Travis Gordon Posted May 14, 2014 Share Posted May 14, 2014 Aloha One and All, I have a fairly general question. I am sure this has been asked, but I am being lazy and wish to get to the point. I cycle my personal training session through powerlifting, olympic lifting, kettlebells, and indian clubs. These aspects of my training interest with not change. My training cycles will usually run 8-12 weeks at a time and since I am getting into better health, I am considering getting back into competitive lifting. I have been actively training for 17+ years and I am great with my programming cycles (peaks and deloading). My question to the GB community is if anyone has suggestions with programming Foundation 1 at 5 days a week while still attending to my personal strength and performance goals. I am considering 2 options:#1: Using the F1 program as a prolonged warmup on the corresponding days. Followed by my strength/conditioning work. #2: Melding the strength and mobility work in with my regular lifts. EX: SPL series with bar lift X in a circuit. Any and all information is appreciated. Keep doing the great work folks!Thanks! - Travis Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joshua Slocum Posted May 14, 2014 Share Posted May 14, 2014 Aloha One and All, I have a fairly general question. I am sure this has been asked, but I am being lazy and wish to get to the point. My question to the GB community is if anyone has suggestions with programming Foundation 1 at 5 days a week while still attending to my personal strength and performance goals. Yes: don't. If you're going to use F1 as a supplement to your regular training, keep the volume low: I'd start at 3 days a week. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Travis Gordon Posted May 14, 2014 Author Share Posted May 14, 2014 Thank you for you input Josh. I can respect the modest 3/day week start for F1. Is there are time frame that I can look to if I might open up to 5/days week? I should also note that I am not in competition mode for anything at the present moment and my attention is specific to skill development and barbell complexes. Would this change the parameters or is this still a 3/day week situation? Again, thank you! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joshua Slocum Posted May 14, 2014 Share Posted May 14, 2014 It's recommended that people who aren't doing any other strength work start with 4; if you're doing other stuff in addition, starting at 3 would be prudent in my opinion. Spend 2-3 months at that volume. If you find that you're consistently energetic and hungering for more work, then up it to 4x/week, and try that for another 2-3 months before deciding whether you'd benefit from 5x/week. Note the emphasis on benefit: being able to handle a certain volume doesn't equate to making the most rapid progress at that volume. Training too much cuts into recovery, which is the part where you actually get stronger. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now