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Plateaued in the Gym? Start With These Fixes

person resting during workout with dumbbells showing resistance training plateau and fatigue

At some point in training, everyone hits a wall. It’s inevitable for the weights to stop changing, the progress slows down, and it starts to feel like all the work you’re putting in isn’t paying off the same way it used to. Your first reaction may be to push through harder with more weight, more volume, more effort, but more isn’t always the answer. Start thinking about adjusting what you’re already doing and go from there.

One of the first things to look into should be your training intensity and structure. Are you still just doing the same exercises, same weights, and same rep ranges every week or are you adapting? Your body adapts quickly so without variation, progress stalls. This doesn’t mean you need to completely change your program, but small shifts like tempo changes, rep ranges, or exercise variations can create new stimulus without overcomplicating things. But always remember the changes should be with intention and planning.

Another big factor is recovery. If your body isn’t recovering, it can’t progress. You need need NEED sleep. Nutrition, sleep, hydration, and even your stress levels all play a role here. You can be training perfectly, but if your recovery is off, your performance will reflect it. Think of the old saying, “work hard, play hard” but just remove “play” with “rest”. Sometimes the best way to break a plateau isn’t by doing more it’s by allowing your body to actually catch up and have true rest.

Lastly, take a look at your actual movement quality. Are you truly pushing yourself with good, intentional form, or just going through the motions? Each exercise is working muscles, yes, but it should have a specific target/focus while performing it. Plateaus can come from a lack of intent just as much as overtraining. Dialing in your technique, focusing on controlled reps, and being honest about your effort can unlock progress you didn’t realize was there. Progress isn’t always linear, and plateaus are part of the process. Use these plateaus as checkpoints. Adjust the variables that matter, stay consistent, and your body will respond the way intended.

#unleashthepotential

Written by:

Dan Aquino

BS, ASFA-CPT

 

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