San Luis Obispo Paso Robles

Monday, April 7, 2008

The Overlooked Key to Muscle Building

There are a number of steps involved in a successful muscle building program. To be successful all must be given equal amounts of attention. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link right? The difficult aspect of this is that one variable in muscle building is addition by subtraction. That's a hard concept for most serious lifters to get their mind around.

I am talking about the overlooked key to muscle building, rest and not over training. If you're serious enough about lifting to do it regularly in the first place, then you don't have to be told to hit the gym, lift hard, eat right and get rest. You already know these things, and you try and do them as best as possible. But here's where most people make the big mistake.

Does it not make sense that, if you are doing everything "right", that every chest work out you have, you lift exactly the same as before OR MORE? That is the point of muscle building, right, to get stronger and bigger. Does that happen? Probably not. Most people write it off to having an off day, or "being tired". Well duh. Then it's obvious that you didn't allow yourself enough recovery time or you haven't gotten the proper amount or quality of rest. People justify this lack of progress in each workout as "doing something is better than doing nothing". WRONG.

The entire concept of muscle building is to build the muscle. Not wear it out. Sessions in the gym that do not make your muscles bigger and stronger are making them weaker and smaller! That's over training! The perfect illustration of this are boxers. After they have trained and peaked for a fight they take an extended period of time off. One fight doesn't make them that tired. It's a matter of not over training their bodies.

If you use being tired, whether it's from a day at work or a lousy night's sleep, as a reason for not being able to match previous workouts, then again, you miss the point of muscle building. It requires a maximum effort to exhaust the muscle, so that it can recover and grow. Without the ability to exhaust the muscle because of a lack of energy means no growth. Why again are you in the gym?

So ask yourself going in how do I really feel? Don't fall victim to the age old trap of mediocrity, "movement equals progress". It doesn't. Only movement in the correct direction does.

Steve R. Robbins has been a life long fitness enthusiast. Has the distinction of being able to run a marathon and bench press twice his weight in the same day. All at the age of 50. Editor and regular contributor to http://www.MuscleandHealth.org

Fitness & Muscle Building Know How for Hard Gainers
Exercise The Right Way - The Seated Row
How These 3 Basic Elements Can Be Used To Boost Your Own Muscle Gains!
Build More Muscle and Lose More Fat by Discovering the Power of Training Variables!
A Recovered Treasure: The Pilates Method
Build More Muscle Mass And Strength Without Supplements
Scientific Principles For Effective Muscle Gain
Exercise The Right Way - Barbell Shrugs
15 Muscle Building Rules for Skinny Guys and Gals!
Exercise The Right Way - The Biceps Curl
Exercise The Right Way - The Stiff-Leg Deadlift
Get On the Ball: Core Stability
Enough Already! Stop Coming Up With New Weight Loss Programs...
Reasons Why Leg Training Should Not Be Ignored
Exercise The Right Way - The Crunch
They Dont Know Squat!
Machines VS. Free Weights II
Increase Your Training Intensity - Forced Repetitions