|
|
 |
 |
|
Anabolic Steroids |
|
|
Steroid Training for size
|
Supersets, giant sets, stutter-reps, negatives,
triple drops, up the rack, down the rack, and one hundred and one Weider
principles. What does it all mean? What really works?
The basis of my program is that heavy weights build big muscles. Very
rarely do you see a huge bodybuilder who isn't strong.
A couple of years ago, I got tired of listening to the local bonehead
group Of power lifters tell me that bodybuilder, like myself, are big
and all, but they can't compete with the likes of themselves when it
comes to powerlifting. Rather than debate the chubby fellows, I entered
the state powerlifting meet and competed against them directly in the
220 pound weight class, I obviously would not be telling this story
if I did not beat them and take first place. I did so by a comfortable
margin I might add, No conclusion can be based on one example of course,
but I have seen it proven over a hundred times. The guys who can lift
heavy build very dense muscularity. Additional examples are that championship
can all bench press over 500 pounds; I don't need to remind you how
massive these guys are, There is also scientific data which supports
the thesis that it takes heavy weight training to build dense muscularity.
Studies have clearly substantiated that nearly all the muscular hypertrophy
experienced by bodybuilder occurs in the white (fast twitch) muscle
fibers. Past twitch muscle fibers are stimulated by explosive, power
type exercises. Slow twitch muscle fibers (red) are worked with low
intensity, aerobic type training. High repetition weight training works
primarily red muscle fibers, they have little capacity for hypertrophy.
Long distance runners are the extreme example of athletes who have fully
developed slow twitch muscles. It is clear by looking at them that this
type of work does not develop much muscularity. It has been my experience
that the farther you deviate from high rep weight training, the better.
Another point related to training with heavy weights relates to muscle
adaptation. The entire goal of weight training is to make muscles adapt
to the stress of weight training. This adaption doesn't occur unless
the stress of each workout is beyond what the muscle can get used. Slow
twitch muscle fibers adapt to stress by becoming more metabolically
efficient; fast twitch muscle fibers adapt by becoming larger each time
they are forced to adapt. These fast twitch fibers do not ever fully
become accustomed to being blasted with heavy weights. Thus, they will
continue to adapt (grow) when they are activated by the explosive lifting
of heavy weights. Another important point in building muscle size and
strength is that recovery takes time. Remember that the workout is just
the beginning, repair and growth follow as much as a week later. For
this reason, I find it unwise to train each body part more than once
every five days; I personally train every body part once a week and
find this to be the best way to grow.
Getting down to the actual
type of workout I recommend, I find it necessary to touch on my theory
for sets and reps. Keeping on line with our heavy training program,
you can probably guess that I recommend doing a lot of low rep sets.
I consider low reps in the area of 4 to 8. If you do not stimulate the
bulk of the fast twitch muscle fibers in the area you are working by
rep 6, believe me you are not going to hit it. As far as the number
of sets per body part, it varies according to the size of that group.
Legs are going to need around 20 sets; shoulders will do fine with about
12 sets. I recommend that a good 3 to 5 minutes be taken between each
set. The goal is to put out maximum explosive effort on each rep of
each set; you can't do that if you are still breathing hard from the
prior set, or if the muscle is still burning. Experienced and well trained
lifters can get as much of a pump from a heavy set of 6 reps on a lift
as others might get from pushing the weight 40 times. I don't think
that high rep sets do anything to build or even harden muscles. I get
an excellent leg pump from riding the stationary bike, but that pump
does not have anything to do with muscle overload.
At the beginning of each
workout there is a warm-up of a few sets. These are high-rep sets designed
to get the blood flowing in the muscle, You will see, that on the exercises
where I go up to quite heavy lifts, I do so gradually. Because we are
training heavy, injury is certainly possible. By the time I get to the
heaviest part of my bench workout for example, I have been lifting for
about 25 minutes. This is very important to remember; do not rush into
the heavy weights. It takes time to warm up the muscle and surrounding
joints. ALWAYS WARM UP VSRY THOROUGHLY BEFORE LIFTING HEAVY! I also
wrap my wrists and elbows for heavy upper body lifts, and my knees for
squats. Perfect form cannot be maintained for all heavy lifts, but an
effort should be made. A little cheating can be a good thing; total
disregard for form just to lift the weight can seriously injure you.
Going heavy might mean lifting 500 Ibs. or 200 Ibs. for you personally,
What ever the weight is, heavy is determined by your strength. Always
push your strength, but remember it will take time to build it up. Forced
reps are a good way to get used to weight that is out of your range.
Doing a few forced reps on maximum lifts can help build strength.
An example of
the workout I favor is as follows:
MONDAY: CHEST AND CALVES
TUEDAYS: BICEPS AND TRICEPS
WEDNESDAY: LEGS
THURSDAY: BACK
FRIDAY: SHOULDERS
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY OFF
This is the exact program I have one of my clients on. Weights are given
merely to illustrate the kind of weight increases made when using progressive
sets and relative static poundage. Of course, each person lifts different
amounts and should set up their program accordingly. Different people
also like different exercises for each body part; some are restricted
by injury and obviously must avoid certain exercises. Thus, the actual
program each person follows is often very different than the one here.
A program like this one follows a 5 and 2 pattern, if you like to give
your workout a number. I feel it is a superior way to build muscle strength
and mass. Each body part is blasted one time a week. I believe in going
all out, each rep of every set. This is the fastest and best way to
build muscle. Many bodybuilders feel that working each body part only
once a week could not possibly be enough training to get maximum growth,
in actuality it is. Each muscle group gets full attention on the day
it is trained; this allows you to get alt your energy into blasting
that specific pan. This enables you to better focus mentally on that
task as well. Other benefits of this program are that each muscle group
fully recovery before you train it again and that you get two days off
consecutively which allows your entire body to rest.
This training program
should be supplemented with aerobic exercise three days a week. This
could be accomplished by riding a stationary bike every other day for
30 minutes. This aerobic exercise should be of low intensity; if you
are riding the bike, you should not have it on high enough tension that
your legs burn. Too intense aerobic work can slow muscle growth. Just
the right amount of aerobic work, will keep your heart healthy, burn
body fat, and keep your metabolism high.
Many lifters wilt change their program around when they go on a steroid
cycle. In fact, I know more than a few guys who only train seriously
or at all when they are on drugs, This is unwise because studies have
shown that anabolic steroids work best on what was defined as 'well
trained muscles.' Lifters who train hard all the time obviously have
the best conditioned muscles.
Another mistake some steroid
users make is that since recovery rime is improved while on a cycle,
this means to train more often. That is a logical assumption, but it
may very well be incorrect. When a steroid cycle is working, the lifter
will store more glycogen in the muscle, lift more aggressively, and
be able to lift heavier weights. All this combined would clearly overload
the muscle each workout than it would in an off cycle workout. So even
though steroids improve recuperation abilities, lifters must still allow
ample dine between workouts in consideration that extra recovery must
take place. What conclusion I am getting at here is that I firmly believe
in this schedule whether a person is on a cycle or not. A thought on
steroids and training involves a theory I find quite sound. This theory
ties a great deal of the muscle gains a person makes during a steroid
cycle to how much strength they build during it. It is well established
that steroids work best when a muscle is in a catabolic state. This
catabolic state is arrived at by damaging the muscle cell by weight
training. The greater the damage, the more the cell will grow after
the recovery period. It is a fact that muscles get used to the level
of stress you inflict upon them so that after awhile, even the most
effective workouts hardly even affect the muscle cell. What can happen
on a steroid cycle, is that a lifter will often experience a sudden
increase in strength; often Just a few days after beginning the cycle.
This is due to an increase in myofibrillar density caused by the additional
fluids steroids cause the muscle cell to hold. The result is increased
contractile strength. This allows for the lifting of progressively heavier
weight. Since the muscle is lifting more than it is used to, it gets
damaged more, thus allowing the main metabolic reactions of anabolic
steroids to work even better. This is a seldom discussed advantage from
taking steroids, but I feel it is the major reason why some people grow
a lot while on a cycle and some don't grow at all.
There you have it; my
basic views on weight training to gain muscle. Of course there are exceptions
to every rule; there are some lifters who grow by lifting light weights.
This is because they are deemed genetically to react to any muscle stimulation.
I would venture to say that 98 out of 100 people are not that way. Clearly,
the odds are you are going to have to get strong if you want to get
big. Many of you out there who have been training for awhile and can
snap out 400 lb bench presses, know what I am talking about. Many others
do not have that kind of strength and must remember to keep going for
heavier lifts all the time. It does take a while to build a massive,
muscular physique, but if your strength is going up, you can be assured
you are on your way.
NEVER FORGET, HEAVY WEIGHTS BUILD BIG
MUSCLES!
| |
|
ANABOL,
ANAPOLON,
ANAVAR,
ANDROLIC,
CLENBUTEROL,
CLOMIPHENE CITRATE,
CYTOMEL-T3,
DECA DUBOL-100,
DECA-DURABOLIN,
NANDROLONE DECANOATE,
DUBOL-100,
ECDISTEN,
IGTROPIN,
INSULIN ACTRAPID,
JINTROPIN 4IU,
JINTROPIN 10IU,
LASIX,
LASIX TABLETS,
LEPORI,
METHANDROSTENOLON,
NAPOSIM,
OMNADREN-250,
ORAL TURINABOLAN,
PARABOLAN TABLETS,
PRIMOBOLAN TABLETS,
PREGNYL 1500IU,
PREGNYL 5000IU,
PROVIRON,
RESTANDOL,
STANABOL,
STANAZOLOL,
SUSTANON-250,
SUSTARETARD-250,
TAMOXIFEN,
TESTACYP,
TESTEN-250,
TESTEX,
TESTOPIN,
BTESTOPIN-100,
TESTOSTERONE PROPIONATE,
TESTOSTERONE DEPOT,
WINSTROL TABLETS,
WINSTROL DEPOT
|
 |
|