Correct these mistakes and blast through your lifting plateaus. The sky’s the limit!
By:
Eric Cressey
5 Reasons You Aren’t Getting Stronger
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Barbell Deadlift & Squat
» Video Demonstration Of Barbell Deadlift.
» Video Demonstration Of Barbell Squat.
Not taking deload periods
One phrase of which I’ve grown quite fond is “fatigue masks fitness.” As a little frame of reference, my best vertical
jump is 36 inches. But on most days, I won’t give you anything over 34.5. The reason is very simple: Most of your training career is going to be spent in
some degree of fatigue. How you manage that fatigue is what’s going to dictate your adaptation over the long-term.
On one hand, you want to impose enough fatigue to create “super-compensation”—so that you’ll adapt and come back at a higher level of fitness. On the
other hand, you don’t want to impose so much fatigue that you dig yourself a hole you can’t get out of without a significant amount of time off.

Successful programs implement strategic overreaching, followed by periods of lower training stress, to allow for adaptation to occur. You can’t just go in
and hit personal bests in every single training session.
Not rotating movements
It never ceases to amaze me when a guy claims that he just can’t seem to add to his bench press (or any lift, for that matter), and when you ask him what
he’s done to work on it of late, and he tells you “bench press.” Specificity is important,
folks, but if you aren’t rotating exercises, you’re missing out on a wildly valuable training stimulus: rotating exercises.
While there is certainly a place for extended periods of specificity (Smolov squat
cycles, for instance), you can’t push this approach indefinitely. Rotating my heaviest movements was one of the most important lessons I learned along my
journey. In addition to helping to create adaptation, you’re also expanding your “motor program” and avoiding overuse injuries via pattern overload.
I’m not saying that you have to overhaul your entire program each time you walk into the gym, but there should be some semi-regular fluctuation in exercise
selection. The more experienced you become, the more often you’ll want to rotate your exercises. (I do it weekly). We generally rotate assistance exercises
every four weeks, though.
Inconsistency in training
I always tell our clients from all walks of life that the best strength-and-conditioning programs are ones that are sustainable. I’ll take a crappy program
executed with consistency over a great program that’s only done sporadically. In my daily practice, this is absolutely huge for professional athletes who
need to maximize progress in the off-season; they just can’t afford to have unplanned breaks in training if they want to improve from year to year.
If a program isn’t conducive to your goals and lifestyle, then it isn’t a good program. That’s why I went out of my way to create 2x/week, 3x/week, and
4x/week strength training options – plus five supplemental conditioning options and a host of exercise modifications – when I pulled my website together; I
wanted it to be a very versatile resource.

Likewise, I wanted it to be safe; a program isn’t good if it injures you and prevents you from exercising. Solid programs include targeted efforts to reduce
the likelihood of injury via means like mobility warm-ups, supplemental stretching recommendations, specific progressions, fluctuations in training stress,
and alternative exercises (“Plan B”) in case you aren’t quite ready to execute “Plan A.”
I attribute a lot of my progress to the fact that at one point, I actually went over eight years without missing a planned lift. It’s a bit extreme, I know,
but there’s a lesson to be learned.
Wrong rep schemes
Beginners can make strength gains on as little as 40% of their one-rep max. Past that initial period, the number moves to 70%, which is
roughly a 12-rep max for most folks. Later, I’d say that the number creeps up to about 85%—which would be about a 5-rep max for an intermediate lifter.
This last range is where you’ll find most people who head to the web for strength training information.
What they don’t realize is that 85% isn’t going to get the job done for very long, either. My experience is that in advanced lifters, the fastest way to
build strength is to perform singles at or above 90% of one-rep max with regularity. As long as exercises are rotated and deloading periods are included,
this is a strategy that can be employed for an extended period of time. In fact, it was probably the single (no pun intended) most valuable discovery I made
in my quest to get stronger.
I’m not saying that you should be attempting one-rep maxes each time you enter the gym, but I do think they’ll “just happen” if you employ this technique.
To learn more about Eric Cressey and his training techniques visit, showandgotraining.com.
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