Saturday, March 31, 2012

New Look, New Goals, New Questions

Welcome newcomers! If you want to build muscle, lose fat, boost your performance and improve your health you're in the right place. To make sure you don't miss out on any new updates you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed and sign up for my newsletter list. Thanks for visiting!

Rollins Search New Look, New Goals, New QuestionsPeople don’t change. That’s what they say, right? But who are they? And who are you, as a free thinking Renegade to listen to them anyway?

Perhaps heeding the words of someone a bit wiser, like the great American poet, Henry Rollins would be a better idea…

“I believe that one defines oneself by reinvention. To not be like your parents. To not be like your friends. To be yourself. To cut yourself out of stone.”

This has been a guiding principle throughout my life; reinvention and constantly trying to better myself.

That’s what the snake tattoo on my arm represents in the traditional Japanese mythology.  The snake is always shedding its skin and evolving. To remain stagnant would be the same as dying.

You can never remain stagnant, my friends. The quest for self improvement is not something that you can take a break from. It’s an every day, all day thing.

I’m a different person than I was five years ago. And I will be a different person in another five years; as will many of you, I’m sure. Because I know you guys get it and want it to excel more than most people do.

Like Jets head coach, Rex Ryan says, “Every day, everybody needs to strive to get just a little bit better.” And even though I’m a Giants fan, first and foremost, I hear those words in my head every morning when I wake up.

Like anything else it takes daily practice and reminders. You don’t become a better musician or athlete without practicing on a regular basis, hour after hour. Nor do you become a better, more productive, more successful (financially and emotionally) person without ritualistically practicing each and every hour of the day.

This daily routine includes associating only with positive people and eliminating all negative forces from your life. It includes having a schedule that you follow without allowing outside forces to steer you off track. It includes making lists, meditating, training, listening to motivational music or recordings and reading a select number of good books and blogs that you derive motivation from (like this one, hopefully).

With that in mind I’m proud to introduce our brand new site to the Renegade Nation. Special thanks goes out to Derek, Alex and Eoin for all their help and the great job they did. This is the third version of the site since we started it back in 2006 and by far the best, in my opinion. Onward and upward.

I’m loving the overall look and feel and am really digging some of the cool new upgrades we’ve added. I hope you guys do to and would appreciate any feedback.

2011 was by far and away the best year ever for the Renegade Nation. Readership steadily grew into the hundreds of thousands, we had more new training programs released than any year before, there were live events, we brought more high profile, big name clients into the family, we were voted as one of the top 100 most influential forces in fitness right up there with trainers who appear on TV in front of a much larger audience… But that was nothing.

2012 has to be even bigger. Inspired by my friend Craig Ballantyne, I have made it my mission to bring the Renegade way to one million people and help them reach their strength and fitness goals while improving their productivity and helping them live happier, more successful lives.

But I can’t do it alone. I need your help.

I need you guys to constantly get better every day and I want to hear about it… on the blog, through email, on Facebook and Twitter, in person, everywhere. That will serve as my motivation.

No one can do it alone. We all need a support team. And you guys are mine.

I’m accountable to you guys and you’re all accountable to each and every other Renegade out there across the globe.

Growing the Renegade Nation to one million strong is my big, hairy, audacious goal for the next few years. Short term I will continue hustling in the pursuit of numerous short term goals including the expansion of Renegade to the West Coast, of which I will keep you all updated on later in 2012.

As for my own fitness goals going forward I have some things I need to work on. Firstly, I’m a horrible traveler. I end up either not eating because there are no healthy options, or eating junk food because I put off eating for so long that I make myself sick and have to eat whatever’s in sight. Not cotton candy, mind you, but stuff I normally wouldn’t eat. I need to make a much better effort to be prepared and keep my nutrition on point when I’m on the road.

I’ve always had difficulty sleeping for as long as I can remember. This year I made it my goal to work on and dramatically improve that. I did and am sleeping a lot better but there are still some steps I can take to improve it even more. I need to train earlier in the day and finish eating a bit earlier every night. I also need to make sure all work related stuff is completely off my mind by a certain hour. When I do those things I sleep better. Now I just need to make them unbreakable habits.

Finally, I need to continue to temper my enthusiasm for training. In the past I have gotten injured plenty of times because I couldn’t control myself and just love training so damn much. Over the last year I’ve gotten significantly better at this but there is still much room for improvement and I will be constantly working on it.

To wrap this up I have a few questions for you:

What is your biggest weakness that you need improve upon?

What is holding you back from reaching your goals that needs to be eradicated? Think long and hard and be brutally honest with yourself. We can’t fix something if we’re not willing to identify it as a problem and put it out there for all to see.

Lastly, what are your biggest fitness/lifestyle goals for 2012? Not bullshit New Years resolutions, but real, attainable goals that you can and WILL conquer in the next 12 months.

To kick the new blog off right let’s get 100 comments from some fired up Renegades who are ready to kick ass, take names and change the world!

Thanks again for all of your support.

Tags: American Poet, Athlete, Blo, Daily Routine, Free Thinking, Giants Fan, Good Books, Great American, Guiding Principle, Head Coach, Henry Rollins, Japanese Mythology, Jets, Little Bit, Musician, New Beginnings, New Goals, Reinvention, Reminders, Renegade, Rex Ryan, Self Improvement, Snake Tattoo
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Thursday, March 29, 2012

Tips on How to Lose Weight on Fat Butt and Thighs - This Takes More Time Than Reducing Belly Fats


Reducing weight in the thighs and butt is really one hard task for a lot of people. It definitely demands more time and effort to be exerted than losing belly fat. However, if you can totally devote yourself in these seven tips, you can achieve desired results in a matter of of time.

The seven tips are:

1. Get hydrated--Drinking a large number of water will aid you in removing your body's toxins, in turn, helping you lose weight.

2. Have a low carbohydrate diet--If you cannot completely lose, try reducing the amount of white carbohydrates you intake. Example of carbs rich foods are potatoes, white bread, pasta, etc. You can replace these with brown carbohydrates provided by wheat pasta, wheat bread, and brown rice.

3. Up your proteins--You can compensate the low carbs intake with a high protein diet. However, remember to remove fat from chicken, steak, pork and eat lean meat, eggs, turkey bacon, lean pork, and chicken breast more often.

4. Start doing beginner cardio workouts--You can start doing this by walking thirty minutes every day, either outside o on a treadmill.

5. Level up with advanced cardio exercises--Since all exercises should be increased, you can advance the intensity of your cardio exercises by doing some lunges with body weight every other day.

6. Start a beginners' weight lifting routine--Use heavier weights for the upper body and low reps for building more size, and more reps and lighter weights on lower body for slimmer waist, thigh, and butt areas.

7. Go up with an advanced program of bodybuilding--If you have dedicated yourself with the six tips for six weeks, you can now start a bodybuilding program that will define and sculpt your new, finer body. You burn and reduce fat by building muscles, so the more muscles in your body, the higher metabolic rate you'll have, thus reducing more weight.




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Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Renegade Attittude

Welcome newcomers! If you want to build muscle, lose fat, boost your performance and improve your health you're in the right place. To make sure you don't miss out on any new updates you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed and sign up for my newsletter list. Thanks for visiting!

crook3 Renegade AttittudeThere are thousands of people who read this site every day who will never make it to Jersey to train at Renegade. So I debated even posting this since it won’t really apply to most of you. But then I realized that no, that’s wrong. It will apply to anyone who trains hard, takes this stuff very seriously and expects the same of all around them.

I’ve mentioned my close friend, Mark Crook plenty of times before. He would be a great addition to any serious gym or group of training partners anywhere in the world. He brings it each and every time and sets an example for those around him. He’s also close to fifty years old, with no signs of slowing down.

The other night I got an email from Mark telling me that he had written this after being at the gym training earlier in the evening. That’s how much training means to him.

Other people go to the gym on a daily basis to get a pump or get their heart rate up or hang out with their friends. But not Crook. He’s like each and every person who visits this site regularly and trains Renegade style. It means so much more to him than that.

So, even though he’s not talking directly to you I still thought it was a pretty good read from one of our fellow brothers in Iron.

Like Dan John, I don’t get this whole idea that seems to permeate fitness these days that every workout has to be the greatest training session of your life. Nothing else gets linearly better so why should training? There is something to be said for lighter or easier workouts. And sometimes just going through the motions is actually beneficial; especially on days you don’t have it. But only if you actually train hard most of the other times.

You need to learn to train hard before you can learn to take it easy.

I hope that all the people who train at Renegade take this to heart and can answer Crook’s call.

Introducing my friend, Mark Crook, unedited, rough, rugged and raw…

***

I wrote this a few weeks ago and felt it relevant to post as I was happy to train at Renegade Friday night as well as help train a few crews… sorry for the length but felt it worth sharing…

Due to my office moving 2hrs away, I haven’t been able to make it to Renegade my usual 3-4x per week. Instead I try to get there as often as I can, usually on a Saturday. This week I’ve been fortunate to be able to get there Monday and Wednesday. I trained at some times and I helped train others at different times. It gave me an opportunity to see some of the usual crew as well as some of our new members– a great group of people and I was happy to see everyone.

Being gone allowed me to look at the gym and individual dynamics with a different perspective (an outsider if you will)… I observed everyone and wondered what they were thinking, where they were “mentally” regarding their training session, what their effort looked like, etc. It got me thinking even further— I wondered what Renegade meant to each one of them, what did it represent to them…

Did it mean as much to them as it does to me?

Do they think about this place all day like I do?

Now most of you know me and know what I am about, at least in the gym. I am committed to representing our place in and out of the gym …I am not the biggest or strongest but I will bring our attitude…the gym is too special to me and like me or not, I will protect it.

That said, here’s what I commit to…

•    I will bring it every day that I walk through that door. Asking for 45 minutes of 100% focus is not asking much yet the positive impact is significant– not only to me but everyone else in that room.

•    I’m on the fence about the acceptable training mental state and the science behind mental state. I also know everyone may “bring it” in their own way. Now it could be argued that one should maintain a state of control (controlled chaos if you will) — intense but staying focused on the task at hand, not frying your CNS within the first 5 minutes and strategically accomplishing your goals for the day. But I still love the days of old when I witnessed Jared breaking a florescent light bulb over his head before a lift or projectile vomit mid-way through a max effort deadlift. Or the memory I have of reaching the wooden door (no windows) to the gym and finding a large hole through the center of it so I could see into the gym from the outside (a result of a fight earlier that day that occurred in the middle of an intense workout).

No one was friends for an hour, no one spoke and everyone tried to one-up the other. We would watch video of the training session immediately afterward to check our form and congratulate each other on good lifts. There is something to be said about training in that kind of environment. So when I train, I commit to providing a blend of both worlds. I also don’t think it is a coincidence that when I work in with a group, people suddenly get stronger. Or when I train with someone with a similar state of mind, I get stronger… it is the environment that I try to create on behalf of my training partners.

•    I will be challenged and I will challenge. Not only through motivational feedback from a trainer or partner but through my actions. My days of squatting and deadlifting big are over due to my back but I promise you I will challenge and find ways to beat you in other ways and other exercises… and I will beat you.

•    I will pay attention to my training partners… spotting them, providing tips or feedback that will help them improve. I will do all I can to help you achieve your goals. I will do that even though I want to bury you. If I’m going to beat you, I want you at your best.

•    My warmups are practice for my work sets. My focus and form will be just as good with the bar as they are with a heavy set of 3.

Now I ask all that train at Renegade–  very special people to me … what do you commit to?

Will you protect this place and represent it as only it should be represented?

Will you motivate and be motivated?

Will you contribute to each and every training session in a positive manner?

Will you?

Tags: Daily Basis, Email, Fellow Brothers, Fifty Years, Fitness, Fri, Friend Mark, Going Through The Motions, Gym Training, Heart Rate, John I, Mark Crook, Plenty Of Times, Renegade, Signs, Train, Training Partners, Training Session, Workout, Workouts
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Sunday, March 25, 2012

Tips To Becoming A Major Muscle Gainer - How To Build Muscle Fast


Looking to learn how to become a major muscle gainer? In order to become a muscle gainer you have to think like a muscle gainer and start making changes to the way that you live your everyday life.

So many guys make the mistake of thinking that if they get their workout and diet plan in line, they will automatically start building up a very high amount of lean muscle mass. But, if the truth is told, it's only when you get all elements of your life working in your favor that you really become a major muscle gainer.

While you may gain some muscle just with the diet and workout alone, if other factors are influencing your progress, you're not optimizing your results.

And, if you're putting in all that time and effort in the gym, don't you want to be maximizing the payoff? Of course you do, which is why you must follow these tips to become a major muscle gainer.

Take Sleep Seriously

First things first, if you really want to become a muscle gainer, you must take your sleep seriously. If you think that you can grow on only five or six hours of sleep, you had better think again.

Remember, sleep is the primary time when your body is going to be releasing all those growth hormones in the body that help you take your body to a new level.

In addition to that, sleep is also the primary time when the body is releasing natural growth hormone, which is key to packing on more lean muscle mass tissue. If you aren't getting enough sleep at night there's a good chance you won't be recovering from your workout sessions and then instead of entering the gym each workout stronger than you were last time, you'll just be entering weaker than you were before.

Get eight hours - minimum. It will really pay off long-term in the results that you see.

Reduce Your Stress

Second, the next thing that you must do is take steps to reduce your stress level. Stress is going to cause a hormone called cortisol to be released in the body and when it is, this can actually encourage muscle breakdown.

In addition to that, cortisol will promote the accumulation of abdominal body fat, so unless you want to sport excess body fat as you go about your bulking period, it's best to minimize stress whenever possible.

Relax!

Third, relax! If you're the nervous, fidgety type, it's time that you get a hold of this. These types of individuals - high-strung people who always must be moving, will burn off hundreds more calories each and every day than a regular person would.

If this is you, it's going to be that much more difficult to meet your daily calorie requirements, therefore making it even harder to move forward in the right direction. Learn to relax and you will finally start seeing the muscle gains that you're after.

Periodically Change Your Program

Finally, the last thing to remember to be a muscle gainer is to change your program periodically. Even the best of bodybuilders do not follow the same workout year-round, so neither should you. The program you use should be designed in phases so that at various points in time you're mixing up the type of stress you put on the muscle tissues.

This will not only help to keep you from hitting a plateau, but it's also going to make your workouts that much more interesting as well so that you stay with them over the long-term. So there you have all the main things to remember as you go about your workout program and diet. If you want to be a muscle gainer, you had better get all of these in line and working for you.




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Friday, March 23, 2012

Renegade for Bodybuilders?

Welcome newcomers! If you want to build muscle, lose fat, boost your performance and improve your health you're in the right place. To make sure you don't miss out on any new updates you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed and sign up for my newsletter list. Thanks for visiting!

 Renegade for Bodybuilders?Question: Jay, how would you modify the Renegade method for competitive bodybuilders and what kinds of workouts would you write for them?

The Renegade Method, is all about getting bigger, stronger, faster, more mobile, more agile and more explosive.

Will you end up looking better? Of course, but you’ll also end feeling and performing better, which definitely can’t be said about typical bodybuilding programs.

Bodybuilding is about stepping on stage in briefs with pro tan and posing

Not that there’s anything wrong with that. I have tons of respect for the guys who do it and I drew great influence from guys like Arnold, Franco, and Yates. I actually am a big fan of old school bodybuilders from the 70's and 80's as evidenced by the pics I use here on the site quite often. That’s when bodybuilding was awesome. And those guys I listed all moved some big weights.

I also have plenty of friends who compete in bodybuilding and take nothing away from them. Those guys work their asses off.

But that’s not what we do. That’s not what this site is about. There’s a reason the people who read this site are here and not on Ronnie Coleman’s site.

Renegade style workouts are more about becoming an all around warrior; someone who has a great physique but can also perform like a badass. The performance part is the primary goal here. That’s what drives the aesthetics. We’re not simply chasing a bigger pump or some other intrinsic goal.

I’m not a big fan of “how would you modify x for y” questions regardless of the topic or subject matter. I’m talking across the board in life. It’s like saying how would you modify the game of football if we decided to play it with a baseball?

I’m not trying to be rude at all but I’m just saying that people have certain beliefs and do certain things for certain reasons. Asking them to change them for an individual concern doesn’t always work.

You can’t ask Bruce Lee to teach a different way. You can’t ask a guitar teacher to show you the chords a different way.

When someone comes to me and wants to build muscle I give them a Renegade program with explosive power, maximal strength, bodyweight and strongman stuff like Uncaged. It’s not typical bodybuilding.

If, all of the sudden, I start writing six day, body part split workouts with giant sets, high reps, pre exhaustion and all that then it’s no longer a Renegade program. That’s not what I do.

I believe that natural, genetically average guys will get the best results by:

Training body parts somewhere between two and three times per week and even up to once every five days for older, beat up guys (and more frequently for younger guys with excellent work capacity)Using moderate volume (50-100 total reps per week, per muscle group)Training with fairly low reps (5-8 with some tens here and there)And a focus on long term (not necessarily every single workout) progressive overload (strength gains).JohnnieJackson2 Renegade for Bodybuilders? Johnnie even shocks himself with the weights he lifts.

If you look at bodybuilding, from the beginning til now, you’ll notice that the biggest guys are always the strongest guys.

Franco and Arnold were strong as shit.

Greg Kovacs moved some monstrous weights.

Yates and Coleman would put a lot of powerlifters to shame.

Johnnie Jackson seems superhuman when you see the amount of plates he piles on the bar.

Sure, you hear or read about the 275 pound guy who only uses 30's on curls and 85's on dumbbell presses but that doesn’t mean that will work for you.  And I can guarantee you that the guys using bigger weights than he is also have bigger biceps and pecs.

Big, compound exercises are all that’s needed to achieve that in most cases. There are very few heavyweight powerlifters who have massive gaping holes of missing muscle.

Olympic lifters backs look pretty impressive despite the fact that they don’t do bent over lateral raises, pulldowns, face pulls, and every row variation ever created.

If all you ever did was focus on getting progressively stronger on 12-20 big exercises for the next 5-10 years you’d end up pretty damn large. It’s all the noise in between that distracts people and leads to the spinning of the wheels and the lack of progress. Believe me, I know. I’ve been guilty of it myself.

Eventually, if you have been training for several years and you feel like you have a weak bodypart, that’s a different story. Then maybe you put it first in your routine or add a little bit more volume or frequency for short periods. Maybe you add in some more backward sled dragging to bring out your quads a little more or whatever. That’s what I suggest in that situation.

But that added specialization work gets added in the context of a Renegade program with power work, maximal strength work, strongman, etc. I don’t all of the sudden prescribe a Flex Wheeler workout circa 1993.

Now, if you want to do a Flex Wheeler or Shawn Ray workout from the 90’s that’s totally cool. I get that. It’s your option. It’s just got nothing in common with the Renegade Method and so I would never write a program like that or even modify one of my own to resemble that.

If you have more than one or two lagging bodyparts (like me) it probably just means you need to stay the course and get bigger overall. You can’t have weak rhomboids, upper pecs, biceps and hamstrings. That’s called just being small. Or smaller than you would like to be and you probably just need to gain another ten or twenty pounds like most people in that situation.

And no matter what you do, unless you’re a newbie, that’s gonna take time, dedication and a lot of hard work.

Tags: Aesthetics, Arnold, Asses, Badass, Bodybuilders, Bodybuilding Programs, Bruce Lee, Franco, Game Of Football, Guitar Teacher, Old School, Performance Part, Physique, Renegade, Ronnie Coleman, Subject Matter, Those Guys, Weights, Workouts, Yates
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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Fast Muscle Building Tips on How to Gain Muscles


If you are skinny and you want to build muscles, or if you are one of those who want to turn those extra fats into muscles to make you become stronger, there are many ways you can do it. If you are resourceful enough, you can also find some fast muscle building tips to help you get into shape.

If you are a beginner in muscle building, it is important that you seek advice from experts on how to start, although you can start with building flexibility first before lifting those weights in the gym, it helps a lot to start from the beginning and start your exercises right.

- Have a program for your muscle building. If you have specific things in mind such as building muscles in the legs, or arms or if you are too skinny and you want to gain weight and build more muscles, then you have to outline what you will do and how long you will do it. You can develop a good program by assessing what you want to achieve with your body, and you can seek the help of an expert to make your program as well.

- Develop your flexibility by starting with stretching exercises. Stretching exercises may not make your muscles grow big but this is an important step towards muscle building and in avoiding strain and injuries. Especially if you are just starting or you haven't had any exercise before, this will protect you against injuries and strain.

- Lift weights. Muscles are made as you exert strenuous effort with your body, and if your day-to-day routine does not allow you to build the muscles you want, you can go to the gym and lift weights. Always remember to do stretching exercises first to avoid injuries. One of the important fast muscle-building tips to keep in mind too is to make sure that you are doing the lifting and the weight exercises in good form. This will help you build a well-developed body as well.

- Change your eating habits. Of course, along with the proper exercise to build muscles, you also have to change your eating habits to attain your goal of building muscles. Add more protein in your diet. Protein helps build muscles and they also allow your body to repair your muscle fibers after a strenuous exercise at the gym.

- Make sure you drink plenty of water. Water is essential to maintain a healthy body and attain your peak strength as well as your energy levels.

- Have enough rest and sleep. Enough sleep is very important in building muscles as it allows you to repair muscle fibers and promotes muscle growth after your weight training exercises.

If you want to build muscles, also do away with cardio exercises as these are often used to weight loss. However, if you are obese and you want to lose fat before building muscles, then you have to work on having cardiovascular exercises before going for weight training or building muscles. Keep these fast muscle building tips in mind and always make sure you do everything correctly, and you will most likely have a good start in keeping in shape.




Carolyn Anderson exercises regularly to help her build muscles instead of accumulating fat. If you aim for a leaner body, check out From Skinny To Muscular. Also check out 7 Things To Gain Weight, to find the best 7 things to help you develop a lean and sexy body.




Monday, March 19, 2012

7 Principles of Exercise Selection


7 Principles of Exercise Selection


To paraphrase a wise man, "Small, weak, and injured is no way to go through life." But if you design your workouts around the wrong exercises, that's exactly how you'll end up; dreadfully unmuscular, embarrassingly weak, and prone to chronic injuries.

Proper exercise selection can be tough. There are countless lifts to choose from and most of them have several similar-but-different variations. Fortunately, there's a set of objective criteria to qualitatively rate exercises, which allows you to make the most effective choice between any group of exercises with the same purpose – like figuring out why an overhead extension is a better choice for triceps than a pressdown.

Admittedly, this is only a partial list of criteria, but they do apply to the vast majority of exercises. Let's take a look at exactly what these principles cover and learn how to apply them to several basic exercises.

An exercise is most effective for a bodypart if that bodypart is a limiting factor in the execution of the exercise, overlooking the other criteria.

If your grip always gives out first on deadlifts, then your posterior chain will remain understimulated and deadlifts end up being a poor choice for training your lower body. Similarly, your lower chest and the long head of your triceps are active movers during a pull-up, but they'll never limit your performance in the lift, so pull-ups are not seen as an effective exercise for these bodyparts.

This criterion removes almost all unstable exercises from the bodybuilder's exercise menu. Standing on an unstable surface will make your balance or, at best, the muscles in your feet the limiting factor in the exercise.

This principle also applies to using unstable objects as weights. Single-arm barbell overhead presses suck for shoulder training because your forearms and the stabilizers in the rotator cuff will give out long before your delts get the chance to do enough work.

For any selection of bodyparts, a compound exercise is superior to more isolated exercises, provided the compound exercise fulfills the other criteria for said bodyparts.

This isn't so revolutionary. If you can train three muscles at once, why train them separately? Compound exercises put much higher neurological, hormonal, and cardiorespiratory demands on your body than simple isolation exercises.

Compound exercises are more than a sum of their isolation exercise parts, which is why the guy with the bigger bench press will be more impressive than the guy focusing on flys and skull crushers.

Compound exercises also allow your body to spread the external force over multiple joints, which is beneficial for joint health and strength. Basically, they're a more natural way to move your body and they lend themselves to meeting the other exercise criteria better than isolation exercises alone.

That is not to say isolation exercises are useless. They absolutely have their place, but they can never rival compound exercises and should never be prioritized over them when it comes to getting big or strong. You can certainly include curls in your program, but only if the program already contains compound pulling exercises.

However, note the second part of this principle's original definition: For any selection of bodyparts, a compound exercise is superior to more isolated exercises, provided the compound exercise fulfills the other criteria for said bodyparts.

That means chin-ups are superior to the combo of barbell curls and straight-arm pulldowns, because chin-ups train the lats and biceps in a manner that meets all other criteria (which we'll learn in a moment). In terms of training economy, chin-ups thoroughly dominate barbell curls and straight-arm pulldowns.

However, when it comes to triceps work, the bench press is not superior to overhead extensions because the standard bench press doesn't work the triceps through the full range of motion and it leaves the long head understimulated. As such, overhead extensions and bench presses can't be directly compared using the compoundedness criterion. They're just different, like comparing a hammer and a screwdriver. Both are good tools, but they can't do each other's job very well.

7 Principles of Exercise Selection
The more an exercise moves joints through their full range of motion, the better it is, overlooking the other criteria.

It has been empirically demonstrated, time and time again, that lifting with a full range of motion (ROM) is superior to partial ROM for building strength. Using full ROM increases your mobility for that movement pattern and does so more effectively than basic stretching.

Increasing the ROM also increases the compoundedness of the exercise. Partial squats are only somewhat effective for training the quads and maybe the spinal erectors, but full squats effectively involve the entire posterior chain. Lastly, training with a full ROM is easier on your nervous system and your joints because lighter loads can be used.

Wait, what? Using less weight creates a better exercise? Yes. If absolute, maximal weight was all that mattered, everybody would be doing isometric-only or eccentric-only exercises and they'd be outgrowing clothes faster than a Kardashian marriage. But that's clearly not the case.

We all know that, ideally, the bar should touch the chest when we bench press and shallow quarter squats are only done by frat kids in between sets of curls, but few people realize that the ROM principle is actually applicable for all exercises.

For almost every pulling or pushing movement, whatever implement you're gripping (bar, dumbbell, cable handle) should touch your body at some point during the exercise. That includes pull-ups, rows, and overhead presses.

The ROM principle also dictates that the optimal grip for most exercises is near-shoulder width. The way most human bodies are built, right around shoulder width offers the greatest ROM for pushing and pulling movement patterns, unless your hands actually become an interference to the ROM, like during the military press, in which case your hands have to move slightly outward.

In short, cutting down the ROM on an exercise demands a damn good reason. And for the record, "a shorter ROM lets me go heavier, and that gives me an ego-boner," is a damn silly reason.

The more an exercise's stress is applied to its targeted structures, and the less stress is applied to peripheral tissue, the better the exercise, overlooking the other criteria.

Targeted exercises should stimulate your muscles maximally and target other tissues, like tendons, only insofar as their adaptations are required for maximum muscle growth. Factors like bone density, tendon strength, and cardiovascular health tend to take care of themselves if you do high-intensity compound exercises, so you don't need to worry about actively strengthening anything other than your muscles.

See my previous Muscle Specific Hypertrophy articles for more information on how to maximally stimulate individual muscles.

Applying this criterion further is generally done on an individual exercise basis, but some generalizations can be made. The following are essentially sub-criteria of this principle:

Your body isn't structurally adapted to pushing against things that are behind your body; it's unnatural and causes unnecessary shoulder stress. As a result, exercises such as dips, behind-the-neck presses, and behind-the-body side or front raises should be excluded due to this criterion.The "core" is structured to stabilize the spine, not move it. Spinal movement, especially flexion, is unnecessary for bodybuilders. Never round your back, keep it flat or arched. Anatomical position is almost always the optimal position for force transfer, maximal core muscle activation, and minimal peripheral tissue stress, such as spinal shearing forces.The more an exercise forces your body into a specific movement pattern, the worse the exercise, overlooking the other criteria. So... dumbbells are more favorable than barbells which are more favorable than machines. Free weights generally have very acceptable tissue stress distribution, while machines almost never do.Closed kinetic chain exercises are superior to open kinetic chain exercises, overlooking the other criteria. When you apply force to an object, either you move or that object will move.

If you move, the exercise's kinetic chain is closed. If the object moves, the exercise's kinetic chain is open. The classic example is to think of a push-up compared to a flat dumbbell press. In the first, you're moving (closed chain), and in the latter, the object is moving (open chain).

Closed chain exercises allow your body's structure to determine which joints move and how much, which takes stress off of the joints and lets the muscles do the work instead.

This finding has been replicated many times and is hugely underrated. Closed chain exercises are better for your joints and your muscles. This is why squats are superior to leg presses and pull-ups are superior to pulldowns. It's also why rows and bench or overhead pressing exercises aren't perfect.

Exercises that consist of an eccentric and a concentric portion are superior to exercises that are purely isometric, concentric, or eccentric, overlooking the other criteria.

Long-term studies that measure increases in cross-sectional area (muscle mass) consistently support this concept. Contrary to popular belief, the hierarchy of muscle building is eccentric-concentric contractions, followed by isometric contractions, followed by concentric contractions, followed lastly by eccentric contractions. As usual with the fitness industry, empirical data falsifies most theories.

This hierarchy reinforces the same theme that's been repeated in several principles so far. "Natural" movements, in the sense of a movement being dictated by the structure of your body, are best.

You're strongest on the concentric when it's immediately preceded by the eccentric phase of a movement. That's how you naturally jump, kick in doors, and throw heavy objects at people doing curls in the squat rack. Oh, and it's the most effective way to do most exercises, too.

7 Principles of Exercise Selection
The closer the resistance curve of an exercise approximates a healthy trainee's strength curve, the better the exercise, overlooking the other criteria.

If an exercise's strength and resistance curves don't match, some muscles involved in the lift will remain understimulated. You know how you usually fail exercises at the same point? Ideally, that point shouldn't exist and muscle failure should only occur at points where your underdeveloped bodyparts can no longer apply enough force.

That way, the exercise would allow you to develop all the muscles used in the lift in a perfectly, structurally-balanced manner. Note the explicit mention of a healthy trainee in the principle.

If you routinely fail to lock out your deadlifts, there's no problem with the deadlift itself. It's a problem within your structural balance. You, most likely, have disproportionately weak glutes, which are creating the sticking point at a given position in the movement.

Exercises that satisfy this criterion would automatically balance you out, because, in the case of the deadlift, your glutes would receive a greater training effect than the other muscles used.

The resistance curve for many exercises is flat, meaning, there's a constant resistance. The weights don't change mass and gravitational acceleration is constant, unless you're training on a space station in orbit. Exercises that require the weight to move vertically (directly opposed to gravity's line of pull) have a constant resistance curve.

Exercises in which the weight moves in a "circular" fashion (think leg extensions and barbell curls) normally have resistance curves that have maxima where the moving bodyparts are horizontal and minima where the moving bodyparts are vertical.

For example, the biceps are under minimal resistance at the bottom of a dumbbell curl and they're handling maximal resistance at 90-degrees flexion (the midpoint). That may seem easy enough, but to determine the exact resistance curve for other movements, you may need a solid understanding of physics.

How do you determine your strength curve? Well, other than paying attention and simply feeling where you're strongest and where you fail during an exercise, it helps to think of a muscle's length-tension relationship.

A decent rule of thumb is that muscles are strongest in their natural anatomical position (think military posture) or when in a moderately stretched position.

For pushing exercises, the resistance is generally greatest at the beginning of, or halfway through, the concentric part of the movement. This is why, in the case of the overhead press, bench press, or squat, you're more likely to fail at the bottom of the rep or before reaching the halfway point.

For pulling exercises, the resistance is generally greatest at the end portion of the concentric. This is why, for example, so many people find it nearly impossible to actually touch their chest to the bar when doing pull-ups. Note: This is giving you a cop-out for such an inability. If you can't touch your chest, you're weak or fat. Either build some mid and lower trap strength or cut some fat, pudgy.

So how do we match our strength curve to the exercise's resistance curve? Many people take the easy way out and simply avoid the hard parts of exercises. The trouble with this "solution" is that it violates the ROM principle and it certifies them as nitwits who probably text their own mother, "Hpy bday 2 u" instead of mailing her a birthday card, because it's easier.

An actual, useful solution would be to use accommodating resistance like chains or bands. Several longitudinal studies have found that adding chains or bands to the bench press increases strength and muscle gains.

While it's also true that some studies have found no differences, that's most likely because it can be difficult to determine the optimal amount of chain or band to use. Apply too much added resistance and you negate all the benefits. Apply too little, and you can still squeak out some benefit, but it'll be sub-optimal. Just like Goldilocks, the right amount will be somewhere in the middle, making the resistance curve equal to the strength curve.

Almost every exercise can benefit from using chains or bands to make the exercise's resistance accommodate to the optimal strength curve. Of course, you'd sometimes have to get crazily creative to implement this knowledge, and it'd be a constant process of estimation and fine-tuning to calculate the right amount of band or chain resistance.

If chains or bands aren't an option for your gym, you can rely on the stretch reflex to train in accordance to this principle. When a muscle lengthens, the strength of subsequent contractions are increased. Popular theory holds that this strengthening is due to elastic energy from the stretched muscle, as occurs when you stretch an elastic band – the farther you stretch it, the harder it pulls.

Though that theory is partially correct, comparing the stretching of muscles to that of elastic bands is extremely simplistic and the stretch reflex is, in fact, primarily a neural process. Muscle lengthening increases signaling for motor neuron activity, but it's still your muscles doing the work.

If it really were a process of elasticity, it would occur even without an active subsequent contraction. You can easily test this. Dive-bomb down during a squat and see how far you "effortlessly" bounce back up. (Okay, on second thought... just imagine dive-bombing down on a squat. Your patellar tendons will thank you.)

Activating the stretch reflex is still a good technique that can be used to accommodate an exercise's resistance curve, especially for pushing exercises. It can also be used for some pulling exercises where strategic momentum can help you to overcome weak points in the movement.

Face pulls, for example, have a strength curve that decreases as you move along the concentric portion, making the exercise uselessly-easy at the start and increasingly more difficult as the bar approaches your face.

Therefore, they benefit greatly from using momentum. Don't just pull on the handle. Heave it and make sure it practically brushes your eyebrows at the end. However, you need to be structurally balanced and injury-free before using any type of strategic momentum. If you aren't, you'll just exacerbate your imbalances by allowing the underdeveloped muscles to avoid training stress.

The more precisely an exercise's resistance can be determined, the better the exercise, overlooking the other criteria.

The best mass-building exercises lend themselves both to high absolute loads and small incremental loads. Ideally, we want to choose exercises that allow us to increase the max weights used, but we need the ability to take baby steps towards those maxes.

Absolute, or maximum, load is generally a limiting factor in bodyweight exercises. Handstand push-ups, for example, are superior to overhead presses with respect to their kinetic chain (closed vs. open), but they're far worse than overhead presses with respect to their absolute loading. Once you've reached beast-mode and you're doing handstand push-ups for reps, you'll add resistance how? Yeah, exactly.

Incremental loading is actually a limiting factor for many exercises. Machines have fixed weight increments in their stacks and most gyms only have dumbbells that increase five pounds at a time. Even barbell exercises can only be loaded with the smallest plates in the gym multiplied by two, because lopsided bars are a bad idea, no matter how "small" the extra is on one side.

While beginners and intermediates may be able to progress with such rigid increases, the ideal incremental load should be measured in a percentage of the working weight, not necessarily a strict 5 or 10 pounds.

While five pounds may a good incremental increase for barbell rows, it can be inefficient and excessive for shoulder isolation work. This is why small magnetic add-ons, like PlateMates, can be so beneficial. If you have them, be sure to use them. If you don't have them, put them at the top of your list of "Lifting Toys I Gotta Buy."

7 Principles of Exercise Selection


Now that you've made it through the lesson, it's time to see the rules at work. Let's apply the exercise selection criteria to a few basic movements.

1) We're hitting triceps today. Should we do two-arm kickbacks, rope pushdowns, or standing overhead extensions with a rope?

Well, they all have the triceps as the limiting factor, they're all dynamic contractions, and have no significantly different tissue stress distributions, although ropes are generally easier on the joints.

The microloadability depends on your gym's equipment, specifically the dumbbells and weight stacks, but kickbacks require such small weights that incremental loading is almost always a problem, unless you've already ordered those PlateMates.

Overhead extensions are the most compound, because the overhead position puts you in full shoulder flexion and allows the long head of the triceps to participate fully, which is not the case in the other two exercises.

All three exercises have the potential to use full ROM, but overhead extensions lend themselves best to using it because the resistance curve better approximates the human strength curve. Kickbacks and pushdowns have very little resistance at the stretched position.

Overhead extensions also have an increasing resistance curve along the eccentric, which allows you to use the stretch reflex.

Therefore... drum roll please... overhead extensions are the best exercise of the three.

2) Everybody says that deadlifts are magical must-have mass-builders, but how does the deadlift really score against the criteria?

I know I'm going to upset a lot of people with this, but deadlifts are not a good tool for mass. They don't involve dynamic contractions, which is a huge downside. Deadlifts also put the legs through a limited range of motion which is arbitrarily determined by the radius of the standard 45-pound plate.

These issues can be partially resolved by not resetting between reps, using a very wide grip, or using an extended range of motion (from a deficit or with smaller plates), but even then, the exercise doesn't satisfy the limit factor principle. With those changes, the grip or erector spinae are most likely to give out first.

Still, deadlifts aren't even ideal for these muscle groups because they're both slow-twitch dominant and require relatively-high volume for optimal growth, but working deadlifts with such a high volume will leave your nervous system fried and extra crispy, like everyone's favorite breakfast side dish.

However, this isn't to say that all deadlift variations are bad for bodybuilders. Romanian deadlifts, for example, remain a good exercise.

By now, you've hopefully absorbed enough to start making more deliberate and intelligent exercise choices. As with the optimizing of all training parameters, exercise selection should be a systematic process based on objective criteria.

It's tempting to do the convenient and comfortable exercises, or the ones that make you feel like a badass, but those feelings are short-lived. We know that the "fun stuff" isn't always the useful stuff, and vice versa. The physique you build from smart training should be the walking billboard to your dedication to the iron.

I always have to remind people, "Do you want to look good for the one hour you're inside the gym or for the 23 hours you're outside of it?" So put the time into designing the best program, do the hard work, and earn the results.

A comparison of tibiofemoral joint forces and electromyographic activity during open and closed kinetic chain exercises. K E Wilk, R F Escamilla, G S Fleisig, S W Barrentine, J R Andrews, M L Boyd. Am J Sports Med. 1996 Jul–Aug; 24(4): 518–527.

An analysis of full range of motion vs. partial range of motion training in the development of strength in untrained men. Massey CD, Vincent J, Maneval M, Moore M, Johnson JT. J Strength Cond Res. 2004 Aug;18(3):518-21.

Closed kinetic chain rehabilitation for sports injuries. W B Kibler. Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am. 2000 May; 11(2): 369–384.

Closed-kinetic chain upper-body training improves throwing performance of NCAA Division I softball players. Max P. Prokopy, Christopher D. Ingersoll, Edwin Nordenschild, Frank I. Katch, Glenn A. Gaesser, Arthur Weltman. J Strength Cond Res. 2008 November; 22(6): 1790–1798.

Effect of range of motion on muscle strength and thickness.Ronei PS, Gomes N, Radaelli R, Botton CE, Brown LE, Bottaro M. J Strength Cond Res. 2011 Oct 24.

Effects of lifting tempo on one repetition maximum and hormonal responses to a bench press protocol. Headley SA, Henry K, Nindl BC, Thompson BA, Kraemer WJ, Jones MT. J Strength Cond Res. 2011 Feb;25(2):406-13.

Influence of range of motion in resistance training in women: early phase adaptations. Massey CD, Vincent J, Maneval M, Johnson JT. J Strength Cond Res. 2005 May;19(2):409-11.

Quadriceps activation in closed and in open kinetic chain exercise. Ann-Katrin Stensdotter, Paul W Hodges, Rebecca Mellor, Gunnevi Sundelin, Charlotte Häger-Ross. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2003 December; 35(12): 2043–2047.

Quadriceps EMG/force relationship in knee extension and leg press. B A Alkner, P A Tesch, H E Berg. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2000 February; 32(2): 459–463.

The constrained control of force and position in multi-joint movements. G J van Ingen Schenau, P J Boots, G de Groot, R J Snackers, W W van Woensel. Neuroscience. 1992; 46(1): 197–207.

The control of mono-articular muscles in multijoint leg extensions in man. G J van Ingen Schenau, W M Dorssers, T G Welter, A Beelen, G de Groot, R Jacobs. J Physiol. 1995 April 1; 484(Pt 1): 247–254.

The effects of a 7-week heavy elastic band and weight chain program on upper-body strength and upper-body power in a sample of division 1-AA football players. Ghigiarelli JJ, Nagle EF, Gross FL, Robertson RJ, Irrgang JJ, Myslinski T. J Strength Cond Res. 2009 May;23(3):756-64.

The effects of combined elastic- and free-weight tension vs. free-weight tension on one-repetition maximum strength in the bench press.Bellar DM, Muller MD, Barkley JE, Kim CH, Ida K, Ryan EJ, Bliss MV, Glickman EL. J Strength Cond Res. 2011 Feb;25(2):459-63.

The influence of frequency, intensity, volume and mode of strength training on whole muscle cross-sectional area in humans. Mathias Wernbom, Jesper Augustsson, Roland Thomeé. Sports Med. 2007; 37(3): 225–264.

The mechanics of multi-joint posture and movement control. N Hogan. Biol Cybern. 1985; 52(5): 315–331.


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Saturday, March 17, 2012

4 Tips To Remember On Building Muscles


There are a lot of programs out there that can help you build muscles. Each of them has its own trainings and procedures on how to do it. Most of what we see in the advertisements is true but not all of the information they give us is helpful. Not all guides they give are compatible with your body. There is always a definite set of workouts, tips and guides that is right for you.

There are 4 tips to remember when building muscles.

1. EAT. When you want to build muscles, we do not recommend you to go on a diet. If you want your body to bulk up then eat foods that will make your body bigger and larger. Eat heavy breakfast, lunch and dinner. You have to eat more to gain more. Eat foods rich in protein such as meat, poultry, fish, eggs and dairy. If you are a vegetarian then you should eat whole foods. Whole foods are foods rich in carbohydrates. Eat veggies, fruits and fat rich foods. Being a vegetarian isn't bad but if you want to build muscles then you should double up or triple up the amount of food you eat in one meal.

2. DRINK. Drink at least two glasses of water in every meal. If you are not fond of just water then you can replace it with fruit juices in each meal but at least try to have a glass of water in each meal. I recommend you to at least drink 10 glasses of water and fruit juices every day. Avoid drinking sodas and carbonated drinks. I also recommend you to drink milk at least two glasses in a day. One for breakfast and one before going to sleep.

3. EXERCISE. Engage yourself in strength training. Start with a light workout then slowly adjust your training into a more intensive training regularly. If you think you can do the training easily then shift to the heavier one. Use weights, dumbbells are helpful in this but you should stay away from machines. Why do we stay away from machines? That is because machines cannot control balance for you. You should use free weights so you yourself can control on how far you can go. Try to do compound exercises. Do not forget to do curl ups. Curl ups make your arm muscles stronger and bigger. Do pull ups, chin ups and squats. This will make your whole body work for better strength. Do these exercises about three or four times per week. It should be one hour per exercise.

4. REST. Allow your body to rest at least two or three times in a week. Schedule your training days and rest days. Resting allows your muscles to regain their energy and will also make them grow. Sleep at least 8 hours a day. Never cut yourself from giving enough time to rest.

Follow these tips on building muscles and try to do it regularly. Never try to cheat on yourself since when you cheat on yourself; you will not achieve the product that you want to have.




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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Rotating Exercises, Squats & Deads in the Same Week

Welcome newcomers! If you want to build muscle, lose fat, boost your performance and improve your health you're in the right place. To make sure you don't miss out on any new updates you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed and sign up for my newsletter list. Thanks for visiting!

grimek Rotating Exercises, Squats & Deads in the Same WeekQuestion: Jay,

Two quick questions regarding the squat and deadlift and rotating these lifts.

1. How does rotating through several lower body lifts affect your muscular development over the long term?

I know that it is a great way to build well rounded strength and keep your CNS refreshed so you can go hard on lifts, but would focus on one variation and doing longer programming methods result in more size and strength?

2. Also, it seems from your last few programs that you’re not big on squatting and deadlifting from the floor in the same week. Are you starting to get the sense that more than what most intermediate level guys can recover from?

Thanks,

-Chris

Answer: For muscular development it probably won’t make much difference. Bodybuilders use a variety of methods and exercises. But if you are just concerned with improving your back squat it’s probably better to work strictly on that lift with varying loads, percentages and intensities throughout the year instead of doing box squats, front squats, safety bar squats, etc.

To get better at something you need to do it often. So squatting three times per week until you were fairly strong would be a good idea. Once you start moving some very big weights you might want to back off on the frequency a bit just due to the long term wear and tear it may have on your body.

Of course, Olympic lifters squat every day and it can be done with outstanding results. It just really depends on the individual, the recovery ability, the boredom factor, etc. Plus no one really knows what the long term damage may be from loading your spine and knees with three to five hundred pounds multiple times per week. It’s really a guessing game and your call at that point.

If a big squat is important to than you need to squat often for a few years. After that you can decide what you want to do going forward.

Now, to address your second question I will start by saying that most people recover very poorly from squatting because they do it improperly. 99% of all people technically shouldn’t be squatting without first correcting asymmetries, improving flexibility and mobility, doing some unilateral training to improve stability, etc.

This process should take 12-24 weeks. I know that sounds like an incredibly long time but three to six months isn’t really too long to sacrifice if you intend to be doing this stuff for the next 30-50 years. Believe me, it’s way smarter to take care of it up front than to wait for the injuries to start creeping up and being forced to add mobility work instead of doing it by choice from the get go.

After that initial pre-squat period I’d say that about 80-85% of people could probably do a  heavy back squat with good form and do so safely.

The remaining 15-20% probably will never be able to squat without some lumbar flexion or other issues that can lead to long term injuries. Now, that’s not to say those people won’t squat or can’t squat, it’s just that if they want to remain healthy for the long term and not be hobbling around beaten, broken and scarred like so many lifters in their 50’s and 60’s it’s not in their best interest.

Remember, if you’re not a powerlifter you don’t need to do exactly what they do. There are always other options.

hot girls squating Rotating Exercises, Squats & Deads in the Same Week Picture courtesy of traviscoffmanphotography.com

IF you can squat properly (high bar, Olympic style below parallel with no tuck) you can do it three times per week with very minimal recovery issues as long as you take your time slowly building up to it. I’d recommend something like a heavy, light, medium scheme as Mark Berry advised back in the 1930’s.

If you choose to do a low bar squat with a wide stance your shoulders, elbows and hips will get too beat up to squat multiple times per week and I wouldn’t even entertain the thought.

The deadlift is a whole different animal. Pulling a straight bar from the floor crushes you and impairs your ability to do anything else very effectively for the next few days. With the lower back strain you’ll be experiencing from deads it’s harder to squat, overhead press, bent over row and do just about any other standing exercise.

More effective than eliminating the combo of the two in the same week is the total removal of straight bar deads from the floor (except for a rare testing day if you were interested in that) and the minimizing of heavy pulling for guys who are strong and have been training for a while. Lighter pulls like high pulls and shrug pulls from blocks are more effective for those guys, with the heavy stuff snuck in on occasion.

Nowadays I’d recommend guys that can pull 405 for 5 from the floor instead do sets of 335-405 off of rubber mats stacked 4-8? high with absolutely picture perfect form and no lumbar flexion or grinding AT ALL. That means when you initiate the pull you don’t start by raising the hips first or by first slipping into a bit of lumbar flexion.

If you deadlift like that it’s far safer. And think about it… even though you’d be using weights that are far below your max you’re still using a weight that is much heavier than any other back exercise you could do. If instead of using 405 on the deadlift you did 355 with perfect form it’s still significantly more weight than you could ever bent over row. So you’re getting the benefits without the negatives.

Remember, submaximal training is what leads to maximal results.

If you liked this post do me a favor and hit the Like button and share it with everyone you have ever made eye contact with.

Tags: Body Lifts, Bodybuilders, Boredom Factor, Box Squats, Chris Answer, Cns, Deads, Front Squats, Guessing Game, Intensities, Intermediate Level, Lifters, Multiple Times, Muscular Development, Percentages, Programming Methods, Safety Bar, Spine, Wear And Tear, Weights
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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

3 Muscle Building Nutrition Tips For Hard Gainers


Proper muscle building nutrition is responsible for about 50% of your muscle gains, 30% of your gains come from recovery, 10% from your workouts and 10% from supplements. Which means proper muscle building nutrition is essential if you want to see any of kind muscle gains fast.

Don't be alarmed. Good muscle building nutrition isn't that hard to follow. Just make sure you know these nutrition basics, and you'll build muscle fast and add inches to your frame in no time.

Muscle Building Nutrition Tip #1: Meal Timing for Building Muscle

It's important to never, ever let your body get hungry. Why? When your body is hungry, your metabolism slows down and it stops burning fat for fuel. Instead, it breaks down your own muscle for extra energy. Not good for a muscle builder! Make sure you're eating every 3-4 hours and 5 or 6 smaller meals a day.

Muscle Building Nutrition Tip # 2: The Important Food and Nutrient Groups

* Protein

A brick layer can't build without bricks. Your body can't build muscle without protein. It's the stuff muscle is made of. If you weight train without consuming enough protein, your muscles will actually shrink in size!

Depending on the amount of muscle and how fast you want to build that muscle, you should consume AT LEAST 0.8-1.0 grams of protein per pound of body weight a day. So a 150 pound person should eat 120-150 grams a day. The more aggressive your muscle building goals, the higher this number will be.

Foods high in high quality protein include...

- Grilled Chicken and Turkey

- Egg Whites

- Tuna and other fish

- Milk and other low-fat dairy products

- Lean Beef

*Carbs

Carbs are the main source of energy for your muscles. So if you're not consuming enough carbs, you're going to feel sluggish and not lift very well.

Foods high in good carbs include...

- Oatmeal and non-sugary cereals

- Whole-grain breads

- Brown Rice

- Beans

- Potatoes

*Fruits & Vegetables

Fruits and vegetables supply your body with minerals and nutrients not found in other foods. Some of these nutrients include potassium, zinc, iron, vitamins, and fiber. Every nutrient supplied in these foods help your body function as it should. If you're not getting enough essential nutrients, you'll only slow down your body's ability to build muscle.

High nutrient fruits include...

- Apples

- Berries

- Watermelon

- Kiwi

- Oranges

Vegetables...

- Spinach

- Beets

- Tomatoes

- Carrots

- Peppers

*Fats

Good fats are important so your body functions properly. Try to eat more mono- and polyunsaturated fats and less saturated and trans fats. Good sources include...

- Olive oil

- Nuts and nut butters

- Fatty fish like salmon

*Water

Pure water has no calories, nutrients, or protein. But it's the most important "food" in your muscle building pantry. Water makes up 70% of your body. It lubricates joints and transports nutrients through your body. Without water, every other food and nutrient is useless. Try to drink at least 8 glasses of water every day, more when you do cardiovascular exercise.

Muscle Building Nutrition Tip # 3:

Easy to follow nutrition habits you as a muscle builder should be doing

- Prepare food in advance and always have something on hand. You never know when you might have to bolt out the door for an unexpected event. If you know you have an appointment or meeting to be to, prepare food in advance so you can eat it as soon as you get home or whenever you have time.

- Take food with you wherever you go. You can't always be sure if food will be available. Remember, you don't want to miss a meal. It counter acts you weight lifting efforts.

- Eat food before you go somewhere. Then you won't have to eat on the run (even though you do have a back-up meal packed just in case!).

- Buy more food than you think you need. It can save money and it means you'll never run out of nutritious food when you're in a pinch.

- Eat a variety of foods. If you eat the same foods every day, you're missing out on some vital nutrients.

- Try to eat a calorie ratio of 40% protein, 40% carbs, and 20% fat. So a person eating 2000 calories a day should eat about 800 calories from protein, 800 calories from carbs, and 400 calories from fat.




Richard Knight is a former "skinny guy" / hardgainer who cracked the code to building muscle fast. Richard teaches other "Average Joes", skinny guys and hardgainers step by step how to build more muscle with less effort in 28 days FLAT with his own weight gain system. Get his FREE Video Course System today... http://www.buildmusclechallenge.com




Sunday, March 11, 2012

The Best Omega 3 Fish Oils on the Market

omega img The Best Omega 3 Fish Oils on the MarketFor as long as I can remember I’ve taken Omega 3 fish oils because they are quite simply one of the top five most effective supplements in existence. When I take on a new client or make supplement recommendations to anyone Omega 3's are one of the first things I put them on. Omega 3's provide us with EFA’s (essential fatty acids) which we really can’t get elsewhere unless we eat a ton of salmon and sardines on a regular basis.

In my mind this makes them an essential supplement that I think everyone should be on.

Unless you have been cryogenically frozen for the last ten years you have surely read about all of their endless benefits by now so I’m not going to rehash all of them but here are just a few:

Reduction of inflammationFight heart attack and strokeFight Alzheimer’s and helps improve memory and IQProvide blood-thinning benefitsImprove mood and fights depressionBenefit joints and cartilage health – LESS PAINImprove blood pressure and cholesterolBalance hormones – MORE ENERGYMay extend telomere length for life extension

Aside from the countless health benefits Omega 3's also help in the muscle building and fat loss process.

I have experimented with different brands over the years but for the most part I wasn’t able to share or recommend the brands I most often used because they weren’t available to the general public. I got them through doctor friends of mine or through companies who only provided their formulations to high level athletes and coaches.

But all that has finally changed. For the last several months my friend Chris the Kiwi, the big dog behind Athletic Greens, has been sending me their brand new Omega 3 supplement to use personally and with some of my clients and I’ve got to say that I have been absolutely loving it. The quality and purity is unmatched.

He set out with the goal of making an Omega 3 that was better than the current market leader… and he surpassed his goals.

If you know Chris you know he does not skimp on things and that purity and quality are of the utmost importance to him. Chris refuses to allow anything to enter his body if it’s not 100% high quality, all natural stuff. Our common interest in supreme health is one of the things that led to the formation of our friendship.

Anyway, for the last 4-6 months I’ve been hounding Chris on a weekly basis because I couldn’t wait for him to make his Omega 3 available to the general public so I could announce it to the Renegade Nation and get all you guys on it.

Well, that day has finally come. Omega 3is here and ready for you to order right now. And when you see the way it stacks up against all other products on the market you will be VERY impressed.

When you see the price you’ll be ecstatic.

It’s the only Omega 3 supplement I will ever use and give to my clients and family members.

I think every member of The Renegade Nation should do the same.

Click HERE now to check it out and get your hands on a bottle today.


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Friday, March 9, 2012

3 Important Tips to Help You Build Bigger Biceps Faster

If there's one muscle group that gets more attention than it deserves, then it's probably the biceps. Ever since Rambo flexed his 'guns' every guy became envious of a set of arms like that. To add fuel to the fire, women just go gaga for big arms. Maybe this is the reason why most guys start their muscle building plan with their biceps - trying to build the proverbial muscles that everybody now associates with being strong.




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As young boys we learn that flexing your biceps is a way of showing off. When you walk into any gym these days nothing seems to have changed. The amount of guys perched in front of the mirror doing dumbbell curls is mind blowing.


When it comes to building biceps most guys get it wrong. Maybe it's inexperience or maybe it's just because everyone looks at what everybody else is doing. Here are 3 tips to help you build bigger biceps faster.


1. More Is Not Better
We all tend to figure that if 3 sets is good then 4 or better? Unfortunately that's not how it works. There is an optimal training zone and if you over exert your biceps, you can easily do more harm than good. Don't go for the instant gratification and try to build big biceps over night. Les is more and slow and steady wins the race. As boring as it sounds, it still is the best way.


2. Focus on Muscle Tension
Biceps respond well to constant tension. The problem is that most guys can't isolate muscle groups well enough when they train and they end up not targeting their biceps very well. Poor technique and sloppy lifting is one of the main reasons why guys miss out on the full benefits of their training session.


3. Mix It Up
It's true that some people are more susceptible to forming habits than others, but from a muscle building point of view this is not always a good thing. If you go to the gym every day and train the same routine and the same sets and the same muscles it does lose its effectiveness. Your muscles tend to become fatigued, but when you mix it up you can create far better results. Train other muscles as well. When you do chin-ups and rows your biceps will come along for the ride. You don't need to train biceps every day for 30 minutes.


Biceps definitely is an important showpiece muscle. It's on par abs although it probably gets ten times the attention that most guys give their abs. It's important to remember that building muscle and getting ripped is not just about great biceps.


Although most guys focus their bicep training mainly on barbell curls and dumbbell curls, there are a lot of different routines you can use. Some are even more effective at isolating the biceps. Mix it up. Train your shoulders, your back and your pecs as part of your bicep training. They will help to train a different aspect of your biceps and in the end give you a more defined look and a harder feel.


For more tips on building muscle fast and how to get the body that you never thought you could get, visit http://www.BigStrongRipped.com


Wednesday, March 7, 2012

The Clean High Pull

by Allen Hedrick – 1/25/2012 The Clean High Pull


When people think of the weightlifting movements, they typically think of cleans, jerks, or snatches. While all three lifts (better known as the Olympic lifts) are great exercises, there are a number of variations that also can be used to help develop muscle size, strength, and power.

One such variation is the clean high pull. This article will discuss the benefits of performing the clean high pull, along with suggestions for program design. Following that, we'll take a step-by-step approach on how to perform the clean high pull correctly.

For most athletes, power is more important than maximal strength. Power, or speed strength, can be defined as the amount of work performed per unit of time. Research has shown that the weightlifting movements result in a superior average power output compared to powerlifting movements.

Further, the movement pattern used when performing the clean high pull is very similar to those commonly seen in many sports. The majority of the power developed in either the clean or the snatch occurs during the second pull phase (the movement from just above the knee until the bar reaches approximately sternum height).

In both the clean and snatch, once the bar reaches sternum height the lifter normally drops under the bar. However, this catch phase doesn't contribute to the power developed in these movements.

As discussed, one advantage of the clean high pull over the full clean is that the athlete doesn't have to catch the bar. As a result, you can typically use heavier loads. This is especially true for athletes with technique issues in the catch phase where a lighter than optimal load must be used because of their inability to catch the bar correctly.

This heavy load, combined with the fast bar velocity seen in this movement, is responsible for the high power outputs that occur when performing this exercise (an average of 52 watts per kilogram for male athletes).

Another advantage of the weightlifting movements, including clean high pulls, is the extremely low injury rate. As long as the weightlifting movements are performed with correct technique, they're as safe as any other training techniques.

Further, performing the weightlifting movements – including clean high pulls – may reduce injury rate by increasing kinesthetic awareness, strengthening the muscles, tendons, and ligaments while enhancing coordination.

The Clean High Pull


When training for power, the program will typically combine a low number of repetitions (1-6) and extended rest periods (2-6 minutes). This combination of low repetitions and longer rest times allows for heavier resistance and reduced fatigue, allowing for the maintenance of bar speed and technique.

If greater bar speed is desired, then training loads of 30% to 70% of 1RM can be used. This approach can be used in sports where speed is more important than force development (high jump, volleyball).

Conversely, in sports that require greater force development (football, wrestling), loads between 70% to 100% of 1RM are appropriate.

By adjusting the number of repetitions performed, the rest periods between sets, or both, the clean high pull can also be used to enhance power endurance. Athletes such as longer distance sprinters (400+ meters) and rowing athletes require the ability to move powerfully over an extended period. Because of the higher repetitions (12 or more) being performed, the shorter rest times (45-60 seconds between sets), or both, the load on the bar must be reduced.

Regardless of the training goal (power or endurance) the clean high pull should be placed early in the sequence of exercises to be performed in the workout, for two reasons.

First, the exercise should be performed explosively. As a result, the movement should be performed before the body becomes fatigued from performing other exercises.

Second, the exercise must be performed with good technique, and this will best occur when the body is in a non-fatigued state.

The Clean High Pull


It's easy to say a clean high pull is like doing the first three quarters of a power clean, up to and including the second pull. However, because the clean high pull, like all weightlifting movements, is technically difficult to do, and because great technique is important to get the most out of all weightlifting movements, we'll take a step-by-step approach to performing this movement correctly.

There are variations of the teaching sequence thought to be best when teaching the weightlifting movements. I prefer to start from the bottom up, starting with the correct foot position.

Biomechanically, the clean is very similar to performing a vertical jump. As a result, when teaching the high pull, it makes sense to position your feet identically to how you'd place them if you were going to perform a maximal vertical jump. Typically this involves a shoulder-width stance with the feet pointed straight ahead.Once the foot position has been established, you can now move to the correct hand position. Pick the bar up with a wide overhand grip and the thumbs resting on the bar but pointed in towards the center of the body. Slowly slide the hands in until the tips of the thumbs just barely touch the outside of the legs. This will identify the correct hand position on the bar.The next step is to learn the correct grip. Once technique is perfected, a large amount of weight can be used when performing the clean high pull, placing a big demand on grip strength. Using a hook grip (thumb around the bar, fingers around the thumb and bar) provides the most secure grip. Initially this may be uncomfortable, however, this is the way to go if you're serious about performing the movement correctly.

To make the learning process easier it's best to begin learning the movement from a hang above position, where the bar is resting on the thighs directly above the patella.

With the feet and hands in the correct position, and using a hook grip, pick the bar up to a standing position and then slide the bar down to the above-the-knee position just described. The arms should be long and rotated so that the elbows are pointed towards the end of the bar. The head should be neutral and the back should be arched.In this position the shoulders should be just slightly forward of the bar. If they're not, the correction required is to reduce the amount of flexion at the knee joint slightly, which will have the effect of bringing the shoulders into the desired position.

Once the correct start position has been learned you can begin learning the movements that make up the high pull. It's important to check your start position before you begin each repetition until the correct start position can be achieved automatically without thought.

The first movement in the teaching sequence is a jump shrug. Keeping a tight core, perform a jumping action, fully extending at the knees and hips as if trying to jump up and touch the ceiling with your head. At the top of the jump the ankles, knees, hips, and shoulders should all be in a straight line.Using the momentum from the jump, aggressively shrug the shoulders straight up as high as possible without bending at the elbows. Do not allow the bar to swing away from the body; the bar should slide up the thighs to approximately hip height.When the correct start position and movement pattern for the jump shrug has been mastered you can move on to the next step – the low pull. This is just a continuation of the jump shrug, but adding a pull until the bar reaches the height of the belly button. At the top of the jump shrug allow the elbows to bend slightly until the bar reaches the desired height. It's important to keep the bar against the body and the elbows above the wrists when transitioning to this low pull position.The final movement to learn is the high pull. Again, this is a continuation of the movement pattern already learned. At the top of the low pull, continue to pull the bar until it reaches sternum height. Focus on keeping the elbows above the wrists and the bar against the body as you move into a fully extended position at the ankles, knees, and hips.

The clean high pull is an excellent choice when the goal is enhanced power production capabilities. A high power-production is possible with this movement because it permits heavy loads and high bar-velocities.

The clean high pull, like the other weightlifting movements, is a very safe exercise once correct technique has been learned. Considering program design, the clean high pull can be used to enhance either muscular power or muscular power/endurance.

A step-by-step approach to learning correct clean high pull technique like the one above will allow most lifters to learn the lift quickly and safely. After that, all that's required is the necessary sweat!


View the original article here

"How Can I Gain Weight?" - 8 Tips For How To Muscle Build


Are you asking yourself "How can I gain weight"? Then get off your chair and learn how to muscle build, and be sure that you will indeed be building muscle, not gaining fat. You might be thinking that you are very skinny and would be happy gaining any type of weight, but keep in mind that you really don't want to gain that weight as fat. Your goal should be to build muscle.

You need to focus on building muscle for a few reasons. Muscle means you're strong, fat means you're weak. Muscle means you're healthy and fit and have a low chance of suffering a debilitating illness, fat means you're unhealthy and unfit and can potentially get seriously ill. Muscle makes you look cool, fat makes you look uncool. Your "How can I gain weight" question should be pointed to learning how to muscle build. To be sure, however, if you start to work out in order to build muscle you will be gaining some fat along the way, but a small amount of fat is normal and isn't a big deal.

If you've gotten this far and are continuing to ask yourself "How can I gain weight", here are eight tips to help you in how to muscle build and gain weight:

1) Keep a positive mindset. A positive mindset means you can do it and those who dare doubt your success should get lost.

2) Spend no more than an hour on working out at the gym every time. After 45 minutes of activity Cortisol levels rise up in your muscles and lead to muscle breakdown - not a good thing for how to muscle build or for your "how can I gain weight" quest.

3) Don't bother with isolation exercises that only target individual muscles. Instead, focus on major combination exercises like the bench press, deadlift, squat, and back rows, all of which target multiple muscles and lead to the most muscle gain results.

4) Make sure you're taking in enough protein. "How can I gain weight" you ask? Well, you certainly won't gain weight by eating any less than six times a day. You need to eat every 3-4 hours to keep your muscles saturated with protein and always in an anabolic state.

5) Forget the "shock your muscles by changing routines often" principle and stick to one workout routine. Your muscles respond to the commands "push" and "pull" and could care less whether or not you change your routine. Give your muscles what they want and don't listen to the hype.

6) Consume enough calories to fuel your workouts. If you're skinny and have little body fat then, unlike chubbier people, you have little energy reserves in your body and you need to consume enough carbs to give you energy needed during exercise.

7) Stay hydrated. Dehydration is one of the worst things you can to yourself while trying to build muscle. Drink 8-10 cups of water every day.

8) Get yourself enough rest. When it comes to how to muscle build, remember that you don't build that muscle while exercising, but while sleeping. On your " How can I gain weight " quest, rest results in the culmination of your efforts by allowing for muscle growth.




Check out more information on how to muscle build.