Check-in Prep

May 10 – May 23, 2026 (14-day window)

Training volume up 45.2% vs prior period ACWR 1.05 — training load within optimal range Protein on target — 288g avg vs 280g goal 9 high step days (>15k) — significant floor load
Biometrics
HRV 19.2 ms +4%
Resting HR 70.7 bpm -2%
Sleep 6.85 hrs -5%
Deep Sleep 77.8 min -5%
Body Battery 20.9 +25%
Stress 38.9
Steps 13736 +4%
Training
Sessions 8
Total Volume 165,300 lbs
Avg / Session 20,662 lbs
ACWR 1.05
Nutrition
Avg Calories 2,950 kcal
Avg Protein 288 g
Days Logged 13 / 14
Late Meals 0
Scoring Recommendations
Suggested 1-10 scores calibrated to 90-day baselines
7
sleep quality
slight dip (5%)
7
recovery
HRV at baseline, deep sleep slight dip (5%)
9
energy
body battery ↑ 25.1% above baseline
9
stress
↓ 22.2% below baseline
7
fatigue
ACWR 1.05 — within range
191.2
WEIGHT
+1.0 lbs over 14d
Draft Narrative

HRV averaged 19.2 this period vs my baseline of 18.4 — 4% above baseline. Logged 8 training sessions, 165,300 lbs total volume. ACWR 1.05. Protein averaged 288g against a 280g target. Subjectively energy and fatigue feel consistent with what the data shows.

Weekly Insight

You set nine all-time PRs this week, with the standout being Rogers Squat at 250 lbs × 10 (up 60 lbs from your prior 4-week best) — that's a massive jump alongside strong leg press and calf raise gains, showing your lower body is responding well to this phase. Upper body kept pace too: Smith bench hit 160 × 12 (+20 lbs), shoulder press nudged up, and single-arm lat pulldown progressed, though back volume dropped 28% and shoulders dropped 49% week-over-week — worth checking with Jeff whether that's rotation-by-design or if those groups need more attention next week. ACWR at 0.97 is right in the sweet spot, total volume dipped ~6% but that's trivially offset by the load progressions, and recovery held steady across the board — clean week. Nutrition was dialed in at 2,950 kcal and 288g protein against your ~2,884/280g targets, so compliance is tight; just keep an eye on hitting your fiber and potassium floors since those tend to be the ones that quietly slip.