Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1292: The 7 Minute Warm-up That Accelerates Muscle Growth & Fat Loss
Episode Date: May 14, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss the importance of "warming-up" properly and the impact it can have on the success of your workout. The under-valued aspect of the warm-up. (4:56) The warm-...up has to send the RIGHT signal to make your workout effective. (8:00) How to stretch with PURPOSE. (13:10) What should your warm-up (proper priming session) do for you? (14:40) The steps to Prime your body properly. Step 1 - Learn how to self-assess. (32:46) Step 2 – Pick movements that activate the areas that are disconnected. (37:38) Step 3 – Perform the 3-5 movements for 7-10 minutes before your workout. (44:21) The Ultimate ‘Post-Priming’ Routine. (45:18) The importance of correctional exercise to combat your poor recruitment patterns. (50:48) Sign up for the MAPS Prime Webinar TODAY! (54:55) Related Links/Products Mentioned May Promotion: MAPS Starter ½ off! **Promo code “STARTER50” at checkout** Special Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off!! **Code “WHITE50” at checkout** MAPS Prime Webinar Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Is Warming Up Before A Workout Necessary? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1180: Joe DeFranco on What Makes a Good Trainer, the Importance of a Structured Warm-Up, the Role of Genetics and MORE Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Joe DeFranco (@defrancosgym) Instagram
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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, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump Your Favorite, Fitness Health, and Entertainment Podcast,
we talk about a portion of your work out that you're probably neglecting.
We're talking about the warmup.
Now a lot of people warm up
because they think it reduces risk of injury.
That's true, but that's the minimum
that a good, proper warmup can do for you.
Most people don't know this,
but if you apply the right movements in your warmup,
you can actually dramatically improve
the effectiveness of your workout.
Not just reduce your risk of injury,
but rather improve your body's ability to build muscle
and then through the building muscle process,
faster fat loss because of the faster metabolism.
So this is a very, very big thing.
Now in the episode, we tell you what to do.
We actually give you takeaways on how you can apply this
to yourself so you can spend seven to ten minutes properly warming up to make your workouts more effective.
But within the episode, we talk about self-assessments, we talk about movements, and we realize,
look, a lot of you might not know where to go from there, what that looks like. So what
we did is we put together a free self-assessment priming course.
This is where Justin actually teaches you
had a self-assess your own body,
and then he shows you movements that you can do
before your workout to make your workouts much more effective.
It's a totally free webinar, it's online.
You'll see Justin taking Doug through the assessments
and exercises, you get to see Doug struggling.
It's a great time.
The site you go to is Maps Prime Webinar.com. There's no limit to how many people can sign up
because it's online. The last time we did one of these, it was extremely popular. We had over 7,000
people attend a single class. Again, it's Maps Prime Webinar.com, go there, sign up, learn how to do the self-assessment process,
learn how to apply the right movements to your body before you work out to get great
arranges of motion, activate more muscle fibers, build more muscle.
Again, it's totally free.
And by the way, if you show up to the live classes, because they're our replays.
So once you sign up, you get the free class sent to you as well. But if you show up to the live classes,
Adam, Justin, myself, and Doug will actually be
on line live answering questions,
any questions you have about what you're seeing
in the webinar.
Again, that's mapsprimewebinar.com.
Also, this episode is brought to you by Legion.
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That's the one that I like to use.
I personally don't like to use caffeine every time I work out.
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The way I do that is I only use it a few days a week
from my heavy workouts.
On my easier workouts, I stay away from it.
And it just gives me the power that I get from caffeine because I don't take it so often.
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you're an existing customer. You know one of the things that I think are one of
the most underrated things in fitness and workouts like one of the things that
people just don't,
nobody really pays attention to.
I don't think anybody thinks it's super important.
That is the opposite of all that.
Like this is one of those myths that
if people just understood how inaccurate
their thoughts were around it,
it can make tremendous gains with their current workouts,
I think it revolves around the warmup. Well, I know I was terrible as a trainer here.
You know, and I know for sure those trainers are listening that are guilty of this, because
I know I did.
I'm pretty sure Justin didn't because he worked for me, so I remember seeing him.
I was too.
Yeah.
For a lot of my career.
And the kind of the normal client that comes in, you, after you've done your
thing with them, you figure out their goals, they're set up for you for the next three,
six months, whatever, you want to get into it. Right. The first session is, you know,
after you've done your like assessment and everything that that with them, the first
thing is, you know, you tell them to warm up, you know, and ideally, you tell them for,
you know, to do it on their own time.
So if you have an appointment with me at three o'clock,
at two, 45, you're on the treadmill or the elliptical
and you are quote unquote warming up before,
you see me, and I did this for years.
For years, that was what?
10 minutes on the elliptical.
Yeah, every trainer was taught to do this.
And in fact, if I'm being completely honest too,
there was a side of me that used to even make clients
that they showed up just on time.
You know, you got to my appointment at three.
Oh, we got a warm up.
You know, get over there and go first 15 minutes
or over there on the, on the, on the, on the,
so I can hear my protein body.
Yeah.
It's true though, right?
You know, and I know there's fucking trainers
on here listening right now that, that are just as guilty.
And the, the truth is it really did little to nothing for any
of my clients and then it evolved to like foam rolling right because then I started to understand
the importance of foam rolling and what a difference that could make so it was like okay
then and then I felt like I was a better trainer than when I was by just throwing them on the
elliptical but even then nowhere near how I get somebody
ready for a workout today.
Yeah, if I did spend any time warming up my clients, it was very much similar to what
I did for athletics where it's almost that mentality of like, okay, now I'll go run some
laps and come back and we'll do just, you know, some, I don't know, some like calisthenics
we'll do some jump in jacks or we'll, we'll like, you know, take, I don't know, some like calisthenics, we'll do some jump in jacks or we'll like,
you know, take your arm and do some static stretches for your shoulder and like just some like
willing, nilly kind of stuff to get everything sort of loose. And that was the extent of what a warm
level. The way that we warmed up in school and PE was static stretching. Lots of static stretching.
So your warm up consisted of hamstring stretch,
quad stretch, side bends, like,
and there were just these long static stretches.
And I remember as a trainer,
this was still encouraged, it was still encouraged
that you do these static stretches.
And then studies started to come out.
And they actually showed, I remember this
because, and it wasn't in the 90s,
this happened in the 90s, studies came out and blew everyone's minds,
because the studies didn't just show
that static stretching before you work out.
Had detriment to your performance.
That's what I'm saying, it didn't just show
that it didn't really do much.
Studies came out, because everybody's waiting for these studies,
like, oh, it's gonna show that, you know,
it reduces risk of injury, improves performance,
and then some people were like, well, at the very least, it's gonna show it, you know, reduces risk of injury, improves performance, and then some people were like,
well, at the very least, it's gonna show it doesn't do much at all.
Studies came out and showed it did the opposite.
It actually increased risk of injury,
and decreased performance.
And I remember this was like a huge deal.
They thought this was a mistake.
There's no way this could be true.
How could warming up make you hurt yourself
more than not warming up?
And it was because they didn't understand
that how you warm up makes all the difference in the world.
Now, why did the static stretching do this?
I mean, we can get more,
we can get deeper into this later in the episode,
but to make a long story short,
static stretching literally sends the wrong signal.
Your warm up has to send the right signal.
That's the big difference.
And that was the first hint that I got as a trainer
that the warm-up was more than just moving.
There had to be some purpose behind that.
I vividly remember when I learned this
because at this time, I had my younger brother,
my younger sister, who were in sports.
And they were like, in their early teens,
and I had found out that this was like big news
for me as a trainer like, oh my God,
like for the longest time,
this is what we've been telling people to do.
And I remember watching them like get ready
for playing sports and that's where it's like
the most dangerous or the worst.
Because explosive.
Yeah, and they would all be sitting in that was like,
and they were playing soccer and basketball
and stuff like that back then and I'd go to their games
and I'd watch their pre-warme up before the game and I remember like like cringing going,
oh my god, that's the worst thing they could be doing, like they don't know yet.
Like in that took a long time, I think, before and you could probably make the case and argue
that's still today. I mean, I still go to some sporting events, if unless you're at a very high level,
I mean, I still go to some sporting events. If unless you're at a very high level,
some coaches are just like pass down information
and knowledge.
All of the little kids coaches do.
Yes, it's every level.
It's even in the NFL and some,
I've seen certain warmups still look like
that same protocol of just like,
let's move the muscle,
let's sit down and let's static stretch and
let's prep our body for all this explosive movement.
And it's just, it's cringeworthy to me.
It's something that I really, I really, if I had time, would love to address this specifically
for sports because they're so far behind.
Well, look, here's the breakdown, right?
When we think of workouts, luckily, people are starting to understand now that the workout,
how the workout is designed,
how it's programmed, the exercises, the sets, the reps, the intention, the tempo, like
everything that goes into the workout is known as it's programming.
And the programming has to send the right signal for whatever your goal is.
So if I have a really well-programmed endurance workout, that's not the right workout program
for someone who wants to build strength and muscle and vice versa, right?
The workout has to be specific and it has to be programmed to send the right signal.
Well your warm-up has to do the same thing.
So why is static stretching?
Why do we know now that static stretching can actually cause increased risk of injury and
decreased performance?
Here's the signal that it sends.
If you've ever done any static stretching, you know that if you hold a stretch for 20, 30 seconds
or longer, that you start to get greater ranges of motion.
Okay, so if I'm stretching my hamstrings are super tight.
If I hold the stretch long enough,
I start to get looser and looser.
Now, is that because my muscles are lengthening
or getting longer in the sense
that the attachments are changing?
No.
Is that because I'm making my muscles more pliable,
like you warm rubber up in the sun and it gets more pliable?
No, that's not what's happening either.
What's happening is my central nervous system,
it says relax.
It says relax.
The central nervous system tells muscles how much they can stretch,
how hard they can contract.
Basically, it's the control center.
Your muscles are dumb. It's like your car. Your cars are like, how hard they can contract. Basically, it's the control center. Your muscles are dumb.
It's like your car.
Your cars are like, my car is like muscle.
Without me in the driver's seat, my car does nothing.
It doesn't know where to go, how to turn, how fast to go.
None of that stuff. It just sits there, right?
Well, your muscles are the same thing.
So when you do a static stretch, what it does is it sends
a signal to the central nervous system that says,
at first it says, oh, hold on a second. then you hold it long enough and the CNS says,
okay, let's chill out a little bit. But here's the problem. What you don't want when you go into
an explosive, when into explosive movements or into a workout is a central nervous system that says,
we're going to chill. If anything, now you've lost strength and stability. You've actually lost
mobility because you're more laxacks and this is how injuries can happen
So if you have stretch your hamstrings really really good and then you go do sprints you increase your risk of
hamstring pulls because of the static stretching so this the warm-up has to send the right signal and the right signal
Makes the workout effective more effective the wrong signal can make the workout less effective
or in worst case scenarios actually dangerous.
It's not only that,
it's also learning to stretch with purpose.
A lot of times we do the standard things.
If you see somebody, how often do you see somebody
on the treadmill, they grab their ankle,
they stretch the quad, they throw their arm across
their chest and stretch the tricep and the shoulder,
it's like there's these like standard stretches
that we've been doing forever, which is ridiculous
because they're not individualized for the person.
And it's like a lot of people,
a lot of people are stretching muscles
that aren't even beneficial to what they're about to go do,
which completely defeats the purpose.
So even if you're following old ways
of getting ready to warm up, you're doing it,
not only are you doing something
that is less beneficial for the purposes
that you're saying right now, Sal,
but at many times, people aren't even stretching
the right muscles.
No, and warm-ups have become so bastardized
that if I saw somebody warming up properly,
we're gonna describe that in this episode,
we're gonna break it down for you, okay?
But if somebody, if the average person, or even the average new trainer saw someone warming
up properly, they wouldn't consider it warming up.
They'd say, oh, that person looks like they're doing some interesting exercises.
What we would consider warming up would be what we just talked about, static stretching
on a piece of cardio equipment, jumping in place.
It's been completely bastardized, which is why I now prefer to use
the term priming. I use the word priming because warm up now means something different. Unless I can
change everybody's mind, it's been too long. It's been decades now of what we consider to be warm
ups. That's all wrong. That doesn't benefit anybody. Proper warm ups I now call priming. The
reason why we labeled it that way is because it looks very different from what we used to consider warming up.
So when we use the word priming on the podcast, what we're referring to is a proper targeted individualized performance enhancing massively injury-preventing type of warm-up.
That's what priming actually is. So you need to ask yourself the following questions.
What should your warm up do for you?
Why am I warming up in the first place?
The absolute bare minimum, the very, very minimum thing
that your warm up should do for you
is reduce your risk of injury.
And I think people understand that.
If you ask people, why do you warm up?
They say, oh, so I don't hurt myself.
I don't mean the top answer every time.
Well, yeah, but the top answer and theory behind the way
we used to warm before is because you're getting the,
like you said, like getting the muscles warm and pliable,
like rubber and the sun.
And that's why, and that's why we're doing this.
And that's not true at all.
Like if we're doing proper priming or warming up
to get ready for a workout,
what is going to help prevent injury
is getting better recruitment patterns.
Getting better control.
Right.
Better control and better stability.
That's the ability where you need it.
That's right.
Because that's really what it's all about.
So if you're muscle, if I, if you look at your arm, right, you have your bicep in your
triceps.
So the biceps, the muscle you flex when you curl your arm, the triceps on the back of
the arm.
So they're opposing muscles.
If I flex my bicep, my tricep has to relax to allow that to happen. If I flex my tricep, my tricep has to relax to allow that to happen.
If I flex my tricep, my bicep has to relax.
Now, if I go and I do a quick punch where I'm using my tricep extending my arm,
and my bicep doesn't relax appropriately to allow that to happen,
I could pull my bicep muscle.
That doesn't, it's not because the muscle, my bicep muscle isn't pliable enough
like a piece of rubber.
It's because the central nervous system
isn't sending the right signal.
I'm not getting a good recruitment pattern.
I should, my CNS should be able to know
that I'm exploding with the tricep
and relax the bicep enough to not let it pull,
but keep it active enough
so that it doesn't have my arm hyper extend
because that's to support my elbow.
So that's what we're talking about when we're talking about recruitment patterns, part
of what we're talking about is allowing that to happen.
That's why hamstring pulls happen so often because people have such strong quads and the
hamstring to quad balance and the way that they work is a little off.
And so one of the muscles is going to get injured in one common one is hamstrings.
Right. And that's why you really want to consider
hamstrings, like if that's a thing,
if you're running and you want to decelerate,
let's wake them up to stabilize you properly
and get that involved in your movements
going into the actual event.
Absolutely, so at the very, very least,
a good warm-up should prevent,
or any warm-up should prevent risk of injury.
But that's like, gosh, that's like saying,
at the very least, my car should drive.
Okay, that's nice.
So you have a car that takes you from point A to point B,
but let's take it a step further.
Most people have a car that doesn't just drive.
It's got air conditioning in there, heater,
it's comfortable to sit in, it's safe,
it's got airbags, all that stuff.
So let's talk about the next levels, okay?
Prevent risk of injury, great.
That's absolute base minimum.
But what else can a good, warm up,
or proper priming session do?
It can improve your results, not just by risking risk of injury,
by reducing risk of injury,
but by actually improving the benefits
that your exercises provide your body.
Now, how does it do this?
There's a few different ways.
One of the ways that proper priming helps your body is by giving you longer
ranges of motion that you have control over.
So remember I said control, it's not just greater ranges of motion.
It's greater ranges of motion that I'm connected to.
We all know, and this is confirmed by studies
and also our own experience,
that a full range of motion exercise
will give you more gains,
so more muscle, more strength,
or broader strength, I should say,
and indirectly, more fat loss because of that,
than a shorter range of motion.
Everybody knows this,
a half bench is not gonna be as good as a full bench
for developing my chest, shoulders, and triceps, right?
So how do we get a greater range of motion
that we have better control over?
That's with proper preying.
And here's a funny thing.
And actually, now long term, you can make tremendous gains
in this.
Can you make immediate gains in a range of motion
that you have control over?
Absolutely.
In fact, in fact, we did a webinar that I think is going to be out by the time
this episode is released. What's the site? Is it Maps Prime? Webinar.com.
Okay, so Justin teaches a priming class. So he teaches how to prime your body. He actually takes
Doug through movements, watch Doug's controlled range of motion before and after priming.
Immediately.
I'm not talking about months, like Doug practiced these exercises.
He literally did a movement, then just took him through a priming movement, then he took
him through the same movement again, and you see this incredible change in his controlled
range of motion.
It's crazy, because a lot of times it seems like magic to me, even as a trainer, to see
what kind of unlocks.
Once people really understand the concept of being able to increase that muscle tension
that provides the support system.
So now I'm telling my body that these joints and these certain parts of my body that I really need to be stable while I'm producing
this type of force and movement, they're covered.
They're accounted for.
Now that feedback comes back to my central nervous system
and it allows me now to produce more range of motion
and stronger range of motion.
Well, when you talk about stabilized joints
and more range of motion, I love to use like
for clients like the analogies of like sports and a baseball swing and a golf swing.
And those both require a lot of rotational power and strength and good range of motion
through that, right?
And you can make, you can take somebody, you can take a batter or you can take a golf
swinger and you can actually improve their distance
right away just by increasing their rotational range
of motion and control with their joints,
right in one workout.
Then that to me is like one of the coolest ways
to show somebody who's playing like a sport
that requires something like that
and you could take them and take them through
priming mobility work right before they go
and do batting practice
or go hit the golf balls, you can show them,
go hit the ball, a bunch of times without doing anything.
Okay, now take them over, do those exercises I taught you.
Now go back, you didn't change their swing,
you didn't teach them any new mechanics,
you didn't do anything but improve their range of motion
and their joint stability in that range of motion
and then let them go do their thing again
and watch the distance they get.
That same thing translate into the gym.
If you have a poor range of motion
or good joint control when you're doing a squat,
low back hurts, you can't get past 90 degrees
and you have an issue,
you're only gonna get so much gains
from squatting that way.
You take that same person and just into this with Doug,
you open their hips up, you give them a greater range of motion,
you give them greater control in that range of motion,
you go back, you do a squat,
and you get an extra three or four inches in your squat
and better control, so less pain, more range of motion,
more muscle, more gains.
Well, I look at this, again,
I know we throw the car analogy out there quite a bit,
but for me, the more stable I have my car, like, think of it like the gas pedal,
like I have acceleration where I can add acceleration, and then I could back off acceleration
where I want, I have more control over that now. So, like, if I don't have that kind of
control, I can only, I can only press so hard before my tires are spinning out. And
this allows me to gain more traction. This allows me to then really accelerate when I need
to back off. Like I just have control over my body.
Yeah, 100%. So you don't even have to, even let's say you have great range of motion. Let's
say you're like, I don't need to go deeper on my squats. I don't need to go deeper on
my bench press. My, my overhead presses, my range of motion is pretty full.
Even if that's all true for you, proper priming will activate more muscle fibers within the range of motion that you're training in.
It's still what it does is it ensures that you're gaining the maximum amount of points from that exercise.
So if a barbell squat is worth 100 points, if do it, the best way you could possibly do it,
proper priming means you're gonna squeeze out
or get close to all those points.
Without proper priming, you're not gonna achieve
the most you can out of those exercises.
So literally, this is no joke now.
Proper 10 minutes of really good priming,
individualized priming,
before I don't care what workout you do,
you could take your workout, I'm plateauing, my workout,. I'm not progressing you might not even need to change your workout
Just prime properly now go to the same workout watch what happens all of a sudden you start to get better results
And with that by the way, this is proven with athletic performance. They show that proper
Warm up I'm putting in quotations here before a batter swings a bat. If they do it right, they swing faster and they hit harder.
They've proven this in time and time again.
And they know this with athletes.
Again, this is true with your workouts.
And muscle fibers, the more muscle fibers you recruit,
the higher your potential for building muscle,
even if the exercise is the same.
And sometimes you can't even tell the difference.
I can look, sometimes you can look at somebody
and you can't really tell the form looks almost identical,
but what you don't know is intrinsically,
they've got better central nervous system activation,
more muscle fiber recruitment,
they've got better muscle fiber recruitment patterns
and therefore they're gonna get better results. Proper priming for me, I mean, I remember when I first
kind of stumbled upon this, you know, there was a period
where I was really trying to see if I, how high I could get
my squat and my deadlift and my bench press,
and I was stuck with my squat for a little while.
And so I started reading powerlifting, you know, books,
and I started researching a little bit,
and I started learning about box squats.
Now for me, sitting back in a squat was kind of hard.
I was also at the very bottom, I had a difficult time.
So I realized when I would do box squats, where I actually sit on a box and then stand
up, I realized that it really helped me feel better with my squats.
So what I started doing is I started doing one or two sets of box squats before my traditional
squats. Now this isn't going to work for everybody. For my individual body,
this was a really good priming session. So I started doing box squat, one or two sets,
then go to my traditional barbell squats. The weight went through the roof. I was
that I added weight immediately from doing that because I was more connected to the barbells.
Because you're at the bottom of your squat and you have no momentum and you need, it's
vital for you to recruit all the necessary muscle fibers to get you out of the most,
the most difficult part of that lift.
Right.
Well, let's use, I really like your point analogy.
Let's use it.
Let's stay there and let's talk about the person who has got good mobility and has really
good form and why, why priming is so important to this person
and I'm gonna use your point analogy solve
because I think it works really good here.
And how is this going to really accelerate your gains
in your training?
You don't have any of these problems.
You're not, you don't have aches and pains,
you feel like you've got good form
and all the exercise we're talking about,
but I'm still telling you that this person
can greatly benefit.
And the way I'll explain that is through the point system,
like you said, so when we get into a squat bench press,
overhead press, a major lift like that,
and you get into the first set,
set one, you get like 70 points,
set two, you get like 80 points,
set three, you get like 90 points,
and by set four, so is when you get maximum.
And what that is, is it's taking that much
time for the body to really figure out to recruit all the fighters to learn the movement
to learn the movement and get and get the most out of it.
So sets one two and three you're getting you know you're not getting the max benefits
that's why most people say like on set three or four they feel the best of that.
Well that's because the first couple was literally the body warming up and kind of priming itself because you didn't do that before you worked out. And so you're
not getting the max points where if you set yourself up priming correctly, you get right
into those max points on sets one and two. And when that, when you do an entire hour
workout, that starts to really add up. That's just one workout. You do that for every workout. No wasted energy that way.
No, you start to accumulate way more points
for the work that you're doing.
I like that analogy because I know there's somebody
who's listening right now and they're like,
well, you know, priming is for people
that just get risked to get injury
and I've got good form already.
So it's not really something that I should waste my,
and I'm telling you, no.
In fact, someone like you will benefit even more because you guys will be able to
get into it even faster. Straight performance. Right. You're getting straight
before. Look, we know that not all exercises are created equal. Some exercises are more
effective than other exercises when you combine them head to head. But even if we stay within
the same exercise, are all squats created equal?
Of course not.
Even the ones you do yourself,
think back to your workouts.
Are there sets that feel more effective and better
than other sets?
What if you could make more of your sets
feel like the good ones,
and way less of the sets feel like the bad ones?
That's what proper priming does.
What if your whole workout could feel that way,
where you get into the workout and every set feels connected.
Ooh, I could feel the muscle.
Oh, I could feel my chest.
Wow, I could feel my back.
Oh my God, I feel like I'm really strong and stable right now.
What if those workouts were the common ones?
Instead of the, man, you know, Thursday's workout was really good,
but I just couldn't get into it.
I felt kind of steady and feel connected.
Priming ensures helps ensure that you get
those better workouts.
So, again, not all exercises are created equal,
but even the exercise itself, not all sets are created equal.
Make the sets do the most work for you with proper primates.
Interesting.
I mean, an entire industry popped up to try and get people
to feel that through pre workouts and through stimulating the CNS by charging your central nervous system
going into the workout.
So you feel like, wow, I have all this access to,
I can recruit muscles.
I'm very stimulated and jacked right now.
You can get that same feeling by priming properly and being able to do that even more efficiently
and effectively and direct it where it needs to go.
Oh, dude, combine proper priming with a pre-workout.
What's what happens?
Oh, yeah.
Now your CNS is on fire.
A lot of what we're talking about
is the physiology of all this, right?
But there's also the mental aspect.
Yeah.
There's also just to getting into the frame of mind
going into this.
And that's one of the great perks of that, of taking yourself from driving to the gym,
or if you have your own garage and you go to your garage, you were just either with your
kids messing around doing something or you're just at work and your mind is all set on this
other thing or other stuff.
And then you get into the gym, you know, getting into that mental space of waking up the
muscles and getting better connected to all these things
you're about to call on and get the most out of them
doing a priming session for 10 minutes
before you get into your workout,
how beneficial that is for the mental shift, too.
Now, here's the thing, you might be thinking,
well, yeah, I do a few sets of warm-up
before I get into my exercise,
and that helps me connect more to the exercise.
It helps me loosen up and I feel what's going on.
And I feel better.
After about three or four warm-up sets of squats,
I can get into my heavy squats and I feel pretty good.
That's true.
In fact, three or four warm-up sets
before an exercise is superior to the warm-ups
that I did as a kid, which was static stretching and walking on a treadmill
type stuff. You're absolutely right.
But it's inferior to individualized priming.
Okay. Doing a few warmups sets of an exercise
does help your body get ready for that exercise
to a good degree.
But what it doesn't do is it doesn't target what your
individual body needs to prime on because you can be somebody
who has poor internal hip rotation.
You could be somebody that has poor ankle mobility and activation.
You could be somebody who has forward shoulder.
You could be somebody that has that scapular activation.
Each person will benefit more from having an individualized priming session
than just doing if you warm up sets of the exercise they're about to do.
Well, you're not fixing the hitch in your giddy up. You ever heard that? Like we're
someone's running and you're like, he's got a hitch in his run. You know, there's something
wrong with it. You just running more or running or jogging before you run. Doesn't fix
the hitch. You have that when you work out. So you could do, let's say squat, okay?
You could do just three sets of lightweight before.
And yeah, it'll help warm up, it'll help weight things up,
but it doesn't fix the hitch.
It doesn't fix.
Their body's still gonna work hard to try and compensate
for where there's lack of stability.
It's gonna take the easiest path.
It's always gonna take the easiest path
and most times with people because of our posture
and the things that we do all day long,
the easiest path is not always the best path
for their movement.
And yes, you could warm the body up,
you can wake some muscles up by doing a set or two
before you do it, but you don't fix the hitch.
You don't fix what is causing the breakdown of the movement
or what's not allowing you to move optimally. So by you priming for your body and your hitch,
that is going to get so much more than just doing a set or two before you go into the
action.
If you think that Justin, Adam, and myself all have the same priming session you're
at your mind. I mean, we could do the same workout. In fact, when we work out,
sometimes we do the same exact workout, but how we prime is very different.
So the way that Justin squats, Adam squats, and I squat,
we all have our own individual areas
that we need to prime our own hitches.
Our own hitches.
And then we get into the exercise,
and then we might do one or two warm-up sets
and get real heavy or whatever,
but it's the priming has to be individualized.
So step number one, to prime your body properly,
you have to learn how to self-assess.
This is very important,
because self-assessing allows you to individualize
your priming session.
It allows you to individualize it
because without the individualization,
all you have now is a warm-up.
Now this is one of the most difficult things
and one of the things that I'm most proud of that we did.
And I'm so excited that Justin put this together
for all of you to watch for free and walk you through
because he's going to do a self,
you are gonna do a self-assessment on the webinar.
We're gonna teach you how to do that.
And this is something that when we came together
and we wanted to create this,
we were like, okay, how do we do something
that we know is gonna be extremely effective for the masses,
but then digestible that my mom could pick it up
and figure out how to assess herself
and then apply this to our workout
without having a professional tell her exactly what to do.
No, small task.
No, no, this is something that we've all, in our own experiences, we've tried to kind
of narrow it down to the most effective moves that cover a lot of area and a lot of joints.
And you know, coming down to like, because I've gone through a lot of different methods.
So there's lots of different ways out there, like FMS and different tests that you can
do for self-assessment.
It is very complex.
Well, most of those are geared towards the coach.
Yes, right?
Like when you look at it, and by the way,
FMS is incredible, and I think it's great.
Oh yeah, if you take that whole, if you spend $1,000,
$2,000, I don't know how many thousands of dollars,
go through the course, learn how to do this
complex assessment like a coach,
it's gonna definitely benefit you.
It's just not realistic for the average person.
Well, yeah, the average person is not gonna invest
that kind of money in that,
nor a lot of people are gonna go through it
and it's gonna go over their heads.
It's overkill.
And so our goal was, okay, how do we take all of our knowledge
from going through things like that and our experience
and then break down what we think are the most common offenders
and the thing that will give the greatest bang for your buck for the average consumer to
be able to.
And then also the trainer who's coming up, can utilize too.
If you're a brand new trainer and you don't have FMS and you haven't gone through some
of these courses that are like really rigorous type of assessments, how can you take something
and apply it to every?
One of the best things you could do is a trainer
is to simplify things.
Not complicate things, simplify.
I remember we had Joe DeFranco on
who I consider to be one of the best trainers
that is out there just from a trainer's perspective.
Definitely.
The dude is brilliant and we were talking about
heart rate variability and oh, you know
That can tell you if you should work out hard or not and how do you figure that?
Well you take your pulse and you do this this mathematical equation very complex
You know what he said he said oh, I have people squeeze
You know squeeze it gripper. I measured their strength. I get an average if they're this much below it
I know we should go easy because that's their CNS is being if it's this much above it
Then I know we can go easy, because that's their CNS is being, if it's this much above it, then I know we can go really hard. And I thought, why is it so brilliant? Is it because it's more
accurate than the heart rate variability test? No, it's right around is accurate. Why is it more
brilliant? Simple. You understand it right away. It's simple. You can ease it and you can apply it,
people can do it. So when we went out to create Maps Prime, we're like, how in the hell do we
teach people how to self-assess? These are people who have no training
experience. It needs to be simple. It has to identify issues throughout the whole
body. We actually, when we created Maps Prime, we were stuck on that problem for
two days. Oh, yeah. Just getting people to understand, you know, their body
more, I just feel like that was such an issue for me coming into personal
training.
I just had no idea that people just didn't even realize they were moving certain ways.
And then I had to show them and be a coach like this, just to show them, hey, you're not
really able to produce this movement the way that I'm trying to demonstrate to you.
And how can I get you closer to that?
Yeah.
So what we did is we put together
three movements that covers the whole body
and we broke the body up into zones.
Actually, if you go to Maps Prime webinar,
Justin teaches these three movements,
you do them at home, they're self-assessment,
and they teach you to identify what areas
you need to focus on.
Now, if you don't have that, self-assessment can,
and now this is not gonna be nearly as effective,
but it's way better than just doing a plain warmup.
What areas of your body are you not as active in?
Do you notice that your shoulders roll forward?
Okay, part of your priming might wanna be activating
the muscles that pull the shoulders back.
Do you have anterior pelvic tilt?
That means your butt sticks out.
So you have that kind of sway back look,
which is quite common.
Okay, let's activate the muscles.
That pull the hips and rotate them forward, so I get a little bit of better posture.
Basically, that's what you're doing when you're priming.
You want to self-assess, identify the movement issues in your body, and then you move to step
two, which is pick movements that activate.
Pick movements that correct and activate.
Not static stretching, not passive stretching,
activate, you wanna turn things on, not turn things off.
Well, I remember how we came about these three zones too.
We sat down and we just started,
everyone started like writing all of the issues
that you have came across, start writing,
all the different, the knees collapsing,
the feet pronating, the hips locking up, the frozen shoulders, the different, you know, the knees collapsing, the feet pronating, the, you know, hips locking up,
the frozen shoulders, the forward head, yeah.
The inability to rotate, left to right,
we just started listing all the things
that we came across in our two decades of experience
of the type of clients that we had trained,
and then we figured out, okay, we need to have a test
that would express all of these issues.
Like, if this is what we've seen in those 20 years of the most common issues of people,
we need to simplify it with, you know, one, two, or three tests that would express those
issues.
So then those people then have a guide on what they should do to address those issues.
Right.
And the problem was this was the typical assessment
that a trainer does is I look at my client,
I do my complicated assessment,
and then I identify some movement issues
and then I connect them to muscles that are not turned on
and we got to activate those and all that stuff.
Okay, how do you do that with the average person?
So instead of saying, hey, if you notice
this small movement probably, it was pass or fail.
If you do this test and you do it well and you're connected and it's easy, you pass. If anything
under that is a fail, and if it fails because it's attributed to this zone of your body, then we
are going to give you some really good general priming movements that will activate the areas that
are preventing you from performing this particular set.
So we just simplified the hell out of it, but kept it extremely effective.
We tried to simplify it to where, you know, like, can you place the back of your hand on the wall with your elbows on the wall with your head on the wall?
All these points of contact down the list.
If there's any deviation, if there's any sway away from that, that's a fail, it's very simple, it's very straightforward,
it's can I do this or can I not do this?
And let's do these exercises to help unlock
the potential for that, come back,
let's see how effective that is.
Right, so I'll give you an example, right?
So let's say you have a very common,
let's say you have forward shoulder,
super, super common nowadays,
because we're on computers, everything's in front of us.
And that literally looks the way that it sounds.
Forward shoulder means the shoulder's kind of round forward.
So now let's say I'm training you
and you've got really bad forward shoulder
and I wanna do a bench press.
And I know that if the shoulder blades don't pinch back
and you're not able to stick your chest out
and stabilize your shoulder girdle,
we're gonna have potential shoulder problems. We're not gonna activate the chest very well. We're going to have potential shoulder problems.
We're not going to activate the chest very well. We're not going to build as much strength as
I'm going to limit what the bench press can do. So how an easy way to prime this person would be
like a cable row. And all I'm going to do is not work out with the cable row, but rather really
focus on opposing that forward shoulder, squeezing the shoulder blades back, sinking them down, activating the muscles
that puts you in a good position to bench press.
Then we go bench press, you're connected now.
Now when I tell the person,
pinch your shoulder blades down and back, hold this position.
They're there, and then as they fatigue,
they're less likely to move out of that position
because as you fatigue, your body starts to revert back,
but because we prime properly,
your bench press move.
Reducing risk of any better.
Much better.
Maximizing performance, just like that.
I'm glad you picked that one
because this is a common one that I know anybody
who's like 35 and above can relate to this,
is there's those days where you go to bench press
and your shoulder hurts, or you feel this pinch.
Right in the front, your shoulder hurts.
You feel this pinch in your shoulder,
or you hear a clicking sound,
and what that is is the shoulders
not tracking optimally.
And it's not 90% of the time,
it's for that reason that Sal just talked about is,
you're not able to retract and depress the shoulders
and keep them in that stable position
while you also bench press.
By priming the exercise that Sal just talked about,
that wakes those muscles up that are responsible
for keeping the shoulder girdle in that position.
So now when you do, and I love the bent,
this is one of my favorite, when I figured all this out,
I would love having a client, we go to bench,
and they would complain to that.
Like, out of my field of my shoulder,
or I feel this clicking or bothers me,
then I could take them right over to a CD-Rose super lightweight.
I would get them to retract, squeeze, just like you're saying, hold it for five seconds
so they can feel it, and then I would let them tell them, like, okay, now that you feel
that, I want you to think about holding that position while we go bench, then take them
right over to the bench.
It's like magic.
And they'll be like, oh my god, it's gone.
Well, that's because the shoulder wasn't tracking probably.
Now, that's just one example, right, of one exercise on how another priming movement can totally improve
that now somebody can work through that.
Now you might be listening going,
well my shoulder isn't really hurt,
but I do feel it feels weird when I do that.
Okay, well if it feels weird, you're getting 70 points.
You're not getting 100, you're not getting anywhere near that
because you're not moving optimally.
And so even if you're somebody who's listening that isn't, I'm dealing with pain, you're also
not moving the best you can to get the most results from that exercise.
Yes, God.
I remember piecing all of this together as a train or later in my career and the value
that I brought, I tell you what, if you're a trainer and you're listening and you don't
understand proper priming, oh my God, you are missing out on so much value.
I remember when I started to piece this together,
I would, the clients, they would have paid me three times
as well as my single client.
This was my number one selling point.
It was such a, the number one thing I did as a trainer
that would sell clients on training.
Was this, once this was piece together?
When you can show somebody in real time,
oh, that hurts right there.
Let me show you something over here for 60 seconds.
Now let me bring you back.
Oh, it doesn't hurt anymore.
I'm a wizard now.
150 bucks an hour, no problem.
I'm gonna pay you because you know,
the value was tremendous.
I remember doing this with,
I mean, I would have a client for example,
who would do maybe like a Romanian deadlift.
And they'd be like, oh, my low back,
and I kind of feel like it's shearing in my low back.
And I'd watch them, I'd say, okay,
this person has a really strong anterior pelvic tilt. Then I'd put them on the floor, we'd do pelvic tilts, and I'd of feel like it's sharing in my low back. And I'd watch them and say, okay, this person has a really strong anterior pelvic tilt.
Then I'd put them on the floor, we'd do pelvic tilts and I'd have them squeeze their abs,
just to activate the opposing side so they could really stabilize that form.
Then we'd go back and do the Romanian deadlift.
Oh, it's going.
And wow, my back doesn't hurt anymore.
What's cool?
Oh my God, I could really feel how effective this is.
That's what proper priming can do for you.
So once you do the self-assessment, and you've identified your movement pattern issues
and what happens to you, then you've picked your movements.
And I, we suggest you pick anywhere between three to five priming movements.
Sometimes two, if you're really good, right?
Two to five, really good priming movements.
Then you do them, and your priming session will last you seven to fifteen minutes.
That's about it. And trust believe me, this will, that's seven to fifteen minutes
will make the the next 45 to an hour and a half that you do in the gym far more effective.
But that's it. Seven to fifteen minutes of proper individualized priming for your body
makes the workout far, far more effective and more connected.
And you see that in real time.
This is what I love about priming so much.
This is not one of the,
I know a lot of times we say on the podcast,
takes time, be patient, you know, go in there,
trains, they discipline, proper priming.
I'm gonna, I will say this with full confidence.
You'll need it. Right away.
Immediately.
This is something that, yeah, I'm not,
you don't need to wait months to follow.
I mean, you know, MAPS Prime has a 30-day money back guarantee.
It doesn't need 30 days.
Try one time.
One time, and you'll know for sure, oh, this is a game changer for me because you just
primed totally properly.
Now, there's another part to this that's even worse than warming up that people completely
ignore 100%, which is the post priming or the cool down.
Now, I don't like the word cool down
because that insinuates just letting my body cool down
and somehow that's just gonna walk in back on the treadmill.
Yeah, like I need to do that.
Like, why do I need to do that?
I'm not gonna work out anymore.
What's the value and benefit of that?
Well, this is where actually static stretching does come in.
Yes, because we talked about how that's a terrible way
to start your workout,
but that doesn't all of a sudden get rid of all the science
that supported the benefits of static stretching, right?
That still stands, right?
There still are benefits to static stretching for somebody.
But when you do it is really, really important.
And this is where it belongs.
Right, do it at the end of your workout.
You're done with your work. At the end of your workout. You're done with your, at the end of your workout is when you, when it's okay to tell
your central nervous system to relax.
In fact, your CNS should be amped during your workout and it should be relaxed for your
recovering.
If you keep your CNS amped all the time, you're going to have a tough time recovering.
In fact, you'll be stressed.
That's what that's stressful.
You want that stress state.
You know that you go you go
thinking of parasympathetic. But parasympathetics where you're you know you're
gonna start calming down your central nervous system again. And that's really
where like all the the great gains come from is when you can get yourself to
calm down and then recover the recovery process is a vital part of the
entire workout. That's right. So static stretch, the muscles that you know that you have tight, the ones that
you maybe thought you should have done at the beginning of the workout when you were
warming up the wrong way. Now is the time to do it. So if you have really tight hamstrings,
you want to improve a little bit of range of motion, tight hips, your chest is tight,
whatever. Now you start doing some static stretching at the end of the workout when the muscles
are pumped, when you're done. in fact, bodybuilders have identified that
static stretching at the end of the workout. They call interest set stretching sometimes,
or at the end of the workout, actually leads to muscle gains. It actually done the right way,
can actually send, not a big, it's not a big muscle building signal, but it's a small one,
and because it doesn't cause any damage, you can, you can, it's like a big muscle building signal, but it's a small one, and because it doesn't cause any damage,
you can, you can, it's like adding the cherry on top.
You just built this amazing Sunday, which is this workout,
muscle building signal, you're prime properly,
you did a phenomenal workout,
now you add the little cherry on top
with the proper post priming, which includes static stretching,
and then the other thing that I think has tremendous value,
which is foam rolling.
Foam rolling has tremendous, tremendous value.
Sometimes foam rolling has value before your workout.
That's depends on the individual.
Always has a value at the end of your workout.
Well, I think we should elaborate a little bit more
on something that Justin just glazed right over,
which is talking about sympathetic and parasympathetic.
I think that's important because, again,
talking about the person who maybe moves optimally
as a high performer and again, talking about the person who maybe moves optimally as a hyperformer and again, maybe not sold on the idea that these things are so important
to them.
What you don't understand is that when we are in a sympathetic state with our, think of
it like this way, like you are hyperactive and awake or hyperactive and ready to go and
then you're relaxed and like when we're sleeping, right?
That's when the recovery process starts.
If you have the ability to get yourself in that state where you are ready to recover,
that it's only going to give you that much more recovery time.
So most people, they get amped up for the gym.
You're still amped for like the next hour or two hours.
Right.
You're not, your body hasn't calmed all the way back down.
Right.
And it's not just calming the whole body down.
That's important.
It's also targeting the muscles that you want to,
because all of us have muscles that are just generally
a bit too tight.
Okay, so I'll give you an example.
A common one with clients would be their upper traps.
This is just a common.
Typically, this comes from forward shoulder,
they have bad stability in the mid-back.
So their neck, it's tight when they're stressed
or when they're working on their computer and they can't figure out what to want to. So at the end of the workout,
knowing that the traps tend to be tight, that's when I send this signal to the central nervous system
that says specifically, hey, let's relax a little extra on these muscles right here. Let's send a
signal specifically to these muscles that are tight in this particular person to chill out just a little bit more.
So what does this do? Well, this means that those muscles who tend to be tight now are less tight, less sore the day after the workout.
And when we go back into the workout again with our priming, those muscles are less of an issue.
So think about it this way, right? You have a target. You have a target sitting in front of you,
and in the center of the target is all the results
that you want.
Like you want muscle gain, or I wanna add 40 pounds
on my bench press, or I'm looking to get lean or whatever.
That's the center.
And the further out I get from the center,
the less results I'm gonna get.
Now I have a bow and arrow, and I'm shooting the arrow at it.
Well, the pre-priming session aims the arrow.
The workout carries the arrow to the target,
and then the post primer, make sure it hits the target
perfectly.
Post priming or cooldown is also very important.
Doesn't take long, by the way.
You're looking at maybe another five to 10 minutes,
but it also can make a big difference.
Now, I will be honest, not as important
as the priming session before the workout,
but it's still something that if you add
and you do them both, watch what happens.
And it's really to pay attention
through your workout, like what was restrictive for you
and what wasn't allowing you to perform
the most optimally through these movements,
and that's what we're on into address
and specifically target at the end of the workout
to try and relax to then promote better movement going forward. Right, right, right. Now, here's those into the workout to try and relax to then promote, you know, better movement
going forward.
Right, right, right.
Now, here's those are the piece to this.
Let's say you go and you work out and you're doing the self-assessment test and you're
priming properly and you're working out and you're getting better each time.
And you should.
If you do good priming session each time, those issues that plague you become smaller and
smaller issues over time.
But let's say they're big issues.
They're really bad issues.
You got to prime hard every time.
And you're like, I want to make this go a little bit faster.
Or this issue is big enough to where, you know, priming before helps, but I want this
issue to be gone a little bit faster.
Now I just want to get rid of it.
Well now you add in some correctional exercise.
This is where the correctional exercise component
of your workout really makes a big difference.
So again, if you have the,
if you're forward shoulders so bad, right?
You do your primer and it makes a big difference,
but you're like, oh, I should so bad.
I want this to be a little bit better.
I suggest that you do some specific correctional exercise
for that particular area, another time during the week, different, separate from your workout, where
you're actually doing a workout to correct your movement patterns.
And I wanted to throw that in there because I want people to know that sometimes it takes
more attention than just priming.
Well, that kind of goes in line with something that I wanted to mention too, that we didn't
talk about, that when I think about clients, in fact goes in line with something that I wanted to mention too, that we didn't talk about,
that when I think about clients, in fact,
one of the clients that I'm helping right now,
that I have a dude because she has exactly that,
she has this forward shoulder,
she's on the computer all the time.
And so the exercises, the priming movements
that I have her do before we train,
I also ask her to do throughout the day.
Oh, beautiful.
So, you know, band pull-aparts and rubber band rows
are what we're trying to do to address
this upper cross syndrome that she has going on.
And that, of course, is something that's important
before she gets into the lift
for all the reasons that we've made the case for
when it comes to priming.
But I also know that I've only got her for that one hour
that she trains.
Then the other 23 hours a day, she's working against me.
She's going back into that round of position,
she's doing the computer work all day long.
And so I've encouraged her, okay, listen,
at every hour, at the top of the hour,
when you know you're gonna sit on the computer
for an extended period of time,
four hours or more through the day,
at the hour, every hour, I want you to take
just two minutes of your time
and do two or three rounds of those two priming exercises that I've taught you to do before you warm up.
Now it's correctional.
Now it's a correctional type of exercise.
So even though she's not getting ready to go lift and we're not trying to optimize her
getting the most results, I'm also still trying to work on something and combat what she's
doing on a daily basis through these priming movements.
And you can't do too much of it when we're trying to correct a poor neurological recruitment pattern,
you can't do it enough.
So I get this question, I got this a lot after the prime pro webinar.
I'd get these DMs of, okay Adam, that was fantastic.
Oh my God, I made a world of a difference.
How much can I do with it?
Often should I do it.
How often should I do it?
That's how much you can.
All the time, you can't do enough of it,
because the reason why it felt so good,
and it helped you so much, is because you were so broken down in all these other areas and
It felt so amazing after you did it
Well, you need to do more of it and the things that you do on a regular basis is what's causing you to feel that low back pain the
Shoulder issues the neck issues and so when when I teach you these priming movements that you get to see help you right away
Inside the gym, don't
stop there.
Make these a part of your lifestyle and continue to do them throughout the day every single
day.
But I'll tell you what, at the very, very least, this is my own estimation, my own personal
experience training clients of myself, just doing a proper pre and post priming session
improves the effectiveness of my own personal workouts and my clients
it's even more.
I'm just talking about myself by at least 10%.
You think that's not that much.
That's huge.
That is huge.
10% improvement over your current workouts is like night and day in terms of the results,
the strength and the progress that you make.
Now of course, Maps Prime has all the stuff in there, but I think you've got some takeaways with this episode
to where you can start to take it a little bit more seriously
and realize that what you do before your workout
can make a huge huge difference.
And of course, here's the other thing.
Because we talked about, there's one part in this episode
that's a little bit more difficult to explain.
It's the self-assessment portion.
So we did a webinar, Maps Prime webinar, it's free.
It doesn't cost you anything.
It's literally a class.
Okay, it's a free class, taught by Justin.
You go on there, watch what he does.
He takes you through and coaches you through the self-assessment.
And then we wanted to add even more value.
We give you one movement that correlates to each assessment. So if you do bad with the
first assessment, he then shows you an exercise that you can do that help with that. And then
you get a chance to reassess yourself real quick just to see what a big difference it makes.
And when you go to that website to register, you'll see that Doug will have, I think we're
going to do three times that this will be going live or we'll be active on their answering
questions and helping people, even if you can't make that time, still register because you automatically
get emailed a replay.
And that was a question last time that everybody was concerned about.
They said, Oh, Adam, it was always during a time that I was working, so I couldn't attend.
The only thing you miss out by not being at the live event is the live action between South
Justin, me and Doug will be on there.
We're going to be answering all your questions.
So talking to you.
That's the only thing you miss out on.
You still get all the great free information.
If you register, it'll get automatically emailed to you.
So make sure you go to that website, register.
You'll get this no matter what.
Again, so it's maps prime webinar.com.
There's no limit to how many people can sign up.
It's online.
So we hope to see you there.
Also, you can find us all on Instagram,
if you wanna follow us all individually.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin,
you can find me at Mind Pump Sal.
Adam at Mind Pump Adam and Doug has an Instagram page too.
We all behind the scenes here.
Doug, the joke.
With the podcast, including the recording equipment
and what he does to edit us,
you can find him at Mind Pump Doug.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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and maximize your overall performance,
check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media.com.
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