The Fatigue Audit: When to Deload & How to Reset

Training hard is the easy part. Knowing when to back off is what keeps you in the game for years rather than months. If you've been grinding for 6–12 weeks, you've likely accumulated 'junk fatigue' that's masking your true strength.

Use this audit to see if you're due for a reset or if you just need a better pre-workout.

Weights that moved fast 2 weeks ago now feel like 'maximum effort'
Joints feel like 'sandpaper' or clicking in the first 3 sets
Waking up feels like being hit by a truck (resting HR is elevated)
You're dreading the big compound lifts you usually love
Grip strength feels 'weak' or shaky on routine warm-ups

The Deload Protocol #

If you checked 2 or more boxes, you aren't getting weaker—you're just overreached. We’re going to dissipate that fatigue without losing your hard-earned adaptations.

The Strategy: Maintain intensity (keep the weight relatively heavy) but slash the total volume (sets) to let your CNS recover.

  • 1.
    Sets: Drop every exercise by 1–2 sets. If you usually do 3, do 2. If you do 2, do 1.
  • 2.
    Load: Use 90% of your top weight from last week.
  • 3.
    RPE: Stop every set 2–3 reps away from failure. No grinding.
  • *
    Deload Target Load
    0 lbs/kg

    When to Ramp Back Up #

    A deload is successful when the 'itch' to lift heavy returns. By day 5 or 6, you should feel explosive again.

    If you still feel sluggish, your last block might have been too aggressive. For the next block, consider starting with 10% less total weekly volume than you ended the last one with, then build back up slowly. Consistency beats intensity every single time.