Theme
Strength Progression + Conditioning
Rest
45–60 sec
Intensity
Moderate–High
Goal
Push strength, improve work capacity, stay athletic
Week 4 – Workout Demonstration
WORKOUT WEEK 4
WORKOUT WEEK 4 – FULL BODY POWER
- AT-HOME
Warm-Up (5–7 min)
- 40 sec High Knees (march option)
- 15 Squats
- 10 Push-Ups
- 15 Glute Bridges
- 30 sec Plank
Strength Supersets (4 Rounds)
- A1 Goblet Squat – 10
- A2 Dumbbell Push Press – 8
- B1 Dumbbell Hip Thrust / Glute Bridge – 15
- B2 Renegade Row – 8/side
Cardio Finisher (10 min)
EMOM
- Min 1: 12 Dumbbell Thrusters
- Min 2: 30 Mountain Climbers
Core
- Plank Hold – 45–60 sec
- Dead Bugs – 10/side
GYM VERSION
Strength
- Back Squat – 4×6
- Push Press – 4×6
Accessory Superset (3 Rounds)
- Barbell or Smith Machine Hip Thrust – 10
- Chest-Supported Row – 12
Conditioning
Rower / Bike Intervals (10 min)
40 sec hard
Rower / Bike Intervals (10 min)
20 sec easy
WORKOUT WEEK 4 - LOWER BODY + ENGINE
- AT-HOME
Warm-Up
- 30 sec Jump Rope
- 12 Reverse Lunges
- 20 Calf Raises
Strength (4 Rounds)
- Dumbbell Front Squat – 10
- Step-Back Lunges – 10/leg
- Single-Leg Glute Bridge – 12/leg
Cardio Circuit (4 Rounds)
- 20 Squat Jacks
- 40 sec Wall Sit
- 30 sec Fast Feet
Core
- Side Plank – 30–40 sec/side
- Heel Taps – 20
GYM VERSION
Strength
- Hack Squat or Front Squat – 4x8
- Leg Press – 3x12
Conditioning (4 Rounds)
- Sled Push or Heavy Carry – 30 sec
- Bike – 45 sec moderate
- Rest 45 sec
WORKOUT WEEK 4 - UPPER BODY + FINISHER
- AT-HOME
Warm-Up
- Arm Circles
- Scap Push-Ups
- 2 min light cardio
Strength Supersets (4 Rounds)
- A1 Floor Press – 10
- A2 Bent-Over Row – 12
- B1 Arnold Press – 10
- B2 Lateral Raises – 12
Conditioning Finisher (AMRAP 8)
- 10 Push-Ups
- 20 High Knees
- 10 Hammer Curls
Gym Version
Strength
- Lat Pulldown or Pull-Ups – 4x8
- Incline Dumbbell Bench – 4x8
- Seated Shoulder Press – 3x10
Finisher
Assault Bike / Rower Sprints / Run
- 6 rounds
- 20 sec all-out
- 40 sec easy
Week 4: Sleep & Recovery
Where Real Strength Is Built
Most people think progress happens during workouts.
In reality, progress happens during recovery.
This week is about sleep — one of the most underrated, under-prioritized tools for fat loss, strength, energy, mood, and long-term health.
You can train hard, eat well, and stay consistent but without quality sleep and recovery, your body struggles to keep up.
Why Sleep Matters More Than You Think
Sleep is not “time off.”
It is active repair.
When you sleep, your body is:
- Repairing muscle tissue
- Regulating hormones
- Restoring energy
- Supporting brain function
- Resetting stress response
- Strengthening immunity
Without enough sleep, your body stays in survival mode and survival mode does not prioritize fat loss, muscle building, or mental clarity.
The Reality of Modern Life
Most people:
- Go to bed too late
- Wake up too early
- Scroll until exhaustion
- Live on caffeine
- Treat sleep as optional
The result?
- Low energy
- Increased cravings
- Slower recovery
- Elevated stress
- Frustrating plateaus
Sleep is not something you “catch up on.”
It’s something you schedule and protect.
Why Recovery Makes You Stronger
Think of exercise as the stimulus — not the solution.
When you train, you create stress in the body.
When you recover, your body adapts and gets stronger.
Without recovery:
- Muscles don’t rebuild
- Joints stay inflamed
- Motivation drops
- Burnout increases
Recovery is when strength is earned.
This applies to your mind, too.
Your brain needs downtime just as much as your body does.
Growth Hormone (HGH): The Youth & Recovery Hormone
One of the most important things that happens during deep sleep is the release of human growth hormone (HGH).
HGH plays a key role in:
- Muscle repair and recovery
- Fat metabolism
- Skin, hair, and tissue health
- Energy and vitality
- Staying resilient as we age
This hormone is released primarily during deep sleep, especially in the earlier part of the night.
When sleep is short or inconsistent, HGH release is reduced and recovery, energy, and vibrancy suffer.
This is why sleep is often called a youth and vitality tool.
A Simple Example
Imagine going to the gym and lifting weights but never allowing your muscles time to repair.
Eventually, things break down.
Sleep is the body’s repair window.
It’s when the nervous system turns down, inflammation settles, hormones rebalance, and strength is restored.
The same way muscles grow stronger after rest, your mind becomes sharper and more resilient when you unplug.
What Prioritizing Sleep Looks Like
This is not about perfection — it’s about intention.
Supporting sleep may include:
- A consistent bedtime and wake time
- Reducing screen time before bed
- Creating a calm evening routine
- Managing caffeine intake
- Treating sleep like an appointment — not an afterthought
Small changes compound quickly.
Why This Matters for Your Results
When sleep improves:
- Energy increases
- Cravings decrease
- Stress feels more manageable
- Recovery improves
- Fat loss becomes easier
- Workouts feel better
Sleep doesn’t slow progress — it accelerates it.
Why This Matters for Your Results
This week is about awareness and respect — for your body and your time.
Notice:
- How sleep impacts your energy and mood
- How recovery affects your workouts
- How much better life feels when you’re rested
Turning off is not quitting.
Resting is not being lazy.
Recovery is not optional.
It is a powerful strategy.
By prioritizing sleep and recovery, you are supporting your strength, your hormones, your metabolism, and your future.
This is how sustainable results are built — from the inside out.
WEEK 4 COACHING MESSAGE
- Add 5–10% load where form allows
- Strength always comes before cardio
- Cardio should challenge breathing, not technique
- Finish proud, not fried