Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1357: The Single Most Effective At-Home Workout Tool
Episode Date: August 13, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss the simplicity, versatility and effectiveness of the suspension trainer and how to use it to build muscle and lose fat. The single most effective at-home w...orkout tool. (3:24) The long history of suspension tools and their effectiveness. (6:30) Mind Pump Revelations: How Mind Pump was introduced to the suspension trainer and the benefits they discovered. (8:45) The versatility of the suspension trainer. (14:02) How this tool is easily modifiable. (16:45) Getting your body to respond the way it should. (19:40) The benefits of closed chain movements. (22:46) Becoming aware of your entire body and building core stability through suspension training. (28:12) Bulletproof yourself from injury through strengthening your stabilizer muscles. (36:55) Emphasizing unilateral movements for bigger gains. (42:57) Excellent for building muscle! (45:02) How proper programming will make things more effective! Why EVERY trainer should own MAPS Suspension. (46:55) Related Links/Products Mentioned August Promotion: MAPS Performance ½ off!! **Promo code “GREEN50” at checkout** Visit Four Sigmatic for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout New Program Launch: MAPS Suspension $20 off! **Promo code “SUSPENSION20” at checkout** Best At-Home Workouts While All Gyms Remain Closed – Mind Pump Blog How to Stay in Shape Without a Gym Membership – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube 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, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta 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 single most effective at-home workout tool, suspension trainers.
We talk all about why they're so damn effective
and versatile for building muscle, burning body fat,
and sculpting your body.
They take a very, very little space,
and there's almost an endless supply of exercise variety,
and you can train with them at any level.
It's one of the only tools I know of where a beginner all the way to someone who's advanced can get an appropriate
Effective workout now this episode is brought to you by our sponsor
For
Sigmatic now for cinematic makes some of the best
Supplements around they specialize in mushroom based. One of my favorite products from ForSigmatic
is their Cordoseps product.
It's the highest quality Cordoseps product that I found.
There's a dual extraction process that gets all of the good stuff
out of the Cordoseps to deliver it to your body.
Now, when I take Cordoseps, here's what I notice.
More stamina in my workouts for long hard workouts.
I notice better acclimation to heat.
So if I work out in the heat,
I just feel like I can keep going.
I don't get tired as often.
My recovery is better.
And cordiceps has also been shown
to raise low testosterone levels in men.
It's a supplement that's been used for hundreds of years,
if not thousands, by
people in eastern countries.
Again, it's a very effective supplement, but you got to get good quality.
Forsegmatic hands down has the best quality that I've ever seen.
Because you listen to Mind Pump, you get 15% off your order of any of their products.
Just go check out what they have on their site for sigmatic.com that's F-O-U-R-S-I-G-M-A-T-I-C.com forward slash MindPump. Also in
this episode I said we would be talking about suspension training and all of
its benefits. We're also launching a brand new Maps workout program called
Maps Suspension. This is an entire workout program all around suspension trainers.
So you can do this workout anywhere, outdoors, at home, at the gym.
You need no other equipment.
That's it, suspension trainer.
And you work out your entire body from head to toe, build muscle, burn body fat, speed
up your metabolism.
This whole program gives all of that to you workout demos so you can see how the exercises are performed.
We tell you how many reps, how many sets,
how to progress your body, everything.
It's a full maps program and because it's a brand new launch,
we're offering it with a coupon code for $20 off.
Here's what you got to do if you want to get the discount
or check out the program.
Go to mapssuspension.com, that's M-A-P-S-S-U-S-P-N-S-I-O-N,
dot com, and then use this code for $20 off.
Suspension 20, that's S-U-S-P-N-S-I-O-N-2-0
for that discount.
Hey, a lot of people are working out at home
and one of the most effective at home workout tools,
single workout tools, like one thing,
has to be suspension training,
has to be one of the most effective ways
you could work out just at home with minimal equipment.
I think it was Justin who got me into this.
I don't remember who introduced it to me first,
but I know you were on a hardcore kick for a while there.
Like yeah, I had seen it.
I know I'd seen it.
And obviously before the suspension trainers got popular,
rings were around well before that, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, rings were first.
Rings were, so I looked up the history of it with Justin
just recently. And so Olympic
rings are the ones obviously the gymnasts use and train on. And I would say the rings
are probably produced some of the most muscular bodies that you'll ever see in the Olympics.
I've worked with gymnasts before male gymnasts and, you know, as trainers. And they have obviously phenomenal upper body strength
in conditioning.
And it's because they use these rings
when they lift their body weight
and do these incredible positions and exercise
and movements and it develops their bodies tremendously.
But that's been used for a while.
Yeah, I don't know if they call it iso-canetics,
but there's a term for it that basically like,
I mean your muscles are so tense
like in an isometric contraction,
but you're also moving through really challenging points
of leverage.
So, you know, the rings are just one of the most grueling
bodyweight tools that you could possibly do.
And you could just see it based off of their, you know,
physique, what it's done for all these athletes.
Well, what I definitely know, whether it was you who introduced it to me or not, I definitely
did not have all the exercises down and movements until I met you.
I didn't realize what you could do with it.
Like, it, when I remember first seeing it, there's literally thousands of exercise.
So many things that you can do with it. And it's so versatile that you don't have to have anything,
but a tree, a bar of, I mean,
you can latch it onto anything to do a full body routine.
I went through a stint where I was,
I just found the value of it with my clients
because there's lots of ways that you can kind of progress
people with weights.
And I just found it not only is it so versatile
and has all these options,
but it's like a really safe way to get started
for a beginner because you're really utilizing
your own body weight,
you're becoming more aware of what your body is capable of
and figuring out how to stabilize yourself,
which I find the most important part of the
very beginning of your training process.
Well, don't fool yourself.
It's also a tool that is extremely valuable for the very advanced.
There's exercises and movements and leverages that you can use with suspension trainers.
That'll challenge the strongest lifter that you know.
Because of the fat out how you leverage,
you know, when you look at old, so I love looking at, or reading about the history of gyms.
And there's, you can find online pictures of some of the first gymnasiums.
By the way, gym is short for gymnasiums. They used to be called gymnasiums.
And some of the first ones were on the East Coast of the US,
if we talk about the first ones here in the US.
And you're looking at the mid to late 1800s.
And you'll see these old pictures in there.
And what the whole gym consists of literally was rings,
which is like a suspension trainer, rings, bars,
ladders, ropes, and like maybe a couple kettlebells.
And that's how they exercise their entire body.
Lots of it was geared around climbing
and using your body and figuring out
what muscles you could use to then get you through
these type of obstacles and things as well.
But yeah, a lot of it was a body weight based
which was very interesting.
Yeah, the Olympic rings were,
they think were borrowed off of the Roman rings
that had been used for 2000 years.
As a method for training and strengthening the body,
gladiators probably utilize them to train their bodies,
soldiers obviously use them to train their bodies.
So this type of apparatus has been around for a long time.
Now why that's a valuable piece of knowledge
is because it has a long pedigree
and history of being effective.
So like when it comes to fitness and look,
I've only been in, you look at all the however long
humans have purposely exercised their bodies, right?
I've only been doing it professionally for 22 or 23 years.
That's nothing in when you look at the grand scheme of things.
However, in the last 23 years, I have seen countless fitness tools and modalities be introduced
to the market and then totally gone.
They don't stand the test of time. So when you look at a piece of equipment like a dumbbell or a kettlebell or a barbell
or rings like suspension trainers and you see that they've been around for a long time,
you know that they work because they would have fallen out of favor a long time ago.
So that's why that's an important thing to understand.
I remember when they got really popular with my staff, right? It was because as a trainer
when you're working in a in a big box gym, one of the most challenging things that you
have is that most clients want to train around the same time. They want to come in at the
peak hours in the morning or the peak hours in the evening. And when you've got a staff
of 15 to 20 trainers and you have this gym that's getting thousands of workouts,
like, man, it's really tough sometimes,
when you write a routine, like, okay, I wanna go to bench,
I wanna go to a squad, I wanna do this,
and there's only two squat racks,
there's only two benches, and what do you do
when you have somebody that's on that,
and you don't wanna stop your clients paying for your time,
and so as trainers, I think it's creative. They have to, like, to stop your clients paying for your time. And so, trainers have to get creative.
They have to like, okay, and this is what makes a really good trainer.
The trainer that has a blueprint or a plan of an idea of like what they want to train,
but then they're able to adjust based off of, you know, what's available to them.
And when I started to get really good at using this tool, I started to realize like, man,
I could just take this in a corner and latch it to a bar,
latch it to something, and back then we had the little eye hooks inside the gym, so you could
latch it to one of these, and I don't have to leave. I could literally do my client's entire
workout in this little six by six square the entire time and give them an incredible workout.
And so it got really, really popular amongst my trainers just for that reason alone that they
could give them this incredibly effective workout with minimally in no equipment and no
space really.
That was so great.
Yeah, so my personal experience with suspension trainers, besides watching trainers using
in the gym with their clients and myself using them with clients,
I never followed like a full on.
I'm going to do this workout for the next three weeks,
type of deal with just suspension trainers or anything like that until I went traveling.
We were in a small town in Italy and I did not,
I know they had a gym there.
So I expected to be able to work out at the gym,
but it was in August and for whatever reason, the gym was closed all month, all month, the whole month of August.
They did it nearly.
Yeah, they do that in small towns in Italy, which I was like, this is, this is infuriating.
But I didn't have, I didn't have a car, the furthest, the closest gym that was open would have been, you know, an hour and a half walk, which just, you know, your on vacation,
you're with family, just not feasible.
So I had bands with me,
and I had a suspension trainer with me.
And at first I did body weight and band stuff,
and I did that, and that was cool,
but then I pulled out the suspension trainer.
And for the last, I'd say week and a half or two weeks,
all I did was suspension trainer exercises,
and I viewed it as a substitute.
Like, okay, I don't have access to the gym. This is just a substitute, so whatever, better
than nothing. I was surprised because I actually, not only was it a good substitute, but
I actually got a lot of benefit from it. And I know this because when I came back, home and opened my studio back up
and started working out in my own gym,
I felt really good with the weights.
Actually, I didn't not only did I not regress,
which is always your fear, right?
If you're a really into fitness,
you always worry I'm gonna regress
because I'm missing my traditional workout.
Not only did I not regress,
but actually progressed in certain lifts
and how I felt with certain things
from using it.
So that was my own personal like light bulb moment.
Oh, this is not just a cheap versatile substitute to weights.
This has value on its own.
This has tremendous value on its own.
And working out just with this can actually provide you with tremendous benefit. Yeah, and I've spoke a bit to, you know, this kind of experimental year that I
had because I had been barbell training for so long for sports and getting myself prepared and
my only method of operation was always to add as much weight as possible. And if I didn't,
I felt like I was slipping back
and I was not doing well with my training.
So that was my only gauge and metric that I was going by.
And I just saw this come out,
this tool, suspension trainer that I had saw,
one of my friends had picked up.
And this is a very new, just came out.
And so we really didn't know
all the moves for it yet.
And so this is a totally experimental time
where, you know, my friend and I,
who is also a trainer,
we just started kind of working with it.
Coming up with moves, you know,
watching videos of like what other people come up with.
And we just, like this whole new world
sort of just opened up in terms of,
you know, effective exercises,
but also teaching type exercises
and then super intense exercises
that we'd come up with to where it progressed
to where I would take, you know, this suspension strap
and then we would master all these moves
and then we'd work our way up to like Olympic rings
to where we could start doing stuff like some, you know, shitty versions of what Jim, Jim, Jim, Jimness were doing.
And it was just like a totally new thing where my body reacted to it. I built muscle. I came back and then barbell trained after that. And I had so much more control and stability. It was unreal.
more control and stability is unreal. Well, you can make a case that it's the single most
effective tool that you could use.
I mean, even like what we've made cases for like,
okay, the barbell, right?
Because barbell, we talk so much about barbellists.
But one of the things with a barbell is that you also
got to have a bunch of weights to really make it effective.
Like just a barbell by itself.
Yeah, you could do a lot of great movements
and exercise with it, but it's really tough
to progress a barbell without having a bunch of plates that you're going to load it with to
progress the workout where you're using leverage and your body weight with this thing.
And so it's actually-
Just by itself.
Yeah, by itself, you could make the case that it's even more versatile than a barbell
or a pair of dumbbells.
It has the same versatility in terms of exercise selection
that you would find with a pair of dumbbells,
which is saying a lot.
There is no other piece of equipment
that you could say that about,
but with suspension trainers,
the amount of exercises that you could do with them
is almost limitless.
You can't say that about almost any other piece
of exercise equipment.
Now, in terms of versatility,
here's what makes them superior,
believe it or not,
like what Adam's saying to dumbbells and barbells.
It's easy to move with,
it's easy to bring,
and it's easy to do anywhere.
So, if I'm in my car traveling,
or carrying a 45 pound barbell, or if I'm in a store window, I'm gonna bring that with you on the plane. Or I'm in my car traveling, or carrying a 45 pound barbell,
or a five-minute-ster window,
I'm gonna bring that with you on the plane.
Or I'm in a small apartment.
Let's say I'm in a small apartment,
and I can't have a 250 pound or 300 pound barbell
or 50 pound dumbbells and put them in there.
Sometimes you can't do that,
but with suspension trainers,
which on their own weigh a pound,
not even, you fold them up,
you can fit them in any,
it's a nice little ball, usually.
Luggage, all you need is an anchor point,
which any door will give you that,
or anything you can hang it over, will give you that.
Now, that's it, now the whole world is open with exercise.
And this is a big deal, especially if you're somebody
that time is of the essence, so you have kids, you have a job, it's you're somebody that, you know, time is of the essence.
So you have kids, you have a job.
It's hard to make time to go to the gym and stuff.
Or right now, you're not going to the gym either because you're afraid of exposing
yourself to a lot of people or your gyms are still closed like they are here in California.
So it's like, okay, what's the one thing I can get?
What's the one thing that I can use
that will satisfy all my strength training needs
that doesn't take up a lot of space,
gives me incredible exercise selection,
doesn't bang up the floor as a suspension trainer.
I can't think of something else
that really competes on all of those levels
like a suspension trainer.
The other thing is that it's,
it's, this is also what it has in common with free weights,
is it's easily modified for different levels.
It's the one piece of equipment
that I can start a brand new client on,
and I can train a very advanced client on
and give them both great appropriate workouts.
Because of the way you adjust the leverage, because of the positioning of the arms and
all that stuff, I would use suspension trainers with my elderly clients and then I'd use
it with the occasional athlete that I would train and they would equally get great work
out.
Well, a push up is an example of how many times do you have a client that couldn't even do like a regular push-up?
And that's an extra, that's like a staple movement
that you wanna see if every client can do.
And, you know, I remember having, you know,
older clients that I'd have to do like,
push-ups off a wall,
just pushing their body weight off a wall.
But I didn't have everything in between,
which was always frustrating, right?
You have like, my client, when I first,
you know, I first get them, they can't do a pushup on the ground.
And so I'm like, you having to use a Smith machine
to kind of angle it where you can really like modify it
perfect for the first.
Yeah, inch by inch by just simply walking out like one more
step or stepping back in one more step to make it either
easier or more difficult for whatever client that you're
trying to, I love that.
There's that little element of instability that they have to overcome initially, which
you're not going to get from those solid surfaces.
That's another key factor that they don't even realize they're working on this joint stability
where when the body feels more stable around the joints, it allows you to apply more force
which makes you stronger.
And this is one of those important facts to build off of.
So if you can establish that right away and then graduate that incrementally, it's invaluable
for a trainer, not let alone somebody that's just kind of getting started.
And then you can just go to a level of extreme that you can really get
adventurous with it. Yeah, I used to love suspension trainers for working on posture. What a great
tool for posture because you're having someone straighten their body out, you adjust the leverage so
that it's appropriate so that the person can get into that shoulder retracted, you
know, good posture position.
While their body is straight and they're using and moving their body weight, and then they
can hold it at the top, and typically what I do is have a client move up to the top, I
correct their posture up there and hold them, have them squeeze, come back down.
Now if you adjust the leverage, now it becomes more of a back building exercise.
I can make the leverage so that you are doing a heavy row
with your body squeezing and working the mid back
and upper back muscles.
I mean, that's just an example of how I can modify
the same exercise with the same tool
to do different things.
Well, another way, like, so the squat was a favorite for mine
just because like most clients that would come in
and had issues were usually that they're really forward leaning and they had all these you know forward issues where I could they felt in balance every time they go to squat you know they're heels would raise or they're trying to lean as far forward as they can to maintain that balance is their hips drop down well now we provide a tool provided tool for them to feel secure and they can allow them to provide depth so they
feel comfort in that position. And we start working on, you know, countering that
balance, lightening the amount of reliance that they have on the straps to
guide them into that position. So it was a great tool to kind of progress your
way through squats, single leg squats, and get real crazy.
What a great point. I actually forgot that I used to use it like that all the time.
You know, when you get clients, it's the best tool for you.
When you get clients to struggle with breaking 90 degrees and they think they can't go beyond
that because their balance falls off, giving them that tool just to get them down in that
position. So look, you have the mobility to get down here. You just haven't figured out
how to control your body to get in this position and getting
them comfortable by holding onto the strap was a great way to teach squatting and then
for sure pistol squats.
That's like one of the best tools for just progressive way to do it.
Or caustic squats, a lot of people have issues with that lateral drop, same thing.
You can hold on and bring it down.
There was also the myth around suspension trainers that you can't work or isolate like our muscles with it.
It's all compound movements, which first off isn't a bad thing.
Compound moves is the best.
But I'm gonna tell you right now,
some of the highest tension bicep and tricep exercises
you'll do will be with a suspension trainer.
Try leveraging your body and doing a curl
with a suspension trainer and tell me
that you don't get the craziest bicep pump and workout
that you've ever gotten.
Same thing with a, you know,
where you school crush.
A school crusher or, you know,
I used to love doing this with a school crusher.
So the triceps got two attachments.
And when you're on the bench and you do a school crusher,
elbow stays in position, you extend the elbows
and the arms and bring them back down.
Do it with the suspension trainer, come all the way down, then bring your elbow up by
your head and then bring them back down and then do the skull crusher.
That's working the long head of the tricep, like you've never worked it before.
You could try doing this with the barbell where you're laying on the bench, you bring the
barbell down, then kind of bring the elbows back and then swing them forward and come up.
That's one way of doing it,
try doing it with a suspension trainer,
and tell me you didn't get the craziest tricep,
you know, pump and work out.
You've ever gotten your entire life?
Oh, yeah.
And if you think back to like our other program,
like our prime program, where we're,
we're, you know, testing out all these,
you know, things going on with your upper body,
especially too, with like maintaining these contact points
and even getting mobility in your shoulders
and getting your, you know, everything to respond,
you know, appropriately, this is such a great bridge
like to use alongside the train to get your body
to respond the way it should by adding just your own
leverage and body weight to get you there.
Yeah, and here's the thing.
So when you're doing exercises, we've talked about this before,
but not in super depth, you can categorize exercises
at most of them into kind of two categories,
open chain and closed chain movements.
So a closed chain would be where you're basically moving your body
and open chain would be where you're moving your body part
or moving the weight. So like a curl body and open chain will be where you're moving your body part or moving the weight.
So like a curl would be open chain.
It's my hand that's moving, holding the weight.
A closed chain version of that would be doing
a suspension trainer curl.
So I'm curling my body towards the equipment
and working the bicep.
Closed chain movements have tremendous value.
And oftentimes when we work out in the gym,
we don't do a lot of those. We do mostly open chain movements. I'll give you an example of a
close chain movement that most people are familiar with. That is exceptional, like a barbell squat,
a barbell squat, or your body weight squat, your feet are staying in position, your body is what's moving, and
that is a phenomenal strength and muscle building exercise.
Close chain movements are exceptional at making you functional because it's teaching you
how to move your body around in space, right?
This is a skill.
This is why a gymnast, who let's say you take a gymnast who's equally
as muscular as a natural bodybuilder, and a lot of gymnasts look like natural bodybuilders.
If you put them together and had them move around in real life and move over things and climb over
things or whatever, the gymnast is going to take the amateur bodybuilder to school. They just know
how to move their bodies, even though they may look both muscular
and they both look similar,
the functionality that you get from close chain movements
is superior.
And all the movements with suspension chainers,
or most of them I should say, are close chain.
You're bringing your body forward and back
and manipulating your body around in space.
And this is amazing, especially if you never train this way. If you never train this way, bringing your body forward and back and manipulating your body around in space.
And this is amazing, especially if you never train this way, if you never train this way,
and then you go and switch from your traditional machines and dumbbells and that kind of stuff
and move to these closed chain exercises, watch how your body responds.
Even for example, I'm talking about like the skull crusher on the, you know, with the
suspension trainer versus a skull crusher
with barbell, technically you're like,
oh, it's the same movement, it's not.
Because one is moving the barbell,
the other is moving your body.
You get used to doing one a long time,
switch the other one, watch what happens.
Well, also too, like, think about now limiting a bench
or something like your body's resting on
that is providing the stability.
You really have to be aware of how to brace properly
and how to be able to protect your spine,
how to be able to keep your body from moving
and turning and twisting while you're trying to accomplish
this movement that you have in front of you.
And so it helps you to be more aware of how to make
these little micro adjustments as you're going
through these movements, which is, again, you could attribute that to like athletic type
movements, functional movements, but in general, you're just strong in these type of movements
because now you can adjust it and brace and keep stabilized while also like working on
your strength.
Well, back to Sal's point, this is, this is conversations extremely important for your advanced lifters. I know this is like one of those tools that if you're like,
you know, you're a heavy dead lifter in squatter, you look at like a strap or bands as ridiculous.
But one of the hardest things when you've been training for a really long time is to seek
out novel things is to find things that your body is not used to and already adapt to
training. And it is so different that that stimulus is going to get
you to see change in your body. That a lot of people when you've been lifting for a long period
time, you've kind of done a lot of things already. And so every time you kind of rotate your sats
and raps and exercise, you don't see those big leaps that you made when you were first starting
to train. This is one of the greatest ways to do that because very few people utilize it as a
primary tool to train.
So even if you're somebody who's an advanced lifter
and you can deadlift and squat and bench press,
you know, 200 or 400 pounds,
and you're thinking, oh, my body weight, that's so light.
But it's more so, it's so novel and different
for all the things that we're talking about.
It's one of the best ways for you
to kickstart seeing change in your body again.
Totally.
And again, like I'll use the just to hammer home the whole thing
about closed chain movements. So I think I don't need to make the argument
that a squat is going to produce better muscle and more functional strength
than a leg press, right? Or a hack squat, hack squat. Well, or no,
hack squat, we won't count that. Let's talk about a leg press
because you're moving your feet rather than your body, right?
Let's say both of them increase in 50 pounds.
I added 50 pounds to my squat.
I added 50 pounds to my leg press.
What, even this, 50 pounds to my squat
versus 100 pounds to my leg press,
which one is gonna translate into more strength
in the real world.
Any athletic coach, anybody who's been working out
for a long time will tell you it's the squat.
Part of that is because it is a close chain movement.
These are some of the benefits that you get
from working with suspension trainers.
And if you haven't done a whole cycle
of suspension training, in other words,
rather than throwing in a few exercises
with the suspension trainer,
rather than doing that following an entire cycle
of this is what I'm gonna focus on for the next two months or three months.
Try it out and watch what happens and you'll see some of these benefits.
Well, Justin alluded to the importance of the core, right?
And like being supported on a bench when we train and exercise, this was something that
I found was extremely important with any of like my novice lifters is getting them to
learn how to pay attention
to their entire body when you do an exercise.
And that's one of the drawbacks of using barbells, dumbbells, and machines inside of a gym
is you're always on this bench.
You're always laying down on a bench or sitting in a chair or you're in the, in the
using fixed positions and people aren't really aware of their entire body while they're
trying to do the movement.
They're just thinking, oh, this is a tricep exercise.
I'm in a tricep machine, and all I'm thinking about
is extending the elbow, extending the elbow,
or same thing for every other muscle group
that we're trying to work,
versus when you do movements like this,
you have to be completely aware of your entire body,
and you have to stabilize with your core,
no matter what, I don't care if you're doing a bicep exercise
for it, if you're doing a chest, a back row, you have to stabilize with your core no matter what. I don't care if you're doing a bicep exercise for it. If you're doing a chest, a back row,
you have to be completely aware of the entire body
and that just gets you connected and introduced to that.
And a lot of people don't do that
when you're always lying on a bench
or sitting in machines to exercise.
This is how your body evolved or was created to move,
by the way, your body does not move well in isolation.
It does a very damn good.
In fact, this is your default.
So think about why it's so hard to isolate a muscle
with weights, especially when it's getting hard, right?
Especially when the reps are getting difficult.
And even though you're trying with everything you can
to not let this happen, sometimes it still happens.
Other muscles help out.
Your body moves.
You use a little bit of body English.
Things tense up.
Try doing a single arm concentration curl to failure without tensing up any other part
of your body.
Almost impossible.
This is how your body naturally moves.
It does not like to move in isolation.
It likes to move in unison.
It likes to move with sequences. it likes to move in unison, it likes to move with sequences, it likes to move all together.
So when you're using a suspension trainer,
this is exactly what you're doing.
You're allowing your body to move the way
that it's supposed to move
and then you're getting it good at moving that way.
Now one of the main areas that tends to be a weak link
and a lot of people that you really stands out
when you use a suspension trainer a lot is your core, core stability, because so many exercises are designed in
the gym to disinvolve the core, because it is a weakest link, we're going to disinvolve
it so I can do my shoulders or I can do my quads or my hamstrings or my glutes.
Well because of that it becomes kind of a weak link.
You start training with a suspension trainer.
One of the first things you'll notice is,
I didn't do any specific core training,
but my core really felt that entire workout.
Because your core now is your weakest link,
and it needs to catch up to be able to support
everything else.
The side effect of that, one of my favorites is
a very well-developed core,
like a very nice structured, defined and strong core
from working your back chest, arm, shoulders, and legs because it needs to be strong.
I had many clients that would notice that their back pain would go away and they couldn't
figure out why.
What are we doing, Adam, that my back pain has been eliminated and it's because of exactly
that.
A lot of times you get low back pain when it's pushing when it's just chronic
You didn't have an acute injury that happened to it. You just have chronic low back pain a lot of that has to do
It's just the lack of core strength that you have to support your spine
That those core muscles they wrap around the spine like a vacuum and when they're strong and tight
They support the spine well when they're weak
You put a lot of stress on it all the time.
And so just by us training that, I'd get clients that would be like,
Adam, I don't know what we're doing with my low back
isn't bothering me anymore.
And I don't feel like you're doing anything to address it.
I don't understand.
And then I'd have to explain that to them.
It's all we're training this way.
You're not used to engaging in working your core.
We train a whole hour like this three, four times a week.
Then you go about your day and you're holding in and you're stabilizing.
You don't even realize you're doing that now.
Yeah, well, what I like to always bring up is, you know, sort of in the athletic realm,
what makes an athlete so amazing is the ability not to just generate force to be able to
be super explosive, but also be able to control that at the highest level. So if I'm producing this movement, I have to be able to react and then be able to be super explosive, but also be able to control that at the highest level. So if I'm producing this movement,
I have to be able to react and then be able to bring back
to homeostasis, bring myself back to this control.
And this is another one of these tools
that really highlights and emphasizes this
because there's elements of rotation.
Your body just naturally wants to kind of lean
towards the side that it's most comfortable. And you notice this even with just a stabilized lift, like a bench press
for instance. Like everybody knows like the, you know, the one side for me it was like,
I would lean a little bit to the right side and then I put more pressure and then I'm
trying to get that last dig if I'm going with a heavy weight or if I'm, you know, and I'm
rotating slightly or if I'm doing a deadlift and you notice
like one side's coming up a little bit versus the other.
And so just the ability to stabilize my hips
or stabilize my shoulders in place
so they don't rotate when I don't want them to
is such a massive thing to consider.
Anti-rotation.
I mean, so a big part of your course function is to produce movement.
So like a crunch or a sit-up or twisting.
Okay, that's a movement that it's doing intentionally.
I'm trying to twist, I'm trying to crunch.
But there's another part that a lot of people don't realize, which is
anti-rotation or preventing
rotation or preventing too much movement. This is the stability part, right?
So why is that important? Well, if my body can only, you know, if my core is good at making itself move but bad at
preventing itself from moving, that's injury waiting to happen. You want a core that when you need it to be is
rigid and strong and prevents rotation,
prevents movement. This is called anti-rotation. So an example of that would be, you know, like I'm
doing a modified push-up on the suspension trainer, one arm is extended out, one arm is close to
my body. Well, my body's naturally going to want to rotate and twist to one side because the
leverage is different on one side or the other.
But I want to stay straight.
The movement requires me to stay straight and not let my body twist.
What is my core doing?
Anti-rotation.
It's stabilizing and holding that position.
One of my favorite exercises for that and to teach was the single arm row with the
TRs for that.
You have to keep their body in a squared position to the strap and then you're doing a single
arm row.
The body naturally wants to flop open and you have to keep that stable.
So there's a great anti-rotational exercise.
But if you talk about anti-rotational, you have to talk about the benefits of the rotational
part of it too.
The number one thing that I've used a suspension trainer more than anything else for, I love
the I and W exercises for external rotation in the shoulder.
There's just not a lot of exercises and moves.
And what I love about it is the point that we made earlier is I have to stabilize my entire
core and spine while I'm also addressing my upper cross syndrome.
So since that's so prevalent in almost everybody that we train, they've got these rounded
forward shoulders.
Yeah, I can do all these exercises on the bench
or on a cable machine, but what ends up happening
is they, the rest of their spine deviates
because they're so focused on the shoulder
internally or externally rotating.
When I do the eyes and the w's,
and I put emphasis on them staying stable and rigid,
while also addressing this,
boy does that really carry over into real life
when they're trying to fix their posture.
I've used it for that more than anything else and warm up almost all my upper body with
that.
That's body awareness.
It really helps a lot with body awareness.
It's like trying to teach a boxer to throw a punch, but you never use the whole body.
Let's just focus on the arm movement and then okay put the arm down. Let's just focus on the arm movement and then okay, put the arm down.
Now let's just focus on the hips
and let's just, rather than having the whole body move together,
what this kind of training encourages,
what suspension training encourages is body awareness.
So yes, I'm working on shoulder stability,
but while I'm working on shoulder stability,
I'm also learning how to stabilize my body,
keep myself in good position, because in the real world, that's how learning how to stabilize my body, keep myself in good
position.
Because in the real world, that's how you have to stabilize your shoulder.
You never have to stabilize your shoulder in the real world in isolation, where the rest
of your body is locked in from, you know, because you're on a chair or whatever.
And so now I'm doing, it doesn't work that way.
It's like I reach back to grab the seat belt or I threw a frisbee or I called a cab or whatever,
your whole body's involved,
you need to have that kind of body awareness
to stabilize your body.
The more familiar you can get your body
to these uncomfortable positions
into these different ranges of motion
that you don't come across on a daily basis.
The moment you do have that,
where you're reaching back or you're slipping the shower,
or something like your body has to react
and respond right away.
If it's not familiar with it,
there's a high probability an injury is gonna occur.
So this is another great way to sort of bullet proof
yourself from injury.
Oh, the joint stability you get from training this way is exceptional.
Look, there's a lot of muscles, small muscles that are involved in stabilizing your joints
or in protecting you from injury that don't necessarily, or oftentimes I should say, aren't
up to par with these other big muscles that you continue to develop.
Okay, so I'll give you a great example.
And maybe this happened to you, maybe as a listener,
you do heavy barbell rows, pull ups, bench presses,
incline presses, over high presses, and you're good at them.
You're really good at them in the gym.
You're strong bench press, strong rows,
strong overhead presses, and then you go, and maybe you're playing around with your friend and you decide to throw a baseball.
And you wonder why your shoulder's so damn sore. Why is my shoulder sore? I'm strong, I'm
fit. My shoulder hurts like crazy. It's because there are muscles that are not being challenged
properly to stabilize. So now you have all this force that you can generate because
you're strong picks and shoulders and lats and all that stuff, but you don't have good stabilizers.
Well, guess what?
Those stabilizers are your weakest link and that's why you end up hurting yourself.
It's not because you're not fit.
It's because your muscles don't match.
You're your stabilizers don't match these big prime movers.
When you're moving your entire body with exercises that you find in suspension training type training, you can't help but strengthen the stabilizers appropriately. They have to in order to support you through the movement.
De-irony of that is actually that person is actually more susceptible than the person who's
De-conditioned and doesn't exercise. That's the funny thing, isn't it?
That's and that's what is hard for people to wrap their brain around.
It's just strong and and wonderful. Exactly.
You see yourself as somebody strong, because all the what you just said,
oh, I overhead press, a hundred and some pounds, I do this, I do that,
I work out every single day.
Why the shit couldn't I throw a baseball to my son, you know,
ten yards away without hurting my shoulder.
And they're, they're more, they have so much strength and power in some of the muscles,
but they haven't addressed all the stability ones.
So there's more of a discrepancy there versus somebody who's just de-conditioned. They never work out, they never do anything. have so much strength and power in some of the muscles, but they haven't addressed all the stability ones.
So there's more of a discrepancy there versus somebody
who's just deconditioned.
They never work out, they never do anything,
they pick up a ball, they throw it,
they're less likely to get injured
than the person who's been training in a single plane
all the time, getting really, really strong,
but not addressing all the same.
I know some people think that sounds crazy,
but let me put it in a different example.
Imagine you had a four-cylinder,
19, you know, 94 Honda Civic, four cylinder,
and you take that exact body
and you put on a thousand horsepower diesel,
you know, engine in there, right?
You're gonna suspension with four, right?
And axle is gonna snap in half, right?
Now, it wouldn't have happened with the four cylinder engine.
The four cylinder, we could run it all day long.
You're never gonna snap an axle or do something
create or twist the frame, you know, that's not gonna happen.
You put a thousand horsepower on that thing,
you're twisting the frame.
Now here's to take it even a step further.
Even though your body allows these muscles to get strong
and big while these stabilizing muscles don't catch up,
there still is a limiting factor.
Believe it or not, your body will only ever build
as much muscle as it thinks it's safely
can do.
So you're still, even if you don't go and throw a baseball or a frisbee, believe it or
not by not having the proper stability, you're still limiting your strength.
I learned this personally as a kid trying to get a high bench press number.
Bench press was the big exercise.
This is when you use the shoulder horn.
The shoulder horn. I remember doing something stupid is when you use the shoulder horn. The shoulder horn.
I remember doing something stupid like that, increasing my shoulder stability.
Did nothing else?
My bench press went at 15 pounds.
I'll stuck at the same weight forever when I have 15 pounds.
I remember showing my friends the same thing, 5 pounds, 10 pounds, 15 pounds, just from
strengthening the stabilizer.
And then the result of that was I was able to bench more weight and then build more, you
know, better chest and more delts and all that kind of stuff.
So that stability is extremely important.
You can't help but strengthen those muscles when you're doing exercises with a suspension
training.
I'll give you one more silly example, okay.
Silly example.
You could have someone that's got great chest press on a bench.
Watch them do a push up which is a closed chain movement, and watch how
their core starts to compromise their strength.
Even though it's their shoulders and triceps and chest seem strong, before you know it,
their butt starts to arch, they feel it in the low back, maybe the hips sag a little bit.
Why?
Because that part of their body can't keep up with the other part of the body.
When you're training with a suspension trainer, naturally, the whole body is going to match.
You're naturally going to have things catch up and you'd catch up.
What do you think that's going to do for your gains when you cycle out of a two or three
month suspension training cycle and then go back to barbells and dumbbells?
It's very similar.
I mean, we're always highlighting the importance of mobility training to incorporate in your
routine.
And especially if you're lifting heavy constantly,
you gotta address the joints and keep the joints healthy
so they can stabilize properly to account
for all this force you're applying
at, because the weakest link is gonna be at the joint.
And so we gotta keep those things
to be able to react and respond appropriately.
This is such a tool that has very similar benefits to mobility training and you're able
to provide all these other types of exercises that you could do in between.
So I look at it as another way to incorporate.
So if you've been doing barbell or dumbbell training forever or with weights to interrupt
that to really address all the stabilizers and make sure that your body now can be reinforced.
Think about reinforcing your body to then progress.
Well, one of my favorite parts about it is, and we talk about the benefits of this, and
I think the suspension trainer is one of the best tools for this, and that's unilateral training. Because the straps are independent, you get all these benefits of training unilaterally
which people don't do enough. And because it has the ability like we talked earlier about
regressing and progressing, that's one of the things that's hard about unilateral training
for some people. Some people can't do a Bulgarian split squad or they can't do some of these unilateral movements.
It's just really challenging for them.
You can regress it for someone to do that.
And then you're always on almost every single body part.
You can do a unilateral movement
with the suspension trainer
because the straps are independent.
Oh, everything you do, you have two handles.
And each one of them move all over the place.
It's gonna highlight the, the weaknesses from right to left.
You're gonna see it right away.
You're gonna see it when you start to fatigue
and your body wants to twist in one direction.
Or wow, my right arm wants to be close to my body.
My left arm wants to be further away from my body.
What's going on?
You may think you're balanced,
try training in this fashion and watch what happens.
And so you end up, now what is this
unilateral emphasis start to do?
It brings up weak body parts,
stabilizes and strengthens your body,
and sets you up for better gains.
You know, there are studies that show that
when one side of your body is weak and one side is strong,
it actually limits the strength
that you can gain overall.
Yeah, the overall potential.
Yeah, your body thrives on balance.
Now, I know that it's, you know, this is more of a systemic thing that happens in the body,
but it does thrive on balance.
A guy who, for example, only works out as upper body, never works out as legs, will not
build as much muscle in his upper body as a guy that builds his legs and his upper body.
And we've known this.
We've shown this in studies
that there's a systemic muscle building effect
that happens from training the entire body.
Training with suspension trainers
and their emphasis on unilateral balance and stability
really does send that loud systemic muscle building signal,
which brings me to the last point.
They're excellent at building muscle.
Excellent at building muscle.
This was surprising to me when I first started using these
with clients and with myself.
I was familiar, you know, it's, I think it's obvious
for a trainer to see the mobility and the stability
and the core training aspects.
It's obvious if you look at it, you say, oh yeah,
for sure, I can see that we're,
that person's building good mobility,
good stability, their core is very active.
That's really cool, but does it really build a lot of muscle?
Yeah, it does, absolutely.
For muscles you wouldn't even expect.
Hamstrings, do a hamstring curl on a suspension trainer.
Tell me your hamstrings don't blow up from the glute exercises.
Do glute hip thrusts or bridges, single leg or both legs
on a suspension trainer.
Tell me your butt doesn't just get the craziest pump
and development.
Arms.
Arms was one that really blew me away.
Like I've been saying throughout the whole podcast,
doing exercise for biceps and triceps on that
were at par or maybe even superior
to certain barbell in dumbbell exercises.
Shoulders, that's a big one.
People are like, well, what am I gonna get from that?
Try doing some, first of all, there's like a hundred shoulder
exercises you can do with suspension trainers.
Watch how your delts develop when you're using
suspension trainers.
It is a phenomenal body building tool,
just to build up your body.
Well, I think the people that are familiar with
suspension trainers have seen a lot of moves and they've seen a lot of videos and things that, you know, they
try and emulate it. And they're like, oh, that looks like a cool move. I'm just going
to see if I can, you know, do that. But it's not really, they haven't really gone through
a real program in terms of, you know, progressing them and intensifying those exercises and
body parts to gradually bring them up, which
your muscles respond to, but then we build on that.
So it's really important that you have structure using a tool like this.
I'm glad you brought that point out because this was my favorite part about creating the
program, was that.
Was exactly my experience when it first came out was it it was like one of those things
where the most creative and unique exercises you could do everybody was just kind of throwing
the whole kitchen.
So novel.
Yes, it's all look at you could do this and look at this crazy movement and it was all
about that.
It reminded me of the wave of functional training that happened to us.
Forget programming just throwing.
Right.
It's just balancing on everything and jumping around and doing weird stuff.
It reminded me of that, and I was originally turned off
by it because of that.
Because it turned into a thing of how creative can I get?
And I'm going like, it doesn't matter how creative it is.
If it's not as useful or as not as effective.
But a lot of that was just nobody
was programming it really well.
They were just throwing out all these creative neat
exercises that were challenging that
you could do, which is great.
That just to the point that we talk about, you could regress and progress things a lot with
this tool, but the reality of it, I haven't seen anybody put together like a really solid
program for the average person to go through and progress and progressively overload their
body in it.
Yes, it makes a big difference.
So it's like, okay, there's 101 different chest exercises,
right? Does that mean you just throw them in a workout and you're going to get as good of results
as a well-programmed workout that puts them in the best order, combines the right exercises, reps
and sets, of course not. Programming is what makes our programs so popular. The exercises in
most of our programs, many of them
are ones that people are very familiar with.
It's just how we put them together, sets, reps,
how you put the weeks together and the days together
and the exercises and what order and what emphasis.
That's what makes them so effective.
I have yet to see anybody do that
with a full suspension trainer workout
where somebody took all these
exercises and did just throw them in and be like, here's some back exercises for back,
here's some leg ones for leg ones, who somebody looked at it like it were programming an excellent
full-on workout.
That's what we did when we put together our map suspension program is we actually took
these workouts, these exercises and put it into a well planned program
all the way from beginning to end,
and faced through so that your body progresses
as you go through the program.
It's a suspension only workout program.
This was also created to address what we thought
was one of the biggest needs that we had heard
in the last two or three months from all of our trainers.
A lot of trainers have been messaging us.
What do I do right now?
My gym is closed down.
I don't know if I should leave careers or there's opportunities for me to pivot and do something
else in the space.
And this is an opportunity right here.
If this was really popular when I was running boot camps is to get eight or ten of these
suspension trainers and then run groups outdoor where everybody can be spaced six feet apart or
more from each other.
You go to some park or some high school or something and you strap it to the goal post
or you strap it to some tree and you get a little camp running with five to ten people
at a time where you're charging a little bit less than what you would for one-on-one private
training, but enough for more than what you would be making per
hour if you were training a client and you take them outdoors and you give them an incredible
workout and we've laid it all out so you could run it like a program.
And my suggestion to the trainers that have been messaging us is I would sell like the
way we have structured the program is that would be an X amount, a week program for your boot camp
or whatever you want to call it, your outdoor training for your clients.
I would package it like that.
This is an incredible tool for all the coaches out there that have been asking this.
A suspension trainer, I would say, is probably the single most valuable piece of equipment
for the private traveling trainer.
I can't think of a single piece of equipment that is superior.
By itself, you could drive to somebody's house or meet them at the park and give them
exceptional workouts endlessly for years and years without needing anything else.
And clients appreciate it because it's a lot of fun and it's different.
And of course, the results that people get from it, like all the stuff that we've been talking about
in this entire episode.
So look, we put together and have released
a brand new Maps program.
I actually haven't released a Maps program in a long time.
This one is Maps Suspension.
It's the entire program.
The entire workout from beginning to end
is with suspension trainers.
That's it, that's all you need is a pair of
suspension trainers and you can train and build and sculpt your entire body because it's a new release.
We have a launch special on it. So what you got to do if you're interested in this and again
everything spelled out. So we have the exercise video demos in there. So when you click on an
exercise, Justin is demonstrating how to do it properly and perfectly.
It tells you how many reps, how many sets,
everything that you need to know
to follow this entire program.
So what you gotta do is you go to mapssuspension.com,
that's M-A-P-S-U-S-P-E-N-S-I-O-N.
And then use the code Suspension20. That's S-U-S-P-E-N-S-I-O-N-2-0.
That'll give you $20 off the program.
So you get $20 off for the brand new launch.
And this program will not be going on sale for very, very long time because it is a brand new program.
Also when you get the program for first time, you know, first come, first serve, first
come, you will get a discount code sent to you in your email for a suspension trainer.
You actually be able to buy them for 47 bucks from us with the discount code.
That's as long as supplies last.
And I know good suspension trainers online
can cost as much as 180 bucks.
So that's a pretty good deal.
Also, mine pump is recorded on video as well as audio.
Come check us out on YouTube, Mind Pump Podcast.
And finally, if you have any questions for us
and you want to talk to us individually,
you can find us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump 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 dot com.
The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps for performance and maps aesthetic, www.mapsanabolic.com 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having sour, animal, and Justin as your own personal trainers,
but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag 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 Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.