Alessandro Cavagnola's Blog

Building Strength, Inside and Out


  • Tuesday Travelogue: Ibiza, Spain — Salt, Stone, and Sunlight

    Tuesday Travelogue: Ibiza, Spain — Salt, Stone, and Sunlight

    Ibiza has two reputations that don’t really explain it.

    One is the nightlife brand—DJs, late hours, velvet ropes. The other is the postcard version—white buildings, blue water, beaches that look like edited photos. Both are real, but neither is the full story. The island is small enough that you can drive from loud to quiet in under an hour, and that contrast is basically the point.

    Spain

    Ibiza sits in the Balearic Islands off Spain’s east coast, with a coastline that does most of the heavy lifting: coves cut into rock, shallow turquoise water in some places and deeper, darker blues in others, plus stretches where the sea looks calm until the wind flips it. If your photos are pool-and-ocean heavy, that makes sense—Ibiza is built for being near water. Even when you’re not “doing” anything, the setting feels like something is happening.

    Ibiza

    The main town, Ibiza Town (Eivissa), is where the island shows its age. Dalt Vila—the old fortified upper city—doesn’t look like a party destination when you’re actually standing under it. It looks like a serious place that had to protect itself. Thick stone walls, steep streets, viewpoints that make it obvious why it was built that way. Down below, the marina area is modern and glossy, with the kind of energy you get anywhere yachts and designer shops pile up. That split—historic stone above, luxury and movement below—runs through the whole island.

    Spain

    Away from town, the vibe changes fast. Beach life here isn’t one uniform thing. You’ve got broad, organized beaches where everything is arranged and you’re basically renting comfort by the hour. And then you’ve got smaller coves where the scenery is the main event and the “amenities” are whatever you carried in. The water is what people remember, but the edges are what give it character—rock faces, pine-covered hills, dusty paths that open into a clean view.

    3

    Culturally, Ibiza is not a museum island. It’s more like a rotating population: locals, seasonal workers, people who come for weekends, and people who come for months and act like it’s their personality. That mix affects everything—prices, crowd levels, even how different areas feel depending on the time of day and time of year. You’ll see calm mornings and chaotic nights in the same exact place.

    4

    And then there’s the visual style of the island: white and sand tones, linen, sun-bleached everything, clean architecture in some areas and older, more lived-in textures in others. It photographs easily, which is why content from Ibiza tends to look like “lifestyle” even when nothing special is happening. A person in a pool here doesn’t read like “pool day.” It reads like “Ibiza.”

  • Motivation Monday: Pulling Forward

    Motivation Monday: Pulling Forward

    Every pull drives me higher than the last, reminding me that real strength comes from meeting resistance head-on. Pull-ups keep me honest — no shortcuts, no momentum, just raw effort and the will to rise.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Sculpting Sunday: The Burn Isn’t Always the Goal

    Sculpting Sunday: The Burn Isn’t Always the Goal

    A lot of people judge a workout the same way they judge hot sauce: if it doesn’t sting, it doesn’t count. No burn, no belief.

    It’s an easy metric because it’s loud. The burn gives instant feedback. It feels like proof. You walk away convinced you did something meaningful because your body is shouting at you.

    But the burn is just one training signal — and it’s not always the one that builds the physique you’re chasing.

    That sensation is mostly metabolic stress: a local buildup of fatigue byproducts that shows up when a muscle is under tension long enough, with limited oxygen, often in higher reps or shorter rest. It can be useful. It pairs well with isolation work, pump sets, finishers, and phases where you’re trying to create a lot of localized fatigue without loading the joints heavy.

    The mistake is treating it like a scoreboard.

    A burn doesn’t automatically mean you trained the muscle better. It means you produced a certain kind of fatigue. Sometimes that fatigue comes from great execution. Sometimes it comes from compensation, bad positioning, and a tempo that got faster as soon as the set got uncomfortable. The feeling is real either way — which is why it can trick people.

    You see it constantly: someone starts a set clean, then the burn hits and everything changes. Reps get shorter. The tempo speeds up. The range of motion shrinks. The body starts searching for leverage. Stronger muscles and better angles step in to help. The target muscle may still burn — but it’s no longer doing the work you think it is.

    Focus

    That’s where chasing the burn backfires. The set gets “harder,” but the stimulus gets worse. You feel more, but you build less.

    If your goals are strength, symmetry, and clean development, the more useful question isn’t “Did it burn?” It’s “Did I keep control?” Because control is what keeps the work where it belongs.

    Did the rep look the same from the first to the tenth?

    Did the joint stay in the position you intended?

    Did you keep the tension where you wanted it, or did your body move it somewhere else the moment it got uncomfortable?

    That’s the kind of boring, technical consistency that actually shapes muscle. It’s what makes an exercise productive instead of just exhausting. And it’s why some of the best sets don’t feel dramatic — they feel precise. Heavy, steady, deliberate. The kind of work where you can tell you’re on the muscle because the rep has nowhere to hide.

    Focus

    The rule is simple: use the burn when it serves the goal, not as the goal itself. Some days you want high reps and a pump. Other days you want fewer reps, more load, and mechanics so clean you could repeat them in your sleep.

    Both belong in the program. Just don’t let the burn be the judge of whether the workout was good. Execution is the judge.

  • Saturday Summary: Lessons from the Gym Floor

    Saturday Summary: Lessons from the Gym Floor

    This week’s posts circled around a theme that shows up again and again in bodybuilding: the difference between effort and intention.

    On Sculpting Sunday, we looked at the sets that actually build a physique — and the ones that only feel productive. Not every set counts. Real progress comes from keeping tension where it belongs and repeating clean, controlled reps that the body can adapt to over time.

    Flex

    Motivation Monday shifted the focus to the pause between sets. That quiet reset — where breathing settles and attention sharpens — is often where the next set is decided. Rest isn’t wasted time when it’s used deliberately.

    Looking Glass

    Tuesday’s Travelogue took a lighter turn with an unexpected “destination” just in time for the eve of April Fools Day: Five Guys. After competitions and long stretches of strict discipline, moments of recovery matter. Sometimes that recovery comes with salt, calories, and a familiar red-and-white restaurant that shows up wherever the sport takes you.

    Five Guys

    Midweek we stepped into the mental side of training with The Real Game Starts When You Want To Quit. Anyone can train when motivation is high. The real test comes when the routine feels endless and progress seems slow. Staying consistent in those moments is what separates short-term enthusiasm from long-term athletes.

    Keep Going

    Throwback Thursday offered a quick look back to a moment of everyday life — a reminder that even in the middle of intense training periods, normal routines still exist.

    Laundry Day

    Finally, Friday Flex brought the focus back to the gym floor with a side chest check between sets. These quick visual checkpoints aren’t about posing for attention; they’re about seeing whether the work done week after week is actually showing up in the physique.

    Side Chest Pose

    Taken together, the message from this week is simple: bodybuilding is built on details — clean sets, patient rest, disciplined routines, and the ability to keep going even when the excitement fades.

  • Friday Flex: Side Chest Check

    Friday Flex: Side Chest Check

    Quick side chest check between sets. Shots like this are less about posing and more about feedback — seeing how the chest, shoulders, and arms are tying together when the body is actually working. The gym floor is where most of the real progress happens, and moments like this help me see whether the work is showing up where it should.

  • Throwback Thursday: Laundry Day

    Throwback Thursday: Laundry Day

    Laundry wasn’t supposed to be the hardest part of the day. September, 2020.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • The Real Game Starts When You Want to Quit

    The Real Game Starts When You Want to Quit

    There’s a point almost everyone reaches when they take training seriously: the point where they want to quit. Not because they’re incapable, but because they’re tired. The novelty is gone, the routine feels repetitive, and the reward still feels far away. You might be deep into a diet with low energy, or weeks into consistent training while still feeling like your body isn’t changing fast enough. That’s when the mind starts asking uncomfortable questions, and motivation becomes unreliable.

    That moment matters because it reveals what kind of athlete you are. Starting is easy compared to staying. Anyone can train hard when they feel great, when life is calm, and when progress is visible. The real test is whether you can keep going when the day feels heavy and nothing feels exciting. That’s why I say the hardest part isn’t the work itself — it’s the phase where the work feels endless.

    Work

    The Edge of Quitting Is the Edge of Breakthrough.

    Most people don’t stop all at once. They stop slowly. They loosen the discipline, they miss sessions, they start skipping meals, or they begin bargaining with themselves. They tell themselves they’re being “balanced,” but often it’s not balance — it’s relief. What they don’t realize is that this is exactly the moment where staying consistent starts to separate you from everyone else.

    This is especially true in competitive bodybuilding, because the sport isn’t only physical. It’s psychological. You don’t get tested only in the gym; you get tested by repetition, by hunger, by fatigue, and by the long stretch where you’re doing everything right while still feeling uncertain about the outcome.

    What Judges Are Watching

    Bodybuilding is obviously judged on physique, but I also believe something else matters: how long you can stay in the game. I once said something to a judge that I still believe in: “Don’t worry. The many times I lose — how do you beat someone who never gives up?” I’m not saying judges reward people simply for showing up, but I do think consistency is part of what makes an athlete serious in their eyes.

    In a sport where the best physiques are built over years, it matters when someone keeps returning, refining, and improving instead of disappearing as soon as it gets difficult. A lot of people can be disciplined for a short period. What’s rare is the athlete who stays steady through setbacks, comes back again, and improves year after year.

    Always Pushing

    Losing Is Part of the Contract

    If you compete, you accept that not every show will go your way. You can do the work, you can feel proud of your condition, and you can still walk off stage disappointed. That isn’t always easy because bodybuilding isn’t judged with a stopwatch — it’s judged by comparison, and subjectivity can exist in any sport where aesthetics are involved.

    That’s why your mindset has to be bigger than one placing. If your confidence depends on every result being perfect, this sport will break you. But if you can handle a loss without putting your head down — if you can learn from it and return better — that’s how you grow. Every time you come back, you’re proving something to yourself, and you’re also building the kind of resilience that lasts longer than a single season.

    What I Tell Myself When I’m Mentally Tired

    When I’m low on energy or feeling mentally drained, I remind myself that the goal doesn’t change just because the day is difficult. I can adjust the plan, reduce intensity, or focus more on execution when recovery is needed, but I don’t change direction. Consistency doesn’t mean being perfect every day — it means staying connected to the process even on the days when you don’t feel like it.

    That’s why the real game starts when you want to quit. Not because quitting is the point, but because that edge is where you learn the most. If you can stay steady there, you don’t just build muscle — you build proof that you can keep going when it’s not exciting, and that ability carries into every part of life.

  • Tuesday Travelogue: Five Guys — Salt, Steel, And The Geography Of Recovery

    Tuesday Travelogue: Five Guys — Salt, Steel, And The Geography Of Recovery

    Travel usually brings to mind coastlines, mountain air, unfamiliar streets, and the subtle ways a place changes you. Over the years, I’ve traveled to various beaches, gyms, cities, and cultures that left a mark long after I left. But there’s another destination that has quietly followed me across borders and competitions, one that deserves its own Travelogue.

    Five Guys.

    I say that seriously, in the sense that tomorrow is April Fools Day.

    Five Guys

    No matter where I am — different countries, different cities, different stages — there’s a strange comfort in knowing that somewhere nearby, red and white tiles are waiting. The menu will look familiar. The smells will be unmistakable. The ritual will be the same, even as the surroundings change.

    That consistency is part of the culture.

    Each Five Guys has its own micro-identity. The layout might shift slightly. The staff cadence changes. The energy of the room reflects the city it’s in. Some locations feel rushed and loud, full of people coming off long days. Others feel almost ceremonial, slower, quieter, like everyone understands why they’re there. You start to notice these details once you’ve “traveled” enough.

    Five Guys

    After a competition, especially, Five Guys becomes something more than a meal. It’s a checkpoint. A signal that a phase has ended. The body is depleted, the nerves are flat, and recovery is no longer theoretical — it’s urgent. Salt matters. Calories matter. Satisfaction matters.

    Five Guys delivers all three in each bite.

    Chowing Down

    The beauty is in the customization. This isn’t fast food you rush through. This is a menu that invites reflection. Toppings are chosen carefully, the way you’d plan a day in a new city. Mushrooms or not. Grilled onions or raw. Jalapeños if you’re feeling bold. The wrong combination can overwhelm you. The right one feels like alignment.

    There’s an art to ordering.

    Start simple. Let the base speak first. Add layers gradually. Respect the fries — especially the portion size. A small is never small, and thinking otherwise is a rookie mistake. Vinegar is optional, but context matters. Post-show, it hits differently.

    Fiveguys4

    And then there’s the setting. Sitting there, (greasy) paper bag in hand, body still holding traces of stage condition, you become a quiet observer. Other patrons have no idea what your last few weeks looked like. The early mornings. The structure. The discipline. The restraint. All they see is someone eating a burger, perhaps with a big grin on their face.

    Five Guys

    In that moment, Five Guys feels every bit as significant as a beach in Bali or a café in Rio. Not because of scenery, but because of timing. Because travel isn’t only about distance — it’s about contrast. And few contrasts hit harder than moving from peak restriction to full permission in a single meal.

    Five Guys

    If you’re planning your own visit, treat it like a destination. Don’t rush. Sit down. Hydrate. Accept that napkins are not optional. And understand that this is not indulgence — it’s restoration.

    Five Guys

  • Motivation Monday: Through the Looking Glass

    Motivation Monday: Through the Looking Glass

    That pause between sets matters more than people think. It’s where the breathing settles, the heart rate comes down just enough, and you decide how the next set is going to go. Sitting here, I’m not zoning out — I’m resetting. Feeling what just worked, what’s still there, what needs a little more control when I grab the weight again.

    Progress doesn’t come from rushing the clock. It comes from respecting the space between efforts, staying present, and making sure each set builds on the last. Rest is part of the work when you use it well.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Sculpting Sunday: The Sets That Don’t Count (And Why People Still Do Them)

    Sculpting Sunday: The Sets That Don’t Count (And Why People Still Do Them)

    There are sets that build your physique, and there are sets that just burn time.

    You know the difference when you’re honest about it. The set that counts has tension in the right place, a clean path, a rep you can repeat, and a clear purpose. The set that doesn’t count feels like effort, looks like effort, and leaves you sweaty… but it never really loads the muscle you’re trying to build. It’s just motion. Noise. A way to say you “worked out.”

    Most junk sets happen for the same reason: people want the workout to feel dramatic. They chase fatigue because fatigue is easy to understand. They chase a pump because the pump is immediate feedback. They chase that shaky, out-of-breath feeling because it gives them emotional proof that something happened.

    The problem is, your body doesn’t grow off emotion. It grows off stimulus.

    Stimulus

    A set stops counting the moment the target muscle stops doing the work. That’s the line. If you’re doing rows and your lower back takes over, the set is done. If you’re doing lateral raises and it turns into a trap-and-swing festival, the set is done. If you’re pressing and you’re bouncing through the bottom while your shoulders shift around trying to find a safer route, the set is done. You’re still moving weight, but you’re no longer building what you came in to build.

    Another way junk sets sneak in is through autopilot volume. People love round numbers. Three sets. Four sets. Five sets. They do them because that’s what the paper says, even when the first two were already sloppy, or even when the muscle is clearly done. They’re collecting sets like receipts, thinking the total matters more than the quality.

    It doesn’t.

    One clean, controlled set that hits the muscle exactly the way you want is worth more than three “almost” sets where you’re just surviving. In bodybuilding, survival reps are rarely the reps that shape you. The shape comes from repeating the same clean pattern long enough for the body to adapt to it.

    Focus

    So why do people keep doing the sets that don’t count?

    Because they’re addictive. Junk sets let you feel productive without being precise. They let you avoid the harder skill: discipline. It’s easier to do more than it is to do better. It’s easier to add a drop set than it is to admit your setup is wrong. It’s easier to chase exhaustion than it is to build a repeatable standard you can follow for months.

    And there’s also ego. Junk sets protect pride. You can swing a heavier dumbbell. You can load more plates. You can turn the workout into a performance. Meanwhile, the muscle you actually want to grow is sitting there like, “Cool. Call me when you’re ready to train.”

    Here’s the practical fix: make your sets earn the right to continue.

    Before you start, decide what the set is supposed to accomplish. Target muscle, range, tempo, and the main cue you need to keep it honest. Then, during the set, the job is simple: keep tension where it belongs. The moment you lose it, either adjust immediately or end the set. That’s not quitting. That’s precision.

    If you want a simple standard: stop counting sets by how many you did. Start counting sets by how many were clean enough that you’d be proud to repeat them exactly the same way next week.

    That’s how physiques get built. Fewer junk sets. More sets that actually count.

  • 2026 Arnold Sports UK – Result

    2026 Arnold Sports UK – Result

    Prejudging and Finals wrapped up today at the Arnold Sports UK, and I finished 6th in a very competitive Men’s Physique lineup.

    Thank you to everyone who followed along and supported me throughout this journey!

    (Photo credit: stephenblackphotography)

  • Saturday Summary: Precision, Patience, and Perspective

    Saturday Summary: Precision, Patience, and Perspective

    This week’s posts circled around a simple idea: real progress comes from paying attention to what’s actually happening beneath the surface.

    On Sculpting Sunday, we started with shoulder training and one of the most common mistakes in the gym — letting traps take over movements that are supposed to build the delts. Small cues, controlled weight, and better exercise choices can make the difference between simply moving weight and actually shaping the muscle.

    Training shoulders

    Motivation Monday reminded us that not all progress happens under bright lights. Some of the most important work happens quietly — focused reps, disciplined sessions, and the intention you bring to each movement.

    Shadows

    On Truth Tuesday, we addressed plateaus. What many people blame on genetics is usually something simpler: adaptation. When training becomes predictable, progress slows. Often the answer isn’t a dramatic change, but tightening the basics — execution, recovery, and smarter programming.

    Plateaus

    Midweek we stepped away from training technique and into the mental side of the sport with The Reality of Judging. Competition results don’t always match expectations, but the process stays the same: respect the judges, learn from feedback, and return to the work with clearer direction.

    Judging

    Throwback Thursday offered a reminder that discipline and balance can coexist. A cheat meal, when it’s earned and appreciated, becomes part of the rhythm of the lifestyle rather than a break from it.

    Cheat Meal

    Finally, Friday Flex brought the focus back to the gym floor. Back development doesn’t come from dramatic moments — it’s built through thousands of controlled rows, patient pulls, and consistent effort that slowly turns invisible work into visible progress.

    Back

    If there’s a theme this week, it’s this: the physique is built in the details — the muscles doing the work, the habits that shape progress, and the mindset that keeps you improving whether the spotlight is there or not.

  • Arnold Sports UK – Let’s Go

    Arnold Sports UK – Let’s Go

    The Arnold Sports UK starts today, and it’s always a bit surreal arriving at a show like this. You spend months in a very controlled routine—training, diet, recovery—and then suddenly you’re here, surrounded by athletes who’ve done the same.

    The Men’s Physique lineup is a strong one this year:

    • Joshua Atease (GBR)
    • Alessandro Cavagnola (ITA)
    • Vitor Chaves (BRA)
    • Riccardo Croci (ITA)
    • Andrei Deiu (ROU)
    • Paul Gustave (FRA)
    • Emanual Hunter (USA)
    • Benquil Marigny (USA)
    • Clarence Mcspadden (USA)
    • Nam Tran Quang (POL)
    • Tyler Smith (USA)

    Prejudging is Saturday from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM, with Finals later that evening from 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM (UK time). View the full event schedule here. The event is being streamed live here:

    https://arnoldsports.brandlive.com/Arnold-Sports-Festival-UK-2026/en

    I’ll also be at the Meet & Greet on Friday from 1:00–3:00 p.m. and again on Sunday from 12:00–2:00 p.m., so if you’re at the expo, feel free to stop by and say hello!

  • Friday Flex: Back to Work

    Friday Flex: Back to Work

    A strong back is built quietly. It’s hours of rows where you control the weight instead of jerking it, pulls where you stay patient through the contraction, and deadlifts done with intent instead of ego. Most of that work doesn’t show up day to day, and it’s easy to underestimate how much time it takes when you’re standing in front of a mirror.

    Shots like this are just a checkpoint. They tell me whether the upper back is opening up, if the mid-back is getting denser, and whether everything ties together from shoulders to hamstrings. When it does, it’s a reminder that boring consistency works — and that the stuff you repeat week after week eventually becomes visible, whether you’re looking for applause or not.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Throwback Thursday: Enjoying a Cheat Meal

    Throwback Thursday: Enjoying a Cheat Meal

    May, 2020. A proper cheat meal, enjoyed slowly and without guilt. By that point, training had already taught me something important: food tastes different when it’s earned. Not rushed, not inhaled, not used to fill a hole—just appreciated for what it is.

    Moments like this were never about excess. They were about balance. About understanding when to stay strict and when to relax the grip without losing respect for the work. The discipline didn’t disappear just because the meal was bigger. It showed up in knowing exactly when to enjoy it—and when to get back to routine the next day.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)