Bryan Haycock
New Member
My name is Bryan Haycock. Im posting this because Ive noticed a few HST threads on the board. Although it may seem that I'm "new" here, I've actually been here for many years now. I am grateful to the owner of the then Mesomorphosis a great deal for his support early on in my writing career. I started posting here when it was Mesomorphosis.com. Anyway, I've been busy over at another website for the last year or so and haven't been around much.
For those of you who haven't heard of me or HST, some years ago I wrote about a training method I put together based on a bunch of physiology research. The method is designed specifically to induce hypertrophy (a.k.a. growth), at times at the expense of other performance factors such as strength, power, endurance, etc. I called the method Hypertrophy-Specific Training for obvious reasons.
Please allow me to post a very brief treatment of HST for those who are interested.
I have yet to find any program that didn't incorporate (or attempt to incorporate) at least one method or strategy designed to elicit muscle hypertrophy.
There are only three concepts that are truly unique to HST.
1) The concept, and research indicating, that mechanical load, rather than neuromuscular fatigue is the primary trigger of muscle hypertrophy.
2) The concept that muscle tissue grows unabated in the face of continued loading. In other words, if you load a muscle, it will begin to grow and finish growing even if the load is never removed. This flies directly in the face of the common belief that full recovery is critical for optimal muscle growth. Think of skin being able to tan even while still exposed to sunlight.
3) The acknowledgement of the "repeated bout effect" and the incorporation of a strategic way of overcoming its growth inhibiting effects (i.e. Strategic Deconditioning)
Everything else is just using sets and reps to load the tissue. Everybody has been doing that since they began lifting weights (Romans were first to systematize it similar to the way we do it today).
One will notice however that these three points of differentiation have a significant impact on the planning of ones "sets and reps". A brief summary of the implications must suffice for now:
1) If progressive load, rather than chronic fatigue, is the primary stimulus for tissue hypertrophy, it isnt necessary to train to failure if hypertrophy is the objective. This makes the practice of adding more weight only after you can do more reps terribly inefficient if muscle growth is the goal. It also refutes the logic of the muscle confusion practice, which is primarily a neurological phenomenon.
2) If muscle tissue is designed to grow even while the loading stimulus is still present, loading (i.e. training) should be undertaken much more frequently in order to maximize the stimulus. Create a high strain environment for the tissue to adapt to, not just occasional assaults.
3) Because the tissue becomes resistant to further load-induced growth as part of its adaptation to being loaded, growth will eventually slow dramatically and/or stop. If continued growth is the objective the tissue must be allowed to return to a more sensitive state before continued growth is to occur from loading. This is called Strategic Deconditioning (SD). This is often mistaken as rest, which deals with the CNS. Rest is designed to allow adaptation to catch up to the stimulus. SD is just the opposite. It is only concerned with the mechanical properties of the tissue. Rather than allowing the tissues adaptive resources to catch up to your training frequency, SD attempts to push the tissue in the opposite direction, effectively making it unfit to endure frequent loading. As you can see, periodic rest increases ones fitness, by allowing recovery, whereas SD decreases ones fitness by allowing adaptive changes to reverse themselves.
How to Set Up a Basic HST Cycle:
First: Find the most weight you can lift for 15 reps, 10 reps, and 5 reps for each of the exercises you want to use during the cycle. These will serve as your 15RM, your 10RM and your 5RM. (RM is Repetition Maximum).
What you are going to do is to start with weights BELOW your RMs and work your way up to them in 2 week blocks or periods. For the first two weeks you will be doing 15 reps on each exercise. For the second two weeks you will be using 10 reps on each exercise. And for the final 2 weeks you will be using 5 reps.
You will only reach "failure" on the last workout of each 2 week block. This is because you will be using your Repetition Maximum on that day for that particular rep range.
So, lets say your 15RM is 200 pounds on incline bench. For the first 2 weeks your weights for incline bench will go like this: 150lbs on Monday, 160lbs on Wed, 170lbs on Fri, 180lbs on the following Mon, 190lbs on Wed, and finally 200lbs on Friday. This example is using 10lb increments, but you could use 20 lb increments if you wished.
Once you have reached your 15RM, you will immediately begin another 2 week cycle but this time using your 10RM and you will work up to it in the same way as you did your 15RM. Once again you will use a fixed weight increment from workout to workout.
Once you reach your 10RM you will immediately start a new 2 week block using your 5RM. And proceed in the same manner as before.
Its ok if your starting weight for your 10RM block is lighter than the weight you just used for your 15RM the Friday before. People call this zig-zagging and its just fine. In fact, most people experience better results with a bit of zig-zagg in their weights as they move from one two week block to the next.
Usually smaller muscle groups do better with smaller weight increments from workout to workout. So whereas for legs you might use 20 pound increments while working up to your RM, for shoulders or arms you might use 10lbs or even 5 lb increments.
If the starting weight is too low, for example with lateral raises for shoulders, it is ok to use 3 total weight increments instead of the usual 6. Simply repeat the same weight for two workouts, still making sure you end up using your RM on the last workout of that 2 week block.
Of course, there are many many details that come up as a result of trying to apply HST to each individuals circumstances. Add to that the many details of mechanotransduction and the whole hypertrophic process (physiology, training, nutrition, supplementation, hormones) and you have quite a bit to chew on.
I hope you found this helpful.
-bryan
For those of you who haven't heard of me or HST, some years ago I wrote about a training method I put together based on a bunch of physiology research. The method is designed specifically to induce hypertrophy (a.k.a. growth), at times at the expense of other performance factors such as strength, power, endurance, etc. I called the method Hypertrophy-Specific Training for obvious reasons.
Please allow me to post a very brief treatment of HST for those who are interested.
I have yet to find any program that didn't incorporate (or attempt to incorporate) at least one method or strategy designed to elicit muscle hypertrophy.
There are only three concepts that are truly unique to HST.
1) The concept, and research indicating, that mechanical load, rather than neuromuscular fatigue is the primary trigger of muscle hypertrophy.
2) The concept that muscle tissue grows unabated in the face of continued loading. In other words, if you load a muscle, it will begin to grow and finish growing even if the load is never removed. This flies directly in the face of the common belief that full recovery is critical for optimal muscle growth. Think of skin being able to tan even while still exposed to sunlight.
3) The acknowledgement of the "repeated bout effect" and the incorporation of a strategic way of overcoming its growth inhibiting effects (i.e. Strategic Deconditioning)
Everything else is just using sets and reps to load the tissue. Everybody has been doing that since they began lifting weights (Romans were first to systematize it similar to the way we do it today).
One will notice however that these three points of differentiation have a significant impact on the planning of ones "sets and reps". A brief summary of the implications must suffice for now:
1) If progressive load, rather than chronic fatigue, is the primary stimulus for tissue hypertrophy, it isnt necessary to train to failure if hypertrophy is the objective. This makes the practice of adding more weight only after you can do more reps terribly inefficient if muscle growth is the goal. It also refutes the logic of the muscle confusion practice, which is primarily a neurological phenomenon.
2) If muscle tissue is designed to grow even while the loading stimulus is still present, loading (i.e. training) should be undertaken much more frequently in order to maximize the stimulus. Create a high strain environment for the tissue to adapt to, not just occasional assaults.
3) Because the tissue becomes resistant to further load-induced growth as part of its adaptation to being loaded, growth will eventually slow dramatically and/or stop. If continued growth is the objective the tissue must be allowed to return to a more sensitive state before continued growth is to occur from loading. This is called Strategic Deconditioning (SD). This is often mistaken as rest, which deals with the CNS. Rest is designed to allow adaptation to catch up to the stimulus. SD is just the opposite. It is only concerned with the mechanical properties of the tissue. Rather than allowing the tissues adaptive resources to catch up to your training frequency, SD attempts to push the tissue in the opposite direction, effectively making it unfit to endure frequent loading. As you can see, periodic rest increases ones fitness, by allowing recovery, whereas SD decreases ones fitness by allowing adaptive changes to reverse themselves.
How to Set Up a Basic HST Cycle:
First: Find the most weight you can lift for 15 reps, 10 reps, and 5 reps for each of the exercises you want to use during the cycle. These will serve as your 15RM, your 10RM and your 5RM. (RM is Repetition Maximum).
What you are going to do is to start with weights BELOW your RMs and work your way up to them in 2 week blocks or periods. For the first two weeks you will be doing 15 reps on each exercise. For the second two weeks you will be using 10 reps on each exercise. And for the final 2 weeks you will be using 5 reps.
You will only reach "failure" on the last workout of each 2 week block. This is because you will be using your Repetition Maximum on that day for that particular rep range.
So, lets say your 15RM is 200 pounds on incline bench. For the first 2 weeks your weights for incline bench will go like this: 150lbs on Monday, 160lbs on Wed, 170lbs on Fri, 180lbs on the following Mon, 190lbs on Wed, and finally 200lbs on Friday. This example is using 10lb increments, but you could use 20 lb increments if you wished.
Once you have reached your 15RM, you will immediately begin another 2 week cycle but this time using your 10RM and you will work up to it in the same way as you did your 15RM. Once again you will use a fixed weight increment from workout to workout.
Once you reach your 10RM you will immediately start a new 2 week block using your 5RM. And proceed in the same manner as before.
Its ok if your starting weight for your 10RM block is lighter than the weight you just used for your 15RM the Friday before. People call this zig-zagging and its just fine. In fact, most people experience better results with a bit of zig-zagg in their weights as they move from one two week block to the next.
Usually smaller muscle groups do better with smaller weight increments from workout to workout. So whereas for legs you might use 20 pound increments while working up to your RM, for shoulders or arms you might use 10lbs or even 5 lb increments.
If the starting weight is too low, for example with lateral raises for shoulders, it is ok to use 3 total weight increments instead of the usual 6. Simply repeat the same weight for two workouts, still making sure you end up using your RM on the last workout of that 2 week block.
Of course, there are many many details that come up as a result of trying to apply HST to each individuals circumstances. Add to that the many details of mechanotransduction and the whole hypertrophic process (physiology, training, nutrition, supplementation, hormones) and you have quite a bit to chew on.
I hope you found this helpful.
-bryan
