Article:
Massive Gains in Size and Strength with Rest Pause Training
Start Date: Saturday, November 11, 2006
End Date: Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Massive Gains in Size and Strength with Rest Pause Training
Over the last ten years I have come across a wide variety of training programs that work tremendously well for increasing size and strength. For example, Randall Strossen's "Super Squats" program is very effective if you can handle the nausea and brutality of the program. Legendary bodybuilder Reg Park loved the 5x5 program that thousands of trainees have used the program to pack on size and strength. Top strength coach Charles Poliquin brought the extremely effective "German Volume Training" program to the mainstream and many trainees have used the program effectively to increase size and strength. Regardless, to be the best trainee that you can be and to continue on the path to massive gains in size and strength, you have to think outside the box and sometimes unlearn what you have learned. For example, does one rep always have to come immediately after another? Most trainees would say of course. However, this form of training does not allow you to use maximum loads to stimulate the largest increases in size and strength. What if there was a training system that allowed you to use maximal loads on every rep of every set? Imagine the new increases in size and strength that you would achieve. Fortunately, there is and it is called Rest Pause training.
Rest-pause training is not for the faint of heart and takes a lot of mental
toughness and hard work. Of course, nothing worth having in life comes easy, and
rest pause training is no exception. With rest pause training you take very
short 10-15 second breaks in between each rep of a given exercise. Yes, you read
that right, breaks in between each rep, not each set. Lets use the bench press
to illustrate how a rest pause set would look. Instead of cranking out five reps
straight on the bench press, you will rack the bar after each rep to give your
muscles 10-15 seconds to recover before doing the next rep. Using this rep
scheme will allow you to handle much heavier loads than you normally use during
regular rep schemes. Using the heavier weights alone will shock your body into
getting stronger and in turn adding on some muscle. After all, which one do you
think is going to generate more muscle growth, a set of five reps straight in
the bench press with 250lbs or five rest pause reps with 300lbs on the bench
press? There is no doubt that the heavier load will result in more muscle
growth. Now do not make the mistake of thinking that this is some kind of
powerlifting program. Sure, powerlifters often train with lots of singles with
as much weight as they can handle. However, they take three to five minute
breaks in between each set to ensure that they can handle the most weight per
set and to avoid hypertrophy. With rest pause training you use heavy training
loads with super short breaks. The combination hits the muscles hard and results
in increases in size and strength. Also, if you are a pump addict, don't worry,
you will get major pumps with rest pause training and not the kind where you
inflate your muscles like a balloon. No my friend, I am talking about super
dense pumps in which your muscles will feel as hard as a rock.
How effective is rest pause training? Here is what Mike Mentzer said about rest
pause training, "Doing four reps, with the 10-second rest-pause, I increased
every single exercise at least 20lbs per workout until I finally had improved
66% on each one. My size of course increased also.” Pretty impressive results
from such an experienced trainee. However, it does not stop there, my friend and
strength coach Matt Wiggins, author of "Singles and Doubles: How The Ordinary
Become Extraordinary" a book which is based on the concept of rest pause
training had this to say about training with heavy weights and short breaks,
"Utilizing rest-pause style singles training is virtually perfect for getting
stronger and gaining size. Because you are only performing one rep per set, you
are able to use maximal loads. In addition, because you are performing the same
movement for multiple sets in fairly rapid succession, you are training your
central nervous system to become proficient in that movement. This leads to
amazing gains in strength. Rest-pause style singles also allow you to use a
fairly high overall volume - much higher than you would normally use when
training with near maximal loads. By using a higher volume, the muscles are
under a long TUL (Time Under Load), and when combined with a caloric surplus
diet, this leads to increased muscle growth." Matt has had hundred of
testimonials from people that have used his brand of rest pause training that
have not only gotten stronger and bigger, but have also increased muscular
endurance. What is great about rest pause training is that every rep is with a
maximum load. With traditional rep schemes, the first several reps are only done
to get to the last few reps, which produce the most growth. With rest pause
training, we eliminate the foreplay and get right to the growth producing reps
over and over again. This explains why Brooks Kubick, author of “Dinosaur
Training” loves training with heavy singles. Brooks stated that, “…heavy singles
made me bigger and stronger than any other combination of sets and reps I ever
tried.” There you go, three people with varied backgrounds and goals that
experienced the full power of rest pause training.
There is no doubt that rest pause training is effective for blasting through
plateaus and adding size and strength. However, because it is so intense it is
not an easy training program for most trainees to break into and must be
traveled with caution. After all, going from sets of 10-15 reps per set to 5-10
brutal rest pause reps will be a tremendous shock to your body and mind. Of
course, we want to shock the body, but not at the expense of over training.
Fortunately for you, I have found a much more "enjoyable" method to adapt
gradually to the brutal rest pause training world. Here is how it is done. Take
your three-rep max on a given exercise. For example, lets say that your three
rep max on barbell squats is 315lbs. Do five rest pause reps with 315bs on
barbell squats with one minute breaks in between each rep. Do one rep with
315lbs., rack the weight and wait a minute before doing the next rep and so
forth. It goes without saying that you should do exercises such as barbell
squats and bench presses in a squat rack if you are training alone. Once you can
do five singles with 315lbs. with one minute breaks, add another rest pause rep
to the workout for a total of six rest pause reps. Work your way up to a total
of ten rest pause reps. At that point decrease the rest periods to forty-five
seconds per set. Once you can complete ten singles at forty five second
intervals, go to thirty seconds. Keep dropping the rest periods until you can do
all ten reps with ten second breaks. Once you can do that, increase the training
weight by 10lbs. and start back at five rest pause reps and one minute breaks.
Work your way up the ladder again before increasing the weight by another ten
lbs. Eventually you will get to a point in which 10lb. increases are not
possible. No problem, just increase the training load by five pounds or stay at
ten rest pause reps with a given weight for two to three workouts to allow your
mind and body to adapt.
It is not only vital for your body and your psyche that you use the same weight
for each rest pause set. Some trainers recommend starting off with your one rep
max and when you cannot complete a rep with that weight, drop down 10lbs. to a
lighter weight and proceed. I do not recommend this form of rest pause training
for two reasons. First, it will lead to burnout fast for most trainees. Second,
it is not good for you psychologically to start heavy and have to drop weight on
each set to continue. You leave the gym feeling beat up and defeated. Doing
several rest pause reps with a given weight will build confidence and allow you
to get stronger faster. Telling yourself that you cannot handle heavy weights
and having to drop down with each set is not building a pattern of success. You
want to complete each rest pause workout exhilarated, not burned out and
exhausted. You read that right. You should be ready to conquer the world like a
king after each rest pause workout, rather than feeling like Homer Simpson after
he gets home from a hard day’s work. Breaking into rest pause training in the
manner that I have outlined will allow you to make steady increases in strength
and size by training for success and avoiding over training. When executed
properly, rest pause training stimulates the central nervous system and gives
you a mental boost. Many trainees feel invincible after a rest pause workout and
feel perked up for hours afterwards.
The Rest Pause Training Program
Many trainees like to do one major muscle group per day. For example, chest on
Monday, back on Tuesday and so forth. While many trainees have used such
programs effectively, I think that it is much more efficient to work
antagonistic muscles in the same workout. The chest and the lats are examples of
two antagonistic muscle groups. Surprisingly, you will be stronger on both as a
result of working both muscle groups in the same workout. Here is an eight-week
Rest Pause Program that you can use to jump into action:
Weeks 1-4
Monday/Friday (Upper body)
1. Bottom position medium-grip barbell bench presses. Do these inside of a power rack. Set the pins as low as possible so that the bar is just above your chest.
2. Bent-over barbell rows
Wednesday/Sunday (Lower Body)
1. Bottom position squats. Do these in a power rack. Put the pins down low and begin the squat from the parallel position of the squat.
2. Turkish Get-up 3x5 left, right (the regular set and rep style).
Weeks 5-8
Monday/Friday (Upper body)
1. Barbell Clean and Military press
2. Weighted Chin-ups
Wednesday/Sunday (Lower Body)
1. Deadlifts
2. One-Legged Squats. Hold a kettlebell, a dumbbell, or barbell plate in front of you and squat down on one leg. Switch legs after each rep.
3. Hanging Leg raises 3x5 (the regular set and rep style).
Stick with the rest pause training program for a minimum of five weeks. While
you are doing rest pause training, don't think about other training programs or
what you are going to do after you have completed a five-week rest
pause-training program. One of the biggest mistakes that I see many trainees
make is changing their training regimens every week. They get excited about one
program and after a week, get excited about another program and so forth. They
never achieve consistency and ultimately get discouraged with their meager
results. Don't fall into this category. Stay focused and stick with rest pause
training for a month. After the first week I have a feeling that you will be
hooked as the CNS boost is enough to get most people excited about their rest
pause workouts. Once you strength jumps within two weeks and the increases in
dense muscle arrive, you will be happy that you took the rest pause challenge
and thought outside the box.
For more info on Matt Wiggins’ book, go to
WorkingClassFitness.com
For more info on Brooks Kubick’s “Dinosaur Training” go to
BrooksKubick.com