gorilla,
>i have one other question. for a beginner
hanger, i know the amount of
weight should be low, but does the amount of time
hanging matter as well? can a beginner hang for, lets say, 3 hours/day right off the bat if the
weight is low?<
The amount of time
hanging does matter. But it is a function of the amount of
weight used. The reason you should move slowly in time and
weight is that if you make a big jump in either, it is more likely that you will injure yourself. An injury only serves to delay reaching your goals.
Penis Enlargement is a marathon, not a sprint. You may make quick early gains, but the majority of the time, the daily stress is what causes the permanent plastic deformation of the tissues, and it takes a while.
In general, a guy can start out at low
weights for two or three sets. Then, I recommend adding sets slowly, perhaps one per week, until you reach the amount of privacy time you have available in a day.
Then, each week, you can add a lb or two until you reach your MAX
weight. MAX
weight is the LOWEST amount of
weight that will bring on fatigue, and cause you to have to LOWER the
weight in subsequent sets.
Example: You may start out at three sets of five lbs. in the first week. You have three hours of multi-tasking time in which to hang, which is six sets. So, over the next three weeks, you add a set each week. Then, in the forth week, you go up to six lbs for your six sets. For the example, lets say that the six pounds has no observable effect.
Then, in your fifth week, you go up to 7.5 lbs. But, during this fifth week, you find that at 7.5 lbs, you reach fatigue and are sore. Do NOT grit your teeth and fight it, but lower the
weight back to say five lbs. You have established that 7.5 lbs is your MAX
weight.
Now, you may or may not be able to return to 7.5 lbs while you are in the fatigued state. This is what I mean when I say you must learn to read your body, and understand what is happening. Fatigue, soreness is an indication of deformation. You will have applied enough stress to cause controlled damage. Try to ride this fatigue, keep the tissues in a deforming state.
The next day, after resting overnight, you will probably be able to return to 7.5 lbs, but perhaps not. If 7.5 is too much, then use five lbs. Ride the fatigue. Keep trying to return to your max
weight of 7.5 lbs, but do not fight it.
At some point, this hypothetical
weight, in the example 7.5 lbs, will no longer provide fatigue. It will no longer be your MAX
weight. So you will have to continue to move up slowly, say 8.5 lbs., and determine the affect.
Make sense?
Bigger