Men's Health Living
UPGRADE - Your Home, Relationships, And Career
Newsletter
Newsletter

Get MH Living delivered weekly to your inbox.

I want special email updates on products and services from Men's Health and its publisher Rodale

Privacy Policy

The Best and Worst Cities for Men to Live

Muscles aren’t built in the gym—they grow after you leave, while you recover. You can accelerate your gains with the perfect postworkout shake: A 2007 review in Sports Medicine found that ingesting protein and carbohydrates soon after your workout improves your body’s response to resistance training and facilitates more muscle growth. After your next workout, try this smoothie—it contains almost 40 grams of protein and 60 grams of carbs.  

Fruit and Yogurt Smoothie
    ½ banana
    ½ cup strawberries
    1 cup 1% milk
    6 ounces low-fat
    vanilla yogurt
    1 scoop vanilla
    whey-protein powder
    3 ice cubes

Blend all ingredients together and drink.

The Whole-Body, Whole House Workout

Burn fat and build muscle without ever lifting a weight

Though Chuck Norris and Christie Brinkley make a convincing sales team, you don’t need their Total Gym to work your total body. “Body-weight workouts can be just as effective as those done with barbells, dumbbells, or machines,” says Craig Ballantyne, M.Sc., C.S.C.S., owner of ­turbulencetraining.com. The secret: choosing the right exercises. Try Ballantyne’s body-weight circuit, below, which trains every muscle in your body while challenging your cardiovascular system as intensely as a hard treadmill session.
________________________________________  

Download the Whole-Body, Whole House Workout to your MP3 player for free

Find more great workout downloads
________________________________________  

Directions
Perform this workout three times a week, resting at least a day between sessions. Do the exercises as a circuit, completing one set of 8 to 10 reps of each exercise before resting for 2 minutes. Then repeat two more times. Too easy? Shorten your rest period or add another circuit.

1  Bulgarian Split Squat
How to do it: Stand with a sturdy box, ottoman, or chair about 2 to 3 feet behind you, and rest the instep of your right foot on it. Keeping your torso upright, lower your body until your left knee is bent 90 degrees and your right knee nearly touches the floor. Pause for 1 second, then return to the start as quickly as you can. Finish all your reps, then repeat, this time with your left foot on the box.

If it’s too easy: Hold the bottom position for 2 seconds, and take 3 seconds to lower your body.

If it’s too hard: Slightly decrease the elevation of your back foot by placing it on a 4- to 6-inch-high step or box.

2  Decline Pushup
How to do it: Get into pushup position with your feet on a bed or sturdy chair. Your body and arms should be straight, and your hands slightly more than shoulder-width apart. Without allowing your hips to sag, lower your body as far as possible. Pause for 1 second, then quickly push yourself back to the start. If it’s too easy: Narrow your hand position to less than shoulder width and pause for 4 seconds at the bottom of each rep. If it’s too hard: Put your feet on the floor.

3  Inverted Row
How to do it: Secure a stick, bat, or pipe across two chairs or other stationary surfaces that are about 3 feet high. Lie under the “bar” and grab it with a shoulder-width, overhand grip, and hang at arm’s length. Keeping your body straight and rigid, pull your chest as close to the bar as you can. Pause, then lower yourself to the start.

If it’s too easy: Hang towels from the bar and grip them instead.

If it’s too hard: Use an underhand grip.

4  Split Squat
How to do it: Perform this exercise just like the Bulgarian split squat, only this time place your back foot on the floor, instead of on a box.
If it’s too easy: Place your front foot on an object that’s between 4 and
6 inches high.

If it’s too hard: Stand close to a wall when you do the exercise so you can use your hands to help with balance.

5  Side Plank with Reach
How to do it: Lie on your right side with your legs straight, and prop your upper body up on your right elbow and forearm. Raise your hips until your body forms a straight line. Then brace  your abs and hold. With your left hand, reach under your torso and behind you. Then raise your left hand above you until your arm is straight. That’s 1 rep. Do all your reps, then repeat on your left side.

If it’s too easy: Raise your top leg and hold it.

If it’s too hard: Begin with your free hand on your opposite shoulder. Hold the position for 10 seconds, lower yourself, then rise and repeat for 60 seconds.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button Print

Comments

Comments

Joe
23 Dec 2008, 07:57
This is a very nice alternative to guys who are too busy or can't go to a gym to workout.
Bryan
23 Dec 2008, 09:04
You can change out the push up for 1 of the 100 varieties of push ups for a change of pace.

And I love the plank exercises. Great ab workout that isn't the boring hell that most ab workouts are.
Mike
23 Dec 2008, 10:30
A decent supplemental workout if you have no choice. But this is not even close to being a decent substitute for going to the gym and actually moving some real weight. Once you can do over 50 pushups and bodyweight rows it gets redundunt and you need some more resistance.
Ryan Ortuno
23 Dec 2008, 10:30
A one legged dead lift (no weight) or superskater is a nice addition to this as well.
Andrew Watkins
23 Dec 2008, 12:20
If the pushups get too easy, try propping your feet up on a wall and do a vertical push-up. We do them in football practice and they are really a killer.
Rudy
23 Dec 2008, 12:53
This is ver helpful...I also find that it alows me to pimpoint specific areas of my body for scuplting when I add some of the routines to my Gym workouts.
James
23 Dec 2008, 13:38
I see from one of the comments that someone is familiar with the P90X program. I've done the P90X program myself at age 38. It does require some equipment but if you travel, resistence bands can be used and the workouts are extremely intense. I would recommend it to anyone who doesn't have access to a gym or travel a lot.
mike
23 Dec 2008, 19:28
I don't know about you guys. I am at work right bord out my tree. So i went to menshealth web sit, found this i thank i am going to give it a tri
melvin
23 Dec 2008, 20:56
i love this sight it has helped me a lot and also the p90x i am 16 years old been working out for almost 2 years and boy do i feel great
melvin
23 Dec 2008, 20:57
if these push ups get to easy slow them down when u push down count 4 seconds same goes when u push up, and when your squating try jumping up and landing in a squat
Andrew
23 Dec 2008, 21:37
CrossFit WOD
Grant
02 Mar 2009, 15:37
This is a good workout if your traveling. You can use it and add a little depth by using some resistance bands along with the workout.
Ashish Yadav
04 Dec 2009, 05:43
________

Ashish
<a href="http://www.trainwithmeonline.com/programs.asp/" rel="DoFollow">Workout Routines</a>
BOBBI
13 May 2010, 12:55
WANTING TO KNOW WHAT IS A SUPER SKATER LIFT?
Timothy
23 Jul 2010, 11:43
Great workout! I do it 5 times a week. It especially good because I am 6 months pregnant!

Comment on this Article

*Name:
Email:
Notify me about new comments on this page
Hide my email
*Text:
Security Image:

Visual CAPTCHA


 

Current Cover