I seem to go through cycles where I just get lazy for a few months.
I still practice, but not as often and I don’t train hard.
My best training routine was 3 days training, 1-2 days off for 4 to maybe 6 weeks, with a week off then start over.
I would do my hardest days first, and scale down so the third day was about 70 of the first day.
I got the best result on that program…however, I was also using a training wine then, and it was one of those super strong ones that you only take once every 3 days. Which is why I did my hardest workout the first day, when the effect was at it’s full strength, and then by day 3 my workout was what it would be with no herbs in my system.
Given the fact that the Training wine allowed me to train harder, longer, and sped recovery times I am not sure how much of my above average results were form that, or the schedule.
Maybe without the training wine, training that hard 3 days straight would burn me out.
My Daughter’s gymnastics coach allways scheduled recovery days. She never trained them more than 2 days in a row without a day off, up untill they were much higher level athletes like approaching Elite level. Her most advanced Athletes trained 5 days a week.
The Old Chinese training method is to train every day, but not to exceed 70% of your ability. The Modern is to train much harder, but to push to more like 98% of your abilities and take recovery time in between.
So to answer the question, I’d have to ask “How hard do you push yourself during a training session?”