Mark Bell's Power Project - EP. 581 - You Should Be Training 7 Days A Week!
Episode Date: August 28, 2021We've heard you say you hate missing a day of training, so much so that it builds anxiety. We train 7 days a week and feel you can as well. Today's podcast will teach you how anyone of any fitness lev...el in all walks of life can in fact train 7 days a week. Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Marek Health: https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT15 for 15% off ALL LABS! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢Eat Rite Foods: http://eatritefoods.com/ Use code "POWERPROJECT25" for 25% off your first order, then code "POWERPROJECT" for 10% off every order after! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: http://drinklmnt.com/powerproject ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Subscribe to the Power Project Newsletter! ➢ https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
with fat booties comes from yeah because it used to be like genetics no but it used to be in the
80s or in like in the 80s it was all about what it wasn't like we're recording now but well okay
i mean this is i just wanted to let you guys know when did we start recording just now just now
butts have really blown up i guess it was wiz khalifa was clean we didn't boys oh ass so fat
let's make a baby that's sick yeah because when you look through the years it's like
we go in phases yeah like big booties wasn't all the rage you know what i mean like the 80s and
70s so it started making a comeback with sir mix a lot i like big butts you cannot lie and i remember
i was just like big butts and then so like I was instantly.
Hip hop made it super popular.
Me being a fan.
And I remember like in, I guess, junior high, maybe when things started like catching your attention.
Yeah.
And everybody was like into big boobs.
And I was like, no, dude, it's all about, it's all about the booty.
And then now it's like, everyone's all about it.
And I'm like
hey i was here first all right i was into this shit way before you kids but social media really
done uh done done a number because like now it's not just big butts it's like when you look at
those ig models ig baddies it's like you gotta have everything you gotta have you gotta have
here and you gotta have here and that's why all these people are getting BBLs. I didn't realize what B yeah.
What's the BBLs?
That's what girls can call it.
BBLs are Brazilian butt lifts.
Oh yeah.
That's, that's what BBLs are.
I've been hearing a lot of people, like a lot of people have more people than you'd
expect to have BBLs.
And then, you know, fake, um, tatas.
And it really just warps perceptions on bodies, man.
I love, um, I went to, uh, it was Rogan when he was here a while back when Uri Faber fought in the UFC.
It was like a big event.
I think it was at the old Arco Arena too.
Yeah.
But he did a stand up and he was like, imagine explaining to aliens the Kardashians.
So, you know, it's a couple of years back.
I remember this one.
And, you know know he's like
well why is she so why do so many people listen to her and he's oh because she's she's big right
here and she's she's big right there he's like and that's and that's it yeah yeah that's right
so yeah she has some talent they're also marketing geniuses let's not take that away from there they
are marketing geniuses or the mom the mom yeah um but she taught the daughters and the daughters have done
well too so like you can't take away like kylie jenner is a billionaire like they done put in
work but still yeah they got up there partially because of kim having a big fat juicy ass, put them on the map.
It did that ass really put them on the map.
And by the way, no hate, like, Hey, make your money.
It just is funny though.
Yeah.
But yeah, man, it's, it's, it makes you wonder too, like how much, um, like, cause, okay.
So, so we lift our, our bodies were made in the gym.
Right. But like at the same time, if you're in fitness culture, you, you also see how kind of warped
up, I guess, a sense of what a healthy body looks like is cause like, yeah, you know what
I mean?
Like, uh, you don't have to look like us to be healthy.
You don't even have to look anything remotely close to us.
But if you're in the fitness industry,
and if Mark was like 15 pounds heavier,
we'd be saying,
Mark,
you fat,
bro.
Or if I was 15 pounds heavier,
like,
it'd seem like I got a little fat,
bro.
It's crazy.
Just a little thick.
Just a little thick.
If you ain't 180,
you ain't a lady.
If you ain't 180,
you ain't a lady. ain't a lady terrible terrible oh i just
kept putting the camera on mark as you and i were talking about the kardashians and he's like i don't
give a fuck but why do you give a fuck about is i had some fish rice last night and two steaks i
really should you know what from our conversation the other day, I really should be taking pictures of my
meals so people understand, but I just feel like it's so
boring. I never do. But yeah, that fish
was good. IG stories disappear, right?
Yeah, they do. They really
do. I put some of that angry duck sauce on it.
Did you like it? It was good. Still haven't messed with it.
It's got a little spice to it.
Spice and tang.
It's really good. What kind of fish was it? It was a salmon.
It was, um, which one was it? The garlic something salmon, but it was really good. I kind of fish was it? It was a salmon.
Which one was it?
The garlic something salmon.
But it was really good.
I just like how quick it is, man.
I got home from jujitsu and I was super tired.
So I just warmed it up, put it on, put the rice on.
Boom, damn done.
I'm having a hard time stopping with the shrimp.
Plow right through it every time. I'm like, I'm just going to put one in the microwave and then I end up eating two of them right in a row.
I haven't done the surf and turf yet.
I need to. absolutely yesterday i had the eat right
shrimp for breakfast right when i got here i'm like oh i want to do a protein shake and i'm like
how about i do something a little bit superior and i had just i forget how many grams of protein
are in it but there's like no fat 80 something i think yeah it's incredible and it's on top of
that tastes delicious it's filling didn't have any rice with it.
No carb, low carb.
And it's just incredible.
And the best thing is I didn't have to cook it.
It was all ready for me.
And all I had to do is throw it in the microwave.
And if that's something that interests you, I highly recommend that you go to eatrightfoods.com.
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every order after that head over there asap oh my god i found the origin yeah it's wiz kalifa
there you go was that what you're yeah i'm like trying to find it I thought it was like
at the end of a verse
or whatever
but it was like
it was stuck in the middle
there yeah
so fat
we can have a baby
let's make a baby
that's cool
let's make a baby
it's you gotta ass so fat
let's make a baby
our obsession with asses
I think
probably started when
I think people started
to figure out
that you can like
manipulate them pretty well through training I think it you know i think like a lot oh
i think a lot of girls you know they tried they started training their butts more and they were
like you know like somebody like kim kardashian people are probably like how does she have a butt
like that maybe uh you know maybe she got that way because she's just
sort of born ish that way she uses a hip circle right she does use a hip circle she does use a
hip circle but i think that people used to just think that that's the way someone was built and
that was that yeah but we've seen evidence of uh something different out there yeah dude sometimes
it really surprises me when i see before and after pictures of some women.
And I'm just like, wait, three years?
Like some women were like literally they didn't have much of a build.
Very thin, especially like through the arms and stuff I've seen. Very thin, yeah.
And the legs and everything.
And then three years later with training, it's like, whoa, like congratulations.
Just like that's great work you know like the way that you can like manipulate your body with some strength training is
insane it's unbelievable yeah yeah and then what you were kind of talking about like uh earlier
about like when they became like in style again but i mean i think it goes way back to like even
caveman days like if she had them them birthing hips, you knew she was gonna be good to plant your seed in
So I think that's where the attraction come Andrew
Not talk like that. Sorry
But I guess I used to grown-up words
Yeah, no that does make that does make sense, but he's healthy
Yeah, but straight like yeah, no you're right though
Like it's like like straight training
really showed people that you can really change your body without having to get surgery you know
what i mean but it's still be wild how many of these people on online be like slightly getting
bbls without telling anybody i actually wonder like what the body fat percentage is on some
of these uh fitness girls that look great you, like what you can get away with. Because I think, you know, having more muscle mass and having muscle in the right spots,
you can, you don't have to be thin.
You don't have to even try to be skinny to be attractive.
You don't.
You know, and I think that's, I think previously that's what people thought.
Like, I just need to get skinny.
I just need to look like everybody else.
Or I just need to look like the other girls that are thin.
And I don't think that's true anymore no that's not true that's not probably was never true actually but
yeah i think that maybe people just didn't have a vehicle or way to know how to grow the spots
they wanted to grow and it's it's it's the same like whenever like whenever i do because i like
when women ask me about training it's like no don't worry about losing weight just train train
trust me your body will change you know you don, don't worry about losing weight. Just train, train. Trust me, your body will change.
You don't need to worry about dropping weight.
Your body fat will go down without you really worrying about it.
Eat up maintenance and just go into the gym.
Weight train.
You could do some cardio, but cut this weight loss shit.
Sometimes you do need to worry about dropping weight, especially if you're really heavy.
But in many cases, just get into training, lifting weights.
Your body will transform.
What worked well for my butt was to get up to 330 pounds.
Hey,
man,
you really do have a fat butt though.
I know we always commented on here,
but like you're,
you're like when,
when everyone saw you at that bodybuilding show,
you know how many people in the crowd are like,
his ass is so fat.
I've never been like more,
uh,
like oddly embarrassed in my life so i walked into the um
i walked into the i don't know honey wanted me to get like some sort of shimmer or something on i
don't i don't know what the fuck's going on this bodybuilding shows like you need to get like you
need to shine up more or something he's like so go in there and i go to go in this room and it's all women in there and they go whoa they're like what did you do to get your ass like
that i love it and honey's like oh my god dude he's like you should see your face he's like you're
so you're so red right now you're so embarrassed i was like yeah i wasn't i wasn't expecting that
they're like kind of whistling at me as i walked in. Now you know how it feels. Yeah, I was like, this old thing?
I was like, I'm not asking for it by wearing these tiny little underwear.
But maybe I was.
But lots of squats, lots of deadlifts, but I kind of, my hips have always kind of been built a little bit that way to where my hips kind of point towards the ground, I guess,
a little bit, you know?
What do they call it?
Like anterior pelvic tilt? There you go. Something like that. something like that yeah yeah yeah i don't know gosh must have trained every
day to do that to build that booty huh you have to every day every day can't miss a day you train
every day andrew i oddly enough have been training a lot more frequently but no not every day do you
have like days that are scheduled to like not work out or does it sometimes just happen that you just don't work out? I try to leave those for
the weekends, just not because like I really care that it's a Saturday or Sunday, but usually that's
when the family's home. And that means that we're probably going to be up a little bit later than
normal. And if I don't get it in in the morning, then there's a really good chance that I just
won't get it in throughout the rest of the day just because there's too much going on.
So if I do take a day off, it's going to be like on a Sunday because usually Saturday I'll wake up early, train pretty good because we don't have anything scheduled usually on a Saturday.
So I have a longer training session and then I have a day's worth of stuff with the family and then a long night usually because like i said everyone's home which means i'm kind of exhausted so i'm like you know what
tomorrow probably not going to happen so that's usually when it will uh not happen but right now
i'm training like five six days a week what if uh you were going to go on like a go to a barbecue
or something on saturday but sunday uh you know like, Oh, maybe I'll just switch it. You do that sometimes all the time. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. No, I don't,
I don't work. I don't, uh, operate on a, uh, like a Monday through Friday schedule with my workouts
either. Like Monday's not chest day. You know, it doesn't matter. I just make sure I get in and do
something. I think maybe we should define some non-negotiables. And what I mean by that is this, because whenever like we all get asked the question, oh, how many days a week should I train? Because a lot of people are like, how many days a week is the optimal days a week to train? It's a hard question to answer because when we think about training, like people usually think of like a hard session, right? But there are just certain things that you should be doing each day outside of maybe the gym or hard cardiovascular work. That's just good for you. Like walking, right?
I wouldn't put that as part of training. Um, and when we think about it, like a lot of people who
have desk jobs or sit at work all day, they don't get a lot of opportunity to actually walk.
So non-negotiable for them outside of getting in the gym and training should be getting multiple
walks in
a day or quite a few steps in each day just in general for your health you know i don't know
if people even know this but on your phone it tracks your steps i've shown this to a bunch of
people and like i didn't even know it had that on there yeah i was like oh that's weird so maybe
there's people that are unaware but at least for my phone, which is just a iPhone, when you click on the health
thingy that has the heart, it shows your steps and it'll actually show your steps from like
previous days.
As long as your phone was with you on your walks, then you're good to go.
So someone could even just be listening to this right now and say, I kind of wonder if
you look at your phone, you open up that app, it might take you a while to find it.
Cause I've had to dive into some people's phones to like, look for it. It was like harder on some
phones than others for whatever reason. But once you find that, you might learn that,
oh, I take 3000 steps a day or I take 5,000 steps a day. See if you could just increase that.
It doesn't, you don't have to like, you know, you don't need to work towards 20,000 steps every day out of nowhere or something like that.
10,000 steps, I think, is a pretty large amount of walking.
So if you can work your way towards that, that would be a good goal.
I think it turns out to be like five miles, which is kind of a lot of walking. But if you could get that maybe a few times a week, that would be great.
When it comes to strength training and when it comes to, you know, like being a power lifter or trying to get like maximum results for bodybuilding or something, you know, this is where somebody could say, oh, you know, four days a week, five days a week is probably a good idea.
And that worked really well for me for powerlifting. Like I, I kind of,
when I was in my powerlifting career, I, I kind of needed days that were like off,
but those days still weren't like all the way off because I would come in and I would do
rotator cuff work. I would do like bullshit stuff, uh, might work calves, might work abs,
might do like other stuff that I just think,
uh, would be in my best interest to help me towards my goals. So I love training every day.
It's on the schedule every day to train. And there's some days where I come in, I got my walks
in, I did a podcast. I'm like, I actually don't really care if I train or not today. I'll just
fucking go home and I don't sweat it.
I don't worry about it.
And then maybe when I,
you know,
after I eat dinner,
maybe I'll go on another walk or something like that.
Yeah,
no,
I,
I do agree with that.
Like one thing is,
it's like you shouldn't beat yourself up too much if you're not able to get in a
training session during the week.
Let's say like you,
you set yourself up a five day a week training protocol and you only get four
days in one week.
Don't let that beat yourself up.
And I would honestly suggest don't try to get that session in or make up that
session in the next week.
Because what happens is if you're not used to,
especially if all those training days that you've programmed are hard,
if you're not used to doing that in succession,
then you try to do six days the next week,
you probably won't feel that great.
But when the way I look at it,
and this is just,
this is me, this is me,
this isn't what everybody needs to do, but I try to do something that is training every day.
There'll be sessions during the week that are harder. And then there'll be sessions that I have during the week that are purposefully easy, where I just like, it could be that I work every
body part, but it's light. And I'm just driving blood to those different muscle groups because
that helps with recovery. Right. And I get to move and I, and afterwards I always feel good.
Even if I went in super tired and I can just do some lightweight, get some blood flow everywhere.
I feel great. Um, and that's just like, I think that you can manage that. It doesn't need to be
an hour. It can be 20 minutes, 30 minutes. Um, and if there's a day for some reason that I
couldn't get to the gym, especially like during quarantine, I'll do some type of kettlebell movements work where I just
get to move my body through different ranges of motion. I like doing that. So I do some form of
training every single day. You know what I mean? But it's not that every day is hard. And I think
that's what we got to remember. You know, not every day needs to be 100 percent.
It doesn't have to be a full be a fully super sophisticated workout plan that
you run every single day, that you do every single day. You could go in the gym and say,
you know what, I just want some movement. You could even do like one exercise a day.
I think that even if you were convinced yourself to do one exercise, you most likely would probably
do more. But I had a really simple workout a couple of days ago. All I did was low cable curls
and tricep pushdowns. I just went back and forth on them, back and forth. And I was like, you know,
I'm going to do this for like 20 or 30 minutes. I ended up doing it for an hour straight. I didn't
do any other exercises though. Just those two movements. It felt really good. And that would
be the other thing too. Don't think that you need to get in a bunch of exercises. You know, somebody might have scientific proof or evidence that it's more advantageous to under sell what we actually do or what we actually did. And sometimes you might say something like,
oh, I, all I had time for today, I just went in the gym and deadlifted. It's like, well,
deadlifts is like one of the hardest exercises you can pick and same with a squat. And so if
that's all, if that's, you know, quote unquote, all you did for the day, that's actually a lot.
And you should be pumped about that. You don't have to worry about whether you got hamstring curls in or leg press or belt squat
and all the other things that you might've wanted to get to. Yeah, that is true. That is true. I
will say this though, too, because I think a lot of, um, there are probably a lot of individuals
whose their ears perked up and they're like, well, I only have to do deadlifts and squats.
And that's, yeah, it's good. Trust me. It's a good training session.
But if you do want to gain a lot of muscle in other places, you probably should do those
smaller movements.
That'll help you out.
Especially if you're a newer lifter.
So a more advanced lifter, if someone can deadlift, let's just say 500 pounds and they
went in the gym and they did four sets, four sets of six with four or five or something like that.
It's like,
well,
that's yeah,
dude,
you can probably go the fuck home.
Like you wrecked your hamstrings,
your lower back and your butt and you're,
you're good.
You don't need to probably worry about it.
But if you're a newer lifter and he did one 85 for four sets of six,
it'd probably be in your best interest to say,
you know what?
I need to spend some fucking time doing some, I got some chicken legs.
I need to spend some time doing some leg curls.
I'm going to drag the sled for 20 minutes and then I'm going to go home.
That falls into the whole muscles money thing that we talk about all the time.
Like, like realize this, like when you've put in Andre Milanich, I've came on and said
your first few years of training, you should be building a volume.
So building a volume, each body part, doing everything everywhere so you can build muscle
so that you then can use that muscle to do strength work.
So if you are starting out, start off by essentially doing bodybuilding work.
And then if you want to do powerlifting, do that after a few years because you've probably
built a good body that can handle training volume, right?
But the cool thing is that after a lot of training years, after you've built a good body, it doesn't take that much to maintain the muscle you've put on.
You don't need to keep lifting that training volume to maintain your frame.
Actually, we had Brad Schoenfeld and a lot of like Menno Henselman's.
They came in and they specifically said, hey, if you it doesn't take a lot to maintain muscle that's already been built.
Building it is rough and not rough.
I say rough building it takes work, I'm not going to say rough.
Building it takes work, but maintaining it takes much less work.
And then what I was also going to add about, because I was just thinking, like this week,
you know, my son, he's seven months old, so we had a pretty bad night the other night.
Like he just, he was so tired he couldn't sleep.
It was weird.
Like he would fall asleep and then he'd wake up freaking out.
I kind of made the decision at, like, 1 a.m., like, yeah, probably not going to do it tomorrow.
So I made sure that I got as good of rest as I could because I started, I sort of treated that rest day as, like, another workout almost. Like, I was like, I'm going to make sure I get good rest here because, like, I don't want to throw away the day completely.
I made sure I actually made it worth it to kind of chill out so by doing that that prevented me from feeling like shit for
not working out because i just i mean it would have been so bad to get like four hours of sleep
and then try to lift like it would just it would not have been good wouldn't be bad yeah people
don't need to get anxiety over and sema saying he works out every day or any one of us saying that we walk or do whatever each and every day.
But we do think it's important to exercise every day.
And I think it's it's also important to understand, like, again, given the scenario, let's just say let's just say I went to go in the gym and do some back.
Right. Go in, do some lat pull-downs, do a couple seated rows, and then I get pulled away, and I'm in like a meeting or something.
And then for whatever reason, I just don't feel like I got enough motivation to go back in the gym and train.
Now, do you really think it matters that much that I come back in tomorrow and I decide to do some pull-overs and I decide to do a couple other things for my lats and finish them off, you know, 14 hours later.
I mean, there's just there's not enough real compelling evidence or testing or like these tests are they're too hard to do when you're just living your life and you're just exercising these certain ways.
So I wouldn't think that you have to.
There are particular ways to work out.
I don't want to say like working out completely randomly all the time.
You might be misdirected and not be able to get to your goal as quickly as you'd like.
So that's not necessarily great.
But it is your workout, and it is your body.
And if you really don't like working out that much, select things that you know that you do like.
Try not to spend too much time in the gym.
I think that's a really good thing that you do in SEMA.
It's like I don't really see you in there forever.
Like you're in there and you're getting your shit done, get a lot of work done.
But I don't know you to be in there for like three or four hours.
You know what I mean?
Um, but I don't know you to be in there for like three or four hours.
You know what I mean?
And I think some people make the mistake of being in there for so long, it cuts into the next day.
So if you're in the gym, uh, three or four times a week and you're in there 90 minutes
every single time and you're just dead ass tired and you, you don't think that you can
train on these other days, maybe cutting back on those other days a bit.
And also, like, what about just being fired up or inspired by something you see somebody else post?
Like, we do that all the time.
Like, hey, this guy exercised like I did.
Oh, shit, that was wild.
Let's try that today.
And that will be our workout for the day.
Like, so don't think that every time that you go into a gym or every time that you're going to do some sort of resistance training that it needs to be this monumental workout.
It could literally just be a couple exercises.
Make it fun.
Fun for me is to try new things and to mess around with new stuff.
It's rare that I do the same workout.
I'm just trying to make sure what I'm saying is accurate.
I'm just trying to make sure what I'm saying is accurate, but yeah, I would say that over the last maybe 10 or 15 years, um, before that I did do similar workouts over the last 10, 15 years.
I have not done a single workout that is the same from one week to the next. They've been all very,
very different. What I mean by that is one week I might use a curl bar. The next week I
might use hammer curls. The next week. Now there is some utility and strategy in saying I'm going
to make my hammer curls stronger. So that way you have a measure and you can kind of follow up and
work on them for periods of time. But me personally, I never dug that. I never cared that
much about that. I just keep switching things up. I just kind of do what calls to me.
And that way I can autocorrect in the workout.
And I can say, man, I'd love to do those rows with Ensema, but my lower back actually hurts today.
So you know what?
I'm just going to kind of do a pussy workout and do pull-downs or something, you know?
So you got to, you know, whatever you're going to be able to do for the day, lean into that.
Don't worry too much about the shit that you can't get to or do.
I love what you just said there.
The weights speak to me and the weights tell me what I say.
What'd you say, motherfucker?
That's so esoteric.
But no, no, I, so I, the way I used to set up my training was I would literally write
my program out and I would have multiple six week cycles cycles of like I'm progressing this for this next.
I'm progressing this.
I'm progressing this.
I still do quite a bit of that.
But the way I do things now is like there are certain movements that, okay, I'm going to be working on this movement for the next four to six weeks.
And there's a few of those.
And then everything else is fair game.
So if I feel like doing a different shoulder exercise than this I, then, then this, that I was doing last week, I'll do that. Um, and there's more, I allow
more variability now. Um, and I think that's beneficial to do when you know more, like you
said the last 10 to 15 years, but you've been training for how long? Like 30 something years,
30 something years. And I would assume that like you still did different things from week to week,
but when you were earlier in your training career, and especially when you were like getting ready
for meets, things were much more regimented in what you were doing from week to week in terms
like box squats, all the different types of movements. But like now that you kind of understand
what you, how you progress, you understand what your body can do. You can then just kind of do
what feels right and still make progression because you are
so familiar with the gym. Yeah, there would be different variables thrown in there. So like one
week I might squat with bands and next week I might squat with chains. But to your point,
I knew so much about what I was doing and I could feel that the weights were similar. So it might
have been 405 pounds of weight on the bar.
And then there might've been 200 pounds of chain on the bar.
And then the next time I went to use the bands,
I would kind of make sure the bands were a similar weight.
So it wasn't like I was going from,
uh,
you know,
one weight to some crazy weight the next week,
but there was always small,
uh,
there's always small,
like little,
um,
changes in the workouts. And so they weren't
massive all the time. It doesn't mean that I went from like doing a box squat to doing Bulgarian
split squats the next week. You know, I did squat, um, for many, many, many years, uh,
straight, you know, probably for a good 15 years straight of box squatting every single week for 52 weeks. But my point in it being different is that I would use a different bar. I would use a
different rep strategy. I would use a different set strategy. I would use different forms of
resistance in terms of bands, chains, weight releasers, and or just the weight on the bar.
So there's a massive amount of variability, but there was also
indicators. Dave Tate wrote articles about this on elitefts.com, which you can still check out
today, or it might be on T Nation. Sorry about that. I can't remember where I saw it, but he
wrote articles about indicators and he had these specific indicators that for him, if he felt those go up, he knew he was getting
stronger in other areas.
An example of that would be maybe he would do a rack deadlift, you know, and so he knew
like if his rack deadlift is going up, his lower back was getting stronger.
His regular deadlift might be a little stronger than it used to be.
And his squats might be a little stronger than it used to be. Things like that, that you're going to start to recognize in yourself that,
oh my God, I increased the strength of my lats, the way that I can pull. And I increased the
strength of my biceps. Holy shit. These pull-ups are way easier. There's going to be like things
that you might have indicators in your own workouts. You know, one thing I want to add in
there too, is that when I was mentioning like,
yeah, I work out every day. I understand that not for everybody, I guess working out isn't the
biggest part of their life. Right. Um, for me, like exercise and health is very huge because
I'm looking for longevity and I don't like when I get older, I want to feel young. So that's why
I'm so gung ho about this shit. But one thing is
like, you don't need to go to the gym to all the time. Like, I think Nick bear always said that
since he was 13 years old, he always just did a hundred pushups every single day. That's just
something he did. So I'm not saying you need to do a hundred pushups every day, but if there's a
day that you know, you're not going to go to the gym, maybe like, I'm going to do 10 pushups today
because what's going to probably happen is you'll do your 10. You'll probably do more than 10.
And then maybe you might end up doing 30, 40, 50 pushups during that day.
And that is a good thing to do for your body.
Or I have a pull-up bar at my house.
So it's always hanging up on a door.
And usually whenever I pass through the frame, I always do a few pull-ups.
I'll always do like three, four, five, maybe eight, whatever.
But I'll always get in a lot of pull-ups during the day.
And those add up. So you don't necessarily have to go to the gym to get work done. I'll always do like three four five maybe eight whatever but i'll always get in a lot of pull-ups during the day and those
Add up so you don't necessarily have to go to the gym to get work done
You can have a few weights at home
And like I mentioned there are days that I just get blood flow
You could get a good just blood flow type of workout getting blood flow to different muscles
In 10 to 15 minutes if you just have one pair of dumbbells at your house literally
Does it matter that you're doing like two or three?
Every couple hours because you said it adds up up but you probably don't feel like a burn you don't really feel like you worked out does that even matter though oh that absolutely matters so like
so you're saying do i need to feel sore essentially yeah because yeah so if we're
talking about the like the amount of pull-ups that most people can do before
they feel something, like most people will feel something with five pull-ups, four pull-ups,
you'll feel something.
And if you just do that multiple times through your doorway, you end up doing 15, 20 pull-ups
during your day.
That will add up over time in terms of your actual pull-up strength and everything else
that's working when you're doing pull-ups.
So it is beneficial.
and and everything else that's working when you're doing pull-ups so it is beneficial like that's like i think movement in general it should be more encouraged because of how most of us live nowadays
most of us live in a seat for a lot of our days and we're not standing like we're i feel super
lucky that we get to just be here standing near this podcast and we're not sitting in chairs
because this promotes movement right um and most people have to sit down at work on a computer all day long and that doesn't promote movement. So if you can have like a kettlebell in your office or something, or even a desk riser that promotes movement, that's going is referred to as like repeated effort. So when you try to have a
repeated effort in the gym of, let's say, pull-ups are a great example. Let's say set number one,
you do eight reps and then you rest 90 seconds. Set number two, you do six reps. Set number three,
you get like three reps. Well, according to, there's a lot of different ways to train, but in general,
I would suggest that that person moves on to probably something else. Uh, your strength
decreased by your strength decreased by over 2%, which is usually like just a rep or two.
And, uh, in that case, it's usually a good idea to move on to another exercise. You can apply
this to dumbbell pressing,
regular barbell bench pressing, squats, deadlifts,
anything that you want.
Once you start to decrease your repetitions by like two or more,
it's probably time to discontinue that exercise.
In the case of pull-ups,
in the case of what Nseema's talking about,
his repeated effort, if somebody was to do this,
to do it at a gym or in an office setting or at
their house or wherever, if they just had a chin-up bar, pull-up bar, just randomly somewhere,
and they could get it, let's say their max amount of reps they could do is like three.
They got three reps in here, three reps there, three reps there, scattered throughout the day,
one, you know, after, one in the morning, one in the afternoon, one later on throughout the day, one, you know, after one in the morning, one in the
afternoon, one later on the day, they're going to be able to have a good repeated effort and get
all three repetitions every single time, as opposed to only resting for 90 seconds.
They won't induce the same soreness most likely because they didn't have a shortened rest period.
So they didn't go into it fatigued.
So someone could technically say,
well, maybe you're not going to get the hypertrophy
that you would get.
But the other argument would be,
hey, you did more volume.
So you're still going to get bigger.
You're still going to get,
and you're still going to get stronger.
So there's many, many ways to train.
Training intentionally when you're fatigued,
we already know works really
well pre-exhaust methods or uh just not giving yourself adequate rest to do the next set in the
case of german volume training doing a 10 by 10 you know and doing every 90 seconds or something
will annihilate you and you only need like a 45 pound plate on each side of the bar
and uh that can probably elicit some muscle growth.
But something different where you did, let's say, three sets of 10 where you used 315 pounds, the intensity is now higher.
You rest for four or five minutes in between your sets.
That one will also have a lot of value.
And you'll also be able to grow and expand from that as well.
Yeah.
I was just thinking, you know, because people will be like, no, like you have to, you know,
feel that soreness.
You have to get hypertrophy going.
Um, but it's funny cause you know, in SEMA, um, recommending people do that every time
they walk by that, that bullet bar, like just do a couple.
Um, if someone is thinking like, no, you need to be sore, therefore I'm not even going to
bother.
It's like, dude, you're going the wrong way at that point.
You know, it's like just because you're not going to get sore from doing three pull-ups, you're just not going to do them at all.
So you're just going to totally wipe that off the table.
Like that's going the wrong direction.
But on the topic of soreness, so the first thing about soreness is first off, when you're newer in the gym, especially in like year one, year two, and you're really like progressing progressing right and
the gains are coming fast soreness is prevalent like you you feel sore a lot especially when you
do some new things that you've never done before like your hamstrings might feel like they not be
they might not be able to move um you'll feel super sore but as you work out longer and longer and longer, even as you get stronger, even as you build up volume, the you don't get as sore as you used to when you started.
Right. Like I don't get as sore as I did when I when I first started training.
So that's one thing like I don't use soreness as a predictor of, oh, I trained hard.
I actually use if I know if I'm really, really sore, that's a tell to me that,
okay, I'm going to go a little bit easier today. So instead of just not working out,
that'll be a day that I go into the gym and I do a 30 minute thing where I just, again,
blood flow. I just get a pump on a lot of things and I don't worry about lifting super heavy weight
or I don't look for me super stressed. I just worry about going through a good range of motion,
getting blood to those different muscle groups. So what I'm, the reason why I'm saying that is
I don't necessarily think that a lot of people, when they're super sore, they're like, okay,
I'm not going to do anything today, which is okay. That can actually help you with recovery too.
That that's fine. But you could also look at that and be like, okay, I'm just going to go
into the gym. I'm going to do 20 or 30 minutes of something easy because that will help your
recovery. But at least I still think that there is a benefit in the habit of making sure that you
do something each day, even if it's something easy, just doing something.
Did you do that when you were going to like a 24 hour gym where there was a lot of other
people and a lot of opportunities for your ego to come work out with you as well?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay. That's big yeah okay that's big
because that's what i was thinking too because i'm like back in my day like if i showed up at
the gym it's like no i'm gonna show everybody i'm gonna work longer and harder than everybody here
and then end up getting hurt harder worse than everybody but yeah soreness is also deceiving
because it can happen from stretching you know so like So like if you were, if you just, if you chose to do dumbbell flies and you chose to superset
that with pec deck type movement, you'd be super sore.
Or instead of your squats for the day, you just chose to do like a Bulgarian split squat
or something, you know, something that kind of stretches you out more or stiff leg deadlifts.
You know, you did a lot of stiff, stiff leg deadlifts or the calves are a great example.
Oh, yeah.
You full range of motion, calf work, calf work and your calves get really, really sore.
So soreness is not it's not a bad indicator.
It's like it is an indicator of like a certain amount of work that gets done.
I like I like for myself.
I like for areas to feel like they got
worked a little bit you know uh not really super sore uh not really stiff necessarily but um
the next day and sometimes even a day later they just feel like a little like swollen and even like
a little uh exhausted more in that range. Got it.
Yeah, and the internet's back, by the way.
What?
Got the internet back.
Yeah.
But anyway, so if you guys have any online references, I can finally pull them up.
Oh, there you go.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I think it would be absolutely useful because, again, not everyone, I'm lucky to be working in a place that has a gym right next to me.
So if I ever do want to get a quick 30 minute workout in, it's 10 steps away.
So I understand I have this advantage.
So if anything, what I'm talking about here, buy a pair of dumbbells for your house, buy a kettlebell for your house, maybe get a pull up bar for a doorframe.
Just again, so if you can't make it to the gym, right,
you can do something small in the comfort of your own home,
and it doesn't need to be some heroic-ass workout.
You can do something quick and easy.
A lot of times some of the CrossFit workouts are pretty good.
They could be like 12 minutes long.
You do some sort of dumbbell complex.
Add a hip circle into the mix with a lot of those movements.
I like doing a lot of that too.
Yeah, you get crushed.
Yeah. One workout I did with. I, I, one workout I did it with my daughter. Uh, I just said,
pick a number and you know, from one to 10, I genuinely didn't care what it was going to be.
I'd make something up if it was like a one, but she said 10, like, all right,
we're going to do 10 burpees every minute on the minute for 10 minutes.
Dude. I mean, okay. So someone who doesn't do a lot of pushups or anything like that,
like she was
actually pretty sore which is kind of funny but it was so easy and like it was fun and it's like
anybody could do that and those crossfitters man every minute on the minute or like those
tabatas or whatever the hell they're called yeah like they sound so like oh i can do that and then
halfway through you're like i don't know if I'm going to get through it.
But that's like part of that challenge.
So something as easy as just 100 burpees in 10 whole minutes, it can be pretty challenging after a while.
So depending on where you are in your fitness, I guess, journey.
But yes, little things like that can add up.
When you mess around with training every day, do you sometimes, midway through a workout,
kind of look at the clock and say,
yeah, I should probably wrap this one up,
but maybe for tomorrow I should get,
like is there something sometimes you're.
Things roll over?
Yeah, you're like, oh, I should probably,
because like, you know, we get excited,
we want to do other stuff, and you're just like,
that would be good to incorporate that tomorrow,
or do you do stuff like that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Things roll over all the time.
Like,
especially if like,
if I'm doing a few pretty stressful movements and I'm just like,
Ooh,
I really wanted to do Nordics today,
but this stuff's just not going to fly.
I'll just do it tomorrow.
Like it's like a roll over minutes from cell phones.
Yeah.
People got to be okay with that though.
You know?
And I think a lot of times people like,
uh,
they stress about it.
They get worried about it, that they can't do it the next day.
Because sometimes there is a little bit of merit, especially if you're on a again, if you're some if you're someone who's getting ready for a powerlifting meet and you've split up your squats and your deadlifts and your benches on different days of the week.
And for some reason, who knows why, but like you weren't able to get in the deadlift volume needs get in.
But tomorrow you're going to squat. You can't deadlift tomorrow. I get it. Okay. I can understand
that. But in most people's situations, if you're just trying to get stronger and you're not
powerlifting for a meet, or you're just trying to get bigger and you're not doing a show, you should
be totally okay with letting things roll over to another day. maybe just doing that later on in the week.
It's not that big of a deal.
I'd say especially with people that are trying to lose weight,
get the fuck out of the gym.
If you already went and you already got a good training session in,
you should cut your losses and go
because the more that you sweat, the more that you work,
the more calories that you burn,
the more calories your body is going to want so literally it gets to a point where all you're going to do is make your chubby little
self hungrier for later on in the day that's what i think about i'm like oh man i need i do love
training but i'm gonna be so hungry if i keep doing this my mind's gonna be wandering so i just
try to say you know what Just fucking get out of here.
Chubby little knees.
Chubby little kneecaps.
Real talk on the idea of exercise equipment.
If you are getting something for your home, get something that you're excited about and that promotes movement.
What I was thinking about was like the slat board is so cool, even though it's just a freaking board that is at a slat.
It's a really good mobility tool because you can just get on that squat and sit there.
I like doing that a lot.
And you can add in bodyweight squats onto it.
You can add in weighted squats.
I got one in my living room.
Right?
It promotes movement.
And if you just put it right there, literally, if you just put it right there in your living room, you probably go and you just fucking squat on it.
Yeah, when I walk past it, I just move around on it, squat on it. Yeah squat on it yeah it when i think about it i'm like oh that's gonna kind of like
hurt to do that out of nowhere uh but i do it anyway and it loosens up my back and it feels
good and i just do a couple reps and i sit back down and watch tv there you go yeah i actually
was doing um just uh calves on it like just lifting myself up and i was just like this is cool like it's
comfortable like you're not like falling off a ledge or anything and uh yeah my so calf raises
on the slant board it was really good and i was couldn't walk the rest of the day because i was
like a newborn baby colt doesn't our buddy kyle kingsbury like not have couches or something
what is it about his house that promotes movement? He does something. He has a trampoline.
Well, when we were there, he had a couch.
Yeah, he did.
Okay.
But he didn't have any chairs for, like, at dinner time.
He had to, like, kind of sit down crisscross applesauce and try to figure out how to eat on the floor.
It was so strange.
Great salad, though.
It was an amazing salad it was so strange great salad though it was amazing that's pretty that's
pretty great like he's got weights like right under his tv and his kids like bouncing off
exercise balls and climbing all over everybody yeah honestly again anything to promote different
types of movement i'm in favor for that's why like i'm in favor of standing desks. His son, Bear, jumped right on his back.
It looked like he was trying to take his neck.
He was a jujitsu practitioner.
It was hilarious.
That boy's going to be a savage, man.
It was amazing.
He already is.
Our boy Kyle with no shoes.
Ever.
Yeah.
I want to get a trampoline, though, the way that they had it.
It's just a small trampoline.
Yeah.
I don't trust trampolines, man.
Not with my big ass. I do not.
Oh, got it.
I've seen some people
with some accidents.
The Nutty Professor.
Oh, was that in the movie?
Yeah. Oh, wow.
Actually, by the way, guys,
my new name is Jean-Claude Van Daddy,
just so you know.
So if you ever refer to me, it's no longer in SEMA.
It's no longer Natty Professor.
It is Jean-Claude Van Daddy or Van Daddy or JCV Daddy.
You changed it officially?
It's officially.
Josh Settleage actually coined it.
So I coined him Settlegate and he coined me Jean-Claude Van Daddy.
Now you got to work on the split between the chairs.
Yes. Let's see, look. Here we go. Oh look here we go oh what is oh yeah the acupuncture but now this is gonna be in scene on the trampoline
it's just all the way down look at eddie murphy man how much is he benching oh come on
it's like one damn maybe 100 pounds wow anyway i don't think
this movie would fly these days the nutty professor i don't think people would be okay
with a man wearing a fat suit like that they'd probably be like that's that mobic yeah i think
i love that yeah it would because when he loses the weight, he's like super mean to the fat guy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's an amazing movie.
The only thing you need to study is your ass.
Your mama's got a big ass.
I got a big ass.
And he's like, pass the salt.
Hercules, Hercules.
God, that's a good movie.
It's a great movie.
It's a great one.
One of the greatest in uh in training every day uh
you don't really have a body part split right you because you you kind of do full body most of the
time that's a funny thing man like you are you always ask me what are you training down like
everything my answer is always everything because it's always full body days for me now but you'd
also do like movements that are just like uh different right
i mean you're doing like um the uh what's that monkey foot right yeah monkey foot you're doing
some knees over toes stuff which is going to kind of require i mean it's you know they're lunges and
knees over toes like stuff but it does kind of require your whole body um do you still do like
just regular like bodybuilding type shit?
Yeah, I'll do bicycle curls. I'll do lateral raises. I'll do hamstring curls. Um, I'll do
calf work. I do, I do all of those movements. Um, but I do add in a lot of movements that add a lot
of other muscle groups in. So when I say full body, it's not like just because the, um, sissy squat like has the quads and the glutes i don't i
don't count that as both i'll still do a hamstring movement um i don't need to do any direct glute
work these days like my butts but you're not literally training every muscle group every day
right like my mentor rip rogers who claims he claims he he did every body part every day.
You're getting to a bunch of different muscles in a day,
and you don't have a specific split.
Yeah.
Like you're not doing like bicep curls, tricep pushdowns,
and then the knees over, right?
I'm doing that after.
Well, I'll always do biceps and triceps.
No, I know, but you don't get in every,
you're not working every muscle every day. Oh, like traps and what?
Right?
Because you're not in there for that long.
I'm not in there for that long.
But I superset a lot of shit.
Yeah, no, I know.
So, like, that's why I can get through a lot of stuff.
Because I can get through my workout in 45 minutes to maybe an hour.
Because right after one movement, I'm not, like, I'll be doing, maybe if I'm doing sissy squats,
maybe I'm doing some face pulls right after the sissy squats in the back to the sissy squats. So like I will work
biceps. If my full body split is three days that week, I'll get it three times if I'll get my
triceps three times. And there'll be enough variation between the days to where you are
hitting every muscle group. Yes. Yeah. So at least every muscle group is being hit individually two
to three times a week because
I do three workouts.
Got it.
But there isn't a day that's just lower body or give us a sample workout for free today.
Sissy squats.
Don't charge us today.
Sissy squats, face pulls, pull ups, lateral raises, hammer curls, tricep push downs.
With that, I usually would do a barbell movement.
Andrew, have you ever seen this guy work this hard before?
Never once.
Yeah.
Have you ever watched me work out?
No.
Okay.
Because I've been in the gym while you're in the gym and I have not seen you do any
of this.
Really?
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
That's very interesting.
I know.
You must not be paying attention.
It could be.
And I will also be doing like maybe on that workout.
Yeah.
You're really, I'm being serious. serious i'm gonna flame the fuck out of
you very soon um where was i where was i so you were lying about your workouts
yeah hard to remember um and then some type of row or something maybe like i don't i haven't
done penly rows in a minute but i might some, uh, dumbbell rows or something like that.
When you wear calves,
sometimes just usually if I do tibialis raises,
which is the stuff on the wall,
um,
I'll sometimes do calves on the slant board,
but that's only like once a week.
I don't do calves that often.
And then did you say hamstrings already?
Yeah.
I already mentioned hamstrings.
So,
but that doesn't take me long because I move between movements.
Crank right through everything.
I crank right through each movement.
And then how many reps and sets?
Usually three.
And reps depends on the day.
I might be doing sets of 10.
I might be doing sets of 20.
It depends on how I feel on the day.
So some days if I feel like doing very high rep loads on something, I'll do very high reps.
If I feel like doing something between, I'll usually do really high on days that I'm trying to get a lot of blood flow. So if it's an easier day for me,
then I'll do sets of 15 or 20. And that really helps with recovery because you get a lot of
blood flow to the muscle group. You do, uh, uh, I was going to say, uh, four or five exercises
in like a tandem, like three, usually three, three, usually be three. It's two or three.
Cause I can't like.
It's too distracting.
Yeah.
It'd be hard to move.
But those exercises usually don't have anything getting in the way of each other.
So if I do sissy squats and face pulls and bicep curls, they don't get in the way of each other.
The face pulls don't take away from the biceps.
The biceps don't take away from the sissy squat.
But you won't see me do a sissy squat and then something else for my hamstrings.
I've always liked working out that way where there's like one or two things that are fairly easy,
like a face pull and a curl,
like just aren't that hard.
A sissy squats a little more challenging.
So you got one thing that's going to get you breathing pretty heavy.
The other two are kind of just other movements.
And I also understand that not everybody has the ability in a commercial gym
to go between.
So, but I still think,
cause we made a video about antagonistic supersets and
there were a lot of comments of people saying like, Oh, but in a commercial gym, you can't hug. Well,
you could do a face pull and then maybe do a bicep curl and not get in the way. You can
literally stay right there at that thing, do a face pull, pull it down, do a bicep curl,
put it up, do a face pull. You can choose these movements. So there are a lot of people making
those types of excuses
But I think you could you could actually do that if you set things up the right way
So you can save a lot of time we can give you guys excuses to on not giving you any more fucking information
Just please stop the madness fucking
Have a ounce of creativity in your blood
Carry some dumbbells over the fucking bench, you know or whatever you got to do figure it out Have a ounce of creativity in your blood. Oh, God.
Carry some dumbbells over to the fucking bench, you know, or whatever you got to do.
Figure it out.
Have an ounce of creativity.
Yeah.
Yeah. Just a little bit.
But really, OK, at a gym.
I think also this is where, like, maybe a little bit of anxiety comes into the gym because people are scared of talking to each other.
And this is one thing, like, when I used to work out at commercial gyms because I did do supersets.
I just like I'd be like, hey, can I work in? I'm going to be doing this and this. And I'd be thing, like when I used to work out at commercial gyms, cause I did do super sets. I'd just like, I'd be like, Hey, can I work in?
I'm going to be doing this and this.
And I'd be like, cool.
Like you just have to talk to somebody else and make an agreement and you're good.
Right.
And I've worked, I've worked out at commercial gyms before.
So some people are too afraid to tell another person, Hey, I'm going to be going between
this and this because most likely the other person is going to say, bitch, no, they're
not going to do that to you.
Every once in a while they might say, Oh, doing some drop sets and i i got one or two more sets to finish up and you're like okay cool i'll circle back i'll
circle back later and yeah that's that's it you could just circle back but typically that that
some people say in cmos because you're big or whatever but no it's like just because you have
some etiquette and you talk to somebody and say hey hey, I'm going to, you know, can I work in with you on this while I'm doing this?
And boom, you can do it.
It is not that difficult.
I have done that before.
So it's all of you who are like, I can't do that at a commercial gym.
Don't.
That's OK.
Don't.
You don't need to talk to anybody.
It's OK.
Yeah.
Just be nice.
Be nice.
Yeah.
Take us on out of here,rew i will thank you everybody for
checking out today's episode i'm gonna kill you andrew he's gonna kill me so thanks everybody for
checking out this podcast this is my sign off and you guys will never this is the last time you're
gonna be seeing zaddy on the power project time we're gonna have somebody that looks just like
andrew next right behind there and they just vaguely look like him so uh ryan's parents came to visit him and they were looking through one of the doors
like oh hey we're curious why ryan didn't come open the door
for us like oh because it was not right it was me they thought i was their son that's awesome
you saw the head and they're like oh that's our child like we just saw bald head beard and we
just figured i was like hey i'll take it because right man maybe he's not in a good mood today or
some shit that That's awesome.
That was great.
Eddie Hoot.
That was great.
Yeah, Ryan will be producing the show pretty soon.
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I was actually just looking up the steps thing you mentioned.
So apparently on average, my steps are around like 6220.
Yeah, mine So five something.
I didn't get those up.
Same. Well, I'm on my feet a lot, but like, I'm not like, I guess I can be doing more.
You actually walk around a lot when you're training.
Cause I've seen like when you walk from what you like, there's a lot of missteps that,
uh, you know, don't get calculated.
But what I would encourage people to do too, is like try to have, there's a difference
between like intended exercise and, um, just like walking your dog, you know, I think some
people take their dogs on like a walk and they go out on like what I would consider
like a legitimate walk.
But sometimes I see like the dog, like, you know, just off, like, you know, kind of doing
its own thing.
And the person has to keep kind of managing or with, or with their children, same thing.
Your kid goes running off and like, those walks are great.
And it's great to walk with your dog and it's great to walk with your child and stuff like
that.
But I still think there's a difference between like having like an intention of getting in
your own exercise.
Um, so do that the best way that you can.
And if you have recreational stuff that you do
or you do gardening or construction work
or any of those other things,
those are all like you play golf or whatever.
All those things are just extra.
Those are all add-ons.
They don't count.
They don't really, you know,
they might count towards your overall steps in the day. But what I'm asking people to do is like, look at your,
look at what your current steps are now. If you have any indication on your phone,
you remember I was saying, you could look that up by clicking on the little heart thing and you'll
find your steps, um, to work on doing like, you know, 5,000 more steps than, uh, than what you're
normally used to because your body has
already adjusted to whatever it is that you're currently doing and now it's time to add in
something different yeah it's also good to pay attention to like your standing averages
i wonder what people's like standing averages are this thing needs to tell us about eating too you
know this fucking thing needs to like like yo you're really eating eight times a day.
It's got to be able to track it because your heart rate goes different and everything.
Maybe.
But I don't know if they've gotten there yet.
Yeah.
Whoa.
It has your speed and step length.
Yeah.
How fast are you on?
I'm going 2.3 miles per hour.
Typically standing 14 hours a day.
Where does it have that?
Stand.
Under activity.
Understand.
I don't understand.
Understand.
Just start standing, too.
That'll help, peeps.
Anyway.
Is it my turn?
Mm-hmm.
It's your turn.
Oh.
I'm at MarkSmellyBell on TikTok and Instagram.
Strength is never weak.
This week's never strength.
Catch you guys later.
Bye.
Pssh.