Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 262: The Best of 8 Unique Fitness Disciplines
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show. Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always,
I'm your host, Danny Matranga. And in this episode,
we'll be going over what I like to call the best of the best. We will be reviewing eight
fitness disciplines and attempting to pull tips, tricks, and tactics from what each one of these
specific disciplines and the practitioners and athletes who practice them, right? What these are all so good at
generating. Suffice to say, what adaptations are these unique schools of fitness good at generating
on a highly likely basis? If you do this, you'll get this. And what can we learn from the best of
the best who do them? The eight schools of fitness will be covering
our powerlifting, CrossFit, bodybuilding, Olympic lifting, distance, endurance, and obstacle course
racing, sports performance, suffice to say strength and conditioning, fighting and grappling and dance slash rhythm, AKA dance, ballet, et cetera. I looked at these
specifically because there's a lot of crossover, no matter how you slice this, but eight was about
as thinly as I could slice this without getting too much crossover. For example, I did include OCR
obstacle course racing in with endurance training slash slash endurance athletes because I just couldn't have it exercise, um, and kind of pillars of physical culture
before, like many of you have done powerlifting and bodybuilding or Olympic lifting and CrossFit
hard to do one and not at least dabble in the other, right? Like you're somebody who competes
in Olympic lifting would, would laugh at the training protocols of somebody who does Olympic
lifts and CrossFit because they're, they in that how one trains to compete in an Olympic
lift is very different from how one would compete in like, say, the CrossFit Games.
So the percentage of training going towards one avenue would be quite a bit different,
but there's a ton of crossover. So we're going to start first by examining the powerlifting school of weightlifting and resistance training and talk about what it is
that I believe they do so well. And the first thing I have highlighted, I have two points here,
is the power of the little plates. Power lifters really understand micro progressions and
progressive overload at its most basic and kind of foundational level. What I mean here is this,
to get to a 400, 500 pound deadlift, a 300, 400 pound squat, a 200, 300 pound bench or so,
okay, some respectable male powerlifting numbers are
what I'm throwing at you. I'm I, this might be, but that might be nothing for you. That might
seem insane for you. I'm just saying like, those are respectable numbers for somebody, my size,
who's powerlifting, um, to get to those totals on those lifts, you can't just add 45 pound plates to the bar. You know,
eventually you're going to have to start making small and incremental changes to the weight that's
on the bar to achieve the outcome of greater strength. And that unfortunately diminishes
over time. So you'll go from your, let's say you start deadlifting a hundred pounds, you'll
get from 100 to 200 purely based on cleaning up your technique, learning a little bit more
about the setup of the lift and the execution and just practicing it.
But to get from 200 to 300, you need to usually practice it a lot and incorporate a lot of
programming and some recovery principles to
get from three to 400, you have to take it to a whole nother level. And to get from four to five,
you're really operating on a tighter margin unless you're just one of those really gifted
strength athletes. And to get there, it takes, with each hundred pound chunk, you're looking
at probably a longer time period to get there, assuming everything stays
the same. So it'll take you longer to get from 200 to 300 than it did from 100 to 200, and so on,
kind of up that line. And you do that with increasingly smaller plates. You get from,
you know, 100 pounds to 200 pounds with 25 and 10 pound jumps usually. But at the higher levels,
the five pound and two and a half pound plates come out a lot. And I think we can stand to learn
quite a bit from this particular thing that powerlifters do so well. Because a lot of what
discourages people on their fitness journey or whether they're trying to compete in any of the
other line items we're going through today is they get frustrated when progress stagnates or slows
or even just grinds to a halt completely and abruptly. And one of the things that I've always
admired about the powerlifting community and the way in which that sport is trained is there's
always a workaround. If you're hitting it like sticking point on a lift, there's a way
around it. So it could be a board press. It could be a box squat. It could be a block pull, right?
If you're having a hard time breaking a plateau, there's different schemes of periodization that
people will deploy. There's so much that can be done to overcome getting stuck because again,
you're just really, really doing these three lifts,
which we'll talk about in a second when we get to the second point. I give them a lot of credit for
being able to lean into the micro progressions and make small incremental progress year over year
on the basics, because I think that is the central kind of framework for developing fitness in almost
any avenue. The second thing, the second school or the second
piece with which the school of powerlifting seems to excel is with simplicity. And I highlight this
because if you really think about it from a foundational level, the bench, squat, and deadlift
train every muscle in the body. Now, do they train them optimally? No. Do they train them optimally
for hypertrophy or bodybuilding? No. Do they train them optimally for hypertrophy or bodybuilding?
No. Do they train them optimally for Olympic lifting outcomes, CrossFit outcomes? No.
Would they be good for sports performance? Almost certainly no,
not at least in the sense of would it optimize for any of those outcomes.
But from a general population standpoint, you cannot convince me that if we got 200 million Americans
to bench, squat, and deadlift three times a week following a dynamic undulating periodization model,
meaning we take the very sedentary, very overweight American population and say,
on Monday, you're going to bench press three by three, squat three by eight, deadlift three by three squat, three by eight deadlift, three by five on Wednesday, you're going to bench
three by 12. You're going to squat three by three, and you're going to deadlift three by five again.
And then on Friday, you're going to bench three by five. You're going to squat three by 10,
and you're going to deadlift three sets of three. And you just do that simple program. You do those
three lifts. You just
kind of flip the reps around a high day, a moderate day, a low day. And you do that and do exactly
what else you're doing. It'd be remarkable, in my opinion, the health outcomes we generate from
that. I think we'd have a huge increase in muscularity, muscle mass, functional strength,
reduction in pain, assuming these lifts are being done correctly. This could be subjective pain.
This could be like, you know, nonspecific back, anything from like a nonspecific back pain to a
unresolved hip pain that might go away with better strengthening of the glutes. You know,
there's so many things that you would stand to help that drive either pain or kind of negative
health outcomes. Obviously you have more normalized blood sugar from increased muscle mass and
contraction of tissue. You have a better mental health from increased muscle mass and contraction of tissue.
You have better mental health outcomes associated with exercise oftentimes.
So, so many good things would happen. And if you were to really want to just make it as simple and approachable as possible,
you'd want to use as few movements as possible.
And one thing that's remarkable about powerlifting and the bench squat and deadlift is they do
train every muscle in your
body. Like I said, not optimally, not perfectly, but with those three, you're training damn near
every single muscle. And if you just got really strong at them, you build a good amount of muscle,
you'd have a lot of strength, you'd have a lot more bone density and all those other positive
health outcomes. So I give powerlifting a lot of credit for really doing a fantastic job of
analyzing and looking at micro progressions as a means to make long-term progress and really
leaning into the power of simplicity. The second discipline that I'd like to unpack and see what
we can learn from, and you can take this into whatever it is that you're doing. You can obviously
learn from this if you're doing bodybuilding or sports performance, or your goal is specifically fat loss, which you could pretty much use any one
of these as long as you're in a calorie deficit. But I really particularly have enjoyed in my
experience with powerlifting, those two specific tools. So moving now to CrossFit, one thing that
I've really appreciated and learned from in studying the CrossFit community and the way they look at things is how well-rounded they try to be.
And I do think that people who compete in CrossFit might be a little bit, you know,
it's challenging to maintain a ton of health when you're competing at the highest, highest,
highest level of sport.
I'm not saying these people are unhealthy.
I'm saying, but like for optimal longevity and for not getting injured sake, you know, and having balance, you know,
all of these at the most competitive level might be a little tricky, but CrossFit seems to be,
in my opinion, this is the first thing I'd like to highlight, uh, the most well-rounded and the
most likely to drive a diverse, positive, functional health outcomes because it incorporates elements of gymnastics.
It incorporates elements of aerobic training. It incorporates elements of anaerobic training,
and it incorporates Olympic lifting. So very technical with Olympic lifting, right? Very
aerobic with things like distance running, very anaerobic with things like sprint work,
specifically on like the assault bike, lots of sprint work on the assault bike and the rower,
lots of anaerobic weightlifting, bodybuilding and powerlifting style things show up in CrossFit
from time to time. But there's also a lot of unique lifts that you kind of see mostly just
in CrossFit, but you do a bunch of different shit. And I think you got to give CrossFit a ton of credit for helping to drive a lot of different adaptations in the
people who engage with it. So much at like so much is lost with, with people in different
communities where they have to micro focus. Um, meaning, you know, you're never going to be the
best Olympic weightlifter in the world. If you're trying to be a bodybuilder, vice versa,
going to be the best Olympic weightlifter in the world if you're trying to be a bodybuilder,
vice versa. But in CrossFit, it is important to develop multiple different avenues of fitness,
and I think that's something that they've done extremely well. Specifically, going on to point number two, specifically in the cardiovascular range, I think I've really admired the use of both low impact sprint work and higher impact, oftentimes endurance work.
CrossFit gyms, boxes as they're often called, are certainly not strangers to having their clients
slash class attendees go on short jogs or runs. Not every piece of cardio is done on a machine in CrossFit, which I kind of
like. I also like that when they do use cardiovascular machines, they do a really good
job of leveraging their strengths, particularly lower impact machines like ski ergs, rowers,
and air bikes or airdynes that you can really sprint on that don't put a ton of pounding or loading on the body.
So this allows CrossFit to really like dive into high level aerobic, um, work where a little goes
a long way and still have their athletes recovered enough for longer distance, low intensity work,
even things like running without being totally beat to shit all the time. Uh, because they're not going out and running sprints on a track out of nowhere. You know,
like I think a lot of people do funny stuff like this where they're like,
I'm on a bodybuilding program and I'm going to start running sprints. And it's like,
do you know how hard it is to recover from actual sprints compared to like sprints on an air bike?
Cause there is a big difference. Let me tell
you. Uh, and the third thing, the third thing that I think we can learn from the CrossFit community
that I absolutely love is the core training. They do a lot of hanging core training, hanging leg
raises, toes to bars. There's a lot of anti-extension work in the form of various planks.
There's a lot of sit-ups and extensions. I think that the CrossFit community
has done a really good job of promoting spinal resiliency through their programming protocols.
Now, do I think they do a perfect job of keeping every single weightlifter that goes through
theirs back perfectly safe and technically sound on every lift? No, I don't. I know that CrossFit
has limitations and I know it's certainly not the quote unquote safest form of exercise, but I make a pretty concerted effort
on the podcast to frame all of these different disciplines as substantially more positive than
I have in the past, where I think I got a little bit campy and a little bit myopic about, hey,
you know, I think this is the best. And if you put me in charge of a
government office that could have the power to specifically create some type of national
resistance training program, it probably wouldn't look like CrossFit. Okay, I'll give you that.
But I think these guys do a really good job at a few things that we can all learn from and take with us on
our health and fitness journey. I think many people could use greater diversity in the
adaptations they train, specifically the aerobic adaptations, which a lot of people don't take
seriously, especially in the body composition space where most of the, like the bodybuilders
have really figured it out. Like you don't necessarily need to do a shit ton of cardio
to get lean. Most of them will, especially when it comes to competition prep season,
but off season bodybuilders, uh, is even natural bodybuilders are able to maintain a tremendous
amount of muscularity, look very, very lean and good without doing a ton of cardio. And a lot of
people in the general population just think that to be that lean, not even stage lean, just generally off-season lean,
they got to do a ton of cardio. And it's because they've got the diet down. But CrossFit does a
really good job of deliberately and specifically including, I think, aerobic training with a
design on hitting on the zone fours and fives and also the zone one and two, specifically two.
zone fours and fives, and also the zone one and two, specifically two. Okay. When we also highlighted, of course, that they do a phenomenal job of having core training that trains the core
in multiple planes to, you know, extend, to flex, to flex and extend lateral flexion,
core stability, anti-extension rotation. All of those are featured there. And I think all of us
would stand to benefit from that kind of inclusion. Moving on to the third school of training,
this is bodybuilding. And I think bodybuilding specifically can be communicated in this context
as people who are bodybuilding or training with the goal of developing a physique that resembles somebody who could, does not have to, but could compete and win
a bodybuilding show. I use that stipulation to say that this is not somebody who just
wants to be a little bigger, or this is not a school of training for somebody who wants to
put on a little size. This is like specifically somebody who says, I want to build a physique
that is in accordance and kind of meets the
standards of the current judging criterion of my gender's specific, uh, you know, competition
standards. Like if, if bodybuilders should have a trim waist and big quads and strong lats and,
and, you know, a big chest and, and these are muscles, or if a bikini competitor should have big glutes,
rounded shoulders, nice thighs, a trim midsection. I'm trying to meet those standards. A lot of
people train like this. It's one of the most popular training modalities, especially for
young people. And many people take it all the way up to the competitive ranks. And one of the
things that bodybuilders do extremely well, I have three points here for
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One of the things that bodybuilders do extremely well that we all
could benefit from in our fitness journeys, regardless of whatever outcome here, again,
there's a lot of crossover here. I specifically selected for crossover. Unilateral work.
Bodybuilders do an incredible job incorporating unilateral work. Now, I think a lot of people
think of the word unilateral as meaning, okay, this unilateral
exercise means it's done on one leg. Lunge is unilateral and a squat is bilateral. Unilateral
does not mean one leg. I get that a lot. Unilateral essentially means one side or
moving one object per side of the body compared to two sides working together to move a single
object. For example, I think you could put it on a spectrum and say that a barbell bench press is
more bilateral than the dumbbell bench press, which is more unilateral because each arm is
moving a single dumbbell versus both arms moving a one single barbell
versus like saying, oh, well, you know, it, everything has to be done one side at a time.
A lot of times I think you can break it down this way. Bodybuilders will opt for dumbbells to train
each side of the body in concert over a barbell because of the expanded range of motion capability on
something like, say, a flat press. I think that would be an example of optimizing for
unilateral joint function moreover than saying like, oh, it's a single side at a time exercise.
I think that this is something that bodybuilders do extremely well even with other tools like
cables. So it's a little bit more than
saying, yes, they do a lot of unilateral exercises. It's also saying that they have determined when
and when it makes the most sense to go bilateral and when it makes the most sense to break it down
into a more unilateral, more isolated version. I give them a ton of credit for that. That's in the
name of building
symmetry, of course. Another thing they do extremely well is they tend to have a very
good functional understanding of biomechanics and what muscles are being loaded the most
in which movements. And they can do this very intuitively. A lot of people who practice
bodybuilding are extremely cerebral and intelligent, and they can actually do these math equations for you using physics. Some people
are that into this, and it's really impressive. And I've had the opportunity to learn from a
number of them. I think it can get a little bit convoluted, and we can kind of lose the forest
for the trees and get a little complex, but good things in life are
allowed to be complex. But bodybuilding tends to help a lifter and an athlete develop a tremendous
mind-muscle connection and a tremendous capacity for intramuscular coordination, which is really
contracting the target muscle, and intermuscular coordination, getting muscles to work together
in concert to complete a movement. Bodybuilders really understand what is being trained and what
movements really well and really intuitively, but they also tend to know the science. So something
you can really generate from bodybuilding is a tremendous sense of physical self-awareness.
I think that is tricky to cultivate when you're not training in such an isolated and developmental fashion.
The last piece about bodybuilding that I absolutely love is there's a lot of longevity.
While I do think many people think of bodybuilding as hellacious blood and guts,
screaming and groaning, garbage form lifting, I find it tends to be very far from that. I think
that most bodybuilders, both natural and enhanced, tend to have longer training careers
than powerlifters and CrossFit athletes and oftentimes Olympic lifting athletes and even
runners that compete or train with the same level of intensity. Bodybuilding is high volume and it
isn't penalty free. You'll put a toll on your body training to build muscle. But I tend to find it
really paves the way for long, meaningful training careers because of the systematized approach to
optimizing for recovery. Bodybuilding is the one kind of thing here in particular
that is more about the recovery than it is the output. And that you go to the gym
to break down the tissue. And then with bodybuilding, you go home and you really dial
in the nutrition to repair and recover and to build as much as possible or to get as lean as
possible while keeping the muscle. And so there is a long-term longevity-based recovery-based
mindset here that I think is really, really valuable and
that a lot of these other schools and disciplines don't leverage to the unfortunate detriment of
the people who practice them. Okay, number four is Olympic lifting. And the first thing that comes
to mind immediately when I think of the Olympic lifters I know and my own experience with Olympic
lifting, both teaching it
and executing it and performing it is it's really, really technical. Much like powerlifting, you're
not doing too many lifts. You're doing lifts and then iterations or smaller kind of broken down
versions of those lifts to put it succinctly. But it's very, very technical and you can drill
just a part of a lift. You can drill the
same lift over and over to make sure that you're in the perfect position or you have the right
rhythm or the right pacing and the right timing. And a very limited library of exercises expands
quickly into a number of drills and different things all boiled down to and in the name of being
technically proficient so you can move the most weight possible in the least amount of time
with the lowest energy demand. Now, another thing, the second point that I think Olympic
lifters really, really succeed with compared to other disciplines is their recovery when they do total body training. Now think about this. Every time you do a snatch
or a clean, you're training probably more muscles than even something like a deadlift or a squat.
And imagine the way a bodybuilder or a powerlifter squats and deadlifts. If they did that every
single day, it would really take a toll on them. Same thing with CrossFit, with those volumes
and those protocols. I don't think you'd want to be a CrossFitter squatting and deadlifting every
day, even four or five days a week. Same thing with bodybuilding, same thing with powerlifting.
Olympic lifting and Olympic lifters do a fantastic job of grading exposure and using percentages of their one
repetition max often to train well below their maximum output levels so they can perform these
lifts three, four, five, six, sometimes even seven days per week, which I know sounds a little crazy,
but there are plenty of lifters who compete in Olympic lifting who are on a platform pulling
and moving a bar five, six days a week easy.
And so it's within that kind of programming and that essential attention to detail at
the percentage of one rep max level, that really granular level that allows them not
to overdo it.
And I think we can learn a little bit from their obsession on technicality and being able to really recover well session to session by
using pretty definitive metrics to gauge how close they're getting to their maximum output.
We'll talk a little bit more about those kind of tactics in a second here when we get to number
six, sports performance. But before that, we'll talk about number five, which is endurance work, which I think can essentially be divided into distance running.
Okay. Uh, like marathons, half marathons, ultra marathons. I put endurance work in here
because that can include things like, um, various competitions that might be team-based,
uh, like crew. Uh, and then I also included in
this category, OCR obstacle course racing, like, like Spartan race or high rocks or tough mudder.
A lot of people compete in these things year round. And I basically thought about this and
broke it down into the four G's. What I think these, these particular athletes and disciplines
cold debate are the four G's grit gear, get up and go and grip, uh, and grip specific
to OCR. But let's talk about grit first to compete in anything long distance or to do anything
challenging for time, including something like an ice bath. Uh, you have to have grit and yes,
it does seem to be at least for me and many people that after about an hour of endurance exercise,
things start
to become physically a little less demanding because of the release of endorphin. Yes and no.
It does, but it also isn't so much that you're going to feel particularly comfortable running
exponentially after you've run for one hour. It's really not that simple. And it's, quite frankly,
not that comfortable to engage in a long distance exercise.
And that is why it requires a good amount of grit to be an endurance athlete. And I think that is a
mental component that this discipline develops very well. This isn't to say that the other
disciplines don't. I think all of these disciplines develop substantially more grit
than sitting on your ass. But I really admire
the grit that endurance athletes cultivate through training and years of training. And I think we can
borrow that for life. I also think we can borrow it for fitness. Something else I think they do
fantastically well, the second G is utilize gear. Any endurance athlete could tell you a bunch about
their shoes, why they selected them,
everything down to their socks, oftentimes their shorts. And well, I'm certainly no glutton for
consumerism. When you compete at the highest level, everything matters, including to the level
of your gear. And I'm often asked questions about footwear for lifting, clothing for lifting. And I do think that you have a little bit more of the ability to be loose with certain training disciplines and training goals and training programs than you would with like a distance program where you might need not just a lot of equipment, but specific equipment. But I do think you can learn a lot from being equipment oriented in your training.
And that could be something like supplements, which might not think you think of as equipment,
but it could be an analog to better performance. I really think for weightlifting, it could be
things like chalks, straps, lifting shoes. CrossFit has a lot of gear, a lot of specific
equipment that being technically proficient on and staying up to date on will help you
actually extend your career. So I think that gear is something that these endurance people
have really paid close attention to, not just to get an edge, but to recover from what's
ultimately really grueling. And I think we could all learn from that. The third is the get up and
go. So one thing that I like about endurance training is no matter where you're at, you can
usually just get up and go find a treadmill. You can find a stair master. You can find some local bleachers. Obviously you can just get up
and go for a run or a hike or find a trail. And I love the get up and go component of this kind
of training in this training discipline. And I think it's really hard to emulate with the more
technical, um, challenging, uh, resistance training modalities specifically specifically but i love the get up and go and then
specific to ocr the fourth and final g would be grip i think that grip training and grip strength
is something that is of particular interest to men um there's a lot of statistics that get thrown
around about general reductions in male grip strength compared to say 40 50 60 years ago
it appears that males are experiencing a rapid reduction in grip strength compared to say 40, 50, 60 years ago. It appears that males
are experiencing a rapid reduction in grip strength, which is tightly correlated with
testosterone and fertility. And so, you know, men are oftentimes, uh, you know, posed with the
question of, Oh, where's my grip strength at? And, and, you know, you'll see a lot in the gym
with gals, they have a hard time gripping and holding onto the barbell when they're squatting
and lunging and hinging and deadlifting so much weight that the lower body muscles outpace the
grip muscles. So they have to use straps. And I'm not saying straps are bad. You got to rock with
what you got, especially in bodybuilding where you're stronger in the target muscle than the
gripping muscle. But OCR competitors tend to develop tremendous grip for their events
and have tremendous relative grip to body weight ratios so they can hang for a long time. And I
think that's a good general fitness practice to be able to be quite strong at hanging and having
good grip strength translates well to a lot of different things. Moving on to the sixth school sports performance,
which I think could be specific to athletes who are training to compete in a sport like baseball,
basketball, football, et cetera, or coaches who are coaching in that context. And what do these
disciplines do well? Well, one thing I know they do well for sure, and this is from friends of
mine who work specifically with teams at high levels, like Dr. Ramsey Nigem. He's been on the podcast. He was with the Sacramento Kings, currently with the Kansas Jayhawks,
probably the best division one men's basketball programs out there, maybe top five, if not the
top program. And they really are big on data. They use bar velocity. They use jump parameters
to measure athlete readiness. They use total tonnage. They use GPS data. They
really look at a lot of different stuff to determine the demands that are being placed
on these athletes. And while I totally think this would be overkill for most people, I think
getting to know your data can be really valuable, whether it be scale, weight data, calorie intake
data, data from an advanced wearable like an Apple Watch or a Whoop.
These things can be really helpful. And the sports performance world has definitely shown to me just how value data can be. The other thing they are really good with, the second piece,
is the training tech. They have bigger budgets typically at Division I and professional athletic
programs that allow these particular coaches and coaching programs to usually be at the cutting
edge of equipment access. And there's some pretty amazing tech out there that are available for
athletes at the highest level that might not be available to you, but you can look and see what
technology is within your budget. Like I mentioned before, even a wearable, which aren't really
reliable for calorie particular data, but they can be great for
encouraging steps or for logging cardiac output. I think they're really good for displaying heart
rate data. Lots of different things, but tech and even home equipment, for example, you can stay up
to date on stuff like that. These sports performance programs are always on the cutting
edge with tech. One thing that I think they do fantastically well,
and this stands above the rest, specifically for fitness adaptations is their third and final one
is the use of plyometrics. So plyometrics are often bastardized in the body composition,
like bodybuilding slash just looking good community as a way to burn calories and do
quote unquote hit cardio. But plyometrics aren't really designed for that.
You see plyometrics refer to exercises designed to increase plyometric strength and power or
ballistic strength and power. And this is that quick twitch hop springy kind of jumpy twitchy
fitness that we see with athletes and sports performance is one of the only places you'll
see plyometrics programmed appropriately
to drive these adaptations. And I think all of us could benefit from having a little bit of
plyometric strength. And something you could do is find a really reduced plyometric exercise,
like a pogo or a broad jump even. And anytime you're going on a walk to once you're warm,
once you're loose, occasionally do 20 seconds of polos
or 20 ground contacts of pogos, or maybe a hide in like a lateral jump or a broad jump or a tuck
jump, light plyos sprinkled in when you go on a walk and you'll build tensile strength in your
tendons and tissues to give you a little bit more of a springy and twitchy quality to your
fitness, make you a little more athletic. And there's a lot of value to that overall. Okay.
Number seven, the school of fighting and grappling. Uh, one of the things I love here is
tissue resilience, something that I've learned a lot from talking to grapplers and watching the
sport of MMA, uh, your joints get put into some pretty compromised positions.
And when you don't have strength in those compromised positions or in those end ranges,
it's going to contribute a ton of additional pain response. And you'll probably be substantially
easier to defeat. You tend to be easier to beat if you're easier to pin. And all of these athletes,
particularly in the grappling sports like jujitsu, have incredible mobility, but they also have a lot of mobility and unique ranges,
end ranges where people typically tend to be weak or uncomfortable. And developing resilient tissue
is, I think, really, really important. And I'm not saying that you go out and you just wrestle
and you go out and you just challenge people in the streets and go like, I need to build up my
tissue resiliency. Let's go.
No, I'm saying that these athletes expose themselves to challenging positions against resistance all the time that are outside of the kind of typical confines of regular resistance
training and develop amazing, amazing functional mobility for their sport, which is to say mobility
that allows them to be put in positions and not tap. That is the definition of a functional, uh, mobility more generally would just be, I can bend and extend
through a full range of motion. It's like, okay, that's cool. Um, that's functional mobility for
the average person. Functional mobility for a fighter is not getting tapped and being comfortable
in crazy positions. And I think these guys do a tremendous job of allowing themselves to get
into those positions through drilling, through grappling, through fighting. And the way the body adapts is really
remarkable. Another thing they have is tremendous calisthenics strength. I wanted to give a shout
out to calisthenics as its own school, but I just couldn't carve out space for it. And I do feel
that more people now are doing grappling as their primary exercise modality than calisthenics.
But it doesn't mean it's not popular.
I just think that it's maybe been usurped by things like Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
But calisthenic total body strength with your own body weight, things like pistol squats,
pull-ups, chin-ups, all these different levers, muscle-ups, all these crazy things.
I've noticed grapplers and fighters tend
to have tremendous body strength, relative strength on those total kind of full body
or even just body weight exercises. So things like burpees, muscle ups, pushups, pull ups,
they tend to be insanely good at those just because of the amazing strength they
have over their body. So number eight would be dance and rhythm. And I don't know how many people
are aware, but like actually dancing and Zumba and all of these different things,
like a lot of people do that as a primary fitness modality. I'm not just talking about things like
hip hop dancing or ballet, but one
of the things that these athletes tend to do well, it's the one thing that I think we can really
learn from them is they tend to spend a lot of time in their training without shoes on.
And I know that might be weird to think about. We just spent this very long 36 minute episode
unpacking seven unique kind of things we can borrow from each of these
fitness avenues. And we get to dance and you tell me to go barefoot. And it really is because I
think this is the most functional and applicable tip for you in your life would be to say,
practice more of your movement when it's safe and possible without shoes on. I know that many
dances actually require special shoes like tap dancing and ballet, but a lot of these athletes have incredible intrinsic foot strength and it's cultivated from years of training in these shoes or training barefoot. And we don't spend a ton of time barefoot. We live in these little shoes, these shoes, aka foot prisons, our whole life and don't develop that intrinsic foot strength. So I think that's something you can absolutely do and borrow from this community to live more fit overall. So hopefully you guys got
something out of this and you're going to deploy some of the tactics in powerlifting, CrossFit,
bodybuilding, Olympic lifting, endurance training, sports performance, grappling, and even dance
to make your movement and physical qualities improve over time. You can learn something from
everybody. And I used to be a lot more cranky and snarky about what I thought was best until I
realized the more I learn from different schools of fitness culture, the better my body feels,
the better my clients are served, and the more uniquely we can put programs together based on
all the amazing different schools within fitness.
So I hope you found this one valuable. If you did, share it with somebody that you think will enjoy it. Leave me a five-star rating and review on Apple Podcasts. Please follow and subscribe
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