Monday, April 18, 2011

Jeff Willet Joins Skip La Cour During This Mass Machine Bodybuilding & Training Podcast (#1 In Series)

During this podcast, Skip and Jeff talk about:

* What it means to Jeff to be an IFBB Professional bodybuilder

* Jeff's talks about his early years in bodybuilding (starting at 16 years old) and how naive he was to steroids

* Jeff talks about the time in his life when he considered taking steroids

* Jeff talks about what influenced him to stay drug free--and why that's so important to him

* Skip begins to talk about the early days of his bodybuilding journey



Click Here to Listen to and Download This Podcast





Sunday, April 3, 2011

This week's BODYBUILDING PODCAST: Quit Making Things So Damn Complicated!

This week's bodybuilding and training podcast explains why you must start making your approach SIMPLE--instead so damn complex--in order to win at the level you want.

Click here to listen to and download this podcast.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Just How Important Is Strict Form to Muscle Growth?

By Skip La Cour
World’s #1 Online Men’s Health, Fitness, and Motivational Coach
Six-Time Drug-Free National Bodybuilding Champion
15-Time Drug-Free Bodybuilding Champion
Success & Leadership Coach

Many bodybuilders have deemed the quality of their form while doing an exercise to be the most important aspect of training. Some people training in the gym use the rationale that lifting heavy weight causes you to train less effectively. "I always use really strict form!" they state proudly. "Lifting heavy weight is not beneficial at all if you don't use really strict form."

Many bodybuilders are confused with what constitutes effective training habits. They feel as though they are forced to make the decision between executing properly and lifting heavy weight. You don’t need to go one way or the other.

To complicate matters further, those who strive for better execution confuse doing so with using strict form. They feel that, because they use strict form, they are properly executing the exercises. Strict form and proper execution are not the same things.

I would describe execution as squarely hitting the targeted muscle group during every repetition. Contrary to what many people in the gym believe, extremely strict form is not always an effective and efficient route to take when training. A person can use strict form and not be executing the exercise properly. In fact, overly strict form oftentimes inhibits your progress. You can compromise your level of exercise effectiveness when you put too high of a priority on strict form. I’ve come across a lot of guys in the gym who are frustrated with their lack of development—but will boast about how great they think their form is.

I’m certainly not saying you should train with careless, out-of-control form. Even worse, I'm not suggesting that you risk hurting yourself in order to lift heavy weight. Using form that is too sloppy won't work the intended muscle sufficiently. If you get hurt while trying to lift too much weight you’ll set yourself back both in time and momentum. Doing that is unquestionably worse than lifting lighter weights.

There is a happy medium, however. That happy medium is performing each set at what I describe as a good value and proper execution. Lifting heavy enough weight to build significant muscle mass—while still using form that’s good enough to directly stimulate the intended muscle group.

Overloading the intended muscle group with heavy weight is one of the most important keys to effectively stimulating maximum muscle growth. Despite what many people believe, you don’t necessarily need to use strict form in order to stimulate the muscle. But, if you want to build the most muscle in the shortest period of time, you do need to use the heaviest amount of weight that you can lift at the same time that you are stimulating the muscle group.

You have to find the right balance between heavy, challenging, muscle-taxing weight and using exercise execution and technique that’s good enough to hit the targeted muscle group. This may take some time and practice—but you won’t find that right balance until you make it your goal to do so.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Can certain exercises change the shape of muscles?

Skip--

I want more or a "peak" on my biceps. Can certain exercises change the shape of muscles?



There are no specific exercises that will actually change the shape of a particular muscle or muscle group. Until you reach your maximum genetic potential for that body part’s muscle growth, you’ll never know what the finished product will look like. 

When it comes to the shape of a particular body part, muscle, or muscle group, everything is not under your complete control. Your genetic disposition has the final say in the shape of a particular body part, muscle, or muscle group. 

What you can control, however, is the amount of high-quality, dense muscle your genetic disposition has to work with. Your goal is to efficiently stimulate the muscle with good old fashioned weight training in order to maximize the amount of size and mass a particular body part carries.