Guns in 60 Seconds
YOUR GOAL: 1 NEGATIVE DIP, 1 NEGATIVE CHINUP
You lift weights, sure, but you’ve probably never paid much attention to lowering them. So start now: Eccentric training, which involves focusing on the lowering (or “negative”) phase of an exercise, can potentially trigger greater strength gains than concentric (lifting-focused) training, says Dr Ellington Darden, author of the new book The Body Fat Breakthrough. “Your muscles can handle more weight during the lowering phase,” Darden says. “And if you draw out that phase to a minute, as you will with the negative dip and negative chinup, you can recruit up to 40% more muscle fibres and enjoy a surge in muscle-building hormones.” The result: more power and strength in significantly less time.
Negative Chinup
Grab the bar using a shoulder-width, underhand grip and hang at arm’s length with your ankles crossed behind you. Pull your chest up to the bar. Lower yourself slowly, half an inch at a time.
Negative Dip
Grab the bars of a dip station and lift yourself so your arms are straight. Lean forward slightly and lower your body slowly—half an inch at a time—until your upper arms are below your elbows.
THE CHALLENGE
You’ll be completing on two reps total (one per move), but they’ll probably be two of the hardest reps you’ve ever done. “Take one minute to lower yourself for each exercise, and rest two minutes between them,” says Darden. If you can’t last longer than 30 seconds, your eccentric strength needs a lot of work.
Photograph by Trevor Reid. Words by Michael Easter.