Nobody gets it right all the time. If that were the case, we’d all be sporting Olympia-contending physiques and chasing down supplement contracts. Bodybuilding is such an individual pursuit — one where success is built on more trial and error than we sometimes care to admit. But one of the best ways to achieve results the fastest isn’t to ensure you’re getting everything right but rather to evaluate what you may be doing wrong. The following list represents nine of the most common training and dietary mistakes that people make as they work to build lean muscle and torch more bodyfat.
1. Skipping Breakfast
Wake up. Shower. Shave. Get dressed. If you’re lucky, you get to grab some coffee before sprinting to your car and diving headlong into your morning commute. But if you haven’t eaten, you won’t be taking a trip to Gainsville. For one, studies have shown that those who skip breakfast are much more likely to overeat later in the day. Also, for every minute you run on empty after waking up, your body is cannibalizing your muscles for energy, which it needs to fuel basic activities, and it’ll take it from somewhere, even your muscles. Without restocking muscle glycogen with some healthy, slow-digesting carbs or introducing some amino acids with a protein quick fix, you’re condemning yourself to a plateau or worse — a backslide. Missing this important meal also interferes with your blood-sugar level, causing undesirable swings in energy and unwanted storage of bodyfat. While oatmeal is a great source of fiber and complex carbs, the centerpiece of a bodybuilder’s breakfast has to be the almighty egg. Research conducted at Louisiana State University’s Pennington Biomedical Research Center found that eating eggs for breakfast reduces hunger and leads to greater abdominal fat loss.
>> Keep your gains on track by having a carb- and protein-rich meal every morning before starting your day. Your breakfast caloric ratio should be about 25–40% protein, 50–65% carbs and 10% fat.
2. Excessive Cardio
Weight training, on its own, is one of the most powerful fat-fighting activities anyone can engage in since it builds muscle, which is a metabolically active tissue. The more muscle you carry, the more calories you burn. But performing cardio is absolutely essential if you expect to get your physique dialed in — it taps into stubborn pockets of bodyfat and increases your overall cardiovascular health. But it’s easy to get carried away. Guys eager to burn fat faster will start stretching sessions out longer or adding more cardio over the course of the week, not knowing that they’re actually sabotaging their overall body composition. Cardio burns calories, but calories build muscle, so adding size will be much more difficult if your body is fighting a constant calorie deficit. Plus, excessive training of any kind can blunt recovery and spike the stress hormone cortisol, which can interfere with muscle growth and fat burning.
>> To keep your gains on track, perform 2–3 cardio sessions per week. For high-intensity cardio, keep sessions to 20 minutes or less. If you’re doing steady-state work, 30 minutes is a good target. To keep from overtraining, add minutes or additional sessions incrementally — a few extra minutes per week or one more bout of cardio every few weeks. If you plateau, start to lose muscle or have a drastic drop in your energy level, cut back on the cardio volume.
3. Training To Failure
We love spirited, iron-loving diehards who think that a set isn’t a set unless your eyeballs are bleeding by the end of it. Training to failure has its place, but the research is clear on when and how it’s best used. As to the “when,” it simply doesn’t make sense to take your first set of any exercise to failure, certainly not if your goal is to lift as much cumulative weight as possible each session. Your muscle strength will be diminished if you spend all your energy capital at the start of each set, which is why you should save failure for your final sets of an exercise. Specifically, by training to failure during the last set — and only the last set — of an exercise, you give yourself the best chance for growth. Researchers at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra found that those taking multiple sets of the bench press to failure gained less strength than those who took only one set to failure.
>> Keep your gains on track by limiting failure training (forced reps, drop sets, etc.) to the last set of each exercise for a given bodypart.
4. Not Training To Failure
One of the most common things that can hinder gains in the gym is not pushing your muscles to failure. Beginners tend to do this out of fear, while more experienced lifters do it out of some misinformed notion that doing so could adversely affect strength gains. But researchers at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra found that lifters who performed four sets of six on the bench press, with the last set done to failure, three times a week for six weeks experienced a 10% increase in strength. Subjects in the study who performed three sets of eight, but never trained to failure over that time, saw only a 5% bump. Additionally, a recent study published in The Journal of Nutrition found that protein synthesis was increased for 24 hours following resistance exercises performed to failure in both heavy-weight/low-rep and lighter-weight/high-rep groups, meaning that training to failure puts you in a position to grow more muscle — regardless of how much weight you’re using.
>> To keep gains on track, take the last set of each exercise to failure, which increases protein synthesis for 24 hours following your workout.
1. Skipping Breakfast
Wake up. Shower. Shave. Get dressed. If you’re lucky, you get to grab some coffee before sprinting to your car and diving headlong into your morning commute. But if you haven’t eaten, you won’t be taking a trip to Gainsville. For one, studies have shown that those who skip breakfast are much more likely to overeat later in the day. Also, for every minute you run on empty after waking up, your body is cannibalizing your muscles for energy, which it needs to fuel basic activities, and it’ll take it from somewhere, even your muscles. Without restocking muscle glycogen with some healthy, slow-digesting carbs or introducing some amino acids with a protein quick fix, you’re condemning yourself to a plateau or worse — a backslide. Missing this important meal also interferes with your blood-sugar level, causing undesirable swings in energy and unwanted storage of bodyfat. While oatmeal is a great source of fiber and complex carbs, the centerpiece of a bodybuilder’s breakfast has to be the almighty egg. Research conducted at Louisiana State University’s Pennington Biomedical Research Center found that eating eggs for breakfast reduces hunger and leads to greater abdominal fat loss.
>> Keep your gains on track by having a carb- and protein-rich meal every morning before starting your day. Your breakfast caloric ratio should be about 25–40% protein, 50–65% carbs and 10% fat.
2. Excessive Cardio
Weight training, on its own, is one of the most powerful fat-fighting activities anyone can engage in since it builds muscle, which is a metabolically active tissue. The more muscle you carry, the more calories you burn. But performing cardio is absolutely essential if you expect to get your physique dialed in — it taps into stubborn pockets of bodyfat and increases your overall cardiovascular health. But it’s easy to get carried away. Guys eager to burn fat faster will start stretching sessions out longer or adding more cardio over the course of the week, not knowing that they’re actually sabotaging their overall body composition. Cardio burns calories, but calories build muscle, so adding size will be much more difficult if your body is fighting a constant calorie deficit. Plus, excessive training of any kind can blunt recovery and spike the stress hormone cortisol, which can interfere with muscle growth and fat burning.
>> To keep your gains on track, perform 2–3 cardio sessions per week. For high-intensity cardio, keep sessions to 20 minutes or less. If you’re doing steady-state work, 30 minutes is a good target. To keep from overtraining, add minutes or additional sessions incrementally — a few extra minutes per week or one more bout of cardio every few weeks. If you plateau, start to lose muscle or have a drastic drop in your energy level, cut back on the cardio volume.
3. Training To Failure
We love spirited, iron-loving diehards who think that a set isn’t a set unless your eyeballs are bleeding by the end of it. Training to failure has its place, but the research is clear on when and how it’s best used. As to the “when,” it simply doesn’t make sense to take your first set of any exercise to failure, certainly not if your goal is to lift as much cumulative weight as possible each session. Your muscle strength will be diminished if you spend all your energy capital at the start of each set, which is why you should save failure for your final sets of an exercise. Specifically, by training to failure during the last set — and only the last set — of an exercise, you give yourself the best chance for growth. Researchers at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra found that those taking multiple sets of the bench press to failure gained less strength than those who took only one set to failure.
>> Keep your gains on track by limiting failure training (forced reps, drop sets, etc.) to the last set of each exercise for a given bodypart.
4. Not Training To Failure
One of the most common things that can hinder gains in the gym is not pushing your muscles to failure. Beginners tend to do this out of fear, while more experienced lifters do it out of some misinformed notion that doing so could adversely affect strength gains. But researchers at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra found that lifters who performed four sets of six on the bench press, with the last set done to failure, three times a week for six weeks experienced a 10% increase in strength. Subjects in the study who performed three sets of eight, but never trained to failure over that time, saw only a 5% bump. Additionally, a recent study published in The Journal of Nutrition found that protein synthesis was increased for 24 hours following resistance exercises performed to failure in both heavy-weight/low-rep and lighter-weight/high-rep groups, meaning that training to failure puts you in a position to grow more muscle — regardless of how much weight you’re using.
>> To keep gains on track, take the last set of each exercise to failure, which increases protein synthesis for 24 hours following your workout.
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