u very strng! y hi rep?
excuse the english lol
thanx, Actually for supersetting days I keep the reps low but the weight has to be high.
I started stalling with the regular routines for back, chest, shoulders, legs, arms etc. So I needed to make a new program to follow. I looked towards the Olympic lifts for some variations and spent months learning the execution and mechanics of it all (you never really stop learning how to execute the movements).
I realized that doing the lifts were alot of fun but they weren't really gonna stimulate an adequate amount of growth or strength so I looked towards the supplemental exercises which I feel are the true strength and mass builders for improving all aspects of lifting especially the explosive stuff.
Lot of focus on heavy weight above the head, stability, flexibility and lots of pulling strength.
Bodybuilders exhaust the muscle and make it grow but that type of training didn't seem to work very well for function and raw power. I needed a type of training that constantly had my body holding up the heaviest amount of weight possible for the longest amount of time.
Priority muscles were legs, hips, low back, upper back and shoulders. So I just did low rep training with very heavy weight. To keep things varied I would combine 2 push pull muscle groups and do max lifts for reps.
On the days when my CNS has given up I just go back into a bodybuilding style of training with 10 - 12 reps and exhaustion (these are the light days).