Strength Practice

How to Build Strength With Grease the Groove

Grease the Groove works because it treats strength as a skill: frequent, fresh, high-quality reps instead of occasional all-out battles.

5 min readVideo guideGTG

Quick answer: Pick one or two movements, perform many small sets across the day at roughly half your capacity, stay far from failure, and repeat for several weeks. GTG is strength practice: focused, flawless, frequent, fresh, and slightly varied.

If your max is 10 pull-ups, a GTG set might be 4 or 5 clean reps. You can repeat that set several times during the day as long as every rep stays fast and controlled. When a set starts feeling heavy, you are no longer greasing the groove. You are just adding another workout.

Keep your training visible. THYMOS gives you a focused place to record workouts, review what you did, and keep the next session grounded in your actual history.

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The five GTG principles

  1. Focused: do not spread GTG across your whole exercise library. Use one or two main moves and their close variations.
  2. Flawless: every rep should look like practice, not survival. Pavel's framing is that max strength requires high tension and clean execution.
  3. Frequent: every pass under the pull-up bar can become a small practice opportunity.
  4. Fresh: avoid fatigue. If you are tired, stop. Bad reps violate the whole method.
  5. Fluctuating: keep it same-but-different. Use small variation changes or rep changes so you do not do the exact same thing every day.

How to set it up

  1. Test a clean max once, then stop testing for a while.
  2. Use about half your max for each practice set, but keep sets at 5 reps or fewer.
  3. If the movement becomes too easy, add load or move to a harder variation instead of adding sloppy reps.
  4. Spread small sets through the day with plenty of rest.
  5. Train moderately hard, never to fatigue.

Best movements for GTG

GTG is useful for pull-ups, chin-ups, push-ups, dips, hollow holds, handstand line work, and other movements where technique quality matters. It is less useful for exercises that require long setup, heavy warm-ups, or high joint stress every time.

How to vary without losing the groove

Variation should stay close to the target movement. For pull-ups, that could mean commando pull-ups, archer pull-ups, typewriter pull-ups, chin-ups, or a small amount of added weight. The goal is not random variety; it is enough change to avoid stagnation while still practicing the same strength pattern.

Common mistakes

How to progress

Progress by making the same reps feel easier first. Then add one small practice opportunity, add a little load, or move to a harder variation. Keep the increases boring. GTG works best when the nervous system gets repeated clean practice without constantly paying a recovery bill.

Train from a cleaner record. Download THYMOS on Google Play and keep your sessions, notes, and progress in one focused workout log.

Get it on Google Play