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10 Secrets To Building Mass

The document provides 10 secrets for building mass, including focusing solely on mass building and not worrying about other goals like abs or cardio for a while. It recommends spending time under heavy weights doing full-body compound movements for 5-10 reps to maximize mass gains, eating plenty of calories, prioritizing rest and sleep, using a program with few core lifts, and getting high volumes of reps within the 5-10 rep range.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
188 views

10 Secrets To Building Mass

The document provides 10 secrets for building mass, including focusing solely on mass building and not worrying about other goals like abs or cardio for a while. It recommends spending time under heavy weights doing full-body compound movements for 5-10 reps to maximize mass gains, eating plenty of calories, prioritizing rest and sleep, using a program with few core lifts, and getting high volumes of reps within the 5-10 rep range.

Uploaded by

aligaram
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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10 Secrets to Building Mass

by Dan John | 03/18/14

Tags: 
 Bodybuilding

Here's what you need to know...


1. If you have 14-inch arms and want to start a mass building program,
don't worry about your stupid abs (for a while.)
2. The best movements for mass building make up a very short list and
you need to do them every time you train, as mastery of the movements is a
key to mass building.
3. There's something magical about mass gains around the 5-10 rep range
and the last century of strength enthusiasts will bear this out, too.
So you want to put on mass, fast. I have a program that will do just that, but
first, some guidelines:
1. Mass building, like fat loss, has to be done at the exclusion of everything
else.
A guy with 14-inch arms will sometimes ask me about a mass building
program, but worry to death about his "six pack" (meth addicts have six packs,
for the record), his cardio, his "game," and about five other things. Once you
get 16-18 inch arms, I'll allow you to worry about all those other things.

2. You need to spend time under the bar.

You have to find ways to load your body and move the weights for up to
several minutes without releasing the load (putting the bar down or resting on
a machine). This program is going to be based on this insight.

3. Eat.
You are now going to stop worrying about every calorie as if you were a
college cheerleader. On a mass-gaining program, you must eat. When I put
on forty pounds in four months my freshman year in college, I used to eat
some sandwiches before dinner so "I wouldn't be so hungry during dinner."
ThinkShark Week when you sit down to eat and warn the others at the table
not to reach across your plate. Likewise, peri-workout nutrition is imperative.
4. You must master resting.

I know there's this urge to do this and that and this after every workout, but for
a mass building program, you have to accept that cardio consists of changing
channels with the remote. If you don't sleep eight-plus hours a night, it's going
to impact your mass gains. Many famous bodybuilders have advocated the
"muscle nap," a long nap in the afternoon to simply gain muscle. Remember,
you grow while you rest. Pick-up basketball games are not rest!

5. Bulking programs have very few movements.


Well, let's put it this way: Good bulking programs have few movements. When
I had my most success with mass building, the number of movements I use is
always around seven or eight, total. Learn to love them.
6. You need to get some reps in.
Although people have gained amazing mass on lower reps (1-5), the load
needed to gain mass on a low-rep program is difficult for most people (and
mortals). So, until you can handle a 400-pound bench, a 500-pound squat,
and a 600-pound deadlift, you're going to need reps to bulk up. There's
something magical about mass gains around the 5-10 rep range and the last
century of strength enthusiasts will bear this out, too.

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