Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1112: How to Get Started with Weight Training
Episode Date: September 5, 2019In this episode, Sal, Adam and Justin detail how to get started with weight training, whether it is for yourself, a loved one, or a client. What is resistance training? (3:05) How does the body burn ...fat? (4:40) How does one understand what goes into their caloric maintenance? (7:20) Making the case that resistance training is the SUPERIOR form of exercise. (11:30) The 6 basic types of human movements the average person should do to reap the benefits of resistance training. (21:35) #1 – Picking things up off the floor. (25:19) #2 – Squatting. (31:35) #3 – Pressing or pushing things away from your head. (42:48) #4 – Pulling. (47:00) #5 – Rotating. (50:35) #6 – Lunging. (51:35) Don’t go into the gym to beat yourself up! Focus on practicing the skill. (52:40) The belief that resistance training requires a lot of equipment. (56:57) Related Links/Products Mentioned September Promotion: MAPS Starter ½ off!! **Code “STARTER50” at checkout** The association of grip strength from midlife onwards with all-cause and cause-specific mortality over 17 years of follow-up in the Tromsø Study Mind Pump TV - YouTube The Best Form of Exercise - Mind Pump Stop Working Out And Start Practicing - Mind Pump Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, So there's a lot of people who, you know,
they might have heard of the benefits,
it's starting to become more mainstream.
And so we wanted to help those people out.
So first off, we open up by talking about
what resistance training actually is.
Is it just exercising with resistance
or is it more specific than that?
We also make the case for resistance training.
There's lots of different ways to work out.
Why use resistance?
Why not just go swimming or walking or running or do yoga?
Why would anybody need to lift weights?
Why, why?
So we talk about all those benefits.
Then we talk about how to start.
Like how do I get started?
Here's the truth.
Resistance, we know this.
Resistance training or weight training
tends to be more intimidating
than other forms of exercise. It seems more complex. It seems like you need more access
to equipment. That's not true. We talk about the basics. We talk about the six movements
you should focus on, everybody. So if you listen to this episode, you'll leave with understanding
what exercises you should do to get started.
We talk about how you should work out.
There's a mentality that goes into working out that will greatly influence your success.
We talk about how often you should work out hard and how often you should work out easily.
And then we talk about the equipment that you can get away with just having.
So basic, basic equipment, what do you need?
In our opinion, a physiabol and dumbbells will pretty much give you everything you want
if you're looking for general fitness from resistance training.
Now also, this month, MAPS starter is on 50% off sale.
Now MAPS starter is our program that is perfect for people just getting started with resistance training
or for people who haven't resistance training a long time
or for people who just wanna work out at home
with a physio ball and dumbbells.
This program's phenomenal for those people.
It's also awesome for personal trainers
who have everyday average people as clients.
Now when I was a trainer,
I used to design workouts like this
for my clients to be able to do on their own.
This is an excellent tool for trainers to give to their clients.
So if you have clients that you want them to do some exercises
stuff on their own, map starter is a phenomenal program.
Now, it's 50% off, and of course, remember this program
includes everything you need to work out,
including exercise demos, videos, blueprints, explanations,
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Here's what you do to get the 50% off.
Go to mapsstarter.com, that's M-A-P-S-S-T-A-R-T-E-R.com and use the code starter50.
S-T-A-R-T-E-R-5-0, no space for the discount.
How to get started with weight training.
This is an important topic.
It's resistance training, weight training is becoming
more and more mainstream in terms of the,
people's awareness of it.
I think we should define that.
Why don't you define resistance training first?
You know, it's funny.
I used to think that was silly as a trainer.
People are like, well, what is resistance training?
Because I walk, isn't that resistance? Because it's my body.
Yeah, gravity.
Yeah, I use a recumbent bike.
Isn't that resistance?
Because I'm pushing the pedals.
And yes, technically, you are using resistance.
But that's not what we're referring to.
Resistance training is exercises
that use external resistance with the expectation
of building strength or muscle and muscle
and or muscular stamina.
So it's using resistance with the expectation
that you're gonna get stronger and build muscle,
which is different than using, let's say,
a recombinant bike or a treadmill, which
yes, does provide some resistance, but the expectation really isn't, you know, it's strength
training. In other words, you're working on other aspects of physical.
Now, the problem with that is I think that definition is what deters some people from actually
doing it because that you don't hear fat loss in that.
That's right.
Definition.
That's right.
And so I think it's definitely important that we cover that when we discuss exactly what
resistance training is, what is it for, but then also how that works with burning body fat.
Right.
So, let's define for how does the body burn body fat?
We've covered this many times on the show, but I think it's important that we define
How that happens in the body again because now we're talking about specifically about resistance training
The way your body loses body fat is by is through what's called an energy imbalance
Okay, so that means you're either taking in less calories than you're burning or
You're burning more calories than you're taking in.
So what ends up happening? Because you can't burn, you can't create energy out of nowhere.
So if you're burning more calories than you're taking in, your body needs to tap into stored energy, which is body fat.
So that's how you lose body fat. So reducing your calories or burning more calories.
When you create that energy imbalance, that's when you cause weight loss. Now, the reverse is weight
gain. If you take in more calories than you burn, then your body needs to store those
because it can't just be destroyed. They don't just disappear. They need to be stored
somewhere. So your body will store it as body fat. And then of course, if everything's
the same and you have energy balance,
you don't lose any weight and you don't gain any weight.
You stay exactly the same body weight.
So we know that.
And that's, by the way, that's a fact.
I think it's important that we say that.
I've heard people say recently in the fitness space
that it's not about energy and balance
that you don't need to be in a calorie deficit to burn
body fat.
No, that's not how it works.
It's actually a law of physics.
In fact, if you are somebody who can lose weight without being in a calorie deficit or
gain weight without being in a calorie surplus, take yourself down to your local university.
You're an alien. Yeah. without being in a calorie surplus, take yourself down to your local university.
You're an alien.
Yeah, you have just,
we have solved the energy problem of humanity.
They need to study you.
It doesn't work that way.
It's impossible.
So now there's lots of different ways to do this, right?
There's lots of different diets
and different ways you can reduce your calories,
different ways you can burn more calories.
But for the purpose of this particular podcast,
we're not going to talk specifically about
every way, but we do know that that's a fact.
You have to have an energy imbalance in order to lose weight or body fat.
Well, I think in terms of resistance training, there's a bit of a barrier there because there's
a more skill involved getting into weight training or resistance training in general over just
moving more
with say jumping on a treadmill or going out for a walk or doing some kind of recombinant bike like you're
mentioning. So that is more of an easy sell for your average person. Now before you go there though
I want to finish with where sales out right now because I think it's important that people understand this, too, because everyone's metabolism is different and unique to them. And so what makes up their
maintenance? So you're talking about, okay, if you have, if in order to lose body fat, we have to
somehow create some sort of a caloric deficit. Well, how do people understand what is a caloric
deficit for them and is mine the same as yours because
we're similar in age and similar in weight or how is that figured factored in?
And I think an area that doesn't discuss a lot or people don't fully grasp and understand
is that the more muscle that you have on your body, the more muscle that you carry around,
the bigger your bank account
is going to be, right?
Or the larger your calorie maintenance is going to be just to maintain your body.
It's a bigger engine.
It's like a car.
Like, the bigger the engine, the more gas it typically will burn, the more muscle you carry
and the more conditioned your muscle is, the more calories you're going to burn.
And this is an important thing to understand because, like I said earlier, when you're talking
about energy and balance,
people look at, everything gets very simplified
and they say, okay, if that's the case,
what form of exercise burns the most calories, right?
Because they're thinking, I need to burn more calories
and I take in.
So what form of exercise burns the most calories?
Cardio.
Cardio, I mean, hard, go run real hard for 30 minutes
and you'll burn more calories and 30 minutes than doing
Wait training for 30 minutes. So using your your inner your engine analogy
I think of it like this like if we have a car that we are trying to build to be super fast
And I have two options sitting back there as the engineer going okay
We've got this car. It's running a you know a 10 second quarter mile
We need to make it faster. We have two options right now.
We can either build a bigger engine in it to make it go faster or we could shed some weight
off of it to go faster, both of them are going to do that.
What would be the better strategy long term for the car to go faster?
Right.
Well, when it comes to cardio because your body is trying to get better at the cardio and
have become more efficient with calories
and you don't need a lot of strength
to do lots of cardiovascular activity.
What ends up happening is as you do lots and lots of cardio,
your body starts to pair muscle down
and studies will show this, studies have demonstrated
that weight loss through cardiovascular activity
results typically in half of the weight being muscle loss,
sometimes more, because your body's adapting
and becoming more efficient at the demands
you're placing upon it.
And again, it doesn't require a lot of strength.
Now, resistance training, although it doesn't burn
as many calories per time being spent,
the demands that it places on the body's
requires more muscle and more strength.
So over time, it speeds up your metabolism.
And it's important to look at the context of things,
right? So you don't just want to be lean. You want to be lean, but also live in the normal modern
world. Well, the modern world consists of very low activity, but we're also very busy. So it's not
like we're, we have nothing to do all day long. We're busy, but we're not moving very much. We're
sitting down most of the time. So low calorie burn, not lots of time available.
Food is available everywhere, and it's also really damn tasty.
I can right now walk outside the door and pretty much choose to eat pretty much any culture
of food that I want within 30 minutes.
I've got Chinese food over here, Mexican food over there, we have Italian food.
I mean, all down the street, I can buy processed foods
that could buy chips, I could go vegan
any processed foods that taste really good.
I could have any flavor, fruits, vegetables,
whatever I want.
So super accessible, tastes really good.
I'm not moving much, not burning much calories
and I don't have a lot of time.
Okay.
So all those things point to what the context is
that we're working with, and resistance training
is superior in that context, because I don't need
to lift weights super often, because I'm speeding up,
I'm a tablism with it, which means I'll burn more calories
all the time, which will give me more,
a greater ability to burn more calories.
So resistance training is just a superior form of exercise.
In fact, we know these following things for a fact, okay?
Resistance training, strengthens your body,
better than anything else.
So will you get stronger if you do other forms of exercise?
Let's say you do yoga or you do cardio, you swim,
or you run, will you get stronger versus doing
nothing at all?
Yes you will, but there's a very small potential because those forms of activity don't require
lots of strength, you'll only get so strong.
It's not really going to build a very, very strong body.
Resistance training does that.
That's exactly what resistance training is.
Strengthens your bones, your ligaments, your joints,
and your muscles.
What about mobility?
A lot of people point to things like yoga
and say that's the best for mobility.
Although yoga is great for mobility,
resistance training done properly is superior.
Resistance training.
Useable mobility.
Resistance training is extremely individual
and you're getting stronger in the ranges of motion
that you're training,
which is what mobility is.
You can't just have flexibility,
you have to have strength within that mobility.
What about, here's a common modern problem,
especially for men, low testosterone.
A lot of people don't know this,
but for the last, I don't know, five or six decades,
we've been noticing this decline in testosterone levels of men,
which accompanies lots of health issues,
lower quality of life, lower libido, lower sperm count, increased risk of heart disease,
prostate cancer, lots of these things. Only one form of exercise has been proven to consistently
raise testosterone in men with low testosterone. That's resistance training. Now, why? Why does it
do that? Because you're asking your body to build muscle
and the hormone, especially in men,
that's very responsible for building muscle,
is testosterone.
You give your body a good reason
to have more testosterone when you lift weights.
So it sounds like you're making the case that,
even if my goal is to be more mobile and flexible,
strength training is superior.
If you had to pick one form, yes.
Even if my goal is to lose body fat,
I don't care about building a bunch of muscles,
I just wanna lose body fat.
The case is still resistance training over cardio.
Totally.
If I'm limited to time, I've only got three hours
in the week, that's all I have to dedicate
to any sort of form of exercise.
And I just wanna be in better shape.
I don't care about being super muscular and that.
Still, you make the case that even longevity, right?
And avoiding things like osteopenia
and like strengthening your bones, you know,
resistance training is superior in terms of other forms
of training.
Yeah, in modern societies, the aches and pains and problems
that people tend to suffer from as they get older are typically not the result of
Overwork, so if you go back a hundred years and you find a seven-year-old with a bad back
It's typically because
Hard labor all their life. They're just overworked
Today people with a bad back or knee or hip, it's inactivity.
It's their bodies literally falling apart
because they're not moving well because they're weak.
De-prioritizing things.
Or injuries.
Look at older people who fall down and break a bone,
like with a small fall.
Now they're really screwed because everything's so weak
in their body.
So we are becoming weak and resistance training
is the antidote because resistance
training makes you strong. There's always, and then there's the argument about the heart. You know,
a lot of people are like, Oh, what about your heart? What about benefiting the heart? New studies
are coming out right now showing that in compared head to head resistance training is even superior
for heart health. I was just going to ask you that. Didn't you read a study not too long ago that confirmed your theory on that we were gonna start
to see doctors start recommending resistance training
as their form, as of right now,
it's still 30 minutes of vigorous cardio activity
is what a doctor would recommend.
If you go into a doctor, he sees that your obese
right now that they would tell you 30 minutes of vigorous activity
daily is what would be the recommendation.
Totally.
We believe that that will no longer be the recommendation in the future and what you
will hear from doctors in the future is 30 minutes to 60 minutes of resistance training
is what you should be doing.
It's totally going to change.
It's already starting to change.
They're finding that that, like if you
when you compare single tests to try to predict
all cause mortality, there's one single test
that beats all the other individual tests.
Of course, that ultimately is a culmination of many tests.
But if you were to compare one on one, a strength test
will tell you, will give you a better,
was a better predictor
of all cause mortality than pretty much any other
single test you could do, blood pressure, cholesterol.
I mean, any other, you know, your triglycerides,
like when they go in and they do like a grip test
with their hand, they're finding that that will predict
all cause mortality, almost better than anything else.
The other one is just getting up off the floor,
which is strength, right?
If you can get up off the floor
without holding on to things,
your all cause mortality risk is really, really low.
It just tells people a lot,
or doctors a lot of frail you are.
It is, totally.
And resistance training now
is starting to become much more recommended.
It's far more mainstream than ever has been before.
I mean, when I got into fitness,
it was not resistance training wasn't mainstream at all.
It was...
No, we were, I think, I remember seeing the statistics
with 24-hour fitness.
I used to put it up on the big projector
when we first started.
So this is what, 15, 16 years ago.
And I think they said that resistance training
was like penetrating like 4% of the population.
Like, that's crazy low.
It's still low, but it's grown a lot.
It's got to at least have,
at least doubled or tripled since then.
I know that when I,
when managed gyms in the late 90s,
you didn't see a lot of women, for example, in the weight area.
Now, and it depends on the gym,
but now when I go to a gym, I would
say it's about 50-50 men and women in the weight room. It was never like that. It was more
like 90, 10, you know, back in the, you know, 20 years ago.
Oh, that's why curves was such a revolution. Yes.
You know, it's like, oh, here's something where we can get women to be more, you know, involved
with resistance. Well, that, you know, to that where we can get women to be more involved with resistance
training.
Well, to that point, too.
And I think there's, this is another point to bring up about resistance training that
is unique to it in comparison to any other form of exercise, yoga, cardio, these other
ones, mobility stuff, is resistance training also gives you the ability to shape the body,
which I think that's such a huge benefit because when you look at a majority of people that start exercise or want to get in shape, most people
are motivated by the way they look, whether that be their motivating because they don't like
the way they look currently or they want to improve that.
At the end of the day, most people that come in the gym are looking at either their stomach
or their thighs or their back or whatever that they don't like.
And one of the benefits of learning how to train properly resistance training is you have
this ability to actually shape and sculpt the body. You cannot spot reduce, but you can spot
build. And that's exactly what Adam's talking about. So if you're, if you want to burn body fat
off your body, we
know that you can't spot reduce. You can't pick specific parts of your body to burn
body fat. Your body doesn't burn body fat. That way it mobilizes it kind of systemically.
And your genetics largely, now of course there are some changes in hormones and stuff that
will change this, but largely it's just your genetics. Your body will burn body fat
from wherever it wants. The first place you pack on fat when you gain body fat,
it's typically the last place, it'll all come off of.
You can't get around that, but you can spot build.
I can look at my body and say, I want more butt muscle here,
or I want my shoulders to look like this
by building this part of my,
that's what body building is.
It's literally spot building,
which actually brings me to another point.
When people think of resistance training, they think of the most extreme expressions of
resistance training, and that turns people off.
You know, when I say, when I tell the average person, oh, you need to start becoming more
active and you're not doing the exercise, go lift weights.
They immediately think bodybuilder, power lift, you get huge, strong man.
Yeah, or my friend heard his back squatting 500 pounds.
Those are the extreme expressions of resistance training.
Just like you drive your car and you have no intentions
on racing NASCAR or Formula One,
you can work out with weights and have zero intention
to squat two or three times your body weight
or to look like a professional bodybuilder.
Those are extreme expressions of resistance training
and like anything, there's an extreme expression.
But regular traditional resistance training done properly
is the most appropriate form of exercise,
period, hands down for everybody.
I will challenge anybody out there listening right now. form of exercise, period, hands down for everybody.
I will challenge anybody out there listening right now.
There is no form of exercise that is more appropriate
for everybody than resistance training.
I can use resistance training on anybody
that can move any part of their body.
I could train someone in a wheelchair
with resistance training.
I've worked with people who have cerebral palsy. I've worked with people who have cerebral palsy.
I've worked with people who've had severe, and that limits them from doing all other forms
of exercise.
Resistance training can be individualized and molded around short people, tall people,
weak people, strong people, people with poor mobility.
I mean, it's the most versatile.
It's the most versatile and the most appropriate, which is why if you are ready to pick a form of activity
for yourself, if you're thinking,
and that's what this particular episode is revolved around.
It's like, okay, there's a certain segment of our listeners
that are gonna pop in who are either haven't worked out
in a long time and are thinking they wanna start doing
something in terms of fitness,
or they never have really done anything special.
Or you're a listener and you're consistent, but you have a family member or a friend that
needs to hear this message.
Yes.
Which brings me to the next point that I think can seem really daunting for the average person,
the person who's never resistance training before, but also wants to be in better shape.
They've now heard enough times
of whether it be from somebody who listens to my pump
or the information is finally getting out there
that resistance training is superior to them
going to their local yoga class or cardio.
And so they're interested, but then they're also
scared to death of what do I do?
You know, what movements do I do, what exercises
am I supposed to do?
And what would you tell somebody that, very, I mean, general, like as far as what types
of movements should they be trying to strive for?
Yeah.
Now, this speaks to Justin's earlier point, right?
It seems more complicated and complex than other forms of exercise.
Like, if you tell somebody, hey, I'm just, by the way, that's a little deceiving.
I'll give you an example
before I get to Adam's point.
People think, oh, running, it's so basic and simple.
I just go outside and run,
kind of, but not really.
That's probably the problem.
Yeah, that's part of the problem.
The problem is that it's deceiving.
Movements like running and swimming and biking seem simple, but they're actually not.
Running is a very complex movement.
If you never run, or you haven't run consistently
your whole life, which is most people,
and then you go out and just go start running.
You can do more damage than good.
You will.
You don't know what the wrong mechanics.
Yeah, you will do the wrong, more damage.
Right.
Because your body doesn't, you don't know how to run.
You haven't trained in practice running.
You should take a long time doing that.
So now resistance training looks complex, looks complicated,
and that tends to turn people off.
But it doesn't have to be.
Again, let's stop looking at the extreme expressions
of resistance training.
And let's just focus on what the average person should do to get their to reap the benefits
of resistance training, maximize the few hours a week that they think they can dedicate
to exercise.
Let's just focus on that for a second.
So when you say that, I'm thinking we primal movement.
Yeah, the most functional things, the things that it doesn't matter if you're you want to
look a certain way or build X amount of muscle.
There are certain movements that you are going to use, that we all are going to use as
human, humans in our daily practices, no matter what they are, that you want to either
want to improve on or stay good at as you age, right?
And not only that, but these exercises or movements that we're about to talk about,
the exercises that work on these type of movements,
also, which is kind of cool,
give you the most bang for your buck,
which is really cool.
So not only are these the following basic human movements
and exercises that you need to work on,
the ones that you need to work on
if you only have a certain amount of time,
they're also the ones that give you the best results,
which is cool, you get that double whammy.
I'm doing this stuff that's gonna benefit me
most in the real world, but it's also gonna give me
the best fastest result, which is cool
because what we're gonna do right now,
is we're basically gonna cut out all the nonsense.
I'm gonna make it super simple for you
and cut out all the fluff, you're not gonna have to worry about 99% or maybe even 100% of the machines in your gym.
You're not gonna have to worry about them.
You're not even gonna have to worry about necessarily barbells because you can do all these
movements with dumbbells.
Very, very basic.
If you stuck to this, you would build a very healthy physique.
You're not gonna look like a physique competitor,
you're not gonna have big bulging muscles.
That's a different podcast.
We could talk about that later,
but this will get you all the wonderful benefits
of resistance training that we talked about earlier.
Fast and fast.
That's a foundation.
That's it.
Build off of it.
So the first thing is very basic human movement,
picking things up off the floor.
Now it's funny, you start with this one,
and I can't help but think of the post that
I saw we were tagged in the other day of somebody that was trying to make the case that dead
lifting was a worthless exercise.
I've seen this pop up all over the place and it's hilarious to me because when do you
not pick something off the ground?
Yeah.
That happens to everybody.
Right.
You're trying to tell me that's not a basic,
foundational movement that I'm gonna experience
almost on a daily basis.
And let's say most people don't do it.
They don't do it with correct form.
Yeah, they don't do it properly.
No, we've all been taught how to lift properly,
or you at least have seen,
how to lift things up off the floor properly.
Well, a deadlift trains that.
That's all it does.
It trains you how to lift things up off the ground properly.
And in doing so, you strengthen your almost your entire body. Now, I know why they made that post.
It's because of the extreme expressions of deadlifts and people get injuries.
Yeah, okay. Again, you're not going to be in the gym deadlifting 500 pounds. Don't worry about that.
By the way, you can take it too far. Yeah, and that's obvious. Like, you see that. And again, back to your like, huge muscle bound bodybuilder kind
of standard, like that's something that's totally extreme.
And so we're just talking about doing this
for basic human fundamentals.
Well, we talk about this a lot on the show.
And I think you guys would agree with me
that I'm most of the clients that I had
that had some sort of a crazy injury happened to him.
It was, and it was never lifting 500 pounds.
It was always doing the most basic fundamental type of movements, reaching over to pick up
a shampoo bottle in their shower, picking a weed out of their garden, reaching back
to give their kid food in the back seat or something.
It's always like this really basic movement that isn't a lot of weight,
but it's just that they have lost that movement pattern
and the connection to that movement pattern
and it's all it takes is being weak
and moving out of their day's length.
They react wrong, they can't balance properly.
Boom, injury.
That's right.
So picking things up, deadlifts, deadlifts are phenomenal.
You could do these with barbells.
You could also do versions with dumbbells.
Dumbbells, it looks almost like a squat holding dumbbells at your sides.
But the idea is you're mimicking picking something off the floor.
You're doing it with a brace core. There's lots of videos I had to do this right.
We have quite a few on our YouTube channel. You can watch those.
But it's definitely an exercise you should incorporate in your workout routine.
Should be some form of a deadlift.
It's a fundamental move.
And here's a cool thing about it.
It really develops a nice looking body.
It works the whole posterior chain, which is a fancy term that means the back of your
body.
So your back muscles, your butt muscles, your hamstrings.
Which I would argue is the most difficult to teach clients like how to properly
activate because we're just so conscious of what's in front of us all the time that to take that
time to really be conscious to connect to the back of your body is that's a whole skill.
Well, again, this is why that movement is so important because it is it's the other half of you
that is extremely don't ignore it. Yeah. That's extremely responsible for a majority of the movements
or the strengths that you need to pick up a couch
or to pick something up off the floor.
And we just, yeah, and we just don't use it.
Most people round their back over and bend at the knee
and they just grab and pick up versus hinging at the hips
and keeping a good stable spine
and supporting themselves through that movement.
And that's just it.
And you don't need to do it with like Sal said, 300, 500 pounds, just getting the pattern
and the movement down so you know how to engage the proper muscles is going to do wonders
for somebody.
So you don't have to be lifting crazy loads.
You do something really, really light and basic to learn the movement first and learn how
to use those supporting muscles for when you do basic movements.
Yes, and I'm going to preface everything by saying, this is all appropriately applied.
Everything we're going to talk about right now is applied appropriately.
If you apply any exercise or movement inappropriately to your body, then your chance or risk of injury
goes through the roof.
When you're doing something appropriately, no risk of injury.
You're doing it appropriately.
That's the point.
It's funny.
We're talking about deadlifts.
Back in the day, Doug, our producer, was my client actually hired me.
Do you know why he hired me?
Because he had a bad back.
He actually hired me because he kept hurting his back
and his chiropractor, sent him to me.
You know what was part of his routine
on a almost consistent basis.
Deadlifts. Deadlifts.
Deadlifts.
Doug got to the point where he could deadlift
over 400 pounds at a body weight,
it was like 160 pounds or something like that.
His back is comparatively now bulletproof,
compared to what it was before where he would hurt,
it would just hurt, he would just wake up and his back would hurt.
So for people who are saying, oh no, that's bad for your back.
That is totally incorrect.
Doing a proper deadlift or versions of deadlifts in your routine is a great way to produce a bullet
proof back.
And back injuries are the most common types of things.
And the fact that it is a challenging movement, it leaves us lots of room to have to practice
at it to get good at it, which is a good thing for somebody who also would like to burn
body fat.
Because it's a more complex movement, more joints are involved, it's going to take a lot
of practice at the skill before you perfect
it. As a matter of fact, you may spend years and years of lifting it before you get perfect
at it. That's a good thing for somebody who's trying to see progression and change in their
body or that wants to lose body fat. If you do something like a standing bicep curl, the
very first couple of times you do it, sure you burn some good calories, yeah, you're gonna stimulate, build a little bit of muscle,
but the body will adapt and figure that out pretty quick.
And so the results that you start to see,
all of it tend to fall off very fast,
where when we look at a movement like a deadlift,
you will continue to see progress in that movement
for very long periods of time,
because it's such a skill-based movement.
You'll rate benefits from all these movements we're about to go over for a long, in fact,
forever.
I do all these basic movements and I've been working out for decades, right?
All right.
So the next one, next fundamental kind of foundational movement would be just squatting.
It's got to be a squat.
Yeah.
Just squatting, squatting down and coming back up.
And there's a lot so many variations.
Exactly. I was just gonna say that.
There's a lot because there's squatting just like dead left
and it's another one of those movements that people tend to
get freaked out about right away.
Or I have a bad back.
I can't do it.
Or oh, it's really challenging my knees.
All these reasons, there's lots of modifications
that you can do to get somebody ready for that.
Yes, I've had many clients that hired me
and we could not go do a barbell loaded squat
right out the gate.
I think most clients did start that way.
Now, my goal always is to get them to that point
but we may spend months, even years,
sometimes doing modifications of the squat to get there.
So just because you may not be able to perform
a backload of squat right now,
or it seems really intimidating or daunting to start at,
doesn't mean that we don't start in the direction
to get there because again,
it is extremely fundamental movement
that everybody should be able to do.
And your body weight oftentimes provides plenty of resistance
when you first get started.
So like if I took somebody who is brand new,
hasn't worked out for a long time,
brand new to the gym or whatever,
and I'm watching them and I'm having them try and do a squat,
and I notice even a body weight squat is difficult.
They can't do a full squat,
their heels come up off the floor
or knees are moving in ways that they shouldn't,
and I say okay, we can't even do a body weight squat properly,
I'm gonna modify that, and I'll take them to,
I'll bring them over to a bench or a chair,
you can do this at home, and just practice slowly
sitting down and standing up.
Congratulations, you are doing squats with the resistance,
and you're gonna reap the benefits of that.
Now you will progress past that pretty quickly,
most people, and then you can start changing it to, without having to sit down, now you're just squatting
in air.
That's more difficult.
Then you can guide it better by using the stability ball with the wall so you get your
angles correct.
There's a whole progression to this.
That's the beautiful, that beautiful part about a squat is like, you can just continually
improve this based off of like, you know, where you're at.
Like I could, I could take that and I could add one little tool.
I could add some dumbbells,
and now I'm adding resistance to that same squat,
it's totally different exercise.
Oh, and you can regress it all the way
to something very, very basic,
like just getting up out of a chair
or using a stability ball against the wall,
and there is, there's lots of progressions to that.
Now, the muscle that you'll activate with a squat,
most of it's in the lower body, but
it is one of the best lower body exercises you could do.
It works on the hamstrings, the quads, the glutes, and even to a smaller degree, the calves.
So it's a full lower body exercise that is really good at getting your body to get stronger
and build more muscle, which is great, right?
Cause we wanna fashion the tabs them.
Squats are always there, and they tend to always be there.
Again, I squat still to the stay,
and I still reap benefits from it.
And I also, I can't help but think of,
one of the common things that you hear
when people start to get to advanced age
is they fall and they break their hip.
Oh yeah.
And you know, I ride away a descents.
Right, right away when I hear that,
I know for a fact that person was not squatting as they aged.
If you would have been squatting,
that person would have been protected
from something like that.
So you think of the things that are extremely important
long-term, maybe right now in your 40s or 50s,
you don't think about it quite yet,
but as you start getting up a 60, 70, 80 years old and you have eliminated squatting out of your daily routine for decades.
That's gone.
And here's the thing, you're going to get a lot of information like the cross internet
from even doctors where once you start getting to the places where you're in pain, they're
going to tell you to avoid that movement.
Right.
Instead of strengthening ways to be able to protect your joints and your back and your
hips and you should be thinking proactively, how can I prevent this pain?
How can I get stronger because I feel like I'm not getting that connection.
I'm feeling pain.
Oh, years ago, a surgeon hired me.
My studio, I still own a personal training studio and I used to be next to a hospital. And a surgeon, this woman, who ended up becoming
a very, very good friend of mine, hired me to train her.
And when I did my intake with her,
she told me all of her, an aster,
like what do you have areas of pain on your body,
what do you need to avoid?
And she's a doctor, she's a very successful surgeon,
and she says, oh, I can't squat or lunge or anything like that
because it's not good for my knees, my knees hurt.
And so I need to avoid those things.
And so I said, okay, and I knew, I'm not gonna,
I don't wanna argue with her and debate with her.
She's very intelligent and it just wouldn't come across.
Right, so I gave it some time, but little by little,
I convinced her to start doing some of these exercises again
We did them appropriately and properly so I applied them properly
Within six months this woman was doing
full body weight squats full lunges and her knee pain was a gone
Mm-hmm. It wasn't there anymore. She no longer had knee pain anymore and she was blown away
And I and she understood at that point,
that well, the chronic pain that we get,
oftentimes comes from inactivity,
not from, you know, I hurt myself.
There's a difference now.
Now, if you hurt yourself,
and you twisted your knee or you tore a ligament,
you probably shouldn't squat.
But if your knee's bother you,
just because of inactivity,
you want to find out why you can't squat and fix that, or regress your squat to the point where you can squat so that your knees don't hurt.
And then what you'll find is as you get stronger, more and more squat variations will open up.
You brought up the physio ball squat.
I think it was you just then.
Where you put a physio ball and a physio ball is for those you listen to, you don't know
what that is.
It's the big, it looks like the big beach ball.
It's the big balls that people sit on and squat on
and they're in gyms.
They got real popular about 10, 15 years ago.
You put one up against the wall,
you put your lower back against the ball,
step away from the wall, now you're kind of leaning against it.
And then you squat down, so you're rolling the ball
against the floor with your hips pointing straight down.
It takes a lot of the mobility and movement out of the squat,
makes it easier for a lot of people.
And you may find that if normal squats bother you,
those don't.
Practice that version of squats
until you get really good at those,
maybe add a little resistance to them at some point,
then move to the other versions of squats
like your free standing squat
and maybe free standing squat with resistance
and see what happens.
Oftentimes, most times, it's the remedy to a lot of people's
problems.
A lot of people don't understand why chronic pain
is caused by the inability to do movements like the squat.
And I share on the show a lot, my own personal experience
with working towards a really deep squat.
Now, I avoided squats for a really long time.
I always had chronic low back pain.
I had percitis in my hips.
And it was even being a trainer.
It's what the excuse I gave myself in my head
to avoid squatting.
Until finally I just got on this kick
where I was gonna, okay, I'm going to address this.
I'm gonna really work on my book mobility.
I'm really gonna work on getting into a really deep squat. And it was a lot of work to address this. I'm going to really work on my book mobility. I'm really going to work on getting into a really deep squat
And it was it was a lot of work to get there
But with the craziest part about it was once I got to the point where I could squat with good depth
I completely eliminated the brisidus in my hips and the low back pain and how I explain it to
In layman's term for somebody is that you have a joint, the hip, and it's responsible for all this movement.
And what ends up happening is because you shorten up its range of motion, you don't use it to its fullest capacity,
a lot of the muscles that help it move in that full range of motion, they go dormant.
And then when you, when you try and get up and down from a chair, then these other muscles start to take over that movement. And this is where the chronic pain happens is my low back muscles are starting to leverage
and help me taking movements that my leg muscles and my glutes should be doing, but because
I've lost a good connection in those muscles.
Now other muscles start to overcompensate, and that's where a lot of our chronic pain.
And that works for all parts of the body is when you don't use it, you lose it.
And then if you still try and ask the body to do it after you've lost it,
then other parts of the body overcompensate and take over.
And that's where a lot of it's chronic pain comes from.
Joints have a way of moving.
That's optimal.
And then every other way that is not optimal is suboptimal.
So give you an example.
I have a sliding glass door at my house.
So most people have a sliding glass door.
Well, I was noticing that the sliding glass door
started to get more and more difficult to open and close.
And I looked down at the track that the door was rolling on.
And I noticed that it was just getting chewed up.
It was getting chewed up and messed up.
And that was what was causing over time,
causing the sliding glass door to move slowly and grind.
So what I had to do is I had to balance it out
and figure out and fix how it tracked on the track
at the bottom, how to line up the sliding glass door
with the track so that it could move properly.
I replaced the track, fixed it, balanced it.
Now I'm gonna be able to move that thing for 15, 20 years,
and it's not gonna chew up the track
because it's lined up properly.
That's your joints.
So if you're weak and you're not moving properly,
you're, it's like that sliding glass door.
The track is grinding up and you are causing problems
because of your immobility.
And it's not the movement that's causing the problem
directly, it's the fact that you can't move properly.
It's you.
I love that analogy because it's always a tracking issue.
Half the time that I'm trying to explain,
especially with shoulders or hips,
and to be able to understand that it's most optimal
in this particular spot.
Like this frees up all those potential ranges of motion.
If I could keep it balanced and I could keep the muscles
in a place where it's just bracing around it,
it's supporting it.
And instead of overdoing it to where it's pulling it
to one side or the other,
that's usually the cause of this nerve and pinchment or pain.
This is why I cringe when I hear somebody tell me
that they don't do a movement because they have chronic pain because that's your
Signal that you need to work and figure something out that doesn't mean that you should just push through the pain and keep doing the movement because you hurt
But it's your body sign that something's not tracking properly
Let's get to the bottom of this. Let's fix the track. Let's get to a point where we can and it will get back to slide on versus
Oh, I can't do that anymore because it bothers me or her.
This is my new standard.
Totally. And that's why we're giving you,
you know, the listener basic movements
and we're naming exercises around these movements,
but there's a lot of varieties and versions of exercises
that mimic picking something up off the ground.
You could do it without any weight.
You could just practice.
You could do it with dumbbells. You could do it with dumbbells at your sides. Squatting, it could be
using the physio ball or sitting down standing up. These are all versions of squatting.
And there are more advanced versions. The more advanced version of a squat would be a back squat
with a barbell on your back. The more advanced version of picking up something off the ground
would be like a barbell deadlift or a trap bar deadlift for example.
Let's move to another basic human movement pressing pushing things away or pushing things up above your head.
That's a very basic human movement that I don't especially pushing straight up over your head.
People don't tend to practice very often.
Oh, yeah, and it and it's pretty hilarious.
We brought up this example many times
of where I've actually seen beginning clients
where if I need to take this object
and put it on a higher shelf,
just watch somebody do that that doesn't train
and see what happens with their mechanics.
A lot of times they're gonna bring their heels up,
they're gonna lift everything up to be able to get up there
because their body doesn't know any different other than we just need to get this thing up there.
So I'm going to get up on my tippy toes to get there.
Yeah, pressing strengthens the pushing muscles of your upper body, your shoulders, your
triceps, your chest, if you're pushing, you know, in front of you.
If you're pushing overhead, there's back muscles that are very involved to stabilize your shoulder blades
because the shoulder, when you're pressing up
over your head, the shoulder blades are very involved
in stabilizing the shoulder and in the movement.
So there's muscles there, that strengthened,
and I don't realize that, by the way, as an early trainer,
just how much the mid-back is involved
and being able to push things overhead.
I always thought my clients, when they had trouble,
like if you push something straight up over your head
and you have issue with fully extending your arms,
straight up, without having to lean back
and look up at your hand, you can push it up your arm
as next to your ear.
If you can't do that, oftentimes it's a weakness
in your mid-back.
I don't realize that and took me a long time.
But you're not gonna get as high,
because you have to get that close to your head
in order to extend fully.
So yeah, that's a good point.
I mean, and to be able to stabilize at that position
is like, that's, that's do or die.
Like at that point, like you're gonna have a back problem
if you don't have that properly figured out.
Yeah, now good exercises for pressing push ups,
a lot of variety, inversions of push ups,
you could do traditional off your feet-feet push-ups.
You can go on your knees.
You could elevate your body to make it easier,
so you could do a push-up on a countertop.
You can even do push-ups on the wall.
I used to do this with my beginner clients
who were a little more in advanced age
where they had to start with something real easy.
And then have them step away from the wall,
put their hands on the wall, do push-ups.
My one and only favorite use of the Smith machine.
I did.
You put it on top of the bar.
And honestly, most people should start in a regress position like that, even if they
can do a normal push up, because since this whole episode is about getting started and
how to start, form always trumps, you know, weight and reps.
Yes.
And reps when you first start.
I would always, I'd have a client and I'd show them,
like push up, for example, and I would know right away
when I get them down to do the first couple
and I would know, okay, I'm gonna regress them
down to their knees, not because they couldn't do
10 push-ups, they could do 10 push-ups,
but the 10 push-ups they were doing,
their mechanics were terrible.
And so I would, hey, let's bring it to your knees
so I can really slow you down and concentrate
on how I want you to do this push up
before we progress you to go do really good.
Now, I know you can do them, you can just muscle them out,
but when you're first starting all of these movements
that we're talking about, I'm always gonna start clients
way lighter than they could technically do.
I mean, and that's a, I think a common mistake
that we should address when people first get started for some reason and
For sure especially my guys, you know, we want to just get to the place where we're we're lifting the most weight that our body can
The problem with that is the body is always going to choose the easiest path and sometimes that means all these other muscles jumping in and helping
And you don't work on the proper mechanics,
where I would much rather, when I start a client off,
start them off with 50% of the load
that they could technically squat or deadlift or push,
and really stress the mechanics of it and slowing down
and making sure you're form and technique.
I used to start clients off with a broomstick
to push overhead.
So they're literally using a broomstick and pressing that straight up above their head,
but we're focusing on full extension, right?
Arms totally straight, nice tall posture, not overarching the lower back.
So they're not feeling like there's too much tension in the lower back.
They're bracing the core.
They're looking straight ahead.
Then they come back down and they do reps with that and that works.
That builds strength and muscle.
So I'm glad you made that point.
What about pulling?
Pulling things.
That's a very basic human movement.
And maybe one of the most important.
Oh, today, especially.
When I use in fact, a lot of times I would hold off on some of the pushing movements
because it's something that we do most of the time.
And I would put more focus and emphasis on the pulling type of movements back to the
point that we are making with the posterior chain, the muscles in the back are just neglected.
Right.
And they're as equally important as the ones in the front.
And to keep everything in track and balance, you have to really consider that and really
incorporate the posterior chain.
And these other parts, even the rear delts and such to be able to maintain
that proper tracking position in your joint.
That's right.
Now pulling movements are any kind of rowing movement
or pulling down movement.
You could do this with bands, you could do this with dumbbells.
You could use a fisioball to help you
with your dumbbell rows.
For example, focus on pulling the weight up,
sticking your chest out, pulling the weight up, sticking your chest
out, pulling the shoulder blade back across your back.
It's like you're trying to strengthen good posture when you're doing these pulling movements.
What are the muscles you're working?
You're working the muscles of the hands, the biceps, and the back.
And let me tell you something, a nice, well-developed back really has a massive impact on your overall aesthetic in terms of how healthy
and fit you look.
You can have people with terrible back development
and great everything else development
and they just don't look right.
You can tell something doesn't look right
with the way they're moving.
Having someone with a real strong back and good posture,
it makes everything else look better.
So if you're trying to work out to look better,
which is everybody, work on the pulling movement.
Well, we're just naturally, we're all as humans closing in, right? I mean, that's just
shaving forward.
Yeah, because everything we do, okay, your day to day stuff from driving, riding, listening,
slowly turning into a shrimp.
What we are, I mean, you really, when you, and I used to do this when I would, when I'd
sell personal training as I would, you know, give the, I'd stand up all right in
like the anatomical position with good posture. And then I would show somebody like, you
know, this is what we look like when we're, you know, young in our teens and vibrant and
playing sports and doing things. And then like, then we get to 20 and then 30 and then
40 and then 50. And I just keep like showing myself rounding over until I was, you know,
impersonating a, you know, 70 or 80 year old
in a walker, and I'm like, that's just the natural progression
if you don't do anything to counter that.
And one of the best things that you can do
to counter yourself from moving into that close position
to the rounded back on a walker
is the posterior chain is like a rowing type of exercise.
This is also why I think there is a big surge in population with like orange theory.
I think one of the things, I don't even know if they knew that this is part of the formula.
I think they hit it out of the part for them is by incorporating rowing and rowing is
taking off right now.
I mean, we've, it's been around forever, but I part of why I think it's becoming so popular
right now is because of the side benefits that people are getting, and they may not even realize that
why they're feeling so good, but because it's such a neglected thing for the average person,
now you've got these droves of people coming through these classes, doing all this rowing,
they're like, man, I feel great, I feel better, and a lot of it probably is because they're
waking up that post-tier chain and getting into a rowing movement that most people just completely neglect.
Totally true.
Another basic movement, rotating.
Your body's ability to twist and rotate, maybe one of the most overloads.
It's an important movement that you should work on and strengthen, just so it doesn't
go away.
What you don't want is you don't want to have well-developed body
and muscles and strength that can't rotate
because that's like a huge injury waiting to happen.
And rotational exercises are easy.
They could be as easy as, you know,
lizard-ruth rotation, which is a mobility movement,
or you could do, and you can find all these
on our YouTube channel, MindPumpTV.
You could do a twisting crunch.
You could use a band, hold it out in front of you
and twist and rotate your body.
Some of the pulling movements and pressing movements
that you do, if you do them one-handed,
can strengthen a little bit of that rotation.
So like if I do a dumbbell row with one hand,
I can incorporate a little rotation at the top.
All right, or overhead press.
You just wanna add a little bit more rotation
with the wrist and the elbow as you're pressing it up.
There's ways you can incorporate it within what you're
already doing that will help to enhance it even more.
Totally.
And then a lunge.
I'll finish it off by saying a lunge.
That is a, and that's just when your legs, one leg in the front,
one leg is in back, and you're squatting.
So it's similar to a squat, but the difference is one leg is
stabilizing behind you, one leg is stabilizing in front of you.
And arguably the most functional thing that we can do as humans.
Because it...
You walk, right.
That makes us...
It emulates everyday life.
Right, so probably one of the most important things that we could do when you think of overall...
Right, so we just listed, let's see, picking things up, squatting, pressing, pulling, rotating, and lunging,
that's six movements, six basic human movements.
Guess what?
Guess what you gotta do.
Pick an exercise for each of those.
That's it, you're done.
There's your resistance training workout right there.
No joke.
Now, you're not gonna be bodybuilding,
you're not gonna be a powerlifter doing that,
but you are gonna get reaped
all of the general benefits of resistance training. And it's a fantastic place to start. And you will see phenomenal results by just focusing on those
six things. And you don't even have to focus on all six of them every time you work out. If you're in
the gym two or three days a week, you can pick three of them and do those things. And Adam, you touched
on something earlier about the intensity and the way we work out, I think we need to focus on that for a second.
Don't go in there to beat yourself up and work out.
There's the right dose.
Go in there to practice those movements.
Just get good at them.
If that's all you did, you'd be golden.
Absolutely, gold.
The goal is to do the least amount as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
I know I've said a million times on the show,
but I can't stress that enough because I know,
even with all of my experience and knowledge,
it's still a mistake that I make.
It's just in us.
It's in us to wanna get in there.
We're motivated.
You know why?
Because I think the hardest thing was to motivate us
to get in the gym.
And then once we're there, we feel like, okay, I'm here.
Now I gotta get in. I get to do all of it.
Right, I think it after is hard.
No, in fact, yesterday my workout literally
consisted of eight sets of lunges and five sets
of overhead pressing and 20 minutes in the sauna.
And that was a successful, great workout.
You do not always have to go.
In fact, you don't wanna go balls to the wall.
You are just trying to do enough that is just enough challenging that the body has to adapt and change and show
you results from it. And then you have room to build upon that. Do not throw the whole
kitchen. Work out like tomorrow. You know, right after you do that workout, you have to
do a workout again. You have to keep that in your mind, which is, you know, I don't think
a lot of people approach the gym with that mindset. That's something that will definitely carry you a lot further and you won't get those
setbacks, which then it's like you have to build all of it.
It's funny because for some reason we do this for this is training, but we don't do it
with anything else.
Nobody who has ever decided to run 100 miles goes out and runs 100 miles their first day.
Or you're going to go ice skate.
You're going to go ice skate.
You're going to put ice skates on and go skate your ass off and hurt yourself.
Right.
You practice.
Go to the gym.
Practice the exercises that cover those basic human movements.
That's it.
Just go in there and practice.
And you know what's going to happen?
You're going to feel it.
You're going to feel it just because you never done that.
Naturally.
It's just going to get easier.
And guess what?
You're going to do more as it gets easier.
That's all it is.
That's all it is.
Now, here's what I recommend.
If you can go to the gym a few days a week, practice a little harder one or two days a week and practice a little easier,
one or two a week. That's it. Super general, super basic. So a couple days a week going there and
just practice a little bit more with a little bit more intent. Like push yourself a little bit more
than you do on the other days. And then a couple days a week, just go in there and practice
some movements and take it easy a little bit.
You have just successfully periodized your workout.
You've now just successfully applied
the right amount of intensity.
Now what does that mean for each individual?
You'll figure it out and you'll figure it out
because you're focusing on practicing.
I know this because I've trained people for so long
that when I tell people,
hey, go to the gym and practice squatting,
they naturally do the right intensity.
It's so funny.
When I tell people to work out,
I gotta have like several conversations
about how hard or how to do it.
Your level of soreness and the amount you sweat
is not directly correlated with your success inside the gym.
No.
And for some damn reason,
we think that that equates to a good workout.
Oh, I was really so serious today,
must have been a great word.
Oh my God, I sweat to my ass off today.
Must, no, in fact, it could be a sign
of a terrible workout.
You didn't need nowhere nearly that much
for you to see progression and to see results.
You could have done 50% less
and seen just as much results.
So, especially if you start talking about what Justin said,
it starts to impede tomorrow's workout
or the next workout,
you're actually taking steps back
and you're not taking steps forward.
In fact, if you're sore, if you're really sore,
if you have a tiny bit of soreness
where you actually have to kind of
move a little bit to feel,
we're like, oh yeah, I think I'm sore, that's okay.
More than that, you did too much.
That's how I use soreness as a gauge.
If you finish your workout
and the next couple days,
you're having trouble walking
and every time you sit up,
sit down and stand up, that hurts or whatever,
every time you reach for something that hurts.
You went too hard.
Now, too hard does not mean you'll get there faster.
Too hard will mean you'll get there slower.
Okay, you'll actually progress slower if you go too hard.
So forget the bravado and the machismo and the whole like,
oh, like the pride
and the struggle type of deal, you'll actually get there slower.
You'll progress slower if you go too hard.
So if you get really, really sore, scale it back, go easier,
and again, just practice.
Now, another, one of the main reasons
that I hear a lot of people not wanting to do resistive
training besides the complexity and all that stuff,
which hopefully we simplified for you,
is that they don't have access to lots of equipment.
Because I think there's this belief
that resistance training requires
a lot of different types of equipment.
It actually doesn't.
It requires very little equipment.
In fact, you could do quite a bit with no equipment
or if you really wanna get equipment
and that's all you're gonna need
and you'll be good with this for a long time,
get yourself a pair of dumbbells and a physio ball.
You're done.
Paradumbels that you can adjust,
they're very inexpensive.
You can buy one on Amazon or wherever.
Dumbels that you can make as light as five pounds
or as heavy as 40 pounds or 30 pounds or whatever. And a physiol ball that you'll blow up, you can buy one at target
for $15 and you're finished. And for people who are like, oh, I don't want to buy equipment,
the same thing you got to do when you run, when you go running, you go buy an expensive $120
pair of shoes because you got a little run. Okay, so now you're going to spend that money
on a pair of dumbbells and a physiol ball and you could do everything with that. Now,
again, you're not going to be a power lifter or a bodybuilder.
But you can build a hell of a physique just from those things.
If you practice the skill of the six movements that we just talked about and got really
good at those six skills.
And added resistance over time.
You could build a pretty damn good physique.
You'd speed up your metabolism, so now you're burning hundreds of more calories
every single day just sitting there.
That means that you could eat the same and get leaner
or eat more and stay the same.
You can sculpt your body.
Remember, you can't spot reduce, but you can spot build.
So now you can look at parts of your body
and you can like a sculptor look in the mirror
and shape the body that you want.
You're not gonna be spending a ton of time working out.
We're talking about maybe three days a week
of exercise focusing on those movements
that we talked about.
It's relatively inexpensive.
It's relatively, it doesn't take up much space.
Dumbbells and a physioball can be stored
in almost any apartment or definitely a house.
And you're set and you're done.
Now, if you want more specified instruction,
if you want personal training Now if you want more specified instruction, if you want personal
training, if you want demos and you want to broken down, how many wraps, how many sets,
everything broken down for me. We have a program called Maps Starter that does all of that. So
Maps Starter is literally a program for people who want to get started with resistance training
and have never done it or who haven't done it for a very, very long time or for people who want to get started with resistance training and have never done it or who haven't
done it for a very, very long time, or for people who just want to work out at home with
that kind of equipment and maximize all those exercises.
That's what map starter is.
It's all broken down.
It takes you step by step.
There's exercise demos, workout blueprints, the whole nine yards.
It's all there, so there's no guesswork.
So if you want that, it's also 50% off this month.
So it's half off, you go to mapstarter.com and use the code starter50.
That's S-T-A-R-T-E-R-5-0, no space for that discount.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy,
and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com.
The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballac, maps performance, and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
sour, Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee and you can get it now plus
other valuable free resources at
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This is Mindbomb.