Training is the practice of creating change on purpose.
This book shows how that actually happens.
In The Practice of Change, coach and educator Dan Cleather brings together physiology, biomechanics, and the realities of day-to-day training to explain why progress rarely comes from heroic effort. Instead, it emerges from rhythm, timing, and the quiet steadiness of thoughtful practice.
You will learn how bodies adapt, how skills develop, why fatigue is not the goal, and how to design training that builds strength, coordination, and resilience without burning out.
Rather than offering programmes or promises, this book focuses on understanding. It shows training as a living process - one shaped by context, feedback, and time - and helps you make sense of what you are already doing in the gym, on the track, or in practice.
Clear, reflective, and grounded in decades of coaching and research, The Practice of Change is for athletes, coaches, and curious lifters who want to move beyond folklore and force their training to make sense.
Training is a conversation that invites the body to change - and our job is to trust the process and the wisdom with which the body does what it is built to do.