Mark
Emperor
      
Posts: 1,112
Joined: Apr 2011
Reputation: 19
|
RE: How do you split (Bodybuilding)?
As someone who started out only able to bench a little more than the bar five year ago and can now bench my own body weight, I can tell you that you need to two things:
1. Low reps, high weight.
2. Eat, eat, eat.
Since you're doing 3x5's of compound exercises, it sounds like you're doing something similar to Rippetoe's Starting Strength. Which is good. That system will add a lot of muscle and make you a lot stronger. I did it twice and both times I got a LOT stronger. I know Philip on this board mentioned getting great results from it too.
But you have to eat. If you're not gaining strength, you're not eating enough. Eat clean, but eat a lot. Lots of protein. Lots of veggies.
Right now I'm doing a modification of Rippetoe that takes into account the Reverse-Pyramid Training mentioned at http://www.leangains.com. My workouts are as follows (up until this week):
A = Squats/Bench/Rows
B = Deadlift/Military/Chin-Ups
I switched it up this week because doing heavy Squats/Deadlifts every other day started to hurt my lower back a lot. So now I rotate them a bit differently, replacing Squats with Leg Extensions/Curls once a week. But the idea is the same. Full body work outs doing big compound lifts. I've been adding a lot of muscle and strength since August. And the reason is I EAT. I eat like a goddamn horse.
Models - A Comprehensive Guide to Attracting Women
G3 Program - Step-by-step interactive coaching program -- takes you from A-to-Z with women.
(This post was last modified: 09-29-2011 03:56 PM by Mark.)
|
|
| 09-29-2011 03:49 PM |
|
TheBoss
Apprentice
  
Posts: 95
Joined: Apr 2011
Reputation: 1
|
RE: How do you split (Bodybuilding)?
(09-29-2011 03:49 PM)Mark Wrote: As someone who started out only able to bench a little more than the bar five year ago and can now bench my own body weight, I can tell you that you need to two things:
1. Low reps, high weight.
2. Eat, eat, eat.
Since you're doing 3x5's of compound exercises, it sounds like you're doing something similar to Rippetoe's Starting Strength. Which is good. That system will add a lot of muscle and make you a lot stronger. I did it twice and both times I got a LOT stronger. I know Philip on this board mentioned getting great results from it too.
But you have to eat. If you're not gaining strength, you're not eating enough. Eat clean, but eat a lot. Lots of protein. Lots of veggies.
Right now I'm doing a modification of Rippetoe that takes into account the Reverse-Pyramid Training mentioned at http://www.leangains.com. My workouts are as follows (up until this week):
A = Squats/Bench/Rows
B = Deadlift/Military/Chin-Ups
I switched it up this week because doing heavy Squats/Deadlifts every other day started to hurt my lower back a lot. So now I rotate them a bit differently, replacing Squats with Leg Extensions/Curls once a week. But the idea is the same. Full body work outs doing big compound lifts. I've been adding a lot of muscle and strength since August. And the reason is I EAT. I eat like a goddamn horse.
I was thinking about doing a program very similar to riptoe. Basically involves 5 exercises, 3 times week, 5 reps.
Isn't this purely a strength building program though? Does it help with getting a lean and cut body? Or am I better off with isolating, and doing higher rep exercises (8-12)
|
|
| 09-29-2011 04:10 PM |
|
Mark
Emperor
      
Posts: 1,112
Joined: Apr 2011
Reputation: 19
|
RE: How do you split (Bodybuilding)?
You pretty much got it. For bulking, three times a week, and never work out for more than 45-60 minutes at a time. That should do it. If you're skinny and trying to get big, focus on the big compound exercises: squats, deadlifts, bench and military presses, chin ups and rows. Stuff like bicep curls and calf raises aren't going to do anything.
Lift heavy. Lift to failure.
Eat like a goddamn animal, good healthy whole foods 4-6 times a day: lots of lean beef and chicken, eggs, tuna, veggies, sweet potatoes, brown rice, wheat bread, etc. Try to eat most of your carbs either in the morning or immediately after a work out. Eat 500-1000 calories over your maintenance level (can be calculated online, google around).
Do that for 3 months and guarantee you'll add some serious muscle.
Also, I highly, highly, highly recommend creating a diet log. I always knew a lot about nutrition, but I would slip up and fuck up with my diet all the time for years. I was a keyboard jockey basically. I had no discipline. Finally about a year ago I started keeping track of everything I ate on an excel spreadsheet and it's seriously changed everything. It's made me accountable and congizent of everything I put into my body. For the first time in my life I'm starting to get a really nice body this year, and I can totally attribute it to tracking my calories. I've lifted and exercised hard for years. But it wasn't until this last year that my diet got really tight.
Models - A Comprehensive Guide to Attracting Women
G3 Program - Step-by-step interactive coaching program -- takes you from A-to-Z with women.
(This post was last modified: 09-30-2011 12:41 AM by Mark.)
|
|
| 09-30-2011 12:37 AM |
|