|
|
![]() By: Jason Bennett How many of you young kids read the magazines and the books that bodybuilders write, the ones with drops of jelly from your PB&J sandwich that was the staple of your diet when you were 12? I know you know what magazines I am talking about. When your friends were staring at the air brushed celebs in Playboy you were covered with a blanket, grasping a flashlight hoping the batteries do not run out and staring in amazement about how big those guys are. DAMN! You want to be like that don't you? Well, look at all the really big guys, not the streamlined fancy guys in striped shorts and a pretty button down. No, the FREAKS, with torn off jeans and suspenders, with muscles sticking out of places you have never seen. With veins so big you can see the blood pump through. Look at all those big guys, and compare their workout routines with the poster-boys. You will notice a trend. The boy band bodybuilders have things like:
Now compare that to the mass monsters with quads the size of watermelons on growth hormone. You'll notice their workout routines look like this:
Which one of these sounds harder? I think I have made my point. Seriously (not for too long though), look at all the mass freaks that do not blend in with society. Ronnie Coleman, Markus Ruhl, Nasser, Priest, etc. These guys all are no nonsense lifters. They use the basic free weight exercises with the max allowable weight by law. Deadlifts, Squats, Bent Rows, Military Press. Compound hardcore movements for hardcore growth.
Squats... have to do them. These things will make a man out of you. Sets of 12 with all the weight the gym handles done in a special gravity enforced room for extra poundage will make your legs grow like Pinocchio's nose trying to explain where that lipstick came from to his girlfriend. Are squats fun? Yes, especially when you are the biggest squatter in your gym, 5-6 plates a side and a few heads turn. After that, you could probably get valet parking at your gym, or at least a deep muscle massage from a spectator. Squatting is the manly way to big quads; you don't want to be that chicken-legged chump with 20 plates on that leg press in the corner that is angled up 30 degrees from the ground. I don't want to hear excuses like "but... mmmm... my knees hurt, my lower back hurts, I'm injured" You're a puss. If you're injured or hurt, squat heavier, that's the only thing that can cure you. ![]() Presses are essential for the chest and shoulders. Grab the heaviest and biggest dumbbells you can find. Hint: They are in the corner by the poster of "Tyson vs. McNealy," you will know you are their when you smell the dust. Wipe those guys down and start pressing. Flat, incline, decline bench presses, military presses and over head tricep press. Do them all, and grow like the champs. I use Dumbbells more than barbell to include stabilizer muscles for maximum growth potential. They are harder, and remember this little saying that probably will make it on the back of a t-shirt at Bodybuilding.com, "The harder they exercise, the more the growth."
Just like with any sport, fundamentals are a big key in becoming successful. The basic compound exercises are tried and true from the earliest bodybuilding days. Fundamentally sound athletes always have more success than anyone, even naturally gifted athletes. Remember this in your training at the gym and at the kitchen table. Never be afraid to lift more than everyone else in the world. There is no such thing as overtraining, only under-resting and under-eating. Grow! Thanks, Recommend this article to a friend by e-mail here! Visitor Reviews Of This Article!
Related Articles
|




Deadlifts are the staple exercise of a good bodybuilder, it builds muscle like a cult recruiting lost teenagers with no sense of who they are. It works your entire back, hamstrings, quads, calves, traps, abs and stretches out your biceps allowing some extra growth in them! It makes your ligaments into steel rods so you can handle ungodly loads of weight for other exercises. In 







