From the Brickyard | Subject: The what, why, and how of muscle gain
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Have you ever wondered what’s going on under the hood when it comes to building muscle? And why we can actually build muscle? And also, maybe most importantly, how to effectively build muscle?
That’s what we’re going to dive into.
Let’s peel back the layers, open up the hood, and figure out how this thing works—like we’re wrenching on a ’57 Chevy Bel Air.
Just What the Heck Actually Is Muscle?
Muscle is contractile tissue—a form of soft tissue that your brain commands to pull on your bones via tendons. This is what lets you move at a joint.
Any movement—walking, picking up your kids, or lifting weights—relies on this process.
You can move in many ways, at many speeds, all because of muscle (plus tendons, bones, and other systems, of course).
That’s about as deep in the weeds as we need to go.
Why We Can Build Muscle
We know what muscle is. So why can we get bigger muscles?
It comes down to one word: adaptation.
When you impose stress on your muscles—say, by lifting weights—your body adapts by improving its ability to handle that stress. That’s where hypertrophy (muscle growth) comes in.
What Triggers Muscle Growth?
- Mechanical tension: Lifting weights or creating strong muscular contractions through a full range of motion.
- Muscle damage: Microtears can occur from eccentric loading (the lowering part of a lift).
- Metabolic stress: That burning pump you feel is a buildup of metabolites—lactate, hydrogen ions, etc.—which may contribute to muscle growth.
Note: Current research shows that mechanical tension is the primary driver of hypertrophy. Muscle damage and metabolic stress can support it, but they aren’t essential for growth.
Recovery: Where the Real Growth Happens
All that hard training just sets the stage.
The real magic happens when you’re resting and recovering. This is when your body repairs muscle fibers—and if conditions are right, it overcompensates and builds back bigger and stronger.
But that only happens if:
- You’re training hard enough to warrant adaptation
- You’re giving your body the raw materials (food)
- You’re allowing proper recovery time (low stress, good sleep)
It’s also important to note that muscle growth is slow. You build a tiny bit of muscle after each proper workout. So think in terms of months and years, not days or weeks.
How to Build Muscle Effectively
We’ve covered the what and why. Now here’s the how.
1. Actually Train
A lot of guys at the gym aren’t really training—they’re going through the motions, like they’re browsing Netflix.
Your body resists change. It wants homeostasis (status quo). So to force muscle growth, you’ve got to challenge it hard enough so that it has to respond.
That means:
- Lifting close to failure
- Staying mostly in the 3–15 rep range
- Using sensible rest intervals
You should feel like you’ve been in a fight after a good set. Muscles burning, breathing heavy, face twisted up. If you’ve never let out a few involuntary curses at the end of a set…you’re not there yet.
Bonus: Two Types of Muscle Growth
There are two primary types of hypertrophy:
- Myofibrillar Hypertrophy: This increases the size and number of the contractile units (myofibrils) in your muscle fibers. It’s associated with strength and density—think powerlifters or gymnasts.
- Sarcoplasmic Hypertrophy: This increases the volume of fluid and non-contractile elements (like glycogen and sarcoplasm) in the muscle cell. It’s what gives that full, pumped look.
Most well-rounded training stimulates both, but the emphasis depends on how you train:
- Lower reps (3–6) and heavy weights = more myofibrillar
- Moderate reps (8–15) with volume = more sarcoplasmic
Want the best results? Blend both styles into your routine. Train heavy some days, and pump up the reps on others…and remember to always use impeccable form any amount of reps you do.
2. Train Consistently
Muscle growth is a compounding process. That means you need consistency.
Like I said earlier, think in terms of months or years.
What about frequency? How many days a week should you train?
3 days is too little, there’s just too much to do. 4 days you’re getting there. Think 5-6 days a week for real results.
Note: This doesn’t mean training each muscle 5–6 times a week. It means hitting certain muscles in turn 5-6 days a week so you can spread your volume out and blast each muscle group throughout the week.
Tip: What matters most is your total weekly volume per muscle (10+ hard sets/week per muscle is a good target). If you choose to train 3 days a week, you’ll have to do a lot more each training session, possibly hindering focus and intensity.
If you think you don’t have the time, then take a long hard look at what you’re doing with your time. You’ve got more time than you think if you cut TV, social media, and bar hopping. A home gym can also really help in this regard.
3. Eat (Like You Mean It)
Muscle is made of amino acids (protein), and building it requires energy. You must give your body what it needs to grow.
This means:
- High-protein intake (~0.7–1g per lb of body weight)
- Carbs and fats for fuel and hormones
- Micronutrients from whole foods for health and proper function
- Fiber for digestion and health
Focus on:
- Meat, eggs, dairy
- Fruits and vegetables
- Whole grains
- Healthy fats and oils
And yes—you can eat cheeseburgers and pizza. Just not only cheeseburgers and pizza.
4. Be in a Slight Calorie Surplus
To build muscle, you need to eat more than you burn—just slightly.
Too little? No growth. Too much? Fat gain.
Stick to a modest daily surplus (200–300 calories above maintenance).
5. Periodically Cut
You can’t bulk up forever, or you’ll end up round and soft.
Cycle in short cutting phases—eat slightly below maintenance to shed body fat while maintaining muscle. Keep training intensity high, and protein up.
6. Live Lower-Stress
Cortisol, the stress hormone, is catabolic—it breaks things down. Chronic high cortisol hinders muscle gain and promotes fat storage.
To reduce cortisol:
- Sleep more
- Limit caffeine
- Manage work and life stress
- Meditate
- Chill!
Growth hormone and testosterone thrive in low-stress environments.
7. Sleep Like a Champion
If you’re not sleeping 7–9 hours a night, you’re leaving gains on the table.
Sleep supports muscle growth by:
- Increasing testosterone and growth hormone
- Repairing muscle tissue
- Reducing cortisol
- Restoring mental clarity and drive
Sleep is not optional. It’s the foundation.
Final Word
Building muscle isn’t complicated—but it’s not easy. It takes hard training, focused nutrition, consistent recovery, and discipline over time.
You’ll be sore. You’ll be tired. And you’ll wonder if it’s working.
But one day, you’ll see it. The thicker chest. The bigger arms. The stronger lifts. And it’ll all be worth it.
Do the work. Build the muscle.
Brick by brick.
-Brickwall
Sources
Schoenfeld, B. J. (2010). The mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy and their application to resistance training. Journal of Applied Physiology, 108(4), 1–10. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20847704/
Morton, R. W., Murphy, K. T., McKellar, S. R., et al. (2022). A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults. Sports Medicine, 52(5), 1085–1101. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35187864/
Grgic, J., Schoenfeld, B. J., Davies, T. B., & Lazinica, B. (2019). Effects of resistance training frequency on gains in muscular strength: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Sports Medicine, 49(5), 793–807. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30558493/
Dinyer, T. L., et al. (2022). Weekly Sets Per Muscle for Maximizing Muscle Hypertrophy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sports-and-active-living/articles/10.3389/fspor.2022.949021/full
Kravitz, L. (n.d.). How Do Muscles Grow? University of New Mexico. https://www.unm.edu/~lkravitz/Article%20folder/musclesgrowLK.html
Walker, M. (2017). Why We Sleep. https://www.sleepdiplomat.com/author