-
I swallowed about isolation exercises for the thighs, back, chest and shoul-
ders, pre-exhaustion, pumping, volume training, conventional split routines,
beyond-failure training, etc. All of it was useless for me, and almost certainly
for the masses of typical trainees too. It cost me years of my youth.
. I was a walking encyclopedia of information about Larry Scott, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, Franco Columbu, Casey Viator, Frank Zane, Mike Men-
tzer, et al (the top bodybuilders during my teens and early twenties). I knew
so much about that which I did not need, but I knew so little about that which I
needed. And therein lies the plight of most bodybuilding junkies.
. If I had been cut off from the training media I would have been ignorant of
what was going on in the bodybuilding and lifting worlds, and of all the dis-
coveries that were supposedly being made in weight training and nutrition.
But I would have been blissfully satisfied in steadily, safely and surely getting
stronger and stronger, and bigger and bigger.
. My life should have been geared around poundage gain on each exercise, but
while maintaining excellent exercise form. Initially it would have revolved
around adding to each exercise. Later on I would have focused on gain-
ing the next , and then the next, and the next, etc. is is crude, primitive
and basic; but this is what was needed.
Rate of progress
. When I first started weight training, age , I used about pounds in the
squat and bench press. (In my ignorance I never deadlifted regularly until
many years later.) Moving to close to pounds in the squat and bench
press was straight-forward and linear, but then it started getting difficult.
. With pounds reached in the squat and bench press—and more in the
deadlift, which I ought to have included—I should have focused on adding
the next (i.e., pounds). Once I got to pounds, I should have lived
for the next gain. When there I should have focused on the next
gain, and so on. Once I got to pounds for reps in the squat I should have
switched from targeting the next gain, to the next .
. Going from × in the bench press, × in the squat and ×
in the deadlift (with the other members of the mighty fivesome progressing
in proportion) to × , × and × respectively (moving there
in shots) would have made a big difference to my physique. Spending