BiggT said:just a notion on how ass backwards, and in some cases totally non-existant, most people's concepts of training are).
For the most part as we've discussed is reflects the info that is available on the news stand. They don't even have any idea stuff like this or any type of planning or programming exists - and the whole world uses it for their athletes and lifters. Eventually it's going to have to change. They can't keep people in the dark that long. I mean, there is a fucking method beyond going in the gym, blasting a bodypart, and praying (or just upping the dosage until something starts working). Understanding variables, how to manipulate them for progression, how progression is best achieved at various levels of experience - hell that progression is even necessary (most people don't even understand that, it's as if the muscle they carry has nothing to do with the loads they are subjecting themselves to in the gym and that training should revolve around more load for adaptation).
Even for those on an AAS cycle. Understanding the parameters will help them put more muscle on (holding dosage constant) and maintain their muscle coming off. Long before PCT became the norm, there was one constant. The guys who trained around big lifts and knew to cut volume and frequency in assistance work while maintaining core lifts at relatively high intensity (%1RM) under tolerable post cycle workloads are the ones who kept their muscle (or most of it) with ease even without PCT while the guys in commercial gyms were on a viscious cycle of gaining and then dropping a significant portion of muscle with no idea how or why, waiting and praying for it to stop. Yet you don't hear crap about that on any AAS board and it would really help out.
BTW Practical Programming is supposed to be out by the end of the month. At $15 for 200 pages I'm really hoping this is the book that presents this stuff clearly and ties a lot of the more advanced theory in for people. All under a good multiyear plan to use for an example, taking someone from total novice to a fairly advanced lifter. I have high hopes that the presentation of quality info and a workable example/roadmap to learn by might actually move things along. Lots of people are excited.