- What is more, here you can find the workout programs that help you to gain weight. In combination with the right diet, it should give the super-fast and effective result. MyFitnessPal can be synchronized with more than 350 other devices, including Apple Watch, which makes it even more convenient in usage.
- Here are some interesting and effective high intensity interval training workouts for men to lose weight, gain lean muscle and enjoy a better overall health. HIIT Workout 1 This workout will certainly make you push your body hard and stretch the limits.
- Free Weight Workout Routines with Compound Movements Compound movement exercises simply mean that you are training more than one muscle group at a time. These can only be completed through free weight workout routines I cannot think of one machine that could offer a solid compound movement exercise.
- Men's Free Weight Workout Program
- Download Weight Gaining Workout Program Men Free Online
- Best Free Weights Workout Men
- Weight Gaining Workout Plan
- Free Weights Workout Men
The three best weight training programs for men are programs that are meant to unite these parts of the body in exercise to make sure that the whole body develops as a whole unit. Whether the training program.
*UPDATE* One of the first articles I wrote for this website years ago was a complete walk-through of my weight training program at the time. It included the full details of how that weight training program was set up, what muscle groups were trained on what days, what exercises were done for how many sets and reps, and why I planned each factor the way I did.
Now, years later, I no longer use that workout routine (for reasons I’ll explain at the end of this article), but I didn’t want to just remove it and pretend it never existed. So instead, here it is in its entirety.
While I wouldn’t use it today, there is still plenty of really useful information in here, and at the end I’ll explain exactly what I’ve changed and why I’ve changed along with exactly what guidelines my current weight training program follows.
So, with that out of the way, here’s a full break down of a workout routine I was using nearly 10 years ago… *END OF UPDATE*
Below you’ll find a basic overview of what my current weight training program is. After that, I’m going to take you through each day, each muscle group, and each exercise to explain every single aspect of the workout.
I’m not showing this to you as if it were the “Greatest Workout Program In The World.” It’s just what I do. Feel free to use it as is, or feel free to change things around to suit your own preferences. I’m not trying to sell it to you. You don’t have to use it. It’s just an example of a workout routine based on 3 highly important weight training principles… compound exercises, rest and progression.
My Weight Training Program
Monday: Chest and Triceps
Flat Bench Press – 4 sets
Incline Dumbbell Press – 3 sets
Dumbbell Flyes – 2 sets
Dips – 3 sets
Cable Press Downs – 2 sets
Tuesday: Back and Biceps
Pull Ups – 4 sets
Bent Over Barbell Row – 3 sets
Seated Cable Row – 3 sets
Barbell Curls – 3 sets
Seated Dumbbell Curls – 2 sets
Wednesday: OFF
Thursday: Shoulders, Traps and Abs
Seated Barbell Press – 4 sets
Single-Arm Lateral Raises – 3 sets
Barbell Shrugs – 4 sets
Various Weighted Crunches and Hanging Leg Raises
Friday: Legs
Squats – 4 sets
Leg Press – 3 sets
Stiff Legged Deadlifts – 3 sets
Leg Curls – 2 sets
Standing Calf Raises – 5 sets
Saturday/Sunday: OFF
As you can see, this routine isn’t that groundbreaking. It’s 4 days on and 3 days off, and it’s chest and triceps together, back and biceps together, and then one day for shoulders (and traps/abs) and one day for legs. There are probably a lot of similar looking routines out there, and with good reason.
Simple is what works. Like I said before, the only real keys to an effective weight training program are the right exercises, the right amount of rest/recovery, and the constant push towards progressing.
Now that you have an idea of what my routine looks like, let’s go through it all from top to bottom so I can hopefully answer any possible questions you have now, or may have in the future.
Monday: Chest and Triceps
Chest
My chest workout starts with, big surprise, the bench press. It seems most people’s weight training program begins with chest, and that chest workout begins with the bench press. This is why Monday is usually the most crowded bench press day in most gyms. I start with 2 warm-up sets, and then I do my 4 real work sets.
The first work set can almost be considered somewhat of a warm-up still, because I am using a weight I can probably do 12 reps with, but I stop at 10. The second set I increase the weight and try to get 10 reps, and here 10 reps is really all I can do. The same goes for the third set, when I increase the weight and go for 8 reps. And just like the others, the fourth set I increase the weight again and go for 6 reps.
Because I’m going to failure or pretty near to failure on those last 3 sets, I always have someone spot me. For anyone wondering, “failure” is when you are at the point where you absolutely can’t do another rep. When this happens during something like bicep curls, there’s very little to worry about. When it happens during the bench press, you can, ya know, kill yourself.
So, the SOWTTOTD (Super-Obvious-Weight-Training-Tip-Of-The-Day) is… be sure to have someone spot you if you think there is even the slightest chance you’re going to need it.
Back to my bench press routine. My goal here is to, while increasing the weight each set, end up doing reps of 10, 10, 8, 6. Sometimes I get something more like 9, 8, 6, 3 or 10, 9, 7, 4. However, my goal is to get an exact 10 10 8 6. I work as hard as I can to reach those reps. Sometimes it takes a week, sometimes a month, sometimes more. But, when I finally reach that goal, it means it’s time for me to increase the weight I’m lifting on each set.
When this time comes, I usually increase each set by 5 pounds. Once I do that, I just start this whole cycle all over again and basically just work my ass off to get 10, 10, 8, 6 with these new heavier weights. Once I do that, I increase it all over again.
Remember when I mentioned “progression” as one of the keys to an effective weight training program? Well, what I just described above is exactly that. Whether it’s 1 extra rep, or 5 extra pounds, it’s that type of weight training progression that builds muscle. This is pretty much what I do with every exercise (although the number of sets/reps may be different). I’m mentioning that so I don’t have to repeat this over and over again for each exercise.
From there I move on to 3 sets of incline dumbbell presses. For my chest workout, I like to do something flat, something inclined, and something that isn’t a press. For incline dumbbell presses, I personally prefer using a lower incline than is typically used. Since the first time I did them, I always found the typical incline bench setting to be too high. My shoulders always felt like they were brought into the exercise a little too much. Because of this, I usually use the bench setting one notch below that. Again, this is just a personal preference.
I’ll usually try for reps of 10 8 6. Now would probably also be a good time to mention the recurrence of the numbers 10, 8 and 6. You’ll notice me using those specific numbers when talking about reps for basically every exercise. And it’s not just me either, you’ll see these same 3 numbers show up in other workout routines as well. The reason is not because they are magical weight training program numbers.
It’s just that a person looking to increase muscle would ideally want to stay within the 6-10 rep range most of the time. Most people, including myself, prefer aiming for the even numbers, which would of course be 10, 8 and 6. Is that any better than making your goal to reach reps of 11, 9, and 7? Or 9, 7, and 5? No, it’s not.
Remember, the key here is progression. Whether your goal is to get reps of 10, 8, 6 or get reps of 11, 9, 7 or get reps of 11, 8, 5… it really doesn’t matter. What does matter is progression. That should be the main goal of your weight training program. Yes, staying around the 6-10 rep range (or even 4-12) is a good idea, but progression is the key.
My chest workout ends with 2 sets of dumbbell flyes. Not much else to say about that.
Triceps
Now I start triceps, which are already pretty warmed up and ready to go from my chest workout. Since all pressing exercises use the triceps secondarily, it’s almost like my triceps workout started during my first set of bench pressing. But, my first real direct triceps exercise is dips, which are probably my favorite triceps exercise of them all. These are parallel bar dips, by the way. Not bench dips.
I start off with 1 set of just my own body weight, and then I add weight to both of the next 2 sets. You can add weight to dips by using a dip belt, or by holding a dumbbell between your feet. I aim for reps of 10, 8, 6.
Then I end my triceps workout (and this workout as a whole) with single-arm reverse grip (underhand) cable press downs. I do 2 sets and aim for reps of 8, 6. Reverse grip isn’t better than the regular grip, regular grip isn’t better than reverse grip, single arm isn’t better than both arms, etc. It’s simply just another way of doing this exercise. Next time I change my weight training program around I’ll probably switch back to using the regular grip and both arms.
The sole reason? It’s just a another way of doing it. Don’t put too much thought into small things like which grip is better. All focus should be on progression. I’ll repeat this 1000 times, the key to an effective weight training program is progression… not specific grips.
And that’s the end of my chest and triceps workout. At this point I go down to the gym locker room, get out my bag, drink my post workout shake and go home.
Tuesday: Back and Biceps
Back
My back workout starts with what is probably my all-time favorite weight training exercise of any muscle group… pull ups. I don’t care if you bench press a million pounds, it wouldn’t impress me at all. What would however is seeing how many pull ups you can do and/or how much additional weight you can add to them. I use a slightly wider than shoulder width grip with my palms facing away (forward). This is my favorite grip, and it’s also probably the grip that makes pull ups the hardest. But, this is a good thing.
The reason is that this grip takes your biceps out of the exercise more so than using an underhand (palms facing you) grip, which puts your biceps in their strongest position. Pull ups are a back exercise. Your goal should be to use your lats to pull. If your biceps are in their strongest position, you will be more likely to pull with your biceps instead of your lats. I do however use a variety of different grips at times (and no grip is “bad” to use, they’re all fine), but this grip is the one I use most often.
I start off with 1 warm-up set of just my body weight, and then I add additional weight to the next 3 sets and go for reps of 10, 8, 6. Just like dips, you can add weight by using a dip/pull-up belt or by holding a dumbbell between your feet. The lat pull down machine is a fine exercise and I used it all the time (and still occasionally do), but once I started doing pull ups, it was like a whole other world.
Strength and muscle wise, I credit pull ups a great deal. If you can’t do any… make it your goal to be able to. For detailed information on how to increase how many pull ups you can do, read this: Do More Pull Ups.
After that, I move on to the bent over barbell row. I use an overhand grip and bend over so that my upper body is a little bit above being parallel to the floor. I do 3 sets and try for reps of 10, 8, 6. From there I move on to the seated cable row and go for 3 sets of 10, 8, 6 as well. One of the biggest weight training problems people tend to have in regards to their back workout is using their biceps instead of or just more so than their back. The key is to imagine you are trying to pull your elbows back rather than trying to pull the weight in your hands towards you.
Biceps
Then I move on to biceps. Just like my triceps feel after my chest workout, my biceps are pretty warmed up and ready to go by now. One preference I have for biceps (and triceps as well) is that I like to do something two-handed and then something one-handed. Any weight training program I create will almost always abide by that. There is no scientific reason for it, it’s just what I like to do.
The first bicep exercise is just plain and simple standing barbell curls. I do 3 sets and aim for reps of 10, 8, 6. After that is 2 sets of seated dumbbell curls. I try for reps of 8 and 6. Not much to say about them, other than no part of your body should move during any type of curl except for the lower half of your arm (and the upper arm may just slightly come forward). If you can’t do curls while keeping your body still, you’re using too much weight and wasting your time.
And that’s the end of my back and biceps workout. I drink my post workout shake and go home.
Wednesday: OFF
Wednesday is one of the 3 days of the week I don’t go to the gym. If I was doing any direct cardio workouts at the time (I’m currently not), Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday (my 3 off days) would be the days I would do them. If you are doing both cardio and weight training, I would recommend doing them on separate days if you can. If you can’t, do the weight training first, then the cardio.
Thursday: Shoulders, Traps and Abs
Shoulders
My shoulder workout starts with the seated barbell press. I do it behind the head. (If you have any type of shoulder problems, you would probably be better off doing them in front of the head.) My reasons for doing them behind the head is that it has always felt like a more comfortable and natural movement behind my head than in front of it. It’s also a more strict way of doing it.
It’s very rare that I see someone doing this exercise in front of their head and not cheating by leaning back and getting into an almost incline bench press position. If you tried to cheat and lean back when doing this exercise behind your head, you would hit yourself in the head. It pretty much forces good form in this position. I do 4 sets and aim for reps of 10, 10, 8, 6.
From there I move on to single-arm lateral raises. Why one arm at a time? It’s just another way of doing it. Any weight training program I’ve used that included lateral raises has always been the common both-arms-at-a-time way. One day the dumbbells I needed were being used, and there was only 1 available. Instead of waiting, I just did them single-arm. Strangely enough, I actually prefer them single-arm now. I do 3 sets and aim for reps of 10, 8, 6.
Traps
From there I move on to barbell shrugs. Shrugs are for the traps (trapezius muscles), which are those muscles located on the left and right side of your neck. I’m only mentioning this because I occasionally get emails from people who think I’m misspelling triceps when I write traps. Anyway, most weight training routines have traps on either shoulder day or back day. I’ve tried doing shrugs on back day, but after exercises like weighted pull-ups and rows, it’s almost impossible to have enough grip strength left to do shrugs.
That’s why all weight training routines created by me have traps done on shoulder day. I do 4 sets and aim for reps of 10, 10, 8, 6.
Abs
This workout ends with abs. My ab workout isn’t very fancy, and it also changes a lot of the time because I don’t really have a set ab routine. Let me explain. See, I park in the parking lot outside of my gym. This is one of those “put your quarters in the meter” parking lots. So, I make sure I put enough money in to have more than enough time to do shoulders and traps, and then whatever amount of time is left until my meter expires is… my ab workout.
Sometimes it’s 20 minutes, sometimes 15, sometimes 10. This is also the area of my gym that is most crowded. Why? Because people spend insane amounts of time working their abs. Why? Because people are stupid.
Getting to the workout, I just do a mixture of different types of weighted crunches, hanging leg raises, side bends and other similar stuff. For the weighted crunches I hold a dumbbell on my chest, by the way. That’s really it. It’s enough to make my abs strong and keep them that way. And, as we all should know by now (although the people in my gym obviously don’t) the key to actually seeing your abs and losing the fat from your stomach and having “sexy 6 pack abs” is a proper diet and/or cardio exercise.
If you didn’t know that, or you forgot, read these: spot reduction, ab workouts and my Ab Lounge review.
After that, I’m done. I have my post workout meal and go home.
Friday: Legs
Quads
Welcome to leg day. Today (the day I’m writing this) was actually leg day, so I apologize in advance if some description is lacking. Just the idea of reliving my leg workout a few hours after I did it makes me want to take a nap. Anyway, this workout starts with what is not only the king of leg exercises, but what may also be the king of all weight training exercises in general… squats.
So many different muscles on so many different parts of the body come into play during squats. There is no exercise that can replace the effect that squats have on your body as a whole. On each rep, I go down just slightly below the point where my hamstrings are parallel to the floor. I do 4 sets and aim for reps of 10, 10, 8, 6.
Next up is the leg press, which luckily for me is located directly next to the squat rack. Why is that lucky? Because after squats, the less walking I have to do, the better. I do 3 sets, and aim for reps of 10, 8, 6.
Hamstrings
From there I move on to hamstrings, which starts with stiff legged deadlifts. The worst part about this exercise is the fact that the area I do it in is located all the way on the other side of the room… and down 6 stairs! At this point, just walking to this area is a workout in itself. For stiff legged deadlifts, I lower myself until the point where my upper body is parallel to the floor. I never go lower than that. I do 3 sets and aim for 10, 8, 6.
From there I move on to lying leg curls. Guess where this machine is located? Yup, back up the 6 stairs. Whoever designed my gym is an idiot. I do 2 sets and aim for reps of 8, 6.
Calves
Then comes calves, which are easily my least favorite muscle to work. Go up on your toes, go down on your toes, go up on your toes, go down on your toes. The whole movement is like 3 inches. Just the thought of it bores me. But, as boring as it is, it still needs to get done, and it still needs my full intensity and focus. I have to admit though, the hardest part of my gym week is getting “focused” and “intense” for a set of calf raises.
I do them very slow and very controlled and make sure to hold it and squeeze at the top for an extra second. I do 5 sets and aim for reps of 10, 10, 10, 8, 6.
And then… get this… I have walk down two flights of stairs to get to the locker room to get my stuff. Once I actually (and just barely) make it there, I’ll drink my post workout shake and go home.
Update: Why I Stopped Using This Workout (& What I Do Instead)
Like I said way back at the beginning, this article was originally written by me nearly 10 years ago and contains the details of a weight training program that I no longer use. Just re-reading this is a damn good reminder of how far I’ve come with my own results and knowledge over the last decade.
I remember thinking I was pretty smart then, and while I was doing quite a bit right, I was also doing quite a bit wrong. In fact, there’s a lot about this workout routine that I would NEVER use or recommend to anyone anymore. Why? Well…
Here are the biggest problems that I see…
- The workout frequency sucks. As my article about how often to workout per week explains, training each muscle group once per week like I was doing is the least effective way to train. Did it work for me at the time? Yeah, to some degree. But did increasing the frequency to twice per week (like I recommend now) improve my results? HELL YES!
- My stupid 10, 8, 6 pyramid. In most of my original weight training programs, I used to increase the weight each set and do less reps. But about 6-8 years ago, I stopped doing that for good. It’s just dumb to start with your lightest weight and get more and more fatigued as the weight gets heavier and heavier. It’s ass-backwards. Now I only either start with my heaviest weights first (after a proper warmup) and reduce the weight each set while the reps increase (a reverse pyramid) or stay the same. Or, I just do straight sets, which means the same weight for the same amount of reps each set. This is all I recommend to others, too.
- Shoulder day. This one makes me literally laugh out loud now. I had a day of nothing but shoulders and little nonsense like abs and shrugs? WTF? A total waste of a day that would have made more sense to be paired with chest/triceps for a legit “push” day (or maybe even added on to legs). Either way, kinda stupid.
- Behind-the-neck-pressing. Funny I mention that you should avoid doing shoulder presses behind the neck if you have pre-existing shoulder injuries. I didn’t at the time, but I did soon after. I now avoid doing any pressing or pull downs behind the neck, and recommend most people do the same.
There’s maybe a handful of other smaller less important issues (like doing 6 reps on exercises like lateral raises… those belong in the 10-15 range), but those are the main problems I see looking back at it. However, it’s not all bad. There’s a few things I still like a lot. For example…
Here’s what I still like 10 years later…
- Progression! There’s a reason this weight training program worked at least somewhat well for me back then, and progression is it. All other factors aside, I had a plan for making progress and increasing the reps I was doing and increasing the weight I was lifting. This is always the key to every workout routine, and I got that part right.
- Exercise selection. All of the most effective compound exercises are there in some form (bench press, rows, pull-ups, overhead press, squats, deadlifts) and there’s only a small secondary focus on isolation exercises like curls and lateral raises. Pretty good.
- Post workout nutrition. I have no idea what it was back then, but I was having some sort of post workout meal. Another plus.
Here’s what I do NOW…
The current weight training program I use is based around all of the guidelines I explain in the workout routines article. Check it out to see what I mean.
Or better yet, if you’d like to actually see (and use) the specific workout itself along with the diet plan and overall system I’ve used to help countless men and women build muscle, lose fat and completely transform their bodies, now you can.
For instant access to all of this and more, check out The Ultimate Fat Loss & Muscle Building Guide.
2.1 Eight “GET BIG” Exercises
3.1Nalewanyj Tip: The Rep Range “Sweet Spot”
7.1 Intensity 7.2 Weight Training Routine Methods 7.3 Split Weight Training Routines 7.4 Weight Training Tempo 7.5 Change 7.6 Warming Up and Stretching 7.7 What About Cardio and Abs?
It isn’t enough to just walk into a gym and throw around some weights, not if you want to be successful in short order.
You must instead have a weight training program built to achieve your specific goal –
This page works through the components that go into programs that demand muscle growth. Make each of these components strong within your program and you will get the muscle building results you are after.
The most common mistake beginner and intermediate mass gain trainers make is an over-emphasis on their weight training and an under-emphasis on their eating and rest.
Don’t be that guy.
- Diet to supply the body with the raw materials it needs to build muscle.
- Provide the body enough rest time with which to repair and rebuild muscle.
The above understood, lets get into training…
Weight Training Philosophies
You will not need to venture far in the bodybuilding world before coming across someone willing to cage-fight to defend his training philosophy. The way he trains is the end-all. It is the hands down best way to work out all the time, with no exceptions.
When you meet the guy who can’t see beyond his own training philosophy, save yourself the grief… Smile politely. Walk away hurriedly.
HIT – HIT, an acronym for High Intensity Training, calls for 1-3 workouts a week with full body single-set routines. These are short but intense workouts. The basic prescription is 8-12 reps per set always done to failure. The goal is to show an increase in strength in each and every workout. So, with each successive workout, you should either look to perform more reps with the same weight or the same number of reps with a greater weight.
Periodization – Weight training programs based on this philosophy approach progressive overload in a different way. In a periodization program you may do light training for three weeks, followed by medium training for a few weeks and then do heavy training for the final cycle. Emphasis is not placed on achieving gains in every workout but rather on the cumulative gains after all phases. The basic idea is to change intensity and volume levels to prevent overtraining.
The basic difference is that HIT recommends always doing high intensity workouts while periodization advocates cycling your intensity.
Muscle Building Exercises
There are two basic types of weight training exercises:
Compound exercises are multiple-joint movements that use multiple muscle groups. The bench press for the upper body and the squat for the lower body are two of the most important. Isolated exercises are single-joint movements that target a single muscle group. Examples include biceps curls and dumbbell flyes.
Compounds allow you to stimulate the most muscle fibers in the least amount of time. In other words, they give you the most bang for the buck.
Isolated exercises can also be an important part of a program. They can be used to hit muscle groups not adequately covered by compound exercises. Or to give extra attention to a lagging body part.
Eight “GET BIG” Exercises
Men's Free Weight Workout Program
You don’t need an advanced degree in exercise science to figure out the above exercises. They aren’t fancy or complicated, none are helped with half-drunk, late-night infomercial purchases.
It isn’t built wasting time trying to hit every single muscle from every single angle. It isn’t built with secret exercises heavily-guarded by IFBB members.
If some crazy scenario forced you onto a deserted island where you could take only 8 exercises… Taking the “
Check the following page for the best muscle building exercises complete with illustrations…
The Best Sets and Reps
# of repsPrimary ObjectiveHeavy1-6StrengthMedium7-12Muscle Building (Bodybuilding)Light13+Fitness, EnduranceThe numbers in the above table are general ranges. They are based on going to fatigue or failure. For an 8 rep set, for example, the weight used would result in the physical inability to perform another rep or two due to muscle exhaustion.
For bodybuilding goals (muscle size), weight training programs should concentrate on medium sets. This is where maximum hypertrophy (muscle growth) will occur.
While the emphasis for muscle building should be in the 7-12 rep range, it isn’t necessarily wise to use these rep ranges exclusively.Working heavy and light set routines into your programs can help keep your muscles responsive and growing. This “change-of-pace” can help make follow-up medium set routines more effective (a periodization technique). It can also help you break past stubborn plateaus.
Another factor to keep in mind is that different muscle groups respond differently to different rep ranges.
For example, the calves and abdominals often respond best to higher repetitions.
Nalewanyj Tip: The Rep Range “Sweet Spot”
Nalewanyj Tip: The Rep Range “Sweet Spot”
Sean Nalewanyj keeps his training clients on a heavy to medium load sets on most exercises. The “sweet spot” he recommends to get the greatest strength and muscle gains is 5-7 reps.
To follow this, use a load that brings you 1-2 reps short of failure between 5-7 completed reps.In
Low-rep sets just need the focus to put forth a short burst of intense effort. This can help keep your workout moving.
Progressive Overload: The Key To Gains
Progressive overload is a simple concept. It means that with each successive workout you increase the demands placed on the muscles.
- Increasing the amount of weight lifted
- Increasing the number of reps in the set
Doing 25 push-ups a day for a year is NOT encouraging the body to build muscle. It is instead encouraging the body to condition the muscle it already has in place.
Weight training programs designed to build muscle mass MUST be based on progressive overload. They must be focused on lifting greater and greater poundages.
To learn more about progressive overload, hitting the right muscle fiber types and forcing your muscles to grow, check the
Rest, Rest and More Rest
What a lot of beginner and even more advanced trainers have trouble grasping is the important role rest plays in building mass.
You will hear the above saying tossed about a lot in weight training circles. Learn what that means and PAY ATTENTION to what it is telling you.
When you lift weights you are not actually building muscle, you are breaking muscle down. You are, when working out, essentially planning to build muscle. You are delivering the blueprints to the builder.
But the build isn’t going to get done unless and until you’ve given the builder the appropriate time to complete the project.
Your body builds muscle while you are resting – while you are sleeping and while you are on the couch watching DVDs. It is only when the body is not busy with keeping you functioning in some way that it will find the time to work on rebuilding the muscle tissue your training broke down.
Give the body insufficient rest time and you will get less than optimal results.
Below are some guidelines that all but the most genetically gifted or chemically enhanced would be wise to adhere to….
- Muscle groups should be worked a
MAXIMUM of twice a week if using splits and three times if using full-body routines. The more you work your muscles, the more you should look out for overtraining. - Each workout should last a
MAXIMUM of one hour, 50 minutes being preferable. - There should be a
MAXIMUM of 5 workouts per week. - After a
MAXIMUM of 8-12 weeks of continuous training, take a 1-2 week vacation from weight lifting.
The above are not optimal suggestions, just maximums that most trainers will be best served not to exceed. The trainer that works five days a week will not necessarily gain more muscle than the one who trains two.
You concentrate on eating and getting your rest. Again, quality dieting and quality rest will prove as important to your mass building goals as your training.
For more on the value of rest and sleep, check the long-titled article,
Putting The Muscle Building Weight Training Program Together
With an appreciation of what makes for good muscle building, the next step is finding a weight training routine.
There are many bodybuilding routines available to you, on the web and in books. You can use them as they are, modify them to your capabilities and needs or design your own from scratch.
Check out my
You are NOT trying to find a routine that will last you a lifetime. You are looking for multiple routines that will work off of each other within your weight training program.
With time and the information gathered from your
Your success at building muscle and gaining weight fast will be dependent on many factors of which the routines you use are just one. Along those lines, check out this…
Use the above bodybuilding tips as a tool to evaluate your weight training programs. It can help identify the areas where your program may be weak and limiting your gains.
More Factors…
The more proven bodybuilding techniques you learn and apply, the bigger and better results you can expect. The basics are above, but there is much more that can help you gain muscle below…
Intensity
Maximum intensity is giving everything you have. It is complete focus, complete confidence. It is putting every ounce of effort into each lift and putting a weight down only when you have nothing left to give.
Intensity is holding nothing back, saving nothing for later. It is always pushing for more.
To build muscle you must workout with intensity. Your goal is to convince your body that it NEEDS to add muscle mass.
Your body knows exactly what you have left in the tank. If you leave a set with more to give, your body isn’t going to see a need to build more muscle for you to waste.
Intensity isn’t about how loud you grunt. The only quantifiable measurement of it comes in the results you get.
Intensity (or lack of intensity) is the reason that the gym’s socialites look the same month after month, year after year. And it is the reason that skinny guy who couldn’t cast a shadow six months ago blew up so quickly.
When your progress slows, take a look at increasing the intensity of your weight training programs. For some tips, check the
Weight Training Routine Methods
Methods are the way you attack your muscles. Check the following page…
The above page goes through many methods, everything from single-set routines to more advanced weight training methods. All these methods can be effective in putting more weight and muscle on your body.
If you’re looking for love, fall in love with the squat. But just date weight training routines for four to eight weeks (or until your progress slows). After a while, you can go back to your favorite.
If you fail to keep the body from acclimating by switching methods from time-to-time, you will fail to maximize your gains.
Split Weight Training Routines
Split routines, as the name suggests, split the body’s muscles into different groups. You then work each group on a different day.
Splits allow for more exercises to be performed for each muscle group. Used correctly, the targeted muscle groups can be stressed greater. Theoretically, this can lead to more muscle growth.
Take a look at this page for more on splits including some samples…
Splits may be “all the rage” but don’t forget about full-body routines. They can be as effective or more effective.
Weight Training Tempo
Tempo is the speed at which you perform your lifts.
Different tempos will stress the body in different ways and prevent it from adapting. For more on weight training tempo as well as information on rest intervals and breathing, go to the following page:
To build muscle, it is important to concentrate on the eccentric (lowering) part of your exercises. It is during the controlled lowering of the weights that the most small tears in the muscle fibers are created.
Given adequate time and nutrition, the body will rebuild these tears. It won’t just rebuild them as good as they were before, it will rebuild them stronger.
This is the body’s natural response, its survival mechanism. It rebuilds itself stronger to protect itself from the newfound stresses you are placing on it. This is why weight training builds muscle.
Change
Whether you call it cycling, periodization or just different stuff, your weight training should change every four to eight weeks. Or, as needed.
Your body will acclimate itself to the stress you put on it and, once acclimated, progress will slow or stop completely.
This can be one of the most frustrating parts of training. Just when you get growing, you can stop growing.
For a chart of what changes and when to make them within your weight training programs, go here:
Warming Up and Stretching
Don’t neglect warming up and stretching. Not if you want to maximize your bodybuilding workouts.
Gets the blood flowing, the body temperature up = allows the body to perform better. Gets fluids to the joints = prevents injury Opens capillaries to the muscles = provides essential nutrients to muscles Increases flexibility = better range of motion for more muscle recruitment Stretches connective tissue = creates space for muscles to grow into Reduces post-workout soreness = allows you to come back and hit muscles again sooner
Five minutes of a light aerobic exercise. This can be stationary bike riding, jumping rope or jogging in place. Anything to just raise the body temperature a bit (you don’t want to make this a workout all to itself). Stretch. Do your stretching after warming up – the muscles will stretch better when warm. During your workout, do warm-up sets before hitting your muscles with the heavy weights on your work sets.
Warming up and stretching will help you reduce the risk of injury and lift heavier. This increased performance will allow you to build more muscle. You’ll be glad you took the time.
What About Cardio and Abs?
Moderate cardio can help your muscle building goals.
“Moderate” means a couple of sessions a week. Once you get past that, cardio can come into conflict with your goals.
Weight training programs are most effective with defined and narrow goals. For more on this, check out
Gaining mass isn’t a lifetime project (or, at least, it won’t be if done right). Putting cardio training on the back-burner as much as possible is a good plan in the short term.
As you gain mass and close in on your goals (or your genetic potential), you will change your focus to cutting and maintenance training. For this training, cardio work will play a major role.
But don’t expects to see the eye-pleasing results (the legendary six-pack) for all your hard work. Not while your on a weight training program designed to gain mass.
In a mass program your goal is to build muscle and your diet is designed to provide the increased nutrition which will allow you to do this. It is not designed to get your body fat levels down to the levels where your abs will ripple (see
Again (and again and again), do not try to multi-task your physique-changing goals. Bodybuilding will not lend itself well to this method. Do one thing at a time and you will get where you want to go much faster.
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Sound like a lot to absorb?
The basics of weight training programs to build mass are second nature to experienced trainers. For beginners and intermediates, however, understanding and intelligently applying all there is can be a daunting task.
That’s why I recommend that the beginner as well as the more experienced but frustrated trainer seek some guidance. The guidance can come from a qualified personal trainer or through one of the
Best Free Weights Workout Men
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