Less Time Equals Better Results?
Why is it that almost everyone you see
working out in the gym does high volume bodypart splits? Today
is Monday and in just about every gym in America that means
it’s chest day. Tomorrow is back, Thursday is legs and Friday
is arms…or something like that, I guess.
Why the lack of variety or rational
thought? What is the need for all that training volume?
You need to understand that most forms of training have just
been passed down for decades from one generation to the next,
without the inclusion of rational thought. Sometime in the
60’s, sensible training programs started becoming less and less
prevalent with the rapidly growing usage of anabolic
steroids.
In the days of old, men like Steve Reeves and Paul Anderson
trained with far more sensible, lower volume programs but these
started to disappear during the 60’s. By the time Arnold got to
Gold’s Gym in Venice for the first time, high volume, bodypart
splits were the widely accepted way for everyone to train for
size and strength.
This type of training is not based on deductive reasoning but
just on the fact that “it’s what everyone else is doing.” The
proponents of these training methods will always blindly tell
you that “higher volume training is needed for hypertrophy
gains.” Says who? I can tell you for a fact that the University
of Chicago isn’t wasting time examining the effects of Jay
Cutler’s marathon workouts. There are no studies saying that
you need 8-12 sets per bodypart to grow. In fact there are
studies that show the opposite; that one set is just as
effective as three.
The proponents of this type of training will also tell you that
higher volume training is associated with higher levels of
growth hormone secretion. What they don’t tell you is that the
level of GH increase is not enough to make any difference at
all. In fact, almost anything you do elevates GH. Extreme
temperatures elevate GH but my biceps don’t get bigger every
time I take a shower. The increased GH secretion from training
is so minimal that it is not enough to make the slightest
difference whatsoever.
For the drug free lifter who does not possess muscle building
genetics quite up to par with the Austrian Oak, training this
way is a huge mistake. Not only does it drain your amino acid
pool and glycogen stores but it dramatically enhances your
recovery time between workouts. If you do 8-12 sets for chest
on Monday you can not recover from that workout and be able to
train again for seven days. So you are only getting one growth
stimulus per week or fifty two per year. Now if you reduce your
volume to the point where you can recover faster and more
efficiently without draining your amino acid pool and glycogen
stores so greatly, you can train bodyparts twice per week
instead of once. Now instead of 52 growth stimulating workouts
per year for each bodypart, you can now do 104. In fact, if
your volume is kept low you can even get away with training
bodyparts three times a week in certain situations. Now, which
do you think will be more effective; 156 growth stimulating
workouts per year or 52?
To train more often you absolutely have to lower your training
volume. The total sets per workout should be kept low and the
total sets per exercise should be even lower. There is no need
to hit four sets of incline presses, flat bench presses and
decline presses for your chest workout. Doing that is a form of
neuroses; you think that you need to hit every angle and do and
endless amount of sets to stimulate every last muscle fiber,
but this is simply not the case.
The reason these training programs remain popular is because
nobody wants to be told that they are wrong. Admitting your
mistakes is something many people can’t do. It is why when
something radically different is proposed, the high volume
proponents get upset and offended. Nobody likes to have their
ego bruised so they keep on doing and promoting the same old
high volume workouts that they always have.
That’s fine, let them continue to do what they choose;
personally I have way more important things to do than spend
all of my waking hours in the gym. If I can get better results
in a fraction of the time I will choose that option every
time.
Cut your volume down, up your weights and intensity and get
ready for the “what are you on” questions to start rolling
in.
Jason Ferruggia
is a world famous fitness expert who is renowned for his
ability to help people build muscle as fast as humanly
possible. He is the head training adviser for Men’s Fitness
Magazine where he also has his own monthly column dedicated to
muscle building. For more great muscle building information,
please visit Muscle Gaining
Secrets.
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