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Muscle can’t turn to fat anymore than fat can turn to muscle. They are two completely different substances. This myth gets it biggest boost from jealous types who wouldn’t know a barbell if they tripped over it. It doesn’t help matters either when bodybuilders and others athletes gain fat when they retire. It’s not that their muscles have turned to fat but that their muscles have lost tone and begin to sag, giving the appearance of fat. Trust us your muscle won’t turn to fat if you stop training.
This myth is a direct opposite of what you should actually do. If you had to choose only one type of exercise to lose weight, bodybuilding would be it. Firstly, cardio doesn’t build muscle tissue. Secondly, cardio doesn’t preserve muscle while losing body fat. Muscle on the other hand boosts your metabolism. The only way to preserve or build new muscle - which is what you really need to do to get lean - is through weight training.
Hate to break it to you but it is physiologically impossible to change the shape of any muscle on your bodies. Shape is determined by genetics. There is no way to change your muscles’ final shape. In other words, if you have short biceps when you first start training, you’re going to have short biceps after 10 yers of training. If your chest is square shaped it will always be square shaped, and so on.
Feeling sore in the days following a workout, may indicate that you had a productive workout. But the opposite is also true. Not being sore in the days after a workout has nothing to do with whether or not you actually worked hard and challenged yourself. The more important factors are intensity level and productivity. Something as subjective as how you felt during and after a workout is probably more important than how sore you felt the following day. So don’t worry if you’re not sore. Instead, pay attention to your intensity levels, productivity, and how you felt during the workout and immediately after your bodybuilding workout.
It takes up to two weeks for a muscle to start losing size and strength (muscle atrophy). A common misconception is that if you don’t train the muscles multiple times per week they will lose their size and strength.
But more is not always better. The average individual on a four-day split routine, training with 100% intensity, will need between four and seven days off between body parts.
By Bob Howard