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Quick Starter Workout

Q: I’m interested in building up my body. I’ve been visiting some workout forums, and lots of people are recommending your quick starter workout. Can you explain why it’s so good? Will it work for me? I want a new body, but I don’t want to look like the Incredible Hulk or anything. Maybe Captain America or Thor, though. Lol.

A: The quick starter workout you’re referring to is our Quick-Start Muscle-Building Guide, and it has you begin with a two-week break-in program, using the basic exercises, like squats, bench presses, etc., one to two sets each (all exercises are fully explained with printable start-and-finish-position illustrations).

It’s a full-body workout that takes about an hour on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and it’s geared to upregulate your nervous system and coordination quickly so you can start building muscle immediately after this two-week “learning” phase. Then you move to something more unique to accelerate gains…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic, anabolic acceleration, anabolic environment, becky holman, before and after, beginner workout, break-in workout, captain america, comeback, comeback workout, continuous tension, fast mass, fast-mass workout, full-body workout, hulk, hypertrophy, incredible hulk, lean muscle, male hormones, massthetic, max force, muscle-building, muscular tension, physique, quick starter workout, quick-start muscle building, steroids, tension time, testosterone, thor, women, women's workout, workout for women

Convert New Muscle Strength to Serious Muscle Size

3D Triceps Positions

Q: I’ve been using the Power Pyramid Program (Chapter 2 in the Freak-Physique Stretch-Overload Workout e-book) for six weeks. I’m getting incredibly strong, but I’ve only gained about four pounds of muscle. I realize it’s a muscle strength workout with a size side effect, but now I’m ready to use my new strength to go for major muscle mass. I also want to get leaner. I’m 5’10” and weigh 200 pounds with 14 percent bodyfat. What type of routine should I follow? I really like using Positions of Flexion in the Power Pyramid Program. Can I just alter that routine somehow for my new goals? 

A: Ah, so now that you’re strong like an ox, you want to get even bigger with some leanness to boot. Sounds good, and it can and will happen. You just need to take your new power in a slightly different direction—still using the multi-angular attack of POF, but altered so you pack on the most muscle size—complete development from origin to insertion. 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic fasting, animal study, bodybuilders, brad pilon, eat stop eat, exhaustion, fast-twitch fibers, fat burning, freak physique, freak-physique stretch-overload workout, get lean, GH, growth hormone, hypertrophic, intermittent fasting, muscle size, muscle strength, muscle-building, POF, positions of flexion, power pyramids, size, static holds, strength, strength building, stretch overload, STX, t/nt, tension time, testosterone, traumatic/non-traumatic, X Reps

Should I Do More?

Jonathan Lawson V-bar chins - 10X for Muscle Size Effects

Q: I’ve noticed in a lot of your e-book routines that you often recommend just two work sets for an exercise Why? Should I do more? I’ve read that most bodybuilders do four or five sets per exercise.

A: As Arthur Jones, the creator of Nautilus machines said: “You can train hard or you can train long, but you can’t do both.” Short and hard or long and not so hard both work. Despite what some die-hard high-intensity trainers say, gradually increasing volume is a form of overload that can result in more muscle—if you don’t overdo intensity. It’s a balancing act. Us? Regardless of whether it’s one of our low-set workouts or high tension time workouts, we’re about efficiency of effort in the gym…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic environment, arthur jones, do more, drop sets, efficiency-of-effort, estrogen, fast-twitch fibers, fat burner, growth hormone release, growth stimulation, intensity, mass tactic, massthetic, Nautilus, rest/pause, steroids, tension time, testosterone, volume training, X Reps, x-hybrid tactics, x-rep partials

Simple Size Principle for Major Muscle Gains

Steve spotting Jonathan for forced reps on dumbbell shoulder presses

Q: It’s hard for me to believe that a few partial reps at the end of a set [a.k.a. X Reps] can do anything measurable for muscle gains. Isn’t doing an additional set just as good or better for muscle growth?

A: At first glance, you’d think so; however, once you understand muscle physiology, you see the enormous muscle-building effects that can occur if you extend a set correctly. It all starts with the size principle of muscle fiber recruitment…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: anabolic, efficiency-of-effort, fast-twitch fibers, high glycolytic, high-threshold motor units, low-threshold motor units, medium-threshold, muscle gains, muscle growth, muscle physiology, nervous system, over-40, oxygenic, size principle, size principle of muscle fiber recruitment, slow-twitch, testosterone, Truth About Testosterone, X Reps, x-rep partials, x-traordinary x-rep workout

Stairway to Mass

JL Pushdowns - Volumizing Muscle Tissue

Q: You’ve said that to get the best muscle-size gains, you have to use both power and density to build both sides of the 2A muscle fibers. But in The X-traordinary Size Surge Workout program, it looks like it’s all power with no endurance [density] work. So how could it produce such spectacular results in Jonathan?

A: The Size Surge program does have a dominant power emphasis, especially in phase 1, the anabolic primer segment. But there’s also some density, or endurance, work (and it expands for bigger mass gains, as you’ll see)…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: boost testosterone, massthetic, muscle mass, stairway to mass, stretch overload, testosterone

Muscle-Mass Measurement Mistake

Casey Viator before and after Colorado Experiment - 60 lbs of Muscle in 4 Weeks

Q: I just got The X-traordinary Size Surge Workout that chronicles Jonathan’s gain of 20 pounds of muscle in 10 weeks. Great info, and I’m psyched to get on the program. One observation, though… In the chapter on the Colorado Experiment, the four-week high-intensity study in which Casey Viator gained 60 pounds of muscle, he lost fat at the same time, so the scale didn’t register a 60-pound gain, only a 40-pound increase. Isn’t that true for Jonathan, too? He obviously gained a lot of muscle, but his waist measurement went down an inch, so he lost fat all over. That being the case, he probably really gained more like 25 or 30 pounds of muscle, didn’t he?

A: Hmm. You’re probably right. We stand corrected; however, we like to err on the conservative side, so we’ll say he gained AROUND 20 pounds of muscle (but probably more, as you suggest). You can sort of see his abs in the after shot, and the caliper measurements were lower, so he did lose fat…

Size Surge Workout 2.0 cover

Also keep in mind that, like Viator, he was regaining some muscle, which is easier to do than building it from scratch. Nevertheless, he did move well past his best-ever muscle size, so in our estimation, he gained at least 10 pounds of NEW muscle–or, if we use your observation of fat loss factored in, more like 15 pounds. Still an amazing gain of new mass.

In contrast, Viator actually gained back to his ORIGINAL competition weight, so no new mass was built during that four-week experiment. Nevertheless, still quite a feat of packing on beef. [Viator’s Colorado Experiment program is outlined and analyzed in the Size Surge e-book.]

Casey Viator before and after Colorado Experiment -

Till next time, train hard—and smart—for BIG results.

—Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson
www.X-Rep.com


A Testosterone prescription is NOT the answer…

Millions of men are struggling with the problems associated with low-T in today’s world, such as extra belly and chest fat, low energy and stamina, lack of sexual desire, ED problems, and loss of muscle.

Sadly, millions of men also turn to Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT) to try to overcome these problems and try to feel like a new man again…BUT there are some VERY concerning problems with TRT that every man NEEDS to know.  

After reading the article below, you might want to consider alternate routes of boosting your T levels naturally instead of through something that’s potentially as harmful as TRT…

–> Why Testosterone Replacement Therapy can do more HARM than good  (for any ladies reading this, please pass this on to your husband or boyfriend if they are using or have considered using TRT)

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 20 pounds of muscle, 60 pounds of muscle, Casey Viator, Colorado Experiment, gains, jonathan lawson, measurement, muscle gains, muscle mass, Size Surge, size surge workout, testosterone, testosterone replacement therapy, trt, x-traordinary size surge workout

Arnold’s X-Rep Mass Connection

Arnold double biceps

Q: In the description of your new e-book [The X-traordinary X-Rep Workout], you mention that Arnold used X Reps. How is that even possible? He was training [at his peak] way back in the 1970s, and X Reps didn’t come around till the 2000s. What’s the deal?

A: We coined the X-Rep term about fifteen years ago, but partial-rep training has been around for ages in various forms. What we did was take the most recent research on semi-stretch-point fiber activation and zero in on the BEST spot on the stroke for end-of-set partials, or X Reps…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: arnold, arnold schwarzenegger, burn outs, burns, flex-x, growth stimulation, iron man magazine, john balik, mass, muscle fibers, over-40, partial reps, positions of flexion, size building, testosterone, v-taper, X Reps, x-only, x-rep partials, x-traordinary x-rep workout

Can a Wimp Build Muscle? + Testo Murder!

Q: I feel like a wimp. There is no way I can hold the weight in the stretch position for 30 seconds after a set as you’ve recommended before. On some exercises, I can get maybe 15 seconds, but on many, I can’t even get 10 seconds. Should I just forget bodybuilding and take up speed walking (kidding)?

A: Everyone’s pain tolerance is different. And, if you notice, most trainees will opt for methods that hurt least. It’s why most prefer heavy, low-rep training. Higher reps hurt like hell—and adding a stretch-hold at the end of even a 10-rep set can be excruciating. But, as you said, the stretch-hold is easier on some exercises, like incline curls where your arms just hang, as opposed to overhead extensions where you have to keep upward pressure on the weight to prevent elbow trauma…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 24-hour testosterone fix, anabolic, bodybuilding, build muscle, can a wimp build muscle, Dr. Jacob Wilson, hypertrophy, intraset stretching, low testosterone, mass building, MMX, mmx fast mega-mass workouts, mmx workout, muscle-building, silent killer, static hold, stretch hold, stretch position, T Fix, tension time, testosterone, testosterone fix, testosterone production, wimp

Look Bigger With NA Workouts

Q: I’ve been using the Ultimate Fat-to-Muscle Workout, and getting fantastic results. My muscles have become more defined, so I look bigger, yet my bodyweight is the same. I’ve read your Power-Density e-program as well, and it makes a lot of sense. My question is, Do you think the negative-accentuated fat-to-muscle method is good for Density? Maybe that’s why it’s working so well after my heavy sets.

A: The bodybuilding truism is, Lose that last 10 pounds of fat and look 20 pounds bigger. That is, a more defined physique creates the illusion of size—and that’s what you’ve done. Here are pics of Jonathan’s back, which looks much bigger in the second more ripped photo, but he actually weighs a little less…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: burn fat, density, fat burning, fat-to-muscle, look big, look bigger, metabolic momentum, muscle fibers, muscle loss, muscle microtrauma, muscle recovery, muscularity, na training, negative-accentuated, overtraining, Power, power and density, power-density workout, slow negatives, testosterone, testosterone replacement therapy trt, ultimate fat-to-muscle workout

35-Minute Mass Workouts: Dual Power-Density

Jonathan doing decline presses on a Smith machine

Q: I’m using The Basic Power-Density Workout from your Power-Density Mass e-book. So for most bodyparts, I do only one Ultimate Exercise as listed. But for shoulders, you divide it over two exercises—presses for Power and dumbbell upright rows for Density. Can I use that two-exercise approach for all muscles? I think using two exercises instead of only one will hit more fibers.

A: Absolutely. Using one Ultimate Exercise for both the Power and Density sequences streamlines the workout, as you need only one piece of equipment. But if it’s possible at your gym, go to a different exercise for Density—just make sure it’s a big multi-joint move.

Will that increase development? Possibly, if you choose exercises that emphasize different segments of the target muscle…

[Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: 2a fibers, 35-minute mass workouts, anabolic environment, anabolic hormone reset, anabolic hormones, basic power-density workout, dr. michael mosley, dual power-density, emg studies, fast-twitch, fast-twitch fibers, growth hormone, intermittent fasting, journal of applied physiology, mass workouts, metabolic adaptions, power pyramids, power-density mass workout, shaun hadsall, testosterone, ultimate exercises

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