Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1322: What’s Your Real Muscle Building Potential? (And how to get there...)
Episode Date: June 25, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss how to determine your true muscle building potential and how to get there. Are the guys hitting their true muscle-building potential? (2:47) Why it’s imp...ortant to consider what your potential could be? (8:25) Bodybuilders vs sheer muscle size. (15:30) The two factors that influence your muscle-building potential. (19:06) #1 - Genetics. (19:20) Muscle belly length. (19:52) Bone structure. (23:15) Muscle fiber type. (24:14) Hormones/Metabolism. (28:10) Gigantism. (31:27) Myostatin. (32:06) The central nervous system (CNS). (34:07) #2 - Lifestyle. (38:17) Training. (38:30) Diet. (44:25) Sleep. (48:47) Consistency. (53:56) Stress. (55:11) What should you focus all of your energy on? (56:14) Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off! **Promo code “HIIT50” at checkout** Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Muscle Potential Calculator - Mind Pump Media Maximum Muscular Bodyweight and Measurements Calculator by Casey Butt. A Mutation in the Myostatin Gene Increases Muscle Mass and Enhances Racing Performance in Heterozygote Dogs How Your Genetics Influence Your Muscle Building Potential – Mind Pump Blog The Most Overlooked Muscle Building Principle – Mind Pump Blog MAPS Fitness Products The Other Best Muscle Building Exercises of All Time – Mind Pump Blog How to Manipulate Macros for Building Muscle – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, 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 muscle building potential.
So, like, what is your actual potential,
both from your genetics and from your lifestyle?
Now, why is this important to know?
Well, maybe you want to build as much strength
and muscle as possible.
But what if you don't?
What if you want to build tons of muscle?
Why would you want to know your potential?
Will your potential actually determine,
can even determine how fast you get to your goal,
how fast you can tone and sculpt and shape your body.
So this is a really cool episode.
So we talk about everything from all the genetic factors that determine your muscle building
potential and all the lifestyle factors that can determine your muscle building potential.
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You want to know what I'd learned the most from using this natural muscle building potential calculator that we have now?
Oh, what was what you learned the biggest lesson that I learned at them. Yeah, Justin slacking
Come on just an endug
Not even close to the potential
We're way down. Yeah way to the potential. We've actually, we're weighed down.
Way down our potential.
No, so this is pretty cool.
So we actually have this now on our site.
What's the link for this dog?
How do people get to this, by the way?
It's musclecalculator.com.
It's a musclecalculator.com.
Okay, so there's this calculator
that you enter in your height, your wrist size,
your ankle size, and then your current body fat percentage. And then what it does is it
uses an algorithm based off of what lots of what we can, with the person who developed
this by the way, Casey Butt is his name, no joke, that's his real name, he's a PhD. And
he did a bunch of calculations of natural,
you know, bodybuilders and natural strongmen
from back in the day.
And people that have been lifting for a long time.
Yes, and you use those averages to figure out
what your potential could potentially be
when you enter in these numbers.
Which is really cool because when you were,
when I was a kid, I couldn't imagine the numbers
that it's spitt off, right?
What, I could never be that big.
You think that you can't get that big,
but with training, you know, consistently for a long time,
and properly.
Well, so here's the thing.
So I've been working out for a long time.
I've been doing this, and I mean consistently,
I've been going towards the same goal of building muscle
since I was 14, okay?
And I've already surpassed my peak,
but I know what the biggest, most muscular I've ever reached.
This thing is pretty accurate.
It actually hit me pretty close.
So this says, so I entered in my height in inches,
which is 72 inches, so that's six feet.
My wrist size is 7.75 inches, so almost eight inches.
My ankle size is 9.5, and my current body fat, I guess,
is about 12, which I think I'm around 12 right now.
This says at 12%, that my max potential for size
or weight would be 222 pounds, which is a,
that's pretty damn close to what I've hit,
and it says my arms 18 inches would be my potential.
Four arms 15 inches, my thighs 26 inches.
So I know what my max measurements have been in my life.
I've definitely hit 18 inch arms.
My four arms I've gotten to 14 and three quarters.
My thighs I've actually gotten to 27 inches.
So I've actually surpassed what this said.
So this is pretty darn accurate.
It's pretty interesting, right?
No, it's really interesting.
Yeah, but like 20 inch biceps, I'm like,
that's what it says for you.
Let's just, because your,
hey, bro, I've gotten up to like 17 and a half, maybe 18.
You never do ours.
I don't do biceps.
Come on, you're, you're, you're, you're,
I'm just like, really?
Well, think about it, you've trained,
you've exercised and trained for a long time,
but your goals have been more performance
than just maximum muscle size.
Right.
So.
We'll let him down nicely.
So, I mean, this is what it said.
You've been trying real hard.
Dugs over there are like depressed as well.
You're not actualizing anything, actually.
Well, what it says, because Justin's wrist,
remember mine was 17.75 inches.
Justin's wrist was 9.5 inches.
Holy, can we talk about that for a second? And his ankle, Justin's wrist was 9.5 inches.
Yeah, can we talk about that for a minute?
And his ankle, it's all about frequency.
Oh, my ankle and your ankle are the same size.
Wow, that makes me really sad about my calves.
Yeah, but this says that your max potential
is like huge, dude.
Well, you know, that's a good point
that you just brought up there right there
when you teasing yourself about calves,
because now this gives you a good generic idea
of about what you can get.
But there are other factors, right?
There's lifestyle and genetic factors that play a massive role here.
So I'll give you an example of something that's similar to this, right?
So body fat tested.
So if you've ever had your body fat percentage tested with calipers, which is the, it's
relatively accurate and it's the most common way to do it.
It's more accurate than electronic impedance.
As long as you get somebody that really knows what they're doing and is consistent with
the way that they apply it.
Yes, and it's more accurate than electronic impedance.
That's the scales that you stand on and it tells you what your body fat percentage is
with the handles that you grab or whatever.
That can change based off of what you ate.
Oh, I could change that in an hour by hydrating or not or whatever. That could change based off of what you ate. Oh, I could change that in an hour by hydrating or not or whatever.
So, calipers relatively accurate, easy to administer.
If you've ever worked with a trainer or gone to a gym or whatever, chances are, if you've
had your body fat tested, you've done it with calipers.
But here's how they did it with calipers.
Because you might ask yourself, how do they know what your percentage is for your whole
body by testing your bicep, your tricep, what they call sub-scapulas behind your kind of near your shoulder blade, and right
above your hip, what they call the super iliac crest.
That's above the pelvis on the side.
You think, how can they come up with a percentage off those measurements?
Well, what they did a long time ago is they took cadavers, no joke, and they tested a bunch
of points on the cadavers with calipers,
then this is for real, they stripped off the body fat
for reals, weighed it, and they found these points
on the body that would give them the most consistent measurements.
So even when you get tested with calipers,
you're still getting an estimate based off of an algorithm,
based off of lots of different people.
Just like this potential to live people.
Right.
But again, individual variances can vary dramatically.
You may just happen to be a person who's got a lean bicep, tricep, shoulder blade and
hip, but still have a lot of body fat in the rest of your body.
And then that algorithm is not going to be super accurate for you.
So, that's an important thing to consider.
But you're right, Adam, there's a lot of things that will determine
what your real muscle building potential is.
Now, why is it important to even consider muscle building potential?
What if you never want to build maximum muscle?
What if you just want to work out to speed up your metabolism
and sculpt your body a little bit? Well, your potential also can help determine how fast you get to
your results. Not just how far you could go, but how fast and how much, how well you
respond. So this is kind of a cool thing to talk about and to talk about all the things
that influence. It's just another tool. Like body fat percentage, like you're bringing
up. I mean, it's just another tool to help you know,
if you're on the right path, right?
Or if you're doing a good job, I mean,
if you've been, if you're muscle building potentials
extremely higher than where you're at,
you've got a lot of room to improve.
You know, now, sure, there's other factors like genetic,
but there's a lot of lifestyle factors.
You know, what you're doing nutritionally
and sleep, all those things that will cover,
those, that, that matters.
And so I like using, I love all these tools.
I think people like to take something like this
and then like to tear it apart and be like,
oh, it could be up to this percentage off,
just like five or a half percentage.
It's just true.
Yeah, and like with all the food calculators
that are out there, like, oh, this is,
this could be all, well, yeah, all of that.
But, man, as a guy who's been lifting for a really long time,
we didn't have any of these tools.
I know.
When we first started, you know, I'm guessing all the time.
I'm just trying to get big.
Yeah, I'm guessing or I'm going and referring back
to a book and writing every track and everything down.
So all of these things just, I think,
for as a coach, for sure.
And even as a person who's maybe not trying to compete,
I think are just great resources for you to know
if you're heading down the right path.
Well, it's the equivalent of this.
It's like you're in a car and you want to drive somewhere
and you're in San Francisco and they say,
you know, and you say, I want to drive to Dallas or whatever.
You have, if you have zero idea of where that is,
it's going to be hard to,
we have to drive around for a while
before you even get close.
Or you can have a general direction
and someone can say to you,
oh, it's southeast, general direction.
These calculators give you that general direction,
but it's not gonna be exact, right?
But you get some direction and you're right, Adam,
we had none of this.
I had none of this growing up.
I had no idea what my potential could even be,
and I even know what determined what my potential was,
especially when I first started.
Especially if your goal is to really get as big as possible
and gain muscle size.
And I know that's not everybody's goal,
but the first thing you think of as a young man is,
well, I can't really get that big
because I'm not gonna be on steroids.
That was one of those things where you just have this mystical idea
of what it provides you and all that as well.
But, you know, it's really kind of understand
your potential naturally where you can,
what you can achieve.
I think that is helpful to kind of stay in it
and really try to maximize what you can do
in your efforts.
Well, potential is interesting because it literally means
what it could be possible.
Okay.
So we all have a potential.
Some of us are potential is much higher than others.
LeBron James has a much higher potential
for to be an excellent basketball player
than the average person.
But that doesn't mean he's gonna hit that potential.
He still has to train, he still has to practice,
he still has to apply a lot of different things
to reach that upper limit of potential.
That's an example of when I think they both cross, right?
When you see these super humans,
whether it be bodybuilding or sports,
is when you see the highest genetic potential matched
with the lifestyle, putting in all the work and effort
to do that.
And then you get this, right?
So, and we see this in bodybuilding.
You know, a lot of times we look at bodybuilders and we try and compare ourselves like, oh, I
want to look like this one day.
And the reality is, you may never, because that person, not only did they have the genetic
potential to build a tunnel muscle, they also put all the work and to do that, the combination
of that is just, it's something that you may never even let it get.
Totally.
There's also a room on,
I also really like this
because I get a lot of,
probably more so than you guys
because I openly talk about using steroids on the show.
I get a lot of young guys like in their 20s
that are considering doing this
and they always ask me,
what do you think should I do this?
Should I not do this?
And you know, first of all,
I don't encourage anybody too. But if, what do you think, should I do this, should I not do this? And first of all, I don't encourage anybody too.
But if you're like, I wanna get into bodybuilding,
I definitely wanna do this stuff,
and I'm okay with doing something that,
how would you start?
I said, well, I tell all of them the same thing.
Personally, if I could go back and do everything
all over again, and I had tools like this,
I would go after my potential naturally first,
and then after that, that is when
I would consider something if I was really serious about bodybuilding.
Yes.
Now, why is that important?
Because you have to figure everything out before you throw one factor.
Dial it all in.
Right, because that's one factor.
Anabolic hormones are a hormone factor, but there's a lot of other factors.
Why would you throw that on in the mix when you
haven't figured out all the other stuff? Once you figure out all the other stuff out, then you
could throw that on and then watch what happens. But why is this potential, muscle potential, even
important to the person? Maybe we have a female listener who's listening right now, I was like,
I don't want to maximize my muscle size. Although, although I'll make the argument that most women
could naturally maximize
their muscle growth and none of them,
very, very, very few of them would look anything
like a bodybuilder.
If anything, they would look extremely sculpted,
tight and have very fast metabolism as a result.
Nonetheless, I'm sure somebody lists things like,
I don't want to maximize my max potential for muscle.
Why should I even consider this?
Because understanding how to maximize your potential just gets you there faster?
Whatever your goal is you'll get there fast.
I mean I disagree with that too. I think even even the female client who doesn't even think about muscle just wants to lose body fat
And she's you know 45 years old three kids doesn't give a shit about anything
I would still encourage this because first of all, it's extremely hard, it's not easy. So no matter what we're talking about, male or female,
to reach your max potential of muscle
without any sort of drugs is extremely,
you'll spend years chasing this stuff.
This is not like a, oh, I know what it is,
I'm gonna follow the next maps program
and I should get to that.
Like no, this is gonna take a very, very long time
and hanging on to as much muscle as possible is really difficult.
So I would always encourage my female clients
to let's try and build as much muscle as you possibly can.
And then you let me know.
You let me know when that you wake up one day
and you think you don't like the way you-
Never happens.
Never happens.
No, never happens.
What does that say?
What does that say?
What does that say?
What does that say?
What does that say? I mean, you can eat more. There's just so many benefits to it.
I think that it just doesn't get advertised enough.
Like what it does to really pursue building muscle
for women, I think it's awesome.
Yeah, what's that saying?
Shoot for the stars.
And then if you don't hit the stars,
you at least hit the moon or something like that.
Right, so that's, and again, you get the faster metabolism.
You get the tight sculpted body.
So understanding this is important
because it's gonna get you to your goal faster more effectively.
So it is an important conversation.
There's one more point about this also, is that there may be a maximum muscle gain potential,
but that doesn't necessarily mean you're going to look as muscular somebody who has different shape to their body.
So it's an important factor to consider.
A lot of body buildersers are not the most
biggest muscular people on the planet.
You put them next to a strong man competitor
and they're not nearly as big.
Why do bodybuilders look the way they do?
They have a combination of great muscle building genes
with the structure that makes those muscles appear
a certain way.
So I'm gonna go back to this muscle building calculator.
We all dug just in an Adam and I, all entered our information.
The person in this room, the only person in this room
was ever been an IFBB professional competitor is Adam.
His muscle building potential on this calculator
was actually one of the worst ones.
Now it's not because he's not gonna,
he can't build great muscle.
Obviously he was a professional.
He has small joints.
He's got a small wrist and a small ankle,
which can actually be benefit on stage.
It actually can make the muscles appear to look.
Look-look-wise, right?
That's my advantage of the small wrist and the small ankles
and a small waistline too.
Exactly.
Those things, so if I do build some good muscle on there,
it looks exaggerated on stage or in photos.
So the reality is I will never be able to build
or have as much potential as someone like Justin
because of our skeletal structure.
It doesn't mean you can't achieve an amazing look.
And when you think of bodybuilders,
I think of, you know who I think of is Frank Zane, right?
Frank Zane is an example of this,
is somebody who has really small bone structures,
but and if you compare his body to Arnold, Arnold had so much more mass on his body than,
but he's still Frank Zane. Some people didn't say that's their favorite body building because of
the look that they exaggerated really. Absolutely. And then I'm just communicating that because
if you do this and you fill it out and you're like, oh no, you know, you have your own individual
factors. And at the end of the day, you know,
and I used to tell us the female clients all the time,
you know, nobody is gonna be caring
around a scale and weighing you.
You know, I've told a story many times,
I love telling the story because it's so impactful.
But when I would give potential members
a tour of my gym, oftentimes I would talk about this
to, you know, both men and women.
And sometimes the women would respond and say,
oh, no, no, I don't want to build muscle.
I just want to get smaller.
I just want to lose weight.
And so anything that sounds like you're gaining
would freak them out.
And so then I would, on my intercom,
I said this all the time, it was super effective.
I would page one of my female trainers,
you know, attention staff,
Jennifer, please come to Sal's office.
In would walk in my five foot one or five foot two
female trainer, very, very
fit.
Obviously, I've been lifting weights for a long time, very sculpted and lean.
And I would ask the female potential member, I'd say, how much do you think Jennifer
weighs and be honest?
And then, you know, she'd look at the trainer for approval and the trainer, like, hey, I
don't care, be honest.
And they'd say something like, oh, 105 or 95 pounds.
That's okay, that sounds like a good guess.
Let's go way, Jennifer, on the scale,
so we can see how much she weighs.
We'd walk over the scale, 135 pounds or 140 pounds.
And it was a great way to illustrate
how muscle looks on the body.
And I'd say, look, you thought she weighed 105
because she's got a small waist.
She doesn't take up a lot of space.
She's very toned, very sculpted,
but indeed she weighs about 30 pounds heavier than you thought.
Do you know what that means?
That means Jennifer can eat 2700 calories a day
or 2500 calories a day and not gain any body fat.
That's one of the wonderful benefits of building muscle.
That's why it's so important,
especially nowadays when we're just not moving that much.
It's good to have a fast metabolism.
Let's talk about the factors that help determine
your muscle building potential.
And really, I think you can break it down
into two big segments, but these segments
can be broken down into smaller constituents.
The big one is genetic, right?
That's the first one.
There's a lot of genetic factors that determine,
you know, how much muscle you can build.
Now, before we get into that,
I think it's important we explain that
there are things that we know that affect you
in terms of your genetics and muscle building.
There's a lot of stuff we might not know.
This is a complex thing.
You know, we're talking about the human body
and metabolism and stuff like that.
There's parts of it we still don't fully, you know, understand.
Oh, yeah.
It gets really complex.
Right.
So, here's one.
Muscle belly length.
So, what does that mean exactly?
Well, when you look at a muscle, you have, where it attaches, there's two points typically
where they attach, and in the middle of that is the actual muscle belly itself. Sometimes
people have short muscle bellies and long tendons or, you know, long parts of the muscle that don't
have this big bulky muscle point. You see this. I see it a lot in biceps, where, you know, I always
thought it was interesting because my biceps are a little bit longer in terms of like where the
attachments are. And so like when I had flex, it looks totally different than my other friend had almost a little soft
ball that was just straight, it was like a ball versus mine being more spread out.
Right.
A real common one where you can look at his calves.
Oftentimes when you look at athletes or basketball players, for example, you'll see short,
real short naughty calves up kind of high on the
lower leg.
And with other people, Justin's a great example.
He's got very long calves that come all the way down.
Come all the way down.
Now, carrying the cankle.
The longer the belly of the muscle, the more potential there is for size because that's
the part of the muscle that really grows when you lift weights.
It's not the tendon. You do strengthen tendon and stuff like that, but it just doesn't muscle that really grows when you lift weights. It's not the tendon.
You do strengthen tendon and stuff like that,
but it just doesn't, you know, when you lift weights,
you don't get these tendons that just explode with muscle,
it's the belly itself.
So, and you see this with bodybuilders, bodybuilders all have,
especially at the high levels, really long muscle bellies.
You think so? I think you see examples of both,
like what Justin's talking about.
I think it's, there's obviously a little bit of an individual variance in each of your muscles, too.
You might have long belly's one.
Overall, Justin's using, we're using Justin as an example, right?
I think he has a long origin and insertion for his bicep.
He also does for his calves.
He probably has that way pretty much all over his body.
On the opposite, I have more of a shorter origin insertion.
When I do a flex, I have that smaller ball.
Like you say, my calf is up higher,
like more like a basketball player.
So I think when you tend to have shorter origin insertion,
you kind of have it distributed that way.
You got long muscle bellies,
except for your calves, your biceps, your triceps,
your forearms, they're pretty long.
I mean, short muscle bellies, you could develop them, they're just not going to appear to be.
The example, the cool way, or the example to see that, and I disagree with you, is like
Justin said, when you flex your bicep, you can tell, there's a gap between the elbow and
the bicep, where Justin's goes all the way down to like his elbow.
I have a nice gap there, and the same thing goes for where my calf,
when I flex my calf,
you can measure the distance from where my calf is
down to my ankle.
And it's...
He's got longer ones for sure.
Yours aren't short though.
You've got some biceps that you'll see that are.
Guys, this is making me uncomfortable.
Yeah.
Take your shirt off, Justin.
Yeah, no, no, no, no, no.
This is where it's going.
But it does play a role, right?
It also has a belly length.
And that's genetic.
You can't change the length.
You know, I don't care how many preacher curls you do
or how many Pilates classes you do.
You're not gonna turn your muscles into longer muscles.
That's something that is not effective.
That's a good point to bring up too
because you see a lot of this in marketing.
You'll see somebody that has a certain look
and then they'll market that,
oh, to work on the peak of your bicep when, you know, Justin's bicep is never going
to look like that guy's bicep that's trying to advertise that to you. So that's why things
like this are good to know.
Yeah, there are. Bone structure is another one. Bigger bones carry bigger muscles typically.
And this is because that's the anchor point of muscle. And one thing that your
body does is it tries to prevent you from being unstable or hurting yourself. So gaining
a ton of muscle on a small bone structure isn't really something your body is going to
want to necessarily do. People with bigger bones just tend to have more muscle. And you
can see this with really big, you know, giant people.
They've got bigger muscles.
Now how they looked is determined by lots of other factors.
But big bones are just, again, they're just heavy anchors.
It's like towing something with your car.
If your toe hitch becomes, if it's not strong enough to allow you to pull something heavy,
you're not going to be able to do it.
And so big bone structures allow you to build more muscle.
So that's another factor you wanna look at with the...
Yeah, a nice muscle fiber type is the next one.
I immediately think of like a sprinter versus,
you know, a long distance runner
and you can see a clear difference
in terms of like the type of muscle
that dominates their physique.
Yeah, totally.
So muscle fibers, and this is way more complex than this.
We're going to totally simplify this, but you could generally break them up into two types
of muscle fibers.
One is known as the fast twitch muscle fibers.
These burn hot, generate a lot of power, but they burn out quickly.
In other words, they use up the energy very fast. So think of like a
you know a v10
twin turbo or supercharged engine. It's gonna give you a lot of power. It's gonna burn up a lot of gas very quickly
and they fatigue quickly, but they can generate a lot of strength and a lot of power.
Then you have the slow twitch muscle fibers. These are the muscle fibers that are efficient.
They don't generate as much strength in power,
These are the muscle fibers that are efficient. They don't generate as much strength and power,
but they can keep contracting over and over and over again
and they give you endurance.
One of these muscle fibers grows when it's trained and stressed.
The other one doesn't grow that much when it's trained and stressed.
Now a lot of people wonder why?
Why would the one that makes you stronger and give you power?
Why is that the one that's going to build? If I train the slow twitch ones, if I do lots of distance
running and lots of rowing and stuff like that, why don't the slow ones grow too? Because
bigger muscle fibers take up more energy. And when you're telling your body to have endurance,
you're also telling your body to be thrifty
with the energy that it needs advantageous
to carry a lot of mass.
No, there's a reason, look, there's a reason why
a preist doesn't burn much gasoline can last a lot longer.
So when you're stressing your slow twitch muscle fibers,
those muscle fibers get more and more efficient
and they do grow but they don't grow that much,
not like fast twitch muscle fibers,
where a bigger fiber squeezes harder,
it contracts harder, so it's something that builds more.
Now some of this, a lot of this is determined by genetics.
Some of us are born with more fast twitch than slow twitch
and vice versa.
How do you know?
The only way to really know is to have a muscle biopsy,
but you probably figured this out as a kid
Yeah, probably on activities you're drawn towards right like that
That's what I always noticed that some people had a propensity more towards it, you know long distance running jogging like things that were more
You know movement based versus like some people that were more into just lifting heavy things and you know challenging themselves
With their power and strength. Yep. Now believe it not, even though I was a skinny kid and I wanted to build muscle, I was
much better at explosive activities than I was at long distance type stuff.
I could generate force quickly better.
So that's kind of a clue that told me that I had more fast work.
I think it would be a better jumper if that was a case. Yeah.
I didn't say it was good. I said, it was better at that than I was.
I was at the distance. That's the distance stuff. Thanks,
sure. But it's, you know, that's one way you can know. Now, here's something that's interesting.
As we're going through these genetic factors, some of these, your lifestyle isn't going to change much.
Others, your lifestyle can change quite a bit.
So we talked about muscle belly length,
your lifestyle, I'm not gonna really do much to it.
Bone structure, your lifestyle can affect it a little bit.
You can train hard, you can lift weights,
you're gonna thicken and strengthen your bones.
Very little though.
But not a ton, right?
Your genetics largely, I'm not gonna grow my wrist.
Yeah, you will some, right?
But not a ton.
Muscle fiber type, training can actually make a pretty decent change on this.
It'll impact it a little bit.
They've shown studies now show that your slow twitch fibers can start to act more like fast
twitch fibers and vice versa, depending on training.
That's kind of interesting, right?
All of these are not 100%.
I think it's hyperplasia, things like that.
Yeah, muscle, you actually increase the number of muscle fibers
in your body, so you build new ones,
which is kind of interesting.
The next one is your hormones.
Genetics do play a pretty big role in your hormones.
Here's one of the greatest example of this.
Men versus women, okay.
Women typically do not have nearly the amount
of testosterone than men do. Obviously testosterone is the male hormone does testosterone impact your body's ability to build muscle
you know absolutely in fact
That's what anabolic steroids are anabolic steroids are based off of the hormone testosterone women who take
steroids are
essentially telling their bodies that they're becoming
a little bit more male, and that's what ends up happening.
As part of that, they build a little bit muscle along with other side effects.
Can lifestyle affect your hormones?
Absolutely.
It has a huge impact.
We're seeing a huge decline in testosterone levels in men in modern times.
Oftentimes I've seen this myself with clients.
One thing I did later on in my career
is I would have clients test their testosterone levels
and we would test it again six months
or a year later after training.
And I would see significant boosts in testosterone
among my male clients.
And it wasn't out of the ordinary for some of them double.
If I got a guy who came in with relatively low testosterone like 270 or 300, it wasn't out of the ordinary for some of them double. You know, if I got a guy who came in
with relatively low testosterone, like 270 or 300,
it wasn't out of the ordinary to see it jump
in the high 500s or sixes from changing their lifestyle.
Yeah, I've never jumped like I did, you know,
going through puberty.
And after that, like just seeing the amount of muscle
that I put on, doing the same type of workouts
I was doing previously to that.
And it was just the surge of testosterone indifferent to hormones that just all of a sudden
came to be.
And so it definitely, I mean, just going through that, seeing how that affected me was
pretty substantial.
Well, when we talk about hormones, I think about like the other one I think is similar,
which is metabolism.
The two of those I think are something that your lifestyle affects a lot.
And you can change it instant again.
You can see a dip in your hormones or a dip in metabolism, like literally over things that you do within a day or two.
So these are things that even though you have a genetic foundation of like you start off at or in general, where you're at,
but then there is a lot of variance
of that going up or down based off the choices
that we make from eating, sleeping, and other things.
You're right, this is where potential comes into place.
So let's say you're a man and your genetic potential
has you between 500 to 900 with testosterone.
Your lifestyle determines where you land. Your lifestyle is gonna determine you between 500 to 900 with testosterone.
Your lifestyle determines where you land. Your lifestyle's gonna determine if you're
at the low end of your potential or at the high end.
Now, some of us have a potential with all of our hormones
and some of us are more resilient with all hormones.
I don't know where my potential was for testosterone,
but typically when I tested it, it's pretty good.
But I also have a lifestyle that feeds
higher testosterone levels.
You talk to a guy with low testosterone
or someone who suffers from it,
and you ask them the difference that they feel,
Adam, how different did it feel
when you went off at a ball,
and your testosterone got real low at night
and day different.
Yeah, total, right?
So that's also highly influenced by genetics,
but also by lifestyle.
Here's a good example of that. People who suffer from gigantism. I don't remember what the
official term was for that. Yeah, it was like a pituitary gland, like a tumor or something
that they were born with. Tony Robins, right? He has some of that under the tonic.
Under a giant. Yeah, there's just examples of that of that. Usually it's around the pituitary gland
if I'm not mistaken.
Acromalia, I don't know how to pronounce it,
but yeah, and they'll have a tumor
that'll grow on their pituitary.
So that they're just squirting out growth hormone
like crazy.
And they're just like, grow, grow.
Yeah, seven foot five or whatever.
I know under the giant's parents weren't even big.
They weren't even that big, you know,
and he was just such a monster.
Yeah. There's something even that big, you know, and he was just such a monster. Yeah.
There's something else that we've identified
relatively recently, which is myostatin.
Now, it's probably influenced by genetics,
but also lifestyle.
And they discovered this factor,
and it's probably more powerful than your hormones are
in terms of seeing how much muscle you can grow.
They've done, if you look this up online,
if you Google Myostatin, that's M-Y-O-S-T-A.
Myostatin Pitbull.
T-I-N, or Myostatin Dog, or Myostatin Mouse, or whatever.
Bull.
Yeah, or Bull.
They'll do these studies, they'll take a mouse,
and then they'll take one, and they'll inhibit Myostatin,
which is essentially like the brakes on your body's ability to build muscle.
And the difference between these two animals is like, it's like one is a cartoon body
builder.
It's insane.
Didn't you, it didn't you long time ago on my pump like when we first started theorize
that that would be the next like breakthrough that we would make.
Right.
Oh, they're working on it.
It's steroids.
Yeah, that was the next one.
They're working on manipulating myostatin and what that'll do.
And what's crazy about that is with these animals,
when you give animals hormones, they'll gain some muscle,
but if you, they have to train and do activity
to really see what happens with the myostatin,
they just leave them, they give,
like they mess with the myostatin of one mouse
and then the other one, they feed them the same,
they don't move much.
They're not even training, they're just getting jacked.
They just build muscle.
It's really, really crazy.
That's the magic pill.
Yeah, but there's a genetic factor there too.
I've seen articles of children
with this mutated myostatin gene,
and they're like three years old,
looking like little bodybuilders.
I would assume that some of the best athletes in the world
in sports like football and in other strength
in related sports probably have a myostatin gene that helps them build you know this kind
of strength.
I'm sure there's a little bit of that like all these factors like I'm sure like genetically
you have and then again this is where it gets complex because I'm sure there's like parts
of the genes that we haven't really fully dived into yet and saw, like, oh wow, this is contributing to it.
And then your central nervous system
and how that fires muscles, how that produces force,
there's gonna be a genetic component to that as well.
Do you think examples of that?
Like, I think CNS is a really interesting one
to talk about because I think of like,
think of somebody who just like picks up an instrument
and they can just like play right away.
Like I feel like that has a lot to do with CNS.
The ability to...
The brain, yeah.
And the same thing goes for somebody
who can just pick a sport up.
I can watch Justin play a sport a few times.
And then right away I can already start to emulate.
Like the mirror.
Right, really, really well.
I think that's an example of somebody
who has a high potential with CNS
is they have this ability really quick
to get connected and to mimic something else
or something like that.
Wouldn't that be a cool thing?
Oh yeah, well, I mean, I don't know if you guys ever watched the Stan Lee superhero,
like it was a TV show.
They just showed people like that were.
Oh, I did.
It was great.
Yeah, they had, I don't know, some DNA, like some genetic factor where it like made them
have these kind of superpowers.
And one of the guys was like not impressive in terms of physically.
Like he wasn't like this physical specimen or anything,
but he could hold this car while it was like peeling out
like on the bumper and put his feet up against
like one of those cement pylons and just hold the car.
And like he just had some like insane strength
that he could summon through CNS.
And it was just like, I was just like,
my mind was just blown.
And ever since I watched that,
I've watched other examples of people that I,
like physically I'm just not that impressed,
but they're so strong.
Like what is that?
You know, let's look at motor skills in kids.
That's central nervous system.
Right.
You see some children develop amazing.
Now very good balance right
away, hand eye coordination stuff really early. Oh dude, I had a client who, you know, and I got
to, I got to catch up with her actually. I would love to see what this kid's up to now, because it's
a long time ago. So he's got to be in, he's got to be in junior high, maybe at this point, but he was
like three years old, you know, I mean, you know, three years old, right? The kids barely learn how to walk not that long ago.
And you give him a little plastic bat,
and he'd throw the ball up, and every time he'd hit it,
boom, boom, every time you give him a little club,
and he'd hit it perfectly.
He'd throw a baseball perfectly, and I was three years old.
I remember thinking to myself,
like, this kid's gonna be,
I'm gonna attach myself to this kid,
and train him.
But yeah, there's definitely a genetic component there,
but can you train and have a lifestyle
that impacts your central nervous system?
Got you just hit on something that's so true
about you just went over it real quick,
but I think it's an important point.
And we've talked about this before about,
you know, some bodybuilder coaches getting like
all these accolades and stuff for coaching these athletes
to become champions.
And a lot of times these coaches, what some of them get really good at, is seeing this,
is being able to look at somebody and see their genetic potential.
And no, like, man, if I can just tweak a few things, this person's going to be great.
And it's funny, because a lot of times these coaches get a ton of credit for that,
but in reality, they just found somebody who had this great genetic potential,
learned on lockets. So it's not to take credit away from them,
but more of that is that than it is.
And then everybody thinks, oh, if I hire that coach,
I'll look like this or I'll be that great.
And it's not necessarily true.
This coach may have just hit the jackpot
by finding this young athlete,
like you were just alluding to who you can see,
like, okay, he's gonna be special.
And now if I just hit point him in the right direction, he's gonna be special. And now if I just point him in the right direction,
he's gonna be this great person
and we get all kinds of credit.
Oh, totally.
Here's the other thing too.
It's genetics aren't this solid blueprint
that can't be necessarily changed.
Like we used to think,
now we're starting to discover
that epigenetics is a real thing.
This is where your genes can be expressed differently based on your lifestyle.
Environmental fact.
Yeah, I mean, there's actually studies that show that fathers who train and lift weights
and live that kind of lifestyle produce offspring who have genetics that allow them to build
more muscle. More so than if the dad didn't. In other words, they were able to express these
genes differently, and then they produce sperm with different expressions of these genes,
and then they produce children this way.
Muscle sperm.
Yeah, it's pr...
Yeah, calm. Don't look that up.
Yeah.
Now, the next big category is the one that we focus on the most, and we talk about the
most, which is your lifestyle. This has a huge impact on your potential.
The biggest one, the most obvious one, would be training.
That's the stimulus that tells your body that it should build muscle.
You have to remember that your body isn't going to just build tons of muscle and strength
for no reason. It's expensive tissue, it costs a lot of energy.
It's something that it can build and take away.
It's an adaptation process, just like your skin darkening with the sun.
You're not going to have a nice tan typically sitting in your mom's basement.
You have to go out in the sun to elicit that adaptation. Same thing,
or similar thing with building muscle. Training is the biggest factor, but really it's the kind of
training you do, because some of it can build muscle, some of it can cause you to maybe even lose muscle.
So let's talk about that for a second. Some of the training that makes you build muscle, right?
Yeah, it's strength training. That's it. Well, and I think that's, you have to understand that there's,
with all the lifestyle things that we're talking about,
there's a long or a big wide spectrum there too of,
you can train and get some of your muscle building potential
just because you're quote unquote training,
but how well you train really dictates
how close you get to that upper limit.
And like everything else in this lifestyle category
that we're gonna go over is, it's not just simply doing that, you know, like sleep is another one,
not just sleeping is going to get that, but how well or what quality of sleep makes a big difference.
The same thing goes for training. When we're training, you could just, just because you're lifting weights,
doesn't necessarily mean you're going to reach your muscle building potential.
The more effort you put into like training properly or according to your body,
will really dictate the amount of that muscle
that you can build towards your potential.
And your body's gonna form to this environment
you're creating for it to adapt to.
And so that's why you'll see like certain muscle
develops, certain muscles are a little bit underdeveloped.
It's really about like assessing,
you know, where the deficiencies lie,
where you're, you know're maybe a little bit more dominant
in your training style.
So it's like a constant thing that you have to look
and assess and see results in metrics
and see where you stand in terms of all those things.
But also it's about setting yourself up for success.
And this is one part of the whole training process.
I think a lot of people skip over
What what is ideal? What's ideal posture? What's optimal?
Way to kind of set yourself up and stack yourself to be able to move to get your muscles to express themselves
How they need to be expressed the answer the interesting thing to about talking about training and all the things that go under lifestyle is
They all kind of feed and bleed into each other. So you know, you can put a lot of effort into one of them and that could
potentially affect another part of your life. So like for example, if you trained around the clock,
non-stop all the time and neglected sleep, that could potentially hurt you in the opposite
direction just because you're training a lot. So all these categories that we go through right now,
you know, it's really about finding the most optimal balance for you.
Look, there's a lot of notes in a song,
but if you just throw them all together,
you're not gonna have the song, you're not gonna make music.
These, all of these factors that we're talking about
have to work harmoniously together,
just like the example Adam gave,
you know, if your training is taking sleep away from you,
you're not gonna get, you know, gain anything from it.
And then training itself is pretty complex. Like there's some exercises that are excellent
at building muscle and strength. There's other exercises. They're not so good at it. You know,
a barbell squat is way more effective at building muscle than a single leg extension.
A single leg extension works your quads, it's resistance training. You're not going to get
anywhere close to what a barbell squat is going to be able to do.
So if you want to maximize your potential, and again, even if your goal isn't to get
as muscular as you possibly can, even if your goal is just to get to your goal fast and
effectively, pick the most effective stuff to get there.
Otherwise, and by the way, even if you do that, it's going to take you a long time.
So if you want to take a normal long amount of time,
pick the most effective ones.
You wanna add extra time to that.
That's up to you.
Do the least effective stuff.
So pick the most effective exercises
which tend to be compound movements.
They tend to be big,
what are called gross motor movements.
Your dead lifts, your squats, your overhead presses,
your rows, your bench presses, those tend to be
the most effective muscle building exercises.
So do those and focus on those most.
Rep ranges make a big difference as well.
You wanna train somewhere, probably in between the like
four rep and then maybe 25 rep range,
but that doesn't mean you're always doing that.
We talk about this on the show all the time.
Phase your training
Stay in a rep range for a little while get good at it get good at five reps for a little while
Maybe a few weeks then move to a new rep range train that because the stimulus also stops being a stimulus
If you do it too much too often and you never change it eventually it stops your body stops
Responding which is why it's important to train in those different phases.
But which is why all of our programs are phased. You look at all of our maps workouts,
you'll find that they all have two to four phases. And phases just means you're changing your
training enough to spark that stimulus again to maximize those results. You have to also train properly. A properly performed
squat is going to be much more effective at building strength and muscle than an improperly
performed squat. Form is extremely important. So as tempo, there's lots and lots of things
we can do to break down training.
Strengthening end ranges, you know, full range is going to provide that extra stimulus
for your muscle that you're not going to get in the shortened range.
Right.
Right.
And the reason why I'm saying all this is not to confuse you.
It's just to highlight that your best bet is to try to maximize because you're probably
going to fall short of it, but it will get you there better than if you say to yourself,
I don't want to build loads of muscle so I'm not going to maximize anything.
Try maximizing a lot of stuff and you'll get there faster and more effectively. Now, the next big lifestyle category is diet.
Diet plays a huge role.
You can definitely eat in a way that'll prevent you from building muscle.
100%.
When we work with clients, Adam talks about this all the time.
When we work with clients, whether they want to lose fat or build muscle or just improve
their health.
Our goal as trainers was always, we got to get them stronger and typically we need to put
some muscle on them.
What's the one thing we would see consistently with clients where their diet was cutting
them short?
Under eating protein intake.
Yeah, low protein.
Now studies consistently show that a high protein diet builds more muscle and it builds
it faster than a lower protein diet
Consistent. This is a very consistent across the board. We see this in studies all the time
Typically you want to aim for anywhere between points six or seven grams to one gram of protein per pound of body weight
If you're relatively lean if you're obese
Use your lean body mass. So that means that a guy like me,
let's say I weigh 210 pounds,
I'll probably wanna aim for about 180 grams of protein a day.
So that right there, step number one.
But what about calories, right?
People ask about calories all the time.
If you're not eating enough calories to fuel the muscle,
you're not gonna build muscle
and you can have the best workout in the world and the best everything else.
You don't have the building blocks, it's just not going to happen.
That's it.
You got to give your body what it needs to be able to even build.
And I think too, you need a healthy body.
And that's something that I think a lot of people like don't realize if you're not eating
to provide, you know, environment for your body as a whole to thrive.
You're gonna have a hard time building muscle
if you're fighting yourself internally.
So they're just also knowing and doing the due diligence
of kind of going through all the different types of foods
and kind of narrowing down what your body can digest.
The best is definitely something I recommend.
Well, this is also why we recommend
the mini cuts and the mini bulks.
It, no matter what your goal is,
regardless of your goal is to build as much muscle
as possible or your goal is to lose as much body fat
as possible, we still recommend that people weave
in and out of the mini bulks and the mini cuts.
And a lot of that is,
because how often do you guys get this, a client who comes in,
and she wants to lose 30 pounds of fat.
She doesn't even really mention building muscle, but you know how advantageous it is for her
to have as much muscle on her body as possible to reach her ultimate goal.
And so we'll be cutting for a few weeks and I might see her progress start to slow down
and then I want to transition into a bulk.
Even though her goal, she came to me and said, Adam, I want to lose 30 pounds of fat,
that's all I care about.
I know as a trainer that I don't want to keep going
that route and slowing her metabolism,
because in turn, even though her goal
or focus is 30 pounds of body fat off,
it's going to slow that progress down.
If I don't reverse her, add some calories back into her diet,
focus a little bit on some building, some muscle,
and some strength to then go back again that way.
Oh, I learned this lesson in the opposite direction.
I, you know, of course, I've talked about this before
as a kid, I was always trying to gain muscle.
And at one point, I went all in and just ate a ton
of calories, but I did it for a long time.
And I remember getting my body fat tested.
And I had gained, I don't remember how much it was,
25 pounds. And I gained out of that 25 pounds, how much it was, 25 pounds, and I gained, out of that 25 pounds,
I think it was like four pounds of lean body mass.
I had stuck so long in this calorie surplus
that my body stopped building muscle
and just stored body fat.
So I gained all that weight for four pounds
of lean body mass, and it was very, very frustrating
because then when I went to remove the body fat,
I ended up almost where I had started.
It was like, oh gosh, at that point.
Right, so cutting would have been smart for me in between because that would, you know,
for lack of a better term, resensitize my body to the extra calories so that it can turn
it all into muscle instead of body fat.
So what Adam's talking about is, you know, if you're trying to gain, you want to eat more
calories in your burning, if you want to lose, you want to eat less calories in your burning.
So if you're losing, you probably want to stay in the less calories
in your burning more often than not,
but every once in a while, eat more calories
because it resensitizes your body.
Otherwise, you know, for people gaining,
you'll gain too much body fat.
And for people losing, you actually start to lose muscle.
That's why you want to kind of go in and out of that stuff. Now, the next one took me a long time to learn, and I didn't
really learn this until I read this article, and I don't remember what magazine, it must
have been Flex or one of those, and there was this guy who told this anecdote about how he gained 10 pounds of lean body mass just by sleeping
eight to nine hours every single night and he was a really really good author. He wrote
The article was very effective at convincing me. So up into this point
I'm one of those people that I can get around
Not needing much sleep, especially when I was younger. I was one of those five, six hours a night,
and I'm up and ready to go,
and not a big deal, and I used to brag about it all the time.
And I remember reading this article,
and it was over the summer, and I thought,
man, let's give this a try.
Let me just try to go to bed early.
Literally.
And I'm trying to sleep in, and I followed all the advice,
I blacked out my room, and I didn't go to bed,
stressed out, and eat too close to bed time and see what happened.
And it worked, I didn't gain 10 pounds of muscle, but I do remember gaining a few pounds of muscle just from doing that.
Nothing else changed, diet was the same, training was the same, but I was stronger, I felt better.
And that's all because I got better sleep. It took me a long time to pick to live. Oh, yeah, it sounds hilarious to me
because it just sounds like, you know,
it's a lazy thing.
Like, for every year's like, I'll sleep when I'm dead.
And, you know, that's the sentiment
that most of my friends and myself even had
when we would like go to train or like,
do anything in terms of like sports
or, you know, try to get better at, you know,
at whatever we were doing,
it's like, oh, sleeping more, that's gonna help.
Like that to me wouldn't even resonate at all.
So that's something I had to learn a lot later on
that you know, to balance out my hormones, to rebuild,
to like reactiv recovery as well.
Like all these things played such a bigger role
than I even like realized.
You know, so you said something that I think it's important
to touch on also is that, you know,
there's a major genetic variance in all of these lifestyle
things per person also, meaning,
you might find that like the sleep thing you brought up,
you might find that you have a friend who never gets sleep,
you know, they never get any sleep whatsoever
and they just have this most amazing physique forever.
They could have this genetic potential
that their body just doesn't need as much as yours does.
Or they're not reaching the potential.
Right, it could be either one of those,
but the point of me bringing this up
is you have to be very careful about your training partner
or your friend or somebody you know
that you're comparing their behaviors, their lifestyle
to yours and thinking that you should be able
to get the same results.
The same thing goes for like what we talked about with diet and training.
I remember having a trainer who worked for me.
He had dogs every day.
That's right.
He had talk about all of McDonald's twice a day and he had six pack abs and he had all
this muscle.
He made all no sense.
Right.
Some people just have this ability to be able to get away in some of these lifestyle things
that you may not.
And so it's important that you, all the things in some of these lifestyle things that you may not.
And so it's important that you, all the things that we're talking about, that you do a deep
dive on them and figure that out for yourself, like where is it?
But it isn't making huge difference when I get that extra hour of sleep versus if I don't.
And so, you know, as we're going through and talking about all of them, that's, I'm thinking
about all these anomalies, you know, these, these people that I know that didn't do one of those things and yet still have this amazing physique, but
that, that goes back to the, this is where the genetic variance is so crazy is that, you
know, each of us are so unique that you may be, there might be this little thing that you
have an unlock because you just didn't think it's that big of a deal because you've got
a friend who doesn't do it and never does it. And then he looks amazing so you don't
even think about it.
But if you all sudden start putting some energy and focus,
it may be that one thing that unlocks your potential.
Totally. And again, think about it this way.
If LeBron James played basketball two days a week,
he's still be good.
Yeah, he's got a crew,
but he would never have reached the potential
that he reached, right?
He would never have become one of the best players
of all time.
So that guy that worked for you,
that ate McDonald's and Taco Bell,
and looked amazing.
If I could compare myself to him and be like,
oh, that's not fair, what, what, what,
but the truth is he's not reaching his potential either.
His potential may be so high,
and he may be on the lower end because he's eating McDonald's
and Taco Bell every day.
It's also important to note that, you know,
the muscle building process,
even if you're gifted or whatever, is a slow process.
I don't know anybody on the planet that can work out
in a week later look amazing.
Burning body fat is faster, much faster than building muscle.
Muscle is a slow, long process for all of us,
some of us faster than others, but still a slow process.
So when you, if you go on this calculator that we have online process for all of us, some of us faster than others, but still a slow process.
So when you, you know, if you go on this calculator that we have online and you enter your potential,
you know, and you think, oh, cool, that's my potential.
I'm going to get there by, you know, by next year or whatever.
Maybe not, probably not.
It's going to take you some time.
I mean, I looked at my calculator.
This is coming from someone who's been working out for a long time.
And I didn't reach that potential that I had that I came up with with mine. It took me
my early 30s to reach that. And this is somebody who had started at the age of 14. So that's like
16 years of really trying to to build muscle, which takes me to the next one with lifestyle,
which is the most important, which is consistency. You know, I've said this before and I'll say it again, a subpar workout routine done consistently
will outperform a great workout program
that's done inconsistently.
Consistency is extremely important for any goal,
but especially for muscle building
because your body is cons,
by the way, muscle doesn't just maintain.
Your body doesn't just keep muscle where it's at.
What's happening every single day
is a little bit of building or a little bit of reducing.
And if you build a little more,
then you reduce the overall result is you build
a little bit of muscle.
If you lose a little bit more than you build,
the overall result is you lose a little bit of muscle.
But your muscles are not just sitting there
stationary and maintaining.
It's this constant up and down fluctuation of
building and losing. So the consistent consistency of sending a muscle building signal, the consistency
of eating the right diet, the consistency of getting good sleep, the consistency of
having a lifestyle that maximizes your genetics or your genetic potential will ultimately result
in more building than losing, which will give you the physique that genetic potential. We'll ultimately result in more building
than losing, which will give you the physique
that you want.
We didn't touch on stress.
That's another really, really big one.
Your body's not going to build muscle
if your stress is really high.
I've gone through stressful periods in my life.
I've never stopped working out.
And I'll tell you right now, I'm weaker.
It takes me longer to recover, and there's no
way I could reach my potential when I'm really, really stressed out.
Well, stress is a big one because it really bleeds into all the other ones, right?
Like high stress, bad sleep, high stress, diet has to change, or get pounds.
Oh, yeah.
And this is, again, one of those ones too, this I didn't really put this one together till I got older
You know, I started to really evaluate like when I'd see the ups and downs in my my stress levels and how it was affecting
Everything else and probably now one of the number one things I speak to if I'm talking to a client
I've I at one of the first things I asked him is about their work load their family
Strait what they got going on and if I can find little ways to hack into that
and improve that part, I know all the other things
in their lifestyle are gonna be a lot easier for me to fix.
Right, now here's the big message with all of this
is what should you focus all of your energy and attention on,
your genetics or your lifestyle, right?
Which one can you change?
What can you control?
Now this also means which one do you think about
and stress about?
Like, if you stress and think about your genetics all the time,
you're gonna be miserable.
You can't change it.
You can't do anything to change your hard set genetics,
but you can change your lifestyle.
And the most successful people you'll find,
actually, almost any aspect of life,
but definitely in training,
or the people that realize that,
they've got their genetics, whatever.
I don't even think about that.
I think about what can I do,
what can I manipulate, what can I work on
to get me where I wanna go?
And that's what we said, right?
That's your training, your diet, your sleep,
your stress, your how consistent you are.
Essentially, focus on the things you can change.
Don't worry, accept the stuff that you can't change and your odds of success are much much better.
Part of that, too, is just reframing that.
You know, we were earlier kind of alluding to this when we are comparing Justin's body type and mine.
We're probably the most extreme difference of the two.
And the grass is always green on the other side.
So if you lack in an area
genetically, there's always a positive to that also. So, Justin could probably put on more,
I mean, obviously he could put on more lean body mass than I ever could naturally, right? But
then I also have an easier time leaning out than he probably ever will, too. And it doesn't mean
each guy can't do great things. You just got to reframe what your genetic potential looks like. It's not like a complete
disadvantage. You know, there's still there's pluses and minuses to all those things that
we talked about if you're on the higher end or the lower end. So a lot of times you just
again, comparing yourself to your friend or comparing yourself to someone else and say,
oh, I wish I had that ability or I wish I had this ability. Well, because you don't,
you have another advantage
so that you have to reframe the way you look at that.
The only fair comparison, and what I mean by that
is like apples and apples is you to you.
You know, compare me now to me yesterday.
That's the only fair comparison that I'd say
would stand the test of scrutiny.
Look, mine pump is recorded on video as well as audio.
So you can actually watch us and listen to us on YouTube.
If you go to MindPump Podcasts on YouTube,
all of our podcasts are posted on there.
Also, you can find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at MindPump Justin.
Me at MindPumpSale, Adam at MindPump Atom,
Doug at MindPumpDoug.
And finally, if you'd like some free content,
if you'd like some free guides on muscle-building,
fat loss and anything that has to do with fitness, go to MindPumpFree.com.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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