Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 193: Q and A, Creatine For Kids, Bosu Balls + More
Episode Date: May 16, 2022Thanks For Listening!  LEAVE A REVIEW OF THE SHOW:There is NOTHING more valuable to a podcast than leaving a written review and 5-Star Rating. Please consider taking 1-2 minutes to do that (iTunes) ...HERE. You can also leave a review on SPOTIFY!OUR PARTNERS:Legion Supplements (protein, creatine, + more!), Shop (DANNY) HERE! Get comprehensive lab analysis of the most important biomarkers for your health from our partner Marek Health HERE (save using the code "corecoaching")Get Your FREE LMNT Electrolytes HERE! Care for YOUR Gut, Heart, and Skin with SEED Symbiotic (save with “DANNY15) HERE! Put your nutrition on autopilot with our amazing partner CHOW meal prep HERE (save with code "danny")RESOURCES/COACHING: Train with Danny on His Training App HEREI am all about education and that is not limited to this podcast! Feel free to grab a FREE guide (Nutrition, Training, Macros, Etc!) HERE! Interested in Working With Coach Danny and His One-On-One Coaching Team? Click HERE!Want Coach Danny to Fix Your S*** (training, nutrition, lifestyle, etc) fill the form HERE for a chance to have your current approach reviewed live on the show. Want To Have YOUR Question Answered On an Upcoming Episode of DYNAMIC DIALOGUE? You Can Submit It HERE!Want to Support The Podcast AND Get in Better Shape? Grab a Program HERE!----SOCIAL LINKS:Follow Coach Danny on YOUTUBEFollow Coach Danny on INSTAGRAMFollow Coach Danny on TwitterFollow Coach Danny on FacebookGet More In-Depth Articles Written By Yours’ Truly HERE! Sign up for the trainer mentorship HERESupport the Show.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always, I'm your host, Danny Matrenga. And in today's episode, I'm going to be answering some of your questions. We have a variety of questions from fitness to nutrition to personal growth to education. And I'm going to be working through them today on this episode, giving you my best answers live and in real time, fielding these directly from my Instagram. So if you guys want to
ask questions specifically for the podcast, you can go to the link below in the show notes or keep
your eyes peeled on my Instagram or for my Instagram question box that I throw up on my
story there once or twice a week. And I field questions for the podcast from there all
the time. Just as a housekeeping note, things have been a little chaotic in my personal life.
I'm getting ready to officiate my best friend's wedding. And as I get closer to that, I am
finalizing the kind of last few pieces for my training studio slash physical therapy clinic.
I'm getting turf installed in the next couple weeks. I'm getting signed installed, still dealing with the city with regards to inspections and such.
But for the most part, things are trending very much in the right direction. I'm very excited
about a soft summer opening and I'm still in the middle of a moving. I'm currently recording out
of my bedroom and all of the training or sorry, not training studio, but recording studio
stuff is kind of thrown around loosely. So I do appreciate you guys bearing with me as I work my
hardest to continue to get you two episodes a week, whether that be an interview format,
we have some exciting interviews lined up, whether that be in the form of question and
answer episodes or specific topics, tips, tricks, et cetera. So lots down and coming, kind of coming
down the pipeline for me here in the next couple of weeks. And I really appreciate you guys, um,
being so, uh, you know, just kind of consistent, whether that be with interacting with me on social
media or here on the podcast, you guys are, you've been consistent, you've been patient,
and I'm going to continue to try to bring you the best information and fitness-specific stuff that I can.
Speaking of fitness-specific stuff, before we get into the questions, the app-based training programs I have, Home Heroes and Elite Physique, we launched those through the Train Heroic app last month.
It is so exciting. We've got over 100 trainees in those two app-based programs, two really cool communities where you can interact directly with me and my coaches. There's a link to access this in the show notes. You can try it
for free for a week, but it's been so cool to watch this thing grow. Four to five a week,
gym-specific training for women, female bodybuilding program, Elite Physique. That is
an amazing continuation of the female physique programs I've done, but with full-blown tutorials,
sets, reps, exercise cues,
et cetera, and home heroes you can do at home with just bands and dumbbells four days a week.
If you need form review, cueing, substitutions, again, all available right there for you in the
app. You get direct, amazing access to highly qualified coaches and myself for any questions
and comments you have. And you can still apply for one-on-one coaching at corecoachingmethod.com slash coaching if in fact it is that you need that more one-on-one tailored
help. But without further ado, guys, getting into your first question, there's two questions here,
book recs to learn more from It's Fit Ash and best books slash resources for learning about
all things fitness and nutrition from Libby.Vanostrand. And so there are a number
of good books for learning about exercise and exercise physiology, specifically things that I
think will help. I think, again, you can split exercise physiology and exercise science into
things like anatomy, to things like nutrition, right? But some of my favorites from a more perhaps textbook standpoint first are
The Science and Development of Muscle Hypertrophy by Brad Schoenfeld.
Hargraves Exercise Metabolism.
That's a textbook.
You can probably get a second edition there and probably still be fine.
Tudor Bampa's Periodization.
There's probably some newer editions there.
Those are kind of the basics.
As for books that I think are helpful, The Hungry Brain by Stéphane Guillenet really is
a wonderful, I think, book as it pertains to understanding the nuances of appetite and how
our brain and neurophysiology impacts our food decisions. Sapolsky's Why Zebras Don't Get
Ulcers, which is excellent for understanding the physiology of stress. The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation by Legion CEO Mike Matthews.
That's a very enjoyable work and take, I should say, on doing the work. I enjoyed that book quite
a bit. The Muscle and Strength Pyramids, the Nutrition Pyramids from Eric Helms, Andy Morgan, and one other author
whose name is kind of evading me right now, Andrea Valdez. That's what it is. Had to look that one
up. Those are all excellent. I really enjoy the great courses. They have a course called Nutrition
Made Clear. That's a phenomenal audio course that if you have an
audible membership, you can access for free. That's like a college undergrad nutrition course
that I think is just really, really awesome. Strength Training Anatomy by
Frederic Duvalier or Duvalier. It's French. I can never remember how it's pronounced. That
one's been around forever. That's really good. If you've followed me for a long time, you know,
I recommend anatomy coloring books,
whether that be to learn about the various soft tissues,
the bony landmarks, or even just the muscles
and how they work.
Anatomy coloring books can be a fun way
to unwind, reset, and enhance your understanding of anatomy.
And then my good friend and guest of the show,
Austin Current, partnered with DK Publishers
to make a very
illustration heavy, The Science of Strength Training is the title of the book, but it's a
very illustration heavy, in my opinion, it might be the best book if you just want to learn about
exercises and how exercises specifically kind of target muscle groups. So more of a like spin on what I would describe
as functional anatomy. That's a really, really good book. And that's from Austin Current,
good friend of the show. So those are some books that I enjoy that I think are very,
very helpful for learning the basics of exercise science, fitness, nutrition, and physiology. So
those are kind of some go-tos there for me.
This question comes from Chanel AP. She asks, what is the ideal rate of weight gain during
a building phase to achieve minimal fat gain? So I think this is very hard to do without taking
a consistent daily weight and then averaging it out, but between 1 to 1.5% of total weight gain
per month. So if you're 150 pound female,
you might be looking to gain somewhere between one and a half, right? 1.5 to maybe 2.25 pounds
a month max, 1 to 1.5% of total body weight per month max. Muscle growth is a slow process. And
so the more advanced you are, like if you were to gain a pound a month
and you've been training for 10 years, I don't think you're going to gain 12 pounds of muscle
in a year. I think you might gain four pounds, three pounds of muscle and nine pounds of fat.
But I think that 1% range, or I should say that 1% multiplier tends to work out really well
for eliminating excessive weight gain via body fat that can often happen
with overfeeding. So knowing that you're going into a planned period of overfeeding, even though,
yes, you are pairing that period of overfeeding specifically with, you know, hard progressive
training, you cannot guarantee that that overfeeding will result in exclusively the exclusive gain of muscle tissue. It's just not
possible. So to maintain the, let's say body compositional level that you're comfortable with
to not gain too much body fat, you would want that overfeeding to be such that it stimulates
muscle growth and does not have a ton of overflow. meaning like you're only eating so much as it might be,
so much as is required to optimize muscle gain or to come close to optimizing muscle gain.
So for most people, I think that's going to be between three and 600 calories above TDEE
or above total daily energy expenditure. And if you gauge your macros correctly and you track them correctly using the various nutritional tools, you have to do that. And you watch your weight trends. Your daily weigh-ins will make this almost impossible, but your weight trends. So you take your weight from the 30th, let's say of April, and that's 150 pounds. And then you multiply all 30 days of May, or you add all 30 days of May together
and divide by 30. And the average is let's say 151.5. So there's a net gain of 1.5 pounds.
That would be a very effective rate of weight gain, 1%. You probably would be doing it yourself
a service to do something like that compared to like going,
oh, I am 150 pounds on May 1st and oh, I'm 152 pounds on May 2nd. I already fucked up.
I gained over 1%. Blah, blah, blah. That's not how it works. Because remember,
those weight trends are going to be transient. So for women, what you might even do,
this is something that I think works quite well. Add up all the days that you are not
is something that I think works quite well. Add up all the days that you are not actively menstruating or going through PMS, which if you understand the luteal cycle, you've got the,
or the menstrual cycle, sorry, you've got the follicular phase, which is like the 14 days
leading up to ovulation, which is right there in the middle. And then you have the luteal phase,
which tends to be, you know, it contains PMS in the first few days of that follicular phase or actually
menstruation.
So you've got days like, let's say you have a menstruation for usually last three days.
So after your last day, when your period has ended, you could essentially start, you know,
kind of adding all those days together up until PMS hits, because those would be the
weeks or days and weeks in which I think the female physiology
and the hormonal fluctuations that can be, let's call it pretty aggressive for some,
might skew the data. And while removing that will of course manipulate the data,
it might manipulate the data such that we get a more accurate representation of lean versus fat
mass as opposed to say something like water retention, right? So
that's a very effective way you might go about doing that. This question comes from Garrett
Grill. And Garrett's question is, is too much olive oil bad? So I think this is a good question.
I think just to keep it simple, as far as dietary fats fats are concerned and as far as cooking fats and oils are concerned i think olive oil has a universally well-earned and well-respected status
as being a good cooking oil maybe not for taste for all dishes but a good element for heating, cooking food. It's also very popular in things like salad dressings.
So if you were to compare it to some of the potential other options, such as maybe canola oil,
rapeseed oil, butter, vegetable oil, right? I think most people would say, well, I think of those fats,
olive oil is the healthiest of those fats because olive oil is a monounsaturated fat.
It has the potential to help lower your bad or LDL cholesterols. And I say cholesterols because
they're subtypes, but your LDL cholesterol. And additionally, right? Like we know that just as a plant compound,
olives have antioxidants and anti-inflammatory properties. So extra virgin olive oil is often
thought to be quite nutritious and might help, you know, to curtail excessive inflammation via
its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. I don't think it's the miracle oil that many people think it is,
right? You have regularly highly processed olive oils that might lose some of these chemical
benefits, these kind of polyphenol plant specific benefits. So dark bottled extra virgin olive oil
tends to be a good oil choice. But yes, you can have too much as is the case with butter,
as is the case with ghee, as is the case with ghee,
as is the case with canola oil, as is the case with vegetable oil, as is the case with coconut
oil. Because most fats and oils are going to be used in things like cooking and dressings and
other stuff, people oftentimes don't have a great gauge for how calorically dense these things
really are. But remember, they're almost all fat,
almost exclusively fat. So nine calories per gram. So all oils, butters, et cetera,
can add up calorically very quickly. And this can become problematic for body fat reduction.
And become problematic for adiposity. So if you're trying to lose weight or just trying to
maintain your weight and not gain any more, too much of any oil could be bad, even if in fact that oil is high in antioxidants
and potentially anti-inflammatory and potentially very tasty.
As an Italian whose father grew olives on property, like I grew up on a big ranch that
my dad had in a small town in Northern California, and he grew tons of grapes and he grew tons
of olives.
And olives are super yummy.
They're super good.
They're a fixture in Italian cooking.
So I love olives and I love olive oil,
but too much of it can lead to excessive body fat gain
just via the simple mechanism of it being very high in fat.
It's very high in calories
because it's exclusively fat for the most part.
I like this question.
It comes from Karina Zelelyeva, and she asks,
what sport can I do that will help recovery from the gym? So I think what we would probably want
to stay away from are sports that have extremely high explosive demands, or they ask you to move
in planes of motion at speeds that require either learning how to do it,
or you haven't done it in a while, or there's a large eccentric demand. So there's a huge
potential for soreness. So for example, if you do not regularly play flag football or soccer,
or something that is played on grass, and you don't normally move in the frontal or transverse
plane, and you don't normally engage with surfaces like grass, and you don't normally move in the frontal or transverse plane, and you don't normally engage with surfaces like grass,
and you don't normally wear footwear that is something spiked like a cleat,
and you go out and you play two hours of that sport on a novel surface
with extremely poor, let's call it extremely seldomly used
or seldomly used motor patterns, meaning like,
oh, I haven't played in years.
The likelihood of those sports
or activities causing soreness that might inhibit your ability to train hard is quite high. The less
often you do something, the less often you do something on a specific surface, the less often
you move in a specific plane, the more often it is that when you do that for the first time in a
while, it's going to shock the system for lack of a better term, and it can result in some soreness. And that right there might disqualify a large majority
of options. Things that I find tend to work well tend to not have much eccentric demand
or not much demand at all. So hiking or walking or jogging, which oftentimes aren't necessarily
sports when we think about a list of sports, swimming are probably your best
options. As far as sports with a low demand, I love golf because even though there is quite a
bit of explosive power reserved for swinging the actual club, I do think that golf as a sport is
extremely, extremely low. Let's call it extremely easy to recover from and low fatigue for most
people. I'm also a very, very big fan of just shooting the basketball around, which I know,
again, isn't the same as playing basketball. Another one that's become quite popular that I
think is probably a little less fatiguing than many is something like pickleball, assuming you
don't go balls to the wall or all out.
But in truth, most sports are going to get in the way or interfere with your ability to recover
from assistance training because they're going to require some recovery for like on their own.
So what you might do is you might just cut a training session off because I find many people
train, you know, maybe more than they should. I think most people
should be around four to five days. So if you're training like six days a week, just cut one of
those out and throw a day in for the sport and really focus on recovery. But it can be a little
tricky. Taking a little break from the action here to tell you about our amazing partner,
Seed. Seed makes the best probiotic supplement on the market, bar none. I'm very
confident with that because I think that the probiotic space and the gut health space in
general is filled with people who have no idea what they're talking about or who are looking
to make a buck. This isn't to say your gut health isn't important. In fact, it's probably one of the
most important and most intriguing developments we have seen in modern medicine
and modern physiology. Our relationship with our guts is critical. It's crucial. And taking care
of that by eating a lot of different plants, a lot of different fruits and vegetables,
getting a diverse array of fiber and resistant starches can go a long way, but so can supplementing
with a high quality probiotic. Seed makes the best probiotic on the
market with 53.6 billion active fluorescent units. These are organisms that are going to be alive
and helping transfer a variety of different benefits to the human host. All these things
are actually proven to work in humans. These strains work in humans, not rodents. Seed is not
cheaping out here by providing you with any random strain. They're
providing you with strains that help with digestive health, gut immunity, gut barrier
integrity, dermatological health, cardiovascular health, micronutrient synthesis, as well as many
other things. They're vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, soy-free, nut-free, shellfish-free.
So very friendly for those of you who may have a variety of different allergies and who are
looking for a supplement you can take that can enhance a variety of different things.
I have a very, very good track record over many, many years of having to deal with things like
eczema and having to deal with things like psoriasis on occasion, especially when the
weather changes. And I swear to you, since I started taking seed, I have noticed substantially
less of that. And there's four strains included in seed shown
to help with things like atopic dermatitis. So there you go. Not to mention the plethora of
strains for the health of your gut. If you're looking to take your gut health to the next level,
you can go to seed.com. Subscribe for their daily symbiotic. You can take one or two a day. You can
share it with a partner. Sometimes you can do that. But it goes a long way.
It's the best probiotic supplement on the market.
I absolutely love it.
And you can use the code DANNY15 to save.
Back to the show.
What's going on, guys?
Taking a break from this episode to tell you a little bit about my coaching company,
Core Coaching Method.
More specifically, our app-based training.
We partnered with Train Heroic to bring
app-based training to you using the best technology and best user interface possible.
You can join either my Home Heroes team, or you can train from home with bands and dumbbells,
or Elite Physique, which is a female bodybuilding-focused program where you can train
at the gym with equipments designed specifically to help you develop strength, as well as the glutes,
hamstrings, quads, and back. I have more teams coming planned for a
variety of different fitness levels. But what's cool about this is when you join these programs,
you get programming that's updated every single week, the sets to do, the reps to do,
exercise tutorials filmed by me with me and my team. So you'll get my exact coaching expertise
as to how to perform the movement, whether you're training at home or you're training in the gym. And again,
these teams are somewhat specific. So you'll find other members of those communities looking to
pursue similar goals at similar fitness levels. You can chat, ask questions, upload form for form
review, ask for substitutions. It's a really cool training community and you can try it completely free for seven days. Just click the link in the podcast description below. Can't wait to see you in the
core coaching collective, my app-based training community. Back to the show. What's going on,
guys? Taking a break from the show to tell you about our amazing partners over at Elemental Labs.
amazing partners over at Elemental Labs. Elemental Labs makes a flagship electrolyte product known as LMNT Recharge. Recharge is amazing. It's got bioavailable forms of sodium, potassium,
and magnesium, which can really help you train, contract your tissues, and get hydrated. I love
having it in the morning before my fasted training because oftentimes I wake up without an appetite,
but I want something in my stomach so I'm not flat, I can get a pump, and potassium. And while if you have
high blood pressure, you might not necessarily be a candidate for electrolyte supplementation,
many athletes and active adults need more salt and more electrolytes in their diet than they
currently get, especially if they sweat, live in warm climates, or humid climates. I found a bunch
of different ways to use my recharge, but like I said, I love using it before and during my training,
whenever I do something active outside or my sweat rate increases, or when I'm in the sauna.
And you can actually try it completely for free. All their best flavors that are
totally free of sugar have only 10 calories. They're sweetened naturally, and they come in
amazing flavors like raspberry salt, orange salt, citrus salt. My favorite is the mango habanero or mango chili and the leban habanero,
which I take in the sauna. There's flavors for everybody and you can check them out by going to
drink elementy slash coach Danny. They'll send you every single flavor in an individual packet.
You can try them out completely free. Just pay shipping drink elementy.com slash coach Danny.
Get your sample pack today completely for free.
Just pay shipping.
Back to the show.
Okay, so this one comes from at Optimist Perch
and they ask any articles on cholesterol
so that you can point to science has changed around it.
So there's a great fitness podcast called the,
or I shouldn't say fitness podcast,
it is a health and fitness podcast called the
Barbell Medicine Podcast. And about two months ago, they had a episode or tandem of episodes
that focused and emphasized the kind of nuances of cholesterol, cholesterol metabolism,
cholesterol and related medications, complications, very, very well-rounded kind of look at cholesterol
and the science around how lifestyle, food and medication and all of those various interplays
kind of come together. And that was an amazing resource, like two thumbs up, huge claps,
loved it. So just go to the Googler, type in barbell medicine cholesterol, give those a listen.
I think you'll be very
pleased. I learned a tremendous amount from those episodes or episode. It was either one long one
split in half or one long one that I split in half, but really, really good. I learned a lot
and I thought it was very nuanced and I thought it was communicated really well, even for somebody
like myself, who is what I would describe as like entry-level science or
data literate. Like my ability to understand the higher levels of science and data is limited just
by virtue of, you know, not having a PhD and not having been particularly pressed to learn those
skills. So to have somebody who's a very effective science communicator explain the science behind cholesterol, but also the data that
we have in front of us as it pertains to how a diet and lifestyle and medication can influence
cholesterol was really, really helpful. And if you're in the same boat as me, that would be a
great place to start. Okay. This comes from Flower Sammy. She asks, casein protein, is it good? So I think when we talk about casein protein,
we need to first talk about where it comes from. And so understand that dairy protein is kind of
the mother protein or milk protein for both whey and casein. Okay. So casein is actually the protein in milk that gives it its white color.
Cow's milk is about 80% casein protein. And when you start using cow's milk to make other products,
whether that be cheeses, whether that be yogurts, whether that be actual forms of filtered milk right milk is processed in some capacity
and so usually when you make cheese right i'm sure you guys have heard the little miss muffet
right nursery rhyme little miss muffet sat on her tuffet eating her curds and whey so a lot of people
just have said that and like over the years never really thought okay what are curds and whey. So a lot of people just have said that and like over the years never really
thought, okay, what are curds and whey? I remember when I heard that, I had no idea,
no idea that the whey from that nursery rhyme was the same whey that's in protein.
And so basically what happens when you make cheese is you remove whey protein from the milk protein, right? Whey being the liquid byproduct
of the curdling process. And once you get curdled milk, you're mostly left with casein protein,
like cottage cheese is like almost exclusively casein protein. And so, you know, these are just
two different forms of dairy protein that digest and are assimilated at
mildly different rates.
It's for this reason that whey protein has become very popular for post-workouts because
it is dissolved and absorbed quite quickly.
And casein has become very popular or marketed as such as being better before bed because
it is higher in the slower digesting casein peptides.
So you end up in a situation where before bed, you take your casein and digest more slowly.
Theoretically, you have more protein available throughout the evening and you take your whey
post-workout because it dissolves faster. And then you get 30 years of marketing behind that.
And you have people asking, should they take casein protein? And the answer to the question, long story short, it's fine to take.
And you should consider taking it if you tolerate dairy proteins well.
And you'd like to get more protein in your diet that doesn't digest as fast as whey.
I don't take casein protein.
I have not for a while.
I prefer whey.
And if I want to slow down the rate at which my whey digests, I can incorporate fats such
as peanut butter or almond butter.
I do think that casein is totally fine and probably has a similar safety profile to whey.
And I've also found that it's extremely good for baking.
So if you're somebody who likes to bake protein-rich snacks, I have found that casein, much more so than whey, lends itself better to baking.
that casein, much more so than whey, lends itself better to baking. So if you are somebody who's going to be baking with protein, casein might be beneficial to have around. This one comes from
Dane Wakawiak. He says, what are your thoughts on creatine for a 13 or 14 year old who's been
working out for two plus years? So I did record an episode with Dr. Darren Kandow of the University of Regina
out in Canada, specifically about all things creatine. And we did talk about this. That's
episode 178. And I strongly recommend checking that out because we cover this and then some.
That being said, I do think for a 13 to 14 year old who's lifting for two plus years and who has
a pretty nutritious diet, the addition of a creatine supplementation
doesn't come across as a red flag. For a healthy young adult, I think creatine supplementation is
probably fine. If I could use myself as an example, again, not particularly scientific,
but I started taking creatine around 16, 17, and I have not noticed any adverse side effects throughout the 11 plus years.
I have been supplementing with creatine almost every day. So for the most part,
I think it's probably okay. But as a parent of a 13 to 14 year old, you know, you're going to
ultimately have to guide them on this decision-making process. And I think it might be a very good way for you
to kind of communicate the importance of doing one's research prior to supplementing.
And so my parents wouldn't really cross-check any of the shit that I wanted to take. And this was
back in the day where you could buy pretty much anything you wanted at GNC short of steroids.
You can even go to the back and buy pro- buy pro hormones. Thankfully, there was some regulation around that by the time I finally started buying supplements. But in the
late 2000s to early 2010s, the supplement industry was the Wild West. And I think what could be a
really effective tool for a parent who has a fitness-focused young adult in the house,
whether they be a male or a female, who's interested in taking nutritional supplements.
And I wish my parents had done something like this. And again, this might depend on the
relationship you have with your child, but say, hey, I understand that you want to take this
supplement and I want to help you on your health fitness performance journey. That being said,
I'd like you to provide succinctly for me some, let's say, not evidence, but some resources as to why this supplement is safe for
a young adult. Can you compile some resources for me that say this is safe to take for a young
adult? Challenge them and work with them. I think it could be a very effective way to educate them
on not just the ability to research something because anybody can cherry pick,
but also being like, Hey, you know, you want to take that. You got to look into it a little more.
You want to make sure you're making a good decision. And as your parent, I want to help
enable you to do that. So that would be how I'd approach that. But overall, I think it's more
than safe. You could definitely go with it, but make them work for it. Um, this last question
comes from Julia Saka. She says, what are my thoughts on a Bosu ball workouts?
And I actually think if you have been training for a number of years, you've seen Bosu balls get used incorrectly in the gym setting. A lot of people love to have people stand on top of
Bosu balls to add a, what they think is a balance element to exercises. Um, and I think that's
probably going to be okay for most people. It's probably not a
dangerous thing. More often than not, I would say that what you're really just doing is making the
exercise you're doing on the BOSU ball less effective by standing on the BOSU ball, but it's
not bad or dangerous for most people, assuming you have the stability to stay on top of it. But
all the exercises that
you're doing standing on a BOSU ball, I think could be removed. I do like to see some athletes
using it as a proprioceptive tool. Like I've seen Saints running back Alvin Kamara, who I think is
quite possibly the example of elite contact balance at the NFL level, the ability to
take contact while still maintaining
balance and being able to redirect opposing forces into movement in another direction.
Meaning if you take a hit, do you fall down or do you maintain your balance and actually use that
hit to propel you in a novel direction, uh, you know, and pick up extra yards. And Alvin Kamara
I've seen for many years trains using that that tool. Now, he is a freak
athlete, elite high-level athlete with an unbelievable skill set with regards to maintaining
his balance. Do I think that a lot of sports trainers overvalue or oversell the benefits of
BOSU ball training? Yes. Do I think there are some perhaps nuanced, creative ways to use it in sports
training? Sure. My favorite application for it, and I know this sounds really basic, it's a nice dome.
So I can do sit-ups over it, contouring it to my low back and get a crazy crunch out
of my rectus abdominis.
Rectus abdominis.
Gosh, can you tell it's Friday?
I also like turning it over, which would be domed side down
and doing planks on it or things like potty saws or stir the pot regressions for clients if they
don't have access to a Swiss ball. I think you can also use it with a compressionary, if that's
even a real word, component where you pull down into it or push down into it. I know the man who invented it, David Dweck, uh, David Weck
is kind of a big proponent of using it in that capacity. And sure, it's been bastardized for
many years and used in an overly creative fashion, but I think, uh, there's a use for it. And that's
why I keep one in the studio, but I don't use it the way you might think. All right, guys,
that will do it for today's episode. I want to thank you so much for tuning in. If you haven't yet, leave the show a rating on iTunes, Spotify. Five stars tends to be best.
I'm not going to pull your leg and force you to leave a five-star review, but literally,
if it takes one to two minutes, it would make a huge difference for me if you have that time to
leave a honest, slightly smaller than average written review. It doesn't have to be huge. It
can just be three to four sentences about what you enjoy about the show. Hopefully I can borrow from that to continue to
make it better and see what I'm doing right and see where I can improve. Thank you again for
listening and I'll catch you on the next one.