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Beyond-Brawn-2nd-Edition

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GENERAL PHILOSOPHY FOR OUTSTANDING DEVELOPMENT<br />

2.42 Do not train flat-out all the time. Cycle your intensity to some degree. How<br />

you interpret cycling depends on your age, recuperation abilities, motivation,<br />

tolerance to exercise, out-of-the-gym lifestyle factors, quality of diet,<br />

poundage increment scheme, supervision (if any), and style and volume of<br />

training, among other factors. A very few people can train full-bore most of<br />

the time. Others can only do it in short, infrequent spurts. Most people are<br />

somewhere in between. e bottom line is poundage progression. So long<br />

as you keep getting stronger in good form, then what you are doing is working.<br />

2.43 e value of increased training intensity is not the actual effort per se. What<br />

counts is the progressive resistance that the high-intensity training can<br />

produce. Just pushing yourself to your absolute limit in the gym will not in<br />

itself make you bigger and stronger. e very hard work will only yield gains<br />

if you fully satisfy your recovery needs, and avoid injury and overtraining.<br />

When your poundages stagnate or regress, you are doing something wrong,<br />

even if you are training full-bore.<br />

2.44 Intensity heightening techniques such as forced reps, drop sets, and negatives<br />

are likely to do more harm than good. Ordinary straight sets pushed<br />

all the way to muscular failure, or near to it, are the way to go for nearly all<br />

your training.<br />

2.45 To achieve the progressive poundages that produce gains in strength and<br />

muscular development, your body must recover fully from your training. As<br />

boring, unexciting and mundane as rest and sleep are, they should be right<br />

at the top of your priorities if you are to progress as quickly as possible.<br />

Everyone knows that sleep and rest are important, but almost everyone<br />

shortchanges themselves in this department. Unless you wake every morning<br />

feeling fully rested, and without having to be awoken, you are not getting<br />

enough sleep. And even if you are making gains in the gym, more rest and<br />

sleep could substantially increase your gains.<br />

2.46 Only compare current attainment to the same stage of your previous cycle<br />

that used the same style of training. You cannot, for example, compare bench<br />

presses done rest-pause style from pins in the rack in one cycle, with those<br />

done touch-and-go in the next cycle.<br />

55

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