Showing posts with label Boosters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boosters. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

3 Intensity Boosters For Solo Training

New Exercise and Fitness Review



Training to the point of failure is a time-honored way of giving your muscles a loud and unmistakable message to grow. It’s definitely not easy—mentally or physically—to push to your breaking point, though. Your brain and body both scream at you to stop, and what was once a light weight suddenly feels like it’s in danger of crushing you.


It’s no wonder that some people feel most comfortable training to failure when they have a partner at their side. But when you’re training alone, the need to push to muscle failure is just as important, says Australian pro Calum von Moger, winner of the 2014 Mr. Universe, and Team Cellucor athlete.


“I see people who train without a partner tend to limit themselves by setting a particular rep target, even though they can push a little harder,” Calum explains. “When training for hypertrophy, going to muscle failure is important because it tears down the fibers even more. The muscles are then forced to adapt to this new stimulus, and this forces them to grow.”


Calum says he finds training with a partner can give him an energy boost and promotes healthy competition, but he often prefers to train alone so he can be more focused. “You can really visualize and have a bit more of an intense, focused workout,” he says.


Here are the big man’s three favorite intensity-boosting techniques to push his limits when he’s going solo in the weight room!


Technique 1


Though there are numerous variations to this technique, essentially it consists of dividing a set into segments, each separated by a very short rest period. For example, if you were doing decline machine presses with your 8RM—that is, a weight you can do for just 8 reps—you could perform 4 reps, then rest 20 seconds, do another 4 reps, rest again for 20 seconds, and repeat this work/rest protocol for 4-5 work segments.







All told, you’d kick out about 20 reps with your 8RM, a significantly greater number than you could do in a single straight set.


Calum’s preferred variation is to bang out enough reps to bring him close to muscle failure—say, 7-8 reps with his 8RM—and start again after a short rest of just 10-15 seconds or less. “Perform as many reps as possible, take a brief pause, then continue to rip out more reps,” he says.” Sure, he won’t be able to do as many reps on the succeeding segments, but the level of intensity is blazing throughout the set.


One caveat when using rest-pause: choose exercises where you can quickly get into the start position. When doing seated overhead dumbbell presses for shoulders, for example, it takes some effort to get into the start position. Performing that same movement on a machine is a more user-friendly alternative.


Technique 2


When performing straight sets, you simply rack the weight and call it a set when you’ve reached failure. That doesn’t mean you have no strength left in the muscle, though. With dropsets, you simply reduce the working poundage when you achieve muscle failure, and keep going until you’ve reached failure again.


So how much do you reduce the weight on the drop? By about 20-30 percent, says Calum. Because the drop needs to happen quickly, it’s easier on some pieces of equipment than others, and a little planning can pay off immediately.


Have a second pair of dumbbells there with you, ready to go


Here’s how to make it work with the most popular equipment:


  • Cables and pin-loaded machines: Just move the pin and keep going.

  • Barbell or plate-loaded machine: Load your weight before the set in a way that makes it easy to strip the exact right amount.

  • Dumbbell: Have a second pair of dumbbells there with you, ready to go

Remember, if you’re spending time searching for a pair of weights to use with a dropset after you complete the first half of the movement, it soon becomes a separate set rather than a dropset.


Because of the intense nature of dropsets—and how they’ll effect recovery for your next set or exercise—Calum recommends doing them on your last set of a given exercise, or toward the end of your workout.


Technique 3


How do you measure your sets? In reps, most likely, but that’s not the only way to do it. Time under tension (TUT) measures a set in seconds rather than reps. So a set in which you do 8 reps may take four seconds per rep (two seconds up, two seconds down), meaning the TUT is 32 seconds. But if that same set were done at 5-6 seconds per set, then the TUT would instead be 40-48 seconds. That’s a lot longer to be supporting the weight—and more work, tension, damage, and contraction for your muscle to be subjected to.


Calum’s recommendation: If you’re training for hypertrophy and using your 8RM, slow it down and make each of those 8 reps last at least five seconds. When using your 12RM, each of those 12 reps should be 4-5 seconds. These durations will push your overall TUT to over 40 seconds per set, a benchmark many feel is particularly conducive to muscle growth.


You could even just forget about reps and watch the clock throughout the whole set.


Remember, each rep includes not just the positive and negative motion in seconds, but also additional seconds if you hold the bottom (fully stretched) or top position (fully flexed) for a count or two. Calum also says he’ll switch up how he allocates his seconds. Sometimes he’ll lengthen the eccentric (lowering) portion of the lift and speed up the concentric (lifting), or vice versa. You could even just forget about reps and watch the clock throughout the whole set.


There are a number of different ways you can crunch the numbers, and they all lead to more muscle growth and the pump of your life!


Find the right head space


Talking about muscle failure and training partners brings images of active spotting and forced reps. But the value of a training partner is often the emotional support they bring, pushing you verbally through those crucial final, grinding reps. To replicate that voice while training solo is the real challenge.


“When I train, I definitely have to play the mental game,” says Calum. “It’s important to recognize that a big part of training is dealing with mental barriers. You have to be aware that the mind gives up 90 percent of the time before the body does. When you recognize this, you’re able to tell yourself that you can do more reps.”


Expect it to take practice. But once you master the crucial skill of self-talk, you’ll be better at training—with and without a partner—for years to come!





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Bodybuilding.com Articles



3 Intensity Boosters For Solo Training

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

18 Instant Health Boosters!

New Exercise and Fitness Review


Your mom. Your doctor. Your teacher. Your significant other. Some U.S. departmental agency. Everyone’s got suggestions on how you could better live your life, but reminding you not to smoke is kind of like blowing out hot air when the wind’s coming right back in your face.


Instead, the editorial team at Bodybuilding.com came up with a number of suggestions on how to implement already-sound advice. For example: Can’t quite seem to down 2 quarts of water a day? Try a splash of Mio or Crystal Light and you’ll be drinking at the trough all day.


Here are 18 easy-to-implement ways to improve your health that you can start right now. We promise, your mom will approve.


1 Tired of too much plaque on your teeth and having the hygienist
spend more time in your mouth than your significant other does?



Invest in an electric toothbrush and let the machine do all the brushing for you. You’ll reach hidden crevices where plaque buildup hides, and you’ll get a sparkling checkup the next time you see the dentist! It gently massages your gums too, reducing your risk of periodontal disease at the same time.


Invest in an electric toothbrush and let the machine do all the brushing for you.


2 If your girl likes muscles, the downside (for her) is that snoring
during sleep comes with the territory.



But for any man with a neck size over 17 inches or so, getting tested for sleep apnea can not only save her a good night’s sleep—it can save you! Sleep apnea, which is marked by constant daytime sleepiness, inordinately affects bodybuilders and powerlifters with big necks.


Take a sleep test to get monitored, and use a CPAP machine if necessary. Your sleep—and the nighttime hormonal boost—will be 100 times more restful, and she might even stay over the next time.


3 What’s the first thing you do after a good workout?



Take a selfie of your pumped-up physique to post on social media? Down a protein shake? Here’s something to consider: You’ve just touched every plate, handle, dumbbell, pin, bench, and machine in the entire club, and so has every sickie with a cold, the flu, or conjunctivitis. Your hands are now petri dishes. Sure, go ahead and take germs home with you. Or wash with hot soap and water, and favor fist bumps over handshakes on your way out of the gym.


Wash your hands with hot soap and water, and favor fist bumps over handshakes on your way out of the gym.


4 As an athlete, you’re constantly reminded to drink plenty of water
daily, but you often find it difficult.



Invest in a water jug—I got a nifty 2-liter plastic jug from Bodybuilding.com—and fill it with cold water each morning. Two squirts of lemonade-flavored Mio—or any flavor that floats your boat—and you’re reaching for the water jug much more frequently.


While getting enough water is no longer an issue, I highly recommend you do this early in your day so you don’t have to run to the bathroom late at night.


5 Have a good laugh at least once a night.



If you’re watching CNN, it may seem as if the world is going up in flames, and your own problems can be overwhelming too. But letting go and having a good laugh can ease your anxiety.


Currently, my favorite way is to watch reruns of “The Big Bang Theory,” but there are lots of old-school sitcoms you can easily download, whether you’re a fan of Lucy, Gilligan, or even Dorothy, Blanche and Rose.


Letting go and having a good laugh can ease anxiety.


Just make sure you turn everything off at least 45 minutes before bedtime—and that includes your phone.


6 Make love to a foam roller.



Yeah those goofy nerf-like cylinders you wouldn’t be caught dead using at the gym can actually help you stretch, alleviate lower-back pain, and improve alignment and stability.


Read an instructional article on foam rolling right here on Bodybuilding.com, and you can even order a foam roller on the site as well. Spend a few minutes each night on your carpeted floor working out your kinks.


7 Ask a longtime bodybuilder to name their best friend, and they’re
likely a chiropractor.



That’s because discs between your vertebrae take a beating after many years of repetitive workouts. Compressive exercises such as squats and overhead presses can cause you to lose 20-40 millimeters of height following a single weight-training session! (Thank God it’s not cumulative.)


Develop the habit of stretching your spine. Hang from a pull-up bar daily with your knees lifted, which can help alleviate spinal compression.



8 Keep a bottle of hand sanitizer on your
desk.



Using a keyboard, your mouse, and even your cell phone exposes you to all sorts of germs. If you eat as much and as often as most lifters, oftentimes you’re multitasking your meal with your workflow.


Ideally you’d wash your hands with hot water and soap before you ate, but let’s face it: When someone comes around with a chocolate-chip cookie or cupcakes, you just grab one.


Minimize germs by investing in a good hand sanitizer and use it like you’re stuck on a cruise at sea with no power for days.


9 Got a small fortune invested in supplements, but always forgetting
to take them?



Try putting your supplements out the night before and placing them right beside where you normally eat breakfast. That way you’ll have them handy with your glass of OJ in the morning, and you won’t have to rush out the door.


10 Nothing boosts your mood like getting outside.



At least once a week, schedule an outdoor activity that takes advantage of your area’s parks, rivers, and walking paths. Whether it’s a bike ride, a stroll, a fishing trip, or a new activity like kayaking, going outside to fill up with the “sunshine vitamin” (D that is) has been proven to boost your mood.


Whether it’s a bike ride, a stroll, a fishing trip, or a new activity like kayaking, going outside to fill up with the “sunshine vitamin” (D that is) has been proven to boost your mood.


In the winter, when days are short, make sure you get outdoors during your lunch hour for at least a little while. Nothing feels worse than going to work and coming home in the darkness.


11 Heard that dedicated training tightens muscles, and that you
should work on your flexibility daily to help maintain range
of motion and flexibility?



Try squatting while watching TV for about 10 minutes each night, or start with just the commercials. Squatting will open up your hips, lower back, and ankles. Here’s your chance to improve your flexibility in just minutes a day.



12 Any fitness enthusiast can attest that it’s easier
to stay on track when you’re already on a roll.



So why not start off your day in perfect fashion?


If you’re looking for a fast meal you can drink on the way to work that takes just seconds to prepare, mix this in your blender: one scoop of whey powder, a banana, some peanut butter, unflavored Greek yogurt, 1/3 cup oats, and water.


With this instant protein-packed breakfast, you’re ready to go!


13 Cravings are difficult to beat sometimes, but look at the “cost” of
tempting sweets not just in dollars and cents but as time on
the treadmill at 3 mph.



That chocolate-chip cookie (1.6 ounce cookie from Subway has 220 calories) has a “value” of 54 minutes for a 170-pound person; that slice of cheesecake (one slice from Cheesecake Factory has 1270 calories) is 313 minutes; and that chocolate cake (Very Best from J. Alexander has 748 calories) will set you back 185 minutes.


Find out the calorie totals—they’re now required to be printed on menus in some states, or you can go online—before ordering so you can compute your time cost. As the numbers above show, it could be staggering!


14 Replace one starchy or complex carb food each day with a
non-starchy veggie.



For example, instead of greasy breakfast potatoes you can have sliced tomatoes. In addition to saving calories you’ll get more fiber, add a host of vitamins and minerals to your diet, and do your heart a big favor.


Instead of greasy potatoes you can have sliced tomatoes.


15 Got a desk job? Get up and move around at least every 15-20 minutes.



Skip the email you were going to send a co-worker across the office and walk over there instead. Sedentary jobs are associated with a greater risk of cardiovascular disease, not to mention an extra inch or two around the middle.


Besides, dealing with live individuals sometimes instead of your computer screen is good for your mental health.


16 Your body is changing, but what about your clothes?



Find styles that fit your physique and complement all the hard work you do in the gym, rather than just wearing baggy clothes that don’t show off your body. You’ll get a lot more compliments and feel better about yourself, which then motivates you to stay on track. After all, you’ve earned the props!


17 Use lotion with sunscreen, especially around your face, neck and
arms.



Unless you’re proud of that farmer’s tan, of course! Overexposure to the sun is dangerous; even 5-10 minutes here and there during the day quickly add up.


Besides reducing your risk for skin cancer, applying lotion will help you maintain healthy skin. You’ll also be prepared if the work gang decides to eat at an outdoor diner come lunchtime.


Besides reducing your risk for skin cancer, applying lotion will help you maintain healthy skin.


18 Pay someone a sincere compliment every day.



It might be difficult in a world where haters want to bring you down, but go out of your way to say something nice to a friend, acquaintance, or even a stranger.


Not only will others respect you more for it, you’ll feel better about yourself, and you’ll get a reputation as one of the good guys. Plus, it’s nice to know you’re above all the ankle-biters in the world.


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18 Instant Health Boosters!