Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1295: Four Ways to Get a Stubborn Body Part to Improve
Episode Date: May 18, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss the frustration of stubborn body parts that just won't improve and techniques that can be employed to create visible change. What a stubborn body part is a...nd why they are so frustrating. (4:08) The concept of the ‘money phrase’ and the main reason why your muscles are NOT responding. (7:00) Busting the myth that muscle fiber ratios in the body determine if muscles respond better than others. (13:02) The Four Techniques to Get a Stubborn Body Part to Improve and Develop. (15:15) Address the poor connection. (16:10) The REAL value of proper priming. (24:10) Gain connection to full ranges of motion. (25:34) The myth of tension and value of isometrics. (27:24) Proper prioritization of your workout. (32:23) Improve your programming. (38:10) 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** How to Improve Weak and Stubborn Body Parts - Mind Pump Media Get BIG Biceps By Doing Chin-Ups! (SECRET WEAPON) - Mind Pump TV How to Trigger Hyperplasia for Maximum Muscle Growth Grow Your Shoulders With The Rear Delt Cable Fly – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Ben Pakulski (@bpakfitness) Instagram Eugene Teo (@coacheugeneteo) 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.
Sout a step in no, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we talk about something that annoys probably everybody that works out in the gym.
All of us have that one body part, that for whatever reason, just a stubborn.
Like everybody, every other body part responds and reacts
and we work out and they change.
And then there's that one body part
that just is so, just doesn't listen to anything
that you tell it, it's like an annoying teenager.
Well, in this episode, we actually give you
the solution for stubborn body parts.
You don't have to have
a body part that doesn't respond. Believe it or not, we have worked with many, many clients
on fixing this issue and actually turning a stubborn body part into a strong body part.
Now, there's four key components that we're going to cover in this episode. The first one has to
do with poor connection. Then we talk about ranges
of motion. Then we talk about lack of prioritization and then finally bad programming. And don't worry,
we give you the solutions. Now in this episode, we do talk a lot about
priming and how that can contribute to getting stubborn body parts to finally respond.
Now if you're confused by the word priming or you don't have to really assess your body to figure out how to prime your body properly, if you go to mapsprimewebinar.com, we're
actually giving you a free priming class. Justin is teaching the class, he's going to teach
you how to do a self-assessment so you can assess your own body, figure out where your
movement issues are, and this is going to show you movements that will benefit you on priming your body so you can bring up those weak stubborn body parts. Now the
classes, when they're being put out there live, we're all going to be on their answering
questions. So we'll be on their active. So if you ask us questions, we'll be right there.
But if you miss the class, don't worry. You get a free replay. So no matter what, you
get to watch the whole class, you get to learn how to assess your body,
and you get to learn how to prime your body.
Again, it's maps, prime, webinar.com, it's free.
Make sure you go there and it'll help you out.
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Let's talk about one of the most frustrating aspects
of working out.
Easily, for me, the most frustrating,
and it's gotta be for a lot of people.
And it's, you know, when you talk to people
who work out consistently and put in hard work
and effort, this is like the worst possible thing,
and it's the stubborn body part.
It's the body part that just doesn't seem to...
She doesn't respond, doesn't grow,
doesn't do what you want to do.
And do.
Everybody's got one unless you're that genetic freak
who is blessed to be, you know,
that was born to be a body part.
It's super common.
Like every person has that one body part, right? Where that just doesn't, now, you know, people might, you know, what is born to be a bodybuilding. It's super common. Like every person has that one body part, right?
Where that just doesn't, now, you know, people might,
you know, what is a stubborn body part?
Well, it's really in relation to the rest of your body
because if your whole body's stubborn,
you don't have a stubborn body part.
You just not, everything matches.
Everything matches.
Stubborn body parts are the ones that,
for whatever reason, they just don't seem to respond
with the same level of speed or enthusiasm or just responsiveness
as the rest of your body, which actually makes it far more, in my opinion, frustrating,
because it's like you're working out and, you know, let's say your glutes don't or stubborn
and your quads are responding, hamstrings are responding, you know, biceps, your shoulders,
you know, and your butt your shoulders, you know,
and your butt is just not like,
what is it asleep?
Like, what's going on?
What's going on?
There's very few, can you think of,
I like this conversation,
I'm glad we're going this way,
because this should strike a chord with everybody,
because as I'm like recalling all the people
that we've trained, I think I've seen a pretty even
split of every body part.
Like I've definitely had plenty of clients
that couldn't get their butt to grow.
I've had plenty of clients that couldn't get their calves
to grow.
I've got plenty of clients that couldn't get their chest
to respond.
Plenty of clients that couldn't get their abs to respond.
Like every muscle group I think I have seen
and I would say all of them are pretty damn common.
Maybe shoulders would be one at least,
but even then I think I've seen that too.
Yeah, that was Doug.
Doug's stubborn body part was delts for a long time.
So yeah, no, we have someone in the room who's had that one.
Yeah, I've seen them all here 100%.
Now personally for me, I've had shoulders
at one point was a stubborn body part.
My calves were stubborn still are.
Chest, that's my nemesis.
It's still, I would consider a stubborn body part,
but I've gotten to go very, very far from where I was.
So I personally have dealt with this myself.
Now, here's the interesting part though,
is that we're saying that, and we're claiming that,
and I agree with you because my chest was that,
at one point I would even thought my shoulders, my calves.
So, but more often than not, it's not stubborn.
It's not stubborn, that it's, it's, it's,
like that's not something intrinsically wrong.
Right, exactly.
There's things that need to be addressed,
and that's what we should definitely dive into that.
Yes, sir.
Because one of the things that all the muscle groups that I thought were so stubborn on myself
There was there was a missing component or something that I wasn't doing. Yeah, I'm glad you went there because there are
definitely genetic factors that can make somebody parts
appear to respond better or to look more
stand out that's definitely true. So I don't want to I don't want to disc stand out. That's definitely true.
So I don't want to discredit that.
I don't want to invalidate that particular factor.
But the fact is that the genetic components,
which I'll go over, the genetic components
are things you can't control.
So it's kind of a waste of time to focus on the many,
anyway.
So what's one genetic component?
Well, the length of what's
called the length of the muscle belly, maybe one, right? So if you have, so if you, when you look at a
muscle and you go from tendon to tendon, right? So look at your bicep. It goes muscle belly. This
is where all the muscle fibers are. It's the bulk of the muscle. Then it goes into connective tissue
and then tendon. The muscle belly itself can genetically be longer
or shorter.
Or shorter.
So if you look at someone, if you look at a bicep, if the belly itself is really short
versus really long and you build them both, the longer belly just has more visual potential
for growth.
It's like calves.
Like you ever see somebody with really, really high calves.
They can like softballs that are up there. Yeah, they could develop them, but they're not going to be
like Justin's calves that go down to his heel. You know, he's got these really long way down.
They're very long calves, so there's a lot of potential. Now, that's a genetic factor. So,
I'm not taking away from that. You just can't control that. There's nothing you can control about
that. That's, it is what it is. Besides that, what Adam's saying is 100% true.
Nine at a 10 times, that's not the main reason
why that particular muscle isn't responding.
The main reason has to do more with what you're doing
or not doing, and that's why it's not responding.
You have to do a little detective work to find out,
you know, what the missing link is.
Yes, there's a few favorite things
that I would hear from a potential client.
And as a trainer, you'll hear your client,
you know, potential client tell you
what they wanna work on, what their challenges are
cause you're doing your assessment.
And there's a few words that in phrases
that are, you know, what I would call like money phrases.
And what I mean by that is you'd hear it
and you'd know right away,
I can show that person value in that. Like I'm gonna show them what I mean by that is you'd hear it and you'd know right away, I can
show that person value in that. Like I'm going to show them what I can do. One of them is
pain, you know, my shoulder hurts, my hip hurts, my knee hurts. And if it's a lot of acute
injury, I knew right away, oh, they're going to love me after about a month or two because
I'm going to take away some of the pain. And that's just so valuable, right? The other
one was a stubborn body part.
That was one of my favorites.
If I met somebody who's been working out,
which is less common than people who don't work out,
but there were decent chunk of people
who were working out who would come hire me,
and they would say to me, and I'd ask them,
well, what are your main goals with personal training?
And they said, well, I work out all the time,
and my upper body is very developed
and my legs just don't respond.
Or my arms are just really stubborn,
or I can't get my back to really respond.
I still love that.
It was a money phrase because I knew
that there was something that I could do with them
that would make that body part respond
and then they would see the value in my training.
I vividly remember when this came together for me,
I had just finished up my corrective exercise
specialist certification.
And so I was early to mid-20s and really understood
on a much deeper level than the surface level
I understood lower cross syndrome.
So, you know, when you go through some of your basic search,
you get kind of a breakdown and you start to piece that together.
When I really understood what was going on
and that so many people suffered from that,
and why that also results in them being very quad dominant
and not being able to develop their glutes,
and then what I needed to do to correct that and fix that,
it was definitely, there was a huge explosion in my business at that time in my career because
I became this butt guy.
I became the guy who could help you start butt guy.
That was a big butt guy for sure.
You have the bumper sticker.
Because I mean, that's a common one, right?
You think of, I mean, there's, I think at one point, I've seen them all, but as far as
pain points, ass is a big one, especially for somebody who trains legs
all the time or try to just try to train their butt.
And they get these incredible quads, but then they're just,
their ass is flat and they can't seem to get the butt to grow.
That's extremely frustrating for somebody who's putting
all the work in the gym, especially when they think
they're doing all the exercises and doing the things
they're supposed to.
That was the most common one for me and all my clients that would come in in terms of
where they were not responding.
That was such a common thing because again, yeah, it's where it's set up.
The alignment and the way that their posture was stacked and everything, it just wasn't
even there for them to recruit properly, they're glutes.
So that was just such an unlocking thing for me to be able to show them.
Yeah, so think about this way.
The most effective exercises you could do for your body are typically compound movements.
These are exercises where you're using more than one joint.
And this is widely understood, they're just very effective.
Now, your muscles work together like a, to have you perform a particular action.
Okay?
This means that sometimes some muscles
will do more work than other muscles.
And so this is just what ends up happening.
So you could do exercises that are supposed to be
the best for your glutes or your chest or your back,
but because of the way your body moves,
you develop other muscles that you maybe are,
and so oftentimes people with like a butt
that doesn't respond, oftentimes have great quads.
You know what I'm saying?
Somebody whose chest doesn't grow, often has great shoulders
and triceps, somebody whose back doesn't respond,
oftentimes has great biceps
because they tend to work together with pulling movements
and the other ones I talked about were push and movements.
There's another myth that I do want to dispel
though along these lines.
This is a little bit more going into the weeds
a little bit so bear with me.
But there's a myth that still floats around there
that muscle fiber ratios in the body
really determine if muscles respond more than others.
Now there are two, this is very generalized,
there's a little more complex in this,
but there's two general types of muscle fibers.
When you go into a muscle, the little strings or whatever are considered muscle fibers,
and generally speaking, you can break them up into two general categories.
One is fast twitch, fast twitch burns energy very quickly, burns out very fast, but generates
a lot of power.
Slow twitch is the opposite.
It doesn't burn a lot of energy very quickly.
It's got a lot of staying power, but it's got way less power.
Fast twitch muscle fibers because their job
is to generate power, getting bigger becomes very beneficial.
They grow because of bigger fiber, contracts harder,
burns faster energy, but it contracts hard.
It's a blood supply.
Right, slow twitch muscle fiber, because it's goal is to give you more stamina,
more staying power, it resists growing
because a bigger muscle fiber just burns more energy
and it wants to stay efficient.
This is why sprinters who use power,
but burn out very quickly have bigger muscles
than long distance runners who use the efficient,
long lasting, slow twitch muscle fibers.
Okay, so it makes sense that genetically you may be born with a propensity for
more fast-twitch muscle fibers, more slow-twitch muscle fibers.
That'll dictate to an extent how much muscle you can build.
And then what people have done is they've taken that too far and said,
oh, the rest of your body grows great because you have all these fast switch muscle fibers.
That one muscle group that doesn't develop while you're biceps, it's because you have too
many slow twitch muscle fibers.
It doesn't work that way.
Although some muscles generally have more slow twitch and others have more fast twitch,
generally speaking your whole body tends to match.
You wouldn't have sprinter genes for your entire body,
except for your quads, or your whole body,
except for your biceps.
So that's a myth.
That's a genetic myth that that's one of the main reasons.
Besides muscle belly length, like I talked about before,
the only things that tend to be the reason
that this muscle group isn't responding
has to do with things that you're either doing,
or not doing.
And I think we should probably get into those.
Well, I like narrowing it down to like what we think are like the four key because when
I was going through that, the corrective exercise specialist certification, and I learned
about lower cross syndrome and I began helping people with the developed their glutes.
It also the light switch went off for me because at that time, still in my career,
I was struggling with my chest.
And what you'll start to find is even though
a chest and butt are completely different,
the reasons why my chest wasn't developing
is very similar to the same reasons
why my clients glutes weren't developing.
And so when that light bulb went off for me
on how I could help them fix that, it completely changed my approach on how I trained and developed my chest. And the first
one that I think of right away is just is a poor connection. It's not it's not firing. You gave a
great analogy with what you see sometimes somebody who can't develop their chest. Well then that same
person a lot of times has great anterior delts and or triceps.
And that's because those muscles
are taking over a movement that should be chest dominant.
Just like the person who doesn't have,
that has the flat butt, but has great quads,
their quads are taking over the movement
instead of their glutes.
So, even though we can talk about all different muscles,
a lot of the common themes of the four main ones
that we're gonna nail down to
will generally help you
in no matter what muscle.
Chest and butt do have cleavage though.
That's true, I wanted to point that out.
They do have something in common.
Have you guys ever seen, I'm sure you haven't,
but I'll ask anyway, have you ever seen
a professional arm wrestler do a pull-up?
You ever seen this?
No.
So they do lots of pull-ups, right?
Arm wrestlers need very strong biceps.
They need to pull very hard.
In fact, certain positions in arm wrestling,
I'm a little bit of a nerd with arm wrestling,
involves what are called pullers.
It's a technique that you use.
And so they do pull ups to strengthen that pulling movement.
But if you watch them do pull ups.
I don't even have to.
I can tell you I know how they do.
Yeah, it's an arm pull up.
Their back is supporting them,
but they're not doing lat pull ups.
Did we do a YouTube video for pull ups for biceps and we taught this?
I think we might have. I think I love that you're going here.
I wasn't even thinking this direction, but you know, this is also how you can take a one
exercise and make it for a total different muscle.
Absolutely. So if you watch these armmasters do pull ups, you'll notice rounded shoulders.
It's mostly biceps and forearm.
The back is there as a supporting role, but the biceps and arms are doing most of the work.
And of course, we look at arm wrestlers, very developed arms, and their backs tend to not
match their arms.
Now pull-ups are known to be a back exercise.
If you'd see a pull-up in a routine, nine at a ten times, it's there because it's in
back.
People typically don't do pull-ups for their arms,
although they can be done for arms, it's actually quite rare.
So it's all about their connection
and how they're doing the movement.
And what ends up happening over time
is if you're doing an exercise,
and I'm gonna put in quotations in my marks wrong,
in other words, you're doing an exercise
and you think you're trying to work one muscle,
but in reality, you're working with the supporting muscles,
the more you do it that way, that way,
the better you get at doing it the wrong way.
You actually strengthen, whatever you train
is what you strengthen.
In fact, a professional arm wrestler
can probably do more pull-ups the wrong way
than they could the right way,
because they've trained it that way for so long.
And that's where the poor connection comes from.
So if you see somebody whose glutes tend to not be developed,
and you watch them do a barbell squat or a deadlift
You're gonna see more hamstrings in the deadlift and more quads in the squat
Because they're squatting in a way that they're squatting is working other muscles more and other muscles less
And the more you do this and this is why it's so hard
Because when you're working with the beginner, all their body parts are stubborn.
I can start from scratch, and I can teach you,
you guys ever hear a martial artist say,
it's easier to teach a beginner
than it is to teach an expert in another martial art.
Like if you're a Thai boxer
and you got a Thai Kwon Doe Black belt coming in,
really hard to teach them how to do a Thai kick.
It's the same in music.
I mean, like going in and trying to teach somebody that has
already solidified the way that they say it's piano, the way that they play the keys and
they hold their hands up and all these, they've mastered their specific way of approaching
this. And then trying to, you have to unlearn all those, the way that you've gone about
it forever. Golfers will tell you the same thing. You know, if you go in and you just start
hitting a golf ball and you start to develop. You know, if you go in and you just start hitting a golf ball
and you start to develop a pattern on how you do the swing
and you do that for a year or two, three years,
and then all of a sudden you decide you really want to get
serious about golfing and then you have,
and you hire a professional and they just tear you apart.
And it sucks because you'll end up regressing at the beginning
because you've got to strip that person back down
and get rid of all the bad habits
even though they may have seen a little bit of success this way. And so the same thing goes with
training. I mean, how often have you got somebody who was like someone who loved to run, right?
Runners, printers, or long distance runners, and then now they want to develop their butt.
They're so used to running on their quads and training that way. And your body, the way your body
works, right? It doesn't go, oh, this is a chest exercise,
and it just automatically works the chest
because it's supposed to be your chest.
It's going to take the easiest path always.
And so if you-
If you say, press move bar this way.
Exactly, move bar that way,
that's how the brain operates, it sees that,
and it will default to what you are strong in.
If you are somebody who has a chest
that doesn't respond very well,
but you've been bench pressing for a long time, right?
One of the best exercises for chest.
And let's say your max bench press is 250 pounds, okay?
If I get you to activate your chest early on,
if I change your form, you ain't gonna be able
to bench 250, you're gonna be weaker
because you're gonna get your strong
at the way you've been practicing. This is why it can be so difficult. So I'm glad you're going to be weaker because you're going to get your strong at the way you've been practicing.
This is why it can be so difficult.
So I'm glad we're going here because the rule number one with a poor connection is to
take 15 steps backwards.
If you're doing pull-ups and your biceps are responding and your back isn't, rather
than doing 15 pull-ups, you're doing three and your form is totally different.
If you're bench pressing with 175 pounds
and your chest isn't responding,
we're going down to 115 pounds
and you're changing your technique
and really focusing on feeling the chest.
It's gonna feel like an entirely new exercise.
It is.
So this is like a new skill you're developing.
You have to approach it like I have to do
this a completely different way.
So yeah, you do have to acknowledge you're gonna regress, you're gonna start again.
And since we're talking right now to people
who have stubborn body parts,
which is assuming that you already work out,
you've already revealed to yourself
that you have a stubborn body part,
this is very important.
Gotta take a bunch of steps back,
identify how to get that muscle to connect.
So in a bench press, what does the chest do?
The chest brings the elbow to the center line of the body.
That's what the chest does.
So I gotta change my technique.
I gotta focus on that.
That means I'm gonna have to bench press with like 70%
or 60% or less of the weight that I'm used to.
When you're doing a squat, what do the glutes do?
Well, the glutes take your leg from in front of you
and bring it to straighten your body out.
They don't extend the knee, that's your quads.
So I'm gonna have to learn how to sit back
a little bit differently, how to activate the glutes.
That means I'm probably gonna have to squat at like 50% weight
and re-learn.
We are trying to reconnect.
By the way, before you can develop a muscle,
you have to connect to the muscle very well.
It's not gonna work.
It doesn't work any way.
Well, it's a little more nuanced than that too.
You just glazed right over two things that are important,
I think to know because there's
some people that understand how the chest works.
Like, okay, yeah, move the elbow to the center line.
But if you do that with a forward shoulder, you're still going to get all dealt.
So not only that, you have to learn to prime the body to be able to get the muscles that
hold the shoulder girdle back in place while you also move that.
So it's a little more nuanced.
And the same thing goes for what you're talking about with developing your glutes.
If you squat and you end up putting all your weight on your quads and you don't know how
to move your hips properly, then you're still, even though your squat may look like it's
a good squat, if it's not activating your glutes because you're quad dominant, there's
more things going on
than just actually performing the exercise.
Yeah, I used to tell my clients,
like first we gotta learn how to anchor the movement.
And so like anchoring the movement,
just like you said with the shoulder blades,
bringing it back and being able to really
provide stability first,
where are you gonna provide stability?
How are you gonna hold your ground
before even performing the movement?
That's a vital part of that process,
which then allows you to get the full access
and full recruitment of your chest.
Nine out of 10 times when someone has a weak body part
and then you ask them,
so they say, oh, my chest isn't developed.
And you say, do you feel your chest when you bench press?
No, they know.
Part of it's like, I do squats all the time.
I just don't feel my butt, my quads get sore
and I feel it my quads.
And this is, okay, this is the real value
of proper priming.
I'm glad you said that, Adam,
because if you prime properly,
you can learn how to feel what you're supposed to feel
because it's really, I'm gonna say this right now,
unless you're very, very experienced with training,
you know the nuances that we're talking about,
you have to understand how to feel the muscle
before you can feel it in the exercise. Just knowing form and technique, the nuances that we're talking about, you have to understand how to feel the muscle before
you can feel it in the exercise.
Just knowing form and technique, although very helpful, still can make it very difficult.
I could tell somebody all day long who doesn't feel their glutes when they squat, here's
what the glutes do, here's what the forms should look like, they're still going to have a tough
time until they know what it feels like and then know what to search for.
That's the part that makes a big difference in priming does that.
That's what I'm so excited that Justin
is running this webinar right now
because if you're listening right now,
and maybe you thought that this free webinar
is not something that you need to listen to,
but then this is resonating with you that,
oh my God, I have a studying stubborn body part,
you need to take that webinar.
You need to go through that
because more likely than not,
this is part of the reason why. And so he's going to go through there and show you the importance
of these three core movements and then how to address it if you can't do it properly.
And getting to that place is so important before you build on it or start to address
the story.
Yeah. Proper priming is like the magic wand for a stubborn body part. It really, really is because the big,
I mean, we started with poor connection,
but poor connection is the main reason why people have,
but there's other reasons,
which I wanna get into also.
I think the next one,
this one is also relatively common,
and it has, this one I see more often in men than women,
mainly because we tend to ego lift a little bit more,
which is just a lack of range of motion, a lack of full range of motion.
And it tends to be because guys want to go a little too heavy.
Well, I would say that, and then also, if there was ever any previous pain or like an injury
or something that like had followed you forever, and you've been uncertain as far as like how
far to go with with the range
of motion and then just just doing that and repeating that range of motion your body gets
really familiar and comfortable with that.
So it's hard to then really you know press yourself a little further beyond that.
Oh yeah.
I remember one when I was younger my back I just couldn't feel this a hard one.
Your back muscles especially when you first start working out it's hard to feel, hard to connect, it's behind you,
you know, I don't know what that's supposed to feel like
or whatever.
And so at one point, you know, I considered my back like,
oh, maybe it's stubborn or not sure what's going on.
And so what I did was, part of what I did,
besides I did super sets, that helped a lot.
I finally felt a little bit of a pump.
But the other thing I did was, when I would do a pull down or a pull up is I went all the way down to the stretch, went all the way
up to the squeeze. I connected to the whole range of motion because up into that point,
you know, I was a kid working out and I just wanted to see how many more reps I could
do or how much more weight I can use. And the truth is, of course, you can lift more weight
when you do a shorter range of motion.
I can have squat way more than I can full squat,
and I can do way more pull-ups if I don't go
all the way down to a stretch
and go all the way up to where I get my chest
to touch the bar and really squeeze.
So that range of motion really does contribute
to the first one we talked about,
which was poor connection.
Another one is the myth
of tension. Now, I blame bodybuilders for this. Bodybuilders, you had to understand something when a
high level bodybuilder is communicating something to the average person. What they're often
communicating is a technique that works for them at that point in their development. They're already
jacked. They're already huge. They've been training for years. They've got crazy genetics. They might
be on anabolic steroids.
They've got great connection to muscles.
Bodybuilders know how to connect to muscles,
and so they'll say something like,
when I do a shoulder press,
I don't lock out so I can keep tension on the shoulders.
Or when I do a squat, I don't go all the way up
because I'm trying to keep tension on my quads.
Now this is a bit of a myth because the truth is,
you can keep tension on a muscle through stretch
all the way up to lock out because it's intrinsic.
Tension is an intrinsic thing.
Now you can change your form to force you to have tension,
but that's cheap.
That's not nearly as effective as being able
to connect to the movement yourself.
So if I'm doing like a shoulder press,
I'm better off going all the way up to lock out,
but not resting the weight on my joints,
but rather going all the way up and squeezing my shoulders,
tensing my arms and maintaining that connection.
That full range of motion, and we know this,
studies confirm this very, very well.
They do show that for overall muscle development, longer ranges of motion
or superior to shorter ranges of motion. This is one of the number one cardinal rules, especially
when you train people, is to teach them how to do that.
Wasn't it a good buddy Ben Pekolsky, the one that made the case for that he's like the
number one thing for him, he says is that in the squeeze, yeah, the squeeze in the fully
contracted position. Because it's poor connection. Yeah.
Like, think about this.
If you have a client whose glutes don't grow,
how hard is it for them to squeeze it
in the fully contracted position?
Right.
It's hard for them to just feel it there.
And so people understand what you're referring to
or what you're saying right there.
It's easy to feel a muscle in its stretch position.
Cause gravity is doing it for you.
Think about being in an open position, holding a dumbbell for a bicep, right?
Because it's stretched out, you don't even think about it, you feel it pulling on the
bicep, but bring the arm all the way to your chest or bring it all the way up and you have
to kind of intrinsically think about squeezing it because you don't have gravity resisting
it in its stretch position.
This is why I like isometrics too, just because if you're focusing on this range of motion
and you don't have that connection, you don't feel it,
we can stay there a bit longer
and really try and reinforce that process of how to recruit
and how to generate that connection again
and to be able to feel it is so important for you then
to move forward and to be able to feel like
you got the strength and support you need throughout that range of action.
Yeah, so when I would train clients and they had a stubborn body part, I would focus a lot
on the squeeze, always on the squeeze.
Okay, we're at the top, squeeze your glutes.
Okay, you're at the top of your bench.
Hold it for a bit longer even.
Squeeze your chest, connect to the chest.
Oh, your shoulder, squeeze at the top.
That squeeze because that leads back to poor connection
and the lack of range of motion contributes to the poor connection.
Well, this is why I like what Justin just said because this is where isometric training
really kicked in for me because I realize that and I used to tell clients this all the
time, like resistance training, all it is is flexion of the muscles with resistance.
That's all it is. All you are doing is flexing the muscle. So the better you are at flexing this stubborn body part,
the better you will be at developing it.
And so, and one of the harder places
to actually flex a muscle is in an isometric position
because there is no movement,
there is no gravity helping you out.
There is no stretch position.
You really have to learn to intrinsically do that.
And so if you train that really well,
then when you add resistance, you add weight,
it's easier to make that connection.
So this is another really great value in IceMatch,
another one of those lost arts that none of people do.
It is, and what helps you gain connection
to ranges of motion?
Priming, again, if you prime your body properly, now,
so if I'm going into a bench press
and my chest is a weak body part, the hardest
part for me to feel my chest is going to be at the top of the bench press. Okay, it's
it is. It's just the hardest. How do I feel? You know, my chest squeezing at the top of
the press, it's not even a full squeeze. Like what is? But if I prime beforehand and I
can identify the squeeze and here's an easy, simple way to prime your chest. Now this
isn't priming a movement pattern issue, which is far more common.
So what I'm about to give you is decent advice for somebody who's got good movement.
I would grab a stick and I would just grab it and just drive inward with my chest,
like I'm trying to slide my hands together, but don't actually do that and squeeze my chest.
Identify the feeling.
So that's a form of priming.
Then I'd go bench press, now I know it to feel
as I'm squeezing through.
Now, as I said, for most people,
it's more to do with lack of connection
to the stabilizing shoulder blades and other parts,
but priming helps so much with extending connected
ranges of motion.
So that's why again, it's so valuable
at bringing up stubborn body parts.
Now, the next one that I think of is what made me realize
that maybe I don't have as many stubborn body parts,
I just, I'm not prioritizing.
And I shared this story about,
I did a YouTube video, I think a couple months ago,
about my shoulders.
And I had really, really terrible shoulders.
And it was brought to my attention
by a female trainer of mine
that was working for me at the time.
And she was a bodybuilder
and I had her assess my physique
and like, you know, tell me what I could be working on,
you know, you're professional in this,
like what do you think?
Oh, she told me out of me,
I have very weak shoulders.
You know, and then like,
just destroyed my ego.
But the truth is, at that time, in my career,
I, this is how I trained my shoulders. I thought, okay, they were kind of an afterthought. It was,
well, every time I do heavy chest, I get some anterior delts. Every time I go heavy back, I get
some rear delts, okay, I'll throw some lateral stuff in there. And I'm done. And I'm done. So,
it was just that I, of course, I was getting my shoulder, my shoulder, and there's some truth to
that, because when you do your chest, you can't not use your
shoulders.
They're involved.
Same thing when you do your back.
So your rear delts are involved.
So, you know, my theory was they're getting plenty of attention and they, why aren't they
developed that way?
And then she really picked on me and then she said, listen, she said, why don't you start
every week, every time you start a week off, you start with that area, start with your shoulders.
And that was the first time I ever started
like, designating a workout for my shoulders.
And I began to say, okay, if this is a weak body part,
you know, because this happens to everybody.
I don't care who you are,
maybe if you're some, you know, crazy,
you know, bodybuilder guy who that's all you do
is live in the gym.
Most people have, you know, ebb and flow of training.
You're really consistent for a while
and you're a little less consistent,
maybe you can fall off for a week or two
or even months sometimes at a time.
And what the natural thing for you to do when you come back
is to always gravitate towards the stuff
you'd like to train.
I mean, we all have favorite exercises
in the body parts.
Yeah, the stuff you like creates your good at. And the part is, yeah. The stuff you like creates you're good at.
And the truth is, if you're really trying to develop a very symmetrical physique or work
on a body part that is underdeveloped, then making it the priority always.
And this was something that I first started with my shoulders and then it ended up being
my legs next that I started to think this way.
And just, I just made a pact with myself that, okay, one, I'm gonna start my week always,
off like that, and no matter where I end
in my workout routine where I fall off for a little bit,
when I come back, I'm always starting
with the week muscle.
So I could have let's just say,
I've been on a kick for three months,
and I just had an awesome shoulder workout,
something happens in my life,
and I fall off for a week or two,
and then I come back to the gym.
Why did shoulders last?
So maybe I should do something.
No, I'm gonna go right back to shoulders again.
I'm starting again that week.
So prioritizing was huge for me.
Yes, and this is actually quite common.
I mean, a majority of times
when somebody has a body part that's weak,
especially if it's for men, legs, and calves,
and for women, arms, and shoulders.
Typically, I'm generalizing, but this is typical.
Typically, it's...
Half leads to spiceps.
Yeah, that's good to say.
Typically, it's because they don't place
as much prioritization or focus on them.
If you really look at their routines,
you know, all my calves don't respond.
I'm guilty of this.
My calves don't respond.
I said it early in the set, so the truth is,
what's the body part I've done, the least amount of sets,
the least amount of exercises,
and what's the body part I never start to work out with?
Haves, right?
So prioritization literally means you prioritize it.
It's the first body part, by the way,
studies show this, if you train full body,
the body part or exercises you start with,
tend to get more of the gains.
That's why you always wanna start with a big compound lift.
But if you have a body part that's weak, you really want to focus on, start your workout
that way.
Never skip that body part that you need to train because that's a big one.
Prioritize it, make it a priority, focus on it, and that makes a big difference.
I love that you brought that up because this was a question I know we've gotten a lot
with people.
It's because we've set up the programs general to try and help the majority, but we always
have encouraged people to modify.
And so if let's say you're following MAP's and a ball, of course, we're going to start
with the big compound list that's going to give you the biggest bang for your buck,
and that makes the most sense for overall muscle gain and fat loss for anybody.
But if that same person is like a major goal of theirs is to develop calves while they
also do this program, that is where an exception where I'd say, listen, for now on, start
your maps and a ball with the calves in the front.
Totally.
If you think you already have good quads and a great bud and it's not like a major focus
yours, just by you simply addressing your calves first in the routine always will already
make a huge impact.
So prioritization was a huge game changer for me
when that light bulb filing went off.
Now this one I actually, and mainly because it was a body part,
I really, really like to train and I really wanted to develop.
When I first started working out,
shoulders were a body part that I was insecure about.
I'm narrow, naturally, I was kind of bony,
and I like the way I looked in t-shirts, and
I would follow my workout, and I'd start to develop.
My arms developed very quickly, but my shoulder was kind of like.
So what I did is I just did more exercises, more sets, and train my shoulders more frequently.
So I'd be out in the backyard doing laterals, and presses, and rear laterals, and you know
what happened over time?
It took time, but over time, my shoulders became a strong suit.
In fact, it's one of my better body parts.
But people don't know this, it started out being a weak body part,
but I had to prioritize it.
This one takes a lot of self-reflection
because I have trained many times,
a dude that comes to me and goes, my legs just don't grow.
And what's the first body part they skip when they skip work out?
Legs, so that's just magically happened. Yes, yes, yes, you have to prioritize it. My legs just don't grow and what's the first body part they skip when they skip work out legs
Just magically happen. Yes. Yes. Yes. You have to prioritize prioritize it. All right the last one is probably
I'd say the least
Communicate in terms of which ones have the most impact although it's still relatively common Which is just you have bad workout programming. Yeah, you know now this one
I hate to say it is much more common in women and especially
with people who want to develop a butt. Now the reason why it's more common in women is because
women are advertised, crappy workouts more than men are. It's just the fact. If it workout is advertised
to a woman, it typically tends to be like, don't do these exercises over here because they build bulk.
Do these these pilates based exercises, they produce long lean muscles and do these short, choppy
exercises for your glutes because you feel the burn and use this hip circle because, forget
dumbbells and barbells and whatever because they're not, they'll make you look bulky.
And you look at their work on like, why isn't my butt grow?
And I look at their routine.
It's like dog peas, butt kicks, like, okay.
It goes back to what you kind of brought up earlier about fast, which slow, twitch muscle fibers and like the difference between the two.
And like you have to train your body completely different
for both of those objectives.
And that's something that again,
like with women, it's a very common that's neglected
and it's not advertised very often.
When in fact, that's something that could stimulate
such a massive difference for them
and get like the kind of results they're looking for just by you know altering the
amount of of reps the rest periods like things like that that's gonna have a dramatic
difference on the way that you're shaping the muscle now and getting more explosive response
out of the muscle which tells it to grow in a different way.
I'm gonna challenge that a little bit.
I think guys are just up there too.
And what I think about it, right away, it comes to mind,
was the way Eugene Tao and I got connected was he did a post
that was kind of encouraging the benefits of the hack squad
and telling people that they don't have to squad.
It's not a mandatory movement.
And we had great dialogue.
I challenged that way of thinking.
And the reason why I did is from my experience
with so many male clients that trained legs,
but it was leg extensions, leg curls, leg press.
Yeah, that's true.
You know what I'm saying?
And then, complying that their legs wouldn't develop
or wouldn't, and I'm guilty of this too.
I mean, when I was younger, when I would squat,
my low back would bother me,
and so I did all the alternative exercises
and all the machines for my legs,
and then bitched about why I didn't have great legs,
and it was a lack of prioritization,
but it was also a lack of good programming.
You know, once I learned the benefits of squatting,
and then when I learned how to deep squat, holy crap.
I mean, I train my legs with less intensity,
less volume today than what I was doing in my mid-20s
and they're way more developed
because of the exercise selection that I do now.
I mean, if you just squat five to eight sets a week,
it is, for me at least, I have found more value in that
than 30 sets of leg press, leg extension, leg curls.
That's true for most throughout the week, yes.
And that was a hard thing for me to get through my own head.
And then it was a hard thing for me
to communicate to a lot of my male clients.
And it's the reason why I challenge Eugene
when he posts that, not because I thought he was wrong,
but because, man, I said,
I remember myself at 20 years old.
That's all you needed, is there a read of post like that?
Exactly, give me an answer.
Exactly, and if I was looking up to a guy like you
and you told me, you gave me the okay to not squat,
I bought into that, and that's why I didn't,
because there were people at that time
that were saying things like that,
that how amazing the leg compress could be,
and all these other machines, how they're great for leg development, and
nothing grew my legs more than learning how to squat.
No, if you want to develop your body and you want to develop a weak body part, the routine
needs to be centered around building muscle and building strength, and it needs to be a
good muscle building type routine.
If your program is not centered around that,
then it's bad programming.
You're not going to bring up a weak body part
with a routine that's centered around shaping
and small movements and yoga inspired and pilates inspired.
And that kind of stuff.
Nothing wrong with that.
Those have their own values,
but they're not going to develop muscles
nearly to the degree that
you know, that resistance strain, traditional resistance strain will, and they're definitely
not going to bring up weak body parts as quickly.
And what are some of the best exercises to develop your body parts?
Freeway, barbell, dumbbell, compound movements, and if they're not included in your routine
as a primary exercises, you need to take a good look at your workout.
And of course, sets and reps are your programs
phased properly so you can go through different rep ranges.
And of course, all the other stuff that we talked about.
And I also wanna, here's another problem is,
and it's tough to get someone to break through
this mentality is, I feel it more
when I do this exercise.
So sometimes you'll get somebody who doesn't like to do
like a bench press or a squat,
because the exercises that are like machines
that are more isolating exercises,
they feel it because it's easier from the filler.
That doesn't mean the exercise that you don't feel it
so much isn't more valuable.
It means you're not doing it correctly.
This is what priming does.
Priming, okay, so yes, you could feel the muscle more
when you do a cable crossover
than when you do a bench press.
If you have a, if your chest is a weak body part.
That's true.
So the value of the cable crossover is there,
but the value is to prime you potentially
for your bench press.
That's where you get the value.
This is the value of priming.
You're not gonna develop your stubborn body parts
just by priming by itself.
Of course not.
The priming is what sets up.
All those awesome exercises I just talked about,
your barbell, dumbbell, free weight, compound movements.
The priming sets you up so that those very powerful exercises
now can give you what they can deliver,
what their full potential can deliver.
So that's the difference,
because I used to get that too with clients,
but well, I know you're saying a, you know,
a barbell squat works better for my butt growth,
but I feel these, you know,
these short dog pee exercises more in my glutes.
And I'd say, well, okay, you feel them more,
that's great.
Why don't we use those to prime the glutes,
then do the barbell squats,
because by themselves, they just don't say.
And that's just the connection, that's not the work.
That's right, that's right.
You need the work to be able to change.
And that's it, and look, check this out, okay,
we have a free class that's coming up,
it's a webinar, it's online, it's unlimited,
people can sign up, doesn't cost anything,
and Justin is literally gonna take you
through a self-assessment.
The self-assessment is going to identify root causes,
root movement reasons why you may have weak body parts.
And once you identify those issues, those root issues,
which he's actually gonna coach you through,
he's gonna show you an exercise for each of them
that'll help prime your body,
getting you to move better,
so that you can reap more value
from, I don't care what workout you're doing.
You're not gonna even, we don't even care if you change
your workout at this point, just prime properly
and watch what happened.
That class you can sign up at mapsprimewebinar.com.
Do it now, by the way, when the classes are broadcast live,
Justin, Adam, myself, and Doug will be on there
answering any questions, but if you miss the class,
you get a free replay.
So no matter what, you get to watch the entire class.
Again, it's maps prime webinar dot com.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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