The Only Way To Gain Muscle
In order to gain any amount of muscle or strength, you must
subject that muscle to overload. To continue making gains, you
must continue to increase the amount of overload you place on
each muscle group over time.
This progressive increase in resistance is the only way to gain
muscle mass. The greater the amount of resistance you place on a
muscle, the larger that muscle will become, provided you get the
proper nutrients needed for muscle growth to occur.
Progression of this resistance is what causes muscle gains to
keep happening. If you keep lifting the same amount of weight,
your muscles have no reason to get any bigger. They can already
handle that weight.
There are 3 ways to increase the amount of resistance you place
on a muscle:
1. Do more reps with the same amount of weight each time.
2. Do the same number of reps but use more weight
3. Use the same number of reps and same amount of weight, but
shorten the rest periods in between sets.
The most common ways to add progressive resistance to build
muscle is with the first 2... using more weight and/or doing
more reps.
One of the easiest ways to increase the amount of weight you
lift is to decrease the number of reps you do. You keep
increasing the weight until you use a heavy enough weight so
that you reach muscle failure between 4 and 8 reps.
When you increase the weight each set while performing the same
number of reps, you want to go easy for the first few sets, they
are just warmups. Only your last 2 heavy sets, the ones with max
poundages, are the ones that build muscle. All other sets just
help you get ready for these heavy sets.
Again, overloading a muscle group is the only way to gain
muscle, increase its size, and tone. So, for your heavy sets,
you want to reach the point of failure with low reps and heavy
weight.
The more weight you use and the harder you work, the greater the
muscle gains. This method is very intense, so you want to ensure
proper rest and nutrition.
Overload will help you gain muscle indefinitely, as long as the
environment for constant muscle growth is met. Again, it takes
intense training, proper nutrition, and plenty of rest.
If one of these conditions is not met, you will not gain the
muscle mass you could.
Now that you know what causes muscle gains to occur, you should
be well prepared the next time you enter the gym to workout.
You'll know that merely lifting weights is not good enough. You
have to keep getting better and stronger, by increasing the
amount of weight you lift or the number of reps you do.
But be aware, this process takes time. Be committed to slow,
constant growth and you'll soon be making more gains than you
ever thought possible.