Kyle Aaron
Active member
That's the theory, JS, but when you look into it you actually find there are very few studies showing any difference. Mostly because there are very few studies on using lower rep ranges at all, so we've nothing to compare it with.
The main thing's nutrition. This is progressive resistance training, and very few people progress their resistance - doing more weight, reps or sets. But even fewer eat to support that training.
Below is the diet of one of my clients, as reported by him after our recent first session. He is by no means unusual, half the gym-goers I talk to eat like this, and most of the other half are lying.
Good food + low reps = get bigger and stronger
Good food + high reps = get bigger and stronger
Crap food + low reps = no change
Crap food + high reps = no change
Once the person is training and progressing the resistance at all, it's food that matters. Given a perfect diet and progression, the rep range may matter. But almost nobody has a perfect diet, and few progress the resistance consistently.
Start with breakfast and some decent food throughout the day. In every session, do more than you did before. Follow that and you'll get bigger and stronger. It'll get more technical later on, but no need to get fancy right now.
The main thing's nutrition. This is progressive resistance training, and very few people progress their resistance - doing more weight, reps or sets. But even fewer eat to support that training.
Below is the diet of one of my clients, as reported by him after our recent first session. He is by no means unusual, half the gym-goers I talk to eat like this, and most of the other half are lying.
Breakfast - Banana/Apple and toast or Musili - But breakfast is very irregular and often skipped / usually eaten late also when I do.
Lunch - Ham/Salami Sandwhiches/ Macdonalds/ (KEBABS)anything quick and easy usually somekind of burger and fries/ But I do make sure I have ham and salad sandwhichs at least 2-3 times a week again usually eaten late
Dinner - meat chips and Salads / Pasta's / take away - chinese - indian - Mcdonalds /
He weighed in at 59kg. Do you think it would really matter if he did 5 reps or 10? 3 or 12? 1 or 1,000? Far more important is improving that diet, eating lots of good food. Lunch - Ham/Salami Sandwhiches/ Macdonalds/ (KEBABS)anything quick and easy usually somekind of burger and fries/ But I do make sure I have ham and salad sandwhichs at least 2-3 times a week again usually eaten late
Dinner - meat chips and Salads / Pasta's / take away - chinese - indian - Mcdonalds /
Good food + low reps = get bigger and stronger
Good food + high reps = get bigger and stronger
Crap food + low reps = no change
Crap food + high reps = no change
Once the person is training and progressing the resistance at all, it's food that matters. Given a perfect diet and progression, the rep range may matter. But almost nobody has a perfect diet, and few progress the resistance consistently.
Start with breakfast and some decent food throughout the day. In every session, do more than you did before. Follow that and you'll get bigger and stronger. It'll get more technical later on, but no need to get fancy right now.