meh im back

....I don't need to be continually lectured on how to coddle the noobs.
I understand that you're old[er] and more experienced, but I'm no n00b, sir. Although I've only been weightlifting for about 2 years, for what I lack there, I make up for in knowledge.

Okay, so I forgot about that one thing. It doesn't mean I'm some teenage newbie who doesn't know what they're talking about...otherwise, I wouldn't post anything at all and mislead people.
 
I understand that you're old[er] and more experienced, but I'm no n00b, sir. Although I've only been weightlifting for about 2 years, for what I lack there, I make up for in knowledge.

Okay, so I forgot about that one thing. It doesn't mean I'm some teenage newbie who doesn't know what they're talking about...otherwise, I wouldn't post anything at all and mislead people.

Defensiveness is the first sign of perceived guilt ;)

I was just referring to the post I quoted, which is usually a good sign of who I'm talking to, that was stating that I should dumb everything down. It's not the first one I've gotten on this forum, and my point was simply that I rarely coddle anyone. I give out some of the more theoretical information just to make a point, but I also will hand out the practical side as well.
 
I wasn't trying to say that you should "coddle" anyone, simply that you dont give enough information to really make it make sense. You just throw something out there that is confusing if you dont have all the knowledge and experience to interpret it and encorporate it.
 
I agree, at least on principle...had someone been asking the question, I'd have certainly gone more in-depth. As it was, I was simply noting that what we sometimes see as "must do" things, aren't always what they might appear to be.

As an example, since it's been asked.

My current training cycle has me doing this:

Monday - pulling (right now, power snatch/volume, some type of DL or box squat, calf assistance)
Tuesday - upper body, press emphasis (heavy overhead press, bench assist, pullups, arm work)
Thursday - squatting (power snatch/intensity, full squats, calf assistance)
Friday or Saturday - upper body, heavy pressing (heavy bench/bench assistance, overhead press, back work, arm work)

Those are the four "main" workouts I do. For the bench, OHP, pullups, and full squat, I'm doing a progression from three singles to 5-6 singles with a given weight before progressing in weight on the heavy session. The lighter session is a progression from 3x3 to 5x5 over several sessions before adding weight.

DL/pull work is relegated to assistance at the moment, with a variety of different pulling and general PC work to build up the area; this is just to build up some foundational stuff before going back to super-heavy pulling (that 605x2 will be mine soon enough).

Everything else is a blend of various hypertrophy-type methods. Lats/back is just getting in a lot of rows of all types, 5-10 reps. For arms, I'm liking sets of 20 for db curls and db extensions right now, adding weight at the 20-rep mark, and doing heavy negatives another day. Calves can't go wrong with just piling weight on the leg press and making sure to get that pause at the bottom. etc etc.

So I do my upper body session Tuesday. If I feel like coming back the next day and doing say an exercise for chest, shoulders, arms, whatever, I do it. I keep the reps high, in the 10-15 range, keep the overall stress low, and limit it to one exercise per part. But I do it. Same goes for lower body, albeit I'm a little more judicious and just limit that to quads and calves if at all. I'd also count "running" cardio as either leg hypertrophy work or active recovery work depending on intensity/volume; same idea with the upper body if I want to come in and box another session.
 
CRAP. I just now remembered about what I read in a bodybuilding book (I think it was by Arthur Jones) about something called over-reaching - where you purposely get into barely overtraining or really close and then take a little rest period, and it helps you get past plateaus and aid gains; but only if you do this every once in awhile as long as you get a rest period later on. I'm sure that's what you meant, right?

My bad! :eek:



You can, but for me personally, I don't....I try to avoid leg-based cardio on leg days. If ever I do cardio on the same day as lifting, I do it after weights, and with low intensity.

I think its called dual factor theory. You go like this
Over ramping period - Deload - Over ramping period - Deload
and so on.. i think :p
 
PMDilly, out of curiousity, do you calculate your overall tonage? Like you hit 5X2@300lbs each=3000lbs.

I don't really. The waving nature of the loads I use keeps tonnage pretty smoothly increasing/decreasing over time. I might do a calculation every so often just for the hell of it, but it autoregulates for the most part.
 
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