Welcome to PROSPER
This program is not about crushing you on day one. It is about building a foundation of strength, health, and resilience that will last a lifetime. Every movement is explained, and progression is scaled safely.
The Foundation Program is a 6-month, beginner-focused training system designed for individuals who are new to structured fitness, returning after a long break, or who want to build a proper base before advancing. Every session, every meal plan, and every recovery protocol has been engineered with one purpose: to make you stronger, healthier, and more consistent than you were the day before.
You do not need prior experience. You do not need a fully equipped gym. What you need is commitment to showing up and following the system. The results will come.
6-Month Road Map
The Foundation Program is structured across three distinct phases. Each phase builds directly on the last, increasing in volume and complexity as your capacity grows.
Master fundamental movement patterns. Build your training habit, establish your nutrition baseline, and prepare your joints, tendons, and nervous system for progressive loading. Frequency: 3 days per week with full-body sessions. All workouts include bodyweight-friendly alternatives where needed.
Increase training volume and introduce the Upper/Lower split. Begin applying progressive overload systematically. Cardio frequency increases and nutrition targets are refined based on your progress from Phase 1. Sessions extend to 50–55 minutes.
Consolidate everything you have learned. Training intensity reaches its peak for this level. Complete your final strength benchmarks, take progress measurements, and prepare for the Intermediate Elevation Program.
Your Training Week
Phase 1 runs on 3 training days per week. Phases 2 and 3 introduce a 4-day Upper/Lower split as your recovery capacity improves.
Phase 1 — Months 1 & 2
Phases 2 & 3 — Months 3–6
Training Sessions
All sets use a controlled tempo. Focus on technique before adding weight. Rest periods are guidelines — beginners may need an extra 15–30 seconds between sets.
Two alternating full-body sessions — A and B. Alternate each training day so you never repeat the same session consecutively.
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goblet Squat | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Drive knees out, chest tall throughout |
| Dumbbell Bench Press | 3 | 10–12 | 60s | Full range, controlled descent |
| Seated Cable Row | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Squeeze shoulder blades at contraction |
| Dumbbell Shoulder Press | 3 | 10–12 | 60s | Do not lock elbows at the top |
| Romanian Deadlift | 3 | 12 | 60s | Hip hinge, soft knee bend |
| Plank Hold | 3 | 20–30s | 45s | Brace core, neutral spine |
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leg Press | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Feet shoulder-width, full depth |
| Incline Dumbbell Press | 3 | 10–12 | 60s | 15–30 degree incline |
| Lat Pulldown | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Pull to upper chest, controlled return |
| Lateral Raises | 3 | 15 | 45s | Lead with elbows, slight forward lean |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Controlled on the way down |
| Dead Bug | 3 | 8 each side | 45s | Lower back stays in contact with floor |
Training splits into dedicated upper and lower body sessions. Volume increases progressively across each month of this phase.
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell Bench Press | 4 | 8–10 | 90s | Full range, natural arch |
| Barbell Row | 4 | 8–10 | 90s | Pull to lower chest, brace core |
| Overhead Press | 3 | 10–12 | 75s | Brace core, full lockout at top |
| Cable Row | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Squeeze at contraction |
| Lateral Raises | 3 | 15–20 | 45s | Light weight, full range |
| Tricep Pushdown | 3 | 12–15 | 45s | Elbows fixed at sides |
| Dumbbell Curl | 3 | 12–15 | 45s | No swinging, controlled eccentric |
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barbell Back Squat | 4 | 8–10 | 90s | Break parallel, brace core hard |
| Romanian Deadlift | 4 | 10–12 | 90s | Feel the stretch in hamstrings |
| Leg Press | 3 | 12–15 | 75s | Do not lock knees at top |
| Leg Curl | 3 | 12–15 | 60s | Full contraction, slow descent |
| Leg Extension | 3 | 15 | 60s | Peak squeeze at top |
| Standing Calf Raise | 4 | 15–20 | 45s | Full range of motion |
| Ab Wheel or Plank | 3 | 10–30s | 45s | Controlled movement throughout |
Cardiovascular Training
Cardio is progressively introduced across the 6 months. The objective is to build your aerobic base without compromising strength gains or recovery capacity.
| Phase | Type | Duration | Frequency | Intensity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1Months 1–2 | LISS — Walking / Cycling | 20–25 min | 2× per week | RPE 4–5 / Zone 2 |
| Phase 2Months 3–4 | LISS + Light HIIT | 25–35 min | 3× per week | RPE 5–6 / Zone 2–3 |
| Phase 3Months 5–6 | HIIT + LISS | 20–40 min | 3× per week | RPE 6–7 / Zone 3–4 |
Flexibility & Movement Quality
Perform the dynamic warm-up before every training session and the static cool-down after. The mobility flow is recommended on active recovery days.
| Movement | Sets | Reps / Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Hip Circle | 1 | 10 each direction |
| Leg Swing — Forward & Back | 1 | 10 each leg |
| World's Greatest Stretch | 1 | 5 each side |
| Bodyweight Squat | 2 | 10 |
| Arm Circle | 1 | 10 each direction |
| Cat-Cow | 1 | 8 reps |
| Glute Bridge | 2 | 10 |
| Stretch | Hold | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hip Flexor Stretch | 45s each side | Lunge position, tuck pelvis forward |
| Hamstring Stretch | 45s each side | Seated or lying flat, flex foot |
| Chest Doorway Stretch | 30s each side | Elbow at 90 degrees |
| Lat Stretch | 30s each side | Arm overhead, lean away from the wall |
| Pigeon Pose | 60s each side | Or figure-four position on the floor |
| Child's Pose | 60s | Arms extended forward, breathe deeply |
Fueling Your Foundation
Nutrition does not need to be complicated at this stage. Focus on your calorie target, eat primarily whole foods, and prioritise protein. Everything else follows from that.
- Whey Protein — 25–30g post-workout
- Creatine Monohydrate — 5g daily
- Vitamin D3 — 2000–4000 IU daily
- Omega-3 Fish Oil — 2–3g EPA/DHA
- Magnesium Glycinate — 300–400mg before bed
- Zinc — 25–30mg daily
- Multivitamin — daily with breakfast
- Caffeine — 100–200mg pre-workout
- Beta-Alanine — 2–5g pre-workout
- Electrolytes — during long sessions
Rest & Regeneration
Muscle is built outside the gym. Your recovery protocols are as important as your training sessions. Follow these guidelines with the same commitment as your workouts.
Target 7–9 hours per night. Maintain consistent sleep and wake times. Avoid screens 30 minutes before bed. Keep your room dark and cool (65–68°F / 18–20°C).
5–10 minutes on rest days. Focus on quads, hamstrings, glutes, thoracic spine, and lats. Pause on tender spots for 30 seconds to allow tissue release.
On rest days, a 20–30 minute walk at a comfortable pace improves blood flow and reduces DOMS without adding training stress to the body.
Every 8 weeks, reduce training volume by 40–50%. Maintain movement patterns but allow full systemic recovery. Deload weeks are mandatory, not optional.
The PROSPER Codes
Physical transformation begins in the mind. These six principles govern every athlete who commits to the PROSPER system.
Consistency over intensity. The athlete who shows up on the hard days — not just the easy ones — always wins in the end. Show up. Every time.
Results take time. Do not measure progress week to week. Measure it month to month. The compound effect is always working — even when you cannot see it.
Your training, your nutrition, your sleep. These are entirely within your control. Master these three variables and the results become inevitable.
Your only competitor is the person you were yesterday. One more rep, five more pounds, one better choice. That is PROSPER in action.
Recovery is productive. Scheduled rest days are not a sign of weakness. They are when your body builds the muscle you earned in training.
Never miss two sessions in a row. Never let one bad day become two. Your standard is your identity — protect it every day.
Measuring Your Results
What gets measured gets managed. Use these benchmarks to evaluate your progress at the end of each phase and prepare for advancement.
Same day, same time, fasted. Weekly average is more reliable than a single reading.
Log all working sets in a notebook or app. Track progressive overload week over week.
Rate 1–10 each morning. Persistent low scores indicate recovery issues to address.
Log hours and quality rating. Sleep is the most powerful recovery tool available.
| Exercise | Phase 1 Target | Phase 3 Target |
|---|---|---|
| Goblet / Back Squat | BW × 10 | 1.1× BW × 8 |
| Bench Press | 0.5× BW × 8 | 0.75× BW × 8 |
| Deadlift | BW × 8 | 1.25× BW × 5 |
| Pull-Ups / Rows | 5 reps | 10 reps |
"The successful warrior is the average man, with laser-like focus."