Two weeks without progression = deload 10% — you overshot sustainable adaptation
When capacity building fails to meet progression criteria for two consecutive weeks, reduce target by 10% to deload—you have overshot sustainable progression rate and need to consolidate at a lower level.
Why This Is a Rule
In physical training, a deload week — reducing training volume by 10-20% — is standard practice when progression stalls. The principle transfers directly to cognitive capacity building. When you fail to meet progression criteria for two consecutive weeks, you've exceeded your adaptive capacity. The system can't consolidate the current load, let alone absorb more.
Two weeks is the diagnostic threshold because one failed week might be contextual (bad sleep, stressful event, scheduling disruption). Two consecutive failed weeks indicate structural overshoot — the target exceeds sustainable capacity regardless of context.
The 10% reduction isn't punishment — it's calibration. You find the level where you can reliably perform (4/5 days, quality maintained), consolidate there, and then resume 10% weekly increments from the new base. This is slower than pushing through but produces lasting capacity gains rather than grinding-without-progress cycles.
When This Fires
- Two consecutive weeks where progression criteria (Increase capacity target by 10% per week only if quality held and you hit 4 of 5 days) weren't met
- During capacity building when you feel stuck at a plateau
- When increased targets produce declining quality or consistency
- Any training/capacity program where effort isn't producing improvement
Common Failure Mode
Pushing through the plateau: "I just need to try harder." Effort at an unsustainable level doesn't produce adaptation — it produces fatigue and aversion. The more you grind, the more the capacity building practice becomes associated with failure and frustration, which undermines motivation for future attempts. Deloading preserves the practice's positive associations by returning to a level where success is reliable.
The Protocol
When progression criteria fail for two consecutive weeks: (1) Reduce target by 10%. (2) Run the reduced target for one full week. (3) Verify: can you hit the reduced target on 4/5 days with quality maintained? (4) If yes → consolidate at this level for one additional week, then resume 10% weekly increments. (5) If no → reduce another 10% and repeat. Find the level where you can reliably succeed, then build from there.