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Body by Science: A Research Based Program to Get the Results You Want in 12 Minutes a Week-John R. Little,Doug McGuff

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Building muscle has never been faster or easier than with this revolutionary once-a-week training program In Body By Science, bodybuilding powerhouse John Little teams up with fitness medicine expert Dr. Doug McGuff to present a scientifically proven formula for maximizing muscle development in just 12 minutes a week. Backed by rigorous research, the authors prescribe a weekly high-intensity program for increasing strength, revving metabolism, and building muscle for a total fitness experience.

Book Body by Science: A Research Based Program to Get the Results You Want in 12 Minutes a Week Review :



I don't usually review these sorts of publications, but in this case more needs said.This program will work for some people, but it won't work for everyone.You need to know why and what to do about it.There is a relationship between results and frequency of training. Studies of frequency, volume and intensity show (e.g. Wernbom et al) that novice lifters in general get best results training about 4 days a week, more experienced lifters get better results with 2 to 3 days.That's the tip of the iceberg. One intense session a week works for some part of the genetic pool, but others require more frequent stimulation (up to 5-6 times a week) for hypertrophy to occur. If you search the subject of "exercise non-responders" you will find that a fat percentage of the general population (pun not intended, but accepted) simply does not get enough stimulation to have real results from one, two, or even in some cases three sessions a week.The more times a person exercises per week, the more likely they are to get results.When study populations exercised 4-5x a week, there were NO non-responders.This is a fancy way of saying one short hard hit at the gym, per week, will do it for some folks, but won't do a darn thing for others.You might have recovery and growth potential like Wolverine, and a hormone profile like the Hulk (natural or injected), and once a week is all it takes for you to grow like a weed. Lucky you! - and of course, you'd post a 5 star review....but...If you're Joe or Jane Average - you need more growth stimulus than a few minutes of total pain once a week, and the more stressed your lifestyle, the older you get, the worse you sleep, the harder it is to recover and grow from an all-out abuse fest.If that's you, then you need to spread your training out into small bite size chunks at a reduced intensity, and find out how many hits it takes per week to get you growing. A few minutes once a week is wishful thinking if you lost the genetic lottery...So, some folks will grow on this program, others will have to put in more sessions a week to move the dial.Lastly - even for those who do grow on this program - strength of muscle will tend to increase faster than tendons and cartilage, which need the higher volume of training. That is one reason several posters mention injury.So, to sum it up, it's a long winded presentation of an idea that sounds too good to be true.Recommended reading for the scientifically inclined (I have no financial ties to any of these):Science and Development of Muscle Hypertrophy, SchoenfeldThe Poliquin Principles, Charles PoliquinScience and Practice of Strenght Training, Vladimir M. Zatsiorsky
Let me say up front that I am 70 years old, and over the last fifty years, I have tried just about every "new" exercise routine to slide down the pop-fitness chute. I have endured many injuries along the way, including going under the knife and taking a two year hiatus due to a severe right shoulder injury.Why, you might ask, am I still here at an age where very few people are able to do a high intensity whole body workout? The answer to this is that several years ago, I discovered Ken Hutchin's work with Super Slow exercise protocols. I studied these, took them to heart, and because I did, I'm still here.I see Body by Science as an interesting extension of Ken's work. Here is my experience with telling my exercise story of slow, smooth reps, smooth turnarounds, and working to muscle failure. I will list these observations in no particular order because some will be more important than others depending on the audience.1. Most gym rats who buy the argument that more is better will simply not accept the 20 minute workout once a week routine, and will find all kinds of arguments against it. (I still get questions from thirty-somethings about how I maintain my strength and physique at such an advanced age. When I tell them about what I do, they just don't believe it is possible. This, I think, is due to bilge put out by the fitness/supplement industry, and a general lack of knowledge in the average gym dweller.)2. These 20 minute workout sessions are extremely intense, and mind numbingly boring. Most gym goers will not stay with this long enough to realize the striking gains they will experience if they do.3. Most do not/will not keep records, and have no idea where they stand, or how to analyze the results if they do. Accurate record keeping is essential with this protocol.4. To me, the big plus of slow reps is the ability to use lighter weights with slower movements, all but eliminating the injuries that plague those always wanting to go higher in the bench press, dead lift, etc.. This "go higher" foolishness is how I wrecked my right shoulder. Nonetheless, most people working out in gyms buy the "more is better" mantra.5. Students starting out on this protocol will still need a trainer. This will be true for some time well into the protocol - some will need a trainer indefinitely. "Inroading" as described in this book is extremely intense, really hard to do, and the stronger you get the harder it is.6. Finally, most people who pay big bucks to join a trendy gym will not be satisfied using it once a week for twenty or even fewer minutes. They will be tempted by all the fancy equipment and the often absurd (box jumping for example) urban legends infecting the modern fitness movement.The book touches only briefly on these issues. Admittedly, they are mostly psychological in nature, but they still would be the ones most likely to stop the book's slow/inroading protocols in their tracks. These mental road blocks should, I think, be examined more in depth, as the actual exercise protocols are really quite simple compared to tackling the ingrained mind sets that feed into fitness in all its iterations.One last thing, the book does a great job of stressing that recovery, not more and more exercise, is what builds strength. But there is another kind of recovery the authors totally miss, here it is: Muscle strength increases rapidly with the inroading technique, but muscle strength increase is always ahead of supporting tissues like tendons, fascia, ligaments, and joints. This, and yanky-jerky movements explains why most injuries associated with weight bearing exercises are not to the muscle but to supporting tissues (tendonitis is ubiquitous, sore joints are a close second).Yanky/jerky movements are replaced by the protocol's slowing down of reps and turnarounds, but the strength gap is still there, maybe even more pronounced due to the rapid muscle strength gains resulting from the inroading process. What to do?I have found from my personal experience, that I have eliminated tendonitis completely, and lessened joint aches to the point they're hardly noticeable, simply by plateauing every third month. This does not mean taking time off, but means just holding steady in my training so my muscle's supporting tissues can catch up.I wish the book or a newer addition of it would address this issue - I'd like to know more about it myself. Couch potatoes and the elderly especially, could easily see a doubling of muscle strength in their first three to four months after starting this protocol - you can bet that by comparison, their supporting tissues are weak. I am not a medical professional, but this plateauing works in my case, and it makes logical sense for certain classes of individuals using the protocols.All in all, I found this book interesting in that I discovered many things I did not know. It was well worth the price.P.S. Another request for the next edition...Where does the protocol stop? Where and how do you level off and go into a maintenance mode? Nobody can make strength gains indefinitely.

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