- Joined
- Feb 12, 2015
- Messages
- 4,278
- Reaction score
- 1,286
But if they did, they’d definitely do curls.Chickens don't even have arms.
But if they did, they’d definitely do curls.Chickens don't even have arms.
This shows my point. Keep in mind you said this, "I've never seen anyone pushing bigger weights than that who doesn't have arms to match their torso in a reasonable relative size. They might not be Arnold pythons, but they aren't going to be chicken sized compared to the torso". Even when I was well past the numbers you mentioned, and past being a beginner i still had tiny arms compared to the rest of my body. This happens to a lot of people who follow the bad advice you're giving. You're using your very limited experience and deciding it applies to everyone.
I gained a lot of muscle in my first year of training, but my arms hardly grew at all. I would have been in a much better position if I had done more arm work from the start. Instead I had to catch up later on, and that's much harder to do.
You seem to have a strange idea that doing assistence work means limiting how much practise you can do on the main lifts. How long does a few sets of curls take? I often just do rest pause on curls. Whole thing takes around a minute. Easy to fit in without interfering with the main work.
Could you explain this one more time?I'm not against assistance work, but assistance work is assistance for a reason. If you're not strong enough to know where you need assistance then you could probably be better off using that time practicing that main movement. As a beginner your form probably sucks ass and could use all the help and practice you can get. That fifteen minutes could easily be another 30 reps on the main lift.
I'm not against assistance work, but assistance work is assistance for a reason. If you're not strong enough to know where you need assistance then you could probably be better off using that time practicing that main movement. As a beginner your form probably sucks ass and could use all the help and practice you can get. That fifteen minutes could easily be another 30 reps on the main lift.
For people who are poor at benching (me), I can't imagine not doing extra arm work and bench variations for hypertrophy. Well I guess I can imagine it, because I avoided those forever and really regret it.
Oblivian the starting strength program is what it is a general program for general strength. It has nothing to do with Aesthetics or long term powerlifting development. I don’t know why you cant understand it. The program has been tweaked over the years to work better for various populations as illustrated in their publications.
To sit there and say everybody that runs starting strength is basically a failure and waste of time because they don’t train for aesthetics to promote long term potential is just stupid small minded thinking.
Asgaard programming is what the book says......practical programming for strength training. It is really that simple.
If you want to do something else that’s great nobody said you have to do starting strength although most people would benefit from getting strong at the fastest rate possible for a novice in the most general useful way.
Damn Bill Starr for turning everyone in the lifting industry against each other for profit! When in reality it is a simple business and there really isn’t much complicated about it.
You haven’t really kept up with the starting strength world lately have you? The better coaches over there promote variations, assistance lifts, and isolation work.
It is no longer just do starting strength then do the Texas Method mindset.
And no the program isn’t not marketed to get through it and then move on to intermediate. The program is marketed to novices to the barbell as most people at any given time are a novice.
Its the only focus there is. If you focus is not focussing on looking jacked in a shirt then your focus needs more focus.As the most jacked person in the thread, I’m saying the main focus should be looking jacked in a shirt. That will automatically make you stronger, so you’re all set.