20 Months To A Champion Physique - Month 2
20 Months To A Champion Physique - Month 2
Month 2
In this second month of the beginner phase you will again train your entire body at each
workout. The routine now consists of 10 exercises one more than last month. Since all the
exercises have been changed, you will do an entirely new routine. Notice, however, that the
order in which you train the respective body parts stays essentially the same as it was last
month – legs, chest, deltoids, back, triceps, biceps and midsection. In months to come we’ll
alter the order for the sake of variety.
I want to emphasize some basic points to ensure that your training continues to be both
productive and enjoyable. No workout program will make you a champion overnight, and no
matter how much progress you make on a program, it does not mean much if you quit training
because of boredom or burnout a few months down the road.
Keep in mind that you must make your training interesting, challenging and enjoyable; don’t
go over the line by pushing yourself to physical extremes, to the point where your workouts
begin to seem more like mind destruction than bodybuilding.
If you are a beginner, remember, too, that you are still familiarizing yourself with the weights,
the exercises and your body. Realize that you are building a foundation for what you hope
will become a positive lifetime habit – a healthy, fitness lifestyle that will give you the body,
strength and vitality you want. To lay that foundation properly, of course, you must first
establish a positive relationship with the weight and your training. The best way to do that is
to make your workouts fun. And if that’s too much to ask, at least try to make the experience
pleasant.
Don’t get me wrong. It takes hard work and real dedication to build an outstanding physique,
but there’s a big difference between training hard and making the workouts so demanding the
you exhaust your enthusiasm long before you come anywhere near perfecting your body.
Most beginning bodybuilders – in fact, most people who train with weights have a tendency
to overdo it rather than under do it, and the result is that far too many of them ultimately wind
up saying, “To hell with it! What am I putting myself through this for?,” and they quit training
altogether. In my many years in bodybuilding and the gym business I’ve seen it happen more
times than I care to remember. Don’t let it happen to you.
One of the key points of my weight-training philosophy is that the training has to become a
part of your daily regimen. You cannot back off from it. Your body loses strength at a rate of
about 5 percent every 72 hours that you don’t exercise, which is a very rapid regression. For
example, if you work out for six months and then lay off for six months, all the gains and
health benefits that you achieved will be gone.
To put it another way, in order for weight training to be something that continually pays you
dividends, you have to continue putting something in the pot, so to speak, month after month,
year after year. Your life has to revolve around some kind of fitness program in terms of
training, eating habits, rest and so forth. You cannot rely on what you did six months or a year
ago to keep you healthy and fit today. The dividends you earned from the training you did
back then are all used up now. It’s what you do today, what you plan to do tomorrow and
what you do tomorrow that keep you healthy and fit not what you did six months or a year
ago.
And that brings us back to the point that I always try to hammer home: You must strive to
make your training interesting, meaningful and enjoyable – actually make a conscious effort
to do that – and you must make it something that you want to come back to day after day,
month after month and year after year. I always try to leave the gym with a feeling that I have
something in reserve so that I can return the next day and do it all again. I never try to “take
out all the marbles” in one workout. I always leave with something in hand in terms of energy
and strength so that I know that I can do a little bit better the next time I go to train. I suggest
you do the same.
Rest when you feel the necessity. If you are feeling tired, cut back the work load or
intensity of a given session. Decrease each exercise by one set or cut back on the
weight or reps.
Learn to focus on the body part you are training. When you are training a particular
muscle, mentally concentrate on that muscle and make it do as much of the work as
possible. Strict exercise form is a very important part of this.
Take some photographs. This is a great way to monitor your progress as you continue
training. Take some before shots in various poses from the front, side and back; both
flexed and standing relaxed. Then periodically take additional photos and study the
progress you have made. Remember, photos don’t lie.
Record your weight and take your measurements. This is another excellent way to
evaluate your progress. Use a tailor’s tape and measure your chest when it’s expanded
and normal, your waist, your hips, your thighs, your calves and your upper arms. Take
these same measurements again a few months later and compare.
billpearl.com and/or any associates are not prescribing any kind of treatments with these
programs.
Exercise Sets/Reps
Do this routine three times a week — Monday, Wednesday and Friday, or Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday — as you did last month. Use the off days for rest and
recuperation.
Since you progressed to three sets per exercise by the end of last month, I recommend
that you continue with that number of sets — except where the routine indicates
otherwise. Since last month’s workout didn’t include any calf work, it’s advisable that
you start with only one set per workout on standing calf raises and build up to three
sets. Your progression with that exercise might resemble the following:
Week 1: One set and minimum reps.
Week 2: Two sets and medium reps.
Week 3 and 4: Three sets and maximum reps.
Use a poundage that’s comfortable yet challenging for the indicated reps. At the
beginning of this routine you’ll have to do some experimentation to determine what
weights you should use. Don’t train to failure! The last rep should feel difficult but not
impossible.
As you continue training and your strength improves, the sets and reps will begin to
feel easy with the poundages you’ve been using. Whenever you reach that point,
increase the weight in the particular exercise until the last rep is difficult again.
Always keep accurate records of your exercises, sets and reps from workout to
workout, week to week and month to month. This will enable you to easily keep track
of your progress from one poundage to the next rather than making the whole process
haphazard. Don’t get caught in the bind of always trying to top your last workout,
however. Remember that the last rep should feel difficult, but it should not be an all-
out effort.
Concentrate on correct form on each exercise, mentally focus on the body part you’re
working.
Rest for 30 seconds to two minutes between sets. If you feel any kind of unusual pain
during your workout, check with a trainer. Of course, if you’re just starting an exercise
program, you should always check with a physician to ensure that you have no health
problems that could make training dangerous.
If three sets per exercise at the beginning of this month seems a little too taxing or
time consuming for you, feel free to go back to one or two sets and work up again.
You may feel the need to ease off on the volume of work if you’re a beginner, and this
will allow you to regroup and work back up.
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Editor’s Note
Bill Pearl, 84, is a four-time Mr. Universe and author of the best-selling bodybuilding books,
Legends of The Iron Game, Keys to the Inner Universe, Getting Stronger, and Getting in
Shape. He has personally coached more major contest winners than anyone else in history. At
his own peak as a bodybuilder when he last won the Universe in 1971 at age 41, he weighed
242 pounds at a height of 5’10” and his arms measured 21 inches!