If this is true then why do I need to get so much protein, etc. and wait several days before lifting with the same muscles again?
If you’re lifting to gain mass, then you need to rest and eat a lot of protein, as protein is the building block of muscles.
If you’re lifting to gain strength and NOT mass, then you can lift weights almost every day for the same body part. This doesn’t require as much protein because the muscle is not being broken down (well, it is, very minimally, however)
Now, let me elaborate before I get flamed.
The two types of workouts are entirely different. They’re as different as a bodybuilder’s workout and a powerlifter’s workout.
Here’s a sample of each kind, for comparison purposes:
Mass gaining workout for chest:
Bench, 6 sets, pyramiding up, minimal rest between sets. 135x10 (warmup), 185x8, 205x8, 225x6, 245x4, 175 to failure (last set)
Dumbell flies: 40’s x 10, 60’s to failure
Cable Crossovers: a bunch of sets with various weight, some to failure maybe
Now, this workout will tire out the chest to the extent that you will probably be sore the next few days, and shouldn’t work out chest for like a week or so.
Strength gaining workout for chest:
Bench, 2 sets, 5 minutes rest between sets, 200 x 5, 180 x 5.
That’s it. From here, the next day you can work out the same thing again, increasing the starting weight by 5 pounds. Each day you can increase the starting weight by 5 pounds (the second weight is always 90% of the first one). Always start a cycle (the first day) with a low weight and build it up by adding 5 pounds per day over about 2 weeks. When you can’t complete 5 reps on the first set, take a few days off and then start over.
This workout doesn’t require as much protein, as it is NOT a mass gaining routine. However, you will gain much more strength much quicker than you will with a mass gaining program.
I thought the idea was to let the muscle cells repair themselves and allow time for them to grow.
Right, provided they’ve been torn down by a mass building workout.
If I am only training my nervous system to contract the muscle harder, can gains in strength be made just as well without getting protein and the proper diet?
You always need a proper diet and protein, but if you’re not aiming for mass you don’t need as much protein or total calories. Working out does not make you big, caloric surplus makes you big.
Iron