17/02/2026
TLDR
In the first 1–4 weeks of training, your body is adapting rapidly — just not in ways you can see.
Early progress is primarily neurological and biological, not structural. Your nervous system improves muscle activation and coordination. Protective inhibition reduces. Technique sharpens. Gene expression shifts. Insulin sensitivity improves. Protein turnover increases. Tendons begin adapting. Inflammation becomes better regulated.
These changes lay the foundation for future strength, resilience, and visible results.
If things feel heavy, awkward, or slower than expected, it doesn’t mean training isn’t working. It means the groundwork is being built.
Early adaptation is invisible.
Visible progress is delayed.
Consistency bridges the gap.
Last week we explored why early training often feels harder before it feels rewarding and why that experience is not a sign that something is going wrong. This week builds directly on that idea. Because while progress can feel frustratingly invisible early on, your body is making meaningful biologic...