Muscle is hard to build ,Results come from hard work
When I started lifting weights, back when I was a ridiculously
weak and scrawny thirteen-year-old boy who dreaded the
humiliation of removing his shirt at the local swimming pool, I
dreamed of having muscles roughly the size of the muscles I have
now. If you had told me I'd someday be a fairly solid 185-
pounder, thanks to the weights, I would've said, "I'm in!"
But if you'd added the caveat that it would take more than three
decades to reach that size, I might've had some reservations.
I 've never once walked into the gym thinking, "Today I'm
going to try to not get too big. " For most guys, when we're talking
about muscles, there 's no such thing as "too big." Those of us
who train drug-free celebrate each pound of muscle we add, and
every millimeter of upper-arm girth. Some guys even obsess over
the circumference of their necks. Why? Because we know that it's
really hard to put on muscle size, it never happens by accident,
and every bit of it is a sign of success against all odds.
And that's with all the hormonal advantages that nature gives to
men.
Meanwhile, women, naturally deprived of the amounts of
testosterone that would make muscle-building a more
straightforward pursuit, worry endlessly about adding so much
muscle that they'll turn into the type of shemale you rarely
encounter outside The Howard Stern Show.
So this brings me to the fourth dirty word: "bulky. " As in, "I
don't want to get too bulky. "
I'll say this as simply as I can:
Unless you 're an extreme genetic outlier, you can 't get too
bulky.
Your body won't allow it. If you put on 10 pounds of muscle in
Alwyn's six-month program, you'll be at the top of the class. And
if you don't take off at least 10 pounds of fat with the combination
of Alwyn's workouts and Cassandra's nutrition plans, I'll be
surprised. The most likely outcome, assuming you're willing to
work hard, is that you'll come away with a small net loss in body
weight, but a dramatic difference in the way your body looks in
the mirror and the way your clothes fit. Your tops should be a
little tighter, especially in the shoulders, and your trousers a bit
roomier, particularly around the waist.
What you don't have to worry about is getting too big. I 've
been lifting weights longer than many of you have been alive, and
I'm still waiting for that moment when I look in the mirror and
say, "Damn it, I'mjust too big! " This is a somewhat redundant rule, given that I mentioned hard
work in the previous one. But here's something I 've observed
over my many years of hanging around in gyms: A woman who 's
willing to work like a galley slave in Spinning class, twist herself
into Gordian knots in the yoga studio, and build enough core
strength with Pilates to prop up a skyscraper will walk into the
weight room, pick up the pastel-colored Barbie weights, and do
the exact opposite of what will give her the results she wants.
I'll tell a story that illustrates what I mean:
As I was writing this chapter, I observed a woman at my gym
doing two exercises in combination. The first was triceps
kickbacks, a simple and useless exercise in which you lean over a
bench, hold your upper arm parallel to the floor, and straighten
your elbow while holding a very light weight. The second was
one-arm rows, in which you lean over a bench with your upper
arm perpendicular to the floor, and row the weight up to the side
of your abdomen.
A rowing exercise involves far more muscles, including the lats
and trapezius, the big, strong muscles of the upper back. Plus,
since it's a multijoint exercise, the muscles that bend the elbow,
such as the biceps, are also involved. And in addition to all that,
the leverage on a one-arm row is perfect for lifting relatively
heavy weights-you have one foot on the floor, and the opposite
knee and hand braced on the bench. There's no stress on your
lower back, and it's not unusual to see serious bodybuilders doing
this exercise with a dumbbell weighing 100 pounds or more.
The kickback, meanwhile, is an awkward exercise, with
relatively poor leverage. The only movement is at the elbow joint,
which is not designed to move heavy weights at that angle. Even a
beginner would probably be able to use three or four times as
much weight on a row versus a kickback.
This woman was using 6-pound dumbbells for the
kickbacks ... and 7 -pound weights for the rows.
I asked a trainer at the gym if he'd seen what I'd just seen. He
shook his head sadly, and said that the toughest part of his job was
getting women to use weights heavy enough to make their time in
the gym worthwhile.
So even if a woman understands the first two rules in this
chapter-that the object of lifting is to build muscle, and that
muscle is hard to build-the idea that she truly needs to challenge
herself in the weight room may not get through.
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