Avoiding the Plateau
- Jared Thomlinson

- May 15
- 4 min read
Why Your Progress Has Stalled — and How to Start Moving Forward Again
At some point in almost everyone’s fitness journey, progress slows down. The weight stops dropping, strength gains stall, energy dips, and motivation can take a hit. This is commonly known as “the plateau” — and while it can be frustrating, it’s also completely normal.
The good news? A plateau isn’t a sign that your body has failed. It’s actually your body adapting exactly the way it’s designed to.
Understanding the science behind adaptation, recovery, and progressive overload can help you break through plateaus and continue improving safely and sustainably.
What Is a Fitness Plateau?
A plateau happens when your body becomes efficient at handling the training stimulus you’re giving it.
In simple terms:
Your workouts no longer challenge your body enough to create change.
Or your body is too fatigued and under-recovered to adapt properly.

Both situations can stop progress in its tracks.
This is where understanding supercompensation, output vs recovery, and progressive overload becomes essential.
Understanding Supercompensation
Supercompensation is the process that drives all fitness improvement.
When you train, you temporarily stress the body. This creates fatigue and slightly reduces performance in the short term. During recovery, your body repairs itself and adapts to become stronger, fitter, or more resilient than before.
The cycle looks like this:
Training Stress
Fatigue
Recovery
Adaptation (Supercompensation)
Improved Performance
The goal is to apply the next training session at the right time — when your body has recovered and adapted.
If you train too hard, too often, or without adequate recovery, your body never reaches that supercompensation phase. Instead, fatigue accumulates and progress stalls.
On the other hand, if training is too easy or inconsistent, there’s not enough stimulus to force adaptation.
Finding the balance is where real progress happens.
Output vs Recovery: The Balance Most People Ignore
Many people focus entirely on output:
More workouts
More cardio
More intensity
More calories burned
But fitness improvements don’t happen during the workout itself. They happen during recovery.
Training breaks the body down. Recovery builds it back up.
Without proper recovery, your body struggles to:
Repair muscle tissue
Restore energy systems
Regulate hormones
Improve strength and endurance
Prevent injury and burnout

Recovery includes:
Quality sleep
Adequate nutrition
Hydration
Rest days
Stress management
Mobility and stretching
If your output consistently exceeds your recovery capacity, performance eventually declines.
Signs this may be happening include:
Persistent soreness
Poor sleep
Low motivation
Reduced strength
Increased injuries
Fatigue despite training harder
More is not always better. Smarter is better.
The Science of Progressive Overload
One of the biggest reasons people hit a plateau is that they stop progressively challenging the body.
Your body adapts to survive. Once it becomes comfortable with a certain workload, progress slows unless the demand increases.
This principle is called progressive overload.
Progressive overload means gradually increasing the challenge placed on the body over time.
This can be done by increasing:
Weight
Repetitions
Sets
Training intensity
Time under tension
Workout complexity
Training frequency
For example:
Squatting 40kg for 10 reps may feel challenging initially.
After several weeks, your body adapts.
Continuing with the same load and reps eventually maintains fitness rather than improving it.
To continue progressing, the body needs a new stimulus.
Why Progressive Overload Works

Your body is incredibly adaptive.
When training places stress on muscles, bones, tendons, and energy systems, the body responds by becoming stronger and more efficient so it can better handle future demands.
This adaptation is driven by several physiological processes:
Muscle fibre repair and growth
Improved neural efficiency
Increased cardiovascular capacity
Stronger connective tissue
Enhanced energy production
Without increasing demand, the body has no reason to continue adapting.
That’s why structured progression matters.
How to Avoid the Plateau
Avoiding a plateau doesn’t mean training harder every week. It means training strategically.
1. Track Your Training

If you’re not tracking your workouts, it’s difficult to know whether you’re progressing.
Keep records of:
Weights lifted
Reps completed
Running times
Recovery levels
Energy and performance
Small improvements add up over time.
2. Prioritise Recovery
Recovery is part of the program — not a break from it.
Aim for:
Consistent sleep
Sufficient protein intake
Hydration
Scheduled rest days
Deload weeks when needed
Recovery allows supercompensation to occur.
3. Increase Training Gradually
Avoid massive jumps in intensity.
Progressive overload works best when changes are gradual and sustainable.
Even small increases over time can produce significant long-term results.
4. Change Variables When Needed
Sometimes the body simply adapts to repetitive training.
Changing variables can help stimulate new progress:
Different rep ranges
New exercises
Tempo adjustments
Training split changes
Increased resistance
Interval variations
Variety with purpose is important.

5. Don’t Ignore Nutrition
Training without proper nutrition is like trying to build a house without materials.
Your body needs:
Protein for muscle repair
Carbohydrates for energy
Healthy fats for hormone function
Micronutrients for recovery and performance
Under-fuelling is one of the most common causes of stalled progress.
6. Manage Stress Outside the Gym
Your body doesn’t separate training stress from life stress.
Work pressure, poor sleep, emotional stress, and overtraining all draw from the same recovery resources.
High stress can impair recovery, hormone balance, and performance.
Progress Isn’t Always Linear
One of the most important things to remember is that fitness progress rarely happens in a straight line.
There will be periods of:
Rapid improvement
Slower progress
Temporary plateaus
Setbacks and rebuilds
That’s normal.
The key is understanding that plateaus are often signals — not failures. They tell you it may be time to:
Recover better
Adjust training
Increase challenge
Improve consistency
Refocus your strategy
Final Thoughts
Avoiding the plateau isn’t about pushing yourself harder every single day. It’s about understanding how the body adapts and giving it the right balance of stress and recovery.
When you combine:
Smart progressive overload
Adequate recovery
Proper nutrition
Consistency
Structured training
…you create the ideal environment for long-term progress.
Fitness is not about exhausting your body — it’s about teaching it to adapt, improve, and perform better over time.
And sometimes, the breakthrough comes not from doing more, but from doing things smarter.




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