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Peak Week: It Has to
be Perfect
by
Dr. Joe Klemczewski
I could fill a
book with the quotes I hear at contests from competitors who
placed from second to last in their class. There are many
versions, but just one quote. I’ll paraphrase: “I screwed up my
peak.” That’s it – end of quote. It’s usually sandwiched in a
paragraph including words like carb loading, sodium
manipulation, water depletion, and it always comes right before
the line, “I tried something new this time.” Now, I’m talking
about legitimate peaking screw-ups, of which there are many. The
one thing I want to eliminate from your mind at the beginning of
this article is to blame your body fat percentage on peaking.
Some people start peak week at 14% body fat and think that by
doing one neat, new little trick that they read about, they’ll
wake up Saturday morning looking like Frank Zane. You’ve seen
them. The ones at 8% body fat who say, “Yeah, I was just holding
a little water today.” This article isn’t for them. This is for
people who know how to dial in on contest shape and now want to
know exactly what to do in order to wake up Saturday morning and
shout, “Eureka! (or ‘Damn!’ -if you’re on the East Coast) - I
did it!! I finally nailed my peak!!”

First of all,
let’s begin with how you should plan to enter peak week. If you
still have to be concerned with losing “the last couple pounds”
in the week before the show, you won’t be able to peak properly.
Peak week should be thought of as recovering slightly, being
fresh, and focusing just on making sure the muscles are full and
hard yet visible because of proper subcutaneous water
elimination. Fat elimination should be over before this last
week.
The next thing I
want to erase from your thought process is the myth that you
have to make extreme changes to manipulate your body into
looking good on contest day. You’ve no doubt experimented with
massive sodium loading and depletion, varying carb loading
schemes, and endless water depletion schedules to try to be your
biggest, hardest, and driest all at one time. You also have
probably experienced the shock at looking at a flat, shriveled
up, smooth physique (with it’s mouth gaping open in terror) in
the mirror six hours before prejudging. DO NOT PLAN ON DOING
ANYTHING DRASTIC DURING PEAK WEEK!!
Your body is
constantly being monitored by your brain with thousands of
chemoreceptors that are sending feedback on millions of chemical
reactions happening in the body. It’s how your brain manages to
balance the chemical necessities for life. This vast neuro-hormonal-chemical
network is brutally dynamic and always in flux. I’m not smart
enough to predict and override these millions of reactions in my
body to create an unnatural super-compensation effect exactly at
prejudging and then maintain it all day. Neither are you. What
we can do is understand the cycles that our body goes through in
directing water into muscles or outside of the muscle cells, the
way our body stores carbohydrates, and how to gently massage
these cycles so that we ride the right wave into the right day
and predictably peak perfectly and naturally instead of trying
to force a freaky, extreme response. That is a gamble you’ll
lose nine times out of ten.
When
I peak a bodybuilder, I control protein, carbs, fat, sodium,
water, and training. We start seven days from the show and I
provide a chart that tells the athlete exactly what to do in
what amounts each day for the entire week. I use these variables
to control the normal cycles of water and glycogen flow in and
out of the muscle tissue. We start out the week in a certain
pattern and then each day the variables change in a subtle way
to be able to predict and control peaking. Obviously, every
bodybuilder is different in the amounts of each of the
variables. Some people have unbelievably fast metabolisms and
some people are very carb-sensitive – two extreme differences
which dictate different amounts of each nutrient variable and a
slightly different schedule. But, the actual flow and cycle is
still very similar. It is important to know and understand what
to expect on each day so you know how to adjust. For this
reason, even my “long-distance” clients have daily communication
with me during peak week. I want to go through each of these
variables and give you some physiological insight to why peaking
is so elusive.
Carbing-up is the
great myth started and continuing with 250-pound steroid using
bodybuilders who consume huge amounts of food anyway and then
take prescription diuretics to eliminate the steroid bloat. If
this describes you, traditional carb depletion and loading may
work. If you’re body isn’t an eighth grade science experiment
out of control, let’s stick with normal physiology. Even the
hardest, leanest bodies cannot metabolize and shuttle glucose
into muscle cells at a maximum rate without having some
extracellular spill-over. Read that sentence again. You cannot
deplete carbs and then supercompensate and expect all of the
glucose and water to end up in the muscle. You’ll certainly fill
out, but you’ll also smooth out. Some a little, and some a great
deal. Yes, a lot of carbs will go into the muscle, but a little
or a lot will end up outside the muscle cell with a lot of water
which makes you smooth. Next time you’re dieting and you’re
fairly lean, log some comments every day in a journal. “Woke up
pretty lean. Very smooth – must have been the sodium in the
chips. Very vascular. Hard as a freak’n rock!!” Just write down
comments on how you look in the morning. I guarantee that you’ll
consistently be your hardest after a couple of low-carb,
high-water intake days. You may not be your biggest because the
carbs aren’t as high, but the lack of extraneous carbs and water
under the skin makes you very tight and you appear much bigger.
Who wins the show: the big soft guy or the bone-dry striated
competitor? The way I carb up my clients catches the wave of
glucose and water entering the muscle on the way up, but not at
the expense of smoothing out on the rebound effect of over-carbing.
My general carb
cycle for peak week is to start at the highest point on the
weekend before. I start at a slightly above “normal” level on
Saturday and Sunday and schedule no training. I want this
weekend to be a recovery time with a refilling of glycogen. As
training starts again on Monday, I slowly drop carbs each day.
It’s a subtle drop, not a severe depletion. The training each
day, Monday through Wednesday, with the slight drop will create
a sufficient carb deficit without total depletion. Depending on
the client’s metabolism, I keep the carbs coming down and keep
the water very high all the way through Friday. For a very high
metabolism bodybuilder, I’m not going as low on the carbs during
the week, and I may start re-carbing on Friday. For carb-sensitive
clients it’s very important to wait until Saturday to reload. By
waiting until later in the week to carb up, you eliminate the
chance of glycogen and water spill over. Your body can
metabolize glucose very quickly and you don’t have to start
three days ahead of time especially if you haven’t completely
bottomed out with severe carb depletion. There are also some
issues with the type of carbs you use to reload. There are some
that create more subcutaneous swelling due to being food
allergens. It’s important to know which are the most common and
how they affect you.
Water is just as
misunderstood as carbs. The traditional carb and water theories
have people drop their water sometimes days before the show.
Nothing will flatten and smooth you out faster! You have to
maintain a high water intake because your muscle tissue is
around 70% water. No water, no hardness – just flat, squishy
muscle tissue. The reason people typically start dropping water
is because they’ve over-carbed so much that they’re already
spilling glycogen and water under the skin and think, “Oh, my
gosh!! I’ve got to get rid of this water!!” With the carb reload
as I described, you won’t have that problem; you’ll actually get
harder and harder throughout the week. KEEP THE WATER INTAKE UP
AND LET IT FOLLOW THE CARBS INTO THE MUSCLE!! IF YOU’RE NOT
OVER-CARBED, THE REST OF THE WATER WILL BE ELIMINATED!
Sodium also has to
be cycled. Start with a moderate amount of sodium, up to two
grams at the beginning of the week and around Thursday start
dropping it slightly but don’t eliminate it completely. If you
do, you’ll force water out of the muscle cell, you’ll look flat
and smooth, and you’ll cramp like there’s no tomorrow. You need
approximately four times more sodium than potassium for your
muscles to contract normally. Again, don’t let the myths from
the pharmaceutically dominated side of our sport lure you into
doing things that aren’t physiologically correct. You don’t have
all those drug side-effects to combat in peaking properly. If
you sodium load and/or deplete in a big way you’re gambling with
extreme chemical rebound effects that you can’t possibly time.
If you’re lucky enough to stumble into a good effect, it will be
short lived because you’re on a pendulum swing that your body
will adjust to and you’ll look absolutely lousy in a very short
time.
I also use
specific tricks regarding fat intake and schedule very specific
contest day meal strategies for the individual needs and
characteristics of my clients. As I get to know their metabolic
rates through the dieting process, I’m already planning their
peak and everyone’s a little different. These general
guidelines, however, I hope will dispel some common mistakes and
put you on a path to learn your body type and peak perfectly
every time!!
Dr. Joe Klemczewski is a WNBF Pro, published author, and has
graduate degrees in health and nutrition. He has helped
countless bodybuilders and figure competitors win amateur and
pro titles through his unique online consulting program. He can
be reached at
dr.joe@joesrevolution.com. |