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Most lifters don’t fail because they’re doing too little.
They fail because they’re doing too much of the wrong things once they leave the beginner phase.
And that’s where the intermediate trap lives.
This episode is sponsored by Harambe System — the platform that’s fundamentally changed how I train.
It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you:
Smooth resistance
Joint-friendly loading
Real strength progression
I’ve personally used it for the past two years and it’s allowed me to:
Build muscle
Maintain strength
Train explosively
Stay pain-free
Harambe SystemHarambeSystem.com/JOHNPARKERBALLISTIC
What Defines an Intermediate Lifter?
You’re no longer a beginner if:
You hit plateaus.
The “just add 5 lbs every week” phase is over.
Newbie gains are gone.
Now:
Progress slows
Adaptation requires strategy
Execution matters more than effort
You can lift.
But:
You don’t always follow your program
Life “gets in the way”
Consistency breaks down
Sleep. Stress. Lifestyle.
You can’t out-train bad recovery anymore.
This is where most people stall.
You keep changing direction.
New program → new excitement → no long-term progress.
You think:
“More must be better.”
It’s not.
You’re chasing:
Sweat
Soreness
Exhaustion
Instead of:
Adaptation
Performance
Skill
You’re trying to feel the workout…
Instead of building something.
HRV drops.
Sleep sucks.
Bar speed slows.
You still push.
This is the turning point.
Stop doing more.
Start doing better.
Leave the gym feeling:
Better
Sharper
More capable
Not destroyed.
You don’t need novelty.
You need:
Repetition
Skill refinement
Measurable progress
(ADD LINK: StrengthAxis Program Design / Performance Tracks)
This is one of the most important concepts I teach.
Train around ~70% effort
Move weights fast and clean
Avoid grinding reps
These are real-world numbers I use:
20–30 total reps
Best structure: 2-3-5 ladders
15–25 reps
Manage eccentric load carefully
10–15 reps
CNS-heavy → respect it
Do less perfectly. Not more imperfectly.
Strength is a skill.
Better execution = more progress.
Weeks → Months → Years
Not random bursts of motivation.
You don’t just train muscles.
You train:
CNS readiness
Recovery capacity
Adaptation ability
Sleep, stress, lifestyle.
These are not “extras.”
They are inputs.
Here’s how I program most clients:
A1 / A2 superset
4 sets
Done fresh
3 sets
Moderate load
Controlled tempo
Arms, delts, core
2–3 sets
Push
Pull
Hinge
Squat
Simple. Effective. Repeatable.
Forget random burnout sessions.
Instead:
Walking
Rucking
Kettlebell ballistics
On-the-minute work
(ADD LINK: Kettlebell AXE / conditioning article)
Not every day is a PR day.
You’re not “working out.”
You’re training.
That means:
Adjusting loads
Managing energy
Respecting recovery
(ADD LINK: Auto-Regulation article)
Discipline isn’t forcing it.
It’s knowing when to pivot.
If you’re stuck as an intermediate lifter:
The answer isn’t more.
It’s better.
Better reps
Better structure
Better decisions
If you want help applying this:
Performance Tracks → Structured training
Program Design → Monthly systems
Harambe System → Joint-friendly strength platform
Most people never leave the intermediate phase.
Not because they can’t.
But because they refuse to change how they train.
If this helped, drop a comment or share it with someone stuck in the middle.
John Parker
StrengthAxis
By John ParkerMost lifters don’t fail because they’re doing too little.
They fail because they’re doing too much of the wrong things once they leave the beginner phase.
And that’s where the intermediate trap lives.
This episode is sponsored by Harambe System — the platform that’s fundamentally changed how I train.
It bridges the gap between bands and weights, giving you:
Smooth resistance
Joint-friendly loading
Real strength progression
I’ve personally used it for the past two years and it’s allowed me to:
Build muscle
Maintain strength
Train explosively
Stay pain-free
Harambe SystemHarambeSystem.com/JOHNPARKERBALLISTIC
What Defines an Intermediate Lifter?
You’re no longer a beginner if:
You hit plateaus.
The “just add 5 lbs every week” phase is over.
Newbie gains are gone.
Now:
Progress slows
Adaptation requires strategy
Execution matters more than effort
You can lift.
But:
You don’t always follow your program
Life “gets in the way”
Consistency breaks down
Sleep. Stress. Lifestyle.
You can’t out-train bad recovery anymore.
This is where most people stall.
You keep changing direction.
New program → new excitement → no long-term progress.
You think:
“More must be better.”
It’s not.
You’re chasing:
Sweat
Soreness
Exhaustion
Instead of:
Adaptation
Performance
Skill
You’re trying to feel the workout…
Instead of building something.
HRV drops.
Sleep sucks.
Bar speed slows.
You still push.
This is the turning point.
Stop doing more.
Start doing better.
Leave the gym feeling:
Better
Sharper
More capable
Not destroyed.
You don’t need novelty.
You need:
Repetition
Skill refinement
Measurable progress
(ADD LINK: StrengthAxis Program Design / Performance Tracks)
This is one of the most important concepts I teach.
Train around ~70% effort
Move weights fast and clean
Avoid grinding reps
These are real-world numbers I use:
20–30 total reps
Best structure: 2-3-5 ladders
15–25 reps
Manage eccentric load carefully
10–15 reps
CNS-heavy → respect it
Do less perfectly. Not more imperfectly.
Strength is a skill.
Better execution = more progress.
Weeks → Months → Years
Not random bursts of motivation.
You don’t just train muscles.
You train:
CNS readiness
Recovery capacity
Adaptation ability
Sleep, stress, lifestyle.
These are not “extras.”
They are inputs.
Here’s how I program most clients:
A1 / A2 superset
4 sets
Done fresh
3 sets
Moderate load
Controlled tempo
Arms, delts, core
2–3 sets
Push
Pull
Hinge
Squat
Simple. Effective. Repeatable.
Forget random burnout sessions.
Instead:
Walking
Rucking
Kettlebell ballistics
On-the-minute work
(ADD LINK: Kettlebell AXE / conditioning article)
Not every day is a PR day.
You’re not “working out.”
You’re training.
That means:
Adjusting loads
Managing energy
Respecting recovery
(ADD LINK: Auto-Regulation article)
Discipline isn’t forcing it.
It’s knowing when to pivot.
If you’re stuck as an intermediate lifter:
The answer isn’t more.
It’s better.
Better reps
Better structure
Better decisions
If you want help applying this:
Performance Tracks → Structured training
Program Design → Monthly systems
Harambe System → Joint-friendly strength platform
Most people never leave the intermediate phase.
Not because they can’t.
But because they refuse to change how they train.
If this helped, drop a comment or share it with someone stuck in the middle.
John Parker
StrengthAxis