01/13/2020
Here’s a question...
If you decided you wanted to become fluent in many languages, how would you approach that? Most likely you would pick one language, take classes in that language a few times a week for 3-6 months, maybe even a year, until you were decent at speaking that language. At that point, you might try to learn or incorporate a new language and take classes in that for another 3-6 months and so on. You wouldn’t forget everything you learned from the first language, and now you’ve expanded on the languages you know. That makes sense right? You most likely wouldn’t take Spanish classes one week, French classes the next week and Japanese the week after that, because you’d just end up being terrible at all of those for a long time. Not to mention each one would suffer just simply due to confusion.
So why would you approach your training this way? If you want to be strong, or fast or jacked or whatever, you should probably train in a way that supports that goal for an extended period of time before you switch gears toward something new. Even if your goal was to be all 3 of those things at once, it would still make the most sense to train for one thing at a time. Training for strength one day or week, then endurance the next and hypertrophy the next, just makes achieving any of those goals take a very long time, at best. You can even break that down to exercise selection and set and rep scheme. Why would you do bench press with a barbell one week, dumbbells the next week and And some weird machine the week after that? Or run one day, row the next day and ride the day after that. Why go heavy for 3 reps one week and sets of 10 the next?
The point is, The more specific and directed your training, the more effective and the faster you will see progress. There is a lot to be gained from a cycle or 3 of training that is focused on one goal versus multiple different and/or opposing goals.