Friday, February 8, 2013
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
4 tips for massive arms
Being involved in strength sports for the past
several years I've almost completely eliminated
direct arm work from my workouts.
several years I've almost completely eliminated
direct arm work from my workouts.
My arms just grow from doing heavy presses
and rows.
and rows.
But like I've mentioned in other e mails...
...I'm "experimenting" with a little bodybuilding
;)
So I've decided to add "arms exercises" back into
my routine in the past few weeks.
my routine in the past few weeks.
LOL - I know, I know... I look like such a geek!
The fact is that I am NOT an arm training expert.
So, I scraped up this article from Pro Bodybuilder and
Author of the Mass Intentions Bodybuilding System,
Ben Pakulski, that I found pretty helpful.
By Ben Pakulski
1) LESS VOLUME!
Small muscles require less volume, and recover faster. Basic logic says,
a smaller muscle has less overall total volume of muscle fibres. It takes
LESS overall stimulus to fatigue these muscles and less overall training
volume to exhaust glycogen stores (stored muscle energy).
2) HEAVY WEIGHTS (WITH PERFECT FORM)
Heavy weights are going to fatigue a greater overall percentage of muscle
fibres in a shorter amount of time (aka less sets). Heavy weights also have
the added benefit of stimulating "high threshold motor units". These are the
muscle fibres that require a lot more stimulus to grow and respond, but also
the fibres that are more likely to be responsible for muscle hypertrophy or
GROWTH!
3) ARMS RECEIVE A LOT OF STIMULUS ON A REGULAR BASIS
Arms receive a lot of stimulus on a regular basis. For most people,
this tends to occur in the middle of the range of motion where the muscles are strongest.
In order to get the arms to grow and respond, it is necessary to subject them to
a different type of stimulus.
One of the best ways to improve arm development is to subject them to more
tension and continuous tension at the extremes of the range of motion (a.k.a,
when a muscle is fully lengthened or fully shortened --where muscles are weakest).
This will allow for greater time under tension as well as targeting different points
of the strength curve to force the nervous system to adapt and stimulate new
muscle growth.
4) YOU MUST ENGAGE THE TARGET MUSCLE FIRST IN ANY
MOVEMENT
The FIRST muscle to engage in ANY movement must be the muscle you are trying
to target. If you are working your biceps, to most effectively stimulate the bicep, it
must be the muscle to initiate the movement. As mentioned, muscles are weakest at
those extremes and that makes it LEAST likely to contract. This is where your
conscious intent and control is vital!
The best way to ensure this is happening is to CONTRACT its antagonist muscle.
This will ensure a fully lengthened working muscle and make it much more likely
that it will initiate the movement(provided you're using proper control).
e.g. when working your bicep, to fully stretch your bicep at the bottom of the range,
it is necessary to contract your tricep before initiating the movement of contracting
your bicep again.The opposite is true when training triceps. Contract your biceps at
he top of the range when a tricep is fully stretched(forearm touches biceps).
(Step-By-S tep) New mass-build ing technique!
I double-dog dare you to try
this in your next workout...
It's called "Compound Exercise Overload" and I stole it from Nick
Nilsson's breakthrough mass-building program
Frankly, it's one of the toughest workouts you'll ever do, but
I've tried it and the results are wicked!
Here's how to do it...
* First, select a compound exercise to work with (ex. - Bench
Press) and do a few light warm-up sets.
* Next, load up a weight you could normally do for about 6
reps... lay down - and perform ONLY 3 REPS with that weight,
even though you CAN do six.
IMPORTANT: DO NOT go anywhere near failure on ANY of your
sets!
* Re-rack the weight and rest 30 seconds... lay back down and
do 3 more reps... rest 30 seconds... etc.
* Repeat these 3 rep sets with only 30 seconds of rest until
you're unable to get 3 reps with that weight anymore. (This
could take from 2 to 10 minutes, depending on the exercise
and the amount of weight you're using.)
Now this is critical...
* When you can only get 2 reps, STOP and remove 10 lbs each
side of the bar (If you started with 225, you now have 205).
* Then continue doing 3 reps sets with 30 seconds rest period.
Drop the weight by another 20 lbs whenever you can't get 3
reps during a set.
Keep going like this for 45 MINUTES solid.
I know this sounds like a crazy workout - one single exercise to
overload your target muscle group - but that's how Nick rolls
baby!
He's a true "mad scientist" when it comes to building muscle and
in my opinion, his program is really groundbreaking.
It's called "Compound Exercise Overload" and I stole it from Nick
Nilsson's breakthrough mass-building program
Frankly, it's one of the toughest workouts you'll ever do, but
I've tried it and the results are wicked!
Here's how to do it...
* First, select a compound exercise to work with (ex. - Bench
Press) and do a few light warm-up sets.
* Next, load up a weight you could normally do for about 6
reps... lay down - and perform ONLY 3 REPS with that weight,
even though you CAN do six.
IMPORTANT: DO NOT go anywhere near failure on ANY of your
sets!
* Re-rack the weight and rest 30 seconds... lay back down and
do 3 more reps... rest 30 seconds... etc.
* Repeat these 3 rep sets with only 30 seconds of rest until
you're unable to get 3 reps with that weight anymore. (This
could take from 2 to 10 minutes, depending on the exercise
and the amount of weight you're using.)
Now this is critical...
* When you can only get 2 reps, STOP and remove 10 lbs each
side of the bar (If you started with 225, you now have 205).
* Then continue doing 3 reps sets with 30 seconds rest period.
Drop the weight by another 20 lbs whenever you can't get 3
reps during a set.
Keep going like this for 45 MINUTES solid.
I know this sounds like a crazy workout - one single exercise to
overload your target muscle group - but that's how Nick rolls
baby!
He's a true "mad scientist" when it comes to building muscle and
in my opinion, his program is really groundbreaking.
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