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Beyond-Brawn-2nd-Edition

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BEYOND BRAWN<br />

frustration, regression, injury, and failure. is is the lot of most typical gym<br />

members who, in their hurry to make short-term metamorphoses, turn<br />

short-term failure into long-term failure, and add more names to the endless<br />

roll of those who have trained but yet got little or nothing to show for<br />

it.<br />

7.5 Here is memorable advice from Peary Rader, founder of IRON MAN magazine<br />

back in the thirties. It came during an interview late in his life, published<br />

in IRON MAN, November 1986, page 37. Rader was asked, “But, what do you<br />

consider the single most important rule to remember during a workout?”<br />

Always err on the side of conservatism. Even if you know you can do better,<br />

drop back to the point where you are using just a bit less weight or doing one or<br />

two reps less than you had planned to do. en, every week or two, gradually<br />

increase your sets, reps or weight.<br />

7.6 Later in the interview he returned to the theme of conservatism:<br />

Yes, you have to work very hard but you do have to work within your ability and<br />

capacity to recover before your next workout… People who promise shortcuts<br />

in time and effort are among the worst abusers of the interest of weight training.<br />

7.7 e fastest progress is made by having the longest possible stretch of consecutive<br />

full-bore workouts, greatest possible frequency of training, and<br />

largest possible weight increments. But in practice the “fastest possible” is<br />

usually very slow.<br />

7.8 Full-bore workouts are no good if you are not increasing your poundages<br />

regularly. Progressive poundages are the barometer of progress, not effort<br />

per se. It is possible to work yourself into the ground but not train progressively.<br />

It is also possible to keep poundages progressive without working<br />

yourself into the ground every workout. Properly applied effort is what is<br />

needed, not effort pure and simple.<br />

7.9 e greatest number of consecutive full-bore workouts is no good if you<br />

are not recovering fully from each of them. You need to adapt your training<br />

intensity and frequency so that you are getting stronger on a consistent<br />

basis, albeit slowly. If you push too hard and too quickly, not only will you<br />

not go forward, but you may regress. You need to cycle your training intensity<br />

to some degree.<br />

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