When I get time.
Hi Mark,
Nothing in the lifting world depresses me more than older novice lifters saying they just want to "maintain" what they got. What!? So you don't want things to get better?
There's been some discussion in training log threads about maintenance. I contend that, with proper programming, always trying for new PRs (always getting stronger) will provide better maintenance than "maintenance." As you've said in the past:
"Actually, I am trying to not die. During the infrequent periods of time in which I am not injured, I try to get stronger." (thread)
If you have an article about this, I haven't found it. It would make a good one.
Thank you,
Tom
When I get time.
This reminded me of a similar situation in an old thread where you were supposed to write an article:
Kelly Starrett and the wisdom of 'Open/Closed Torque'
Now that was one article I was curious about (thus why I remembered it), have you perchance been fine-tuning this article for 3 years?
Even very old individuals have the capability to get stronger, albeit much slower than a younger trainee. If you look across their strength levels over decades, you will see that an older trainee gets weaker over time, but if you look at their strength levels workout to workout, or month to month, they are still training to get stronger.
Your body is built to adapt to stress. The stress adaptation model does not allow for one to maintain. There is either enough stress to elicit an adaptation to get stronger, too little stress for the body to adapt by getting weaker, or too much stress that causes the body to become injured. Maintaining really is just alternating between getting weaker and getting stronger.