
Originally Posted by
Charlie67
You're right, "if you create MORE or the same damage in one session as you would in two, then what does it really matter?", I don't think it does.
Putting aside all the "we're all different blah, blah, blah" disclaimers. The only methodology I tend to really believe in any more is being consistent over time with measurable progress towards your goals. Yes, there are some truly aweful programs out there, but for most of us, the type of workout is less important then doing it long enough in a measurably progressive way, because I think most things work if you "work" it. It really is that simple**.
Another irritating disclaimer: "For me personally".... It seems that ANY reasonable program works if you do it long enough with the right intention and work hard enough. If 20 sets in one session gets you where you want to go, do that. If its 10 sets, 2 times a week, do that. I generally think people get so caught up in the 1% details, they lose focus on the 99% work part. Even with a shitty program, if you stay healthy, you can grow.
Pick a general outline that works for you and keeps you healthy, and do that. You can vary the sets and exercise choices if your bored, but find an outline, and run with it until you can no longer measure progress. Then change. I think people tend to jump from program to program so fast, they may be missing something helpful.
If you're curious... my basic template is this. I've been doing it for about 5 years, changing exercises anywhere from daily to every 12-15 weeks.
Monday: Heavy Chest / high-rep Shoulders
Tues: Heavy Arms / high-rep Back
Wed: Heavy Legs / high-rep chest
Thurs: Heavy Shoulders / high-rep arms
Friday: Heavy Back / high-rep legs
"Heavy" for me is NOT the same as "Heavy" for some of the big mo-fo's around here... I'm tiny at 6'2, 250lbs with a bit of a belly... by heavy I mean 10-12 reps, and on high-rep work, its 20-25 reps.
Cheers,
Charlie
**Yes, yes, yes... we could argue about "ideal" programs versus "ok" programs versus "good enough" programs versus "complete crap" programs. For most of us, I don't think arguing about 4 sets versus 5 is all that relevant if your first 3 are good working sets. If you're jacked and super lean, and in the 99% awesome club, you've already figured it out and probably not listening to us anyway.