I just lift.
^^^ I disagree.. U do need some type of protein within a half hr post workout..
What ever works I guess.. A 3 type protein blend post workout works, for some good gains.. That's just my opinion![]()
I'm a big fan of the dessert stuff too.. That chocolate coconut? Soo good..
^^^ I disagree.. U do need some type of protein within a half hr post workout.. High reps work for women... To build lean mass... And if I lower my reps I'm twice as strong.. It's nice to switch it up..
When you guys start approaching your genetic limitations you'll understand that mass isn't about lifting low rep heavy weight at all. It's about form, volume and intensity.
Sorry to annoy people on here but 3 X 5's are not as intense as 3 X 20's. I'm also appalled at the notion that you guys think to lift higher rep ranges means to lift sssoooooo much lighter. Relative to what? I can squat 225 for almost 30 reps..does that make it light? I've done more growing in the trunk area of my legs than ever before when I moved exclusively over to higher rep ranges and more intensity. Leg muscles have lots of slow twitch fibers so its important to bang out the reps to see the real potential in your thighs. There are many ways to add volume without lowering the weight. Supersets, dropsets, giant sets, partials, pauses, and even using a number of these at the same time. I like to to pauses and partials with full range of motion and in some cases I'll use multiple gripping angles - usually starting with the most difficult first, then as I fatigue I switch to easier grip angles and keep going. I can do all of this in the 75% range of my 1RM.
Another thing to be careful about is to think that you only need one or the other. You need BOTH. But from my experience, if you are further along in training, you'll need more volume than you will weight. You simply can do more work in any given period of time when you stick around the 60 - 80% of your 1RM. If I had a perfect cyclical schedule, I'd spend a 1/3 of my year training for strength and 2/3 training for volume and mass.
Without that "pump", you just aint gonna grow beyong a certain point. You need to fill the muscle up with blood, stretch the heck out of the fascia, and tear the fibers to the max to grow continously.
It depends what training you do to what type of muscle fibres you have. Most people have 50/50 fast and slow twitch muscle fibres (even in their legs). If you train with high reps you will be using mostly slow twitch fibres. Marathon runners have around 80% slow twitch whereas sprinters have around 70% fast twitch. So it depends on what type of training you do that dictates what muscle fibres you have. That is why I like to do 10x3 to train both fast and slow twitch.
Read these...
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Tell me how fruits boost your body's alkalinity? Fruits are acidic, no? I would think a teaspoon of baking soda would boost your body's alkalinity 10x higher than any fruit. A small amount of calcium hydroxide (pickling lime) should send it through the roof.
The bodies reaction also varies on ones blood type![]()
Kinda like what the lady said to ya, whatever works for you.
Slow twitch, fast twitch..to have a well-rounded look and development you need any and all of the different styles and ranges. But one thing I have experienced first hand is the need to lighten the weight, slow the rep down and squeeze the muscle for max contraction. I dont need to argue about what does and doesn't work man. I've studied all the science and the difference here is that I have also applied it too. Turns out, alot of crap you read about doesn't pan out in the gym.
This might be because of the endless variables associated with the human genome and our environment, diet and social factors. Either way, I've tried the low rep ranges vs the higher ones and I personally know which works best for me. Been doin this religiously for 6 years. Haven't missed a single week since and I've progressed further than most in the gyms that I've trained at. The comforting thing is that I have a similar opinion as the biggest and baddest bodybuilders in the world. That makes me think I'm on the right track.
Experience trumps text books. Not to say text books aren't valuable - they are, just not as much as we'd like them to be. And if I recall, my post didn't trash heavy lifting. You should do heavy lifting. I reserve the opinion that heavy lifting and powerlifting are appropriate for a season at a time and should play a moderate role in a much larger goal.
And by the way, there is more than one way to recruit max muscle fibers. It doesn't have to be just super heavy weight. A simple pause and explosion can increase fiber recruitment without having to add a single pound.
If I didn't spend time working on increasing calories gradually I would be 120 pounds no joke.so I don't understand what he means by don't buy into bulking up and then leaning out. Just eat, train and grow naturally without counting macros? It's not going to happen for me. Impossible. Right now I'm trying various things with diet, recovery and training to see what works best for MY body. Some people say minimize recovery. Then why do I keep plateauing when I work sore muscles? When I maximize recovery I always increase reps,weight, etc. I'm wondering how many naturals actually write these principles. A steroid user should never give naturals advice...period