That guy who does 5/3/1 even though he's a beginner

>that guy who does 5/3/1 even though he's a beginner

A partially autoregulated program like 5/3/1 would actually work pretty good for beginners.

>autoregulated

Elaborate.

5/3/1 only moves its training maxes up monthly, but the main set is an all-out set and the assistance isn't a prechosen weight or anything. If you've gotten stronger (and a beginner should have) your reps will go up to match. Its not like a set-in-stone weight/rep scheme where someone outpacing the expected progression will waltz through the workouts.

progress is progress you dogmatic autistic grey hoodie, Olympic shoe wearing intermediate lifter.

I really love that insult

>you dogmatic autistic grey hoodie, Olympic shoe wearing intermediate lifter.

h-how did y-ou..

Its a common stereotype. Lotta guys got into fitness around about the same time from the same info sources... and absorbed about the same amount of understanding.

This.

Beginner = Grey hoodie + runners
Novice = Grey hoodie + foam roller
Intermediate = Grey hoodie + foam roller + olympic shoes
Advanced = Grey hoodie + foam roller + olympic shoes + inzer belt

I see what're you're saying BUT it does not need to be autoregulated; each months you can reasses your maxes and calculate on your new max.

On a side note, I like 5/3/1. I just started another cycle today. My deadlift has been untrained in 3 months and i managed to lift 10 kilos more on my max diddlylift than i ever have done before. Weird.

Feels good to lift for strength desu fampai

>that guy who keeps giving bad people good ideas

>That guy who does triple six five forked tongue

It would work, but you would still gain more strength on SS

In the short term? Probably. Three lower body sessions a week trumps two for learning to display strength.

In the longer term? Maybe not. The lack of volume on SS tends to make people hit walls once they've tapped out their easy CNS increases and they haven't developed the muscle mass to go with it.

>That guy who SPIKESPIKESPIKESPIKESPIKESPIKE

ExM > TMS > BP > NLDW = TPTB

What does that mean

do novices abstain from footwear all together?

>That guy who thinks you need volume for hypertrophy

...

You do. It doesn't need to be all in one session or accomplished via high reps, but you need workload to grow.

NoTM>ExM>GP>TMS>JD>BP>NLDW

>The lack of volume on SS tends to make people hit walls once they've tapped out their easy CNS increases and they haven't developed the muscle mass to go with it.
That's why you do GOMAD, have you even read the book?

Yep. When they figure out squatting in runners is bad, but they don't want to spend the money on oly shoes.

>that guy who spends his time worrying about things other people do that affect him in no way whatsoever

>Niggas on the Moon and Jenny Death ranked separately

What??

Normally I rank them together, but after listening to JD again, the only good song is On GP, so I don't want it to drag down NoTM

Death grips album acronyms for all unawares

You, I and anyone else who read the book all know that GOMAD is not a blanket recommendation for new trainees.

>there are people that think Niggas on The Moon is better than Jenny Death
What

NoTM has no bad songs, whereas JD only has one good song

Bigger weights are volume too, user

Remember that the whole point of exercise is to shred your muscles. You're actively damaging your musculature in a controlled manner so that it gets stronger when it's rebuilt.

But after a certain point you can't do it with repetition alone. The only thing you get by lifting light weights a billion times is worn-out cartilages, like a less retarded version of crossfit, while lifting a huge weight once will provide you with the muscular damage you're looking for in the first place.

I'd contend that JD only has one bad song, while NOTM's songs are pretty much all average to forgettable

> It doesn't need to be [...] accomplished via high reps,

He already said that, work on your reading comprehension.

>Up My Sleeves
>Billy not Really
>Big Dipper
>average to forgettable

That was my initial opinion on the album, but I Break Mirrors, Inanimate Sensation, Turned Off and DG 2.0 really grew on me. I'd go as far as saying Turned Off is one of their best songs, Ride's flow in the first hook is really great(reminds me of Beware for some reason)

That's called intensity not volume you stupid bitch. You're wrong and you should feel bad that you're spreading misinformation.

>tfw this was my progression minus the grey hoodie

Volume is weight moved X reps X sets, you imbecile.

Try to get the same amount of volume doing sets of 3 as you would doing a set of 12. (Just an example).
It'll take twice as long.
>b-but muh strength
Who cares? The strength gain differences between high and low reps of equal volume is only really marginal, depending on how advanced you are.
Bodybuilders don't care about strength anyway.

If you're a powerlifter, go ahead, do your 7x3. But if you just want your muscles to grow, you can do the same amount of volume in half the time doing 4x8. 4x8 is still much more volume if you assume 7x3 is done at 90% of 1RM and 4x8 is done at 78%. Do the math.

I am a powerlifter. Very little of the training is stuff that's like 7x3. A lot of my current programming has me doing the main compounds for 8 or more reps at 70% my 1rm to accumulate fatigue. The difference in strength gains are big for beginner when you compare high reps and low reps, it's not until you get more advanced that more volume is required to progress.