Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1310: The Three Best 30 Minute Workouts for Fat Loss and Muscle Gain
Episode Date: June 8, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin put together three 30-minute workouts focusing on muscle & strength, calorie burn and mobility. How to approach the objection with time with your clients. (2:37) 3... Effective 30 Minute Workouts for Fat Loss and Muscle Gain. (12:15) #1 – Muscle and Strength: The goal, choosing the RIGHT exercises, the importance of rest time & MORE. (13:09) Barbell squat. (17:02) Barbell or dumbbell row. (19:59) Bench or incline press. (22:33) Overhead press. (24:24) 2-4 sets of each exercise, 1-3 minutes of rest in between each set, 6-12 reps each exercise #2 - Conditioning and Calorie Burn (HIIT workout): The goal, picking 3-4 balanced exercises, the importance of form & MORE. (25:22) #3 – Mobility: Building strength in new ranges of motion, improving connection within those new ranges & MORE. (31:46) Handcuffs to rotation or Wall test. (32:40) The Windmill or Thread the needle. (33:50) 90/90. (36:14) Combat stretch. (36:33) Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off! **Promo code “HIIT50” at checkout** Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** How To Squat Properly - Knees Over Toes | The Muscle Doc – Mind Pump TV The #1 Setup Cue For The Barbell And Dumbbell Row Exercise – Mind Pump TV The ONLY Way You Should Barbell Row – MInd Pump TV How to Bench Press with Proper Form (AVOID MISTAKES!) - Mind Pump TV The OFFICIAL Overhead Press Checklist! (AVOID MISTAKES!) - Mind Pump TV HIIT Workout For Fat Loss with Barbell (15 Minutes) | MIND PUMP HIIT Workout for Fat Loss with Dumbbells (15 Minute Full Body Workout) | MIND PUMP 15 minute Fat Burning HIIT Workout - Kettlebell ONLY!! | MIND PUMP Mind Pump #1307: How To Make Your HIIT Workout More Effective MAPS Prime Webinar Mind Pump Webinar Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcast,
we talk about the three best 30-minute workouts you can do for fat loss and for muscle gain. So here's what we did.
We created three fast workouts. Okay, a lot of people have limited time, but of course they still want
to get maximum bang for their buck. They want to get good results still. So we created three workouts.
One of them is great for strength and muscle. The other one is great for conditioning and calorie
burn or fat burn. And the third one is mobility based. So we think you're going to have some great takeaways. You can follow
these workouts and see for yourself. We think they're going to work great for most of you
guys listening right now. Now this episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors, Legion.
Now Legion makes excellent performance based supplements. They sell creatine. They have
pre workout supplements. They sell protein pow, they have pre-workout supplements,
they sell protein powders.
Now here's a deal, we work with Legion
because all of their supplements are transparent.
What you see on the label is what is in the product.
They also don't put little doses of things
just to say they have them in there.
They use efficacious doses.
In other words, studies show that three grams of,
you know, citralline is great for
pre-workout. Well, that's what you're going to find in their pre-workout. It's stuff that
actually works at the doses that actually work. And by the way, all of their products are
naturally sweetened. There are no artificial sweeteners in their products. Now, if you
go to buylegion.com, that's B-U-Y,
LG-I-O-N.com forward slash MindPump,
you can get 20% off your first order, just use the code MindPump.
If you're a returning customer, you'll get double rewards points.
Also, we're putting one of our best short-term fat loss,
muscle-preserving programs on sale.
This is a great summertime program.
A lot of you are interested in getting lean over the summer.
Our HIIT program is the most effective in a short period of time.
It's like a six week program, extremely effective.
It's 50% off.
It's all high intensity, interval training based with weights, so you don't lose muscle.
Here's how you get your 50% off go to maps hit.com. That's MAPS
H-I-I-T dot com and use the code hit 50 that's H-I-I-T
5.0 no space for the discount
You know one of the the most common
Objections that I would hear from a potential client the one that I'd hear
pretty consistently
and that actually has a lot of validity. Not to say that objections don't have validity
typically, but a lot of times people will say that there's roadblocks in front of there,
you know, why they can't work out, why they're not exercising consistently. And a lot of it
isn't, it's just them putting things out. They're not necessarily actual roadblocks,
but there is one that's a real one
that I used to approach very differently.
And that was the time issue.
People would, they'd tell me that the reason why
that they haven't embarked on a fitness and health journey
whether it'll exercise regularly is because
they just don't have a lot of time, they have a job,
they have kids. And the way I used to approach that
as an early trainer was different than the way
I approached it later on, and it was actually wrong.
The way I did it in the first, as an early trainer,
was not very effective.
And what I used to say to people was,
and I do the whole speech, right?
Okay, I understand you don't have a lot of time,
but all of us have the same 24 hours in a day.
And then you would break down the path.
Yeah, you have to exactly, you know, you have to prioritize fitness and health. How important
do you think your health is to you? It's more important than anything else. If you have
poor health, then you can't be a good parent. If you have poor health, then you can't be
a good employee or you can't run your business well. So logical.
You need to prioritize your time
and make the time to work out.
And the truth is sometimes,
and I'm a pretty convincing person,
I can speak in convincing ways.
Sometimes I would spark motivation in people
and get them to take that first step
and dedicate, you know, okay, fine, that's it.
I'm gonna come in, I'm gonna see four days a week
or whatever, but long term,
it was a terrible strategy because, number one, I'm not validating what they're saying.
Of course they're looking at me as some 20-something year old
trainer.
No, you know, what do you know about me?
You love working out, right?
For me, I got all these responsibilities
that are more important to me that I need to take care of.
Number two, if I was successful
at getting someone's hyper-motivated, it didn't last because it was too big of a change.
You know, they were going from no working out to now, I motivated to come to Jim, you know, four or five hours a week, which was just too much.
About five years into my career, you know, I took a, and I know you guys did something similar.
I really took a hard look at my success rate, and if I was being honest, I was failing.
I was doing well with people in short periods of time, but I didn't have a lot of forever
success.
I didn't have a lot of permanent success with people.
Later on, I had a completely different strategy and actually learned this from a manager
that I had worked with who was an excellent communicator.
And I remember one day, him and I were talking
and one of the gyms that I was managing was just busy.
It was, I think it was February,
so it was like beginning of the year, packed.
And I was like, man, the gym gets super packed at night.
And when I'm touring potential members,
they ask me about that, about how busy it is.
And he goes, well, what do you say?
And I say, well, I tell them that we have lots of equipment. I tell them that it's usually not this busy.
It's the beginning of the year that they could come at different times. And he's like, that's the wrong thing.
He said, just acknowledge what they said and move on. I said, what do you mean? He said, well, if someone says it's super busy, be like, I know it's really busy right now. And then you just go along.
I thought, huh, that's interesting.
And I did it.
And I remember how people just, it was not an issue.
So then I started applying that towards the time issue.
And I thought to myself, God, I'm not listening to people.
So then when people would present to me the time issue and say,
I don't have a lot of time, I would follow up with the question
and say, well, how much time can you commit to fitness?
Honestly, what is, what can you honestly, well, how much time can you commit to fitness? Honestly, what can you honestly, realistically,
long-term basis commit to exercise?
And then what I'm gonna do is I'm going to construct
a routine around the time you know you have,
and we're gonna make it as effective as possible.
And it's going to be valuable because it's more
than what you're doing now.
And I'm gonna make it as valuable as possible
because I know what I'm doing. So much more successful because then people would say to
me, I only have an hour a week, 30 minutes, twice a week or whatever. Then I would design a routine
around that. And what would end up happening is they'd be more consistent because it was realistic.
They would definitely see results because I did make an effective work. It was much more than they
were doing before. And then inevitably they'd see results
and without me saying anything,
they'd come up and to me later on,
and be like,
it's how I think I'm ready to work out more.
I'd like to dedicate more time to exercise.
It was just way more effective.
Yeah, that was always a tough thing coming in
because one of those things where you wanna just take them
on this path that's perfect for them.
You want to describe why they need to do all these things and get on board and you're super
motivated for them to change.
You have nothing but good intentions as a trainer trying to steer this person into really committing
and getting more commitment out of them instead of understanding where they're at,
where they're coming from,
what's actually something that isn't gonna be
like a drastic change.
So something that's a drastic change
in the very beginning,
it's just a lot more obstacles in your way
where you could just start there
and really start to build and develop,
more momentum along this path.
For me, it was realizing that I was using guilt
and motivation to get these people to do this.
And that's fleeting.
And for me, I started to piece together
and I've shared that when that kind of a piphany happened for me where it was, I started to piece together. And I've shared that, like, when that kind of,
that epiphany happened for me where I was like, you know,
told that I was, you know, a top performer and trainer.
And I had all these accolades and plaques and trophies
to show for it.
But yet, when I thought of all the people
that I had fundamentally changed their lives long-term,
they're, I could probably count on one or two hands
how many they were, but yet I've trained hundreds of people by that time.
And it's because my approach was all wrong, you know, and I realize that like anything
else, whether it be your learning to play an instrument or learn a new subject or a language
or even setting a goal of, I want to chip away or I want to become a reader.
I wasn't a reader before and now I want to chip away, or I want to become a reader. I wasn't a reader before, and now I want to start reading.
And the idea of you have to do a certain amount of time or commit a certain amount of days
to whatever this new skill or thing you're trying to learn is such a bad approach, because
it's setting yourself up for failure versus trying to make small incremental changes into
your current lifestyle. And by doing that, it turns into long-term behaviors.
And so, yeah, I went from being the trainer who used to,
and I think some of that comes to from a lot of our certifications
and the things that we would read as trainers.
I think most all sorts and people that would speak on,
oh, they say that the average person,
if they just worked out three hours a week,
that's plenty to get them in shape.
So that was kind of like that hard number
that I think that was stuck in every trainer's head.
That, you know, as long as you train a good three hours
of intense training a week,
you could pretty much do anything of your body.
So the way I looked at it was,
I got to convince everybody to at least do that.
And it was just, it's a terrible approach.
And you're also blinded by being a trainer
who this is your life.
You know, this is your livelihood.
This is what you love to do, your passion about doing.
And it took me a long time to see it from their perspective.
Somebody who doesn't give a shit about working out.
In fact, it doesn't like it or dreads it or is only there because their doctor is told them to and they have many other
passions in their life that take up a majority of their calendar. And here I'm trying to convince them that, you know, you need to make my passion your priority. If you really want to change and I think that's just a horrible throw. It was similar when people would tell me that,
you know, part of their activity was walking.
Oh, I go on walks, you know, for 30 minutes.
I'd be like, ah, walking, that's not exercise.
Like, you gotta push yourself.
Now, here's the irony.
Objectively speaking, you could get phenomenal results.
You could get great fitness and health
by incorporating things like walking
and effective 30 minute workouts.
Now for the average person, you can actually go very, very far. You know, Doug was my client for
a long time. I trained Doug probably for a year, a full year, two days a week. It was two workouts
a week, two full body workouts a week. We got him to deadlift more than twice his body weight.
I think it was like two and a half times his body weight.
He built tremendous amounts of muscle.
And that's, I'm using Doug as an example
because if you're a long time listener
and you're our producer, so you're familiar with Doug.
But I've done that with lots of clients.
So not only is it a poor strategy
to get people to be long-term consistent,
the truth is that if you're not doing much now, and especially
if you're designing Constructor Good Workout, a little bit of time can make a pretty significant
difference.
Now, you're not going to be a high-level bodybuilder, you're not going to be a competitive athlete
training with not a lot of time, but you will be fit, healthy, you will be building considerably more muscle
than you have now.
And as far as body fat loss is concerned, paired with good diet, you can get very, very,
very far.
And so what I want to do is I want to put together for people three effective 30 minute workouts
and three different types of effective 30 minute workouts and three different types of Effective 30 minute workouts because as I was as I'm thinking about this. I'm thinking okay
What we can probably do is put together a good muscle building and strength building 30 minute workout
but I also would like to
You know construct an effective
30 minute hit type workout where you get your conditioning and lots of calorie
burn.
And then I'd also like to put together a good 30 minute mobility type routine, something
that's going to work on range of motion, injury prevention and all that kind of stuff.
And the truth is all of them have value, but you're going to have three different options.
And all of those, if you do them properly,
can give you significant results.
So let's start with the muscle building
and strength building, you know, 30 minute workout.
Now, the first key to that is choosing the right exercises.
If you're only going to lift for strength for 30 minutes,
the last thing you wanna do is to go into a gym
and pick three, four,
five machines that you're going to hop on. The benefit that you're going to get in comparison to
big compound lifts is minimal. So, and that's the real key about if you're going to reduce the time
that you're inside a gym. You can get away with four or five machine exercises if you're gonna reduce the time that you're inside a gym, that you can get away with four or five machine exercises
if you're spending an hour in there
and you still incorporate four or five big lifts in there.
Because, and mainly because you did the biggest bang
for your buck in those lifts.
So if I'm only working with 25 or 30 minutes,
much of like what the workout looked like for me today,
I'm just gonna pick three to five tops, big lifts that are gonna move us.
Yeah, the biggest bang for my butt.
Absolutely, because what you want, remember,
this first workout, this first 30 minute workout,
the goal is muscle and strength.
So what we wanna do is we wanna pick the most effective
muscle and strength building exercises.
We don't have a lot of time,
so we don't wanna throw in things that are less effective.
We have a million exercises to pick from.
Let's pick the top three or four most effective muscle building exercises.
Now, why is this important, by the way?
Well, building muscle, first of all, looks good.
Obviously, if you have more muscle on your body, you're looking to look more sculpted and
shaped and firm and toned and all that stuff, but it also speeds up your metabolism.
So if your goal is fat loss, building muscle and strength gives you more fat burning machinery,
meaning you burn more calories even at rest.
You have a higher automatic calorie burn, which especially if your time is limited, because
here's the deal.
Most people listening who have limited time, it's not because they're being active all day.
They're limited time with inactive types of activities.
Modern life is sitting, it's a lot of sitting.
I work at the computer at my age.
Yeah, exactly, you're busy, but you're not like,
it's not like you're outside gardening and digging holes
and building houses.
I mean, maybe you do that, but most people aren't.
Most people are busy, but sedentary.
So building muscle and strength is beneficial
because now you have a faster metabolism,
makes leaner, easier for you.
And of course, for those of us who understand
that muscle gives us good structure,
it gives us good shape, it makes us look better,
feel better, it prevents injury,
balances out hormones.
Strength is the foundation because it provides more abilities.
And the more abilities you have that as a byproduct you move more.
You're more active.
You're more able to do all these different things.
And the thing is it's an energy.
Like you get more energy.
So if you've ever noticed like the less you move and the more you sit,
you're more likely to not want to get up and move around and do things.
So it's just, it's part of the whole process of trying to create a new lifestyle by establishing
this foundational strength first.
Right.
So building strength consists of doing straight sets with rest periods in between the
sets.
So you have to rest in between sets, not because you need it.
And this is important to communicate because oftentimes clients would be like, I can go again, you know, I can go again.
You want to rest because we're training an energy pathway that leads towards muscle and
strength.
If we don't rest, then we're building more stamina and endurance, which is okay, that's
fine, but it's not muscle and strength anymore.
So what you're doing are sets of six to 12 reps.
You're doing them controlled.
You're focusing on form.
After you're done with the set, you rest
for anywhere between one to three minutes.
Then you repeat it again.
You're probably doing anywhere between two to five sets
of an exercise and then you move to the next one.
Okay, so let's pick the first exercise.
I think I can make a really strong argument
for the barbell squat.
I think the barbell squat is one of the most foundational
movements.
It builds overall good strength.
It's a lower body exercise, but it also involves the upper body.
I can't think of any three other lower body exercises combined that would
beat the squat in terms of just general muscle and strength building. Studies, by the way, on exercises
prove this. When they do studies, they actually show muscle protein synthesis levels. This is a
signal that we can measure that shows muscle building. Squats spikes this higher than any other exercise.
They've also, when men tested things like testosterone spikes, you tend to get a spike in
testosterone. Men do, at least, after they follow a good strength training routine, barbell
squats causes the highest spike. In women, you see that with growth hormone. It just is
extremely effective. And so, my opinion, of course, I'm speaking generally, but for most people, barbell squats
has to be one of the three or four exercises.
And it's emulating a primal movement pattern.
So something that we all should have the ability to do this.
And not only that, it will actually relieve all of that excess tension that could lead
to back pain down the road, where, you know, if you're not able to squat,
you know, your back is going to take on a lot of the brunt of the force and anytime you pick something up,
it's going to be compromised. Your hips, your glutes, like everything around center around your hips is very important to have that kind of strength
in order to contribute to, you contribute to the overall strong body.
Well, if I'm only working out for 25 to 30 minutes too,
and I have to pick three to five exercises,
I'm also going to consider too
how many muscles are being activated
in an exercise like a squat.
Totally.
Because someone listening might be like,
well, what about the hex squad or the leg press?
Leg press is a great exercise too.
And that's training your legs, legs, legs, squats.
But when you do squats, my back gives pumped,
my shoulders gets pumped, my forearms,
get pumped, my core gets activated.
I feel all the way down into my calves.
So much has been your entire posterior chain,
plus your quads, everything is getting worked.
So I want to do a movement that is as little isolating
as possible because I only have so many exercises
in so much time.
So doing the biggest bang freebug.
And then you have to also take into consideration
the benefits that you get for the central nervous system too.
I mean, the adaptation that you get from that
from squats versus a leg press or a leg extension or a machine exercise is
Also something that is is compounding and makes it even more beneficial 100%
So that's got to be one of the number one exercises that we can talk about so the next movement that I would say
Belongs in in this particular 30 minute workout,
a barbell or a dumbbell row.
Rowing, if you're gonna do a back exercise
and you can only pick one, I like rowing more than I like pull-ups.
But now pull-ups are phenomenal, by the way.
Love pull-ups, I love pull-downs, I think they're great.
But a row tends to work the back in ways
that people need more than a pull-up
or a pull-down.
Most people have forward shoulder.
They've got weak mid-backs, causing neck tension and shoulder problems and all that stuff.
Rows tend to work.
They work the whole back, muscular chair.
You still get a lot of activation, but doing them properly, you're also getting the shoulder
to come back.
It's great.
If you do it right, it's a great posture exercise.
Now, it's a compound movement just like the barbell squad is.
So you're getting a great deal of biceps and forearms
in that particular movement.
You get really, really strong at a row.
It's like you're doing curls and a back exercise together.
That's one of my other favorite exercises.
Yeah, the only reason why I wouldn't argue with you
about a pull-up is just because when I think about
the majority, the majority of people cannot do
five to 10 strict pull-ups.
That's true.
With really good mechanics, so get the most from that.
So, or I would argue with you that I think
the pull-up could be right there.
So, you know, if you're listening and you're somebody
who can do good, really good pull-ups and you can get five to 10 control pull-up could be right there. So, you know, if you're listening and you're somebody who can do good, really good pull-ups
and you can get five to 10 control pull-ups,
then there's a decent case for doing that
in replace of the rows.
But if not, absolutely, I think a barbell row
has gotta be under.
Yeah, I like it for the fact that you mentioned
in terms of addressing up across syndrome
or where your shoulders are coming forward.
And there's just certain things that in your training program,
you want to make sure that it does combat everyday patterns
that could lead towards repetitive injuries,
the repetitive use injuries.
So what you do the most could then place your body
in a position where it doesn't benefit you anymore.
You end up getting pain, you get cheering, your joints aren't functioning the way they
should anymore because it's out of its track.
So it's definitely good for one of those to reinforce those stabilizing muscles to keep
your shoulders where they need to be.
I've just seen, I've also seen people who have such bad forward shoulder and they can
do pull-ups, but the pull-ups actually make the forward shoulder worse.
Right, yeah, yeah.
And then they roll the shoulders forward.
Yeah, so barbell or dumbbell row has got to be up there.
The next movement, you could either pick a bench press or an incline barbell press.
It works the pressing muscles of the body, it works the chest, the triceps,
it works the front part of the shoulders, done properly either an incline
or a barbell press is just a general good upper body exercise. It's one of the best exercises.
And again, if we're looking at developing a balanced body with just one strength building work out,
I think some kind of a horizontal press needs to be there. And I don't know,
do you guys, what do you guys think about that?
Yeah, no, I definitely think that.
And I like the incline press mainly
because it places you in a good position.
So the more you learn about some of these compound lifts,
like there's a lot of skill involved.
And so there is a learning element to these things.
If you're not familiar with these lifts,
the technique is gonna play a big factor in this.
And so the thing I like about the incline bench
is it just helps you to already place your shoulder blades
in position where it's bracing.
And that way you're not like over,
over putting too much demand on your shoulders,
which then could lead towards problems.
So if you're building this with the intention
that you're eventually gonna get to overhead press, then I'm fine and good with the chest press. But it really
depends on your time frame right now, right? If you are doing two to three sets of the
movements that we just said, we might be getting close to the 25 minute mark right now.
And so I'm either going to do an overhead press in replace of the incline press, or I'm either going to do an overhead press in replace of the incline press or I'm going to do both if I can.
If I can do both, I think that's a perfect world.
That's ideal what I would do.
I would do like a flat or incline press and you're right just in the incline press is actually easier to teach.
It's harder to have good form with the bench press, believe it or not, than it is with an incline press.
So the fourth exercise would be an overhead press.
Now I personally, I can do two to three sets
of all those exercises, do one to one and a half minute rest
in between them, and that's four exercises,
and I can do that in 30 minutes.
I could totally do that in 30 minutes
with that type of a rest.
Overhead press belongs in this routine,
and you make a good point at them.
If you're running out of time,
then you could pick either an incline press
or an overhead press.
Yeah, either or.
Standing overhead press is a phenomenal
total body exercise.
I mean, you're getting upper back activation
to stabilize, you're pressing your core staying active,
you're getting triceps involved.
So that's gotta be up there as well.
And there you go.
There's your three to four strength building exercises,
two to four sets each, one minute to two minute resting
between, and you're doing six to 12 reps, and that is an excellent short muscle and strength
building.
And if you do that two to three times a week, you'll build a hell of a physique.
Oh yeah, you're doing good.
You'll get strong.
You're doing really good.
You'll get real strong doing that.
You are.
Okay, so the next one would be a hit type workout.
Now, the goal with hit type training is
burning a lot of calories in a short period of time
and some conditioning.
Hit training builds strength stamina,
it builds conditioning.
Muscle endurance.
Muscle endurance.
Hit training when you do it properly minimizes
the potential muscle loss you can get
from doing lots of stamina type training.
If you were gonna do 30 minutes of just
straight cardio, you would burn a lot of calories also, but you also run the risk of
having your body try to become more efficient by reducing muscle. This is why lots of cardio can start to cause
metabolism slow down or cause muscle loss in a lot of people. Hit training done properly,
you know, and negates that quite a bit. It can actually prevent the muscle loss and you get really good
short-term fat loss type of an effect. Now, the way that I think, you know, that you should
do hit training, kind of the same way we designed Maps Hit, you know, if you're the owner of Maps
Hit, you know exactly what I'm talking about, we, I don't think hit training is done best
on a piece of cardio. I think it's done best with weights. I think you about, I don't think hit training is done best on a piece of cardio.
I think it's done best with weights.
I think you're gonna do great if you pick three to four exercises
that you do one after another,
not necessarily immediately one after another,
but you're going from one, allowing yourself to reset,
get steady, and then do the next one.
And the goal is to have perfect form the entire time.
When you switch exercises is when your form
starts to break down, not when you can't breathe
anymore and you're about to die.
So you wanna pick, you know, maybe three or four
balanced exercises.
Now, some of the ones that I like is,
I'll put it generally out there,
I'll say pick a leg exercise of pushing
and a pulling movement,
and then maybe something rotational for the fourth one.
So literally you could do something like a back step lunge to a push up, to a body
row, maybe to a cable chop, and you've got your whole body kind of covered.
And now that this hit workout is actually going to be less than 30 minutes.
Most of you will complete three to four rounds in about 15 to 20 minutes.
And again, though, really focus on perfect form
when your form breaks down.
That's when you switch to the next exercise.
Now, there's got to be a lot of people that are wondering
why not do the four exercises
that we just listed for strain training in a hit routine.
You can.
You absolutely can do those.
Now here's what I'm trying to do.
What I'm trying to do is I'm trying to imagine
someone is gonna do both of these workouts.
They have two 30 minute workouts.
I'm offering them a little bit of variety.
Also, the exercises are important that you pick for hit,
but they're important so pick good ones,
but when you're trying to train for muscle and strength,
you wanna pick muscle and strength building exercise. Well, yeah, will pick good ones, but when you're trying to train for muscle and strength, you want to pick muscle and strength building exercise.
Well, yeah, and the case that,
or what I was alluding to there is that,
you have to be careful of if you were to choose to do
the first exercises that we talked about in a hit sequence,
is those are all high skill movements.
And so, it's challenging to do.
You know, if you're doing a squat and you're
doing it in a circuit where, you know, you've got weight on your back, the risk that you
potentially could form be off while you're loaded in your back is a little higher or much
higher than doing a back step lunge, you know, or walking lunches. So that's something to consider.
If you are going to run, you know,
a hit type of routine as, as beneficials,
all those strength exercises we talk about,
I would be careful on how many of those compound lifts
that I'm pairing next to,
because then you start to get like the problems
that we don't like about CrossFit.
I mean, that's one of the things
that we don't care about the programming with CrossFit, that's one of the things that we don't care
about the programming with CrossFit is that,
they throw all these compound lifts.
Super high skill lifts during high intensity
and endurance training.
And so, I wouldn't want a client doing
more than one major compound lift in a series
of a circuit like that.
So yeah, you definitely don't want to throw
intention out the window.
I mean, this is one of those things
where it's a different method, different modality,
but it still has, you know, it's required.
It's very technical, like if you're going through this,
especially if you're going through this
with maximal effort or you're putting a lot of,
you know, extra effort into this,
where your body's going to start
to get fatigued, your form's going to inevitably break down.
And you can't think about just getting through the reps, which is a flaw, it happens all
the time because the momentum of these type of workouts, it promotes you to really try
to push yourself further through all these and just try to make it through the workout versus really
paying attention to each individual exercise making sure the form and everything is correct.
Right.
The difference would be like if you watch how a lot of people do a hit workout, it looks
like they're just trying to do as many as they can.
It's like, oh a bunch of pushups, a bunch of burpees, a bunch of pull ups and it looks
like they're just trying to get through and trying to get as many reps as possible.
That's not the effective way to do hit.
The most effective way to do hit looks like
a strength training routine with little to no rest.
What I mean by that is your pushups are controlled,
slow, perfect.
Your body rows, controlled, slow, perfect, squeeze,
extension, your lunges, slow, control, perfect.
Once your form starts to deviate, once you notice your hips
are sagging on your pushups or your body rows,
you're starting to jerk your body up
or you're doing these lunges
and you're not going down as low
or you're gotten real wobbly.
That's how you know it's time to switch the next exercise
because remember what you train, you strengthen.
And if you're training bad form and bad technique,
that's what you're gonna get good at and that's what your
body is gonna move towards. So if you train your hit that way you are asking for ineffective workout that is very very
injury prone. So it's gotta be perfect form. You aren't going immediately from one exercise to another. There is a
short rest because what you're doing is just getting yourself set up for good form again.
But you are pushing your stamina more than what
the traditional strength is.
Yeah, your heart rate is still racing,
but your composure is what you want to pay attention to,
gathering that composure again going back into
another exercise.
So you know that you can withstand all those factors
against you in order to perform a good exercise.
Totally.
Now, the third workout, I'd like to make mobility focus,
because we're talking about strength and muscle,
we're talking about calorie burn and conditioning.
Mobility has to be up there, okay?
Because poor mobility reduces your ability
to build muscle and strength,
just because you're not moving optimally.
Your body eventually plateaus with strength and muscle
because it's going to naturally try to limit you
to prevent injury, or you push yourself past that point in which case you hurt
yourself.
It also increases range of motion that you have control over, which makes all things more
effective.
And it's also, if you do it right, improves the longevity of your body, meaning that you
can continue to work out more and more.
Mobility done properly improves your ability to adapt in different ways.
It improves your ability to get endurance, improves your ability to build strength, it improves
your ability to look better, and then of course the obvious it prevents your risk of
injury.
Now, the first mobility movement, we'll start from the top, the upper body.
I love the, and there's two that I'll pick either handcuffs with rotation or the wall test that we have an assessment in maps prime.
I think that's phenomenal to work the upper shoulder, upper back area, the thoracic area, good control stability, really giving you good, controlled range of motion in the upper body. Remember when you're working through
mobility, it's not a stretch. So the idea isn't to get into a position, just kind of let
me sit here, let the muscle stretch and loosen up. You have to be tensing in the position.
You have to connect to your muscles in these positions. Otherwise, what you'll end up with
is a greater range of motion that you don't have control over. So you'll be looser, but you're not stronger,
which means you have an increased risk of injury.
So what you wanna do is have a greater range of motion
that you connect to.
And the only way to do that is to challenge a range of motion
and then tense up all the surrounding muscles
in that new range of motion,
meaning you tense up the muscles that are stretching,
you tense up the muscles that are contracting,
all of the muscles around it,
and that gives you that improved mobility.
I like the windmill. Since we mentioned all these compound lifts and your body working in unison,
it's really important that you have proper support and stability and all these muscles to be involved.
And so to add in an element of rotation that's going, especially
in your thoracic rotation, something that's going to keep you in your spine healthy, to
be able to do a windmill is definitely one of those items, mobility exercise. I have to
incorporate with any type of training like that.
Well, when we did, and if you're listening and you haven't signed up for the maps prime pro webinar
That I did you you have to it's free and if you're if you would like to see how to put a a routine together that addresses
Everything that we're talking about right now. That's exactly how I designed that and that's just one example right that the program
Maps prime pro has over 50 exercises
And that's just one example, right? The program Maps Prime Pro has over 50 exercises,
but I narrowed it down to five moves
that I think address all the things that you just said.
I mean, you started off-soul with the zone one,
so we're looking at upper cross syndrome,
a mobility type of exercise of drill there.
Justin, you mentioned windmill for, you know,
thoracic mobility and rotation, right?
For me, that was the thread
the needle. Like, I love thread the needle for that. It's an easier movement to teach
people to gain more access and rotation. But that, when that was created, that was the
idea was to give somebody movements that kind of address from all the way from head to toe,
all these different mobility exercises. you're right so it's
That you I could always tell the people that went through it the right way
I got tons of messages Adam. Is it normal that I'm sore?
You know why I'm so yeah, you woke up muscles that you hadn't done and you probably haven't
trained isometrics forever if you've never trained isometrics and then you do a good mobility routine
You'll get so it'll build muscle. That's right. That's right. When you push your body
into a different range of motion, at first you'll find it's hard to connect to
that new range of motion. Like if you're stretching your hamstrings, put yourself
on a really deep stretch, now try to activate them. It's almost like you just
don't have, it doesn't exist, it feels like. So you have to create intention. So
tend, it's like tensing up your muscles
and maintaining that tension throughout the movement.
That's what makes it mobility
and that's what doesn't make it just a static stretch.
Now the third movement, 90, 90, 90 works the hips,
it works internal external rotation,
meaning your hips ability is to turn your leg out,
turn your leg in, It helps stabilize your hips.
I love that movement.
So that's gotta be the third movement
that I'll put on this mobility day.
And then if I was gonna add a fourth one,
it would be combat stretch,
just to work on ankle mobility,
which I think a lot of people just have never known
to even work on myself included.
This wasn't something I worked on ever.
Because I didn't even know it was a thing
until, believe it or not, until like five years ago.
Well, most people are wearing really padded shoes
and you're wearing these shoes that lift up your heel
quite a bit throughout the day.
You don't even realize how much of a loss of connection
you have with your ankle supporting your body.
And so taking the shoe element away,
it really reveals a lack of an restriction there.
So that's definitely one of those exercises
that addresses that problem specifically.
Right, now when you go through these movements
from mobility, they look kind of like
your strength training workouts.
So what I mean by that is you're doing reps.
You're going into a position, you're tensing,
you're holding, you're squeezing, you're holding, and then you lay off and take a break, and then you do it again. You're going through
tensing, tightening, challenging ranges of motion, and then you take a break, rest a little bit,
and then get back into it. The reason why you're doing that is because what you're trying to do is
you're trying to, just like the strength training workout, you're trying to build strength, but you're
trying to build strength in new ranges of motion by connecting to new ranges of motion.
So what you're not doing is doing mobility movements where you're like going into the mobility
coming out.
I've seen people do this, right?
They'll do like, you know, go in, go out, go in, go out, or, you know, another one is
they go in and then let it stretch and be like, oh, that I can really feel that stretch.
No, no, no, no.
You're going in with intention, tension, holding, squeezing, five to 10 seconds,
and that deep range of motion, connect, connect, connect,
and then come out, take a few breaths,
maybe rest 15, 20, 30 seconds, maybe even a minute,
and then go into it again.
And you're doing both of that?
That's what.
Oh yeah, I mean, it's a pretty intense exercise
if you allow yourself to really get involved
and squeeze and tense your muscles properly.
Well, and the reason why this is so important is because everybody's body will have a default
end range of motion, right?
So you go do like a lizard with rotation or like the internal rotation of the 90, 90,
and everybody will be able to move somewhat, right? How far depends on your flexibility and mobility, but everybody will be able to move somewhat, right? Well, how far depends on your flexibility and mobility, but everybody will be able to
move and mimic somewhat the movement.
But you're not really doing anything if you just go to that end range and then come back
out, go to the end range and come back out.
We're trying to find a new range of motion.
And so it requires that when you get to the end range that connecting and
trying to drive into it more, that's what's going to get you a greater range of motion.
And that's where we're improving our mobility and connection. So it's the number one thing
that I see wrong with people that are trying to emulate these exercises. They watch a YouTube
video, and then I see them, you know, in the gym going through the movements.
And if you just look at the movements and you try and mimic it and you're not doing it with
the right intent, it really does defeat the purpose of the exercise. Totally. So there you have it.
You've got three, 30 minute or less workouts. They're well put together. We program them ourselves.
The first one focuses on strength, building muscles, We program them ourselves. The first one focuses on strength building muscles, speedy-emothermentableness, the second one focuses on
conditioning calorie burns. So it's a great fat burning type workout. The third one works on mobility
Stabilizing your body giving you better ranges of motion which helps with everything and I am gonna say this if you just do one of them
And you do that one all the time,
it will start to lose its effect.
So if you can only do one, that's okay,
but try to cycle through them.
If you can do all three in a week,
you've got yourself a pretty balanced workout and routine.
Look, we record these podcasts on video as well as audio.
So if you're listening to us in your ears
and you wanna see what we look like,
go to Mind Pumpump Podcast on YouTube.
Can check it out.
One thing we do on there too is we break up some of our episodes into the question and
answer portion.
So if you just want to learn a specific question or learn the answer to that question, go
on there, we post the question, and you can get the answer.
Again, that's MindPump Podcast.
You can also find the three of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at MindPump Justin, me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body,
dramatically improve your health and energy,
and maximize your overall performance,
check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media.com.
The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad,
maps for performance, and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbumble is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers,
but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee,
and you can get it now,
plus other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love
by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes
and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.