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Build Big Muscles
Build big muscles - how do you build big
muscle quickly? This topic is so intensely disputed in the
weight training arena but doesn't need to be. There is a
simple way to build bigger muscles that will pack on real
pounds and inches quickly.
Real muscle, strong, lean hard muscle that stays! Some people
will just ask a "big" guy in a gym. But if this guy is just
"big" because of the chemical steroids he has taken then
what's the point? You will see he will be big for a few weeks
and then shrink back in size again.
Others follow the routines touted in magazines as the supposed
routine that built the Mr Olympia body. If it was that easy
you would see that everyone who had bought that magazine would
look like a professional bodybuilder - but they don't!
What
you need is a blueprint for success. A program that has been
shown to add real muscle to real bodies without any form of
steroids or growth hormones.
PERMANENT MUSCLE is what you need - build:
BIG ARMS - Biceps & Triceps
HUGE BARREL CHEST
SUPER WIDE BACK
SHOULDERS LIKE A BARN DOOR
SUPER STRENGTH LEGS
PLUS
A Rippling Six Pack Stomach all
at the same time
If you want PERMANENT MUSCLE
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Don't be the small kid in the gym. Get
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Where are people going wrong?
The first thing that must be mentioned is that each and every
time you walk in the gym you need to cause your muscles
something called 'microtrauma' which is when your muscle
fibers are damaged due to forcing resistance against them.
Growth happens during recovery when the process of protein
synthesis occurs to repair those 'micro torn' muscle fibers
into a stronger and larger state. So when you are training for
mass gains, strength gains or even fat loss your number 1
priority is to cause as much microtrauma as physically
possible before your muscles fatigue and eventually fail.
So what rep range is ideal for building muscle?
I want you to totally forget about rep ranges from now on and
start concentrating on 2 factors:
1) Isolating the targeted muscle group
This is important during every set because it ensures that the
targeted muscle group is the actual muscle group doing the
majority of the work. Try grabbing the heaviest set of
dumbbells in your gym and lifting for a set of standing
dumbbell curls. How many reps did you manage to get out? 2,
maybe 3 on each arm? Now grab a pair of dumbbells half that
weight and see if you can complete any reps. Wow, you managed
to complete a full set of 8 each arm, what that's telling you
is that the ultra heavy set really had no impact on fatiguing
your biceps to the point they need to grow because you were
able to complete a full set with the correct weight
immediately after. Use a weight that allows for maximum
muscular isolation/stimulation on all repetitions.
2) Lift with good form using the heaviest possible
resistance
Understand that; the heavier the weight you use, the larger
the surface area of a muscle is recruited to move it. Each
muscle in your body is made of inter-connecting muscle fibers,
now think about the size of your pecs and quadriceps, they are
huge muscles that span both the width of your torso and upper
legs respectively. Your goal when training them is to recruit
as many of those muscle fibers as possible during each set and
exercise.

Perfecting each and every set...
Let's say for example sake that your pecs are made up of 1000
muscle fibers.
If you had a 1RM (1 repetition maximum) of 220lbs (100kg) on
your bench press that would indicate that all 1000 of those
muscle fibers would have been used in that 1 repetition. That
would be effective in one sense but a waste in another because
you only applied 1 reps amount of tension on those muscle
fibers (around 3 seconds), NOT causing effective muscle fiber
fatigue. Let's say you dropped the weight lifted to 175lbs
(80kg) and managed to get out 6 repetitions at this weight
before your muscles failed. This would be much more beneficial
to you because those 1000 muscle fibers were again all
recruited (due to reaching muscle failure) and you applied 6
reps of tension to the muscle (around 20 seconds)
How I can make your workouts even better...
In the following example you have taken your muscles to the
point needed for them to grow (microtrauma), I also call this
point your muscles 'stim point' (point on maximum
stimulation). Over 96% of all people in the gym will in fact
never actually get their muscles to this point during a
workout, so it SHOULDN'T be taken for granted but SHOULD be
capitalised on! I recommend further maintaining this point of
maximum stimulation by performing a simple drop set or static
set directly after your muscles fail for the first time.
Imagine your muscles work on a capacity scale of 0-100. When
your muscles are at rest (sleeping), let's say they are
running at around 5 capacity. When a muscle completely fails
due to resistance training it is obviously at a capacity level
of 100. It is at level 100 that you want to be at MOST OFTEN
during a workout.
When you recover between sets, your muscles glycogen/creatine/ATP
stores begin to re-supply and in as a little as a minute your
muscles can recover back to around level 40 before your next
set. The KEY is to maintain high capacity levels (> 80) for as
long as possible. Lifting a heavy set like the example above
to failure puts you at level 100, then moving directly into
another lighter set straight after (lifting to failure again)
maintains that high capacity level for the double the amount
of time than lifting for just 1 heavy set on it's own!
Putting it all together. I honestly hope I didn't lose anyone
there, it is a fairly complex topic to discuss in text but I
get
asked this all the time and like always I wanted to set the
record straight.
So forget about sticking to the same reps every single set.
Listen to your muscles and let them make the big decisions.
Concentrate on isolation, recruiting a large surface area of a
muscle and maintaining the point of maximum stimulation for as
long as possible.
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