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pmXfit – The Ultimate Training System!


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Are you looking for a completely limitless method of training which will allow you to hit the major muscle groups, and always keep your body guessing? Here is a routine which gives the trainer almost complete freedom in the direction his workout takes. It sticks to a framework which helps to deliver the most results, while at the same time giving the trainer plenty of options.
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Everyone knows that deadlifts are a very useful exercise. However, many trainers aren’t sure why. Let’s look at some of the more frequently asked questions regarding deadlifts, their uses, potential dangers, and the like. Enjoy!
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The back is a tricky muscle group. With body parts such as chest, shoulders, or thighs, a wide variety of repetition ranges is essential for stimulating growth throughout all the muscle fibers. While it is true that the back does contain its fair share of slow and fast-twitch muscle fibers which are indeed stimulated through different repetition ranges, much of the actual definition seen in the back, such as the desired “Christmas Tree” effect in the lower back, is attributed to low body fat and water deprivation. When it comes to training the back for mass as well as shape, heavy compound movements are the way to go.
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Are you tired of splitting up your routine into a series of high-volume training days? Do you feel that waiting a full 6 days between each body part workout is derailing your training efforts? Do you no longer see the point in pumping with machines and cables when what you feel your body really craves is a nice workout consisting of compound movements? Try this routine 2-3 times a week, and you’ll quickly discover what you’ve been missing out on. This type of training is heavy, down n’ dirty – but it will lead to results!
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Maybe you just got your clock cleaned at a show by a guy with sensational hamstrings. Maybe you just saw a picture of Tom Prince in his competitive heyday, with hanging hamstrings that looked bigger and thicker than your thighs even look. Maybe your own thighs have been showing marked improvement, but your hamstrings just look the same as they always have. And maybe you’ve just come to the realization that a set of thick, powerful, bulging hamstrings is something you want – and something you will no longer be denied. Whatever your reasoning, you’ve come to the right place. Let’s examine a few techniques to help make those hammies the best they can be!
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We all know how exciting it is to train back in a state-of-the-art facility. The machines are clean, and they are aplenty. The dumbbells are pre-sized, and placed on neat racks. The cable movements have a wide variety of grips. The free weight area is filled with racks, weights, and even those nifty little devices that allow you to load the weight for deadlifts just an inch off the floor. Ah yes, the feeling of training back in a top notch gym. Nothing beats it!
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The deadlift is the simplest exercise in the gym, and the one that dates back the furthest into history. Thousands of years ago, it was the caveman who could pick up the biggest rock who could build the strongest fort. Many exercises, including the bench press and squat, depend upon suits and rules and technique. The deadlift goes above all of this. When it comes to the deadlift, you either defeat gravity, or you do not. You either move a weight from grounded to upright, or you do not. It’s man versus metal in the best way!
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When beginning bodybuilders first enter the gym, they often see the lat pulldown bar as the best invention since sliced bread. They aren’t yet able to complete bodyweight chin-ups or pull-ups, because their arms cannot pull their own body weight. However, they sure can pull down that very fun “cable doohickey” exercise, and they make the most of it. The attractiveness of the machine increases, as the newbie trainer notices his lats begin to flare for the first time, and discovers a hardness in the arms and shoulders that was never there before.
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The most successful workout routines – those that deliver the best bodybuilding results – are those which we create ourselves. They utilize the movements we like best. They include those machines and lifting options available at the gyms we train in. After all, we all know how hard it can be to use one of those advanced FLEX magazine training routines in out home gym in the garage. Here are five upper-body bodybuilding movements which should be used when creating your own workout routine. Each of them involves the use of free weights, which delivers both strength and size. They are also movements which can be done in any gym, from an advanced commercial facility to an old Weider bench in the basement.
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If you’ve ever braved your way into the powerlifting section of the gym, chances are you may have seen some heavy, thick chains sitting amongst the dust, chalk, and other debris. You may have wondered why these chains were there. Perhaps they serve some purpose in pulling vehicles or some other exotic purpose – but surely they have no place in standard bodybuilding routines, right? Think again! Chains can provide an ascending or descending level of resistance on any exercise. They are used to help you overcome sticking points on movements by adding weight at those critical times. When you take the chains off and complete the exercise, you’ll notice some new growth
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