If
you're a hardgainer or natural bodybuilder, you already know how difficult it
is to get sleeve-busting muscles. Learn how to avoid these common unforgivable
bodybuilding sins that not even the Pope will excuse!
Unforgivable
Bodybuilding Sin #1: Training through the motions instead of training for
results
How
many times have you gone to the gym and casually lift the same weights; same exercises;
same workout order; and same lack of progress? This is called insanity; doing
the same thing but expecting a different result. It is also known as training
through the motions. Your body is present but your mind is absent. Training through
the motions is fine if you are simply interested in stress release and improving
your energy levels, but if you are trying to build a body you can be proud of,
this won't cut it.
Only
results matter, if you expect to see progress.
Consider
the analogy of starting your own business. Starting your own business may earn
you praise for being a hard worker, disciplined, skillfulness and many other nice
compliments but if your business does not make money, the latter perks don't really
matter. Whether you agree or not, money is a measurement of whether your hard
work, discipline and skillfulness are paying off or not. Lifting more weight,
squeezing out more reps in a workout, and completing more work in less time are
all signs of measurement.
How
to make this sin forgivable?
Stop
training through the motions and you will no longer have the illusion that you
are improving. Focus on measuring your results and out doing yourself from workout
to workout and there will be no doubt that you are moving forward.
Unforgivable
Bodybuilding Sin #2: Not keeping a training journal
Not
keeping a training journal piggy backs on the last sin. Imagine trying to run
your brand new business without keeping records. You have no idea what's coming
in or what's going out. You have no idea why you had a bad month. You have no
idea why you had a good month. Training is no different.
History
has a tendency to repeat itself
If
something worked in the past, why wouldn't it work for the future? If something
did not work in the past, than most likely it won't work in the future! If you
are not tracking what works and what fails, than your training progress is doomed.
Instead
of just recording what you did at each workout, start recording the details. If
you had a great workout, let's determine why?
Is it from the amount of sleep you got the night before?
Was it a new workout drink you used?
Was it a different time of the day?
Did you warm up or stretch longer?
Did you take an extra day off?
Were you in a better mood?
How
to make this sin forgivable?
The
more you know, the more control you have of experiencing the same feeling the
next workout. On the flip side, if you had a terrible workout, consider all the
same factors to prevent it from happening in the future.
Human
nature always want to out do itself.
Your
natural instincts will strive for improvement. If you know what the numbers were
last workout, you will want to out do yourself. You will want to complete your
workout in 47 minutes instead of 50 minutes. You will complete all ten reps instead
of eight. You will increase your weights 2.5 lbs instead of stay the same.
The
numbers don't lie.
A
training journal will keep your progress honest and not deceive you. You might
feel incredible after a workout and consider that a sign of improvement but than
be disappointed when you realize that you were actually weaker meaning no sign
of improvement. Treat your training like a business and it will catapult your
muscle progress forward.
Unforgivable
Bodybuilding Sin #3: Broken focus
Here
is how I see many people live life. First you want to open up a restaurant. Next
week you want to become a police officer. The week after that you want to go to
Vegas to become a professional poker player! You will most likely fail at everything
you do because of your broken focus and lack of discipline to finish what you
start.
How
to make this sin forgivable?
A
lack of focus equals a lack of results. Start treating your training the same
way you would treat your career. If you change your career, every few weeks, you
will inevitably become a jack of all trades, master of none. It will not become
a question of if, but a question of when. Your training, to build a jaw dropping
physique, is no different.
Pick
one training program and stick with it
There
are a lot of options and it can be difficult to choose just one. However, look
at this has a positive, and make your life simple by choosing just one and stick
to it for it's entire program length. Don't start a 12 week strength program and
than go back to a bodybuilding style program after three weeks because it wasn't
working.
You
must trust the author of the program and take responsibility for your decision.
Do not consult others about a program someone else has written, they are not the
author of the program and will only confuse you.
Go
straight to the source and consult the author of the program if you require clarification,
otherwise execute every single detail as prescribed. Stay completely focused and
committed to the program you have chosen and squeezing out every ounce of muscle
that it promises.
How
to pick the right program
Don't
start a high-volume training program if you are not prepared to get extra sleep,
spend some extra money on supplements and find extra time in the day to eat more
food. Don't start a fat loss program if you don't have the time to do double day
workouts as sometimes necessary.
Don't
pick a bulking program if summer is coming up and you want to be ripped for summer.
Bottom line, make sure you know exactly what your program entails and that you
will be prepared to invest whatever is involved with the desired outcome.
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