Group: General Fitness & Exercise

Created: 2011/12/31, Members: 382, Messages: 54581

Various general exercise related discussions. Find out what it takes to reach your fitness goals through daily effective exercise. With so many options we try to find out what works best.

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To failure; or not to failure

rgartman
rgartman
Posts: 6
Joined: 2002/08/22
United States
2003/02/04, 01:22 PM
I wasn't sure which one this site advocated. Is this more of a cycle training method or failure to each set.

12 weeks of intense (to failure training) with this much volume is pretty tasking.

I got really great results with POF (Positions of Flexion by Steve Holman)but it started getting stagnant and just became goofy workouts. I started this program and my endurance went up immediately, but my strength is stagnating now.

POF is going to failure on every set.

I am looking at competing this year and I want to make the most of this off season.
bb1fit
bb1fit
Posts: 11,105
Joined: 2001/06/30
United States
2003/02/04, 01:13 PM
I personally believe in failure on each set if possible. One key thing with this type of workout, it is brutal, and you need a week at least off after each 8-10 week cycle. It is not the muscles as much, they can usually maintain(keep up, get stronger), but the ligaments, tendons, joints can't, and really take a beating. Thus the rest period. Keep up the solid nutrition during this time off. You should gain. Your mental state will thank you too.

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Failing to plan is like planning to fail!
mackfactor
mackfactor
Posts: 766
Joined: 2002/10/17
United States
2003/02/04, 01:30 PM
If you're going exclusively for hypertrophy, going to failure on each set is certainly an option. I found it doesn't do well for me since I'm more of a small, fast twitch type and I try to keep my explosiveness.

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"Don't follow leaders and watch your parking meters!"
-- Bob Dylan