Why Your Muscle Pumps Don't Build Muscle
Copyright 2006 Marc David
Which is better, the pump or the feeling of totally exhausting
your muscles to the point of failure when it is nearly
impossible to pick up a pencil? Good question because I can
promise that one is asked a lot. People love the feeling of
being pumped and the blood flowing thru their muscles. In fact,
Arnold has quite a few 'interesting' quotes on this subject.
But really, what is better? The pump or the taxed feeling?
Let's get down to brass tacks...
A pump does not build muscle. But overloading and giving your
body a reason to grow does.
By the way...
There is some evidence to suggest that pumping the muscle full
of blood will help get more nutrients to the area and therefore,
help to build muscle. That is a weak argument that a pump builds
muscle but nonetheless, I have run across that bit of debate.
While you might leave the gym feeling weak but not pumped, that
certainly doesn't mean you are not making some serious progress.
And in fact, some programs I've tried, I leave the gym feeling
completely weak but I'm not pumped at all and I even have the
feeling I could do more work but that's not part of the program.
My strong hunch is...
That you love the pumps! I mean honestly who doesn't? I know I
do and that's why I found a little way to get the best of both
worlds. Sort of like having my cake and eating it to.
It's called super setting. It's not a new concept at all. In
fact it's an old bodybuilding method but is foundational and can
give you a great pump but at the same time, leaves you feeling
weak and not wanting more.
Really think about...
A pump is just the blood flowing to the area. You can get a good
pump without working all that hard. Giving your body no reason
to grow. But you can get a great pump.
Overloading your muscles doesn't have to give you a pump either.
If you engage in training that has you lift heavy weights but
only in the 4-6 rep range, you may not feel a pump at all. But
you will be weaker and you will get stronger. Yet you'll lose
the feeling of pumps entirely because lifting heavy and resting
simply doesn't give your body a chance to get all that blood to
the area like a typical pump will do.
Needless to say...
Many just get frustrated and go between trying to get the best
pumps and actually working hard.
What they don't know is that super setting is the ultimate way
to work your muscle to a state of exhausting (increasing the
intensity) and yet get that massive pump you've been looking to
get.
Sample Pump Routine:
Incline Smith Bench Press (12 reps; slow, controlled reps,
70-75% of max)
IMMEDIATELY followed by
Incline Dumbbell Flyes (12 reps; 70-75% of max)
Keep in mind, this is just a sample but you are using weights
that are challenging, in a higher rep range and following it up
with another exercise that works the same area.
All this means is that you are going to bump up the intensity
(forcing your body to grow) AND push blood to the area to get a
great pump.
You can even experiment with rest intervals so that it's even
more intense and the area you are focusing on is totally pumped.
Please understand that a pump itself does not build muscle.
Overloading it, challenging it and giving it a reason to grow
does.
You can use various techniques to bump up the intensity of any
exercise, making it challenging without stacking on super heavy
weights and having long rest periods. You'll not only get
stronger and build muscle but you will get that pump feeling
back.
Don't think that one or the other is better or worse, it's just
different. But you can use techniques as I've shown above to
build muscle and get them pumped up as well.
Certainly there are other ways in which to raise the intensity
of an exercise and make it more difficult and still get the
pumped feeling. Supersets were but one example. Drop sets are
another variation that not only can overload the muscle and
force it to grow thru intensity and progressive overload but
you'll get a fantastic pump from that method as well. There's
several other techniques you can use that I will detail in
another article.