So many people focus
so much on dieting, training routines and even supplements hoping to
excel to the next level. Fortunately those do play a vital part in the
muscular development of an athlete, but the unfortunate
story is most will plateau excelling to that next level, unless you
start developing more testosterone. Testosterone allows any individual
to dramatically increase their muscle mass than what their body would
normally do. Every single male and female will
produce different levels of testosterone, and that is why there are
testosterone deficit deficiencies and why males can develop muscles
easier than females.
In the world of
muscle building, testosterone plays a huge role in regulating muscle
growth and the body's response to strength training. Strength training
correlates to muscle growth, by causing small traumas
to the muscles each time you train. You body will react from the
muscles damaged by repairing those tissues damaged by adding new protein
strands, giving you more strength and size. All this process is called
protein synthesis. What limits protein synthesis
is regulated by a number of factors in your hormone, most importantly,
testosterone.
Quite simply,
testosterone is the most important muscle developing hormone in your
body, and it is the one of the key limiting factors that determines how
much muscle a person can develop. Testosterone aids muscle
growth by connecting receptors on the surface of the muscle cells and
acts as a key catalyst in providing signals for muscle tissues to
repair, amplifying protein synthesis. Testosterone also enhances growth
hormones, which also helps the body to recover from
strength training.
Testosterone is the
backbone in muscle development, unfortunately, unlike dieting, training
intensity and protein supplements, you don't have much control of your
natural production of testosterone. A lot of
people will debate that genetics and testosterone will be overcome by
dedication and training, that is only partially true, because there will
come a point, where you will plateau and wonder what went wrong.
Let's take prisoners
as a example, do you ever wonder in documentaries why prisoners are so
big and build. Do you think they get access to 1 gram of protein per
pound of lean muscle mass from nutrient, do you
think they get access to top of the range supplements and get to eat 6
meals totalling 3500 calories a day. No. Most of them do have two
things, access to weight lifting everyday and they have high
testosterone. Men who go to prison normally have higher testosterone
than average, then they are placed in an environment drowning in
testosterone and their own testosterone count shoots through the roof.
You’ve got to have high T just to survive, to be on the lookout every
day, willing to fight or kill at the drop of a dime.
Testosterone is the building block of muscle and these guys are loaded
with it. Access to anabolic steroids is not as common as everyone thinks
in prison, however, it does contribute partly to the muscle image in
prisoners.
Testosterone plays
an important role in muscle growth. This is one reason why anabolic
steroid use is popular for people desiring to build big muscles quickly.
Anabolic steroids are basically a synthetic form
of testosterone. If a patient is diagnosed with HIV, in clinical stage
three of the symptom, they can suffer severe weight loss. Do you think
the doctor will tell the patient to take BCAA, Creatine or even protein
supplements? No. To combat this, doctors will
prescribe steroids for the patient, increasing their testosterone and
their ability to put on weight.
It is a hard pill to
swallow to learn about testosterone and looking to my heroes and idols
in the bodybuilding industry and seeing the difference between what I'll
never be and what they are.

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