Lift barefoot, if possible, or in minimalist footwear like Vibram
FiveFingers shoes, wrestling shoes, or converse chucks. having your feet
flat on the floor lessens the distance you have to pull the bar on a
deadlift, increasing your leverage and helping you lift heavier weights.
Training barefoot also strengthens your feet, which in turn adds
stability and traction to all your lifts.
Squeeze your glutes at all times during a set, especially on lifts like
the bench press and overhead press. It stabilizes your entire torso.
If the total number of reps you perform for an exercise adds up to 25,
you're more likely to maximize muscle and strength gains. Just keep the
reps relatively low and the sets moderate. Configurations like 5x5, 6x4,
and 8x3 work well.
Train with heavy loads one month, using sets of four to six reps. The
next month, go lighter and stay in the 10-12 rep range. The heavy
training allows your body to make even faster gains during the lighter
weeks.
Hold an 8- to 10-pounder and throw it hard into a wall a few feet in
front of you, as if you were passing a basketball down the court. You
can also reach overhead with the ball and then slam it hard into the
floor. Do three sets of five reps. Explosive exercises fire up the
central nervous system, helping you recruit more muscle fibers on lifts.
Want to look leaner without
dieting? Develop the taper from
your shoulders to your waist with
this shoulder shocker: Hold a
dumbbell in each hand. Now
perform a lateral raise with your left arm. Keep your arm held up while
you do a lateral raise with the right arm. Lower the right arm a
quarter of the way down, raise it back up, then lower it all the way.
Perform 10 reps like this. Rest three minutes, then switch arms. Perform
one set first thing during your workout twice a week for four weeks.
If your sticking point on the bench press is at the bottom of the lift
when the bar is on your chest, work on dumbbell bench presses with your
palms facing each other. This positioning also forces you to tuck your
elbows close to your sides when you lower the weights, which will become
a habit when you press with a barbell. Benching with elbows tucked
makes for a safer, stronger lift.
Here's a great bait-and-switch trick for the nervous system. Work up in
weight as normal on a lift to warm up, but make your last warmup set a
few pounds heavier than the load you plan to use for your first work
set. Just make sure you perform fewer reps in the warmup set than in the
work set. So, if you want to squat 315 for five, you might work up to
320 or 325 in your last warmup set for two reps—it shouldn't be very
difficult or tiring. Rest, then back off to 315 and go for five reps as
planned. The set should feel easier than it would've otherwise, and you
might try to go heavier next week.
Wrap a towel around the bar or dumbbell handle to make the grip thicker—products like Grip4orce (
grip4orce.com) and
Fat Gripz
work even better. Increasing the challenge to your grip with any
exercise recruits more muscles in your hands and forearms. As a result,
you can bring up these areas fast without any extra isolation work.
Do one set of as many as you can in the morning. Do another all-out set
at night. Repeat this every other day. After 30 days, test your max
number of reps. You can expect to see up to a 10-rep increase. This
system works for dips as well.
If you're bulking up, taking in loads of extra food can be stressful to your gut and lead to poor absorption of nutrients.
Digestive enzymes
help break down that food. Make sure the ones you take contain
protease, amylase, and lipase, which break down protein, starch, and
fat, respectively.
The European Journal of Applied Physiology found that working out first
thing in the morning on an empty stomach doubled the magnitude of muscle
growth signals.
If you let them drift, you won't fully extend them, and you'll be cheating yourself out of a full range of motion.
To build muscle, most of your sets need to be performed with weights
that are at least 70% of your max weight for that exercise. This
generally necessitates keeping reps to 12 and under.
Hold a weight in the contracted position (usually the top of the lift)
and have a partner take off plates or reduce the load. It forces your
muscles to keep working through the weight change. Unlike with regular
dropsets in which the lifter will usually get a few seconds to recover,
you get no rest doing this. This technique works well for machine
exercises like Hammer Strength or Smith machine chest or shoulder
presses. It's also great for barbell curls.
You're familiar with "preexhaustion," in which you do an isolation
exercise followed by a compound movement. This will tire out the bigger
muscle groups you're training, forcing you to use less weight on the
compound lift. However, the compound movement is the one that helps you
make the quickest gains. Instead, try flipping it around, performing the
compound move first, then repping out with the isolation. For example,
do a set of bench presses and then pick up dumbbells for flyes.
Coordinate this action with the upward phase of a bench press, right as
you push the bar off your chest. The drive of your legs will actually
allow you to handle more weight.
If you can't do a pull-up, lessening your body weight with the
assistance of elastic bands makes the movement easier. loop a thick
exercise band around a pullup bar and place your feet in it. the band
will act as a slingshot to propel you over the bar. the pullup
revolution pro (available at lifelineusa.com) offers various levels of
assistance depending on your strength.
Forget three sets of 10. Choose a weight you can get about 10 reps with,
and aim for 30 total for that exercise. Perform each rep explosively
and take as many sets as you need to get up to 30. The quality of your
reps will likely be better, and you'll let your body determine the
optimal number of sets.
You'll be fresher than if you had just done back exercises and able to
train the biceps more frequently. Now you'll be hitting them not just
with legs, but indirectly on back day as well.
Work up to a final set of eight reps on all your main barbell lifts for
three weeks. Then go for a heavy five the next three weeks. Then three
reps. Do just one hard work set per lift, then back it off by 10% and do
another set of the same reps. Each wave builds on the gains of the
previous one, and you should be setting personal records by the end of
nine weeks.
Before any big pressing workout, take a light medicine ball and press it
into a wall with your arm extended. Roll the ball around and make the
shape of all 26 letters. Keep pressure on the ball so it doesn't slip.
This fires up the rotator cuff so you can stabilize heavy loads better.
Two-thirds of all your muscle fibers are responsible for balance and
coordination. The remaining third are designed for movement. Therefore,
you get more out of exercises that are done standing than you do ones
where you're seated, lying down, or strapped into a machine.
Proteins that have been "hydrolyzed" digest superfast, so your muscles
soak them up quickly. The fast absorption also spikes levels of insulin.
Try adding hydrolysates to your whey and carb post-workout shake to
boost its efficacy.
Stand behind the bar, bend down to grab it, and then roll it back toward
you. Just as it touches your shins, drop your butt and begin the lift.
Time it right and you'll generate momentum that aids in the lift.
source:bodybuilding.com
by having regular exercise and gyming.
ReplyDeleteGyming is a regular exercise that keeps you fit and look healthy always
ReplyDeletethe person must not eat heavy food so that the muscle will not reduce.
ReplyDeletereduce too much fat taking daily.
ReplyDeleteby having regular exercise and gyming.
ReplyDeleteKeep Your Muscles Healthy With Proper Nutrition,Avoid refined grains, such as white bread and white rice. Replace refined grains with whole grains, such as whole-grain bread, oatmeal and brown rice. Whole grain foods have fiber, an essential part of growing and repairing muscles.
ReplyDeletekeeping your exercise fit is good for the body.
ReplyDeleteIf you're bulking up, taking in loads of extra food can be stressful to your gut and lead to poor absorption of nutrients
ReplyDeleteEat well and let whole grains help you repair worn-out muscles and tissues
ReplyDelete