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Bodyweight Fitness

— Getting strong without a gym membership
102 members Created Feb 2026

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High-Volume Calisthenics: Managing Accumulation

Some calisthenics athletes train with very high volume — 5-6 days per week, multiple sessions per day, or very high set counts per session. Here's how to manage this without accumulating chronic injury.

The fatigue management principle: high volume is only sustainable if recovery infrastructure matches. Five-day training weeks require excellent sleep (8+ hours), sufficient caloric intake, adequate protein, and deliberate recovery practices. Remove any one of these and the volume is unsustainable.

Session intensity distribution: not all sessions can be high intensity. In a 5-day week, plan 2 high-intensity days, 2 moderate days, and 1 low-intensity active recovery day. Attempting maximum effort across 5 days is not high volume training — it's overtraining.

Deload scheduling: at high training frequencies, deload weeks should come every 4 weeks rather than every 6-8. The connective tissue stress accumulates faster at high frequency.

Signs of successful high volume: performance improving session to session within a week, skills improving week to week, body weight stable, and joints feeling good. Any of these degrading is a signal to reduce volume.

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