Two Basic Bodybuilding Workout Rules to Gain Muscle
There are a huge amount of muscle building programs out there. Gaining serious muscle will involve using methods that will get you there as quickly as possible.
Most often, the rule of thumb is, “More is better.” In other words, practice more, and you’ll get better at what you do with better results. However, with gaining muscle, most of us need to be working out less, not more.
Each time you pick a magazine up all you see is bodybuilders who will tell you that to get muscles like them you have to train nearly everyday of the week. When we see there huge muscles we think if we follow their advice, we will get the same results.
Unfortunately this is a mistaken assumption. Bodybuilders are built differently from birth. They are genetically gifted. These men don’t need as much rest to recover after training. Don’t think that we can use their methods of training.
If you want to gain muscle the right way, AND you don’t want to hurt yourself, you can’t overtrain. In fact, you probably should cut back on your training if you’re trying to mimic what those “bodybuilder” type guys do.
Try this, you should see some pretty impressive muscle gain in about eight weeks if you just follow two simple rules.
1. Don’t overdo the amount of weight you train with. Don’t think about what others are lifting. You know it’s working for you when you find it challenging. Your training should consist of exercises that hit larger muscle groups. These methods hit the most muscle with one exercise. Squats are good for this.
2. Additionally, train just a couple of times a week, perhaps three or four days if you feel up to it. At minimum, though, take a day off between workouts and focus on how you feel. When you train intensely, you are in essence retraining your nervous system, not just your muscles. So even if your muscles recover, your nervous system may not have.
If your nervous system hasn’t recovered, you’re not going to do any good with further training and in fact may give yourself a setback; that’s because if you haven’t let your nervous system recover, it’s not going to be able to cope right. Give it time to catch up. If you don’t recover, you can’t build muscle. Try this; after your training session, take a day, two days, even three days off as a break. See how you feel and don’t overdo it, but so keep challenging yourself moderately and within limits.
You might find yourself tempted to try this for a little while and then go back your old methods of continuous training. However, if you’ve tried these other methods of training and they haven’t worked, ask yourself if something might be wrong. Try doing the above, something different, and see if it doesn’t work. Chances are, it will.

