A list of advanced training sessions have been provided for advanced trainers to use as a guide. When you get into more advanced routines, you leave the world of number counting in the pursuit of muscle conditioning. As a basic guide the beginner is often introduced to the world of numbers, the numbers are generally high to ensure they don't lift too heavy a weight. As you enter more advanced routines you begin to learn that the numbers are only a guide to ensure you're in the right area of resistance. When you are trained up you will learn how to listen to your body.
As the mucle works it will start off strong, then begin to fatigue. The two main feelings I try to train in my clients is (1) muscle pump - when the muscle fills up with blood and you can feel the onset of fatigue; and (2) muscle fatigue - when the muscle fails. The moderate trainer targets muscle pump, the advanced trainer lives in a world of muscle fatigue.
The principles are still the same however in advanced routines the warm up is still a light weight with the aim of achieving muscle pump. Set 2 (the build up) is a moderate weight in pursuit of the onset of fatigue. The remaining sets pursue fatigue in every set. The numbers are just your guide, if in the 4th set your rep range is 10-12 and you don't fatigue until 18 then your weight is too light, if you only got 5 reps its too heavy. An advanced trainer trains by muscle state and rep range, the weight lifted is adjusted to suit. |