@willyroyal4:

willyroyal4
willyroyal4
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Sunday 11 January 2026 07:59:51 GMT
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DO YOU NEED TO LIFT HEAVY ALL THE TIME? No. And if you only train with heavy weight, you are actually leaving a lot of muscle growth on the table. Here is how the three weight ranges work and when to use each one. 1. LIGHT WEIGHT (higher reps, full range of motion) Light weight does not mean easy. When you slow down and use a full range of motion, light weight creates a lot of tension in the muscle. - 15 to 25 reps per set - Great for isolation exercises like lateral raises, curls, and flys - Forces you to feel the muscle working instead of just moving the weight - Keeps joints safer and adds quality volume without heavy fatigue Use this to finish a session or when your joints need a break. 2. MEDIUM WEIGHT (moderate reps, controlled movement) This is where most of your training should happen. It builds a strong balance between muscle size and strength. - 8 to 15 reps per set - Works well for compound movements and machine exercises - Enough load to create real stimulus, not so heavy that form breaks down - You can stay consistent with this week after week without burning out This is your bread and butter range. 3. HEAVY WEIGHT (lower reps, maximal effort) Heavy training builds strength and teaches your body to recruit more muscle fibers. - 3 to 6 reps per set - Best for big compound lifts like squats, deadlifts, bench press, and rows - Requires longer rest periods and more recovery between sessions - Do not go heavy on every exercise or every session or fatigue builds up fast Use this as a tool, not a rule. THE SIMPLE WAY TO APPLY THIS - Start your session heavy on the main compound lift - Move to medium weight for your accessory work - Finish with light weight and full range of motion on isolation exercises All three ranges build muscle. The difference is how and when you use them. Rotate them across your training and your progress will stay consistent without destroying your joints or your recovery. #weighttraining #musclebuilding #gymtips #strengthtraining #fitnessadvice
DO YOU NEED TO LIFT HEAVY ALL THE TIME? No. And if you only train with heavy weight, you are actually leaving a lot of muscle growth on the table. Here is how the three weight ranges work and when to use each one. 1. LIGHT WEIGHT (higher reps, full range of motion) Light weight does not mean easy. When you slow down and use a full range of motion, light weight creates a lot of tension in the muscle. - 15 to 25 reps per set - Great for isolation exercises like lateral raises, curls, and flys - Forces you to feel the muscle working instead of just moving the weight - Keeps joints safer and adds quality volume without heavy fatigue Use this to finish a session or when your joints need a break. 2. MEDIUM WEIGHT (moderate reps, controlled movement) This is where most of your training should happen. It builds a strong balance between muscle size and strength. - 8 to 15 reps per set - Works well for compound movements and machine exercises - Enough load to create real stimulus, not so heavy that form breaks down - You can stay consistent with this week after week without burning out This is your bread and butter range. 3. HEAVY WEIGHT (lower reps, maximal effort) Heavy training builds strength and teaches your body to recruit more muscle fibers. - 3 to 6 reps per set - Best for big compound lifts like squats, deadlifts, bench press, and rows - Requires longer rest periods and more recovery between sessions - Do not go heavy on every exercise or every session or fatigue builds up fast Use this as a tool, not a rule. THE SIMPLE WAY TO APPLY THIS - Start your session heavy on the main compound lift - Move to medium weight for your accessory work - Finish with light weight and full range of motion on isolation exercises All three ranges build muscle. The difference is how and when you use them. Rotate them across your training and your progress will stay consistent without destroying your joints or your recovery. #weighttraining #musclebuilding #gymtips #strengthtraining #fitnessadvice

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