30 Biggest Lies In Bodybuilding

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Hi, found this article on the web (click here to read. It seemed too big to post here), and some of it seems to agree with HST principles, but some don't. The authors seem well-informed, but two "lies" (#2 and #8) made me think twice about the advice I got about eating to bulk up. The authors don't seem to believe in "bulking" and "cutting" phases.

Can anyone please comment?  TIA

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30 Biggest Lies about Bodybuilding


MUSCLE MEDIA 2000 EXPOSES
30 OF BODYBUILDING'S BIGGEST LIES
THAT STAND BETWEEN YOU AND SUCCESS!
By T.C. Luoma and Bill Phillips.

. . .

2 -- In order to get really big, you have to eat a super-high-calorie diet.

Well, that's true; you'll get really big if you eat a super high-calorie diet, but you'll look like the Michelin Man's fraternal twin. However, if you want to get big, lean-tissue wise, then super-high-calorie diets are probably not for you unless you are one of those very few people with metabolicrates so fast you can burn off these calories instead of depositing them as fat. Unfortunately, studies show that, in most people, about 65% of the new tissue gains brought about by high-calorie diets consists of fat! Of the remaining 35%, approximately 15% consists of increased intracellular fluid volume, leaving a very modest percentage attributable to increased lean muscle mass.

According to Dr Scott Connelly (MM2K, Spring 1992, p. 21), only about 20% to 25% of increased muscle growth stems from increased protein synthesis. The rest of the muscle growth is directly attributable to increased proliferation of the satellite cells in the basal lamina of muscle tissue, and dietary energy (calories) is not a key factor in the differentiation of these cells into new myofibers (muscle cells).

Of all factors determining muscle growth, prevention of protein breakdown (anti-catabolism) seems to be the most relevant, but adding adipose [fat] tissue through constant overfeeding can actually increase muscle proteolysis (breakdown). Furthermore, additional adipose mass can radically alter hormone balances which are responsible for controlling protein breakdown in muscle. Insulin balance, for one, which partially controls anti-catabolism in the body, is impaired by consistent overfeeding. So much for the eat-big-to-get-big philosophy!

Stay away from the super-high calorie diets unless you're a genetic freak, or you're woefully lean and don't mind putting on fat [or you're using appropriate pharmaceutical supplements].


. . .


8 -- You can't build muscle on a sub-maintenance calorie intake diet.

It may be a little harder, and it may require a little bit more know-how and a little bit more conscientious effort, but it can be done. The fact is, the obese state in humans and animals is not universally correlated with absolute levels of caloric intake and neither is the accrual of lean body mass. The ability to realize changes in lean/fat ratios is regulated by components of the automatic nervous system working in concert with several endocrine hormones; this is called nutrient partitioning. For example, certain beta-agonist drugs like Clenbuterol increase meat production in cattle over 30% while simultaneously diminishing bodyfat without increasing the amount or composition of their feed. Other drugs, including growth hormone, certain oestrogens, cortisol, ephedrine, and IGF-1 are all examples of re-partitioning agents. All increase oxygen consumption at the expense of fat storage--independent of energy intake!

Drugs are not the only way to do this, however. It's true that a significant component of this mechanism is genetically linked, but specific nutrients, in specific amounts, when combined with an effective training programme, can markedly improve the lean/fat ratio of adult humans. MET-Rx is one such nutrient re-partitioning agent, and several companies are trying to duplicate its successes [warning: one of the authors of this article has a significant financial stake in Substrate Technologies, the makers of MET-Rx].
 
The date of the post was 1994 and it appears to be referencing an article that was out-of-print at that time.  Some of the information is outdated and wrong, e.g., steady state cardio is the best way to lose fat and total body training 3Xweek taking sets to failure will ellicit the best growth.
 
Here's another huge myth u forgot:

Arnold Schwarzenegger is cool
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While it's true that bodybuilding has an enormous number of lies and myths, I've seldom seen them listed for the sake of clarification or to get to the truth.

 Usually when I see an intro like that ("lies/myths"), what follows is an explanation of why you should buy what we sale as opposed to what the other guys sale. Not always, but most of the time.

 It's sad that $$$$$$ take precedence over the real truth.

Anthony
 
<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">It's sad that $$$$$$ take precedence over the real truth.
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Fact of life, except in HST
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