High load resistance training: exercises, benefits, and tips
You've got 20 minutes, a barbell, and the will to grind. High load resistance training is about intensity, not volume. Lifting at 80-90% of your max for sets of 5 reps has been shown to increase strength by 25% in 8 weeks. No fluff, no superset pyramids. Just heavy compound lifts with full rest. Dorsi helps you program exactly that: your next set weight, rep count, and rest timer, adjusted to your real-time recovery. If you've ever stood in the gym wondering what to do next, that's decision fatigue, and it kills momentum. High load training cuts through that noise. You pick a weight, you lift it hard, you leave. Below, we break down what high load training actually does to your muscles, how to structure a session, and when to push vs pull back.
Practical Playbook
Start with a load you can control
Pick a weight where your form stays crisp through the last rep. If your torso caves or the bar drifts on rep three, it's too heavy. For strength, aim for 80-85% of your 1RM. That's sets of 3-5 reps with one left in the tank. Grinding isn't the goal.
How do I know when to increase the load?
When you hit your target reps with clean technique for two sessions in a row, add 5 pounds. Upper body benefits from 2.5-5 lb jumps. Lower body can handle 10 lbs. Don't rush. Strength gains unfold over weeks, not days. Patience pays.
Fix technique before adding weight
More load won't fix bad form. Prioritize bar path, bracing, and controlled eccentrics. If your position breaks on rep four, the weight is too high. Drop 10-15% and build a solid foundation. Your future PRs depend on it.
Schedule deloads every four to six weeks
High load training accumulates fatigue. Every 4-6 weeks, drop to 60-70% of your working weight for a week. You'll return stronger. Skipping deloads leads to plateaus and nagging injuries. Trust the cycle: stress, recover, adapt.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Jumping to 90% of your one-rep max every session because you think heavy lifting means always lifting heavy.
- Why
- High load training creates significant central nervous system fatigue and mechanical stress. Doing it every session leaves no room for recovery and your nervous system shuts down before your muscles do.
- Fix
- Limit heavy work to 2, 3 sessions per week. Use the other days for technique work or moderate loads at RPE 7.
- Mistake
- Rounding your lower back on deadlifts because you're chasing a new PR.
- Why
- A single heavy rep with a rounded spine can herniate a disc. The PR is worthless if you're sidelined for six months.
- Fix
- Set your hips lower and push the floor away. If your back rounds, the weight is too high. Drop it and fix your brace first.
- Mistake
- Adding weight every single week without considering form or fatigue levels.
- Why
- Progressive overload isn't just adding plates. If you're constantly grinding out ugly reps, you're building poor motor patterns that will plateau or injure you.
- Fix
- Increase load only when you can hit all reps with clean technique and controlled tempo. Sometimes that means staying at the same weight for three weeks.
- Mistake
- Only doing the big three lifts and ignoring rotator cuff or grip accessory work.
- Why
- The shoulder joint is most vulnerable under heavy loads. Without prehab, imbalances lead to impingement and lost training time.
- Fix
- Add face pulls, farmers carries, and band pull-aparts twice a week. They take 10 minutes and save your joints.
From the Dorsi blog
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Lifting in a Calorie Deficit: What Holds Up When Calories Are Low
A cut starts well, then strength tanks in week three. Here's what actually changes in your body when calories are low, and how to train so the muscle you cut for is still there at the end.
Just show up. Dorsi handles the rest.
- HRV-driven readiness — today's plan adapts to how recovered you actually are.
- Adapts every session — no decision fatigue, no second-guessing your numbers.
- Apple Watch native — log a set with your wrist, not your phone.