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Heavy Negatives are a Positively Good
Idea
By Mike Westerdal -
www.criticalbench.com
This
article will assume that you are trying to increase your strength. If
you go to the gym to stay in shape, maintain your strength, or even
worse, to avoid getting fat, than don't waste your time reading this.
However, if you set your goals for yourself, have an open mind and want
to get bigger and stronger than read on.
Negatives can be applied to any exercise to help shock your muscles.
They are specifically included in the
Critical
Bench Program to help you increase your bench press. First lets
review what exactly a negative is making sure everybody is on the same
page. Using the bench press as an example let's review a negative set.
You will load the bar with a weight that is about 40 lbs heavier than
your one rep max. (If you don't know your one rep max you can look it up
on this chart: http://www.criticalbench.com/chart.htm) Three spotters
will be needed. The most important spotter is the one that stands behind
you because he will keep his hands on the bar throughout the entire
lift. The two remaining spotters will stand on opposite ends of the bar.
Of course you will need a lift off unless you plan on turning negatives
into a positively bad idea. You will now begin to lower the weight as
slowly as positive. At first you'll do fine, but about half way down
you'll feel like you are trying to stop the weight from falling. Once
the bar touches your chest all three spotters lift the weight to the
lockout position where you start again. When you are lifting poundage
this heavy only a few reps will be possible so don't feel discouraged.
Okay so why in the world would you want to do this? Won't you look like
an idiot in the gym when three people have to pull the weight off your
chest? People have even said that the exercise is just an ego booster
and doesn't do much for you. Some clowns might even say that you are
cheating! Well don't believe any of it. Luckily, I'm here to tell you
why negatives are so important.

1. Heavy Negatives Overload the Muscles
Most of us will agree that singles help improve strength because you
overload your muscles with heavy poundage that your body is not used to.
Based on the same principle, if you do negative sets with even more than
your max weight you will overload your muscles even further.
2. Conditioning Your Body
Let me give you a few examples of this. A basketball player who is
shooting jump shots while he is wearing ankle weights. A swimmer who
does laps wearing pants and a t-shirt. A football player preparing for
camp by running in the middle of the afternoon during a 90-degree summer
day. A sprinter that runs with a parachute tied to his back. How about a
powerlifter that does negatives with a weight that is much heavier than
his one rep max. Are you beginning to see the correlation? When you run
in 90-degree weather, practice in 80-degree heat doesn't seem so bad.
When you shot jump shots with ankle weights, you feel pretty light and
explosive when you take them off. When it is time to unload in each
situation the body can perform better because it has been strengthened
by the overload. You get the point. Let's say your goal is to bench 400
lbs. If you've never tried it, the initial shock might surprise you. If
you've felt the weight of 450 lbs and done negative sets with it, your
mind and your muscles will be preconditioned to handle the 400 you were
aiming for. You've felt heavier weight, making this weight seem lighter.
Your muscles need to feel the shock of heavy weight to prepare for a
max. So why not take it to the extreme?
3. The Challenge
If your training lacks intensity I'd like to see you have the courage to
take this exercise lightly. Actually I wouldn't, but don't worry about
it because it's not possible anyhow. Your heart will begin racing, and
you will be pumped with adrenaline. Not to mention the fact that you
have three people watching you. You'll be ready to perform, because
there is no other choice. This is more weight than you've ever lifted in
your life, so you will get psyched up for the big challenge. As
mentioned earlier, some people call negatives ego boosters. They are
partially correct. It does feel good to load the bar with the heavy
poundage. Whipping out a few reps will definitely give you confidence
when it's time to max out for real. The only difference will be you've
felt heavier.
4. Letting It Down Slow
Still not convinced? Let me pull out the textbook for you. The eccentric
phase is the opposite of the contraction. For the bench press it is the
lowering of the weight. Many bodybuilders treat this phase as an after
thought, which they shouldn't because it is very important. Research
confirms that the eccentric component of a lift may be more important
than the concentric phase for promoting muscle growth. One study showed
that, when compared to normal weight training, concentric-only training
required twice as many repetitions to produce similar results. With
normal weight training, during an eccentric contraction (negative) you
lower the same weight with fewer muscle fibers, and that means that each
fiber involved has to sustain greater force.
5. Get The Last Laugh
We all know variety is important as well. If you haven't done heavy
negatives before than give them a try. It may be just what your muscles
are screaming for. If you get funny looks at the gym, don't worry about
it. You're not there to impress anybody; you're there to get stronger.
The only person you have to look at in the mirror is yourself. The
weights will always weigh the same so you can't compete with them. You
may want to practice negatives with lighter weight before you jump right
into this. Round up a couple buddies and show them why heavy negatives
are positively a good idea.
Mike
Westerdal is the owner of
CriticalBench.com. He earned his BS from Central CT State University
where he played four years of D-IAA football. After college Mike went on
to play and coach football in Europe before he acquired his
certification as a personal trainer with the American Council on
Exercise. Westerdal is a contributing muscle writer for various iron
magazines including REPS! and Monster Muscle. In addition his articles
are published throughout the Internet.
Westerdal is a drug free competitive powerlifter in the AAPF, AAU and
APA federations. He resides in sunny Clearwater, FL and trains at
Titanium Barbell Club in St. Petersburg. He will soon be married to his
wonderful fiance Courtney.
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