Accelerate Your Muscle Growth By Manipulating The Speed Of Your Repetitions

You’ve undoubtedly tried different programs in search of more size and deeper cuts. You’ve gone high rep, you’ve gone low rep, you’ve pyramided up, you’ve pyramided down hell, you’d do the freakin’ Hokey Pokey every day if some study somewhere proved that it packed on muscle.

One overlooked variable for many bodybuilders, however, is rep speed. The prevailing mantra is slow and steady, contracting the working muscle as forcefully as possible at the apex of each rep. Good advice, yes … but you can do better. In fact, by using the full spectrum of rep speed, from slow to fast, in your overall program, you can maximize your growth. Isn’t that really what it’s all about?

The Fast And The Furious

The speed of each rep you perform depends on the weight being lifted, the number of reps being performed and the level of fatigue of the muscle being trained. Usually, most reps are done in a slow and controlled manner, about one to two seconds for the positive and one to two seconds for the negative. Of course, as you go heavier and the muscle fatigue intensifies, the positive portion of the rep takes longer and the negative part of the rep accelerates. Generally speaking, typical speed is about three to four seconds per rep.
Training with reps that are faster than the typical three to four seconds can be beneficial for a number of reasons.

Explosive Reps

When you perform the positive portion of your reps explosively taking less than one second to complete them your fast-twitch muscle fibers are called into action to a greater degree. Fast-twitch muscle fibers produce the greatest muscle force (i.e., strength) and have the highest potential for growth.
The other major type of fibers found within your muscles slow-twitch fibers produce less force and are smaller than the fast-twitch fibers, but they have greater endurance capacity.

Targeting The Muscles

Fast reps may focus the workload more on the intended muscles.

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What to take after you work out!

The answers on all of these questions……

1. What is the best supplement to take post workout?

2. What makes the most difference in recovery?

3. What is the best supplement to build muscle?

4. What is the best supplement for muscle growth?

5. What is the best post workout shake?

6. What is the best post workout supplement?

7. What is the best post workout drink?

8. What is the best post workout recovery drink?

These are all variations of the same question which I will try and answer in this article. I have prioritized the top supplements that I feel are necessary for maximum post workout recovery and growth. These questions are popular among bodybuilders and fitness enthusiasts. I feel for pre-workout, the best supplement would consist of a creatine/NO mix with many cofactors. That will be the topic of a separate article, but for this article we will consider the most effective supplement to take after working out that will build muscle and increase muscle growth.

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The Muscle Adaptation

Load adaptation is the key to muscle growth

So, we already know basics of muscle activity and purposes of a wokout logs. Now it’s time to reward you for your patience and tell what makes our muscles increase their size and strength, after all.

Homeostasis

Our organism is a self-regulating system tending to constant equilibrium (homeostasis). Muscle training loads influence our muscles shifting lot of organism characteristics from their ‘ordinary’ level. The degree of these changes depends on the character and intensity of physical loads and individual features of your organism. Right after influence of any load different processes start taking place in our organism to restore its initial equilibrium (quiescent homeostasis). During these restoring processes certain changes occur that later on allow decreasing of oscillations of the organism internal environment when new similar loads take place. Our organism is lazy; it is always tending to constancy.

Adaptation

Any muscle growth is a process of purposeful adjustment (adaptation) of our organism to the influence of training loads.

Adaptation types: rapid and long-tem

Rapid adaptation appears to be the response of our organism to single training load influence. Mostly, we refer to this adaptation type in the sense of recovery of nervous and energy resources just after a training session.

Long-term adaptation develops progressively on the basis of continuously repeated trainings.

Supercompensation

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