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For the bodybuilders of this thread. I read this article and it had a lot of good tips in here for beginners and not so beginners. Thought it was a good read and just decided to pass it on to my fellow Freaks.

16 Worst Mistakes In Bodybuilding

Novice and seasoned trainers alike can make the simplest errors, both in and out of the gym. You are probably thinking, “Hey man, not me!” Yes, you too. Be warned – intelligence does not grant immunity.

“I wish I knew then what I know now.” We’ve all heard this statement, and most of us have said it ourselves. Like most things in life, bodybuilding is a learning process. We rely on past experience to build future muscle. Yet at some point we all fall victim to the mistakes that bring our muscle building to a halt. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Even the most intelligent and experienced bodybuilders commit training mistakes. Knowing what these mistakes are is the first step to correcting them.

Mistake #1: Not Doing Any Cardio

Sure you want to be as big and strong as an ox, but do you want to look like one, too? Weight training does stimulate the cardiovascular system, but it’s limited in its ability to reduce body-fast levels. To keep your body-fat percentage low and your heart and lungs in prime condition, make sure to get in three or four 30-minute cardio sessions every week. Mistake

#2: Not Eating Enough Protein

It’s amazing how many bodybuilders still do not consume enough protein – even with all the reputable sources out there declaring they should. Protein is the primary building block of muscle tissue. You need to consume enough to allow the body to recover from intense training sessions.

7Mistake #3: Isolation during the Off-Season

Bodybuilding exercises can be divided into two types: compound and isolation. Compound movements involve rotation at more than one joint. They enable you to train multiple muscle groups with heavy weight. Isolation exercises involve only one joint and limit their effects to one muscle. For example, the barbell squat involves rotation at the ankles, knees, and hips and also allows you to hit the hamstrings, quads, and glutes. An isolation exercise such as the leg extension involves the knees only, effectively removing hamstring and glute stimulation. Compound exercises are far superior than isolation exercises at building muscle mass, and should make up the majority of training during the off-season.

Mistake #4: Not Drinking Enough

The human body is composed primarily of water – about 70 percent. This means that it has developed methods to ensure it will get enough of this life-sustaining substance. One of these is thirst. When fluid levels drop too low, you begin to feel thirsty. The problem is that the thirst mechanism doesn’t kick in until your fluid levels are already too low. By the time you feel thirsty, you are already dehydrated. Drink at least 6 to 8 glasses of water every day – even more when training in a hot environment.

Mistake #5: No Time Off

In their quest to develop a maximum amount of muscle size, bodybuilders are their own worst enemies. It’s true that consistency is one of the primary factors in determining success, but consistent is one thing and constant is another. The joints and connective tissues are not designed to deal with tons of heavy weight every day. Talk to any bodybuilder with more than 10 years of experience and you will hear about at least one joint that causes problems. Even with the adequate nutrition and proper technique, bodybuilding exercises are stressful on the joints. The solution to safe, long-term training is to take an extra day or two off every couple of weeks. Trust us – your body will thank you for it.

Mistake #6: Training too Often

Unless you are one-in-a-million or on the juice, you cannot train intensely for more than three or four sessions a week. Any more than this and you’ll quickly slip into a state of overtraining. By far, most bodybuilders train three to five times a week during their mass-building phase. Don’t fall victim to the “more is better” philosophy.

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Mistake #7: Using too many Machines

Strength machines are nice to look at, convenient, and easy to use. But the bulk of your training should consist of free weights. Don’t believe it? Go into any gym and take a look around. You’ll see that the biggest, strongest people there are doing barbell bench presses, squats, rows, and deadlifts. They may wander over to a machine to finish off a certain muscle group, but serious bodybuilders spend most of their gym time hoisting serious iron (barbells and dumbbells). They don’t pamper their muscles with the latest chrome-plated contraption! We are not saying machines are useless – some machine exercises, such as pulldowns, triceps pushdowns, and leg curls, are excellent additions to your free-weight program. But using free weights offers more of a challenge and will help strengthen stabilizing muscles.

Mistake #8: Not Eating Enough

When you begin bodybuilding, your body enters into a constant state of repair and recovery. This means it needs a steady supply of nutrients in order to build new muscle tissue and recharge glycogen supplies. One or two meals a day will not be enough to meet these demands. If you eat small meals every two or three hours, your body will be able to recover. Eating every couple of hours will also keep your metabolism revved up. Try to eat a good breakfast, mid-morning snack, lunch, mid-afternoon snack, supper, and early evening snack. Remember that these are all small meals. Don’t eat huge portion sizes! Keep each mini-meal between 400 and 600 calories.

Mistake #9: Poor Training Technique

We’re not sure who first coined the phrase “strict style is king,” but it should be hung on the walls of every him! Proper technique is essential in bodybuilding. Arching, bouncing, and heaving weights around may flatter your ego, but it won’t produce the results you want. Using a little bit of body momentum to complete a few extra cheat reps is fine, but the bulk of your training should be performed with solid technique. If you need to bounce or swing the weight up, it’s too heavy.

Mistake #10: Not Getting Enough Sleep

Bodybuilding is one of the most intense forms of physical fitness. You’re literally tearing muscle tissue down and asking the body to rebuild it. Moreover, your body expected to recharge its energy reserves in time for the next training session. The vast majority of this rebuilding and recharging takes place during sleep. You need a minimum of eight hours’ sleep every 24 hours. It doesn’t have to be eight consecutive hours. Research has shown that six hours plus a two-hour nap is just as effective.

Mistake #11: Unstructured Workouts

While there are a few individuals who can train instinctively and wing it every workout, most people don’t achieve much success following such a haphazard style. Unless you have a terrific memory, how do you know the precise number of reps you did on a specific exercise during your last workout? It’s very easy to become lazy without structure in your workouts. For best results, create a training log to record information like exercises, sets, reps, weights, and type and duration of cardio. It’s also a good idea to record your eating habits.

23Mistake #12: Overtraining

If you’re spending two or more hours in the gym, you should probably re-evaluate your entire training philosophy. There is no way you could train for two hours at maximum intensity. The body has energy reserves for only about 45 to 60 minutes of intense training. Are you resting for 60 seconds or less between sets, or are you wandering around chatting for three or four minutes?

Mistake #13: You Train Your Best Body part First

Come on, admit it. Your thighs are better than your calves and hamstrings. Your chest is impressive, but your back is mediocre. Bodybuilding is about proportion and symmetry – not maximum size in one or two muscle groups. But go into any gym and you’ll see guys with 50-inch chests and 30-inch thighs starting their workout with chest and thighs! By the time they get to their backs or calves, they will just be going through the motions. To develop a well-balanced physique, you must stop neglecting the muscles that are lagging behind. Odds are you train your weakest muscles towards the end of your training routine. How will they improve that way? Always train your weaker body parts at the beginning of your routine when you have the most energy.

Mistake #14: Not listening to your body

Most athletes will tell you that they “felt something odd” just before they became injured. Whether it was a slight twinge or an extra degree of soreness, their body issued a warning signal before the injury occurred. Unfortunately, most people don’t listen when their bodies start talking to them. Pay attention. If you really don’t feel like you’ve recovered after your day or two off, take another day. Likewise, if an exercise is causing you pain – even when using light weight – stop doing that exercise for a few weeks. Your body is your best friend. Listen to it.

Mistake #15: Not Being Progressive n707891262_1783966_1695

It’s called progressive overload and it’s one of the most important training principles in bodybuilding. Essentially, you must increase the load placed on a muscle because the muscle will adapt to any resistance placed upon it. By “progressively overloading” the muscle, you are forcing it to adapt and grow. Many bodybuilders fail to follow this and keep using the same weight month after month, year after year. Many become discouraged, blaming “poor genetics” or “lack of steroids.” They could have easily solved their problem by placing an extra five pounds on the bar every few weeks. Be progressive, not regressive. Training with a partner is a great way to advance your training. A partner can offer inspiration and be there for a helpful spot when squeezing out that last rep with a new and more challenging weight.

Mistake #16: You Train Like Mr. Olympia

Rest assured; Arnold, Dorian Yates, Lee Haney, Ronnie Coleman, and all the other Mr. Olympias didn’t start out training with the pre-contest split you’ve seen printed up. They started out slow and gradually worked their way up the intensity ladder. You must do the same if you hope to keep making progress. Following some six-day-a-week pro bodybuilder’s routine will only lead to overtraining. Within a matter of weeks, your body will become so stressed that all progress will come to a halt. You may even see a reduction in muscle mass. There you go. Sixteen of the most common mistakes bodybuilders make that keep them from creating the body of their dreams. We know you work hard; now start working smart!
 
The only part i don't really agree with is the sleep part. And while it is important, everyone is different.

I don't need 8 hours anymore. When i was younger i did, I feel fine and function fine off of 6. I can't sleep for 8 anymore if i wanted to. I think it depends on the type of sleep you get, If it's restorative and you recover is all that matters.
 
There is some good information there. I now need to develop a routine for the gym now that I have access to different equipment.
 
Though far from looking like this, I felt like this tonight while I was lifting.

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I finally did 3 full sets of 10 reps on bis tonight, after only doing 5 reps on the 3rd set Saturday. On the 10th rep I was snarling and groaning like it was my job, but I persevered and did it. Starting to see some more ares on me really coming into form, if I can just burn the rest of this fat I think I might look pretty good if you could just tighten my skin over the muscles there now :lol

Speaking of burning fat, this weekend is the first of my summer weddings, my goal date for being at 40lbs burnt, as for this week's weigh in this morning, I've burnt 37lbs, down to 283lbs, it's not dead on 40, but close enough, and by the weekend, my workout this week will have done most of its job, and I expect next Monday it'll read 281 on the scale, so even if not perfect, it's a long way away from where i was 6 months ago.
 
Damn this is painful. I just turned down lunch at an awesome burger place I can never get to usually. Damn my my will power must be stronger then I give myself credit for.
 
Its nice to contribute to this thread a little!

I have been into fitness all my life but slacked a little when I got married and had kids as most of you will do or have done. The love of my life has been soccer and always will be, I have been playing ever since I was like 5. But as you age you loose a lot of flexibility and agility. So along with weight lifting at the gym I do Hot Yoga or most of the time Power Hot Yoga. Its the best thing that I have ever done for my body in my entire life!
I lost all the unwanted fats, and gained my six pack back in a year. I have regained all my flexibility and can very much keep up with all the young 25 yr olds on the Soccer field at ease.
If you guys that are trying to loose some weight or have unwanted fat you really should try this! The best thing is you can go with your gf or wife! They love this S@#@!
And if you dont have a gf/wife then its really the best place to admire the ladies!
I would say try it at least once! Drink a ton of water before and after and take it easy doing it the very first few times. It will kick your a@@! But if you keep with it for a month you will be a changed man!

There is one down side for some! That is you have to be ok with lots of sweating! And if your a weight lifter and gainer you cant do this more than once a week since Hot Yoga will eventually produce extremely lean muscles.

As for everything you have to keep with it for it to work and you have to take it easy when you get started.

Now get your asses up and go do something! :)
 
Nice article Skiman! I'm glad to know that I don't fall prey to any of those issues. I attacked this new lifestyle like I was prepping for a final exam. I studied my ass off, read a lot of literature and have tweaked the diet and routine as I have gone along to keep it going. The one mistake I DID make in the beginning was I started with too long of a workout with too many exercises, and I didn't include Squats and Deadlifts.

But I am smarter for it now. I am careful with my diet, strict and watchful with my routine, and I always get my required sleep. :rock

And on the weight front, I'm down to a 37 inch waist and down to 197 lbs. :duff

And Sean, great progress man! Keep it going, your goal is closer than you think bro.
 
Right on DA, been reading a lot lately and here's another, hope no minds reading a lil bit...

Why Some People Quit & Some People never Give Up

Throughout my 18 years in the fitness industry as a trainer, nutrition consultant and motivational coach, I have noticed that some people who start a nutrition and exercise program give up very easily after hitting the first obstacle they encounter. If they feel the slightest bit of discouragement or frustration, they will abandon even their biggest goals and dreams. On the other hand, I noticed that some people simply NEVER give up. They have ferocious persistence and they never let go of their goals. These people are like the bulldog that refuses to release its teeth-hold on a bone. The harder you try to pull the bone out of his mouth, the harder the dog chomps down with a vice-like grip.

What’s the difference between these two types of people? Psychologists say there is an answer.

An extremely important guideline for achieving fitness success is the concept that, “There is no failure; only feedback. You don’t “fail”, you only get results.”

This is a foundational principle from the field of Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP), and the first time I ever heard it was from peak performance expert Anthony Robbins back in the late 1980’s. It’s a principle that stuck with me ever since, because it’s a very, very powerful shift in mindset.

A lot of people will second-guess themselves and they’ll bail out and quit, just because what they try at first doesn’t work. They consider it a permanent failure, but all they need is a little attitude change, a mindset change, or what we call a “reframe.”

Instead of saying, “This is failure” they can say to themselves, “I produced a result” and “This is only temporary.” This change in perspective is going to change the way that they feel and how they mentally process and explain the experience. It turns into a learning opportunity and valuable feedback for a course correction instead of a failure, and that drives continued action and forward movement.

It’s all about your results and your interpretation of those results

Dr Martin Seligman, a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, did some incredible research on this subject and wrote about it in his book, Learned Optimism. Dr. Seligman noticed that the difference between people who give up and people who persist and never quit is what he referred to as “explanatory style.” He said that explanatory style is the way we explain or interpret bad events or failures.

People who habitually give up have an explanatory style of permanence. For example, they hit a plateau in their progress and explain it by saying, “diets never work” or “I have bad genetics so I’ll always be fat.” These explanations imply permanence.

Other people hit the same plateaus and encounter the same challenges, but explain them differently. They say things such as, “I ate too many cheat meals this week,” or “I haven’t found the right diet for my body type yet.” These explanations of the results imply being temporary.

People who see negative results as permanent failure are the ones who give up easily and often generalize their “failure” into other areas of their lives and even into their own sense of self. It’s one thing to say, “I ate poorly this past week because I was traveling,” (a belief about temporary behavior and environment), and to say, “I am a fat person because of my genetics” (a belief about identity with a sense of permanence). Remember, body fat is a temporary condition, not a person!

People who see challenges and obstacles as temporary and as valuable learning experiences are the ones who never quit. If you learn from your experiences, not repeating what didn’t work in the past, and if you choose to never quit, your success is inevitable.
 
Interesting article, I think that's what's been working for me, been seeing what's in the glass instead of what isn't. I haven't burnt the 40lbs I hoped to in the time I wanted, but I still burnt 37 which is a lot.

I think depending on where you're at, it takes crossing a certain threshold to open your eyes to what's being achieved vs. what isn't. Particularly, depending on what you're doing for weight loss, you can't be a slave to the scale, which some people are. It's a guide, but it's not cast in stone truth. My scale says I lost 2lbs a week, but week to week, the change in my body that I sense feels more than that, and it's probably true, but I have to use the scale because it's the only measurable, objective way to be certain I'm making forward progress, and that's all I use it for, progress, not so much how much progress.
 
Feed The Beast – Gain Muscle While Losing Fat

Been training hard for weeks, months or even years without substantial results? If you’ve ever wondered why, consider this: it could be that the quality of your energy is lacking. How much have you really thought about the fuel you are pumping into your body? The following article will help you fuel muscle gain while losing fat.

You’re running low on gas. Time to take your car to the gas station and fill ‘er up! You know exactly what kind of gas to put in the tank because these days vehicles come with proper fuelling instructions. Put the wrong gas in and your car performs poorly, chugging and grinding so badly you’d think it needed a tune up.

Cars and humans have a lot in common when it comes to fuel. The human body responds badly to improper fuel just as a car does. Years of bad nutrition yield a body that is sluggish, covered in fat, unshapely and lacking any signs of health or vitality. If any of these words describe you, chances are you have been neglecting the nutritional needs of your body. Too bad humans don’t come with proper fuelling instructions. It would be so easy. Here’s your chance to understand the importance of nutrition

to your physique-shaping goals and tune up that sluggish engine of yours.

Start with Clean Eating

It can be daunting to overhaul your daily food intake. There are thousands of questions about what to eat and what is healthful. If you throw out the mayo-laden sandwich or the burger and fries, what’s left for lunch? And don’t say nothing; the habit of skipping meals makes things worse.

What’s Lean Protein?
backstage20071

Lean protein sources are the backbone of a clean eating program. Pure protein, eaten every two or three hours throughout the course of a day, along with regular weight training, builds big beautiful muscles. You will never go hungry and it won’t be long before you notice positive changes in your physique.

Not Just Protein

Without complex carbohydrates, protein cannot create the muscles you want. It is the chemistry of these macronutrients working together that creates full, healthy muscles. Complex carbs are found in a rainbow of fresh fruits and vegetables. Avoid the junk-food aisles at the grocery store and look to the produce section

instead. Although most fruits and veggies are part of a clean-eating regimen, fruit, carrots, corn and squash should be eating in moderation since they contain higher amounts of sugars and starches.

Whole grains also contain complex carbohydrates and other fabulous nutrients critical to your new way of eating. Oatmeal tops the list as a wholesome breakfast food. Add a little cream of wheat to the hot cooked oatmeal to provide added texture and muscle-building nutrition. One cup of cooked porridge sustains you for two or three hours. There is no more superior fuel for an active body than oatmeal. Jazz up your morning bowl with a half-cup of fresh berries for antioxidant power, two tablespoons of flax for bowel and heart health and three tablespoons of wheat germ for hormonal health.

Brown rice is another superb whole grain filled with disease-fighting agents and fibrous complex carbohydrates perfect for building muscle. Try quinoa, the ancient super-food of the Incas, for a change of pace.
 
Damn. Even I could have told you not to train with Drago on your first workout.

Yep, that guy is bad news... He WILL....and MUST break you.

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As for motivation, I used to be that self defeating guy. I basically forced him to recede when I joined the Navy and gave myself NO WAY OUT. When I was put in that inescapable situation I found my inner mega-driven S.O.B. I would laugh when we were forced to do situps in Boot camp, I'd wake up late and night and do Handstand pushups with the other SAR and SEAL candidates, and I was a constant overachiever during Boot. In A school I was class leader, and when I went to SAR I was doing great until I hit the first distance swim.

I couldn't make the times, and DOR'ed myself. I gave up for the first time, and it killed me. Once I finished my term that man was reawakened and I decided to get my life together. I started painting, found my Wife, started college and just now FINALLY got started on my journey to a better body.

It's all about drive. You have to reach in and find that hidden individual within yourself and destroy the old weak one. Once you set your mind to a goal, you don't think about options... there is only one option. WIN. :rock

If you fail, no matter what the reason. Take it, learn from it, and promise yourself it will never happen again. Etch it into your memory and become tougher for it, you won't regret the decision.

As for me today, it's arm day so I am excited to hit it harder than I did last week. Should be pretty damn epic. :rock2
 
Here is my progress so far. I was messing around with the waits at home and took some pics. Still have a long way to go. But i Feel stronger which is my goal. :rock

Now To the Gym to hit the Back and Triceps! :rock

P7070018.jpg

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Here is my progress so far. I was messing around with the waits at home and took some pics. Still have a long way to go. But i Feel stronger which is my goal. :rock

Now To the Gym to hit the Back and Triceps! :rock

P7070018.jpg

P7070019.jpg

P7070020.jpg

P7070022.jpg

:drool:drool:drool
 
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