![]() |
||||||
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 94
From: barry@math.ucla.edu
(Barry Merriman)
Periodization Methods
My Sample Bodybuilding Routine
Diet
Supplements
Drugs
Sleep
Training
Comments
The key to big gains after your first couple beginner easy
growth years is to train more, but do it in a periodized fashion
to avoid (mental and physical) overtraining. Without periodization
(or steroids) you will rapidly overtrain on these higher volume
workouts.
It is worth reading up on periodization techniques: I suggest
the following:
The above three refs I have no direct experience with, but
I have seen them described and they sound like good periodization
systems for size and strength, and drug free training.
My personal favorite, and authorative reference
on periodization techniques as well as what is really known about
all other aspects of weight training (including nutrition, proper
form, steroids, etc), is the college sports medicine text book
Weight
Training: A Scientific Approach
by Michael Stone and Harold Obryant
1987
Published by Burgess International Group
7110 Ohms Lane
Edina MN, 55435
612-831-1344
Not only is it an excellent, well researched and referenced text,
but I have also talked with a student that studied under one of
the authors, and he concurred he is extremely knowledgable about
weight training. (Note: don't expect any magic bullets here---this
book wil just tell you what is known, and there is no short cut).
*If you want references for any of the claims I make below, see
the book I recommend*
This routine is intended primarily to add muscle and body mass.
We must consider all factors related to growth:
You need a high calorie diet to grow, with plenty of protein.
You should get at least 1 gram of quality protein per pound of
bodyweight, and around 20 calories per pound of bodyweight per
day---that will vary a bit depending on whether you have a slow
or fast metabolism. Through experiment, you will need to find
a calorie intake that leads to growth without too much fat accumulation.
keep your diet around 20% fat, 50% carbs and 30% protein. Calories
intake will probably be in the range of 3500--4000 calories. Don't
worry if you put on some fat while gaining mass---you can take
it off later.
But This is plenty of calories---The mega-calorie diets you read
about in the mags (6000, 8000, etc calories) are only for heavy
steroid users.
You don't need steroids to make good gains on these programs. I used them drug free, and am a classic hard-gainer type. If you do want to use steroids, I suggest you wait until your natural gains are pretty well tapped out, which would take at least 3 years of proper training. I also suggest you use them to accomplish a specific goal, like a 450 lb bench or an 19 inch arm, rather than just playing around with them.
Get plenty, at least 8 hours a night, and train first thing in the morning if possible. Once you get used to it, you will find you can get the best workouts then.
Ok, now its time for the periodization schedule for each bodypart, choose 2 exercises, one compound, one more isolation. I recommend the folloing, for e.g.
*only one direct trap exercise, as it gets hit by other things
In your workout, perform 4 sets of each exercise. The first should
be a light, thorough warmup. Then jump to your heaviest weight
you will use that day, do your set, and reduce the weight on the
subsequent sets---so you do one warmup and 3 descending weight
sets. Reps will be kept in the 8--12 range.
Now, split the bodyparts into a 5 day split:
Now, impose a heavy-light alteration on top of this, for a 10 day micro-cycle:
HEAVY = 100% effort, trying for new best set
LIGHT = 75% of the weight used on the previous heavy day
Now that you have the miscro-cycel, here is how to organize these
into a macro cycle:
At the start of your training cycle, choose weights for your initial
heavy days that allow you to get 8-12 reps comfortably.
Then: each heavy day, try as hard as possible to increase your
reps on each hard set (you do 6 hard sets per bodypart, recall).
You will need to keep a small training log to keep track of previous
performance. Try to maintain the same form fom day to day---don't
get more reps by getting sloppy.
Every time you reach 12 reps, in your next heavy day for that
set, increase the weight, but by as little as possible (5 lb increments,
or even 2.5 if you have 1.25 lb plates); that will knock the reps
back down to around 8 or so the next time.
On your light days, just mimic your previous heavy set in terms
of reps, but use only 75% of the weight. On these days, focus
on your form, move through the workout more quickly, and do not
tax the muscle. A decent pump and tiny burn is all you should
get.
If your muscles are still sore on their light day, that is fine
and to be expected. If a muscle is still sore on its next heavy
day, insert a day off.
Cycle termination: continue these 10 days micro-cycles, progressing
every heavy workout as described, until: you fail to improve over
your previous best on a lot of your sets and for 2 consecutive
heavy days. fo example, if my best bench sets were 225 x 10, 200
x 9, 180 x 7, and then the next two heavy days I got 225 x 8,
200 x 8, 180 x 8, and 225 x 8, 200 x 8 , 180 x 9, that would indicate
that your progress has truly stalled and your are starting to
over train. Consider your set performance increases as votes---every
set that improves is a vote to continue the cycle, evry set that
stagnates or regresses is a vote to stop. When the stop votes
win, terminate the cycle.
When you terminate the cycle, do one whole 10 day cycle using
VERY LIGHT weights---50--60% of your heavy weights. During this
period, focus on quick workouts and very good form---try to undo
the inevitable sloppy-ness that builds up during the load cycle.
Don't tax the muscle at all, just get a nice pump.
Resuming the next cycle: after your 10 day VERY LIGHT cycle, restart,
using as your starting weights around 95% of your previous cycle
best weights. Begin working up in this cycle as before.
I like the above style because it is self-regulating: you use
your rate of improvement to decide when to stop the cycle, thus
guaranteeing you will not overtrain. basically, you should either
always be making improvement on heavy days, or be deciding it
is time to terminate the cycle.
Initially, I could carry one one macro cycle for about 3 months
before I had to terminate it. As I got more advanced, using more
wieght and intensity, and closer to my limits, I would have to
terminate the cycles every month or so. After a couple years of
this style, I reahced a point where I was spending as much time
off cycle as on cycle, and that was about the limit of its effectiveness.
But I had gained 30 some pounds of bodyweight from it, so I was
satisfied.
Don't be afraid of light days!!! Lifting addicts often fear that
unless they always train hard, they will shrink. The evil HIT
cbal also try and reinforce this idea that intensity is a must.
In fact, this attitude is a big barrier to progress. learn to
have fun on your light days. Save your intensity for the heavy
days. Have fun during your very-light cycle. Don't worry if you
lose a bit during this time---you have to be willing to step back,
to take two steps forward in the future. In practice, I usually
came back from the very light cycle at stronger than I had been
ever before.
As for progress: progress is built into this system---if you are
doing it, you are progressing. Go mostly by rep and poundage progress---your
bodyweight will change slowly, at most 2 pounds per month. Derive
your satifaction from the heavy day to heavy day improvements,
and the big picture (muscle mass gains) will take care of themselves.
Don't worry if your reps sometimes drop down to 6---just keep
working to bring them up towards 12 as always. But don't make
the mistake of jumping too much weight when you get to 12: jump
as little as possible. For weights > 100 lbs, a 5 lb jump is
plenty. For weights < 100, try to make 2.5 lb jumps if possible.
Never take a 10 lb jump---just save it for next time.
There are many other possible periodizations. See the refs above
for more idea. You can have a lot of fun designing periodized
programs, but don't stop using one if it is still working well.
Conversely, if it seems not to work well, scrap it early and try
another one. Don't waste months on unproductive routines (as I
did). You should be able to make workout to workout gains most
of the time.