LinkedIn

Magnus PS

Grease the Groove: My Return to Ruthless Simplicity

"That's some serious weight."

The older guy had been watching my Turkish Get Up. The weight. The form. The fluidity.

I felt a jolt of pride.

Last year, for the first time in years, I made real Gains. With a capital “G”.

I'd circled back to kettlebell training with Pavel Tsatsouline's Simple and Sinister protocol. Inside was a principle called Greasing the Groove (GtG): do less, more frequently and treat strength like a skill.

Instead of training 2-3x/week, I trained 5-6x. Instead of 60 min sessions, 25 mins. Instead of 10 different lifts, just 2. I focused on the Turkish Get Up and the Kettlebell Swing.

For the first couple weeks I dialed in form, then ramped up:

When I tested other lifts—bench press, front squat, trap bar—my 3RMs had improved across the board despite never touching them.

Narrow focus unlocked tremendous potential.

How could so little work, translate so seamlessly to major strength gains?

I started applying it everywhere. Data Science skills. Agile mindset at work. Guitar. Writing. Language learning. Job apps. Diet and daily rituals.

I turned over all the stones and slowly-but-surely bit off more than I could chew. I lost sight of correct adherence to the principle, overextended and fizzled out.

What follows: the protocol, its strengths and limitations, and how to make it stick.

...

The Protocol

Do as much quality work as possible while being as fresh as possible. - Pavel Tsatsouline

Pavel Tsatsouline popularized GtG in the early 2000s.

The premise: perform a movement multiple times throughout the day at low intensity.

Never approach failure. Train the nervous system rather than exhausting the muscles.

His classic example entails doing a single set of pull-ups 8-10 times daily whenever you pass a doorway bar.

Full recovery between sessions. High-quality reps accumulating. Strength as a skill.

This enables consistent progress without overtraining.

Less, more frequently beats heroic single-session efforts.

The magic is in frequency, not intensity. You never hit failure or exhaustion.

No dread. No recovery days. No burnout.

The reps stack up daily, and the practice becomes effortless.

It flies in the face of our worship of intensity and suffering, but the most effective path is often the simplest one.

The one you can walk every single day.

...

Across Domains

You don't need to train until utter exhaustion every single day. Leave some in the tank for the next day. - Faras Zahabi

The underlying pattern for skill acquisition and habit formation: neurological adaptation responds better to frequency than intensity.

We are pattern-recognition machines and patterns are reinforced through repetition in varied contexts, not exhaustion in single contexts.

The pattern holds across domains, yet doesn’t apply in all contexts.

Matching Your Tools to Your Life

If the only tool you have is a hammer, it is tempting to treat everything as if it were a nail." - Abraham Maslow

Let me get personal for a moment.

I've circled back to GtG to start 2026 because life demanded it, and because it delivers.

My wife and I had a baby in September 2025. We're both back at work now, juggling dual incomes with growing demands. Five days a week for me at the office, four for her.

Long days. Tight schedules. The math is simple: time is money, and both are in short supply.

GtG lets me pull a minimal toolkit—kettlebells and a steel mace—into the home front. I knock out sessions in the morning or chip away throughout the day when I find a five-minute window.

Life with a baby isn't linear. Blowouts and crying fits don't follow a training plan. You need systems that bend without breaking.

This isn't venting. I love my life. And part of why it works is that my return to minimalism naturally led me back to GtG.

But this time I'm doing it right. This time I'm going slow. This time I'm applying it to the right domains. This time I'm taking those five-minute chunks and making them count.

Alive time beats dead time. Being an active participant beats being a passive consumer.

...

The Obstacles

The obstacle is the way." - Marcus Aurelius

From my experience, the greatest challenges in applying GtG don't come from the method itself. They come from within us—and from the world we live in:

And honestly, if you're Type-A like me, the lack of struggle might mess with your head. You won't feel the burn. My Oura ring barely registers when I've "trained." As a metric addict, that's psychologically rough.

...

Why You Might Want to Try It Anyway

Simplicity is the key to brilliance. - Bruce Lee

GtG isn't the answer to everything. It won't prepare you for a marathon or an MMA fight. It won't maximize hypertrophy or teach you complex, integrated skills under fatigue.

But it excels at building strength in fundamental movements, hitting specific milestones, and maintaining fitness without demanding your entire recovery budget. It works for new parents, busy professionals, anyone whose schedule looks like Swiss cheese, and people who need their CNS fresh for other priorities.

The goal isn't finding one method that solves everything. It's matching the right tool to the life you're actually living.

Greasing the Groove happens to be an excellent general-purpose tool that works for more situations than most people realize. It just requires you to let go of what training is "supposed" to look like.

Know what you're after. Choose accordingly.

And when life gets chaotic, when time fragments and energy becomes precious, remember that there is power in ruthless simplicity.

For more info: