How long does it take to see results from weight training?
May 31, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under Weight Training & Equipment
I am 25 years old, I am weight training 3-4 days a week for about an hour each session. How long will it take to start seeing results?? Any other advice to speed up the weight loss process?
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Going Basic - Natural Bodybuilding
May 31, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under About Bodybuilding
Now, by natural bodybuilding, we mean exactly that. No steroids, no drugs, and no so-called light muscle enhancers. Natural bodybuilding is just plain exercise and good, old healthy diet.
The Strategy: Natural Bodybuilding Regimen
Well, we all know that no self-respecting bodybuilder goes without a proper training program as guide. After all, bodybuilding is defined partially by how a person trains. For natural bodybuilding, there are three basic strategies: weight training, good nutrition, and rest.
Resistance weight training leads to microtrauma of the muscle being trained. Microtrauma in turn causes muscle soreness called Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS). The repair process of microtrauma is what causes anabolism or muscle growth. Below are six rules to follow in any natural bodybuilding program:
* Sessions should be short. The maximum number of minutes should be sixty since after this, hormone levels for muscle building and growth begin to drop.
* Rests between sets should be minimized to around 60-90 seconds for cardiovascular purposes and better muscle voluminizing effect.
* Sets should be 6-15 cycles for each exercise. This helps maximize growth hormone level and increase circulation of blood and nutrients.
* And lastly, natural musclebuilding should be progressive training.
Now, of course, for muscle to grow and repair itself, it would need something to fuel the process. This is where nutrition comes in. The average bodybuilder needs 500-1000 calories per day and natural enthusiasts requires around the same figure in calorie-intake.
Natural muscle building enthusiasts take in complex carbohydrates as opposed to simple sugars as their major calorie and energy source. It is imperative that natural bodybuilding aficionados keep in mind that too much consumption of simple sugars may lead to fat rather than muscle development and at extreme cases, can cause Type II diabetes.
Protein is another key nutritional value for natural bodybuilders for it helps build and develop the muscles. Every natural bodybuilder should take in one to two grams of protein per pound of bodyweight to achieve maximum body development and recovery. The best sources of natural protein are chicken, whey, and egg whites, which are preferred by almost all bodybuilding buffs for their low fat value.
The third basic component of natural bodybuilding is rest. The quality and quantity of sleep a bodybuilder gets can very much affect the success of his muscle building regimen. Rest gives the body the opportunity to recover and build.
Now, as what you might have found out, natural bodybuilding is far from rocket science. It is as simple as one-two-three. And we mean that literally.
Thanks to T J Madigan for contributing this article to our Bodybuilding blog:
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Just Added to My-Bodybuilding.com …
May 31, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under Bodybuilding Updates
This has been a great week at My-Bodybuilding.com. As usual, I’ve added some helpful Bodybuilding content for you below.
Go check out the following tips and resources:
Here are the Bodybuilding articles that were added this week:
You’ll find this week’s Bodybuilding resources especially useful:
Would you like to ask a Bodybuilding-related question? Click the “Comment” link below to post your questions. I’ll post an answer for you on the site and in our Bodybuilding newsletter. Subscribe in the right sidebar.
Thanks!
Matthew Boherty, Editor My-Bodybuilding.com
Should you Do Cardio Before or After your Weight Training Workout?
May 30, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under Weight Training & Equipment
The funny thing about being on the cutting edge of weight loss science is that people are reluctant to believe you until someone with a M.D. says it is so. Well, wonder of all wonders, it just so happens that a recent study suggests that the best time to do cardio is after a weight workout and that how long you rest between the two can make a difference in both hormone release and fat burning.
This is not new information to bodybuilders who specialize in rapid fat loss year in and year out. My experience as a competitive bodybuilder is what prompted me to use this style of training for fat loss in my clients.
The study was presented at the 2006 ACSM meeting and featured 10 healthy men who did three types of exercise routines on different days: 1) Endurance exercises only 2) Endurance exercise after weight training and a 20 minute rest 3) Endurance exercises after weight training and 120 minutes rest
The weight training workout consisted of six exercises each done for three to four sets of 10 reps. Pretty standard fair and similar to the second phase of the Fat to Fit Program. The cardio exercises consisted of stationary cycling for an hour at low intensity (50 percent of maximum heart rate.
For maximum fat loss I would suggest a higher intensity level and a more High Intensity Interval Training style as opposed to the low intensity approach used in the study.
Doing the weight workout before aerobics led to marked increases in lactate, norepinephrine and growth hormone levels. These are all great things when it comes to maximum fat loss. Before the endurance exercise started those in the 120 minute rest group showed the highest levels of free fatty acids in the blood, while those in the 20 minute rest group showed higher levels of norepinephrine and growth hormone.
During the endurance and weight training exercises, blood levels of free fatty acids and glycerol were higher in both weight training groups than in the endurance only group. The bottom line is that those in both weight training groups were burning more fat during the aerobic exercise than the aerobics only group.
You can compound the case for post workout aerobics further by adding in the fact that not only did the group that did weight training first burn more fat during their cardio but also burned more calories in total by virtue of an increased overall daily metabolism increase and calories expended through the actual resistance training itself.
The study clearly shows that doing a weight workout before aerobics leads to hormonal changes that increased fat oxidation (read weight loss or fat burning) during the following aerobic workout.
Here is another angle to the story. Imagine yourself doing 30 minutes to an hour of aerobics and then going on to do your weight training. How much energy do you really have left to do justice to your weight training? After all that cardio, you have burnt through your glycogen stores (which are the muscle preferred source of fuel) and will not have the energy to stimulate the most outrageous fat burning method available to you. An all day long, increased metabolism, because you stimulated your muscles.
It kind of makes you smile when you find out information like this doesn’t it?
Thanks to Raymond Burton for contributing this article to our Bodybuilding blog:
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Does weightlifting and other bodybuilding exercises stop growing ?
May 30, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under More Bodybuilding Answers
Im 17 years old and I wanna start bodybuilding because I feel skinny , but some people say that it will stop my growing. What do you think ?
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