Hello, I’m a 34 (soon to be 35) year old looking to gain muscle and weight. Although I eat a lot, (at least I think I do) I’ve been at 145-150 lbs for as long as I can remember. I saw your article on Bodybuilding.com and would like to give it a try.
My only question with the pyramid program is: Do I change the weight for each rep? In other words, do I lift the weight 10 times with a certain weight and then 8 times with another weight, and so on and so forth? Or, do I find a weight that I can lift 15 times and do all sets with that weight?
Any help would be appreciated.
- M. Palacios
My Answer: Yes, adjust the weight according to the repetitions. Adjust the weight so that you come close to failure at each target rep.
Friday, April 22, 2011
Monday, April 11, 2011
Charles Poliquin and the BioSignature Method
Charles Poliquin talks about why you store fat in certain places and how it is an indicator of your hormonal profile.
Labels:
Charles Poliquin,
hormones
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Exercise A.D.D.
The other day my one year old daughter and I were at Border's bookstore. We were in the children's section, and I was, like a lot of parents with toddlers, looking for something to entertain my precocious baby girl.She crawled around the store floor for a bit and then crawled right up to a young woman sitting on one of the tiny kids' chairs. My daughter propped herself up beside this young woman and then babbled something to get her attention.
"Oh hello!" she said. The woman had a pile of books by her side, and she was skimming through a book titled something to the effect of "the big book of exercises for women."
I asked her, "You looking to work a particular muscle group?"
She related that she was simply looking for something different, something new to learn. She told me she was a fitness competitor with a classic case of exercise A.D.D. She said that she gets bored easily and is always looking for new exercises or training routines, but that it's been harder to find new things because she's seen them all. Every book or magazine has the same information.
I was a lot like her in my younger days. I had classic exercise A.D.D. I was always looking for the next best thing, always looking for something new. After awhile, though, I realized that there wasn't anything new under the sun. A lot of the ideas that are presented as new are simply old ideas repackaged and presented as such.
I remember going to a small neighborhood gym with a pile of Muscle and Fitness mags in the lobby. 10 years of mags that the owner had subscribed to. So every day before my workout I would read an issue.
Having all of those mags there accelerated my learning of bodybuilding training and diet. Instead of waiting for an issue to arrive in a month, I was learning something new everyday. I was expanding my training and dietary knowledge at an exponential rate.
But after awhile I noticed a couple of things:
1) I was learning fewer and fewer new bits of knowledge.
2) The same training "wisdom" was being rehashed over and over through the years. The exercises in a chest article in 1984 were the exact same exercises in a chest article the following year and the subsequent years after.
Over the years, I have noticed a few changes in the fitness industry. Whereas recreational bodybuilding (using bodybuilding methods to improve one's looks) was pretty strong in the 80's and early 90's, its influence has receded. During that time I've seen the introduction of Bosu balls and the reintroduction of kettlebells. The Internet spurred a number of exercise cults as well.
But ultimately there is very little new under the sun. And the key to obtaining a better physique or greater strength is not always adopting the latest fitness craze (P90X comes to mind), but consistency and commitment. Committing to doing something as opposed to nothing, to applying what you have learned.
Boredom is natural. But if you want the muscles, then you have to focus and do the hard boring work in the gym.
Labels:
exercise A.D.D.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Academy Strength Training, Part 2
I saw one of your articles on Bodybuilding.com. I am also a police officer. My department currently has an opening for Wellness Coordinator. I hope to fill the position.
I would like to bring something new to our department. Right now, I feel the physical training is below par. I am looking for ways to best train recruits. I have researched alot of programs online, but I feel the same way you do, that the past and present training regimens are not beneficial to new officers.
Can you recommend any books and/or websites? Your help is much appreciated.
My Answer: Books... books... oh, I don't know... MY books might be good.
Seriously though, my books are good for recreational bodybuilders: guys just looking to get bigger, stronger and ripped. So the info in these books is not geared specifically for law enforcement, but more for men in general.
Now when you conduct the strength training of academy classes, you're always going to be limited by the equipment and the number of students. Strength training is not like cardio. It doesn't lend itself well to group training. It is primarily a solitary or partner activity. Plus it's hard to train a group if you have limited equipment, and the equipment is being used one recruit officer at a time.
So you have to think of ways to train your students with minimal to no equipment. I've answered this question before: Academy PT Programming.
What I would add to my previous answer is that you should include some grip training and ab work. For grip training, you can pair up your students according to their individual strength levels and have them do arm wrestling.
Good luck!
I would like to bring something new to our department. Right now, I feel the physical training is below par. I am looking for ways to best train recruits. I have researched alot of programs online, but I feel the same way you do, that the past and present training regimens are not beneficial to new officers.
Can you recommend any books and/or websites? Your help is much appreciated.
My Answer: Books... books... oh, I don't know... MY books might be good.
Seriously though, my books are good for recreational bodybuilders: guys just looking to get bigger, stronger and ripped. So the info in these books is not geared specifically for law enforcement, but more for men in general.
Now when you conduct the strength training of academy classes, you're always going to be limited by the equipment and the number of students. Strength training is not like cardio. It doesn't lend itself well to group training. It is primarily a solitary or partner activity. Plus it's hard to train a group if you have limited equipment, and the equipment is being used one recruit officer at a time.
So you have to think of ways to train your students with minimal to no equipment. I've answered this question before: Academy PT Programming.
What I would add to my previous answer is that you should include some grip training and ab work. For grip training, you can pair up your students according to their individual strength levels and have them do arm wrestling. For ab work, I would suggest having them line up at the pull-up bars and do hanging leg raises. You could also train the entire class with difficult versions of the plank. Each recruit officer can perform a variation of the plank that suits his or her abilities.
Good luck!
Labels:
law enforcement
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