapata - age 52

18 Pounds of New Muscle at Age 55!

I have trained dancers, acrobats and martial artists for over 30 years, and I've never seen anything like this. I've gained over 6 lbs of muscle each of the last 3 months. And I'm 55 years old. And on top of that the XF2000 has been recuperating a shoulder that I injured in a motorcycle accident, and thought it would take years to use fully again, if ever. Constantine Darling.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. Normally I never talk about injury rehab or other medical issues because I’m not an MD and I don’t want people to assume I am giving medical advice. But one 33 year old male user of the Explosive Fitness equipment is under the care of a physician following a severe leg and hip injury from a snowmobile accident.

The accident totally demolished his hip socket, pushing the bone right out of the socket. The surgery performed on him had only a 1% chance of full recovery and that only after 18 months. Yet four months later he became aware of the EF-5000 Leg Press and went from pressing 18 lbs to pressing over 1,000 lbs with his bad leg in just 3 months of rehab! The fastest typical recovery rates to just walk normally are 18 months or more. His recovery went like this:

First session - 18 lbs. 2 week rest

Second session - 145 lbs 2 week rest

Third session - 347 lbs 2 week rest

Fourth session - 585 lbs 2 week rest

Fifth session - 785 lbs 2 week rest

Sixth session - 1054 lbs, all with a leg that wasn't supposed to be able to support his own weight for another 12 months!!

The subject says: “My Doctor told me I wouldn't be able to walk normally for at least a year. Three months on the EF5000 and I am sprinting.”

Why Does This ‘Change The World’?

The health benefits of being stronger and having more lean mass are very well documented. They include lower blood pressure, greater bone density, higher levels of energy, being less prone to injury, an enhanced sense of well being…the list goes on and on. In short, muscle is youth!

This new Explosive Fitness equipment allows everyone to garner these fantastic benefits in the absolute minimum amount of exercise time, under the safest possible conditions and with affordable equipment they can never outgrow. And all these benefits are achieved with the absolute minimum of wear and tear on the body. Workouts that last 5 minutes instead of 90 minutes. Workouts 2 or 3 times a month instead of 3 or 4 times a week! As I said, it is truly revolutionary!

Remember all the the “buzz” that Nautilus equipment created in the 70’s? Well built equipment. Nautilus only gyms. Used by elite pro athletes. Well, my friends, this is BIGGER! Within a few years you’ll see all of that and much, much more! Explosive Fitness is well named…I honestly believe it is the ‘next big thing’ in the world of exercise, fitness and rehabilitation. And I’ve waited over ten years to be able to say that!!

The best part is…you can have it all right now! Explosive Fitness has increased its production capacity so that this equipment can be made available to more customers. The pricing still reflects a “factory direct” discount that will not last much longer. Once domestic and international distributors and online affiliates begin selling this equipment, the costs will need to increase. I urge you to find a way to buy these machines for you and your family now. It is an affordable investment in your strength, looks, health and well-being!!
 

jack

Primus registratum
Re: Bodybuilding.

Q. Most bodybuilding magazines and websites are packed with ads for nutritional supplements. You never say anything about them, so what is your opinion of supplements?



A. I have a pet peeve with the nutritional supplement business and it has always prevented me from endorsing any product from any company. Before I tell you about it, let me say that I know that there are people doing honest research into ways of improving athletic performance through nutritional supplementation. There could very well be ways to increase the intensity of muscular output by feeding muscle the perfect combination of fuels…please remember I said that.



What irks me are the advertising methods of the supplement companies. You see, in the US, where most supplements are sold, there is an interesting split in the laws regarding these products. Specifically, the actual name of the product is not regulated but the description on the container is regulated. So a company could legally introduce a product called “Cancer Be Gone” as long as the description on the bottle does not say “Take one tablet three times a day for the elimination of all forms of cancer.” If they make that claim in the description somebody could go to jail….but the product name is OK.



So bodybuilding supplements have names that strongly imply they reduce fat (get you ripped) or add new muscle or speed up the growth of muscle (give you more mass!)…but the description on the container never makes the same claim!



Why?



Yet when I buy Tylenol the description says “relieves pain”…and it really does! So why doesn’t any supplement say “Builds more muscle” in the description?



And that isn’t the only thing about the advertising that bothers me. I keep seeing tricky wording like: “Contains elements that support muscle growth.” What does that really mean? Water “supports” muscle growth too, but drinking more of it won’t put more muscle on you. And water isn’t even called “water”…it gets called a “muscle cell volumizer.”



So when I see stuff like that it really makes me leery of all the claims. Which is really too bad for those few doing honest research into performance improvement, because it very hard for them to be heard above the noise of all these other claims.



I’ve never done any research or testing of the effectiveness of any supplement. And I’m way too busy researching effective and efficient training methods to ever get around to supplements. That’s why when people ask me about nutritional supplements I just refer them to the work done by Will Brink, who is the only person I know who provides information about supplements but is not working for a particular supplement company or selling any of their products himself.



These are Will’s two e-books on the subject:













Special Note: Please don’t send me e-mail asking “What about the new RammaBol (or whatever)…I hear it really does work.” I won’t have any opinion on it and I’ll just refer you to the above.



Pete Sisco





An Honest Look at “Light” vs. “Heavy” Training



Ever heard this one in the gym? “I’m just going easy today; yesterday was my ‘heavy’ day.” Those few words point to a plethora of misconceptions and false premises that thwart maximum muscle growth and can even lead to a loss of strength and mass.

It’s not that “light” or “heavy” are the right or wrong ways to train. It’s that you need to know exactly what you are trying to get out of your training in order to choose the right workout.

Your body responds to exercise in a similar way it responds to any other stress. It makes an adaptation so future stresses are less…well, stressful. For example if you go out into bright sunshine today your light skin is pushed to the limits of its ability to protect you and will adapt by darkening into a tan. So tomorrow the same amount of sunlight is less stressful to your body.

Similarly, you make muscle building progress by pushing your muscles to the limits of their ability to work so they adapt by increasing in size and power so the identical workout is less stressful next time.

The Invisible Line

The trick is finding the “invisible line” between a workout that is stressful enough to trigger new muscle growth and a workout that is not. We all understand that a day spent in the shade is not going to deepen our suntan, but do we truly understand that a “light day” of weight lifting will not increase our muscle? Because I assure you it won’t.

To help visualize this very important and fundamental concept, imagine that your level of strength could be measured on a scale of 1 to 100. The number 100 represents the absolute limit of how strong you could become if everything possible was done perfectly to build your muscles.

Let’s say today your strength scores 35 on that scale. Now let us suppose that if you work your muscles to within 5 points of your maximum you will generate 2 points worth of new lean, hard muscle.

Now it’s all very simple and clear. If today’s workout pushes past “30” in intensity and work done then your strength level will grow to 37. Wow! A productive workout! But your next workout will have to push past “32” (5 points from your new maximum) in order to trigger even more muscle growth. If you do that “30” workout again, or…God forbid!...a “light” day of an “18” workout you don’t have a prayer of generating new muscle. So what would be the point of the workout?

“You Can’t Train Heavy All the Time”

This leads us to something else you might have heard in the gym. “You can’t train heavy all the time.” I hear that refrain every time I try to explain the concept in the last paragraph. But what people really mean when they say that is, “I love to lift weight 3 or 4 days a week and I can’t train heavy that often.” Yup, very true. And I can’t get my hair cut 3 times a week just because I like going to the barber.

Reality check: Do you want to lift weights or do you want to build muscle?

The fact is you can’t train heavy all the time…but you can train heavy every time. But because your body needs time to recover from heavy, productive, muscle building exercise you need to add more time off between workouts. Our man in the above example can do a workout that is a 37…then one that is a 40…then one that is a 41, if he takes enough time off between workouts. That’s the way you work your way up to 100. That’s the way everyone has to do it. It’s a physiological law.

There is a concept that can really help unlock the secret to all of this: Perceived Effort. Hypothetically, if your level of strength is “28” then a “26” workout feels extremely intense and demanding. But if your strength level is “88” and you perform an “86” workout the perceived effort is identical! As you get stronger your workout intensity increases but your perceived effort stays the same! That’s great news because it means you don’t really have to psych yourself for more and more difficult workouts…just the same level of perceived effort every time.

One Real Benefit of Light Training

So you can see that the guy performing a “light day” is pretty much wasting his time. There is no possibility whatsoever that his light workout can trigger new muscle growth. In fact, if his last workout was productive his body will be in recovery mode and will need to fully recover before the new muscle growth will manifest. And doing another workout the next day – even a light one – will only slow down recovery.

Personally, I think the main reason guys go to the gym for “light workouts” is just so they can watch that cute blonde on the stair master. The gym, for many guys, is what the local bar is for others: a place to meet and socialize. So people have taken their need for frequenting the gym and rationalized it into a training method of frequent “light days” without regard to the physiological facts of the matter.

But, all that said, there is one tangible and valid benefit of lighter training. Stress relief. Speaking for myself, I tend to carry stress in the muscles of my lower back and my neck and traps. If I do a few deadlifts and shrugs I get instant relief. I only need to use 30 or 40 percent of my maximum to get this stress relieving benefit. The best part is that if I keep the perceive effort very low I know I’m not slowing down my recovery too much. The stress relief and mild endorphin release makes it a pretty good bargain. But I don’t kid myself that I’m building muscle. I know that takes truly grueling effort.

So…want to get the best of both worlds? Plan your productive, muscle building workouts far enough apart to ensure a steady climb to that “100” that represents your full genetic potential. And when you need some stress relief and a shot of endorphins, do a few lifts at about 30% of your capacity…if you really feel you must.



Train Smart!
 
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