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#2 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Toronto
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well i wouldnt start off doing 6 days per week. If you are just starting out. I can see you are all fired up to become a new you but you have to ease into it. Save the energy for when you are in there, say, 4 days per week.
For the first month i would start you off on a program that involves working every moscle group, every time you go in, 3-4 times a weeek. Like a circuit program. Then after about a month start to isolate each muslce group so you are working one or two groups each time you work out. One muscle group per week. So for example...... Monday Bicepts and Chest Wed Back and Tricepts Friday Shoulders, Traps Sunday Legs Doing abs 2-3 times per week. Regardless of your height, weight and body fat index... you will start to notice results in the first month. But depending on your height, weight and body fat index..it could take up over a year to start seeing the results you truly want. To achieve something really special you have to stay focus, motivated, consistent etc...in your eating habits and workouts. It is all about progression and as long as youstart and dont quite....you will be able to achieve a lot. But to totally re-shape yourself takes a long time. But nobody expects to break out into a Jimi hendrix quitar solo the first time they pick up the guitar either, even though tehy want too.....and sometimes the length and effort to get there becomes to much... that is the greatest struggle. Staying hungry and not giving up. |
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#3 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: 127.0.0.1
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It's hard to say, really. Taking protein supplements will increase the process, but it can still take a long time. Just make sure that if you actually are working out 5-6 days a week that you vary what you exercise every day (ie, legs one day, chest & back the next, arms and stomach the day after, etc etc blah blah) so that your muscles have time to heal.
You'll probably notice a small difference after a month, then maybe around 3 months, six months, and a year. It's really something that you have to work at for it to happen. I'm sure others will have more to say, but thats the gist of it. |
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#5 (permalink) |
Insane
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5-6 days a week? Ouch! The other two already said the downside to that. . .
Anyyay, everyone's different but for getting bigger, a fast rate of progress can be 2 lean kg every two weeks (abt 4.5 lbs). Depending on your goals and eating habits of course. If you are skinny like that it usually means high metabolism, you would have to eat like a pig to get any meat to stick to you. I mean a PIG. Eat at least twice as much as you are eating now, if not more. But eat good food or else you get fat. |
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#8 (permalink) | |
Tilted
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#9 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: Orange County, California
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Here is a great site to show the different exercises for your different muscle groups ![]() http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/exercises.htm |
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#11 (permalink) |
Psycho
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Keep in mind , if you are pressed for time a work-out buddy can severly slow you down. While it is a good idea to take rests in between sets, a workout buddy may end up stretching your rest-time in between sets to like 5 or 10 minutes. Eventually those minutes start to add up and it could take you 2 hours to do a workout then you may be able to complete in 50 minutes by yourself.
Of course, you will need a buddy to do things like benching and perhaps for fly's(I think thats what they're called?) and a few other things, but you could always ask someone else who's in the gym(if you're going to a public one) for some help..from my experience even the biggest guys in the gym are usually pretty nice and helpful. Cowlick: If you don't eat a lot, then yeah you'll gain muscle for a bit, but eventually you'll come to a halt. How do you expect your body to gain mass, if you're not putting that mass into your body in the first place? Also, while you may get big results in 6 months, you shouldn't play/and or hope for it. Everyone's body is different, and it could take you years to achieve what you dream of. Like you can see from a thread I posted the other day, I havn't been making the biggest gains over the past few months, but it hasn't discouraged me because I enjoy going the gym. Getting those big muscles has almost taken the back-burner to simply enjoying the time I spend in the gym. If it's not fun, then find another way for excersize because you're not going to get ANY results if you're not enjoying it.
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You don't like my point of view..but im insane Last edited by Cowman; 09-01-2003 at 05:48 PM.. |
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#12 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: Orange County, California
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For proper mass gains, eat clean and eat more calories then you are supposed to be taking in daily (go find out what your BMR is), make sure you are getting plenty of protein, and keep consistant on your workouts (weights AND cardio). Don't listen to anybody who says to eat whatever you can because you will have wasted a lot of your life and end up very unsatisfied with the results. Not only is misinformation a waste of time, but it is very unhealthy as well. For a more accurate guestimate on how long it will take, post a pic of your frame and one of the body you aspire to look like and we can give you a better idea. Last edited by Plan9Senior; 09-01-2003 at 06:22 PM.. |
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#15 (permalink) |
Upright
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If you want to gain cleanly, you should do aerobic (jogging, swimming laps, cycle) exercises just as much as strength.. yes, I know most people don't appreciate it. Protein supplements and creatine help. The first summer I started working out religiously, I gained 25 pounds.. that was 5 years ago. Since then I'm at a plateau. Growth spurt stopped, so I'm just trying to keep the fat off.
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#16 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: Orange County, California
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#17 (permalink) |
Crazy
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I worked out hard for about 3 months and noticed some good results... I think I'm in the same boat as you, pretty thin, but just keep at it... motivation is the toughest part, especially when you're struggling to throw down sets of 10 with 125lbs bench and see the dude next to you doing like 200+ easy, it sucks but keep at it... and take pride in the fact that the really strong guys all look kinda fat whereas you'll get some nice definition right away and look a little bigger than you actually are...
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#19 (permalink) | |
Purple Monkey Dishwasher
Location: CFB Gagetown, NB, CANADA
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Quote:
http://www.exrx.net/Lists/Directory.html
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"If you're not weird, you're not interesting". I'm very interesting ... seizei; (adv - Japanese) at the most; at best; to the utmost; as much (far) as possible. (pronounced - say-zay) |
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#21 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: San Diego, CA.
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Totally depends on how you work out, your habbits, and the person doing the working.
When i used to lift semi-often, i was going 5 days a week for about an hour a day. Lifting that frequently i gained quite a bit fo strength. I didn't spend my time too well and didn't work all that hard, but in about 7 months i had increased my bench 75lbs, squatting 100 more, etc. I was much stronger than i started. Over the course of this period though, i only gained about 10lbs, maybe 15. Most of this was from growing a few inches. I was 120 going into it, came out 135 or so. Again, i am pretty skinny so i didn't have much weight to lose, thus the little increase in weight. I grew very little more muscle mass, and i got more toned. But i got much stronger. I knew several other people would had similar gains and had a rather noticable increase in body size. It depends on what kind of person you are and what you consider "buff". You can gain strength and not much bulk, and you can also gain a lot of bulk, but not all that much strength. It depends on how you work out and what you want to accomplish.
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Dont cry kid, It's not your fault you suck. |
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#22 (permalink) | |
Insane
Location: Milwaukee
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Don't blame me... *I* voted for Kodos! |
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#23 (permalink) | |
Dubya
Location: VA
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I switch from one to the other every 5-6 months or so, every time I start plateauing with one, I move on to the other. |
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#24 (permalink) |
Banned
Location: Orange County, California
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Also, when on a cut cycle, you create a caloric defecit so you are losing bodyfat from your diet as well. Some take fat burners too while cutting, but I am totally against suppliments that puts an unnatural stress on your system. Working out goes in cycles, "bulking" and "cutting". Bulking is done during the winter season until a few months before summer (when you are going to be wearing less clothes) you start your cutting. It is the way that your body grows mass while maintaining a healthy low bodyfat percentage.
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buff, long |
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