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If you’re new to proper weightlifting, you have much to look forward to.
You’re taking your first steps in a journey that can transform not only your body but your entire life.
With every bit of muscle and strength you gain, you’re going to look a little better, feel a little better, and thrill a little more at the prospect of what else you might be able to achieve.
You have a special advantage, too—one that even the most accomplished weightlifters envy.
Whereas they have to fight tooth and nail for every ounce of improvement on the scale and bar, thanks to a quirk of physiology, you’re going to progress with relative ease.
For instance, for someone like me, no matter how hard I work in the gym, the best I could possibly do over the next 12 months is maybe 30 to 35 pounds added to my key lifts and 1 to 3 pounds of muscle gain.
You?
Well, in just your first year of proper training, you should have no trouble increasing your whole-body strength by several hundred pounds and gaining 15 to 25 pounds of muscle (and about half that if you’re a woman).
Such is the power of “newbie gains.”
Notice I’ve said “proper” a couple times now, too. This is important because even if you’ve been into lifting for a while, if you’ve made little progress since starting, you too can benefit from newbie gains.
In short, if you’ve yet to gain your first 15 to 25 pounds of muscle (again, for women, about half that amount), you can get there a lot faster than you might think.
If you’re skeptical, I understand.
Well, I have good news:
I have proof, too.
Through my books, articles, podcasts, and videos, I’ve helped thousands of everyday men and women build their best bodies ever, and I can do the same for you.
And I can start right here, right now, by providing you with an in-depth review of the science of newbie gains—a rather controversial phenomenon.
Some people say newbie gains aren’t really a thing because there’s nothing special occurring at the physiological level.
Others say newbie gains are
By Mike Matthews4.8
45374,537 ratings
If you’re new to proper weightlifting, you have much to look forward to.
You’re taking your first steps in a journey that can transform not only your body but your entire life.
With every bit of muscle and strength you gain, you’re going to look a little better, feel a little better, and thrill a little more at the prospect of what else you might be able to achieve.
You have a special advantage, too—one that even the most accomplished weightlifters envy.
Whereas they have to fight tooth and nail for every ounce of improvement on the scale and bar, thanks to a quirk of physiology, you’re going to progress with relative ease.
For instance, for someone like me, no matter how hard I work in the gym, the best I could possibly do over the next 12 months is maybe 30 to 35 pounds added to my key lifts and 1 to 3 pounds of muscle gain.
You?
Well, in just your first year of proper training, you should have no trouble increasing your whole-body strength by several hundred pounds and gaining 15 to 25 pounds of muscle (and about half that if you’re a woman).
Such is the power of “newbie gains.”
Notice I’ve said “proper” a couple times now, too. This is important because even if you’ve been into lifting for a while, if you’ve made little progress since starting, you too can benefit from newbie gains.
In short, if you’ve yet to gain your first 15 to 25 pounds of muscle (again, for women, about half that amount), you can get there a lot faster than you might think.
If you’re skeptical, I understand.
Well, I have good news:
I have proof, too.
Through my books, articles, podcasts, and videos, I’ve helped thousands of everyday men and women build their best bodies ever, and I can do the same for you.
And I can start right here, right now, by providing you with an in-depth review of the science of newbie gains—a rather controversial phenomenon.
Some people say newbie gains aren’t really a thing because there’s nothing special occurring at the physiological level.
Others say newbie gains are

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