Alessandro Cavagnola's Blog

Building Strength, Inside and Out


  • Friday Flex: Steam and Strength

    Friday Flex: Steam and Strength

    Stepping into a warm shower after training, I can feel the tension melt away — muscles loosening and mind resetting.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Throwback Thursday: Taking a Dip

    Throwback Thursday: Taking a Dip

    There’s something about warm water, quiet moments, and fading sunlight that reminds me to appreciate how far I’ve come. Relaxing in 2020.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • What a Good Coach Should Ask You — And What You Should Ask Them

    What a Good Coach Should Ask You — And What You Should Ask Them

    Choosing a coach is one of the most important decisions you can make in training — and it’s also one of the most rushed.

    I see it all the time. Someone wants to change their body, improve performance, or take training more seriously, so they jump straight to who looks impressive online or who promises results the fastest. A program gets downloaded. A plan gets started. And a few weeks later, frustration shows up because things don’t feel aligned.

    That usually isn’t a programming problem.

    It’s a communication problem.

    Coaching works best when it’s treated like a conversation, not a transaction. It’s a two-way process, and both sides have responsibilities. Over the years — as an athlete, as a professional bodybuilder, and as a coach myself — I’ve learned that the quality of the questions asked at the beginning often determines how far someone goes.

    Coaching

    What You Should Ask a Potential Coach

    Before you ever talk about exercises, volume, or macros, you should understand how a coach thinks.

    One of the first things I believe an athlete should ask is how the coach defines progress. Some coaches look only at scale weight or visible changes. Others pay attention to performance trends, recovery, consistency, and movement quality. Neither approach is inherently wrong, but they lead to very different training experiences. You want to know what the coach is actually watching week to week.

    It’s also important to ask how they adjust plans over time. Bodies change. Schedules change. Stress changes. A coach who treats a program as something static — written once and followed blindly — usually isn’t paying attention. Good coaching evolves. It responds. It reflects what’s actually happening, not what should be happening on paper.

    Coaching

    Communication matters just as much. Ask how often you’ll check in, what kind of feedback they expect from you, and how detailed that feedback should be. Coaching breaks down quickly when expectations aren’t clear. Some athletes want constant guidance. Others prefer space. Neither is wrong, but both sides need to know the rhythm.

    And finally, ask how the coach handles setbacks. Plateaus, injuries, missed sessions, life interruptions — these are part of training, not exceptions. The answer you’re looking for isn’t perfection. It’s flexibility and honesty.

    What a Good Coach Should Ask You

    This part gets overlooked, but it might be even more important.

    A serious coach won’t rush into prescribing solutions. They’ll ask questions first — sometimes uncomfortable ones. Not to judge, but to understand.

    A coach should want to know what your life actually looks like. Your work schedule. Your travel. Your sleep. Your stress. Training doesn’t exist in a vacuum, and pretending it does is how people burn out or get hurt.

    Coaching

    They should ask about your training history in detail. Not just what you’ve done, but how you’ve responded to it. What felt good. What didn’t. Where progress stalled. Patterns matter more than numbers.

    Injuries and limitations should come up early, not as an afterthought. A coach who ignores those details is either inexperienced or careless. Good coaching respects longevity.

    And one question that matters more than people realize: why you want to train.

    Not the surface answer — the real one. Is it confidence? Structure? Competition? Health? Proving something to yourself? That motivation shapes how hard you’ll push, how you handle discomfort, and how you react when progress slows. A coach who understands your “why” can guide you through the moments when discipline has to take over.

    The Relationship Is the Program

    Coaching isn’t about handing someone a perfect plan. It’s about building a system that works in the real world.

    I’ve had coaches who taught me things I still use today — not because they knew everything, but because they saw things I couldn’t see myself at the time. I’ve also learned just as much by coaching others, watching how different people respond to the same structure, and adjusting based on feedback instead of ego.

    Coaching

    The best coaching relationships feel collaborative. There’s trust, honesty, and accountability on both sides. The athlete shows up prepared and communicates clearly. The coach listens, observes, and adjusts without defensiveness.

    When that balance is right, progress feels steady. Not rushed. Not chaotic. Just consistent.

    Red Flags Go Both Ways

    There are warning signs worth paying attention to.

    A coach who promises timelines or guarantees outcomes usually isn’t respecting how unpredictable the human body can be. Progress doesn’t follow a script.

    On the other side, an athlete who constantly wants shortcuts, skips communication, or treats feedback as optional is setting themselves up for frustration. Coaching only works when both sides stay engaged.

    Training is a long game. The people who improve the most aren’t the ones who find the flashiest plan — they’re the ones who build relationships that support learning over time.

    The Goal Is Alignment

    Whether you’re working with a coach for general fitness, performance, or competitive bodybuilding, the goal stays the same: alignment between expectations, communication, and effort.

    Ask good questions. Be honest with your answers. Pay attention to how the other person listens.

    Because when the relationship is right, the training tends to take care of itself.

  • Truth Tuesday: Why Strong Isn’t Always Smart

    Truth Tuesday: Why Strong Isn’t Always Smart

    There’s a question I get a lot, and it usually sounds like this:

    “How much do you bench?”

    “How much do you shoulder press?”

    “How heavy do you go?”

    I understand why people ask. In the gym, strength is the easiest thing to measure. You load the bar, move the weight, and you have a number.

    But for me, especially as a professional bodybuilder, the goal is not to lift the most weight. The goal is to build the best physique. Those are two different outcomes.

    I’m not training for powerlifting. I’m not trying to be the strongest guy in the room. I’m trying to create muscle with shape, control, symmetry, and detail. That’s where most people go wrong. They let the weight dictate the movement instead of the muscle.

    Ego lifting shows up in small ways. Form starts to slip, but the load keeps increasing. Reps get messier, but the set continues. A shoulder press turns into a full upper-body effort. A back movement becomes more about the arms. The weight goes up, but the target muscle does less.

    It happens because the gym creates pressure. Sometimes it’s competition. Sometimes it’s pride. Sometimes it’s the idea that heavier always means better.

    It doesn’t.

    If your goal is physique, the muscle doesn’t respond to ego. It responds to tension, control, and repetition done correctly. Once you lose control, you lose tension. And once you lose tension, the exercise stops doing what it’s supposed to do.

    I see this all the time. Someone fights through a heavy set, everything compensates, and it feels hard. But hard doesn’t always mean effective. In many cases, it just means inefficient.

    There’s also the cost. The heavier the weight, the more stress you place on joints and connective tissue—especially when the movement isn’t stable. One injury can erase months of progress. In bodybuilding, consistency is everything. You don’t build a complete physique if you’re constantly stepping back to recover.

    Lifting

    For me, training is about making every rep count. I want to know exactly what muscle is working. I want to control the negative, hold the contraction, and keep the movement where it belongs. The set should end because the muscle is done, not because the technique broke down.

    That’s the shift. The weight is a tool. The rep is the product.

    Once you start thinking that way, your approach changes. You choose loads you can control. You focus on execution. You repeat it consistently. Over time, that’s what builds detail.

    I still train heavy. Strength matters. But it only matters when the movement stays clean and the target muscle stays engaged. If I have to reduce the weight to keep that, I do it without hesitation.

    Because progress isn’t about what you lift once. It’s about what you can repeat, refine, and build on over time.

    If you’re serious about your physique, don’t chase numbers for your ego. Chase control. Chase execution. Chase the feeling of the muscle doing the work.

    The best physiques aren’t built by the loudest training. They’re built by the most precise.

  • Motivation Monday: One Step Forward

    Motivation Monday: One Step Forward

    A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step—but that step has to mean something.

    It’s not about starting once. It’s about repeating that step every day with intent. Every rep, every set, every session builds on the last.

    This is what that looks like in real time. Effort, strain, focus. No shortcuts—just consistent progress, one step at a time.

    (Photo source: Instagram)

  • Sculpting Sunday: Your First Rep Matters The Most

    Sculpting Sunday: Your First Rep Matters The Most

    Most people think the first rep is just a warm-up for the set. Something you rush through so you can “get into it.” But for me, the first rep is the most important one of the entire movement.

    Why?

    Because the first rep locks in the pattern your body will follow for every rep after it.

    Here’s what the first rep does:

    • It tells your nervous system which muscle should lead the movement
    If the traps fire first, or the triceps jump in, or the shoulder shrugs even slightly — that becomes the pattern for the rest of the set.

    • It sets your posture and joint alignment
    Chest position, elbow path, grip tension, shoulder angle — all of these are “programmed” in rep one.

    • It determines whether you will feel the right muscle or chase the weight
    When the first rep is clean, slow, and intentional, the muscle contracts exactly where you want it.

    When it’s sloppy, the stronger side or dominant muscle takes over immediately.

    • It anchors the mind–muscle connection
    I always pause for a second at the start, squeeze the muscle gently, and “wake it up” before the rep begins.

    This small moment changes the entire set.

    The sculptor’s rule:

    Treat your first rep like a blueprint — everything you build afterward follows its design.

    Next time you train, slow down your first rep.

    Make it perfect.

    You’ll be surprised how much better the rest of your set feels.

  • Friday Flex: Held to a Higher Standard

    Friday Flex: Held to a Higher Standard

    Conditioning like this isn’t built in a single phase. It’s the result of staying accountable when the standard doesn’t change.

    Every detail matters — tight execution, controlled volume, and consistency across weeks, not days.

    This is where that shows up.

    (Photographer: co.davidgamboa)

  • Throwback Thursday: Relaxing in Ibiza

    Throwback Thursday: Relaxing in Ibiza

    Relaxing in Ibiza, Spain in April, 2024. Rest is part of the process. Between workouts and meal prep, days like this in Ibiza help reset the mind and restore the energy needed to come back stronger.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Grocery Shopping Is Where Training Actually Begins

    Grocery Shopping Is Where Training Actually Begins

    People usually picture training as what happens in the gym. The sets. The weight. The sweat. That’s the visible part. What doesn’t get talked about as much is how much of the work happens long before you ever touch a barbell — usually under fluorescent lights, pushing a cart down narrow aisles, making decisions that don’t feel heroic in the moment but shape everything that follows.

    For me, grocery shopping is not a side task. It’s a planning session.

    When training is serious, food stops being abstract. It becomes practical. You’re not thinking in terms of “healthy” or “unhealthy.” You’re thinking in terms of meals that exist, meals that can be prepared, meals that show up on time — even when life gets busy, travel stacks up, or motivation dips.

    That’s where the difference usually is.

    The Cart Reflects The Week Ahead

    I can usually tell how a week will go by what’s in my cart. If it’s organized, intentional, and realistic, training tends to flow. Recovery stays consistent. Energy feels predictable. When the cart is random, rushed, or built around wishful thinking, the week usually unravels somewhere around day three.

    This isn’t about perfection. It’s about reducing friction.

    Grocery Shopping

    I don’t shop with the idea that every meal will be exciting. I shop so that every meal exists. That alone removes a huge amount of stress. When food is already decided, the mental bandwidth stays free for training, recovery, and focus — the things that actually move the physique forward.

    A lot of people train hard and then leave nutrition up to chance. That’s where things start to slip.

    Simplicity Wins More Weeks Than Creativity

    Over time, I’ve learned that variety is useful, but reliability matters more. Grocery shopping is not the moment to experiment wildly. It’s the moment to secure the basics — the foods I know digest well, cook easily, and support training without drama.

    Shopping

    When you’re deep into routine, decision fatigue is real. Standing in front of the fridge at night, tired and under-recovered, is not the moment to invent a meal. The work has already been done earlier, in the store, when your head was clear.

    That’s why I keep it simple on purpose. Simple doesn’t mean careless. It means repeatable.

    Travel Changes Everything — Planning Becomes Protection

    When I’m traveling, grocery shopping becomes even more important. New cities, unfamiliar kitchens, different food availability — all of it adds friction. That’s when a short grocery run can stabilize an entire trip.

    Even a few familiar items can anchor the day. It creates continuity when everything else feels temporary. I’ve learned to look for what solves problems, not what looks impressive. Sometimes that means improvising. Sometimes it means adapting portions. The goal stays the same: keep the system intact.

    Training doesn’t stop when conditions aren’t perfect. It adjusts. Grocery shopping is part of that adjustment.

    Discipline Shows Up In Quiet Places

    There’s nothing glamorous about walking through a grocery store with purpose. No one applauds it. No one sees it as “hardcore.” But this is where discipline becomes visible to me — not in how much weight I move, but in how consistently I remove excuses from my own path.

    When food is planned, training feels lighter. Recovery feels cleaner. The day runs smoother. Those effects compound over time, and they matter far more than one standout workout.

    I’ve said before that progress comes from repetition. Grocery shopping is one of those repetitions.

    The Cart Is A Commitment

    By the time I leave the store, the week has already been decided. I know what meals are coming. I know how much thinking I won’t have to do later. I know I’ve made it easier to show up when it counts.

    That’s the part people miss. Training doesn’t begin at the gym doors. It begins with preparation. And sometimes, preparation looks like standing in line with a cart full of ordinary food, knowing that ordinary habits, repeated long enough, build extraordinary outcomes.

    Shopping

    That’s why grocery shopping matters to me.

    Because strong weeks don’t happen by accident.

  • Truth Tuesday: Your Body Is the Feedback — Stop Copying Programs Blindly

    Truth Tuesday: Your Body Is the Feedback — Stop Copying Programs Blindly

    One of the biggest mistakes I see is people treating training like a template. They find a program online, copy it exactly, and assume it will work the same way for them. But the truth is simple: the program is never the boss — your body is.

    Science matters. Biomechanics matter. New methods can be useful. But none of that means anything if your body isn’t responding the way it should. Two people can do the same exercise with the same form and still feel it in completely different places — because structure, mobility, weak points, and nervous system efficiency aren’t the same for everyone.

    That’s why feedback is everything. When you train, pay attention to what’s actually happening: where you feel the tension, which side takes over, where you lose control, what gets sore the next day, and what never seems to improve. Those signals tell you more than any trend or influencer routine.

    So the goal isn’t to blindly follow someone else’s plan. The goal is to become the kind of athlete who can listen — and adjust. If an exercise doesn’t hit the target muscle, change the setup. If the technique is correct but the feedback is wrong, change the angle. If your recovery isn’t keeping up, change the schedule. The strongest program is the one that matches your body.

    Train smart. Use the plan — but let your body write the final version.

  • Arnold UK Show Day: What Worked, What Didn’t, and What Comes Next

    Arnold UK Show Day: What Worked, What Didn’t, and What Comes Next

    Show day started early, as always.

    I woke up feeling good. The first coat of tan was done, carbs were in, and physically everything was responding the way I wanted. Mentally, I felt calm. Going into the day, I already knew this had been one of the most balanced and sustainable preps I’ve done, especially considering how much I had been traveling.

    Backstage, it was the usual routine — final checks, small adjustments, pump-up. Nothing rushed, nothing chaotic, just focused. At that point, there’s not much to change. You just try to stay present and be ready for the moment you step on stage.

    Prep

    When I got out there, I felt confident in the package I brought.

    After prejudging, the first feedback started to come in. From the front, the impact was very strong — structure, presence, overall look. That’s where I stand out the most right now. But at the same time, the feedback was consistent: the back is not yet at the same level.

    It’s not a big difference, but at this level, even small gaps matter. When the front is at a certain standard, the back has to match it to create a complete package.

    Flexing

    In the end, I finished 6th in a very competitive lineup.

    Of course, I would have liked to place higher, but I’m satisfied with the condition I brought and the way I showed up. More importantly, I left with clear feedback and a very specific direction for what needs to improve.

    On the way back, I had a conversation with a taxi driver that stayed with me. We spoke about discipline and lifestyle, and he thanked me in a way that felt very genuine. Moments like that remind me that this journey is not only about competing, but also about what you can share with others.

    Community

    Now it’s time to move forward.

    I know exactly what needs to be improved — bringing the back up to the same level as the front, while keeping the structure and tight waist that define my physique. That’s the focus going into the next phase.

    If you want to see the full show day — from the final prep to the stage and the feedback — you can watch the full video here:

  • Motivation Monday: Locked In

    Motivation Monday: Locked In

    Columbus, Ohio. Early March, 2026.

    In moments like this, everything narrows down to the rep in front of me. The noise of the gym fades, the weight settles into my hands, and the only thing that matters is execution.

    Motivation doesn’t come from hype. It comes from showing up with purpose, especially when the stakes are high and the margin for error is small.

    Every set is a chance to reinforce the standard you’ve built over months of work. Control the movement. Stay present. Respect the process.

    That’s how progress keeps moving forward—one focused rep at a time.

  • Sculpting Sunday: Why Squeezing Your Glutes During Leg Press Improves Hip Stability

    Sculpting Sunday: Why Squeezing Your Glutes During Leg Press Improves Hip Stability

    Most people think the leg press is just a quad exercise. You sit down, load the sled, push the weight — simple. But if your hips aren’t stable, your knees won’t track properly, your quads won’t activate evenly, and your lower back will try to help in ways it shouldn’t.

    One of the best cues I’ve learned for leg training is also one of the simplest:

    Squeeze your glutes before you press — and keep them engaged throughout the movement.

    This small activation changes everything about the way your lower body moves.

    Squeeze

    Here’s why it works:

    • It locks the pelvis into a safe, neutral position
    When the glutes are active, your hips stop rocking backward. This protects the lower back and keeps tension in the legs where it belongs.

    • It improves knee tracking
    Stable hips create stable knees. You’ll notice immediately that your knees stop collapsing inward or drifting outward.

    • It increases quad activation
    When the hip is stable, the quads can produce more force without compensation from the hips or spine.

    • It prevents the lower back from assisting
    If your glutes switch off, your lumbar spine tries to take over — especially at the bottom of the rep. Squeezing locks that down.

    • It creates better left–right symmetry
    A stable pelvis helps both legs push evenly, preventing one side from taking more of the load.

    The sculptor’s rule:

    Strong glutes don’t just build glutes — they stabilize everything below them.

    On your next leg press session, try firing your glutes before the first rep and keeping them engaged through the entire set.

    Your quads will feel the difference immediately — and your knees will thank you.

  • Friday Flex: Back Under Review

    Friday Flex: Back Under Review

    Columbus, Ohio — early March, during Arnold weekend.

    A quick pose check with my coach, Giuseppe. Moments like this are where small details get sharpened: how the lats open, how the mid-back tightens, how the pose holds under the lights. On stage, those details decide everything, so we refine them long before the judges ever see them.

    The work isn’t just lifting. It’s learning how to present the physique you’ve built.

  • Throwback Thursday: Goofy Moment

    Throwback Thursday: Goofy Moment

    March, 2022. A quick selfie and a reminder that not every photo has to be serious. Between training sessions, travel, and the structure of competition prep, it’s good to keep a sense of humor about the whole process.

    Even athletes who spend most of their time focused on discipline and routine still have moments where they just relax and enjoy the ride.