Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1157: Seven Ways Functional Training Burns Fat & Builds Muscle
Episode Date: November 7, 2019In this episode, Sal, Adam and Justin discuss seven reasons why adding functional training can improve fat loss and muscle gain. 1157: Seven Ways Functional Training Burns Fat & Builds Muscle Why it ...is SO important to look deeper into a study. (2:41) How the term functional has become bastardized. (11:55) Seven Ways Functional Training Burns Fat & Builds Muscle: The carryover, benefits & MORE. (18:40) #1 – The emphasis on mobility. (19:56) #2 - Utilizes different planes of motion. (30:14) #3 – The importance of novelty to get your body to respond. (36:00) #4 – The carryover value of using unconventional tools in your routine. (41:14) #5 – A focus on performance over aesthetics. (46:49) #6 – Employing all three contractions muscles make. (53:15) #7 – Increasing your body’s total work capacity. (58:00) People Mentioned Eugene Teo (@coacheugeneteo) Instagram Max Schmarzo (ATC/CSCS/MS) (@strong_by_science) Instagram Justin Brink DC (@dr.justinbrink) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned November Promotion: MAPS Performance ½ off!! **Code “GREEN50” at checkout** A Comparison of Free Weight Squat to Smith Machine Squat Using Electromyography What is the First Step to Better Mobility? - Mind Pump Blog Effect of range of motion on muscle strength and thickness. Mind Pump 1017: Max Schmarzo- Strong by Science 5 Most Important Exercises for Muscle Growth in an Effective Routine – Mind Pump Blog Heavy duty – Book by Mike Mentzer Build Your Legs with the Zercher Squat Stop Working Out And Start Practicing - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Free Resources
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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, MIND,IND, MIND, MIND, MIND, Gosh, that term has been bastardized more recently. They're taking the fun out of fun.
Right.
In the fitness space.
There you go.
What does functional mean?
Like, aren't all exercises functional?
And if not, which ones are more functional others?
And what is the benefit?
What is the benefit for athletes?
That's obvious.
But what are the benefits for everybody else?
Those of you that just want to build muscle and burn body fat.
Should you spend any time
on trying to train more functionally?
Now we think definitely, we think everybody has tremendous benefits, can get tremendous
benefits from at least placing some focus on functional training.
In fact, in this episode, we list seven of the ways that functional training will help
you burn body fat, build muscle, and
just get better results overall.
So we talk about how functional training places an emphasis on mobility.
We talk about the multi-directional component.
You know, that means you're moving in different directions or you're using one leg versus
two legs, that kind of stuff.
Talk about the novelty aspect.
You know this, you might already know this.
You change up your routine and your body responds all of a sudden.
We talk about why the real life practical movements
that functional training tends to employ.
The emphasis on performance over aesthetics,
if you're sick and tired of being obsessed
with the way you look
and you just wanna focus on performing better,
functional training is a great way to do that.
We talk about the different types of muscle contractions
and of course how functional training increases a great way to do that. We talk about the different types of muscle contractions and of course how functional training
increases work capacities so you can work out more
appropriately and more, thus getting better results.
Now our most functional program, the one program
that we designed a while ago, specifically for people
to help them improve on their functional capacity
is Maps performance.
It's very different from other workout programs.
This is a, I believe, a 12 or 16 week program all the way out, follow it all the way through.
It's got exercise demos, workout blueprints, everything you need to get functional results.
There's also mobility sessions in Maps performance.
So there's workouts and mobility sessions.
Now, this month, we've taken Maps performance and we there's workouts and mobility sessions.
Now this month, we've taken Maps performance
and we've cut the price in half.
It's 50% off.
Here's how you get the discount.
Go to mapsgreen.com and use the code green50,
g-r-e-n-5-0, no space for the discount.
So I feel like we have to address this
because it's starting to gain traction
In fact, I was I was tagged on a post again
Today, I was tagged on one a couple days ago. I'm still getting comments
from Eugene Tows post on the
Barbell back squat and now the most recent one I'm tagged on is
This study that's going around
that is saying that it is as beneficial or more beneficial for someone to use a machine
squat versus a barbell back squat for functional purposes. And right away, that just doesn't
even make sense to me. There's, although I could see how I could make a case
for it being close to as beneficial
at the very beginning of teaching someone this,
but long term and an overall function
for more than six or eight weeks,
I just don't see that.
Yeah, 100% disagree with the conclusion that a lot of people are going to take from
a study like that because what a lot of people will get from that is that a machine squat
is as good or superior to a barbell squat for building muscle and for performance.
This is why it's so important to look deeper into the study.
So, a little background.
I looked up the study and I saw that it was a small sample size.
It was 27.
Initially, 30 women signed up for the study.
So it was only women.
There were 30.
None of them had any prior resistance training experience.
So these were all total beginners.
Three women dropped out,
so eventually turned into 27 women doing this study
and it was for six weeks long.
So what we have now is 27 untrained individuals
following this study for six weeks.
Within the six week period,
what they did is they had half of them do hack squats.
So this is like what you would do
in like a paramount machine or something like that.
It's where the pads are on your shoulders
and you slide on the hack squat.
The other half did barbell squats.
And then at the end of the six weeks,
which for people listening right now,
if you're a beginner and you start working out with weights,
you're a beginner for probably six months to a year,
just in the way your body moves,
in the way you control yourself with your training,
in the way you can feel exercises,
working your body more variables.
Yeah, there's six weeks, you're still a total beginner
when it comes to training.
So, these people went through six weeks of training,
and then they compared the barbell squat to the hax squat.
And what they found at the end of the study was that
the hax squat might be a little better
in that six week period at producing power
and strength and agility.
Okay, so let's break this down for a second.
You guys are familiar with the high jump in the Olympics.
Not the one with the, not the high jump. What's the one where they jump over the pole? It's a high jump. It's a high jump in the Olympics. Not the one with the, not the high jump.
What's the one where they jump over the pole?
It's a high jump.
It's a high jump, okay.
Not the one where they have to stick pole vault.
Pole vault, okay.
So forget the pole vault.
The one where they jump over, right?
Yeah, and they approach it sometimes backwards
and kind of kick their legs over.
Do you guys know the original way people jumped
over those things?
Straight forward.
They would run, then they jump over it straight forward.
And for a long time, there was a limit
to how high people were getting.
And then some brilliant person discovered,
if I ran and then turned backwards and led with my head
and it's kind of, now that's the famous video.
Yeah, it's those famous videos you see of the person
like their head goes over first, they arch their back
and they kick their legs over.
Okay, so let's say we took 30 people
and we said, well let's see how high you could jump over this high jump.
I already know what you're going with this.
And 15 of them, you said,
however you want, the other 15,
you try to teach them the other technique.
At the end of six weeks,
the people trying to jump normal would still kick their ass
because the learning curve for the better technique
is much higher.
Or it reminds me of the analogy
that you've given on this podcast
multiple times about the chicken pecking
versus learning the home keys.
Oh, with type writing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
If you took somebody in the first no one's typed
in their life before.
And you say, hey, you type with your fingers as fast you can
and you will try and teach you the proper way.
Right.
At first, the person doing what they're two index fingers
is going to blow the doors off the other person.
Right.
Because there's a steeper learning curve.
But once you get past that, the benefits you reap blow the doors off of the other way.
That's immediately what I was thinking.
Because it simplifies all the variables.
All you have now to consider is this one straight path.
I have to take this weight and move it already
where the machine wants you to go.
So to consider all these other factors
of having to brace and how to hold your body
in a proper position, how to support your joints,
like all of that takes a lot of time for you to develop.
Yeah, let me ask you guys a question.
Let me ask you guys this.
How long did it take you guys to take the average untrained,
because this study had a bunch of untrained people,
or did it in the way,
take the average untrained healthy person.
How long would it take you before you could really push them
on a barbell squat, really get the reach
of the benefits of the barbell squat.
Years, yeah.
You're practicing, you're practicing, but this exercise, first off,
the progress you're gonna get from it
is gonna be a little slower initially
than just getting on a leg press or a hack squat.
Just like just doing a shit ton of cardio
and starving yourself,
we'll get you more weight loss initially
than doing lifting weights,
speeding up your metabolism,
reverse dieting, that approach.
But after you pass a certain point, after two, three months, four months, five months,
you start to pass up the easier approach.
And then the distance starts to become massive.
You take somebody who's been hack squatting for two years, no barbell squats.
You take someone who's been barbell squatting for two years, practicing it, working on
the things that gets them to do it properly,
compare those two groups and what you're going to see is night and day.
But six weeks untrained? Yeah.
No shit. Yeah.
Give them the easier thing to do and they're going to do,
look, I tell you what, I could probably drive my car faster
than if I got into a high-tech One car, the first couple of times I
tried, it's gonna take me a while to learn how to maximize this Formula One complex.
So a barbell squat is one of the more complex exercises, not the most complex, it's not
up there with Olympic lifting, but it requires a lot of skill and practice.
And it is one of the most functional things you can learn to do.
Period.
I'm so tired of hearing that message right now. And it is one of the most functional things you can learn to do. Period.
I'm so tired of hearing that message right now.
And I think the reason why I'm so tired of it is because I spent the first half of my
career not hearing it enough at all.
And maybe because it's become popular and because things like CrossFit have made squatting
and barbell lifting cool again and started to add that to more people's routines, it's
gotten popular again.
And now here's, it's like this pendulum,
we're always doing this where we're swinging back and forth
where it's like nobody was barbell back squatting,
then all of a sudden, you know, 10 years into my career,
all of a sudden it's super popular,
and a lot of people, probably a lot of people
that shouldn't be doing it.
I'll give you that, right?
Or at least having done the training to get to the point.
Yeah, the prerequisite.
So you haven't done the right prerequisites
to get to the point where you should be barbell squatting
with, especially with heavy load.
So now you're getting the counter message again
that are trying to tell people like,
oh, maybe you shouldn't be barbell squatting.
And now we're starting to come out
with stupid studies like this
and we're having a lot of really popular people
on social media, take that.
And they're doing it because it's click baity.
I get that. I can totally
respect that. We're in the digital marketing business. We know that, you know, titling something or
taking a counter message is a great way to get attention and get people talking about whatever it
is you have to say, but it's just it's so misleading. It's yes, and it's a poor message to be sending to
people. Yeah, I just we just got to a place where I feel like more and more people are learning the benefits
of barbell exercises to come and say some shit like that.
The only people that the understanding or the message gets through to the right way are
probably your really intelligent trainers that have a lot of experience of read a lot of
studies.
They can unpack that. They get what's going on there.
But for the majority, they hear that message
and it justifies why they shouldn't barbell.
No, that's just that.
There isn't a lot of studies around exercises
working out and fitness.
There really isn't.
And the studies are really limited, they're short.
And they do a very poor job of representing
what most people will probably experience.
And so if you read the study, the six week study done
on 27 untrained women, at the end of six weeks,
the HAC squat performed by the way, a tiny bit better,
wasn't like it was drastic, it was just a little bit better.
But if you have a lot of experience training lots
and lots and lots of people for a long period of time,
you know, you ask me, which one's better,
so I'll hack squad or barbell squad,
there's no competition for most people,
the barbell squad's far more functional,
but that term alone, functional,
like what does that even mean?
And for a while that, oh totally.
I remember when it really became like a marketing thing,
you know, this is when I started training clients in gyms, it was, this is back in 1990,
I think 1997 was when I first became a personal trainer.
Woo, okay.
Yeah, it was a little while ago.
Rachel Borneo.
We were listening, we were lifting dinosaur bones.
There weren't even barbells at that.
But this is when I, you is when I first became a trainer. And before that, I'd been working out in gyms
probably since 1993 or 94.
And for the first few years as a trainer,
functional was never even a term.
Nobody said that.
It was, you went to the gym and you worked out.
Yeah, I was strength training or not.
Nobody said the word functional.
Maybe somebody might have said
real world strength or something like that. Well, you know, you know, we're an originated from it originated from physical therapist
So it's been a practice for actually a really long time
It didn't make its way into the gyms and fitness professionals until where you're alluding to right now
Which is in the late 90s early 2000s. Did it make its way to trainers?
But originally it was a method of training that
most PT's physical therapist did for rehab to help with their clients' movement and mobility
when they're rehabbing from an injury.
And really all that it means is, or what it's supposed to mean is, does your training
give you a lot of carryover to everyday life?
Does improve your quality of life?
Now any type of exercise, I wanna be clear by the way,
any type of so long as it's relatively appropriate,
any type of exercise is gonna improve your quality of life
and is gonna make you more functional than none.
So if you do nothing and you sit on the couch all day long,
you could do some of the most non-functional exercise,
you're probably still gonna get more functional ability,
just because now you're exercising.
So when we are talking about functional versus
unfunctional training, I think we're just comparing
which one gives you more carryover,
which one makes you feel better.
Now here's the number one thing I'll say
about functional training.
Number one for the average person,
the number one goal of exercise should
be to help prevent obesity. And the reason why I say that is only because obesity is the
biggest problem that most people will face. That's the big rock, right? Like, okay, that's
great that you're doing all this wonderful functional exercise, but if you're 60 pounds
overweight and your diet is bad, not stuff, then it's not very functional. You get a heart attack or you increase your cancer risk,
it doesn't matter.
So that should be kind of number one.
But then we go down the list, right?
Does this improve my ability to do my daily activities?
Do I have less pain?
Is the strength in the gym relate to the strength
that experience outside the gym?
Like, am I strong on a bunch of machines at the gym,
but then I go move my couch and I hurt my back?
And honestly, anecdotally, I know where the term,
I guess, came from the rehab perspective,
but as a sports performance or strength driven trainer,
I knew it was also a counter to a lot of,
the big box gym sort of movement of all the machines and kind
of placing everybody in these confined space where like I'm trying to train in this fixed
position, but it didn't have the greatest carryover when we went to use this strength out on
the field. And so, you know, there was this movement of coming back to lunges and coming back to free weights and squats and dead lifts
and trying to get that strength,
but also not having the parameters
where everything was fixed in one plane.
This is not controversial to say,
but the more individualized the workout is for a person,
the better it's gonna be for that person.
I don't think anybody will ever disagree with me. If you take a general routine and you apply it to a bunch of people or you take
routines that are individualized, individualized ones are going to be always better. Now,
break that down to the exercise. The more individualized that exercise is for that person, the better
it is. The biggest problem with machines, biggest, this nobody will debate me or if they
do their idiots, is that machine, your body has to conform to the machine you get on a
Hacks squat or a leg press or chest press that machine was designed for what they deemed to be the average person that's going to be using that machine if your
arms are long or your tall or your short or your shoulders are wide or narrow or you're just a person everybody's differently. You get on that machine and you adjust the seat in the arms
or most people don't, most people don't adjust anything.
You just get on there and do it.
But even if you do adjust them,
you still have to conform to that machine moving in that track,
following the handles, free weights conform to your body.
So when I place a bar on my back or I curl away,
it doesn't matter how long my arms are
or how short I am or how wide my shoulders are,
the free weights conform to my body.
So that's the biggest most functional plus of free weights, is it's individualized mainly
because the free weights adjust to the body, not the other way around.
But I do remember when the word functional, have you guys ever trained physical therapists?
Yeah.
I've had several physical therapy clients and they would talk about functional training. The one area that I found that they
missed was that strength, the physical pursuit of strength or the physical action of strength
is positive for all other physical pursuits. The greatest pursuit. It's the one that contributes
to all of them. If you're stronger and you do it right,
you're gonna be better, you have better stamina,
you'll have better, if you train properly
with a full range of motion, you'll have better mobility.
And so when I would get these physical therapists,
they were so good at the biomechanics
of certain movements and correcting pain and stuff like that,
but they were really bad at just progressive overload
and building strength.
Then I'd have them get stronger,
and then it would click and they'd be like,
oh, this is where the term sort of got bastardized
because then you started to see a lot of the movement
of a functional training becoming stability training
and becoming the emphasis of joint function and movement.
And it became very much centered around uh...
you know balancing and like strength was in a big part of that that that training
seat got you guys remember that
all of the old totally it was like overnight man all of a sudden trainers at
clients balancing on
stein a dissuiting
and all that's like anything else i mean we
the pendulum seems to swing one way real hard and then come back the other direction.
We weren't doing anything around stability training, you know, 20 plus years ago, then
we went crazy with it.
So now we're trying to find the middle.
So all this stuff and all this talk around functional training inspired me to write a list
of what I thought were the seven ways that functional training helps us to build muscle
or burn bodies.
Why everybody should do something functional based.
Right.
You know, besides the basic traditional resistance training exercises, I would say this,
wherever you're at and your fitness routine, however experienced you are,
functional means you're going to challenge your body a little bit differently
with exercises that you think are going to give you more carryover to the rest of your
life. And what Adam's talking about are what are the benefits of that? Let's say you all
you do, you just want to train to look good. You just want to be lean, you want to be muscular.
So you do your traditional body parts split or your full body workout and you follow these
exercises and you're thinking, well, I really don't, I'm fit. I move around fine at home and, you know,
I play, you know, Frisbee with my kids at the park. Why should I incorporate more functional training
into my routine? Or maybe you're a beginner and you're listening and you're like, I just want to lose
weight. I just want to get better shape. Why do I need to go the functional training route? Like,
what is the value of functional training besides
to the athlete or besides to the person who's super motivated by being an awesome athletic minded person. Well the first one that comes to mind is the the emphasis that it puts on mobility.
I know on the show we talk a ton about the benefits mobility. It's one of those things as a young trainer.
I didn't talk about it. I didn't address.
As I've aged and no longer that,
limber and spray young kid,
I now see the benefits of it,
especially for long-term health, for joint health, and just
for overall movement in life, because nobody, I don't care how fit or unfit you are, nobody
likes to wake up in the morning and deal with joint pain or back pain or struggle to get
up out of a chair.
And, you know, when you talk about the average person most people is whether they
want a six pack or not at the end of the day want to feel good. And so I think that one
of the number one things and the first thing we talk about is how functional training
plays in a major role and overall mobility and joint health.
Totally. If you're if you're imagine you have a catalog in front of you and it's the
catalog of all the exercises
that your current level of mobility
will allow you to do or perform properly,
which means you can reap the benefits
from those exercises, risk of injuries low,
you can do them properly.
Okay, improve your mobility, that catalog grows.
Every time you improve your mobility,
the catalog of exercises and movements
that you now have at your arsenal continues to grow and expand. And this is very important because as you continue
to train changing up exercises and doing different things, one of the biggest
tools you have, one of the biggest factors you can manipulate to getting your
body to continue to change. Now mobility isn't just a range of motion. I think a
lot of people think, oh I can touch my toes, do the splits, whatever, I must have good mobility. No, it's not the same.
Mobility is having range of motion, but having complete control and strength in that.
Oh, yes, control and strength within that range of motion. Then there's this also. So we talked
about risk of injury. Of course, if you hurt yourself, you're not going to be able to work out
and get in shape. So that's obvious. But let's talk about having greater ranges of motion that you have strength and control
in.
It's conclusive.
Studies show this that larger ranges of motion done properly will give you better results
than shorter ranges of motion in terms of general strength, general muscle building, and
then of course, indirectly, generally talking about fat loss.
In other words, doing a full barbell squat
where your butt goes down below parallel
with good control, good stability.
So you've got great mobility there.
Is going to give you generally speaking
better overall results than a half squat.
Same thing with the bench press, a row, overhead press,
any other exercise you could possibly do.
So improving your mobility, let other exercise you could possibly do.
So improving your mobility, let's say you love to do, let's say you love doing, you know,
deadlift squats, benches, overhead presses, rows, you like doing pull ups, you like doing
all the greatest exercises.
But all you do is improve your mobility.
So now you're doing a half an inch deeper on your squat.
Now you're overhead press, you have a quarter inch more extension at the top.
You're able to squeeze and control
and connect to more of the wrap
on all your favorite exercises.
What you've done is dramatically improve
or increase the effectiveness of those exercises
that you always do.
That's why mobility plays such a huge role
in just getting good results,
is the ability to move through great ranges of motion?
Yeah, I think another thing when we had Max Schmarzo
on the show, he brought up an interesting point
that I've always ever since I've been trying to think
about this even further about how to convey
that point about movement aesthetics.
And why we pay so much attention to Olympic athletes, like Jim like gymnasts like if you're watching a martial arts
event and you're watching why one dominates over the other and and the way that they move is so much
More superior than the other opponent fluid. It's fluid. It's natural. It looks
Awesome. It's it we're dumbfounded by it a lot of times.
And I think that people don't realize that movement is a signal of health as well as,
you know, somebody coming in with, with the motivation of looking like they have a six
pack, like that's signaling that I'm in good health.
Well, good movement signals, signals, good health as well because now your abilities increase. Now it's a longevity
to it. If you're moving well, you know that you're going to be able to do things that other
people can't. Totally. And injuries happen, most a lot of injuries, I should say, not
all, because some injuries happen because something falls on you or whatever. But a lot of
injuries happen because your body moved
within a range of motion that you simply didn't control.
And oftentimes you're in that position,
you call upon your muscle, your strength, boom,
your tweak, or you tear something,
or you twist something because of it.
So it's like the reaching back behind you in the car
because your kids are acting up and you're twisting
and then oh no, I gotta grab the steering wheel.
You try and move quickly from that position.
I hurt my back.
You may be fit.
You may be someone who works out all the time.
In fact, this happens to people like that all the time.
Or maybe you work out all the time in the gym,
you think you're fit, you go through the baseball around
with your kid.
And the next day, my shoulder is messed up.
I hurt my shoulder throwing a baseball.
It's because you're moving it within range of motion
that you did not entirely have control over.
Mobility is improving upon that ability.
And being able to move better within
greater range of motion, not only decreases,
dramatically decreases your risk of injury,
but it gives you better results
just because your range of motion is better and all your exercises.
I think a simpler way to put it too is, you know, as we start to age, especially today,
man, we sit down so much we're not moving around through full range of motion.
And like your hips and your shoulders, these, you know, multifaceted joints are so dynamic.
They allow you to move all over the place.
And when you limit yourself for years and years
to this kind of same place,
where I'm just, I'm always typing
and front, I'm always driving from me.
And I stop like lifting above my head
or I stop squatting all the way around.
What ends up happening is muscles get shortened
and tightened and tightened and tightened,
and you lose that range of motion that you used to have,
and instead of just going to exercises that complement
that go, oh, I can no longer get down there
as to grassy more.
So let's just go do, you know, haxquats halfway.
What ends up happening is you end up tightening up
and shortening up and tightening up,
and then what ends up happening to your point, so I was one day you have to move out of that range of motion and that's how almost every one of my older clients were hurt
Supercom
It was never
Deadlifting 500 pounds or squatting 300 pounds on the back. It was picking up a fucking shampoo bottle in the shower
It was pulling some weeds, you know in their rose guarded. It was always some
Bullshit simple moves. That's outside of all those traditional exercises.
That's outside their traditional movement.
And it's because your body was designed to be able to do that,
but you've limited it for so many years.
And now why I can't stand this message is of the,
you know, machine squatting, as you start to confine that to the machine,
and you're doing that because it's easier for you
and it's more challenging to work towards getting a better squat or work to getting a better overhead.
It's the caution tape. It's the same response you're going to get from your doctor that's like,
yeah, you probably shouldn't do that ever again. And that's all they leave you with is like that specific thing that you're doing before like say it was
You know a sport or say it was like, you know, just basically like I can't I can't run anymore
I can't do any you just can't do it anymore now
Now we're just gonna limit you to and confine you even further to a chair
But it's it's more than just the muscles changing because of the lack of movement. The neural pathways that control that movement
also start to disappear.
That's right.
It's not just the muscle, it's that you actually lose the ability.
Whatever you don't train, you lose.
Your body's very effective at this, by the way.
Your body's always trying to be about as good as it needs to be.
There's no reason for it to be any better than it needs to be.
In fact, being better than it needs to be. There's no reason for it to be any better than it needs to be. In fact, being better than it needs to be costs resources.
And your body is just a beautiful efficiency machine.
It's always trying to burn just about as enough calories
as it needs to.
It's only gonna give you as much strength as it needs.
And don't need to be stronger than you need to,
cost too many resources.
There's no reason to be any faster than you need to.
Oh, you know what, you're not reaching up
above your head anymore.
We don't need that movement, get rid of that.
Let's become more efficient.
And so you start to not only do you just maintain
what you've been maintaining,
but you slowly start this decline.
And so training functionally is extremely important
for everybody, just from that standpoint alone.
You know that statement reminds me of remember the first time that
Dr. Brink put us in the 90 90
Hedge to the heel lift right it just like it was like you're I can't do it was like your leg didn't even
It was your body and then he took his hand and then he moved
Yeah, here's a range of motion right and you so we had this incredible the range of motion was there
But to your point about there was no no access to it.
Yeah, no access to it whatsoever.
And that single thing, like just working on
the internal rotation of my hip
and the external rotation of my hip,
which is basically what you're working on
in those 90, 90 moves where you're switching back and forth
and you're lifting those back legs up,
just me working on that every single day,
completely eliminated the versitis that I had in my hips.
Right. And a big part of a big part of the reason why you might have had
brisidus was because every time you squatted or whatever because you lacked
connection to certain parts of that movement, your joints were moving
sub optimally. However little. I won't set a squat. Two sets of squats.
Not going to notice a. Just over time.
Over time, and this is how, look,
most people's pain is chronic.
It's not the acute variety, and it comes from something like that.
Look, here's a big thing that functional type training does
very, very well.
I would say, and even argue that this is probably
one of the hallmarks of functional training.
It's utilizing different planes of motion.
That's a multi-directional.
Yeah, favorite.
Yeah, because just building traditional strength,
or just building muscle, we tend to get stuck
in this full, everything in front of me, type of position.
I'm squatting straight, I'm pressing straight,
I'm curling straight.
And so I train in this, there's very little lateral movement,
what your body moves laterally, of course it does.
You don't just, you know, we're not robots stuck on a track, right?
And we do very little twisting.
Yeah, rotational.
Very, very little rotation.
And so because of that, we get really, really good
at one plane of movement.
Yeah, forward and back.
And we get really, and we get strong in it.
We get super strong good at one plane of movement.
And we get, we completely lack another plane of movement,
which actually believe or not,
increases risk of injury.
It's also susceptible.
It does, it totally does.
So it's like having all this,
it's like having a car with tons of horsepower,
but you don't have good brakes
or you don't have good suspension.
And it just blows out parts of the car or whatever.
So here's a good example.
Think of a regular lunge.
Most people listening have probably done a regular lunge.
Great exercise, one of the best exercises ever,
by itself, very, very functional.
But if you've never done a side lunge or caustic squat,
try doing run right now and notice how unbelievably awkward
and weird it feels, if you can even do it all.
Now, from a standpoint of muscle,
you're using the same muscles.
That's the funny thing.
The muscles are, you're still using the glutes,
still using the quads, still using the hamstrings.
There's maybe a little bit more of the abductors,
there's a muscles on the side of the leg
that are being used with the, you know,
maybe a little bit more obliques,
but really what it is, it's the patterning
and the fact that you're going laterally.
So what do you think will happen
if you start to train that lateral movement,
or you start to throw that into your routine
to become more functional?
Do you think you're gonna build more muscle
or improve your ability to build more muscle?
Absolutely.
So one of my favorite things about functional training
is like in Maths Performance, for example,
we made such an emphasis on training
in different planes of movement. And what people noticed from that is that first, just
like the study said, at first it was hard. I had to go light, couldn't use a lot of weight,
but as they got stronger, their capacity to improve.
Oh, and they don't realize that's going to fortify the joints even more when you go
into that, that forward and back plane right if I'm going to to
then back squat again and I've been doing caustic squats. I've been moving laterally. I've been
twisting. Now I'm able to express the stabilizing muscles and they're going to be a part of the
process even more which then allows your body to produce more force. Yeah producing more force is
the game. People don't realize that.
Like to get stronger, you have to feel like
you're able to support your joints
with all that load on your back.
No, your body has natural limiters in fact.
It's got a governing system in place.
Your body tries to limit the amount of strength
that empower you can exert based off of its assessment of
whether or not it thinks you're going to get hurt.
The more train you are, the more you're able to tap into that amount of strength.
And most of the more of the strength that you have, the capacity you have to express.
And the more you train a particular movement, the more your body feels comfortable within
that movement expressing that strength.
And there is some carryover to the other movements.
But if you never train in certain planes of movement,
your body just doesn't feel safe.
Even though the side lunge uses the same muscles
as the front lunge, your body, try loading it
like you do with your front lunge.
You're gonna, well, don't do this, you'll fall.
You're not gonna be able to,
because your body's like, nope, I don't feel safe.
Well, and doing the movements in different planes,
like that also mimics real life more.
I mean, that going back to the point I made of the injuries
that always happened to the client,
it's always something as simple as picking a shampoo bottle.
Well, the reason why she got hurt picking up the shampoo bottles,
because she didn't enter her shower,
turn her body
180 degrees around squat down in the sagittal plane and then pick the shampoo bottle up That's why she did that she would have got hurt the reason why she got hurt is because she moved in the transverse plane
Yeah, she tried to move naturally
She rotated and then lunged over and because she had no strength or control in that position
She gets hurt and that's the reason why that type of stuff
has the most carrier and why I think it's, you know,
quote unquote, the most functional.
And any sort of program that you're following
that claims to be functional should incorporate
these type of movements.
Totally.
And you know, it's funny too, because one of the,
one of the paramount principles of bodybuilding
has always been using different
angles, just from a muscle development standpoint.
Even though a barbell curl, a preacher curl, and a concentration curl, and a drag curl
are all flexing at the elbow, anybody with any experience in muscle building will tell you
that doing all of those is probably better than just focusing on one, even though the volume and everything is the same.
So training in different directions, training in different planes through functional training
is another way to literally change angles on your body.
If you've been working out for a long time and you're consistent and you haven't done about
a functional training or you're focusing on different planes because you think this is not going to build me more muscle.
You are wrong.
The fact that you're training these different planes will actually contribute to your body's
ability to build more muscle just simply because there's different angles, different angles,
which brings me to another one.
Novelty.
How important is novelty at getting your body to respond?
It's fun, I did a post yesterday on my Instagram
about the best rep range.
And people often will ask us,
hey, what's the best rep range to build muscle?
Where should I always train?
And if you take studies and you examine them,
and again, most of these studies are done for six weeks,
or eight weeks, the studies pretty conclusively show
that about eight to 12 reps is probably the best
rep range to build muscle.
Now, the problem with that is, and it is true, if you compare it all the rep ranges for
a six week period only, and you took beginners or whatever, you're going to find that eight
to 12 builds more muscle.
But what those studies don't show is if you follow those people for a long period of time,
follow them for three, four, five, six months a year,
you'll find that unless you get them out of that rep range and train in the one to
five rep range or the 15 to 20 rep range,
the progress slows to a grinding halt.
It stops. So the answer to the question of which rep range is best is
the rep range you're not doing. When you're not doing. Yeah. And all of them.
All of them and none of them depends on which one you're doing
and which one you're going to do.
That's novelty.
This reminds me when we first started the podcast,
or the first year that we started creating
and writing programs, the order was maps and a ballic,
maps performance, and then maps aesthetic.
Now, as far as sales was concerned,
maps and a ball bulk and maps aesthetic
just blew everything out of the water,
just blew performance.
And of course, we knew that going into it
because they both are geared.
Sexier.
Yeah, they look sexier and it's more towards,
you know, looking better and building muscle
is what it's marketed to, right?
And I remember I'd get DMs and emails from people saying,
hey, you know, I've followed maps in a bulk, I've done a static.
And my goal is I want to build muscle.
And I want to burn body fat.
What program or what should I do next?
And it's a map's performance, of course.
And they'll be, oh, well, no.
I don't want to be an athlete.
That's not my goal.
All I care about is the way I look.
I just care about aesthetics.
And I'd say map's performance still. And the I care about is the way I look, I'm just care about aesthetics, and I'd say math's performance still is that.
And the reason why that is is because I know
that it's marketed to people that care about sports performance,
but it has incredible benefits for burning body fat
and building muscle, especially to somebody
who never trains that way.
That's all those tons of value.
Right.
Tons of value.
Novelty is so important when it,
now you don't wanna overdo novelty.
You're not trying to go to the gym
and make up exercises every single day.
There's certain level of consistency
that you wanna stick to to maximize the benefit of certain.
I can definitely speak to that
because I was an addict for novelty at a certain point
because of how effective it was.
Once I found one specific thing,
I got to a certain point where I was benching all the time.
I was squatting all the time.
I was power cleaning, I was dead lifting,
but that was it.
It was all this balanced barbell load.
And then I started to get to a point where I could only do
so much, my shoulder gave out on me.
And I would always get to a certain weight and stop.
And that was as far as I could go. And then I started, and then I found Indian clubs and I found rotational
movements with my shoulder. And I just started working on that. And it was, it was like
a key just unlocked this new potential where my shoulder felt stable. And my shoulder felt stable and my shoulder felt really stable and stronger going into a simple
lift like a bench press and it was dramatic how much more weight I could add to the bar.
And so then I thought, well, that must be the key.
I got to do a lot more rotation.
So I went crazy.
I'm going mace bells.
I'm going, you know, like I'm doing side tosses.
I'm going all rotation and everything.
And it got out of hand, but the point of it was
is that that was the new stimulus that was lacking.
That was the thing that I needed to focus on
to reinforce my abilities to then gain more strength.
As a kid working out, I don't know how many times
this lesson was tried to be learned,
but I just refused to learn it.
Like I would do a routine.
Like the first routine I did,
I was like Arnold Schwarzenegger's,
Encyclopedia Bodybuilding routine.
I did that.
It was a split routine, lots of volume,
lots of angles, different exercise, did that for a while.
Then I read Mike Mentzer's Heavy Duty.
Heavy Duty was go to failure one set per body part, that's it.
Super short workout, super intense,
and I was only training maybe a few days a week.
Switch to that, oh my God, all this muscle's coming
on my body, that's all I'm gonna do now.
Did that forever, forever, forever in my body, stop for fun.
Then I changed to a different routine.
Oh my God, this is the best routine.
It took me like five times to realize
that putting it together, wait a minute.
Oh, wait a minute.
Oh, wait a minute.
It's when I change routines.
Then all this stuff happens.
Well, how often do you guys get clients like that?
I don't know how many times I get a client,
I remember getting a client who would sit down
and tell me what was best for their body
because of their past experience.
Oh, I've tried lifting like this,
and when I lift like this, I got the best results.
And I'm like, well, that's because it was novel to you
because you've never trained that way.
And so your body responded.
But Justin, you bringing up the tools and rotational stuff,
brings me to the next point, which is the real life
practical movements and using things like sandbags
and Indian clubs and getting into real ways
that you would use your shoulder, you would use your hips and using tools like this.
Oh, I was surprised, and let's see,
I'm trying to think when this happened,
this was probably seven or eight years ago.
I had gotten really into reading the history
of strength athletes and strong man time training.
And at this point, I've been working out already
for a long time, I'd been training forever.
I'd kind of hit some limits with my lifts.
And I'm a historian when it comes to strength sports.
And so I'm reading stuff and I'm like,
you know what, it might be fun to incorporate
some of these odd lifts just because I've been training
for so long and I just wanna see what would happen.
So one thing that I did was I started doing these
really, really heavy sandbag carries.
So this is where I would take a sandbag
or I'd take like a punching bag or whatever.
It was almost like that size.
And it'd be really, really heavy.
And I would lift it and walk with it at after hug it.
So my arms would reach all the way around it
and I'd hug it and I'd lift it up
and I'd walk for distance, drop it.
And I'd do sets like this.
I was shocked at first off how sore I got, but then I was shocked at how
strong it made me in my deadlift, which was my lift. That one I'd been training forever.
And then I started to piece it together. I was like, wait a minute, when I'm hugging the sandbag and lifting off the floor, even though it looks a lot like a deadlift, the differences my shoulder
blades are rounded forward.
I'm doing what's called rounded back lifting, not lower back rounded, but rounded around
my upper back.
So now my rhomboids and my traps and my lats are, their tension that they're holding is
in this lengthened or different position, then when I'm deadlifting where I'm trying to
keep things kind of protracted, I built more muscle and I got much stronger.
Then I started experimenting with a kettlebell overhead press
versus a dumbbell press.
And then of course I met Justin when we started doing
mind pump and got introduced to all these other types
of tools that you could use.
And I'm first and foremost, I like building muscle
and being strong.
I wouldn't consider myself in any capacity,
a functional training.
That's not my favorite thing to work on,
but because those things contributed
to the strength of muscle,
I definitely started incorporating it.
Yeah, as any mentioned, sandbag,
I mean sandbag is one of those tools that,
I mean, it's the great equalizer.
It shifts on, you move on,
you have to adjust with it.
And so that's a completely different skill to acquire,
which then has a lot of carryover
then with something that doesn't move.
And it's nice and fixed.
And you can wrap your body around it much more easily.
So I mean, there's ways to use these tools
where then it is novel at first,
but then it has massive carryover.
Because now your body reacts differently.
It stabilizes on command.
And that applies greatly towards strength pursuits.
One thing, like you mentioned with deadlifting for me,
I had hurt my QL and I had gone through this process
of rehabilitating myself and really found that windmills was a massive breakthrough for me in terms of being able to regain that connection and get that kind of rotation in my thoracic spine and to be able to then adjust and stabilize something again as simple as a deadlift. But if you have the most minute shift,
it's gonna affect you greatly
when you have that much more weight added to that.
One of my favorite movements that we included
inside mouse performance was the zertra squats
for the point that you're making cell
because as functional and as amazing as barbell back squats are, and we would all agree on that,
when I think about, you know, the way I would pick up something and carry something in real life,
you rarely ever throw it on your back and load it.
Almost never.
Unless it's your girlfriend at a rock concert.
Yeah, this is on your shoulders.
Right, right.
You know, 90% of the time, you're, you're, you're you're you're you're bare hugging it with this kind of rounded shoulder position and squatting it or
picking it up. And so, you know, talking about real life type of movements that
or exercises that have carry over into real life, um, zertra squats. That was
something that was introduced to me when I met Justin, I'd never trained zertra
squats before and just absolutely loved incorporating that in my routine. And that was introduced to me when I met Justin, I had never trained zurchers quats before
and just absolutely loved incorporating that in my routine.
And it's one of my favorite movements
that was placed in that program too.
That's actually Jessica's favorite squat.
Is it really?
Yeah, because she started doing the zurchers
after she was introduced to him and she's like,
wow, the way I feel these in my glutes,
the way I feel these in my back
and just the improvements she saw. And I'll tell, wow, the way I feel these in my glutes, the way I feel these in my back,
and just the improvements she saw.
And I tell you what, when you find an exercise
that you're not good at,
just through simply getting good at that.
Oh my gosh, the strength gains
in the change you see in your body is incredible.
Because that initial, those initial newbie gains,
you can actually apply that to an exercise
you're not good at.
So if you've been working out for a while,
and you remember how fast you progressed
when you first started working out,
where you're like adding 10 pounds of bar
every single week, that first three months or whatever,
find an exercise that you never do,
like the CosX squat that I talked about,
or the Zurcher squat or whatever,
that you're not familiar with,
and the strength gains come fast
because a lot of that is just you learning how to do the exercise.
Now imagine what that does for the rest of your body.
Now there's another benefit, the next point,
that reminds me of something that you recently have been talking about,
Sal, that I think is, when I think about majority of my clients,
what they would benefit, and it's this point.
And that is creating a program or following a program that is based off
of performance over aesthetics.
Oh, yeah.
And I think that the benefits here,
of course, there's physical benefits that we can get into,
but the mental benefits that I think are applied here
are what's more important.
Because when I think of the average client
that I used to get, most of them came to me because they were insecure
about their body, they were slaves of the scale
or they're constantly comparing themselves in the mirror
or to their friends and it was all about how they looked
and how they looked,
drove how they trained in the gym,
which a lot of times was a very unhealthy relationship
and they weren't doing things
that were best for their body.
And when I could get a client to stop focusing on the way they looked and their scale weight
and begin focusing on their performance in the gym and how they moved and how they perfected
the movement and they improved upon liberating.
Oh, it's incredibly liberating.
And the irony of it is when they stopped caring about those things, that ends up being a side effect that comes later on.
And they start to look much better.
My-
They get better at the exercises.
I mean, if you put the focus and the emphasis on improving on these very specific exercises
that have carryover towards building and developing muscle,
I mean, look at that.
Like, that's the recipe.
And a lot of times, I mean, it's tough because that's like everybody's
most, everybody's goal coming in. I want to look better. I want my body to change and
to be able to reveal this muscle and this hard work I've been doing. But a lot of times,
putting that emphasis into actually improving those specific exercises, getting better
at the skill of working out makes the world difference. It was my biggest secret weapon when I trained clients.
It was the one thing when I pieced it together, when I put it together, it made me more
effective than I'd ever been before as a trainer and it separated me from my peers as trainers.
And it was every client that I got, every single client that I got, almost every.
My goal was to get them to focus on performance.
My goal was to get them to care about their movement,
their strength, and their stamina,
because here's the truth.
If you improve your general performance consistently,
the side effect of that,
the very, very consistent side effect of that is better aesthetics.
So if you get stronger, faster, better mobility,
better stamina, the very high odds are,
you're gonna look better.
The reverse is not true.
If your goal is to change how you look,
you could give a crap about performance.
All you wanna do is change your body
and it's appearance in the mirror.
The odds are not that your performance will always improve.
In fact, oftentimes, especially when we're talking
about the average person, especially when we're talking
about the average person, you get the average woman
that comes in and wants to lose weight.
And all she cares about is the scale.
All she cares about how she looks,
oftentimes performance actually gets worse
because of the diet practices that accompany that,
and the fact that they treat workouts like a punishment.
So changing your focus from how you look to performance
will radically change how effective your workouts can be,
and it is extremely liberating.
If you are listening and you're honest with yourself right now and you're honest
and you feel like you're a slave to the scale
or to the reflection or to comparing yourself
to other people, liberate yourself
and for the next few months, stop caring about that.
And I don't mean stop caring like you're like,
ah, I'm gonna, no, no, just don't focus on it anymore
and focus entirely on all aspects of performance.
Am I moving better?
Am I faster? am I stronger?
Do I have more stamina?
Do I feel better?
Just focus on that.
You're gonna have a surprise at the end
of that three month period.
And of all those things you listed, when you're five,
if you're somebody who's listening
and you're already following my car,
Math Performance Program, I can't help but stress this.
And the reason why I want to make this point
was because I remember when I was going through performance,
Katrina was going through it.
My friend Everett was and I had somebody else was going through performance, Katrina was going through it.
My friend Everett was and I had somebody else and occasionally we would get together and
we'd work out in the gym together on that program.
And I remember vividly doing the reverse lunge, landmine to press exercise, super challenging
exercise.
Yeah.
And a lot of moving parts in that.
And I remember coaching them through that
and them wanting to increase weight.
And I was explaining to them that,
you know, this is not the most weight that I could do here,
but there's so many things that are being communicated
through the entire body from head to toe
that I'm actually more focused
on to Justin's earlier point about the beauty of the movement.
And I think learning to look at it, like that, learning to look at an exercise and trying
to make it look fluid and seamless and everything speaking to each other versus, oh, I could
get 10 more pounds up.
But then I've got to throw myself to the side a little bit or I'm kind of wobbly when
I do it.
And just not a lot of people approach their training programs like this. It's sometimes we get so caught up on either one how we look and so
it's punishment like you said, so. And I think there's also a lot of people that are guilty of just how
much weight is on the bar. And when you're following a really good functional training program,
that actually, even though that's an indicator of improvement because you've increased strength,
and I do think that strength is one of the greatest pursuits
because it has so many carriers,
I actually think that when you're focused
on functional training, it's everything.
It is, and movement should be at the top of the list
and improving.
I would always look at my previous week
compared to where I was at in performance and know, performance and go, you know, I
may not have moved up five or 10 more pounds, but boy, it's way more fluid when I do this
exercise. That's, those are gains also. Totally. And we, it's not always how much we're
putting on the bar or what we see coming off the scale, getting to be able to move and
get your body to communicate better, you know, from head to toe is a huge success too.
And one, that we don't celebrate enough, and I think that you should put a lot of emphasis
on when you're training a map's performance or any functional program for that map.
No, I'm glad you said that.
Functional focus is focusing on all of it.
In fact, functional training done properly is the best type of training to focus on all
of the functions, or at least the
three different types of contractions that muscles make.
What I mean by that is, okay, so if you're not, if you're not on talking about, every time
you lift a weight, let's say you're curling a weight, that curling action is considered
a concentric contraction.
So that's a type of contraction, the muscle's shortening.
When you lower the weight, that's eccentric, that's you lowering the weight.
So your muscle's still contracting, but it's allowing itself to lengthen.
Anytime you hold a weight in a position, that's considered an isometric contraction.
Functional minded training focuses on all of those things because they're all important.
If you want good function, you have to be able to control the concentric, the isometric
and the eccentric.
Okay.
Which one of those makes you build muscle?
Which one of those helps you burn body fat?
Which one of those is good to drink?
That, yep, the answer is A, concentric, B, eccentric,
C, isometric, or D, all of the above, right?
All of the above, they all do.
Other forms of training kind of understand this,
like body building, they'll say,
oh, focus on the eccentric, right? That's where the muscle growth
happens. We're power, you know, for training for strength, like, oh, the concentric's the
most important, just lifting the weight. And they kind of understand this a little bit,
but functional mind of training is the only type of training that really pays
attention to all of those. Can you walk with a weight above your head, stabilizing?
There's your isometric. Can you walk doing a farmer walk your head, stabilizing? There's your isometric.
Can you walk doing a farmer walk or a suitcase carry?
That's your isometric.
Are you lowering the weight with good control?
There's your eccentric.
Are you able to explode or control the weight
on the way up that you're concentrating on?
Well, again, it's more movement focused.
So like, can I create the action?
Can I create the momentum that can propel me forward?
So, you know, that's the first thing is accelerating.
Okay, I wanna accelerate this way,
I wanna accelerate my body, I wanna do this.
Now can I stabilize and control my body while I'm doing this
and keep all my limbs and everything in check
is symmetrically, so can I hold my body
in a certain position while I'm moving?
There's certain isometric components to that that have to occur. And then can I slow my body in a certain position while I'm moving? There's certain isometric components to that that have to occur.
And then can I slow my body down?
Can I decelerate?
So these are all muscle actions controlling the joints that we have to consider.
And I would argue that the isometric portion is probably the most underrated portion of this.
It's neglected in all training.
Right.
And maybe one of the most. It's neglected in all training. Right.
And maybe one of the most beneficial things that you can do.
Certainly, if you're not.
Definitely for the novelty reason.
Right.
I mean, if you're not training any sort of isometric exercise, which is why this was important that we
included it when we were writing something like performance because we knew the value of
that portion.
And then we also knew that most people just don't put a lot of emphasis on it.
Like you said, Sal, bodybuilding community does a really
good job of speaking to the eccentric portion,
that's slowing down the reps and chasing the pump
and getting more blood inside there, like great job there.
Your powerlifting and Olympic lifting
does an incredible job of talking about the expression
of the concentric and explosive and getting up through the
rep, but not a lot of people speak to the isometric portion
of the exercise, which is as valuable,
if not more valuable, because most people neglect it.
Oh, it's funny.
Years ago when I was doing Jiu-Jitsu,
I noticed as strong as I was, because I've been lifting weights,
I would get really fatigued in certain positions,
because in Jiu-Jitsu, there's a lot of, especially with the ghee, you slow down, you hold the
position.
So you have this isometric contraction, you have to get really good at, or you'll get
someone in a lock or a guillotine choke, and maybe it's not perfect, so you're squeezing
and holding and squeezing and holding.
And I would just get blown out.
So what I started to do is I would get like a medicine ball or at one point I had a buddy who had a dummy and we would focus, we would
do these isometric holds on it where I'm getting a guillotine or I'm getting a position and I'm squeezing
and holding and squeezing. I started to building muscle, which was funny. I wasn't lifting any more
weights with this, but because I was doing the I said because it was so novel for my body,
I actually started to build muscle. I also experienced this with overhead carries.
Justin was big on overhead carries when we first met.
So I said, now I'm gonna give this a shot.
I'm gonna take a dumbbell or a kettlebell,
press it up above my head, hold it there and walk,
or just hold it there for time.
And I was surprised at how much carryover
I had to the rest of my lifts.
And I actually started to develop a little bit of muscle,
as long as I've been training, that's a big deal for me.
So focusing on all three of those types of contractions
is something that functional, real functional training
does better than any other type of training.
Now, the last thing I want to talk about
is I think one of the most important.
When it comes to your training, especially if you're advanced, especially if you're pushing
your body, the number one limiting factor that prevents you from progressing any further
is your overall body's ability to recover from training, your overall body's total work
capacity.
We know that exercise is what sends the signal
to the body to build muscle,
but along with that signal comes some damage
and your body needs to heal.
If you had, if you were like a Wolverine
and you had instantaneous healing properties,
you could literally do 10 super hard workouts every single day
and you would progress 10 times faster
because you're able to throw more at your body
and recover from it,
because your work capacity recover from it.
Because your work capacity is so high.
Well, when you train functionally minded, when you improve your ability to train in different
planes of motion, when you have better mobility, greater ranges of motion, when you focus
on all the different types of contractions, you actually increase your work capacity.
So now, if you train like a bodybuilder, now you can add a couple overhead carries.
You can add a couple rotational movements.
And rather than really hammering your body's ability to recover, you just expanded upon
your body's ability to handle all of that work.
Work capacity is a big one.
In fact, I'll say this all day long.
One of the things that some of the people that you know
that have the most muscle or the best ability,
one of the reasons why they're the best
is necessarily because they train better,
it's because they have the ability to train more.
Yeah, they actually have a greater work capacity.
And you can develop that by just focusing specifically on that.
When does the breakdown occur?
And how can I stretch that out a little bit further?
Like me being in all of that like demand
and that load and that stress on my body,
can I withstand just a little bit more?
Can I train myself to stretch that out and withstand it,
you know, just that much further?
And there are techniques to do that.
And then applying those within your programming
will have massive carryover.
When I'm doing reps, now I don't feel that onset.
I don't feel that the impending doom
where I'm fatigued, that breakdown is just gonna,
my body's gonna start shutting down.
Yeah, I mean, if you're like,
oh, I can't, I like to do more exercises.
I think I can recover from it, but my joints can handle it.
You know, I do more of my shoulder hurts,
my back hurts, my knees hurt, or whatever.
Improving your mobility through functional training
now opens those doors for you.
Now you can do more training
and your joint because your joints are moving better.
You know, you don't have to,
it's not like your joints either move perfectly
or they move terribly. You have kind of different capacities. Well, if you're moving at 85%
of what's considered perfect for your joints, you're going to be limited by that. You're not going
to be able to do as much as you can do because at some point like Adam, you'll develop
percitis or tendonitis or issues with your joints. So functional training at the end of the day
this or tendonitis or issues with your joints. So functional training at the end of the day improves or increases your work capacities.
You could do more on your body, which then of course results in better progress, faster
results.
And these are all the things that we kind of focus on in Maps Performance, which this month
is 50% off.
So you go to mapsgreen.com.
You can get that program for 50% off, but you have to use
the code green50 as gr EN 5 0, no space. Also, we have guides that we write that are totally
free. So if you want more information that costs nothing, make sure you go to mindpumpfree.com.
And finally, you can find the three of us on Instagram. You can find Justin at MindPump
Justin, me at MindPump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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