NewDude001
Don Juan
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2005
- Messages
- 122
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Alright, my stats
5'8''
140 pounds
7-8% body fat
Current Fitness Routine
Mon- 10-15 minutes of HIIT
Tues- Rest
Wed- 1/2 mile repeats
Thurs- Rest
Friday- 3 Mile run
Sat- HIIT
Sun- Off
This is pretty much to maintain my physique and prep for soccer.
Right now I have a full shredded 6-pack in the morning, then it gets worse as the day goes on and I eat/drink water. I have good muscle definition and I'm by no means skinny. I'm happy with my physique, just wonder if I should put on more mass. I am going purely for a health and authentic build; I don't want an unnatural body builder's mass.
I was thinking about why the body has muscle mass and what a natural build would look like, what the ideal body would be. I came to these conclusions.
1.) Females don't like a body builder's frame because it is unnatural. If we look at this from an evolutionary standpoint, where would a woman find a body builder's body 10,000 years ago? Evolution didn't teach women to love HUGE men. Same with obese people, both are unnatural and therefore unattractive. I'm not saying muscles are unattractive, just saying pure bulk is not all it's cracked up to be.
2.) Humans have a set amount of muscles for maintenance and doing routine tasks such as walking, getting up, supporting body weight etc etc etc. This is directly proportionate to gravity and the amount of physical work you do. Again, from an evolutionary standpoint, our ancestors would have been on their feet all day long, hunting and gathering. It's known they were more muscular than modern day humans, but they were no Arnold.
So what I'm asking is how natural and logical would it be to beef up a little maybe to 155? Then maintain?
Maintaining = keeping same weight but doing more reps each time as you develop muscle endurance or exactly how does that work?
For a long while I was against any form of weightlifting because I knew it placed great stress on the body to adapt to the new conditions over and over, which probably had problems associated with it esp since I'm not done growing. Then I realized that I was basically doing weightlifting with wind sprints, so I started to reconsider. The body adapts and builds more muscle for the first month- 2 months and then if you don't add weight while continuing to lift you would basically be doing cardio at that point, building endurance as with distance running?
5'8''
140 pounds
7-8% body fat
Current Fitness Routine
Mon- 10-15 minutes of HIIT
Tues- Rest
Wed- 1/2 mile repeats
Thurs- Rest
Friday- 3 Mile run
Sat- HIIT
Sun- Off
This is pretty much to maintain my physique and prep for soccer.
Right now I have a full shredded 6-pack in the morning, then it gets worse as the day goes on and I eat/drink water. I have good muscle definition and I'm by no means skinny. I'm happy with my physique, just wonder if I should put on more mass. I am going purely for a health and authentic build; I don't want an unnatural body builder's mass.
I was thinking about why the body has muscle mass and what a natural build would look like, what the ideal body would be. I came to these conclusions.
1.) Females don't like a body builder's frame because it is unnatural. If we look at this from an evolutionary standpoint, where would a woman find a body builder's body 10,000 years ago? Evolution didn't teach women to love HUGE men. Same with obese people, both are unnatural and therefore unattractive. I'm not saying muscles are unattractive, just saying pure bulk is not all it's cracked up to be.
2.) Humans have a set amount of muscles for maintenance and doing routine tasks such as walking, getting up, supporting body weight etc etc etc. This is directly proportionate to gravity and the amount of physical work you do. Again, from an evolutionary standpoint, our ancestors would have been on their feet all day long, hunting and gathering. It's known they were more muscular than modern day humans, but they were no Arnold.
So what I'm asking is how natural and logical would it be to beef up a little maybe to 155? Then maintain?
Maintaining = keeping same weight but doing more reps each time as you develop muscle endurance or exactly how does that work?
For a long while I was against any form of weightlifting because I knew it placed great stress on the body to adapt to the new conditions over and over, which probably had problems associated with it esp since I'm not done growing. Then I realized that I was basically doing weightlifting with wind sprints, so I started to reconsider. The body adapts and builds more muscle for the first month- 2 months and then if you don't add weight while continuing to lift you would basically be doing cardio at that point, building endurance as with distance running?