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Question to the BodyBuilders
My question. how do you achieve a fuller, more evened out chest? I do workout consistently and have been for the past 2 years, I don't go crazy just moderate workouts but I do tend to focus more on my chest. Now the difficult part to explain..I want to get that full proportioned chest look with the full line in the middle where the pecs are almost square shaped (hope that makes sense) whereas mine, although I do have a line my pecs look more of an upside down triangle, which I must admit does look good but at times looks perky especially when I wear some types of shirts. It just seems all my pec muscles are stuck in the upper region so trying to see what I'm missing. For my chest I usually do dumbell fly's, incline cable crossovers, bench press..I have a gym at my complex so were limited to those..do I need to include a decline workout? I guess I should just pay for a membership and get tips from the trainers but here's me being lazy! |
Not that I'm a body builder, but are you doing high weight and low reps or low weight and high reps?
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i thought exercises such as the decline bench would do it but now i read the regular bench press already targets the lower chest..hmm so now i'm totally lost! |
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Alternating from high weight to low wieght in your daily sets leans. Low weight to high weight builds.
Must take in protein (dairy whey is ideal) within 30 mins AFTER any workout. Be mindful, the avg. body can only process 30 g protein at a time, ALL extra hits the waste stream. Lowfat chocolate milk is the best off the shelf recovery beverage. A protein ADDED lowfat flavored milk is the best overall beverage. (good reference page, Shamrock Farms – Dairy Nutrition ) |
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Lobster makes some good points. I'm not a bodybuilder, I'm more into the powerlifting routines. But regardless of whether you're bodybuilding or powerlifting you need to start with a whole body baseline and figure out your bodyfat percentage. Most gym trainers will give a complimentary fitness evaluation, which includes bodyfat. Your diet will have as much (if not more) impact on your "lines" as your lifts. Specifically, high quality protein, calcium, and total caloric intake. You also need to set realistic goals. Unless you're an NFL wide receiver or an anorexic-bulemic, you're not going to get down to 6% body fat. Nor would you want to. If you can get to around 10-12%, you're in the right territory for the cuts and definition you're seeking. I can go on for quite a while about other stuff, like getting your bench to skyrocket in a hurry, but I'll shut up for now since that was not your question.:thumbup: |
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