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Beyond-Brawn-2nd-Edition

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HOW TO PERFORM YOUR REPS<br />

is one-and-a-half-rep work going up. e half rep is done before the full<br />

rep.<br />

11.40 Both ways can be productive. You may find one is better suited to some<br />

exercises than the other—experiment to find out. You may, however, prefer<br />

to use both ways in a systematic way for the same exercise—for example,<br />

alternate the two approaches from set to set, or workout to workout.<br />

11.41 A full rep and a half rep counts as a single one-and-a-half rep. Naturally you<br />

will have to reduce your poundages relative to what you would use for sets<br />

of the same rep count but of exclusively full reps. And, of course, you would<br />

focus on progressive poundages in good form for this training approach,<br />

just as you should for any format. When you return to sets of full reps after<br />

a period of using one-and-a-half reps for that exercise, you should be able<br />

to work into new personal best poundages—perhaps, though, only after a<br />

short period of readaptation to using purely full reps.<br />

The pilgrimage<br />

11.42 No matter what style of training you use, each set needs to be a pilgrimage.<br />

ere is no room for anything other than 100% application if you want to<br />

make good progress. Pay homage to focus, perfect form, and effort. And<br />

make each set perfect by making each rep perfect!<br />

B 40<br />

Elite bodybuilders, lifters and athletes can tolerate and even prosper<br />

on explosive training because they have the required robustness<br />

of joints and connective tissue. But even they often pay a<br />

heavy price in terms of injuries, eventually. ere is absolutely no<br />

need to take any risk with explosive training. A slower and controlled<br />

rep tempo—as promoted in this book—is so much safer,<br />

and by far the best option for typical trainees. Why seriously risk<br />

pushing your body beyond its structural limits, and possibly suffering<br />

permanent injuries, when there are safer ways to train that<br />

are super productive?<br />

231

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