Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Important Is Getting a Pump for Building Muscle?
Episode Date: May 6, 2020If you’ve read anything about bodybuilding, you’ve probably heard about something called “the pump.” In a nutshell, this refers to the temporary increase in muscle size that occurs when you li...ft weights. Bodybuilders have been strangely obsessed with this phenomenon since people started lifting weights, and according to many, it’s the cheat code for unlocking rapid muscle growth. George Butler and Charles Gaines, authors of Pumping Iron: The Art and Sport of Bodybuilding, claimed getting a muscle pump, “feels like one of those fast-frame films of flowers blooming or seeds ripening; the muscles seem actually to go from pod to blossom in seconds under the skin.” This explanation reveals one of the main reasons weightlifters like getting a pump: it’s a visible sign your efforts in the gym are paying off. Your muscles are getting bigger before your eyes! This preoccupation with the pump hasn’t waned, either. You’ll still find articles touting the benefits of “chasing the pump”—bodybuilder lingo for doing lots of reps with short rest periods until your muscles are swollen and sore. Others counter that chasing the pump is a fool’s errand. Temporary muscle swelling has nothing to do with muscle growth, and your time is better spent getting as strong as possible, they say. So, who’s right? In this podcast, you’re going to learn what the pump is, what causes it, why people think it’s important, why it isn’t essential for muscle growth, and why it’s still worth doing some “pump” training in your workouts to get the best results. Let’s get started! --- 6:20 - What is the pump? 8:23 - What is pump training and is it good for building muscle and strength? 17:31 - How can I program pump training? --- Mentioned on The Show: Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://legionathletics.com/shop/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
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Hello, my favorite people in quarantine, the dedicated Muscle for Life listeners who are
still tuning in despite not having a gym to go to. But hey, things are on the up and up,
states are opening back up, gyms are going to be opening back up, and we will be able to return
to our beloved iron soon enough. And I hope you have been staying on top of your home workouts.
If you have been good on you, because you're going to find that when you do get back in the gym,
if you have been doing good home workouts, making them hard. And I understand that can be hard.
Like if you only have your body weight, for example, you're going to be limited. If you
are an experienced weightlifter, if you have some bands, you are less limited. If you have some dumbbells like I do.
So I have dumbbells and bands. That's what I've been using for the last two months. Then you are
even less limited. And it's not the same of course, as being in the gym, but with some bands and
dumbbells, you can do plenty. I have not lost any muscle in the last couple of months probably have lost a bit
of strength and that brings you back to what i was going to say is when we get back in the gym
what most of us are going to find is if we've been pretty consistent with our home workouts we
probably haven't lost any muscle to speak of but we will have lost a little bit of strength however
that's just going to be mostly due to skill degradation, right? We haven't been under
a bar or over a bar. We haven't squatted or pulled or pressed in a couple of months. And while those
are not highly technical activities, they do have a bit of skill. There is a skill component. And so
if you don't do something that does require a whole body coordination and balance and power
production in a little bit, you'd expect to
be a little bit worse at it, right? So what I think is that for those of us who have been pretty good
with our home workouts and maintained our physiques pretty well, we're going to be right back to our
pre-virus training numbers within, I mean, I think three or four weeks. That's what I expect. Like
one mesocycle of my current training, a four-week mesocycle. I think I'll be right back to where I was. And so that's pretty cool. And
I hope the same for you. And if you haven't been doing much in the way of home training and you
have definitely lost some muscle, don't worry because you have muscle memory on your side.
Muscle memory is very real. And what it means is when you do get back to it, your body
is going to respond like you're a newbie again. You're going to have a new wave of newbie gains.
So when you consider that, along with the fact that when you look at the research on detraining,
that you really don't start losing muscle tissue until maybe three-ish weeks of no training,
maybe a little bit sooner if you heavily restrict your calories
and you don't eat enough protein, but assuming that you weren't doing that, you're not going
to lose any muscle really until the first month or so, until the second month or so. So you're
going to make it through that first month with essentially no muscle loss. Now you might lose
some muscle size because if you're not training, your muscles are going to hold less water and less
glycogen. So they're
going to look smaller, but that doesn't mean you've lost muscle tissue. Muscle tissue takes
longer to lose. So let's say that you have been slowly losing muscle for about a month or so.
Let's say that comes out to a couple of pounds of muscle loss. You're going to gain that back,
that couple of pounds within your first month back in the gym. So while you might have been harsh on
yourself for not staying on top of your workouts and not doing everything you can to maintain your
muscle and now you've lost muscle and all seems lost. No, not at all. You're going to get back
in the gym and you're going to be very happy to be there and your muscles are going to get swole
fast, bro. You're going to gain whatever you've lost back very quickly.
And if you have gained weight as well, I see jokes online of the COVID-19 or maybe the COVID-20 or
21 or the quarantine. As someone else put it, that made me laugh. Don't be too hard on yourself.
Give yourself a break. Treat yourself like you might treat a good friend and have a bit
of understanding. I mean, this has been a once in a lifetime event, a once in a lifetime catastrophe
and disruption of everything. And so if you've been a bit stressed and you have been eating a
bit too much food, well, at least you had a good excuse, right? And soon you'll be able to
change that. Soon you'll be able to easily lose whatever fat you've gained and get right back
into the routine that you had previously and the habits that you had previously. If you did it once,
you can do it again, right? All right. So that's it for today's pep talk. Let's now talk about
muscle pumps. Let's talk about the pump and building muscle. This is a question I often get,
how important is getting a pump for building muscle? Now, before we get to the show, if you
like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more
people get into the best
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your first purchase, then you will get double reward points on your entire order, which is essentially getting 10% cash back in rewards points. So again, that URL is legionathletics.com. And if you appreciate
my work and if you want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing
what I love, like producing podcasts like this. So first let's talk about what is the pump, right?
So this is a temporary increase in muscle size
that occurs when you lift weights and especially when you're using higher reps and shorter rest
periods and the reason for that is what happens is when you contract your muscles you have
different metabolic byproducts like lactic acid for example that build up in the muscle cells and
around the muscle cells and then your heart pumps more blood into
your muscles to carry those waste products away and get them out of the body. And that makes your
muscles swell. Now, these compounds also pull water into the cells and that makes the cells
even larger. And as the cells expand, they reduce the amount of blood that is able to escape the muscles.
So more blood gets trapped in the muscle cells and your muscles, right?
Because normally blood can pass between muscle fibers.
But when those fibers expand, when they swell, they pinch off the veins that are trying to
carry blood back to the heart, the deoxygenated blood back to the heart.
And the net effect of that is your muscles get pumped.
They get blood
that gets pumped into them faster than it can pump out. And that blood that pools in your muscles
gives you a pump. Now to get a really big pump, you can do more reps in a set. So your muscles
produce more and more of these metabolic byproducts and produce them faster. And then your body's
trying to get them out even more aggressively, right? So the pump gets bigger. You can rest less, right? Than you normally do in
between sets. If you follow any of my programming or my advice, you're probably resting a couple
of minutes, two to four minutes in between your hard sets. If you cut that in half, that's going
to make it harder for your body to remove the metabolic byproducts because it's working to do
it while you're resting. And if you cut that rest period short and start training again, then of course your body can no longer remove those metabolic byproducts because it's working to do it while you're resting. And if you cut that rest period short and start training again, then of course your body can no longer remove those
metabolic byproducts. You can also do more sets. So if you do more work in a workout, you're going
to experience a bigger pump up until a point. Of course, there is diminishing returns with all of
these things, but if you do more work in your workouts, that's going to mean more blood flow
to your muscles and that's going to mean more metabolic byproducts. And so then pump training, training that emphasizes getting a pump usually
involves higher reps. So you're usually doing sets of like 12 to 15 reps. And it also usually
involves short rest periods in between sets, anywhere from 30 to 90 seconds of rest in between
each set. And you also usually do quite a large number of sets,
at least as many as you need to get a really big pump. But again, pump workouts generally are
higher volume workouts. And while you can certainly gain muscle with that type of training,
you can gain muscle with many types of training. It's not optimal. So for example, there was a
study that was conducted by scientists
at the University of Central Florida, and they took resistance trained men and they split them
into two groups and they had one do pump style training. So 10, 12 reps per set, 70% of one rep
max, one minute of rest in between sets. And then the other group did a more of a strength style
workout, three to five rep range, 90% of one rep max, three minutes between each set.
And by the end of the study, both groups gained about the same amount of muscle, but there was
a small trend for greater gains in the group that used the heavy weights. And there are other studies
that echo those findings. And then there's also the strength component too. We know that training
in the three to five rep range is more effective for gaining strength in the 10 to 12 rep range. And we also know that as you become more experienced,
as you become a more advanced weightlifter, once you are, let's say, solidly into your
intermediate phase as a weightlifter, your newbie gains are behind you. The correlation between
strength and size becomes stronger, meaning that when you're a newbie, you can gain
a fair amount of strength without gaining that much muscle, without gaining maybe as much muscle
as you'd expect given how much you are progressing in your strength. However, once you progress into
your intermediate phase, so if you're a guy, let's say after your first 20-ish, 15 to 20 pounds of
muscle, you're no longer a newbie. For women, about of muscle, you're no longer a newbie. For women,
about half that, you're no longer a newbie. At that point, a lot of the muscle that you're going
to gain from that point on is going to come from gaining strength. Again, that relationship becomes
much stronger. The most reliable way to continue gaining muscle as an intermediate plus,
as an intermediate and beyond weightlifter is to increase your whole body strength. And the best way to judge your whole body strength
is your estimated one rep max is on your squat, deadlift, bench press, and overhead press.
So the reason why I bring that up is when you look at a study that goes for eight weeks,
10 weeks, 12 weeks, that's useful information, but that's not a large period of
time, especially for an intermediate to advanced weightlifter. You don't expect to see much of a
change in that short period of time. And we know that if you zoom out and you start stretching
that timeline out to something a bit more appropriate, like let's say a year, that the
intermediate weightlifter who gains the most whole body strength over a year is almost
certainly going to be the one who's going to gain the most muscle. And there are genetic factors to
take into account here, and that won't necessarily be true. So you could have somebody who, let's say,
gained the most, let's say, a group of trainees that were all more or less at the same point in
their journeys, and they all have decent genetics. Nobody's an outlier in that regard. You might have someone who gained the most whole body
strength being beat out in muscle gain by the number two or maybe the number three, but not by
the number 10. That's just not how it works. And so just keep that in mind when you are reading
about or listening to discussions about rep ranges and muscle building. As an
intermediate weightlifter, the best thing you can do is to periodize your training, to continue
doing the heavy stuff and to work in some lighter, not light, but lighter stuff. So to work in a rep
range anywhere from let's say two to 12 reps, depending on the exercise and depending on where you're at
in a training cycle or a training block or a mesocycle, different terminology for the same
thing, a period of training. And that's something I'm going to be talking a lot about in the book
that I'm currently wrapping up, which is a new, really just overhaul, rewritten from scratch
version of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. This
is going to be the second edition and it's a brand new book. I'm very happy with how it's
come together. And if you are an intermediate male or an advanced male weightlifter, I think
you're going to be very pleased with it. It's going to be out this summer, I think August.
And yes, I will do a version for women
as well. I didn't do one previously because I wasn't sure what to put in it. Honestly,
I hadn't worked with enough intermediate and advanced women to know what that book should
be like. When I wrote the first edition of Beyond Bigger Than You're Stronger, I did feel like I
knew enough to do the subject justice, to do a good job with it and provide something valuable.
This new second edition, I think is far better, but that's what I would expect. That's a good
thing. I think that means that I have learned a lot in the last five years and I'm going to
update that knowledge and pass it on. And now though, I have worked with enough experienced
women to know what that female book should be like. So I'm looking forward to doing that as
well. Okay. So let's get back on topic here. So we have this downside to pump training in that it is
not great for building muscle and gaining strength, especially if you're an intermediate or an advanced
weightlifter. If you're a newbie, you can do it, but you are going to have to start lifting heavy
weights eventually. So you might as well start early. That's my theory because you are
going to get more acquainted with that style of training. You're going to get used to squatting
heavyweights and pulling heavyweights and benching heavyweights. There's going to be less of an
awkward transition from a lot of pump style training to a lot of heavy style of training.
And for your newbie gains, you're going to do just as well in your first year lifting a lot
of heavyweights as you will lifting a lot of lighter weights. But if you lift a lot of lighter weights, again, you're going to have a jarring transition that you then started doing a lot of heavier strength training, it was a bit uncomfortable at first and it was a
bit awkward and they had to adjust their weights down. They weren't able to handle the loads that
were being calculated by calculators, for example. So they would put in their numbers for, oh, well,
this is what I can squat for 12 reps. And then the rep calculator says, oh, well, you should be able to do this for four or five
reps. And because they were really not used to training like that, they couldn't, they couldn't.
They had to sometimes use 60, 70, 80% of their calculated numbers, which again, is not a huge
issue. It's just kind of obnoxious. It's easier to just start with your heavy lifting as early as possible
and get used to that style of training and then add in some pump related stuff when you need to
add more volume to continue making progress. And that, for example, is a good use of pump style
training. I do, I guess you could call it pump style training on isolation exercises. In the
beginning of my training blocks, I'm doing sets of 10 to 12 reps on certain isolation exercises,
for example, not on my compounds. I start with sets of 10 in a four month training block on my
compounds. The first week are sets of 10, and then I'm going sets of eight and sets of six,
then I'm deloading, and then I'm doing sets of eight, six, four, deload, four, six, two,
deload. And that's all going to be explained in Beyond Bigger Than You're Stronger 2.0.
But on my isolation exercises, I am doing sets of 10 to 12. And that does help bring up lagging
muscle groups because it just helps add volume to them. Because of course, when you bench press,
you're not just accumulating volume in your chest, you're also accumulating volume in your
shoulders and in your triceps,
and to some degree, even your lats. That indirect volume does quote unquote count,
but with smaller, more stubborn muscle groups like the shoulders, for example, pretty much
everybody has to do more than just pressing a barbell to get the shoulders they want.
And pump training, higher rep training, higher volume training is great for that because you
can add that volume selectively. Instead of trying to do a bunch more bench pressing to bring your
shoulders up, you can add in side raises, maybe in the rep range of 10 to 12 or eight to 10,
or even six to eight. You can do rear raises. If you want to do more anterior delts, you could do
front raises. Although I would say that means you're probably
not doing enough pressing. You probably shouldn't be doing front raises unless you can't press as
much as you should be, which really just comes to the flat barbell bench press, the incline barbell
bench press, the flat dumbbell press, the incline dumbbell press, the overhead press, whether it's
barbell or dumbbell. Your anterior delts should get all the work they need with those exercises. But if you can't do that and you have to work
around an injury or some sort of restriction, then something like a front raise can make sense
as well. And so I'm going to wrap this up with a simple rule of thumb, the Pareto principle.
We're going to apply it to this. And that is that you should be spending about 80% of your time in
the gym doing heavy compound training,
those multi-joint, multi-muscle group exercises. You should be using loads that are, let's say,
at least, let's just say in the range of 80 to 95% of your one rep max. And so that's in the
rep range of like two to eight. And the remaining 20% of your training time though, of your volume,
of the work that you're doing can be lighter stuff where it does give you a bigger pump.
And a lot of that, if not all of it, is going to be with isolation exercises.
Again, so you can strategically increase your volume where it needs to be increased.
And so you can look at your weekly volume, for example, per major muscle group and make
sure it's where you want it to be.
If you're new, something around nine or 10 hard sets per major muscle group per week
is plenty.
And remember, you can count the indirect volume.
So if you're doing three sets of bench pressing, that's volume.
That's three sets of volume for your chest, your tris and your shoulders.
Maybe exclude lats from that.
And of course, then your direct volume.
So whatever extra volume you're doing then in side raises or rear raises, of course, then your direct volume. So whatever extra volume
you're doing then in side raises or rear raises, cool. That's more shoulder volume. If you're doing
some triceps press downs or some overhead triceps presses or whatever, extra triceps volume. But if
you're an intermediate or advanced weightlifter, you could expect to have to do anywhere from 15
to 20 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And the only way to do that is to include
isolation work in your workouts, isolation exercises. And really the only way to do that
effectively is to include some pump style training, some higher rep training. Because if you try to do
all of your work in, let's say the four to six rep range, yes, that's fine. You can gain muscle,
you can gain strength. With some exercises,
it's going to be pretty awkward to maintain proper form like a side raise and a rear raise,
for example, but it can be done. However, what you'll find is your joints are going to take a
beating. It is nice to work with some lighter weights for portions of your training blocks
and then get into the heavier stuff. When you are including pump training, just make sure
that you are using some sort of progression model, just as you would with your compound exercises.
You don't want to only progress on your compounds and not progress at all on your accessories. If
you do that, you will see changes in your physique, but you will do better if you push to progress in both your
primary work and your accessory work. And you can also experiment with different types of training
too that I guess could qualify as pump training, like rest pause training or blood flow restriction
training. And if you want to learn about those things, I've recorded podcasts on both, I believe,
so you can find them by searching in the feed or my YouTube channel. And if you'd rather read about those things, just go over to legionathletics.com and search for rest
pause. And you might have to put a hyphen in there, rest hyphen pause, and then search for
blood flow restriction. And you'll find articles that I wrote on both. All right. Well, that's it
for today's episode. I hope you found it interesting and helpful.
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