SociallyChallenged
Elite
- Mar 22, 2002
- 10,483
- 32
- 81
Originally posted by: polarmystery
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: damage424
Very interesting. I'll read the sticky tonight and see if that touches up on this. I think after reading it and learning about compound lifts I'll have a talk with my friend. I do know my friend takes a supplement called Animal Cuts. He told me down the road I'll need to take them if I want to get ripped like him. I told him I want to avoid all supplements and do it the natural way (I saw him on it and he is different on them). I have a feeling he is going to try to persuade me to keep doing what I'm doing and not to fix what is not broken. But again I'll be doing some researching and I'm sure questions will be coming up pretty soon.![]()
Well, let me get some things out of the way here. I study exercise biology as my major. I've taken all the major courses on nutrition, cell bio, systemic physiology, etc. I also help coach, have been an athlete all my life, and seen hundreds of people do hundreds of different things. The only major class I'm missing for my degree is anatomy really. First of all, you need to stop listening to your friend. If he's so invested in you doing the exact same thing as him, he's not telling you the best thing to do but the things he wants you to do.
You need zero supplements to get ripped. You need a good diet and a solid weightlifting program. The only supplements that have any real scientific basis are whey protein, fish oil, and creatine.
Let me also point out that the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" line doesn't apply here. It IS broken. If you ever wanted to play a sport, you would be at a significantly increased risk for injury. Your large muscles would go to do something while your smaller muscles wouldn't be able to keep them in the right place. You know why guys that do a ton of chest and tricep isolation have more bench injuries? Because their rotator cuff can't handle the load. Imagine the same with the knee, the elbow, etc. Personally, I want the real world to be the same as the gym. I don't want them to be exclusive. I want to be able to lift x amount of pounds whether it's in barbells or tree stumps. Why would you do something if it had no practical benefit?
What about Caffeine and N.O. ?
Caffeine is a stimulant - a drug. It has a relatively high risk of addiction. To be perfectly honest, it has no place in the gym. If you'd like to put your blood pressure through the roof and put yourself at some serious risks, go for it. However, it should not be used.
Also N.O. increases blood pressure to hazardous levels as well. Even though it does this, there is no research that states it is beneficial during exercise. Sure, you feel a greater pump. Feeling does not necessarily indicate helpfulness. That's like saying feeling the burn is a good indication of a workout. It's not at all.
