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BODYBUILDING SECRET 4
Secret
#4 involves workouts and exercises. Someone says this new
workout
and/or exercise is going to make you huge. Truth
is it may or may not. You have to find something that works best for
you. If it does, one reason it worked for you is because your muscles
were not use to it. Your muscles have a memory, you do the same thing
to them every single day and before you know it you get stronger and
your muscles get use to the abuse. It becomes easier to them. Shock
them. Change it up. Confuse your muscles. Make your muscles wonder
what's next!
GET BIG:
Want to be big, lift big! Thats right, lift big
and lift heavy. Change it up, do heavy weights that you can do at a
decent rep range of at least 10. Also do the heaviest that you can do
at a rep range of 2-3. Change is the number one concept. Change up your
exercises while your at it.
After looking back and analyzing the workouts and exercises of many
pro bodybuilders, we discovered continuous tension.
THE
WORKOUT:
Ronnie
Coleman does only partial reps on almost every exercise and those
partials always include the max-force point, where fiber activation is
red-lining (the X Spot). Another interesting detail is that he rarely
does low reps as you’d expect, they’re usually up around 12. So what
he’s doing is keeping tension on the muscle for a considerable length
of time (we’ve said that around 30 seconds or more is best for
hypertrophy). He’s also enhancing fiber recruitment by using a
controlled explosion right at the semistretched point on the stroke,
like near the bottom of a bench press.
Locking out on exercises
where the target muscle can rest is useless because it kills continuous
tension. That means moving the bar all the way up on bench presses and
squats is costing you mass gains. The top range of the squat is almost
all glutes, so the quads get a rest. At the top of a bench press your
pecs relinquish the load to the triceps and front delts. So if you lock
out, it’s like doing a series of singles, which is fine for
powerlifters interested mostly in strength development and who have to
lock out in competition (we’re interested in maximum muscle mass first,
with a strength side effect).
We’ve come to the realization that
if you’re after the most mass stimulation possible, you should avoid
the top third of the stroke on those types of exercises. Remember,
continuous tension blocks blood flow to the muscle (occlusion), which
triggers an incredible anabolic response if that tension lasts long
enough. (Longer tension times is one reason Ronnie Coleman is so freaky
huge!)
Time under tension is very, very important. In fact,
we’ve labeled short, or lower-rep, sets as one of the biggest mistakes,
if not the biggest mistake, in muscle building. Why? Because most
bodybuilders are obsessed with using heavy weights and lower reps, so
time under tension is cut short on every set. They’ve been conditioned
to believe that low reps build the most mass, which isn’t true.
Extended
tension times up to a point do more for muscle mass than lower reps
(one reason is the size principle of muscle-fiber recruitment). Low
reps are more for strength with a slight size side effect.
Nevertheless, lower-rep sets every now and then can enhance your
bodybuilding progress by increasing your nervous system response more
strength may allow you to involve more fibers eventually on any one set
(Coleman does low reps every so often, like on squats). If you want to
insure more muscle stimulation, we suggest you add X Reps to those
low-rep sets. That way you exponentially jack up the mass-building
effects.
FOR
EXAMPLE:
Let’s say you do a set of bench presses
with a heavy weight that allows you only seven reps. If every rep lasts
about three seconds, that’s only 21 seconds of tension time good for
strength, not so good for size (and remember not to go to lockout so
that your pecs stay engaged throughout). When you miss on rep eight,
you want to somehow keep firing the muscle to extend the tension time.
Lower the bar to just above your chest, the X Spot, and blast up to
just below the midpoint of the stroke. You may need help from a
partner, but the growth response you’ll get from more stress right at
the max-force point will be well worth the extra effort. (X Reps are
impossible on free-bar squats, so you may want to do your X-Rep set on
a Smith machine or hack machine.)
COMMON
SENSE:
Think about it. If you can get
six X-Rep partials, each one lasting more than one second, you can push
your low-rep set closer to 30 seconds of total tension time, the
anabolic time zone. That gives you a double-whammystrength-building
effects from the lower reps and more size stimulation by extending the
tension time.
CONCLUSION:
You get bigger muscle dimensions with more
continuous tension, so blast out some X Reps on most of your lower-rep
sets. It’s like size-building insurance!
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