Weightlifting Tips
Weightlifting Tips: Discover How To Create A Productive Split Routine So You Can Build Muscle And Lose Fast Faster, Without Overtraining
Use these weightlifting tips to create a weight training
program you can use to build muscle, gain strength or
lose fat.
If you're like most bodybuilders and weight lifters, you
train most of the time on some sort of split routine. Take
a look around your gym.
Nowadays you see very few people
performing full body workouts. This is because so many
weightlifting tips involve using a split routine.
This has caused two problems
that are holding you back from massive muscle gains and
faster fat loss results.
First of all, full body weightlifting routines are extremely
effective. With a proper full body workout regimen, you'll
build muscle at a very fast rate.
The second (and bigger) problem is that most people using these
weightlifting tips on split routines falsely
believe that their split routine will keep them from overtraining.
Unfortunately, they run into a couple of problems and they
don't realize what the problems are so they can't fix them.
They end up banging their proverbial heads against the wall
without making any progress, wondering why all these weightlifting
tips aren't working for them..
The first problem with going to a split routine is that most
weight lifters end up doing too much work for each body part.
Since they've split their weightlifting routine into multiple
workouts, they end up training just as long, but on fewer
body parts. So instead of 3 sets on the bench press in a full
body routine (or maybe a two way split), they end up training
chest by itself and performing 15 sets.
The second big problem with most split routines in these weightlifting
tips is the unintended
consequence of overlap. Very few splits eliminate overlap. Let
me give you a couple of examples of problem splits that I've seen
in magazines or books (Continued Below).
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Monday - Chest & Shoulders
Tuesday - Legs
Thursday - Arms (Biceps, Triceps and Forearms)
Friday - Back
Looks pretty good, right? So what's the problem with this split?
How about training arms and back on consecutive days? When you
train your back, you train your biceps pretty darn hard. This
causes two problems. First, you're going to overtrain your
biceps. Second, with back being trained the day after arms, your
back, a very large and important muscle for promoting muscle growth,
will suffer in it's training. Your biceps are a limiting factor
in back training and you just trained your biceps the day before.
If you understang what I'm conveying in these weightlifting tips,
you'll be able to construct much better routines and make better
muscle building progress.
A very popular weight training split is to workout five days a
week, take the weekends off and hit each body part once in
that period. Here's an example:
Monday
Chest
Tuesday
Legs
Wednesday
Arms
Thursday
Back
Friday
Shoulders
Again, you hit the biceps twice in a row. You also hit
the shoulders pretty hard on three different days - chest
day, back day and shoulder day with back and shoulder day
coming back to back.
Weightlifting Tips Alert: However you divy up this split, you'll run
into trouble.
A lot of body parts overlap so you need to really think
through how you are going to construct a split routine.
It's a lot more than just dividing up your body parts
and plugging them into a standard split.
Here are some weightlifting tips to remember:
- Most back exercises will hit the biceps hard, while also
affecting the shoulders.
- Most chest exercises will hit the triceps hard while also
affecting the shoulders.
- Leg and back exercises can overlap, as exercises like squats
hit the lower back very hard, as do stiff legged deadlifts,
and regular deadlifts.
Keep some of these weightlifting tips in mind while putting together a
split routine to make sure you give each body part enough
rest without overtraining.
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