There Are No “Special” Exercises That Build A Peak, Or Shape A Muscle

bjbi

Question:
How can I build the peak on my biceps like Yours? I was told that preacher curls build a peak, is this true?

Answer:
You will need to clone yourself and mix in a copy of My anatomical DNA! Just kiddding.

Unfortunately, a peak on your biceps is genetic, meaning you either have it or you do not. If you build your biceps just as you would any other muscle group, and a peak never forms, then it probably never will.

There are no “special” exercises that build a peak, or shape a muscle. You train a muscle and it grows, whatever genetic shape it has that is how it will grow. It really is that simple.

So continue to train your biceps, utilizing many different exercises, e.g. chin ups, preacher curls, barbell curls, & dumbbell curls, hopefully you are one of the few lucky ones like me that where gifted with “peaked” biceps.

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Truth About Building A Solid Chest

Bruno-Full-Chest

Question:
I want to build up my upper and inner chest, should I do incline presses and cable crossovers for this?

Answer:
YES! As well as flat barbell presses, decline barbell presses & dumbbell flyes.

I do not say this because any of those exercises will actually target any specific region of your pectorial, cause they will not. I say this because to obtain “complete” chest development to your maximum genetic potential you will need a variety of exercises.

A common mistake people make is the “I feel it” syndrome. They think because an exercise makes a certain part of a muscle sore it must target that area of the muscle. This is true in some cases such as the deltoids where there are more than one head with different tendon attachments. The pectoral major is a single muscle with one tendon attachment to the humerus (arm) that fans across the rib cage. However, it is still a single muscle and muscles grow as a whole, not in parts. Think about it this way, if you could cause growth in one area of a single muscle that would imply that it’s possible to shape a muscle, right? Well, we all know (at least I hope we do) that you cannot shape a muscle. The shape of your muscles are genetically predetermined.

Now, it’s still important to use multiple angles to hit the pectoral muscles (and any muscle for that matter), not because it will cause growth in one area, but because using different angles to hit a muscle is necessary for maximum stimulation and to continue progress and development.

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