Just was wondering what everyone thaught the most demanding, toughest workout program there is?
What workout do you need to be a absolute beast to actually perform?
ps
I'm bored.
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04-19-2006, 11:39 PM #1
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04-19-2006, 11:55 PM #2
I've tried 3 different workout regimens so far. The first was Max-OT, which despite the hype on their website, really isn't that tough. The only thing that really busts your balls on that routine is the leg day but ironically with legs being trained only once a week, there isn't that much stimulus for growth there despite the difficulty of the workout.
Next is the SF 5x5. This program is tough in that you end up putting a lot of mental presure on yourself to make the PRs on the lifts (or at least I did) when they are scheduled to happen. Also, the workouts are no joke. Any given day on this program is tougher than anything I encountered on Max-OT. The combination of high volume and high intensity will really bust your balls on the bigger lifts such as squats and deads.
Now I am trying GVT. This program is really intense in its own right. Ten sets of ten reps at 60% of your 1RM sounds easy? Just try it with squats. Yesterday I did 10x10x155 on squats and that was the most painful experience I've ever had in the weight room. The poundage is light compared to my 5RM of 275 but pain set in after about 5 sets and I collapsed after set 9 and then collapsed for a really long time after set 10. The 1 minute rest intervals start coming quicker and quicker and towards the end and you begin to dread the time when you have to get under the bar and start the next set.
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04-20-2006, 12:55 AM #3
GVT is up there. Due to its high volume and repetitive use pattern, GVT is really good at illustrating adrenal fatigue/cortisol response and CNS stress in "cartoon form." By set 7, the rate coding is so high that you can actually sense the split in the mind-muscle connection, when the brain is sending pulses of "lift more!" rather than a continuous message. You'll be shaking. Also, I've probably never felt more "good pain" (i.e. strain) with muscle during the workout than with GVT. Finally, you'll be out of it for the next 2-3 hours. Your brain is toast. And, then, you have to deal with the ungodly DOMS.
DC is up there too. It's the intensity of the 20-rep squat applied to the whole body, rewarded with amateur cortitionist night (i.e. extreme stretches.) With that being said, a person with a background in HIT-style training (and some experience with 20-rep squats) would have a pretty good idea of the conditioning, intensity, and mental pacing necessary to succeed with this. One of my friends just loves this training partly because its in-the-moment brutality kinda fits his ideal of what training should feel like.
But my pick for hardest would be the lactic acid training schemes. And the reason is two-fold. When you run out of air, anaerobic exercise is almost impossible to complete. In fact, almost all weightlifting programs are designed around the assumption that you'll have enough oxygen. Except these schemes. And, second, these are the ones most likely to make you throw up. So, essentially what happens is that, unlike say DC or GVT, you'll feel strong enough to keep going, and you'll feel mentally there to keep you in the moment . . . but your body will be telling you to stop in every possible way. The burn. The lack of air. The sense of energy draining away from your body. The nausea.I need direction to perfection
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04-20-2006, 01:41 AM #4
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04-20-2006, 01:59 AM #5
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04-20-2006, 09:12 AM #6
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04-20-2006, 09:18 AM #7
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04-20-2006, 09:29 AM #8
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04-20-2006, 09:36 AM #9Originally Posted by fitnessman
no kidding... with my manipulation of OVT, i used to feel like throwing up a number of times on my leg days..... jesus... it brings back bad memories...
Originally Posted by ckrumm24
but, from what i've read, i think DC or Iron Mans HIT program will definitely be the most difficult....
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04-20-2006, 11:12 AM #10
For "hardgainers"
I would say lifting fork to mouth 8 meals a day. Definately high volume and taxes the mind quite a bit. Very hard to complete. Man by the 12 week some just can't go on. Pound for pound the hardest workout ever. Sometimes you feel like puking after that 7th meal. Oh and the mornings when you are sitting on the can emptying out that oatmeal. That is a brutal session.Cha Cha Cha
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04-20-2006, 01:17 PM #11
If were are talking bodybuilding routines I would say Super Squats which included 20 rep breathing squats. However, the toughtest routine I ever did was a conditioning routine that consisted of dips, pull-ups, squats, deadlifts, DB Swings, sandbag lifts and sprinting. Not all in the same day but those workouts were brutal.
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04-21-2006, 06:34 AM #12
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04-21-2006, 06:39 AM #13
Mon, Wed, Fri
Chest:
Bench press - 5 sets, 6-10 reps
Flat bench flies - 5 sets, 6-10 reps
Incline bench press - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Cable crossovers - 6 sets, 10-12 reps
Dips - 5 sets, to failure
Dumbbell pullovers - 5 sets, 10-12 reps
Back:
Front wide-grip chin-ups - 6 sets, to failure
T-bar rows - 5 sets, 6-10 reps
Seated pulley rows - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
One-arm dumbbell rows - 5 sets, 6-10 reps
Straight-leg deadlifts - 6 sets, 15 reps
Legs:
Squats - 6 sets, 8-12 reps
Leg presses - 6 sets, 8-12 reps
Leg extensions - 6 sets, 12-15 reps
Leg curls - 6 sets, 10-12 reps
Barbell lunges - 5 sets, 15 reps
Calves:
Standing calf raises -10 sets, 10 reps
Seated calf raises - 8 sets, 15 reps
One-legged calf raises (holding dumbbells) - 6 sets,12 reps
Forearms:
Wrist curls (forearms on knees) - 4 sets, 10 reps
Reverse barbell curls - 4 sets, 8 reps
Wright roller machine - to failure
Abs:
Nonstop instinct training for 30 minutes
Tues, Thurs, Sat
Biceps:
Barbell curls - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Seated dumbbell curls - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Dumbbell concentration curls - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Triceps:
Close-grip bench presses (for the all three heads) - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Pushdowns (exterior head) - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Barbell French presses (interior head) - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
One-arm dumbbell triceps extensions (exterior head) - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Shoulders:
Seated barbell presses - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Lateral raises (standing) - 6 sets, 6-10 reps
Rear-delt lateral raises - 5 sets, 6-10 reps
Cable lateral raises - 5 sets, 10-12 reps
Calves and Forearms:
Same as Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Abs:
Same as Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
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04-21-2006, 07:12 AM #14
- Join Date: Mar 2006
- Location: Shawnee Mission, Kansas, United States
- Posts: 18,208
- Rep Power: 76955
Originally Posted by spirit3530
When I put raw oats into my shake, it gets so thick that I sometimes would probably need to use a spoon. heh
I don't think I can do it 8 times a day. LOL might as well attach a bag to my mouth like a horse at that rate!Last edited by ossizen; 04-21-2006 at 07:41 AM.
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04-21-2006, 07:58 AM #15
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04-21-2006, 11:32 AM #16
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04-21-2006, 12:19 PM #17
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04-21-2006, 12:35 PM #18Originally Posted by Guinness5.0
Here is a brief description, (THIS IS ALL MY WRITINGS)
If you try this training you will need a few break in sessions, 1, to get the weights right, and 2, because it’s so damn hard. The last 6 months on John Casler’s Direct Compensation Training it’s been mind blowing, it’s the hardest training I have ever done, it’s the most result producing in strength and size, and it makes you feel so good mentally and physically, I have beaten all my personal 20RM,10RM, 5RM and 1RM. And am doing with the same weight for 30 reps, what I was doing on the third set, for 10 reps only.
You do not really have to take the first set to failure, at first, but after a few weeks you can, but I took all other sets to full failure.
1/2 rep speed,
Hypertrophy,
Set 1, 30 reps, rest 5 minutes, set 2, add 25% 15 reps, rest 5 minutes, set 3 add 15% 10 reps, set 4, drop down weight to your first or second sets weights, and do a full stop at the top and bottom to take advantage of Good recognition of the role of stretch in sarcolemma (cell membrane of a muscle fiber or muscle cell. The membrane is designed to receive and conduct stimuli.) Disruption.
Strength,
Set 1, 20 reps, rest 5 minutes, set 2, add 25% 15 reps, rest 5 minutes, set 3 add 15% 10 reps, set 4, which is 5 reps, drop down weight to your second sets weights, and do a full stop at the top and bottom to take advantage of Good recognition of the role of stretch in sarcolemma (cell membrane of a muscle fiber or muscle cell. The membrane is designed to receive and conduct stimuli.) Disruption.
Wayne
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04-21-2006, 01:06 PM #19
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04-21-2006, 01:48 PM #20
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04-21-2006, 02:38 PM #21Originally Posted by Irishfurey
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