For building maximum
muscle and ripping the fat off your body, conventional
training is NOT where it's at. I'm going to teach
you 5 of THE most effective exercises and techniques
that will have "management" pulling
their hair out!
The
most effective exercises and training techniques
are the ones that push your body to the limit...they
activate more muscle fibers, challenge your balance
and determination, and push your strength to the
limit!
Oddly enough, they
can also get you kicked out some gyms! (Not that
I know this from personal experience or anything...)
These top 5 techniques
are among THE very best for achieving the goals
they're targeted for. Use them wisely!
1. Lockout Partial Squats
This exercise will
draw the ire of any self-respecting gym owner,
especially one that hasn't invested in good-quality,
high weight-rated Olympic bars.
Why? Because, when
you do this exercise with REALLY heavy weight
(as you should for maximum effectiveness), your
standard "el-cheapo" Olympic bar is
going to BEND and bend PERMANENTLY.
If and when the
gym management sees bent bars and you're the only
one using really substantial weight on them...well,
you get my drift.
So how do you do
Lockout Partial Squats? They're quite simple -
basically, you set the safety rails in the power
rack to just below the very top position of your
squat. Then you set a bar on those rails. Then
you pile a LOT of weight on (you can warm-up with
what you would normally do for a one-rep max).
When the bar is
set up, step underneath, get it set on your back
then finish the lockout. Simple as that!
In this example,
I'm using the lockout squat as a static hold,
standing up with it then just supporting the weight
at the top - I'm using 950 lbs on the bar (10
plates on either side) using a bar rated to 1500
lbs. As you can tell, I've learned my bar-bending
lesson!
2. Fat-Loss Circuit Training
This is a training
technique that is downright AMAZING for fat loss.
It'll kick your metabolism into overdrive like
nothing else. So why will it get you kicked out
of a gym?
Let me tell you
how it works first...
At its simplest,
you're doing a regular weight workout, but instead
of taking complete rest in between sets (e.g.
do a set of 8 reps than sit on the bench for a
minute doing nothing), you'll be doing 30 to 40
seconds of moderate intensity cardio training.
Here's what it would
look like:
1 set of 8 reps
bench press
40 seconds jogging on the treadmill
1 set of 8 reps bench press
40 seconds jogging on the treadmill
1 set of 8 reps bench press
40 seconds jogging on the treadmill
1 set of 8 reps bench press
40 seconds jogging on the treadmill
And so on, for the
rest of the workout...
It is actually deceptively
simple and seems relatively easy...but let me
tell you, when you do this in a regular workout,
it will AMAZE you with how strongly it revs up
your metabolism.
You can read a more
in-depth description of this technique in this
article:
So why will this
technique get you kicked out of the gym?
Well, as great as
this technique is, it DOES require you to go back
and forth between weights and cardio equipment.
To do this (and this is normally only a problem
if you train at a busy gym) you have to claim
both a weight training area and a cardio machine.
Most gyms frown on this type of thing, especially
at a busy time. Chances are, your stations will
be gone the moment you step away from them.
Fortunately, it's
easy to remedy with a simple modification! Instead
of using a machine for cardio, you can skip rope,
step up and down on a bench or on stairs, or you
can jog in place.
3. Power Cleans or Any Olympic
Lifting In General
If you go to a Bally's,
or another similar type of machine-oriented commercial
gym, and start doing Power Cleans (or any Olympic
lifts) in eyeshot of any of the "supervisors"
or trainers, chances are good that you will be
asked to stop (been there!).
Why? Liability.
You see, if YOU know what you're doing and you
know how to perform the exercise safely, that's
one thing.
But the other person
WATCHING you do that exercise (who is probably
not experienced enough to perform it safely) might
just decide to try it out and hurt themselves.
And, of course,
when that person does drop that barbell on their
foot or wrench their back, they'll sue Bally's,
which is what Bally's is REALLY worried about
here.
The thing is, Power
Cleans and Olympic lifts are GREAT for
building explosive power. They're NOT dangerous
at all when taught correctly and under knowledgeable
supervision. In fact, injury rates in competitive
weightlifting are actually much LESS than even
something as simple as running!
It's all in proper
instruction.
You can get a good
idea of what the Power
Clean looks like here:
4. Backwards Treadmill Running
And Walking For TORCHING The Quads
You may now know
this but the treadmill can actually be a GREAT
muscle-building tool...it's just not immediately
obvious HOW.
You see, if you've
got stubborn quads, part of the problem is probably
blood supply. Most lagging muscle groups correlate
with poor blood supply.
Think of it this
way...which of your bodyparts pump up most easily?
Which ones are the hardest to pump up? Now which
ones develop the most easily? I can tell you with
near certainty, your muscles that pump most easily
also develop most easily.
Back to the treadmill.
Most people face forwards when using the treadmill,
which is fine...even encouraged, if you will.
But turn yourself
around and run or walk on the treamill facing
BACKWARDS (and set the machine to a high incline)
and you've got yourself an exercise that will
quite simply TORCH the quads more than you will
believe.
And in the process
of this torching, you are going RAM more blood
into your quads than you can with pretty much
any other exercise. This dramatic increase in
blood flow will actually help improve overall
circulation to the quads, which will help with
future muscle growth.
So why could this training technique get you kicked
out of a gym?
Well, standing backwards
on a treadmill does increase the overall general
risk of even using a treadmill in the first place.
This is why you MUST hold solidly onto the rails
as you're running or walking on it. You should,
at any given moment, be able to instantly support
yourself on the rails and step off the belt.
But most gyms don't
have this level of trust in their members. Even
a perfectly safe and effective technique like
this may fall within the reasoning of "different
= bad."
Here's the thing...when
you hold the rails solidly while using this technique
(and you can step off at any given moment),
I think it's actually SAFER than running FORWARDS
on the treadmill!
5. Deadlifts
The deadlift is
one of my favorite exercises...there's just something
so satisfying about grabbing a really heavy bar
and lifting it off the ground. There's no middle
ground...you either lift it or you don't. And
the crazy thing is, I HAVE almost gotten kicked
out of more than one gym for doing plain old deadlifts!
The first time was
at a gym in Ft. Lauderdale. I was doing deadlifts,
minding my own business, not slamming the bar
to the ground or dropping it or anything like
that, when the attendant came over and said:
"I'm
sorry. We don't allow deadlifts in this gym. They
make too much noise."
And I actually felt
sorry for the poor guy who had to come up and
tell me this...I could tell by the look in his
face he knew what a stupid rule and stupid reason
it was but he had no choice but to enforce it.
(Apparently the
coffee shop on the first floor below didn't realize
there was a GYM upstairs when they opened up and
would complain constantly about noise...)
So I asked him "How
about if I just do deadlifts but don't set the
weight on the ground in between reps AND I'll
be very gentle when I DO set it down at the end
of the set. You won't hear a peep."
I demonstrated a
set of continuous-tension deadlifts (which are
a GREAT variation of the deadlift, by the way...you
do the exercise but never let the weight plates
touch the ground between reps...VERY tough to
do with heavy weight).
He looked suspicious
but said that was okay and I was able to finish
my training for the day without getting tossed
out.
The second time
was at Gold's Gym in Nassau, Bahamas. On this
occasion, I was doing heavy singles - still not
slamming the weight down or dropping it. Then,
in between sets over the loudspeaker, I hear...
"Please
do not drop weights on the floor...it distracts
other gym members."
So I keep going
thinking, hey, I'm not dropping weights on the
floor. I'm just setting the bar down doing heavy
singles. So I keep going and AGAIN over the loudspeaker
I hear (in an EXTREMELY snotty voice now)...
"Gym users
who drop weights on the floor will be asked to
leave the premises."
Disgusted, I unloaded
the bar, set the safety rails on the nearest rack
to just below lockout position, put 10 plates
on either side then proceeded to bend the ever-lovin'
CR@P out of that bar with the lockout partial
squats from example #1 in this article...
I'm just kidding!
I really only used 9 plates... :)
This
deadlift was done in my home gym, which luckily,
I've
never managed to get myself kicked out of...
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