5/3/1 5/3/1 Explained: Why Wendler's Program Still Works After 15 Years Wendler's 5/3/1 isn't optimal on paper — it's sustainable in practice. That's why it's outlasted most programs built after 2010.
Training Intensity The Case Against Failure Training (For Most Sets) Training every set to failure triples the fatigue cost for a marginal stimulus bump. Save RPE 10 for the last set of the last exercise.
Programming Why Most Lifters Fail Their Own Programs — And What to Do Instead The best program is the one you'll run for eight weeks without skipping sessions. Optimization is downstream of adherence, always.
Deload Deload Weeks: When You Need One and How to Structure It A deload isn't a week of Netflix. Drop volume 50 to 60 percent, keep intensity, and come back in 7 days reset. Three signals that it's time.
Mobility Mobility Work That Actually Matters: Stop Doing Butterfly Stretches Static stretching before a squat session is a waste of warm-up time. Loaded mobility and end-range work actually move the needle.
Grip Training Grip Training: Why Yours Is Probably the Limiting Factor If your deadlift fails at 90 percent, it's usually the grip giving up before the back. Fifteen minutes of grip work twice a week fixes it.
Shoulder Health Shoulder Health for Bench Pressers: The Work You Should Already Be Doing Benching without direct back and rear delt work is how most lifters end up at a PT at 38. Fix it with eight minutes twice a week.
Cardio HIIT Isn't Better Than Steady State for Most Lifters HIIT burns more oxygen per minute than steady state — but it also eats into the recovery your lifts depend on. Use it sparingly.
Cardio Zone 2 Cardio: How to Actually Do It Without Killing Your Lifts Zone 2 work — 120-140 bpm for most trained 30 to 50 year-olds — improves recovery and health markers without touching your lifting capacity.
Nutrition Calorie Cycling: When It Helps and When It's a Distraction Calorie cycling isn't magic, but a 300-calorie bump on training days is easier to adhere to than a flat average. That's the real benefit.
Nutrition Cutting vs Bulking: A Sustainable Framework, Not a Seasonal Cycle The dirty bulk to crash cut cycle is a fitness industry invention. Slow lean bulks with long maintenance phases outperform it on every metric.
Hypertrophy Hypertrophy vs Strength: You Can Train for Both, Just Not Equally Hypertrophy and strength aren't rival goals — they share infrastructure. Concurrent training works if you pick one primary and accept the trade.