Good post swerve.........So true!This is an age old question... However, one that can never really be answered completely... The best answer one can give is that it is all relative... It depends on the person... I recently got a chance to watch a guy who placed third in states in the heavyweight div train... I also talked with him afterwards... The guy didn't go heavy on anything... At least not compared to what you would think a guy of his size could handle... But what he lacked in poundage used he made up with speed... The guy was like a machine... He trained chest in 20 minutes... The next day did back and hams in 35 minutes... His rest breaks were only around 30 secs at the most... Reps stayed in the 8-10 range on everything... Supersetted some stuff along the way... Anyway, after his last day of training at my gym (he was down on vacation) I asked him about his training style and nutrition... He said that it wasn't until he started backing off of the heavy weights and incorporated shorter rest breaks between sets did he really start growing... He said before when he was killing himself trying to go to failure and going heavy as possible, he would wake up every morning hurting... But not muscle soreness, but rather joint pain... He said its hard to concentrate on the muscle you are working when there is so much stress being put on your joints... So he said lighten the weights and concentrate on the muscle you're training and stop bullshitting with your buddies... He said I should be done with any muscle group within 30 minutes.. If not I'm wasting too much time talking or at the water fountain... I have since started incorporating his philosophy and it is working... I do not hurt all of the time, and for the first time in a while I am getting great muscle pumps... I will say this again, it is all relative... Do what works for you! This is just what I have recently encountered and it seems to be working for now.... But what works for one may not for someone else... Thats why trial and error is the only effective way to answer this question for one's self...
This is an age old question... However, one that can never really be answered completely... The best answer one can give is that it is all relative... It depends on the person... I recently got a chance to watch a guy who placed third in states in the heavyweight div train... I also talked with him afterwards... The guy didn't go heavy on anything... At least not compared to what you would think a guy of his size could handle... But what he lacked in poundage used he made up with speed... The guy was like a machine... He trained chest in 20 minutes... The next day did back and hams in 35 minutes... His rest breaks were only around 30 secs at the most... Reps stayed in the 8-10 range on everything... Supersetted some stuff along the way... Anyway, after his last day of training at my gym (he was down on vacation) I asked him about his training style and nutrition... He said that it wasn't until he started backing off of the heavy weights and incorporated shorter rest breaks between sets did he really start growing... He said before when he was killing himself trying to go to failure and going heavy as possible, he would wake up every morning hurting... But not muscle soreness, but rather joint pain... He said its hard to concentrate on the muscle you are working when there is so much stress being put on your joints... So he said lighten the weights and concentrate on the muscle you're training and stop bullshitting with your buddies... He said I should be done with any muscle group within 30 minutes.. If not I'm wasting too much time talking or at the water fountain... I have since started incorporating his philosophy and it is working... I do not hurt all of the time, and for the first time in a while I am getting great muscle pumps... I will say this again, it is all relative... Do what works for you! This is just what I have recently encountered and it seems to be working for now.... But what works for one may not for someone else... Thats why trial and error is the only effective way to answer this question for one's self...
its not about heavy or light weight, its about intensity....