this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2023
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So i have been on cut for like 8 months at this point and i have been progressing very litte (I have tried a lot of different styles PPL, bro splits and experimenting with weight and reps)

However, there’s something i have noticed is that in bicep curls, i will not progress until i forcefully add weight and perform like 4-5 reps for a high no. Of sets (4-5), i am usually able to get them up-to 10-12 reps after 3-4 weeks (i follow 6 day PPL)

However, i have also read that doing heavy sets of accessories can damage your joints, i do barbell and dumbbell curls and never felt like there was any tension on my joints, and my back remains quite straight and elbows locked

So should i stop doing these kind of curls and wait until i can bulk? Or should i keep doing this if it works for me

I have also been in the gym for 8 months if that is of any use

Edit; not in the gym but have been hitting the gym ⚆ _ ⚆

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[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's completely normal that your progress starts stalling after 8 months of newbie gains while being on a cut.

If you want to continue your fat loss journey, focus on your diet: keep your protein intake high and don't be in a too drastic but steady caloric deficit, prolonging the diet forever is not going to lead you anywhere.

Training is secondary for you right now, don't change programs and KISS (keep it simple, stupid).

Seriously, you might not see any gains anymore until you are done cutting, no matter which program you do, overthinking this will only frustrate you. Remind yourself that you came a long way but that this is a long term thing, with one step at a time. Do your curls however you like (just not in the squat rack), but stop fucking around with them.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So if i could progress by 4x5, I should continue but if i could not, i should do the ol’ 3x8?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

If your joints feel fine I say give 4x5 a shot, everyone is different and you have to find what works best for you by trial and error. With that said I wouldn’t go lower than 5 rep sets though, I feel like that’s just asking for tendon inflammation.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

You’ve been on a calorie deficit for 8 months, you shouldn’t really expect any strength or muscle gains at this point. Just lift to maintain what you have until you finish your cut, then focus on strength and size gains on a small calorie surplus (300-500 calories max).

[–] mythic_tartan 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

When you say you’ve been progressing very little, what precisely do you mean? Weight loss? Strength gains? Bicep strength specifically?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Strength gains, but when i trained my bicep this particular way, they progressed…

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

You won't get strength gains while eating fewer calories than you burn, or at least not much. As your fat stores get low, your body starts cannibalizing your muscle to fuel your lifts and you'll see negative progress. 8 months for a cutting phase is excessive unless your body fat percentage was very high.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I'm only an beginner-intermediate lifter, so take all of what I'm saying with a grain of salt.

Ultimately your gains will depend on Time under tension, assuming you're getting enough rest and nutrition, especially protein. You don't necessarily have to keep adding weights since there's other variables you can adjust like rest time, reps, speed (slower), etc. I can't stress rest and nutrition enough, any time I plateau it's usually because I'm not getting enough protein. Also make sure not to overwork your muscles, they need rest to recover and grow.

If you're focusing on strength (and not hypertrophy or endurance), then you could add other exercises which work your biceps. For instance, deadlifts put a lot of load on your biceps and will shoot up your strength much more when used alongside your curls. To put it bluntly, with an example you're often going to get more bicep gains from a 200lb deadlift than a 30lb curl (MASSIVELY oversimplifying here!). Of course, this only applies if you have already trained extensively on these lifts, they can lead to injury otherwise.

Additionally, there are often bottlenecks to a particular muscle's growth if its supporting muscles, tendons, etc. aren't strong enough. Focusing on the supporting muscles around your biceps should help unlock some gains too.

Another thing to consider is the principle of progressive adaptation. If you're consistently going to the gym and focusing on perfect form, you should always progressively increase your load to prevent your muscles from hitting a wall. This does not mean you have to keep increasing weights, rather adding different movements, playing with rest time in between sets, etc. If you hit a hard wall, don't shy away from reducing your weights and starting a ramp up again, this lets your overworked tendons rest, any weak spots to catch up and builds momentum.

Hope this helps!