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No Myth Fitness - January 2007

Speed Up and Slow Down

January 31st 2007 11:29
The simplest element of weight training is the repetition (or the doing of what it is you are doing!). If you are to get the most benefit from your time in the gym you cannot ignore this most basic element. In fact by concentrating on the repetitions in every exercise set you can assure yourself of more productive workouts.
weight training
Like this guy on the way up!


In the simplest terms a repetition has a working phase and a return to the beginning phase. Exercise experts have terms for each: the working portion is called the eccentric phase of the movement and the return is called the concentric phase.When you engage in the eccentric phase of an exercise you are working against gravity- moving the weight up. In the concentric phase gravity is your ally,helping you to reach the starting point with less exertion than was required in leaving it.

It is no surprise then that the average trainer works hard on the eccentric phase of his/her movements and then relaxed on the concentric. He grabs a curling bar and hauls it up to his shoulders with a grunt: it slips back to his thighs and he steels himself to haul it up again. When he cannot haul it up anymore the set is over and he moves on.
This is pretty much in keeping with how the body performs its normal tasks. It works when it has to but lets gravity assist it whenever possible


You are,however,engaged in something that is not altogether natural-high intensity lifting for relatively short bursts. The whole purpose of your workout is to put the muscles through something that will transcend the everyday activity in which they are employed. This manipulating of the norm can be done in a very great number of ways. These include how you approach the eccentric and concentric aspect of each repetition. You are right to assume that Ms Average Trainer is not doing this.

You can make real progress in muscle growth by practicing the following axiom: speed up and slow down. You can guess what this means. When you are performing the eccentric(hard) phase of a movement you should be focusing on speed -to move the weight from nadir to apex as fast as you can without sacrificing strict form(i.e. no rock and roll). When you have reached the top of any movement, your focus should shift to resisting gravity as it pulls your weight back to its original resting position.
weight training
Like this guy on the way down!

That's right. You will be working on both ends of the movement, instead of relaxing on the down phase. As the muscle labors in the concentric phase there is tissue stimulation that does not take place in the eccentric phase. That means more stimulation on a rep by rep basis. That is training with weights!

You can easily begin to incorporate this technique into your workouts. Just do you regular eccentric movement and then slow the concentric movement down and fight Mr. Gravity all the way back to the start. Thus you will be trying to make the second half of the movement as slow as the first is fast. Yes,some movements are more suited to this than others, but give them all a try. Again its "speed up and slow down." Your servant as always.
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You are not Painting

January 30th 2007 11:35

weight training
Not related to weight training.

Weight training is not analogous to painting. When you paint a wall etc,you brush a stroke,step back, and see what it looks like. If you decide you did not get enough paint on the object to suit you, you reach for the paint again and give it another brush. If it takes three or four strokes,so be it.

This is the way in which many people approach weight training. They are not the most forlorn of trainers. Those are the trainers who obliviously soldier through the sets specified on the workout card they carry with them and like automata move on to the cardio area as the card prescribes. I assume that these clueless folks are rookies and have not had enough experience to begin to take control of their workouts.

More experienced trainers tend to have a certain number of sets for each exercise which they will finish in accordance their overall plan no matter what. In most cases I suspect that they are doing one or even two too many sets for what is optimum on any given movement. Why? Because there is no set that can approach the first for productive muscle building.

Your muscles are programmed to adapt to various kinds of stimuli. Their reaction to sub-maximal sets is to prepare for repetition by focusing on slow twitch tissue designed to be activated by long repetitive movements. Its counterpart-fast twitch tissue- is designed for rapid recruitment when there is demand for explosive short term activation.

Weight training can and does involve both,but real changes in strength and size focus on the fast-twitch. Our friends from an earlier post-sprinters- when they have muscle biopsies, show a larger than normal percentage of fast twitch tissue in their muscles. They are also characterized by the large size of their bodies when compared to long distance runners. Thus bigger in running is a direct result of short and all out. In sculpting the body bigger thus thereby better sculpted is a direct result of sets at maximum effort.

Repeated sets of the same movement with the same moderately heavy weight send the body the message that you are stressing repetitiveness and that means slow twitch stimulation. In painting another stroke works fine;in weights it works against the kind of explosive and all out sets that sculpt the body.

Superior training thus involves doing every set with the maximum effort and no set is more important than the first. Everything you've got should be brought to bear on it. If you haven't done it to the max you cannot compensate by adding further inadequate sets. Always concentrate on your work,especially the first set. Your servant, as always.
weight training
Not weight training
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A Sore Subject

January 29th 2007 11:33
Last Friday my leg workout consisted of squats only. I was reminded again of
Muscle man
to sing the praises of the squat and ponder why people would use the silly lower back machine in the gym when a few squats would do more for their lower back than a lifetime of lower back machine nonsense. Instead I would like to focus on the process of using their effects to analyze the efficiency of workouts.

At 48 hours after the all squat workout some useful information is available to me. For one thing I am reminded that weight training involves the paradox of tearing down to build up. My legs are feeling the soreness of having been pushed to do all those squats. The extent to which I am debilitated is an indication that serious training has occured-not insane training because I can walk and getting out of a chair is not a fearsome event-but productive training. I am pleased.

If you have gone through a workout, you should be able to feel some soreness too at about 48 hours. To a serious bodybuilder soreness is a pleasure of a sort; it signals that the efforts to tear down tissue have been a success and that the body will build it back plus the little extra that means bigger muscles. No soreness? That speaks volumes about your training.

When you are new to weight training soreness probably causes you less joy, but it is an inevitable and useful part of sculpting the body. If you feel little or nothing in the days after a workout you are probably not pushing yourself,i.e. wasting your time. Veterans can tell when the soreness is too great and when it is insufficient, but for a beginner the expectation should be that you are pretty sore and a little uncomfortable. To make progress in weight trainer you should accustom yourself to assessing your level of soreness on a regular basis and calibrating it so that it is just the right amount. Less soreness means that adaptation is taking place and you need to consider ramping the difficulty of your work.Extreme soreness on the other hand is not useful.

Your soreness can teach you more about yourself than just that you have worked hard. It can confirm that the movements you have chosen for certain body parts are in fact working those body parts. Sounds a little crazy,but I see people doing movements all the time that are not producing what I suspect they think they are. I did squats and two days later my quads are sore and my rear end. This rear soreness is important to me,because I want to firm up that part and squats are apparently at work on the project. I am also sore in my inner thighs and that's good too. (OK. I can't help it. Squats rule! )

Note with care what is sore after every workout and set your exercise selection in accordance with the results. If you train a muscle and feel nothing, start looking for different exercises or your form in your movements. Fail to tap into this feedback loop and you will be flying blind. Weight training is a thinking and analytical enterprise. Your servant, as always.
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A Boatload of Supplements

January 27th 2007 05:33
Look! The supplements you ordered are here!

Bodybuilding magazines are the richest source of information that will help you train properly with weights. There is so much information there that can be lapped up by a novice that they really are worth the price of a subscription. I like all the major ones. They are somewhat different in their approach,but each contains a treasure chest of information. I have also found over the years that reading one can often revive my flagging interest in training. I'm not sure why, but they seem to be able to send me to the gym..

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Say Hi to the New Kid(and Be Nice)

January 26th 2007 05:30
I would like to take the opportunity today to welcome The Health Fanatic
Healthfanatic
Be nice and read the new kid's blog.
to our blog community. I recommend that No Myth Fitness readers give the newest kid on the block a look every day. Here is why. The relationship between wanting to be in shape and wanting to be healthy is so close that they are indistinguishable.I can't tell you how many times I have discovered something in a bodybuilding magazine about fat loss, diet, supplements etc.only to see articles touting it in the wider press months later. I read several health newsletters as well and countless are the times that articles there have seconded things I originally read in a bodybuilding magazine. Many forty years of interest in fitness has yielded a ton of things that were meant to promote fitness and promoted health as a side effect.(I know, priorities a little screwy, but benefits just the same.)

The reason is clear. Bodybuilders are obsessed with the very kind of things in which the general public is less passionately interested, but interested. Take fat loss. Bodybuilders are not satisfied with anything less that a body fat percentage rate in single digits. They will do what it takes to get to that level. Professional bodybuilders paved the way in integrating fat loss with muscle maintenance by using diets which were Atkinsesque before Atkins came along. Great fitness heroes like Jack Lalane always -40 years ago-sought to associate right eating, right living, exercise, and health


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Muscle Magazine Myth and You

January 25th 2007 05:41
The questions for anyone who steps into the weight area of a gym to workout are legion.What muscles should I work in a given workout? How often should I return to the individual muscles in my body? How many sets should I do for my body parts? Should I do the same number for each body part or is each to be treated differently? What are the proper exercises for each body part? How many repetitions of each exercise should I do? How long should my workout last? Is there a time of day that is better to workout? Would a training partner help or divert me? How long should I wait between sets? If this confuses you, it should.
gymnast
What if she tried his workout?
weight lifter
Or he tried hers?


The reality is that you do not have to answer all these questions correctly to get tremendous benefits from weight training. That is because your body does not have brain. It marvelously adapts according to its patterns regardless of how uncertain the brain attached to it is of the efficacy of its methods. It is also abundantly clear that we humans are variable in our physical endowments that the answers to training questions are as idiomatic as are our bodies and personalities. This simply means that each weight trainer has to work out his/her own system of training. You can't avoid making all kinds of decisions when you undertake to train with weights


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Scales Of Injustice?

January 24th 2007 11:31
Scales
Don't Trust This!

Lets continue in the vane of yesterday"s discussion of weight loss. How do you know that you are overweight? I think that your pants or your clothes in general are the best indicator and that your scales are the worst.

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Your Pants and Reality

January 23rd 2007 05:20
My pants feel tighter after the holidays-not a lot but the trend is in the wrong direction and I want to reverse it. My immediate, visceral response is what interests me. I want to lose weight,period. I want my pants to be looser and the sooner the better. I know that if I clean up my diet and go on a crash regimen of cardio exercise that the calories will burn off and I will have lost the five pounds it will take to create the looseness I crave. Understand that I want to lose weight and I am not so concerned about the composi
Pig
His pants were too tight to wear!
tion of the weight.

If this is a familiar set of emotions for you, welcome to the club. It is, however, a myth to believe that all weight loss is the same. When you've gained a few pounds and the rush is on to lose it, you will use the tried and true. Ramping up the cardio will work and you will lose the weight. The reality is that you are making no progress in the abiding,problem you have with weight. That is because you do not have a persistent problem with weight;you have a persistent problem with fat


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I Do Not Believe

January 22nd 2007 14:32
A tour through my gym yesterday reminded me that there are movements and machines in which I place no faith. I list a few and give my justification.
1) The Incline Bench Press: The crowd for which the arms and chest are the sum total of weight training love to do this movement. I've frequently seen them doing sets of "inclines" after they have done their bench presses. I think this movement is overkill at best and largely superfluous. The fact is that pectoral muscles are best stimulated by bringing the arms across the chest with the palm facing the chest. Thus dumbbell chest flyes are the optimum movement to force the pectorals to work in isolation. The theory behind the incline press is that it uniquely targets the upper pectorals. Why do they matter? If your upper pectorals are underdeveloped compared to the lower you will look a little saggy and thin near the clavicle. In my opinion this is unlikely in the first place, if you are doing dumbbell chest flyes or the pec deck machine that is designed to mimic flyes. If you are doing bench presses and then incline bench presses I suggest that you are doing essentially the same movement in each exercise- a movement that is less about pectorals than about triceps and front delts.
2) Lower Back Machines: Every modern gym I've visited has a machine which alleges to train the lower back. You sit upright on it with a padded arm behind. You select your weight from the stack and then lean back,forcing the arm to a position parallel to the ground. I suspect that the origin of this machine has something to do with modern man's burgeoning problems with lower back. I don't,however, think that the machine does much. If you have a weak lower back I suggest you start doing stiff legged dead
Smith Machine
Don't Try This
lifts with a barbell(just the bar at first). I suggest you slowly start some squats with a barbell on your shoulders. Also use a hyperextension machine. If you have lower back trouble, spend the time you would waste on the lower back machine on serious, progressive abdominal training. Weak and prolapsed abs are a source of back problems


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"Set" Yourself for Success

January 19th 2007 11:20
Girls
Ladies, This is for you too.

In Forget 10, Einstein a couple of blogs ago I trashed the superstitious fixation of so many weight trainers on the number 10 for repetitions. Today I wish to turn my focus to another fundamental of weight training that is so often given little thought-how many sets of each exercise should be done in a workout.

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In Which I Defend Barry Bonds

January 18th 2007 11:30
I am not an avid fan of baseball. I am not an avid fan of Barry Bonds. I have not followed very closely the soap opera in the sporting press relative to his alleged use of performance enhancing drugs to power his way toward Hank Aaron. I have heard my fair share of discussions in the sports press about Bonds and drugs. I do not have a clue in the world about his guilt or innocence. I am, however, going to speak up for Bonds,because the fact is that any aging weight trainer like me can give you an insight into the situation that a pencil necked pencil pusher cannot:Barry Bonds could quite plausibly have gained the size and strength increases which he clearly has without drugs and while watching his 30s give way to his 40s.
Creatine
Could this be Barry's(completely legal) Secret? www.lef.org

Barry Bonds is a professional athlete at least to some extent because he is physically gifted with a body that readily gains muscles as well as extraordinary reflexes and hand-eye coordination. He is also a member of the first real generation of baseball players who have embraced weight training over the length of a career. Bonds is,then, one of the first real star players to weight train his way into his latter years. Certainly Aaron's body changed in composition over his career. He was not, as far as I know, a systematic weight trainer, but his strength was clearly greater at the end of his career. Bonds is a weight trainer and to fairly judge his achievement one ought to at least wonder whether a man at his age can do what he has done with his muscle mass without steroids etc


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Forget 10,Einstein

January 17th 2007 12:13
The obvious goal of anyone who lifts weights is to enhance fitness in as efficient a manner as is possible. The idea of workouts that do little to contribute to this goal has appeal to practically no one. Maybe there are a few out there who want to expend energy inefficiently day in and day out,but I can't count myself among them.Your text goes here
Einstein
Forget 10, Einstein, Think Muscle
]

The best way to waste time and effort in the weight room is to rely on techniques and approaches to training that have no real basis in experience. The myth of three days a week comes to mind. I have taken it on in an earlier blog. Suffice to say that three day weeks really yield Two Day Bodies(see my blog). Split routines which train upper body one day and lower body the other are still around and wasting a lot of time and work. Failing to isolate and rocking and rolling your way through sets is still helping people kid themselves about how hard they are working


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Reality is a Two Ton Hippo

January 16th 2007 05:46
Hippo
Meet reality

In my last two posts I have claimed that short extremely intense exercises are the best for overall long term fitness. The truth is, however, that if every member quit who is in the gym or exercise class primarily to lose weight, there would be no gyms- at least profitable ones. The fact is that our Western diets make weight loss a premium for most adults. Thus whatever suggestion is made as to how to achieve that goal will gain adherents. That includes magic pills and all kinds of exercise regimens.

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The Real,But Difficult, Deal

January 15th 2007 12:16
The best exercise program for long term achievement and maintenance of fitness involves short almost violent exertion done frequently enough to cause adaptation,but not so frequently as to trigger the body's reaction to long duration exercise. The latter will doom the benefits of exercise- fat loss, bone density, skeletal muscle.
Jiu-jitsu
Short and Intense-jiu-jitsu
seconds. That's right. If you can do it for more than 10s of seconds it is not an optimum exercise. Certain types of exercises meet this criterion:1) weight training, where a set of an exercises rarely lasts more than thirty seconds, 2) sprinting, where a duration of a minute would be on the extreme 3) martial arts, where sparring or grappling require the entire body to exert itself maximally in a series of short bursts over two to five minutes.

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Cardio Perils

January 14th 2007 12:19
I say it again: the best way to promote your fitness is to engage in the most intense exercise you reasonably can for very brief periods. The conventional wisdom on the other hand is currently centered around the heart rate. It claims that heart rate, when raised to submaximal levels and sustained there, promotes the burning of fat. This, of course, lends attractiveness to things like ellipticals and treadmills, if not even brisk walking. I have never been an adherent to such theories, although for many years I was a serious cyclist. (I was serious,but absolutely horrible and slow, but I rode thousands of miles and loved it.)

I think that the adaptive process of the body makes it necessary that more and more time be spent on the cardio equipment to continue to progress. Let's say that you have treadmilling 15 minutes a day for awhile. When you look in the mirror or try on clothing you are happy, but not happy enough. What are you likely to do? I think you would be tempted to add five minutes or even ten. After a few weeks of this what would you do if you still weren't where you wanted to be? I think you get my point


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Stop Cheating Until You Learn How

January 13th 2007 12:54
The goal of all serious weight trainers is to force their muscles to work with ever increasing intensity. This is really not easy. Yet, bodybuilders have for many years experimented with techniques that extend their muscles to the limits of intensity. One of the most useful of these is called cheating.

Cheating in the gym is,of course, using momentum created somewhere other than the isolated muscle to complete a movement. If you do a movement from the beginning of the set with these tricks of momentum you will be submaximally training the muscle in question to say the least. People,for instance, who arch their backs or swing their hips while performing a curl are not really seriously applying stress to the biceps. Nor is an overhead press performed while leaning backward or using the legs to help raise the weight the kind of shoulder work that gets rewarded with large deltoids. In fact lots of rocking and rolling while doing movements probably means your ego can't stand the thought of doing a set strictly with a smaller weight. Real muscles are built by fanatical devotion to strict movements with whatever weight you can handle properly


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Your Own Mountain Peaks

January 12th 2007 10:54
The symbol of power and muscularity has been and continues to be the big arm complete with bulging biceps like the peak of a mountain. Without a doubt the biceps is the most trained muscle in the body. I would estimate that there are 100 sets of biceps work done in the average gym for every one set of squats. The average bodybuilding magazine is littered with articles in which the latest star explains how he built his big "guns". Here are some thoughts on getting and keeping large biceps:

It is worthwhile mentioning that large arms are more a function of large triceps than large biceps, since the girth of the arm is about 2/3 triceps and 1/3 biceps. If you truly want to sport larger arms, concentrating on triceps is a must. I would also say that the function of the triceps in extending the arm away from the body finds its way into more athletic activities than the biceps as well


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FItness's Secret

January 11th 2007 11:00
Hyperbole must surely be the most important figure of speech for the publishers of fitness magazines.Those that populate the coveted check-out area of my favorite grocery seem to live or die by it. The headlines that they plaster across the their covers convey a steady stream of overstated claims that probably do little more than sell magazines to the unwary and the desperate. If you genuinely wish to become fit they are of less than little value to you.

Fitness headlines seem to fall into two broad categories of exaggeration. Some claim to offer the "secrets" of various things like weight loss or shape up and others seem to guarantee that they can get results in delightfully short time. These are usually combined with broad claims that the something to be revealed does not require much by the way of intense work or more than ordinary exertion. Upon inspection I usually find that the secrets are not secret and the time is not as short as I would expect short to be


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Some "ABS"olute Truths

January 10th 2007 11:59
As most people are aware the body has a pattern of depositing fat that demands that the waist and hips bear the brunt of weight gain. This very basic fact also means that fat goes on according to plan and it comes off according to a plan. There is really nothing that can be done to alter the way your bad eating impacts your body and there is really no such thing as spot reducing. You would never know this by the boat load of abdominal contraptions that litter the various media.The central impression these ads convey is that just exercising with the product in question will slim the waist and improve appearance all by itself. This is overstated to say the least. If you read Midnight Confessions recently you know that advertisers are not beyond sending subjects to the gym for months in advance of an ad campaign to get the before and after effects they wish to ascribe to their "Abdominal Whatever." All of this nonsense has left a residue of confusion in the average person's mind about the relationship of abdominal exercise and its effects on the overweight.

Let's dispel some myths. If you are overweight and fat has accumulated among your middle, you cannot get rid of it by doing hundreds of sit ups or some variation thereof. The result of such effort will be that you will have very strong abdominal muscles with great endurance...and fat around your middle to cover these developed muscles. If you do not diet you will make no headway in the battle of the bulge. If you do diet your bulge will disappear whether you ever exercise your abs or not


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400 Lbs of Tragedy

January 9th 2007 11:44
Many years ago I read the very saddest thing in a bodybuilding magazine. Such magazines often have advice columns and in one of them a reader wrote in to tell the bodybuilder-columnist that he was the reader's favorite bodybuilder etc etc. Then the other shoe dropped. The reader admitted that he would like to be like the bodybuilder but the fact was that he was nearly 400lbs and wished he wasn't. The bodybuilder was genuinely kind, as I remember. He invited the reader to contact him via the magazine and promised to do whatever he could to help him.

I have thought about that exchange over the years. What would I tell this morbidly obese person who genuinely wished to somehow get himself out of such a predicament? Here's the advice I'd give


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Midnight (Fitness) Confessions

January 7th 2007 16:03
The darkest time of the night recently revealed, as it often will, the starkest of truths to me. It wasn't some striking insight in the semi-sleep of waking or the product of worried tossing and turning. It came like a voice from the stillness, however. Awaken too early,but too late to return to bed I turned to that perpetual companion of the insomniac-AM radio. Amidst the rehashes of Roswell, the conspiracy theories about the faked moon landing, and the machinations of the Trilateral Commission I dialed in a discussion with a fitness expert whose name I never got.
Dumbbells
Amazing All-In-Two Fitness Machine

The interviewer covered all the territory- how to exercise, how to diet, supplements etc. Then she veered into the unexpected. She asked the expert about all those fitness contraptions we see on paid programming television these days: "Do they work?" The expert was not even a little coy. He instead related a story


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No Butts About It

January 6th 2007 11:00
Lets get down to the butt of the matter - your butt that is. The old joke is that God made you so that you can't turn your head 180 degrees,because that way you can't see how big your butt is. Joking aside, I suspect that many,many people are convinced that their butt is a) too fat b) too flabby c) too droopy d) all of the above. Like all aspects of your physique you have been endowed with what you have been endowed with. Flat, bubbly, wide - You cannot change it, but you can make it fit. If its naturally softer than you want, it can be made firmer.

I will concern myself today with some things you can do in the weight area of the gym to firm up your posterior. If you adopt some or all of these suggested movements, you will definitely make a difference.First, the fact is that heavy leg work occupies the rear end. If you are in the "no legs, please" majority in the gym you are not getting any rear end benefit.In my opinion all the treadmilling, ellipticals, etc will never firm up that rear like a few simple weight exercises


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Continuing Isolation

January 5th 2007 11:41
In the last episode I discussed and advocated for the use of isolation for superior results in weight training. Today I wish to elaborate on how isolation may be utilized in training various body parts.

Let's first review isolation. Its simply requiring a muscle group to work together in performing a movement. This is not the normal procedure the body uses to perform its tasks and for this reason it is necessary to both learn and concentrate on it, when working with weights. It is also worth noting that fatigue makes it very easy to revert to the body's normal manner of performing work and the point of fatigue in your workout is therefore a time to pay special attention to proper isolation


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Practice Isolation

January 4th 2007 10:59
If you have a genuine interest in building up your body either for strength, athletic performance, or aesthetics you are well served to become acquainted with some important principals that bodybuilders have been practicing over the decades. The principal that I feel is central to the kind of work that will yield benefits in any muscle groups of the body is isolation.

The human approach to performing work is to involve a carefully concerted group of muscles groups to perform a task. It is really relatively rare that any normal task involve just one muscle group. This is a brilliant economy of effort on the part of your body to keep from needlessly overtaxing one part while others sit idly by. However, such a pattern means that it is not likely that any body part will become abnormally large or well developed. This is not the approach one wants, if he/she wishes to build up the body


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Favorite Weight Training Movements

January 3rd 2007 11:58
Today I give air time(or face time) to some weight movements that have the status of pets with me. They are excellent movements, but largely neglected by the folks in my gym.

My all time most excellent neglected movement is upright cable crosses. Here's how its done: Stand between the cables. Take a handle in each hand and make sure you have enough weight to make the movement tough but not impossible. Stand absolutely as upright as you can and roll your shoulders forward. Pull the handles downward and together so that your fists contact knuckle to knuckle at slightly above your belt line. Do not bend over. Do not bring the cables together higher than your navel. Feel what you are doing. You are putting a hurt on your pectoral muscles, especially the sweep of the outer pec. You are also cramping the pecs together and building the pec along the sternum. If you bend over or bring your handles together without your fists touching knuckles to knuckles, you will be activating deltoids and back and not very effectively. Want a bigger chest? This is it. I don't want to be indelicate,but, Ladies, you should do this one too


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Favorite Weight Training Movements

January 3rd 2007 11:46
Today I give air time(or face time) to some weight movements that have the status of pets with me. They are excellent movements, but largely neglected by the folks in my gym.

My all time most excellent neglected movement is upright cable crosses. Here's how its done: Stand between the cables. Take a handle in each hand and make sure you have enough weight to make the movement tough but not impossible. Stand absolutely as upright as you can and roll your shoulders forward. Pull the handles downward and together so that your fists contact knuckle to knuckle at slightly above your belt line. Do not bend over. Do not bring the cables together higher than your navel. Feel what you are doing. You are putting a hurt on your pectoral muscles, especially the sweep of the outer pec. You are also cramping the pecs together and building the pec along the sternum. If you bend over or bring your handles together without your fists touching knuckles to knuckles, you will be activating deltoids and back and not very effectively. Want a bigger chest? This is it. I don't want to be indelicate,but, Ladies, you should do this one too


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Embrace the Strange:Enter Fitland

January 1st 2007 11:26
Amidst the silliness of New Year's resolutions which are dissolved almost as soon as they are resolved, there are those which take on a seriousness that merits some attention.

Recently I came upon a cry of desperation in a magazine from someone who was 17 years old and 50 lbs overweight. This is sad particularly since those of us over 30 know that its easier to get out of shape later in life than earlier. Let's say for the sake of arg