Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1385: How to Start Your Fitness & Fat Loss Journey
Episode Date: September 21, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss five easy ways to start a fitness and fat loss journey. Mind Pump speaking to the average person and how to begin their health journey. (2:44) The 5 fundam...ental steps you can add to your lifestyle TODAY to start your fitness and fat loss journey. (7:20) #1 – Avoid heavily processed foods. (9:03) #2 – Try and hit your protein target. (23:46) #3 – Build muscle to create a faster metabolism. (28:56) #4 – Increase daily activity. (35:15) #5 – Get good sleep. (39:42) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit ChiliPad for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! MAPS Fitness Products NIH study finds heavily processed foods cause overeating and weight gain Why Can’t I Lose Any Weight? - Mind Pump Blog Top 3 Tips for Losing Weight – Mind Pump Blog The Most Effective Single Step You Can Take to Lose Fat – Mind Pump Blog The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake – Mind Pump Blog Why do we Need Protein? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1220: The 4 Best Sources Of Protein MAPS Macro Calculator Mind Pump #1382: Why Everyone Should Squat Rubberbanditz Resistance Band Set Mind Pump TV - YouTube Does Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT) Actually Help With Fat Loss? Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we talk about how to start your fitness and fat loss journey
and we break it down into five easy steps.
Look, we literally created this episode
for people to share with friends and family members
that need to get started, or want to get started
with fitness or fat loss, or on a health and fitness journey.
If you're a fitness enthusiast,
and you're listening to our podcast,
and you want to send a podcast to somebody
to help them get started. This is the one.
This is probably our most shareable episode.
This is probably one of our most valuable episodes
for you to give to people to get them going.
We're talking to the average person
who's interested in getting started.
So we listed five of the most important,
easy to start steps for fitness and fat loss.
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One more thing I'd like to mention, if you're listening to this podcast and you're just
getting started and you want more personal attention, you want more instruction, you want to see how
exercises are broken down, you want a workout that's more personalized.
Go to mapsfitinistproducts.com.
We've created many, many different workout programs for different people.
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Go check it out all you need to follow that program is a pair of dumbbells and a fisiobull
But we have lots of programs on there including those that are for advanced
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So this morning I'm having a conversation with Jerry,
who just started with us in the last couple months.
I always like talking to someone like her.
What I mean by someone like her
is really general population.
She reminds me of just the average client
that I would have that comes in and asks questions
about health and fitness related.
She's not a hardcore gym goer fitness person, but curious interest.
Interested in eating better and exercising and has a family, has a lot going on, works
a lot. One of the things when we first got started with Mind Pump, we talked a lot about
this. When we came into the space in particular podcasting, we felt it was a bit of an echo chamber
that it was a lot of our peers, speaking to our peers, like, you know, talking about things that,
you know, hardcore fitness people are wanting to know what's the new cutting edge science and
breaking down, you know, modalities and the latest, greatest study that just came out and what's new here. And really, when we all talk to like,
when we first met, over six years ago,
we all said, those are not the people I train.
It maybe represents 1% of the people that I used to train.
And really the majority, don't give a shit like that.
They just want to know, what are the most basic things
that I can do to get started, to
make a change in my life, to be healthy, or to be fitter, and I don't want all the crazy
details.
And so I was asking her, now that you're listening to the show, I said, are there some things that
you would like to hear or that you've heard us talk about?
She was sharing some things that she's heard recently.
And she says, I'd really like something that's just geared around how do you start?
Whether it be nutrition or exercise, brand new,
just like I'm gonna start my fitness,
where do I start or what should I do
to kick it off and start?
And I said, oh, it's a good idea.
We've done something similar to that,
but we haven't organized a single topic episode
in a while, centered around that.
No, that's great because first of all,
that's most people, right?
That's most people.
When we have majority of people.
It is.
When you're talking about things like the obesity epidemic
or you're talking about health epidemics
or chronic health issues,
what you're talking about or the average person,
you're not talking about fitness fanatics and enthusiasts.
And they're the ones that also get marketed to heavily and they
get communicated the wrong information. A lot of the myths around fitness and nutrition
start because marketers target these general population people and they just tell them
the wrong stuff because it's catchy or whatever. And it fails, obviously. People, people every single year,
every day people, every year,
start a workout program of some sort,
start a dietary change of some sort and fails.
I think it's a fail rate, something like 90%.
So it's really important to not just figure out,
you know, that, okay, we're communicating
to the average person, but also what are the things
that they can do that will help them the most?
And how can we communicate it in ways that are simple, easy to understand?
Because one something, this just kind of happens when you're in fitness, is you forget that.
You start to lose touch with that, you know, because you understand things differently.
You talk about things a little differently. You forget that the people you're trying to help,
you got to bring it to a different level and communicate it in a way that makes sense and tell them the biggest bang for
the buck changes they can make that are simple because that's the most, those are the things that
are most likely that they'll stick to and that will produce the best results. This is also massively
important for us. I mean, to revisit these types of topics because we need to sort of evaluate
what seems to be common and common knowledge to us.
Like it really still isn't to the high majority
of people out there.
And I think something like this,
like a topic like this is also good for people
I've been listening to us for a long period of time,
but also want to relay the information to a family member
or a friend, but they're like, wait a minute,
how much of this can I pass
on without overwhelming them with a lot of stuff?
Totally.
So I want to start with the most simple basic but also biggest bang for your buck, changes
that you can make to get started on a fitness and health journey.
What are the simple basic changes that you can do
that don't require lots of knowledge, lots of work
from a technical standpoint,
things that you can do right now
that will make the biggest change for you
in starting your fitness journey.
And the most important part of this conversation,
I can't remember when I first said this,
but I like repeating it,
because I think it's a good
a good statement for for most people to hear and that's you know, we don't have a
weight loss pro a weight loss problem in this country
People millions of people lose weight every year the problem is that everybody ends up gaining it all back
You know high majority 80 plus percent of those people
that everybody ends up gaining it all back. High majority, 80 plus percent of those people
gain all that back and some.
And I think a lot of that has to do
with over complicating this process.
Versus, as a good coach or good trainer,
those the desired outcome is that I get my client
to make fundamental change in their life forever.
And so getting into all the nuances of training
and exercise and nutrition and cardio and going
so deep, even if someone is smart enough to disseminate all that information, many times
it's not something that they can implement into their life long-term.
And so giving somebody like five basic things, which is what we'll do today, that you can
start to implement into your life, that can make a fundamental change forever.
And a good goal when we go over these five is to be targeting all five of those and making
them a part of your lifestyle forever and at least attempting multiple of them and never
stopping.
In fact, if all you ever did was the five steps we're about to talk about, you're going
to be 85% of the way there.
You'll be very sad.
Most people will be very happy and satisfied with the results that they get and how they
feel and the improvements in their health and fitness.
If all you ever did are the following five steps that we're going to talk about right
now.
So the first one, and this is the big one, and it's funny because I've talked about this one for a long time.
I know you guys have two, but we now have studies to support just how powerful this first
step is.
And that is to avoid heavily processed foods.
Now heavily processed foods are foods that we tend to find in wrappers or bags or boxes.
They have long shelf life, they have large ingredient lists.
These are engineered foods.
Now, by themselves are not inherently unhealthy, although most heavily processed foods are less
healthy than whole foods.
But that's not really the problem here
because could you find foods that are more processed
that are technically healthier you could?
But here's the big issue.
Heavily processed foods are engineered
and most of the science and engineering
that goes into these foods is designed to get them
to get you to eat more of this particular food.
It's called hyper-palitability.
Okay, and this is what food manufacturers and companies
aim for when they make processed foods,
and they're so good at it that it sure is hell
makes people over eat.
In fact, it's funny that we've had this debate
for a long time, what caused the obesity epidemic?
And at first it was like, oh, we're moving less,
that's the big problem. And then it was, no it was like, oh, we're moving less. That's the big problem.
And then it was, no, it must be fat.
We're eating too much fat.
And then, no, it's too much carbs.
The reality is, although, you know,
the lack of activity and the over, you know,
eating more carbs and fats might have contributed.
Those aren't the real problem.
The real issue is that our diets went from
largely whole natural foods and whole natural foods
are just foods with one or two ingredients.
Like a banana.
What's the ingredients of a banana?
Banana, right?
Meat, eggs, milk, vegetables, even rice.
Those types of things are whole and natural.
American diet went from primarily eating a majority of our diet with whole natural foods
to a transition where most of our foods were heavily processed.
In fact, if you match the market penetration of heavily processed foods and you take that
chart, what percentage of Americans ate heavily processed foods and what percentage of our
diet made up of, you could literally place it over a chart of obesity and it matches it 100% and the reason is these foods make you
eat more and we now have studies that show these are really good studies by the way the
problem with food studies in the past is they are a survey based epidemiology type studies
where people will fill out a survey and talk about what they and those are his those are just classically inaccurate people often. Yeah, they overreport
under report. They it's you don't have people in the lab. You're not watching exactly what
they do. Well, here's what they did with some of these studies with heavily processed food.
They literally took groups of people put them in a laboratory. So everything was controlled. They could watch everything.
They gave one group full and free access
to whole natural foods.
They took another group and they gave them full
and free access to heavily processed foods
and they controlled the macros.
Macros being proteins, fats, and carbohydrates.
They made it similar.
Okay, so that wouldn't be the,
they could control that factor.
And then they said just eat until you're full and then when you're not full stop eating, and that's
it. Just continuing. And then the best part about this is they did that for a while, then
they switched the groups. So now they took the same group, that was in the whole natural
foods, put them in the process foods and vice versa. And they've done several studies
like this. And what they find is on average,
when people eat heavily processed foods,
they eat 500 more calories a day automatically.
500 calories is not a little.
That's a quick.
That is a lot.
In fact, and it's not perfect math,
but technically, that's like a pound of body fat a week or so.
That you can gain from, in fact,
when someone's cutting their calories, 500 is a lot to cut from your diet. a pound of body fat a week or so, that you can gain from, in fact, when I put someone,
when someone's cutting their calories, 500 is a lot to cut from your diet.
And these people were not, they were not trying to diet, they weren't trying to watch
what they were eating, they were just eating until they felt satisfied.
And that's how powerful these foods are.
So inadvertently, when you avoid heavily processed foods, you naturally eat more appropriately.
You naturally reduce your calories.
One of the reasons why I love this
is a first piece of advice for somebody is,
I, of course, if someone hired me,
I like them to download an app and track their food
so I can be very precise about all this
and I could teach them macros.
But when I'm just talking to the masses, right?
Or like this, maybe this podcast could share
with somebody's mom who's not really an affinism,
is not gonna go way and track their food,
which is a lot more people than the other side, right?
There's a lot more people that will not put them,
in fact, this is actually one of my tricks
that I do within my own family, right?
So being a fitness guy, of course,
anytime I'm at a family event,
or talking to any family members,
everybody wants me to tell them the diet
Well, one of my ways of getting out of that because I know that if I spend time doing that with everybody
I'll write a you know hundred diets and nobody will follow them
One of my ways of getting out of it is I tell them like listen
If you put the work in and you track your food for a week
I will sit down and evaluate it in like 90% of them never do that. So the truth is, I know that most people won't do that.
And my thing back to the family is like,
listen, if you can't commit to just tracking for a week,
I'm not gonna sit down and formulate a meal plan
for you, you're never gonna follow, right?
But the truth is, this simple advice,
and this came from me way later.
I didn't do this early on.
I mean, very early on, we used to have software
that would print off, you know,
you put in somebody's weight and their goal and their activity level.
And then it would, and then they get, they fill out this chart of like foods I like,
foods I don't like.
And then in this, this, you know, would spit out this meal plan.
It was always so weird too.
It was just like, but it was the perfect balance of macros for what this person should
have.
Nobody ever stuck to that.
Maybe 1% would be crazy enough to like follow that to a tee.
And later on, I realized, wow,
if I told someone to just eliminate processed foods
and eat whole foods,
it was so simple for them that just naturally by doing that,
they would probably reduce their calorie intake by 500.
Another reason why I love this so much
is because most people struggle with their relationship
with food, there's this, I can, I can't have type of thing.
And when you tell someone they can't have it,
they're enticed to wanna do it more
or they feel like they're sacrificing so much
because you told them as a trainer,
like you can't have this, you can't have that.
Versus, hey, as much as you want,
if it's whole foods go to town.
If you're hungry, go eat, just stick to that one thing.
Just simply doing that gives them the freedom of,
oh wow, I'm not on a restricted diet.
My trainer's not telling me I got a way
or measure my food or I can't have these things.
I just got to stay in this category,
which is massive by the way,
hundreds and hundreds of foods
following the whole food category.
So they have all kinds of options
and I'm not telling them to get a restrict.
But what I know is, and we knew this before
those studies came in, right?
These studies are relatively new.
We had pieced this together before that,
wow, when people eat all these packaged foods,
they just naturally eat more.
So if I just tell them, don't do that,
but go ahead and eat what you want.
Boy, it made a huge difference.
It's natural.
It's really strange.
I remember when I started to do this the first time and I would have clients just avoid
those foods and you just watch them get leaner.
And you know what they would say to me?
It's so funny because you don't realize that this is what's happening to you.
You really don't.
They would come to me and they'd say things like, I don't realize processed foods
were making me gain so much,
they thought there was something magical about the fact
that they were eating whole natural foods
versus processed foods in that processed foods
somehow magically promoted body fat.
They thought, I didn't realize that
that made me gain so much weight.
And it wasn't necessarily that.
It said, you don't realize that eating these foods
just makes you eat more.
It mass the signal for you to stop eating a lot of times too.
And I had talked to my dad about this.
He's going through this process right now
and he lost, you know, a good 18 pounds
over the last few months of just seeking Whole Foods,
not even like replacing or avoiding all these things.
Or being perfect, yeah.
Just his mindset, it's like a treasure hunt for him.
He's trying to go find these things
that I'm telling him to include
and to put into the diet.
And so it becomes more of a psychological mindset.
And this is something that I think is,
it's way more effective.
Unfortunately, I didn't have this way of training people
to way later on in my career, just like you guys,
but it was so much more effective because now it's not, you're not punishing, you're not hammering
yourself, you're not leading with that energy, you're focusing on things that are going to benefit
my health and I want to go get those things. Yes, and I'll give you an example of this. So you just little mind game free, right?
So imagine if I gave you four or five potatoes
and you boiled them and we skin them
and you didn't put anything on them.
There's plain potatoes, boiled, no salt, no butter,
no nothing, and you had to sit down
and you had to eat all four or five potatoes, right?
Most people listening right now would be like, that would be tough.
Like four or five plain potatoes.
Oh, I'd gag, probably after third one, I'd be so stuffed, it'd be so difficult to eat them.
Well, here's an interesting contrast.
If I gave you a large bag of potato chips, you'd be able to eat the whole thing.
Most of us would be able to eat the whole thing.
That large bag of potato chips has four or five potatoes in it.
That's how many potatoes are in a bag,
a normal bag of chips.
Here's the crazier part.
You ate more calories with that bag.
So not only did you, were you able to eat the four or five potatoes,
but they were, you know, in oil, fried, with salt.
So you actually ate more because it was processed.
This is the trick that this food plays on your body.
It literally overrides or changes the level at which
you start to feel satisfied with food.
Because people don't realize that,
this is the narrative that's been pushed for a long time.
That, oh, humans were, you know,
for most of human history, we evolved and food was scarce.
So we became these eating machines,
where if you just put food in front of us,
we'll just eat the hell out of it
because we evolved and scarcity.
That's not true.
Eating too much would have killed you in the past,
just like at will today,
either through digestive issues or gagging or whatever.
You have something called palate fatigue.
You start to feel satisfied.
Part of that is how much volume is in your gut.
Part of it are the hormones and chemicals that are released,
but it's much more complex than that,
which is why you can eat more calories
with a bag of potato chips and you can't
with plain potatoes before you start to feel like
you can't eat anymore.
Heavily processed foods have billions and billions
of dollars of research
that goes into making them as effective as possible
as doing this.
So if you just eat heavily processed foods,
you're going to eat more.
If you avoid them, you will naturally eat less.
That's just the bottom line.
So to that point, I have a hack for clients
that I used to give, right?
So not personally, I prefer to eliminate all of these foods
in my house.
So it's just not there as an option.
For me, one more step.
Right, exactly.
One more step.
I'm not going to be at 9 o'clock watching Netflix and go like, oh, I want ice cream or I want
to bag a potato chips and I don't have it in my house and go, I'm going to draw the grocery
store, go get it.
If you do, you deserve it.
I'm going to throw it in there.
Right, right.
So I think that's first, but the reality is this.
There's a lot of clients that I've trained that,
they have kids that have snacks in there.
They've got a spouse who isn't following a diet
and so the stuff is in the house.
And again, I like to go with the angle of,
okay, instead of telling you they can't have this,
I say, listen, again, if you're sitting there,
okay, and you're ready, you know,
you're eating your own Netflix
and there's a bag of potato chips on the counter
and it feels like it's calling your name.
Again, instead of telling a client like,
no way, you can't have that, say, listen,
go eat the whole foods first.
If you still feel like you want it
or you need it afterwards,
then give yourself a ration of it.
And the truth is what happens a lot,
I just did this to myself, okay?
So even though I normally don't keep things in my house
that are like this, I mentioned on a podcast recently,
after doing a Q&A a week or two ago,
that I bought some thrifty ice cream.
And I've been like, you know, trying to challenge myself.
Like how long can I keep this in the freezer
and discipline myself to not do that?
So I play even 20 years in this space,
I still have to play these same mental games with myself.
I'm sitting down, this is the last night, no joke.
I'm sitting down, we're watching Netflix,
we're watching the show right now.
And oh man, I get up and I'm like,
oh that ice cream sounds so good.
And I know I didn't train, I didn't train that day.
And I'm like, you know, I haven't really earned
the right to over consume calories like that.
You know what I need to do?
I have left over, I already had stuff to already had,
Veele and a whole wheat pasta that was already
tupperwareed out from the previous night at dinner.
Like, you know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna go over and I'm gonna have my whole food meal.
And then if I still feel like I'm craving the ice cream,
it's sure shit, I go over, eat that,
I'm satisfied, don't even think twice
about the ice cream.
So if you are somebody who lives in a house
where you've got these things,
one, I always recommend that you get it out
because it's that much easier.
But if it's gonna be in there, you can't control that.
You live with other people that are gonna bring it
into the house anyways, then don't, again,
don't tell yourself you can't have these things.
Go make yourself, go eat something that's whole food first
and you'll be amazed by how little will suppress
that feeling of craving for that.
Totally, just that one step will bring your body weight down to a more healthy, natural body weight. and you'll be amazed by how it will suppress that feeling of craving for that. Totally.
Just that one step will bring your body weight down to a more healthy, natural body weight.
Probably won't make you shredded.
You're not going to get a six pack from just avoiding heavily processed foods, but you're
not going to be 30 pounds overweight.
It's going to lay the foundation.
It definitely does, and it's an easy step.
It's very easy, and it doesn't limit you with your whole foods eat as much as you want.
Part of that is also not drinking processed beverages, not drinking juices and sodas and calories.
And one way you can do that, similar to what Adam said, is to aim for a water target for most people,
that's anywhere between half a gallon to a gallon a day.
Justin, I know you did the math with bottles of water.
Yeah, so it's like seven and a half
for your average like Dessani water bottle,
like a plastic water bottle.
And I'm sure people, I just thought that,
you know, that's something that I know a lot of people
will go to the gas station or they'll go to Costco.
A lot of people still drink out of, you know,
plastic water bottles and so just, you know,
if you want to make a goal of a gallon,
it would look something like seven and a half of those.
Excellent.
Now, the second step is also an easy step and makes a big impact is to try to hit your
protein target.
Okay.
So an easy way to figure out your protein target is to take your body weight and eat about
half of your body weight to about your body weight
and grams of protein.
So, there's your range right there, right?
So, about half to your body weight, if you weigh 150 pounds or anywhere between 75 to 150
grams of protein.
And, really, throughout the day, just try to hit that number.
Now, here's why that's important.
There's a few different reasons.
Number one, protein is the most satiety-inducing macro-nutrient, meaning out of carbs, proteins
and fats, proteins are the ones that satisfy the appetite the most.
They tend to make us eat less when we eat a lot of protein.
The second reason why it's important is protein is slightly thermogenic, meaning it burns
a little bit more calories than carbs and fats.
It also greatly improves your ability to build muscle and improve your performance.
And when we get into the later steps that include exercise, if you eat a diet that's relatively
high in protein, like I just said, you're just going to respond.
Yeah, it pairs well with muscle training.
You're going to respond better.
Well, I like this advice, too, because unless you're somebody, the only exception I have
to this role is if you said to me that I love meat and I eat lots of meat every single
day, most people grossly under eat protein, most people, unless you're that person, unless
you're that person that knows, oh man, I'm out of meat and meat, three to four servings,
easily every single day consistently,
plus I love eggs and dairy, like no problem.
So if you're that person, you're probably,
this is probably something that you're getting close to
or hitting, but you'd be surprised how many people think
they eat a lot of protein and then they start tracking
and they're grossly under-consuming.
And so I'll take a step further than what you said.
I like to teach clients to
get after that after every every every every meal they build around the protein. So it's like,
hey, it's a prick, which is hard for breakfast, by the way, because breakfast tends to be like the
cereals and oatmeal and the things like that that are high carbon and sugary type of stuff to start
your day off with. So when you start any meal, look to attack the protein first.
Consume that first before you make your way over the carbohydrates.
So I like protein, fats first, and then you eat your carbohydrates.
If you do it the other way around, it can be really difficult to hit those proteins.
It actually works perfectly with the first step, which was avoid heavily processed foods.
When you're trying to hit your protein targets,
you tend to aim naturally towards more unprocessed.
Because those are the best sources.
Right, versions of food, you know.
I mean, there are some processed versions of protein.
I mean, you can technically have protein bars.
You could powder, yeah.
Yeah, beef jerky might be considered protein,
although I've never met anybody that over-8, you know, on a regular basis, beef jerky might be considered protein, although I've never met anybody that over-rate
on a regular basis, beef jerky or salami.
Those are technically processed,
but for the most part, protein sources
tend to be whole foods anyway.
In fact, when you look at the average person's diet,
they are predominantly heavily processed foods,
but the foods that tend to not be processed
are protein sources.
So when you look at the average person's diet,
they might have eggs, they might have milk,
they might have ground beef or steak in there.
Those are the unprocessed foods.
So when you aim for protein,
it does marry very well with the first step,
which was avoid heavily processed foods.
If you aim for that first,
you tend to have these meals
that are built around whole natural foods.
Well, I also like, again, this very generic,
half your body weight to your body weight number,
because the people that are most affected by this,
when you saleluted to the, you know,
the other steps when we get into training,
the people that are most effective,
negatively from not hitting their protein intake,
it's because they're grossly under-consuming
on a regular basis.
Low protein for a one day is not a big deal.
But if you're consistently under,
you're under consuming that half of your body weight
in protein almost area, which by the way,
a large percentage of clients that I'd track their food
would do, and then you're also strength training,
you may not be building muscle at the rate you like,
or maybe not much at all, and just kind of spinning your wheels.
And many times that was a plateau breaker.
Many times I would assess somebody's diet
and go, man, part of the reason why we're not building muscle right now
is you can't string three days in a row
of hitting your targets.
You have three days, two days good,
and then you have two days that are bad
and it averages out to be under that number
that we need to be at.
So I like just this generic advice of the half
their body weight to their body weight
because you'll see all kinds of information on the internet.
I mean, we even have, we have a macro calculator.
If you want to get precise and you want to know exactly
what you have, how much you need to be in taking
to maximize building muscle,
we have a free calculator online
that you can use to calculate that out.
But again, when we are speaking to your mom,
you know, when we're speaking to the masses,
you know, something that simple of just listen,
you know, how much you weigh,
target half of that and grams of protein
for your day or up to your body weight
and shoot for that every single day.
Consciousness.
Now why is it important to build muscle?
That's gonna lead us to the third step here.
Well, that's because muscle is a very active tissue.
It burns lots of calories, it sculpts your body,
it makes you feel tight and strong and mobile.
It doesn't take up much space,
gaining a few pounds of muscle, you would not look bigger,
but you would feel tighter.
But the biggest reason is because it speeds up your metabolism.
Look, the biggest problem that we're tackling here
with the average person is this weight gain,
this obesity epidemic, having a faster metabolism
means you can eat more and still be lean.
And it's very advantageous in modern societies
to have a faster metabolism.
You want a faster metabolism.
Building muscle does that.
So the next step is revolve the round building muscle.
And we're gonna make it as simple as possible.
I wanna give you the four exercises
that are the most effective at developing a balanced body
at building muscle building strength.
Now, are there other exercises with lots of value?
Absolutely.
Is this the perfect workout?
Is this like following a maps program
where one of our maps program
it was all detailed out and we have phases
and we tell you specifics and you,
it's a 12 week course and all that stuff.
No, this is, but this is meant to be simple,
it's meant to be easy and simple.
And so we picked,
yet effective.
And yet effective.
The four most basic, simple, yet effective exercises that you can do to speed up your metabolism
and build muscle.
And so we're going to start with the first one, which is squats.
Squats are very functional for the body.
In fact, we did a whole episode on why everybody should squat.
It's a very, very effective exercise, phenomenal for the lower body.
If you do it with a barbell, it even strengthens your posture in the upper body. If you do it just your body weight, it's mainly in
legs. It's probably the best lower body exercise you can do. The next exercise would be to
press something overhead and with a nice full extension, meaning you're nice and tall.
So you could do this with a medicine ball. You could do this with dumbbells, bands. You
could use a bag of rice. You could use your kid even just press them straight up above
your head. Nice and tall. That works the shoulders, helps your posture, it works your arms.
The next exercise would be a row. Bands are great at doing rows. Bands you can find
they're very inexpensive and you can typically come with an attachment where you put them right in the door.
Rowing strengthens the mid-back, fixes your posture, it works the arms.
Then the next exercise is a push-up, and there's a million in one variations of doing a push-up
or a bench press or some kind of a press like that.
Those four exercises done a couple days a week, two days a week, or three days a week,
but maybe 10, 15 reps for each of them.
You are covered pretty much your whole body,
and if you brace your core while you do the squats
and overhead presses and pushups,
yes, you're also working the core
in a way that stabilizes your body.
But that's it, just those four exercises.
Literally, that's your workout.
There's lots of people I know that are listening
and I'm thinking that it's not very much.
If you're an advanced lifter, you're right,
it's not very much, but again,
talking to your mom and getting her to do this two to three times a week, and each of
these exercises doing two to three sets for 10 to 15 reps, consistently two to three
times a week, I tell you, if you followed all these steps for a month, I guarantee that
they would see a significant change in their body and their body fat and
their muscle, everything just by following that consistently.
And there's going to be a wide spectrum of abilities out there, especially something like
the squat.
And what you got to kind of relays is that everybody can sit down in a chair.
I would hope.
And so that could be like your standard in terms of a squad is just getting up and down out of your chair
And that's like is very simple as you can start
Yeah, using whatever ability you have to get up and down out of your chair to really start to strengthen and promote that within your legs and
Progress from there and we do have a lot of videos with these very specific exercises about how to regress or progress
These types of movements.
So yes, it seems very similar, or I'm sorry, simple to us, but also for your aunt, your
grandma, your dad, somebody else in your family or friend that maybe has restrictions, there's
ways to really implement this in a safe and reasonable manner.
So we don't lose our intermediate to advanced listeners though.
This has tremendous value even for you because most people fall off for a few weeks or a
month and I talk about this all the time.
One of the biggest mistakes I made is a trainer forever and I still to this day do this.
If I've been inconsistent and fall off the wagon for a couple weeks
or a month and I come back in the gym, I always overreach. I always want to go back to
where I was and I train way more than I need to. So even somebody who is intermediate to
advance, who's been off for a while and just getting back to the gym following something
like this for 30 days. And like Justin said, you can progress it. So obviously if you're an advanced lifter,
you can squat over 300 pounds
and you've just been off for a few weeks to a month.
It doesn't mean you need to progress
all the way back to a bodyweight squat.
Just do a lighter barbell squat for someone like that.
But each one of those movements, the squat,
the overhead press, the row and the pushup,
like, or a pushing exercise,
all of those can be progressed
for somebody intermediate advanced.
Oh, I'll tell you what, you could do this whole workout
for a year, just add weight as you get stronger or add reps.
And your body will continue to progress.
In fact, one of our more popular programs,
maps and a ball, it's definitely more complex
and there's more exercises in it,
but it's centered around these four exercises
and people who are advanced get tremendous results
from when we pick the best exercises.
So these four,
this is your core.
These four, you can do them in ways that are easier.
Like Justin said, with the squat,
you can sit down and stand up
or you can go to a barbell squat,
throw some weight on there,
and then do squats.
You can literally follow this workout for a while.
But if you're just getting started,
just do it with body weight, do it with bands,
do it in your home, and just practice.
Two to three days a week, and just do that
with those first two steps,
you should get some really good results.
Now, the fourth step,
this one involves just increasing daily activity.
Now, one of the big mistakes that I think people make
when trying to introduce cardiovascular workouts
or activity into the routine
is they schedule it out like it's a whole other workout, you know, like they think, okay,
now you gotta do 30 minutes or an hour of cardio exactly end of their day or the very beginning.
Exactly, okay, here's what I'm gonna do every day. I'm gonna wake up 30 minutes early so I could do
a 30 minute walk or a 30 minute cycle. So, okay, the problem with that is you are adding it to your
life. It's a new thing on your schedule.
It's a new thing you gotta worry about.
And nothing necessarily wrong with that.
It's just the amount of people that are likely
to stay consistent doing it that way as much lower
than what I'm about to say.
So one of the more effective things you can do
to improve your activity is to attach extra activity
to your daily rituals, okay?
So attach it to things that you do anyway,
because you're gonna do those things anyway.
Well, by the way, there's research to support this.
There's research to support that when you attach it
to already a current habit brushing your teeth
and eating, okay, which everybody does every single day,
it's much more likely that you're gonna be consistent
with it versus adding it somewhere else in your day that isn't part of it.
Oh, this is why supplement companies will tell you they'll sell supplements to take before
you work out or right when you wake up or right before you go to bed because they know that
if they attach it to a daily ritual, you're more likely to take that supplement.
So here's an easy one.
It's super easy.
Okay.
You're going to probably eat like most people anywhere between two to four meals a day,
probably like most people eat three, right?
So the average person eats breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Well, here's what you do.
Walk 10 minutes after every meal, that's it.
You eat breakfast, go for a 10 minute walk.
You eat lunch, go for a 10 minute walk.
You eat dinner, go for a 10 minute walk.
Guess what you just did?
30 minutes of walking.
Easy way to increase activity and also, you know, promote good
Digestion, which is something that I think a lot of people don't even really consider that and what you know
That all builds up towards you know the night it starts affecting your sleep and then all kinds of things happen as a result
It's it's a thing. It's a 10 minutes. It's 10 minutes at a time. I mean that is that sound so easy, right?
It doesn't sound over overbearing, it's not too much time.
It's like, I got 10 minutes after breakfast,
I'll just go around the block a couple times
and you do that breakfast lunch and dinner
that equals 30 minutes, it does improve your digestion,
here's another side effect of it.
And this, again, they've done behavioral studies on this.
When people know that they're gonna walk for 10 minutes
after their meal, they're more likely to pick meals
that are healthier.
This is a wonderful side effect
from something so simple as that.
Is that when you know, I'll after I eat this,
whatever, I'm gonna do a 10 minute walk,
you're just more likely to wanna pick foods
that are probably a little bit better for you.
This one's super easy, and I'm telling it,
it makes a huge difference.
It doesn't sound like much, but imagine if you did
30 minutes of additional walking every single day.
Well, it's easier to to build on. I like this again, even for my advanced people.
So this was something later on as I started to train more and more like competitors, so people that are
dieting to get on stage and build incredible physiques.
And kind of the norm in that space is for coaches to prescribe,
you know, these 30-minute hour bouts of cardio
and I just think even for that person,
even the discipline person that has a state date
they have to get on and they're gonna follow the routine,
I've always taught my clients to have just behaviors,
like listen, like right now you're not getting,
you're not walking for 10 minutes after
and then I just build on that for them,
we obviously have to keep peaking, right?
So we have to keep progressing week over week over week for a show.
So it starts off at a 10 minute walk, then goes to a 15 minute walk, then goes to a 20 minute walk.
But I slowly do that because what I find is after the show, after they've reached their goal and they look amazing,
instead of them rebounding hard and cutting out that one hour cardio in the morning
and one hour cardio in the evening,
they've built these routines of walking afterwards.
Most of them don't stop.
They keep the walking up,
or maybe they just go from, you know,
20 minutes of walking after the meal down to 10,
and it's not as drastic as cutting out that hour of cardio
in the morning and the hour of cardio at night.
Well, I mean, it's as easy as this even.
If you're not doing this at all,
if you're not doing any walking at all,
five minutes after each meal, it's 15 minutes of this even if you're not doing this at all if you're not doing any walking at all five minutes after each meal
It's 15 minutes of additional activity that you literally weren't doing before so it's a super easy step
To improve or increase your activity improve your digestion and the side effect also being
Probably more likely eat a healthier meal the last step this one's also very important
It sounds simple, so we'll
get into the base, to the nuts and bolts of it, but it's get good sleep, okay? Having good
sleep has been shown in many, many, many studies to improve your hormone profile, to reduce
cravings, to improve your body's adaptive abilities, meaning you build more muscle, more strength.
You're less likely to store body fat.
Even when calories are controlled,
people who lose sleep tend to store more body fat
and build less muscle, people have good sleep,
tend to do the opposite, great, build more muscle,
burn more body fat.
So you wanna make good sleep a priority,
but now we should probably get into the details.
Well, yeah, I think the first step in the conversation I have when I talk to people about this is,
and I don't remember again, where I first heard somebody talk about this, but this is where the
light bulb went off from me is that it's so interesting how we have ritualized a morning routine,
almost everybody has. Again, everyone's a little bit different, but for the most part,
everyone probably goes to the bathroom.
They probably shower, they probably brush their teeth,
they probably eat or drink.
It's always in the same order.
Right, it's in a very similar order.
It's always timed out about the same.
You get up at the same, like it's crazy how much of a ritual
we all have for our morning routine to start your day
and how few of people have a similar type of a routine
to end their day. And the reality is that the time that we are sleeping is far more important how
you set that up than how you set your day up. Oh yeah it is. You know it's you getting ready for
bed and having quality sleep is far more important than the way you get up and start your day. You
could shoot up first thing in the morning or you or take an hour to get up and the effects on
that, hormonally the effects on that for your day and the success and for fat loss and
building muscle is nowhere near how important it is for you to set up your night before
you go into bed and sleep.
It is, we expect to have good sleep by hustling all day long, watching TV, electronics wrong, bright lights are on,
and then it's time to go to bed,
and then we go hit the pillow,
and we take the lights off, that's it.
And we expect our brain to just
process into this awesome deep sleep.
It doesn't happen, it actually takes about an hour or two
for the brain to wind down for the,
your brain to perceive the fact that the lights are off.
Maybe it's now time to go to sleep.
So even if you go to bed and give yourself eight hours,
if you go straight to bed with no routine ahead of time,
to set yourself up, you're actually probably getting
closer to seven or six and a half hours
because you went from bright lights
and everything going on to straight to bed.
So set yourself up with a sleep routine.
I like to give people about an hour.
So about an hour before you turn
lights down or off or you go by candlelight or you wear blue light blocking glasses which allow
that you to block some of the blue light that tells your brain to stay awake. Don't eat anything
about an hour before bed because your your internal digestive organs also have a circadian rhythm
so they'll tell you. Manage your temperature. Yes. Yes. We'll get a big one for me.
Absolutely. Here's the other part.
Go to have a bedtime.
So this makes it a big impact.
Go to bed at the same time every night.
Wake up the same time every morning.
Go to bed at the same time.
It's a big one.
So 10 o'clock, I'm in bed.
This is my structural nine o'clock.
I start my sleep routine.
Then Adam mentioned manage the temperature.
This one's a huge one.
You want to have a cool room.
So this means either with your AC
or keeping the window open or there's products
in the market that actually cool the mattress.
We work with a company called ChiliPad
that does that really, really well.
Those things get people to sleep faster.
It's just proven by studies and deeper
and better stages of sleep for longer.
Which is also great that there's technology out there now
where you can kind of, you know,
you'd have separate temperatures
because I know like people are significant others
like we're not always on the same climate.
And so this is one of those things that consider too,
you know, how you get to sleep.
I personally need that, that, you know,
cool temperature for me to get that deep, deep sleep.
Yeah, so I've done this with clients
where all I'll have them do is say,
okay, we're gonna pick it bedtime.
So we go to bed always at the same time
so we can wake up at the same time every morning
and we'll have a sleep routine and we'll do all this stuff
and not change anything else.
So it's not powerful, it is.
We'll not change anything else
and I'll see their bodies lose body fat
and I'll see them get stronger in the gym. And they're not consciously changing anything else, and I'll see their bodies lose body fat, and I'll see them get stronger in the gym.
And they're not consciously changing anything else.
Now, what really happens is, besides the hormonal positive hormonal effects, good sleep changes your behaviors.
Like I said earlier, it changes your cravings, how you eat, it changes your activity levels.
You'll find that you'll naturally move more because you have more energy, because you're getting better sleep.
Your body will recover better and recuperate better because you get better sleep.
So this one is a huge one and it's one that a lot of people miss mainly because electronic
use, so we have it so close to bedtime, we don't manage the temperature of our rooms
very, very well and we just don't take it seriously.
Like Adam said earlier, there's no routine,
there's nothing.
It's funny how much we emphasize the beginning of your day
being so important.
And half the people are fighting what they did the night
before to then create that and try to gain that momentum
at the very beginning of their day
to be productive in all these things.
When if you address your sleep,
like how much easier that process will be.
Well, the truth is, I know we all go by this 24 hour clock,
but really setting up your morning routine
really starts in the evening.
It does the day before.
Right, if you want to have a productive
full of energy, good, solid day,
the number one thing that will affect that,
above all, whatever routines you do,
brushing, pooping, eating a certain thing,
meditating, whatever, cool shower,
all these cool hacks that everybody has for your morning,
really, all of that doesn't matter
if you have shit sleep going into all that.
So the real setup for the morning routine
is actually the night routine
and just nobody puts any effort towards that.
Completely, so there you have it.
There's five steps right there.
And 100%, if the average person whose goals is to achieve
a healthy and relatively fit body,
most people's goals are not to get on stage
and flex their biceps and have a six pack.
Most people don't care about,
they just want to be fit, they want to be healthy,
they want to be at a healthy body weight,
they want to fit into their normal clothes, they want to be mobile, they want to be healthy, they want to be at a healthy body weight, they want to fit into their normal clothes,
they want to be mobile, they want to feel good.
All of those things, this is, I'm not making this up,
this is 100% true, all those things that just said
can be accomplished.
Literally, if you just did the five steps
that we just listed right now and you did them consistently,
if all you did was avoid heavily processed foods,
only drink water, make sure you ate your protein intake,
did those four exercises that we talked about.
Watch out for the health markers and everything changed.
That's it, do those four exercises
that we talked about two to three days a week,
your squats, presses, your overhead presses, your rows
and your pushups or bench presses,
walk for 10 minutes after every meal,
and then make sure your prioritize sleep.
If you just did those things right there,
most people listening right now will be very, very satisfied, more than satisfied with the results
that they got. Look, MindPump is recorded on video and audio. If you like listening to the podcast,
you'll love looking at our faces. Just go to YouTube, MindPump Podcast. You can also find all of us
on Instagram. You can find Doug, the producer at Mind Pump Doug.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin.
You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Send this to your mom.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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