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5 tips to KILL your workout

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Arnold Schwarzenegger knows how to have a killer workout – scene from “Pumping Iron”. 
I’ve had great workouts, and I’ve had workouts that were just so-so. Sometimes it’s the sleep I had the night before, the meal – or lack thereof – that I ate before, or the routine I was doing. 
There are, however, some steps you can take to ensure you have a great workout. 

1. Shorten your workout 
Limit your workout to a 30-45 minute session. Intensity is king whether you’re after fat loss, building lean mass, improving your athleticism, or a bit of everything. The more intense and focused your workouts are, the more successful you’re going to be. 
Know what you’re doing when you get in there and don’t waste time. If you lose steam during your rest periods, try shortening them by 15 seconds. 

2. Lift to failure 
When I say “failure“, I mean failure within the proper form for the exercise. If you can’t finish the lift with the right form, then you fail. 
Even if you’re feeling a little flat, lifting until you fail can give your muscles the boost they need. I’ve gone into the gym on ‘bad days’ and lifted for a rep count, not to failure. My muscles felt weak, drained and flat. As a result I never quite got into the workout. But I’ve had ‘bad days’ where every set was to failure and I ended up having great workouts. 
That pain you experience in the last few reps can really wake you up and make a difference in your workout. 

3. Get a good night’s sleep 
Aim for at least 8 hours a night. Your body needs sleep in order to recover from a workout, but also to prepare for one. 
If I don’t get enough sleep, no matter if I drink a cup of coffee or not, my muscles feel sluggish and not into it, if muscles can feel like that. 

4. Have a plan 
If you don’t know exactly what you’re doing when you get into the gym, you’re already falling a step behind. Have your workout written down, know the exercises you’re going to be doing and go at them hard. 
I see people on a daily basis walking around the gym thinking what they’re going to be doing next. It sucks the intensity right out of their workouts. I’ve done it before, I actually used to do it in high school and couldn’t gain a pound – go figure? 
Choose a program wisely, but once you’ve chosen it, follow it to a tee. 

5. Compete against yourself 
Having a lifting partner that’s at your strength level or stronger is ideal, but if you don’t have one – heck, even if you do – compete against the number’s you posted last week. 
This means you have to keep

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