Well compared to you, almost all of us are average novices.
I'm not far past novice stage.
Stage of training readiness is NOT determined by size or years in the gym. Rather, it's determined by how quickly your recover from the stress of training. This rate of recovery dictates the need for complexity in periodization.
And how quickly we progress from novice, to intermediate, to advanced, to expert will vary from person to person.
the routine "switching" is physiologically as well as psychological. I'd be bored with my routine within a month or so if I did the same speed with same incline, same weights, etc.
This need to feel like you have to change something in the novice stage is the biggest mistake I see people make, in reference to strength training.
You say "same weights." A novice should never be working out with the same weights.... and if they are, something is very wrong with their programming.
You see, being a novice, you are able to recover very quickly, locally and systemically. Neural fatigue does not set in as *hard* as a novice simply b/c you are not working with weights at such a young *training age* that will promt massive set backs in fatigue.
That said, the stress/fatigue/supercompensation curve for a novice is very short. This translates into a very useful way of training that we know as straight linear periodization.
Because of this, we should be increasing weights on the major lifts pretty much every single workout, assuming we are using something like a full body routine 3 times per week.
I say this to some people, even some professionals in the industry, and they don't understand it. It sounds complicated, but it really isn't. Novices don't create major stress, hence, they don't experience major fatigue, hence, the most efficient way to get stronger (which is very important in the novice stage) is to optimally train during supercompensation periods. And for the novice, these periods peak every 48 hours or so.
Follow me?
And if i did the same cardio with same resistance for a couple months the weight loss would probably stop (and it did).
now speaking strickly physiologically and only with resistance training, i suppose the routine could be mostly static (although my routines are pretty dynamic).
I'm not quite sure what you mean in terms of physiology. Read above and correlate your line of thinking to what I say above please. If you don't mind that is.
On the cardio side of things, it's a totally different story. I have no issue with switching things up at will.
Keep in mind that I am on Atkins, so my exercise may differ slightly to greatly to most of you.
I'm speaking for anyone really, no matter of dietary patterns.