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If you are a farmer, a sportsperson, a mechanic or any other laborer who does a lot of work with hands, then you need not read this articles. Just click on any other article from the links shown below. You already have strong forearms.
Every guys wants a perfect chest or a sculpted six pack for summer time. But when winter comes, and when you wear long sleeves, all the hard work goes undercover. But yeah, you can fold up your sleeves and show your sexiness – your forearms.

Rope Climbs



If you start doing a workout that consists of efficient rope climbing, then you’ll understand what it takes to get perfect forearms. Do you know Indian wrestler Sushil Kumar can do over 10 reps of legless, 25 plus, rope climbs in a set. Woah.

Towel Kettle Bell Curls.



These uncommon curls will, let me guarantee you, double your forearm and grip strength. Wrap a towel around kettle bells and start doing the work. Let the grip be as tight as possible.

Load Carrying


This is the ultimate functional exercise. To test your grip strength, take two 25 kilogram dumbbells and walk 100 feet carrying them, without any halt. If you are good, then boy, your grip strength is good. Or else you have to work.

Towel Pull Ups



Throw a towel on your pull up bar, and use it as a grip to pull yourself up. We know bar pull ups are cool, but why don’t you try these? Your forearms will cuss your for this.

Exercises For Grip Strength And Strong Forearms

Who likes a man with a beer belly? A slim and sexy stomach is what most of us like. Unfortunately, there is no perfect exercise that you can do to get your belly out. And plus, your core is the center of your body. You just can’t get a flat belly by doing crunches.

Here are four easy steps, that you need to keep in mind if you want to get flat abs easily.

Picking The Right Protein.




Protein is a must for building washboard abs. You can never sculpt your desired abs if you do not take enough amount of protein. And also, selecting the right protein is very important. Don’t always select red meat and milk, these things will make you gain fat. Chose a protein like rice, peas, etc..

Coffee.




Coffee is very rich in antioxidants and phenol, and will definitely boost your metabolism, and kick start your digestive system. Instead of adding great amounts of sugars and ingredients to your morning cup, try different flavours and blends of coffee. Make coffee your serious business. Remember, variety is the spice of life.

Kick The Stress.




Studies reveal that taking a lot of stress releases a hormone called cortisol. This hormone makes you gain fat, making you look bloated. Keep your tensions in your pocket. Only then, you’ll become thinner. Take a deep breath, and relaaaax.

How To Get Flat Abs

Growing bigger is not an easy task. If you have a job, where you have to report at 9 and leave at 5, with a small break for lunch, then growing bigger in mass is a very difficult task. You need to eat a lot and strictly watch what you’re eating.
Here are 5 reasons, why some of you are unable to gain muscle mass.

Ignoring Meals Before Workout.




You have to take a protein and carbs rich meal at least 30 minutes before starting to workout. Make this a point. Yes, we are talking about proper food and not supplements. A calorie full shake made with full milk, a scoop of whey and oats is also a good option.

Lacking Intensity In Workouts.




You train the same everyday and are not focused. You have to shock your muscles to make them grow. Do not workout again before your muscles recover. The more the rest, the better the recovery. Don’t take unnecessary selfie or gossip breaks. Focus.

Not Eating Properly.




If you want to grow bigger, eat like a beast and not like a fashion model. Eat big. Eat clean. Consume heavy home-cooked carb, protein and fat rich meals atleast six times in a day. Stay away from junk food. Eat for every 2 or 3 hours.

Avoiding The Exercise You Hate.




We only do what is comfortable for us. Don’t run away from exercise that you don’t like to do. Muscles become stronger only if you work them harder. Do what it takes, whichever workout, to gain muscle.

Reasons Why You Are Unable To Gain Muscle Mass

Working on weight loss and been dieting? Unable to lose weight and you are disappointed? 


Well, every person in this world today has their own goals in regards with their body and its composition. Some want to stay slim, whereas some others just want to stay how life is making them. This is a familiar story to everyone. 


You tell your brain that you are gonna do things to lose weight, but you eventually end up eating the cupcakes your office mate brings to you for his anniversary or grabbing the birthday cake at your friend’s birthday party.

Well, losing weight needs to be safe. Unless you know how to lose weight, you mustn’t.



Here are four diet mistakes due to which you are not losing your weight. 

 Skipping Meals.



Breakfast is breakfast. Lunch is lunch and dinner is dinner. There is a misconception among people that skipping breakfast – or any meal – will save calories. No sir, it won’t do. The truth is that people who take less than three meals in a day, will end up consuming more calories during the other times of the day.



Not Eating The Right Food.



Fitness experts recommend that 40 percent proteins, 30 percent carbs and another 30 percent fat is ideal for fat loss. Make sure you eat what you must eat. Don’t consume too much proteins, too much of carbs or too much of fat. Eat wisely.


Not Exercising Enough.




You must do adequate amount and time of exercise to lose weight. Experts suggest a minimum of one hundred and fifty – 150 – minutes of exercise every week. But 240 minutes is ideal. Exercise at least 200 minutes every week, and the intensity of the exercise is important too.

Not Sleeping Enough.



When you sleep less, your body will release hormones that will increase the stress and hunger levels in your body. And this hunger will crave you for high calorie foods. Experts recommend a seven to nine hour peaceful and comfortable sleep.


Reasons Why You Are Not Losing Weight

So you’re looking to quickly gain muscle? You’ve come to the right place.


Gaining muscle quickly is simply a matter of diligently applying the laws of muscle growth, which are as certain, observable, and irrefutable as those of physics.

When you throw a ball in the air, it comes down. When you take the correct actions inside and outside the gym, your muscles grow. It’s really that simple, and these laws apply regardless of how much of a “hard gainer” you think you are.

These principles have been known and followed for decades by people who built some of the greatest physiques we’ve ever seen. Some of these laws will be in direct contradiction of things you’ve read or heard but fortunately, they require no leaps of faith or reflection: they are practical. You follow them and you get immediate results. And once they’ve worked for you, you will know they’re true.

So, let’s look them over.




THE FIRST LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Only if They’re Forced to

This law may seem obvious and not worth stating, but trust me, most people just don’t get it. By lifting weights, you are actually causing tiny tears (known as “micro-tears”) in the muscle fibers, which the body then repairs and adapts the muscles to better handle the stimulus that caused the damage. This is the process by which muscles grow (scientifically termed hypertrophy).

If a workout causes too few micro-tears in the fibers, then little muscle growth will occur as a result because the body figures it doesn’t need to grow to deal again with such a minor stimulus. If a workout causes too many micro-tears, then the body will fail to fully repair the muscles, and muscle growth will be stunted. If a workout causes optimal micro-tearing but the body isn’t supplied with sufficient nutrition or rest, no appreciable amount of muscle growth will occur.

For optimal muscle growth, you must lift in such a way that causes optimal micro-tearing and then you must feed your body what it needs to grow and give it the proper amount of rest.


THE SECOND LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow from Overload, Not Fatigue or “Pump”

While many guys think a burning sensation in their muscles is indicative of an intense, “growth-inducing” workout, it’s actually not an indicator of an optimum workout. The “burn” you feel is simply an infusion of lactic acid in the muscle, which is produced as a muscle burns its energy stores.

Lactic acid does trigger what’s known as the “anabolic cascade,” which is a cocktail of growth-inducing hormones, but elevating lactic acid levels higher and higher doesn’t mean you build more and more muscle.

Muscle pump is equally worthless in terms of muscle growth. The pump you feel when training is a result of blood being “trapped” in the muscles, and while it’s a good psychological boost and isn’t a bad thing, it’s just not an indicator of future growth. High-repetition workouts fail to sufficiently overload muscles to trigger growth, even though they deliver quite a pump.

What triggers muscle growth, then? Overload. Muscles must be given a clear reason to grow, and overload is the best reason. Trust me on this one. High-rep drop sets, giant sets, supersets, etc., are for the magazine-reading crowd. Such training techniques simply do NOT stimulate growth like simple, heavy sets do.

The same goes for the confused crowd of “muscle confusion” advocates that say you need to change your routine every week or two. This is pure nonsense. You can make incredible muscle gains by doing the same proven, mass-building exercises every week, steadily increasing weight and reps (overload).



THE THIRD LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Outside the Gym

Most training programs have you training way too often. They play into the common misconception that building muscle is simply a matter of lifting excessively. People who have fallen into this bad habit need to realize that if they did less of the right thing, they would get more. Yes, I said that right: do less, get more.

How does that work? Well, muscles grow during the recovery period—the period of time between workouts of the same muscle groups. When you overload your muscles, your body gets to work adapting them to overcome future overloads, and to do the job correctly, it needs sufficient rest and nutrition.

If, every week, you wait too few days before training a muscle group again, you can actually lose strength and muscle size. If you allow your muscles enough recuperation time (and eat correctly), however, you will experience maximum strength and size gains.



THE FOURTH LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Only if They’re Properly Fed

How important is nutrition? Answer is one word: everything. Nutrition is everything. Simply put, your diet determines about 70-80% of how you look (muscular or scrawny, ripped or flabby). You could do the perfect workouts and give your muscles the perfect amount of rest time, but if you don’t eat correctly, you won’t grow—period.

Almost everyone gets this wrong. They just don’t give their body what it needs to rapidly build muscle. Sure, we all know to eat protein, but how much? When? What kinds?

What about carbs—what kinds are best? How much? When should they be eaten to maximize gains?

And fats…are they important? How much do you need and what are the best ways to get them?

And last but not least, how many calories should you be eating every day? How large should your meals be as the day goes on?

You must have the right answers for these questions and more if you want to get the most out of your training.



SUMMARY

Quickly packing on slabs of rock-solid lean mass is, in essence, just a matter of following these four laws religiously: lift hard, lift heavy, get sufficient rest, and feed your body correctly. That’s how you build a strong, healthy, ripped body. As you see, it’s much simpler than the marketing departments of supplement companies and their magazines want you to think.

The Simple Science of Building Mass Fast

Many people think cardio should be avoided at all costs when trying to build muscle. Are they right?


Many guys fear the treadmill, believing it has a mystical ability to shrivel up muscle and sap strength. And many bodybuilder types bash cardio simply because they don’t like doing it.

While it’s clearly evident that excessive cardio causes muscle loss (just look at any marathon runner), what about moderate cardio? Will it interfere with your muscle growth? Or will it help?

Well, it can go both ways, actually.


3 Ways Cardio Can Help With Muscle Growth


There are 3 primary ways that cardio can help you build (and retain) more muscle. They are as follows:

 1.   It improves muscle recovery.
  2.  It improves your body’s metabolic responses to food.
  3.  It keeps up your conditioning, making the transition from “bulking” to “cutting” easier on your body.

Let’s look at these in more detail.

As you know, intense exercise causes damage to muscle fibers, which must then be repaired. This damage is the cause of the soreness that you feel the day or two following a workout, and is known as delayed onset muscle soreness, or DOMS.


The reparation of the damage is a complex process that is partly regulated by two simple factors: how much of the substances needed for repair are brought to the damaged muscle over time, and the speed at which waste products are removed.

Thus, cardio can help your body repair muscle damage quicker because it increases blood flow. This helps your body build the muscle back up quicker and remove the waste, which results in an all-around quicker recovery. This is why I always do a cardio session on legs day–it dramatically reduces leg soreness in the days to follow.

It’s worth noting, however, that these benefits are primarily seen in the legs because most forms of cardio don’t really involve the upper body. If you want to boost whole-body recovery, then you would need to do something that gets your upper body working, like a rowing machine, or even using your arms to help pump on the elliptical.


Cardio and How Your Body Metabolizes Food

In our collective dietary fantasy, all nutrients eaten would be sucked into the muscles and either absorbed or burned off, and none would result in fat storage. And when we dieted to lose weight, all energy needs would be met by burning fat, not muscle.

The reality, however, is that our bodies do these things to varying degrees. Some people’s bodies store less fat when they overeat (they burn off more excess calories instead of storing them), and lose less muscle when they diet for weight loss (more energy is sucked from fat than muscle to make up for the caloric deficit). Other people, on the other hand, are more likely to store excess calories and lose muscle when they restrict calories for weight loss.

Hormones like testosterone and cortisol play major roles in this (higher levels of testosterone promote more muscle and less fat, whereas higher levels of cortisol promote less muscle and more fat), but unfortunately there isn’t much we can do about either beyond injecting ourselves with drugs. Our genetics have basically set our normal physiological hormonal ranges and that’s that.

All is not lost if you’re not of the genetic elite, however. Another factor in what your body does with the food you eat is insulin sensitivity (how well your cells respond to insulin’s signals). As discussed in my advice for “hardgainers,” being insulin sensitive is highly beneficial when you’re eating a surplus of calories to build muscle, whereas insulin resistance inhibits muscle growth and promotes fat storage under these dietary conditions.

Now, genetics do affect natural levels of insulin sensitivity as well, but you can do various things to manipulate this mechanism. This is where cardio comes in, because it improves insulin sensitivity, and does so in a dose-dependent manner (meaning the more you do, the more benefits you get).


So, cardio can help your muscles better absorb the nutrients you eat, leaving less available for fat storage.

cardio and muscle gains


A common issue in the bodybuilding world is the dramatic reduction in cardiovascular fitness when focusing only on heavy weightlifting for months on end.

Building one’s cardio conditioning back up is not only uncomfortable, but going from doing absolutely no cardio to several sessions per week, on top of a caloric deficit (as cardio is added back in for weight loss purposes), puts a lot of stress on the body. This added stress makes weight loss physically and psychologically tougher, and can even accelerate muscle loss.

By keeping regular cardio in during your bulking phases, however, you can maintain your metabolic conditioning and prevent the “shell shock” that many people experience during the beginning of a cut.


It’s also common for people that have bulked for months without cardio to experience an initial lag in weight loss. Those that keep their cardio in seem to better retain the ability to oxidize fat.

2 Ways Cardio Can Get in the Way of Muscle Growth


As I said earlier, cardio can both hurt and help muscle growth. The two primary ways it can negatively affect your gains are by reducing your caloric surplus too much, and by causing you to overtrain.

The surplus issue is pretty moot, however. Normal cardio sessions don’t burn that many calories (a few hundred at most), which is easy enough to correct. But if long, intense sessions are done, that could cause caloric issues.

“Hardgainers” might have something to worry about in this regard as they usually have trouble eating enough as it is. Research has shown that low-intensity cardio stimulates the appetite, however, so including some every week can actually help with eating enough.


Issues relating to cardio and overtraining revolve around intensity and frequency. Simply put, the more cardio you do, and the more intense it is, the more your strength and growth will be negatively affected due to excessive stresses put on both the central nervous system and muscles being worked (usually the legs get it the worst).


cardio tips


I think the positives of including cardio when you’re bulking clearly outweigh the negatives, especially considering the fact that the negatives are easily dealt with.

Generally speaking, I prefer HIIT cardio to steady-state even when bulking, despite the fact that it puts more stress on my body. Research has shown that HIIT cardio preserves muscle better than steady-state , but don’t take that as a carte blanche to do hours of HIIT every week while bulking.

The point at which the added cardio will impair your strength gains and muscle growth will depend on your genetics and conditioning, but a safe recommendation is no more than 2-3 sessions of cardio each week, for no longer than 30 minutes.

If you find even that much HIIT negatively impacts your strength, then opt for a few sessions of low-to-moderate cardio each week instead. This is enough to enjoy its benefits, while avoiding its drawbacks.


And as a little added bonus, research has shown that cycling is a better choice than running when you’re trying to maximize muscle gains, probably because it mimics actual movements you perform with weights. I experienced this when I made the switch to cycling for all of my cardio: my leg strength dramatically jumped over the following several months.

Cardio and Muscle Growth