EPROM
Banned
Two things:
(1) Hard Muscle vs. Soft Muscle (Bicep as an Example)
I have been training hard all of my life. I usually have a much better build than most people, but there have been declines now that I'm 47. From my 20's all the way to now I have what I call "Soft Muscles". When I flex a big ol' Bicep ...it's kinda soft. You can crunch it. Most people have rock hard biceps ...but mine are never rock hard. I usually have better volume and size than most of these people, yet they always have the rock hard bicep. Why is this? ...and should I have a certain type of workout/training method based on my muscle type? (i.e., is "lower weight - higher reps" better for this muscle type or "low rep - higher weight"?)
(2) Speed reps vs. Slow and Determined
I have always understood that you quickly lift heavy weight upward (one second) and lower the weight slowly and determine (3 to 5 seconds). For instance, If I am doing curls I curl lift the weight quickly up - slowly back down to positive failure. Then I immediately drop the weigh a certain percentage and keep going to positive failure. I do this one more time for a total of three breakdows to positive failure. I consider this all "One Set of Curls". I may do 5 sets of this type of breakdown curls during a workout.
However, every time I see a video clip of a professional bodybuilder s/he is doing reps just as quickly as friggin possible! ...I see them getting 8 to 12 curls in like 10 seconds! I always thought this was the WRONG way to do this? have workouts changed over the years and somehow I missed it? What's up with all the "speed lifting"?
Birdman
(1) Hard Muscle vs. Soft Muscle (Bicep as an Example)
I have been training hard all of my life. I usually have a much better build than most people, but there have been declines now that I'm 47. From my 20's all the way to now I have what I call "Soft Muscles". When I flex a big ol' Bicep ...it's kinda soft. You can crunch it. Most people have rock hard biceps ...but mine are never rock hard. I usually have better volume and size than most of these people, yet they always have the rock hard bicep. Why is this? ...and should I have a certain type of workout/training method based on my muscle type? (i.e., is "lower weight - higher reps" better for this muscle type or "low rep - higher weight"?)
(2) Speed reps vs. Slow and Determined
I have always understood that you quickly lift heavy weight upward (one second) and lower the weight slowly and determine (3 to 5 seconds). For instance, If I am doing curls I curl lift the weight quickly up - slowly back down to positive failure. Then I immediately drop the weigh a certain percentage and keep going to positive failure. I do this one more time for a total of three breakdows to positive failure. I consider this all "One Set of Curls". I may do 5 sets of this type of breakdown curls during a workout.
However, every time I see a video clip of a professional bodybuilder s/he is doing reps just as quickly as friggin possible! ...I see them getting 8 to 12 curls in like 10 seconds! I always thought this was the WRONG way to do this? have workouts changed over the years and somehow I missed it? What's up with all the "speed lifting"?
Birdman
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