Tuesday, May 31, 2022

After 11 years of running 5/3/1 variations I'm ready for programming with a new skeleton. I'm also firmly set on resuming my weight cut to remain in the 198 weight class and optimize my athleticism for martial arts. With those circumstances in mind, I will be embracing abbreviated training once again via Andy Baker's Heavy Light Medium template.

The label is unliteral because Andy actually recommends spreading out the heavy effort throughout the week on all three days if you're not a beginner. Here's what I came up with:

Day 1 (heavy)
Squat: 3x5
Bench: 3x5
Super-set with weighted rows: 3 x 8-10
Bench or press accessory movement: 3 x 8-12

Day 2 (light): 
Press: 3x5
Super-set with chins
Clean: 3x5
Deadlift: 1x5
Hamstring movement: 3 x 8-12

Day 3 (medium):
Squat variation 3 x 8-12
Bench variation: 3 x 8-12
Super-set with weighted rows
Bench or press accessory movement: 3 x 8-12

With that said, I'll be using the day's theme as an intensity guide. On day 1, though I'll be starting with something manageable, I'll eventually get to a point where it's a 90+% 3x5, and I can take the rows to failure. The light day will be a progressive but fairly digestible lineup of pressing, leaving a rep or two in the tank, with only the deadlift being truly heavy. Saturday will basically be what I've done for 5/3/1 accessory work. The weight will be challenging but autoregulated by the higher ranges and not taken to failure. I can throw in a bunch of other exercises on this day too if I feel like it. 

Andy recommends a high calorie cheat day, which I already practice, on the heavy day. 

It was getting exhausting treating every lifting day as a test for a maxing out, which was my fault, not Wendler's. I need a change, and perhaps something else will come out of this based on how I'm progressing. 

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