Focus on developing strength as the ‘mother quality’ of all fitness, as it forms the essential base for improving speed, endurance, leanness, and overall physical capabilities.
Practice a skill (e.g., a lift) frequently throughout the day or week with moderately heavy weight, performing half or fewer of your maximum repetitions while staying fresh, to reinforce neural pathways and build strength without exhaustion.
Divide your total training volume into smaller, more frequent sessions, allowing your body and nervous system to handle more work and recover better, leading to improved results.
Select a limited number of foundational exercises that you can perform well and pain-free, as these will provide the greatest carryover to overall strength and fitness without the need for constant variety.
Master the hip hinge movement, which is crucial for protecting your back, improving lifting mechanics, and supporting long-term spinal health in daily activities and training.
For daily training, use a ’training max’ – the heaviest weight you can lift without excessive excitement or a pre-set heart rate spike – to build strength consistently without overtaxing your nervous system.
Do not train to muscular failure, as it exponentially increases recovery time, can convert fast-twitch fibers to slower types, and degrades technique, making it counterproductive for long-term strength and skill development.
Aim to conclude each training session feeling stronger and more capable than when you began, avoiding exhaustion to support long-term progress, mental freshness, and overall well-being.
Cultivate a general reserve of strength to enhance your ability to perform daily tasks, handle unexpected physical demands, and improve overall quality of life.
Learn power breathing for heavy lifts by inhaling deeply into the abdomen through pursed lips or one nostril, pulling up the pelvic floor, and creating intra-abdominal pressure to stabilize the spine and increase strength.
Focus intensely on developing one specific training quality (e.g., strength) for a period while maintaining others with minimal effort (e.g., once a week at moderate effort), then shift priorities.
Utilize Zercher squats, holding the bar in the crooks of your elbows, to build powerful core stability and strength, particularly beneficial if shoulder or wrist issues limit other squat variations.
Actively train grip strength, either directly with grippers or indirectly through exercises like rope climbing or heavy kettlebell snatches, to enhance overall strength and potentially contribute to longevity.
Incorporate heavy, low-repetition strength training that focuses on neurological strength, as it can improve endurance performance in activities like running or cycling without adding significant muscle mass.
Focus on training methods that promote aerobic metabolism within working muscle fibers, as this helps postpone fatigue and enhances endurance by fighting its underlying mechanisms.
Always perform a cool-down after training, including easy stretching, meditation, or breathing exercises, to downregulate the nervous system and promote recovery.
Maintain good posture and actively avoid slouching during rest periods between sets and during post-workout recovery, especially after heavy lifts, to protect your spine from injury.
Integrate isometric training to strengthen sticking points in lifts, optimize lifting angles, and develop the neural drive necessary to grind safely through heavy attempts.
Incorporate paused repetitions (e.g., pausing for 3-5 seconds at the bottom of a squat) to combine eccentric, isometric, and concentric contractions, enhancing strength, control, and technique.
Perform glycolytic power repeats (e.g., 30 seconds of hard effort followed by 5-10 minutes of rest, repeated 5+ times) to build cardiorespiratory endurance, muscle, and peripheral adaptations efficiently.
After intense efforts, avoid sudden stops; instead, walk it off and perform ‘fast and loose’ muscle relaxation drills to restore circulation, reduce tension, and promote recovery.
Once you’ve achieved a suitable strength level for your goals, maintain it by training that quality once a week at a moderate effort, freeing up resources for other training priorities.
Experienced and older lifters may benefit from shorter training cycles (e.g., 6-8 weeks) to better manage recovery, adapt to life events, and sustain progress.
For a simple, do-it-yourself progression, start with a challenging weight, maintain it until it feels light, then increase the weight and repeat the cycle.
Consider concentric-only training (dropping the weight after the lift) to gain strength while minimizing muscle growth and post-exercise soreness, particularly useful for weight-class athletes or during recovery phases.
Perform assisted eccentric training with a competent spotter by lowering a slightly supra-maximal weight with the intention to lift it, then having spotters remove the weight, to build strength without excessive risk.
Incorporate assisted concentric training where a partner provides just enough help to lift a supra-maximal weight, allowing you to ’live your motor future’ and build strength without psychological stress.
Use stimulants judiciously and in moderation, saving them for when truly needed (e.g., peak training weeks) rather than relying on them daily, to preserve adrenal function and avoid burnout.
Incorporate full range of motion exercises, performed carefully and cautiously, to improve flexibility and sarcomere length over time, potentially reducing the need for dedicated stretching.
Use wall squats (facing a wall with arms extended) as a self-correcting exercise to improve mobility and achieve a proper, deep upright squat posture.
When stretching, approach the edge of discomfort and maintain the position calmly, allowing the nervous system to relax and reset muscle spindles, rather than forcing the stretch with pain.
Approach core training with a primary focus on generating high tension and paying close attention to abdominal engagement, rather than just performing high repetitions, to build true core strength.
Learn to synchronize your breathing with muscular effort during movements (e.g., punching, lifting) by timing abdominal contraction and pressurization with the exertion to maximize power and efficiency.
For most deadlifts, maintain a neutral neck position where the head aligns with the spine, looking at a spot on the ground that allows the eyes to come up naturally with the lift, for spinal safety and optimal mechanics.
Select a simple, proven training program with an established track record and adhere to it consistently, avoiding excessive customization or constantly seeking new methods, to achieve better long-term results.
For children and young people, encourage a wide variety of physical activities and balanced development, as early specialization can be detrimental to long-term athletic potential and health.
For beginners in strength training, start with kettlebells as they provide an excellent entry point for learning fundamental strength movements and developing body awareness.
Incorporate kettlebell swings to safely develop power and power endurance, improve resilience (e.g., reducing hamstring tears), and enhance fat loss.
For experienced kettlebell users, practice over-speed eccentric swings by actively accelerating the bell downwards and upwards to generate high force and safely load tissues, enhancing power.
Utilize kettlebell exercises like the bent press to significantly improve mobility in the T-spine and shoulders, promoting overall joint health and range of motion.
Utilize the bench press for upper body strength development, as it allows for significant gains with low training volume (e.g., several sets of five once a week).
Include exercises that target the posterior chain, such as the narrow sumo deadlift, to improve overall strength and back health.
Perform short, non-exhausting, familiar strength exercises as a ‘strength warmup’ or throughout the day to create a tonic effect that enhances overall physical and cognitive productivity.
Advanced lifters can occasionally train blindfolded to enhance kinesthetic awareness and reduce reliance on visual feedback, improving body control and technique.