Chapter One
Foreword to the Second Edition
Who would have thought that anyone could compile an encyclopedia on
bodybuilding and resistance training, let alone one more than six
hundred pages long? After all, how much is there to say about hoisting
heavy metal plates? Bodybuilding isn't, as they say, rocket science.
Well, many people take exactly that approach when they begin a
bodybuilding program; I know because they're easy to spot at the gym.
Such individuals generally load excessively heavy weights on a bar,
heave the iron with whatever form it takes to get the weight up (with an
extra thrust from the lower back for good measure), and then let the bar
come crashing down. That's not bodybuilding! Strong on desire but short
on smarts, these folks are either sidelined by an injury or often will
give up quickly because they aren't seeing any significant results from
all the work they're doing.
The truth is, it doesn't take a Ph.D. to learn the complexities of
bodybuilding, but neither does it come as naturally as, say, riding a
bike. Heck, the bodybuilding vocabulary is like a foreign language:
pyramid training, gastrocnemius, negatives, periodization, instinctive
training, spotting. Learning the many distinct elements of resistance
training, from the hundreds of unique exercises and variations to
understanding how to put together a results-producing workout, all take
time and practice. To make progress at the fastest rate possible, you've
simply got to know what you're doing.
If you're rich enough to afford $50 (or more) an hour for a personal
trainer you might be able to get away with being a bodybuilding
dumbbell. Or, for about the price of a single session, you can invest in
this encyclopedia and reap a lifetime of gains that'll start with your
very next workout.
Many people forget that I, like you, was once a beginner, and started
building my body and my career standing in exactly the same position you
are right now. If you find that difficult to believe, there's a
selection of photos from my teenage years that will show how far I had
to come, how much work I had to do. What made me stand apart from my
peers, though, was a deep, deep desire to build muscle and the intense
commitment to let nothing stop me. Along the way I made countless
mistakes because the only guidebooks I had were a couple of Joe Weider's
English-language muscle magazines, and I didn't even speak the language!
The magazines inspired me to learn English so I could follow my early
idol Reg Park's routine. Still, the magazine could teach me only some
rudimentary concepts; everything else was done by trial and error.
Experience, however, is the best teacher as long as you learn from your
mistakes. When I began, I trained biceps far more intently than I did
triceps, a larger muscle group. I pretty much skipped ab training
altogether because that era's conventional wisdom dictated that the
abdominals received enough stimulation during many heavy compound
movements. I put so little effort into calf training in those early
years that when I finally came to America, I was forced to redouble my
efforts. I even went so far as to cut off the pant legs on my training
sweats so that my calves were constantly visible and under scrutiny -- a
constant reminder to me that my weaknesses deserved greater attention.
Nor did we have many machines available; I never used a leg curl or leg
extension during my first years as a bodybuilder. Most of all, though, I
was handicapped by my lack of knowledge; my catalog of exercises to
shape the total body consisted of just a few movements. Fortunately,
with this book, you don't have to make the same mistakes I did.
You'll find, as I did, that building muscle builds you up in every part
of your life. What you learn here will affect everything else that you
do in your life. As you witness the fruits of your labor, your
self-worth and self-confidence improve, and these traits will color your
work and interpersonal relationships long past your competitive days. I
credit bodybuilding with giving me not just physical attributes but also
with laying the foundation for everything else I've accomplished -- in
business, acting, even family. I know I can succeed in anything I
choose, and I know this because I understand what it takes to sacrifice,
struggle, persist, and eventually overcome an obstacle.
Even today, many of the people I work with comment upon my commitment;
when I'm making a movie, I'm ready to do a difficult scene over and over
again until we get it right. Why? It all comes back to discipline. If
you make a commitment to better your physical health, you'll find the
same self-discipline, focus, and drive for success carries through into
the rest of your life's activities. Though you may not realize it now,
you'll eventually recognize it when you take the same disciplined
approach in tackling a particular challenge. That's another reason I'm
so enthusiastic about what bodybuilding can do.
This book is not a biography, not the story of my life as a seven-time
Mr. Olympia winner or even a history of my life as an actor. (If you're
interested, you can find all that elsewhere.) Though I'm known mainly as
a bodybuilder-turned-actor and businessman, on various occasions I've
been able to take on another role, one that brings me the greatest
amount of personal pride, and that's the role of teacher. That's why I
published the original encyclopedia in 1985 and have continued my close
association with the sport. In the years since that first publication
I've been collecting, studying, and revising information for this
expanded and updated reference. That I can say I was able to inspire a
generation of men and women of all ages to take charge of their health
and fitness is truly gratifying. From the couple of dozen students of
bodybuilding who heard me give a seminar in the mid-1970s at a Santa
Monica gym, to the elementary and high schoolers I tried to empower to
exercise when I traveled to all fifty states as chairman of the
President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, to the less
fortunate who compete in the Inner City Games throughout the year and
the developmentally challenged who participate in the Special Olympics,
to the readers of my weekly syndicated newspaper column and the ones I
write in the muscle magazines, to you the reader of this encyclopedia,
you are all very much the reason I've undertaken this gargantuan effort.
I am indeed grateful that you've chosen me as your teacher.
That I can share with you my greatest passion in the world, which is
truly the only real secret to health, longevity, and a better quality of
life, has made this book an endeavor of absolute necessity -- and joy!
Bodybuilding is my roots, and I will continue to promote the sport and
spread the word through my work.
I've accumulated more than thirty-five years of bodybuilding experience,
including tens of thousands of hours training with the world's top
bodybuilders from yesterday, like Bill Pearl, Reg Park, Dave Draper,
Frank Zane, Sergio Oliva, and Franco Columbu, to the champions of today,
including Flex Wheeler, Shawn Ray, and eight-time Mr. Olympia, Lee
Haney. I've studied the writings of the predecessors to modern-day
bodybuilding, some of which date back more than a century, including
Eugen Sandow's
System of Physical Training (1894), the United
States Army's
Manual of Physical Training (1914), and Earl
Liederman's
Muscle Building (1924). I've interrogated the world's
pre-eminent exercise scientists, researched questions from students at
seminars I've given on all the major continents from Africa to Asia to
South America to more recent ones I hold each year in Columbus, Ohio --
and poured every ounce of that knowledge into this encyclopedia. With
this reference book, which is designed for students ranging from rank
beginners to competition-level bodybuilders to athletes looking to
improve their performance to those who simply want to look better and be
healthier, readers are free to pick through the expansive knowledge its
taken me so many years to accumulate.
In one sense, I feel like a doctor on call who is continually asked for
expert advice. A skier in Sun Valley asked me recently how to build quad
strength and muscular endurance to improve his performance; at a health
convention, several people inquired about the latest on the
muscle-building properties of creatine; at Wimbledon, a top tennis
champion wanted some advice on building his forearm strength; on
vacation in Hawaii, a woman came up to me and asked what she could do to
lose a hundred pounds of body fat and keep it off, at seminars, young
bodybuilders want to know how to put a peak on their biceps and improve
their outer-thigh sweep; when speaking to military personnel, I'm
commonly asked how to get more out of training with just very basic
equipment. Every day I'm asked questions on topics ranging from vitamins
A to zinc, to the need for rest and recuperation, to the false promises
of performance-enhancing substances. This is why I decided long ago that
if I was going to spread the gospel on the benefits of bodybuilding I'd
absolutely have to stay current with the material.
That's been no easy chore. Evolution in bodybuilding has occurred at the
speed of light, both at the competitive level and among recreational
athletes. Those who simply write that off as due to a greater use of
anabolic drugs fail to see what's taken place in the industry.
Muscle-building exercise, long scoffed at by coaches who claimed it made
you musclebound and inflexible, has come under intense scrutiny by
researchers. In fact, the science of resistance training is really
becoming a science as exercise scientists verify what we bodybuilders
have been working out by trial and error for years. That's not to say we
didn't know what we were doing; on the contrary, early physique
champions were pioneers in the health and fitness field, planting the
seeds of development for each generation that followed. We coined such
phrases as "No pain, no gain," words that every bodybuilder today knows
and understands.
Though science is showing us how best to manipulate the variables that
make up your training, you cannot discount the importance of
environmental factors. I grew up in a poor family in post-World War II
Austria, yet those conditions gave me a greater drive to succeed.
Developing an instinctive sense about your training is another
intangible factor that many top bodybuilders develop. Desire,
discipline, and drive all play a role. Science has a hard time
quantifying these factors, but their importance is certainly profound.
So, too, are your genetics: Some individuals have the bone structure and
muscle-fiber makeup to succeed at the competitive level in power sports
or bodybuilding. The bottom line is that with bodybuilding, anyone can
make improvements and achieve 100 percent of his or her potential, even
without the potential to become a world-class athlete.
Still, exercise scientists and medical experts studying the body, as
well as researchers in the fields of diet and sports nutrition, are
applying the lessons of yesterday to tweak and refine training
techniques. If not set in stone, many of the ideas may best be
characterized as principles. Ultimately, however, any finding presented
by the scientific community must be useful to students of the sport and
bodybuilding champions themselves, who are the ultimate test of the
validity of such ideas. Applying these truths to achieve results is the
practical basis of this encyclopedia. The information that I present on
these pages is proved, of practical value, and will also work for you!
Since I last published the encyclopedia, the nature of bodybuilding has
undergone an evolution of sorts in a number of ways. A bench press is
still a bench press, and a squat a squat. In fact, the execution of
various exercises has changed very little, but I've witnessed a number
of other very important factors that have. Let me briefly review not
just these developments, but how they can be applied to your workout.
You'll learn:
how to structure your workout, whether your goal is to become a
physique champion or simply to firm and tighten your body, and how you
can effectively target lagging areas;
how power athletes can adjust repetition speed to build explosive
strength;
which exercises to include for the greatest muscular benefits, and
which ones are best left to advanced-level trainees;
how to put together a workout that emphasizes body-fat control vs.
one that maximizes strength, and even how to cycle them to get the best
of both worlds;
how to not only reduce your risk of injury but actually lift more
weight by adding a 5- or 10-minute warm-up and light stretching;
how to get the most out of each rep and each set, taking your
muscles to total failure and reaping the greatest benefits in the pain
zone;
how to mix up the training variables when you hit a training
plateau;
when too much enthusiasm will start reversing your muscle and
strength gains.
As I mentioned, few exercises are done any differently now than they
were twenty years ago. Exceptions: Science has weighed in with a
differing opinion on how you should do abdominal movements. The crunch
movement, which features a shortened range of motion whereby the pelvis
and ribcage are drawn together, is a safer exercise than the common
full-range sit-up. The best bodybuilders of my competitive era did have
outstanding abdominals from doing sit-ups, but their strong midsections
probably saved them from incurring spinal problems. Because lower-back
pain afflicts more than three-quarters of all Americans at some point,
the sit-up is fairly universally contraindicated. So, I've completely
overhauled the abdominal training section to meet current scientific
opinion. I've also expanded the list of exercises to include the wide
variety of crunch variations.
The basic raw materials of weight training -- barbells, dumbbells, and
bodyweight exercises -- haven't changed much either, but we can't say
the same about resistance-training machines, which have traditionally
been favored by some users because of the safety factor. Today, dozens
of manufacturers vigorously compete with one another, which is radically
changing the face of the industry and the sport. Each year new versions
of old favorites are becoming increasingly sophisticated and smooth to
operate, now closer than ever to mimicking freeweight movements. Some
allow you to alter the angle of resistance from one set to the next;
others increase resistance on the negative; still others use a computer
to vary the resistance. I would expect we'll see even more radical
developments over the next couple of decades.
Commercial gyms aren't the only ones to benefit; home gym use has
skyrocketed as large, clunky machines have given way to smaller, safer
models that don't take a big bite out of the wallet and still fit nicely
into a spare bedroom. That's an ideal choice for individuals too busy to
make it into the gym.
In terms of nutrition, the raw concept "You are what you eat" still
rings true, but don't discount the dramatic changes that have occurred
in sports nutrition, either. Sure, science has engineered some
super-foods, like firmer tomatoes, and we're now raising fish in
so-called farms and leaner meats from ostrich and beefalo, for example.
Today, we also know more about the dietary needs of the hard-training
athlete and have seen the introduction of some important supplements
that aid sports performance.
Let's start with the basic bodybuilding diet. I've seen a thousand and
one fad diets come and go, but nearly every bodybuilder I know follows
the same basic guidelines that I present in this book. More often than
not, a lack of progress in your muscle-building efforts can be linked to
nutritional shortcomings in your diet. If I can hijack a phrase from
computer technicians, if you put in garbage, you'll very likely get
garbage out. I present several commonsense strategies that can work for
you. Among the macronutrients, I'm often asked about the role of protein
and the key amino acids that support tissue growth, how much you should
be consuming in a given day, and how to time your meals for optimal
absorption. Fats, mistakenly thought of as an enemy to bodybuilders, who
may avoid them at all costs, play an important role in synthesizing key
muscle-building hormones and maintaining health.
No discussion on nutrition would be complete without mentioning the most
important supplements, some of which have dramatically changed the face
of sports nutrition. Creatine is a proven performance enhancer, but a
number of other products, including the amino acid glutamine,
branched-chain amino acids, and antioxidants, are important to athletes
as well.
We also know more about the ways in which nutrients are absorbed into
the bloodstream; since not all foods are absorbed at the same rate, the
glycemic index was created to measure insulin response, a key anabolic
process. Given that a hard workout depletes your muscles of their
glycogen stores (basically stored energy), the post-workout meal is
especially crucial. Research now tells us what it should contain and how
soon you should be refueling after your training session. And who better
than top-ranked bodybuilders themselves, who've endured innumerable
contest-preparation cycles, to explain the tricks that even the
noncompetitive bodybuilder can use to reduce his body fat, even if it's
just to look great at the beach.
The field of sports psychology is thriving along with the payroll of
milion-dollar athletes. New theories and techniques demonstrate the
importance of the mind in training and competition, how to spur
motivation and stay focused, and how to set achievable short- and
long-range goals. If you have a goal of becoming Mr. Olympia, you'd
better start by having a clear vision of your ultimate physique, then
follow it up with a plan on how you'll create it. Nothing happens by
accident. You won't, for example, become a respected doctor by
happenstance; you'll need to plan on years of intensive studies to reach
your goal. The same goes with your training.
Once you have your goals clearly in mind, I'll show you bow to create
your own personal workout routine, but the role of the mind doesn't end
there. As it did for me, that vision will inspire you on each burning
rep of every set and successively take you one step closer to your goal.
But there's more to it than just what goes on in the gym: Dietary and
lifestyle considerations will also move you either closer to your
desired destination or further away. Thats why the mind is so crucial in
all sports, including bodybuilding. Your mind must first create the
picture, and your training must be in sync with that visualization. As
you begin to see changes, you start to feel better about yourself. The
result is a self-perpetuating process: You focus your mind to train your
body, and the changes that begin to take place impact your mind as well.
Dream it, believe it, and you can achieve it!
The exponential growth of bodybuilding has spawned a billion-dollar
industry with unlimited career opportunities in health clubs, apparel,
equipment, nutritional products, publications and media, physical
therapy, personal training and coaching, and other areas. Can you
imagine making a living every day from an activity you freely choose to
do as a hobby? If that's where you'd like to be, learning all you can
about the body and how it works is a great place to start.
Paralleling the changes made in the study of bodybuilding are the ones
in society at large. Today, weight training is one of the most popular
recreational fitness activities in America, but it certainly wasn't that
way some twenty-five years ago. I can remember hearing various coaches
and athletes bash muscle-building, claiming it would hinder sports
performance. (Gee, I wonder where those guys are now!) Resistance
training is being used by all kinds of people today.
From the high schools to colleges and professional sports teams, weight
training is helping to create better, stronger, even faster athletes.
Sure it takes incredible natural ability to rise to the top of your
sport, but without question resistance training provides the winning
edge. Baseball slugger Mark McGwire hits the iron regularly even during
the season, as does just about every position player in the National
Football League. I've even seen members of the NBA's World Champion
Chicago Bulls over at Gold's Gym working out while they were in Los
Angeles. You can bet they weren't there taking pictures like tourists!
You can strengthen your backhand for tennis, build up your quads for
skiing, add valuable height to your vertical leap in volleyball, improve
your ability to withstand a hit in soccer, power your stroke and kick in
swimming, and improve your strength and stride in sprinting, all with
resistance training. What's more, you'll be more injury-resistant should
a mishap occur.
Of course, you wouldn't expect a long-distance runner to train like a
football player. Choice of exercises and manipulation of the training
variables allow each athlete to tailor the activity to individual needs
and goals. For some, like boxers and wrestlers who compete in weight
classes, or gymnasts who can't afford to significantly increase their
bodyweight, strength is critical, but a different type of training is
required from traditional bodybuilding. A football lineman, shot-putter,
or discus thrower each has his own specific training requirements for
his activity. If you play a sport, you'll learn how to customize your
workout to meet your sport-specific (and even position-specific)
requirements. Still, in the end, no matter whether the athlete is 150 or
250 pounds, strength training is the common thread.
Some occupations demand that personnel pass strenuous physical
conditioning that mimics on-the-job conditions. Entrance requirements
into the military, fire, and police academies require exacting levels of
fitness -- in terms of strength, muscular endurance, and aerobic fitness
-- to ensure everyone's safety and mission effectiveness. This is
especially demanding (but by no means impossible) for women, who must
train perhaps more vigorously than their male counterparts. Once you're
selected for admission doesn't mean you no longer have to stay in shape,
either; to that end, police and fire departments are installing weight
rooms in their facilities and encouraging their veterans to maintain
peak levels of physical conditioning.
Just a few years back during the Gulf war, the
Washington Post
reported that the number one request of servicemen in the Middle East
was to have weights sent over so they could keep up their training. To
that point, they had been lifting pails full of sand. At that time I was
serving as chairman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and
Sports, and I approached a number of large equipment companies seeking
donations. In all, we amassed more than four hundred tons of equipment,
which General Colin Powell insisted be
airlifted to the troops.
That's how important physical fitness is to some of these guys!
Resistance training is even being used by the elderly. After about age
twenty-five you lose about a half pound of muscle for every year of
life. Without an appropriate training stimulus, your muscles will
eventually decrease in size and strength. Regular exercise will help to
hold back this aging process, which is really nothing more than a result
of disuse. For many seniors, greater strength leads to independence and
improved quality of life.
Now before you visualize Granny under the squat rack, realize that even
just basic movements can strengthen your muscles and bones and improve
flexibility, but must be tailored to the user. Today, exercising against
the resistance of water in a pool is a popular activity among many
seniors.
New research shows that exercise can aid in the disease-fighting
process, too. Don't just take my word for it; this is confirmed fact.
Just recently I read a report in the
Journal of Strength and
Conditioning Research that weight training is aiding cancer
patients. Numerous other studies have linked resistance training to
improvements in individuals with diabetes, hypertension, heart disease,
arthritis, asthma, and AIDS. Exercise can boost the immune system,
allowing you to better fight off minor ailments, even mild depression.
Again, the weight-training program must be customized to meet the
individual's particular needs.
What about younger people? Yes, they, too, can enjoy some of the
benefits of a resistance-training program by making a few modifications,
such as using a high-rep protocol and bodyweight exercises that will
both strengthen and build bones and muscle.
One of the most remarkable recent fitness trends has been the doubling
in popularity of strength training among women between 1987 and 1996. At
the competitive level, the sport now offers contests for both
bodybuilders and fitness competitors. At the noncompetitive level, most
women prefer a workout that simply tightens and reshapes the body and
works particular problem areas like the glutes, hips, and triceps. Most
often, women have different goals than men, who are generally more
interested in bulking up and significantly increasing their strength.
Though the goals of men and women may differ, which is reflected in
program setup and choice of exercises, the execution of the movements is
identical. The female body also differs physiologically from a male's:
smaller skeletal structure, less upper-body mass in relation to the
legs, more body fat and fat cells located in the hip, thigh, and glute
areas compared to the waist. But given these facts, muscle fiber is
muscle fiber and, whether on a male or female, responds to the same type
of exercises and training techniques. For many women, then, following
the strength-training guidelines put forth with some modifications is
the answer.
Does that mean you'll grow bigger muscles if you train like a man?
Certainly not: Women produce so little testosterone, the anabolic
hormone largely responsible for muscle growth, that the training effect
is far less pronounced. The bottom line here is that this book addresses
various goals for just about every body type, age, and gender; a woman
can make an equally impressive physique transformation even if her goal
is not traditional bodybuilding per se.
Ever broken a bone and later visited a physical therapist to begin
rehab? Strength training is useful here, too. Not only does it lower
your risk of soft-tissue and joint injuries, but it's your best tool for
full recuperation and a speedy return to your activity. Whether it be
temporary muscle soreness, lower-back pain, tight joints, or returning
to action after you break a bone, resistance training will allow you to
more quickly regain your former levels of strength.
From the days when Charles Atlas offered help to pencilnecks who had
sand kicked in their face, bodybuilding has come a long way. Resistance
training is now practiced worldwide. No doubt, it's far more than
building big arms and looking great at the beach (but those aren't bad
goals, mind you); weight training can reshape and tone your body,
improve your health as well as your game, keep you injury-free, and
ensure a long, active future. Whether you're a beginner looking for the
nuts and bolts of training, an intermediate seeking to split your
workout and bring up a lagging body part, or an advanced trainee looking
to refine your physique and incorporate advanced training techniques,
you'll find the answers in these pages.
Obviously, then, the scale of changes that have occurred in the scope of
bodybuilding and among its participants since I first published the
encyclopedia are far greater than merely evolutionary -- they approach
revolutionary. Besides those just mentioned, we have a greater
understanding of the benefits of resistance training, which accounts in
part for its tremendous popularity.
Every person who enters a gym or health club brings a personal
motivation as to why he or she has chosen resistance training to
accomplish certain goals. Sure, the aim of bodybuilding is to develop
greater muscle size and improve physical appearance, but they are by no
means the only reasons individuals train with weights. Consider also the
effects on strength: You have the capacity to do greater work, both in
terms of being able to lift a heavier weight one time (muscle strength)
and to lift a lighter weight more times (muscle endurance). Some types
of bodybuilding, like circuit training, are a good choice to build heart
health and improve the functioning of your lungs and respiratory system
as well. Traditional bodybuilding combined with some type of aerobic
training will promote even greater health benefits.
In an increasingly technology-driven society that sits for long periods
in front of computers and televisions and eats too many calories from
fat, obesity -- and several major health consequences -- is the result.
Bodybuilding plays a major role in building lean muscle tissue and
reducing body fat. Unlike adipose (fat) tissue, muscle tissue is
metabolically active and has a high energy requirement for maintenance
and rebuilding. An increase in muscle tissue corresponds to an increase
in your metabolic rate. Bodybuilding allows you to literally redesign
your body and lose as much as two pounds of fat per week -- without
risking your health with diet pills or fad diets! One of life's curious
ironies is that individuals who are overweight also have a tendency to
be tired, while those who expend a lot of energy exercising seem to have
more.
Other healthful effects can be measured as well. Research shows that
resistance training done correctly makes you more flexible, not
musclebound. That's because when one muscle flexes during a movement,
the antagonist muscle is stretched. Many top athletes who've spent years
in the weight room, like muscular gymnasts and track sprinters, must
have tremendous flexibility to excel at their respective sports. I've
even seen top pro bodybuilders like Flex Wheeler do the full splits
onstage! Movement maintains flexibility, and I encourage you to work all
body parts over their normal ranges of motion.
As you age, especially if you're a woman, your bones lose strength and
size. Resistance training can prevent and even reverse osteoporosis.
That holds true for tendons and ligaments, too. Stronger muscles, bones,
and connective tissue reduce your risk of injury. Skeletal muscle serves
as a kind of shock absorber that helps dissipate force from a repetitive
activity like running to a simple fall onto a hard floor.
As I mentioned, the importance of the psychological component in
bodybuilding can't be understated. Mental health professionals today
agree that nothing beats exercise for defusing anxiety. In terms of
self-respect, you can get this from a job well done, and physical
fitness is no exception. You work to achieve your goals and can
rightfully feel proud once you have achieved them, gaining respect from
others in the process. Let me finally add that training regularly can
dramatically boost your sex life by giving you more energy, increasing
testosterone levels, decreasing anxiety, and improving self-esteem.
The summation of all this makes a remarkable and compelling case for
bodybuilding. No wonder working out with weights became the most popular
fitness activity in America in 1995 as measured by the Fitness Products
Council and has remained on top ever since. Even
USA Today
reported that "significant improvements in muscle strength and tone by
lifting weights only two times a week for 20 to 30 minutes" are
possible, despite the myth that bodybuilders spend countless hours in
the gym each day. So, are you going to be a part of this revolution in
fitness or among the ever-expanding ranks of the nation's obese?
Here's what I can offer you. It's taken a book the size of this
encyclopedia to put down in writing my vast experiences, ranging from
training with yesterdays champions to conversations with todays
top-ranked bodybuilders, from consultations with exercise scientists,
nutritionists, and researchers worldwide to investigating questions from
readers like yourself who have asked me about training. As knowledge is
never finite, I've endeavored to remain on top of the sport even as a
retired competitor, studying the winning formulas of the past as well as
today's most current theories. In reality, that still makes me a student
of the sport, but because I still very much love bodybuilding, it's
something I plan on continuing for a very long time. At the same time,
by sharing the wealth of knowledge, I can serve as teacher as well. If
it suits you, think of me as your private personal trainer.
Here's what you must do for me. It's pretty simple, really, but I
didn't say easy -- after all, as I said, the slogan "No pain, no gain"
originated in bodybuilding circles. It's what sets those who succeed
apart from those who don't: You must have a sincere and burning desire
to achieve what you dream, dedicate yourself to inaking progress, and
take control of your circumstances to change your body. You must realize
that such shortcuts as using anabolic/androgenic steroids lead only to
short-term progress and potentially some very serious long-term health
problems. Understand that bodybuilding isn't an overnight process, but
rather a lifelong one. Personal factors like your attitude, commitment,
and desire to improve your appearance play an important role in your
ultimate success. Endeavor to learn all you can, train smart, listen to
your body, and combine it with a good diet. But don't get too caught up
in trying to understand all the training ideas and myriad principles at
once. You most likely don't have the experience to properly interpret
all the information anyway.
If you're with me so far, you're miles ahead of everybody else and are
destined for greatness.
I've tried to make this book as honest, accurate, and practical as
possible. Study it, reviewing the material over and over, constantly
referring to it when you have questions, need motivation for your next
training session, or are just looking for ways to make changes in your
workout. You hold the answers right here in your hands.
Ready to get started? I thought so. Let's do it!
Arnold Schwarzenegger
November 1998
Copyright © 1985, 1998 by Arnold
Schwarzenegger
Foreword to the Second Edition
Who would have thought that anyone could compile an encyclopedia on
bodybuilding and resistance training, let alone one more than six
hundred pages long? After all, how much is there to say about hoisting
heavy metal plates? Bodybuilding isn't, as they say, rocket science.
Well, many people take exactly that approach when they begin a
bodybuilding program; I know because they're easy to spot at the gym.
Such individuals generally load excessively heavy weights on a bar,
heave the iron with whatever form it takes to get the weight up (with an
extra thrust from the lower back for good measure), and then let the bar
come crashing down. That's not bodybuilding! Strong on desire but short
on smarts, these folks are either sidelined by an injury or often will
give up quickly because they aren't seeing any significant results from
all the work they're doing.
The truth is, it doesn't take a Ph.D. to learn the complexities of
bodybuilding, but neither does it come as naturally as, say, riding a
bike. Heck, the bodybuilding vocabulary is like a foreign language:
pyramid training, gastrocnemius, negatives, periodization, instinctive
training, spotting. Learning the many distinct elements of resistance
training, from the hundreds of unique exercises and variations to
understanding how to put together a results-producing workout, all take
time and practice. To make progress at the fastest rate possible, you've
simply got to know what you're doing.
If you're rich enough to afford $50 (or more) an hour for a personal
trainer you might be able to get away with being a bodybuilding
dumbbell. Or, for about the price of a single session, you can invest in
this encyclopedia and reap a lifetime of gains that'll start with your
very next workout.
Many people forget that I, like you, was once a beginner, and started
building my body and my career standing in exactly the same position you
are right now. If you find that difficult to believe, there's a
selection of photos from my teenage years that will show how far I had
to come, how much work I had to do. What made me stand apart from my
peers, though, was a deep, deep desire to build muscle and the intense
commitment to let nothing stop me. Along the way I made countless
mistakes because the only guidebooks I had were a couple of Joe Weider's
English-language muscle magazines, and I didn't even speak the language!
The magazines inspired me to learn English so I could follow my early
idol Reg Park's routine. Still, the magazine could teach me only some
rudimentary concepts; everything else was done by trial and error.
Experience, however, is the best teacher as long as you learn from your
mistakes. When I began, I trained biceps far more intently than I did
triceps, a larger muscle group. I pretty much skipped ab training
altogether because that era's conventional wisdom dictated that the
abdominals received enough stimulation during many heavy compound
movements. I put so little effort into calf training in those early
years that when I finally came to America, I was forced to redouble my
efforts. I even went so far as to cut off the pant legs on my training
sweats so that my calves were constantly visible and under scrutiny -- a
constant reminder to me that my weaknesses deserved greater attention.
Nor did we have many machines available; I never used a leg curl or leg
extension during my first years as a bodybuilder. Most of all, though, I
was handicapped by my lack of knowledge; my catalog of exercises to
shape the total body consisted of just a few movements. Fortunately,
with this book, you don't have to make the same mistakes I did.
You'll find, as I did, that building muscle builds you up in every part
of your life. What you learn here will affect everything else that you
do in your life. As you witness the fruits of your labor, your
self-worth and self-confidence improve, and these traits will color your
work and interpersonal relationships long past your competitive days. I
credit bodybuilding with giving me not just physical attributes but also
with laying the foundation for everything else I've accomplished -- in
business, acting, even family. I know I can succeed in anything I
choose, and I know this because I understand what it takes to sacrifice,
struggle, persist, and eventually overcome an obstacle.
Even today, many of the people I work with comment upon my commitment;
when I'm making a movie, I'm ready to do a difficult scene over and over
again until we get it right. Why? It all comes back to discipline. If
you make a commitment to better your physical health, you'll find the
same self-discipline, focus, and drive for success carries through into
the rest of your life's activities. Though you may not realize it now,
you'll eventually recognize it when you take the same disciplined
approach in tackling a particular challenge. That's another reason I'm
so enthusiastic about what bodybuilding can do.
This book is not a biography, not the story of my life as a seven-time
Mr. Olympia winner or even a history of my life as an actor. (If you're
interested, you can find all that elsewhere.) Though I'm known mainly as
a bodybuilder-turned-actor and businessman, on various occasions I've
been able to take on another role, one that brings me the greatest
amount of personal pride, and that's the role of teacher. That's why I
published the original encyclopedia in 1985 and have continued my close
association with the sport. In the years since that first publication
I've been collecting, studying, and revising information for this
expanded and updated reference. That I can say I was able to inspire a
generation of men and women of all ages to take charge of their health
and fitness is truly gratifying. From the couple of dozen students of
bodybuilding who heard me give a seminar in the mid-1970s at a Santa
Monica gym, to the elementary and high schoolers I tried to empower to
exercise when I traveled to all fifty states as chairman of the
President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, to the less
fortunate who compete in the Inner City Games throughout the year and
the developmentally challenged who participate in the Special Olympics,
to the readers of my weekly syndicated newspaper column and the ones I
write in the muscle magazines, to you the reader of this encyclopedia,
you are all very much the reason I've undertaken this gargantuan effort.
I am indeed grateful that you've chosen me as your teacher.
That I can share with you my greatest passion in the world, which is
truly the only real secret to health, longevity, and a better quality of
life, has made this book an endeavor of absolute necessity -- and joy!
Bodybuilding is my roots, and I will continue to promote the sport and
spread the word through my work.
I've accumulated more than thirty-five years of bodybuilding experience,
including tens of thousands of hours training with the world's top
bodybuilders from yesterday, like Bill Pearl, Reg Park, Dave Draper,
Frank Zane, Sergio Oliva, and Franco Columbu, to the champions of today,
including Flex Wheeler, Shawn Ray, and eight-time Mr. Olympia, Lee
Haney. I've studied the writings of the predecessors to modern-day
bodybuilding, some of which date back more than a century, including
Eugen Sandow's
System of Physical Training (1894), the United
States Army's
Manual of Physical Training (1914), and Earl
Liederman's
Muscle Building (1924). I've interrogated the world's
pre-eminent exercise scientists, researched questions from students at
seminars I've given on all the major continents from Africa to Asia to
South America to more recent ones I hold each year in Columbus, Ohio --
and poured every ounce of that knowledge into this encyclopedia. With
this reference book, which is designed for students ranging from rank
beginners to competition-level bodybuilders to athletes looking to
improve their performance to those who simply want to look better and be
healthier, readers are free to pick through the expansive knowledge its
taken me so many years to accumulate.
In one sense, I feel like a doctor on call who is continually asked for
expert advice. A skier in Sun Valley asked me recently how to build quad
strength and muscular endurance to improve his performance; at a health
convention, several people inquired about the latest on the
muscle-building properties of creatine; at Wimbledon, a top tennis
champion wanted some advice on building his forearm strength; on
vacation in Hawaii, a woman came up to me and asked what she could do to
lose a hundred pounds of body fat and keep it off, at seminars, young
bodybuilders want to know how to put a peak on their biceps and improve
their outer-thigh sweep; when speaking to military personnel, I'm
commonly asked how to get more out of training with just very basic
equipment. Every day I'm asked questions on topics ranging from vitamins
A to zinc, to the need for rest and recuperation, to the false promises
of performance-enhancing substances. This is why I decided long ago that
if I was going to spread the gospel on the benefits of bodybuilding I'd
absolutely have to stay current with the material.
That's been no easy chore. Evolution in bodybuilding has occurred at the
speed of light, both at the competitive level and among recreational
athletes. Those who simply write that off as due to a greater use of
anabolic drugs fail to see what's taken place in the industry.
Muscle-building exercise, long scoffed at by coaches who claimed it made
you musclebound and inflexible, has come under intense scrutiny by
researchers. In fact, the science of resistance training is really
becoming a science as exercise scientists verify what we bodybuilders
have been working out by trial and error for years. That's not to say we
didn't know what we were doing; on the contrary, early physique
champions were pioneers in the health and fitness field, planting the
seeds of development for each generation that followed. We coined such
phrases as "No pain, no gain," words that every bodybuilder today knows
and understands.
Though science is showing us how best to manipulate the variables that
make up your training, you cannot discount the importance of
environmental factors. I grew up in a poor family in post-World War II
Austria, yet those conditions gave me a greater drive to succeed.
Developing an instinctive sense about your training is another
intangible factor that many top bodybuilders develop. Desire,
discipline, and drive all play a role. Science has a hard time
quantifying these factors, but their importance is certainly profound.
So, too, are your genetics: Some individuals have the bone structure and
muscle-fiber makeup to succeed at the competitive level in power sports
or bodybuilding. The bottom line is that with bodybuilding, anyone can
make improvements and achieve 100 percent of his or her potential, even
without the potential to become a world-class athlete.
Still, exercise scientists and medical experts studying the body, as
well as researchers in the fields of diet and sports nutrition, are
applying the lessons of yesterday to tweak and refine training
techniques. If not set in stone, many of the ideas may best be
characterized as principles. Ultimately, however, any finding presented
by the scientific community must be useful to students of the sport and
bodybuilding champions themselves, who are the ultimate test of the
validity of such ideas. Applying these truths to achieve results is the
practical basis of this encyclopedia. The information that I present on
these pages is proved, of practical value, and will also work for you!
Since I last published the encyclopedia, the nature of bodybuilding has
undergone an evolution of sorts in a number of ways. A bench press is
still a bench press, and a squat a squat. In fact, the execution of
various exercises has changed very little, but I've witnessed a number
of other very important factors that have. Let me briefly review not
just these developments, but how they can be applied to your workout.
You'll learn:
how to structure your workout, whether your goal is to become a
physique champion or simply to firm and tighten your body, and how you
can effectively target lagging areas;
how power athletes can adjust repetition speed to build explosive
strength;
which exercises to include for the greatest muscular benefits, and
which ones are best left to advanced-level trainees;
how to put together a workout that emphasizes body-fat control vs.
one that maximizes strength, and even how to cycle them to get the best
of both worlds;
how to not only reduce your risk of injury but actually lift more
weight by adding a 5- or 10-minute warm-up and light stretching;
how to get the most out of each rep and each set, taking your
muscles to total failure and reaping the greatest benefits in the pain
zone;
how to mix up the training variables when you hit a training
plateau;
when too much enthusiasm will start reversing your muscle and
strength gains.
As I mentioned, few exercises are done any differently now than they
were twenty years ago. Exceptions: Science has weighed in with a
differing opinion on how you should do abdominal movements. The crunch
movement, which features a shortened range of motion whereby the pelvis
and ribcage are drawn together, is a safer exercise than the common
full-range sit-up. The best bodybuilders of my competitive era did have
outstanding abdominals from doing sit-ups, but their strong midsections
probably saved them from incurring spinal problems. Because lower-back
pain afflicts more than three-quarters of all Americans at some point,
the sit-up is fairly universally contraindicated. So, I've completely
overhauled the abdominal training section to meet current scientific
opinion. I've also expanded the list of exercises to include the wide
variety of crunch variations.
The basic raw materials of weight training -- barbells, dumbbells, and
bodyweight exercises -- haven't changed much either, but we can't say
the same about resistance-training machines, which have traditionally
been favored by some users because of the safety factor. Today, dozens
of manufacturers vigorously compete with one another, which is radically
changing the face of the industry and the sport. Each year new versions
of old favorites are becoming increasingly sophisticated and smooth to
operate, now closer than ever to mimicking freeweight movements. Some
allow you to alter the angle of resistance from one set to the next;
others increase resistance on the negative; still others use a computer
to vary the resistance. I would expect we'll see even more radical
developments over the next couple of decades.
Commercial gyms aren't the only ones to benefit; home gym use has
skyrocketed as large, clunky machines have given way to smaller, safer
models that don't take a big bite out of the wallet and still fit nicely
into a spare bedroom. That's an ideal choice for individuals too busy to
make it into the gym.
In terms of nutrition, the raw concept "You are what you eat" still
rings true, but don't discount the dramatic changes that have occurred
in sports nutrition, either. Sure, science has engineered some
super-foods, like firmer tomatoes, and we're now raising fish in
so-called farms and leaner meats from ostrich and beefalo, for example.
Today, we also know more about the dietary needs of the hard-training
athlete and have seen the introduction of some important supplements
that aid sports performance.
Let's start with the basic bodybuilding diet. I've seen a thousand and
one fad diets come and go, but nearly every bodybuilder I know follows
the same basic guidelines that I present in this book. More often than
not, a lack of progress in your muscle-building efforts can be linked to
nutritional shortcomings in your diet. If I can hijack a phrase from
computer technicians, if you put in garbage, you'll very likely get
garbage out. I present several commonsense strategies that can work for
you. Among the macronutrients, I'm often asked about the role of protein
and the key amino acids that support tissue growth, how much you should
be consuming in a given day, and how to time your meals for optimal
absorption. Fats, mistakenly thought of as an enemy to bodybuilders, who
may avoid them at all costs, play an important role in synthesizing key
muscle-building hormones and maintaining health.
No discussion on nutrition would be complete without mentioning the most
important supplements, some of which have dramatically changed the face
of sports nutrition. Creatine is a proven performance enhancer, but a
number of other products, including the amino acid glutamine,
branched-chain amino acids, and antioxidants, are important to athletes
as well.
We also know more about the ways in which nutrients are absorbed into
the bloodstream; since not all foods are absorbed at the same rate, the
glycemic index was created to measure insulin response, a key anabolic
process. Given that a hard workout depletes your muscles of their
glycogen stores (basically stored energy), the post-workout meal is
especially crucial. Research now tells us what it should contain and how
soon you should be refueling after your training session. And who better
than top-ranked bodybuilders themselves, who've endured innumerable
contest-preparation cycles, to explain the tricks that even the
noncompetitive bodybuilder can use to reduce his body fat, even if it's
just to look great at the beach.
The field of sports psychology is thriving along with the payroll of
milion-dollar athletes. New theories and techniques demonstrate the
importance of the mind in training and competition, how to spur
motivation and stay focused, and how to set achievable short- and
long-range goals. If you have a goal of becoming Mr. Olympia, you'd
better start by having a clear vision of your ultimate physique, then
follow it up with a plan on how you'll create it. Nothing happens by
accident. You won't, for example, become a respected doctor by
happenstance; you'll need to plan on years of intensive studies to reach
your goal. The same goes with your training.
Once you have your goals clearly in mind, I'll show you bow to create
your own personal workout routine, but the role of the mind doesn't end
there. As it did for me, that vision will inspire you on each burning
rep of every set and successively take you one step closer to your goal.
But there's more to it than just what goes on in the gym: Dietary and
lifestyle considerations will also move you either closer to your
desired destination or further away. Thats why the mind is so crucial in
all sports, including bodybuilding. Your mind must first create the
picture, and your training must be in sync with that visualization. As
you begin to see changes, you start to feel better about yourself. The
result is a self-perpetuating process: You focus your mind to train your
body, and the changes that begin to take place impact your mind as well.
Dream it, believe it, and you can achieve it!
The exponential growth of bodybuilding has spawned a billion-dollar
industry with unlimited career opportunities in health clubs, apparel,
equipment, nutritional products, publications and media, physical
therapy, personal training and coaching, and other areas. Can you
imagine making a living every day from an activity you freely choose to
do as a hobby? If that's where you'd like to be, learning all you can
about the body and how it works is a great place to start.
Paralleling the changes made in the study of bodybuilding are the ones
in society at large. Today, weight training is one of the most popular
recreational fitness activities in America, but it certainly wasn't that
way some twenty-five years ago. I can remember hearing various coaches
and athletes bash muscle-building, claiming it would hinder sports
performance. (Gee, I wonder where those guys are now!) Resistance
training is being used by all kinds of people today.
From the high schools to colleges and professional sports teams, weight
training is helping to create better, stronger, even faster athletes.
Sure it takes incredible natural ability to rise to the top of your
sport, but without question resistance training provides the winning
edge. Baseball slugger Mark McGwire hits the iron regularly even during
the season, as does just about every position player in the National
Football League. I've even seen members of the NBA's World Champion
Chicago Bulls over at Gold's Gym working out while they were in Los
Angeles. You can bet they weren't there taking pictures like tourists!
You can strengthen your backhand for tennis, build up your quads for
skiing, add valuable height to your vertical leap in volleyball, improve
your ability to withstand a hit in soccer, power your stroke and kick in
swimming, and improve your strength and stride in sprinting, all with
resistance training. What's more, you'll be more injury-resistant should
a mishap occur.
Of course, you wouldn't expect a long-distance runner to train like a
football player. Choice of exercises and manipulation of the training
variables allow each athlete to tailor the activity to individual needs
and goals. For some, like boxers and wrestlers who compete in weight
classes, or gymnasts who can't afford to significantly increase their
bodyweight, strength is critical, but a different type of training is
required from traditional bodybuilding. A football lineman, shot-putter,
or discus thrower each has his own specific training requirements for
his activity. If you play a sport, you'll learn how to customize your
workout to meet your sport-specific (and even position-specific)
requirements. Still, in the end, no matter whether the athlete is 150 or
250 pounds, strength training is the common thread.
Some occupations demand that personnel pass strenuous physical
conditioning that mimics on-the-job conditions. Entrance requirements
into the military, fire, and police academies require exacting levels of
fitness -- in terms of strength, muscular endurance, and aerobic fitness
-- to ensure everyone's safety and mission effectiveness. This is
especially demanding (but by no means impossible) for women, who must
train perhaps more vigorously than their male counterparts. Once you're
selected for admission doesn't mean you no longer have to stay in shape,
either; to that end, police and fire departments are installing weight
rooms in their facilities and encouraging their veterans to maintain
peak levels of physical conditioning.
Just a few years back during the Gulf war, the
Washington Post
reported that the number one request of servicemen in the Middle East
was to have weights sent over so they could keep up their training. To
that point, they had been lifting pails full of sand. At that time I was
serving as chairman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and
Sports, and I approached a number of large equipment companies seeking
donations. In all, we amassed more than four hundred tons of equipment,
which General Colin Powell insisted be
airlifted to the troops.
That's how important physical fitness is to some of these guys!
Resistance training is even being used by the elderly. After about age
twenty-five you lose about a half pound of muscle for every year of
life. Without an appropriate training stimulus, your muscles will
eventually decrease in size and strength. Regular exercise will help to
hold back this aging process, which is really nothing more than a result
of disuse. For many seniors, greater strength leads to independence and
improved quality of life.
Now before you visualize Granny under the squat rack, realize that even
just basic movements can strengthen your muscles and bones and improve
flexibility, but must be tailored to the user. Today, exercising against
the resistance of water in a pool is a popular activity among many
seniors.
New research shows that exercise can aid in the disease-fighting
process, too. Don't just take my word for it; this is confirmed fact.
Just recently I read a report in the
Journal of Strength and
Conditioning Research that weight training is aiding cancer
patients. Numerous other studies have linked resistance training to
improvements in individuals with diabetes, hypertension, heart disease,
arthritis, asthma, and AIDS. Exercise can boost the immune system,
allowing you to better fight off minor ailments, even mild depression.
Again, the weight-training program must be customized to meet the
individual's particular needs.
What about younger people? Yes, they, too, can enjoy some of the
benefits of a resistance-training program by making a few modifications,
such as using a high-rep protocol and bodyweight exercises that will
both strengthen and build bones and muscle.
One of the most remarkable recent fitness trends has been the doubling
in popularity of strength training among women between 1987 and 1996. At
the competitive level, the sport now offers contests for both
bodybuilders and fitness competitors. At the noncompetitive level, most
women prefer a workout that simply tightens and reshapes the body and
works particular problem areas like the glutes, hips, and triceps. Most
often, women have different goals than men, who are generally more
interested in bulking up and significantly increasing their strength.
Though the goals of men and women may differ, which is reflected in
program setup and choice of exercises, the execution of the movements is
identical. The female body also differs physiologically from a male's:
smaller skeletal structure, less upper-body mass in relation to the
legs, more body fat and fat cells located in the hip, thigh, and glute
areas compared to the waist. But given these facts, muscle fiber is
muscle fiber and, whether on a male or female, responds to the same type
of exercises and training techniques. For many women, then, following
the strength-training guidelines put forth with some modifications is
the answer.
Does that mean you'll grow bigger muscles if you train like a man?
Certainly not: Women produce so little testosterone, the anabolic
hormone largely responsible for muscle growth, that the training effect
is far less pronounced. The bottom line here is that this book addresses
various goals for just about every body type, age, and gender; a woman
can make an equally impressive physique transformation even if her goal
is not traditional bodybuilding per se.
Ever broken a bone and later visited a physical therapist to begin
rehab? Strength training is useful here, too. Not only does it lower
your risk of soft-tissue and joint injuries, but it's your best tool for
full recuperation and a speedy return to your activity. Whether it be
temporary muscle soreness, lower-back pain, tight joints, or returning
to action after you break a bone, resistance training will allow you to
more quickly regain your former levels of strength.
From the days when Charles Atlas offered help to pencilnecks who had
sand kicked in their face, bodybuilding has come a long way. Resistance
training is now practiced worldwide. No doubt, it's far more than
building big arms and looking great at the beach (but those aren't bad
goals, mind you); weight training can reshape and tone your body,
improve your health as well as your game, keep you injury-free, and
ensure a long, active future. Whether you're a beginner looking for the
nuts and bolts of training, an intermediate seeking to split your
workout and bring up a lagging body part, or an advanced trainee looking
to refine your physique and incorporate advanced training techniques,
you'll find the answers in these pages.
Obviously, then, the scale of changes that have occurred in the scope of
bodybuilding and among its participants since I first published the
encyclopedia are far greater than merely evolutionary -- they approach
revolutionary. Besides those just mentioned, we have a greater
understanding of the benefits of resistance training, which accounts in
part for its tremendous popularity.
Every person who enters a gym or health club brings a personal
motivation as to why he or she has chosen resistance training to
accomplish certain goals. Sure, the aim of bodybuilding is to develop
greater muscle size and improve physical appearance, but they are by no
means the only reasons individuals train with weights. Consider also the
effects on strength: You have the capacity to do greater work, both in
terms of being able to lift a heavier weight one time (muscle strength)
and to lift a lighter weight more times (muscle endurance). Some types
of bodybuilding, like circuit training, are a good choice to build heart
health and improve the functioning of your lungs and respiratory system
as well. Traditional bodybuilding combined with some type of aerobic
training will promote even greater health benefits.
In an increasingly technology-driven society that sits for long periods
in front of computers and televisions and eats too many calories from
fat, obesity -- and several major health consequences -- is the result.
Bodybuilding plays a major role in building lean muscle tissue and
reducing body fat. Unlike adipose (fat) tissue, muscle tissue is
metabolically active and has a high energy requirement for maintenance
and rebuilding. An increase in muscle tissue corresponds to an increase
in your metabolic rate. Bodybuilding allows you to literally redesign
your body and lose as much as two pounds of fat per week -- without
risking your health with diet pills or fad diets! One of life's curious
ironies is that individuals who are overweight also have a tendency to
be tired, while those who expend a lot of energy exercising seem to have
more.
Other healthful effects can be measured as well. Research shows that
resistance training done correctly makes you more flexible, not
musclebound. That's because when one muscle flexes during a movement,
the antagonist muscle is stretched. Many top athletes who've spent years
in the weight room, like muscular gymnasts and track sprinters, must
have tremendous flexibility to excel at their respective sports. I've
even seen top pro bodybuilders like Flex Wheeler do the full splits
onstage! Movement maintains flexibility, and I encourage you to work all
body parts over their normal ranges of motion.
As you age, especially if you're a woman, your bones lose strength and
size. Resistance training can prevent and even reverse osteoporosis.
That holds true for tendons and ligaments, too. Stronger muscles, bones,
and connective tissue reduce your risk of injury. Skeletal muscle serves
as a kind of shock absorber that helps dissipate force from a repetitive
activity like running to a simple fall onto a hard floor.
As I mentioned, the importance of the psychological component in
bodybuilding can't be understated. Mental health professionals today
agree that nothing beats exercise for defusing anxiety. In terms of
self-respect, you can get this from a job well done, and physical
fitness is no exception. You work to achieve your goals and can
rightfully feel proud once you have achieved them, gaining respect from
others in the process. Let me finally add that training regularly can
dramatically boost your sex life by giving you more energy, increasing
testosterone levels, decreasing anxiety, and improving self-esteem.
The summation of all this makes a remarkable and compelling case for
bodybuilding. No wonder working out with weights became the most popular
fitness activity in America in 1995 as measured by the Fitness Products
Council and has remained on top ever since. Even
USA Today
reported that "significant improvements in muscle strength and tone by
lifting weights only two times a week for 20 to 30 minutes" are
possible, despite the myth that bodybuilders spend countless hours in
the gym each day. So, are you going to be a part of this revolution in
fitness or among the ever-expanding ranks of the nation's obese?
Here's what I can offer you. It's taken a book the size of this
encyclopedia to put down in writing my vast experiences, ranging from
training with yesterdays champions to conversations with todays
top-ranked bodybuilders, from consultations with exercise scientists,
nutritionists, and researchers worldwide to investigating questions from
readers like yourself who have asked me about training. As knowledge is
never finite, I've endeavored to remain on top of the sport even as a
retired competitor, studying the winning formulas of the past as well as
today's most current theories. In reality, that still makes me a student
of the sport, but because I still very much love bodybuilding, it's
something I plan on continuing for a very long time. At the same time,
by sharing the wealth of knowledge, I can serve as teacher as well. If
it suits you, think of me as your private personal trainer.
Here's what you must do for me. It's pretty simple, really, but I
didn't say easy -- after all, as I said, the slogan "No pain, no gain"
originated in bodybuilding circles. It's what sets those who succeed
apart from those who don't: You must have a sincere and burning desire
to achieve what you dream, dedicate yourself to inaking progress, and
take control of your circumstances to change your body. You must realize
that such shortcuts as using anabolic/androgenic steroids lead only to
short-term progress and potentially some very serious long-term health
problems. Understand that bodybuilding isn't an overnight process, but
rather a lifelong one. Personal factors like your attitude, commitment,
and desire to improve your appearance play an important role in your
ultimate success. Endeavor to learn all you can, train smart, listen to
your body, and combine it with a good diet. But don't get too caught up
in trying to understand all the training ideas and myriad principles at
once. You most likely don't have the experience to properly interpret
all the information anyway.
If you're with me so far, you're miles ahead of everybody else and are
destined for greatness.
I've tried to make this book as honest, accurate, and practical as
possible. Study it, reviewing the material over and over, constantly
referring to it when you have questions, need motivation for your next
training session, or are just looking for ways to make changes in your
workout. You hold the answers right here in your hands.
Ready to get started? I thought so. Let's do it!
Arnold Schwarzenegger
November 1998
Copyright © 1985, 1998 by Arnold
Schwarzenegger
Excerpted from "The New Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding"
by Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Copyright (C) 2007 by Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Excerpted by permission.
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