GonnaBeAGearHead
New member
I'm throwing my opinion out to everyone here in hopes of conveying one of my most important training principles.
Lift heavy. I always train in the 6-8 rep range in all my basic power movements. Think about it this way. The heavier the weight that you use, the more muscle fibers you recruit, the more muscle fibers you fatigue, the more new muscle gets built.
No one has ever built a huge back, or a thick chest, or tree trunks legs without smashing them with heavy HEAVY weights. How are you supposed to get spinal erectors that look like two pillars of muscle running down your back without heavy deadlifts? How are you supposed to make your chest look bulletproof without heavy ass bench presses. I haven't ever seen a good pair of legs on a guy that just did leg extensions.
I think that Eddie Robinson put it best when he said you should "train like a madman and eat like you're trying to erase all traces of existence". The point is that is you want a hard, thick, powerful looking physique you need to train heavy.
Lift heavy. I always train in the 6-8 rep range in all my basic power movements. Think about it this way. The heavier the weight that you use, the more muscle fibers you recruit, the more muscle fibers you fatigue, the more new muscle gets built.
No one has ever built a huge back, or a thick chest, or tree trunks legs without smashing them with heavy HEAVY weights. How are you supposed to get spinal erectors that look like two pillars of muscle running down your back without heavy deadlifts? How are you supposed to make your chest look bulletproof without heavy ass bench presses. I haven't ever seen a good pair of legs on a guy that just did leg extensions.
I think that Eddie Robinson put it best when he said you should "train like a madman and eat like you're trying to erase all traces of existence". The point is that is you want a hard, thick, powerful looking physique you need to train heavy.