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	<title>AtoZfitness Article Blog &#187; The Musclehead</title>
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		<title>The two keys of muscle building</title>
		<link>http://atozfitness.com/wordpress/2009/the-two-keys-of-muscle-building/</link>
		<comments>http://atozfitness.com/wordpress/2009/the-two-keys-of-muscle-building/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Jun 2009 10:27:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>lewis</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The Musclehead]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[musclehead workout planner key]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[muscleheadworkoutplanner]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Intensity = Immensity

This is the first thing I want to mention in here because it's
absolutely crucial to muscle building. It also builds on what you
have already learnt about the body's response to muscular stress.

If you think back, you'll remember that the body builds muscle due
to increased periodic stress. So it makes sense that to build
maximum muscle, you need to stress your muscles out as much as
possible while you're in the gym. ]]></description>
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<p align="center"><strong>   						 						<font face="Verdana" size="2"> 						<a href="http://atozfitness.com/wordpress/go.php?http://www.AtoZfitness.com" title="(3618 hits)">www.AtoZfitness.com</a>  						<br />
                        Your Internet  						Fitness Resource Site<br />
                        </font></strong><font face="Verdana" size="2">- AtoZfitness  						Announcement -<br />
                        </font><font face="Verdana"><strong>The two keys of muscle building</strong></font></p>
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<div align="left"><font face="Verdana"> 																By: The  																Musclehead<br />
                                    </font> 																<font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"> 																<a href="http://atozfitness.com/wordpress/go.php?http://www.atozfitness.com/recommends/musclehead.html" target="_new" title="(81 hits)"> 																http://www.atozfitness.com/recommends/musclehead.html 																</a></font> 																<font face="Verdana">&nbsp; 																</font></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif;"> 																Intensity =  																Immensity</p>
<p>                                    This is the  																first thing I  																want to mention  																in here because  																it&#8217;s<br />
                                    absolutely  																crucial to  																muscle building.  																It also builds  																on what you<br />
                                    have already  																learnt about the  																body&#8217;s response  																to muscular  																stress. </p>
<p>                                    If you think  																back, you&#8217;ll  																remember that  																the body builds  																muscle due<br />
                                    to increased  																periodic stress.  																So it makes  																sense that to  																build<br />
                                    maximum muscle,  																you need to  																stress your  																muscles out as  																much as<br />
                                    possible while  																you&#8217;re in the  																gym. </p>
<p>                                    This means that  																you need to lift  																heavy. I don&#8217;t  																care if you&#8217;ve<br />
                                    heard that low  																weight, high  																reps is the way  																to go. Use your  																brain,<br />
                                    think back to  																the reason why  																muscle grows in  																the first place.  																I&#8217;m<br />
                                    sure you&#8217;ll see  																the light. </p>
<p>                                    Now, heavy is a  																relative word.  																What is heavy to  																me may not be  																heavy<br />
                                    to you. So what  																do I really mean  																when I say you  																need to life<br />
                                    &quot;heavy&quot;? Well,  																basically, you  																need to lift a  																weight that you  																can&#8217;t<br />
                                    perform more  																than 8 or so  																repetitions  																with.&nbsp; I&#8217;ll go  																into depth in<br />
                                    a moment, but  																for the moment,  																just accept that  																if you can lift  																a<br />
                                    weight more than  																8 times, you&#8217;re  																not lifting  																heavy enough. 																</p>
<p>                                    It should also  																mean that by the  																end of your last  																set, you should<br />
                                    have lifted to  																failure. This  																means that no  																matter how hard  																you try,<br />
                                    you simply  																cannot lift the  																weight again. If  																need be, use a  																spotter.</p>
<p>                                    This is someone  																who is there to  																help you with  																the final couple  																of<br />
                                    reps. It is  																especially  																useful for  																exercises that  																could result in<br />
                                    injury if you  																didn&#8217;t have a  																spotter, such as  																the bench press.  																Just<br />
                                    make sure the  																spotter only  																helps you when  																you really need  																it, he&#8217;s<br />
                                    not there to get  																a workout while  																you&#8217;re lifting. 																</p>
<p>                                    I like to use  																2-3 sets because  																I believe it  																gives your  																muscles<br />
                                    enough time  																under stress.  																Some people say  																1 set is enough  																and I<br />
                                    think 1 set is  																definitely  																better than 10,  																but I still say  																2-3 is<br />
                                    the optimum  																amount of sets.  																By the last  																couple of reps  																of your last<br />
                                    set, you should  																be really  																struggling to  																lift the weight  																on your own.</p>
<p>                                    Also, intensity  																means that you  																are lifting with  																&quot;high&quot; reps. I<br />
                                    don&#8217;t mean you  																grab a 2lb  																dumbbell and do  																500 reps with  																it, that&#8217;s<br />
                                    not going to  																stress you out  																at all. It will  																make you tired  																and give<br />
                                    you a great  																burn, but that&#8217;s  																about it. </p>
<p>                                    What I mean by  																high is between  																6-8 reps.  																Performing 1-4  																reps of an<br />
                                    exercise is a  																great way to  																increase your  																strength (more  																on that in<br />
                                    a minute) but  																it&#8217;s not enough  																to stress your  																muscles out. 2-3  																sets<br />
                                    of 6-8  																repetitions is  																just enough time  																under stress for  																your<br />
                                    muscles to get  																stressed out  																completely,  																without going  																completely<br />
                                    stupid and end  																up needing to be  																wheeled out of  																the gym on a  																trolley. </p>
<p>                                    Progression</p>
<p>                                    This is the next  																point I want to  																strongly get  																across to you.  																While<br />
                                    intensity is  																extremely  																important, it&#8217;s  																easy to forget  																something<br />
                                    that&#8217;s pretty  																simple. As you  																lift the weights  																and your body  																adapts<br />
                                    itself to the  																new situation,  																you&#8217;ll find  																yourself  																becoming  																stronger. </p>
<p>                                    As you become  																stronger, what  																was once an  																intense workout  																for you<br />
                                    will become an  																easy workout for  																you. So it is  																key that you<br />
                                    continually  																progress. If you  																want to hit a  																plateau and stay  																there,<br />
                                    fine, don&#8217;t lift  																any harder. But  																if you want to  																smash your  																plateau<br />
                                    and build more  																muscle than ever  																before, you are  																going to need to<br />
                                    focus on this  																word:  																progression. <br />
                                    &nbsp; &nbsp;<br />
                                    You need to be  																able to go into  																the gym and do  																more work than  																you<br />
                                    did the last  																time. This  																doesn&#8217;t mean you  																drop the weight  																and up the<br />
                                    reps, it just  																means you either  																do 1 more rep  																using the same  																weight,<br />
                                    or you increase  																the weight. </p>
<p>                                    It doesn&#8217;t  																matter how much  																you increase the  																weight by, over  																time,<br />
                                    it will really  																begin to add up.  																This is also  																going to help  																you<br />
                                    naturally build  																up your  																strength, while  																still keeping  																the goal of<br />
                                    muscle size as a  																priority. </p>
<p>                                    There&#8217;s a  																popular Japanese  																word that gets  																around a lot in  																corporate<br />
                                    circles. It&#8217;s  																&quot;kaizen&quot;.  																Basically, what  																this principle  																is all about<br />
                                    is just  																improving each  																day. Proponents  																of kaizen say  																that if you<br />
                                    can just improve  																a tiny little  																bit each day,  																the company will<br />
                                    improve greatly  																over time. </p>
<p>                                    And so it is  																with building  																muscle. It  																doesn&#8217;t matter  																if you can&#8217;t<br />
                                    increase your  																lifts by 5kg  																every day, as  																long as you just  																improve<br />
                                    by the smallest  																of margins. </p>
<p>                                    This is how I  																usually tell  																people to do it.  																Start lifting a  																weight<br />
                                    that causes you  																to fail on your  																2nd or 3rd set  																of 6 reps.</p>
<p>                                    Eventually, you  																will be able to  																do 7 reps, then  																8. When you get  																to<br />
                                    this point, I  																suggest  																increasing the  																weight to a  																number that only<br />
                                    allows you to  																lift for 6 reps  																again. </p>
<p>                                    Then you just  																repeat the  																cycle. When you  																hit 8 reps for  																the first<br />
                                    time, up the  																weight the next  																time you perform  																the exercise.  																Pretty<br />
                                    simple huh?  																While it is a  																simple concept,  																I can&#8217;t stress  																it&#8217;s<br />
                                    importance  																enough, so make  																sure you heed  																this advice. </p>
<p>                                    I hope you got  																something out of  																that Lewis, if  																you have<br />
                                    any questions  																for me, just  																send over an  																email and I&#8217;ll  																do my<br />
                                    best to answer  																it in a future  																newsletter. </p>
<p>                                    Lift hard and  																have fun!</span></p>
<p align="center" class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>
<p align="center" class="style27">&quot;Could it really  																be <em>THIS EASY 																</em>to gain 10,  																20, even 30  																pounds of solid,  																flab-free muscle  																by spending less  																than 8 minutes  																in the gym per  																day?&quot;<br />
                                    <img height="261" width="152" border="0" alt="" src="http://www.themusclehead.com/newmuscle/img/booksm.jpg" /></p>
<p align="center" class="style25">I GUARANTEE that  																it is, even if  																you have the  																worst genetics  																in the world.  																And you won&#8217;t  																even have to  																spend a cent on  																supplements&#8230;</p>
<p align="center" class="style25"><a target="_blank" href="http://atozfitness.com/wordpress/go.php?http://www.atozfitness.com/recommends/musclehead.html" title="(81 hits)"> 																Click-Here for  																more details.</a></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif;"> 																<br />
                                    </span> 																<font face="Verdana" size="2"> 																<span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial,sans-serif;">==========================================<br />
                                    </span> 																</font> 																<font face="Arial"> 																<span lang="EN-CA" style="font-family: Verdana;"> 																Sarah, CPT</span></font><font face="Verdana" size="2"><br />
                                    </font> 																<font face="Verdana">Lewis, Publisher<font color="#000080"><br />
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                                    Follow me on Twitter for updates from my  										blog&#8230;.<br />
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                                    </name>If you have any questions,  					you can contact me  										sending an    <br />
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