Tuesday 3 December 2013

The Beginner's Guide to Mass Building for Men and Women


The Beginner's Guide To Mass Building

For Men and Women

One of the many problems when entering the gym or starting on a journey towards any goal is that there are so many different voices to listen to.

Who is right?

Who is wrong?

Especially with it being the internet age, information is more readily available, meaning clarity in the mind of the beginner trainer is often lacking.

Suddenly the individual is in the gym feeling completely lost, makes very little progress and ends up either quitting or remaining the same year upon year, month after month.

I don't feel this needs to be the case, so the purpose of this article is to lay down a basic, clear and specific guide or list of rules to follow in order to start you on the road to building the muscle and/or strength you want to acquire.

The rules:
  • Track your progress
  • Have a plan (with alternatives), set goals, know your goals- if you intend to stay natural, find some natural bodybuilders of a similar body type, join and checkout websites such as the NPA, the BNBF or the WNBF to look at what is realistically achieveable as a natural competitor
  • Progressively overload (gradually)
  • Use correct technique (overall, most men need to focus on anything requiring a straight back, bent-over row, good mornings and squats seem to be the worst culprits)
  • Focus on the task in hand
  • Train and eat like an athlete
  • Never under any circumstances text, ring or check Facebook on your phone during a work out
  • Be consistent and wherever possible do not skip work outs
  • Hire a reputed Personal Trainer at least every couple of months
  • EAT AND DRINK ENOUGH
  • Allow for recovery
Track your Progress

First of all- GET YOURSELF A JOURNAL. You're probably spending far more than you should on food, supplements, gym memberships and god knows what else, but without writing down or recording your measurements, the weights you are lifting and the things you are eating how on earth are you going to know if you are progressing?

Looking into the mirror just simply isn't going to cut it, not when you see yourself each and every day.

To continually build muscle you must increase the amount you are working gradually over time, ideally you'll be changing around your exercises every 4-8 weeks, so when you cycle back to old exercises how are you going to know what you were lifting if you don't record your progress?

If progress is actually the aim, quit being lazy, record everything you do in the gym and use the time productively.

Have a plan

Matt Argall
x2 time NPA British Lightweight Champion

100% Natural

And ultimately the physique I am aspiring to achieve/ content with


Andrew 'Mezza' Merrifield and Mark Oakes
These men are examples of what you can achieve naturally, without the use of anabolic steroids

When you enter the gym it is far too easy to just go in and 'do what you feel like' and for more advanced athletes this can be fine, they are far less likely to fall into the trap of 'let's train chest, biceps and traps again.'

The absence of a plan when in the gym equates to a lack of focus.

Know what you are going to do when you get into the gym.

Also, especially if you are someone who must train at the busiest times in the gym, you must have alternatives planned to every exercise on your plan, you never know when a piece of equipment is going to ruin your program, so by having some alternatives in your back pocket, you minimise the chance of a piece of equipment ruining your session.

This is such a big issue.

Look around your gym and see how many people seem to be following a structured plan, the chances are that the number isn't very high, and I'm willing to bet that very few of these people are making any progress whatsoever.

Get a plan, get your head down and get it done in the gym.

If your gym work is a social event then you aren't training hard enough and you're not going to make the progress you could.

Plan it, execute it, and get the hell out.

Setting Goals



Setting goals is also massively important in keeping yourself on track. Many of us have been indocrinated by pictures of absolutely monstrous bodybuilders on the front of protein supplements, in films and in the media, you must get the idea of being like this out of your head. I feel the best thing to aim for is the top physiques in natural bodybuilding, so to establish an attainable physique for you I would check out npabodybuilding.co.uk or bnbf.co.uk to see what the best natural bodybuilders in the country look like. These are not drug enhanced, and it is a much more attainable look to strive for.

Progressively Overload

In order to stimulate muscle growth/stack on some muscle (the adaptation you are striving for when aiming for muscle growth) you must continually increase the amount of tension and stress placed upon the individual muscle fibre over time.

Essentially this means that you must CONTINUALLY INCREASE THE AMOUNT OF WEIGHT YOU ARE LIFTING IN ANY GIVEN EXERCISE.
Progressive Overload

If you are lifting the same weights that you were a year ago, then the chances are that you are the same size as a year ago. You must increase the amount you are working, otherwise the body has no reason to adapt.

The body will not adapt because you want it to, you must place in under more and more stress.

The key point is, train HARD. You don't need to increase the amount of weight (or reps ) every single work out, but the key is to lift more and more gradually over time.

If you don't progressively overload, you won't grow to anywhere near your full potential.


REMEMBER the connective tissues in your body take a little longer than the muscles to recover, so increase the weight slightly every few work outs, otherwise not letting these tissues recover will result in injury, which isn't good for your work out goals!



Use Correct Technique

If you get injured, you are unable to train, or it makes training more difficult as you strive to train around the problem.

On average, men seem to have far worse postural control and have greater difficulty performing exercises such as the deadlift, squat and bent-over row than women. This is partly due to having a heavier skeleton than women and in general lifting heavier weights day to day, it is often extremely embarrassing for men to have to take the weights down and do an exercise correctly, which I think is a huge contributor to the “I'm going to train chest and arms every single work out” phenomenon.

Watch Youtube videos, hire a Personal Trainer, read articles and just make sure you are performing all exercises correctly! Don't just swing a dumbbell around and expect to know how to perform every exercise just because you are in a gym!



Good posture while training = Far less likely to get injured, the targeted muscles are activated correctly and you're going to be much more able to be consistent with your training!



Practice and straighten your back!

Focus on the Task at Hand

If mass building is your goal of choice then focus on it!

Research it away from the gym, think about what you want to achieve in the gym before you get in there, and when you do, let no one interupt your focus, you are there to cause your body to adapt, to make it think that it needs to build muscle in order to survive.

So if you're messing about, with no focus on the task at hand, then you're never going to get anywhere.

Put some headphones in, get the music on that gets you going, and go after that goal like a man possessed.

You have plenty of time to talk to people after the session, when you've earned it, and not before.

Eat and Train Like an Athlete

it's only about 5-10% of gym members who get anywhere near to training properly in order to progress towards their goals.

The rest may have good intentions, but they are probably resting too much, not training hard enough, not making their work outs harder over time, and will probably end up stagnating and falling short of where they want to be. Simply because they don't want to or don't know how to do the HARD WORK that is required to make progress.

Athletes live and breath the sports in which they play. When they train, they train with a purpose. They get the work done, striving each day to improve. 90% of the people in gyms don't train like athletes, and 90% of people don't reach any significant exercise goal. Gaining muscle from a skinny beginning seems to be a particularly difficult starting point for people, so my advice would be to get into the mindset that you are an athlete, or at least aim to train like one until you are one.

Train harder, smarter and more consistently than everyone else in the gym, and the odds are that you will make more progress towards your goals than 90% of the other gym users around you.

WORK HARD AND RESULTS HAPPEN.
    Never under any circumstances text, ring or check Facebook on your phone during a work out
I am sick to the back teeth of this. I see people texting away and posting on Facebook all the way through their work out, then rechecking after each and every set.

If you can check your phone during a session, then you aren't training hard enough, it's as simple as that.

How can you focus on a training session designed at pushing your body to the limit if you are thinking about what to reply to the latest text, or thinking about your next witty Facebook post.

Put your phone away. If you can't go without it for an hour or less then you aren't going to make any progress anyway. Put the phone away, get some work done and go back to it afterwards.

Just so it sinks in....IF YOU CHECK YOUR PHONE EVEN ONCE DURING A WORKOUT THEN YOU AREN'T WORKING HARD ENOUGH AND ARE WASTING YOUR TRAINING TIME.

SORT IT OUT!
 
Be Consistent

You must place your body under enough stress to make it adapt, but what about the progress you have made so far?

This is where consistency is key, in order to protect your gains and continue on the ladder of progress you must consistently train, consistently progress and consistently get the hard work done. Without consistently training 3-5 times a week (training hard at least 3 of those sessions) your body simply reverts to it's previous state, gets rid of all the gains you trained so hard to get, because the muscular adaptations are no longer needed. This effectively puts you back to square one. So without consistency, you really don't stand a chance of making those gains.

Hire a Personal Trainer

Ideally this would be a reputed Personal Trainer who knows what he or she is talking about. We all get lazy with our programming, exercise technique and progress tracking (amongst many other things.)
 
According to Malcolm Gladwell in the book Outliers it takes 10000 hours of practice to gain mastery of a particular skill. So when you first enter a gym, there is no doubting this, this is 100% correct, as little as you want to hear it, you are going to do at least 50-90% of your training wrongly, which is why you should hire a Personal Trainer at least for the first couple of sessions.

Failing that you should diligently practice your exercises, Youtube is a fantastic resource. Film yourself training and compare your form to the masters. These are the people who will aid you in getting to exactly where you need to be.

A good Personal Trainer should be able to point out exactly where you are going wrong and give you a plan of action for the future. And for the small investment you must make in order to hire a Personal Trainer, you are going to save SO MUCH time, confusion, effort and money in the long run due to not buying loads of ridiculous supplements you don't need, you will get a logical plan to follow over the weeks and if technique is lacking in any way, the Personal Trainer can help you out there too. Saving you much pain and frustration should you get injured.

Speak to a few Personal Trainers before deciding on who you would like to train with.

Remember, just because he's biggest, most ripped, most qualified doesn't mean he is a good Personal Trainer at all. Speak to their clients if possible and make an informed decision in terms of who you want to train with.
 
Never be too proud to ask. If you aren't making the progress you want, then a fitness professional such as a Personal Trainer is one of the surest ways to get you back on track.

Eat and drink enough to fuel growth





Supplements






Hydration




Micronutrients


Macronutrients

Total Calories

In the above pyramid, you'll notice supplements are placed at the top of the pyramid. This denotes that SUPPLEMENTS ARE THE LEAST IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER WHEN FIRST STARTING ON YOUR MASS BUILDING JOURNEY.
Just to clarify.
SUPPLEMENTS ARE THE LEAST IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER WHEN FIRST STARTING ON YOUR MASS BUILDING JOURNEY.
Again.
SUPPLEMENTS ARE THE LEAST IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER WHEN FIRST STARTING ON YOUR MASS BUILDING JOURNEY.
Just in case you missed it...
SUPPLEMENTS ARE THE LEAST IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER WHEN FIRST STARTING ON YOUR MASS BUILDING JOURNEY.
Supplement companies have played a clever trick in making you think they are needed to make any progress in the gym. This is because people aren't prepared to put in the work consistently and see the results. No supplements are needed to make progress and build a fantastic physique.

They won't even guarantee any progress at all, for example, you could have as many protein shakes in a day as you want, but if you aren't consuming more calories than you burn, you won't grow at all.
Supplements can be brought in when everything else is sorted out.

So it's the total amount of calories you need to consider first of all.
Fill out a food diary, and check how many calories you currently consume on the average day, if you haven't put on any weight for a while, the chances are that you need to increase your calorific intake by a couple of hundred. Do this each week until you start to see the weight going up nice and steadily, say .25-.50lbs a week and stick with that calorific intake until the increase in weight slows, at that point you can consider taking calories up again.
Now on to macronutrients (protein, fat, carbs.) I'm not going into massive detail for the beginners as the total amount of calories is likely to be the biggest issue (if you're really skinny, you probably massively under eat and massively overestimate the amount you eat) but in terms of how much of the macronutrients you need, I would initially concentrate on the amount of protein you require within the total amount of calories that you consume.

Aim for 1.2-1.5g of protein per lb of bodyweight.
For example a 150lb man consuming 1.5g per lb of bodyweight would be consuming 225g of protein per day.
1.5g per lb is on the high end for people to achieve at first, but given a couple of weeks practice to get used to the dietary changes, and you should be fine.
For those that want fats and carbs percentages, usually I recommend getting 25% of your calories from fat and the rest of your calories from carbs.
Micronutrients are next on the list. Simply make sure you are eating plenty of varied fruit and veg, try to vary the sources where you get your protein from and try not to neglect any of the major food groups.

If you're a baby and can't handle veg, you might want to take a multivitamin to make sure you aren't deficient in any vitamins. This is less important while in a calorie excess, but nutrient deficiencies will get in the way of your progress and are to be avoided wherever possible.
Hydration comes next in my pyramid. Personally I try to drink 5 litres every day, but for most people that simply isn't doable or convenient to drag around such a large bottle of water. The beginner mass gainer should be absolute fine regulating their hydration levels using thirst alone. Drink plenty of water whenever your thirsty, and perhaps add an extra glass of water per meal and you shouldn't have anything to worry about in terms of hydration.
To go back to a previous point.
SUPPLEMENTS ARE THE LEAST IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER WHEN FIRST STARTING ON YOUR MASS BUILDING JOURNEY.
Supplements are pretty much always the first things that people ask me about when starting to put on mass. But consider all of the above, and they aren't even needed for anything other than convenience.
For example when winning the Novice Lightweight Yorkshire Natural Bodybuilding title, the only supplement I used was a protein shake, and the only reason for that was to save myself energy not having to cook another meal per day.
But no doubt people are still going to ask anyway.

So the supplements I take:

A whey protein

Creatine
Branch Chain Amino Acids
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
TurboNox

The only reason I now supplement is that I have been training for a number of years, and the additional 5-10% these supplements give me could potentially be the difference between 1st and 7th in my next show.
So before considering a supplement more than a protein shake, get everything else down first, then if you still feel you are lacking (please get a second opinion on this) you MIGHT consider taking some supplements similar to myself.
Recovery

Listen to your body. It needs to recover and can't lift heavy each and every day.

I usually have at least 2 days off a week from training, particularly after heavy leg days.
Some people need more recovery than others, others need far less. You'll probably need more rest as the weights you lift get heavier over time and as you progress up the ability ladder.

Eating the correct amount will certainly go a long way to help you optimize your recovery and subsequently grow in the way you want to grow. So without these days off your body simply will not have the time it needs to grow and get stronger for your next work out. Allow recovery. More work outs doesn't mean more gains.
 
What should I train and when?

At first you will make progress no matter how you split your training week. But for those wanting a more specific answer it seems best to train each body part twice a week, rather than the traditional 'smash each body part into the ground once a week.'
My training split is as follows:
(This seems to be working for me however it may not work for you)
Monday- Lower Body Hypertrophy (8-12 reps per exercise)

Tuesday- Off/ Some cardio

Wednesday- Back and Shoulders Hypertrophy (8-12 reps per exercise)

Thursday- Lower Body Power (3-6 reps per exercise)

Friday- Upper Body Power (3-6 reps per exercise)

Saturday- Off

Sunday- Chest and Arms
5 workouts a week certainly aren't needed.


A four workout week might look something like this:

Monday- Lower Body Hypertrophy (8-12 reps per exercise)

Tuesday- Upper Body Hypertrophy

Wednesday- Off

Thursday- Lower Body Power

Friday- Upper Body Power (3-6 reps per exercise)

Saturday- Off

Sunday- Off

Train hard, but not too much that you don't recover.

Eat more than you burn, but not so you pile a load of fat on.

Be smart, hire a professional or get the research done yourself.

Get in, get out, get the work done.

 



By Chris Kershaw and Jennifer Ward

Level 3 Advanced Personal Trainers

Call 07703679622 for your initial complimentary session while spaces are available!