Before we can answer the question, “how often should you train a muscle,” a few factors need to be considered.What is optimal for a beginner would be detrimental for an advanced lifter.When you’re a newbie, progressive overload and frequency are two of the most important factors in building muscle.The more frequently you can train a muscle, while stimulating strength gains and without exceeding your capacity to recover, the more muscle you’ll build.This is no different than any other physical quality that you would like to improve in life.
All too often people get their training advice from the wrong sources. I'm talking about genetically gifted, chemically enhancedbodybuilders who may not be qualified to help average guyslike you and me. A lot of their advice is arguable. Maybe it makes sense,
maybe it doesn't. It comes down to simple logic that you
apply to every otherthing you do in life. So why would strength training be
any different?
Want to become a better golfer? Go to the driving range
more frequently.Want to become a better footballer ? Get on the ball out everyday and spend hour after hour on the fundamentals.
Whenever you want to get better at something the answer is always to do it more often.
So if you are new to strength training you should train
more frequently.
Strength development is a skill. Just watch the Olympic
weightlifters. It’s all skill and technique.
You have to teach your muscles and your central nervous
system to work in synchronicity so that you can contract harder during a set.
By contracting harder and producing more tension you’ll
get stronger and be able to lift heavier weights. When you can lift heavier
weights you’ll get bigger (as long as you’re following a proper nutritional
diet).
It’s a simple formula that is often overlooked.
All that being said, beginners will get their best
results training each muscle group three times per week. Three full body
workouts is a standard that has stood the test of time. It always works.
But it only lasts so long. Everything works,nothing works
forever !
When you advance beyond your first year or two you can
and should split the workouts up into upper body and lower body days.
Intermediates get great results training each muscle group twice per week.
That schedule will take you through your next few years
of training. And truthfully, you might want to stick with that forever. A lot
of the biggest, strongest lifters in the world do.
I love an upper/lower/upper split for almost everyone.
Then I add in one hard conditioning workout on the weekend. That qualifies as
your second lower body workout. Or I may add in some easy bodyweight based
lower body stuff you could do at home in 20 minutes with no equipment.
But everyone is different and some might tend to break
down sooner than others.
The stronger you get the more demand you place on your
body. That’s because your nervous system is capable of recruiting more muscle
fibers and making your muscles contract harder. It’s also because the greater
weights being lifted (with more intensity) take more out of your entire system.
The increased loads also take a toll on your joints and
spine. So you might need to start to take more rest between muscle groups or
movement patterns as you get more advanced.
As a more experienced lifter, with more than 3-5 years of
proper training under your belt (especially those of you over 40), you may have
to reduce your frequency even more. For guys at this advanced level of strength
and development, training a body part once every 5-7 days is can be very
beneficial.
That means you could spread your upper and lower body
days out over the course of nine days instead of seven. So one week you do
lower body twice and upper body once. The following week you do upper body
twice and lower body once.
Here’s how that looks over the course of two weeks:
Monday-
Upper Body
Wednesday- Lower Body
Friday- Upper Body
Monday-
Lower Body
Wednesday- Upper Body
Friday- Lower Body
Another option is to do a push, pull, lower split. Many
big, strong guys are able to train this way with relatively few injuries well
into their golden years.
To hit four hard strength training days per week
everything has to be really dialed in. You have to manage stress properly,
sleep a lot and eat well. If you don’t have all that perfected I’d stick with
three training days per week.
To sum it up and simplify here is what I recommend for
most guys (keeping strength training at three days per week, plus 1-2 hard
conditioning days):
Beginners–
Full/full/full
Intermediates–
Upper/lower/upper
Advanced/older
guys– Push/pull/lower
Bottom
Line : Lifting “ heavy “ is relative to the individual. NEVER
use more weight than you can handle correctly . If you need someone to spot you
it’s probably to heavy. Let the amount of reps you are doing determine the
weight you use, not the other way around . Remember this golden rule: Develop your
strength, don’t demonstrate it !
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