Robert5891
Well-known member
9/9 Chest/Tris
Incline DB Bench Press...........................30/20, 40/15, 12, 12, 12
Flat DB Bench Press...............................40/15, 15, 15, 15
Incline DB Pull Over................................40/9, 12, 12, 10
Incline Overhead Tri Ext..........................30/15, 10, 10, 10
Another short day today. Work is killing me (13+ hour days, eating at my desk, no real breaks outside of "forced" bio breaks). I rearranged my workouts this week for a variety of reasons, the main one right now is due to my shoulders (mainly my traps) feeling like I just crushed a massive shoulder workout, even though I have not exercised my shoulders in well over a week. So I pushed my back and then chest workouts up in the schedule.
I also have been compressing my workouts due to time constraints. I noticed (not surprisingly) that when I reduce my inter-rep rest periods that the total # of reps (and sometimes weight) goes down. Which is better for adaptation (hypertrophy)? Longer rest + more reps/more weight? or shorter rest periods and less reps/less weights?
Total reps going down is expected when shortening your rest times between sets, so don't worry about that.
How long are your typical rest periods and how much have you shortened them too recently?
The conventional recommendation for rest period length is 45-90 seconds for most hypertrophy exercises. However, some of the latest research from Dr. Brad Schoenfeld (hypertrophy guru) has shown that rest times of 3+ minutes were superior for hypertrophy in certain circumstances:
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in the end, both are effective, and it's probably good to cycle through different rest period lengths as another method of periodization and "muscle confusion" haha. Plus, if you're starting to max out on your available weights, shortening the rest periods is another way to get more bang for your buck out of the weights and still keep the gains coming.
