10 Strength Building Strategies
Follow these 10 rules for immediate and long-lasting muscle and
strength.
Strength is the foundation of nearly all physique and
performance goals. When you're strong, you more easily gain muscle size, lose
fat, run faster, hit harder, play longer, and move more living room furniture
for your wife. We've rounded up 10 no-questions-asked tips to help you make
everything in your life feel just a little bit lighter.
1. Own
the "big four."
The squat, deadlift, bench press, and shoulder press are the
best strength-building exercises, period. The chinup and row are great moves
too, but don't make them the focus of your workout — they can be assistance
lifts to complement the bench and shoulder press, keeping your pulling muscles
in balance with the pressing ones.
2. Use
barbells first.
Forget all the fad equipment. The barbell is king, the dumbbell
is queen, and everything else is a court jester — it may have its place, but
it's not essential. Start your workouts with barbell exercises, such as the
"big four," as described above. Barbells let you load a lot of
weight, and lifting heavy is the first step toward getting stronger. Once your
heaviest strength exercises are out of the way, you can move on to dumbbell and
body-weight training.
3. Keep
it simple.
Some trainers make their clients lift with a certain rep speed,
like three seconds up, one second down. But know this: There's no need to count
anything but reps during a set. Simply focus on raising and lowering your
weights in a controlled manner, pausing for a one-second count at the top of
the lift. Using an arbitrary tempo can lessen tension on your muscles or force
you to use varying amounts of weight, slowing your progress. The only way to be
sure you're getting stronger is if your loads consistently increase.
4.
Maintain a log.
Write down your exercises, sets, reps, and the fate of each
workout. Keep track of your best lifts and the most reps you've done with a
certain weight on an exercise. Constantly strive to improve those numbers.
5.
Don't overdo it.
Try to stick to three or four lifts per workout. Keeping your
workouts short helps you take advantage of hormonal surges. When you do too
many exercises in a session, at least some of them get done half-assed. All you
need is one main lift per workout (one of the big four), one or two assistance
lifts (for keeping the body in balance and further strengthening the muscles
that perform the main lift), and then core or specialty work at the end (ab
exercises or some forearm or calf moves, depending on your goals). Doing any
more lessens your results.
6.
Think five.
You should rotate many different rep ranges in your workouts,
but sets of five seem to offer the best blend of muscle size and strength
gains. If you're pushing through one of the big four moves, you'll find that
your form often breaks down after five anyway.
7. Add
weights slowly.
The main reason people plateau and stop gaining strength is that
they go too heavy for too long. Abandon your ego and do your main lifts using
10% less than the most weight you can lift for the given rep range. Increase
the weight each session — but by no more than 10 pounds — and stick with the
same lifts. You'll rarely plateau again.
8. Take
to the hills.
Cardio is a must if you want to be lean and healthy, but
long-distance running or cycling increases levels of hormones that break down
muscle tissue. To get stronger while getting leaner, do cardio in short,
intense bursts. Go to a moderately steep hill and sprint to the top, then walk
back down. When you're ready, sprint again. In your first workout, do only half
as many sprints as you think you could. In your next workout, do two more
sprints than you did the first time. Continue adding two sprints to your
workouts until you can't improve anymore. Then do sets of sprints.
9.
Balance your training.
Whatever you do for one side of the body, you must do for the
other side. Follow that rule in your workouts and you should be able to avoid
injury and muscle imbalances. If you're doing squats (mainly a quad exercise),
also do Romanian deadlifts (which hit the hamstrings hard). Your chest
exercises should be balanced with back-training lifts. You don't necessarily
have to do your balance work in the same session, but it should be done in the
same week. In general, follow a ratio of two-to-one between your
pulling-and-pushing movements. So if you bench-press on Monday (and most of the
world seems to), you can do chinups on Tuesday and bent-over lateral raises on
Thursday, for example. Every other pressing exercise you do should follow this
formula.
10. Do
it right. Form is key.
You may think you know how to perform the big four, but you
could probably get more out of them. Here are some quick pointers for each one.
·
Squat: Begin the squat by pushing your hips back as far as
you can. Keep your lower back arched and you should feel a stretch in your
hamstrings. When your hips are bent, begin bending your knees and squatting
low. This is what you need to squat maximal weight.
·
Deadlift: Use the same stance you would
to perform a jump — your legs should be narrowly placed. When you bend down to
grab the bar, keep your hips down and your back straight, with your shoulders
directly over your knees.
·
Bench Press: Start with your head off the bench.
Keeping your feet steady, grab the bar and pull your body up off the bench and
forward, so that when your butt comes down on the bench your lower back is very
arched. Squeeze your shoulder blades together. Your range of motion should be
significantly shorter for stronger pressing.
·
Shoulder press: Flare your lats when the bar is
at shoulder level. It will allow you to use more weight.
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