Will High Intensity Training Really Build Muscle Mass?
In order for your muscles to grow, you have to stimulate them
with a high intensity training stress and then allow them to
move through the three phases of the recovery process.
There seems to be a number of differing variations of high
intensity as it relates to bodybuilding, so let's make sure we
are on the same page, okay?
High intensity refers to the percentage of momentary muscular
effort being exerted.
If you can curl a 100 pound barbell for 10 repetitions and an
11th repetition is impossible, you have performed high intensity
training and have trained with 100% intensity and to the point
of momentary muscular failure, if, and this is a big if, you
also gave it 100% mentally, not just physically.
And that makes high intensity training a completely different
kind of animal.
This is what is meant by the phrase, "training to failure", as
advocated by high intensity training enthusiasts. In other
words, if you are doing a set of barbell curls and you perform
as many repetitions as possible until you can't complete another
repetition in good form, you have trained to failure.
There is another important point we need to touch on in the
above definition and that is the ideal of volitional effort. You
see, your muscles are voluntary - they will not contract (work)
unless your mind tells them to do so.
You see, intensity, as it relates to bodybuilding, is the
possible percentage of momentary muscular and volitional
(mental) effort exerted. You can not train with 100% intensity
(train to failure) without doing so mentally as well as
physically.
The fastest way to make progress would be to stimulate your
muscles with high intensity weight training (in order to trigger
the adaptive response) and then minimize the stages of the
recovery process. The way to minimize the recovery process would
be by performing the least amount of exercise needed to trigger
the adaptive response - one set per exercise per body part.
One set per exercise per body part is the least amount of
exercise we can do and still stimulate muscle mass and strength
increases. By performing just one set, you limit the drain on
your body's finite energy reserves.
Every set you perform eats in to your limited recovery ability.
Your workouts need to be hard, brief, and infrequent if you want
to make maximum progress in a minimal amount of time.
Once you've performed a high intensity set on an exercise,
you've triggered the adaptive mechanism that will allow over
compensation (increase in muscle mass and strength). It only
takes this one attempt (one set) to make progress. Performing
any more sets will only drain away your body's limited recovery
ability.
If you remember, your muscles adapt and grow larger and stronger
by being exposed to an anaerobic stimulus that challenges their
current existence. In other words, progressive overload through
high intensity weight training.
If you train intensely enough, most of you will not duplicate or
outperform what you did in the first set. For example, if you
train to failure and manage to do 10 reps with 200 pounds in the
bench press, you will not be able to duplicate this performance.
You may get 6 or 7 reps on the second set.
So what would be the purpose of this set, since it does not come
close to challenging your body's current strength level, and we
already know that is necessary in order to cause the adaptive
response we are looking for. All you've done is create a much
greater inroad into your body's recovery ability. Although it
doesn't seem like much, by adding a second set, you've increased
the volume for that body part by 100%!!
However, this is where things get muddy for the skinny
hardgainer. For you, it may be necessary to add another set or
two. Here's why -
As a skinny hardgainer two things are likely - your muscles have
low neuromuscular efficiency and you have more slow twitch
fibers.
With lower neuromuscular efficiency your body may need a second
set to fire enough muscle fibers to trigger the adaptive
response. Thus, a second set could be of benefit.
In addition you need more time under load as discussed in the
previous report. In order to satisfy this as well as make up for
lower neuromusclar efficiency, you may need to add a set or 2 to
each exercise in order to make enough of an inroad to trigger
the adaptive response mechanism.
Keep in mind, there are a lot of variables when it comes to
designing a proper weight training program. I am not stating
that one set per exercise is the most effective way for you to
train all the time. But it is extremely effective, if (and
that's a big if), you work at a high enough intensity level,
something very few people are able or willing to do.