newscandinavian
New Member
I'm looking to add mass all over but I want just a handful of exercises to concentrate on right now. I'm thinking bench press, dumbbell curls, squats, and leg extensions. Is that well-rounded enough?
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newscandinavian said:Thanks guys. I especially like the idea of doing bent over barbell rows - don't know why I hadn't been doing those. The one thing you guys mentioned that I can't stand doing is deadlifts. Drives my back crazy.
Probably a lightweight eater more than anything.Grizzly said:You're not a hardgainer, you're a shitty exercise selector.![]()
True. All I could get down for breakfast this morning was a yogurt drink.Bob Smith said:Probably a lightweight eater more than anything.
A food journal?jmills said:Maybe a food journal would be a great place to start bro.
Ease said:The age-old equation is true: Calories consumed - calories burnt = weight gain / loss. For you to gain weight, you will need to consume more than you burn. However, the quality and type of calorie you intake will largely determine what your body does with it. Simple principle, but often challenging to institute.
The idea behind a food journal is to track your daily average caloric intake. Take a little book to every meal and log the food and amount for one full week. Once you have a good idea of how many calories you average, you can increase your intake and watch for weight gain. I would recommend adding 200-300 calories, keeping with the same protein / carb / fat ratio scheme you have in place.
Assuming you are under your genetic mass potential and not on any AS, a realistic amount of gain is one pound per week. So, after you have followed your caloric intake for a full week, up your calories and see what happens. If you do not see a gain, increase intake by another 200 calories the following week.
Here are some things that I do to make this practical:
1. Do not count calories every meal. Just note the food and amount as you go through the day and tally everything up at night.
2. Follow some kind of diet. This will take some of the guess work out of what to eat. I like The Zone diet by Dr. Barry Sears or if you have a lot of money to dedicate to food read Dr. Perricone's '7 Secrets to Beauty, Health, and Longevity.' Neither of these programs are fad diets, rather lifestyle eating. With either program, you are going to need to bump the protein while on a cycle. (and Perricone is a dermatologist- thus the title. The diet is spot-on and he even talks about supplementation.)
3. Get an account at www.fitday.com. I use this mostly because it has a huge index of foods. So you just type in for lunch 'tuna' and it will show all the data for one serving of tuna. You adjust the amount and it does the math. There are a ton of other tools on this site as well, but the dieting tools are excellent. Oh and it is FREE.![]()
4. HAVE A CHEAT DAY / MEAL. People get burnt out on eating so strictly. Take friday night with the family and eat whatever the hell you want to.![]()
Hope this helps.
Ease
litterbox said:Barbell Bench
Barbell Military Press
Squats
Deadlifts
Barbell Bent Over Rows
That's the most solid formula for overall mass imo.
