Help with full body workout

Hey there. I am currently making a new plan after reading lots on the topic of working out. My old work out routine hasn't been giving me the results i used to and after reading up on new routines I plan on starting a FBW. I read quite a few on this site but still am wondering on a few things and looking for some advice. I know many people come onto forums and do look around so I just wanted you to know that I have done some research and I now think I can ask for help. Hahaha the whole teach a man to fish analogy.

The plan below is what I want to start and I noticed many questions come up such as weight, age, height, and intended goals. My weight is 220, I am 5'11, I am 25 years old and I want to gain muscle and strength. I don't know my body fat. I work out for a year last year and took a year off to get out of finacial trouble. I just recently started working out again. 3 weeks ago, and my old routine is old and a mismash of stuff. I decide to stop being stuburn and try a new plan. I can work out 3 times a week and for about an hour and a half. I have access to a good university gym. I am dedicated to going three days aweek and I want to get back into the shape I was.


you want to focus your movements around 7 basic exercises.
squats
deadlifts
bench
rows
pullups/chins
dips
military press

do 5 compounds a day to begin. you can make a workout A and a workout B
alternate workouts A and B. like this

monday:A
wed:B
fri:A

mon:B
wed:A
fri:B

A
squats
bench
rows
pullups
mil press/dips

B
deadlifts
bench
rows
chinups
mil press/dips

you can choose from a variety of set/rep ranges. i dont know your goals so i cant recommend anything.

this is not set in stone. it is a basic guideline and i think it would work well.
you cant skip squats or deads. sure benching is fun and so are chins but you have to do the kings.

So for what I want to do (gain muscle mass and strength) what do you guys think? I am sorta just looking for a plan as such above with specifics so I can follow along till I see what works and doesn't.
 
If you want to gain muscle mass. You have to learn about the almighty calorie, and learn how to approximately determine what you need and then go over a slight margin to allow muscle growth.



The road to potentially bulking:


The road to your goal, is gaining knowledge of calories and nutrition within a diet proportioned to your age, wgt, hgt, and gender, which includes associated activities.

Then developing a scheduled training plan per week (which allows recuperation time) that compliments---a clean diet. When both are developed, then the key is consistency and then watching, looking, and being very mindful, of your bodily responses to your diet and training stimulus.



Surplus dieting is the MAIN thing that does the job.

Some Basic information that can lead you to weight tissue gain

Calorie calculation is an approximation science, remember this. Through your journey WATCH, LOOK, and LISTEN, to your body..........it will TELL YOU if your doing the correct things or combination of things!


○ Change your eating habits (below are some suggestion examples)

○ Substitute an artificial sweetener of your choice in the replace of refined white sugar (Refrain from Refined Sugar like you would a disease)

○ Try eating 5 to 6 smaller meals during the day

○ Balance your meals out during the day so in one day you have a mix of protein, carbohydrate and good fats

○ Drink lots of water during the day and before, during and after exercise

○ Simple Carb Examples: Grapefruit, Watermelon, Cantaloupe, Strawberries, Oranges, Apples, Pineapple, etc

○ Complex Carb Examples: Whole Wheat Pita Bread, Oatmeal, Long Grain Brown Rice, Brown Pasta, Malto-Meal (Plain, whole wheat),etc

○ Good Protein Examples: White or Dark Tuna, Chicken Breast, Lean Turkey, Lean Ham, Very lean Beef, Quality Whey Protein Powder,, etc

○ Good Fats Examples: Natural Peanut Butter, Various Nuts, Flax Seed, Fish Oils.

This is what you need to do:

This an approximation science, but you can narrow it down very close, if your meticulous in your vision when looking at the data.

Tweak your desire and passion by educating yourself on the basic requirements of losing fat tissue. With your age, sex, height, and weight, in mind, find your approximated base calorie needs (this is organ function, breathing, or bodily function needs). One can use the Benedict Formula.

Calculate your BMR:

The Harris Benedict equation determines calorie needs for men or woman as follows:

• It calculates your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) calorie requirements, based on your height, weight, age and gender.

• It increases your BMR calorie needs by taking into account the number of calories you burn through activities such as exercise.

This gives you your total calorie requirement or approximated Maintenance Line (I call it the MT Line).

Step One : Calculate your BMR with the following formula:

•Women: BMR = 655 + (4.35 x weight in pounds) + (4.7 x height in inches) - (4.7 x age in years)
•Men: BMR = 66 + (6.23 x weight in pounds) + (12.7 x height in inches) - (6.8 x age in years)

Step Two : In order to incorporate activity into your daily caloric needs, do the following calculation:

•If you are sedentary : BMR x 1.2
•If you are lightly active: BMR x 1.375
•If you are moderately active (You exercise most days a week.): BMR x 1.55
•If you are very active (You exercise daily.): BMR x 1.725
•If you are extra active (You do hard labor or are in athletic training.): BMR x 1.9



The calorie surplus margin is just an example:

Apply this knowledge by going over the approximated MT Line (approximated Maintenance line), say for example, a +500c per day, for about 1 week.

Before the week begins, weigh yourself in the AM when you FIRST get up (do not eat yet) (remember your clothing, preferably with just underwear and t-shirt or like clothes).

Note the time, and the approximated wgt.

Each day spread your caloric content out throughout the day (keep the body fed, with calories in the 300 to 500c approximated calories each meal), or a like division which mirrors your end caloric deficit limit (meaning MT +500c).

This way you have your entire day and body encircled with nutrition (I assume you already know to eat clean), which if your eating right, will give an approximated good energy.

At the end of the week, on the same day, the same time, with the same like clothes, weigh yourself again. Note whether you lost or gained tissue (or weight I mean).


If this didn't happen, this means you need to make finer adjustments, and the MT line is not accurate, and you need to adjust this on your own.

Based upon the FEEDBACK your body is giving you, ask yourself how faithful you were on the diet, AND how faithful in training (whether you kept the training schedule (if you didn't, this would effect the caloric equation, no?!), AND how accurate you figured in your activities caloric wise.........but, you have the base information to begin making adjustments.
=========================================================

The Nutrients are an essential factor in the diet; however, the law of energy balance within the DIET, is the ultimate KING while the Nutrients can play in some decisions made within the body.

Do yourself a favor, figure out your MT line, adjust off of this, eat well balanced spaced out meals (DONT EVER starve YOURSELF), AND listen to your body for the results.

While you are trying to figure out your body, IT WILL PAY YOU BACK, I promise. You have to learn to MASTER yourself to become the master of weight loss for YOURSELF.
========================================================
"Let your inner vision cultivate your ultimate exterior expression" —Chillen

"The strongest inner feeling that prevails will result in the exterior expression" –Chillen

"Your cultivation and manifestation of thought accumulated within your reasoning will determine your outcome"----Chillen
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The most effective beginning is to look at your diet, and make a diet journal in my opinion, THEN work in a training program around this diet.

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Have controlled obsession (and obsession to a---Point, is necessary), but some lose this obsession once they learn the amount of work it requires. There eyes then widen and then the obsession then pops right out. Dont let this happen to you: Raise your Want-o-Meter to a new higher level.

Best Regards,


Chillen
 
Thanks for you replies guys. I read the article and am just figuring out the basic exersizes of my program. I will write down what they will be this afternoon and I am starting monday with my FBW. I read all you contributed and I will let you guys know how it goes.

My base BMR is 2168.3.
On the second part of the BMR which multiplyer would I use if I did a FBW. the lightly or moderate calculation?
 
If you hit it hard 3 or 4 days a week (which you should with the outlined routine), I'd go moderate. I think of occasional brisk walks or some weekly tennis as lightly active.
 
Thanks for you replies guys. I read the article and am just figuring out the basic exersizes of my program. I will write down what they will be this afternoon and I am starting monday with my FBW. I read all you contributed and I will let you guys know how it goes.

My base BMR is 2168.3.
On the second part of the BMR which multiplyer would I use if I did a FBW. the lightly or moderate calculation?

Use the moderate multiplier........

Make sure you track your caloaries and weight.......but do not over do the weighing. Just do once or twice a week, in THE MORNING, with the same TYPE of cloths on and at the same time


(edit: Def we posted at the same time.......didnt this happen before...sometime back......LOL)
 
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didnt this happen before

Ha. I think it did.

For a minute I was wondering why he had to train with the same clothes on. Then I realized...Weighing, not Weight Training. My brain is broken.

Now get to the lifting, Saone, and good luck!
 
So tonight I am starting this plan. The plan I have chosen is in that testosterone nation article that was given to me and this is the work out plan.

dead lift
barbell bench press
pull downs
military press
hammer curls
tricep extension.

Workout 1

Sets: 3
Reps: 5
Rest: 60 seconds between sets
Load: Choose a weight that forces you to near-failure for the last rep of the last set.*
*This is the recommended load for all workouts.

Workout 2

Sets: 3
Reps: 8
Rest: 90 seconds between sets

Workout 3

Sets: 2
Reps: 15
Rest: 120 seconds between sets

this is the order I am going to go with. I heard you should do the dead lifts first as they are the most strenuous of all. What do you guys think and any criticism?
 
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