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So here's the
deal...I've been training more than 20 years
and in that time, I've learned a LOT of
lessons about building muscle and losing
fat.
I have to
say, though, nothing beats the extremely
steep learning curve of my first year of
training. I didn't always make good progress.
In my first year of training, I made a lot
of mistakes and learned a lot of things
the hard way. I also did some things quite
right totally by accident!
If you're
just starting in your training or even if
you've been around the block and curious
to read a different perspective on what
works and what doesn't, I think you'll enjoy
the article.
IN THE BEGINNING...
I wanted nothing
more than to get big and strong. I had been
an endurance athlete all through high school
(cross-country running, speed skating, skiing,
track and field) but wanted to make a change.
I was 17 years old and skinny and jumped into
weight training with both feet. I saved up some
money, bought the Cybergenics supplement program
(mistake #1! - basically that was just an expensive
multivitamin) and started training. It was June
of 1991, just heading into summer.
I had a fairly
good program and I started getting stronger
right away but wasn't really gaining much muscle.
I was, however, getting absolutely ripped to
the bone!
By the end of
the summer, I still weighed about 150 lbs soaking
wet (right where I started 4 months earlier)
but I was probably about 4% bodyfat. When you
can see the division line between your upper
pecs and lower pecs without flexing the chest,
you know you're at low bodyfat!
LESSON #1
I wasn't eating
NEARLY enough or frequently enough and wasn't
getting enough protein. I would rollerblade
or bike to the gym first thing in the morning
and do my workout, eating NOTHING immediately
after training. I would rollerblade home then
eat a bowl of cereal. Then I would go to work
as a lifeguard the rest of the day, eating maybe
once or twice more that day with my largest
meal being dinner.
Just the weight
training itself was helping a lot...the goal
of building a lot of muscle and strength wasn't
being met with the type of training and eating
I was doing.
THEN IT WAS OFF TO UNIVERSITY...
Having just graduated
from high school, I enrolled in university that
fall. I had learned my lesson about not eating
enough and I was determined to make up for it.
And make up for
it I did...with cafeteria food! Some people
drink too much their first year of college -
I ate too much.
Not to knock the
food service there, but I'm just sure they deep-fried
the salad. To show you my knowledge of nutrition
at the time, I would (in the interest of trying
to keep fat levels in my diet down) order fried
eggs and cut out the yolks, eating only the
whites (which were shiny with overused cooking
oil). All this never realizing that I would
have been better off cutting off the whites
and eating the yolks (that's where the fat-emulsifying
lecithin and the majority of the good nutrients
in the egg are!).
Eight months later,
at the end of my first year of school, I was
75 pounds heavier, probably about half of which
was actually muscle mass. At one point, I sat
down and calculated my caloric intake on some
of my "big eating" days and found
it to be almost 9,000 calories per day!
LESSON #2
When I learned
my lesson about eating more to gain muscle,
I didn't learn the lesson that you can eat WAY
too much and you can easily eat the wrong types
of foods. Sure, I got big and strong, but I
probably went from 5% bodyfat to 15 to 20% bodyfat
at the same time. NOT the results I was looking
for! What I needed to do was eat more, certainly,
but also eat a better quality of food.
That, plus I'm
sure all the "Weight Gain 3000" type
of supplements I was taking didn't help matters!
Looking back on the ingredients, it was mostly
cheap milk protein and maltodextrin (a high
glycemic, cheap carb source).
I was so desperate
to gain muscle, I was shoveling in just about
everything I could. While it worked GREAT for
increasing bodyweight, I wasn't after just bodyweight.
TRAINING AT UNIVERSITY...
As I was eating
more at University, I also ramped up my training.
I would try and do more and more sets and use
more and more weight. Because I was eating so
much more, I was still making great progress!
Plus, being then 18 years old, I could beat
the tar out of myself in the gym and still recover
from it pretty much without a problem.
I was seeing increases
in strength and bodyweight on almost a daily
basis.
But then something
happened...something that opened up my eyes...one
workout I was in the gym for almost 2 and
a half hours and it wasn't even that great
of a workout. Something was wrong with the picture.
LESSON #3
I was training
WAY too long and with too many sets. I was still
making progress but only because I was eating
so much. Little did I know, I could actually
make BETTER progress by cutting my training
time WAY down. From that day on, I always stopped
my workouts at the 1 hour mark, no matter where
I was at in the program.
And it did wonders
for my results. I think the week after I started
cutting back, my strength shot up and my bodyweight
went up 10 pounds. THAT opened my eyes...10
lbs in a week was a pretty darn good result.
In the Spring
Semester, I tried a program that, if you've
been training awhile, may be familiar with:
Serious Growth by Leo Costa. At that point,
I started training twice a day, six days a week,
but only 45 minutes per session, at the most.
Still eating a ton of food every day, I made
excellent progress with this system and learned
about the benefits of keeping your eyes on (and
cycling) training volume.
BUT I TOTALLY NEGLECTED CARDIO
TRAINING...
At the start of
the eight months when I was furiously trying
to increase my bodyweight, I had read that when
trying to gain muscle, you should reduce cardio
training. The aerobic work could burn up calories
that could be used by the body for building
muscle and might interfere physiologically with
the muscle-building process.
Well, I took that
a little too far and cut cardio training completely
out. My thought was, I was doing cardio in the
summer (blading to the gym and back) and didn't
gain any muscle. When I was endurance training,
I didn't gain any muscle. So maybe cutting it
out was necessary. So I didn't even hardly walk
up flights of stairs unless I had to.
LESSON #4
Too much cardio
training (especially long-duration cardio training)
CAN interfere with muscle growth, sure, but
as I've learned since that time, SOME cardio
training should always be a part of any mass-building
program. The key is to do the RIGHT kind of
cardio training (i.e. interval training, which
can actually help the muscle-building process).
Let me put it
this way, it's nice to be big and strong but
when you're big and fat and strong and lose
your breath going up a flight of stairs, you're
not exactly at the pinnacle of health.
Plus, think of
it is this way...you NEED good cardiovascular
functioning when training for muscle mass. What
pumps blood and nutrients to the muscles? What
helps you recover faster in between sets?
Cardio and muscle-building
are not mutually exclusive concepts and it's
important to maintain some level of cardio conditioning
even when you're focused on muscle and strength.
WHAT HAPPENED AT THE END OF
THE SCHOOL YEAR?
Well, at that
point, being big and strong but big and fat,
I decided I needed to burn off of the excess
(the old bulk-and-cut concept). But then I made
a HUGE mistake. I went back to similar habits
that got me lean the previous summer. I didn't
eat nearly enough to support the muscle mass
that I had built and I didn't eat enough protein.
I also started
running again, which at this point having not
done any cardio training for 8 months, was a
HARD lesson to learn. Imagine going from being
a 150 lb cross-country runner who could do 5
km in about 15 minutes to being a 220 lb weightlifter
who couldn't even jog slowly for more than 3
minutes straight!
Now, even though
I was TRYING to do long-duration cardio, it
actually resembled interval training more than
anything because I had to stop and walk every
few minutes. As I got in better cardio shape,
I started running longer distances straight
through (I would have been better off sticking
with the intervals - little did I know!).
And I did lose
weight and did lose some fat but I lost a LOT
of muscle along with it. Nothing is more depressing
than losing what you've worked so hard to build.
I didn't lose all of my muscle and strength
but it was enough to set me back.
LESSON #5
What you should
eat and how you should train are actually fairly
similar when you're trying to build muscle or
burn fat. The main differences lie in how much
you're eating and training variables such as
rest periods and cardio frequency. You still
need to eat a lot of protein regardless of your
goals and you still need to lift heavy, even
when on a fat loss program (it's how you tell
your body that it needs to hold onto muscle).
Increasing cardio
frequency, eating fewer calories and decreasing
rest periods in between sets will get the fat
burning process moving in the right direction.
Don't starve yourself or go nuts by dramatically
increasing your training workload.
SO WHAT HAPPENED IN MY SECOND
YEAR OF TRAINING?
That's a story
for another day...in the meantime, if you're
interested in building muscle and doing it RIGHT
(without making all the mistakes I made above),
I want to refer you to a good friend of mine,
Jason Ferruggia.
I've known Jay
for a few years now and I'm always impressed
with his level of knowledge of training for
strength and mass. The dude knows EXACTLY
what he's doing in that department and I
give him my highest recommendation. Our philosophies
match up almost exactly and you won't go wrong
with his program.
He can absolutely
help you build MASSIVE muscle and strength very
fast and very effectively.
He's got his Muscle
Gaining Secrets program on sale right now
(Independence Day Sale), for the next two days
til Saturday at noon EST, so definitely check
it out now!
Click
here to learn Jason Ferruggia's best
muscle-building info...get Muscle Gaining
Secrets on Sale now!

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