Kpaxi
Member
Ok so here’s the scenario.
I had two major traumas to my legs through my early career in the military that forced me to not load them for the past two and a half years.
Through Therapy and surgery I finally just received the green light to train my legs. Not just to train them. But that I can go heavy on them assuming I don’t try to “push through pain” if joints and bones start hurting.
Here’s the issue. I’m 5’10, 205 LBS. All upper body. I haven’t hit a leg day besides therapy in years. My max squat is 215 and that’s a struggle. I can literally shoulder press for reps more than I can one rep squat.
I’m bulking Test/Tren/Dbol modérate amounts currently.
The question is this. Will my legs catch up to my body? Is it possible for them to “want” to catch up to my body quicker than normal?
My legs are my number one insecurity and I’m glad to be able to fix it. I’m just trying to find out what I should expect.
Newbie gains+ Roid gains all at once maybe they’ll catch up?
Thanks in advance.
I had two major traumas to my legs through my early career in the military that forced me to not load them for the past two and a half years.
Through Therapy and surgery I finally just received the green light to train my legs. Not just to train them. But that I can go heavy on them assuming I don’t try to “push through pain” if joints and bones start hurting.
Here’s the issue. I’m 5’10, 205 LBS. All upper body. I haven’t hit a leg day besides therapy in years. My max squat is 215 and that’s a struggle. I can literally shoulder press for reps more than I can one rep squat.
I’m bulking Test/Tren/Dbol modérate amounts currently.
The question is this. Will my legs catch up to my body? Is it possible for them to “want” to catch up to my body quicker than normal?
My legs are my number one insecurity and I’m glad to be able to fix it. I’m just trying to find out what I should expect.
Newbie gains+ Roid gains all at once maybe they’ll catch up?
Thanks in advance.
