Health & Fitness Guides โ€” Formly.live
Complete fitness knowledge base

Everything that actually
moves the needle

Sleep, hormones, supplements, injury prevention, body types, the science of fat loss, mindset, and the myths holding you back. The information that separates people who transform from people who plateau for years.

๐Ÿงฌ Body types ๐Ÿ”ฌ Fat loss science ๐Ÿ˜ด Sleep โš—๏ธ Hormones ๐Ÿ’Š Supplements ๐Ÿฉน Injury prevention โŒ Myth busters ๐Ÿ”„ Recovery protocol ๐Ÿง  Mindset ๐Ÿ‘ถ Beginner guide
Body types (somatotypes)
๐Ÿงฌ Your body type changes everything

Understanding your somatotype is the first step to training and eating in a way that works with your biology. Most people are a blend of two types โ€” identify your dominant type and adjust your approach accordingly.

๐Ÿง
Ectomorph
Thin frame ยท Hard gainer ยท Fast metabolism
Characteristics
Naturally lean with narrow shoulders and hips
Fast metabolism โ€” burns calories quickly at rest
Struggles to gain both muscle and fat
Low body fat percentage naturally
Small joints, wrists, and ankles
Best diet approach
Caloric surplus of 15โ€“25% above TDEE to gain weight
High carbohydrate intake (50โ€“60% of calories)
Eat frequently โ€” 5โ€“6 meals/day to hit calorie targets
Don't skip meals โ€” consistency is critical
Calorie-dense foods: nuts, nut butter, avocado, whole milk
Best training approach
Heavy compound lifts with low rep ranges (5โ€“8 reps)
Minimal cardio โ€” 1โ€“2 sessions/week max
3โ€“4 days training with full rest between sessions
Focus on progressive overload above all else
Sleep 9 hours โ€” recovery is the bottleneck
๐Ÿ’ช
Mesomorph
Athletic build ยท Easy gainer ยท Genetic advantage
Characteristics
Naturally muscular with broad shoulders
Moderate metabolism โ€” builds muscle and loses fat relatively easily
Responds well to most forms of training
Good strength-to-weight ratio naturally
Wide clavicles, narrow waist โ€” classic V-shape
Best diet approach
Balanced macros: 35% protein, 40% carbs, 25% fat
Moderate caloric surplus (10%) for muscle, deficit (20%) for fat loss
3โ€“5 meals per day works well
Carb cycle on training vs rest days for optimal recomp
Responds well to both high and low carb approaches
Best training approach
Responds to almost any structured programme
Moderate volume works: 4โ€“5 days/week, 3โ€“5 sets per exercise
Mix of compound and isolation movements
2 cardio sessions/week for cardiovascular health
The biggest risk is complacency โ€” mesomorphs can get lazy
๐Ÿ‹๏ธ
Endomorph
Broader frame ยท Easy fat gainer ยท Slower metabolism
Characteristics
Naturally broader, rounder physique
Slower metabolism โ€” gains fat easily
Tends to carry more body fat, especially around the midsection
Higher insulin sensitivity issues more common
Often has good natural strength despite excess fat
Best diet approach
Lower carb intake (30โ€“35% of calories)
Higher protein (35โ€“40%) to preserve muscle during deficit
Caloric deficit of 500โ€“750 kcal for steady fat loss
Carbs primarily around training (pre/post-workout only)
Avoid refined carbs and sugars entirely during fat loss phase
Best training approach
Combine resistance training AND cardio 5 days/week
HIIT cardio 3ร— per week for metabolic boost
Higher rep ranges (12โ€“15) with shorter rest for calorie burn
Increase daily NEAT โ€” walking 10,000+ steps is critical
Most important somatotype to track nutrition consistently
The science of fat loss
๐Ÿ”ฌ How fat loss actually works

Understanding the mechanisms behind fat loss helps you make smarter decisions and avoid the countless traps in the fitness industry. Here's what the science actually says.

3,500
kcal per lb of fat
One pound of body fat โ‰ˆ 3,500 kcal. A 500 kcal daily deficit creates approximately 0.5kg fat loss per week. This is the fundamental equation โ€” everything else is just optimisation around it.
20%
Max sustainable deficit
A deficit larger than 25% of TDEE causes muscle loss, hormonal disruption, and metabolic slowdown. 15โ€“25% is the optimal range for fat loss without damaging side effects.
2.0g
Protein per kg to preserve muscle
During a caloric deficit, 2.0โ€“2.5g protein per kg bodyweight is required to preserve lean mass. This is significantly higher than what most people eat โ€” and the single most important variable.
48h
EPOC effect from HIIT
High-intensity interval training creates EPOC โ€” elevated metabolism lasting 24โ€“48 hours post-workout. This afterburn effect can increase 24-hour calorie burn by 6โ€“15%, making HIIT far more efficient than steady-state for fat loss.

Hierarchy of fat loss factors

1. Caloric deficit (90% of results)
Nothing overrides energy balance. Create and maintain a deficit consistently over time.
2. High protein intake (muscle preservation)
2g/kg minimum to prevent muscle loss during the deficit phase.
3. Resistance training (recomp effect)
Strength training during fat loss preserves and even builds muscle simultaneously.
4. Sleep & stress management (hormones)
Poor sleep and chronic stress tank fat-burning hormones and spike hunger.
5. Cardio type & NEAT (acceleration)
HIIT for fat burning efficiency, plus daily walking to increase total calorie expenditure.

Why fat loss plateaus happen

As you lose weight, your body becomes lighter and therefore requires fewer calories to maintain. Your TDEE decreases as you get smaller. Solution: recalculate TDEE every 4โ€“6 weeks and adjust calories downward, or take a 1โ€“2 week diet break at maintenance calories to reset metabolic rate.
Research shows people underestimate food intake by 20โ€“40% on average. Restaurant meals, cooking oils, sauces, and "tastings" are the most commonly missed calories. Re-weigh everything on a digital scale, including pre-packaged foods (they're often 10โ€“20% more than stated).
Your brain compensates for dieting by making you fidget less, sit more, and take fewer steps โ€” reducing NEAT by up to 300โ€“500 kcal/day. This happens without conscious awareness. Track daily steps and maintain 8,000โ€“10,000 minimum regardless of how you feel.
You can be losing pure fat while the scale stays flat or even rises. High sodium, carbohydrates, stress (cortisol), and hormonal changes (especially in women around menstruation) cause water retention of 1โ€“3kg. Measure body composition with tape measurements and progress photos โ€” not just scale weight.
After 8โ€“12 weeks of sustained deficit, leptin drops significantly, ghrelin rises, and thyroid output decreases โ€” all making fat loss harder and hunger worse. Take a 1โ€“2 week "refeed" at maintenance calories every 8โ€“10 weeks. This resets hormones and often results in faster fat loss in the following phase.
Sleep & recovery
๐Ÿ˜ด Sleep: the most underrated performance tool

Sleep is when your body builds muscle, burns fat, consolidates memories, and recovers from training. No diet or training programme can compensate for consistently poor sleep. Adults need 7โ€“9 hours. Elite athletes typically sleep 9โ€“10 hours.

The 4 sleep stages and their role in fitness

Stage 1 (N1)

Light sleep

Transition from wakefulness. Lasts 1โ€“7 minutes. Easy to wake. Muscle twitches are common (hypnic jerks). The entry point for deeper recovery.

Stage 2 (N2)

True sleep

Heart rate slows, body temperature drops. Memory consolidation and motor learning begin. Makes up 45โ€“55% of total sleep. Crucial for skill acquisition.

Stage 3 (N3) โญ

Deep sleep (SWS)

Growth hormone secretion peaks here. Muscle repair, protein synthesis, and immune strengthening occur. Under 1.5 hours per night significantly blunts muscle building and fat loss.

Stage 4 (REM) โญ

REM sleep

Testosterone peaks during REM. Emotional processing, creativity, consolidation. Men who sleep 5 hours have testosterone levels equivalent to someone 10โ€“15 years older.

Science-backed sleep optimisation

๐ŸŒก๏ธ

Keep your room at 16โ€“19ยฐC

Core body temperature must drop 0.5โ€“1ยฐC to initiate deep sleep. A cold room accelerates this dramatically. 18.3ยฐC is the scientifically optimal sleep temperature. Use a fan, keep windows open, or use lighter bedding.

๐Ÿ“ต

No screens 60 minutes before bed

Blue light wavelengths suppress melatonin production by up to 3 hours, delaying sleep onset and reducing total sleep time. Use blue-light blocking glasses after 8pm, or switch to reading physical books or podcasts.

โฐ

Fixed wake time โ€” including weekends

Your circadian rhythm runs on a 24-hour biological clock. Sleeping in on weekends creates "social jet lag" that measurably impairs performance, testosterone, and mood for the following 2โ€“3 days.

๐ŸŒ…

Morning sunlight within 30 minutes of waking

10 minutes of natural light sets your circadian clock for the entire day, making falling asleep at night significantly easier. This one habit โ€” endorsed by neuroscientist Andrew Huberman โ€” is free and extraordinarily effective.

โ˜•

Cut caffeine after 1โ€“2pm

Caffeine has a half-life of 5โ€“7 hours. A coffee at 3pm means half the caffeine is still in your system at 9pm, blocking adenosine sleep receptors. Delay your first coffee until 90 minutes after waking for maximum energy (avoids the crash).

๐Ÿท

Alcohol ruins sleep quality

Even 1โ€“2 drinks reduce deep sleep by 11% and REM sleep by 24%. You may fall asleep faster but the recovery quality is severely impaired. Drinking earlier in the evening (before 7pm) is significantly less damaging than right before bed.

๐Ÿ’Š

Magnesium glycinate before bed

Magnesium deficiency (affecting ~50% of adults) impairs deep sleep quality. The glycinate form has the best bioavailability and sleep evidence. 300โ€“400mg taken 30 min before bed reduces time-to-sleep by ~17 minutes in studies. Low risk, measurable benefit.

๐Ÿ’ช

Train at least 4 hours before bedtime

Exercise raises core temperature, adrenaline, and cortisol โ€” all of which delay sleep. Morning or early afternoon training consistently produces better sleep than evening sessions. If you must train at night, reduce intensity and avoid HIIT after 7pm.

Hormones
โš—๏ธ Hormones: the invisible hand controlling your body

Hormones regulate every aspect of body composition โ€” fat storage, muscle building, hunger, energy, and mood. Understanding them helps you train and eat in a way that works with your biology rather than fighting it.

Testosterone
Primary anabolic hormone
Stimulates muscle protein synthesis, reduces body fat, improves energy, mood, and libido. Men have 10โ€“20ร— more than women, which explains significantly easier muscle building. Peaks in the morning and declines with age (~1โ€“2% per year after 30). Low testosterone is epidemic among modern men โ€” poor sleep, chronic stress, obesity, and sedentary lifestyle are the primary drivers.
Heavy compound lifting (squats, deadlifts) produces the largest testosterone spike
Sleep 8+ hours โ€” testosterone production is almost entirely nocturnal
Never drop dietary fat below 0.8g/kg โ€” fat is the raw material for testosterone synthesis
Zinc (15โ€“45mg/day) and Vitamin D3 (2,000โ€“5,000 IU) are the most impactful supplements
Chronic alcohol consumption reduces testosterone by up to 30%
Cortisol
Stress hormone
The body's primary stress response hormone. Short-term spikes during training are beneficial and necessary. Chronically elevated cortisol โ€” from poor sleep, over-training, life stress, or extreme caloric restriction โ€” breaks down muscle tissue (catabolism), increases visceral fat storage (especially belly fat), and suppresses testosterone and growth hormone. Managing cortisol is one of the most overlooked aspects of body transformation.
Never maintain a deficit exceeding 25% of TDEE for more than 10โ€“12 weeks continuously
Keep training sessions under 75 minutes โ€” cortisol rises sharply beyond this
Meditation (10 min/day) reduces cortisol by 15โ€“20% in controlled studies
Vitamin C (1,000mg post-workout) measurably reduces post-exercise cortisol spike
Ashwagandha (KSM-66 extract) reduces chronic cortisol by 11โ€“32% in clinical trials
Insulin
Storage & nutrient partitioning hormone
Released in response to carbohydrates and protein. Shuttles glucose into cells for immediate energy or into fat stores for later. Insulin sensitivity determines what happens to the food you eat โ€” good sensitivity = fuel goes to muscle. Insulin resistance (the precursor to type 2 diabetes) causes the same food to be preferentially stored as fat. Improving insulin sensitivity is transformative for body composition.
Resistance training is the single most powerful intervention for insulin sensitivity
Time the majority of carbohydrates around training when muscles are most insulin-sensitive
10-minute walk after meals blunts post-meal glucose spike by up to 30%
Reduce ultra-processed carbohydrates and added sugars โ€” primary driver of resistance
Apple cider vinegar (1 tbsp) before meals reduces glucose spike by ~20%
Growth Hormone (GH)
Anabolic & fat-mobilising
Stimulates muscle growth, accelerates fat breakdown, and drives tissue repair. Approximately 70โ€“80% of daily GH is secreted during the first 2โ€“3 hours of deep sleep โ€” making sleep quality non-negotiable for body transformation. GH works synergistically with testosterone and spikes after fasting, high-intensity exercise, and intense resistance training. Eating carbohydrates before sleep blunts GH release by raising insulin.
Prioritise deep sleep above everything โ€” this is when GH is released, not during light sleep
Don't eat 2โ€“3 hours before bed โ€” elevated insulin blocks GH release significantly
HIIT and heavy compound training produce larger GH spikes than steady-state cardio
Intermittent fasting can increase GH by 1,300% in women and 2,000% in men (24-hour fast)
Ghrelin & Leptin
Hunger & satiety regulation
Ghrelin is the "hunger hormone" โ€” it rises before meals and spikes with sleep deprivation. Leptin is the "satiety hormone" โ€” it tells your brain you're full. After just one night of poor sleep (under 6 hours), ghrelin rises 28% and leptin drops 15% โ€” a catastrophic double hit that leads to eating an average of 300โ€“380 extra calories the following day. This explains why sleep deprivation makes every diet fail.
Prioritise 7โ€“9 hours of sleep โ€” the single biggest lever for hunger hormone balance
High-protein meals suppress ghrelin more than any other macronutrient
Eating slowly gives leptin time to signal fullness โ€” takes 15โ€“20 minutes from meal start
Avoid extreme prolonged deficits โ€” they chronically suppress leptin, triggering metabolic adaptation
Oestrogen
Female sex hormone (also in men)
In women: critical for bone density, cardiovascular health, and body composition. Balanced oestrogen supports fat mobilisation and muscle building in women. In men: testosterone converts to oestrogen via the aromatase enzyme โ€” elevated oestrogen (from excess body fat or alcohol) causes fat accumulation and reduced testosterone. Both sexes need the right oestrogen balance โ€” not zero oestrogen. Changes dramatically during menstrual cycle (training should adjust accordingly) and menopause.
Reducing body fat (especially visceral fat) improves oestrogen balance in both sexes
Cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower) support healthy oestrogen metabolism via DIM
For women: track your cycle โ€” strength peaks in the follicular phase (days 1โ€“14)
Alcohol significantly raises oestrogen in men โ€” another reason to reduce or eliminate drinking
Thyroid hormones (T3/T4)
Metabolic rate controller
Thyroid hormones control your basal metabolic rate (BMR) โ€” the calories you burn at rest. Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) significantly slows metabolism, causes weight gain, fatigue, and depression. Chronic severe caloric restriction suppresses thyroid output โ€” one of the main mechanisms of "metabolic adaptation." Iodine, selenium, and zinc are required for thyroid hormone production.
Don't crash diet โ€” severe restriction (under 1,200 kcal) suppresses thyroid hormones
Diet breaks every 8โ€“12 weeks help restore thyroid output to normal levels
Iodized salt or seaweed provides the iodine needed for thyroid hormone production
If you experience unexplained weight gain, fatigue, cold sensitivity โ€” get thyroid tested
Dopamine & Serotonin
Mood, motivation & adherence
Dopamine drives motivation and the reward system โ€” critical for staying consistent with training. Serotonin stabilises mood, reduces anxiety, and improves sleep quality. Both are produced in the gut (80% of serotonin is gut-derived) and are significantly influenced by diet, exercise, and sleep. Exercise is one of the most powerful dopamine and serotonin modulators available โ€” explaining why trained people have better mental health.
Resistance training increases dopamine receptor sensitivity โ€” the "motivation" system
Aerobic exercise increases serotonin synthesis โ€” the "mood regulation" system
Gut health directly affects serotonin โ€” probiotic foods support both mood and training adherence
Tyrosine (a protein found in chicken, eggs) is the direct precursor to dopamine production
Supplements
๐Ÿ’Š The honest supplement guide

The supplement industry is a $50bn market built largely on marketing over substance. This guide rates every major supplement on the actual weight of peer-reviewed evidence โ€” A through D. The truth is uncomfortable: most supplements have little to no evidence.

SupplementEvidenceBest forOptimal dose & timingWhat to realistically expectNotes
Creatine monohydrateA โ€” Very strongStrength, muscle, power, brain3โ€“5g daily at any time. No loading needed.+5โ€“10% strength in 4 weeks. +1โ€“2kg lean mass in 8 weeks. Improved cognition.Most studied supplement in history. Safe for lifelong use. Works for ~80% of people โ€” "non-responders" have naturally high creatine levels. Monohydrate beats all other forms.
Whey proteinA โ€” Very strongMuscle building, hitting protein targets25โ€“40g post-workout or anytime needed to hit daily protein goalEffective when total daily protein is inadequate. No magic if you already eat sufficient protein.Concentrate is cheapest. Isolate is best for lactose-intolerant. Casein before bed for slow-release. Pea/rice blend for vegans โ€” match amino acid profile by combining both.
CaffeineA โ€” Very strongEndurance, strength, fat loss, focus3โ€“6mg/kg bodyweight. 30โ€“60 min pre-workout. Cycle off 2 weeks every 8 weeks.+3โ€“5% strength output. +8โ€“12% endurance performance. Significant fat oxidation increase. Mood enhancement.Tolerance builds rapidly โ€” the 2-week cycle-off maintains effectiveness. Avoid after 1โ€“2pm. The compound in pre-workouts with the most evidence.
Omega-3 (EPA/DHA)A โ€” Very strongRecovery, inflammation, heart, joints, brain2โ€“3g combined EPA+DHA daily with food. Ratio: 2:1 EPA:DHA for inflammation.Reduced DOMS by ~35% in studies. Better insulin sensitivity. Heart and cognitive health. Joint lubrication.Fish oil or algae-derived omega-3 (vegan). Choose brands testing for mercury and oxidation. Triglyceride form has ~70% better absorption than ethyl ester form.
Vitamin D3 + K2A โ€” StrongTestosterone, immunity, bone, mood2,000โ€“5,000 IU D3 + 100โ€“200mcg K2 (MK-7) daily with a fat-containing meal+20โ€“25% testosterone improvement if deficient. Improved muscle function. Significantly better immunity. Depression reduction.Over 60% of people in the UK are deficient โ€” especially in winter. Get a blood test (25-OH vitamin D). K2 directs calcium into bones, not arteries. Take together with fat for absorption.
Magnesium glycinateB โ€” GoodSleep quality, recovery, stress, cramps300โ€“400mg before bed (glycinate or malate form)Improved deep sleep onset and quality. Reduced muscle cramps. Lower cortisol. Mild stress reduction.~50% of people are deficient (from poor diet and soil depletion). Glycinate form is best for sleep. Citrate works for constipation. Oxide form has poor absorption โ€” avoid. Food sources: dark chocolate, nuts, leafy greens.
Beta-alanineB โ€” GoodHigh-intensity endurance (30 secโ€“4 min efforts)3.2โ€“6.4g daily โ€” split doses. Timing irrelevant (saturates muscle carnosine over time).+2โ€“3% performance in 60โ€“240 second effort ranges. Minimal benefit for pure strength or efforts under 30 seconds.Causes harmless tingling (paraesthesia) โ€” lower doses reduce this. Found in most pre-workouts. Not useful if you primarily do heavy strength training.
Citrulline malateB โ€” ModerateMuscle endurance, pump, recovery between sets6โ€“8g, 60 minutes pre-workout+4โ€“8% more reps before failure. Reduced muscle soreness 24โ€“48h post. Improved pump and blood flow.Better absorbed than arginine (L-citrulline converts to arginine more efficiently). Found in watermelon. Commonly included in pre-workout formulas.
Ashwagandha (KSM-66)B โ€” GoodStress/cortisol, testosterone (men), sleep, recovery300โ€“600mg daily with food. KSM-66 extract specifically. 8โ€“12 week cycles.+15โ€“20% testosterone in multiple studies. Cortisol reduced 11โ€“32%. Improved sleep quality. Better recovery between sessions.Only the KSM-66 branded extract has clinical evidence โ€” other ashwagandha products vary significantly in potency. Effects accumulate over 4โ€“8 weeks. Cycle off after 12 weeks.
L-TheanineB โ€” GoodFocus, anxiety reduction, sleep100โ€“200mg alone for relaxation. 200mg + 100mg caffeine for focus.Smooths out caffeine's anxiety and jitteriness without reducing its energy effect. The "smart coffee" combination is consistently validated.Found naturally in green tea. The caffeine + L-theanine stack is genuinely evidence-backed for clean, sustained focus. No tolerance builds. Safe long-term.
ZincB โ€” Good if deficientTestosterone, immunity, wound healing15โ€“30mg elemental zinc with food. Zinc bisglycinate is best absorbed.Significant testosterone improvement if deficient (very common in athletes who sweat heavily). Strong immune support.Zinc is lost significantly through sweat โ€” athletes are commonly deficient. Don't take with calcium or iron supplements (they compete for absorption). Food sources: oysters, beef, pumpkin seeds.
BCAAsC โ€” Weak if protein is adequateMinimally useful if eating sufficient protein5โ€“10g if used โ€” near trainingMinimal additional benefit if total daily protein intake is 1.6g+/kg from whole foods. Leucine is the key BCAA for muscle protein synthesis.A product that benefits the supplement industry more than the consumer. Spend the money on whole food protein sources instead. Only genuinely useful for fasted training or if protein intake is consistently low.
Pre-workout formulasC โ€” Most components weakDepends on individual ingredientsVaries by productEffects are primarily from caffeine (well-evidenced) and sometimes citrulline/beta-alanine. Most other ingredients are underdosed for effect.Read the label: if caffeine, citrulline (6g+), and beta-alanine (3g+) are present in adequate doses, it may be useful. Most "proprietary blends" hide underdosed ingredients. Cheaper to buy ingredients separately.
Fat burners (most)D โ€” AvoidMarketing purposes primarilyN/ANegligible fat loss beyond what the caffeine content produces. Frequently contain undisclosed stimulants with health risks.Caffeine alone accounts for any fat-burning effect. The rest are expensive fillers. Some have been recalled for containing controlled substances or causing cardiovascular events. Save your money.
Testosterone boostersD โ€” AvoidMostly marketingN/ANo meaningful testosterone increase in healthy individuals. D3 + zinc + sleep + heavy lifting will do far more.If you genuinely have low testosterone (blood test confirmed), work with a doctor on TRT or optimise foundational factors (sleep, stress, body fat, zinc, D3) before trying supplements.
Injury prevention
๐Ÿฉน The most common gym injuries โ€” and how to prevent them

The majority of gym injuries are entirely preventable with proper warm-up protocol, correct technique, and appropriate load progression. Here are the most common injuries, their causes, and evidence-based prevention strategies.

Lower back
Lower back pain & lumbar strain
The number one gym injury. Primary causes: rounding the lower back during deadlifts and squats (shear force on L4/L5 discs), weak core muscles that fail to protect the spine under load, jumping in load too quickly without building technique, and prolonged sitting that creates hip flexor tightness. Most lumbar "pulls" heal in 1โ€“3 weeks with rest and gentle movement โ€” avoid bed rest.
Learn the hip hinge pattern thoroughly before adding significant deadlift weight
Brace 360ยฐ (Valsalva manoeuvre) before every heavy squat and deadlift rep
Film yourself from the side to check lower back position at the bottom of lifts
Dead bugs and McGill "Big 3" (curl-up, side plank, bird-dog) are the best prehab exercises
If injured: avoid prolonged sitting. Gentle walking, swimming, and bird-dogs speed recovery
Return to loading slowly โ€” reduce to 50% of pre-injury weight and rebuild over 4 weeks
Shoulder
Shoulder impingement & rotator cuff tears
Extremely common in pressing-dominant programmes. The rotator cuff (four small muscles stabilising the shoulder joint) is chronically overloaded when people bench press 4โ€“5 days per week without adequate pulling or rear delt work. Early warning signs: clicking sounds during rotation, pain when raising arm overhead, difficulty reaching behind your back, loss of strength in specific positions.
Maintain a minimum 1:1 ratio of pressing to pulling volume (many coaches recommend 2:1 pull:push)
Add face pulls 3ร— per week โ€” the single best shoulder health exercise available
On bench press: retract scapulae completely and maintain throughout the set
Elbows at 45โ€“75ยฐ on pressing movements โ€” not flared to 90ยฐ (impingement position)
Reduce internal rotation exercises (most chest work) and increase external rotation (face pulls, band pull-aparts, YTWLs)
Ice 15โ€“20 min post-training if shoulder is irritated. Rest from pressing 7โ€“14 days at first sign of pain
Knee
Knee pain, patellar tendinitis & IT band syndrome
Knee pain during squats is almost always a technique issue rather than a structural problem. Valgus collapse (knees caving inward) is the primary mechanism of injury โ€” caused by weak glutes and hip abductors. Patellar tendinitis (jumper's knee) โ€” pain at the bottom of the kneecap โ€” comes from excessive plyometric volume. IT band syndrome โ€” lateral knee pain โ€” is common in runners who overtrain or increase mileage too quickly.
Squat with deliberate external rotation โ€” actively push knees out over toes throughout
Strengthen glutes and hip abductors: clamshells, lateral band walks, hip thrusts
Reduce jump training volume at first sign of patellar tendon pain
Eccentric single-leg squats (Bulgarian split squats with slow lowering) are the evidence-based treatment for patellar tendinitis
For IT band: foam roll the IT band, strengthen hip abductors, temporarily reduce running mileage by 30%
Wrist & Elbow
Tennis/golfer's elbow & wrist pain
Lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow โ€” outer elbow pain) comes from repetitive extension movements like rows and pull exercises. Medial epicondylitis (golfer's elbow โ€” inner elbow pain) comes from repetitive flexion like curls and gripping. Both are overuse injuries of the forearm tendons. Wrist pain during pressing (especially front squats and overhead pressing) indicates wrist mobility limitations that need addressing before adding more load.
Forearm stretching daily: wrist flexor (palm down, pull fingers back) and extensor (palm up, pull fingers down) stretches
Eccentric wrist curls are the clinical first-line treatment for both lateral and medial epicondylitis
Reduce grip-intensive work temporarily: use straps for deadlifts and rows to give tendons rest
Front squat wrist pain: work on thoracic spine mobility and use heel elevation plates while improving ankle flexibility
NSAIDs (ibuprofen) short-term for acute flare-ups. Physical therapy for chronic cases.

Non-negotiable warm-up protocol (every session)

โ‘  5 min general warm-up
Light cardio to raise core temperature and heart rate. Brisk walk, cycling, or rowing at easy pace.
โ‘ก Joint mobility (3 min)
Dynamic mobility for the joints being trained. Hip circles, shoulder rotations, thoracic rotations, ankle CARs.
โ‘ข Activation sets (2 min)
2 sets at 30โ€“40% working weight. Prime the movement pattern without creating fatigue.
โ‘ฃ Ramp-up sets
50% ร— 5 reps, 65% ร— 4 reps, 80% ร— 3 reps before first working set. Never skip this for heavy lifts.
Myth busters
โŒ Fitness myths that are holding you back

The fitness industry is saturated with misinformation that wastes people's time and money. Here are the most damaging myths, debunked with the actual evidence โ€” and what to do instead.

โŒ MYTH: Lifting weights makes women bulky
Women have 15โ€“20ร— less testosterone than men โ€” the primary hormone driving muscle size. It is physiologically extremely difficult for women to build large, "bulky" muscles without years of dedicated training, very high calorie intake, and often anabolic steroids. The "toned" look that most women desire IS muscle. You cannot tone without building muscle mass beneath the fat. Heavy lifting for women produces lean, defined, strong physiques โ€” not mass. Elite female powerlifters and weightlifters who appear large are the outliers representing decades of specific training.
โŒ MYTH: Spot reduction works
You cannot selectively burn fat from a specific body part by exercising that area. One thousand crunches will not directly reduce belly fat. Fat is stored and mobilised systemically based on hormones, genetics, and overall energy balance. Where fat is lost first and last is determined primarily by genetics. The only approach that works: create a caloric deficit to reduce total body fat while building the underlying muscle โ€” which then becomes visible as fat decreases everywhere.
โŒ MYTH: You need protein within 30 minutes post-workout
The "anabolic window" concept has been significantly revised. Research now demonstrates that muscle protein synthesis remains elevated for 24โ€“48 hours post-training, not just 30 minutes. What matters most is total daily protein intake (1.6โ€“2.2g/kg) spread across multiple meals. Timing within 2 hours post-workout does have some benefit โ€” but the difference between 20 minutes and 2 hours is negligible compared to the difference between hitting your daily protein target or not.
โŒ MYTH: Carbs make you fat
Excess total calories cause fat storage โ€” not carbohydrates specifically. Carbohydrates are the primary fuel source for brain function and high-intensity exercise. The reason low-carb diets cause weight loss is caloric restriction, not carbohydrate restriction specifically. However, carb quality matters: refined carbohydrates (white bread, sugar, pastries) spike insulin rapidly and promote overeating. Complex carbohydrates (oats, rice, sweet potato) provide sustained energy without significant downsides.
โŒ MYTH: Cardio kills muscle gains
Moderate cardio (2โ€“3 sessions/week, 20โ€“40 min) does not significantly impair muscle building when protein intake is adequate. The "interference effect" (cardio impairing strength adaptations) is real but requires very high cardio volumes to manifest. Excessive daily high-volume cardio CAN impair muscle growth through caloric deficit and cortisol. The solution: keep cardio sessions separate from strength training by at least 6 hours, and ensure total protein intake is sufficient to offset any increased breakdown.
โŒ MYTH: More exercise is always better
Muscle is built during recovery โ€” training is just the stimulus. Training tears tissue down; recovery builds it back stronger. "Overtraining syndrome" โ€” characterised by elevated resting heart rate, chronic fatigue, persistent soreness, mood disturbance, strength regression, and immune suppression โ€” is a real and serious condition. The minimum effective dose principle: find the least amount of training that produces the maximum adaptation. This is almost always 3โ€“5 days per week for 45โ€“75 minutes, not 7 days for 2+ hours.
โœ“ TRUTH: Muscle does NOT convert to fat
Muscle and fat are two completely distinct tissue types with different cellular structures โ€” they absolutely cannot convert into each other. When someone stops training, they experience muscle atrophy (loss of muscle through disuse). If they simultaneously increase caloric intake, they gain fat. These two processes happen independently and simultaneously, which creates the visual illusion that "muscle turned to fat." Understanding this distinction is important: the muscle doesn't disappear โ€” it shrinks, and fat expands to replace the visual space.
โœ“ TRUTH: You can build muscle during a caloric deficit
Body recomposition โ€” simultaneously losing fat and gaining muscle โ€” is genuinely possible. The primary conditions where it occurs most effectively: training beginners (high stimulus response to any training), people returning after a break (muscle memory and myonuclei reactivation), individuals with significant excess body fat (fat stores can fuel muscle synthesis), and anyone eating very high protein (2g+/kg). It's considerably slower than dedicated bulking or cutting phases, but it's real and sustainable.
Post-workout recovery
๐Ÿ”„ The complete post-workout recovery timeline

Recovery is not passive โ€” it's an active process with specific actions required at specific times to maximise the training stimulus and minimise unnecessary soreness and fatigue.

0โ€“30 min

Immediate recovery window

Consume 25โ€“40g fast-digesting protein (whey isolate is optimal). Add 30โ€“60g fast carbohydrates if next training session is within 24 hours (banana, white rice, fruit). Begin rehydrating โ€” aim to replace 150% of sweat loss. Add a pinch of salt to water for electrolyte replacement.

30โ€“60 min

Cool-down and inflammation management

5โ€“10 minutes of easy cardio (walking, cycling) helps clear metabolic waste products (lactate, hydrogen ions). Static stretching of trained muscles held for 30โ€“45 seconds each. Cold shower or contrast therapy (3 min hot / 30 sec cold ร— 3 cycles) reduces DOMS by ~25% in controlled studies. Anti-inflammatory foods: tart cherry juice (reduces DOMS), berries, ginger, turmeric.

1โ€“4 hours

Sustained anabolic window

Consume a complete, balanced meal with protein, complex carbohydrates, and healthy fats. Continue hydrating steadily. Protein synthesis remains elevated for 24โ€“48 hours post-training โ€” don't neglect nutrition in this broader window. Elevate legs if lower body was trained to reduce swelling and improve venous return.

4โ€“8 hours

Active recovery phase

Keep activity light if any. Avoid alcohol for at least 6โ€“8 hours post-training โ€” it blunts protein synthesis by up to 24% at this stage. Consider a 20-minute nap if sleep-deprived โ€” shown to temporarily restore testosterone and cognitive function. Foam rolling and soft tissue work helps with fascial tension and perceived recovery.

8โ€“24 hours

Peak growth hormone & testosterone release

Quality sleep is doing the majority of the recovery and muscle-building work during this window. GH and testosterone peak in the first 2โ€“3 hours of deep sleep. Casein protein or cottage cheese before bed provides a sustained trickle of amino acids through the night, keeping protein synthesis elevated. This is the most important recovery window โ€” it cannot be replaced by supplements.

24โ€“72 hours

DOMS peak and supercompensation

Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS) peaks 24โ€“48 hours post-training and represents microtrauma to muscle fibres โ€” this is normal and even desirable. Light activity (walking, swimming, stretching) accelerates clearance. Don't train the same muscle group at high intensity again until DOMS has largely resolved. The supercompensation process during this window โ€” where muscle rebuilds stronger than before โ€” is the entire point of training.

Mindset & psychology
๐Ÿง  The psychology of lasting body transformation

The limiting factor for most people isn't access to information, a gym, or even time. It's behaviour consistency across months and years. Here's what behavioural science tells us about making fitness permanent.

๐Ÿ”—

Identity-based habits

People who say "I am someone who exercises" succeed long-term far more than those who say "I want to lose weight." Your identity drives your behaviour โ€” not the other way around. Every workout is a vote for the person you're becoming. Start small enough that showing up consistently is inevitable, then increase intensity gradually. The goal is to build the identity first; the results follow.

๐Ÿ“…

Consistency beats intensity

Training 4 days per week for 52 weeks absolutely outperforms training 7 days per week for 6 weeks then burning out. You cannot out-train inconsistency. A mediocre programme followed for 12 months produces dramatically better results than a perfect programme abandoned after 8 weeks. The best workout is the one you'll actually do consistently โ€” not the optimal one.

โš™๏ธ

Systems over motivation

Motivation is unreliable and emotion-dependent. Systems are not. Schedule workouts as non-negotiable appointments โ€” not things you'll do "if you feel like it." Lay out gym clothes the night before. Reduce friction to zero. Make NOT exercising harder than exercising. Research by Wendy Wood shows that 43% of daily actions are habits, not decisions โ€” engineer your environment for success.

๐Ÿ“Š

Data feedback loops

People who measure progress (body measurements, progress photos, strength numbers) every 4 weeks achieve significantly better results than those who rely only on scale weight. The scale lies โ€” muscle is denser than fat, so body weight can remain identical while you're dramatically changing your physique. Measure waist, hips, chest, arms, and take monthly photos. These numbers tell the truth.

๐Ÿค

Social accountability

Having a training partner increases workout consistency by 65% (University of Aberdeen study). Telling other people your specific goals (not vague ones) increases follow-through substantially. Join a class, hire a coach for the first 12 weeks, use a training partner for the hardest session of the week. Social commitment mechanisms are among the most powerful free behaviour-change tools available.

๐Ÿ”

The minimum viable workout principle

On difficult days, commit only to showing up and doing 10 minutes. Research consistently shows that once the warm-up is complete, over 80% of people continue to a full session. The hardest part is always the gym door โ€” not the workout itself. A 20-minute session done consistently beats a 90-minute session done sporadically. Give yourself credit for showing up โ€” then train.

Beginner guide
๐Ÿ‘ถ Starting from zero: your first 12 weeks

If you've never trained consistently, or are returning after a long break, follow this framework exactly. The single biggest mistake beginners make is starting too hard โ€” which leads to injury, excessive soreness, and quitting within 3 weeks.

01

Weeks 1โ€“2: Movement quality only

Learn the 6 fundamental patterns: squat, hinge, push, pull, carry, and core bracing โ€” with bodyweight or very light weight. Watch your form in a mirror or film yourself. Your only goal is to perform each movement pain-free. Do not worry about intensity, weight, or sweat. Consistency of showing up matters more than anything else at this stage.

02

Weeks 3โ€“4: Add structure and resistance

3 full-body sessions per week with at least 1 rest day between each. Work in the 10โ€“15 rep range with moderate weight. Leave 2โ€“3 reps in the tank every set โ€” do NOT go to failure yet. Focus on the 5 compound movements: goblet squat, Romanian deadlift, dumbbell bench press, dumbbell rows, and overhead dumbbell press. 3 sets each, 3 sessions per week.

03

Weeks 5โ€“8: Progressive overload begins

Add 2.5kg (small plates) or 1 rep to at least one exercise each session. Track every workout: exercise, weight, sets, reps. You should feel pleasantly fatigued after sessions but recovered within 48 hours. Add one additional set every 2 weeks. Start eating 1.6g+ protein per kg bodyweight. Sleep 8 hours as a non-negotiable priority.

04

Weeks 9โ€“10: First progress assessment

Take measurements (waist, chest, hips, arms) and progress photos. Compare to week 1. Assess: Are you demonstrably stronger? Has your diet been supporting your goal? Are you recovering well between sessions? Most beginners at this point need to either increase food (if muscle building) or reduce slightly and add one cardio session (if fat loss). Adjust based on evidence, not feeling.

05

Weeks 11โ€“12: Graduate to a structured programme

By now you have movement foundations and can handle real training. Choose a programme matched to your goal: Push/Pull/Legs for muscle building, Fat Burn Circuit for fat loss, Starting Strength or 5ร—5 for raw strength. You're now ready for intermediate training. Re-read the diet plans and exercises sections with a new appreciation for the detail โ€” you'll absorb far more now that you have context.

Medical disclaimer: All guides on Formly.live are for general educational purposes only and do not constitute medical, physiotherapy, or professional fitness advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before beginning a new exercise programme, especially if you have existing injuries, medical conditions, cardiovascular concerns, or are pregnant.

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