Should You Train To Failure?

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  • Опубліковано 21 сер 2024
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    #fitness #workout #gym #bodybuilding

КОМЕНТАРІ • 188

  • @FitnessFAQs
    @FitnessFAQs  Рік тому +4

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  • @isaacwinters6954
    @isaacwinters6954 Рік тому +299

    Technical failure might be the best (or better) way of “training to failure” principles.

    • @doordashh
      @doordashh 10 місяців тому +3

      i agree its safer

  • @mysmartieteevee3036
    @mysmartieteevee3036 Рік тому +134

    Just constantly experiment and do what's optimum for yourself. Everyone responds differently.

    • @The-stuff-I-do-at-60
      @The-stuff-I-do-at-60 Рік тому +3

      Best comment. 👍🏼

    • @rjhick1
      @rjhick1 Рік тому +1

      Yep getting into intricacies like this doesn't really matter

    • @gabepearson6104
      @gabepearson6104 Рік тому +7

      Great advice for a while I was 6 days a week every set to failure now it’s just 3-4 days one set to failure the next two close proximity to failure, strength has increased since then.

    • @GrahamVarnell
      @GrahamVarnell 10 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! 🫡 need more folks like you

    • @seohix
      @seohix 10 місяців тому +1

      ​@@gabepearson6104That's nice, since you have given your body more time to recover you have attained more progress. More isn't always better

  • @robertwhite2449
    @robertwhite2449 Рік тому +254

    When I train to failure on most compound movements or lifts, it totally fries my nervous system. I literally feel like I have mild flu for days afterwards, and I become physically useless whilst recovering. Everyone is built differently and some will get away with it of even get benefits, but if you're someone who's got other things to do outside of training (e.g a job and family) it's probably not worth it as a regular thing.

    • @supercomputadora
      @supercomputadora Рік тому +9

      I do everything to failure

    • @KurokamiNajimi
      @KurokamiNajimi Рік тому +8

      Have you considered you’re just doing too much volume? 0 RIR sets are much more potent, just look at the difference in performance drops. Just 1 set to 0 RIR does more much damage than say 2 RIR 1st set, 1 RIR 2nd set. Evident by the fact you’d be able to get the same number of reps 3 sets in a row

    • @bradycharles9571
      @bradycharles9571 Рік тому +8

      I train to failure pretty regularly and never have felt this way. If I do I know something is wrong with my nutrition/recovery. Training even hard training shouldn't make you feel shitty

    • @JohnSmith-ct5jd
      @JohnSmith-ct5jd Рік тому +1

      I never had that problem. I am 59 years old, btw.

    • @Dtp2296
      @Dtp2296 Рік тому +6

      Evaluate your diet mainly magnesium, salt and protein are other contributers to this. I train past failure everyday with training and very physical job and busy life, rarely sit down unless i'm going to bed or driving somehere

  • @minileo3107
    @minileo3107 Рік тому +85

    David Goggins:"Nah I'd do it just for my mentality"

    • @yonatanmonneler1744
      @yonatanmonneler1744 11 місяців тому +5

      With all of my respect to goggins, just because doing something is challenging doesn't mean it's beneficial or a good idea at all.

    • @shubhamchand4517
      @shubhamchand4517 8 місяців тому

      Man he's a f*kin Navy seals soldier 🪖. Limits are not meant for soldiers, we're just civilians and we don't understand that thing.

  • @serv4ntPGR
    @serv4ntPGR Рік тому +11

    Training to failure makes me skip later training days due to soreness... sticking to progressive overload is best

    • @danjsilve
      @danjsilve Місяць тому

      I currently go to failure on my last workout of the week. Then I could to go again on Monday and Wednesday where I don’t go to Failure.

  • @GeorgesonOfficial
    @GeorgesonOfficial Рік тому +42

    I think there should definitely be days here and there where you fully train to failure but it should not be every session, I think it can be very good done in moderate amounts but doing it every time is begging to get injured. Also, I think most of us are actually not that capable to train to that "complete failure" that will lead to those really higher risk of injuries, most people don't even have the will power to push that far.

    • @mkthefit7780
      @mkthefit7780 Рік тому

      No not at all, not even moderate only every now and then to test your max if you're inexperienced or have a low pain tolerance.

    • @moneymakinmitch8130
      @moneymakinmitch8130 Рік тому +2

      I train to failure every session n I’m perfectly fine 😂 I don’t take every set to failure but usually just every last set of every exercise

    • @GeorgesonOfficial
      @GeorgesonOfficial Рік тому +1

      @@moneymakinmitch8130 Same, I train to failure every session too on my last sets of the exercise with a large drop set and so far I really didn't have an issue. But I do think that as you get more advanced, you have to work more smart instead of hard. More weight generally will mean more risk of injury for your joints especially if you didn't spend atleast a few weeks with that weight and let your joints and tendons adapt to that load. As you go to intermediate and advanced, it's important to work smarter and more on your weaknesses rather than just increase volume and stress out your joints even more in order to keep progressing. I think as beginners we can get away with a lot of stuff, so basically what I am saying is a beginner, intermediate and advanced lifter will need to focus on different programs to get optimal results. Training to failure is something most should seek as most of us are below intermediate, I think after a certain point of progressing, you should cycle it more often based on how you feel on the day.

    • @GeorgesonOfficial
      @GeorgesonOfficial Рік тому +1

      @@mkthefit7780 there's nothing wrong with testing your max on a given exercise everyday or often if your form is controlled and you don't try to cheat through you failed rep and instead fail due to not being able to complete the full range of motion. It's not necessarily the best way to progress due to insufficient rest periods but it's not that injury prone. The issue is when people to try to cheat through their failure because of their ego with momentum and breaking of good form, that's then you risk tearing a muscle or pinching a joint.

  • @drewpfeif5028
    @drewpfeif5028 Рік тому +12

    I think a lot of people who train close to failure, don't realize that they're capable of doing more reps than they know. You gotta push your limits to grow. In all aspects of life.

  • @corenko
    @corenko Рік тому +85

    Intensity all the way. If I’m leaving reps in the tank, I feel like I’m not training

    • @mkthefit7780
      @mkthefit7780 Рік тому +2

      Personally no it's not beneficial

    • @corenko
      @corenko Рік тому

      @@mkthefit7780 So you are doing a couple of rest and before failure you say “This was enough” ?

    • @Ben_sul
      @Ben_sul Рік тому +18

      That's good if you're just an emo in the gym and care more about fighting demons than sustainable progress

    • @corenko
      @corenko Рік тому +14

      @@Ben_sul I’ve made 0 progress with “reps in reserve 🤓” and when I started training with intensity that’s when I grew

    • @JasonAizatoZemeckis
      @JasonAizatoZemeckis Рік тому +2

      ​@@Ben_sul I used to do that, its not that bad honestly

  • @tomisinolujinmi
    @tomisinolujinmi Рік тому +3

    I completely agree. If you're going to failure every rep, you'll stop going to the gym eventually, either from exhaustion or mental fatigue. Going to failure on the last set on the other hand may have some value.

    • @importantopinion
      @importantopinion Рік тому

      Not true. I'm going to gym more than 2 years and every other training i do each set to failure then with partials. Completely fine so far actively becoming stronger and bigger.
      PS Fullbody 3 times per week

  • @mkthefit7780
    @mkthefit7780 Рік тому +9

    Very true,a lot of people who exercise can benefit from this.

  • @ChrisPBacon1434
    @ChrisPBacon1434 Рік тому +8

    This doesn't apply to everyone. I train to failure nearly every set i do with calisthenics to try to progressively overload. The only downside for me is that my form breaks over time in my attempt to get a new pr, so every 2 or 3 weeks, I do super strict form to failure.

  • @higherresolution4490
    @higherresolution4490 Рік тому +3

    As the great old-school bodybuilder, Tom Platz, says, training to failure means training to the point where you are going to lose form, then stopping.

  • @moneymakinmitch8130
    @moneymakinmitch8130 Рік тому +26

    "define failure"
    me 😔

    • @noobman096
      @noobman096 Рік тому +1

      can relate

    • @hasan2524
      @hasan2524 Рік тому +2

      I understand ur pain, but u have to remember ur not the only one, keep working hard and well make it bro

  • @youtuberdisguiser6075
    @youtuberdisguiser6075 Рік тому +4

    It has Value for strength, in the sense that it is good for hypertrophy.
    Thing is, there's a high amount of fatigue, which is why you shouldn't do it on compounds, but it's fine for isolations.

  • @senghbeh
    @senghbeh Рік тому +2

    Failure will get you injured because of the ego. Especially if you do not use a spotter.
    I stay in the gym no longer then 40 mins. Warm up and get to it. Consistency is King.

  • @duinthadope420
    @duinthadope420 Рік тому +6

    This guy's SO wise. Wise well beyond his years, such valuable advice.

    • @FitnessFAQs
      @FitnessFAQs  Рік тому

      Agreed Zlat is a legend in the game. Spitting facts even with english as a second language.

  • @KayEnFX
    @KayEnFX Рік тому +7

    i would love to watch a video of him just working out as he would normally, would be interesting (possibly on a vlog channel or something)

  • @maknavickas
    @maknavickas Рік тому +2

    I go to failure just out of laziness. I only have the patience to do like 2 sets of an exercise, so if I go to failure my body will respond and I didn’t have to do nearly as many reps. Usually the weight makes the failure rep in the 4-6 range, so I am only doing around 10 really hard reps. If I’m doing calisthenics then it’s just holding the position until failure 4 or 5 times.

  • @chxde_abode3000
    @chxde_abode3000 Рік тому +1

    Personally I agree with Mike Mentzer. If I want to train to build muscle, I will go until failure. Stop, and rest for ~7 days on that muscle group.

  • @timkania6828
    @timkania6828 Рік тому +1

    It depends.. For max strength id say never go beyond "technical failure", since its too risky for injuries and you will be too fatiqued too soon, for max strength you want to train the efficiency of the specific movement, Not Only one muscle. For Hypertrophy on the other Hand, especially for more isolated exercises, failure is pretty useful since the exercise isn't that fatiguing for your CNS anyways (fatigue isn't only generated through intensity but also complexity of movement) and you can therefore safe much time in the Gym with more gains. Just make sure you adapt volume with higher intensity (Not more then 2 Sets) and warm Up properly.

  • @cannonieh4469
    @cannonieh4469 Рік тому +19

    Wow, I didn't expect to hear that. I thought he'd say that training to failure is the best option

    • @Dtp2296
      @Dtp2296 Рік тому +11

      This bro science man. Doesn't line up with any scientific studies

    • @maksim5984
      @maksim5984 Рік тому +1

      Must. Achieve. Failure

  • @user-rl4ks9jd9f
    @user-rl4ks9jd9f 2 місяці тому

    I perform to failure only when gauging my max once in a month or so. In my multiple set routine I train in 2-3 rep shy of failure fashion. I have a life to enjoy in the first place.

  • @Dtp2296
    @Dtp2296 Рік тому +3

    Mentally i get more push and drive knowing i gave it everything, went to failure then added some eccentrics

  • @JustN0tMe
    @JustN0tMe Рік тому +2

    When I used to workout I preferred Myo Rep Training and I had great results

    • @GerronLavace
      @GerronLavace Рік тому +2

      I've done these for years and would recommend to anyone. You get close to failure so many times in a short space of time, so efficient for hypertrophy.

  • @huntmatthewd
    @huntmatthewd Рік тому +1

    Everyone should do bodyweight to failure at least some of the time. Just make sure to recover.

  • @bjf5027
    @bjf5027 Рік тому +7

    Mike Mentzer has entered the chat

  • @The-stuff-I-do-at-60
    @The-stuff-I-do-at-60 Рік тому +2

    At 58 I try to better the reps compared to the last time I did the exercise, or maybe add more weight to the weight vest. I think you’re asking for injury if you older and exercise to fail. But that’s just me. Couldn’t do it without your advice tho, cheers. 🙏🏼

    • @zy9662
      @zy9662 Рік тому

      But if you add more weight then you would fail at some rep, that's train to failure in my book

    • @The-stuff-I-do-at-60
      @The-stuff-I-do-at-60 Рік тому +1

      @@zy9662 sounds like an interesting read! 😮‍💨

  • @spongechameleon6940
    @spongechameleon6940 Рік тому +2

    I just give 80% effort consistently. Going to physical failure just burns me out. I've got other shit to do anyways

  • @mitfreude
    @mitfreude 11 місяців тому

    Mike Mentzer enters the chat

  • @phd_phd
    @phd_phd Рік тому +1

    But Tom Platz said...
    Well may it was long ago but nothing changed he had the biggest legs even compared to nowdays bodybuilders who r on much more efficient steroids and take them in tons. So i dont argue with knowledge but its may about mentality of winner u get into after u achieved real failure and may because of confidence and kinda self hypnosis

  • @Fonz128
    @Fonz128 2 місяці тому

    I kinda hate this topic because it makes me overthink. I just want newbie gains. So I don’t go till failure.

  • @chopwoodcarrywater49531
    @chopwoodcarrywater49531 Рік тому

    I think it can be good if you're lifting weights and have spotters. Get some good eccentrics in or partial reps if you are having a plateau on a certain lift or lack a solid muscle connection with a specific body part. Or you could just lighten the load. But always good form. I do believe the best bang for buck would be technical failure as far as safety, strength/hypertrophy, and recovery.

  • @americanmonster4983
    @americanmonster4983 Рік тому

    In my case you are right, my nervous system has suffered. Thanks for the information.

  • @Ruudwardt
    @Ruudwardt Рік тому

    First 2 or 3 years of serious weighted pullup training I went to RPE10 or failure on every set. For hypertrophy it can be good idea, for strength less so.
    Now, 5 years in I rarely do that. It blunts my performance noticeably. It is best to stay 1 rep shy of max and be able to do more sets successfully with clean form and good power (fast concentric). I boke plateaus that way several times.

  • @peacefulbeast8386
    @peacefulbeast8386 Рік тому

    Yeah but the opposite argument could be made that going to failure is basically giving it everything you had. And that that builds more mental energy and gives you that edge.

  • @mooseoncaffeine
    @mooseoncaffeine Рік тому

    I train to failure on (almost) every single set, and i feel great all the time. It may be because im still young and spry, but going to failure never affected me negatively. Studies show that its at least more effective than NOT going to failure. But you do you, of course.

  • @r3l0ud56
    @r3l0ud56 Рік тому

    I think you should, sometimes, get to that type of failure. Just for the athlete actualy understands where his point of failure his. Somethink like each 2-3 weeks? Maybe once a month

  • @supermegapowerg1188
    @supermegapowerg1188 Рік тому

    Idk anyone would see and read this but my best advice to you to hit failure without out of breath feel like dying is that you should train heavy enough that you would fail mechanically (extreme example of this is giving all your might to push an super heavy object it moved but when you tried again you cannot anymore coz your muscle cannot produce same amount of force anymore your fast twitch fibers are short lived they are there to produce force as much as possible when difficult task has arrivedI mean like this but on minute scale of like 4 to 6 reps range) not biocally stressed aka endurance stress.

  • @Bolshevikrussia
    @Bolshevikrussia Рік тому

    For a decade (from age 23 to 33) i mistook Heavy Duty Failure training concept of Mike Mentzer and didn't see results.
    Lately, in the last 4 years (i am 37 now). I switched over to higher volume Training short of failure always..my gains in strength and body measurements have been better in last 4 years than the last previous 11 years to failure

  • @Itsadamnshame
    @Itsadamnshame 2 місяці тому

    Lucky enough, I start at failure and move my way down. :)

  • @Jorandoi
    @Jorandoi Рік тому

    good to know because i did failure all day

  • @gajendranmunisamy9252
    @gajendranmunisamy9252 Рік тому

    Good job 👌

  • @DBASSDAN
    @DBASSDAN Рік тому

    5 x 5, kicks ass.

  • @yaboiij6694
    @yaboiij6694 Рік тому +5

    As long as you train until there’s an involuntary slowing of muscle contraction during the set close to failure, it should be enough stimulus for growth

  • @nolannaert6354
    @nolannaert6354 Рік тому +1

    What about drop sets til failure?

  • @aurelienyonrac
    @aurelienyonrac Рік тому

    It is nervously taxing

  • @_Avaan_
    @_Avaan_ Рік тому +3

    I completely agree with that, I do mostly bodyweight Exercises with Some dumbells etc.. I mostly pushed myself to failure(Every single Workout), I literally don't had the Strength to even Do some basic things at home after that workout and Mom was Always complaining about it... Now I changed it I only Goes About 75-80% and It makes me more active through out the day.. And My mom is happy now😂

  • @danikatona8936
    @danikatona8936 Рік тому

    I agree! I usually max out, the reps I can preform correctly.

  • @jesperpetersen636
    @jesperpetersen636 Рік тому

    Go to failure. If you cant fulfill the movement the do as much you Can. Just some experience after 32 years of training my body in all sorts of ways.

  • @paLm22
    @paLm22 Рік тому

    I train to failure every set. This is why I am shredded beyond belief.

  • @jelos6397
    @jelos6397 Рік тому +1

    I alway train to quality of movement failure. I don't see the point of doing an exercice that is badly executed.

  • @OGLOC1574
    @OGLOC1574 Рік тому

    When you know nothing and you interview someone who knows just as little as you 🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @ilanasmits6148
    @ilanasmits6148 Рік тому

    So it’s better to , for example do 10 quit heavy reps which are preformed good and then you call it a set , rather than doing 13 or so reps with that same weight , whilst those last 3 reps where just half or 3 quarter reps

  • @OKOK-hm2is
    @OKOK-hm2is Рік тому

    I just can't feel good if I don't have that last rep that I cannot perform despite all my effort. It's like cheating if I do less.
    But not on technical compound movements.
    For squat and deadlift I always leave few reps in the tank, because it this case failure means injury.

  • @HoliGallistur1023
    @HoliGallistur1023 Рік тому

    Breakdown my nervous system ?

  • @devvv4616
    @devvv4616 Рік тому

    when i was younger i used to do that cos of all those motivational videos about how bad i want it and whatnot. then i'd get sore as hell for days and barely be able to workout in a week.

  • @wenmoves
    @wenmoves Рік тому

    I like this proposition

  • @promophobe69
    @promophobe69 Рік тому

    But if last week you fail at 10 and this week you fail at 11, that's actually progress. Isn't measurable progress good for mental health?

  • @vortigaunt7655
    @vortigaunt7655 Рік тому

    I’m unsure, it’s really complicated and the results can vary from day to day

  • @FaulksDigital
    @FaulksDigital Рік тому

    Well the science clearly says otherwise

  • @saxonmillerklee
    @saxonmillerklee Рік тому

    Would it not be beneficial to train your nervous system endurance by training to failure.

  • @azumag4432
    @azumag4432 Рік тому

    I always stop 2000 reps before failure.

  • @conlangknow8787
    @conlangknow8787 Рік тому

    A good idea is probably training to failing a rep failure every so often to know your limits and to train a rep or two under.

  • @johnhamilton6768
    @johnhamilton6768 Рік тому

    Get to failure first with single sets and hit the same plateau 2 weeks in a row to get your true failure number then start adding sets but only doing 70% each set.

  • @avontebrowning8940
    @avontebrowning8940 11 місяців тому

    So do sets to failure vs reps to failure?

  • @icedragon9097
    @icedragon9097 Рік тому

    everyone responds to failure differently. I'm pretty lucky as i can train past failure with drop sets for a whole session and then come back the next day with a different muscle group good as new

  • @raaj966
    @raaj966 Рік тому

    How abt mike & dorien yates ??

  • @aakashsuriyaaakashsuriya4300

    Bro, what is your opinion on Mike Mentzer work out principle

  • @rq5304
    @rq5304 Місяць тому

    I cant speak for anyone else but I have seen more gains working out to failure with less reps then I have to pre failure and I have been lifting for 15 years. Just saying.

  • @jeremytheimer7443
    @jeremytheimer7443 Рік тому

    I go to faliure on the first set to figure out where to stop on the next sets. Hasn't caused me any problems.

  • @Yourubeei
    @Yourubeei Рік тому

    Someone explain the whole “rpe” shit. Someone told me it means how many you have left in the tank, first of all how would you know how many you could get, secondly so an RPE of 10 seems so ridiculous, I’d be using like 20kg dumbells for bench press lol

  • @dylh7559
    @dylh7559 Рік тому

    I think unless you really know your body well it's hard to find that RPE 10 without going to full failure. Most people would be able to do atleast 1 or 2 more reps if they were to given a million dollar for those extra reps.

  • @YPEJr
    @YPEJr Рік тому +1

    How do you feel about isometrics?

    • @Dtp2296
      @Dtp2296 Рік тому

      Isometrics are best for minumum muscle damage but are slow to build strength
      , eccentrics are best for rapid strength building but at the cost of most damage so more rest is needed. Concentrics in the middle

  • @lucasdocarmo7792
    @lucasdocarmo7792 Рік тому

    Say that to Arnold or Coleman hahahaha

  • @zezeti2246
    @zezeti2246 11 місяців тому

    Once in a while you have to train to failure,how else are you supposed to know how far from failure you should train?😅

  • @bobdobric6787
    @bobdobric6787 Рік тому +4

    i was watching a video a while back now on how the Russians train and i remember this lifter saying he goes to failure 1 in 4 times so 3 trainings he focuses on lifting heavy with form and then 1 out of 4 he goes all out .And we all know how well they are in the strength world

  • @RoboBreaker
    @RoboBreaker Рік тому

    Legendary Mr. Olympia Mike Mentzer would disagree with you completely

  • @KurokamiNajimi
    @KurokamiNajimi Рік тому +3

    Leaving reps in the tank does nothing but increase the amount of sets needed. Notice how much your performance drops from a 0 RIR set vs a 2 RIR set. I stopped leaving more than 1 rep in the tank and that’ll be on the last set if I do. With this approach you don’t even necessarily need 3 sets 2 can be enough

  • @wimeatsworld
    @wimeatsworld Рік тому

    Couldn't be stated more clearly.
    I'm curious how much extra recovery would be needed because of the additional 'tissue damage'.

  • @ElementFreedive
    @ElementFreedive Рік тому +1

    Tell this to the HIT cult people :-)

  • @rajatthakur3058
    @rajatthakur3058 Рік тому

    I can do 50 pushups at speed but slow and controlled only 20. Which will be good for muscular development ?

  • @Angel-sk1wg
    @Angel-sk1wg Рік тому

    We all want to do more work, but if you’re sacrificing your safety and your form, then you’re also sacrificing the gains just to say i did more work

  • @andrewsup5952
    @andrewsup5952 8 місяців тому

    Fries your nervous system?Bro,that is such a bs..Take a look on all the heavy lifters out there,you think they got big by staying in the comfort zone?You either go hard or go home,no in between.If you’re doing it for the health purposes,sure,no need for that,but if you train to get big and put mass,go to fucking failure every rep or don’t go at all.I jumped from struggling to bench 70kgs to repping 100kgs in less than 5 month with the “no pain,no gain” mentality.Cheers👊💪

  • @draszi
    @draszi Рік тому

    So AMRAP good Failure bad

  • @mohanad0408
    @mohanad0408 Рік тому

    It's really not worth it. I hear some Russian lifters do more than 10 sets throughout the day (these are professional athletes) just to accumulate as much volume without failure. Regular lifters have limited time in the gym, so it's to feel guilty if you don't go all out in a single session.

  • @toscadonna
    @toscadonna Рік тому

    Back in 1995, we had a trainer who made us (the volleyball players) and the football players train with light weights to failure once per week. It was supposedly some new science backed training regiment to make us better athletes. Now I knew this was gonna be bullshit, but I let it slide and participated. We ALL got weaker, and the football team got crushed that year. I was weaker going into track after a semester of that dumb sh1t, and my coach, who was an Olympic hammer thrower, had to put me onto a periodization chart to get my lifts back up to where they were prior the dumb training to failure that had been inflicted upon us. And that strength coach who came up with the training to failure scheme was fired.

    • @fbomb2353
      @fbomb2353 Рік тому +1

      The lighter weights and going to failure probably got you used to lifting lighter. Failure probably wasn't the problem. If you chose the right assistant exercises I think it's probably fine. Meaning it was probably the movements he had you training. If your going to use light weights and push them hard they need to be specifically tailored for other exercises. Going light with curls to failure for example will just tax the nervous system, and while with that particular muscle group it may get you a little stronger, it will also take time away from compounds like pull ups that you could probably just use a harder variation of and get better results over time. I can see why the programming itself would end up negatively effecting you simply because you're taking time away from more beneficial things. Light weights can be beneficial if it's used for conditioning but it's better to do stuff like that on days in between training in my experience. The movement should prime the body for harder lifts while pumping bl00d in the joints for recovery. Fifteen minutes or so is all that's really needed and it should boost your real training session making it go smoother. Failure isn't even needed on every set when doing this, but the last few should be a struggle for sure.

  • @manofsteel7728
    @manofsteel7728 Рік тому +1

    The one thing I learnt is it's better to let go that last rep as it may cause some serious injury due to sudden movement and low stability
    It comes to the point of being greedy for more reps
    It's the volume of reps which stimulates growth not failure
    I didn't get any injury and gained muscle with this way

  • @skither4305
    @skither4305 Рік тому +1

    Jesus loves all of you! Turn to him before it’s too late!

  • @Dtp2296
    @Dtp2296 Рік тому

    Bro science at it's finest

  • @Pp-sr4cs
    @Pp-sr4cs Рік тому

    What dictates on how intense you should train is your personality and how truly intense you can train, as simple as that. You will have a natural inclination towards a certain type of training either way. Some can go high volume, some intensity, some can mix both, some may have this very precise window of what they do and etc. There're no absolute rules, only reccomendations.

  • @JBell949
    @JBell949 Рік тому

    you should train to yourself?

  • @billyclob637
    @billyclob637 Рік тому

    More excuses for ppl to train with little effort, hit 4x-12 and call it good.

  • @JohnSmith-ct5jd
    @JohnSmith-ct5jd Рік тому +1

    Jeff Cavalier: "Not training to failure is killing your gains."

  • @wahabkhan7611
    @wahabkhan7611 Рік тому

    I think training to muscle failure is better for enhanced individuals not for naturals, thats why all the OG enhanced bodybuilders recommended it cuz it works for them, it cannot work for the majority of natural lifters because they will have muscular and CNS limitations. And training to failure on a regular basis is really not sustainable for everyone, it just destroys your body beyond the point of what your body is naturally able to recover from. Training to failure is just overrated immensely.

  • @WORKOUT_Dalmatia101
    @WORKOUT_Dalmatia101 Рік тому

    *MASTER* is talking right,listen to Daniel and his guys all pur progress philosophy comes from FITNES FAQS* ✅🌅💙💪

  • @skinnylifter
    @skinnylifter Рік тому +1

    This is completely incorrect. The vast majority of people train because they want bigger muscles, and if you want to continue making gains past the first year of working out, you need to be training to failure

  • @ktleen
    @ktleen Рік тому +5

    Strong disagree. As long as you re in a safe space when performing an exercise i think is very beneficial to train close, to, and beyond failure. Altho not 100% of the time i think a vast majority should be with very intensity as long as you dont injure yourself.

    • @mkthefit7780
      @mkthefit7780 Рік тому +1

      Science and experience say otherwise

    • @GeorgesonOfficial
      @GeorgesonOfficial Рік тому +3

      @@mkthefit7780 No, it doesn't. Science has always shown training to failure always showed more growth stimulus than not training to failure. You just need to decide if the increased stimulus between 2RIR to 0-1RIR is worth the injury risk and that depends on your form to begin with. If your concentric and eccentric are very controlled, you can continue to failure as you will be limited strictly by your strength and nothing else, there is actually very low risk. The problem is either when people have poor form to begin with or pitch in momentum on their last reps to cheat through their failure. At that point, you've reached failure for the given exercise but you are trying to break form and utilitize other muscles to lift the weight, that's mainly how people tend to get injured.

    • @ktleen
      @ktleen Рік тому +1

      @@GeorgesonOfficial yes, this. We need to learn to train hard with minimal break form. We need to learn how to grind through reps. As long as the load is for your level, the form is good, you control the eccentric and concentric parts of the exercise, and there is minimal risk of injury, we should train really fucking hard the majority of time. Its a skill you aquire in time

    • @GeorgesonOfficial
      @GeorgesonOfficial Рік тому +1

      @@ktleen fr

  • @SerpentOfSamael
    @SerpentOfSamael Рік тому

    This is bullshit. Volume and high intensity are key, just mix it up.

  • @arturchmara5594
    @arturchmara5594 Рік тому

    You guys sound like you looking for excuses not to go into deep dark place.