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Put On Up to a Pound of Muscle a Week!

Are you looking to build muscle and build it fast? Are you sick of being the little guy at the gym, the scrawny guy at the bar, and the dude on the beach too embarrass to shed his shirt and reveal his girly body? In order to be that guy that other guys envy (and lose their dates to!), you have to work on your body, and you have to put in the work!

Weight gain is not something people talk about too much, it’s a society thing. Too many unhealthy people are massively overweight, so the thought of giving recommendations about gaining weight is totally out of the question for a lot of publications and health sites. There’s plenty of reason to gain weight and bulk up though, and many men can’t seem to figure out how. Those men who can’t gain muscle are just going about it wrong- the wrong exercises and the wrong diet. Read about these principles of weight gain and put on as much as a pound of muscle a week.

Maximize Muscle Building

The more protein your body stores—in a process called protein synthesis—the larger your muscles grow. But your body is constantly draining its protein reserves for other uses—making hormones, for instance. The result is less protein available for muscle building. To counteract that, you need to “build and store new proteins faster than your body breaks down old proteins,” said Michael Houston, a professor of nutrition at Virginia Tech University.

Eat Meat

Shoot for about one gram of protein per pound of body weight, which is roughly the maximum amount your body can use in a day, according to a landmark study in the Journal of Applied Physiology. (For example, a 160-pound man should consume 160 grams of protein a day—the amount he’d get from an 8-ounce chicken breast, one cup of cottage cheese, a roast-beef sandwich, two eggs, a glass of milk, and two ounces of peanuts.) Split the rest of your daily calories equally between carbohydrates and fats.

Eat More

In addition to adequate protein, you need more calories. Use the following formula to calculate the number you need to take in daily to gain one pound a week. (Give yourself two weeks for results to show up on the bathroom scale. If you haven’t gained by then, increase your calories by 500 a day.)

A. Your weight in pounds.
B. Multiply A by 12 to get your basic calorie needs.
C. Multiply B by 1.6 to estimate your resting metabolic rate (calorie burn without factoring in exercise).
D. Strength training: Multiply the number of minutes you lift weights per week by 5.
E. Aerobic training: Multiply the number of minutes per week that you run, cycle, and play sports by 8.
F. Add D and E, and divide by 7.
G. Add C and F to get your daily calorie needs.
H. Add 500 to G. This is your estimated daily calorie needs to gain 1 pound a week.

Work Your Biggest Muscles

If you’re a beginner, just about any workout will be intense enough to increase protein synthesis. But if you’ve been lifting for a while, you’ll build the most muscle quickest if you focus on the large muscle groups, like the chest, back, and legs. Add squats, deadlifts, pullups, bent-over rows, bench presses, dips, and military presses to your workout. Do two or three sets of eight to 12 repetitions, with about 60 seconds’ rest between sets.

Have a Stiff Drink

A 2001 study at the University of Texas found that lifters who drank a shake containing amino acids and carbohydrates before working out increased their protein synthesis more than lifters who drank the same shake after exercising. The shake contained six grams of essential amino acids—the muscle-building blocks of protein—and 35 grams of carbohydrates.

“Since exercise increases bloodflow to your working tissues, drinking a carbohydrate-protein mixture before your workout may lead to greater uptake of the amino acids in your muscles,” said Kevin Tipton, an exercise and nutrition researcher at the University of Texas in Galveston.

For your shake, you’ll need about 10 to 20 grams of protein—usually about one scoop of a whey-protein powder. Can’t stomach protein drinks? You can get the same nutrients from a sandwich made with 4 ounces of deli turkey and a slice of American cheese on whole wheat bread.

But a drink is better. “Liquid meals are absorbed faster,” says Kalman. So tough it out. Drink one 30 to 60 minutes before your workout.

Lift Every Other Day

Do a full-body workout followed by a day of rest. Studies show that a challenging weight workout increases protein synthesis for up to 48 hours immediately after your exercise session. “Your muscles grow when you’re resting, not when you’re working out,” said Michael Mejia, Men’s Health exercise advisor and a former skinny guy who packed on 40 pounds of muscle using this very program.

Down Carbs After Your Workout

Research shows that you’ll rebuild muscle faster on your rest days if you feed your body carbohydrates. “Post-workout meals with carbs increase your insulin levels,” which, in turn, slows the rate of protein breakdown, says Kalman. Have a banana, a sports drink, a peanut-butter sandwich.

Eat Every 3 Hours

“If you don’t eat often enough, you can limit the rate at which your body builds new proteins,” said Houston. Take the number of calories you need in a day and divide by six. That’s roughly the number you should eat at each meal. Make sure you consume some protein—around 20 grams—every 3 hours.

Make One Snack Ice Cream

Have a bowl of ice cream (any kind) two hours after your workout. According to a study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, this snack triggers a surge of insulin better than most foods do. And that’ll put a damper on post-workout protein breakdown.

Have Some Milk Before Bed

Eat a combination of carbohydrates and protein 30 minutes before you go to bed. The calories are more likely to stick with you during sleep and reduce protein breakdown in your muscles, says Kalman. Try a cup of raisin bran with a cup of skim milk or a cup of cottage cheese and a small bowl of fruit. Eat again as soon as you wake up. “The more diligent you are, the better results you’ll get,” said Kalman.

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Here’s the breakdown of the recipe for success when it comes to gaining weight from muscle:
Maximize Muscle Building- build and store more protein than your body breaks down to maximize muscle building.

Eat Meat- in any given day, you should be eating one gram of protein for each pound you weigh, the rest of your calories should be from carbs and healthy fats.

Eat More- follow the formula listed in the article for an accurate estimate, but logic says that you need to increase calories to gain weight- pure and simple.

Work Your Biggest Muscles- it’s like picking low hanging fruit, building your bigger muscle groups is easier, so start there.

Drink Shakes- your body synthesis liquid protein faster than solids, so drink those protein shakes to streamline muscle building protein.

Lift Every Other Day- give your muscles a break, especially in the beginning. Muscles need to heal to grow.

Carbo Load After Workouts- this is great time to sneak in those extra calories with bulky carbs.

Eat Every Three Hours- eating every three hours keeps your energy up and keeps you going through intense muscle building workouts.

Have Ice Cream as a Snack- what a great excuse to eat ice cream, for your fitness routine!

Drink Milk at Bedtime- the high calories in milk will ‘stick to your bones’ better as you sleep.

Watch this video about building muscle weight…

Are you serious about gaining muscle weight? Are you planning to follow these tips?

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Strong Back = Strong Life!

Your back is a very important part of your body- more specifically, it is a very important part of your body’s movement. There’s hardly anything you do, movement wise, which does not involve your back. Unfortunately, this realization usually does not hit people until they have an injury or chronic back problems- then they feel pain in their back doing things they never thought had an impact on that area. Turning your neck, lifting your arm, moving your leg to take a step- go ahead, try to do those things without involving your back, it is not possible! Your back is used to lift, stand, sit, walk, and even lay-down. Knowing all this, why would any of us take the muscles in that area for granted and let them become weak?

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Build your back muscles

The most common back problems are in the neck and lower back. The first and easiest way to prevent them is by consistent stretching. This keeps tendons, which attach each end of the muscles to a bone, flexible and more resistant to pulling or tearing. It’s especially important for the shoulder area, where rotator cuff problems are so common for upper body athletes such as basketball and volleyball players.

Here are three good back stretches: 1. Sit in a chair or even better, on an exercise ball, with legs spread slightly wider than shoulder width. Lean over and reach between the feet to touch the floor. 2. Lay on your back, flex knees to chest and grip hands together behind knees, pulling the thighs towards the head while rounding the lower back. 3. Standing with hands lightly clasped over the chest, turn upper body to one side, then the other. Hold each position for 30 seconds.

Several of the smaller back muscles can be a source for nagging aches that can last for years without being correctly diagnosed. The worst of these is the rhomboid, which goes from the backbone to the shoulder blade. It’s located UNDER the bigger and thicker trapezius muscle, which starts at the back of the neck and goes over the shoulders and down to the middle of the spine.

Work the rhomboids by forcefully squeezing the shoulder blades towards each other. Add resistance with seated rows, where you pull back hard with a two-handed grip attached to a cable, while again squeezing the shoulder blades towards each other. Do bent-over rows, picking up a weighted bar from the floor while again squeezing the shoulder blades. For bent overs, bend at the hips, not the waist, and keep the back straight, not curved.

The latissimus dorsi, or lats, are large muscles which go from the front of the underarm to the backbone, can be strengthened with the well known lat pulldown, found at every gym. Vary your grip to work the entire muscle. Move your hands from wide to narrow on the bar; do it with fingers turned both outward and inward.

Another important set of muscles to build and strengthen are the spinal erectors, two thick columns of muscle on either side of the spine. Building them gives greater protection to your backbone, but just as important, strong spinal erectors give an athlete more stability and force. The best exercise for these muscles, providing you have no back problems, is the good morning. Place a bar on the back of your neck and shoulders. Holding your back straight, slowly bend over until the bar is parallel to the floor, then slowly straighten up. Check with your doctor to see if you’re in shape to do this exercise.

Finally, don’t forget your obliques, important core muscles on the side of the body. They are rarely thought of as back muscles, but their involvement with twisting motions include a lot of involvement with the back. While most gyms have an oblique bench, you can get the same benefit at home, simply by holding a dumbbell or weight plat against your chest while twisting from side to side and bending over from side to side.

When your back muscles are strong, your athletic results will improve dramatically.

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Athletes all know that working on your back muscles will make you stronger and will increase your stamina and performance. A strong back will help reduce the incidence of injury and chronic pain. Well-built muscles protect bones during stress and impact, build this area’s muscles and you will develop the padding needed to protect your frame from permanent damage. Let these muscles go and become sedentary and you will likely feel the result every day for the rest of your life.

Common areas of chronic pain are at the neck and lower back- the easiest way to work these out is by regularly stretching. Stretch out the tension in the back and you will feel more relaxed and loose.
Another common cause of back pain is the smaller back muscle, worst of all the rhomboid. This muscle can be worked by forcefully squeezing your shoulder blades together. Add rhomboid building exercises into your strength training.
Other areas to work include the spinal erectors, (two thick columns of muscle on either side of the spine) and the core muscles.

Watch this video for a complete back muscle building routine for the gym…

Are you already using back building moves in your routine?

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Look Like A MMA Fighter with Cage Fitness

Cage fitness is a workout routine developed by former MMA champion Matt Hughes. Contrary to what the name suggests this program does not involve getting beat up in a cage by a professional fighter. Thankfully, it is also not about getting beat up by a professional fighter either! If you have every watched UFC fighting, you know that the athletes who compete have defiantly achieved physical perfection. With the cage fitness program, you can get the results of MMA training, minus the bruises and injuries that go along with being a professional fighter.
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Get back to fightin’ weight with ‘Cage Fitness’

Cage Fitness class participants perform a ‘knee on 12 punch’ move at the Leading Edge Martial Arts school in Allentown, Penn. The classes, which provide a quick, intense workout modeled after a championship mixed martial arts bout, have proven very popular at the school.

When Dan Evans was sent home from “The Biggest Loser” last spring, he’d lost just 15 pounds. A year later, he’s down over 100 pounds more, thanks to a combination of diet, treadmill running and something called Cage Fitness, a fast-and-furious workout routine based on mixed martial arts.

Mixed martial arts, also known as ultimate fighting, is one of the world’s fastest-growing combat sports. Bouts are fought in an octagon-shaped ring called a cage, and fighters use moves and techniques from various fighting disciplines, including karate, Jiu-Jitsu, Muay Thai and boxing. It’s quick, it’s brutal and it’s incredibly popular. Cage Fitness workouts mimic the structure of a championship MMA bout — minus the injury. Created by Matt Hughes, a nine-time world welterweight champion, Cage Fitness workouts are just 30 minutes, with five, five-minute “rounds,” followed by a minute of rest. It’s high-intensity interval training, using familiar moves like squats, MMA-specific techniques like Kimura crunches, and a weighted fitness dummy for added resistance.

Cage isn’t the only MMA-based fitness class — martial arts studios across the country are adding programs that promise to get students into fighting shape, without the impact. Team Lloyd Irvin Martial Arts and Fitness, in Arlington, Va., offers a ladies-only Ultimate Fitness Kickboxing class alongside its judo and boxing classes. And the MMA Fitness Drill class at Houston’s Paradigm Training Center promises to get students into “octagon shape.”
It took Vanessa Yanez, of San Mateo, Calif., awhile to work up the nerve to try the Cage classes at Gold Medal Martial Arts. Yanez, a 40-year-old mother of two, had seen the sessions, which started before her cardio fitness class. And they looked pretty intense.

“While at first the class looked a little scary with the heavy bag and all, I found that I really liked the 30-minute aspect of it,” Yanez wrote in an e-mail. It was short enough, she added, where she wasn’t looking at the clock all the time. And: “The exercises end … unlike machine work or long-distance running, there is a reward every five minutes: Rest.”

Each Cage workout starts with a warm up, and then moves quickly to an upper body round, a lower body round, a “combo” round, and then a cool-down, with core work.

Each round of Cage ends with a ‘ground and pound,’ where members punch and elbow their fitness dummy for 30 seconds. It’s a great way to work on endurance — and it’s also a great stress reliever. The Leading Edge Martial Arts school, where the photo was taken, is in Allentown, Penn.

And every round wraps up with “ground and pound,” a 30-second flurry of punches into your fitness dummy.
“No matter how tired people are, they always get a huge burst of energy for the ‘ground and pound,’” said Jessy Norton, who helped design the Cage workout with Hughes.

Cage and KiDo, a martial-arts-inspired cardio workout, helped Yanez lose 40 pounds. “More importantly, I’ve increased my endurance and muscle tone to where instead of someone who just works out, I feel like an athlete,” she said.
Since its inception almost two years ago, Cage Fitness has expanded to over 280 martial arts schools, gyms, military bases and police academies. There’s also a home kit, which includes a weighted fitness dummy, gloves a training manual and seven DVDs for $349. It’s what Dan Evans, who’s now a certified Cage instructor, uses when he can’t get to a scheduled class.

“Cage is a huge part of my weight loss regimen,” he said. “There’s only so much you can run on the treadmill.”

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Developed by Matt Hughes, a formed mixed martial arts champion, the cage fitness routine promises to whip you into shape. The regime involved kicks, punches, lunges, and other moves used in marital arts- these moves are done with a grappling dummy and punching bag equipped with straps for adjustment of angles. Even experienced martial arts students have noted that this routine is quite challenging and intense for anyone- the words we like to hear when it comes to taking strength training and body sculpting the next level. This routine is slightly more popular for men than women, but either gender can participate and see impressive results with the commitment to the plan.

This routine is made up of five, five minute rounds that are followed by rest. This high intensity workout is a form of interval training- a type of training with undeniable effectiveness. Every workout begins with a warm up that moves into an upper body round, lower body round, and combo upper/lower body round, followed by a cool down and core work. Ending the rounds is a ground pound that involves a punch and elbow to the fitness dummy for 30 seconds.
Former Biggest Loser contestant, Dan Evans, lost 100 more pounds than he did on after leaving the show after losing only 15 lbs.- accrediting diet, running, and cage fitness.

Watch this video that explains the cage fitness workout…

Are you going to try the cage fitness workout?

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A Routine That Says ‘No’ to Supplments…Sorta

You want results, that’s why you and everybody else works out. Sometimes those results are coming as quickly as they should, or as you think they should, and you start looking for alternative options. In the world of athletes, weight lifters, and exercising drugs and supplements aren’t exactly uncommon. Actually, the majority of us use them, a supplement before a workout, another one after and so on…There’s one muscle building guru that believes using supplements is a giant waste of time and money. This expert believes that you can get the results of drug and supplement use through exercise, not shakes. Find out what he believes is the right way to bulk up.

3104958433 1be544fa71 m A Routine That Says No to Supplments...Sorta

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The Hurricane Is Over… It’s Time to Clean Up!

While it is absolutely essential to train in a manner intense enough to stimulate the anabolic process, it is equally as vital that one does everything possible to facilitate the body’s recuperative mechanisms as well, for if you fail to do so, your progress will stagnate no matter how hard you go at it in the gym. Once you have caused sufficient micro-tears in the muscle fibers, the goal is to bathe them with as much nutrient/hormone-rich blood as you possibly can. In other words, it’s time to chase the pump, and chase it furiously! The idea here is to begin generating immediate repairs to the damaged muscle tissue, so that you will already be ahead of the game once you return home from the gym.

After quite a bit of experimentation with various Fiber Saturation protocols, I have found that what works best for our purposes are: 1) Very High Repetitions, 2) Continuous Tension, and 3) Post-Activation Supersets (i.e., a compound movement followed by isolation movement). I recommend a 1/0/1/0, or ‘piston-like’ tempo, where the weight is in almost-constant motion when performing your FS sets. This is not the time to ‘stretch and squeeze,’ as all we wish to do in this phase is force so much blood into the target muscle that it feels as if it may burst! The muscle has already undergone the trauma necessary during the Fiber Damage portion of the workout, and now it is time to nourish, repair and recuperate!

And Speaking of Nourishment!

In order for FD/FS training to work to its greatest potential, I developed a specific nutritional protocol to be used in conjunction with the program. The types of training techniques utilized during the FD phase are very brutal to both the muscles and CNS, which is why the FS stage of the workout is a necessary component. Since there will be a tremendous amount of blood circulating to the muscles during FS (almost five times as much as when at rest), we can take further advantage by overloading the system with certain nutrients before, during, and right after training. The period immediately preceding the workout to shortly after is your greatest opportunity nutritionally to hasten the muscle-building process! In fact, I would postulate that FD/FS training is about 30-40 percent more effective for muscle hypertrophy when the following protocol is utilized:

30-45 Minutes Before Training:
Whey Protein Isolate… 50 grams
Waxy Maize Starch or Maltodextrin… 50 grams
Vitamin C…1000 mg
Phosphatidylserine… 800 mg (efficient cortisol blocker)

Sip Throughout Workout:

Gatorade or similar product containing electrolytes and glucose… 50 grams
Essential Amino Acids 5-10 grams
BCAAs…10-15 grams
Glutamine…10-15 grams
Creatine Monohydrate… 5 grams
Beta Alanine…3 grams
15-30 Minutes Post-workout:
Whey Protein Isolate… 50 grams
Vitargo… 50 grams
Leucine… 5-10 grams
Antioxidant Blend (there are several excellent products available)… 1 serving

FD/FS in Action

Now that I have bombarded you with the ‘whats’ and ‘whys’ of FD/FS, let me show you what a typical day of training might look like, using a couple of examples drawn directly from my own training journal:

Chest:
Hammer Incline Press… 3 x 3-4 (2/0/X tempo)
Smith Incline Press… 2 x 4-6 (6/1/X tempo)
Flat DB Flye… 2 x 6-8 (2/4/X tempo)
Machine Bench Press… 2 x 25-30 (1/0/1 tempo; non-lockout reps)
Superset: Bodyweight Dips (1/0/1 tempo; non-lockout reps)/Cable Crossover (1/0/1 tempo)…1 x 20-25 each

Quads:
Hack Squats…3 x 3-4 (2/0/X tempo)
Angled Leg Press…2 x 4-6 (6/1/X tempo)
Sissy Squats…2 x 6-8 (2/4/X tempo)
Squats…1 x 25-30 (1/0/1 tempo)
Superset: Vertical Leg Press (1/0/1 tempo; non-lockout reps)/Leg Extension (1/0/1 tempo)… 2 x 20-25 each

Final Words

Because of the extremely demanding nature of FD/FS training, I highly recommend that it only be utilized during periods of the year when gaining muscle mass is the primary goal. You need to be well-fed and completely rested to truly reap the rewards of this program. With the exception of the most advanced bodybuilders, and/or those who do not train drug-free, I do not feel that FD/FS should be used during a cutting phase, except for perhaps the very early stages.

Further, FD/FS was not created for continual use, and should be cycled in and out of your regular training regimen, whether it be Power/Rep Range/Shock, DC, HIT, or any other method. It should only be used for two- to three-week periods, or both physical and/or mental burnout can occur. Consider FD/FS as a ‘short burst’ mega-mass gaining strategy! Many students of mine have added between 8-10 solid pounds in a single three-week FD/FS cycle!

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So, this guy’s view on supplements is obviously a little different than ours since what he’s calling ‘nourishment’ before and during workouts, are what we consider to be supplements. Still, the advice on exercising is invaluable. He also offers good advice about being well fed and well rested, we completely agree with that sentiment. Many of our posts are made with the intent to inform our readers about the importance of eating the right things and the right amount, and giving your muscle a break so they can heal.

The suggested workout is a brutal one, and is intended to build muscle and bulk up only. It seems like it will work well for the initial phases of bulking up, and maybe the occasional incorporation of maintenance, but wouldn’t really work as a part of your everyday fitness routine. What he calls this workout is a Fiber Damage and Fiber Saturated or FD/FS and is meant to help people put on 8-10 lbs of muscle in only three weeks’ time- or one FD/FS cycle.

This workout was designed with three ideals in mind:

• Very High Repetitions
• Continuous Tension
• Post-Activation Supersets (i.e., a compound movement followed by isolation movement)

Watch this video as this guy talks about putting on muscle mass without the use of supplements…

The suggested routine is pretty intense, are you going to try it out?

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Rhomboid Muscle – Rhomboid Exercises That You Probably Forgot About

What’s up guys?  I got another great article from Brad today talking about the Rhomboid muscle.  “The what?” you may be asking.  If you are then this article is definitely for you.  Learn more about the forgotten muscle and some Rhomboid exercises.

Don’t Forget the Little Things: Rhomboids

Oh no I am doing it again , not offering you an awesome chest exercises to add 3 inches to your chest in 3 months( which I did personally and with clients) but am going to tell you about another long forgotten muscle .

Ok I will give in, and give you a quick story that may help you directly on your chest size… You see like many trainees I have relatively long arms, which made the bench press more of a shoulder and tricep builder then a chest movement. Within a year or so of training chest Monday, Wednesday, And Friday every week, my bench went from a low 100lbs to around 300lbs . But my chest didn’t grow , I still had practically no visible chest development and that certainly wasn’t acceptable if I was going to ever do bodybuilding or just wanted a thicker look.

Then one day I was reading about a bodybuilder from the Golden Era of Bodybuilding, Serge Nubret and how he avidly preached wide grip bench-pressing, and I do mean a WIDE GRIP.

serge Rhomboid Muscle   Rhomboid Exercises That You Probably Forgot About
Serge Nubret Wide Grip Bench Press with 405lbs

I figured what the heck and did the same, and within 3 months of benching this way my chest went up 3 inches! Now you cannot do as much weight this way, but it definitely activates the chest more, practically eliminating tricep and shoulder support.

Ok ok…. the free tip is over, now let us get back to a real problem a lot of gym goers face that only gets worse as they continue training. Weak Rhomboids, no those are not the muscle that make you have a wide back, but what they can do is make your chest look bigger! Your Rhomboids are located here.

rhomboid muscle 300x232 Rhomboid Muscle   Rhomboid Exercises That You Probably Forgot AboutRhomboids

And as you can probably tell by their placement, their function (summarized) is to pull your shoulders back, resulting in you sitting up straighter and standing taller. Now I know we all love chest, front delt, abdominal and lat training , however over emphasizing this causes postural imbalances such as excessive forward leaning . Excessive Forward Leaning is a major contributor to low back pain, which nearly 80% of adults face (as recorded by the National Academy of Sports Medicine).

To balance the issue, all most trainees need is focused rhomboid training and possibly stretching the above listed overactive muscles if you already suffer from low back pain.

Strengthening The Rhomboids

Since we all love getting stronger in every way possible, we will discuss exactly how you can incorporate rhomboid training in your routine. The easiest step is optimizing your existing exercises to focus on the rhomboids. To do this with your standing or seated rows, be sure to really pinch your shoulder blades together at the max contracted point. Hold for a second, and then lower the weight again, the key is using a low weight you can fully control throughout both the concentric and eccentric portions of the lift.

Next, you can add more focused exercises such as

 Bat Wings with Kettlbells or Dumbbells

Note: You can also perform these on a flat bench if you do not have access to an incline bench, or the position is uncomfortable for you. Do this for 3-5 sets of five repetitions with every back workout for 4-8 weeks and watch your posture improve drastically.

Bringing it all Together

If you caught my other article on rotator cuff training , specifically the external rotation movements , combining this with those techniques you will be well on your way to building a stronger , more muscular , and most importantly BETTER BALANCED AND HEALTHIER BODY.

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Brad Kelly writes a weekly article every Tuesday. He is a National Academy of Sports Medicine Certified Personal Trainer, Performance Enhancement Specialist, and Corrective Exercise Specialist out of Panama City, Florida. Driven by a passion to help others he not only trains locals, but also performs online personal training and writes fitness articles to reach as many fellow fitness enthusiasts as possible.

 

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