How to Gain Mass - Solving A Different Kind of Weight Problem
Learning How To Add Pounds of Muscle Fast
This is for you poor souls that just can't seem to gain a pound.
And on top of that, you get no sympathy from the scores of
people that want to lose weight and have no idea why you'd
complain about not being able to put weight on.
They think you're the lucky one, eating whatever you want
without gaining weight. Little do they know that you are just as
frustrated without gaining mass as they are with not being able
to lose weight!
For those of you who desperately want to add muscle, you know
how frustrating it can be to train hard and stay skinny. You
wish your problem was losing weight instead of gaining mass.
You need to eat more calories than you burn off and use an
effective trainig program designed to add pounds of muscle to
your skinny frame.
Of course, there is more to it than that, but that is the bottom
line. It does matter, however, what kind of calories you eat,
and when you eat them.
Eating candy bars and drinking sugar laden sodas may help you in
gaining mass but that mass will be fat, not muscle. And then
you'll wish you were skinny again. You need to not only take in
enough calories but you need to take in the right
calories that will help your body achieve an anabolic
(muscle building) state, and minimize fat storage. You need to
constantly feed your body high quality protein at a minimum of 1
gram of protein per pound of bodyweight. Hard weight training
causes your body to crave muscle building nutrients, protein
being the primary nutrient that it needs.
As a naturally skinny guy myself I can tell you from experience
that I have a very difficult time gaining mass unless I am
taking in at least 1.5 grams of high quality protien every day.
Make sure you eat at least six meals a day. This will help your
body utilize the nutrients more efficiently, including
minimizing fat storage by avoiding excessively large meals that
send your body signals that there might be a famine pending,
causing body fat storage to accelerate.
Most people who have trouble gaining mass aren't taking in as
many quality calories as they think. Consider keeping track of
your calorie intake and make adjustments as you go, shooting for
a gain of 1 to 2 pounds gained per week.
If you are gaining mass at a rate of 1 pound of quality muscle
per week, you will transform your appearance in a matter of a
few months.
Constantly monitoring your calorie intake, body weight, and skin
fold caliper measurements will help you pinpoint the number of
calories you need to consume to build muscle. For Gaining Mass -
Max Out Your Mass and Strength Most of use were taugh to warm up
over several sets while decreasing the number of repetitions.
For example, start with a set of 15-20 reps on the bench press,
add weight, do another set of 10 - 12 reps and possibly even a
third set of this number.
Finally, the work begins and you add weight for a fairly hard
set of 8 - 10 reps. Increase the weight for a hard set of 6 - 8
reps and possibly one last hard set of 5 - 6 reps. Here's the
problem I have with routines like this (which is most routines).
You're working hard enough on the warm ups to begin wearing
yourself out, yet not hard enough to have a positive impact on
your progress, ie, strength and muscle mass gains.
Your warm up should be designed to do just enough to prevent
injury and allow you to work out as hard as you can with the
heaviest weight possible for your working sets. If you workout
in the manner I described and you switch to warming up just
enough, you'll find yourself lifting heavier weights for more
reps than you were previously using.
This will increase the intensity, signaling your body that it
needs to increase its muscle mass to cope with the new stress.
This may take some experimenting but here are a couple of
examples to give you an idea. Let's say you want to use 225
pounds on your working set of bench presses.
Start out with a very light set of 8 - 10 reps with 100 pounds,
then do 3 reps with 145 and another 2 reps with 190. Rest a
minute or 2 and then do your work set with 225. Those 3 warm up
sets are done without any rest, except the time it takes to
change the weights on the bar.
Let's say you want to Squat with 300 lbs.
Do 8 - 10 reps with 135, followed by 3 reps with 205, 2 reps
with 255 and maybe 1 rep with 275. Rest a minute or 2 and then
do your work set with 300 lbs. Again, you'll need to experiment
with what it takes to get you physically and mentally prepared
for your work set but try using this warm up method and see if
your top end poundages don't improve.
Sure, there are ways to gain muscle without becoming much
stronger and ways to become stronger without adding muscle but
all things being equal you need to become stronger to succeed in
gaining mass in the form of new muscle.
To sum up, do minimal reps on the warm up sets, don't rest
between warm up sets, and then go to your top weight on your
work sets.