How To Start A Muscle Building Program
Beginning a muscle building program can be a little confusing, since there’s so much information out there. There are so many opinions floating around and most of them come from people who are not even qualified to give you advice.
So if you’re just starting out yourself, you really want to take the time to learn how to weight train and work out correctly. If not, you’ll have to “undo” alot of stuff you’ve done. So, no matter what you do, learn correctly the first time.
I feel that one of the main factors people don’t stick with their muscle building routine is a lack of guidance in the beginning. They have no idea where to begin, so they get discouraged before they give themselves a chance to see results.
You need to have some basic understandings about how to work out and build muscle in general. This will make your time in the gym more productive and enjoyable.
In order to build muscle and lose fat, you need a combination of weight training, nutritional planning, and cardio.
Let’s take a look at the role each of these plays in your physique development.
Weight Training
Weight training is the stimulus for building muscle. By overloading the muscle with resistance, you send a signal to your muscle to get bigger and stronger to handle the load that’s been placed on it.
When you lift a heavier weight, over time, your body adapts to this by increasing the amount of muscle mass you have.
But weight training is only the first step you need to complete to maximize your results.
Proper nutrition
Good nutrition is extremely important when getting started on a workout program. You can have the most intense muscle building workouts you’ve ever had, but if you don’t have good nutrition, you’ll only see a fraction of the results.
You need to supply your body with the fuel it needs to respond and grow from weight training. You need protein and carbs in order to refuel your muscles after training. You also need quality, healthy fats for cell regeneration and organ protection.
Cardio
Cardio is important for getting lean as well as for your overall health. Cardio helps in reducing body fat because it helps you expend more calories than you consume.
Your body burns excess fat to be used as energy throughout the day. So, by eating clean and doing cardio, you create a calorie shortage in which fat is burned.
Start your muscle building program by working out 3 days per week and training each muscle group 1 time per week. It isn’t a good idea to start a weight training program by going to the gym 7 days a week. This can lead to overtraining and stopping all your chances of building muscle.
Use higher reps and lighter weights so you get accustomed to the exercises and the weight you should be using. Start slow and build a strong foundation here.
If you’re doing the exercises wrong, you’re going to have to change a lot later on, so start with light weight and learn how to do each exercise correctly. You can always add more weight later.
There’s no need to kill yourself in the gym right now, you’ll have plenty of time to increase the weight and intensity as you continue.
Before you perform your first exercises, you need to warm up by doing 3 or 4 warm ups where you use a heavier weight but don’t tire the muscle. Once you feel ready, do 2 heavy sets with as much weight as you can comfortably handle for 8 to 10 reps.
Again, you want to start your program with lighter weights, so you can learn the form. From here, you can increase the weight over time.
Only train 2 muscle groups each time, doing 2 to 3 exercises for each muscle group. Your total time spent on your muscle building program each workout should be under 1 hour. Don’t think that more time spent is better. It’s the quality of the time that matters.
This is how you want to set up your muscle building program to start. From here, your main goal is to get stronger on each exercise. Increase the amount of weight and intensity you use and you’ll soon start building more muscle than you ever thought possible.
Shawn Lebrun
http://www.articlesbase.com/fitness-articles/how-to-start-a-muscle-building-program-11039.html
Muscle Building In A Rush - week 1 (Workout Program For Building Muscle)



November 27th, 2009 at 11:30 pm
I am looking to start a muscle building program and i would like some advice and starter information?
I am roughly 16 and a half and have been living a fairly sedentary lifestyle for the past year. I am not fat, in fact i am just above the level of being underweight for my height of 5′ 4". I would like to get an athletic build, not massive "guns". I would be quite grateful if an experienced individual could give me some tips on what kind of machines or weights to use and different techniques. If somebody knows of a good workout log that would be great too.
Thanks in advance
November 28th, 2009 at 4:32 am
jimmy
check out the site below and just read thru his articles for tips.
i have most of his books that detail workouts and bodybuilding diet
you can get and maintain an athletic build until you die
good luck
References :
http://cbass.com
November 28th, 2009 at 4:34 am
your body is still not fully developed at 16, so i would leave the weights alone for now.
Body weight workouts will get you started in the right direction…situps pushups pullups and walking or running.
swimming if you have a pool handy..basketball for motor skills and coordination…and lots of stretching the arms and legs….arm rotor circles for shoulders with arms held straight out from the sides and swinging in small circles…
if you insist on weights then lite dumbell curls and lite bench presses to start with…
you may think you’re ready for more weights, but; if you can’t manage moving your body weight with the ease of a gymnast on the rings, or parallel bars, then you need to leave free weights alone.. for males, the peak of your physical development is around 33 yrs old, so you’re still developing…
pushups pull ups and situps
References :
November 28th, 2009 at 4:36 am
You should definitely join a gym.
If you go already then there are lots of muscle machines there.
Cardio is important but if you are quite lean already, don’t worry too much about it. Cardio is for fitness and you want to build your muscle.
Well first thing is, start off low with what your comfortable with but push yourself and use heavy weights with low reps. Heavy weights and low reps bulk up your muscle. If you use low weights with high reps you get toned muscle - this is what many women go for - not me though!
Breath in when your muscle is relaxed and breath out when your muscle is contracting.
There are so many things you can do that i could write an endless list! I would advise, chest press, bench press, shoulder press, bicep curls and machines and workouts that build your arms, chest, back and abs. Strong abs are very important - abs are the hardest to get but its worth it!
Do your legs time to time because a built top and a weedy bottom looks strange.
Don’t overdo it though. Good luck!
References :
November 28th, 2009 at 4:38 am
I used a program very similar to this one (http://snipurl.com/fobfc) and it worked great for me. It was alot of hard work and dedication but I was able to put on 20 lbs of muscle lower my body fat to 8%. The program I did said to get a least 1 gram protein for each pound of your body weight, and this can require a lot of eating without supplements. The only supplements I took were whey protein and multivitamins. Good Luck.
References :