MED Programming With No More PRs

Matt & Scott developed the concept of Minimum Effective Dose programming (MED programming) through conversations on the podcast. Today, Matt and Scott discuss how to apply the principles of MED programming when PRs are behind you. No more PRs!?

Check out the Barbell Logic podcast landing page for free resources, recent offers, & more.

Listen to Scott’s podcasts: Online Great Books, Music & Ideas, or Growing Resilience.

SHOW NOTES

No More PRs!?

This typically occurs for older clients with high-compliance (though even younger clients who have trained consistently for a long enough time run into this problem). If you’re a lifter who regularly takes vacations and misses training, you’ll continue to return to linear progression, so this doesn’t happen.

Eventually, you can’t recover from the stress it takes to hits bigger PRs. Older people tend to sleep less well and they cannot eat as many calories without adding bodyfat. Plus, the reality is simply that the body doesn’t react as well to things as it ages – it’s just a fact of life.

This also applies to those who find themselves suddenly facing a huge amount more stress. Scott, for example, besides being a bit older, is doing manual labor on his farmstead. This stress matters when it comes to his recovery and ability to stress himself in the gym.

Practically, what does this mean? It often means pulling slots – less frequent training and less volume. You may see 5s become 4s become 3s after awhile. More days of rest between training are needed. Eventually, weight will have to come off the bar, though. Scott has also found that he doesn’t program cycles longer than 4 weeks for post-advanced clients.

A disclaimer, though – if you’re an officer worker who has never done intelligent training, you need to do this, you need to chase numbers, and you need to get big and strong.

SPECIAL OFFERS

OTHER NEWS

 

twitter2 twitter2 instagram2 facebook2

 

©2024 Barbell Logic | All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Powered by Tension Group

Log in with your credentials

Forgot your details?