stovepipe
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2017
- Messages
- 978
- Reaction score
- 1,089
Over the past 25 years being in and out of the gym I noticed 3 unique people who's style of working out is unlike any other I've seen. They workout as if you hit a slow motion button, but also super strict form, squeezing the muscle and holding it for a few secs, then slowly bringing the weight down. I'm talking each rep is so slow almost everyone in the gym has looking at them like "wtf is he doing". Some people laughed, I approached and asked some questions.
The one thing all 3 of them had in common besides the way they worked out, was they were all more shredded than any other guys I've seen, ever (in the gym)! They didn't look to be on juice, weren't pro bb, just normal guys. My theory is due to the stabilizer muscles having to work just as hard in the negative range of motion as the positive, on top of the strictest form I done ever seen.
Used to know a guy who trained with an Olympic coach. To increase their bench max he would add 20-30% more weight than he can lift on the bar, then just raise the bar off the bench and hold it till your arms were going to give out, then re-rack. Don't remember what his specific routine was, but I did try that and it worked surprisingly well. My arms were shaking and burning so bad, it was painful af. You dont want to risk your arms giving out before you re-rack, so having a spotter is a good idea if anyone tries this. He told me your stabilizer muscles overtime strengthen to the point where that weight no longer is as heavy even though you didn't do a rep and your max increases as a result.
I plan on trying to workout in super slow motion for 6 months as an experiment. Focusing on my negative resistance just as much as my positive, while keeping the weight on the lighter side. Then adding in a normal heavier day once a month. I know this all sounds weird, but in 25 years I've only seen 3 people do this and I've seen 1000's in that time.
The one thing all 3 of them had in common besides the way they worked out, was they were all more shredded than any other guys I've seen, ever (in the gym)! They didn't look to be on juice, weren't pro bb, just normal guys. My theory is due to the stabilizer muscles having to work just as hard in the negative range of motion as the positive, on top of the strictest form I done ever seen.
Used to know a guy who trained with an Olympic coach. To increase their bench max he would add 20-30% more weight than he can lift on the bar, then just raise the bar off the bench and hold it till your arms were going to give out, then re-rack. Don't remember what his specific routine was, but I did try that and it worked surprisingly well. My arms were shaking and burning so bad, it was painful af. You dont want to risk your arms giving out before you re-rack, so having a spotter is a good idea if anyone tries this. He told me your stabilizer muscles overtime strengthen to the point where that weight no longer is as heavy even though you didn't do a rep and your max increases as a result.
I plan on trying to workout in super slow motion for 6 months as an experiment. Focusing on my negative resistance just as much as my positive, while keeping the weight on the lighter side. Then adding in a normal heavier day once a month. I know this all sounds weird, but in 25 years I've only seen 3 people do this and I've seen 1000's in that time.