Lifting more weight doesn't always mean you've gotten stronger. In this foundational session, Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum and Dr. Austin Baraki introduce the Fitness-Fatigue Model to explain why "stalled" progress is often just a temporary masking of strength by accumulated fatigue. By learning to differentiate between a lack of fitness adaptation and a lack of recovery, you can avoid the "panic pivot" and maintain the long-term signal necessary for elite-level gains.
Supercast Sign-Up
For the 6-part audio series and Training Plateau Action Plan, sign-up for Barbell Medicine Plus:
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Key Learning Points
- The Fitness-Fatigue Model: Understand the physiological duality of every workout—while a session builds your "fitness" (potential), it also creates "fatigue" that temporarily suppresses your performance.
- Strength vs. Effort: Performance must be measured relative to RPE. If the weight on the bar increases but the RPE climbs disproportionately (e.g., jumping from RPE 8 to RPE 10 for a 5lb gain), your absolute strength has not actually improved.
- Noise vs. Signal: A one-week stall is statistical "noise." Constant program hopping in response to a single bad session destroys the cumulative stimulus (the "signal") required for actual tissue adaptation.
- The Root Cause Audit: Determining the "Why" behind a plateau.
- Lack of Fitness: The stimulus is no longer sufficient to drive a new adaptation (Needs more volume/intensity).
- Lack of Recovery: The fatigue is overwhelming the adaptation (Needs a deload or volume reduction).
- Autoregulation as a Diagnostic Tool: Using RPE not just to prescribe load, but to "interrogate" your current state of recovery and readiness.
Timestamps
- [00:00] Intro: Introducing the Barbell Medicine Plus Exclusive Series
- [02:15] The Thought Experiment: 310x6 @ 8 vs. 315x6 @ 10
- [05:30] Deep Dive: Defining the Fitness-Fatigue Model
- [09:45] Interpreting the Stall: Is it a Stimulus Problem or a Recovery Problem?
- [14:20] The Danger of "Short-Termism": Why Panicking Destroys the Signal
- [18:50] Introduction to the 6-Part Audio Course & Actionable PDF
Pearls
- The Pivot Rule: Never change a successful program based on a single week of data. Look for a 3-week trend of stagnant or declining performance (at the same RPE) before initiating a program pivot.
- Peaking Mechanics: Most "peaking" protocols do not build new strength; they simply reduce fatigue to reveal the strength you've already built.
- The stimulus-Recovery Trap: If you feel "beat up" but the weights are moving well, you likely don't need a deload yet. If you feel "great" but the weights are stuck, you likely need a stronger stimulus.
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