How To Bulk Up and Get Ripped
Posted: Tuesday, November 11, 2008
by Bill Davis
Building muscle fast (bulking up) requires really heavy lifting, but it also requires smart work-outs and meal plans. We'll go over each of these in the following paragraphs.
A muscle grows only when it has to. Muscles grow as a consequence of overloading them and then allowing them sufficient rest and providing them sufficient nutrition so that they can adapt to the stresses put on them. As a practical matter, this means that you should exercise each muscle group a maximum of twice per week. When you really stress a muscle, you may even want to work out once per week. Muscles need a lot of time to recover after High Intensity Training (HIT) of this nature.
Day 1
- Squats, 4-5 sets, 10-12 reps. Slow and deliberate. Full squats.
- Hamstring curls, 3 sets, 15 reps.
- Calf presses, 3 sets, 20 reps.
- Tricep extensions, 3 sets, 10 reps.
- Barbell curls, 3 sets, 10 reps.
Day 3
- Bench press, 4-5 sets, 6-10 reps. No bouncing (EVER).
- Bent Rows, 4-5 sets, 6-10 reps. Feel the weight. Round the shoulders at the bottom, really squeeze the shoulder blades together at the top.
- Shoulder press, 3 sets, 10 reps.
Day 5
- Repeat Day 1. You can substitute stiff-legged deadlifts for the hamstring curls and you can do variations on the arm exercises.
Day 8 (Day 1 of the following week)
- Repeat Day 3. You can substitute Lat pull-downs for the Bent Rows.
Day 10
- Repeat Day 1.
In fact, if you only did one exercise at all, it should be the squat. Squats stimulate not only the quadriceps, hamstrings, and glutes, but they also stimulate muscle growth throughout the body. There are so many stabilizing muscles that are directly stressed by squats that you'd be hard-pressed to find a better overall exercise. Additionally, it's been shown that heavy squats actually trigger a muscle-building response in the body. In short, you'll gain muscle all over simply by doing heavy squats.
That's the exercise program. Each of these routines should take no more than 30-45 minutes to complete.
Now, onto the nutrition program. Vince Gironda, the "Iron Guru," held the belief that bodybuilding was 85 percent nutrition. I won't go that far. But I will say that training without good nutrition is pointless, just as good nutrition with no training is useless!
You CAN, however, trigger an anabolic response with proper nutrition. The key is keeping a positive nitrogen balance in the bloodstream. This means that you have to eat high-protein, low carb meals every 2-3 hours. DON'T WORRY ABOUT THE FAT. You'll also need to take in a LOT of supplements. There are a whole host of supplements that you need to take to effect this anabolic response. Remember, your muscles only grow if they have to. You can help this along by supplying them with the nutrients they need. Here's the program:
Breakfast
- Mix up 4-6 eggs
- 8 oz half and half
- 8 oz whole milk
- 8 oz steak or other beef
- Mix up 4-6 eggs
- 8 oz half and half
- 8 oz whole milk
- MetRx packet
- 1 pound hamburger
- Mixed green salad or raw veggies
- 4 oz cheese
- Mix up 4-6 eggs
- 8 oz half and half
- 8 oz whole milk
- MetRx packet
- 1 pound steak or roast
- Steamed veggies
- 4 oz cheese
- Mix up 4-6 eggs
- 8 oz half and half
- 8 oz whole milk
- MetRx packet
- 10 dessicated liver tablets
- 5 yeast tablets
- 4 raw orchic-tissue tablets
- 6 amino acid tablets (ariginine and ornithine)
You can see gains in as little as 2 weeks on this program!
Generally speaking, once you gain 2-5 pounds of muscle, you'll want to go on a less extreme diet plan and change up your exercise plan to do a few more sets per body part, with more reps per set. Why? Your body adapts to each type of stress you put upon it. Constantly changing things up "confuses" your body and, because it always seeks to adapt to the stress, continuously grows. Also, by switching up the exercise regimen, you'll be promoting different aspects of muscle growth (Muscles grow in various ways: The parts of the cells grow in number and in size, both require different training stresses).
In summary, then, you will constantly cycle through this extreme training and diet plan, you'll move off it after several weeks, then you'll go to higher volume but less intense work-outs for several months and a more traditional ("balanced") diet, then you'll return to this muscle-building phase. It's a cyclical, or phased, approach. I call it the "Stair Step Method."
Here's to your bodybuilding success!
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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)I really liked your article, very helpful. One thing though, you said to eat high protein, low carb meals but i was under the impression that you need, complex carbs to provide the energy needed for workouts and that without it your body takes energy directly from your muscle tissue and can subsequently reduce your muscles. so now I'm confused! :)Please log in to respond to this comment.I should have been more precise with my words - I should have said "relatively low carb" rather than "low carb."
We Americans eat way too many carbs and not nearly enough quality protein. If you check the foods I listed, you will see that you get plenty of carbs.Please log in to respond to this comment.
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