Thursday, September 26, 2013

The Optimal Workout Frequency For Hypertrophy

By Russ Howe-Pti


If you don't know how to build muscle one of the first questions you'll likely ask is how to work out the optimal number of gym sessions to see great gains. Today we will explain this for you and show you where quite a lot of exercise enthusiasts go wrong.

Before you visit your local gym there are a few changes you should make at home in order to ensure your workouts are more productive.
The importance of diet is just one of the five rules touched upon in the video guide on how to build muscle accompanying today's article.


Let's start with people who have perhaps never used a gym before. How are you supposed to know when to workout? This is an area which many people get lost in. Don't buy into the fear that you must blast your body every day of the week.

If you can get to the gym two-to-three times per week you should see positive results within the first four weeks. Especially if you combine cardiovascular exercise with regular weight training. That means you too, girls. Don't buy into the incorrect philosophy that weights will make you huge.

This will get your body ready for the lifestyle change you intend to put it through.

Once you begin seeing results, however, a different type of situation is upon you and there are different risks to your progress. No longer will you have to worry about hitting the gym regularly enough, because seeing a positive change in the shape of your body will be enough to kick-start your desire to exercise more than ever before.

Many people succumb to the urge of working out every day of the week when they reach this stage, believing that the more exercise they complete the more results they will ultimately see.

You do not need to hit the gym every day of the week. If you do then you'll actually notice less improvement than if you took adequate rest periods in between your workouts. That's right, more is not necessarily better.

If you don't let your body rest you will not see continued results. You are essentially breaking down yesterday's results and rebuilding them today, which will not actually help you to get any further forward at all. If you simply enjoy training and don't want to limit yourself to three sessions per week, you should look into using a split routine instead of a full body workout at this stage.

You need to rest in order to grow, so don't allow yourself to give in to the temptation of hitting a certain muscle group purely because you enjoy the ego boost it gives. This is known in fitness circles as "Chest and arm syndrome" and usually affects men who like working on their biceps.

If you utilize a split routine there is nothing to stop you from hitting the gym five times a week, however those two extra days should be reserved for rest. One of the most important factors in learning how to build muscle which lasts into the long term is understanding the importance of rest.




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