We don’t have the classic bodybuilding seasons of bulking vs cutting. In hybrid calisthenics, our real seasons are: • Strength • Skills • Mobility / Flexibility (and sometimes Recovery) And here’s the key: If you change one, it affects the other two. After coaching hundreds of athletes in hybrid calisthenics, gymnastics, parkour, and ninja, this is the exact framework I use. 🧱 Season 1 — Strength Strength = muscles + progressive overload. Examples: • Push-ups → decline push-ups → one-arm push-ups • Pull-ups → weighted pull-ups • Squats → pistols • Pike push-ups → handstand push-ups Key rules: • Strength training should make your muscles very tired • Strength skills (planche, levers, HSPU) belong inside strength days • If you train strength hard, your skill quality later in the workout will drop Important distinction: • Strength skills = fail because muscles fail • Technique skills = fail because coordination or balance fails If planche is your goal: • Do planche first in the workout • Then do shoulder-focused strength work • Optional: light planche the next day (grease-the-groove style) 🎯 Season 2 — Skills (Technique Skills) Technique skills = fail because the mind-body connection fails. Examples: • Handstands • Balance work • Precision jumps • Flow • Transitions Rules for technique skills: • You can practice them almost daily • They don’t require muscle failure • Quality > volume • They don’t interfere much with strength Example: Handstand focus phase You rotate variations across days: • Pike handstands (body position) • Chest-to-wall handstands (line + endurance) • Back-to-wall handstands (balance) • Crow pose (hand balance + wrist prep) • Headstand (core + legs, wrist break) Goal: • Maximize time on the skill • Avoid burnout • Avoid bad habits • Avoid nervous-system overload During a heavy skill phase: • Strength drops to maintenance • 1–2 short strength sessions per week • Most energy goes into the skill