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- 1 Sie 2021
Congrats, welcome to manhoodBenched 225 today lads, had to brag to somebody about it.
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Congrats, welcome to manhoodBenched 225 today lads, had to brag to somebody about it.
This is actually good music, what are you crying about here?Lady Gaga
Shhhh, don't tell them the secret gym gems for 2x any PR.get on my level btw i'd smoke you at cardio or any lift
Benched 225 today lads, had to brag to somebody about it.
It'll come back quick. Once you gain muscle it's a lot faster to regain it than it was to earn it the first time.There is nothing worse than getting so ill that you have to take two months hiatus from the gym. It really hurts going back and seeing all my progress lost. But at least I have old PRs to strive for and compare my progress to.
You'll get there, I'm still shocked at how far I've come and it was something that seemed unobtainable a few months ago. Now I'm wondering if I can make it up to 250.Damn bro, that's sick. I'm right behind ya, 225 is my eventual goal so gratz on hitting that milestone. You could join the NFL Combine now
Not trying to be a soyence guy but I've been thinking for years that the neurological part is huge when it comes to strength.It'll come back quick. Once you gain muscle it's a lot faster to regain it than it was to earn it the first time.
It is absolutely huge but the reason muscle is easier to regain than initially gain is because the satellite cells that have turned their nuclei to grow muscle stick around for a long time even when your muscles atrophy. It takes a lot of stimulus to get satellite cells to initially turn into muscle but once they've done that you have quite a long time before they disappear. They're primed and eager to grow again once they experience stimulus.Not trying to be a soyence guy but I've been thinking for years that the neurological part is huge when it comes to strength.
Actually that's a misconception. Satellite cells do not donate their nuclei to fat cells. The number of fat cells a human has ispretty much set stable from adolescence through adulthood. The cells just shrink and expand as necessary.Once the satellite cell was created they grow in tandem with the cells you would have naturally, your body only starts recruiting satellite cells when it needs it which is why you get more of them as you lift, if you stop lifting they become smaller and smaller, but they still exist, and once you start lifting again you grow much faster because the amounts of cells growing is higher than when you started.
Something similar happens with fat, if you lose weight your fat cells become smaller and smaller, but they still exist, and if you overeat your body won't have to waste energy creating new fat cells, which means you will gain weight faster if you used to be fat, also even if those fat cells very small and imperceptible to the eye they still exist, and they send biological signals to your body that say "you should eat more", and this happens even after a few years of having lost the weight, the signal is strongest immediately after you lost the weight and diminishes over time.
My point is that something similar happens with fat cells, they make it easier to get fat again.
Oh I see, I'm gonna delete my post since I was wrong then, I don't want to spread misinformation (unless it's funnyActually that's a misconception. Satellite cells do not donate their nuclei to fat cells. The number of fat cells a human has ispretty much set stable from adolescence through adulthood. The cells just shrink and expand as necessary.
The way I've heard it explained (probably incorrectly) is that when you build muscle - the muscle cells are there permanently, they can get bigger or smaller depending on whether your body thinks you need them, but they don't have to be rebuilt from scratch when you lose your gains and then start lifting again, so they come back a lot faster.Not trying to be a soyence guy but I've been thinking for years that the neurological part is huge when it comes to strength.
Personal Forearm Note: As part of my basketball warm up I'll enter a kneeling push up position and use my forearms/wrists to push myself up off the ground dynamically/plyometrically. It's the exact motion of shooting the basketball, with follow through, except I'm pushing my body instead of the ball. I'll do this after typical wrist clock stretches.Forearms.