Heavy weight school of thought:
1. More weight = more muscle size. Aim to get more reps or add weight to the bar every workout.
2. Go to failure. The muscle won't grow if you don't push it beyond its limits.
3. Often sets and reps are very important for those subscribing to this mentality. They tend to focus on the 5-8 rep range and may even record their workouts in a log book.
"Stimulate, don't annihilate" school of thought:
1. Use as little weight as you can while still fatiguing the muscles.
2. You don't have to go to failure, doing so can lead to injury / "overtraining."
3. Reps should be very smooth. The last rep in the set won't look much different from the first (no grinding it out).
4. Use a weight you can control. The positive portion of a rep should be explosive, while the negative should be controlled. Yes, even the last rep of a set (no grinding).
5. Reps and sets are less important. Getting a pump, and feeling the muscle on every rep is more important. If you stop feeling the muscle, then you should end your exercise or workout.
Which is better?
It seems like most bodybuilders and bodybuilding media sites say heavy weights are king, but is this really what they believe? Sure there is the occasional ronnie coleman who lifts very, very heavy weights, but people seem to overlook the fact that he's also very strong, and doesn't struggle with these weights that much.
I was just looking at this video of lee haney today,
who of course is known for coining the phrase "stimulate, don't annihilate" and was surprised at some of the weights he was using: 115 (?) for barbell curls, 200 for lat pulldowns, 125 for preacher curls, maybe low 100s for leg extension? GH15 repeatedly tells us that bodybuilders usually lift much heavier for their videos than for their everyday training.
how about this one of nasser and jay?
Bench press with two plates? And what were those dumbbells? 90 lbs, 100, 110? Flyes with 60 lbs dumbbells?
Shawn ray... squatting with 3.5 plates, every rep SUPER SMOOTH, doesn't even look like a problem at all for him. If he can build the legs he had with just 3.5 plates on the bar, what business do all the gymrats have putting on 3-4 plates and killing themselves, only to end up with little twig legs?
How about this one?
I assume this video shows every consecutive set of lat pulldowns he did for the workout. I don't know about your gym, but I routinely see kids looking like they put twice the effort into their sets, and probably using more weight too!
Is the whole "heavy weights" strategy just another brainwashing tool to sell legal, non-steroid muscle building "solutions" (in the form of training books, personal training, supplements, and the like)? Is it a ploy used by bodybuilders to further enhance their image (as hardworking, strong athletes)?
Or is there something to be said for all those kids deadlifting four plates, struggling like crazy on each rep, huffing and puffing only to end up with the back thickness of their little sister?