Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 345: 15 Fitness Habits to DROP in 2023
Episode Date: December 14, 2023Help the show (and enter for a chance to win some swag) by leaving a review on: - APPLE PODCASTS - SPOTIFYTrain with Danny on His Training App HEREOUR PARTNERS:Legion Supplements (protein, creatine,... + more!), Shop (DANNY) HERE!The best hydration and pre-workout on the planet! Get your LMNT Electrolytes HERE!Vivo Barefoot: Grab my favorite training and lifestyle shoe HERE! Use the code DANNY10 to save 10% SISU Sauna: The best build it yourself outdoor home sauna on the market. Save hundreds of dollars by clicking HERE! (CODE: DANNYMATRANGA)RESOURCES/COACHING: Train with Danny on His Training App HEREGrab your FREE GUIDES (8 guides and 4 programs) by clicking the link: https://mailchi.mp/coachdannymatranga.com/free-guide-giveaway Interested in Working With Coach Danny and His One-On-One Coaching Team? Click 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.
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Welcome, everybody, to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast.
In this episode, episode 345, we will be discussing 15 habits that I believe are holding many
of you back from achieving your peak fitness results.
These are 15 habits and behaviors that I have noticed over the nearly
12 years I've been coaching hold more people back than pretty much anything else. These are things
that even seasoned veterans can make the mistake of falling into. These are things that most
novices certainly make the mistake of falling into. And these mistakes and habits span everything from
aerobic training, plane-specific training, frequency of your training, tracking and logging
of training to nutrition, as well as many other unique things that I believe you will be able to pick through and pull from to fine tune your training as we
wrap up the year 2023 and head into 2024. There's certainly many things on this list
that I myself have been guilty of doing in the past. And I believe if you are open to listening
to this or listen to this with an open mind, you'll probably be able to clean a good amount of your
training, let's call it mishaps out, kind of dust the cobwebs away and really fine tune things
heading into a new year so that hopefully 2024 can be your most efficient training year ever,
whether you are new, intermediate, or quite advanced. Enjoy. This podcast wouldn't be
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on the best pair of shoes you've ever owned. Okay, folks. So getting into this list,
Okay, folks. So getting into this list, unpacking some of the things that I have found hold people back. These are from conversations I've had with people at the gym, from clients who are coming to
me for the first time, when I consult with potential clients or consult with anybody in
the fitness space who's booking me in a consultative role. And this is number one on the
list just because I find it is so pervasive. And it just, the reason that it's pervasive to me
makes a lot of sense. And that is just simply trying to fit in too many training sessions
each and every week. Now there's absolutely nothing wrong with training at a high frequency.
There are people who can train six to seven days a week. However, I have found that the majority
of people who are training six to seven days a week are doing this because they are extremely invested in getting results. So this creates a little bit
of a paradox. The paradox is simple. You train multiple days a week because in your mind,
more training is better. And this is sensible. For most people, if you want to improve an outcome,
For most people, if you want to improve an outcome, having a greater input will drive a greater outcome.
I will say though, for many people, more training sessions does not equal better training results.
This is for one specific reason.
What's known as the allostatic load.
The allostatic load is the total amount of stress you incur throughout the day and
throughout the week. This is not just your training stress. This is work stress. This is family stress.
This is any stress that you incur, be it physical, mental, or emotional. And each session that you
are in the gym is an allostatic input. I have found that for most people, lowering the number of inputs,
meaning training a little bit less, makes a huge, huge difference. Not less in terms of intensity,
not even less in terms of volume, but less in terms of sessions. Dialing it back from six to seven weekly sessions to let's say three
to five oftentimes results in the actual training itself being much better, more focused, and higher
in quality. It also shuts the door on the likelihood of excessive accumulation of fatigue
and quite frankly, junk sessions that just never really reach the intensity required to
drive serious progress. So if you are one of those people who is super gung-ho about results
and you catch yourself training six to seven days a week, but not making progress with strength,
size, or any of the other goals you have, it's very likely that your training is simply not of a
high enough quality because you're spreading it too thin and you're incurring too much stress.
The allostatic load is too high. So my recommendation for you actually would be to train
less and make sure that the training that you are doing is of a particularly high quality.
If you do that, I'm of the impression that you will have better results for a net lower
total time in the gym. And for the average person, you know, 45 minutes, four times a week is
probably more than sufficient. If you want to bump that up to five times a week for an hour,
by all means, sessions that take an hour and a half are fine as well. I wouldn't let them bleed
into like the two hour range.
All of the programming we have, whether it's elite physique, home heroes, the training we do for
clients one-on-one, the new training program that's launching at the beginning of the year,
Fit Forever, which is a kind of strength hypertrophy hybrid program that incorporates
elements of aerobic fitness, multi-planar fitness, core training, mobility.
All of those sessions are built to be less than an hour, even if you're taking a one to three
minute rest in between each set. And all of those programs are mostly four to five days a week.
And I think that is the sweet spot for most people. And I would imagine that many of you
who want these results the most are suffering from
this issue, the issue of training too much, more than anything else.
Okay, a second issue that I find to be very, very prevalent is that you only track the
data that you most enjoy or find most convenient to track.
that you most enjoy or find most convenient to track. And I think a lot of people, let me say this, I think a lot of people suffer from paralysis by analysis when it comes to training data.
I really wonder how helpful whoop data is, how helpful aura ring data is for people who are just
looking to live a little healthier and get a little bit more results out
of their training. I cannot tell you how many people I know who allow whoop data or aura data
to influence their training or their psychology around training so much that their actual total
training volume goes down, their training frequency goes down. They're so buried in the
minutia that they forget that there's, you know, hey, there's actually a need to train. Like,
I know your HRV might not be perfect, but do you think that people at the highest level of sport
or people who want to, you know, really change are going to not train at all just because the
little recovery score isn't high enough.
I mean, the people who create these technologies want you to use them and engage with them the
same way social media companies do. So the more you use the app, the more data it gives you.
In theory, I would hope that that would equate to better results, better training.
I have found for so many people, it does the opposite. And I know that
there are ways to use these metrics and use these technologies to drive outcomes. But more often
than not, I find the people who really get hung up on these data points, this technology, they
actually start to regress. So that's always been a reason why I don't really, you know,
recommend these technologies too much is I find that when people get like an aura ring or they
get a whoop, they are spending so much time in some of this higher level data, whether it's HRV,
total sleep, recovery score, et cetera. And they're not paying attention to like,
am I actually progressing in the weight room? What are my lift numbers? Am I eating enough fiber? Am I eating enough protein?
Like I know so many people who could tell you every little tiny detail about the data they're
getting from their wearable, but they can't even tell you how many grams of protein they ate or
how much water they drink. And to me, that is missing the forest for the trees. And when it comes to data, I think you have a good amount
of data available to you without any of these technologies. It can be things like, how do I
feel when I wake up in the morning? Forgive me for being a little crass. If I'm a man,
do I have a morning erection? If I'm a female, do I feel that I'm waking up rested? These are signs
of deep recuperative sleep. You don't need a wearable to tell you that. Am I eating multiple
servings of protein across the day? Perhaps you even track your protein intake using an app.
Am I getting enough water? Am I getting enough total calories? Is my training progressive? Do
I even track my training? Do I even log my training?
The amount of people who do not do these things, yet they are relatively beholden to the data they
get from a wearable is shocking to me. So if your wearable does little more than create stress,
and this is a real thing, like I'm not just saying this. There are a lot of people for whom a
wearable device, a whoop, an aura, et cetera, you name it actually provides a greater stress
than it. Like the, the net stress caused by the wearable probably has a greater negative impact
on health and wellbeing than the wearables data,
the actionable data from the wearable. Like, oh my gosh, I got terrible sleep. My recovery score is crap. My HRV is crap. And then these people go out extremely stressed. You know, we see
something similar with like seed oils or artificial sweeteners or small additives in the product. People step over dollars to pick
up dimes. They miss the big picture. They're so worried about the minutiae of the recovery score,
the HRV, that they don't even train or they are limiting what they're doing in the gym.
And these are things that we want to avoid. So I would actually recommend going into the year,
And these are things that we want to avoid. So I would actually recommend going into the year,
simplifying the data points you look at, look at resting heart rate. Sure.
Look at daily weight, look at protein intake, fiber intake, calorie intake. How are your gym sessions going? Are you actually making progress? What's your total sleep time and go from there.
Another habit, number three, that holds a lot of people back, and this ties in
nicely to number one, is doing too many exercises in a given session. You do not need to do eight
exercises on a leg day. And I would argue that if you can do eight exercises on your leg day,
and I'm discussing this from the viewpoint that like it's eight leg specific exercises, not like two warmup exercises, four leg exercises, and two core
exercises. I'm talking about a leg day where you go in and you do something like RDLs, squats,
hip thrusts, Bulgarians, leg extensions, leg curls, you know, step ups. I see this a lot, especially
with women. Uh, if you can do eight exercises, many of them compounds, the likelihood of each
of those exercises being at a high enough intensity to actually generate change is pretty freaking
low. I think you're better off picking three to five and front loading the intensity so that those
first two or three
are the big bang for your buck exercises, the compound and really emptying the clip
and then letting two or three on the back end kind of fill in the gaps. Then you are trying to do
every single glute exercise you know of every time you train your glutes. A lot of novices fall into
this trap. They include as many exercises as they can for
a given muscle group, allocate a ton of volume across the session, you know, eight exercises,
three sets each. And by the time they get through the second exercises or second or third exercises
in the session, you know, the, you know, the 12 to 15 sets to follow across what's left are all
terrible with poor execution. And they're just checking boxes. I would say that, you know, the 12 to 15 sets to follow across what's left are all terrible with poor execution
and they're just checking boxes. I would say that, you know, three to five exercises,
you know, you can do even less if they're compounds, but you know, you could do as many
as six if you're including more isolation movements is more than sufficient for a given
movement type or muscle group. I think if you are noticing in your training, like you have six, seven, eight exercises per session for the same movement type or muscle
group, you might be doing yourself a little bit of a disservice, taking too much time in the gym
and not accumulating those valuable reps that really build muscle and really build the outcome that you're after. You might just be
surviving your training. Number four, this is something that I see to be fairly common,
and that is not including any exercises or neglecting exercises for the core, grip,
gluteus medius, rotator cuff, and calf. The reason that I think people skip these things
is because quite frankly, they're just kind of boring and not so fun. Um, you know,
they're just things that like, you know, like nobody's going to rush to do external rotation or standing half raises or, you know, hip abductions or planks when you have
awesome, fun, cool, heavy exercises like deadlifts, squats, you name it. And the same thing is true
for non-lifters. Like if you're into baseball, it's more fun to take batting practice than it
is to do arm care. If you're into running, it's more fun to just batting practice than it is to do arm care. If you're
into running, it's more fun to just go run than it is to do warmup or prep work. And this stuff
catches up to you. Um, and the muscle groups that I find people enjoy training the least,
like the core, the muscles of the forearm and wrist, the muscles of the gluteus medius and
minimus, the muscles of the rotator cuff and the lower leg calf specifically, they get neglected,
thrown at the end, or altogether completely forgotten. And I would recommend if you are
catching yourself not doing any movements for any of those movement types or muscle groups,
that you make sure that you include those in your training.
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The fifth thing I see a lot of people doing is neglecting speed, explosive, and plyometric
work.
This means they never do any lifts for power or explosiveness.
They don't move lightweights fast, or they don't try to move relatively substantive loads with
power, and they never train plyometrics. So I'll give you an example using a jump, okay?
So using a jump, we could train explosiveness with a box jump. We could train plyometric
strength with a jump rope, quick successive ground contacts. We could train plyometric
strength with pogos, quick side to side ground contacts. And we could train maximum power by
taking a weight you know you can squat for, say, eight reps and doing four
reps with it very fast. I find that most people do not include any of these movement types or
properties in their training at all, and a little bit goes a very, very long way.
So I would strongly recommend including these things on occasion. You'll see these feature a
lot in the upcoming app program I'm dropping, Forever Fit.
There will be multiple days a week where you'll see small, but I think important inclusions
of these types of exercises, even just two to four sets a week, can make a big, big difference.
Another habit that I find holds a lot of people back is neglecting
aerobic training. I understand that for so many people, doing cardio is kind of shitty. They don't
like it. It's not as fun as lifting weights. And quite frankly, I think if you could only do like
three hours of total exercise, I would do more weights than I would cardio. But a little cardio
goes a long way and the right amount of cardio can enhance your resistance training and it will
prevent the development of a lot of issues down the road. And a great many people in this country
still die of cardiovascular disease. And yes, many people get pretty substantial aerobic benefits from just anaerobic
resistance training exercise, but a little cardio goes a long way. And there's a million ways to do
cardio. You can do things like steps. You can do things like walking, jogging, or hiking.
And if you don't like ambulatory cardio, like walking, jogging, hiking, running, you can do
cycling, rowing, swimming, all of this.
And what I would recommend is that you do most of the cardio you do at a low to moderate intensity
and save a little time. And by a little time, I mean a little time, even like 15 minutes total
each week for some high output stuff. This might mean, you know, 20 seconds worth of sprinting on an
assault bike three times a week for three sets of 20 seconds. So like three total minutes of 20
seconds sprinting a week will make a huge difference in the cultivation of your aerobic peak.
And then you can let the rest of your aerobic training be in that zone two to three range.
the rest of your aerobic training be in that zone two to three range. And if you just do that,
it's probably not enough to have, you know, optimized aerobic wellbeing, but compared to doing nothing. And especially if you hate cardio and are, like I said, doing nothing, that'll make
a huge, huge difference. Uh, another one, very common. Most people do all of their exercise in the sagittal plane,
front to back. Things like running, most weightlifting occurs in the sagittal plane.
But things like the transverse plane and frontal plane, which are rotational planes and side to
side movement, are extremely valuable for cultivating long-term fitness, resilience,
and maintaining athleticism. I want you to think about things like tennis, pickleball, lacrosse,
baseball, snowboarding that incorporate elements of moving the hips and moving the trunk
in a rotational fashion. These movement types develop some pretty awesome
movement quality that carries over quite nicely to quote unquote real life. If you want real life
fitness and you want to feel coordinated, you are probably going to be moving in multiple planes of
motion. And if you only train front to back in the sagittal plane, you're going to be missing
out on some things.
So you can include rotational work in the gym or even rotational sports a few times a week, like tennis, pickleball, or any of the field sports, including things like basketball
and pick up a ton of that frontal and sagittal plane movement.
Even if it's not super, you know, categorical training, it's more free play.
It'll make a huge difference.
Uh, number eight is never training to failure or quite frankly, even close to failure.
Um, many people just struggle to make gains in strength and muscle, not because of a lack of
volume or a lack of total time in the gym. It's more of a lack of proximity to meaningful output. So their training is good. It's not great.
Their form is good. Maybe it's even above average, but the actual reps never get close to failure
and proximity to failure is huge for getting a lot out of your training. So be sure if you're
allocating that time in the gym, that some of that training is done fairly close to failure.
that time in the gym, that some of that training is done fairly close to failure.
The ninth habit I see holding a lot of people back is just arbitrarily doing like eight to 12 reps on everything. I think eight to 12 repetitions is fantastic for developing a little bit of
strength and a good amount of muscle. But I think it's smart to sometimes train with a three to five
rep range or a six to 10 rep range or a 15 to 20 rep range.
I think changing up your rep ranges keeps things pretty interesting.
It keeps things fresh.
It can help avoid excessive wear and tear on the joints, can help you better pair exercise
exercises with rep ranges that are intelligent.
So don't be afraid to mix up your rep ranges and play around
with things. I just would avoid doing like 15 plus reps of certain compound lifts. Okay. Uh,
number 10, I see this a lot. I'm guilty of this and it's not taking advantage of that post-workout
meal. Uh, so frequently with the evidence-based fitness community,
we kind of like turn our backs on things that have been proven to be unnecessary. So like,
for example, if you eat enough protein throughout the day, the importance of a post-workout meal
is substantially lower than it would be if you don't. But it doesn't mean that there isn't a
benefit to having a post-workout meal. And specifically, a lot of that data is post-workout
protein. Like if you get enough protein across the day, the ability for a post-workout protein
shake to really make a meaningful difference is lower than if you are like, say, protein deficient.
So what I would try to remind you all of in doing this or in training is, you know,
you have these small windows that can marginally, even if it's five to 10% improve your outputs,
the pre-workout, the peri-workout and the post-workout window and the right supplements
and fuel 90 minutes before all the way into 90 minutes after can make maybe a one to 10%
difference on the high end. And to me, that's
worth it. So be sure that after a hard training session, if you can get some protein and some
easy to digest carbohydrates that are of course, in accordance with your total calorie goals,
you do that because it can make a really freaking big difference.
Tip number 11 is neglecting pre intra intra, and post-workout supplementation opportunities.
Again, when it comes to pre-workout training, many people opt for caffeine, vasodilators,
pre-workout supplements. That can be great. For endurance athletes or for longer sessions,
the inclusion of something like an electrolyte can be really valuable pre or intra-workout.
an electrolyte can be really valuable pre or intra workout. And after your training,
you have this great window where your body is particularly, uh, let's say sensitive to insulin,
uh, or rather insulin is going to be a very valuable hormone to elevate, to reduce excessive breakdown of protein and help with nutrient absorption. So post-workout you can include
some carbohydrate as well as some
protein, and it's a great opportunity to include your creatine. I mean, the most important thing
with creatine is you take it every day, but I think having it after your training might make
sense because when you are finished training, if you eat something with carbohydrate, you're going
to release insulin, which is very valuable after you train because
it prevents excessive protein breakdown or muscle breakdown from occurring. Additionally, when you
eat something sugary and you elevate insulin, a protein called GLUT4, which acts like a little
tunnel, goes to the surface of your muscle cell to let that blood sugar in, the sugar that you likely just ate
that raised your insulin in the first place. That protein channel, that protein tunnel,
allows more than sugar into the muscle cell. It can also allow amino acids and creatine in,
which is why having post-workout carbohydrate can improve your absorption of things like creatine and even certain amino
acids and make a small but important difference in your ability to recover. So I think a lot of
people get confused with what to have post-workout. Should I have protein? Should I have carbs? I
think you'd probably be best having both and maybe even creatine, but it's pretty valuable to have those post-workout carbs.
And a lot of people don't understand why. So that's a big reason you can take advantage of
the shuttling effect of some of these proteins that exist in ourselves.
Another thing, this is issue number 12, doing too much bilateral work. This would be like only
doing squats, never split squats, only doing
deadlifts, never single leg deadlifts, only doing barbell presses, never dumbbell presses.
I think including more bilateral work where each side can work on its own or unilateral work where
each side can work on its own, I should say, bilaterals where both sides work together, my bad,
big difference maker. A 13th issue I see is neglecting the utilization of machines or cables
where it makes sense. I love free weight training, but a lot of people are like,
they're just quite frankly, there's a lot of people who are too married to free weight training.
They think free weight training is like the end all be all. But I'll give you an example.
The dumbbell fly is like a perpetually permanently always
shittier option than the cable fly. Like always, this is just always the case. Like 90% of cable
tricep exercises work better than free weight tricep exercises. You quite literally cannot
train your calves or I should say quads and their shortened position without a leg extension,
unless you're doing some like really inefficient joint challenging leg exercises. So like just only ever doing free weights and like
bashing machines and cables, it, it truthfully, objectively, and factually, I think makes your
training shittier, harder, and less efficient. Should most of your training be done with free
weights? Yes. Should you only use free
weights if you have access to a whole gym? I really don't think so. At least not if you care
about your joints and optimizing your training. And that's not even trying to sound like an optimal
bro. Like that's not optimal. I'll be the first person to tell you doing most of your training
from free weights or with free weights is probably best for strength, hypertrophy, inter and intramuscular coordination, but use those machines. They are such good tools and
don't bash them just because there's some weird appeal to the efficacy of free weights. We know
they're good, but in many contexts, cables and machines are better. The 14th issue I see a lot
of people making or problem, or I should say
bad habit holding you back is just never taken that deload. You've been promising yourself for
a long time. Many of you know you need one, but you never take it. You need to take time away
from training. It doesn't have to be a week. It can be three days. It can be five days,
but take time to give your joints and nervous system a break. And lastly, and this happens a
lot, and I don't think it's a huge deal if you only care about gains and you actually train hard,
but if you are not following a program, you don't have structure, you don't have accountability,
you don't have a protocol when you get to the gym, man, are you leaving a lot of gains on the table?
And there are so many good options available out there right now for programming, for coaching,
are so many good options available out there right now for programming, for coaching, that not having structure and like allocating multiple hours a week to something with no plan is crazy to me.
Cause like you're going four days, five days, one to two hour sessions. Holy shit. Going in there
without a plan. Like you're just going to have 10 hours that you spend in the gym every week with no
set plan. That's a lot of time to spend on something without a set
plan. I just don't think it's worth it. Okay, folks, I hope that that was helpful. That is 15
habits that I think hold a lot of people back from reaching their peak when it comes to fitness
training. Again, those are training too much, too many days specifically, tracking weird data and
not actually effective data,
doing too many exercises in a session, not training your core grip, external rotators
of the hip and shoulder or calves, neglecting speed, explosive and plyometric properties,
skipping aerobic training, only training in the sagittal plane, never training close to failure,
always picking the same rep
range, not having post-workout or pre-workout training meals, neglecting supplementation
around your training, not doing enough unilateral work, prioritizing free weights and not taking
advantage of the benefits of cables and machines, forgetting the importance of deloading and not
following a program. If you found this episode helpful, I would strongly encourage you to subscribe,
to share it to your Instagram story and tag me. Let me know what tip you'll be implementing to
make 2024 your best training year ever. Thanks so much for tuning in and I'll catch you on the next
one.