foreverAFC said:
well, you may not get the best gains possible, but yes you can get gains and get in shape with training once a week. if you are going to complete failure and increasing weights, then your body will have to adapt.
Of course if youve never lifted before and were sedentary, you can get "some" gains working out only an hour a week. Buts its very minimal compared to what you could get working out 4 hours a week or more.
here is an older guy going doing a 10 minute full body workout, and he has decent hypertrophy in his muscles for a natural guy his age.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVhhbC51_3k
would he be even bigger if he lifted more, probobly, but the fact is he looks in better shape than most people with only 10 minutes. all im saying is that even 1 hour per week can be enough to change your body if you do it correctly, im not saying its ideal or best. its just that guys who say that dont want to spend hours in the gym every day to look decent have no excuse in my opinion.
Oh please. You really think thats such a good physique? Sorry but he looks like a regular bloke to me. And the ten minute workout shows that. Hes not in terrible shape, but I dont buy that he only works out for ten minutes either. It defies all the proven material on fitness out there.
I wish people would stop buying into lazy workout out routines that promise you can transform your body with only minutes a day exercising. It doesnt work like that.
just cause it takes you 90 minutes to train your legs, it doesnt mean everyone else needs to do the same. if it takes you that long, maybe you need to increase your intensity or find more effective ways of working out. why is it taking you that long? do you mind telling me your routine?
Im saying that to get strong legs and a really healthy lower body, you will NOT get that from only working your whole body
once a week for
just an hour. How much time does that even leave you to train your legs each week? Most people working out only an hour a week will most likely do weak leg training for maybe 20 minutes. That wont do much for them. Im not saying that everyone should do 90 minutes or do exactly what I do. Im saying they should at least dedicate an hour a week to some form of lower body training.
Have you ever done a true leg workout? Or a true conditioning workout for your lower body? I combine bodybuilding with my soccer training. Ill run off everything for you, and mind you each exercise I do a warmup set with half the weight (so 4 total sets)
- 10 minute stationary bike warmup, follow by 3 sets of 15 bodyweight jump squats to warm up the legs. Half of each set is down up to a platform to train my explosive jumps.
- wide stance hack squats....3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- close stand 45 degree incline legs press....3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- leg extensions.....3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- prone hamstring curls....3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- seated hamstring curls....3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- seated straight leg calf raises ...3 sets to failure, 10 to 15 reps.
- bent knee calf raises....3 sets to failure, 10 to 15 reps.
- glute kick backs...3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps.
- glute pushdowns with the assist dip machine...3 sets to failure, 8 to 12 reps. (this exercise I use one leg to pressdown the platform)
If my legs arent killed, I will do a few sets of sprints as hard as I can. If Im too tired, I save it for the morning.
Now tell me, how in the world can I do that, and sufficiently train my legs in under 90 minutes, while giving my muscles the rest they need between sets. I like to train and make strong every single part of my legs...as well as do a bit of conditioning that will help me play soccer. But leg day is mostly for strength. And Im not a huge guy either...I just train to keep my legs strong and fit.
like i said, grappling alone doesnt produce the type of hypertrophy that weight lifting does, look at all the gracie jiu jitsu guys, they were skinny as hell despite grappling hours per day, every single day. in fact the grappling sessions are detrimental to gaining muscle because of all the calories that are lost during training. it keeps me slim and fast and trains my cardio, but its doesnt really build muscle.
Thats still a form of exercise...aka... youre NOT only exercising 1 hour a week. So its disingenuous to push the statement you did earlier. And lets be real here...you dont even really lift...so you cannot really tell anyone that an hour a week or minutes a day will be enough to truly stay fit or make the gains they want.
If you are limiting your exercise frequency to once a week, then you basically only have intensity and volume to play with, and there is only so much intensity and volume you can add to one short workout session within a week.