Once you have been bodybuilding for at least six months or more.  You may be ready to employ some advanced
    training techniques in order to increase the intensity of your workouts.  If you are no longer experiencing soreness
    the day or two after a good workout, you may need to start using one or two of the following techniques.  Once
    your muscles get used to your workouts  taking the last set to the point of muscular failure,  you must then go
    slightly past muscular failure in order to stimulate new growth.



    Drop sets is a technique in which immediately following your last rep of your last set, you quickly decrease the
    weight so that you can pump out two or three more reps.  Here is an example using seated dumbbell curls:  You
    are performing your last set of dumbbell curls with 35 pound dumbbells.  You have just performed nine reps and
    no matter how hard you try, you can not get that 10th rep.  As quickly as possible, drop the 35 pound dumbbells
    and pick up 25 pound dumbbells and continue until you reach muscular failure again.  Now drop the 25 pound
    dumbbells and quickly grab 10 or 15 pound dumbbells and continue once more.  Your biceps muscles will be
    much more exhausted now than they would have been if you've had stopped the set on the ninth rep of your last
    set.

    Drop sets can be done with virtually any exercise.  For some exercises  you may have to stop, get up and remove
    plates from each side of a barbell in order to reduce the weight for your extended set. If you're using a weight
    stack on a cable machine,  you simply need to stop, pull the pin and select a lighter weight.  If you train with a
    partner or several partners on an exercise such as the bench press, you can have the partners remove the weight
    plates on each side and you could immediately continue your set with the lighter weight.



    Every exercise as a positive and negative aspect to the movement.  When you are doing bicep curls, for example.  
    When you start with you on extended and you curl the weight up.  That is the positive side of the rep.  When you
    lower the weight back down, that is the negative part of the rep.  Your muscle can handle more weight on the
    weight down, that it can on the way up.  Therefore, when you get to muscular failure during your set of curls.  With
    that really means is your muscle is no longer able to raise the weight.  However the muscle is still capable of
    lowering the weight slowly under control.  Using negative reps is simply a technique in which went to reach
    positive, muscular failure.  You continue your set by only performing at negative portion of the repetition.  This
    technique is easily done with a training partner.  If you are doing barbell curls for example, when you reach the
    point where you can no longer raise the weight, your training partner steps in and assists you in raising the
    weight. This allows you to lower the weight without assistance, one or two additional times.  This technique can
    be very difficult to use in certain exercises such as squats, where the weight would be far too much for one
    training partner to assist you in raising it so you could lower it again.  It is easily used in exercises such as
    concentration curls or single arm dumbbell curls.  When you fail, you can use your other arm to assist you in
    raising the weight, and then continue lowering the weight with only the muscle being worked.  It is also possible
    to use momentum or body motion to assist you in raising the weight  if you don't have a training partner to help
    you.  Use this technique to extend your final set by one or two repetitions.



    Forced reps is similar technique to negative reps your training partner will be helping you to do one or two
    additional positive repetitions, after muscular failure.  Using this technique.  Your partner will be watching you
    perform your last set.  When you can no longer raise the weight he will give you just barely enough help to keep
    the weight moving in a positive direction, but he will not lift it for you, as he did in the negative rep technique.



    This is a technique that you can do without a training partner.  To perform this technique simply perform your last
    set as usual and do you reach muscular failure and simply Paul as for 30 seconds, or even as long as a minute if
    necessary and to your muscle has recovered enough to do one more rep.  If you've done one more wrap, rest
    again for 30 seconds to a minute or until you feel you can do another rep.  Use this technique to add two or three
    additional repetitions and you will surely feel the burn.



    This technique can be used in a couple of different ways.  One way in which this is used is to take a weight that is
    heavier than your normal weight for a particular exercise but only perform one third or one half of a regular
    repetition.  For example, on a bench press,  You could load the weight up a little higher than you normally can last
    a dead when you listed off the rack, you only lower the weight.  One third of the weight down before pressing it
    back up.  You'll find that since you're only doing a small portion of the repetition.  You can use a much heavier
    weight.  This is a method of increasing your strength in one portion of all full repetition at a time.  You'll have to
    experiment with the amount of weight to use in the various exercises.  You can do the top third of the movement,
    the middle third of the movement or the bottom third of the movement usually working in a portion of the
    movement where you tend to fail at the end of the set.  For example, when you're bench pressing and you reach
    muscular failure, if it is usually right in the middle of the movement, that's where you want focus your partial reps
    to improve your strength in that area.  If muscular failure for you is when the weight is touching your chest, then
    you want to work on the bottom third of the movement to increase your strength.  Another use of partial reps is
    when you've reached muscular failure in exercise, but you can still perform the bottom third of the exercise a few
    more times.  For example, if you are doing bicep curls and you get to the point when you are half way up, but you
    cannot go any further, lower the weight to the bottom and then raise it as far as possible two or three more times..



    A superset is another technique to add intensity to your workouts.  This is simply a technique in which you
    perform one exercise for a body part.  And when you reach failure immediately move to a different exercise for the
    same body part.  For example, do a set of bench presses and then when you reach failure, immediately start
    performing flyes until failure.  You can superset squats and leg extensions, barbell curls and concentration curls,
    military presses and lateral raises, triceps press downs,  French presses, and the list goes on.

    Another way to use supersets is to superset opposing muscles.  For example, do a set of a triceps exercise until
    failure and immediately go to a biceps exercise until failure.  Do a set of bench presses and immediately follow
    that with a set of low pulley rows for the lats.  This is a good way to engorge an entire area with blood, enhancing
    your pump and triggering greater muscle growth.



    Super slow reps are and other excellent way to increase intensity and push your muscles past muscular failure.  
    This one is pretty self explanatory, in that basically you do your regular routine day he except that each rep is
    performed at an extremely slow pace.  Extremely slow can mean anywhere from 4-10 seconds going up, and 4-
    10 seconds going down.  You can experiment with this one as to when in the set to apply this technique, and how
    long you want each rep to last.

    For example, you can perform your set as usual except when you get to appoint where you know you can
    complete at least one more rep, perform that last rep super slow.  The very first time you try this technique, you
    will feel muscle fibers working that you didn't even know you had!



    This is a technique I have recently implemented in my own training.  As with most of the other techniques, there
    are various ways to utilize static holds.  That method I use is to apply is only on the negative portion of the last rep
    of my last set.  When I get to the point (in the bench press for example) where I had pressed the barbell all the
    way up and I know I can not complete another rep, I lower the barbell about half way down and attempt to hold it in
    that position as long as possible.  I will probably only be able to hold it there for a second or two and then fight it
    all the weight down until it rests on the power rack pins.

    This technique is very similar to super slow reps.  The difference is that using super slow reps, you are
    concentrating on lowering the weight under control for a predetermined period of time (i.e. 10 seconds).  Using
    static holds you are actually attempting to hold the weight in one position which actually requires you to push
    against the weight as if you are attempting another positive repetition.  

    Once you begin to experiment with these techniques, you will see and feel the differences between them.  You
    will want to learn to use each technique said that you will have many different ways to increase the intensity of
    your workouts in your repertoire.  Since the human body has the amazing ability to adapt to repeated stresses,
    you will need to change the techniques you use from time to time to keep your muscles growing.

    Once you began to increase the intensity of your workouts, it is more important than ever to be sure your body is
    getting all the nutrients it needs to continue growing.  You must consume 1 to 1.5 g of high quality protein per
    pound of body weight each and every day.  It is also a good idea to feed your muscles the proper amount of
    creatine and glutamine before and after each workout.
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Advanced Training Techniques

Drop Sets

Negative Reps

Forced Reps

Rest-Pause

Partial Reps

Supersets

Super Slow Reps

Static Holds