Bulking Up Fast Or Slow
When I first started out I was very young and impressionable and as a result was taken in by a lot of the stories that were published in the bodybuilding magazines. I used to read advertisements about people who had literally transformed their body in as little as 8 weeks and it really got me down because I wasn’t achieving the same results. I now realise that the majority of the publications on the subject of muscle gain and fat loss are sponsored by the very company manufacture sports products and supplements. It’s obvious now that the articles were incredibly biased in an attempt to get people to buy their products; they were sponsored ads and articles. Having spent the last six years training hard and training with others to figure out a tried and tested methodology for gaining muscle, I now understand how long it takes for changes in physique to take place and what a healthy natural trainer should aim for in terms of bodyweight changes and strength increases on a weekly and monthly basis. In this article, I’m going to quickly discuss my thoughts on timescales and give a few pointers to new trainers.
The important thing to realise when training to gain muscle is that the rate of improvement at any given time is i) subjective and ii) dependent on the level of the athlete in question. That means that if your friend is growing faster than you, that doesn’t mean you’re necessarily doing anything wrong and that if you’re a beginner in the weight room you should be able to progress much faster than if you had 5 years training under your belt.
For a beginner who is looking to pack on serious amounts of mass in as short time frame as possible I suggest taking a logical approach of 1 to 1.5lbs per week in progression on the scales. That should equate to roughly 500 calories in excess per day of what you require to maintain. It is extremely important for you to realise that if you start to eat way in excess of your body’s requirements, the process for building muscle doesn’t speed up beyond a certain point. In other words, if you stuff your face, you’ll get fat, not muscly.
It is possible for a newbie to put somewhere in the region of 2 stone on in the first three months of a training regime if everything is spot on and optimal. That means clear and logical weekly progressions in weight for each exercise on a weekly basis, incremental calories per week to equate for the new weight added from the week before and sufficient rest for your body to recover. At the end of a three month period, you should definitely take a week off to let your body recover from the beating it’s just taken. Remember you don’t grow in the gym, only out of it.