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How to Perform Reps for Most Muscle Growth



Should you be lifting heavy weights as fast as possible or light weights with a slow controlled tension if you want maximum muscle growth? In this video, I’m going to show you the best way to perform your reps if you want to build muscle and create muscle hypertrophy from your workouts. I’m going to break out the science and show you four examples head to head so you can make sure you don’t waste any more time in the gym using methods that are inferior.

There are many different ways that you can lift a weight. Often times, it doesn’t matter which exercise you perform since the principles apply to them all. The more important question you should be asking yourself is what your training goal is at the moment. For instance, if you are training for strength then your goal with every exercise should be to make it as efficient as possible. On a bench press for example, you would want to be sure that you are pressing the bar with good speed along an optimal bar path with all muscles contributing to the lift.

If on the other hand you were trying to use the bench press as a hypertrophy exercise for the chest in particular, you would want to find a way to lessen the contribution of the triceps and shoulders and more favorably press with the chest. In addition, you would want to make the movement more inefficient by spending more time on the negative of each rep as well as holding and squeezing the contraction of the pecs at the top of every rep as much as possible.

If instead you were trying to train for hypertrophy and muscle growth then you would want to apply this concept of movement inefficiency to every exercise you did. In this video, I use the lat pulldown taken to failure as an example exercise. Now, here is where you would want to squeeze your elbows down tight into your sides and back behind your body to maximally activate the lats. You would want to think less about using the forearms to curl the bar down towards you or your biceps to pull too much on every rep.

This would create as much tension as you could and direct it to the lats. In order to speed up the hypertrophy of a particular muscle, it is this focused tension that comes in handy to get the job done. That said, you wouldn’t discredit the value of simply taking your 10 rep max on the lift and just performing reps with a movement as a whole focus instead of directing your attention to any one muscle over the other.

This is where you would see the reps start out rather easy and peak at the highest difficulty level towards the final 2-3 reps. If you had opted to go with a slightly lighter weight however and made every single rep much more difficult by focusing tension into the lats and using intensifying techniques like slow negatives and paused reps, you would elicit a greater stimulus for hypertrophy versus just pure strength.

Check out the different variations shown here and see the different effect each has on your ability to build muscle and strength. When you are done watching and are ready to start performing a program where I lay out all the workouts, sets and reps you need to do to build muscle fast, head over to the link below and get the program best suited to your goals.

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22 Comments

  1. What I do is go through my workout with a higher weight, not so high I cant handle it and my form is shit but high enough that its pretty hard to lift/pull. I do that with all my exercises and then go over my ENTIRE workout again with light weight strickly working on PERFECTING my form and create a hard way to get from A to Z. (Like talked about it video) I have been loving it

  2. I have injuries that won't handle heavy weight. This leaves me to use extremely light weights and more repetitions.
    More repetitions means too much movement for those injuries.
    It's frustrating since I'm always battling pain.
    I am trying to workout as much as my body allows. I want to rebuild from a point in which I was very fit. I used to be in the gym for 6 days a week for 1.5 to 2 hour's a day pushing hard doing supersets and about 20 to 40 minutes of cardio. The supersets with lighter weight were part of my cardio training.
    My job was also extremely active and physical. I was a shipper, commercial driver locally in Seattle.
    . I trained horses. I was a farrier. Being strong and fit was a necessity.
    I'm now attempting to regain that fitness with injuries that are making it difficult.
    I'm finding I have to be patient with my body.
    You cannot rush healing. It sets you back every time.

  3. My notes :
    Find out what my “ confort zone “ is in terms of 2 factors : reps and weight and 2 strategies: strength and intensity.

    Then consciously move outside my comfort zone throughout my training session playing around with the 2 factors and choosing beforehand which of the 2 strategies I’m going for that day .

    The mantra is , for any session : if I’m having a comfortable session , that means it’s a worthless session .

    Perhaps he forgot to add at the end that, for the everyman, it is best to mix both strategies throughout the year: focus on strength for a month or two and then switch back to intensity for a month or two . I find that muscles like to cheat and they will learn to adapt to either of the 2 strategies , so it’s better to change constantly to keep them on their toes . Especially if you are not a professional athlete or a model/actor that requires only one of the strategies. As a working-class father of 3 I find that I need both constantly.

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