8/20/2017
Yesterday I was able to extend to the maximum tension in the extender at 32.5 minutes however I was only able to stay in it till 35 minutes before slippage so only 2.5 minutes of time under tension. Also when I tried for a second session that day slippage occurred rapidly and I had to end the session.
So for today I wasn’t sure what to do, whether to back off to one level of tension lower or simply try to slowly increase the time at the higher tension. This is where the records were useful and I found that the most successful increments in increasing tension occurred when spending a week and a half to 2 weeks with a given tension level, while gradually increasing the time under tension. I’d only spent 5 days there this time, so I figured that wasn’t enough so I backed the tension off a level. (For me a level is 5 half turns)
Today I was able to stay in the extender for 60 minutes(Max time at that length and tension), having gotten to the tension level at 30 minutes, so 30 minutes of time under tension. I’m going to keep it at that tension level for another week and then increase to the max tension and see how it goes.
So slowly I’m honing down my protocol. The other area that I would like to get clarity is how many session in a day or in succession is too much. In looking at the records I seem to have benefited from occasional days of 3 sessions but I have also noticed that multiple 3 session days in succession leads to a fall off in progress and requires that I back off so that things recover.
Anecdotally I seem to not need full days off for recovery. But there’s so many iterations that it’s really hard to hone down what is optimal. All I know so far is that when it’s overworked the tissues are not robust enough to support progress and I’m starting to get a sense of where that limit is. What I’m seeing is that a less is more approach is where I’m landing. Looking at the records some combination of 1-3 sessions per day, 45-60 minutes for the first session, that’s about all I can figure so far.
As long as we’re making progress. Slow and steady wins the race.