Eat’s Healthy

Why “Lifting Heavier” Is Ruining Your Body — And Killing Long-Term Progress


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The fitness industry sold us a dangerous lie: that progress in the gym means adding more weight every single session. In this episode, I break down why that belief is responsible for chronic injuries, early burnout, and millions of people quitting training altogether.

 

Using real examples from legendary coach Arthur Jones, insights discussed on The Joe Rogan Experience, and extreme cases like Eddie Hall, we examine the risk-to-reward ratio of chasing heavier weights—especially deadlifts, max lifts, and ego-driven training.

 

This episode explains why:

 

  • Lifting heavier is not the same as getting fit and healthy
  • Poor technique + progressive overload = joint damage you won’t feel until your 30s or 40s
  • Most gym injuries don’t come from laziness, but from misguided ambition
  • Personal trainers often push clients past what health actually requires
  • Real progress is built on contraction, stretch, and recovery—not numbers on a bar
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    I also share a thought experiment that changes how you view strength forever: What if every gym capped weights at 50kg? Would progress stop—or would training finally become intelligent?

     

    If your goal is to stay strong, pain-free, and consistent for 20–30 years, this episode will reframe how you train forever.

     

    This is not anti-strength.

    It’s anti-short-term thinking.

     

    Perfect for:

     

    • People over 30 training for health, not competition
    • Anyone dealing with back pain, joint pain, or gym burnout
    • Beginners confused by fitness “gurus”
    • Lifters who want longevity, not injuries
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      Weight is a tool. Consistency is the outcome.

      If you can still train next year, you’re winning.

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      Eat’s HealthyBy eatshealthy.uk