April 15 2026

Your guide to recovery tweaks and programming adjustments

    ⚠️ What’s Really Going On

    Soreness isn’t the problem — it’s a signal. And usually, it points to one of these:

    1. You’re overdosing novelty
    Too many NEW movements = excessive soreness (especially in newer clients)

    2. Volume is too high for their current capacity
    They’re doing more than they can recover from — not more than they can perform

    3. Recovery habits are weak
    Sleep, hydration and nutrition aren’t supporting the workload

    4. They think soreness = success
    So they push too hard… and then crash

    ✅ The Fix (What to Do This Week)

    1. Switch to “Active Recovery” Sessions

    Don’t cancel — pivot the session
    • Light movement (bike, walk, swim)
    • Mobility + range of motion work
    • Technique-focused lifting at lower intensity

    👉 Goal: increase blood flow, reduce stiffness, maintain consistency

    2. Reduce Volume, Not Frequency

    Instead of skipping sessions:
    • Cut sets in half
    • Keep intensity moderate
    • Focus on 2–3 key movements

    👉 Consistency beats crushing them once and losing them for 3 days

    3. Repeat Movements (Less Variety = Less Soreness)

    New exercises = new soreness
    • Keep core lifts consistent week to week
    • Progress slowly instead of constantly switching

    👉 Familiarity improves recovery and confidence

    4. Add Simple Recovery Standards

    Give clients non-negotiables, not suggestions:
    • Protein at every meal
    • Water goal (½ bodyweight in oz as a baseline)
    • 7+ hours of sleep

    👉 Most soreness problems are recovery problems in disguise

    5. Reframe the Mindset

    Tell them: “Soreness isn’t the goal — progress is.”

    Help them understand:
    • You can get stronger without being wrecked
    • Feeling better between sessions is a win

    💡 Pro Tip

    If a client is sore every single session, it’s not a badge of honor — it’s a programming flaw.

    Great trainers don’t just build intensity. They build repeatability.

    🔁 Quick Trainer Reset

    If your client is constantly sore, ask yourself:
    • Did I introduce too much too fast?
    • Am I prioritizing intensity over sustainability?
    • Am I coaching recovery — or just workouts?

    You don’t need to cancel sessions when clients are sore — you need to coach them through it. Adjust the plan, reinforce recovery habits and keep them moving in a way that supports progress instead of setting them back. The goal isn’t to leave every workout exhausted — it’s to keep your client showing up, improving and feeling better week after week.