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Getbig Main Boards => Gossip & Opinions => Topic started by: cephissus on May 02, 2016, 01:55:14 PM
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3-4 days a week
Legs, push, pull
2 main exercises, with progressive variations
Example: legs and push
2-3 sets of each:
Overhead squats
Front squats
Back squats
Pistols
Superset with:
Close grip push-ups
Bodyweight dips
Weighted dips
Overhead press or db bench
- each exercise or variation is progressively heavier, except possibly the first/last, which are more skill based and for warm up/cool down
- choose exercises that can be done in a rack for the most part. Bodyweight exercises serve as good warm ups and can be done anywhere.
- the two exercise 'paths' progress in parallel. I like to take about one minute rest between each set -- you get sufficient rest between heavy sets but don't get bored.
- There shouldn't be too much overlap between the two paths. E.g. if doing legs/pull, don't do squats and pull ups would be better than squats and deadlifts.
Work in some mobility/stretching and you can be in and out of the gym in an hour, 3-4 times a week. I've been working out this way for a few weeks and just feel like it makes more sense than any of my previous routines, especially if you like to do other activity in addition to 'bodybuilding'. Cuts out all the less productive exercises, redundant warming up (too many unrelated exercises) and just flows from warm up through easy sets to hard sets in a single, natural progression.
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Bench press super set with squats 30 sets x 10 reps ;D
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3-4 days a week
Legs, push, pull
2 main exercises, with progressive variations
Example: legs and push
2-3 sets of each:
Overhead squats
Front squats
Back squats
Pistols
Superset with:
Close grip push-ups
Bodyweight dips
Weighted dips
Overhead press or db bench
- each exercise or variation is progressively heavier, except possibly the first/last, which are more skill based and for warm up/cool down
- choose exercises that can be done in a rack for the most part. Bodyweight exercises serve as good warm ups and can be done anywhere.
- the two exercise 'paths' progress in parallel. I like to take about one minute rest between each set -- you get sufficient rest between heavy sets but don't get bored.
- There shouldn't be too much overlap between the two paths. E.g. if doing legs/pull, don't do squats and pull ups would be better than squats and deadlifts.
Work in some mobility/stretching and you can be in and out of the gym in an hour, 3-4 times a week. I've been working out this way for a few weeks and just feel like it makes more sense than any of my previous routines, especially if you like to do other activity in addition to 'bodybuilding'. Cuts out all the less productive exercises, redundant warming up (too many unrelated exercises) and just flows from warm up through easy sets to hard sets in a single, natural progression.
Overhead Squats are stupid and useless. So are "pistols".
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workouts do not matter
it matters how high of energy u can maintain day to day
if u have a good workout and are zonked mentally and physically, whats the benefit?, whats the point?, are u just living to workout?
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workouts do not matter
it matters how high of energy u can maintain day to day
if u have a good workout and are zonked mentally and physically, whats the benefit?, whats the point?, are u just living to workout?
Pretty much true. Workouts won't matter a fucking thing, especially when peaked as a Lifetime Natural. Just workout 3 days or so a week, lift heavy and don't really worry about it. You are not going to make any gains at this point anyways. Its just making sure you look the same at this point.
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Pretty much true. Workouts won matter a fucking thing, especially when peaked as a Lifetime Natural. Just workout 3 days or so a week, lift heavy and don't really worry about it. You are not going to make any gains at this point anyways. Its just making sure you look the same at this point.
thats right
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Pretty much true. Workouts won matter a fucking thing, especially when peaked as a Lifetime Natural. Just workout 3 days or so a week, lift heavy and don't really worry about it. You are not going to make any gains at this point anyways. Its just making sure you look the same at this point.
So what your implying is... Workout is a workout?
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So what your implying is... Workout is a workout?
Why wouldn't it be if you have reached a level where you can no longer progress? Sure you can pick up weights in different ways and even get stronger on some of those things, all without looking any different, so whats the point? (unless you like doing that which I actually do not mind)
The thing is, as long as you are making it difficult enough, whatever you do, its not going to matter once you have been training and doing this for a while.
Its impossible to keep progressing.
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Why wouldn't it be if you have reached a level where you can no longer progress? Sure you can pick up weights in different ways and even get stronger on some of those things, all without looking any different, so whats the point? (unless you like doing that which I actually do not mind)
The thing is, as long as you are making it difficult enough, whatever you do, its not going to matter once you have been training and doing this for a while.
Its impossible to keep progressing.
all true
one can only hope to make small strides gambling on exotic substances
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all true
one can only hope to make small strides gambling on exotic substances
Funny how people are trying to find "the perfect routine", especially if your goal is to look your best. If that is the goal, then it really takes minimal training and effort, especially after years of training.
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Why wouldn't it be if you have reached a level where you can no longer progress? Sure you can pick up weights in different ways and even get stronger on some of those things, all without looking any different, so whats the point? (unless you like doing that which I actually do not mind)
The thing is, as long as you are making it difficult enough, whatever you do, its not going to matter once you have been training and doing this for a while.
Its impossible to keep progressing.
I actualy agree with you, show me a natural who claims they make gains after so many years if training and I'll show you a liar...
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Overhead Squats are stupid and useless. So are "pistols".
Overhead squats and pistols are both better warmups than other squat variations. When you are 80 and start getting joint pain, you might start to appreciate such things.
At this point im not too interested in looking better, but getting the same result with less wasted effort. Cutting out the things that don't matter and always annoyed me, finding the most enjoyable workout. No longer measuring progress in terms of how I look, but reducing pain, increasing ability.
I may not be able to look much different, but I can enjoy learning new skills like a pistol or handstand pushup.
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workouts do not matter
it matters how high of energy u can maintain day to day
if u have a good workout and are zonked mentally and physically, whats the benefit?, whats the point?, are u just living to workout?
I'm not zonked I actually feel good after this workout. I agree though, much overlooked point.
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Overhead squats and pistols are both better warmups than other squat variations. When you are 80 and star getting joint pain, you might start to appreciate such things.
At this point im not too interested in looking better, but getting the same result with less wasted effort. Cutting out the things that don't matter and always annoyed me, finding the most enjoyable workout. No longer measuring progress in terms of how I look, but reducing pain, increasing ability.
I may not be able to look much different, but I can enjoy learning new skills like a pistol or handstand pushup.
I have never warmed up and never will need to. Never understood that nonsense at all.
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Overhead squats and pistols are both better warmups than other squat variations. When you are 80 and star getting joint pain, you might start to appreciate such things.
At this point im not too interested in looking better, but getting the same result with less wasted effort. Cutting out the things that don't matter and always annoyed me, finding the most enjoyable workout. No longer measuring progress in terms of how I look, but reducing pain, increasing ability.
I may not be able to look much different, but I can enjoy learning new skills like a pistol or handstand pushup.
Might as well see how fast you can do the hokey pokey while you are at it.
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Might as well see how fast you can do the hokey pokey while you are at it.
To be honest I'd rather be able to do these than have a big bench or squat, these days.
Plus these exercises are more fun and you can keep strength even without the gym.
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To be honest I'd rather be able to do these than have a big bench or squat, these days.
Plus these exercises are more fun and you can keep strength even without the gym.
Next thing you will be taking up cycling or some other gay activity that people do when they become disenchanted with weightlifting. hahah
I have seen it so many times. Its pretty funny actually.
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I have never warmed up and never will need to. Never understood that nonsense at all.
I didn't either, when I was younger. I think the more injuries and dysfunctions you get, the more important it becomes. If you have good muscle control, practice the movement often, and don't have many injuries it's not as important.
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Next thing you will be taking up cycling or some other gay activity that people do when they become disenchanted with weightlifting. hahah
I have seen it so many times. Its pretty funny actually.
Already have :D
But actually, I'm enjoying weights again more than I have in a long time.
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But kinobody Greg Gallogher says to just do some pistols and jump in place for leg training
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Might as well see how fast you can do the hokey pokey while you are at it.
haha, it's posts like this that always make me appreciate your years of contributing to GetBig
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3-4 days a week
Legs, push, pull
2 main exercises, with progressive variations
Example: legs and push
2-3 sets of each:
Overhead squats
Front squats
Back squats
Pistols
Superset with:
Close grip push-ups
Bodyweight dips
Weighted dips
Overhead press or db bench
- each exercise or variation is progressively heavier, except possibly the first/last, which are more skill based and for warm up/cool down
- choose exercises that can be done in a rack for the most part. Bodyweight exercises serve as good warm ups and can be done anywhere.
- the two exercise 'paths' progress in parallel. I like to take about one minute rest between each set -- you get sufficient rest between heavy sets but don't get bored.
- There shouldn't be too much overlap between the two paths. E.g. if doing legs/pull, don't do squats and pull ups would be better than squats and deadlifts.
Work in some mobility/stretching and you can be in and out of the gym in an hour, 3-4 times a week. I've been working out this way for a few weeks and just feel like it makes more sense than any of my previous routines, especially if you like to do other activity in addition to 'bodybuilding'. Cuts out all the less productive exercises, redundant warming up (too many unrelated exercises) and just flows from warm up through easy sets to hard sets in a single, natural progression.
Why in the hell would you even bother purchasing a gym membership if you are going to be exercising to see how fast you can get out of the gym?
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TL,DR,FU.
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Overhead Squats are stupid and useless. So are "pistols".
WTF are pistols? (besides Glock, etc) ???
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Why would you perform 4 squat variations in one workout ???
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Why would you perform 4 squat variations in one workout ???
Reeves did 3.. BB hacks,front squats , Back squats.
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Reeves did 3.. BB hacks,front squats , Back squats.
With all respect to Steve, but it makes no sense to me
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With all respect to Steve, but it makes no sense to me
I know what you are saying but i have used this at Home with a Barbell and it does work. Hard workout.
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I know what you are saying but i have used this at Home with a Barbell and it does work. Hard workout.
The same volume of those 3 with 1 movement gives the same result (contraction = contraction)
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The same volume of those 3 with 1 movement gives the same result (contraction = contraction)
well then the same must be true about flat bench vs Incline and Decline. If you do 9 sets of flat every workout you will develop heavy lower pecs. I guess people do inclines for a reason? so your theory is not 100% correct. Front squats hit lower quads harder as do BB hacks but Hacks hit the Hammies harder. Full Back squats are more upper and Glute/hip dominant.
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Overhead Squats are stupid and useless. So are "pistols".
Stick to machines and bowl cuts. Clueless.
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I have never warmed up and never will need to. Never understood that nonsense at all.
Man your lucky then . I got no choice but to get a lil blood in my shoulders usually just a five pound plate warm the rotator cuff up a bit takes about 2 minutes per side .
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well then the same must be true about flat bench vs Incline and Decline. If you do 9 sets of flat every workout you will develop heavy lower pecs. I guess people do inclines for a reason? so your theory is not 100% correct. Front squats hit lower quads harder as do BB hacks but Hacks hit the Hammies harder. Full Back squats are more upper and Glute/hip dominant.
There are minor differences between movements when it comes to fiber recruitment (Google for EMG studies), but they will never result in a different shape of a muscle. A muscle can only get stronger & bigger, so there's no such thing as 'training the lower part of a pec', since fiber recruitment isn't that local.
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Don't forget a half gallon of regular milk a day.......not kidding.
Dr Dutch' recommendation : twice a week/ Tbar-row, regular low Deads, DB bench, Military's.
If want a bit more, add Full Squats, Calf work, arm work if you think it will matter (I don't), maybe uprights...
Make a very time efficient workout.
REALLY TIME EFFICIENT: only deads plus Bench. But work HARD.....
So says Dr Dutch
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Why in the hell would you even bother purchasing a gym membership if you are going to be exercising to see how fast you can get out of the gym?
I'm not. After years (almost decades) of spending too much time in the gym, though, I've come to hate doing more if it's not helping. All the things that people commonly say are necessary... Well, I no longer want to take any of it for granted.
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Why would you perform 4 squat variations in one workout ???
This is one of my favorite parts. I always felt like 'why do 3x4 on 3 unrelated exercises for ”leg day"? I'd rather just do 12 sets of one exercise.'
And I did enjoy gvt, which is basically just that. But admittedly i feel there is some benefit to including more variety, if not in terms of hypertrophy, at least in mobility, flexibility, or other ways.
So I came to this approach, which is somewhere in between. The intensity ramps up from beginning to end, I don't 'reset' like when pyramiding for each exercise -- something I always hated. In my example, I add weight (almost) every set, as if I were doing a single exercise. But the variety stresses the muscles in different ways and allows me to challenge myself with both light and heavy weights.
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well then the same must be true about flat bench vs Incline and Decline. If you do 9 sets of flat every workout you will develop heavy lower pecs. I guess people do inclines for a reason? so your theory is not 100% correct. Front squats hit lower quads harder as do BB hacks but Hacks hit the Hammies harder. Full Back squats are more upper and Glute/hip dominant.
After training 31 years, I will say there is some truth that incline puts more stress/development on the upper chest.
Squatting is a fantastic leg exercise, but it can also give you a big ass if genetically inclined.
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After training 31 years, I will say there is some truth that incline puts more stress/development on the upper chest.
Squatting is a fantastic leg exercise, but it can also give you a big ass if genetically inclined.
Many powerlifters have better chests than bodybuilders, and >90% of their chest work are flat benches.
You can make a squat more quad dominant by going less deep, but many iron-fundamentalists refuse this.
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I actualy agree with you, show me a natural who claims they make gains after so many years if training and I'll show you a liar...
I don't think the ceiling for natural gains is that low. If you're talking about the maximum amount of muscle mass one can carry with the minimum amount of bodyfat, then sure, gains are probably negligible after a certain point of training. I don't think that limit applies to guys looking to put on muscle without being contest ready, but still being in shape. I don't think it applies to guys who want to get stronger. I think you can progress in strength fairly regularly until your body starts breaking down. I think you can improve body composition even without drastically changing weight. Just in the last year, I've improved forearms a lot with a different routine and it's not as a result of adding a significant amount of muscle mass.
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Many powerlifters have better chests than bodybuilders, and >90% of their chest work are flat benches.
You can make a squat more quad dominant by going less deep, but many iron-fundamentalists refuse this.
I've had many powerlifting buddies through the years... some of them had lack luster chest development, but were still very strong. 70% of their work was centered around flat benching... they also did plenty of inclines.
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Why wouldn't it be if you have reached a level where you can no longer progress? Sure you can pick up weights in different ways and even get stronger on some of those things, all without looking any different, so whats the point? (unless you like doing that which I actually do not mind)
The thing is, as long as you are making it difficult enough, whatever you do, its not going to matter once you have been training and doing this for a while.
Its impossible to keep progressing.
It's slower and gets more difficult with age (especially if natty), but it's not impossible.
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Many powerlifters have better chests than bodybuilders, and >90% of their chest work are flat benches.
You can make a squat more quad dominant by going less deep, but many iron-fundamentalists refuse this.
Great post agree on both points.
For me at least when dropping flat benches chest always flattens out after a while, no other chest excercise comes close.
Worst thing I did was learning to squat ass to grass, outer thigh shrank and ass and inner thighs grew due to widening stance in order to squat deep, currently having to start from scratch learning to squat to paralell with a narrower stance with a lighter weight.
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A 'pull' example. Did yesterday, felt great:
Power snatch: 10 singles
Full snatch: 20 singles (add weight every 5 reps or once comfortable)
Power clean: 3 triples
Full clean: 3 triples
At this point the exercises start taking less skill, so I start supersetting:
Straight leg deads: 2x10
Pull ups: 2x10
Full deads: 3x6-8
Weighted pullups: 3x3-5
Finished off with 4x6-8 hanging leg raises and a set of curls, just for fun.
Again, the idea is to progress through related exercises, from more skill, lighter to less skill, heavier. No need to go backwards in weight or readiness because theres no switching between unrelated exercises.
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I don't think the ceiling for natural gains is that low. If you're talking about the maximum amount of muscle mass one can carry with the minimum amount of bodyfat, then sure, gains are probably negligible after a certain point of training. I don't think that limit applies to guys looking to put on muscle without being contest ready, but still being in shape. I don't think it applies to guys who want to get stronger. I think you can progress in strength fairly regularly until your body starts breaking down. I think you can improve body composition even without drastically changing weight. Just in the last year, I've improved forearms a lot with a different routine and it's not as a result of adding a significant amount of muscle mass.
Keep day dreaming, you wil gain next to nothing once you've hit you limit... You can fool your self its gains when you not lean.. This goes for juiced lifters too, they hit a limit that cant passed and need severe abuse to get past
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Also.... Anyone that has trained a long period can tell you how missing movements effects your physique, my chest looks less boxy if I cant do inclines