Strength Training & Powerlifting Articles

Evidence-based guides on programming, technique, and nutrition for powerlifters and strength athletes.

Should You Use a Belt in Training

The belt debate produces more heat than light. One camp says never use a belt — you need to build raw core strength first. The other says always wear a belt — protect your spine at all costs.

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Should You Eat Before You Work Out

The fear: train fasted and your body will eat your muscle for fuel. The counter-fear: eat too close to training and you will be nauseous under a heavy squat.

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What to Eat on Rest Days

Rest days produce a lot of unnecessary anxiety. Do you eat less? Do you cut carbs? Do you maintain exactly what you eat on training days?

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Training When Life Gets Busy

At some point, the standard training schedule stops being possible. Work intensifies. Kids arrive. Sleep becomes scarce. The 5-day program you designed when you had unlimited time is now laughable.

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How to Breathe During a Heavy Lift

Breathing during a heavy lift is not instinctive. The instinct — especially under maximal loads — is to hold your breath and hope for the best. That instinct is actually correct. But most people apply

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How Long Should You Rest Between Sets

Rest period recommendations range from 30 seconds to 5 minutes depending on who you ask. The correct answer depends on what you are trying to achieve — and most people rest either too little or too lo

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How Sore Is Too Sore

Soreness after training is normal. Soreness that prevents you from moving normally for five days is not. Understanding the difference determines whether you are training productively or damaging yours

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Stop Majoring in Minors

If you are currently debating the optimal angle of your pinky finger during a tricep extension but haven’t tracked your total training volume in six months, you are the problem.

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Nutritional Periodization

Most people eat the same way year-round regardless of what phase they're training in. That is like driving in first gear on the highway—technically moving, but leaving a lot on the table.

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The Minimum Effective Dose

More is not always better. At some point, extra training volume stops producing extra adaptation and just costs more recovery. The minimum effective dose (MED) is the smallest stimulus that still prod

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Fatigue Management and Autoregulation

Most programs assume you are a robot. They prescribe "5 sets of 5 at 80%" on Tuesday regardless of whether you slept 8 hours or 3, or whether work stress is through the roof.

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Why Doing More Sets Stops Working

Muscle growth follows a diminishing returns curve. There is a physiological limit to how much anabolic signaling a muscle can receive in a single session. Once you cross that threshold, you are doing

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Programming for Active Aging

The fitness industry treats the 60+ demographic with condescension. The standard prescription is light weights, high reps, and water aerobics. This assumes the primary goal of aging is safety.

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How often should you work your chest

When it comes to sculpting a well-defined and muscular upper body, a strong and chiseled chest often takes center stage. Whether you're striving for an aesthetically pleasing physique

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How often should I increase the load?

How often should you increase the load in training? The answer is a with so many other things in training it depends. The simplest answer to this question is when you get stronger.

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How to warm up for exercise

The two main reason people do and should warm up is to improve performance and to reduce injury risk. However, many things people often do to warm up are simply a waste of time.

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Strength Training, where to start?

There are many reasons why one might want to start working out. Some of the most common include looking better naked, being stronger, improving performance in a sport, or general health.

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