He has a free e-book downloadable from his site, www.ampedtraining.com. I don't know if that's what he was talking about. At any rate, you can find lots of other articles from him there too.
-s.
Cool. Where can I find your write-up?
And yeah, Stacey, I can see your point about having excess nutrients around the clock. I cover this by doing "blocks", that is two-on/one or two-off. The first day tends to focus on a lot of heavy squat volume. I'm still drinking a lot of milk on the very next day when I do lighter squats for recovery and heavy benches.
He has a free e-book downloadable from his site, www.ampedtraining.com. I don't know if that's what he was talking about. At any rate, you can find lots of other articles from him there too.
-s.
Thanks. Heard of amped, but didn't realize it was PMDL's.
If you're lifting say more than twice a week, then yeah you're always recovering from it. And yeah, getting a good bit of protein in as your dietary foundation is always a good move.
I'm a more conservative eater than most of you around here, because I don't have the GFH goals anymore, but I still push a lot of protein even though my daily calories aren't super-high.
I try not to obnoxiously advertise.
Then allow me...
One of the best things I've read on the interwebz: http://www.ampedtraining.com/physiqu...-lied-fallout/
I used to be a 150-lb guy who thought neural efficiency would let him get really strong without having to get up to 200 lbs. And I did start with about a 100-lb squat.What is relevant is the relative strength gains over your lifetime. If you’re a small guy that brings his squat from 100 lbs up to a raw or mostly-raw (say belt + light wraps) 550 lbs, you’ve grown. You had to have grown to move that weight. And I’m banning the first one of you that complains about ‘neural efficiency’. I don’t want to hear that shit. If it was about neural efficiency, every one of those 150 lb kids could just hit the gym 4-5 days a week with singles and eventually ramp up to that load. Why doesn’t that happen?
Moving heavy weights around requires muscle mass.
You might like to look at Dr. Squat's "Zig Zag Diet" on which he has an e-booklet and several online articles. Basically though, it says "eat more on training days, less on rest days in order to gain more muscle and less fat".
This is off-topic for the thread, but I read a few articles on Matt P's site earlier today, and couldn't stop laughing at this excerpt he quoted from the P90X site:
Followed by Matt writing, "'Confuse the muscles'. Really? Somebody just said that, in 2009, and expects to be taken seriously?" (The article was from Sept.) That gem was in Right, Wrong, and Meh.The secret behind the P90X system is an advanced training technique called “Muscle Confusion,” which accelerates the results process by constantly introducing new moves and routines so your body never plateaus, and you never get bored!
And on the P90X Web site, "Muscle Confusion" is actually trademarked. I got 3 or 4 giggle fits out of that. Good god, the last thing my muscles need is "confusion"! Life itself is quite confusing enough, thankyouverymuch.
Sorry for the off-topic post; couldn't help myself. My muscles must be all confused from my workout....
-Kate