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How to gain
lean muscle mass - Part 3 of 3
by Tom Venuto
www.burnthefat.com
Getting brilliant muscle building on
the Basics.
"Big Ernie," one of my old lifting buddies from Pennsylvania,
e-mailed me last month after reading the articles on my website about
proper nutrition for weight gain. In his usual sardonic tone he
wrote, "Seeing all the scientific stuff on your web page reminds me -
here is a good formula for you:
HM = BC + HW
HUGE MASS (HM) = BIG CALORIES (BC) + HEAVY WEIGHT (HW)".
I was rolling on the floor laughing when I read this, but afterwards
I got to thinking that he was absolutely right - the formula for
getting big isn't anything overly complex or scientific - it's
actually very simple; just eat big and lift big on basic exercises.
This may seem like an oversimplification, but that's really all there
is to it. I've already discussed eating to get big in the first two
parts of this series, so now I'd like to discuss the third and final
component; how to train big to get big. A successful approach to
building muscle involves choosing basic, compound exercises,
progressively adding resistance, allowing enough recuperation and
keeping workout sessions brief and intense.
Get "Back to Basics"
When Vince Lombardi took over the Green Bay Packers everyone asked
him what he was going to do: "Are you going to change the playbooks?"
"Are you going to change the players," "what are you going to do
differently?" To these questions he replied, "I'm not going to change
anything, we're just going to get brilliant on the basics. Our
opponents may be able to predict exactly what we're going to do, but
we're going to be so good at the basics that they won't be able to
stop us."
When your goal is to gain muscle, your training mantra must become
"back to basics." I believe there are three reasons why people fail
to get back to basics. The first is because they have been on a
fat-reducing plan for so long that they become locked into a
fat-burning training and nutrition mentality and they simply refuse
to shift gears for fear of getting fat. You should stay reasonably
lean all year round, but trying to stay ripped all the time will
severely limit your size gains. When you've finished dieting to lose
weight, shift gears, get back to basics and get focused on a
mass-building mentality.
The second reason people fail to get back to basics is because the
basics seem so basic. What I mean is that people don't see the forest
for the trees. People are always looking for some exotic, esoteric,
magical formula, theory or program. Meanwhile, the answer is right in
front of their face, but they overlook it because it seems too
obvious.
The third reason people fail to get back to basics is because the
basics are so darn hard! It never ceases to amaze me how people
always gravitate towards the easiest exercises while avoiding the
harder, more result-producing exercises. Let's face it, squats are
tough - real tough! But if you don't learn to love heavy, basic
exercises like squats, you'll never join the ranks of the massive.
Choose Compound vs isolation
movements
First and foremost, "back to basics" means using compound,
multi-joint exercises over isolation movements. Compound movements
are those that involve the largest muscle groups as well as smaller,
stabilizing muscles. Because they utilize a greater muscle mass, they
allow you to lift the heaviest weights possible. There is a direct
correlation between the amount of weight lifted in an exercise and
the size of the muscle. Therefore, it is logical that compound
exercises like squats have a greater potential for building muscle than
isolation movements like leg extensions because squats allow the
utilization of much heavier poundages, resulting in much greater
hypertrophy.
The Best Muscle Building Exercises
Here is a list of the best basic mass building exercises for each
body part:
Quads: Squats, Front Squats, Leg Presses
Hamstrings: Stiff-Legged Deadlift, Lying Leg Curl
Back: Deadlift, Bent Over Row, One Arm Dumbbell Row
Chest: Barbell Bench Press, Dumbbell Bench Press, Weighted Wide Grip
Dips
Deltoids: Press behind Neck, Dumbbell Press, Military Press, Shrugs
Triceps: Lying Tricep Ext., Close Grip bench Press, Pushdowns, Seated
Tricep ext.
Biceps: Standing Barbell Curl, Seated Alternate Dumbbell Curl,
Preacher Curl
Calves: Standing Calf Raise, Donkey Calf Raise, Seated Calf Raise
If you don't Squat, You Ain't Squat!
Out of all these basic muscle building exercises, no exercise is better
for packing on pounds of quality muscle than the squat. Ironically,
however, no exercise is more ardently avoided either. I've heard just
about every excuse in the book for not squatting, and believe me,
after rupturing a lumbar disk, I've had every reason not to squat
myself. Despite my injuries, I squat any way. Why? Because barbell
squats are positively the single most result producing exercise you
can do. I'm not suggesting that you ignore the advice of your
physician if you have an injury, but if you are physically capable of
squatting and you're not doing them, you are compromising your
results. Squats hype your metabolism, pump up your legs and make your
whole body grow! Leg presses are OK, but they just aren't the same.
Rest and Recuperation
Muscles don't grow during a workout. They grow between the workouts -
if you allow them to rest, that is. All too often, the
over-enthusiastic trainee works out longer and more often under the
impression that more is better. Over training is the arch-nemesis of
the bodybuilder. Training by itself does not necessarily translate
into growth; training plus recuperation does.
Proper recuperation includes two separate components; specific
recuperation and systemic recuperation. Specific recuperation refers
to how much time you allow between training a particular body part.
The rage these days seems to be training every day and hitting each
muscle group once per week. This is not a bad idea, but if you're
training six or seven days per week, you're defeating the purpose of
one body part a week training. Individual muscle groups need to rest
between training sessions, but so does the entire body. Systemic
recuperation means allowing your entire body to recuperate by not
training too many days in a row. If you train too frequently, this
places excessive demands on your nervous system. Two or three days of
weight training in a row is the most you should ever do. If you are a
"hard-gainer" then an every other day routine might be even better. A
two on, one off schedule where you work each muscle every five to
seven days is extremely effective. This allows individual muscles and
your entire body sufficient recuperation for maximal growth.
Progressive Resistance - # 1 key key
to building muscle mass
There are many factors involved in building a muscular physique, but
in the long run the only thing that really matters is that you
progressively overload your muscles. There are many ways to overload
a muscle such as decreasing rest intervals, increasing volume,
slowing rep speed, increasing time under tension, doing more
repetitions, and using stricter form, but the granddaddy of them all
is simply adding weight on the bar. The more weight you can lift in
strict form, the bigger the muscle will get, period. Constantly
adding weight at every session can seem like an insurmountable task
at times, but the best way to achieve this goal is to make tiny,
incremental increases consistently over time. Don't attempt large
jumps in weight loads too quickly. Aim for adding just 2.5 lbs to 5
lbs with every workout on the basic exercises. You may not always be
able to increase the weight, but you must make progress in some form
at every single workout or you are wasting your time.
Keep your workouts brief in duration
and high in intensity
The definition of intensity is the degree of momentary muscular
effort that you exert during a set. In other words, intensity is how
hard you workout. Most people simply do not train hard. Most likely
this lack of intensity is due to the volume being too high. There is
an inverse relationship between intensity and volume. The harder you
train, the less sets you'll be able to do (and the less sets you'll
need to do). As a general rule, it's most effective to keep your
workouts brief and intense (under 60 minutes). More is not better,
harder is better. Always train to the point of failure or just short
of failure.
Avoid excessive cardio work
The entire point of adding a 250-500 calorie surplus to your diet is
to allow extra nutrients and energy to support the growth of new
muscle tissue. If you continue to do cardio every day for prolonged
periods as you do in a fat-reducing program, you'll only be burning
off those extra calories you needed for growth. Never completely stop
doing cardio. Everyone should always do 20-30 minutes of cardio 3-4
days per week year round regardless of your goals - that should be a
part of any healthy lifestyle. But too much is counterproductive.
Conclusion
Getting big is not the result of using some secret eastern bloc
training program, a miracle diet or a super muscle building
supplement. Gaining muscle isn't rocket science. The formula for
getting big is deceptively simple; it is just a matter of being
"brilliant on the basics." Do yourself a favor; stop wasting your
time searching for an easy way, because it doesn't exist. Just eat
big, work hard, work heavy on the basic exercises and get plenty of
recuperation and you'll soon be adding pounds of lean body mass
faster than you ever thought possible.
For more information on gaining lean muscle mass, check out Will
Brink's book,
Muscle
Building Nutrition: Learn
the FACTS
on exactly how, what & when to eat to achieve maximum lean muscle
gains with minimum body fat in record time, & discover precisely
which muscle building supplements can help you achieve those goals
and which ones are just hype.
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About the
author:

Tom Venuto
is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, gym
owner, freelance writer & author of
Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle, Fat Burning Secrets of
the World's Best Bodybuilders and Fitness Models. Tom has
written over 140 articles and has been featured in IRONMAN
magazine, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine,
Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. Tom is the Fat Loss
Expert for
Global-Fitness.com and the nutrition editor for Female
Muscle.com and his articles are featured regularly on hundreds
of websites on the web.
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