Curing the Imaginary Lats Syndrome

[quote]JayPierce wrote:

[quote]Larzker wrote:
I find that if you do kind of narrow grip T-Bar rows in such a way that you’re squeezing the serratus muscles at the top of the movement he resulting development of the serratus pushes the arms out a little.[/quote]
Bullshit. Show me a picture of serratus muscles big enough to do that.

You have the ILS, don’t you?[/quote]

[quote]JayPierce wrote:

[quote]Larzker wrote:
I find that if you do kind of narrow grip T-Bar rows in such a way that you’re squeezing the serratus muscles at the top of the movement he resulting development of the serratus pushes the arms out a little.[/quote]
Bullshit. Show me a picture of serratus muscles big enough to do that.

You have the ILS, don’t you?[/quote]

Jay, do believe there is anyone with Latissimus Dorsi muscles big enough to push out the arms to any degree?

If so, do you also believe the serratus anterior, which comes in contact(not attached though) more with the arms could also push out the arms to some degree as well?

The teres major, minor, and infraspinatus also push out the arms as well.

The serratus anterior are mostly covered by other muscles but can still contribute significantly to what is perceived as back width and can be developed to a great extent.

some people just have lats bigger than their shoulders, man…

[quote]Larzker wrote:

[quote]JayPierce wrote:

[quote]Larzker wrote:
I find that if you do kind of narrow grip T-Bar rows in such a way that you’re squeezing the serratus muscles at the top of the movement he resulting development of the serratus pushes the arms out a little.[/quote]
Bullshit. Show me a picture of serratus muscles big enough to do that.

You have the ILS, don’t you?[/quote]

Jay, do believe there is anyone with Latissimus Dorsi muscles big enough to push out the arms to any degree?

If so, do you also believe the serratus anterior, which comes in contact(not attached though) more with the arms could also push out the arms to some degree as well?

The teres major, minor, and infraspinatus also push out the arms as well.

The serratus anterior are mostly covered by other muscles but can still contribute significantly to what is perceived as back width and can be developed to a great extent. [/quote]

Anyone whose serratus is big enough to push out their arm likely isn’t human.

Why are we debating this?

[quote]Larzker wrote:

[quote]JayPierce wrote:

[quote]Larzker wrote:
I find that if you do kind of narrow grip T-Bar rows in such a way that you’re squeezing the serratus muscles at the top of the movement he resulting development of the serratus pushes the arms out a little.[/quote]
Bullshit. Show me a picture of serratus muscles big enough to do that.

You have the ILS, don’t you?[/quote]

Jay, do believe there is anyone with Latissimus Dorsi muscles big enough to push out the arms to any degree?

If so, do you also believe the serratus anterior, which comes in contact(not attached though) more with the arms could also push out the arms to some degree as well?

The teres major, minor, and infraspinatus also push out the arms as well.

The serratus anterior are mostly covered by other muscles but can still contribute significantly to what is perceived as back width and can be developed to a great extent. [/quote]
You are NOT going to develop the serratus, all by themselves, to a size big enough to push the arms out. And that’s the way you made it sound in your previous post.

now we need to work on curing the Imaginary Down’s Syndrome which seems to be afflicting at least half the posters in this thread.

[quote]WormwoodTheory wrote:
now we need to work on curing the Imaginary Down’s Syndrome which seems to be afflicting at least half the posters in this thread.[/quote]

I LOL’d

I’ve seen obese slobs with enough tufts of fat, spreading from their outer pectoral region to their arm pits, that their arms have no choice but to stick out.

[quote]joe cool wrote:
I’ve seen obese slobs with enough tufts of fat, spreading from their outer pectoral region to their arm pits, that their arms have no choice but to stick out.[/quote]
You leave me out of this!!

[quote]Iron Dwarf wrote:

[quote]Im_New_Feed_Me wrote:
My wingspan is like 9 inches shorter than my height. I have short little t-rex arms and this happens to me all the time. Everyone makes fun of me… also, my thoracic mobility isn’t the greatest.

But I don’t give a shit, because both of my arms work. If this is the worst thing that happens to me in my life, I think I’ll be ok.[/quote]

How the hell do you reach your dick with those little arms?

Just saw this now. Have been busy all month creating tiny robotic arms for masturbation and cleaning purposes.
lol[/quote]

[quote]WormwoodTheory wrote:
now we need to work on curing the Imaginary Down’s Syndrome which seems to be afflicting at least half the posters in this thread.[/quote]

Hahaha! I think most people who actually suffer from Down’s would seem pretty smart in comparison.

“You know where the weight room is?”

Chris Farley. Tommy Boy. Pool scene.


Lat or fat?

Lmao instead of back he has tits. Don’t you love it when people are so fat so that their chest and back are one part…

[quote]Larzker wrote:
Lat or fat?[/quote]
Fat actually pushes the arms out therefore there is no ILS on the Sumo