Loss of strength rarely announces itself all at once. It arrives quietly — in the grocery bag that feels heavier than it should, the stairs that leave you winded, the moment you realize you’re bracing yourself just to stand up from the couch. What often gets blamed on aging or poor conditioning has a simpler explanation.
Human performance scientist Andy Galpin put it directly in a recent conversation on The Line with Dr. Kristen Holmes: strength isn’t a fitness goal — it’s a foundational requirement for normal human function. His point was not about fitness trends or athletic performance. It was about how your body is designed to interact with the physical world — and what happens when that capacity diminishes. When strength declines, ordinary movement demands far more effort than it should.
Despite this, strength training is still widely misunderstood. Many people associate it with aesthetics, intimidation, or extremes that feel inaccessible. That misunderstanding keeps people from addressing one of the most practical levers they have for preserving independence, mental sharpness, and physical resilience. Strength is not a niche pursuit. It’s a baseline skill.
Clarifying what strength really is — and how little it takes to rebuild it — changes the entire conversation. Once the noise and myths are stripped away, what remains is a straightforward path forward that prioritizes function, consistency, and progress over intensity for its own sake, using a simple 3-by-5 framework that removes guesswork and focuses on what actually restores strength.
Strength Training Reshapes How Your Body Functions
During the interview, Galpin, who trains professional athletes and conducts academic research, explained why strength training affects nearly every system in your body.1 The discussion focused on how structured resistance work supports longevity, brain health, immune regulation, mood stability, and daily function. Rather than framing strength as a niche fitness goal, Galpin positioned it as a core biological requirement for long-term health.
He repeatedly emphasized that the benefits of strength training apply to beginners, older adults, and people with limited time or physical limitations. He addressed common barriers such as gym anxiety, fear of injury, and confusion about programming — strength training adapts to your body, your schedule, and your starting point.
• The benefits extend far beyond muscle — Galpin explained that resistance training improves bone density (especially important for women), supports immune regulation, and stabilizes mood and energy. When asked where to start, his advice was practical: “Pick something that matters to you” — mental clarity, resilience, confidence — and you’ll find evidence that strength training helps.
• Weakness, not poor endurance, limits daily life — Many age-related struggles stem from insufficient strength rather than low cardiovascular fitness. He described how climbing stairs becomes exhausting because each step demands near-maximal effort from weak muscles. This explains why daily tasks spike heart rate and breathlessness even in people who walk regularly.
• Soreness is not a marker of progress and often blocks consistency — Muscle soreness has little relationship to strength gains. He explained that excessive soreness reduces training frequency, which undermines results. Strength adapts to repeated stimulus. Training a muscle once a week sends a weak signal; training it two to three times weekly sends a stronger one.
If soreness keeps you out of the gym for four days, you’ve lost half your potential adaptation. Strength training should feel effortful during the session but allow you to recover quickly enough to repeat it. Galpin explained that strength improves when muscles work close to their capacity for short periods, followed by adequate rest. This sends a clear signal to your body to build stronger tissue and improve coordination. Long intense workouts, extreme fatigue, and high-volume routines dilute this signal.
• The 3-by-5 protocol is a practical way to get started — Galpin described the 3-by-5 approach as a way to control training frequency, volume, intensity, and rest without complexity. This framework involves:
â—¦Training three to five days per week
â—¦Performing three to five exercises
â—¦Using three to five sets and repetitions
â—¦Maintaining deliberate rest periods long enough to preserve strength and coordination between sets
Whether you use machines, body weight, or simple movements at home, the underlying benefit remains the same: you challenge your ability to produce force. This flexibility empowers you to build strength without needing perfect conditions or elite tools.
• Neurological demand explains why strength training supports brain health — Strength training requires coordinated signaling between your brain and muscles. When you lift something heavy, your brain sends electrical signals through nerves to recruit muscle fibers. The heavier the load, the more fibers your brain need to coordinate simultaneously — like a conductor bringing in more sections of an orchestra.
This repeated practice of “loud, clear signals” strengthens the neural pathways themselves, not just the muscles. This constant demand reinforces motor control, reaction speed, and cognitive engagement. Grip strength, in particular, reflects overall neurological and physical strength because your hands require precise control from your brain.
Train Your Body to Protect Your Brain
Beyond the physical changes you’ll feel in daily tasks, strength training produces something less visible but equally important: measurable protection for your brain. In the second half of the interview Galpin connected strength training to cognitive performance and brain aging, then shifted into actionable decisions that determine whether you stay consistent — especially as life gets busier or you get older.
Exercise is both a physical stimulus and a nervous system stimulus, which changes how you should think about training sessions and recovery.
• The brain benefits come from more than stronger muscles — Galpin described two layers: the benefit of “physical strength itself” and the benefit of “the act of the strength training.” In other words, it’s not only what you build (stronger tissue), but also what you practice (your brain sending stronger, cleaner signals to your muscles). That repeated practice strengthens the “neuromuscular connection,” meaning your brain and body communicate faster and more efficiently under load.
• Arousal was the key concept he tied to brain protection — Galpin used “arousal” in the neurological sense — the degree to which your nervous system is activated and alert. Strength training produces a specific type of arousal: heightened focus, faster reaction time, and sharper cognitive engagement. Unlike caffeine, which creates alertness through chemical stimulation, resistance training achieves this through direct physical demand on your nervous system.
• Grip training is a simple, high-return activity — Galpin noted that research is “still being unpacked” and that some findings include bias in who chooses to exercise. Even with that nuance, he gave a practical bottom line: “Go train your grip. It’s a good idea.” If you want a low-effort entry point, grip work, like the dead hang exercise, is easy to add.
• It’s not “too late” to strength train if you’re older — When asked if it’s ever too late to start lifting, Galpin answered, “No.” He referenced training studies in adults “70 plus” and “80 plus,” and stated there is “no compelling evidence” that age creates a point where progress stops. If you’re older and intimidated, this gives you permission to start small and still expect results.
Galpin and Holmes described older participants as unusually consistent: they “never skip training,” show up early, and have “very low dropout.”
• Creatine is “not necessary” but “beneficial” — While supplements aren’t required to see benefits from strength training, Galpin described creatine as effective for strength and noted long-running research across many populations. He advised choosing creatine monohydrate and avoiding creatine gummies because many don’t match their labels.
Grass fed red meat is one of the best food sources, but supplementing 3 to 5 grams of creatine monohydrate daily is a safe and effective way to increase levels.
Build Strength Using the 3-by-5 Protocol
Loss of strength sits at the root of many problems people blame on aging, low energy, or declining fitness. Restoring strength in a structured way makes daily movement easier, improves confidence, and stops ordinary tasks from placing excessive stress on your body. This approach keeps training simple, repeatable, and effective instead of overwhelming.
1. Build training around strength and coordination, not burnout — Stop chasing sweat, soreness, or long workouts. The 3-by-5 framework eliminates decision fatigue: train three to five days per week, pick three to five exercises, perform three to five sets of three to five reps each. Every variable falls in the same range. If you’re unsure, start with three of everything and add only when you’re ready. Choose a weight where reps one to three feel controlled and reps four to five require genuine concentration.
You should finish thinking “I could maybe do one more,” not “I have nothing left.” If you fail mid-set, the weight is too heavy for this protocol. Then rest fully before the next set. This combination strengthens your muscles and sharpens the brain-to-muscle signal at the same time. To find your starting weight for any exercise, begin with what feels almost too light and add weight in small increments.
Stop when the fifth rep requires genuine effort but you maintain good form. That’s your working weight for week one. Good form means controlling the weight through its full range of motion, without momentum, jerking, or compensation from other body parts. If you have to swing, heave, or twist to complete a rep, the weight is too heavy.
When you can complete all five sets of five reps with a given weight, add the smallest increment available (often 2.5 to 5 pounds) at your next session. Expect to drop back to three to four reps initially.
This cycle of reaching a target, adding weight, and rebuilding is how strength accumulates over months. If life gets chaotic, a single 15-minute session with three exercises is infinitely better than skipping entirely. Consistency beats perfection. Protect the habit first; optimize later.
2. Choose movements that fit your body and your current capacity — If joint pain, old injuries, or gym anxiety are present, adjust the movement rather than quitting. Prioritize basic patterns such as pushing, pulling, hinging (bending at the hips while keeping your spine neutral), squatting, and carrying, but let the equipment vary.
Machines, dumbbells, bands or body-weight exercises all build strength when the effort is high enough and the movement is repeatable. Record one or two key lifts and aim for small, visible improvements such as an extra rep, slightly more weight or better control. This creates momentum without data overload. A sample beginner session could include:
◦Push — Wall push-up or machine chest press
◦Pull — Band row or cable row
◦Squat — Goblet squat or leg press
◦Hinge — Romanian deadlift or back extension
â—¦Carry — Farmer’s walk with dumbbells
3. Protect training frequency by keeping soreness low and adding grip work — Progress depends on showing up again soon, not on being sore for days. Mild soreness that fades within a day or two signals appropriate load. If sitting, climbing stairs, or sleeping becomes difficult, reduce the intensity. Add short grip work — carries, hangs, or simple squeezes — to reinforce strength and coordination with minimal recovery cost.
Start with a dead hang from a pull-up bar: grip the bar, lift your feet, and hold as long as possible. Aim for 30 to 60 seconds. If you can’t hang at all, begin with farmer’s carries — hold a dumbbell in each hand and walk for 30 to 40 seconds.
4. Support recovery with adequate protein and practical nutrition choices — Strength gains stall when recovery falls behind. Most adults do best with about 0.8 grams of protein per pound of ideal body weight (about 1.76 grams per kilogram). Make sure roughly one-third of your protein comes from collagen-rich sources such as bone broth, pure gelatin powder without additives, oxtail, shanks, or grass fed ground beef that includes connective tissue.
Low-fat protein after exercise delivers amino acids into your bloodstream faster, giving your muscles a stronger signal to repair and grow.2 Dietary fat slows stomach emptying. Post-workout, you want amino acids reaching your muscles quickly, so leaner protein sources are advantageous in that specific window, even if fattier sources are fine at other meals.
5. Use KAATSU to amplify results with lighter loads when needed — KAATSU is a specialized form of blood flow restriction training that uses automated cuffs to rhythmically inflate and deflate around your arms or legs. The rhythmic inflation and deflation creates repeated cycles of blood pooling and release, which triggers a stronger metabolic stress signal than continuous restriction.
This pulsing action also reduces the risk of numbness or nerve compression that can occur with static bands worn too long. This cycling pressure differs from conventional static bands and produces a stronger biochemical response, including anti-inflammatory myokine signaling. Myokines are signaling molecules released by contracting muscles.
Think of them as chemical messages your muscles send to the rest of your body during exercise — including signals that reduce inflammation and support immune function. KAATSU appears to amplify this myokine release even with lighter weights. Because KAATSU allows meaningful strength and muscle-preserving effects using light loads, it’s especially useful during rehabilitation, joint pain flare-ups or periods when heavy lifting is not appropriate.
FAQs About Building Strength with the 3-by-5 Protocol
Q: What is the 3-by-5 strength protocol?
A: The 3-by-5 protocol is a simple strength-training framework that organizes frequency, exercise selection, sets, repetitions, and rest without complexity. It involves training three to five days per week, performing three to five exercises per session, using three to five sets of three to five repetitions, and resting long enough between sets to maintain strength and coordination.
Q: Why does strength loss affect daily life so quickly?
A: When strength declines, ordinary tasks require a much higher percentage of your available capacity. This makes activities like climbing stairs, carrying groceries, or standing up from a chair feel exhausting and stressful, even if your cardiovascular fitness is adequate.
Q: How does strength training support brain health?
A: Strength training challenges the connection between your brain and muscles, reinforcing motor control, coordination, and cognitive engagement. This type of effort creates a unique form of nervous system activation that supports mental sharpness and resilience, distinct from stimulants like caffeine.
Q: Is it too late to start strength training later in life?
A: No. Research and training studies referenced by Galpin include adults in their 70s and 80s, with no evidence that age prevents meaningful strength gains. Older adults often show excellent consistency and adherence when training programs are appropriately scaled.
Q: When is KAATSU useful in a strength program?
A: KAATSU is especially helpful when heavy lifting is not practical, such as during rehabilitation, joint pain flare-ups, or recovery after surgery. By using automated, cycling pressure to restrict blood flow, KAATSU allows you to stimulate muscle and preserve strength with much lighter loads.
Test Your Knowledge with Today’s Quiz!
Take today’s quiz to see how much you’ve learned from yesterday’s Mercola.com article.
How many minutes of weekly movement deliver meaningful cardiovascular protection?

