The idea that bodyweight exercises can build muscle might seem foreign to some people. After all, most people's concept of bodyweight exercises are the stuff you see on cheesy workout DVDs.
The truth is, bodyweight exercises can be extremely effective for building muscle, when done correctly. Muscles respond to force. When you lift weights, your body generates force to fight against resistance and create tension. That's how the process of hypertrophy (muscle growth) begins.
But what if you don't have access to weights? Can you still create enough resistance and tension to build muscle? Absolutely. Here are some key bodyweight exercises you can do anywhere, anytime to help you build muscle. Then we'll dig into the science.
Push-ups are the bodyweight king when it comes to building a bigger chest and arms. Here are a few challenging variations:
Full stop push-ups eliminate any potential momentum or cheating during the exercise, putting sole emphasis on your chest to push yourself up from the floor.
These minimize momentum and add a pause.
You're going to be feeling the time under tension while you lower yourself and then apply as much force during the concentric phase. Maintain proper form.
This is an amazing variation for the triceps. It's almost like the Russian dip exercise, but on the floor.
Repeat for 10 reps and tell me how your triceps feel.
I'm borrowing this from Joe DeFranco because it's a good one.
You won't need to do these for more than 10 reps if you're doing them right.
Another way to do this exercise would be to hold each position on its own for 30-40 seconds and rest for about 20-30 seconds before going again.
No matter which way you do it, the idea is to contract your upper back muscles and squeeze your shoulder blades together as hard as you can to create an isometric contraction.
This is the best bang for your buck when it comes to bodyweight exercises for the shoulders and upper back. It can also be a great warm-up for the shoulders while stretching the pecs. It also fires up the small upper back muscles we tend to neglect during heavy rowing exercises.
There's no way you can cheat this move or use momentum to your advantage, something that you often see when people do weighted back exercises like rows and pulldowns.
You might think there's no way to really train lower body without equipment. These moves might change your mind.
Walking lunges are tough on their own, but these two modifications will make them even more effective. With the partial walking lunge, remember that muscles grow because of tension and resistance, so by adding a half rep to each stride you keep more uninterrupted tension on your quads, glutes, and hams, which means they'll grow bigger as a result.
The low-ceiling lunges are similar to partial lunges in that they cause constant tension in all of the supportive leg muscles.
Do 12-15 of those while focusing on controlling the movement and your legs will blow up.
There are two types of isometric training – yielding and overcoming. Yielding is when you pause during an exercise and hold the weight (or your own bodyweight), producing an isometric contraction in your muscles.
Overcoming isometrics are when you're trying to move an immoveable object. This stimulates a maximal amount of muscle fibers and is particularly beneficial for powerlifters and other strength athletes looking to make gains in the main lifts. For the purposes of building muscle with bodyweight exercises, we're focusing on yielding isometric exercises.
All of your favorite exercises have a concentric and eccentric phase to them. Think of a bench press. Do you ever notice it's a lot easier to bring the bar down to your chest than it is to push it back up? That's because we're about 20% stronger during the eccentric phase of most exercises.
That means we're able to control the eccentric portion of exercises more efficiently and create more time under tension. This is extremely beneficial for bodyweight lifts because we're forcing our muscles to work harder for a longer period of time, which translates to muscle hypertrophy.
Unilateral exercises are one-sided movements like lunges and step-ups.
The major benefit of incorporating these exercises from a muscle-building standpoint is they require more muscle recruitment to perform than most bilateral (two-sided) exercises. For example, when you perform a lunge, your core and stabilizer muscles are working hard to balance your body throughout the movement.
You know how brutal these can be if you tried them with the walking lunges above.
If you want to build muscle with bodyweight movements it's all about creating tension. Doing one and a half reps and partial reps will do just that.
Remember, rather than doing one rep of an exercise, you'd do half the movement followed by a full rep. For example, dropping to the bottom of a squat, coming up to a half squat stance, dropping back down and then coming up to full extension. That's a full rep.
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