Hello, 32m 6'1, 175lbs currently. I lifted on/off my whole life, took about a 6 year break (sporadic sessions) after college and got back into it about 2 years ago. I'm struggling reconciling some things about growing muscles and would like to hear your opinions on what else I can do to speed up the muscle building process.
My main concern is how long it's taking for me to grow. I've been in the 170-200 range my whole adult life. When I started finally consistently going 3-4x a week a year ago I was 205lbs. In august last year, I felt like I hit a plateau with incrementing resistance so I decided to do a cut on a strict diet and got down to 170lbs and 13% body fat (dexa scan) by the end of last year. I still felt like I grew muscles during my cut for some reason and lifts remained the same. According to the Dexa scan I have 150lbs of muscle, but I feel like barely any of it is skeletal muscle. After the new year started I switched to bulking and have finally gained about 7lbs in the last few weeks and lifts are improving again - but I'm starting to think it's mostly fat. As of now, my lifts are all higher than they've ever been, squatting 205 for 8 reps x 3 sets easily as compared to 135 a year ago. Benching 185 x 6-8 reps 3-4 sets as compared to 135 x8 a year ago, bicep curls went from 30lb dumbbells to 45lb dumbbells.
However, appearance wise I'm struggling to not believe that I basically look identical to a year ago. When I'm not flexing in the mirror I feel like I look exactly like I did when i was 205ls and probably 18% body fat (except for a flatter stomach).
I just don't understand what I'm doing wrong when I see people's results after they start working out for like 3-6 months - you can visually see their muscles grew by like 1.5-2x. I see guys at the gym that are much more muscular (like twice the size of biceps and 3x the size of pecs) than me doing slightly above or similar to the weights I'm doing (i'm not sacrificing on form either). Sometimes I wonder how long they have been lifting to get so big and I guess I just don't want to believe that it will take me like 5+ years to get to their size at the rate I'm going. To be fair, this is my first actual bulk that I'm doing - I've never been in a caloric surplus while lifting before as I didn't understand how important diet was and thought I was just genetically predisposed to not gain muscle.
I'm just frustrated that for the last 6 months I feel like I've been doing everything right: eating the right foods, tracking calories, tracking workouts, incrementing my resistance, adding volume, prioritizing 7-8 hours of sleep over social events, taking supplements, eating 160-250 g of protein daily, switching up lifts every 3 months, yet I feel like i look very similar (like 10% bigger muscles) to how I did when I didn't work out at all 2 years ago...
I did get my testosterone tested recently and it's on the low end (you would think a year of exercise, good diet, adequate sleep would help but it didn't), is that basically the difference?
What else can be done? Do i just have to accept that getting ripped is not something I can do if I commit 100% to it for a year and instead just accept that it will take multiple years to dramatically change my body and I may never be one of those big guys at the gym?
My main concern is how long it's taking for me to grow. I've been in the 170-200 range my whole adult life. When I started finally consistently going 3-4x a week a year ago I was 205lbs. In august last year, I felt like I hit a plateau with incrementing resistance so I decided to do a cut on a strict diet and got down to 170lbs and 13% body fat (dexa scan) by the end of last year. I still felt like I grew muscles during my cut for some reason and lifts remained the same. According to the Dexa scan I have 150lbs of muscle, but I feel like barely any of it is skeletal muscle. After the new year started I switched to bulking and have finally gained about 7lbs in the last few weeks and lifts are improving again - but I'm starting to think it's mostly fat. As of now, my lifts are all higher than they've ever been, squatting 205 for 8 reps x 3 sets easily as compared to 135 a year ago. Benching 185 x 6-8 reps 3-4 sets as compared to 135 x8 a year ago, bicep curls went from 30lb dumbbells to 45lb dumbbells.
However, appearance wise I'm struggling to not believe that I basically look identical to a year ago. When I'm not flexing in the mirror I feel like I look exactly like I did when i was 205ls and probably 18% body fat (except for a flatter stomach).
I just don't understand what I'm doing wrong when I see people's results after they start working out for like 3-6 months - you can visually see their muscles grew by like 1.5-2x. I see guys at the gym that are much more muscular (like twice the size of biceps and 3x the size of pecs) than me doing slightly above or similar to the weights I'm doing (i'm not sacrificing on form either). Sometimes I wonder how long they have been lifting to get so big and I guess I just don't want to believe that it will take me like 5+ years to get to their size at the rate I'm going. To be fair, this is my first actual bulk that I'm doing - I've never been in a caloric surplus while lifting before as I didn't understand how important diet was and thought I was just genetically predisposed to not gain muscle.
I'm just frustrated that for the last 6 months I feel like I've been doing everything right: eating the right foods, tracking calories, tracking workouts, incrementing my resistance, adding volume, prioritizing 7-8 hours of sleep over social events, taking supplements, eating 160-250 g of protein daily, switching up lifts every 3 months, yet I feel like i look very similar (like 10% bigger muscles) to how I did when I didn't work out at all 2 years ago...
I did get my testosterone tested recently and it's on the low end (you would think a year of exercise, good diet, adequate sleep would help but it didn't), is that basically the difference?
What else can be done? Do i just have to accept that getting ripped is not something I can do if I commit 100% to it for a year and instead just accept that it will take multiple years to dramatically change my body and I may never be one of those big guys at the gym?