Chest..

You can't spot reduce.

If you want to blow the fat away, do this:
1. weight lift 3 to 5 days per week (working your legs will burn the most fat, because muscle turns up your metabolism and legs are where your muscle is). So, do not overlook those glutes and thighs!
2. Break your meals into smaller portions and have 6-8 per day.
3. Drink water (lots of it). Try to drink 8 oz every 30 minutes.
4. Eliminate Trans Fats.
5. Work 3 days of cardio into your routine. Do 45+ minutes (once you are able) in your target heart rate area (~ 75-85% of MPHR).

If you want to increase your pec size, do this:
1. Bench Press.
2. Dumbbell Bench Press.
3. Flyes.
4. Bench Press.
5. Dips.
6. Bench Press.
7. Shoot... Did I mention Bench?

If you were smart, you would do this:
BOTH

Hit your antagonist muscles so you don't get out of proportion (i.e. Lats). And, strengthen you entire core to help out.

-Rip
 
basicly follow a program written by a pro.

Tho muscle and fitness magazine and mens health are not always the best programs, they will start you off on a good well-balenced workout.

buy some mags and follow the programs they set for a month.
 
The antagonist muscle is just an opposing muscle group. Like when you work your abs you need to work your lower back too...if one is significantly stronger than the other the weaker one will get injured.

You can also do just good, old-fashioned pushups to build your chest muscle.

I don't know what you normally eat but I really think that just eliminating junk food and pop will help you lose weight/fat at your age.

~teresa
 
teresand77 said:
if one is significantly stronger than the other the weaker one will get injured.

Not really, the problems comes from the muscles becoming tight when they are worked, so if you always work your abs and never work your lower back, your abs will be pulling you forward slightly all day, every day. So you'll end up with spinal problems.

If you work your chest and never work your traps you'll end up will a rounded back and your shoulders will roll forward.

Working one muscle without its antagonist causes joint problems, not muscular.
 
Backmann said:
we found out a few days ago ur antagonist muscle for ur chest is ur trapezius
While it is true that the trap is a pec antagonist, the lat is also. Rhomboids as well...

Try doing bentover dumbbell or barbell rows. Now envision doing the exact opposite and you will find yourself working your chest not your shoulders (I assume that the argument involved the deltoids being the antagonist for the lats; which happens to be true as well).

In almost all cases, you can easily find the antagonist by doing a routine you use for a particular muscle and reversing it.
 
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