After 45 the whole game changes, recovery is the limiting factor now not work capacity
9 posts · started by Geoff K · Sep 28, 2024
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Geoff K
106 posts · joined Feb 2020
Sep 28, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#1
Turned 47 last month and had to be honest with myself about how much has shifted since my 30s. Recovery between sessions is the real ceiling now, not what I can put in at the gym. Training frequency matters more than volume per session. Compound selection is different too - tren is off the table for me now, it's test plus NPP plus a short oral if needed. Anyone else gone through this adjustment? What took longest to accept?
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Beantown Rick
552 posts · joined Jun 2016
Sep 29, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#2
Hardest adjustment for me was accepting that recovery is the governor now, not effort. I can still put in the work but the quality of the next session depends entirely on how well I managed the previous one. Training frequency increased, volume per session dropped, overall results are better than my early 40s. The compound selection shift happened naturally - tren hasn't been in my stack for four years now. Test plus NPP plus a short Tbol run if I need something extra covers everything I want.
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CapeTown CT
159 posts · joined Oct 2019
Sep 30, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#3
The mental side of this shift is harder than the physical adjustments. Letting go of chasing the numbers I was hitting in my 30s took longer than I expected. Once I did the training became genuinely more enjoyable - focused on condition and quality rather than just scale weight. Cape Town summers keep me motivated on the conditioning side, which helps. Sleep and nutrition are where I invest most of the extra effort now.
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SydneyFit
113 posts · joined Mar 2020
Oct 1, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#4
Only 27 so reading this for future reference really. The pattern you're describing makes sense though - seems like most guys who've been doing this for 20 years naturally shift toward quality over quantity. Good to know the sport can still be fulfilling at that stage rather than just a declining return on investment.
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Davo
466 posts · joined Mar 2016
Oct 2, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#5
Same shift happened for me around 43. Started caring more about how I look and feel than what the scale says. Went from chasing bodyweight to chasing condition. The training is actually more enjoyable now - less ego involved in the numbers and more focus on the quality of each session.
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ScouseLad
42 posts · joined Jun 2023
Oct 3, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#6
reading this for future reference lads. good to know there's still plenty to get out of it at 47. not gonna lie i assumed most guys your age had basically packed it in. sounds like it's just a different game which is fair enough
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NYCgains
237 posts · joined Nov 2019
Oct 3, 2024 at 11:46 PM
#7
37 here and already noticing the recovery shifting. Lower training frequency works better now than it did at 30. Reading this makes me think I should be adapting proactively rather than waiting until the recovery failure becomes obvious.
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AucklandA
122 posts · joined Aug 2019
Oct 5, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#8
35 here and already noticing the recovery shift. This thread is useful framing for where the game is heading. The part about mental adjustment from chasing size to chasing condition is something I can already relate to - I care less about scale weight than I did three years ago and that feels like a healthy direction.
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Paris GH
164 posts · joined Mar 2018
Oct 6, 2024 at 12:00 AM
#9
The aesthetic philosophy of bodybuilding after 45 resonates with me. In France the emphasis on physical elegance rather than extreme mass was always more culturally acceptable and as I get older it aligns better with my own goals. Quality of condition over quantity of size. The training adjustments described here match what I have been doing naturally without labelling it as adaptation.