Everyday is Potential Perv or Actual Perv Day for us, HELLLLLOOO!!!!![]()
Yeah, that's for sure, but if I make Friday MY official Perv Day, then I can really let loose
I hope I'm in good form tomorrow

PERV PARTY TIME!!!

Everyday is Potential Perv or Actual Perv Day for us, HELLLLLOOO!!!!![]()
Awesome!!! Thanks Steve
I don't know how you know all this stuff. It's like your brain is a filing cabinet, and I ask a question, you go into the file "P" for "Periodization", and pull out what I need to get me going.
I've already read that book, though ... apparently my comprehension was ZERO or I lapsed into a coma in that chapter
I'll go back and take a better look at that later tonight
Hope you have a nice evening, Steve!
Periodization is simply managing the adaptations your body undergoes within the confines of fatigue and intensity. It's not really a subject so much as it is an understanding or way of thinking about the physiological/biological processes that go on in response to training, and optimizing them.
I haven't read PP in a while but if I remember correctly, it was how he started the book. Or it was at least near the beginning where he talked about stress.
I believe I've told you before but much of what we know about periodization comes from russian scientists. So going to the source is really where the best info is. It's just that stuff can be needlessly complex and dull unless you have a sincere passion for this stuff. In addition, some of the best stuff isn't translated and others is, but poorly.
Mel Siff was as close as you'll ever get to an American who is as well versed in this stuff as the Russians. In fact, some would say he was the greatest. He's the guy who wrote Supertraining, which is just a ridiculous book.
Russian names include, but are not limited to Zatziorsky, Verhoshansky, Viru, Matveyev... the list goes on. These guys are great.
And now that I think about it, I have an excellent Canadian resource you might enjoy. It has some 'reports' written by some of the greats regarding periodization. It's a gold mine of articles.
It can be found .
This is me.
This is me ignoring the pervertedness.
Steve, I could just eat you up like a cookie for providing all this info to me!!! THANK YOU SOOOOOOO MUCH!!!![]()
I took a look at the Supertraining book, and looked over Mel Siff's info on periodization, and it is just ridiculous -- ridiculously awesome
But I'll re-read the periodization info in Strength Training first.
You're so freaking intelligent and full of information ... you really are a walking encyclopediaYou never cease to amaze me
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lol...perv party..ya'll are too funny
Anyways I haven't stopped by and said hi in a while...not since christmas....so ....HI!Hope stuff is going good for you and the wifey. You guys get the house all in order? We just had to shell out money for plumbing and very soon some roof repairs...awesome being a new home owner, lol. But I don't miss the landlord, that's for sure!
Morning Steve,
Got a camping schedule for this year?
Steve, been reading your journal here and there(mostly Words of Wisdom stickies). There's definately a lot of info that's been very helpful the last two months since I started dieting.
I picked up the New Rules of Lifting book, and I had a quick question to ask. The book has sample workouts to follow, and it all looks good. But the workouts intended for fat loss have me kind of confused. Are these workouts supposed to be for someone who is dieting? Or are they used to burn calories while at maintenance? I ask because the workouts seem a little intense just for maintenance. But maybe it's just complicated compared to some workouts you've posted for novices.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks again
the guy who designed the workouts in that book, tend to like resistance training to be more about caloric expenditure for fat loss than muscle maintenance... at least it seems that way to me
There's many ways to skin a cat and a lot of people have realized progress with the book, so it's certainly worthy of trying.
That's what I was thinking too. Thanks for clearing it up. Saw the same approach in Men's Health Total Body Plan. I think I'll stick to what I've been doing lately, which is IT cardio, and some of the sample workouts you've listed. They seem to be working.
That does seem to be the case the more I read around.
Any books you recommend that do mention resistance training for muscle maintenance? Or just Nutrition/Fitness books in general?