Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1382: Why Everyone Should Squat
Episode Date: September 17, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin go into five reasons everyone should squat. Mind Pump’s motivation behind why everyone should squat. (2:45) The common reasons why people don’t squat. (6:26) T...he benefits of fundamental human movements. (12:18) The bodybuilder mentality. (15:30) Why a beginner should squat. The importance of laying the foundation first. (19:57) The best exercise for overall strength. (27:10) The importance of hip-hinging. (35:34) How squatting speeds up the metabolism and promotes fat loss. (37:13) Emphasizing on practicing the skill and the mobility factor. (39:20) Pro or Con: The popular exercises people replace the squat with. (42:56) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Oli Pop for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout for 15% off your first order** MAPS Fitness Products MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Everything a Beginner Needs to Know About Squatting – Mind Pump Blog A Comparison of Maximal Squat Strength and 5-, 10-, and 20-Meter Sprint Times, in Athletes and Recreationally Trained Men Sitting, squatting, and the evolutionary biology of human inactivity Mind Pump #1377: From Couch To Deep Squat In 90 Days Mind Pump TV - YouTube Prime Bundle | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Eugene Teo (@coacheugeneteo) Instagram Jon Call (@jujimufu) Instagram Ben Pollack, Ph.D. (@phdeadlift) Instagram
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
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 a great subject, one that there's a little bit of controversy around on the interwebs, we talk about the squat, and in particular, why everybody should do squats,
or if you can't do squats, why you should get to the point where you can do them.
It's the best exercise for beginners to learn.
It's phenomenal for building real world strength.
It builds muscle like no other exercise.
It's phenomenal for fat
loss through the metabolism boosting effects, and all the other exercises people
like to do in replace of squats, leg presses and hack squats, for example,
they're all terrible, terrible substitutes. Now in this episode we talk about
mobility a little bit because some people can't squat because they lack the
mobility. Okay, that's not an excuse to not squat.
If anything, work on your mobility,
so you can squat.
We have a free class called,
it's a PrimeProWebinar.com,
so if you go to PrimeProWebinar.com,
you can take the courses totally free.
Adam, or my co-host,
takes you through mobility movements
that will help you get a better squat.
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We've addressed, I think in quads many times.
I don't know if we've done a single episode related to this,
but I get tagged on posts like this all the time.
And so I think that we should lay this out
one good time, very thorough.
And then we could reference this episode going forward
so we don't have to continue.
Here's our stance.
Have this conversation.
And so the title of this episode is why everyone should squat.
Ooh. Now what motivated you?
Why is there a controversy?
Yeah, what was the post or motivation?
Did you get one recently?
Yeah, so I got tagged in a good buddy of ours, Eugene Tao.
Oh, it's a good guy.
Incredible guy, very smart dude.
Very smart dude, great coach.
One of my favorite dudes on Instagram,
and so of course when we have crossover of audience, right?
So this happens a lot when our good friends, you know,
whether it be Pukowski, Greenfield, Pack,
if any of these guys, Lane Norton,
Lane Norton, if any of these guys say something
that is like, doesn't align perfectly with mine pump,
we get tagged like, fucking a thousand times.
And it's like, what do you guys think?
Yeah, what do you think about this?
So a couple of things.
First of all, so addressing Eugene's post,
he is very good at Instagram.
He's very, very good.
He's better than we are for sure.
And, and I'm kind of a weird award-tower.
And you don't have that award, man.
First place, a good job.
Hey, well, I mean, it's classic trophy.
No, all joking aside, he's a smart dude too.
Yeah, that's the very smart guy.
Good trainer.
This is what makes him really good at this.
This is, he's very, and here's what I love
about someone like this is they do a good job
of putting something out like that.
And I don't think he is a zallet about it whatsoever.
He does it because he knows it's gonna stir up
some controversy and some conversation.
He also knows how to make a case.
Absolutely.
And he knows how to intelligently argue his point the same way we're gonna argue ours.
So his post is this the one I got tagged on it too where he's basically saying essentially
why squats are not the best exercise or why everyone doesn't need to squat or something
like that.
Yeah, not only that was why it's not the best exercise for all these people.
And he lists beginners, strength athletes, power lifters, and some, I forget what all
the lists were, but basically making the case.
And then in fact, he penned a comment that somebody said, well, then why even squat?
And you know, he penned that comment, so that's a great question.
So basically making the case for, you know, why, why should anyone ever squat if we can
accomplish many of the things that people claim that you can accomplish in squat from
other movements.
Yeah, and I think, okay, so it's important to say this first.
They're because training, everybody's an individual, so there's always exceptions to
most rules and fitness always,
but some exceptions are far more rare than others.
For example, there may be an exception where I'd say,
everybody should have at least some fruit and vegetables
in their diet.
Are there exceptions to that?
There are.
I know people who follow very strict carnivore diets
who have autoimmune flare ups when they eat fruits and vegetables.
But they're not, they're definitely the exception, okay?
So are there people out there
where squatting may not be right for them?
Yes, but they are very small exception,
very, very small person.
In fact, of all the clients I've ever trained,
I can't think of a single person
who would follow in that category. I mean, I did have think of a single person who would follow that category.
I mean, I did have a client that was an amputee that's obvious, but everybody either squat,
did squats or worked towards doing a squat and we got phenomenal results.
So when we're saying why everyone's a squat, we're referring to the vast majority of people,
you know, 97% of the people listening to this podcast.
Now in my experience, the, when people say they don't like squats, there's always the
same, there's always the same reasons. It's either one, they don't have the mobility that
allows them to squat properly and they don't want to work on the mobility to be able to
squat. So they, they say squats don't work for me. Yeah, they don't work for you right
now, but can you get to a squat and should you be able to?
You should, but that's why they don't like them.
Oh, squats hurt my knees, my back.
They don't feel comfortable.
That's always one of the reasons is that they have poor mobility
and rather than working on the mobility,
they just say, I shouldn't squat.
Here's why this is a dangerous argument, in my opinion,
to defend why you shouldn't squat and so I do like
having this debate back and forth because I think it's a healthy conversation. But look what's
happening right now and this is happening in our generation, okay. In a short period of time,
we have been able to literally sit on our ass at home and work, order something that gets to us within
24 hours, call a car that can come pick us up right from the spot that we're at and not move.
We don't even have to walk. Yeah, we don't even have to walk now. We've got these little, you know,
scooter electric scooters all over town everywhere. We've got these little, what do they call one of
those, the two-wheeled ones that are popular now.
The Segways, the Segways all over the place.
I'm all bicycle.
It's, no.
It's so much work.
So much work.
So we're not far from, you know,
having a potential society that looks a lot like that,
that car too.
Wally.
Dude, when I watched Wally, I actually,
great movie, very touching, but that part, me was a little bit of an oof.
But where I'm going with this is that really soon here,
walking may not become mandatory anymore.
And people will say, why should I try walking?
Why? Why should I even prefer?
It hurts. It's difficult.
It's too much work.
It bothers my...
You sit in my hover chair.
Yeah, it bothers my knees. It doesn't bother my bothers my- You sit in my hover chair. Yeah, it bothers my knees.
It doesn't bother my knees to sit in my hover chair.
And so, now, mind you,
and I need you to be a little creative listening to this, right?
This is an extreme analogy to make this point,
but at some point,
we've lost this fundamental skill to sit down and squat.
I'll back you up right now, okay?
People think walking, no, we're never gonna lose that ability.
Okay, we've lost our ability to run.
The average person right now,
because, okay, running is a fundamental human movement.
Running is something that humans do exceptionally well.
In fact, it's widely agreed upon
that the way that humans, for most of human history,
caught their food was by injuring the animal and then running after it
until it got too tired to keep running.
That's the no joke.
In fact, if you look at modern hunter-gatherers,
they still hunt this way.
They will run an animal down.
They out under them.
They out and der them.
There's been races, long-distance races
where humans beat horses.
We're exceptionally good at long-distance running.
We evolved the do-so. Now is running. We're evolved to do so.
Now is that true for the modern person?
No.
If I go outside right now and go pick out a hundred people,
I guarantee not one of them will be able to run properly
without pain, without terrible dysfunction.
This is why I recommend people don't run these days
because we grow up not doing it,
we grow up not practicing it, we lose the skill, and then people think they can go outside and just run all the time.
We've lost that fundamental human movement, walking the same thing will happen to walking,
the same exact thing will happen to walking.
Squatting is also a fundamental human movement.
If you go to a third world country or you watch modern hunter-gatherers, this is how people rest. This is how they eat. This is how women
give birth. This is how we go to the bathroom. This is how we go to the bathroom.
We sit in a squat. It's very comfortable. Old people do it. Young people do
it. It's a fundamental human movement. And why are now why are fundamental
human movements good to maintain?
Because your body evolved to do them and when you lose those fundamental movements,
there's a lot of carryover and what you can lose in terms of just general movement.
It's a big deal.
Well, I think to like I'm more prone to looking at carryover for real life situations,
I'm more prone to looking at carryover for real life situations,
versus just trying to focus completely on muscle development and being happy with walking around with excess muscle,
versus being able to actually use that in certain situations,
and be able to pick things up properly,
being able to sit down, be able to do all the things you described.
Why not do that with strength attached to it?
Yeah, so I talked earlier about one of the number one reasons why people say they don't
like squats is because they lack the mobility, whether they're aware of it or not.
The second reason that I see people say they don't like squats is because they're hyper
responders, they build a lot of muscle very easily in their lower body, and so to them,
it's like, why should I do
that difficult challenging exercise
when I've got these great quads and hamstrings
from doing leg presses and haxtquats
and leg extensions?
You hear this from body builders all the time.
Oh, I don't squat, it hurts my whatever.
I just lay press and I look phenomenal.
Look at my legs and I get that.
Okay, great, you've got these great genetics
and all the stuff.
So in spite of the fact that you're not squatting, you've developed good muscle, does that
mean, however, that you won't benefit from squatting yourself?
Absolutely, well, everybody will benefit from this, again, from this fundamental human movement.
There's other ones too, throwing, throwing with accuracy, this is a very exclusive skill
to humans,
climbing, you know, humans are supposed to be able to climb.
And if you don't practice these things, you lose them.
And when you lose a fundamental human movement, a lot of things happen.
So let's go back to walking for a second, because that's the one that people can still do.
Thankfully, we still practice it.
If you lost your ability to walk, we are losing it by the way.
We are. If you lost your ability to walk, we are losing it by the way.
If you lost your ability to walk,
imagine the rest of your health
and what would happen to the rest of your health.
Even if you, let's say you didn't walk
and you were in a hover chair or whatever,
but you use a lot of other equipment to exercise your body.
Would that replace just basic, simple walking?
No, it wouldn't.
You know, we know that walking circulates the,
your blood and lymphatic system.
We know that walking helps with digestion.
We know that walking has a far reaching effects
on the brain because it's something that we humans evolve
to do, squatting is up there.
And if you don't do it, you lose a skill
and the longer you lose a skill,
the more difficult it is to gain it back.
So it's something that everybody should do.
But along with that, because it's a fundamental human skill,
there's so much potential that comes off of it.
In my experience, nothing comes close
to the muscle strength and functional ability
I gain from squatting.
It's like the best exercise for all of those things.
I can't think of another exercise that even comes close.
And I remember when I first started squatting as a 16, 17 year old kid, and I remember
like I would add 20 pounds to a squat and it did more for my legs than adding 70 pounds
on a leg press.
It just blew me away.
This is the same thing with my clients.
When I first started my career as a personal trainer,
I kind of fell into this, you know, believing these myths
and so my clients, rather than them teaching them
how to squat, working on mobility, we would do leg press,
we would do hack squat, we would do leg extension.
Later on in my career, as I understood the importance
of this, I stopped doing that.
And so I get a client, I'd look at them
and we try to do, okay, you can't do a squat,
let's work on mobility, we'll work towards squats.
Oh, now we can squat, let's practice without weight.
Okay, now we can add weight.
And the progress that the clients would make
through that process, blew everything out
of the water that I did before.
Just speak to all those skills.
I mean, you start like losing that skill by not using it. You start building
up a lot more dependencies. And so what you're going to see now is you're very limited in
anything in real life with what you can actually apply because you're susceptible to just,
you know, the slightest angle that you're not familiar with. Now I don't know how to properly
stabilize in this position. I don't know how to properly stabilize in this position. I don't know have the strength really to dig me out of this position. I'm more vulnerable and dependent
on things being in a perfect track. And that's just not the real life.
So let's let's let's address beginners first. And I think that's kind of the the go to case
that people like to make for like white by beginner shouldn't squat. Yeah. Why a beginner? Because
it's a high skill movement, right? It's a very high skill movement.
It takes probably years and years of practicing
to get really good at it.
So why would I ever have a beginner do something
that's that high skill
because the potential of risk that.
So why not do other machines and other movements
while they are a beginner and then transition
maybe later to success.
So, you know, I wanna, before we even get into that
because I think this is connected to that,
I do wanna say that a lot of the reason why
this is even a debate or discussion
has to do with the influence of bodybuilders
in training and in fitness.
And bodybuilders have brought a lot of amazing things
to fitness, but as bodybuilders started to change their focus, because originally bodybuilders have brought a lot of amazing things to fitness, but as bodybuilders started
to change their focus, because originally bodybuilders, they, when they would, first bodybuilding
shows, by the way, included a physical performance, you know, feet, like you went on stage, you
didn't just pose, you also had to show that you were strong or that you could do something,
and then eventually turned into just looking at me and then steroids came in and then it
became all about just developing my body in the easiest way possible,
and it really doesn't matter how I move or whatever.
But bodybuilders used to squat all the time
before they moved away from squats,
and here's the influence that we have now on beginners.
Bodybuilders say you can develop nice looking legs
without squatting, this is what beginners here is,
oh, I just wanna look good,
so why do that hard, complicated thing
when I'm just going to develop my legs
doing this other exercise?
This is a very bad way of thinking.
It's not a good way of thinking.
And again, here's your example.
Look at bodybuilders.
Look at a bodybuilder.
Watch them walk, watch them move,
watch them throw a football, watch them throw a punch,
watch them run.
What you are seeing is a muscular dysfunctional person,
very muscular, unable to move and function properly,
easily able to hurt themselves as a result.
Unless you're jujujimufu.
Well, he practices fun, you know,
functional movements and stuff all the time.
You just have to do a lot of time.
That's an example of what,
if you actually were a body builder
who put that much energy and effort towards
Mobility, you're back flips right right, you know, but that's rare though. You don't see that you rarely see somebody who's built that way
That's put so I mean this one is this conversation. I'm very passionate about because here I am now with a a one-year-old child
and I can't tell you guys
one year old child. And I can't tell you guys how much of my day
is in the squatted position.
I mean, I rest, what's awesome though,
is I have the ability now,
which I didn't have just five, six years ago,
I did not have the ability to rest
in a complete deep squatted position.
That was not a resting position for me.
My hips were so tight, my ankle mobility was so poor
that if I truck,
first of all, I couldn't even get that low without my heels rising above the ground.
So my quads and shins would be on fire trying to say that. I couldn't sit in that position
for longer than maybe a minute, maybe two minutes at best. Where now I can take my son out to the park
and we can be running back and forth in the grass and I can be down with him and in that rested position for 20, 30 minutes
at a time, comfortably.
And I wouldn't have been if I had not started to work on the depth in my squat and work
on my mobility to be able to do that.
Otherwise, if I would have just stuck to machine exercises, and here's the problem that
I have with this is that if you can't squat because you're limited because
of your mobility, what makes you think when you get into a hack squat, a leg press, or
a machine, a machine that that mobility is going to improve?
It's not.
You're just going, it's just easier to cheat.
It's easier to cheat on a hack squat.
You're actually strengthening your immobility.
Exactly. So you just, but you build muscle,
so maybe your legs get developed,
but then you lose this ability to sit down in a deep squat.
And this, why this argument is tough from my buddy Eugene
is because he has great mobility.
So if he was a client of mine, right, if he hired me,
and he said,
I don't like doing squats. He also seems to look like he develops some amazing legs.
Yeah, no, 100%. Right? And if I saw his ankle mobility, his hip mobility,
performing his hax squats and he likes doing that and he didn't want to squat anymore,
I probably wouldn't push the issue. Okay, we don't have to.
You don't need to. You can build great legs. You've got great
income mobility. You've got great hip mobility. As long as we continue to do movements that
promote that, I'm all for it. But if you give a kid the out or even an adult who's just
getting into fitness, you give them the out that they don't need to squat because it's
hard or it's hurt or it hurts them or they don't have the mobility You you definitely are not helping them out by by pointing them in the direction of a machine because they're still not addressing the root cause of why they couldn't squat
No, they're not and with beginners. This is extremely important. Now here's a deal when you're training a beginner as a trainer
It's like building a house
The way you build a house is you start with the
foundation. You don't build a house roof first or walls first. You have to start with
a good foundation. I don't take a beginner and throw them in a high intensity workout type
class. I don't throw them in max PRs. It would be inappropriate. It doesn't make sense.
It doesn't develop their body properly and sets them up for injury and failure.
What do you do at the beginner?
You focus on the base, we look at mobility, we look at stability mechanics.
Mechanics, and can I get you to the point where you can do a few movements, stable and strong,
a squat, an overhead press, can I get you to do a proper row?
Can I get you to do a proper horizontal press?
Can I get your core stability good?
Can you rotate well?
Like you gotta do all that.
Do you even have control of your body yet?
And honestly, like there's all these machines
are basically masking a lot of,
they're taking over the job and responsibility
of a lot of the stabilizing muscles your body has.
So what you're going to do is you're going to shut those off and teach them not to respond.
To me, that's just not something that I would promote towards a beginner.
That's one of the first things I want to establish and teach them is the proper way to get
your body to respond and be harmonious in your movements because your body is a hole. It's not segmented.
Yeah, it's a body builder. It's literally a body builder mentality.
Well, if I can look this way, then it doesn't matter, but here's the other side of that, okay.
By working on these things, you will be able to utilize the most effective exercise there is
for developing an aesthetic lower body. So it's not like
you're trading. So it's not like I'm taking a beginner and saying, we're going to sacrifice
muscle building. We're going to sacrifice the way you look because I think squats are
great. So we're not going to do these other exercises that are going to develop better
muscle. That's not true. It does both better. So it's not like you're sacrificing one for
the other. You're just sacrificing one when you don't do squats.
So you might develop some muscle,
but you don't get any of the mobility.
But if you squat, not only do you get the mobility,
but you also build more muscle.
And you build more muscle.
I have another example, besides the house analogy,
was like when I went through music
and I was trying to learn the proper way to play guitar,
and I taught myself, and I was all proud of teaching myself
and I could hear things on the radio
and I could kind of figure it out.
And I miss, I built so many bad patterns
because I didn't go to the process of music theory.
I don't know exactly the chord structure.
I don't know how to create all this myself.
It's just, I was trying to jump to the parts
that I found, you know,
the most sexy. I want to see if I can do this, but I never really learned the level I
know I could learn. So I look at it the same way with fitness. I really am passionate about
like learning it the proper way first and then building on top of that.
It's funny to me too that someone would say it's not the best for beginners when in
most certifications I've taken,
most courses that I've taken.
For assessment.
Design for trainers, right?
These are courses that are approved,
they're nationally certified courses,
even ones that are not nationally certified,
but ones that have lots of respect and value.
Almost every single one, in fact,
I'm having trouble thinking of one
that doesn't have a squat as part of the assessment for a beginner because it doesn't tell you everything
but it tells you a lot. If you watch someone squat, you can start to see, you can see the issues
with the upper spine, you can see issues with the lower spine, you can see issues with
the hips, the knees, the ankles, and the feet just from doing a squat. So the fact that
someone would say
it's not best for beginners is very interesting.
Well, that's another great case for why it's so valuable
because what a great place for a mark, right?
I mean, for me, this is how I gauge my overall progress
is always going back to my squat
and seeing it as it improved.
Has my strength improved, has my movement improved, has as it improved, has my strength improved, has my
movement improved, has my depth improved, has my control improved.
And if I've been doing a good job programming and putting my consistency in and my work
in and addressing my mobility and addressing all my postural deviations that I got going
on, like everybody else, if I've been doing that, every time I come back to the squat, it
should be a little bit better.
A little bit better.
And better doesn't always translate
into I can squat a hundred more pounds.
It's, there's a lot more that goes into
having a really good squat.
It's not just about how much we'd load
and that we lift, that's not the idea.
To be able to perfect a deep good controlled squat
with stability and control,
that in itself is a great marker for beginners
to always refer back to to pay attention to the progress.
Yeah, there's nothing wrong with training body parts
and trying to connect to body parts
and develop body parts.
That's an important aspect of training,
but when you're a beginner, when I'm training beginners,
unless I'm doing correctional exercise
where I need to get them to feel a particular muscle,
just because they don't feel it at all.
Aside from that, most of my training
revolves around movement and not muscles.
In other words, I'm not like working your quads,
working your hands, I'm like,
can we get you to do a good squat?
I'm not saying, do you feel your lats or your rhomboids?
I'm saying, can we do a good row? I'm not saying, can you feel your delts? I'm like, I'm trying to say, can we do a good
overhead press? So when it comes to beginners, especially to beginners, squatting is extremely
valuable. And the way you start a beginner is you train them to be able to squat, then you get
them to be able to squat and then you progress from there. It's one of the most important exercises.
The squat is the target.
It's the bullseye, right?
And you could break apart firing a gun into a bunch of different things, the cocking of
it, the squeeze of it, what hand, the way you look with your eye, and you could have no
target inside, and you could teach all these things and get great at it.
But if you don't have a mark, if you don't have a gauge for them to aim at and fire, it's really tough to tell if they've gotten better at firing that fucking gun.
The same concept goes when it comes to training.
You can break it up and segment it in all these isolation exercises and all these different machines to help develop and to get better at all that.
Understanding the gun, understanding how to squeeze, understanding how to hold it, how to look, all those things.
But if you don't have a marker, if you don't have a benchmark,
if you don't have a target
that you can go back and reference and see like,
oh wow, all these things that I'm doing,
I'm getting closer and closer and closer to that perfect,
that perfect straight bullseye, it's really tough
for you to gauge like how well you are improving
in your overall mobility and function,
which I think the squat is the key.
Yeah, absolutely. And to go back to the whole segmenting at first and that it's not for beginners,
what you're going to do is build all these compensations and all this mess that you're going to have
to unwind. Once you really decide to dive into learning the squat, like good luck,
fighting your own tendencies that are hardwired because you decided to jump ahead
and didn't do the due diligence to start
where you need to start.
That's right.
Now the next thing that squats are great for is strength.
In fact, it's one of the best exercises
for overall strength that you can possibly do.
And what I mean by that is, if you get stronger in your squat,
you almost always see carryover into either other lifts
or into any other kind of physical performance.
It's so powerful in fact that a 30-pound increase
on a barbell squat, a good barbell squat,
is worth more than a 100-pound increase on a leg press
or a hack squat. No joke in terms of real world strength in the carryover.
Studies show, especially with beginner to intermediate athletes, this is before you
start to get real specific and technical with them, that getting them strong or squat
makes them faster.
It just makes them faster.
They can take off quicker, especially in the beginning and intermediate stages.
It's one of the best exercises of a strength.
In fact, I love deadlifting, right?
Deadlifting's one of my favorite exercises.
If my deadlift goes up, sometimes I see my squat go up,
sometimes I don't.
If my squat goes up, I almost always see my deadlift go up,
almost every single time.
It's one of those exercises with carryover is just,
in fact, when my squat goes up,
I oftentimes see other exercises,
I don't even seem connected going up.
I actually see my bench press going.
Well, it's one of the few exercises that literally gets everything from your neck down
to your toes.
I mean, it literally touches everything in a single movement and an exercise like a leg
press, a hack squat.
I'm sorry. The machine, like to Justin's point earlier,
is doing a lot for you.
It's doing a lot.
It's taking over a lot of those stabilized muscles
that you would have to activate when you're in a squat.
It's also, I mean, we talked on this show at Nazim about,
there's many times when I go to the gym
and all I do is squat because it's that valuable.
It's such a great exercise that I know,
like you know what, I'm not in the mood
to do a 50 minute hard workout today.
It checks all the boxes.
At the bare minimum, I'm gonna get in there,
and I'm gonna squat.
I know if I can do five sets of squats,
I'm gonna walk away, have a pretty damn good workout
and get everything from calorie expenditure,
to strength building, to everything of fat loss.
There's all this and then mobility,
all these things that I get from one single movement.
There's nothing else like that.
You know, they do these studies on exercises
where they're measuring,
they measure anabolic hormone response.
So you'll do an exercise and then they'll test things
like testosterone and growth hormone
to see what the response is.
Now this isn't the B all end all.
So it doesn't necessarily mean that
because you got the greatest response, you're gonna build build the most muscle whether, but if you are comparing
apples to apples, so all exercises performed in similar ways, it does tell you something,
right?
So, if you do an exercise and you see a 200% increase in testosterone, you do another
exercise and you see a 50% increase in testosterone, I think it tells you something about that exercise.
No exercise compares to barbell squats.
Barbell squats, and almost every study I've ever seen,
causes the greatest anabolic hormone response,
which just confirms kind of my experience
with barbell squats, that they're just the great strength
and muscle building.
It sends a very loud strength building signal, very, very loud.
Like I said, 30 pound increase on a squat is more value.
You talk to any lifter.
You ask them, what's more valuable?
30 pound increase in your squat, a hundred pounds increase
on your leg press.
And almost all of them will say, oh, the squat,
well why?
30 pounds on a squat means a lot more muscle.
100 pounds on a leg press doesn't mean that much more muscle.
So if you think about the CNS, right?
We don't talk enough about that.
I mean, I've referred to you're now in this podcast
that we've done this so many times.
You're analogy of the speaker and the amplifier.
I just think it's such a great analogy,
and here it is again, it's like,
when we train and we lift weights, everybody
thinks about the muscle all the time, building and developing the muscle and the muscle getting
worked. And the role of the central nervous system is such a big part in your overall success
and building a physique and to not talk about that and to not talk about what the squat does
for training the CNS, there is nothing that is going to wake up that body like a squat.
It increases the capacity to generate more force.
And that's what gives you more strength.
Not only that, you have to be able to stabilize all of your joints in order to allow more
of that force to be produced.
And so working with machines limits that substantially.
So your potential is way lower
than being able to go through something
where everything has to, you have to check all those boxes
and now, all of a sudden, my whole body is involved.
I'm gonna generate a much louder signal,
which then I can, it bleeds into almost every other
lift.
Yeah, one of my favorite aspects of the squat.
It's one of the few lower body exercises that simultaneously encourages good posture.
You have to, if you're doing a good squat, a good, especially with a barbell, right?
We have to hold it on your back and you have to sit there with your chest out while you're
squatting.
In fact, if your posture breaks down while you squat, that's a mobility issue and can cause problems, right?
That's one of the core things to look at when you're doing a squat.
Can you maintain good posture as you do it?
So here you are building and strengthening the lower body,
but supporting it with good posture.
This is phenomenal.
Not a lot of lower body exercises do this.
A leg press definitely doesn't do this.
In fact, a leg press may actually encourage poor posture
as you're getting stronger with your legs.
Now, why is that important?
Because in the real world, when you're exerting force
through your legs, your body tends to put itself
in the position that you strengthen it
in when you're working your legs.
Do you want to exert force in your legs
in a leg press position in the real world?
Or do you want to exert force with good posture? Think about all the things that press position in the real world, or do you want to exert force with good posture?
Think about all the things that you do in the real world
that require your legs to be strong.
Do you want to have that?
Be good at shin kicks.
Yeah, exactly.
That's about it.
The squat encourages good posture.
And here's a funny thing.
I'm training clients.
Sometimes that's what I have to work on
to get them to do a good squat.
It's not hip mobility, it's not ankle mobility,
it's, oh, it's your posture.
Your posture's killing the squat.
So we work on the posture in order to get them to squat.
This is a great part of the barbell squat.
It also builds the most muscle.
It just does for most people, okay?
Maybe not for everybody, but for most people,
you do good barbell squats.
There's no other exercise that's gonna develop your legs.
And one of my favorite examples is Adam.
Adam was a professional, you know, physique competitor.
You had to develop his body.
It was his job for a second there.
And he went off gear, went off testosterone,
retired,
started getting really good at barbell squats.
His legs actually developed better
after all of that just through the barbell squat.
And the irony of that too is that
I had to lighten the load to work on my mobility.
So that was one of the things that blew me away was,
okay, I had squatted a half squat or ten to two parallel squat,
heavier weight than what I was doing when I
came off of testosterone, worked on my ankle and hip mobility, and worked on a deeper squat
with lighter weight.
So regressing back on the load and working on mobility and depth ended up developing
my legs more even with less weight.
And I think that's something that you have to take into consideration.
I think that was your point you made earlier, Sal, about beginners avoiding it because
they think they have to sacrifice learning to squat in order to build muscle.
But the reality is if you learn to deep squat with good form, you'll end up building more
muscle with less weight.
That's the beauty of it.
Oh, dude, if I don't squat, I can feel it
in the muscles of my legs.
If I squat, I feel it within two or three days.
It's like my legs just respond for women
who want to develop nice hamstrings and glutes.
Those are popular muscles for women
with my female clients.
It was like, all right, we're gonna get really good
at squatting and they would always get blown away. Well, my butt's getting really round and I'm like, well, yeah, it was like, all right, we're gonna get really good at squatting. And they would always get blown away.
Well, my butt's getting really round.
And I'm like, well, yeah, it's a barbell squat.
It's one of the more effective exercises
for your butt if you do them properly.
You know, to that point too,
like we didn't really address this very much.
And we should because one of the things
as a trainer, we end up having to teach a lot
is the importance of hip hinging.
The importance for the ability for someone to hinge at the hips,
we tend to lose this.
We tend to become so anteriorly driven
where we're on our quads.
And this is another reason why I don't like the haxquat
is because we're already driven that way.
And we have a hard time teaching a client
to know how to hinge at the hips.
When you get into a haanksquat, you just,
or a leg press, you eliminate that.
You completely eliminate that function.
And so you're just getting strong in that position.
You're not helping, you're not helping what's going on at all.
It's so crazy too.
Like, towards the end of my career,
I started training a lot of people in advanced age.
And the mobility, strength, and the mobility strength
and muscle that they would get from squats,
there was no machine that came close at all.
If I could get an older person to be able to do,
and I'm saying older, like over 70,
10 good body weight squats,
that was better than leg pressing and hack squatting
and leg is way better.
They would come to me and be like,
oh my God, I can move more.
I feel so much stronger.
I'd watch them build muscle.
You know, hard it is to build muscle
on somebody who's over 75.
It's much more challenging,
but we would measure it.
We would test it.
And I'd see them build three, four, five pounds of muscle
just from practicing this movement
of this fundamental human movement.
Now, you're the average person.
You're not set de-conditioned in 75.
If you're listening to this right now,
and you like to, you want to build muscle,
try getting to the point where you can barbell squat properly.
Watch what happens, watch what happens to your body.
And now, indirectly, that leads to the next one,
which is fat loss.
Now, resistance training, we've made the argument
many times on this podcast,
that resistance training is one of the best ways
to burn body fat, not because it necessarily burns
the most calories for the time spent doing it,
but rather because it's the best form of exercise
to speed up your metabolism
so that you burn more calories on your own.
Now because the barbell squat or the squat
builds the most strength and the most muscle,
it also simultaneously speeds up the metabolism the most.
I have seen this with clients firsthand.
Just getting them to get stronger at the squat,
while reverse dieting, I have seen the greatest increase
in metabolism boost just through that exercise alone
compared to any other exercise.
Now as far as calorie burn is concerned,
you ever do a 20 or 30 rep set of barbell squat?
Yeah, God.
Feels like cardio.
Name one more traditional strength training exercise
that burns more calories in that.
And I'm not talking about the other, you know,
people like to say like burpees,
and that's I'm not counting,
those are all cardio exercises.
I'm not about traditional resistance training exercises.
I can't think of another exercise
that gets you breathing as hard
or burning as many calories
as a barbell squat for my right.
And honestly, you compare to burpees,
but I'll take that challenge still.
Do 20 burpees, do 20 full body weight squats.
I mean, or barbell squats.
I mean, and tell me which one of those
gets your heart rate going just as much.
You're incorporating as many muscles as you are
if not more than what you do inside of a burpee.
So just because you could do the burpee faster
and maybe elevate that heart rate,
I would still challenge on which one
ends up burning more calories.
Yeah, and you can, they measure
to the after calorie burn effect.
Not a huge effect, but still barbell squats are,
it's always at the top.
It's like barbell squat and the next will be like a deadlift
and then other compound movements underneath. But the squats always at the top. It's always at the top. It's like barbell squat and the next will be like a dead lift and then other compound movements underneath.
But the squat's always at the top.
It's always at the very top.
And there's not a lot of movements, maybe four or five,
that I could honestly say that can be a workout all by themselves.
It's like this is, this squat is that.
A squat is one of those exercises
that I would have some clients that's all we did.
The entire hour was dedicated to working on their mobility
so I could get them to perform the squat
and having them squat on the back half, right?
So the first half, we're working on ankle mobility,
hip mobility, shoulder mobility, posture,
all the work that going into make sure
that when we get into the squat,
they have good form and then we squat the rest.
And that's a workout.
So I had gotten, so when you did the Prime Pro webinar,
which I think is still available, right,
Doug, the primeprowebinar.com?
Okay.
Okay, so it's a free, it's a free webinar
and Adam takes you through,
mobility moves that will help you with general mobility,
but we're talking about the squat,
specifically there's a few movements in there,
if not all of them, that'll help you get a better squat.
And back when you did that, I actually got messages
from people who they said, I never squatted
because I hurt my back and it bothered my knees.
And I didn't squat, even though I heard you guys
say on the podcast and whatever,
then they did the Prime Pro webinar.
It's a free class, right?
They followed that, then they started practicing the movements.
Then I got these messages like a month later.
I'm finally squatting, you're totally right.
My body's developing and it's all because it was all the mobility, right?
That was prevented them in the first place.
Once they fixed that mobility issue, the messages I was getting was just.
And that's the real beef that I have with statements like this that, you know, people,
not everybody should squat is that it gives,
it gives a lot of kid, because I was this kid, I didn't like to squat.
It was hard for me.
It hurt.
And if some body builder or some guy that I looked up to that I respected that was intelligent,
that was fit, was telling me that I don't need to squat.
That's all I needed to hear.
That's all I needed to hear to get me to go, I don't need to do this.'s all I needed to hear. That's all I needed to hear to get me to go,
I don't need to do this.
And I heard shit like that.
And that's what kept me from focusing on it.
And it wasn't until later on,
I wanted to hear it.
Yeah, it is.
It's what I wanted to hear because it was hard.
Because they're hard, they're hard,
they're hard to get good at.
They are high skill.
And it does take me having to work on a lot of issues.
I had a lot of issues like most people do.
It's very rare.
I get a client and then we do a squat assessment. It's very rare. I get a client,
and we do a squat assessment, and they're squagal, oh, wow, you have a beautiful squat. I got nothing
I did. I got nothing to help you with. Yeah, and in terms of fat loss, if you're working on your
squats and you're really strengthening your hips, you're strengthening your entire body through
that, it promotes more movement. So a lot of times, like you're just not motivated to do certain movements and exercise in different directions where
you're going to have to, you know, that's your focus right there. You need to do the
work and get your body strong, which then is going to promote even more to do more.
Dude, I tell you, if you're listening right now and you're like, man, but squat's so really
hard for me, do the Prime Pro webinars,
PrimeProWebinar.com, do that class,
and then in the move, it's totally free.
There's nothing in there that costs money or whatever.
Follow that class, and then practice those movements
every day, practice squatting.
Most people listening right now who have issues with squats,
you're looking at a couple months
of that kind of mobility work,
where you'll see some pretty drastic improvements
in your squat.
You know for those that are like,
the muscle thing, right?
Like a good example, and I love to use them
because he's a beast, is Ben Pollock.
That dude literally did like two exercises
for like fucking 10 years.
Yeah, like deadlift and squat is like,
I don't think I've ever seen him,
I think I've seen him once do a bench press.
I think I've never seen him do an overhead press.
Like literally squatted and benched
and go take a look at that physique that has been built
from that absolute gorilla.
It's crazy.
Let's talk about some of the exercises
that people like to replace with squats
and say, oh, just do this instead.
Let's start with the leg press.
That's the most common one.
There's a couple of reasons why the leg press is so popular.
One, 100%, I will bet money on this all day long,
that people like the leg press because it makes your ego
feel good because it's an easy one to add a lot of weight.
You talk to anybody who has a little bit of experience
working out and if they bring up the leg,
oh, I used to be able to leg press 400 pounds.
I could throw five plates.
My friend would even sit on it.
Yeah, and it's crazy.
It's one of those exercises.
It's really easy to get strong at,
but the carryover isn't that huge.
The range of motion is limited.
Your body's already folded in half.
What a weird position to work the legs.
I'm not saying it's a totally worthless exercise,
but if you compare to the squat it is,
the range of motion is not,
even if you do a deep leg press, you are still not getting a full hip extension.
You're still not getting that full range of motion
that a squat provides.
It just doesn't work the body in the same way.
And you're in this weird seated position,
the things on a track.
By the way, I've seen more back injuries,
serious back injuries with the leg press
than I have the squat because when you have poor mobility and you're trying to do a leg press and you put a lot of weight on it and you come down with the leg press and I have the squat because when you have poor mobility
and you're trying to do a leg press
and you put a lot of weight on it
and you come down with the weight, you know that,
that what is it, but we inked that people see with the squat,
way worse with the leg press.
Yeah, you still got that issue, right?
Hips come up off the bench,
now you're loading it like crazy.
And it's compressed and the rest of your body is supported
by a pad and you've got, I don't know, 800 pounds, I think.
I've seen more slip discs embalging discs
from leg press almost into that.
So that's the problem I even have with the Hacksquat
is that I would put a client in the Hacksquat
that has like lower cross syndrome
and you'd still see that the winking happened.
So I mean, and when you watch,
Eugene has a video of him doing that,
he said a beautiful X-Quat.
He has, he has great technique.
He's got great ink.
He's also got a great squad.
Yeah.
And so when he does it, it looks great.
But when you put a client who's a beginner, who doesn't have good control of their pelvic
at all, and you put them in there and you see the winking all day long where you see the
butt drip off the back of the pad.
It's terrible.
Or, you know, here's, okay, here I'll make this statement right here.
You can find people that are good at leg press and good at la haxquat who are not good
with barbell squats.
It's hard to find someone who's good at barbell squats who can't do a good leg press or
a good haxquat.
That's a hundred percent, right?
Now, I know why a lot of people like the haxquat.
It's easier and it doesn't require as much ankle mobility, okay? This is me, right? Now, I know why a lot of people like to hack squat. It's easier and it doesn't require as much ankle mobility.
Okay. This is me, right? I have ankle mobility issues, something I always need to work on.
But I can put my feet up on the platform with the hack squat and it turns into an exercise where now my ankles,
my mobility doesn't need to pass 90 degrees and I can go all the way down and go all the way up.
Yeah, just bypass it.
And you just bypass it. So it's a much easier exercise. It does not build muscle in the legs like a squat.
It doesn't require the range of motion.
It doesn't require the mobility.
It doesn't send the same signal.
The next exercise, this one's silly,
but I even have to make this point.
But a leg extension, leg extension is not going to do.
It's not even going to come close to building your legs.
Remember those studies where they used the,
not the East Tim, but the EMG?
Was it, what's the measures?
Yeah, the most activation.
Yes, yeah, it's the EMG, right?
I think so, or it was like,
I think it was active MRI, but anyway.
Yeah, yeah, but you remember all those that would come out
and then try to make the argument that lay extensions.
This is activated more.
Yes, yeah, terrible.
No, so, lay extension.
In fact, I, for the last, I don't know,
15 years of my personal training career,
I never did Lady Extension with clients.
But my studio didn't have a Lady Extension machine.
It was an exercise that was largely a waste of time
unless you're really trying to add volume
and frequency to your workout.
You've already done the great exercises.
You're a body builder, you can handle lots of volume.
Okay, I'll throw in a leg extension,
but for most people,
I, did you guys do leg extensions with clients
and I almost never did that.
Pretty much eliminated it.
Just because, you know, I was just more prone to doing it.
If I'm gonna do that, I'm gonna do lunges,
I'm gonna do step-ups, I'm gonna do front loaded squats.
Like if I'm really trying to target, you know, the anterior,
which we're already like very anterior driven
like to your point earlier.
It's just one of those things.
I'm trying more to consider the post-ear chain and incorporate that to really help support
everything else in the body.
I did, but I admit that was a terrible trainer when I first started.
I did it because it was lazy.
It was easy.
You can sit them down.
Yeah, you can sit them down and make their legs burn.
Yeah, make their legs burn and do four or five sets of it and kill 15 minutes of your session. I mean,
it's been completely honest, not because it was the most beneficial thing from. I mean, honestly,
if you want that exact, that exact, exact foot would do a sissy squat. Oh, that's for sure.
You know what I'm saying? Now you've got a, now you've got a leg extension that builds muscle.
Right. With the, and it requires, of, of course, more stability and more skill.
Leg curls, that's a hamstring exercise.
You know, it's funny about that.
You're going to develop your hamstrings better
from doing things like dead lifts, stiff leg at dead lifts.
Curling the legs, it does work one part of the hamstring
a little more.
You know what I used to do with my clients?
Over a machine leg curl, physio ball leg curl.
Way more valuable for the average person.
Requires hip extension.
You gotta keep your core stable,
and I would get them to be able to work their hamstrings
a little better with that anyway.
I think talking about the hip extension,
that's you have to keep in mind as a trainer and a coach
that when we're training clients that come in
and say, wanna build muscle, they wanna burn fat,
that we're also a big part of our responsibility is to,
you know, help them with their posture,
work on longevity, address the health
and their joints and mobility.
Like, that's part of the job, even if they don't know that,
even if they come to you and say,
Adam, I want to build 30 pounds muscle,
that's all I care about.
Like, my job is to help that person
in all those other categories,
even if they don't realize how important that is for themself.
And because of that, that's why I'm not okay with letting people get away with,
you know, you don't need to do squats.
Because of course you could build a physique without ever doing squats,
but it is such a fundamental movement that has so much carryover and benefit
to all aspects of health and fitness.
Right. And because it's not a trade off and because it'll get you to build muscle faster,
burn body fat more effectively, get stronger more effectively, it makes no sense.
It's a win, win situation. There is no trade off when you're talking about the barbell squat.
It is one of the best exercises that there are. It's definitely, it's either number one or top three.
For most, I'm talking about 90 something percent
of the people listening to this podcast right now.
And I do, again, I'm gonna say this again,
if the squat is challenging for you,
if you're one of those people that doesn't feel
like you get value out of the squat,
go to the PrimeProWebinar.com, take the free class.
If you just want a full on mobility course available
with videos and demos with all kinds of mobility exercises,
we have a, what's called a,
that is a Prime Bundle, which includes Maps, PrimePro,
and Maps Prime.
You can find that at mapsfitinusproducts.com.
And MindPump is recorded on video as well as audio.
Come check us out on YouTube if you want to see our faces.
You can also find us on Instagram.
You can find Doug at MindPumpDoug, Justin at MindPumpDoug.
And me at MindPumpSaal and Adam at MindPumpAdom.
Thank you for listening to MindPump.
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