28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan
With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleA round butt can be one of the most attractive body parts of the female body. Especially since her wider hips, the more acute angle at which her thigh bones attach to the pelvis, create that particular way of walking that singer Tennessee Ernie Ford referred to as having “quite a hitch in her get-along.”
But some butts are better shaped than others – either primarily by genetic inheritance or a combination of nature and nurture (exercise, activity, and diet). For example, fitter women tend to have a much harder and rounder butt and less “padding” from covering layers of fat.
So, while you are born with certain physical qualities and proportions, several decades of female muscle competitors and hardbody women athletes have demonstrated there is a lot you can to do bring out your best qualities and to make up for inherent natural deficiencies.
The key to shaping and building a round butt is to subject the muscle involved to the proper program of resistance training. And the most effective and efficient type of resistance exercise ever invented is the modern program of bodybuilding-type weight training. That is, not what serious competition bodybuilders do but the principles that underlie this training and which can be used by anybody to build, shape, and develop their own bodies.
To build and shape the body for a round butt, you need to do the basic exercises, with sufficient intensity, over a long enough period of time. Regardless of what your ultimate goal might be.
There are two basic kinds of leg training exercises for a round butt:
Two-joint, compound movements are some kind of press – such as squats, leg presses, or hack squats. These are power movements that combine the efforts of a lot of big muscles such as the quadriceps, hamstrings, and glutes and allow you to generate a great deal of force.
LEG PRESSES: Everybody knows what a deep-knee bend is. Well, that is the basic leg press movement done as a callisthenic exercise, using just your own bodyweight for resistance. Both the hip and knee joints are involved and, depending on exactly how this movement is done, almost all the major leg muscles can be involved.
BARBELL SQUAT: This is the primary exercise for building the lower body. You balance a barbell across the back of your shoulders, squat down until your thighs are about parallel to the floor, and press back up. A variation of this is squatting while holding two dumbbells at arm’s length by your side.
MACHINE LEG PRESS: There are a variety of machines that let you do a leg press movement without having to control a free weight. There are standing machines, incline machines, and vertical machines (where you lie on your back). You gain from using these devices because you don’t have to balance weight and there is little chance of losing control during the movement. But the muscles tend to respond less to exercises in which “difficult” replaces the feeling of “heavy,” so it’s best to include both free weight and machine exercises in your routine.
HACK SQUATS: – This is the primary exercise for specifically targeting the glutes and hamstrings – the absolute best one for a round butt. It is essentially a leg press movement where your feet are placed way out in front instead of underneath you. This throws the effort back from your quadriceps toward the back of the leg – glutes, and hamstrings. You obviously can’t do hack squats with free weights. You’d fall over backward. Instead, position your feet high up and forward on an incline press machine or well in front of you on a Smith machine (with the bar that does up and down in a track). Lower your body as far as you can only come up about three-quarters of the way – or else the quads will be working instead of the glutes and hamstrings.
Training legs is very demanding and if you train intensely, you only need to work them in the gym about once a week, or twice in ten days.
Exercising the muscles sends a signal through the nervous system telling the body it needs to grow and adapt. You don’t actually change the muscles directly unless you damage or over-stress them.
The target amount of resistance is about 75% of your one-rep maximum. In practical terms, this means a weight that allows you to do about 10 to 12 reps to failure for the upper body muscles, and about 12 to 16 reps to failure for the legs. The reason for the difference is that blood and oxygen delivery are more efficient to the leg muscles, so they have somewhat more endurance during exercise.
It should be remembered that the human body is a homeostatic organism. That is, it tries to stay the same no matter the environment or how it is treated. This is why you can diet or overeat substantially, and it takes days or weeks before you see any changes in your body. In the same regard, you can pursue a bodybuilding-type program for long periods of time before the changes in your physique become obvious.
This is all the more reason why you need to follow a bodybuilding-type program even if your goal is not to be a competitive bodybuilder. Bodybuilders have figured out the most effective and efficient way of developing the muscles of the body in all of history. Since few of us are “genetic geniuses” that build a lot of muscle just by looking at a weight, and everyone eventually runs into a situation of diminishing returns, the best way to achieve your goals and get the maximum you can out of your genetic inheritance is to learn to deliver the most stimulation to your muscles that is possible. And that is why training like a bodybuilder is your best strategy.
A lot of lower body exercises have some effect on butt shape and the ultimate goal of havin round butt. Again, some genetic geniuses just need to do some squats and leg presses and end up with great development of their butts. But most are not so gifted. For the rest, the primary exercise is hack squats.
Technically, what hack squats are is a leg press movement in which the feet are moved well forward shifting the center of gravity toward the back – which more specifically targets the glutes and hamstrings. You need some sort of machine or device to do this. My recommendation is using a Smith machine – the device in which a bar slides up and down in a fixed track.
To do a hack squat on a Smith machine, position yourself with the bar across the back of your shoulders and move your feet well forward. You can judge how far by trial and effort experience. When you are new to this, use very little weight to start with. Properly done, this movement does not use the strength of the big quadriceps so you will not be a strong as most squatting or leg press movements.
Bend your knees and come down until your butt just touches but doesn’t rest on the floor. Pause at the bottom and then back up – but only about ¾ of the way. Any further and you are engaging the quadriceps, which you don’t want involved in this movement.
Hack squats are the only two-joint, power press exercise that directly targets the glutes and hamstrings. When you are at the bottom of the movement and first start upward, the glutes are doing almost all the work. As you come up a little further the hamstrings become involved. As long as you don’t go up too far, all the effort comes from the back of the leg, not the front of the thighs.
Unless you’ve been doing hack squats like this, you have probably never worked that area of the legs intensely. So, you’re in for a surprise. Because you’re using a lighter weight than for squats, it doesn’t feel as if you’ve done that much after a few sets of hack squats. But later in the day, perhaps the next day, you may suddenly find your glutes and hams are extremely tired and sore. Even cramping. This is a sign that you’ve subjected these muscles to level of intensity that they are not accustomed to.
A lot of people are concerned that squatting so deeply puts too much pressure on the knees. But if your feet are far enough forward, you will see that at the bottom of the exercise your knees are only angled at about 90 degrees.
Using a bodybuilding-type approach to losing fat helps to create the definition that show off your muscular development. In general, bodybuilders get into and stay in a state of negative caloric balance, expending more energy than they consume. They keep their protein intake high, their fat intake low and adjust how many carb calories they consume depending on their daily caloric intake plan.
One thing to keep in mind is that, like building muscle, losing fat is a slow process. Competition bodybuilders generally take about 12 weeks of strict dieting to get ripped. But a large percentage of that change takes place near the end of the diet, not the beginning. You simply have to set a diet strategy and the stick with it for a long enough period.