Bodybuilding and Fitness Articles!
Discover Your Optimum Training
Frequency and Unleash Huge New Growth
Author: Peter Sisco of Precision Training
The Big Mistake
Want to know the #1 mistake made by people lifting weights? This single mistake inevitably causes long training plateaus and frustration that saps your motivation needlessly.
OK, you probably already guessed the answer from the title of this article. The #1 mistake is training with the wrong frequency. Frequency refers to the number of days per week you perform weight lifting workouts. The most common training frequency is “3-days-per-week” often performed on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. If this is your training frequency, I’ve got some great news for you. You can do far, far better!
Knowing the proper amount of time off between workouts is the single most misunderstood concept in strength training. The truth is, even if you do everything in the gym perfectly – number of reps, number of sets, optimum weight, proper rest between sets and proper exercise form – all of it can be worthless if you aren’t training with the right frequency.
The Dirty Little Secret of Strength Training
Fixed training schedules are insane. Every fixed training schedule, such as 3-days-per-week, will ultimately fail you. Here’s why. As your strength increases, your workouts are more demanding and require more time from which to recover.
The average guy sitting in front of a computer has the capacity to increase his muscular strength by 300-400 percent. However, recovering from physical activity puts demands on many of the body’s organs, such as the liver, kidneys and pancreas, to name three. These organs do not have the capacity to increase their metabolic functioning by the same 300-400 percent your muscles can.
When you think about it, this is something you already know from experience. If you do a light workout it hardly takes anything out of you. Your recovery is swift. But when you do a grueling workout involving heavy weights and a high intensity of overload, it can take days to feel fully recovered.
And since the indispensable key to strength training gains is progressive overload, you must find a way to increase the intensity of every workout and allow more time to recover from that workout.
Why “Splitting” Your Routine Won’t Avoid Overtraining
To keep workouts less demanding, it is a common practice to "split" workouts, such as: Monday – upper body, Wednesday – lower body. While this is a sound tactic (one I recommend) it alone will not solve the problems of a fixed training schedule. The reason is stated in Sisco’s Maxim: "Every day is kidney day."
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Amazing Progress by “Doing Nothing”
Once you understand how to adjust your personal training frequency, your results will soar. Here’s an example of what happened for a very tough-minded client of mine named Stanley.
After we discussed his training and lack of progress – particularly in the barbell shrug exercise - I told Stanley to take three weeks off of all training. He said there was no way he could stay out of the gym that long. Actually, this is a common problem with serious bodybuilders. Psychologically, when you want to make progress, it is very difficult to do what seems like "nothing." Not training feels like throwing in the towel or admitting defeat in some way. But the truth is your body needs time to recover. Time off is not wasted time; it's time that is critical to the growth process. It took a lot of talk to convince Stanley but, to his credit, he took three weeks off of all training.
Two months later he called me back with results that will shock you. His strength increased in every area of his body and his shrug power had skyrocketed. His first workout after the layoff was a personal best. Now he's training once every nine days. That's 18 days between workouts for the same bodyparts, because he uses an upper/lower body split. Before this correction in his training frequency, Stanley was training four times in just nine days. Look at the numbers that he sent me.
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October 11
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November 8
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December 17
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365 lbs. 20 reps
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405 lbs. 20 reps
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405 lbs. 20 reps
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400 lbs. 20 reps
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455 lbs. 20 reps
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505 lbs. 20 reps
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505 lbs. 16 reps
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600 lbs. 12 reps
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