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Originally Posted by baffled111
Hi all,
I've just finished reading the "New Rules of Lifting" and for the most part I liked it and found it very intuitive--for one thing, it is completely consistent with the regimen you guys helped me to set up for myself.
!
The reason that this is very consistent, at least pertaining to the part of the advice that I gave you previously is because Alwyn Cosgrove (along with Mike Boyle, Chad Waterbury, Brooks Kubik, and some others) is someone I have been heavily influenced by.
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I'm puzzled about the supersets though, and I'd like to be either convinced that I need to do them, or given alternate ways of mixing up my workout.
You don't NEED to do them. You should try to understand why they were included in the program and then make a decision from there whether or not they are a fit for you based on the goals you are looking to achieve and, of course, the equipment and facilities you have available to you. You didn't specify which particular program you were referencing, but for Alwyn uses them heavily to create what he likes to call "Afterburn" or Metabolic Disturbance. These are terms to describe EPOC which is Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption, which is basically the scientific way of describing the level at which your heart rate remains elevated in the hours following exercise. EPOC is heavily linked to intensity. The EPOC after an aerobic bout has been found to be minimal, while an intense anaerobic bout has been seen to creat EPOC for up to 36-48 hours. Alwyn tries to maximize EPOC by getting you to do as much work and at as high an intensity as possible while keeping the workout to a reasonable time. He likes to accomplish this through supersets, and in particular he likes to use different muscle groups to allow the first group to recover while the second group is working. This allows you to go heavier than you would normally be able to and since intensity is the % of your 1RM that you are working at, this means you are not only increasing the amount of work that can be accomplished by the superset but are increasing the intensity as well.
It is not the only way. You can increase the amount of work you are currently doing in your workout, simply by reducing the rest periods (although this likely will cause you to work at lower intensity).
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The NRL suggests supersets such as squats/lat pulldowns. In my gym, those are on opposite sides of the weight area. I'd have to set up the squats, do a set, walk all the way across the gym, set up the lat pulldowns, do a set, walk back to the squats and hope that someone else hasn't jumped in, etc etc.
Equipment availability is always an issue. You can always substitute exercises in these cases to make things work and it is all dependent on your availability. Unfortunately the others of NROL or any program not specifically tailored to an individual will have to base their programs on average facilities. In this case, if your facility has a power rack that either has a top bar that can be used for pullups or has a pullup bar attached or has a pullup bar near by, you could do pullups or assisted pullups instead of the lat pulldowns.
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It sounds very awkward and slightly confusing to me.
Take your time and read through the book a few times. Don't focus so much on the workouts, focus on the explanations and the underlying principles. If you can determine why the particular program was designed in the manner it was, that is actually far more valuable then the program itself.
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Plus, I've become very comfortable with my upper/lower splits...
hmmm. I don't like the word "comfortable". Training is all about going beyond your comfort zone. However, I think you mean that you mean that from a physiological and psychological standpoint, you have found upper/lower splits to be a better fit for you at this time. In which case, you need to find an upper/lower split that will both challenge you and direct you toward your current goals. There may or may not be one in NROL. Or once you have become more familiar with the elements of program design by reading the thoughts of people like Lou and Alwyn among others then you will be able to design or adapt programs of your own to suit your needs.
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Are supersets really the best/only way to mix things up?
Like most things in training as in life, "it depends." It may or may not be based on your goals and the reasons they are included. As Mel's post pointed out, there are many different reasons to utilize supersets. Some of which or none of which you may find applicable at any given time due to changing goals.
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As I've mentioned, I've basically been doing the same stuff since the beginning of June. I like the compound exercises, I like the upper-lower splits, but I have stopped progressing so quickly and I feel I'm getting a little stale.
You can change exercises, you can change orders of exercises, you can change set/rep schemes, you can change the tempo at which you lift. There are many different ways. Since you are still fairly new, I'd probably start by just rotating in some new variations of squats, deadlifts, rows, etc.