“Holistic” isn’t a word you hear bandied about anymore, but in the ’70s it was a ubiquitous adjective: holistic medicine, holistic nutrition, holistic ecology and a Weider Principle, holistic training. “Holistic” signifies a relationship to whole systems as opposed to breaking things down to their parts. It’s macro, not micro. Picture a river. The more tributaries that flow into it the larger and faster that river will be. Likewise, by utilizing a variety of workout styles, you can focus these styles on one goal— more muscle—and, flowing together, they can help you reach that end faster.

 

8. THE WEIDER HOLISTIC TRAINING PRINCIPLE

This tenet prescribes you utilize a variety of training techniques to stimulate muscle growth. The best rep range is 8–12 reps, and exercises should generally be performed for three or four working sets. However, this is not the only way to grow. What’s more, doing it workout after workout most certainly is not the fastest way to grow. This brings us to one of FLEX’s favorite maxims: everything works, but not everything works forever. Incorporating a variety of workout styles in your training regimen allows you to take the best from each to build strength and size. Typically, you should do a different style of workout each week, and rotate three to five of these.

There are dozens of valuable styles, but here’s a quick look at seven major ones:

STANDARD This is the old standby: three or four sets per exercise and 8–12 reps per set.

HIT Focus on one or two working sets per exercise for high-intensity sets taken beyond failure via forced reps, rest-pause, etc. Do four to seven working sets per bodypart.

HIGH REP Sets of 20–100 reps. Utilize drop sets to extend sets to the upper ranges.

POWER/SPEED Emphasize the three powerlifts (squats, deadlifts, bench presses), pyramided to max sets of 3–6 reps. Also incorporate speed training via exercises like box jumps, partial dead lifts and bench presses with bands.

10X10 Maximize variety by doing 10 exercises 
per bodypart, but do only one set of 10 reps of each exercise. (This is a variation of German Volume Training, which is actually 10 sets of 10 reps on one exercise.)

SUPERSETS Do workouts consisting entirely of supersets. For example, follow every set for biceps with a set for triceps.

CIRCUIT These are conditioning workouts, so a week of three circuit sessions should be used as a “working rest.” Do 6–12 exercises in a circuit without stopping, stressing your entire body. Do three to five such circuits.

 

HOLISTIC TRAINING ROUTINES

Here are four sample quad routines that employ four distinct training styles: HIT, high-rep, power/speed and 10×10. After the 10×10 workout, start again the next time with the HIT workout.

Under Armour Project Rock Unrivaled Crew
Courtesy Image

FRESH TAKE

Holistic training doesn’t only apply to moving metal. It can also invigorate your cardio sessions. Altering your style of cardio will activate different muscles and keep your interest elevated. This can be as simple as going from the StepMill one workout to the treadmill the next and to the elliptical the third. However, on occasion, try to incorporate completely different types of fat-burning activities — the sort that typically take you outside the weight room. These include sprinting intervals, swimming laps, pummeling a speed bag or heavy bag, jumping rope and mountain bike riding, as well as multiperson sports like racquetball, full-court basketball and sparring sessions for boxing or martial arts. In addition to burning calories, these machine-free cardio activities improve the functional skills and balance crucial to athletes, and they can be a lot more fun than another 40 minutes climbing in place.

 

Athleta CYA Stronger Hoodie
Courtesy of Athleta

H.U.G.E.: Staggered Split

If you want, you can stagger your workouts further by putting bodyparts on different schedules of the same rotation, but for that to work best you need to have the same number of styles as you have workouts in your split. For example, if you divide your body into six workouts, you need six workout styles. With our four styles, such a holistic, staggered split could look like this:

 

DISADVANTAGES

THERE ARE TWO POTENTIAL PITFALLS:

■ If you don’t carefully construct your routine, one style of training can hinder the other, instead of aiding it. For example, if you do a week of HIT workouts just before a week of power/speed workouts, the former can detract from your strength in the latter. Instead, break up a HIT week and a power week with a lower-intensity week of circuit training or high reps.

■ A variety of styles can lead to a loss of focus. You must endeavor to continuously use greater weights or get more reps with the same weight each time you go through the workout rotation.

ADVANTAGES

IN HOLISTIC TRAINING’S FAVOR:


■ The variety keeps your intensity and interest up.

■ You can incorporate power and speed training into a bodybuilding regimen, thus you can keep your primary focus on muscle gains but also significantly boost power.

■ It’s ideal for those who have multiple sports goals. Perhaps you want to maximize your muscularity but also boost your “hops” and quickness for basketball. A holistic approach will let you incorporate plyometric, leaping exercises and speed conditioning into your bodybuilding routine. As another example, perhaps you want to be both a bodybuilder and a kickboxer. Alternating a weight-training workout and a kickboxing-specific session will let you do both.