GH pulls more water into me which is good for lifting.
I agree, I'm def. holding more water.
I work my muscles not my joints and I lift natural ranges of motion. For example, hang you arms down by your sides and look at you hand position. It isn't anywhere close to being supinated so why do curls in a supinated position?
But your hands/arms CAN supinate. But I see your point.....do we typically pick up heavy objects and supinate at the same time? Not usually. Do we pick up and apple and supinate to get it to our mouths? Yes.
Pick up a dumbell and curl with your hands in that natural position (probably be more Hammer style). When you want to go heavy reduce the leverage and force on your forearms by curling across the body.
Yes, I do this too. I agree.
When I bench press I do not come close to touching my chest. I want to keep the load on the chest and when I explode up I want that turn-around point to be a place where the load is on my chest not my shoulders. I never come close to locking out so my triceps aren't taxed. All of the motion is designed to work the pecs only.
I don't bench (flat) press anymore. I do incline BP though and have no issues with decline as well. I have never touched the bar to my chest....too much ROM and not necessary. I WILL though try limiting my triceps in the ROM....less distance to lock-out. I never lock-out though as there's always a slight bend in my elbows.
Guess what? My shoulders never ache because I don't drop a heavy load to them in a position awkward to them (i.e. the last few bottom inches in a bench press).
I do Military behind the kneck shoulder presses where I go down to the earloab but no further down. The bar scrapes the back of my head and stays in close.
Even with this movement I have zero shoulder problems.
I need to comment on "behind the neck" movements. I think it's awfully unnatural to lift heavy items using a behind-the-neck motion. If I ever have to lift a bowling ball off a tall shelf, I'll do it facing forward where my eyes are. I don't think nature ever intended people to lift with their arms behind and above them. That's just my logic to it all. I'm not saying it'll cause death if done that way but it's just a movement I avoid because I think nature doesn't favor it too much.
I use hooks or straps for every pulling movement period.
Yep, I just got a new pair. I'm still getting used to using them as they can be a pain to wrap around the bar correctly. I'm a newb yet.
The weight is just a tool. I lift heavy but don't play the D.C. beat the book games.
I hit every muscle group 3 times per week with just enough intense sets to stimulate growth but not overly tax the CNS. Thats 3 growth events a week. My CNS isn't fried ...my one or two days off per week is all I need. I stay fresh and grow.
3x EW? Upper/lower-type workout? I'm assuming you do a U/L/OFF/U/L/OFF/U : repeat or the same regiment but w/only 1 rest day?
I'm a decade older then you
(HE HEEE!) and I feel a decade younger then you do at the
moment.
If you are overly inhibiting estrogen as well your joints will ache as well.
Not taking anything to inhibit estrogen (that I'm aware of man).
Anyway I know you've caught the D.C. religion and I've mentioned several times better ways to lift so I'm not going to bring it up again.
No no, I haven't caught anything! I read up on and tried DC training. I thought it was a good 6-weeks as progress was obvious as was recovery (usually). But, I'm always open to learning new methods, especially those that help me recover faster. When not on PH/DS/AAS, I tend to recover poorly. So the more I can workout and recover, the better (obviously)
Growing a lot of tissue is an uncomfortable process bro. The lifting is the fun part. The taking in of 6000 calories of whole food a day is the incredibly difficult part.