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Been training 4-6 rep range for years on zero carbs. Progressive overload still works. Strength still increases. Muscle still grows. The "carbs fuel workouts" narrative assumes you're doing 12-rep sets to failure with drop sets and supersets. That's not hypertrophy training. That's cardiovascular suffering with weights. Heavy weight, 4-6...

34,774 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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I don't think carbs are a problem for building muscle. I want to be clear about that, because I'm going to be misquoted on it within fifteen minutes of posting. Carbs can be very useful. They're perfectly healthy in the right context, eaten by someone whose metabolism handles them well, in quantities that match their training. There are physiques built on rice and chicken. There are physiques built on potatoes. The world is large. What I don't think is that carbs are necessary. When you train the way I train, low rep, low volume, high intent, you're predominantly using the phosphocreatine system. The first ten seconds of any heavy effort. Glycogen is barely touched. You're not draining a system that needs refilling. You're not running a marathon at the end of every set. Once you're properly fat adapted, six months in, sometimes longer, the body becomes extraordinarily efficient at running on fat and ketones for everything that isn't a sprint. Meat and fat take care of the building. Ketones take care of the energy. The system is closed. The bonus is everything else. You feel better. You recover faster. You look trimmer because you're not retaining water from glycogen storage. You don't have post-meal slumps. You don't need a pre-workout to get through a session that should already feel manageable. Six years on carnivore. Six years of training. The physique is there. The strength is there. The recovery is there. Carbs aren't the enemy. They're just not the requirement they've been sold as. You can build a body you're proud of without them, on meat and fat and a pot of butter. That's been good enough a reason to keep me here.

Sama Hoole

25,290 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

If you have lagging Arms and bringing them up to par is your TOP PRIORITY… I’d recommend doing something like this each week: Upper A • 2-3 sets of “The GREATEST Triceps exercise known to man” • 2-3 sets of Supinated Grip Curls w/ Upper Arm Support • 2-3 sets of Machine or Cable Overhead Extensions • 2-3 sets of Hammer Grip Curls w/ Upper Arm Support Upper B (Performed 3-4 days after Upper A) • 2-3 sets of Dip Machine • 2-3 sets of Machine or Cable Preacher Curls • 2-3 sets of “The GREATEST Triceps exercise known to man” OR Machine or Cable Overhead Extensions • 2-3 sets of Hammer Grip Curls w/ Upper Arm Support This will result in you doing somewhere between 8-12 sets of direct Bicep and Tricep work per week Low likelihood you need any more volume than that to improve your Arms mightily if following the notes below: 1) The ideal rep range to be using when performing the exercises mentioned is the 5ish to 10ish rep range — Choose a weight you can do for 5, 6, 7 reps @ 0-2 RIR…once you can do that weight for 8, 9, 10ish reps, increase the load by 5ish pounds 2) You should perform all reps of all the listed exercises with a controlled (but not overly slow) eccentric and an explosive (but still controlled) concentric 3) You should perform these exercises very early in your workout to ensure they are as efficient/effective as possible — If you perform them later on, you will not get as robust a growth stimulus from the sets because of the outstanding fatigue that will be present from the earlier sets/exercises in your workout Additional notes: - You may sub any of these exercises for comparable exercises due to preferences and/or equipment availability — Ex: Dip Machine subbed for Weighted Dips - I probably forgot something that I should’ve mentioned…if I think of it I’ll drop it in the post below

Dean Turner

66,141 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

There is not a muscle on the body that needs high reps to see its best growth. This is basic physiology. Yes, muscles vary in their ratio of slow to fast twitch fibres. It doesn't matter, for two reasons: 1. Slow twitch fibres reach their ceiling early. They are not the limiting factor. 2. As you approach failure, every fibre is recruited regardless. The body does not leave capacity sitting idle when it thinks it's about to fail. Here is what actually drives hypertrophy: involuntary slow contractions. The point in a set where the concentric is grinding, the bar speed is dropping, and the muscle is being forced to recruit everything it has just to complete the rep. That is mechanical tension. That is the growth signal. It only exists in the final five or so reps before failure. Everything before that is your body coasting on the fibres it was already using. Some muscles tolerate high reps better than others. Calves are the classic example. But tolerating junk reps is not the same as benefiting from them. It just means the damage is less visible. The reps are still junk. If you are living in the 8-plus rep range, most of your set is happening nowhere near that zone of involuntary contraction. You are accumulating fatigue, impairing recovery, reducing training frequency, and spending more time under the bar: in exchange for a growth stimulus you could have captured in a fraction of the reps. More reps past the point of failure proximity is not more stimulus. It is just more cost.

Sama Hoole

15,967 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

Your metabolism isn’t broken. You’re just playing the wrong game. Post-chest day pump into a full Forbici feast: their largest pepperoni pizza, cacio e pepe, Caesar salad, double protein chicken bowl, and wine. This is what metabolic flexibility actually looks like. When you carry significant muscle mass at 12% body fat, your body becomes a completely different machine. You’re not just “lean”, you’re metabolically advantaged. Think of it like this: Fat cells are storage units. Muscle cells are furnaces. The more furnaces you have running 24/7, the more fuel you can throw at them without consequence. At 12% body fat with real muscle tissue, your insulin sensitivity is optimized. Nutrients partition preferentially into muscle, not fat. Your body actually PREFERS to burn fat for fuel at rest and shuttle carbs into muscle for growth and performance. This is why I can destroy an entire Italian feast on date night without anxiety or tomorrow’s cardio “punishment.” The muscle mass creates metabolic flexibility, the ability to efficiently use whatever fuel source you give it. Most people obsess over aggressive deficits and endless cardio, treating fat loss like an emergency. Yes, these tools work. Yes, you can preserve muscle if you’re smart about it. But you’re still playing defense, constantly fighting to maintain what little muscle you have while grinding through restriction. The game isn’t just getting lean. It’s building the engine that makes being lean effortless. When you prioritize muscle acquisition FIRST, you create a physique that burns more calories at rest, handles carbs better, and allows you to eat like someone who enjoys date night. Stop majoring in the minors. Build the metabolic advantage first, then reveal what you’ve built. Your grandmother was right - you need to eat. When you have the muscle mass to support it, food becomes fuel, not the enemy.

Coach Paul

22,950 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад