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What
Is High Intensity Training?
by Tony D'Amato
All
strength training programs are based upon three
variables: intensity, volume, and frequency. The
goal of strength training is progression - an
increase in either strength or the amount of time
spent under a specific load. An almost infinite
number of strength training programs exist, all
based on different combinations of intensity,
volume, and frequency. Is there one combination
of those three variables which works best for
all people? Well, yes and no.
Insofar
as a strength training program is concerned -
a specific exercise prescription - there is no
one workout which will work equally well for everyone,
nor will there ever be. Each individual has a
different tolerance to exercise and a different
ability to recover from exercise. Therefore, it
is literally impossible for a program to work
across the board.
However,
there is a PHILOSOPHY, or a set of principles,
which will work for everyone provided that the
variables are adjusted to suit their tolerance
and recovery ability. By using the basic principles
of proper exercise - which are based on both logic
and observation - and designing a program which
is specific to the individual, astounding results
can be obtained in a relatively short amount of
time. This philosophy is called high intensity
training, or HIT.
The
first principle - the foundation for proper exercise
- is a HIGH INTENSITY OF EFFORT. The goal of strength
training is to stimulate your body into making
an adaptive change; in this case the adaptation
is an increase in strength and muscle mass. However,
your body is very reluctant to undergo any adaptive
changes because those changes use up a great deal
of your body's resources - change is metabolically
expensive. Because the body is resistent to change,
you must actually force it to adapt. This can
be accomplished through extremely high intensity
exercise. Training in this fashion will make the
body think that it is in a life-and-death struggle,
and that adaptation is the only means of survival.
Anything less than a complete and total effort
will be percieved as a suggestion rather than
a demand, and the adaptations will be mediocre
at best and nonexistent at worst.
A
high intensity of effort is characterized by performing
each exercise to the point of momentary muscular
failure, or MMF. MMF occurs when the athlete attempts
a repetition and is unable to complete it despite
an all out effort to do so. It depends as much
on the motivation of the trainee as it does on
the strength of one's muscles, and for this reason
I feel that MMF is a very vague concept. My advice
is simply to train as hard as humanly possible
within the set. If you are training as hard as
humanly possible, you will reach true MMF - as
opposed to percieved MMF - and you will have provided
an adequate stimulus for an increase in muscular
strength and size.
The
second principle of HIT is LOW VOLUME. Because
it is necessary to train with an extreme level
of intensity, it is not possible to utilize a
high volume of sets and exercises. The goal is
to perform only the precise amount of exercise
necessary to bring about the largest strength
increase - no more, no less. Invariably, the amount
of sets necessary to bring about the best result
will be low. In almost all cases, one per exercise
is sufficient provided that the intensity is high
enough. The number of exercises performed in a
session can fall anywhere between three to fifteen.
As a general rule, though, I suggest that each
trainee perform one to three exercises for each
major muscle group - the hips and thighs, the
upper body pulling muscles, the upper body pressing
muscles, the neck and trapezius, the forearms
and hands, and the trunk. The precise number of
exercises performed for each muscle group is an
individual issue which must be tetermined through
critical thinking and analyzation of training
data.
The
final principle of proper exercise is LOW FREQUENCY.
It is very important to determine the rate of
occurance of strength training sessions which
allows you to move forward as rapidly as possible.
Again, because of the intense nature of the work
being performed, the body needs ample time to
restore itself to normal and to make the adaptations.
Usually it takes an athlete at least three days
of rest before another productive session, and
I have found in my experience that once every
four or five days is even better. Some may progress
well training once every four days, but may make
even better progress training only once a week.
Like volume, frequency of training is a highly
individual matter that must be determined through
analyzation, trial and error, and critical thinking.
It is your job to determine what's best for you.
So
there you have it. There is no perfect exercise
program, so there is no use in trying to find
it. However, I have presented the philosophy of
high intensity training, which is the most productive
and efficient philosophy of strength training
known to man. Given the fundamentals of this philosophy,
you can now determine the specifics of volume
and frequency, and design a program which will
undoubtedly give better results than anything
else you have ever done in the past, provided
that you apply the principles correctly and train
as hard as humanly possible.
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