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Bodybuilding Training - Bodybuilding Training Tips For
Gaining Muscle Weight

Dave Draper Shares His Bodybuilding Training Tips For Gaining Muscle Weight

by Dave Draper

Muscle Growth Takes Time

Before I get into the meat of the matter, or you might say, the iron of things (note the
subtle, well-placed wit within my presentation of bland facts), let me assure you there
is no fast way to pack on muscle. That’s a lie, a myth, marketing hype, a cruel
promise and a sick joke. The muscles, God bless them, grow, but they, like, crawl into
place. Muscles are not in a hurry; speed is not their thing.
Besides taking their own sweet time to arrive, they are secretive. The more you look
for them, the harder they are to find.

The rascals like to be left alone. You eat, you train hard, you rest, you believe and
you smile. The rest is up to them. Down that tuna, push that iron, relax, think positive
and have fun. You’re growing; ever so slowly, but you are growing. The workout
routine matters, of course, but it doesn’t have to be a scientifically planned
methodology complete with the careful manipulation of sets and reps in proportion to
one’s one-rep max as determined by precisely detailed scale training. Oh, my, no.
Spare me the dizzy, suffocating struggle of establishing and recording the increments
of the weight engaged and the increase of repetitions applied. What? Are we in
school or at the gym? Is this advanced math theory or elemental weightlifting? Are we
students achieving a scholarly degree or a bunch of guys pounding the iron and
getting huge? Excuse me, Mrs. Gilmore... wiggle, wiggle, wiggle... may I go to the
bathroom?

On the other hand, I don’t suggest you walk around the gym and lift whatever gets in
the way... not that I don’t see that style of training on the gym floor every day. It’s
very popular, in fact: What’s this? A dumbbell... crash, boom, bang... jeez, man. Ah, a
cable thing... pull, swing, whoosh, tangle... now, they’re fun... like those. Hmmm... a
big bar and bench... seen this before... under we go... oooff, grrrgh, clang, oomph,
clunk, splurt pzush, crash. Gasp! Hope nobody saw that one... stinkin' bar’s probably
bent. Interesting contraption... sit here, I’ll bet... grab these probably... and push...
nope... pull... nope... Ahha... "Extend Legs Slowly and Completely -- Repeat." Kinda
boring, ya ask me. Ah, my favorite... the chinning bar... I’ll just jump onto this baby...
and pull... Huh?... pull 'n kick.... pull, kick 'n swing... oomph... pull, kick, swing 'n
squeal... grips.... seethe... slip... wriggle... ping...oops, flop. I can’t move. Is that the
exit? Zoom!

Bodybuilding Workout Routine Basics

Some overall basics, gentlemen:
1.
If you’re serious about your goals, train no less than four days a week and
no more than five.
If
you’re just interested, train three days a week.

2.
You want to hit each muscle group twice a week, directly or indirectly.

3.
Provide 80-percent effort in your exercise input, saving 90 and 100
percent for those inspired sets of reps that colorfully dot your workouts.

Focus is 100 percent, pace is a consistent and unhurried lean on your sets, and
doubt is dashed by extra effort.

4.
Maintain order in your training, though like exercises can be occasionally
interchanged during a series of workouts -- dumbbell presses for bench presses,
preacher curls for dumbbell incline curls, leg presses for squats. I offer this latitude to
trainees who know their training well enough to recognize a need for exercise
replacement due to overload, discomfort or displeasure. I don’t support arbitrary
changes in your routine; they must be purposeful. This freedom will be valuable in
muscle growth and injury prevention, as well as provoking more thinking, and
evaluating exercise worth and effectiveness.

5.
Complicated is out. Keep it simple and basic and don’t be afraid to
superset (one exercise after the other performed with no rest in between)
.
Supersets are tough and wonderful, and, though demanding, work for all levels of
trainees. They are not reserved for leaning and defining the physique. Remember,
you’re eating and building. The basics include assorted presses -- bench, standing,
barbell, dumbbell; curls of all varieties -- standing barbell and dumbbell curls, incline
and preacher curls, alternate dumbbell curls. There are cable pulldowns, cable rows,
bentover bar and dumbbell rows, deadlifts, squats and leg presses. Don’t forget
pullovers, cleans, chins and dips.

Too often I see a trainee with weight-gain intentions wasting his time with lightweight
one-arm concentration curls or isolated upright cable rows or delicate one-arm cable
lateral raises. Tap, tap, tap! Cute additions to a lackluster routine or nifty pumpies for
a Sunday afternoon, but not the powerful basics we need to disturb the stubborn
body into growth. We want the blockbusters, the heavy artillery, those movements
that hammer the muscles like a pile driver. Kaboom, Kaboom, Kaboom!

Think thud! Don’t think clink. Think black and white. Don’t think pink.

Weight Training Program For Weight Gain

by Dave Draper

I have no particular weight training program for weight gain in mind. There is no
special bulking routine I recall from the past to pass onto you. That dimension of your
training is accomplished through your eating as described on our bulking article. The
function of your training is to build muscle with that precious food and fuel you ingest.
To help you in your training and simultaneously help you mature in your training, I’ll
merely direct you as you piece together your own workout scheme. I’ll just stand on
the side and "kibitz," as my Dad used to say... and do.

Say you’re going for the three-day compact schedule, here’s a neat mix of muscle
groups:

Day 1) Chest, back and shoulders

Day 2) Legs and torso

Day 3) Arms.

Training Instructions

First, you want to exercise your midsection each of those days with a combination of
leg raises, crunches, rope tucks and hyperextensions.
Second, you want to pick two or three complementing exercises per muscle group
from the list of basics we underscored above. Third, you want to perform them with all
your heart and might and mind. You will not fail.

Keep a reasonable mental note of the weight you use in each exercise and try to
exceed your input from workout to workout. Here’s where some guys and gals go off
the deep end. They think their training is only as successful as the progress they can
calculate by comparing this week’s numbers with last week’s. Phooey is the
professional term I use to comment on this frustrating and erroneous means of
charting one’s progress. The numbers represent a reference point only, the vicinity
from which you started. There’s no mountain to climb, only land to traverse. Do this
and one day the mountain will be beneath your feet.

Your goal is multifaceted, and includes improving your internal chemistry, your
cardiovascular health, your conditioning, your training knowledge and understanding,
your muscle weight, your muscle density, shape and size and skin tone and your
character and savvy. Be consistent and be confident, and these priceless attributes
advance on schedule. How often I’ve witnessed a lifter fold cuz he missed his last rep.
I know... the broken, misguided wimp having too often been me. Press on.

Four Day Split

Should you choose to spread your workouts over a dutiful four-day period you might
consider this:

Day 1) Chest, back and shoulders

Day 2) Arms and legs

Day 3) Off

Day 4) Chest, back and shoulders

Day 5) Arms and legs

Days 6-7) Off

Again, it’s the basics in an arrangement that appeals to you and to your physical
system. Think, not as a machine, but as a living, breathing, feeling and functioning
being with instincts. God bless our instincts. If you look at the bench press one day
and secretly want to torch the miserable thing, do dumbbell inclines instead. At least
the bench press will be there next week when you mysteriously crave the
troublesome movement. If it’s your day to squat, but you’d rather eat worms, maybe
you’d better squat cuz you’re coping out and you know it. Just thinking out loud.

Ahha! You’re going for the hunky Big Five workout. This is excellent, the choice of
champions. As a reward I’m going to refer you to my
All-Time Favorite
Bodybuilding Training Routine, which I recorded on the web about six years ago.

It’s still my favorite routine, though I condensed it to four days when I turned 61. It
was the will of my body and its ability to recuperate, which I, after considerable
battling and pouting, conceded to honor and obey. Days one, two and three remain
the same while day four is a combination of movements my intuition and desire call to
the foreground. All four workouts are enjoyable and productive and follow the
discipline and freedom I need to get the work done lovingly, wisely and well.

You cannot love your training every training session, but you must respect it. You
cannot give up, but you can give in... rarely. If you do, my dear friends, be willing to
answer to the phantom ego who stalks you in the shadows and carries a big stick. He’
s a ruthless taskmaster. Personally, I’d rather punish myself.

Wait! What’s that I see far and overhead? It’s the sky, the wild blue yonder, that
infinite and glorious space bound only by far-flung horizons. My wings, please; 'tis
time to go. Care to join me?

Home, at last... Dave

Take a look at Dave's
All-Time Favorite Bodybuilding Training Routine and his
recommendations on
Gaining Solid Muscle Weight.

About Dave Draper

Dave Draper is a bodybuilding author and fitness expert with over four decades of
practical experience. He holds the prestigious bodybuilding titles of Mr. America, Mr.
World and Mr. Universe, in addition to being part of the Bodybuilding Hall of Fame.
Dave writes a weekly e-mail newsletter which can be found at
www.davedraper.
com and is also a frequent contributor to Muscle and Fitness, as well as many other
publications in the fitness industry. Dave has also authored a book on bodybuilding
called
Brother Iron, Sister Steel, and a book on weight loss called Your Body
Revival: Weight Loss Straight Talk.