I love these types of videos, it’s like a college lecture but much more engaging and easier to listen to
@saitama85712 ай бұрын
A lot of my favorite professors are like Mike but the difference being that they teach subjects I don’t care about and I’m forced to do
@masshysteria30Ай бұрын
This guy should really look into teaching
@EarthlyOrangutanАй бұрын
i’m currently skipping my lecture and watching this video
@withoutdaysofficialАй бұрын
@@masshysteria30 Maybe you were joking, but I think he was/is a professor
@vvoof2601Ай бұрын
@@masshysteria30…
@patriciahughes7516Ай бұрын
Dr.Mike, I'm one of the "few" women on the channel (I suspect there are more than you know), just wanted to say thanks for all your help and making the App. As a woman with a history of being assaulted, one of the best forms of therapy I've found is having a stronger body, gaining more mass, more confidence and more power. Your stuff is AWESOME! Thank you sooo much for the assist 🤩
@logananthony-vc6rjАй бұрын
hey
@BBE22oooowh-in5hiАй бұрын
@@logananthony-vc6rj🤣🤣🤣🤣
@JoshuaKevinPerryАй бұрын
Never trust a woman on the Internet.
@JeromeProductionsАй бұрын
Much respect to you
@tushnikdas8307Ай бұрын
I wish very on your joirney keep going❤❤
@thisnameisnotfake517Ай бұрын
Dr Mike inspired me to be myself in social situations. I’m now on a list.
@ExcedrineАй бұрын
If you're not on some kind of list at some point, are you *really* even living?
@WIEMACHSTDUАй бұрын
List of sex offenders?
@seanayers8636Ай бұрын
So you're the new guy
@BigBoyJay_69Ай бұрын
The more I learn, the more I realize the answer to most workout questions is "It depends" lol
@FredPuttermanАй бұрын
lol i'm about to finish my phd in another field - answers to most questions went from simple when i knew less to "well it's complicated" now.
@blacksabbath222Ай бұрын
EliteFTS has a tank top that says exactly that, one of my favorites.
@thor498Ай бұрын
Kind of true it depends on what you want and what your genetics are
@Charles-pf7zyАй бұрын
Same for economics
@LadymusiccАй бұрын
This has always been my answer when people ask me stuff about the gym or my workouts.
@@OptimalGluteHypertrophy How so? That it doesn't matter for some exercises?
@OptimalGluteHypertrophyАй бұрын
@@MayonnaiseOreo ye like there’s no such thing as a “deep stretch” on a shoulder press assuming you are using the term “stretch” in the way that would actually be beneficial for hypertrophy.
@TheMegHendyАй бұрын
I had to stop the video to say I LOVE your lecture style videos. Your delivery, pace, and deep understanding really shine, and I feel so lucky I get to see this outside of a classroom.
@adamezammitАй бұрын
Personally after 10 years training 1. 5-10 reps ideal 2. Progressive overload same weight until you get to +10-15 for each working set 3. Add weight and repeat the process Sets of plus 20 just seem not ideal. ^ Above approach is safe granted good form ^ Makes workout shorter - More likely to not skip sessions due to daily life interruptions or fatigue ^ Faster to get to the right RPE in each set ^ Most of all, best approach is the one that allows you to be the most consistent, and I could promise that a regular 9-5 parent with kids, is more likely to not hit mental fatigue or boredom in a set that’s shorter than longer thus increasing likelihood of hitting progressive overload accurately. But that’s me personally, everything Mike has stated is clearly accurate! But the best training style is the one you can adhere to long term
@sauteallday9151Ай бұрын
This is solid advice. I’m in my infancy of lifting (7 months) but this is the plan I adhere to. Short, sweet and to the point.
@Impact_TOАй бұрын
Couldnt have said it better 🙌
@oldgrunt5569Ай бұрын
did you get to about the 8 min mark of the vid? 40 years in (with some breaks as loing as 9 mos at a time) and i can tell ya there's def some room for higher reps as the good Dr says. if you're over 40 for instance try out the old school workout of 20-15-10-5 with 20 seconds rest in between (partly Gironda but updated in the early 2000's by someone on the Deszo Ban blog can't remember who). it's pretty intense for compounds or even non isolations that aren't quite compounds (like bodyweight reverse skull crushers). the two keys are sticking to the low rest and being patient. it's gonna take 3 or so workouts to figure out your starting weight.
@ChokmahIsraelАй бұрын
How many sets though
@streetsk8rerАй бұрын
I just don’t agree with this, for smaller muscles like side delts and calves, sets of 30 can be insanely beneficial especially when upping the weight even 5lbs can be dramatic and place strain on joints. My pumps in those muscles have never been better with sets of 20-30. A calf raise set of 5-10 just seems silly Also, I love how Dr mike explains all the nuance and variation possibilities and your dur dur dur ass goes “5-10 NO NEGOTIATON” You’re the clown he talks about
@Caleb2002Ай бұрын
You've changed my gym life completely, I pretty much base everything i do on your advice, love it, thanks mike
@filippolippi02Ай бұрын
The simple fact is, Mike's vids give more than enough extremely high quality information to any lifter / fitness person. This dude is sharing more quality info than even what golden age lifters ever had. Best fitness YTer
@myhumps2730Ай бұрын
I did a set of 50 penis curls and saw no penertrophy. Can you explain that Uncle Mike? I didn’t hear what you were sayin.
@6FootVampireАй бұрын
Dont take his advice on being a Hobbit tho
@StMargorachАй бұрын
Same
@alicianadodson7458Ай бұрын
Dr. Mike, I became a CPT earlier of this year and I have a passion for health science. I love your lectures, taking notes, and then doing my own research on talking point and comparing my own experiences. Similar to being a coach vs football player , you’re a wonderful educator AND an accomplished bodybuilder. I hope I can help others the way you have helped me. Sometimes we don’t know, what we don’t know.
@theoneandonly1158Ай бұрын
I'm a 41 year old mom. Last time I was a dedicated lifter was 20 years ago. Well I'm at it again. 9 months into it and I feel so good. The endorphins kick in and it's amazing. ❤
@APR702Ай бұрын
Like sex all over again 🎉
@adamD1orАй бұрын
Cap
@southsidesauce1261Ай бұрын
I’m a 38 year-old man it has been a while since I’ve done it as well and it has woken something up inside of me❤
@calebcool2171Ай бұрын
Wait till the body dysmorphia and joint pain kicks in
@johnlexus1Ай бұрын
I believe Dr. Mike would not recommend a 19year plus rest between workouts. 1 to 3 days ratio is a good rest period between workouts.
@borrow4654Ай бұрын
Absolutely nuts how this is the EXACT video i was looking for, and Mike just uploads it today of all days
@Prof856Ай бұрын
Literally the same experience. The Dude is tracking my life.
@rhaegotiАй бұрын
YES! This was such an excellent video! So much great info packed into it, no distractions for jokes or sidetracking, just one fact or tip after another for 25 minutes! Thanks Mike, great episode to come home to today!
@billybadass7718Ай бұрын
For my body, 5-10 is king. As a natural, I feel like if I’m not actively trying to get stronger, very little gains are made.
@willcrockett2579Ай бұрын
For compounds and bigger muscles I’m right there with you. For small muscles like side delts or calves though I really started seeing big gains when I started chasing that lactic acid burn you get from high reps on say lateral raises for example.
@Wo1fLarsenАй бұрын
Yeah, I'd agree with that as well.
@discreetman593Ай бұрын
@@willcrockett2579 perfectly said, but one thing newbies do that kill their gains. "ego lifting"...lol. '
@victormartinez6974Ай бұрын
@@willcrockett2579how long have you been training?
@JtsTubesАй бұрын
I hear you, I've found I have to target each muscle group twice a week to see gains and that's hard to do with a busy schedule. One day a week and I'm only able to not lose muscle or strength.
@cedarandsoundАй бұрын
I'm a beginner trying to get back in shape and I've been making use of your videos to put together a solid workout I can do 6 days a week and build muscle for losing fat. The most helpful thing was all the pointers you had on full range of motion, I've eliminated methods of lifting and certain exercises that either were problematic or were just inefficient. I've got a good 1 hour routine now each for leg day then upper body and do abs every day. So far lost 17 pounds in 5 weeks and starting to see some muscle growth. You're really helping me get out of obesity in a safer more efficient way. Thanks for all the work that you've done on this channel (for free at that!).
@Jojiku9Ай бұрын
Really hope everything works well for you! Just an advice tho. Dont forget the abs are also a muscle, they need rest! Twice a week is totally adequate. For example I usually do 3 heavy sets on the end of my Legs Day and then another 3 heavy sets on any other day
@cedarandsoundАй бұрын
@@Jojiku9 I don't usually go to failure on the abs any given exercise, but once I get some more strength built up if I can do harder exercises then I would not do them every day.
@Fr33d0Ай бұрын
It's important to embrace the learning process throughout your fitness journey. I feel like this is something many people who rely on steroids miss out on. There’s so much to learn about working out-small details about how the body works and what keeps it functioning optimally. Skipping this learning process often shows in someone’s routine. For the longest time, back in middle school, I trained for hypertrophy with rep ranges between 12 and 30. When I started hitting the gym after high school and focused on heavy strength training (working in the 1-3 rep max range, which works better for me), I failed countless times on every major muscle group. It wasn’t until then that I truly learned the difference between training for strength and hypertrophy. The fitness journey is a continuous process of learning and growth that no one should rush or skip. Along the way, I also discovered other lessons-some of which were humbling and even embarrassing, but they taught me a lot. The most important lesson I learned early on, from my very first time at the gym, was to leave my ego at the door because it wont get you anywhere
@Jammaster1972Ай бұрын
Advice starting at 11:55 is pure gold
@emilielanzner4152Ай бұрын
I liked this video immensely . After following a program a trainer gave me now 3 months in I've realized I've naturally been switching up the reps/sets/weights & felt like I* was the problem in the training cuz I wasn't doing it exactly. This video made me realize modifying reps, sets and weights to what feels most effective is actually okay & better for me. Thank you!
@ThisguyLeftthechatАй бұрын
Dr. Mike. You explanation is so easy to follow and understand. You have great examples and often funny too. Thats why you are always my favorite guest on any podcast. Thank you
@techforge-NateАй бұрын
6:00 - this makes sense, otherwise walking would have us all with tree trunk legs.
@nicholasuck2148Ай бұрын
Thats very true good point actually
@brarautorepairsАй бұрын
I've tried everything under the sun to try to maximize growth. Every time I thought i couldn't add more muscle, I would change my program and boom, I would start getting bigger, stronger and develop better. I pushed every set and every exercise to complete failure, and then drop sets after that. It was great when I was younger because you can go home, eat a ton and sleep as much as you need. Once I got older, I started to limit my volume and weight. It was much better for injury management and allowed for faster recovery. I didn't push as hard as my younger days but i was able to train more often. 45 minutes to 60 minutes and get out.
@scottn1019Ай бұрын
That's me too. 45 - 60 mins is more than enough
@brarautorepairs21 күн бұрын
@@scottn1019 how many days a week are you training?
@scottn101921 күн бұрын
@@brarautorepairs five days usually
@davidepulinas16402 ай бұрын
I'm on my way to the gym and this dropped... Dr. Mike, are You watching us?
@jamesstrom6991Ай бұрын
same. leg day! eff yah!
@daevidpp445Ай бұрын
@@jamesstrom6991i JUST did legs fuggg
@davidepulinas1640Ай бұрын
Back day for me, but in the sense that i was watching my back 'cause that shit was creepy, even though, to be honest, Dr. Mike can watch me whenever he wants...😏 Just kidding, hit chest and applied his advices right on.
@jamesstrom6991Ай бұрын
@@daevidpp445 if you’re not on a gurney you didn’t do legs
@MericalWhipАй бұрын
Only when we're in the shower
@noahnajor2408Ай бұрын
Clearest training I've heard. I'm totally new at working out properly using proper techniques to achieve a better body. Very helpful thank you!
@DCJayhawk57Ай бұрын
I've unlocked new back growth, especially in my traps/upper back, by going heavier on my rows with most of my emphasis on challenging the muscles at long muscle length with either a little English at the top of skipping the end lockout entirely. My upper back has always been my weak point and this has really helped to bring it up. I used to be a lot more strict and would limit the load used based on the lockout instead of what I could handle in the bottom 50-60% of the ROM. I've also found that doing a lower rep top set on most of my compound movements helps drive strength progression while also providing a growth stimulus. I've noticed quite a few natural bodybuilders also tend to train at the lower end of the hypertrophy rep range.
@Bdavis2475Ай бұрын
What really grew my traps and rear delts was bent rows for sets of 20
@Mark-ks9jjАй бұрын
I’ve blown my upper back and lats on pulldowns cable rows etc. have found progressive overload with rep ranges from 10-20 work super well. As Mike said know your body, watch for the signs read them and be the best you can be. Variation and consistency in training are important.
@BohumilRajchlАй бұрын
There is no reason to do more then 8 reps.
@rossklineАй бұрын
This is fantastic info. I've experienced what you're talking about. Great to hear you explaining it. I believe the mental connection is key. Finding balance between a weight that's scary and a weight where your lungs give out before your muscles do.
@edarmstrong7197Ай бұрын
Great food for thought Dr Mike. I'm a 49yo damaged construction worker trying to rebuild after work related wear and tear injuries to back, shoulders, and elbows sidelined me for a bit and I'm finding for me that 4 sets of 12-15 is giving me visible results. I hope to be able to lift heavy again someday, but I count myself lucky to be mobile and pain free.
@YimiTedeskiАй бұрын
Keep on punchin!
@edarmstrong7197Ай бұрын
@ Thanks bud, pushing every day. Be well!
@JohnD-f2o5 күн бұрын
Same here. Recently retired at 62 with 48 years of construction work behind me. I want to gain some muscle and stay healthy and out of the nursing home. Tons of life time injuries from work. Plan to start out easy and work into heavier weights. Also plan to eat a lot better. I tried lifting in my 30's but never ate right. This time I have a plan.
@edarmstrong71975 күн бұрын
@@JohnD-f2o You started young eh? I've always done various athletic activities outside of work and trained moderately, not for extreme size or anything, just boot camp and martial arts inspired training. I've been keeping up with much bigger guys my whole career and it caught up with me. My max weight was 162 pounds and after injuries and illness went down to 145 2 years ago. I'm still a few pounds short but like you I'm working on my nutrition and always evaluating my training. Congrats on your retirement! It's never too late to improve your fitness and I wish you well!
@paulelverstone8677Ай бұрын
Superb, and this is something that I love about weight training; is that it is so nuanced. The stand-up caveat I always say is 'everyone is different' - what works for someone else may not work for you. The trick is to find how you personally respond to the various stresses you place upon yourself and you could spend the rest of your days chasing that very particular formula...
@ФедяЛитвакАй бұрын
Thank you for the channel ! the content is great and very informative I got the nutrition app and there are few things I would recommend to add: 1. I’m living in Israel and the week starts at Sunday here, so if there could be an adjustment for countries that starts there week not on Monday (could be a cultural or religious thing as well) in your planning section, but that is less important 2. Which is more important to me, if it possible, add an option to measure sleep for people that are working shifts, because not all of us ideally fall asleep and wake up every night - there could be some adjustments that can be added at the planning stage or during the cycle Of course the app is great and those are just a little things that can be added for perfection. Anyway, thanks 🙏
@MrCurtis1966Ай бұрын
Hands down the best training advice channel on yt. Much appreciated !!
@tonysmith8594Ай бұрын
Dr. Mike your lectures have improved my understanding of work out science and philosophy which has led to increased improvement in my work outs and body composition. I’m building muscle better than I ever have in my 30 years of working out. Thank You.
@liberationpocket7950Ай бұрын
I've always used my systematic fatigue as a standard for how much volume I use. Smaller muscles such as biceps, don't really give you as much fatigue as squats. So as a rule of thumb, the bigger muscles NEED more weight whereas smaller muscle groups need more reps. Systematic fatigue itself can be measured by oxygen recovery in between sets. Meaning, that smaller muscles are able to recover more quickly than larger muscles. Experiment and listen to your body to find the perfect mixture of reps/weight
@C-24-BrandanАй бұрын
Love the content like this where it's engaging, fun/easy to listen too, not boring and you get great knowledge out of it. Keep killin it guys 💪 👍
@terigiese1322Ай бұрын
I feel you!I gotta stay light because of 63 year old joints.So,I am GRADUALLY going heavier and less reps.I definitely prefer loudass yells versus whispers!😅By 20-25 reps?If I am not struggling?At least a little?I go up in weight.I will not leave that gym unless I feel a pump and fatigue in the muscles worked.💪🏻
@pi286Ай бұрын
Think your joints can handle 12-14 reps? I think it will be alot better. If not, KEEP GOING. EDIT: Just looked at your profile... and DAMN are you look good for 63.
@bruuhhhhАй бұрын
This was a really good video, it stood out as covering lots of relevant points really clearly
@Kane_thompsonАй бұрын
I did not expect bro to be wearing a faygo shirt😂
@Diezeldee22 күн бұрын
Hey Mike!.. it’s heath from back in the day. This is great to see you killin it 👍🏻
@jackerylelАй бұрын
I like this format a lot. Just the good facts with some humor thrown in when it fits, not spamming weird jokes all the time which takes away from the info imo
@FalsePos1tiveАй бұрын
I was just asking myself this question. Dr Mike you're the GOAT 🐐
@travismitchell210Ай бұрын
I absolutely love 5x5 set/rep schemes. Problem is they take up alot of time. I usually run 1 exercise per session at 5x5 and everything else 3x10 or 3x15. Whatever i havent progressed in for a while is what ill pick for my 5x5. Currently running incline bench, squat, weighted pull ups, and deadlifts. Just hit 270 x5 on my incline this morning. Working on repping my last max which was 315.
@davebathoryАй бұрын
This video is succinct in outlining fitness principles that anyone can utilize immediately. Thank you Mike!
@JauntWithGАй бұрын
Dr. Mike is great! Thank you for always making quality content filled with knowledge (hilarious content included 😆). Facts and some comedy, what more could you want?
@highcalibertrainersАй бұрын
Dr. Mike’s advice works so well because it’s fundamental science… most of his tips worked so well for me, everyone should follow his advice
@fake-PSLАй бұрын
😂😂😂
@MinihammerraqАй бұрын
The portion on recommended rep ranges was pretty much exactly what I was curious about today. Nice.
@asimoruc7207Ай бұрын
Dr. Mike is just the GOAT, his voice alone makes my muscles grow. I know it's the truth from the severe muscle growth made while working out and having his videos in the background.
@dreambeliever3652Ай бұрын
Dude. It’s really something listening to you. Very informative
@bodrea_collectiveАй бұрын
there’s been a lot of debate recently on weekly frequency vs volume. a lot of people have been switching to full body or upper lower splits 6-7 days a week with the argument that you’ll have way more potential to overload compared to ppl or other splits in which you’re training separate muscles every other/2,3,4 days. proponents to this theory would be people like ryan jewers, paul carter, and a bunch of other people on youtube n tiktok. kinda one of those viral things right now and i’d love to see a video with your thoughts
@alexbolotin8899Ай бұрын
Look up the ppl vs upper/lower vs whole body video on this channel. He discuses this. Basically number of sets per week no matter how many sessions you split them up across
@bodrea_collectiveАй бұрын
@@alexbolotin8899yeah i’ve seen that video, but there are a bunch of people now saying that weekly volume is a “useless metric” so it would be cool to see a new vid challenging that idea
@jamesstrom6991Ай бұрын
even better, keep changing it… i flow from full body back to back days for a bit, then upper/lower, then bro split.. listen to your body and adjust to feedback.
@Brk_LiftsАй бұрын
Jordan Peters did a great video on this. How advanced you are at lifting matters a lot in which training split works best and how much volume a person needs.
@ryanmerritt2684Ай бұрын
@@bodrea_collectiveIt is a useless metric since 8 sets done once a week was shown to be inferior to 1 set done twice a week. You cannot extrapolate how effective the total amount of sets is since fatigue plays such a huge role in how effective each set is.
@rpgmindandfitnessАй бұрын
The big thing I take from these types of videos on sets/rep ranges is that there’s no exact science and that everyone’s over thinking the hell out of it. I’m a coach and a pro natural bodybuilder. People come up to me constantly with questions about volume, sets, rep ranges, exercise selection, etc. All I think is “Holy shit. If only you asked this many questions about nutrition, your sleep, hydration, etc.” You wouldn’t even need to hire or approach me! Everybody wants to talk about the sexy stuff, the fun stuff. They want to know about which supplement is going to change their damn lives! Man… at the end of the day? You don’t build muscle in the gym. Muscle builds while you recover and sleep. Learn proper technique, train hard, train consistently, train through a full ROM… The rest? Honestly, there’s so many different ways to fill that in. Stop getting so lost in it. If you are and you’re not growing? You’re probably looking in the wrong place.
@JackJones-jn4oqАй бұрын
I do 5 days a week in the gym and resting 2 days in the week is this enough rest and quick question if you could answer is drinking 3 litres of water a day enough to drink I'm 40 years old
@JordanAnkersАй бұрын
@@JackJones-jn4oqyes it’s plenty
@rpgmindandfitnessАй бұрын
@@JackJones-jn4oq That all sounds great. Make sure you're getting plenty of sleep on top of that. You could argue that adequate sleep is the most important of all.
@ajlucastvАй бұрын
Well presented, thanks for the update 😊
@THE_CHOAS_ENGINEАй бұрын
train lighter but slow the rep down... in some cases the rep is 4 seconds others maybe 5 or 6 seconds. I was never a believer of time under tension but I'm convinced its the best way. For chest I select the weight for 12 reps. Shoulders 15 reps, legs 20 reps, back 10 reps, arms 12 reps... select proper weight to go to 90% of failure. sets per exercise? 5 or 6. that's just me. The secret is the ultra slow controlled motion. zero chance for injury.
@jamesstrom6991Ай бұрын
especially as you get older
@joshuamartinez8049Ай бұрын
Nah that’s weak honestly train heavy and controlled and you won’t feel like a little boy in the gym
@qamar3222Ай бұрын
indeed it is a slower tempo no momentum sets (basically standardising your form) but doing it in the 4-8 rep range for 2-4 sets is the best since it keeps fatigue low and you can see progressive overload week to week
@craigejacobsАй бұрын
@@joshuamartinez8049 your future surgeon thanks you in advance for your patronage.
@DavichizАй бұрын
lmao
@captainwavy4097Ай бұрын
Dr Mike you not only are the coolest fitness influencer! your advice has helped me achieved the most gains!
@StuckAtNightАй бұрын
8:51 Frank Israetel
@mainsourcecapitalmiami8382Ай бұрын
Dr. Mike has changed the way I train. In 6 months I’ve made more gains than 1 year of my previous training regimen and protocols!
@zezeti2246Ай бұрын
Just got a ptsd episode remembering of the few weeks I once did 10x10 sets of squats😂
@danieljamesfarquharson8421Ай бұрын
Disgusting 😭😭😭😭😭
@tylerreamer8292Ай бұрын
Love the Information you Share Thanks I will Watch Entire Clip
@thomasharsha3359Ай бұрын
I’m a faygo for Dr.Mike
@discreetman593Ай бұрын
love faygo soda pop from detroit. I.C.P would shower us with it at their concerts in the 90's..lol
@John_on_the_mountainАй бұрын
@@discreetman593out of everything ive ever heard on this channel, thats the gayest
@thedman623Ай бұрын
This man has a gift. 25 minutes of science based facts and numbers and not a single yawn from me. Thanks Dr.Mike! Also I used to think that me doing 3 reps of 120kg on bench would do me good. And also, you know, the girls were watching. I toned it down to 80-90 kg and my muscles are bigger then ever.
@corismsynАй бұрын
Existential dread with 20+ reps. I know that feeling. I've had to really take my time warming up and psyching up and getting in the zone prior to my first working set because I knew that it was going to be awful. Loads of tension and pain starting at around 15 reps and you got 10 more to go. Basically tearing up, tensing the whole body, grimacing and just trying to survive the set, while trying to keep focus on MMC and ensuring the form and technique is still being maintained and keeping the tension and burn on the target muscle. It can be quite draining.
@Dave8T9Ай бұрын
This is EXACTLY the video I needed right now. I’ve been questioning about weight vs reps a lot lately with mixed responses from people. 2 days ago I upped my weight on every bar and for example on the bench I went from 20 reps, 15 reps then 10 reps when lifting and now I’m managing 2 sets of 10 with strain and then my third set today I managed 8 reps before I had to stop because I workout at home alone and while I have ropes attached to stop me from dying when my arms fail, I don’t trust the ropes enough to go to absolute failure. My curls are similar, I did 2 sets of 10 on each arm, then I got a final 8 full reps while strained and then 5 partials when my arms gave up on me. After the info in this video I know that what I’m doing is the right thing, my muscles feel great afterwards with that pumped feeling and hot. I’m 42lbs in to a 120lbs weight loss goal and that’s in only 3 months and it wasn’t all that difficult to do. I lift, I cycle for cardio and I’ve cleaned up my diet a lot and I’m keeping myself at a high calorie deficit without starving myself. Eggs and fish are my best friends since I love the taste of both with salad on the side to get other nutrients I need. Loving the journey so far
@abortedlordАй бұрын
Why not? It is boredom. I am bored doing a thing on rep 10. 100%, if I CAN get to 10, I'm off of it, and I'd rather just add more weight. This may not be a particularly "scientific" approach but it's better than just saying, "Ok I don't want to do any of this anymore."
@user-wk5yc7eb7tАй бұрын
Training to volitional failure 😎
@richardbass3325Ай бұрын
Love this Dr Mike always a balanced view and plenty for me to think on and try 👍
@corenkoАй бұрын
5-10 is my rep range, I've tried 10-15 even 15-20 it just does not work with me. I get bored counting to 20
@jamesstrom6991Ай бұрын
high reps have their place, especially for injured/old joints, hitting muscles that tolerate high volume like calves and shoulders, and for undulating periodization
@Ax69sxxdsАй бұрын
I feel like 5-10 personally helps you judge failure and RIR much easier as well as overall success with progressive overload. I been doing 5-10 reps across all movements, it feels great
@vladpaloukotisАй бұрын
ur wrong in my opinion.u need all ranges of reps to maximize ur gains
@corenkoАй бұрын
@ False bro. You don’t need all rep ranges to maximize gains. All reps from 5 do 30 are equal. Just pick what you like, in my case 5-10 is the best
@Gokustrongest5Ай бұрын
Thank you for this information Dr.Mike
@peacefulruler1Ай бұрын
Priority #1: don’t injure neck, knees or shoulders. Some injuries can never be fixed. Some can put you in a wheelchair or kill you. Be wise.
@lobstermyname4477Ай бұрын
what about low back
@alexvisan7622Ай бұрын
Wtf are you people doing in the gym that can cripple you? Putting 200% of your squat on the bar and trying to do a rep? You must be really stupid to get seriously injured in the gym.
@ImprovementonallfrontsАй бұрын
Keep making these videos! Love the lectures.
@srleplayАй бұрын
I honestly don't remember when was the last time I went lower than 15 (on the first set) having torn pretty much everything when I was lifting heavy despite perfect technique no one can say to me that injury risk isn't there. General safety is a bit upside as well, during transitions or freak accidents, getting hit in the face with weight isn't linear, I'd rather get 60 twice than 120 once. Another thing you save a lot of warmup time I basically don't warm up for most lifts for years now, not a single injury. You save time and fatigue of loading plates. You save fatigue getting into position and you save a lot of fatigue stabilizing lifts. Any serious SFR calculation has to include all of those. Also it's easier to train with other people
@JayGoodsАй бұрын
Dr. Mike , You have a soft kinda bed time story voice. Great content! Thanks
@joelpygott7523Ай бұрын
I think what mike is trying to say is, do high reps and low weight to tone the muscle. High weight low reps will make you look like a freak (too big!!)
@jmarino09Ай бұрын
Seen your stuff on my feed, and Think Before You Sleep recommended your stuff for strategy and tactic around weight training. As a 15 year lifter, this video made me realize I can still elevate my game so much. Thanks!
@АлексейФёдоров-ч8кАй бұрын
6 -12 reps for big muscle groups, 12-20 for smaller muscle groups
@velinivanov607Ай бұрын
About as simple and effective as it comes
@Starkiller2725Ай бұрын
This videos is absolutely amazing, thank you!
@staceygram5555Ай бұрын
It still seems kind of pointless to me to be talking about reps without talking about tempo. There's a big difference in the weight you're going to be using doing 30 reps of 1 second reps vs 30 reps of 8 second reps. I wonder if doing 30 reps of 8 second reps will lower the weight to such an extent that it renders it almost pointless in terms of hypertrophy.
@Bdavis2475Ай бұрын
All of his videos of people actually training will give you a good idea of the tempo he recommends
@staceygram5555Ай бұрын
@Bdavis2475 The science says 2-8 seconds. 30 reps of 8 second reps is insane.
@SpicyExpressionsАй бұрын
Been waiting for this one!!!! Gracias!!
@alexbolotin8899Ай бұрын
What if it’s 2 girls and only 1 cup?
@a1b9c2Ай бұрын
Then the shit has really hit the fan.
@ChaseHubАй бұрын
dudes just so consistent! another banger :D
@JimmyHeightАй бұрын
99% of gym goers don't train heavy enough
@medraenАй бұрын
Meanwhile i cannot recover from more than 1 set every 48 hours lmao. I literally did 1 set of bicep afte 2 sets of lat pulldowns and my bicep is cramping 12h after if i try to flex
@_RG99_Ай бұрын
Exact opposite imo. Everyone's egolifting
@ok2853Ай бұрын
@medraen mate you either have muscles in the dorian yates range or you have some insanely bad diet and low hydration
@alexvisan7622Ай бұрын
@@_RG99_found the technique cyborg who only does isolation and thinks deep squats are ego lifting.
@_RG99_Ай бұрын
@@alexvisan7622 I love deep squats
@michaelchafin4016Ай бұрын
Love this video, so true and spot on with me and my style of working out after 7 years of figuring it out for my body and age.
@MHASHMANSАй бұрын
LOVE EVERYTHING YOU SAID MAKE SENSE THANK YOU
@thunderkat5282Ай бұрын
Great video!
@generationzdegenerate765Ай бұрын
Alright Dr. Mike if u can - as u said - shove some graphs of group comparison data - into us please do that cause I'm to lazy for researching stuff myself but I'm really curious. love you man and whole RP group you guys are doing some amazing work
@Metheny72Ай бұрын
I lift 6-15 reps for 3 reasons. 1. Time. 2. Lactic acid burn fucking hurts. 3. I find it hard to focus on the movement with less tension.
@leohernandez8006Ай бұрын
Dr. Mike, Your a beast!!!! Thank you for all the helpful information.
@R0t73NF4rT27 күн бұрын
your videos inspired me to start training and i plan to document my progress =)
@sihi5634Ай бұрын
I’m a 726 second old Vietnamese pretend scuba diver and I’ve never felt a pump like I felt after watching this video. Praise the several hundred lords for Dr Mike.
@MaclainAustinАй бұрын
I love your content brother! Thank you for the entertaining delivery of knowledge. Who knew, right!?
@AverageYTerАй бұрын
Here’s all I ever needed to understand this: Compare an Olympic sprinter’s legs to an Olympic marathon runner’s legs. Now you understand !
@masehrafie34Ай бұрын
You are The boss Dr Mike . Thank you
@carl_anderson9315Ай бұрын
So I’be been doing this intuitively 😊 My approach is: For “big” muscles (biceps, quads, lats, etc): 3 sets, progressing from 3x6 to 3x10, and then moving back to 3x6 while adding 5 lbs to the weight, and repeat. For “smaller” muscles (hip rotators, rotator cuff, tibs, neck muscles, etc) I do 2 sets from 8 to 15 reps, following the same pattern. Always slow negatives 3 to 5 seconds.
@littleeddie133Ай бұрын
when I was 22, 5-3, 135 lbs a bodybuilder got me in the gym, he taught 3 sets of 10 reps, when you can lift that weight comfortably then you go up in weight. One set for each body part. He had me benching 225 lbs. Today at age 65 and still 135 lbs I’m just trying to stay in shape so this still works for me. I’m happy benching 135lbs! Lift 3 x a week and cardio 6 days a week.
@rudykatwaroo8260Ай бұрын
Great video and resonated with Nick Norwitz's N=1 experiment video in doing what works for your body, whether it's diet or exercise.
@nathangabriel8888Ай бұрын
Nice Approach Mic love the intro
@theovercomer2006Ай бұрын
I ended up doing a ton of reps on my last workout. I just didn't want to lift heavy that day I had a great pump, but on some of my sets I did stop short of failure. I was using the 40s on hammer curls and stopped at 45 reps because I just didn't want to do it anymore! I'm enjoying the show Mike!
@christopherlenahan3906Ай бұрын
Appreciate the defining of beginner, intermediate and advanced! Thanks, it gives a lot of context for you video catalog. I'm definitely beginner, 10Rx3S on all my exercises is my goal, and if 12 is doable I up 5-10lbs the next week.
@jamesmabley3636Ай бұрын
I read an article by Fred Hatfield, or it may have been in the ISSA Certification Course Audio/Video decades ago, and he said one can gain nearly, or as much strength using 60% of max, vs 90%, but execution, of the rep was the key. Like say on Bench. He said to Lower the weight very slowly under control, Pause, absolutely, do not let the weight sink into the chest, very, very light touch to the chest, and then while still under control, explode from the bottom of the rep, from a dead stop, until all but the end of the rep, so one doesnt hyper-extend the elbow. But he was clear to accelerate the weights, as quickly as possible, under control, for as much of the complete range of motion, as is safe, and then lower very slowly, under control. Also, when one get back to the top of the Bench Rep. Stop Dead, for a second, and, do not fully lock out the elbow. 90%. Tom Platz, was known for doing a single set of 225, which was his bodyweight. Precontest. He said he did 225lbs, for 125 reps. In one set, so, that convinced me to add extremely high rep training, with Bodyweight Squats. Of course that means individual bodyweight, plus your bodyweight, on the bar. Also consider much of this is what Ive done many years ago, Im 66, and as of the last 7-8 years, I rarely go under 5 reps anymore. At 66, I can still Full Squat, ass to the floor 225ls, for 25. With a Narrow Foot Stance. Im also very flexible, and sometimes stretch 3 hours in a day. And have done so, since the early 80s. Gus Hoefling, convinced me. Strength and Health mag, had him in the magazine. Gus was Strenght, and Conditioning Coach for the Phoenix Suns, Dallas Cowboys-Landry called Gus the best sports strenght conditioner, in the world. He trained Phillies, and the Flyers. He trained Steve Carlton, and Bob Boone. He said Bob, was his most dedicated student. Boone could do 1000 Nonstop Situps. 325lbs Bench, and was extremely, flexible. He said Carlton was so strong, he could have been a lineman in the NFL. Carlton, was also a Black Belt/some form of Karate. But Gusss said one needed to maintain the same flexibility as one grew bigger and stronger, as to not increase the chance of injury, and because, if you lose to much range of motion, you lose functional abilities. One being Speed, which is also power. Olympic lifters, are generally extremely flexible. And Explosive. I saw a study that said Olympic Lifters, were the Most Explosive of all Olympic Athletes. Im also a runner, lifetime steroid free, though, I have been accused of it, and not really because of the way I look, but because I am relentless in the gym, and on the road, as I seek the pain, and then fight with it until the muscles fail, or the run, is over. Many of my friends used, and while some of them may have gotten bigger than I. I would bury them in a workout, as far as training intensity goes. One guy I trained with for a short period.. Rick Cornett, who is a former 242lbs Powerlifter, used to call me crazy. He said if he trained like me, he would be Mr Olympia. Rick won the 1987 USPF Kentucky State Championships 1987-04-11, USA-KY, Ft. KnoxDownload as CSV Rank Lifter Sex Age Equip Class Weight Squat Bench Deadlift Total Wilks 1 Rick Cornett M 35 Single 242 242.5 810.2 457.4 639.3 1907 509.05 Ive never trained, or eaten for size. I trained/train for maximum functional strength, and endurance. Jack Lalanne, is one of my main influences, and is a reason, I like endurance type training. He liked to swim, I like to run. It seems like that is where my mind is. Grinding it out. I ran 8-50 Mile Ultra Marathons in the 80s, in under 7 hours, and a 2 hours 38 Minute Marathon. Also flat backed, raw, no supports of any kind, feet in the air, pause Bench, of 321lbs, at 148lbs. Actually no shoes on either. I used to like to lift, with no shoes, but they wont let you anymore. I think Mind Set, also has a great deal to what reps/weights one may thrive on. But, I feel one should work Every Muscle Fiber Type. While I do structured, and usually 10 week cycles, I also may do a cycle, where I employ the Muscle Confusion Principle. I may be doing 5 x 5, for weeks, and then, out of nowhere, do super sets, with little, to no rest. Or, pre-exhaustion/isolation exercise before compound. Superset. Tri sets-Giant sets. Work a body part 2 days in a row. Do exercise sequence backwards vs normal. Do opposite whatever youre doing. Heres a Leg workout, I ran one of my steroid using buddies tapped out on, back in the 90s.Tis is also inside the rack. Oly the strong willed, and eager for pain need to get inside the cage. Start with bar supports on the Inside of the rack, and put Pins on the Very Bottom of whatever your Ass to the Ground, Full Squat Position Is, so, when you go to failure, and cant stand up, if you wimp out, and not go until you cant stand up anymore, without one, forced rep, stay home. But, you also need 2/TWO Good Spotters. So you pick a weight that allows you to Fail, at 20 reps, at the Botton Position,,,, spotterrrrs help you back to the top position. You rack it, they quickly, as fast as possible, strip 50% of the weight off, and you start going again, until failure. At the low position you can either crawll out of the vottom position, or have the spotters help with on more forced rep. Any case. With Zero Rest, start Jumping as high as possible, until you cannot jump, anymore. Then, with No Rest do bodyweight Squats, until failure. At that point, one trip through, he quit. Had to sit down in the floor, for half an hour. He was supposed to do leg Presses-Extensions/Curls, and standing/seated calves. He quit after the first trip through Squats... He was sore for a week, just fro the one trip through Squats!! And, he is/was then, reallly strong. He still is strong, but not chemical anymore. 380 Bench at 175lbs. I start out a 10 weeks cycle of that type training, I do 1 trip through the first week, and every 2 weeks, add one trip through. Until 5 trips. And you will have to greatly decrease loads/weight, to survive, and get all the reps, and 5 cycles. This really is brutal. Years ago, a fellow ultra marathoner did this, and got more sore than running 50 miles, cross country. Ive never had one person last a full 10 week cycle. I also run 40 miles a week. I will blast legs, and make/will myself to go out, and Jog, I wont say run, but, I will make the effort, to put in at least 1 mile, after any grueling workout. Also, my cardio is so good, I NEVER run out of breath in a high volume Squat weight workout. The high level cardio, allows me to recover better, between sets too.
@Marx1963Ай бұрын
Love this video - every muscle group I do different amounts of reps . Back more reps then chest , legs more reps then shoulders , arms somewhere in between- my rep ranges are between 6-20 reps .
@NancyLane-ki7vnАй бұрын
Love your advice!!
@alanconsidine8432Ай бұрын
Ab awful lot to take in need to watch again but brilliant information a lot you would forget but good to hear again. Love Dr mike evan on any podcast so informative and funny to listen to at same time💪
@jacobrichey8478Ай бұрын
hey doc, I love watching you, and it really seems that you're knowledgable about more than just hypertrophy. I personally want to be a sort of powerlifter calisthenics mix, so if you could make a video on how to train for strength instead of muscle, or possibly how to train tendon strength for isometric poses like planches and front levers, I would love it. maybe even your thoughts on plyometrics and how to get hops? Im sure it doesn't sell as well as muscle growth in the algorithm but there are definitely people who have interests and will watch these things. I also want to know if isometric holds are only a waste of time for hypertrophy and whether or not they appeal to strength in general.
@bashpawАй бұрын
Dr. Mike, I love this topic. Could you expand on this perhaps in another video with relation to age as a variable in this equation.
@theodawbarn3841Ай бұрын
this is very great advice, very well presented, wow
@dominicdealmeida292Ай бұрын
Bro, Dr. Mike’s content is elite. Talk about best-in-class…
@dustinneoАй бұрын
REnuance Periodization. Always eye opening advice from Mike