Bodybuilding 101: The Total Body Workout
Author: Michael Russell
Date Posted: December 05, 2006
The trend in bodybuilding over the past many years has been to
train one body part at a time, once a week. While this protocol
can be very effective, it often can lead to overtraining and it
requires a heavy commitment of time. If you find yourself too busy
to make it to the gym 5-6 times per week or you feel that your body
is overtrained and you need a refreshing change, the total body
workout may be just the thing you need.
At first you may wonder how you can ever work your whole body in
one workout. After all, most people are so accustomed to performing
4-5 exercises per body part for around 12-20 sets that they cannot
imagine properly training a body part with anything less. This mindset
must be opened up. In working your whole body in one workout, you
will be performing only 1-2 exercises and 4-6 sets per body part.
However, the training frequency will be 3 times per week.
The total body workout involves a focus on basic, multi-joint movements.
These exercises stimulate the most response from the body in terms
of not only the muscle fibres recruited, but also in the release
of the necessary hormones to promote muscular growth. Also, working
all major muscle groups in one session will have a synergistic effect
on your body's response to the training session. In short, your
body should respond well to this type of training, especially if
it is a drastic change from what you have been currently doing.
The key is to keep the training sessions relatively short (less
than one hour) and intense. Work the large muscle groups first (legs,
chest, and back) and then the smaller muscle groups (shoulders and
arms). By focusing on basic, compound movements you will provide
your body with the maximum recruitment of muscle fibres in the shortest
amount of time. For example, when you train chest with bench or
incline presses, you are also recruiting heavy work from the shoulders
(especially the front deltoids) and triceps. This is efficient training.
Combined with sufficient intensity, it will create really good results.
With this program, leg training simply cannot be neglected. The
simple old-fashioned barbell squat is the best bodybuilding exercise,
period. Regular intense squats performed in good form will stimulate
muscular growth over your whole body. As a matter of fact, most
individuals would benefit from a routine focused on just squats,
deadlifts, bench, bentover rows, and chins. These exercises work
because they stimulate muscle growth. These are what the old-time
greats focused on. So do them.
Here are the exercises recommended for the Total Body Workout:
Quads: Squats, Leg Press, Hack Squats
Chest: Bench press, Incline press, dips (presses
may be performed with dumbbells or barbells)
Back: Deadlifts, Chins, Pulldowns, Bentover Rows,
T-Bar Rows
For a sample workout, simply choose 1-2 of these basic movements
for each body part and perform no greater than 6 sets. For example,
a workout could consist of squats for 5x5, bench press for 3x8,
incline press for 3x8, chins for 3x10 and bentover rows for 3x8.
You get the idea? It's pretty straightforward. By the way, a 5x5
or 3x8 protocols works really well for the total body workout.
You can follow these basic movements with the following isolation
exercises:
Hamstrings: Lying or seated ham curls
Calves: Seated or standing calf raises
Shoulders: Shoulder Press (dumbbell or barbell),
lateral or front raises
Arms: Dumbell or preacher curls, lying triceps
extension, triceps pushdowns
Abs: Crunches
For the routine, simply choose 2-3 of these muscle groups and perform
2-3 sets of your favourite isolation exercise. The next workout,
do the other 2-3 muscle groups. For example, if you did shoulders
and arms one workout (at the end of your legs, chest, back routine)
do hams, calves and abs the next workout.
The total body workout should be performed 3 times per week on
alternate days. A Monday-Wednesday-Friday routine works well and
it leaves the weekends free for you weekend warriors. The important
thing is to remember never to do the same exercise twice in a row.
So if you did squats, barbell bench and chins and barbell rows on
Monday, change it to leg press, dumbbell incline press, pulldowns
and deadlifts on Wednesday. This is an easy routine to follow.
If you are looking to get maximum results with limited time, this
routine rocks! If you are looking for a change or something new
to stimulate new growth and strength, the total body workout could
be just the ticket. Give it a try - you may just love it! Now get
to the gym and train with intensity!
About The Author
Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Body
Building
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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