Real Muscle Real Fast!
by Jesse Cannone CFT, SPN, CPRS, of Achieve
Fitness
Adding muscle seems to be a mystery to most, yet if you pick up a copy
of any fitness or bodybuilding magazine and you’ll almost always
see a headline like this: “Gain 15 Pounds of Muscle in 6 Weeks.”
If it were so easy you’d have millions of muscle-heads running around.
Even though building muscle tissue can be a challenge, I’m going
to outline some very specific principles that can pack on the muscle faster
than you can throw away that copy of “Muscle and Fiction”!
Before we get started though I want to clarify a few points.
1. The ridiculous claims made by most fitness and bodybuilding magazines
are only there to get you to buy that issue – nothing more!
2. If you are serious about strength training you need to be reading
books and NOT cheesy fitness magazines
| Weight
Lifting For Absolute Beginners! Written for women over 30 who
are not currently on an exercise routine. You will learn to lift
weights (without gym fees and spending less than $5 on equipment),
and stick with your routine to lose weight and tone your body. Did
you know that your muscles burn calories 24 hours a day?
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Ok… here we go.
In order to add muscle tissue you must force the body to add it. Your
body won’t just add a pound of muscle just because you followed
a 3-set workout that you read about in Muscle + Fitness. You need to give
the body a reason to make improvements – in this case add muscle
tissue.
You have to provide what I call a “stimulus”. This can be
done in many ways and I’ll address a few in just a moment. Basically,
you need to force the body to add muscle by subjecting it to levels of
stress it is not used to. Some methods are more obvious than others but
all can work. Here are a few examples of how this can be done effectively.
First, the basic and common methods:
1. Increase weight or resistance
2. Perform more repetitions
3. Perform more sets
4. Move the resistance slower
5. Rest less between sets and exercises
Now for the more advanced methods:
1. Pre-exhaust (perform an isolation exercise first and immediately continue
with no rest on a compound movement. ex. chest flye and then chest press)
2. Static holds (hold the resistance in the hardest position of the range
of motion. ex. the top position during a leg extension)
3. Partial reps in weak range (perform a portion of the rep where you
are weakest. ex. the top half of a rep of leg extensions)
4. Strip-set (after a warm-up set, perform 3 sets back to back with no
rest while starting with the heaviest weight possible and each time strip
off some weight to allow you to continue)
5. 1 ½ reps (perform one full rep and then on the second rep only
perform half the normal range of motion and then return to starting position
to begin the next rep. ex. one full rep of lat pulldowns, pull second
rep all the way down, resist weight back up but only half way and then
pull back down)
These are just a few examples of methods of increasing intensity to ensure
progress. The key point to remember is that whatever you do it must be
progressive in order for it to elicit a physical change. This is even
more critical for those looking to add muscle size.
Although this article is geared towards individuals who are interested
in gaining muscle size, the principles can also be used for individuals
who want to build strength, increase metabolism, or tighten and tone muscles.
Here are some general recommendations for different goals…
If your goal is to tighten and tone muscles:
- Focus on increasing reps, decreasing rest, and changing exercises frequently
- Train each muscle group twice per week
- Perform fewer sets of many different exercises (1-2 sets per exercise)
If your goal is to increase strength and power:
- Focus on increasing weight
- Train each muscle group once every 7-10 days
- Perform multiple sets of each exercise (2-5 sets per exercise)
If your goal is to increase muscle size:
- Focus on shocking muscles by changing variables frequently (exercises,
set and rep schemes, rest time, etc)
- Train each muscle group on a variable schedule (experiment by training
a muscle group 3 times a week and then once every ten days)
- Perform multiple sets for a while and the perform single sets for a
week or two
Some final reminders:
The recommendations above are general and of course would need to be adapted
and adjusted for your personal goals and experience. For those of you
who are advanced and may be thinking there’s no way you can build
strength by training once every 10 days I challenge you to try it for
at least 4 weeks, or those of you who think that you need to stick to
the same basic movements like bench to build size I challenge you to try
shocking the muscles by changing the exercises you perform each week for
4 weeks, and those of you with little experience I hope that you’ll
throw away the fitness magazines and learn what really works.
If you have any questions about the techniques described in this article
please feel free to contact me. You can jesse@achieve-fitness.com
or call 240-731-3724. I highly recommend you get a copy of APEX as it
covers so much ground including advanced training techniques, mental training
+ preparation, body transformations + competitive bodybuilding, nutrition
and recovery, too much to even try and list here. Do yourself a favor
and get a copy of APEX now - you'll save yourself time, money, energy,
and frustration. To order your copy go to Achieve
Fitness
Jesse Cannone is a certified personal trainer, nutritionist, and best-selling
fitness author. Sign up to receive his free email course, Muscle Building
Tips which is full of powerful tips and techniques for maximizing strength
and size. Achieve
Fitness

Link to us
Title: Beginning
Weight Lifting program
URL: http://www.womensexercisenetwork.com/weight-lifting/beginners.html
Description: specifically written for women over 30 who
are not currently on an exercise routine. You will learn to lift weights
(without gym fees and spending less than $5 on equipment), and stick with
your routine to lose weight and tone your body. Did you know that your
muscles burn calories 24 hours a day?
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What Readers Are Saying...
About the Weight
Lifting for Absolute Beginners eBook:
"This
plan makes it so easy..."
"I had had
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~
Frances
"The pictures are
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I just started the program and
I enjoy it! The book is very easy to understand and the pictures
are great! I'm looking forward to waking up to lift weights
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~Michelle
"Any
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Weight Lifting
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The illustrations
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Weight Lifting
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Author of Practical Weight Loss
"Easiest-to-use..."
I'm only getting
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~Monica
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