Isolation Rules


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By Ian Graham and Bryan Kavanagh
Authors of The Athlete Physique

Isolation exercises rule, but they are like the icing on the cake... You have to have all the ingredients present, mix them together and bake the cake before adding the topping. Too many trainees are trying to ice the cake before it has been baked!

No isolation here!

The gym is littered with guys and girls hammering out all sorts of isolation exercises... either to tone, lose fat or even gain muscle before they have developed a true level of strength.

You need a base of strength to achieve anything in the gym, fat loss muscle gain or conditioning.

Strength is the well from which all of your training capacity comes from.

The higher your max strength, the harder and longer you can work because you are using a smaller percentage of your max capacity to perform each exercise and the resultant time to fatigue is prolonged.

You can do more work at much higher intensities!

This rule holds for muscle gain and fat loss.

The stronger you are on compound movements the more you can lift when isolating the muscles too. However, if you focus on isolating before you have earned the right to do so, it can only hurt your progress and use up precious time you could be dedicating to bigger, better, more bang for your buck exercises.


The RULES of ISOLATION

  • Earn The Right To Isolate
  • Bodyweight Before External Loading
  • Push and Pull Before You Flex and Extend
  • Use Performance Parameters Before Implementing Isolation Exercises


Are you breaking the isolation rules?

Isolating muscles while training versus training heavy and with big compound movements has always been at the centre of controversy. For example on 'bicep day' doing about four different curl variations followed by some crunches. Here's the first problem; dedicating an entire day to such a small and comparatively weak muscle just doesn't make sense. Look at the following two resistance training sessions:

Session 1: (Isolation Based)
Barbell Bicep Curls
Dumbbell Hammer Curls
Barbell Reverse Curl
Dumbbell Alternating Curls

Session 2: (Compound Movements)
Pull ups (pronated grip/ palms facing away)
Chin ups (supinated grip/palms facing you)
Parallel grip chins (palms facing each other)

Isolating a muscle is inherently wrong as it doesn't happen in real life and doesn't make sense from a physiological standpoint. Your body works in patterns of movement it never isolates! Going against your natural coordination pattern and lifting sub max weights is just silly! Unless you've earned the right to do so that is.

Look at the session number 1 . . massive 'pump' right? 'oooh yea I'm hitting the biceps from every angle'. Well not really, you are hitting the muscle sub maximally with lots of repetitions and essentially you are training your biceps for endurance! Now I know your going to say 'but bodybuilders use these methods'!

You aren't a bodybuilder!

Less than 1% of the population are of the genetic predisposition that they will make muscular gains much easier than everyone else. That's life! If you wanted to be a bodybuilder you should have chose your parents better because they are the ones that gave you those genes.

Now look at the session number 2. You might say 'there's no bicep exercises in there' look closer! ANY pulling movement is essentially a curl with a pull attached to it. I.e. Chins or any heavy pull are essentially working your biceps they way they were intended to work! A functional movement!

Now what if I said that isolating muscles was actually counterproductive... not only are you at risk of not adding muscle but you are also breaking down muscle you added in previous sessions? Have I got your attention now?

Any exercise initiates a stress response from the endocrine system; cortisol. Low intensity and isolation exercise, by its very nature never allows the body to reach the intensity required to release growth promoting and fat releasing testosterone and HGH and continually exposes the body to unopposed cortisol which makes weight loss more difficult and breaks down muscle. Cortisol, in its wisdom also increases blood sugar levels, thus increasing insulin levels and decreasing fat loss.

What I'm getting at here is that most, if not all exercise should contain a level of intensity and isolation exercises such as crunches should 1) not be performed at all and 2) even if they are performed they should never be preformed on their own! Ever heard of someone going to the gym to do their biceps and their abs? Could they have picked a more low intensity workout?

Unopposed Cortisol City!

Now I am not saying that isolation exercises should NEVER be performed! I am merely saying that if somebody has only ever performed isolation exercises, they more than likely are not strong! Have you been curling the same 25 pound dumbbells for 3 months thinking that 'maybe next week you'll get stronger/bigger. What is the definition of insanity?

'Repeating the same behaviour over and over expecting different results' - Albert Einstein

Now in order to make a limb strong enough to do heavy enough curls to tax the muscle appropriately you need to train it the way it can be trained hardest! I don't know about you but a 200 pound row or a weighted chin up would tax the biceps a LOT more then a concentration curl!

'Earn the right to isolate'

Now that isn't to say that you can't add a little volume to your training with isolation exercises but 2/3 sets at the end of a session will suffice. Do the important stuff first! Challenge the biceps and grip heavily with chins, rows and deadlifts (yes deadlifts strengthen your biceps too)

Set performance goals to earn the right to isolate

If you can currently only do 5 chin ups and are eager to start doing arm curls… WAIT and only allow yourself to introduce arm curls once you can do 10 full chin ups. Apply this 'RULE' for numerous lifts/bodyparts.

 
 

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Bodyweight before external load

Another great one I see is people doing 5kg dumbbell presses. I am a strong believer that an individual should be able to perform bodyweight exercises before ever going near external load i.e. weights! It doesn't make any sense! Bodyweight exercises are the best, most appropriate exercises you can perform when starting out.

'I can't do a single push up'

For those of you that can't perform bodyweight exercises YET that doesn't mean you retreat to the pink weights section! NO. Perform some assisted bodyweight exercises such as band assisted push ups, chins, dips and inverted rows, until you can perform the traditional versions then move onto the advanced progressions for these exercises.

So your take home points are. . .

1. Push and pull before you flex and extend
2. Bodyweight exercises before external load
3. 'Earn the right to isolate'
4. Use Performance Parameters Before Implementing Isolation Exercises


CLICK HERE
to learn more about Bryan's
book "The Athlete Physique".

 

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