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필사 모드: Strength Training Fundamentals: The Few Things That Actually Matter (Evidence-Based)

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Introduction — Very Few Things Actually Make You Stronger

Most fitness content is noise. A new machine, a day-by-day split, "this one trick" — the more sellable the story, the thinner the evidence usually is. What years of peer-reviewed research keep pointing to, by contrast, is almost boringly simple: add load progressively, do big compound movements, accumulate enough volume, eat protein, and recover. Nearly everything else is a detail decorating those five.

This post is a short, sourced reference on those five. I did not invent the numbers; each figure comes from an actual meta-analysis or guideline, and I attribute it. I am not a doctor or a trainer, and this is a starting point, not a personalized prescription.

The Principles That Actually Matter

  • Progressive overload. The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) position stand defines it as "the gradual increase in stress placed upon the body during exercise training." The body adapts only to what it is made to handle. Nudging weight, reps, or sets up a little, consistently — that one sentence is the engine of strength training.
  • Big compound movements. Squat, hinge/deadlift, horizontal push (bench, push-up), horizontal pull (row), vertical push (overhead press), vertical pull (pull-up, lat pulldown). They work many joints and large muscles at once, so the stimulus per unit of time is high and the carryover to everyday movement is good. Isolation work is an accessory you add on top of this frame when needed.
  • Volume and frequency. Schoenfeld and colleagues' volume dose-response meta-analysis (15 studies, 34 groups) found a graded relationship: more weekly sets produced more hypertrophy, and splitting the data into fewer than 5, 5–9, and 10+ weekly sets showed that 10+ sets per muscle per week produced the greatest growth (with diminishing returns). WHO and the US physical activity guidelines advise muscle-strengthening for "all major muscle groups on 2 or more days a week." Spreading that weekly volume across 2+ sessions is the practical default. Beginners grow well on less.
  • Proximity to failure (RPE/RIR). You do not need to take every set to the point where the muscle gives out. Refalo and colleagues' meta-analysis found only a trivial advantage for training to failure versus stopping short for hypertrophy (effect size 0.19). Stopping 1–3 reps short (RIR 1–3) delivers similar growth with less fatigue and injury risk. For pure strength in particular, grinding to failure every time is not required.

Fuel and Recovery — Protein and Sleep

Muscle does not grow in the gym. The stimulus happens in the gym; the growth happens while you recover in between. That is why fuel and sleep are principles, not "bonus tips."

Protein first. Morton and colleagues' BJSM meta-analysis (49 studies, 1,863 participants) found a breakpoint: beyond a total intake of about 1.6 g/kg per day (95% confidence interval 1.03–2.20), added protein produced no further resistance-training gains in fat-free mass. So roughly 1.6 g per kg of bodyweight is a sensible target for most people, and piling on more buys little for muscle (for a 70 kg person, about 112 g). Even accounting for the top of that interval, there is thin support for going past 2.2 g/kg.

Timing and distribution are secondary. The broad consensus across studies is that total daily intake is the primary driver; how many meals you split it across, or the "anabolic window" right after training, is closer to fine-tuning once the daily total is met.

Recovery is part of training. Rather than pounding the same muscle group to failure every day, leave time between stimuli and get enough sleep. Chronic under-sleeping erodes recovery and adaptation and raises injury risk. When progress stalls, suspect recovery, sleep, and food before you blame the program.

Myths Worth Throwing Out

  • Spot reduction. The belief that exercising a body part burns fat from that part. Vispute and colleagues (2011) had participants do abdominal exercise 5 days a week for 6 weeks and saw no change in belly fat, waist circumference, or body fat, and a meta-analysis pooling 13 studies and 1,100+ people concluded that localized muscle training has essentially no effect on localized fat (effect size near 0). Fat comes off through whole-body energy balance, not from the area you trained.
  • Muscle confusion. The idea that you must swap exercises constantly to "confuse" the muscle is not a mechanism. What drives adaptation is progressive overload and sufficient volume, not novelty. Repeating the same movement consistently while adding a little load almost always beats random variety. Rotate exercises to avoid injury, cover weak points, or manage boredom — not because "confusion" is itself the goal.
  • "Women get bulky from lifting." Most women have far lower testosterone, so the same training does not make them as large as men. A visibly big physique is not an accidental side effect but the result of years of deliberate, high-effort training (and sometimes more). For most people the real outcome of strength training is not "huge" but stronger and more durable.

A Simple Starting Framework (and a Safety Note)

It does not need to be complicated. Folded into one page, the principles above look like this:

2–3x per week, full body
- 3–4 big compound movements (lower push/pull, upper push/pull)
- 2–4 sets per movement, stopping 1–3 reps short (RIR 1–3)
- Add a tiny bit each week (weight, reps, or sets — one of them)
- Aim for ~10 sets per muscle per week; beginners start with less
- Protein ~1.6 g/kg per day; sleep enough

Always add the safety note on top. Learn the form first, then add weight — groove the movement with light loads, and warm up every session. Progress gradually: do not raise everything at once in a single week. Muscle soreness is common, but sharp joint pain is a stop signal. If you have a medical condition, an injury, are pregnant, or have been sedentary, talk to a physician or a qualified professional before starting. This post is a sourced reference, not personalized medical advice.

Closing

The honest truth about getting stronger is that there is no secret. Progressive overload, big compound movements, enough volume, roughly 1.6 g/kg of protein a day, and recovery — the people who hold those five steady over months and years are the ones who get strong. Skill here is not a new machine or a flashy program; it is the ability to repeat boring fundamentals for a long time.

Most of the energy people spend hunting for the perfect program would have paid off more if spent simply showing up consistently. Optimization is a problem for after consistency.

So do not delay starting while you try to perfect an elaborate plan. Begin this week with the one-page framework above, and lift a little more next session — that is the whole thing.

References

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