The Practical Fitness Podcast
If you're consistently landing on even numbers or 10 reps for your sets, you might be stalling your progress. And in this episode, I explain why. Most strength programs give you tidy rep prescription, such as to do 3 sets of 10. But when 10 becomes the thing you chase, it’s easy to lose sight of the variable that actually drives progress. In this episode, I break down why reps and load are not the primary drivers of strength, why effort at the end of the set is what truly signals change, how to use reps in reserve, and how to spot a subtle clue in your training log that **might** mean you’re under-efforting. FREE STUFF Get my FREE STRENGTH “Macro” TRACKER [https://mailchi.mp/b4de23edf542/free-strength-macro-tracker-signup] Follow @laurelbeversdorf [https://www.instagram.com/laurelbeversdorf/] on Instagram Follow @laurel_beversdorf [https://www.youtube.com/@Laurel_Beversdorf] on YouTube www.laurelbeversdorf.com [http://www.laurelbeversdorf.com] EPISODE RESOURCES (Nuzzo, 2024) PMID: 38781472 [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38781472/] TIMESTAMPS 01:00 The floor and ceiling of rep ranges 03:00 Why reps do not make you stronger 07:00 Effort as the real signal for strength adaptation 09:00 What effort reflects physiologically (motor unit recruitment) 14:00 How reps in reserve works 6:00 Failure as a reference point 22:00 What real strength progress looks like over time 26:00 How I program effort with clients 29:00 What rep drop-off across sets can reveal
4 episodes
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