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Dead Lift The dead lift is probably the single greatest exercise thereis. Dead lifts work your traps, upper back, lats, ...
21/10/2015

Dead Lift

The dead lift is probably the single greatest exercise there
is. Dead lifts work your traps, upper back, lats, lower back, biceps,
forearms, glutes, hamstrings, and quads. If you could only choose one
exercise, this would be the one to do.
A proper dead lift begins with the right bar placement and grip and
stance width. Set the bar about an inch away from your shins, taking
a shoulder width grip and a slightly narrower stance. With your head
up and back arched, your body should be at approximately a 45
degree angle in the starting position. Start the lift by pulling up and
back towards you, being sure to get a strong leg drive. Return to the
starting position by sitting back and then lowering the bar, trying not
to squat down until the bar clears your knees. Be Fueled !!!

Shoulders !!! Go HARD or go HOME !!!Be fuelled !!!
08/07/2015

Shoulders !!! Go HARD or go HOME !!!

Be fuelled !!!

Chest day today !!! Train don't strain !!!Be fuelled !!
07/07/2015

Chest day today !!! Train don't strain !!!

Be fuelled !!

Muscle Bowl BreakfastIngredients 6 egg whites 1/2 cup instant oatmeal, cooked 1/2 banana 1/8 cup walnuts 1/4 cup raspber...
05/07/2015

Muscle Bowl Breakfast

Ingredients
6 egg whites
1/2 cup instant oatmeal, cooked
1/2 banana
1/8 cup walnuts
1/4 cup raspberries
Cinnamon
Stevia or raw organic honey

Directions
1. Cook egg whites in a skillet on
low heat.
2. If you want to cook your banana, spray another skillet with coconut oil or
virgin olive oil and set on low-medium heat. Chop half of the banana into
pieces and add to the skillet. Use a spatula and be careful not to let the
banana pieces stick to the skillet.
3. Combine oatmeal and egg whites in a bowl and mix.
4. Add cinnamon and Stevia (or raw honey) and mix.
5. Top with banana, raspberries, and walnuts.

Nutrition Facts
Calories: 447
Fat: 16 g
Carbs: 48 g
Protein: 31 g

Be fuelled !!

Biceps Curls !!! I love this sport !!!
05/07/2015

Biceps Curls !!! I love this sport !!!

Ali ! Ali ! Ali !
04/07/2015

Ali ! Ali ! Ali !

Lifting changes more than just your body. Lifting can change how you participate in and view the world. Find out what th...
03/07/2015

Lifting changes more than just your body. Lifting can change how you participate in and view the world. Find out what the iron has taught Noah ''The Siege'' Siegel about living a better life.

1. FAILURE ISN'T FAILURE
If you've never missed a lift or reached complete muscle failure, you haven't been pushing yourself hard enough. In order to become stronger, you must progressively overload your muscles to the point where they literally can't do more.
In the gym, you should be purposefully trying to fail. These failures are actually steps in the right direction. Eventually, that huge deadlift PR will be yours. Eventually, you'll have the biceps peak you've always wanted. But you won't achieve these goals unless you're constantly pushing yourself to failure.
Although it might be difficult to do, try to view your failures outside the gym as attempts to build your best life. Maybe you don't have to go through life feeling terrible every time you fail. Pushing yourself to be the best student, co-worker, parent, friend, or spouse will undoubtedly lead to some disappointments, but you can always pick the dumbbell—or whatever your implement may be—back up and try again
2. THE IRON NEVER LIES
As Henry Rollins once wrote, "The Iron never lies to you." It doesn't care if you're tired, fat, hungry, or just stupid. A barbell loaded with 250 pounds is always going to be 250 pounds, no matter how you feel. Try to blame the iron for not getting your reps, and it'll just stare back at you. Your bad attitude won't change the fact that the bar still weighs 250 pounds.
Don't look to blame your inability to perform on something or someone else. Of course there are times when outside factors affect the outcome of events, but you need to ask yourself whether you've done everything in your power to succeed.
Lifting weights is simple: You focus all your energy on moving an implement from point A to point B. Taking this approach to other aspects of your life will help you simplify difficult tasks. There are no choices and no excuses, only focus and will.

3. DO MORE THAN JUST SHOW UP
To be successful in life and in training, you have to do more than just show up. Don't be that guy who simply goes through the motions. You've seen him in the gym; he comes in, does his curls and bench press, and then hops on a treadmill for 20 minutes. He lifts the same weights, works at the same pace, and does the same exercises over and over again. He may have been doing this for years, but his body never changes. Like everything else, he's getting what he puts into it.
If you show up every day and do a half-assed job, you will get half-assed results. If you want results, you need to constantly strive for new heights and progressively overload. Stop doing the same things over and over again and expecting different results.

4. FOCUS IS A LEARNED SKILL
It's easy to tell yourself to focus, but learning how to block out the world and use tunnel vision to see the task ahead of you takes some practice. Do it first in the gym. Go over what you are about to do and see the positive result in your head before you attempt anything. When you are in the moment, there should be nothing else on your mind.
In my mind, attempting a heavy squat is the ultimate lesson in channeling your entire being into making something happen. If you attempt a max-effort squat without any previous mental preparation, you'll get crushed.
Through the years, I've learned how to take this intense focus and use it to accomplish other tasks in my life. You can do the same. Once you get the hang of it in the gym, apply it to other areas of your life. If you want something badly enough, shut out all the distractions around you and do it!

5. YOU ARE CAPABLE OF GREATNESS
The most important lesson the gym has taught me is that through hard work, I can do things I never imagined possible. I changed my life because I wanted to achieve something and wouldn't let anything get in my way.
You don't have to be the biggest or the strongest guy in the world to learn these lessons or their practicality in life. There's a reason many athletes are successful outside of sports. They learn to face their challenges head-on and battle through them.
Through our triumphs at the gym, we learn we can be triumphant in life.

Be fueled !

JON DE LA ROSA TALKS LEGSHow is your leg training these days different from what you did in your first couple of years o...
03/07/2015

JON DE LA ROSA TALKS LEGS

How is your leg training these days different from what you did in your first couple of years of training? Would you say you train a lot smarter now?

I know some people will say this doesn’t sound very hardcore, but I mainly chase the pump now. That doesn’t mean I go light, it just means that if I can’t feel the muscle working and I can’t get that really good pump I’m after, I don’t go heavier. For example, I haven’t really moved up in weight on squats over the years. I still do 405, but now I do it for sets of 15-20 instead of 10-12. As a younger guy, I wasn’t putting anywhere near as much focus on squeezing and contracting the muscle. Now it’s everything. Lifting weights from point A to point B is not going to give you the development of a bodybuilder. You need to push a lot of blood into the muscles.

Which exercises do you feel have been the most productive for you? And what rep ranges do you feel have given you the best results?

Squats are number one, hands down. The rep range that I have found works best is 15-20, and that’s not just for legs. Most guys never give the higher reps a chance, but they would be shocked at how well they stimulate growth. It’s also a lot safer in the long term for your knees and your lower back when you aren’t loading up a bar with something you can only get a few reps with.

Do you do mostly regular straight sets in your leg training, or do you do a lot of supersets and drop sets?

I like straight sets most of the time. When I was training for the Mr. Olympia, I liked doing drop sets and ascending sets on the leg press to push myself a little harder. For the ascending sets, I would do sets of 10 and keep adding a plate to each side, taking only enough time between to add the plates, until I couldn’t get 10 reps anymore.

What rep tempo works best for your legs— slow and squeezing, or faster and more like a piston, with no pausing at either the top or the bottom of the rep?

Slow, controlled movements are what I feel are best.

Should the legs be trained twice a week if they are lagging, or is that too much to be able to recover from?

I think twice a week is too much simply because it’s a large volume of sheer muscle mass. If you’re truly doing a good job training them, they will need a minimum of three days and probably four to fully recover. If you work them again and incur that damage to the muscle cells before they have repaired and rebuilt, you won’t be able to grow. You might even see a loss of size in your legs.

Is leg day a training day when you feel a training partner is especially valuable?

For me, no. I think if you’re in tune with what you have to do, there is no need. I genuinely love training, and I love training by myself. Since I started my business, Nutrition Locker, many times I don’t get into the gym until 9:00 p.m. It’s tough finding someone who wants to train at that hour. And that’s OK. On your own, there is no BS. I walk in, and it’s just me and the weights. I do what I have to do, and I get out.

Jon’s Leg Routine

Leg Extensions 4 x 20

Leg Press Ascending sets, adding weight – 5-7 x 10

Lying Leg Curls 4 x 15-20

Single Leg Curls 4 x 15-20

Stiff-leg Deadlifts 4 x 15-20

Be fueled !!

How Long Does it Take Muscles to Recover When Bodybuilding?Bodybuilders lift heavily and often, some six days per week. ...
03/07/2015

How Long Does it Take Muscles to Recover When Bodybuilding?

Bodybuilders lift heavily and often, some six days per week. Because muscle recovery is crucial to gaining mass, it is important to balance muscle overload, nutrition, and rest periods for optimal results. Allowing muscle cells to recover properly will minimize the chance of injury and will produce maximum hypertrophy, or growth, of the muscle fibers. It's important to keep changing up routines to produce gains, but maintaining a rest/recovery cycle needs to be part of every bodybuilder's plan during and after the workout.

Getting Oxygen To Muscle Cells

Since lifting heavy weights means breathing heavily, a proper breathing pattern during a lift means oxygen is getting into the blood while the muscles demand it. This can make a difference post-workout as well. Before the first repetition, take a deep breath. With each repetition in the set, exhale during the muscle contraction and inhale during the eccentric phase. Doing this from the very first through the last repetition will make a big difference in recovering to do the next set.

Be fueled !!

Whats your EXCUSE???
03/07/2015

Whats your EXCUSE???

GET AGGRESSIVEGetting angry is a "to each his own" type of process. I can't offer you a step-by-step primer on rousing y...
02/07/2015

GET AGGRESSIVE

Getting angry is a "to each his own" type of process. I can't offer you a step-by-step primer on rousing your inner beast to let loose on a barbell. I can, however, recommend that you find a dark place in your psyche and provoke it. This provocation coincides with ramping up your mental intensity lever. The combination turns aggression into applied performance.

Be mindful, however, to not disregard your coaching cues. Blind anger is a hindrance; focused aggression is an enhancement.

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