Picture this: You walk into the gym primed to set a personal record (PR), but then you get distracted: You start looking for the perfect song, you set up your phone to capture a video, you get caught up in how many reps youโ€™re going to get, etc. As a result, you botch the lift. 

Assuming youโ€™ve been lifting with proper form and making smart weight progressions week to week (i.e., not 25-pound jumps), then a missed PR is usually a performance issue, not strength.

To help my athletes focus on the task at hand, Iโ€™ve created this time-based lifting protocol. The idea behind it is simple: Instead of worrying about reps, youโ€™ll simply lift for an amount of time. The weight will be light enough that you wonโ€™t get psyched out but heavy enough to challenge you. After your set, youโ€™ll have a short amount of time to rest, so scrolling through Instagram or swiping through Tinder isnโ€™t an option. 

Skeptical itโ€™ll work? One of my clients, Nick Hadge, winner of the 2016 Ultimate Strongman Junior World Championships, added 25 pounds onto his three-rep max for the deadlift, going from 800 pounds to 825 in just four weeks.

Try it out for yourself by following the guidelines at right.

Timed-set tips

Below, Triana lays out a few rules to abide by while following this program.

  • Use this protocol for compound movements: Deadlifts, squats, bench presses, and strict presses are all excellent options.
  • If youโ€™re an experienced lifter (more than two years of training), you can use this protocol twice a week with two different moves (one upper-body and one lower-body exercise). If youโ€™re less experienced or train fewer than four times a week, stick with one move and one session.
  • Start out with 70% of your one-rep max on the bar.
  • Each week, youโ€™ll add either 5% or 10 pounds to the exercise.
  • Focus the hell upDonโ€™t touch your phone. Donโ€™t talk to your gym friends. And donโ€™t worry about videos. Youโ€™re training down to the second, and in order for this to work you need to give every ounce of effort you have for every set.
GET STRONG: TIMED SET METHOD
WEEK SET SECONDS ON/OFF
1 3 20/40
2 4 20/60
3 5 15/60
4 6 12/75
* Take 4-7 days off before testing your new 1RM, 2RM, or 3RM
Man preparing to lift a heavy barbell using chalk for a high-level athletic workout program

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