I did my volunteer day yesterday, it is so nice to bring a smile to the ladies faces. I happened to walk into the dining area while the nurse was giving out her Flu shots so I got in line, it not only protects me, but it also protects the residence in the event I get the flu, so a little pain to protect us all. I hope you all got in line and had your shot.
I mentioned to the residence that we might be able to paint some Christmas decorations on one of our Wednesday get together's, and they were very happy to do it, they asked what they could do with them and my reply was what ever you want to. Do you think we could use them as a gift one lady said. I said absolutely we can, so I must get shopping and get all the items we will need, maybe even so gift bags for just in case someone wants to give them away.
I went to the gym this morning and did an hour on the elliptical machine. As promised you will find below some more information from yesterdays blog.
Training Each Muscle Group
With A Once Per Week Workout Frequency
One of
the three most common weight training frequencies is one in which each
muscle group or body part is trained just once per week.
For
anyone who has spent any time trying to find a workout split and schedule
before, this is probably the frequency you are most familiar with seeing.
Whether
or not that means a once-per-week frequency is actually what’s best for
you is something we’re going to figure out right now.
First,
let’s take a look at a few common examples of this type of frequency…
Example Split #1
- Monday: Chest & Triceps
- Tuesday: Back & Biceps
- Wednesday: off
- Thursday: Shoulders & Abs
- Friday: Legs
- Saturday: off
- Sunday: off
Example Split #2
- Monday: Chest, Shoulders, Triceps
- Tuesday: off
- Wednesday: Legs & Abs
- Thursday: off
- Friday: Back & Biceps
- Saturday: off
- Sunday: off
As you
can see, the example workout splits above (of which there are dozens more) show
each muscle group and body part being trained with a frequency of only once
per week.
This
means that each muscle group gets trained just once every 7th day, which
makes this a pretty low frequency form of weight training.
How To Make A Once-Per-Week Training Frequency Work
The key
to making a once-per-week training frequency work is ensuring that you provide
enough of the right training stimulus during that one weekly workout to
actually warrant not training that muscle group again for an entire week.
You see,
one of the many pitfalls of training each muscle group just once per week is
that you are not training it again for another 7 days. And, it’s very easy for
your body to de-train during this time and lose whatever progress you
made during that previous workout.
Think
about it. What happens if you stop working out for a while?
You
regress, results gradually disappear, and you slowly lose whatever muscle,
strength or performance related improvements you’ve made.
To a
lesser degree, that’s exactly what can (and often does) happen when you
wait a full week before training each muscle group again.
You may
end up doing enough to stimulate progress and new adaptations during your
workout, but then by the time a full week passes, you’ve already lost those new
adaptations and you end up getting nowhere.
So, to
make this frequency work, volume (exercises, sets, reps) per muscle group would need to
be high enough to allow you to maintain the progress made from workout to
workout (which in this case is a full week to week) without actually exceeding
your capacity to recover. (More about that here: The Optimal Workout
Volume)
The Other Problem With This Frequency
The other
big issue with training each muscle group just once per week is that, even if
you did do everything perfectly (provided enough of the right training
stimulus, maintained all of the new adaptations made over that 7 day break,
etc.), it’s still a full week of time being wasted.
Think
about it. Training each muscle group once per week means you’ll have 52
potential progress stimulating workouts per year, per muscle group.
In
comparison, if you trained with a twice-per-week frequency (more about that
soon), you’d have 104 potential progress stimulating workouts per year, per
muscle.
Now, with
all else being equal, which do you think has the potential to produce
better/faster results over the same period of time?
Seems
pretty obvious, doesn’t it?
The point
I’m getting at here is that even if you do everything right with a
once-per-week training frequency, it’s still pretty tough to look at that week
off between training sessions for each muscle group as anything but an unnecessary
waste of time.
You could
have been back in the gym stimulating progress again instead of sitting around
waiting for a week to pass.
Not to
mention, there’s absolutely nothing special or magical about training each
muscle group once every 7th day.
It’s a
totally arbitrary amount of time based on nothing but that fact that we happen
to have 7 days in a week. Seriously. It’s NOT that it works better or has some
kind of benefit, it’s just that that’s how many days we have in a week, and
it’s convenient to schedule stuff in this manner.
So, Is A Once-Per-Week Training Frequency Optimal?
Based on
everything I just told you, I think you already know the answer. I’ll say it
anyway…
Training
each muscle group once-per-week is the LEAST EFFECTIVE weight training
frequency.
There… I
said it. And no, it’s not just my opinion. It’s the opinion of every single
qualified expert, trainer and strength coach with half a brain.
Oh, and
guess what else? It’s not just an opinion… it’s a fact backed by science
and real world results.
Literally
all research and scientific studies looking at weight training frequency
conclusively show that training each muscle just once per week is the least
effective way to train regardless of your goal or experience level.
Can it
work? Sure. Does it work? Sure.
Honestly,
as long as you do everything else correctly, ANY weight training
frequency can work to some degree, including this one.
HOWEVER,
this isn’t about what works and what doesn’t work. This is about what works best
and what works worst.
And, all
research, expert opinions and my own firsthand experience shows that training
each muscle group just one time per week is just NOT optimal for the majority
of the population.
Who Is A Once-Per-Week Frequency BEST Suited
For?
Training
each muscle group once per week tends to work best for the following people:
- People using steroids/drugs.
- People with above average genetics.
- People whose primary goal at the time is to just maintain their current level of muscle and strength rather than improve it any further. In that case, training each muscle group once per week should be perfectly sufficient.
- Advanced trainees looking to specialize certain body parts or muscle groups. They’d train those “specialized” muscle groups with a better, higher frequency, and train everything else once per week for maintenance purposes only.
I’d
personally only recommend this workout frequency to the last 2 groups on that
list. The first 2 would likely get better results with an improved frequency,
just like the rest of us.
Who Is A Once-Per-Week Frequency LEAST
Suited For?
Like I
said before, a once-per-week training frequency is NOT ideal for the
majority of the population.
Chances
are that includes you.
For
starters, anyone with a strength/performance type goal should almost always
avoid this type of training frequency like the plague. It’s typically seen as
being borderline useless in that area, especially in comparison to other better
training frequencies.
And,
while it can work to some degree (assuming everything else is done right) for
those of us trying to build muscle, get “toned,” or improve the way our bodies
look in any capacity, it’s just clearly NOT what works best.
I don’t
recommend it at all.
What About Other Weight Training Frequencies?
Good
question. Let’s take a look at a higher workout frequency and see if that’s
more ideal for you… Stay tuned for more tomorrow.Today's Quote:
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