Return to Training
For anyone returning after injury, rest or when life gets in the way. Four weeks. Three days a week. Basic exercises. This is how you get back — properly.
Why This Programme Exists
I have followed this programme myself — first in 2003 and several times since. It was built out of necessity. Injury, work, life — they all get in the way at some point. The question is never whether you took a break. The question is how you come back.
Most people make the same mistake when returning to training. They go back to where they were before the break and pay for it within a week. Ego writing cheques the body cannot cash. Four weeks off means four weeks off — and the body needs to be reintroduced to load, not ambushed by it.
This programme is built on basic exercises because basic exercises work. I still love old fashioned gyms with good old metal. The weights do not lie and the simple movements are simple for a reason — they are effective. Four weeks is enough to get your body back into working out properly. Not completely fit, but back in the habit, back moving well, back feeling the benefit.
This programme is for gym use. Most gyms in the UK now offer affordable memberships — PureGym, The Gym Group and similar chains make this accessible to everyone. You do not need Chelsea Harbour Club to follow a proper programme. You need a barbell, a few machines and the willingness to show up.
How to Use This Programme
Pick any 3 days during the week when you are free. Monday, Wednesday and Friday works well as a template but it is just that — a template. What matters is having at least one rest day between each session. The rest is where the adaptation happens.
Each session is a full body workout covering CV first and then resistance work. The CV section is important — do not skip it. It warms the body, gets the heart rate up and reintroduces the cardiovascular system to sustained effort. The resistance section builds on that foundation.
Keep the weights honest. The numbers in this programme are starting points based on what I used returning from a break. Your starting weights may be different and that is completely fine. What matters is that the weight allows you to complete all sets and reps with good form. Leave your ego at the door for the first two weeks.
Day 1 — CV and Legs
CV — 30 Minutes
Resistance — Legs
Day 2 — CV and Upper Body
Tuesday 5 August 2003 · Holmes Place · 8pm
CV — 30 Minutes
Resistance — Upper Body Push and Pull
"Was one shot of Pimms down. Very disappointing — had such high hopes. (Just joking)"
— oldschoolPT · Original training diary note, August 2003
Day 3 — CV and Shoulders/Triceps
Wednesday 6 August 2003 · Holmes Place · 8pm
CV — 30 Minutes
Resistance — Shoulders and Triceps
Day 4 — CV and Shoulders/Core
Friday 8 August 2003 · Holmes Place · 7pm
CV — 20 Minutes
Resistance — Shoulders and Core
"Very hot today!!!!"
— oldschoolPT · Original training diary note, August 2003
Day 5 — CV and Full Body Circuit
Saturday 9 August 2003 · Holmes Place · 6pm
CV
Resistance — Full Body Circuit
30 seconds on each exercise. 3 rounds. Minimal rest between exercises — this is a circuit, not a straight sets session. By the end of three rounds you will feel every muscle group.
"Good — just need to fine tune."
— oldschoolPT · Original training diary note, August 2003
A Note on Weights
The weights listed in this programme are starting points — what I used myself returning from a break. Do not treat them as fixed. If 40kg on the leg press feels too easy, add weight. If it feels too heavy, reduce it. The numbers are a guide, not a rule.
What matters far more than the weight is the quality of movement. A barbell squat with 10kg done correctly is worth ten times more than a barbell squat with 60kg done badly. The first two weeks of any return to training should prioritise movement quality above all else.
"Four weeks is enough to get your body back. Not completely fit — but back in the habit, back moving well, back feeling the benefit."
— oldschoolPT