Phase 1: Anatomical Adaptation
Duration: 4–6 weeks
Focus: Movement quality, proper form, building work capacity
Characteristics: Lower intensity, higher repetitions, focus on technique mastery
Discover educational frameworks for building progressive strength training systems. Learn how to structure your practice for consistent advancement and sustainable skill development.
Effective bodyweight training systems balance multiple elements: movement variety, intensity progression, recovery, and skill development. A well-designed system ensures consistent progress and reduces injury risk.
Different frequency models suit different lifestyles and goals. This educational comparison helps you understand the trade-offs of each approach.
| Model | Frequency | Session Length | Focus | Recovery Demands |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Foundation (3x/week) | Monday, Wednesday, Friday | 30–40 minutes | Full-body movement learning | Low–Moderate |
| Balanced (4x/week) | Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri | 35–45 minutes | Upper/lower body split | Moderate |
| Push/Pull/Legs (4x/week) | Varied with rest days | 45–60 minutes | Movement pattern specialisation | Moderate–High |
| High-Frequency (5x/week) | Monday–Friday | 40–50 minutes | Skill-focused with volume | High |
| Elite-Level (6x/week) | All week with 1 rest | 50–90 minutes | Advanced skill development | Very High |
| Flexibility Model (Variable) | 3–5 days per week | Variable 25–60 min | Adapt to lifestyle | Variable |
This is educational information comparing different training frequency models. Individual response to training varies. Always listen to your body and adjust frequency based on your recovery, energy, and life circumstances.
Periodisation is an educational framework that structures training into phases with different focuses. This approach helps optimise learning and prevent plateaus.
Duration: 4–6 weeks
Focus: Movement quality, proper form, building work capacity
Characteristics: Lower intensity, higher repetitions, focus on technique mastery
Duration: 6–8 weeks
Focus: Muscle development, increased training volume
Characteristics: Moderate intensity, varied rep ranges, progressive volume increase
Duration: 4–6 weeks
Focus: Maximum strength, advanced progressions
Characteristics: Higher intensity, lower reps, mastery of complex movements
Duration: 1–2 weeks
Focus: Active recovery, consolidation of gains
Characteristics: Reduced volume and intensity, mobility work, mind-body connection
The best training system is one you'll actually follow and one that evolves with you. A rigid system that ignores your body's signals will eventually fail. The most effective educational approach emphasises understanding your individual response.
Most beginners benefit from starting with a Foundation model (3x/week full-body) to learn movement patterns and build baseline work capacity. This allows adequate recovery while providing enough stimulus for learning. Adjust based on how your body responds.
Yes. The frameworks presented here are educational models. Many advanced practitioners create hybrid systems combining elements from multiple approaches. The key is understanding the principles: progressive overload, recovery, variety, and tracking.
Most systems require 4–8 weeks to show meaningful results. When progress plateaus or you've achieved your phase goals, it's appropriate to shift to a new system or phase. Changing too frequently prevents adaptation; sticking too long can lead to stagnation.
Book an expert consultation to discuss system design personalised to your goals and circumstances.
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