Simple, Easy-to-Implement
Strategies for More Size and Strength
If the titles of
workout articles are any indication, America doesn’t know how to train. I can’t speak for other countries, since I haven’t
lived anywhere else. In the past, I have
spent some time in Asia for work, and if my visits there were any indication,
then I don’t think the rest of the world trains much better. So I guess there’s that.
Now, if you know
anything at all about proper training, and if you walked into any gym
anywhere in America, you’d probably come to the same conclusion—that Americans
simply don’t know how to train—so why am I singling out the titles of
English-language workout articles? The
reason is simple. Almost every single article
I have seen lately—to a friggin’ tee—has almost the exact same
title, and it goes something like this: “I did (fill-in-the-blank) for (fill-in-the-number
of days/weeks/months) and these were the results.”
Trying something
out just to see what happens to you is not training. That’s just exercising. And it’s a highly suspect and typically
ineffective way of garnering results.
You may get good results from your random whatever, but you
probably won’t. It’s what I refer to as “letting
the means justify the ends” and it’s the cardinal sin of most modern
trainees. The ends (the results you want
to attain) must justify the means (the workouts themselves).
In defense of
those bad articles—and the often equally bad websites that run them—that kind
of training mentality is, unfortunately, nothing new. When I first started lifting weights as a
teenager in the late ‘80s, I would ravenously devour every muscle magazine that
hit the newsstands and often read the bodypart training articles of the popular
pro bodybuilders multiple times. I would
then—not all the time, but quite often—go to the gym and attempt the same
training “programs.” If you came of age
during that same time, and you were interested in bodybuilding, then the chances
are that you did much the same thing.
But following a random bodypart workout of some random professional
physique model didn’t produce very good results. Not for me.
Not for most people. Though it
must be said that then, as now, there were always some trainees who did
get good results from such programs. They
were the ones—minority though they may have been—who achieved success in the
sport of bodybuilding.
Eventually, I did
get good results from training when I was a teenager. But not from following random workouts-of-the-month. Nope.
I got them from following (fairly) well-structured programs that had an
end-result clearly in mind. That kind of
approach still works. In fact, it’s the
only approach that will work consistently for the majority of lifters.
Part of the
issue, however, is that a great number of average trainees—and this also goes
for the average population as a whole, even guys and gals who have never set
foot in a gym and never intend to—believe that what constitutes a “good”
workout is how “hard” it is, or how much it makes you sweat, or how exhausted
it leaves you when the workout is finished.
While a good workout program may make you tired or sore or
exhausted or anything similar, there must be a reason and a rationale for designing
a workout in such a manner.
The first thing
you must do is decide what it is that you want.
And be honest with yourself about your goals. It may seem like an odd thing to write, but
the fact of the matter is that a lot of people aren’t honest with themselves
about their desires from training. A guy
may claim that he wants to be strong, and he may even tell others that—heck,
he might even train with a group of powerlifters who have an effective
strength-training program they follow—but what he really wants, if he’s completely
honest with himself, is to just look good with his shirt off. He may actually just want to build large,
shapely muscles, strength gains be damned!
Now, I may find that odd and perhaps you find it odd. I always wanted muscles, sure, but I wanted
to be stronger than I looked, and I always wanted muscles that could perform. But that’s me. That very well might not be what you
want. So, be honest, not just with
others, but with that person that’s staring you back in the face from the
bathroom mirror.
Once you know what
it is that you want, you can now set about designing (or simply finding) a
training program that will produce those results. To help you with this, I’ve come up with a
few pointers, tips, and strategies that can make programming (fairly) simple. I think part of the reason that some lifters
simply do “tough” workouts that produce sweat, fatigue, and exhaustion is
because they really don’t know how to program a training regimen, and so
the next best thing, at least for them, is to simply go to the gym and train
hard, hoping that that will be enough to illicit the results that they want. But since that probably won’t work for you,
as we have already established, it’s helpful to understand the basics of program
design with the results you want to achieve in mind.
First, Know HOW to Train for Your Mass/Strength Goals
As mentioned, you
can’t program your workouts with any degree of success if you don’t understand how
to train for your particular goals. In
my book “Ultimate Mass and Power” I wrote this: “There seems to be quite a bit
of confusion out there—whether it’s on the internet or at the gym—about how to
train for BOTH hypertrophy and serious strength gains. The first problem seems
to be that some folks just don’t know how to do either. Guys go to the gym to
“get big” but then spend most of their time attempting to max out on a lift.
Or, conversely, a guy wants to be massively strong but spends too much of his
time training for a pump or doing a lot of repetitions.” My book is geared towards you if your goal is
to attain a combination of strength with concomitant muscle mass
gains. But it could be that you are only
after strength or, the opposite, you simply want to have a physique that looks
good.
Let’s say we have
a guy who wants to achieve a really strong bench press. Our guy reads one of my articles (or Vince
Gironda’s or Charles Poliquin’s) on the 10x10 method. He follows the program for his bench press as
written—it’s a good program—and achieves good results. Well, at least he achieves good hypertrophy
gains. But his bench press numbers
hardly go up. Instead, he gains a
considerable amount of chest muscle but without the coinciding bench gains to
go along with it. This is an example of
a good, effective program, but simply the wrong one for our hypothetical
trainee. So, make damn sure that the program
you are utilizing aligns with your goals.
If you are after strength, and strength only, then you need sets in the “low”
rep range. 5 reps would be about as high
as you want to go if strength, and, once again, only strength, is your
goal. If you’re after muscle mass, and
muscle mass only, then 5 reps, on average, would be about as low
as you would want to go. You also need
to make sure that your program has enough volume—for whatever “level” you are
at—to induce hypertrophy. And if you’re
one of those guys or gals—I have a feeling that this last category is, for the
most part, the primary readers of this blog—who are after a combination of size
and strength, then you need a program that utilizes both low reps and high reps.
Once you know how
it is that you need to train for your goals, it’s then that you can set out
designing a specific program using the remainder of the strategies I recommend
here.
Total Body Training
I think, perhaps,
the first indication of a good training program is that it utilizes a lot of the
body’s muscles in one session. The more
muscles, the better. This is the reason
that I recommend full-body workouts more than other forms of training. In fact, if you’re starting out—or if you
have been training for a considerable length of time and have yet to attain
noticeable size and/or strength gains—full-body workouts are the only
kind of workouts that you need to be doing.
If you don’t use full-body
workouts, then utilize a split program that works multiple muscle groups at each
session. I often recommend (what I refer
to as) “full-body split workouts.” One
workout might consist of deadlifts, overhead presses, and barbell curls. The 2nd workout might consist of
squats, bench presses, and chins. Even
though that approach would still be a split workout, it’s one where each
session is a total body workout.
I believe that total
body training is even more important for hypertrophy than it is for strength. That might seem like an odd statement to you,
especially when you consider the fact that most successful bodybuilders use
multi-split (what are often called “bro split”) routines where one day is
reserved for chest, one day for quads, one day for back, one for shoulders, and
so on and so forth. But that approach is
mainly good for steroid users, who, because of the anabolics, don’t need to
take advantage of the “hormonal” response a full-body workout can initiate. Before the advent of steroids, bodybuilders
from the ‘70s and earlier used either full-body workouts or 2-way splits. Total body training simply stimulates more of
a response from your body, telling it, essentially, that it needs to pack on
some mass in order to handle the training.
If you go to the gym and just train your arms, you don’t get that kind
of response.
Use a Limited Number of Free-Weight, Compound Exercises
A common mistake
trainees make is to utilize too many machine or cable movements, and not enough
compound exercises with free weights, be they barbell, dumbbell, or kettlebell. Machines, cables, and the like should be
reserved for supplemental work once you’ve already built an appreciable amount
of muscle (or for older athletes who have spent a lifetime training with free
weights and now need to do “gentler” movements).
Here is a list of
exercises that are effective. You really
don’t need any movements other than these:
·
Barbell squats
·
Dumbbell squats
·
Bottom-position squats
·
Military presses
·
Behind-the-neck presses
·
One-arm dumbbell overhead presses
·
Chins
·
Dumbbell or barbell rows
·
Bench presses (flat or incline; barbell or
dumbbell)
·
Deadlifts (sumo or conventional)
·
Deficit deadlifts (sumo or conventional)
·
Power cleans
·
Power snatches
·
High pulls
·
One-arm dumbbell snatches, cleans, or high pulls
·
Barbell curls
·
Dumbbell curls (standing or seated)
·
Calf raises (barbell or dumbbell—or “donkey,” if
you have a willing training partner)
·
Incline sit-ups
·
Ab wheel
·
Any and all forms of loaded carries: sandbag
carries, farmer walks, stone carries, wheelbarrow carries, tire flips, sled drags,
etc.
One really doesn’t
need more than that, but if you get strong on all those lifts, and have
gained an appreciable amount of muscle mass, then feel free to add in some
various cable or machine versions of the same movements or some isolation
exercises.
Although I have
listed around 20 movements (more, I know, if you consider different dumbbell or
kettlebell versions of different lifts), it’s best to train with only a handful
or so at a time. Don’t try to get strong
on 20 different lifts at once. Pick a
handful of free weight movements, a loaded carry or two, and one abdominal
exercise, and get strong on all of those before moving on to some different
lifts.
Focus on the Movement Not the Muscle
Along those same
lines, focus on the movement and not the muscle. And, yes, this is even a good rule if your goal
is hypertrophy only.
The problem with
training the muscle over the movement is that a bodybuilder will often go by “looks”
or the “feel” of the workout session.
Now, once you get advanced, you might very well get good results by
going by the feel of your sessions, but once you reach that level, you
can pretty much throw most of the “rules” out the window. Chances are, you’re not there yet!
There are a lot
of problems with going by "feel" or
"looks." Often, your memory lies to you. You
think you look better than you did three months ago when, actually, there isn't
any change (or you look worse).
While bodybuilders of the past
enjoyed the benefits and the feeling from getting a good pump—they often called
it “chasing the pump”—they worried more about increasing their
strength. It's the reason they used methods like 5 sets of 5 (a
favorite of Reg Park's), 5 sets of 5/4/3/2/1, and heavy
singles. With these techniques, the emphasis is on performance,
though the looks will soon follow.
Final Thoughts
An interesting
thing happened with this essay. It
turned out being completely different from what I had originally intended to
write. My initial idea was to write a
workout program, a simple, easy-to-follow regimen for building both size and
strength. I believe, however, that I
will save that for a follow-up piece, where I will outline a program that uses
the principles discussed here. Until next
time—which will probably be that very article—if you have any questions about this
essay, leave them in the comments section below or shoot me an email.
If you found this
essay interesting, and would like to read more like it, please consider purchasing
my recent book “Ultimate Mass and Power Essays.”
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