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Ten Mass Building Tips

BigAndy

New member
10 Bite Sized Mass Building Tips
by Chris Aceto

Every month for the past few years, I've endeavored to give you practical information about bodybuilding nutrition. Now, in response to popular demand - based on the letter's I've been getting and questions I've been fielding at seminars and clinics - I'm going to switch gears. I've decided to focus exclusively on mass building tips to help you pursue the Holy Grail of bodybuilding: packing on maximum size in a minimum amount of time.

1. Bump Up Your Protein
Most bodybuilding experts advocate consuming at least one gram (g) of protein per pound of bodyweight daily. To accelerate the muscle building process, I'm advising that you increse your daily protein intake to one and a half to two grams per pound of bodyweight. Increasing protein intake helps to enhance protein synthesis while preventing protein breakdown. The net effect is anabolism (gaining quality muscle size) rather than catabolism (getting smaller due to losing muscle mass).

2. Jack Up The Carbs
Ingesting three grams of carbs per pound of bodyweight daily will provide your body with plenty of calories for energy, ensuring that your protein derived calories will be left to support muscle growth and repair. Another cheery result of increasing carbs is taht the body won't tear down muscle tissue for energy during training.

3. Eat The Right Fats
All fats are not created equal. the omega-3 fatty acids in salmon and swordfish help to prevent muscle inflammation, improve glycogen formation and enhance protein synthesis. Eat salmon or swordfish three time per week or take five to seven grams of fish oils daily

4. Increase Rest Intervals During Training
Taking time to rest between sets allows for immediate recovery within the muscle. That will enable you to train with heavier weights. It's amazingly simple. Heavy poundages (plus good form) equal more mass. My recommendation is to rest for no less than two minutes, but no more than three minutes, after each set.

5. Eat Six Meals A Day
I know it is a pain in the neck to eat so aften, but gaining mass on four meals a day is simply not going to work for most people; only the genetically blessed mass monsters can gain substantive size on a four a day meal plan. Schedule each of your six bodybuilding friendly meals every two to three hours. This installment plan allows you to increase the absorption and assimilation of your precious nutrients.

6. Don't Snub Sugar
Fast digesting carbs - a.k.a. simple sugars - get a bum rap. Including simple sugars in the posttraining meal helps to suppress the production of cortisol - a muscle wasting hormone - and promote the release of insulin. Shoot for 80-130g of carbs immediately after training, with at least half coming from fast burning carbs such as fruit juice, bagels, fat free ice cream or white flour based bread products.

7. Use An Anabolic Cocktail
My cocktail of choice is glutamine with a creatine chaser. Two grams of glutamine in the meal immediately following your training can increase growth hormone levels; 10 grams of creatine can drag water into the muscles to turn on protein synthesis.

8. Experiment With Low Reps and Heavy Weight
Include low reps - two or three per set - and heavy weights in your program, especially with compound exercises like squats, bench presses and deadlifts. These heavy multijoint movements are a prerequisite for building a maximum amount of muscle.

9. Design An Insulin Boosting Stack
Let's get creative and devise a three supplement stack of goodies that will release insulin when ingested with your high carb posttraining meal: 400 milligrams of alpha lipoic acid to promote the uptake of carbs by muscles - even without the presence of insulin; 200 micrograms of chromium to increase the muscles' sensitivity to insulin; and six grams of branched chain amino acids to provide a shot of leucine, an amino that helps to trigger the release of insulin.

10. Limit Workout Volume
Volume in a workout context can be defined as the number of sets you perform per bodypart. Doing too many sets promotes catabolic hormones and adversely impacts recovery and recuperation. The ideal volume for building mass is six to eight sets comprising two exercises for smaller bodyparts, and 10-12 sets comprising three exercises for larger bodyparts.





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This article was printed from Flex Magazine, January 2000 issue.
Chris Aceto is the author of a number of training and nutrition books!
 
It seems he forgot to put something pithy and witty for #11, something like: test is best. Or, I really don't know what I was thinking about that anabolic coctail with the glutamine and creatine. Really, my favorite anabolic cocktail is tren, test, and anything else.

But I guess that would actually pass on some knowledge about reality.

Just a note, I do not condone the use of tren, test, or any other anabolic. :angel:
 
A lot of those are common sense, but I think we all need to hear a little common sense every once and a while. I learned my lesson with the low carb shit. I did that for a while, got skinny weak and soft. Now I do a much more sensible diet and eat clean (I don't mix fats and carbs...ever).
 
I don't necessarily agree with the training strategy though (although Chris Aceto is much more
knowledgeable than me, I'm still gonna throw my .02).

Take for example the calves. Unless you are genetically gifted, this is often a lagging body part. Why is
this almost always the case? It's because most guys spend one day out of there split (1 of 5 or 4)
working legs. Most guys also train upper legs first, leaving little motivation to have a killer calf routine.
If you only did 10 to 12 sets/ week of say 5-10 reps like Chris suggests, I highly doubt your calves
look like Mike Materazzo's. My strategy has been to do about 10 reps/set on calves but only take a
10 second break between sets during 1 exercise of 5 sets (3-5 minutes between exercises). My theory
is that your calves are probably one of the most trained muscles in the body due to their constant use
for walking, running, and cardio. In order to stimulate them to grow size (instead of indurance) we must
kill them in the gym. I try to do 4 exercises of 5 sets/10reps as heavy as I freakin well can. It's been working very well for me, and I also do this twice/workout cycle --> one very heavy(to failure on the last set of each exercise) and one very light with double the reps and half the sets (never to failure)

My workout looks like this:

1: Calves(Heavy), Forearms, Abs

2: Pushing: Shoulders 1st/2nd, Chest 2nd/1st, Tris 3rd(alternating shoulders and chest each cycle of workout)
Using 8-10 sets of compound exercises for bodypart 1, 6-8 sets of single joint exercises for bodypart 2, and 4-6 sets for tris (remember you've been using your tri's throughout the previous two body parts)


3: Pulling: Back 1st/2nd, Traps 2nd/1st, Bis 3rd (again alternating order of back and traps each cycle of workout) using the same set strategy as day 2.

4: Calves(Light), Forearms, Abs

5: Upper Legs (Always as heavy as possible any 4 exercises for 5 sets of 10 reps, failing on the final set
of each exercise)

As you can see I train legs 3 of 5 days. But by using this cycle I've brought my legs up quite a bit, and
haven't sacrificed the growth of my upper body at all because I now train it smarter. The other nice
thing about this is that I look forward to my leg days. My upper body days are now the grueling ones.

Not trying to say I've got it all figured out, but this routine has been awesome for me and does not
coincide with Chris Aceto's theory at all. However, we are all different and over the last 11 years I've
been able to figure out what works well for me, and this is it, at least until I get bored of it and change it
to something else ;).

Feel free to cut my theory to shreds if you like...

Cheers.
 
good post bro...

listen i just got one question.... flame me if u want, but i need this explained to me.. i'm new to the more than 1g protein/lb. of body weight theory. I was recently taking in about 200g(since im about 190 lbs). of protein daily over 6 meals time. This seems reasonable, however... 400 grams does not. I'm not saying ur wrong, I just don't understand why this is so. Because I know that your body cannot handle more than like 40-50 g. at a time... so what would be the purpose of 400 g? Please respond, i'm very curious as to how this works. I understand it when related to AS... but not for everyday meal habits. Thanks in advance guys.
 
but what if your are on juice..

that last part that said u should limit exercise volume... i usually do 20 sets for large muscle groups and 12 sets for smaller ones like tri's,, won't juice increase recovery, therefore u can do more sets...??? without injury or catabolic breakdown?
 
1 gram pro/lb. of bodyweight is fine drug free..... with the drugs, I can see 1.5 - 2 grams of pro/lb...with the addition of gear, nutrition is a whole different story...
 
what works for some does not always work for others. you guys that disagree have good points too. the plan seems to be a good base mass building plan.
 
CrzySayin said:
useful knowledge, thanks!!!!!!! :fro:

Yeah Crazysayin, you need the mass, and should cut the hair. Print this out and put it on your agenda. Get a computer so you can start reading my replies punk. :D
 
4. Increase Rest Intervals During Training
Taking time to rest between sets allows for immediate recovery within the muscle. That will enable you to train with heavier weights. It's amazingly simple. Heavy poundages (plus good form) equal more mass. My recommendation is to rest for no less than two minutes, but no more than three minutes, after each set.
This is a good option, but not an absolute. One hypertrophy protocol involves short rest intervals, 30-45 seconds, between sets. This stresses the CP system and the, in part, adaptation results in an increase in creatine and related system capacity.

Also, another thing to look at, often preached by Mike Mentzer, is that, for the purposes of bodybuilding, one should focus more on the exertion put forth, not the actual poundages lifted.
 
Please allow Beezers to simplify for those not so inclined to read the whole write-up.

For AS using bodybuilders to key to getting massive is to f**king EAT. Don't whine about not gaining when you're restricting carbs. Don't whine about not gaining because you consumed a whopping 100g of protein a day. There's a reason some poeple are starving...Because bodbuilders roam the planet and eat three peoples rations of food in a day. Sorry for the harshness there(it's only to convey a point).
 
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