Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 Hey Andy, I forget which Muscle Media mag had the article in it. But I read an article that wrote that made a world of sense to me and completely changed my ab training. I found I had trained my abs wrong for the last 6 years in the gym. I was one that believed like most people that I needed to do a million crunches every day. In the article he stated that if you wanted your bicep to grow would you do a million reps every day??? NO! that would make the muscle smaller due to over training. The article then said to think of your abs as any other muscle and train them as any other muscle group. He said NOT to train them every day, they need recooperation time. And to build the muscle there (the ripples that stick out- aka 6pk lol). As with other muscles if you want to build muscle you need to do low reps high weight, to lean out high reps low weight. The way BFL training plan goes makes a happy medium with the reps, sets, and weight. Some of the sets are high reps low weight and change as you are pyramiding. You said you do NOT want to increase your girth, what I would do is be very very strict with you diet and follow the training routine that I have attached that sent to me. Best of luck! P.S. I hate ab training lolololol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 Hey Andy, I forget which Muscle Media mag had the article in it. But I read an article that wrote that made a world of sense to me and completely changed my ab training. I found I had trained my abs wrong for the last 6 years in the gym. I was one that believed like most people that I needed to do a million crunches every day. In the article he stated that if you wanted your bicep to grow would you do a million reps every day??? NO! that would make the muscle smaller due to over training. The article then said to think of your abs as any other muscle and train them as any other muscle group. He said NOT to train them every day, they need recooperation time. And to build the muscle there (the ripples that stick out- aka 6pk lol). As with other muscles if you want to build muscle you need to do low reps high weight, to lean out high reps low weight. The way BFL training plan goes makes a happy medium with the reps, sets, and weight. Some of the sets are high reps low weight and change as you are pyramiding. You said you do NOT want to increase your girth, what I would do is be very very strict with you diet and follow the training routine that I have attached that sent to me. Best of luck! P.S. I hate ab training lolololol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 The same article goes on to state: " If you are doing dozens or even hundreds of repetitions, then the answer is no, unless you are a novice to training. If you want cardiovascular or aerobic fitness, then you must do thousands of reps with little resistance for a prolonged period, as in distance running, cycling or swimming. If you want bodybuilding hypertrophy, then 8-12 reps are most commonly used. If you want strength, then 5-8 reps with heavy weights are most popular. If you want to develop dynamic (not static) muscle endurance with resistance, then you might do anything from 20-100 reps with a moderate weight. If you want power (like Olympic weightlifters, shotputters and jumpers), then you do as few as 1-3 reps at a time, naturally with very heavy loads. Remember that there are individual variations to these formulas, but for the general client, they still offer reasonably valid guidelines. " Now I didn't quite understand all of that in terms of my own goal. If my goal is to *slim down* (and get more muscular *elsewhere*), then should I really be doing much ab exercising *at all*? That whole article really played down the importance of ab exercises altogether. Thanks, Andy > According to an article at > http://www.fitnesslink.com/exercise/abmania3.shtml, > > " Let's consider a few of these reasons. First, it is highly unlikely > that any amount of ab exercise, with or without machines, will trim > you down and take off fat. On the contrary, ab exercise will probably > increase the muscle bulk around your waist and increase your girth. " > > The first sentence is pretty much common knowledge - but is the second > sentence actually true? I was expecting to have to do a fair amount > of ab workouts as part of the BFL program, but I do *NOT* want to > increase my girth!! > > Thanks, > Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 Andy, Don't worry: there are NO exercises in BFL that you should not do for any particular aesthetic reason. Stick to the program as written, and save the tweaking for six months or so from now, when you're well entrenched in a healthy lifestyle. As to abs: exercise firms them up, but they stay hidden under layers of fat until your body fat ratio falls under a certain point (usually under 10% for men). So for that " washboard " effect, you have to combine exercise with diet. I think that was the point of the passage you quoted: that if you just exercise the abs but don't lose the gutfat, you might end up with a wider waist. But YOU'RE not going to have that, because YOU'RE firming up and slimming down at the same time. Hope this helps. > Andy > > > > According to an article at > > http://www.fitnesslink.com/exercise/abmania3.shtml, > > > > " Let's consider a few of these reasons. First, it is highly unlikely > > that any amount of ab exercise, with or without machines, will trim > > you down and take off fat. On the contrary, ab exercise will > probably > > increase the muscle bulk around your waist and increase your girth. " > > > > The first sentence is pretty much common knowledge - but is the > second > > sentence actually true? I was expecting to have to do a fair amount > > of ab workouts as part of the BFL program, but I do *NOT* want to > > increase my girth!! > > > > Thanks, > > Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 In a message dated neo-reality@... writes: I was expecting to have to do a fair amount of ab workouts as part of the BFL program, but I do *NOT* want to increase my girth!! Well if it happens, you could always stare it down in the mirror and say, "You go girth!" Sorry Andy, couldn't resisit it after your Hmmmm, Nutbars.... Leaner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 O sp ;pve tje cp,edoams pm tjos .....oops...that shoud read....I so love the comedians on this site.... I was working in the dark....had my fingers on the wrong keys.....hehehehehehehe Z Well if it happens, you could always stare it down in the mirror and say, "You go girth!" Sorry Andy, couldn't resisit it after your Hmmmm, Nutbars.... Leaner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 25, 2001 Report Share Posted January 25, 2001 > Andy, > < Don't worry: there are NO exercises in BFL that you should not do for any particular aesthetic reason. Stick to the program as written, and save the tweaking for six months or so from now, when you're well entrenched in a healthy lifestyle. > Pretty good advice, I reckon. Surprised I didn't think of it myself. :-) < As to abs: exercise firms them up, but they stay hidden under layers of fat until your body fat ratio falls under a certain point (usually under 10% for men). > My longterm goal is to get to single-digit bodyfat percentage! < So for that " washboard " effect, you have to combine exercise with diet. > Amen, brother! Thanks, . Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 25, 2001 Report Share Posted January 25, 2001 Ha. Ha. Ha. Andy ;-) > In a message dated neo-reality@h... writes: > > > I was expecting to have to do a fair amount of ab workouts as part of the > > BFL program, but I do *NOT* want to increase my girth!! > > Well if it happens, you could always stare it down in the mirror and say, > " You go girth! " Sorry Andy, couldn't resisit it after your Hmmmm, > Nutbars.... Leaner. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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