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Bodyweight Fitness

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

Why most people plateau on pull-ups (and how to break through)

Progression Methods for Stalled Skills

Every calisthenics athlete eventually hits a skill that doesn't progress for weeks or months. Here's a structured approach to diagnosing and breaking the plateau.

Diagnosis: is this a strength plateau, a technique plateau, or a recovery issue? Test by doing the skill with maximum focus and fresh recovery (after a full rest day). If it feels better than usual, recovery is the issue. If it doesn't improve with better recovery, it's strength or technique.

For strength plateaus: add volume at an easier progression. If advanced tuck front lever is stalled, add more tuck front lever work. Accumulate 20-30% more hold time per week and rebuild.

For technique plateaus: film from a new angle. Have an experienced person give feedback. Look for common errors (hip position, scapular depression, hollow vs arch). Fixing one technical cue can unlock weeks of progress.

For recovery issues: reduce weekly volume by 40% for two weeks. If skills feel better after this deload-like period, you were accumulating fatigue without realizing it.

The worst response to a plateau is simply doing more of the same thing harder.

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