Daily Exercise That Build Muscle for Skinny Guys
If you are a skinny guy and you struggle to put on muscle with your traditional heavy workouts, you are going to want to watch this and start doing the exercise I show you here every single day. This is something you can do whether you work out that day or not and it is going to provide benefits bey
JEFF: What’s up, guys? Jeff Cavaliere, ATHLEANX. com. I have an incredibly helpful video for you today. I’m standing here next to the skinny guy- JESSE: Whoa.
Whoa. Whoa. JEFF: Actually, ‘not as skinny’ guy. JESSE: I wouldn’t say anymore I was- JEFF: There we go. JESSE: Skinny.
JEFF: All right. JESSE: As skinny as I once was, brother. JEFF: I gotcha, Hulk Hogan. The fact is, skinny guy – speaking from a skinny guy. I grew up in my life as a skinny guy.
JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: There is something I think every skinny guy should do every time they train, because I think it has so many far reaching benefits, and it’s not that hard to do. JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: It’s not going to overly stress you to the point where you can’t train because of this exercise. What is it?
JESSE: Face pulls. JEFF: See? I knew you were going to say that. Face pulls is something I’ve told everybody to do. JESSE: Yes.
JEFF: This isn’t just for skinny guys because everybody can benefit from this exercise. JESSE: Oh, absolutely. JEFF: The exercise is- JESSE: The carry. JEFF: The carry. Guys, if you incorporate the carry into your training – it doesn’t have to be a lot – you’re going to see so many benefits from it.
Especially helpful for the skinny guys out there that are having a hard time building size. Why? Let’s start to go through some of those benefits. Number one: it’s really damn versatile. JESSE: Yeah.
Absolutely. JEFF: This is an exercise that you can do with anything. JESSE: Mm-hmm. JEFF: You can do them with kettle bells. You can carry dumbbells.
You can carry a trap bar. You can carry a couple of plates. JESSE: Oh, my favorite is carrying small children. JEFF: The DCF is going to be calling you very soon. The fact is, you can carry anything.
You can also do this anywhere. You can do this in the house, you can do this in the gym. If you have a lot of room to walk around, as you see us doing here, you can do laps around the gym, or if you’re limited on space you can do this in a line, back and forth in your living room. JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: You don’t need a lot of area to cover.
You just need to be able to do this for a time. Now, why is it particularly helpful for the skinny guy? Well, as we know, and as we’ve talked about here before, skinnier guys will have one thing in common. They don’t have a very muscular frame. JESSE: Yeah.
JEFF: They’re lacking in stability. They’re subject to a lot more of the stress that weights will provide to their body, than a guy who has more meat on his bones, or weight behind his body, would be able to handle it a lot easier. JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: Though we program squats for beginners, and though we program deadlifts for beginners, and though we want to build that base, foundational strength; it’s going to be a hell of a lot easier for a beginner – especially a skinny beginner – to handle weight on a deadlift than it would be putting that weight on their back. JESSE: 100%.
JEFF: Structurally – even a guy like Jesse here – structurally, he had a hard time initially with the squat. Now, doing much better, over 300lbs. JESSE: Yes. JEFF: Congratulations. JESSE: Thank you.
JEFF: But you would basically have a lot harder of a time because your skeleton can’t handle that weight on your back. JESSE: Yeah. Even when they tell you, “Low bar squat”, you don’t have enough muscle mass to raise that shelf. JEFF: When people say, “Put it on the shelf”, there has to be a shelf there in the first place to be able to handle that weight. So, there are some advantages to not having to bear the weight.
A carry is going to be allow you to be able to carry some weight, as you see Jesse doing here with a little bit heavier weight. You’re able to carry and learn how to distribute this weight at the size of your body. JESSE: Yes. JEFF: Without having to bear down through your spine. So that’s one of the main things.
It allows you to at least start to feel more weight and apply that weight to your body as a weight of the total system, without having to bear that through your back. The next thing is crazy important for everybody. Especially, again, beginners and skinnier guys. Posture benefit. JESSE: Yeah.
Oh. JEFF: Now, Jesse is somebody that had terrible posture. Just like that. We fixed that through a lot of hard work, but this is something that reinforces that. And skinny guys will tend to have very bad posture because any muscular development they’ll have is likely going to be in the front of their body because, maybe, an attempt to try to do something about their skinniness.
JESSE: Bench-press. JEFF: Right, or maybe some pushups and they develop this imbalance between front and back. As you can see here, this is going to demand you do this out of good posture. Especially if you’re going to do it properly. The next thing we’re going to talk about is a conditioning benefit.
Now, you’ve always been attached to your 8-pack, as we’ve just discussed in one of your previous videos, Baby Shark. He doesn’t want to lose his 8-pack. So, he wants to do his conditioning, but one thing I did caution you about, because I don’t really coach you very specifically on a lot of things. JESSE: No, because I just watch the videos, I edit the videos, and I take pride in being the ‘every man’ like everyone else. JEFF: And I enjoy that you actually like being that.
But I told you, if you’re going to do some of your conditioning, that running that you did, that long-distance running has to go. In place of that, you can do a carry as your conditioning, with has a lot of muscle sparing benefits in the form of conditioning. As opposed to going out and running 8 miles, like you used to like doing. That was keeping you nice and skinny. JESSE: Yeah.
JEFF: Running long distance is not a good thing for somebody who’s already skinny and struggling to put on weight. So, what we want to do here is utilize the carry as a conditioning exercise. Here you’re using a little bit lighter weight, and you’re doing it more for distance and time. JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: As far as – you mentioned you like the feel on your traps.
JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: It allows the upper traps to be engaged. This is a great exercise for your upper traps. Again, contributing to posture. But at the same time, you like that overall stretch on the traps.
Guys, this is something that allows you to get that stretch stress on your traps without doing it the wrong way. We’ve covered before how we do something like the rack pull. It’s literally pulling your body into a stretch on the traps, in the exact wrong position, placing too many other stresses on the shoulder joint itself- JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: That you don’t want because of the positioning of the dumbbells, or the trap bar, or even the kettle bells which are putting your shoulders in a better position to do this right. Get that stress on the traps, but not have to forego that.
So, let’s talk about how you’re going to do this right because I want you to incorporate this into every, single workout. Even just a few laps. JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: The first thing you want to make sure is, you’re not positioning the dumbbells – or whatever else you’re going to pick up off the ground – in the wrong position to start. If you pick them up here, as Jesse’s doing, in front of your body you’re going to let your shoulders roll in front of your body, further contributing the posture problems, and further contributing to the imbalances you already have, as a guys who’s lacking some overall muscle development.
JESSE: Yeah. JEFF: So, what you want to do instead is position them on your side to pick them up from your side, and then carry them from yo