Hello, I just completed a great 3 week cycle of MAG-10 caps at 1 dose per day. I have begun taking my recovery supplements (M, Methoxy-7, and Alpha Male), but I was wondering how much I should tone down my workouts during the next 2-3 weeks. I was doing some very high intensity workouts for the past 3 weeks, but I’m not sure exactly how much I should tone them down. Any suggestions anyone has would be great, or if they could point me to good articles or workouts on the same subject.
[quote]theflux wrote:
Hello, I just completed a great 3 week cycle of MAG-10 caps at 1 dose per day. I have begun taking my recovery supplements (M, Methoxy-7, and Alpha Male), but I was wondering how much I should tone down my workouts during the next 2-3 weeks. I was doing some very high intensity workouts for the past 3 weeks, but I’m not sure exactly how much I should tone them down. Any suggestions anyone has would be great, or if they could point me to good articles or workouts on the same subject.
… Cy’s recomendation works great and I have found that this plan that CT wrote is great as well. Just another choice for you. Either is great just remember to keep the k/cals up a bit and drop the volume for a spell.
Hope this helps,
Phill
Post Cycle Plan By CT=
"
Training to maintain postcycle
gains Whether we like it or not, the use of androgenic-anabolic steroids is part of the strength training world. I?m not here to judge those who use nor to condone the use of such substances.
Since those who use steroids will
eventually have to come off at some
time, I feel that its important to teach the proper way to train after a cycle to maintain your muscle gains. A lot has already been said about what substances to use to help you recover after a cycle, but little is known about the whole training aspect. First, here are some of the biggest mistakes made by those coming off a cycle:
Too much volume: When you stop your cycle you will undoubtedly loose intramuscular water. Steroids helps to promote intramuscular glycogen and creatine storage. So while you re “on”
your muscles are swelled up with nutrients, water and minerals. This makes for great “pumps” in the gym (and even outside the gym). However when your cycle comes to an end you loose this cell volumizing effect and as a result it becomes harder to get a mindblowing pump. This is normal and to be expected. However trainees often panic because they’re not getting that
marvellous pump anymore. As a result
they end up greatly increasing their
training volume, adding more intensive
techniques such as supersets, drop sets etc. All in the hope of being able to attain a pump similar to what they experienced while ?on?. The problem is that after a cycle your body has a lowered capacity to synthesize muscle proteins and there?s a rebound cortisol increase. Cortisol is a catabolic hormone, and while it’s needed for maximum adaptation, when there?s too much of it you loose muscle mass.
12 (Training to maintain continued))
So after a cycle your body is:
a) less efficient as repairing damages
made to the muscles b) more efficient at breaking down the muscles. The worst thing to do in that situation is
to use a high training volume and frequency. Immediately post-cycle you?re not going to stimulate muscle growth. By trying too hard to do so you’ll actually end up catabolizing, and loosing, the muscle tissue you already have! So high volume and intensive techniques (supersets, drop sets, etc.) are not good
ideas post-cycle as you can now see.
Going too light: I’ll say it once and
for all … your priority after a cycle
should be to try everything in your
power to maintain your strength levels as
they are. After a cycle your body will
want to return to homeostasis, and if you
don’t give it a good reason to preserve
the gained muscle mass, you?ll loose it!
Decreasing training weights after a cycle
(oftentimes while increasing volume) is
one of the fastest way to loose your hard
earned muscle! In the 2-3 weeks after a
cycle you should switch to a limit
strength-training approach: going heavy
(80-90%) on a few basic exercises while
taking relatively long rest intervals and
using a very low volume of work.
Maintaining strength post-cycle is one of
the cornerstones to maintaining muscle
size.
Too much frequency: After a cycle
athletes become so paranoid about
loosing their muscles that they tend to
train too often. This is due to the
psychological factors involved, but also
to the decrease in myogenic tone that
occurs after a cycle. As I already
mentioned, after a cycle your?ll loose the
cell volumization effect of steroids.
Now, in the gym that means less
important pumps. But outside the gym it
also means that your tonus (I know, we
all hate that word!) or muscle hardness
will be much lower. When you?re used
to feeling pumped all the time this can
be hard to accept. So in order to correct
the situation athletes are tempted to train
very often, just to feel their muscles.
Remember that after a cycle your body
has a lowered capacity to adapt to
training-induced physiological stress. So
for any given training session, the
adaptation period will be much longer. If
you train too often, just as if you train
too much, you will breakdown more
muscle while actually building less! Not
a good deal if you ask me!
Too little food: After a cycle you will
often feel physically softer and slightly
depressive. This state of mind and body
will lead you to become paranoid about
gaining fat. For that reason, many
peoples actually decrease caloric intake
too much post cycle; trying to maintain
both super-low body fat levels and
muscle after a cycle is extremely hard to
do. Prioritize: do you want to keep the
muscles you gained? Then you must
actually INCREASE daily caloric intake
post-cycle. Always remember that food
is the ultimate anabolic! The more you
eat post cycle, the more you’ll maintain
muscle mass. First because of the sheer
increase in nutrients availability (thus
(Training to maintain continued)
less need to catabolize muscle tissue) but
also because of the ensuing hormonal
responses. Eating a lot will increase
insulin levels, which increases nutrient
uptake by the muscles. Insulin also acts
to counteract the catabolic effect of
cortisol by stopping muscle breakdown
in its tracks. There?s also some evidence
that large caloric intakes lead to an
increase in testosterone levels. So after a
cycle EAT MORE not less! You?ll gain
a little fat, which you’ll easily loose later
on. Your priority should be to maintain
your muscle mass.
A good strategy I often recommend is to
drastically decrease caloric intake 1-2
weeks before the end of a cycle. For
example, if you do a 12-weeks cycle,
during weeks 11 and 12 you should
decrease caloric intake significantly (by
20% or so). You should also decrease
protein intake to the minimum necessary
level (around 0.7g per pound of
bodyweight). Don’t worry you won’t
loose muscle at this point (you will loose
weight, but not muscle). Then
immediately after your cycle you
should almost double your caloric and
protein intake for 3-4 days. This will
lead to a great rebound anabolic effect
which will greatly help you in the early
stage of post-cycle recovery. After the
4th day, decrease your caloric intake
(but it should still be kept relatively
high) while maintaining protein intake.
Stay on this regimen for 7-14 days (so
the super high caloric intake lasts 14-21
depending on how your body responds).
Expect to gain 2-3lbs of fat during that
period. But if that 2-3lbs can help you
avoid loosing 10lbs of muscle it’s worth
it! And as I mentioned, it will be easy to
loose the excess flab a bit later on.
After those initial 14-21 days slowly
decrease caloric intake to your baseline
level.
During the first 3 weeks of your postcycle
recovery program you should train
at a frequency of 3 times per week with
minimal volume at each session. I would
recommend sticking to compound
movements such as the bench press,
squat, deadlift, leg press, chins, barbell
rowing, etc. Perform 2-4 exercises per
session. A push/pull/legs routine is good
at this point. Something like the
following is an appropriate approach:
Monday
Exercise Sets Reps Load
Bench press 4 5 85%
Military press 4 5 85%
Dips 4 5 85%
Wednesday
Barbell row 4 5 85%
Barbell shrugs 4 5 85%
Lat pulldown 4 5 85%
Friday
Back squat 4 5 85%
Romanian dead. 4 5 85%
I recommend using 4-6 reps with 85-
90% of your maximum for 4-5 sets per
exercise. Try hard to increase the loads
every week. The more strength you
maintain (or even gain) during that time,
the more muscle you’ll retain.
Hope this helps!"