Here's something most fitness advice gets wrong: heavier weights don't automatically mean better results.
Research now confirms what many Pilates practitioners have long experienced — lifting lighter loads slowly, with control and intention, can produce muscle growth comparable to heavy lifting. A landmark study found that training with loads as low as 30–40% of your one-rep maximum, performed with high reps and deliberate control, triggered similar muscle development to far heavier training (Thiebaud et al., 2014). More recent work by Radaelli and colleagues (2025) reinforces this finding.
The mechanism behind this? Time under tension — and it changes everything about how you think about home workouts.
What Is Time Under Tension — and Why Does It Matter?

Time under tension refers to the total time your muscle is actively working during a set. It's not about how many reps you complete. It's about how long your muscles remain under load throughout those reps.
Picture yourself holding the bottom of a squat. At 10 seconds, the burn begins. By 20 seconds, your legs are trembling and heat is building through your thighs. That slow-mounting intensity isn't just discomfort — it's your muscles being deeply recruited in a way that a quick, bouncy squat simply can't replicate.
Research by Corradi et al. (2021) found that squat tempo directly affects muscle activation and exercise intensity. In other words, the same 10 squats can produce very different physiological demands depending on how fast or slowly you move through each rep. Slowing down isn't easier — it's often significantly harder.
Same number of reps. Very different muscular demand.
What Actually Happens When You Slow Down

1. More Muscle Fibres Are Recruited
When a muscle stays under tension for longer, your body calls on a greater proportion of available muscle fibres to sustain the effort. Research on muscle contraction duration suggests that extended time under load increases both blood flow and oxygen demand in skeletal muscle — hallmarks of genuine muscular work.
2. Metabolic Stress Rises
Sustained tension increases the metabolic demand inside the working muscle. This drives adaptation — your body responds to the challenge by building endurance capacity and, with consistent effort, strength (Mang et al., 2022).
3. Your Neuromuscular Connection Deepens
Moving slowly forces your brain and muscles to communicate more precisely. This is the neuromuscular connection that sits at the heart of Pilates-based training — and it has real structural benefits. A 2024 systematic review found that Pilates-inspired exercise positively impacts both posture and spinal health. Controlled movement isn't just safe; it's rehabilitative.
The Case for Light Resistance

There's a persistent myth that muscle tone only comes from heavy lifting. In reality, strength and definition are shaped by four factors: consistency, controlled contraction, progressive overload, and adequate recovery.
Light resistance — ankle weights, wrist weights, resistance bands — increases time under tension without adding significant stress to your joints. That makes it particularly well-suited to:
Low-impact home training
- Women returning to exercise after pregnancy, injury, or a long break
- Anyone prioritising long-term joint health alongside strength
- People building endurance and a lean, functional physique
Studies consistently show that women respond very well to moderate resistance training performed with control — building tone, endurance, and functional strength without adding unwanted bulk (Molinari et al., 2024). Adding light weights to Pilates-style movement amplifies muscular demand while keeping the fluidity and safety that makes the practice sustainable.
How to Use Tempo in Your Workouts
Tempo refers to the speed at which you move through each phase of a rep. A simple framework to start with:
- 3 seconds lowering (eccentric phase)
- 1 second pause at the end position
- 2 seconds lifting (concentric phase)
Think of it as the 3-1-2 rhythm. Count each second deliberately — "one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand" — and let that cadence become the anchor of your practice.
Most people move too quickly through their reps, using momentum instead of muscle. Slowing down exposes weakness and forces genuine engagement. It's humbling at first — and deeply effective over time.
Try this: pair slow squats with your morning coffee routine, or add controlled calf raises during a phone call. Linking movement to existing habits is one of the most reliable ways to build consistency.
A Practical Starting Point

You don't need to overhaul your routine. Choose two or three of the following movements and work through them with intentional tempo and light resistance where relevant:
Glute bridges with ankle weights
Wall sits — hold for 20–30 seconds, focus on breath
Slow squats with 3-1-2 tempo
Standing calf raises — 3 seconds up, 3 seconds down
Pilates-inspired side-lying leg lifts with ankle weights
Guidelines:
- 8–12 controlled reps per set
- 2–3 sets per exercise
- 3–4 sessions per week for consistent progress
After each session, note how your body feels — areas of soreness, growing control, and confidence.
Fewer reps done slowly and with full attention will almost always outperform a higher number rushed through poor form.
Why This Approach Is Better for Long-Term Results
Fitness culture celebrates intensity. But research suggests that up to 30% of people training in high-intensity programmes experience injuries — with rates even higher in certain group classes (Aune; Powers, 2017). Programmes that push too hard, too fast, don't just risk injury; they reliably undermine consistency, which is the single most important variable in building lasting strength.
Time under tension offers a different path. It requires no heavy equipment, no high-impact movement, and no dramatic overhaul of your lifestyle. What it does require is intention — and that's something you can bring to any session, anywhere.
Strength isn't built in one dramatic session. It's built in repeated, controlled moments of tension.
The Amp Wellbeing Approach

At Amp, we design resistance tools that complement this philosophy — beautifully made, purposefully weighted, and built to fit into your home and your life without friction. Our approach isn't about chasing intensity. It's about precision over pace, control over chaos, and sustainability over short-term effort.
Because when your tools are designed well and your method is sound, showing up consistently becomes the easiest part.
Ready to Start?
Add light resistance. Slow your tempo. Increase your time under tension.
Layer your strength — and let consistency do the rest.