Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 194: My 8 Most Embarassing Fitness Mistakes
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Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. This is episode 195 and I'm your host Danny Matrenga.
Today I'm going to be sharing with you eight of the more what I would describe as embarrassing fitness mistakes I have made over the years. We're going to make a kind of trip
down memory lane, if you will, and I will revisit eight things that I have done, not so that I can
just poke fun at myself, but also hopefully so that you can learn the ways in which I've refined
my process and reduced the number of mistakes I'm making now as somebody who's substantially more educated
with regards to health, fitness, nutrition, programming, etc. So at the age of 27, I have a
much better understanding of how these things work than I did at 17. So many of these things that
we'll go over today are mistakes that I have made across a 10-year lifting career. So lots of things
I think that you can learn from
here, lots of opportunity to grow and potentially avoid some of the mistakes I've made, in addition
to the fact that I think sharing these things will be quite humorous. While there's a lesson
in almost each and every one of these mistakes, some of them are, I think, objectively somewhat
funny or silly. So if you're just a fitness enthusiast, you should get a kick out of these.
Starting off with the first fitness mistake I made, this was perhaps what drew me into
fitness, not necessarily in the long term, but in the short term, one of the elements
of the fitness industry I found most exciting was supplements.
fitness industry I found most exciting was supplements. And very early on in my career lifting weights, I took a lot of supplements, a lot more than I take now. There weren't evidence
based fitness supplement companies out there like Legion. The probiotic space wasn't around.
The electrolyte space wasn't really around when I started working out. And I
say that because most of what I take now is just electrolytes daily, seed probiotic daily, and some
whey, pre-workout, creatine, and multivitamin from Legion. A very simplified supplement arsenal at
this point in my career. But when I first got started, supplements were the name of
the game. It was where the money was at. It was so fun, so cool. And I was spending in high school
every dollar of disposable income I had from doing random chores, miscellaneous tasks, anything that
I could to do to earn money in a small town, whether that was helping somebody move, mowing
lawns, weed whacking, you name it. I was spending every penny I could on supplements, but not just
supplements that I felt were beneficial like pre-workout creatine and whey protein. I used
to get excited about buying supplements that were new. I would go on bodybuilding.com every single day, multiple times a day, whether it was on my phone or the library at the schools,
the computer in the school library and look up their top 50 supplements and see if there was
anything new, exciting, or cool that I hadn't taken yet. And even at this point in my career,
lifting, having been doing it for between like probably at that point a year, maybe two, I had a decent idea that a lot of this stuff
didn't work, but I was so in denial about it. I wanted it to work. I liked collecting the
supplements. I liked the packaging of the supplements. And so I tried everything from
fat burners to BCAAs to EAAs to every type of creatine and form of creatine you
can imagine to every natural test boosting product over the market to every insane, crazy
pre-workout imaginable. And I loved putting the bottles up on my shelf. I was looking through my
phone the other day and I found photos from like 2014 or 13 and I saw the supplement shelf. I was looking through my phone the other day and I found photos from like 2014 or 13 and
I saw the supplement shelf that I had erected in my home, in my bedroom, like a literal shrine
with all of these shiny packages. And it was interesting to me because I had almost an
epiphany moment where I said, oh my gosh, to the uninitiated young or younger
consumer, the appeal of these shiny bottles, these fascinating label claims, these incredible
influencers. Back then, this was kind of before social media influencing was huge. This was like
before discount codes. This was like when supplement companies would find high-level
athletes and high- level bodybuilders to
represent their brands online, but more specifically in magazines. So like I would have magazine
cutouts of like the bodybuilders that I thought were cool and keeping like all my bodybuilding
magazines, all my cutouts, all my supplements in like one shrine area of my room. And so I was
spending a ton of money on shit that, in truth,
wasn't helping me whatsoever.
If I could go back and redo all of that,
I would take and spend substantially less on supplements,
and I would definitely have gone back and gotten a personal trainer.
We'll get to some of the hilarious training-specific mistakes
that I made over the years,
because I think you guys can learn a lot from that as well. But from an opportunity cost standpoint, this one went first because I think
it was my largest regret, given that if I had simply just not spent that money on supplements
and spent it on something that was a little bit more likely to help generate results, whether that
be a coach, whether that be education, or just saving it. I think that
would have been in a lot better place. So that was probably the most embarrassing supplement-specific
mistake I made, which was spending multiple hundreds of dollars a month on stuff so that I
could collect it, display it, try it, see what it did. I was so inquisitive, but it really ended up
burning a hole through my pocket and I didn't get much out of it.
The second most embarrassing mistake I make, this is something that I think back on all the time.
I thought it was relatively funny that I did this. And I don't know where I got this idea.
But again, when I started working out, I literally went to the gym and just tried to figure it out. This was at the very infancy of YouTube fitness and social media. And like, there weren't too many people making good content at
this time. There were a few people who were making content at the, uh, that they're bigger now. Sure.
But there were a few people that were making relatively good content, uh, educational pieces
of content that would somewhat guide me. But I remember starting
every single workout. So this is the second mistake is starting every single workout
with isolated arm supersets. And so this is like so, so funny to me because it's very much the
opposite of how one might intelligently design and program today, and that you would probably start with
compound movements instead of isolation movements. And you might not necessarily start with a
superset of isolation movements for small muscles that will then be asked to come to the party in
five minutes. But I would literally start every single workout, even if it was going to have legs
featured in the workout. That's another thing I didn't
think I needed to train legs because I already was playing so many sports. But I would start
with hammer curls, supersetted with overhead dumbbell tricep extensions, doing a triple drop
set of 35 curls to 35 overhead extension, 25s all the way down to 15, supersetting between those two.
And that single superset, starting every workout with that, totally trashed my elbows. It was just
too much volume on the elbows and too many inefficient exercise choices to then go into
like what I would almost always do second, which was barbell bench press. So I would destroy my fucking elbow stability and the muscles
that were responsible for creating stability around the elbow joint with tons of volume.
And then I'd go bench with my hypermobile elbows and hyperextend everything. And I would even start
like I wanted to get as many reps of 225 as possible. So I even like went through a phase
where I would put 225 on the bar to start because
I had this brilliant idea that I was getting fatigued working up to 225. So just really
unintelligent program design, probably the second biggest mistake I made. Thankfully, when you're
young and you're resilient, you can kind of get through that. And still to this day, like I have
some elbow stuff that lingers, but it's gotten a lot better. And I've learned from that. Uh, the third one,
and, and this one I laugh at a lot was just the general decision to pair exercises in ways that
I thought were cool, fun, creative. Uh, and in thinking back on it now like it didn't make any sense but like an example is like i would
pair incline barbell press with incline dumbbell fly oh two inclines or i perform a super set of
decline dumbbell press with incline dumbbell flies oh they're opposites i do the decline
press with the incline fly. Or I would do
something super stupid and do a tri-set of incline machine bench press with flat barbell press and
decline chest dumbbell press. I did incline flat and decline, all presses, all part of one super
set. There's no muscle fiber in my pecs that won't be punished from this. And I ended up just doing
way too much junk volume that didn't really get me a whole lot of anywhere. And this stuff did not
just stop there like at all. Like I would do 21s on every fucking exercise imaginable. So I was
originally taught 21s when I was probably 17 as using an easy bar and doing a partial rep curl from the bottom to the mid range
do seven times doing seven reps of mid range to shorten position and then seven full reps.
So if you're driving or trying to visualize this, hold an easy bar, curl the weight from your
lengthened position where your arms are all the way long halfway up
seven times, then hold in that halfway position where elbows are at 90 degrees, curl from halfway
to all the way seven times, and then do seven full reps for a total of 21 reps, seven of which are
done half bottom to top or bottom to mid, seven of which are done mid to top and then seven full.
And so that was like some super bro-y,
hand it down wisdom of like getting a sick arm pump. You do 21s. And I was like, okay, well,
what if I did 21 lat pull downs where I did seven wide, seven in the middle and seven close,
or I did 21s on pushups where I do seven wide, seven in the middle and seven close.
Like I would find a way to apply these kind of silly principles to anything so that I
could kind of, in my opinion, just play with it and explore it.
But also I think I have a little bit of young lifter ADHD.
I was a kid in a candy shop, if you will, and I didn't want to leave any stone unturned.
So these workouts often got long, but I suppose mistake
number three, without a doubt, was consistently looking for opportunities to make workouts fun,
hellacious, creative, unique, in exchange for productive. Had I just been focused on putting
more weight on the bar on a handful of simplified lifts and really just getting better at those, I think I would have made a lot more progress earlier on in my training career. But the good news is making these mistakes really, really helped me, I think, have more empathy for clients and better understand some of the mistakes that other people make.
have more empathy for clients and better understand some of the mistakes that other people make.
The fourth mistake, this is more of a nutrition one, was cooking food and not eating it.
So I would religiously prepare my meals every single weekend, chicken on the George Foreman grill, steamed broccoli, and rice. And I would make 14 Tupperwares, one for two for every day that I would
pair with a standard breakfast. So my breakfast would be like a protein shake in the morning.
After workout, I'd have like toast and eggs. And then I would prepare two meals of chicken,
rice, and broccoli that I would take with me to school. Cause that's what I was told
I shouldn't be doing by the bodybuilders. That's what
I should be doing. I should be eating that diet. Now, when you pair that with the amount of exercise
activity I had for sports and lifting, absolutely under eating. There's no way in hell you'll ever
convince me that I was not straight up in like full blown bonafide starvation status. Like I was shredded to a bone. I had good
muscularity by virtue of being young and hyper responsive. But what I would do is I would
regularly prepare these foods in shitty little Tupperware is what I could afford at the time
where they wouldn't really hold well and they wouldn't make it past Wednesday before they
started. Like the chicken just got stiff as a board. And so I just wasn't fucking eating.
And I was training hard. I was practicing sports like baseball, basketball, football, and I wasn't
eating. And I wasn't allowing myself to eat foods that albeit weren't healthy, like pizza,
french fries, hamburgers, what my friends were eating, right? Because I had this notion that
those foods were quote unquote bad. But what I was really doing was I was living in a chronically malnourished,
underfed state with tons of physical activity
and really missing out on the opportunity to build a lot of muscle.
It's unfortunate.
I still, when I started high school, was about 130 pounds.
When I graduated, I was about 170 pounds.
But I bet I could have been closer to 180 or 190,
which is a little bit closer to where
I'm at now. I run between 185 and 195 pounds, but I was eating like an idiot. I was training really
hard like an idiot, but I wasn't giving my body anything to fuel itself. And so additionally,
like I spent a good chunk of my mid to late teenager sick all the time. Why am I so sick? Why do I get a cold
all the time? I was getting colds all the time because I was so overworked. I was so malnourished.
I'm sure my immune system had nothing to, you know, I didn't really have anything to work with.
So like that mistake was orthorexic eating patterns, being obsessed with eating clean
foods, not allowing myself to enjoy my youth and the foods that my friends were around, and then preparing foods that could have been nutritious and helpful,
but not fucking eating them because they tasted gross because I couldn't cook worth of shit.
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Number five, this came a little bit later in my training career, but it was skipping,
running from, or bashing on cardio. So in high school, I had a basketball coach in particular, who really enjoyed conditioning as a means of like punishing or
just kind of ingraining hardcore work ethic into children. And I don't know if that was
ultimately his goal. When I look back at it in hindsight, I think like, okay, I'm really glad
I had to deal with this individual because 16, 17, year old, Danny was like petrified of this guy.
He was so scary. He was tall. He was bald. He was short. He didn't say short, like in that he
didn't say much. He was actually quite tall, but didn't have much to say. Just looked at you,
stared at you and made you run like crazy. And some of the conditioning workouts that we did
were absolutely absurd. Like I grew up in an area where it would regularly be between 90 and
105 degrees during the summer months, fall months when school started. So into September, August,
all of that stuff. And he would make us go out to the track every Tuesday and Thursday for basketball.
And you think like, okay, track and like we did more conditioning than the cross country team,
but we would go out to a dusty old track. He would draw a line in the dirt,
and he would make us run between 8 and 12 400-meter sprints.
Each sprint had to either tie or beat the subsequent time,
which, if you think about it, is fucking stupid
because you will see a precipitous drop-off
in what you're capable of doing with each
400 meter sprint it is the hardest like aerobic slash mostly anaerobic activity you can do
like you're sprinting 400 meters it's like as far as you can sprint before you have to kind of shift
down to being more uh aerobic in how you metabolize fuel like you literally can sprint for about 400
meters and then you're going to see the drop off. He would have us do between eight and 12 of these motherfuckers. And you know,
you got 14 guys on a basketball team. So you got 14 opportunities to tie or beat your last
time every round. And of course, after three or four rounds, everybody's missing because they
have no juice left. So he would count those as what he would describe a plus one. So each round we'd
get between eight and 10 plus ones from guys not meeting or beating their time. Interestingly
enough, then he would have us run 200s, 200 meter sprints, about 10 to 12 of those. And the same
thing would happen. People weren't able to tie or beat their last time. So you ended up in a situation where you had like plus 60, plus 70, 70 to 80 individual instances in which people didn't tie or beat
their last times over these 400 and 200 yard meter sprints. And so what did we do with those?
If it was plus 85, that meant you ran up and down the bleachers 85 times. All this to say,
I developed a relationship with aerobic exercise
that was pretty negative. I looked at it as purely for punishment. And the minute I finished playing
sports in high school, I took about two years off of not only playing basketball specifically,
but doing any kind of cardiovascular exercise. And I felt the difference when I started doing
cardio again in a more positive and holistic light. It did really help my health. And I felt the difference when I started doing cardio again in a more positive and, you
know, holistic light. It did really help my health. And I still had a substantial amount of like
aerobic endurance and mental toughness to be able to stick with it. But I skipped it for about two
or three years because I got punished with it. And I really kind of developed a love hate relationship
love in that, like, I like how it feels, but hate in that I didn't know how to do
it in a way that wasn't punishing my body. And it would have always been used as a punishment by
people who were introducing exercise to me in my influential younger years. So all this to say,
like, how you use something and how something is presented to you can really impact how you view
it over the course of your life. And so if you have kids or you are a coach, think about this as you introduce various things, whether it's weights, nutrition,
cardiovascular exercise, right? Like using it as punishment isn't optimal, in my opinion,
for getting somebody to stick with it in the long term. And when we talk about youth sports,
none of these kids are going pro, very few are going pro, if any, very few are even going to
get to play at a collegiate level that will support
their academic goals, meaning they'll get a scholarship so that they can go to school for
free. So knowing that most kids won't even come close to either of those, like your job shouldn't
be to punish them with exercise so that they can take it academically to the next level. It should
be to use sport as a way to teach, you know, things like teamwork, work ethic, getting outside of yourself. And again, I also think it's
a good foundational way to build fitness and a good relationship with fitness if you do it right.
The sixth one was, and this one I've talked about ad nauseum on the podcast, is an over-reliance on
hardcore stimulants. And I'm not just talking about caffeine. In fact, the first pre-workout I
ever took was Jack 3D, which had a modest amount of caffeine in it, but it had 1,3-dimethylamylamine,
which was an amphetamine. So I was taking two to three scoops of caffeine and amphetamine
to the tune of about 400 milligrams of caffeine paired with amphetamine almost every day to work out as a young adult.
I did not need that level of stimulant. And that had very tangible and noticeable deleterious
effects on my mood. It completely killed my ability to get an erection at the age of 17.
I was taking Driven Sports Craze at the time, which had another amphetamine memetic in
there. And after like four days of taking that, I literally could no longer get an erection.
This was something at the time that was referred to anecdotally on the internet as stim dick.
And so what was my solution at that point? It was to buy horny goat weed and tribulus, which are
supposedly at that time were supposed to be testosterone boosting herbs.
Really, all they are are just a whole lot of junk.
And so I took those thinking that the answer to a stimulant and a supplement making my erectile quality poor was more supplements.
And in fact, all I had to do was stop taking that.
supplements. And in fact, all I had to do was stop taking that. But I remember at that point,
I was in an intimate relationship, which many high school students can end up doing. I'm not recommending that for anybody, but I remember being like, what the heck? I can't have sex
anymore because something is wrong with my actual penis and I'm entirely unaware of how to fix it.
And I'm not going to tell my parents about it.
So my solution was to just get back on the fucking internet.
And oh my goodness gracious, the pathways you fall down to.
So the point being, I became excessively reliant on stimulants and caffeine.
And I weaned myself off substantially over the next several years to
the point now where I usually don't even take pre-workout that contains caffeine at all. I
usually have one or two espresso shots in the morning at the studio where I see my clients
or in my home office. And that's that. But I've learned a lot from overdoing it on the stimulants.
It was fucking with my sleep. It was fucking with my mood. And it was even fucking with my libido
when these products were legally allowed to contain stimulants that thankfully they're not
containing as much anymore. The seventh mistake was too much density, meaning I was trying to
fit too many sets and reps and too much duration into each session. So my sessions were actually
too long. Now my sessions in the gym are between 45 and an hour and a half, 45 minutes and an hour and a half. And I find that that works
really well. When I first started training, I needed two to three hour sessions or I wasn't
satisfied. And that was very unproductive. So what I have found is that work of higher quality
is better than work for work's sake, especially if that work for work's sake is unintentional and it's not close to failure and it's not done with good technique.
And so I've learned quite a bit from that. And I think for most people, 45 to 90 minutes is the
sweet spot. And the eighth and most perhaps embarrassing mistake of all, because it's
something that I so regularly speak out against now because it's a mistake that I think held me
back more than all of these, was working out six to seven days a week because it's a mistake that I think held me back more than all
of these, was working out six to seven days a week. I used to think that I needed to go to the
gym every single day and I would get tremendous anxiety and tremendous frustration. If I didn't,
I would have incredibly negative self-talk. I would feel as though I was slipping back and
not making progress when in fact, I think going so much was actually inhibiting my ability to make progress. I would go to the gym at right when it opened every day. So I'd get up at 4am
to go. I'd be waiting for the guy to unlock it at 4.45am. I'd go in there half asleep because I was
not getting adequate sleep. I'd pound a ton of stimulants and I would train like crap for two
plus hours, six to seven days a week, instead of just training three to
four days a week for about 90 minutes, training hard as shit, and then giving myself time to
recover. When I look back at the introductory period of my weight training journey, my resistance
training journey, I can't think you could fuck it up too much worse than I did. I did this about as
poorly and ass backwards as possible. And the reason I shared this with you guys today
is so that you don't make these same mistakes.
So I hope you learned something from this episode.
I hope that you can laugh a little bit
at some of the silly things that I've done.
As a professional, I really speak out
against these things now
because I see how harmful that behavior was
and how hard it was for me to course correct,
even as I learned more about how the body works.
And I don't want anybody to make those same mistakes.
Instead of relying on supplements,
using cardiovascular exercise as punishment,
or viewing it as a form of punishment,
instead of always thinking more is better,
I would encourage a more nuanced, thoughtful approach
tailored to your life that's built around
what it is that you already enjoy doing
that will make it substantially more easily to adhere to an effective exercise protocol.
I want to thank you guys so much again for tuning in and I will catch you on the next episode.