This week, write your training plan on one index card. If it doesn't fit, simplify it.
Picking a periodization model for a non-athlete is like a casual home cook arguing about which knife brand professional chefs use. The knife isn't what's stopping the meal from being good. Showing up to the kitchen every week is. The fancy knife doesn't slice harder than the basic one in your hand right now.
Everyone obsessing over periodization is solving the wrong problem. The meta-analyses are in. The model you pick is almost irrelevant. Volume and adherence dominate.
Verdict: Partially Correct Conviction: ModerateThis week, write your training plan on one index card. If it doesn't fit, simplify it until it does.
That's the version the meta-analyses support. The lifters who progress for years are not the ones with the most complex models. They're the ones running the simplest program they'll honestly log every week.
Takes one minute. No equipment.
The Verdict
Everyone obsessing over periodization is solving the wrong problem.
Picking a periodization model for a non-athlete is like a casual home cook arguing about which knife brand professional chefs use. The knife is not what's stopping the meal from being good. Showing up to the kitchen every week is. The fancy knife does not slice harder than the basic one already in your hand, and switching brands every two months guarantees you never get fast with any of them.
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Conviction
Moderate overall
Endpoint-stratified. "Periodization is REQUIRED for non-athletes" is HIGH-conviction confidently false. "Periodization affects chronic hypertrophy independent of volume" is HIGH-conviction confidently false. The "DUP or block beats linear for max strength in trained intermediate-to-advanced lifters" claim is MODERATE conviction with a small magnitude (SMD ~0.2–0.3, high heterogeneity). Two practical claims sit on a LOW evidence base — older adults are under-represented in periodization trials, and the "periodization improves long-term adherence" hypothesis has not been tested in trials long enough to measure adherence.
A pre-registered RCT of N ≥ 300 untrained-to-intermediate adults aged 35–65, randomized to simple linear progression vs daily undulating vs block periodization, weekly volume equated, primary endpoints of lean mass (DEXA) and 1RM squat + bench, 52 weeks, powered to detect SMD 0.2 between arms. If a periodized arm beat the linear/autoregulated arm by ≥10% on either endpoint with intention-to-treat analysis, conviction would upgrade to MODERATE-HIGH that periodization model matters for non-athletes.
The same 52-week RCT, with a third primary endpoint of 12-month adherence (sessions completed divided by sessions planned). If the linear arm shows the highest retention and matches the periodized arms on lean-mass / strength gains, the "simple beats complex for non-athletes" claim would upgrade to HIGH. If a periodized arm shows higher adherence than linear (variety reducing dropout) AND equal or better adaptations, the adherence claim flips to favoring periodization. That trial does not exist. The whole field is built on 6–24 week designs that cannot test the adherence question.
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