How To Build Muscle Mass Fast - Complete Guide

how to build muscleIn learning how to build muscle, people are often lead astray by unsubstantiated claims, fad workouts and diets.

You will note that the title of this article is ‘How To Build Muscle Mass Fast‘ - this is not to say you can ‘build crazy muscles in a week’ or other such nonsense. What you can do though, is maximize your potential for muscle growth naturally. This commonsense guide therefore represents the fastest way to build muscle.

In this article, I’ll summarize all the fundamental points of muscle building. It’s a good refresher for those already on the journey, and a great place to start for beginner bodybuilders (at the bottom of the article there is a definition of terms for any beginners among you).

How To Build Muscle 101

(1) Lift Weights - no doubt about it. Weight-training beats everything else for building muscle. Body-weight exercises (calisthenics), gymnastics, cardiovascular work, all may build some muscle for total beginners but only a little - then it stops. Why? Because you can’t add ever-increasing resistance with these other forms of exercise.

(2) Force Your Body To Adapt! Continuing from point one, your muscles will have no reason to grow if you don’t place them under ever-increasing demand. What this means is that the weight you can lift on any given
exercise should increase over time. No increase = no growth. This is the concept of Progressive Overload.

(3) Train For Hypertrophy & Avoid Strength Training. Hypertrophy means muscle growth. You want to specifically target this, as opposed to strength-training which has its focus primarily on strength gains with building muscle as a happy side-effect. Training for strength usually means a low rep range and compound-only workouts. While compound exercises are vital to a good workout, no-one is building bulging biceps with military presses and squats. Read on…

(4) Do Compound + Isolation Workouts - Compound exercises are crucial, they involve many muscle groups simultaneously and induce the release of growth hormone in the body. However, what if I want to shape my biceps? Work on the outer portion of my shoulders a bit more? This is where ‘compound-only strength training’ and Olympic weight-lifting is found wanting. I simply cannot train my biceps with enough intensity to produce continual growth without isolating that particular muscle.

(5) Train with A Full Range of Motion. Building muscle mass is all about feeling the muscle throughout the whole rep i.e. the concentric and eccentric part of the rep. To really mess this up, use weights that are too heavy for you, use too much momentum throughout the rep and do super-quick reps. This is another flaw of using ‘Olympic Weight-Lifting’ type exercises as your means of building muscle. Those type of exercises use a lot of momentum & fast, snap movements such as in the ‘Jerk’. This movement is not a muscle builder.

(6) Eat - Get enough calories. No matter what bodybuilding diet you are on, you need to eat enough to supply your body with what it needs to grow. Go here to see how many calories you need to build muscle.

(7) Get Enough Protein - No you don’t need astronomical amounts of protein to build muscle, but you do need more than the average guy. Use the following calculation:

Lean Mass Weight (Kg) x 2.75 = Daily Protein Requirement

(8) Train In The 8 - 12 rep range. I call this the hypertrophic rep range. Basically, you should reach failure on each set on the 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th or 12th rep. When you can hit 12 or more, increase the weight used for that set.

(9) Keep Your Workouts Short. Steroid users can train for hours, natural bodybuilders can’t. Catabolic hormones are released in the body which actually break muscle down. To minimize this, try to keep all weight-training sessions to a maximum of 45 minutes.

(10) Take a Rest Between Workouts. If your priority is building muscle, what good could cardio do? I understand that you want to stay lean while you build muscle but this is best accomplished with a carb-cycling bodybuilding diet. Leave cardio until you want to prioritize fat-loss.

(11) Allow Adequate Rest Between Sets. Building muscle is all about performing at your best each and every set. Research shows that rest periods between sets of less than 1 minute reduce the amount of power muscle can produce in successive sets. Resting more than 3 minutes provides no further benefit than resting for 2 minutes. Therefore to strike the optimal balance between time-saving and maximum results, rest for around 2 minutes between sets.

(12) Drink Water. To build muscle at the maximum rate you need to drink enough water. Use this general rule:

Body weight (lbs) X 0.6 = Water Intake in ounces.

Remember strength can decrease by up to 15% with a drop in hydration levels of only 3%!

Definition of Bodybuilding Terms

  • Reps - A single cycle of lifting and lowering a weight
  • Sets - A number of consecutive reps without rest
  • Hypertrophy - Muscle Growth
  • Compound - An exercise that moves the body through more than one joint movement
  • Isolation - An exercise that moves the body through a single-joint movement
  • Concentric - The part of the rep where the muscle contracts and shortens
  • Eccentric - The part of the rep where the muscle lengthens
  • Failure - The point at which you cannot possibly perform another rep

So, with all this said, can YOU do it? Can you build the body you want? Of course you can. I was a weed with a fat belly once too. If I can do it, anyone can!

Stay Motivated!

Mark McManus

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How To Rise To Every Challenge - And Succeed!

Rise To Any Challenge And Succeed!Your problems have a purpose.

What a concept! Have you ever considered the possibility that your problems are there for a reason?

This is a belief I have chosen to accept as true and I suggest you do too.

Why?

Not because it’s an absolute truth that I can somehow prove, but because of the positive impact it has on your life.

Problems aren’t problems

Problems are really challenges. A challenge set before you to encourage you to grow.

Everything you can do and cope with now is within your comfort zone. Challenges, on the other hand, are outside this comfort zone. Therefore, in order to meet the challenge, you must expand yourself i.e. learn knew skills, improve your behavior, use creativity, forgive someone…whatever the case may be.

Let me illustrate it another way. Imagine your comfort zone is a circle. When a challenge is set before you, it lies somewhere outside that circle, otherwise it wouldn’t be challenging to you. In order for the challenge to be successfully dealt with, the circle must expand i.e. you must grow. Once you have expanded the comfort zone to take in this challenge, this particular problem never causes you as much bother again.

Lifelong Self-Improvement

It seems just intuitively wrong to me that we are supposed to enter life and leave it again and the same level. I see the main purpose of life as the growth/expansion/learning - the evolution of consciousness if you will. Challenges (problems) are therefore absolute necessities in facilitating this growth.

This doesn’t mean life therefore is unavoidably stressful, quite the opposite. This would be the case if you saw problems as random obstacles that keep popping up to frustrate you. From my viewpoint though, no challenge is insurmountable. In fact, life wouldn’t put the situation into your experience if it also didn’t provide the means to overcome it – your job is to find it, your growth then occurs in the process.

This website is an example itself. I have always been a non-technical person (with a capital NON). I knew I wanted a website and didn’t have the money to pay someone to do all the technical stuff for me. At the time I didn’t even know what the following terms meant:

  1. Blog
  2. RSS
  3. CSS
  4. HTML
  5. FTP
  6. Trackback
  7. SEO
  8. Tags
  9. Server
  10. PDF

I was absolutely clueless. I’m not great at it now, but I’m much improved.

So what did I do? I didn’t moan that I didn’t have the skills or money, and that I’d have to leave it to people that were ‘luckier’ than I was. I bought book after book, read article after article and made many mistakes in order to facilitate my own growth. Now, in a sense you could say I am a ‘bigger’ person.

My advice is to never shy away from your problems. If you do, you’re missing the whole point. Grow and enjoy the process, the successful outcome is assured if you just persevere and learn the lesson life is trying to teach you. :)

And remember, it’s NEVER the size of your problem, it’s the size of YOU!

Your Buddy,

Mark McManus

image credit: Max Ackermann

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MuscleHack Forums Coming Very Soon!

The MuscleHack forums are coming very soon.

I hope to have them up and running this coming weekend (Saturday 14 June 2008).

I will be contacting those who expressed interest in moderating the forums very shortly, so expect an email guys.

I will almost certainly be expanding the forums in time, but to begin with there will be the following categories and forums…

Category: Build Muscle / Bulking

Forum: Workouts / Exercises

Forum: Diet & Nutrition

Category: Fat Loss

Forum: Exercise & Cardio

Forum: Fat Loss Diet & Nutrition

Category: Supplements

Forum: Bodybuilding Supplements

Category: ‘Total Six Pack Abs’ Inner Circle

Forum: ‘Total Six Pack Abs’ password-protected area for buyers of the book

Category: General Discussion

Forum: Off-Topic Discussion

Forum: Personal Development - anything to do with improving your life

Any comments or suggestions are welcome at this point.

See you at the forums soon and thanks for your continued support!

Your Buddy!

Mark McManus

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