My Uncle Rory from Scotland was the only guy on either side of my family who could be considered big. Neither of my parents has ever weighed more than 140 pounds and nobody on either side, except me and my brother, ever even made it past 185. But Uncle Rory was different. He was not only big, he was massive. He also taught me quite a bit about how to gain muscle fast.
My family and I went to Uncle Rory’s house for a backyard barbecue one summer day, as we had a million times before. When we got there I went out to the garage gym looking for him and found Uncle Rory in the midst of his workout. He had just done a set of deadlifts and was pumped up to even larger proportions than normal.
“Haallo wee’yan. How ye gittin’ on?”
I was set to enter high school the following month but I was still the “wee’yan” (little one) to Uncle Rory. Come to think of it, anyone was little compared to Uncle Rory.
We sat and talked for five minutes or so and he then excused himself to do another set. He banged out a set with 515 pounds for five reps and again sat down to chat some more. Four or five minutes later, he did another set. At that point he sat down to tell me a story and I assumed his workout was over. Several minutes later, and after his point was made, he did his final set of the day and began stripping the weights.
“Sorry to hold up your workout, Uncle Rory; I thought you were done.”
“Ye did’nae hold up my workoot.”
“Yeah, but I made you rest way longer than you’re supposed to between sets.”
“Then you’re supposed tae? How long are ye supposed tae rest between sets?”
“I don’t know; aren’t you supposed to do a set and then wait a few seconds and then do another? I thought you were supposed to really be breathing hard and sweating. I didn’t see you doing either.”
“That’s rubbish, lad. That’s nae how ye git big and strong. Ye need to take a good long rest between sets so ye can lift heavy weights. It’s the only way to dae it. Ye can’nae lift heavy weights withoot resting properly.”
“Oh. But I read something about how to gain muscle fast, and thought that to get in shape you were supposed to keep your heart rate up and keep moving for 30-60 minutes straight without resting.”
“Aye, but I’m no trying tae get in shape; I’m trying tae get bloody well big and strong.”
And with that, Uncle Rory delivered one of the most important points about how to gain muscle fast that I have ever learned. The weight room is the place where you get big and strong. Like Uncle Rory said; it is not the place where you “get in shape.” You do that through proper diet and cardio work. Don’t try to turn your workouts into marathon conditioning sessions or try to burn more calories with high-rep, low-rest nonsense. All that will do is leave you looking pathetically small and weak. While you may have seen videos of your favorite pro bodybuilders doing set after set during their pre contest preparation while only resting 30-45 seconds, I can tell you that that approach will leave you small and weak… and it won’t take long to happen.
You need to rest long enough to perform high quality sets with heavy weights. That is usually somewhere between one to three minutes depending on the exercise, weight being used, how much training experience you have, what you weigh and a variety of other factors too numerous to discuss here. Heavy weights with adequate rest periods should be the main focus of your workout. If you do that you can still add in some low rest periods and higher rep, pump style training from time to time in order to get the best of both worlds.
To learn more about the exact science of selecting proper rest intervals, and countless other critical factors that make up the optimal muscle building program, click HERE now.
Please leave your questions and comments below.









13. May, 2009
at 5:35 pm #
Oh yeah, Jay. I remember hearing those old stories about Rory man! When you used to bring him up in conversation – I forgot how fired up I would get! I would fricken sprint out to my garage gym and get some of the craziest most result producing workouts of my life. But, that’s just how it was before all the BS and confusion planted it’s ugly face. Fortunately, it’s great for people to hear these great old nastalgic stories on how MEN used to – and still do… get it done!! A powerful dose of reality, indeed.
15. May, 2009
at 12:03 pm #
Is that a picture of your uncle? That guy in the picture is pretty wide.
17. May, 2009
at 12:08 pm #
Rob, it always goes back to basics. No matter how scientific and confusing people try to make it.
17. May, 2009
at 12:09 pm #
Kelly,
No it isn’t.
17. May, 2009
at 12:20 pm #
Jason,
Figured i put it in here.I started doing the dips woth straps and they are going great.No shoulder probs.I do suspended push ups too and find these great as well.
One q if you dont mind.I know that push ups are safer for the shoulder than bench press because the scap has more freedom to move.What about handstand push ups?I havnt done any overhead pressing in ages because it just hurts my shoulders.Would doing handstand push ups be a good alternative for direct shoulder work?
Thanks.
20. May, 2009
at 11:26 am #
Yeah a great story indeed. I’ve been reading the ‘keys to progress’ by John Mccalum and the storys in that book are great and got me thinking why doesn’t anyone reflect like that in their writing and boom, out comes Uncle Rory and the Deadlift. Jason your one of a kind, keep up the damn good work!