
control yourself with dr andreo spina Ep 34_Training to Failure: Myth, Science & Strategy
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Apr 8, 2025 A deep dive into whether training to failure is necessary and when it helps. They compare conflicting research and separate momentary muscular failure from technical form breakdown. Discussion covers hypertrophy versus strength, motor unit recruitment limits, exercise selection for full muscle access, and why selective, low-volume failure can protect tissue and boost results.
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Beginner Vs Experienced Failure Use
- Beginners don't need to train to failure; prioritize skill and neurology first.
- Experienced lifters should use near-failure selectively to exceed their habitual zone.
Stimulate, Retrain, Detrain Framework
- Training has three intensity roles: stimulating (gain), retraining (maintain), detraining (recover).
- You must program these relative to an individual's habitual zone to avoid wasted stimulus.
Fail Sparingly—Pick One Or Two Targets
- Limit the number of exercises you take to failure per session and prioritize one or two targets.
- Use other exercises for maintenance (RIR) to save adaptive currency and prevent volume overload.
