Five Easy Lifestyle Changes to Gain Muscle Mass Fast
Tuesday, January 6th, 2009If your goal is to get 100% better at something, what would be the best way to approach it? I can think of two ends of the continuum. The approach you select will be somewhere along this continuum: doing one thing twice as good (or 100 percent better), or performing 100 activities 1 percent better. I think that most people gravitate towards the former approach, but the second is much easier to implement.
Taken a step further, to make each of these 1 percent building blocks more effective, you could also change things that occur outside of your workouts. So you focus on changing your habits and making fractional improvements in many areas that will stack on top of each other to give you massive benefits.
So here are five simple lifestyle changes you can make to amplify your muscle workouts.
1) Replace Aerobics with Interval Training
Aerobic activities have a negative impact on mass building because it burns glycogen and branched chain amino acids (BCAA). Rather, focus on HIIT sessions for fat burning, e.g. a 400-meter sprint followed by a 400-meter recovery jog, repeated for a total of four times.
2) Increase Total Time Under Load
Rather than concentrating on the number of repetitions, concentrate on the total time your muscles are under load. Try spending 2 seconds on the negative contraction, 1 second at a neutral contraction (bottom of the exercise), and 1 second on the positive contraction. Lengthening the negative is an easy way to overload muscles and promote muscle weight gain.
3) Increase your Sodium Intake
Sodium increases amino acid absorption and carbohydrate storage while also improving the muscle’s receptiveness to insulin. Just do in it moderation!
4) Mix up your Total Time Under Load
One really easy way to add variety to a workout, confuse your muscles, and build muscle up is to switch up your repetition tempo by adding an explosive day once per week, or an explosive set once per workout. It looks like this: 2-second negative contraction, 1-second neutral, explode as fast as you can on the positive contraction and repeat.
5) Try Something New
If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got. Commit to yourself to read a new (as in current and scientifically backed) exercise book every six months. You’ll pick up new approaches and new tips to add to your workouts.
