Jul 9, 2024
There is a time around 6 weeks into an attempted habit implementation, new diet, or workout routine, where people tend to quit.
The early, easy gains end; the long-term changes the person wants have not really been seen; and the path forward remains unclear.
This is when most people quit. They build a habit of quitting, not knowing how to get beyond this common sticking points.
If approached with wisdom and perseverance, these times are actually doors to long-term success.
These times are great times to ask for help or dig deeper. For lifting, signing up for online coaching can be great (real online coaching where you get technique feedback and personalized programming) or go in for an in-person technique check up with a professional coach.
If you cannot afford this or, for some reason, do not want to seek a coach, you have to educate yourself and become a coach.
Piling more stress on in and of itself typically does not work. Pulling the stress back often does not work. The stress-recovery-adaptation period must be elongated, no longer one stress event with time afterword, but rather a period of time where you stress yourself, build up fatigue where fitness decreases, and then allow for recovery to allow fatigue to go down, fitness to come up, and ultimately cause more performance (hopefully a PR).
Getting through these sticking points, however, is really the key to long-term success. You have to be able to handle unexpected bad times, keep going, but keep going intelligently so you do not burn out.
Get beyond the sticking points. Learn how to build life-long health and fitness habits. Strength is for everyone. Strength is for life.