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Old 01-05-2007, 01:07 PM
Musclehead24 Musclehead24 is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Eric3237 View Post
You don't need to do that. Variety for variety's sake is useless. To keep the body guessing is not why people periodize, it's just what clueless people say to sound smart. If they gave you a simple prescription based on your needs, they wouldn't appear as knowledgable. There may be reasons for certain people to change rep ranges in some linear fashion at some point in their training but that is not it. Personally I think linear peridization sucks even for what it's meant to do. But some people find it works for them.

You know that story (Roman, I think) about the guy who gets this bull calf and carries it up a hill every day. As the bull grows and grows, the guy continues carrying it up day after day. Once the bull is full grown the guy is like hercules or something. I forget his name. But hopefully you get the point, it's fantasy and myth, but even back then people instinctually knew how the body adapts.

The "shock the muscle" theory probably has it's popularity due to the widespread epedemic of attention deficit disorder. Some people just can't stick to a plan . Things take time. Don't expect miracles. If you're not Ronnie Coleman in two weeks it doesn't mean the answer is to change your rep range. Usually progress stops because the trainee fucks it up, not because the body is confused as to what it is supposed to be doing.

Personally I hate any program that starts out complicated and in order to have it keep being productive you have to further and further complicate it. That's my problem with HST. But you'd be much better off with that rather than just doing some random rep ranges for a completely invalid reason.

Keep things as simple as they can be and still result in progress. Only complicate them when more complexity becomes necessary.
I agree, I rather just do basic lifts, eat and grow. I don't want to follow any specific program. With an upper/lower split I was thinking about doing something like this...

Mon:
Bench Press
Bent Over Rows
Military Press
Shrugs
Barbell Curl

Tues:
Squats
Calve Raises
Abs

Thursday:
Incline Bench
Deadlifts
Pull-Ups
Close Grip Press

Friday:
Leg Press
Calve Raises
Abs

I want to keep it simple and train the entire body twice per week. I will train heavy and close to failure, but not complete failure. I was concerned about the rep range because I don't want to burn out. So should I just keep the reps between 5-7?

P.S. I dont know if this has any barring, but I'm not a beginner. I've been training for about 4 years on and off and I've made some good gains. Over the years I've trained a lot of different ways so I can't pinpoint and say what has worked best for me. Now I just want a good routine I can follow and make good gains.
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