More is More: Volume - Why the negative rep
Monday, October 8th, 2007Go back 40 or so years ago and you would see a completely different environment inside gym walls compared to today. The main difference not just being the questionable clothing attire, but also the way in which we train.
What is this difference in training? Volume/Frequency.
Perhaps the greatest champion of them all, a man who has been admired by numerous other bodybuilders, used the word and training meaning a great deal in his career, which has gone from bodybuilding, movies, straight through to politics. His hard work most certainly paid off (and I’m sure you all know of you I talk).Somewhere down the line, we have been scared off from the volume and onto a lower volume plan. The argument is that champions of past could work with higher volume because they may or may not have been using anabolic steroids.
This really holds no water.. Even if they did have certain anabolics, their training would still have had to been effective for them to achieve results.
Below, after researching and agreeing with Chris Aceto on such matters of volume training, I’m going to discuss a better approach to training.EFFECTIVE VOLUME TRAINING:
Effective training is all about knowing your body, how it responds and getting the most out of it. For that to happen, changes must constantly be adapted to training to help you keep growing/responding.
Low volume/brief training (a smaller number of sets) helps the body to recover and fill out - it rebounds and recovers quicker, giving the muscles more roundness and fullness. However, to notice these changes and effects, you must have been in a state of high volume 3-4 or so weeks previous to it.Here is the thing with volume: you grow and then you hit a plateau.. Your body no longer grows or responds to your training – this is where reducing the volume and switching up your training to low volume for a couple of weeks becomes effective!
You get the initial growth from your HIGH VOLUME training and then your recovery from your few weeks of LOW VOLUME training.
A smart man takes two successful things and combines them, making his wine out of the water!
Think of this as an example:
A lifter in the gym begins his training (we’ll call him Klaus). He does a lot of volume/set work… and after 5-6 weeks he keeps at it and notices he isn’t getting any more results from his training.
A fellow lifter in the gym (we’ll call him mountain man) shakes his head and tells him he is doing way too many sets and that he should cut back.
Bingo! Klaus cuts back the number of sets he does in the gym and he gets the initial results from HIT training.
The thing is, he is not really growing.. He is recovering. The reduced volume has allowed him to recover. His damaged muscle fibres (from the high volume training) have a chance to repair/GROW and he begins to look fuller, his muscles have more roundness to them.
Then.. disaster strikes! Klaus decides he likes these initial results in the way his muscles look and changes his program to follow purely this low volume route.
Bottom line being; Higher amounts of volume/sets per body part, a good diet that is high in protein and can support your training, and a good amount of sleep will give you great results.
When you feel your body begin to fail/stagnate, start the next week and the next few weeks after that under the low volume method for recovery. Volume should not be taboo.
I will spend the majority of my comeback from injury bulking cycle putting it into practice.







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