Body-Part Training Is Dead
By Joseph Arangio, M.S., C.S.C.S.
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You don't have to sport a permed mullet and baggy muscle pants to look like an outdated bodybuilder. For most guys, all it requires is a trip to the gym. Why? Because the average lifter still organizes his workouts by body part, designating a separate day to train his chest, shoulders, arms, and so on. Sound familiar? It's a common approach that was popularized in the '80s by every muscle and fitness mag on the planet. (And still is.) It's not wrong--plenty of muscleheads swear by it. But it is antiquated. Think about it: Everything else has evolved and improved in the last 20 years--shouldn't your workout? The fact is, there's a faster, more effective way to build muscle than traditional body-part training. We took off our lab coats to create--especially for you--a 21st-century training plan. This way, you'll be up to date in the gym, even if you drive a Datsun to get there.
FAULTY GROUNDS
The foundation of body-part training is shaky because of one simple and often ignored scientific fact: You can't isolate muscles. Whether you're doing a bench press for your chest or an arm curl for your biceps, there are always other muscles at work. These muscles either assist the "target" muscle or contract to stabilize your joints as you perform the exercise.
So when you prepare to lift a weight, your brain sends a nerve impulse to all the muscles needed to initiate the movement, causing them to fire as
a single unit. The bottom line: Your brain recognizes movement patterns, not individual muscles, so that's the way you should organize your training sessions. Yet few lifters or trainers think in those terms, and that's a problem, because most body-part routines don't allow for balanced workouts, ideal recovery, or efficient training. For example, here's a common workout plan: chest on Monday, back on Tuesday, legs on Wednesday, shoulders on Thursday, and arms on Friday. Now here's why it's flawed:
The muscles of the lower body, the quadriceps, hamstrings, and calves, are worked on the same day, yet the chest, back, shoulders, and arms are trained separately. There's nothing wrong with training your legs once a week, but devoting an additional four days to your upper body is poor logic.
Having a dedicated "arm" day is overkill. When you train your chest, back, and shoulders, the smaller assisting muscles--the triceps and biceps--fatigue faster than the larger target muscles. So by doing compound moves, such as bench presses, shoulder presses, chinups, and rows, you're working your arm muscles maximally, even if you never do a biceps curl or a triceps extension.
The arm workout is performed the day after the shoulder workout, even though shoulder presses engage the triceps fully. This results in inad-
equate recovery time for growth.
Since you're only working one body part per workout, you have to perform straight sets, resting between each. That means there's limited opportunity to speed your workout with supersets or alternating sets.
MOVEMENTS FOR MUSCLE
You can solve all the above problems by choosing your exercises from the six major movement patterns on the next page. And by taking our recommendations that follow, you'll work all your muscles intensely while allowing plenty of recovery time for them to grow.
EXERCISE GROUPINGS
1. Horizontal Pushes: Upper-body exercises in which you move the weight away from your torso horizontally. (Imagine your torso is upright.)
Exercises: Any bench press or chest fly; dips
2. Horizontal Pulls: Upper-body
exercises that require you to move the weight toward your torso horizontally
Exercises: Any bent-over or seated row; dumbbell or machine reverse flys
3. Vertical Pushes: Upper-body exercises in which you move the weight vertically in relation to your torso
Exercises: Any type of shoulder press; lateral or front raise; upright row
4. Vertical Pulls: Upper-body exercises that require you to move
the weight in a downward direction in relation to your upright torso
Exercises: Any pullup, pulldown, or pullover
5. Quad-dominants: Exercises in which your quadriceps are the primary mover
Exercises: Any squat, lunge, or leg extension
6. Hip-dominants: Exercises in which your hamstrings and glutes are the primary movers
Exercises: Any type of deadlift or leg curl
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