just hrithik rosan
just hritik rosan

Top 10 Worst Muscle Building Workout Mistakes

Gaining muscle can be tough. Even for lifters that gain muscle fairly easily, everyone has plateaus, time-frames where you simply can’t seem to move the scale and add on more muscle.
We all fall in and out of habits occasionally, so if you can’t seem to move the scale and gain some muscle, there’s a chance you haven’t fine-tuned your routine, or have slipped out of the usual one.
These simple changes can ruin entire workouts, halting progress and draining your motivation. To get that motivation back, scan the list below of the worst muscle building mistakes, to see if you can make an improvement in your routine.
1.) You Don’t Eat Enough – Yes, extra calories can mean extra belly fat, but if you’re lifting consistently and cor­rectly, most of what you’re taking in should be converted to muscle. The truth is your muscles will never grow without a surplus of calories. For a lean guy looking to put on muscle mass, 2,000 calories a day won’t cut it.
In fact, this kind of restricted diet is ac­tually the ideal recipe for losing muscle tis­sue and sparing fat, as it causes the body to shift into starvation mode and shed calo­rie-consuming muscle. It also makes you store fat for emergency energy. And the less protein you eat, the less of a chance you give your muscles to recover after a workout.
2.) You Amp Up your Cardio – There are three ways that cardio typically cancels out muscle gains: doing it too often, doing it for too long, or doing it on an empty stomach. In gen­eral, daily cardio sessions simply burn too many cumulative calories to allow you the surplus you need for muscle mass, and the same can be said for ses­sions that last 45 minutes or more. Work out in the morning before breakfast and you only compound the problem.
When you wake up, your body is already in a catabolic (muscle-burning) state, since a night’s sleep—time spent without eat­ing—empties your tank. Working out immediately just reinforces this condi­tion and costs you intensity—whether on the treadmill or with the weights. The end result: You burn muscle as fuel in place of calories you should have consumed at breakfast.
3.) You Overtrain your Muscles – If the biggest muscle-head in the gym has taught us anything, it’s that doing lots and lots of sets and reps to the point of total collapse is the best way to build muscle. Never mind that he’s a genetic freak and/or proba­bly on steroids. More than 20 total sets per muscle group, or more than 15 reps per set, may leave your muscles swollen (hence the ego-enhancing “pump”), but it will be from inflammation, not actual muscle growth. Any weight that allows that much work is too light to cause sub­stantial growth, and you’ll reap no lasting gains.
4.) You Favor Body-part Workouts – Breaking your training down into chest days, back days, and arm days over­works some muscles and neglects others. It’s an old-school way to train—and it’s incredibly outdated. Most guys still do it, and many make gains for a while, but their progress eventually screeches to a halt, usu­ally due to injuries. Body-part routines also prevent your biggest muscles from ever learning to work together in the kinds of coordinated effort you need to lift really heavy weights—another major avenue for fast growth.
5.) You Skip out on Stretching – Boring? Definitely, but stretching has been shown to speed up re­covery and increase a muscle’s range of motion, making more room for muscle fibers to grow. Simply lifting weights without making time for flexibility work will increase your risk for injury and se­verely limit your ability to move athleti­cally. So no matter how big you get, you’ll probably be picked last for teams.
6.) You Only Eat Sporadically – It’s true: Eating infrequently is nearly as bad as not eating at all. When you go more than three hours with­out food, your metabolism drops significantly. When that happens, every time you do get a meal, there’s a good chance that a large percentage of it will be stored as fat. Why? Blame your body. Without food, it slips back into starvation mode and starts to think it needs to hold on to every calorie it can get in order to survive.
7.) You Never Switch up your Workout – Doing the exact same workout week after week will, at best, prevent new gains, and, at worst, lead to burnout. Fail­ing to impose any new challenges on your muscles—such as by increasing the weight you use or the number of reps you per­form—simply helps keep them the same size, whereas pushing yourself harder than you’re accustomed to will actually spur new muscle and strength.
8.) You Only Train what you can See – Focusing your workouts on tro­phy muscles such as the pecs and biceps may be more fun, but it won’t do much for your overall development. Since 70% of your body’s total musculature is lo­cated in your legs and back, your main potential for muscle gains will remain untapped. Furthermore, this kind of train­ing will leave you with muscle imbal­ances that lead to injury—and that can keep you out of the gym permanently.
9.) You Don’t Drink Shakes – Chugging a protein-and-carb mixture after your workout starts the recovery process immediately, replenishing lost glycogen (your mus­cles’ energy stores) and providing the nutrients your body requires to repair muscle and grow more of it. Skipping the shake and casu­ally waiting an hour or more for your next meal is like ig­noring a cry for help.
10.) You Don’t Get Enough Rest – Sleep is when muscle repair happens, so getting six or fewer hours of shut-eye a night limits your body’s natural production of crucial muscle-building chem­icals, such as growth hormone. Too much activity outside of your workouts, such as playing sports, all-night parties, and extra stress—all of which are permissible now and then, but dangerous in excess—also cut into muscle gains.
And if you’ve been working out seven days a week, we’ve got another pleasant surprise for you: You’ll actually lose muscle. Such a high frequency won’t allow for regeneration, and your efforts will be wasted. And no, it doesn’t matter if you’re training different muscle groups each day—you still have the same central nervous system, and it still gets tired of having to deal with major physical exertion every day.