Well, whether we prefer it or not, month 2 of 2025 is here .
I’ll potentially be launching a new program before quarter end.
I had some great feedback and some downright bad feedback.
The great is probably what you’d expect, which I’ll explain in a future email, but the bad?
Well… it was generally something like this:
“I couldn’t complete the program because I got injured.”
“I couldn’t complete the program because I had an injury going into it, and I thought I could overcome it.”
Now, let me just say this upfront:
THERE IS NO GOOD REASON YOU SHOULD GET INJURED DURING TRAINING.
But “Bad Reasons?”
There are plenty of them.
Trust me, I get it.
I’ve been injured plenty over the years. (The exception being the last 15 years where I’ve been injury free.)
So what are these “Bad Reasons?”
They fall into one of three categories.
The first?
[1] Poor Recovery:
Again, for the 55th-11th time, we need to remember, it’s not how much work you do that improves conditioning …
It’s how much you can recover from that work.
Many guys get into trouble because they think “more work = faster results .”
If you’re using PEDs, then almost certainly yes.
But for the rest of us - almost certainly not.
As a baseline, you need 7+ hours a night of sleep. Period. End of story. Amen.
(Less than 7 hours increases fat storage and cannibalizes muscle tissue [1] - the exact opposite of what we want.)
If you’re not getting at least that, then you’re “suffering” from Poor Recovery.
Next, eat protein. Lots of it. (We’ll cover more on this some other time.) THEN…
TRAIN HARD on THREE non-consecutive days of the week . That’s it.
Not 6 days a week, two hours a day, like Ah-nold (Schwarzenegger) suggested in his Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding.
That works well for steroid-using guys in their 20s with no families and no responsibilities - which is what Arnold was when he was competing in bodybuilding…
But it doesn’t work in the Real World for guys like us who have jobs, run businesses, and have families.
In reality , back in the “Olden Days,” the 1930s through the 1960s, most of the muscular men, like those on the US Olympic Weightlifting Team, including the legendary Tommy Kono, (2x Olympic Champ, 6x World Champ) trained -
And repeat after me if you’ve heard this before -
INTENSIVELY on 3 non-consecutive days of the week. ;-)
So if it was effective for guys back in the pre-steroid era, it will work for us - for you too.
The ONLY “hack ” or “work-around” I am aware of to this if you really want on training more frequently?
To increase the number of days you train a week to 4 or five, or even an intense 6 …?
Is to cut your training duration in each session by 33% to half.
For example, 3x 30-minute sessions (90 minutes) becomes 4x 20-25 minute sessions or 5x 15-20 minute sessions.
This “ divides the effort ” which for many, helps you better cope with, even speed up your recovery.
But, I want to strongly encourage you -
If you haven’t committed to a FOCUSED, HARD, THREE, Non-consecutive days of the week training plan might do for you …
Test it out for yourself.
I think you’ll be shocked what slowing down, getting 7+ hours of sleep a night, adequate protein, and “only” training 3x week can do for your strength, muscularity, and conditioning.
Next time, we’ll talk about a problem I see on forums, social media, and Zoom sessions that’s rampant kettlebell in Kettlebell-land.
Stay Strong,
Geoff Neupert.