Make Real Gains with Brief, Intense Workout Programs
For years now, high
intensity training (commonly referred to as H.I.T.) has been one of the most
controversial training methods in the bodybuilding world. The proponents of H.I.T. seem to think
that it’s the only method capable of truly transforming the “average”,
drug-free bodybuilder. On the
other side you have proponents of volume workouts (one such proponent has been myself) that seem to think that
H.I.T. training is the bane of bodybuilding existence. So which one is correct? Well, I believe that the answer is
“both” and “neither.”
Confused? Read on and I’m
going to attempt to straighten everything out, and then I’m going
to outline some brief, intense workouts that actually do produce real-world
results.
The Rise and Fall of H.I.T. Principles
In the beginning of
the barbell, strength-training universe—we’re talking early twentieth
century—almost all of the physiques and the strength gains were built with fairly
brief, fairly intense workouts.
Old-time strongmen and bodybuilders built their strength and physiques
with full-body workouts, commonly performing these workouts in just three days
per week. Most of the time, they
rarely performed more than 3 to 5 sets per bodypart and they kept their
repetitions fairly low. Over time,
they would slowly add sets and exercises to their programs, but they would take
their time doing this and they would still perform three-days-per-week,
full-body workout sessions.
This kind of training worked, and worked really
well. It produced some of the
greatest physiques (and strong physiques) of all time. Men such as John Grimek, Steve Reeves,
and Reg Park trained in this manner.
In time, the volume
grew and grew. Split workouts and
steroids were introduced to the scene, and it didn’t take long before the
brief, hard, intense full-body programs of the old-time lifters was all but
gone and forgotten.
Enter the ‘70s, and
such men as Arthur Jones, Ellington Darden, Mike Mentzer, and Casey Viator
(infamous prodigy of the Colorado Experiment). From these men—Jones in particular—H.I.T. arose, preaching
such things as full-body workouts (once again), heavy training, minimum sets
(usually 3 to 4 per bodypart), and (here is the most important factor of them
all) really hard work. For the men—and women, I suppose—who
decided to take up this form of (new?) training, there was little doubt: these
programs worked. Gains were made
in almost record time for many H.I.T. trainees. Brief, intense, full-body workouts were back in vogue. (And rightly so.)
But—as things
inevitably do—it all went awry.
Minimum sets of 3 or 4 began to give way to only one set for each bodypart. Full-body, 3-days-per-week workouts gave way to
2-day-per-week workouts where the body was—to make things even worse—split into
2 different sessions. (At one
point, some H.I.T. proponents even started to preach once-weekly workout
sessions, where you would train each bodypart only once every 2 weeks.) And
leading this charge was Mike Mentzer, preaching the gospel of some crazed,
pseudo-intellectual Ayn Rand-esque philosophy of his own making, determined to
prove once-and-for-all that his brand of H.I.T. was the only form of training
in the muscle-building multi-verse.
Sane, hard, reasonable training had given way to a group of muscle-less
H.I.T. enthusiasts whose grasp of reality and the bodybuilding truth of big
muscles was anything but sane and reasonable. Their form of growing muscles worked in their minds, but did
very little in the real world of actually gaining muscle mass.
But it doesn’t have
to be this way. The kind of
training that worked for the old-time strongmen of the early twentieth century
and worked for the early H.I.T. explorers of the 1970s can still work
today. It’s time to resurrect real high-intensity training.
The
Rules of Real H.I.T.
First things first:
Many H.I.T. enthusiasts probably won’t approve of what I’m branding
“high-intensity.” That’s fine with
me. The training I’m advocating is
for guys (and gals) who actually want to grow big and strong, not just sit
around and talk about it.
What follows are the
“rules” for my brand of high-intensity training. Take these rules seriously or don’t grow muscles at your own
peril.
Rule
#1: Perform Full-Body Workouts. For some time now, I’ve been touting
the efficacy of full-body workouts.
When performed properly, there is simply nothing like them when it comes
to producing real-world results in terms of both muscle mass and strength
gains.
Rule
#2: Perform Basic, Compound Movements. For full-body workouts to be effective,
you have to choose the correct exercises.
Dumbbell curls, sissy squats, and push-ups are not going to cut it. Instead, you need squats, deadlifts,
chins, bench presses, overhead presses, rows, cleans, snatches, barbell curls;
well, you get the picture.
Rule
#3: Keep the Reps Fairly Low. In other words, you need to train friggin’
heavy. Sets of 10 to 12 reps—or worse, sets of 20 reps like a lot
of H.I.T. proponents recommend—are not going to get the job done. Sets of 5 to 8 reps—and occasionally
lower—need to be staples of your training. (Save the high-rep stuff for one or two sets at the end of
the workout.)
Rule
#3: Utilize a Limited Number of Exercises. You really don’t need
more than 3 to 5 exercises per workout to get your muscles growing. Workout routines that utilize more than
this—even if they’re not H.I.T. workouts—are overkill.
The program
presented here will have you doing 3 exercises per workout, plus a finishing movement at the end of the session.
Rule
#4: Train Frequently Enough to Elicit Gains. One of the good things
about Jones’s programs in the ‘70s was that he had his lifters train their
entire bodies three days each week.
That’s frequently enough
to elicit gains. When training
all-out, I like to rotate between weeks with 3 days of training and weeks with
2 days of training.
Real H.I.T. Mass-Building
I think you’ve been
reading long enough. Let’s get
down to the nitty-gritty, the reason you started reading this article in the
first place: some real-world workouts.
The following
mass-building program is for those of you who have been training at least a few
months, are ready to give some serious workouts an actual try.
Stick with this program religiously for the next two to three months,
and you might be quite surprised at just how much muscle you pack on your
frame.
This program contains
5 different workouts spread out over 2 weeks.
Day One
Squats:
5 progressively heavier sets of 5 reps. The last set should be
all-out—high-intensity, in other words.
If your max for 5 reps is 315 pounds, then your set/rep progression
should look something like this: 135x5, 175x5, 225x5, 275x5, 315x5
Incline
Bench Presses: 5 progressively heavier sets of 5 reps. The
same methodology as the squats applies to this exercise.
Close-Grip
Chins: 3 sets of maximum reps. Use your bodyweight on this exercise,
and take each set to momentary muscular failure.
Dumbbell
Bench Presses: 1 or 2 sets of maximum reps. Here is where the high-rep
stuff comes into play. Pick a
weight where you should reach momentary muscular failure somewhere around the
20th rep. One set
should probably be enough for a lot of you, but don’t be afraid to add another.
Day
Two: Rest
Day
Three
Deadlifts:
5 progressively heavier sets of 5 reps. If your max for 5 reps is 315 pounds, then your set/rep progression
should look something like this: 135x5, 175x5, 225x5, 275x5, 315x5
Weighted
Dips: 5 Progressively heavier sets of 5 reps. Same methodology of
progressively heavier sets as the deadlifts.
Overhead
Barbell Presses: 5 progressively heavier sets of 5 reps. Same
methodology as the deadlifts and dips.
Trap
Bar Deadlifts or Dumbbell Deadlifts: 1 or 2 sets of maximum reps. If you
have access to one, use a trap bar on this lift. If not, then use a heavy pair of dumbbells. Pick a weight
where you should reach momentary muscular failure somewhere around the 20th
rep.
Day
Four: Rest
Day
Five: Repeat Day One
At this point, you
want to make sure that you’re resting two or three days before training
again. Most of you will do best by
resting just two days. This is
preferable since it allows you to train on set days each week, say Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays. When you do train again, start off with the day three workout,
and repeat in the same manner.
Also, don’t be afraid to add a rest day occasionally whenever you feel
it might be necessary—just don’t overdo it.
I wouldn’t recommend
following these workouts for the rest of your training life. For one, I would find such a thing
boring-as-hell. For another, your
body needs variety in order to continue to grow bigger and stronger. So give your body what it needs.
Training is an art,
not a science (although science is definitely involved), so make sure that you
change exercises—or even add exercises—as you see fit. For instance, if you feel as if you
need some direct arm work, then don’t be afraid to add a few sets of barbell
curls at the end of one workout, and a few sets of skullcrushers at the end of
another.
Now get your ass to
the gym, train heavy, train hard-as-hell, and resurrect some real high-intensity training.
Your ideas on H.I.T. are just perfect. Unfortumately, H.I.T. become some sort of cult. The way it turned is in direct analogy to some "martial arts" whose masters can defeat just their own students, that fall mesmerized by some "mistycal powers" that such masters presumably have, making their own students fall roling over the floor just by using very simple hand movements without even touch the students body... So sad... Arhur Jones roll into the grave with such patetic "Hiters".
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