Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1387: Turning Your Body Into a Fat-Burning Machine
Episode Date: September 24, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss four things you can do to turn your body into a fat burning machine. Understanding your body’s survival mechanisms when it comes to fat loss. (3:29) The ...misconception of wanting to be “smaller.” (9:55) Addressing the psychology hurdle. (13:01) How to turn your body into a fat-burning machine automatically. (16:18) The 4 Ways You Can Turn Your Body Into a Fat-Burning Machine. (22:04) #1 - Stress management. (22:18) #2 – Lift weights properly to build muscle. (31:46) #3 – Use cardiovascular activity as a supportive role. (37:03) #4 – Pay attention to your nutrition. (43:41) Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Fitness Products Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Mind Pump #1027: 3 Steps To Speed Up Your Metabolism Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss Mind Pump #1385: How To Start Your Fitness & Fat Loss Journey NEAT vs. Cardio for Maximum Calorie Burn – Mind Pump Blog The Ultimate Goal to Intuitive Eating – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's number one ranked fitness health and entertainment podcast,
we talk about how to turn your body into a fat burning machine.
The number one fitness goal that people have is fat loss or weight loss.
There's a couple of ways you can do this.
There's the wrong way, which makes things very difficult and definitely not long lasting.
Or you could do it the right way where it feels seamless and you have longevity with your
fat loss.
In this episode, we talk about the right way.
We talk about the four ways you can turn your body
into a fat burning machine,
so you burn more calories and more body fat at rest.
We talk about automatic calorie burns.
We talk about everything from stress management
and why that's important to how to lift weights properly
and train properly with resistance.
We talk about the proper use of cardiovascular activity.
We talk about nutrition,
avoiding heavily processed foods.
Why that's important?
Why you should eat a high protein diet?
By the way, for some people hitting their protein targets
can be difficult.
This episode is actually brought to you
by one of our sponsors, Legion,
and they happen to make some of the best protein powders you can find anywhere.
He has way protein powders and vegan protein powders, both of which are flavored naturally.
There's no artificial sweeteners.
Now Legion also has lots of other performance enhancing supplements.
The reason why we like working with Legion is all their products are third party tested.
The labels are transparent,
and they only put stuff in the bottles
that have evidence to show that they work.
They're science-backed.
And because you listen to MindPump, you get a discount.
So here's how you get your discount.
Go to bi-leagen.com.
That's B-U-Y-L-E-G-I-O-N.com-flour-sashmindpump.
Then use the code MindPump for 20% off your first order.
If you're returning customer, you get double rewards points.
So keep using the code mine pump for those points.
Also, in this episode, I did mention a couple of workout programs because we're talking about
speedy with them, tables, we do talk about lifting weights.
And there's two programs in particular that we think can really help.
One of them is great for beginners. It's called Maps Starter,
and the other one is great for people with a little bit of experience working out with weights.
It's called Maps and a Ballac.
Both programs, extremely valuable at building muscle,
and speeding up the metabolism,
adding the fat burning machinery that turns your body into a fat burning machine.
But we do have a lot of other workout programs.
Actually, we have quite a few.
All of them fitting different people's needs and experience.
If you want to find the right workout program for you, that's written by real personal
trainers, not by celebrity Instagram trainers who don't know much about exercise.
We are real trainers.
We've been training people for decades.
We know what works.
Go check out the workout programs.
Just go to mapsfitinistproducts.com.
Find the one that works for you.
Sign up, try it out for 30 days.
See if it works for you.
If it does, keep the program.
If it doesn't, return it, get a full refund.
Again, all the workouts are at mapsfitinistproducts.com.
Other day, I'm getting interviewed by a trainer
and he's asking the question about,
you know, a lot of people want to lose a body fat
as fast as they possibly can.
And he goes, it's probably one of the most common questions
that I get that I have to address.
And he goes, I'd just like to hear how you explain that to somebody.
I told him, and this is something I started doing, I don't remember when, but I felt it
was like one of the best visuals that I could give somebody.
I would draw like this straight line on a piece of paper and one end, the far left you
would have losing weight as fast as you possibly can.
On the far right, you're adding weight, which is what the opposite direction you would have losing weight as fast as you possibly can. On the far right,
you're adding weight, which is what the opposite direction you want to go. And somewhere in the
dead center in the middle is where we want to be, which is the perfect sweet spot. And I said,
in the middle here is where your body weight doesn't change so much. We're losing body fat,
but we're adding muscle at a similar rate. So you kind of
stay right around the same body weight. And I said, you know, this is the most optimal
place that we can be. And the fastest way, believe it or not, to lose body fat, it may
not feel that way because the scale isn't moving. But is the most optimal way that we can
do this for not only longevity,
but it for it to be effective
and for you to keep it off for the rest of your life.
And I said, and then you have the far left,
which is just get the 20 pounds off me out of
as fast as possible.
And I said, and I'd say,
if you wanna be here,
well what here looks like on the far left
where you are losing it just as fast,
wait off the scales, fast you can,
well that's easy.
Just don't eat food for the next month.
Come in and see me and we're gonna exercise
for an hour to two hours every single day.
Now of course that's not real advice.
I don't recommend anybody do that.
That's not safe or healthy.
What's order to do that.
But the truth is you would lose that kind of weight
that fast.
But that's not sustainable.
Now most people get that analogy that like,
I don't wanna do that, I'm not gonna eat,
but believe it or not,
a lot of people fall somewhere between there
in the middle place where I want you to be
when they ask those questions.
They may not be that crazy and extreme,
but they're flirting more with that side of it
than they are more balanced towards the middle.
And so I'm trying to always get them to understand,
in the middle is where we, you know,
are at that the ultimate place for turning your body into a fat burning machine. and so I'm trying to always get them to understand, you know, in the middle is where we, you know,
are at that the ultimate place for turning your body
into a fat burning machine.
Well, yeah, and it's not that extreme example you gave
is not that crazy.
When you look at studies of people who just died
to lose weight, okay, all they did was cut calories
to lose weight on the scale. When they go and test
their body fat percentage and look at their body composition, which covers, you know, what that
body weight is made up of, right? So you weigh 150 pounds, but what is that made up of? How much of
it is muscle? How much of it is body fat? What they find with people who just die it is that more than half of the weight
that's on the scale that when that that they dropped came from muscle. They actually
lost, so if they lost 10 pounds, something like six pounds of that weight loss was muscle.
It's even worse when they throw too much cardio on top of it. You see even more of a muscle loss.
Now real quick explanation as to why this happens.
The human body is trying to get better at whatever you do a lot of.
And so if your approach to weight loss is just cut calories and then do lots of cardio,
your body says, okay, here's the deal.
So just imagine inside your brain or your body,
there's like this group of people that are working,
like that one cartoon,
was that cartoon with all the emotions in there?
It was really, really good, right?
So imagine you got these people working in your brain.
You usually have it for you.
I know, you guys look right at you.
You have a blank stare.
Yeah, didn't even have it.
Sorry.
But so imagine these people working behind the scenes
in your body, right?
So this is the illustration. And they're like, oh, we're getting signals.
Calories aren't coming in. We're not eating a lot of calories. And then the person says,
but we are, but we're also trying to burn a lot of calories by doing a lot of movement. What do we do?
How do we fix this? How do we get better at this? So they decide, okay, here's what we're going to do.
We're going to become more efficient. We're going to, we're going to what we're gonna do. We're gonna become more efficient. We're gonna get this body to burn less calories
every single day so that we can survive on the fewer calories
and we can still do this activity which requires really just stamina
which doesn't require a lot of calorie burning machinery.
So in essence, what you've done is you've actually slowed your metabolism
or down or to put it in a
different way. You've turned your body into a fat storing machine. You've actually increased or
improved your body's ability to store body fat and not burn body fat. So this is why it's an
important, this is a very important conversation. Yeah, it's interesting because I mean we're set up
our biology set up so we're able to survive and that's like the biggest
priority that your body knows to
operate off of and so to
Have these types of goals where we want to almost a lot of times especially with man
They want to gain size, but they want to reduce body fat and so they want that
You know to be able to have more definition with that.
And also like, I know for women too,
they want to lose weight,
but they want to lose the body fat,
not, you know, not the muscle,
but that's not what your body is like hard wire to do.
So we all, we have to play this sort of trick on the body.
And it takes a longer process to do that.
It's not something that you could just quickly do.
Much more systematic.
Well, your body's not aware of your insecurities.
Your body doesn't know it doesn't let you don't like
your fat gut or your flabby arms.
It doesn't give a shit.
It's one job is to survive.
Keep you alive.
Yeah.
And to be as good at that as it possibly can,
and you have to understand that when we're exercising,
any sort of exercise, even weight training,
weight training, high intensity training, cardio,
all these things, these are all stress
that you're sending to the body.
And so it's trying to figure out all these signals
that it's getting and it's like, okay,
we need to adapt and perform and be efficient.
Again, doesn't care about your personal goals,
doesn't care you want six pack abs,
doesn't care you want to get rid of those flabby arms,
it just wants to survive.
And the problem is that for such a long time, we think that we've thought that, oh, the
more I throw out it, the faster I'll get to my goals and that couldn't be further from
the truth.
No, and there's also this misconception, especially with people who have a lot of weight
to lose, is that they just want to get smaller.
So they don't really care.
In fact, I've had this conversation with people, I said, well, you know, if you do this the wrong way, half the weight that you lose is going to be
muscle. And they'll say, well, I don't care. I just want to get smaller. Here's what you can do.
You can Google this and you'll find pictures of this. You can literally look up a what look up
130 pound woman lean versus 130 pound woman fat or 180 pound man lean versus 180 pound man fat.
And what you'll see are pictures, people have posted these before and after pictures, that
look radically different, but the person weighs the same.
I just got a message this morning, in fact, from somebody I literally just got a message
this morning.
I can't say the person's name because I haven't gotten clearance from them yet, but they
sent me a message and they said, you know, I followed your advice. And the before pictures from
July, the after pictures from this morning, and they look quite different in one picture.
She's not super overweight, but she's got a little bit of body fat or whatever. The second
picture, she's much smaller, much leaner, more developed in her body, better curves.
And so I asked her, I said, how much do you weigh
in each picture?
She goes, how weigh the same?
It's the same body weight, except this one
I have a different composition.
Part of this is because body fat takes up a lot of space
whereas muscle doesn't take up a lot of space.
And muscle is shapely.
Every time when you're thinking about adding shape
and sculpt your body, it's muscle.
Here's the other part.
I said, what's the difference between the two pictures and nutrition?
And she said, believe it or not, I eat more.
I eat 300 more calories in this picture over here.
And that's because she's turned her body into a fat burning machine.
This is what you want to do, especially because life does not lend itself well
to lots of activity all the time
and eating a little bit of food all the time.
It just doesn't work well with modern life
because it's sedative, but busy.
So, although we don't move a lot, we're still busy.
You gotta all kinds of things to do,
whether you're studying for school, going to work,
doing things with your kids, taking care of the house.
You're busy, but you're not moving.
So if you have to work out every day
to burn all these calories,
that means you can have to schedule an hour or more
every single day to exercise,
but that still doesn't make up for it
because you're still set in Terry throughout the day.
And then on top of you have to eat a little bit of food,
but oh my gosh, food is everywhere,
and it's really good and it's inexpensive.
And I can door dash things to my door.
And we have birthday parties and we have celebrations.
That's a terrible strategy.
And in the context of now,
if you lose weight the wrong way,
you may lose weight, but you will turn your body
into a fat storing machine,
which not only in the long term makes it very difficult, but even in the short body into a fat storing machine, which not only
the long term makes it very difficult, but even in the short term, it makes it very difficult.
And here's the thing, if you think you're flabby, getting smaller means you might just
get, be a smaller, flabby version of yourself.
So fat burning machine looks very different than fat storing machine.
Well, the truth is that this is actually really difficult to do.
And I think marketers try and make it seem simple,
to advertise to you.
Ah, quick, do this in 30 days or it's as easy as these three steps,
but it's not.
It's actually really hard and it's been,
it was a struggle for most of my clients
and for many reasons and we're gonna go over many of those.
We're gonna get into nutrition,
we'll get into stress management,
we'll get into programming, all those things
that I think need to be aligned really well to do this.
But I think the number one thing before we even get into those
is addressing the psychology of this.
To me, that was always as a trainer.
That was the hardest hurdle for me to overcome.
Is that clients, just like you said, South,
they just wanna get smaller.
I just wanna lose weight.
I don't care, Adam, just get that scale down.
I don't like the fact that I'm seeing over 200 pounds.
I've never seen that in my entire life.
Get me below that, get me below that.
And so they've ingrained this in their head.
That's all they care about is the scale.
But the truth is, if I'm doing a really good job as a coach,
if I have this beautiful balance of nutrition
and strength training and cardio
and stress management, I really shouldn't see much of a fluctuation unless this person
is morbidly obese. If I have somebody who's 300 plus pounds, we're going to come down on
that scale. That scale is going to come down a lot when we get them to a very healthy
place. But I'm talking about the average person who needs to lose 20 to 40 pounds.
There's two different, there's two graphs.
Imagine two graphs here, okay?
Doing it the wrong way, what, if you're measuring weight,
forget body fat percentage for a second.
We've already made the case.
If you do it the right way, you lose more body fat.
If you do it the wrong way, you'll lose weight and less body fat.
Okay, by the way, if you lose weight, if you lose 10 pounds,
half of its muscle,
your body fat percentage stays the same.
People don't realize that.
So your body fat percentage is what determines how you look.
Obviously, so if you have a 100 pound person
who's got 20% body fat, take that body fat,
put it on a 200 pound person, it's 10% body fat.
They look much leaner.
So if you lose weight, half of its muscle,
body fat percentage actually stayed the same.
You're a smaller version of yourself,
but you look really fluffy.
Yeah, you look no different.
But imagine these two graphs.
If you do things the wrong way,
initially you see quick weight loss, strong plateau.
That's it, you're done.
If you do things the wrong way,
on the scale, forget the body fat percentage,
because that does come down right out the gates
if you do it right, but on the scale, forget the body fat percentage because that does come down right out the gates if you do it right, but on the scale,
the fat loss looks more like a momentum builder.
So it starts off slow, but then it starts to ramp up
as your body turns into this fat burning machine,
then it really starts to come off.
With the example that Adam talked about of,
oh my gosh, I weigh over 200 pounds or whatever,
initially we're not looking for weight on the scale
because I'm getting you to lose body fat percentage
while I'm building muscle.
Eventually, I can't build, I'm not gonna build
30 pounds of muscle on somebody's body
who needs to lose 30 pounds of body fat.
I'll build some muscle.
Once we've hit that limit a little bit
where the muscles come up, the metabolism's up.
Oh, now we're starting to plateau with muscle,
which is totally normal.
Then the fat really starts come off.
So rather than it being like initially quick
and then plateauing starts off a little slower on the scale
but then it ramps up and it speeds off.
And then if you look at a long term, it's far more permanent.
Well you have to explain why that is, right?
Because the average person doesn't understand,
how does that work?
It doesn't make sense.
How someone eating more building muscle
and their metabolism working faster,
muscle is an expensive tissue.
In other words, it costs the body a lot of calories
to keep it on your body.
So just simply adding, so take a person who is unhappy,
they're fat, they wanna lose body fat,
they're unhappy with their weight,
and you don't lose any fat on them at all,
and you just give them five more pounds of muscle,
you get them to add five more pounds of muscle,
you ride away, speed their metabolism up.
You ride away, their body now requires
X amount more calories,
and there's all kinds of places that people will debate
on the exact amount of calories it is,
but just for arguments, say,
let's just say five pounds,
somewhere between 200 and 300 more calories your body needs.
That's a lot.
You know on its own.
Yeah, just by itself, not doing anything.
Yeah, because here's the key with the turning your body
into a fat burning machine.
What that means is you are literally turning,
you are moving your body to a place
where it burns more calories automatically.
Okay, this is a superior position than burning calories manually.
Manually means if I want to burn an extra,
you know, Adam gave the example of gain five pounds of muscle and burning
let's say three and a more calories, which by the way,
that's a pretty good generalization.
In my experience, if somebody gained five pounds of muscle,
they're going to burn, especially if they do it the right way,
we're burning about 300 more calories a day on average.
That's just average.
Some people, the less, some people a little more.
So, if I'm sitting around and I want to burn
300 more calories a day, I can either get up
and walk for an hour and a half or two hours or do cardio
or I can teach my body to burn more calories
so I can stay seated and burn an additional 300 calories a day.
Which one of those scenarios is easier to maintain?
Which of those scenarios is gonna be more beneficial
considering your life is both sedentary
and the fact that there's all this food around you.
Here's what you don't wanna do.
What you don't wanna do is just cut your calories,
lose muscle, now you're eating, I don't know,
1500, 1600 calories a day, and you got to your goal body weight.
Guess what you gotta do to stay there now.
You gotta keep it.
You're still eating 1500 calories a day.
Yeah, how long do you wanna live in that position?
It's just not sustainable. That's one of those things. I think people don't realize once you get to live in that position? It's just not sustainable.
That's one of those things.
I think people don't realize once you get to an end goal,
you have to really assess what that looks like
once you get there.
You know, like once I got there,
like am I happy doing this now from then on?
Or is this something that I just wanted to temporarily get here?
Yeah, but now you're just gonna,
you're putting all this pressure on your body to maintain
that level of stress and that level of cardio and reducing my calories.
I have to be able to keep doing that. Otherwise, I'm gonna go right back up.
I have, so I've done this many, many, many times with clients.
One of my favorite things to do is to take somebody and really turn their body into this fat
burning machine. One client in particular, it stands out because she was such a hard working client.
She came to me after competing in bikini competition.
So these are fitness bikini competitions,
not like the, you know, Hawaiian,
tropic, old school one or whatever.
So they're actually going on stage, getting shredded,
trying to show some muscle and that, that kind of stuff.
So she did that a few times, extreme dieting.
On top of it, she did cardio a lot.
We're talking about an hour or more every single day.
This was either running or she was cycling.
Every single day, she was lifting weights a couple days a week.
She was kind of new to the whole lifting weights thing.
So she didn't do a whole lot of resistance training.
Her calories were very low.
So here's a crazy part, all that exercise,
all that, but because she had done this for so long,
she got to the point where if she ate anything over,
I think it was like 17 or 1800 calories,
she would gain body fat.
And I remember she came to me and I'd give her tips
and stuff like that.
Finally, she hired me because she said,
so I can't, and she wasn't like highly competitive.
These were just local shows.
She goes, you know, I wanna do better
as a bikini competitor,
but the judges are telling me I need more muscle
and I need to get leaner.
She goes, I can't get leaner.
I can't eat less food and work out more.
She's like, I've got kids.
I get more to doing over an hour of cardio
every day plus lifting weights.
Oh, she was also doing yoga and other stuff on top of it.
She's like, what do I do?
Move more, eat less.
She's like, I don't wanna do that.
And I said, no, that's insane.
Let's not do that.
I said, let's give you, let's give six to eight months.
Six to eight months because we've done some damage.
You've really slowed your metabolism down
and we're gonna reverse it a little bit.
So here's what we did.
We slowly reduced her cardiovascular activity.
So I slowly moved her off the manual calorie burn.
We increased the type of resistance training we did, focused mainly on building strength.
I slowly increased her calories.
We did some stress management.
She had to do a lot of trust and faith in me.
That was a big one.
I remember it was literally every day a text between us where she'd be like, are you sure?
I'm afraid what's gonna happen.
Don't worry, trust it.
Anyway, at the end of that,
I think it took us about eight months.
At the end of that eight month period,
she was doing, I think, a couple days of cardio a week,
which is like 30 minutes, which is nothing.
Her and I were lifting weights three to four days a week.
Traditional resistance training,
wasn't this crazy calorie burn type of stuff.
And she was eating 800 more calories a day
than she was before, and leaner.
And she was leaner on top of it.
And now that's one example.
I've done this so many times with other people.
If you can turn your body into a fat burning machine,
your odds of being successful and staying lean
are so much, so much higher.
Well, let's take that.
Okay, and let's break the steps down, right?
So you just gave a great example of how most people should go after building a fat-burning
machine here.
And I think the very first thing that I like to address before we get into the other
steps, the first step for me is stress management.
And that's kind of changed over time.
Like that wasn't a huge focus for me.
I feel like when I first started as a trainer,
I just feel like stress and anxiety and, you know,
what with tech now and how much we're seated
and people not prioritizing sleep,
I just feel like stress management has become more important
today than it's ever become.
And I think that that's the first place I like to look. I can start to make some real
basic changes that can make a big difference on how their metabolism
is working for them, right? So right away I'm looking at
like a prioritizing sleep. I want to look at my clients
sleep and recovery and address stress management first and foremost.
Yeah, and here's why it's important, by the way, why you want to manage stress.
So we talked about how you can send signals to the body and it tries to get better at what
it does a lot of.
So let's say you have a lot of stress in your life, either from too much exercise, hectic
schedule, poor sleep, bad diet,
just generally just too much stress,
too much stress all the time.
What this tells the body is it says,
conserve calories and eat more.
These are the two things that it sends the body.
Now, why does it do this?
Historically, lots of stress for humans meant,
I don't have shelter, don't have food.
So, the body says, slow down the calorie burn everybody,
stress out situation, we need to make sure
we store these calories, because remember,
for most of human history, food was very, very tough
to come by.
So, you actually move away from being effective
at burning body fat.
You actually move towards being effective
at storing body fat when stress is like this.
They've actually shown studies where not only does it
increase the amount of fat, someone will store,
but it also changes the way people store body fat
to move it more to the visceral body fat
where it's in around the organs or around the belly.
Stress management is a very, very big one.
So this is an important thing because again,
if your stress is either too much or not managed properly,
now you're fighting against your body.
It'd be very hard to get lean
when your body's afraid to get lean.
Well, this was also, you know,
it's your point of like,
readjusting sort of the strategy.
I thought that this had so much more weight
because like going through and doing an inventory of stress,
I think people just don't realize where it's all coming from a lot of times.
And if you go through and you see your situation at work, you see, you know, even your interactions
with your relationships or your family, you know, you're moving, like you're just on the
go constantly, you're traveling all the time.
Like all these things are potential stressors and it will affect your sleep too.
So, you know, the recovery process gets interrupted and then you're just compiling the stress and
caring it with you and it just, it becomes, it comes to a point where now your solution
is to exercise which, you know, may have that temporarily feeling of like, oh, I was able
to relieve some of that stress, but
really at the end of the day, we're adding more to it.
So it's really important to almost itemize all these things and see what you can start
addressing.
Oh, 100%.
I feel like the analogy that Sal gave and Justin failed to help him out with was, it's
what comes to mind right away for me, right?
So I envision this cartoon that you said of,
you know, all these little guys that are running inside of you
that are deciding, you know, to pull all these levers
to burn body fat.
And what stress is, it's like these alarms going off for them.
Like, oh, she's not feeding us calories.
Oh, she's running running on a treadmill.
Oh, she's not sleeping very well.
Oh, she's fighting with her husband.
Oh, it's like, those are all alarms. they're, they're, then you're pulling all those
at once. It doesn't know where to prioritize in it. And it goes into like, just survival.
No, no, look, what are you? Okay, think about it this way. All right. Imagine, okay,
let's just pretend money is like body fat, right? For us, right? So what happens when the
economy gets really crazy,
things get really stressful out there?
What do people tend to do?
Store money.
Honey, listen, we're not going out to dinner for a little while,
but we got money in the bank account.
Yeah, but the economy's looking kind of scary.
I don't know if I'm gonna keep my job.
Let's just store this money.
I know we got money, it's already saved,
but let's not spend any, we don't know
what the future's gonna look like. It's really crazy. This is what your body's
doing when there's a lot of stress. It's saying, oh, things are looking bad. We're really
stressed out. I know we got this body fat already. That's stored energy, but let's just
add more to it. Let's just add more. Let's try to slow down the metabolism. It's not burn
as much. We don't know what the future holds. And usually, again, historically, lots of stress meant, we ran out of food.
So let's just store as much body fat as possible.
That's a great analogy because then the building muscle part is just adding more money to your
bank.
That's what that is.
Oh, oh, oh, building muscle is burning more money.
You mean burning more money, right?
Adding muscle is like, imagine the economy goes bad.
And instead of saving your money, like let's go buy a boat, you know,
let's go buy a cash pit or whatever.
That's what muscle is to your body.
Muscle is expensive, it costs a lot of calories,
and if you're stressed out,
your body doesn't want muscle.
It's not gonna want any muscle, it just costs too much.
It wants to stay safe.
I remember the first time I had a client,
this blew me away the first time it happened,
and then every time after that, it just became commonplace, but I remember the first time I had a client, this blew me away the first time it happened and then every time after that it just became commonplace.
But I remember the first time I had a client exercise or burn less calories through exercise
and actually get leaner.
I remember the first time it happened.
I had this type A woman, she was in executive, insane activity levels.
She did all the group X classes and running and you know, hit classes and boot camps and then she came and hired me as a personal trainer.
This is before I really understood this by the way and it was all about calorie balance, right?
Energy balance for me. So I'm like, oh, you're burning this many calories. You're eating this many calories.
You want to get leaner. We got to cut your calories even more and then we got to cut your calories.
Well, I got to a point where she's like, I don't want to eat me less.
Why am I not getting leaner, youer? And I'm looking at her thing.
I'm like, my God, you're working out like crazy.
And so I remember I had this conversation
with a veteran trainer.
And they said, I talked to him about it.
I'm like, she's just too much.
Bring it back down.
I'm like, yeah, but then she's gonna get fatter.
If she stops doing all this calorie burn,
she's gonna gain body fat.
And they said, no, no, no, no, no, no, watch what happens.
So I said, okay.
So I convinced this client to swap out two of her
hard workout days with slow yoga classes like this was like in yoga style
where you're literally sitting in a stretch for 30 seconds you're burning no
calories okay compared to what she was doing before she's burning no
so I we took her from classes that were probably burning five to
600 calories that were intense to classes that were burning like a hundred
calories. And I convinced her and I said, let's just this will get your body to
burn more body fat. So she does it at first, nothing happened, which blew both of
us away. I'm like, look, you gain no weight. This is so far so good. You haven't
gained more weight. And then magically, her body got leaner.
And I remember we were both like, shocked at it,
and she was like, this is crazy.
I'm like, well, you're telling your body,
it's okay to burn more body fat
because we're balancing out your stress.
It was the same with me, a clear example of that,
of a VP of a massive company that every night
would worry that there'd be some kind of fire
that she need to put out around the world somewhere.
Like there would be a call,
you have to just wake up and answer the call.
And just that alone was something that just that interruption,
it was like we were always in this hamster wheel,
just trying to spin just to keep whatever weight
that we could sustainable.
And once the barriers were set up to where that wasn't the case. Like
that, that she could actually sleep through the night. It was like an immediate loss of,
like, 10 pounds of good weight, you know, just off. And just the bodies innate tendency
to just hold on to that, you know, like you said, like it's just, it's survival. It's
something that your body, you know, wants to help you with.
Oh, an easy takeaway, I think we should,
you know, the first thing that I would tell a client
is to, you know, prioritize sleep, right?
Because I think that's the number one one.
That's the biggest one.
Right, like just simply putting,
and like talking about Justin's client,
like, you know, that, that type of client is also the client
that keeps their phone right by their bed
and so then at one o'clock when it goes off,
they reach to it and they can't help it look like, you know, if you're that person,
this, this matters the most, right? Like get the phone out of the room, get the room
dark. South talks all out, turning the lights off when you get when the sun goes down.
If you got blue blockers, if you got, there's lots of great tools to help assist this,
but at the bottom line, even if you don't have any of these tools, just prioritize sleep.
Just make it a priority to pay attention to
how you get ready for bed the same way
that you get up.
Actually, if there's, and if there's the one thing
that you can do that will do the,
have the greatest impact,
there's a lot of things you can do for stress.
You can meditate, you could exercise appropriately.
It's good for some.
You need techniques.
You know, breathing techniques,
you can, you know, work on your relationships
with the people around you. There's a lot of things you You know, breathing techniques, you can, you know, work on your relationships with people
around you.
There's a lot of things you can do, but the single most impactful thing, if you just want
to do one thing, is prioritize sleep.
Just do that.
That's it.
Every night, get seven to nine hours of quality sleep, go to bed at the same time, wake up
the same time every morning, just do that by itself, and that by itself has the biggest
impact for stress.
The second thing that we should focus on is building muscle.
This is your fat burning engine.
This is the engine, think about it this way.
This is the engine that's always on.
It's always burning calories.
And then when you move, it's really revving up and burning a lot of calories.
If you make the cornerstone of your workouts
towards building muscle, you will,
the odds that you'll build a fat burning machine
are much higher.
In fact, whether you want to build muscle
like a body builder and get big arms and whatever,
or you just want to get as lean as possible,
just want to lose body fat,
both those people should train similarly.
You should be training to build muscle.
This was always a great conversation with clients
because when they came to me for losing weight,
I'd basically talk them into not what we're gonna train
like we're trying to build muscle.
I don't want to gain muscle, I'm trying to lose weight.
It's like, okay, and I have this conversation,
but that's the way you should train.
Lift weights like you're trying to build muscle
and get stronger.
Don't lift weights like you're just trying
to sweat and burn as many calories as possible lift weights, like you're just trying to sweat
and burn as many calories as possible.
Now that being said, remember, too,
and I like following this after talking about stress first
because some people just hear that and they go,
okay, weights every day.
I'm gonna train hard every single day,
try and build muscle, try and build strength,
five days, seven days a week.
Remember, that too is a stress.
That also is sending those guys running around in your
body, those alarms going off and pulling levers. You got to think you want to have a nice
balance. So that's why I love the analogy that you guys gave both with clients of reducing
their training actually resulted in more body fat. You don't need to be training every single
day inside the gym two to three days a week of good strength building, okay, or focusing on building muscle is plenty.
So maybe you're going to the gym four or five times,
but those other two times are mobility work or yoga
or working inward because that's also helping the stress
management side in addition to you also focusing
on recovery and building muscle.
I would say the two best programs in this category
for building muscle for the average
person, one would be as ideal for a beginner.
That's map starter, so that'll get you building some good muscle.
The other one is ideal for someone who has some experience working on the gym and that's
maps and a ball.
Both those programs are very effective at building muscle and boosting the metabolism, which is
a side effect.
This is the wonderful thing about building a fat burning machine for a body, is that the
side effect of that is natural fat loss, which is really, really cool.
I mean, your body wants to burn body fat, makes things a whole lot easier.
Now, there's a couple components to both those programs.
Actually, there's a couple components that should be in all muscle building programs.
Number one, strength is your greatest objective measure
as to whether or not it's working.
Okay, so if you're in the gym and you're getting stronger,
you added a rep to your squat,
you added five pounds to your overhead press,
you're able to do a little bit more with your curls.
That is the best objective measure that's telling you,
you're moving in the right direction.
In fact, that's the best measure.
Now, it's not a hundred percent
because you can change technique
and all that stuff to get stronger.
But if you have good form, good control,
and you're getting stronger,
you can essentially guarantee yourself
that you're moving in the right direction
of building muscle and boosting your metabolism.
Well, it's a way better measure than us watching the scale.
Oh, way better.
Right, so this is when I gave the first analogy, the visual of the line in the spectrum.
This is where I want to be with a client.
I want to be right in the middle where we're not seeing much fluctuation on the scale, but we're getting stronger.
If that's the case, I'm letting him or her know,
like we're winning right now.
We are doing a beautiful exchange.
You're getting stronger in the gym,
your scale isn't going down, which tells me
we're probably adding some muscle on your body
and you're also probably leaning out,
and that's why we're hovering around the same way.
Yeah, back to your point of like the dose matters, right?
So that's something to consider too,
whether or not like, your strength will kind of indicate
whether or not you might be a little bit overdoing it
or, you know, underdoing it.
And so that's something to always keep in mind
while adding the proper amount of recovery,
but, you know, there's a way to do it where
it's not always more is better.
And I think that's the message that everybody's always
heard about burning body fat is like,
you can't do enough.
And that's just not true once you do an inventory
of all the stress you're already accumulating.
No, look at your strength.
Look, Maps and a Balak, which I said was four people
who have some experience.
You can do that program two days a week.
Two days a week, but it's effective, right?
You're in there, you're doing the compound movements,
you're phasing your reps, there's different cycles in the program.
But it's two days a week and if you're getting stronger, okay, here's the thing, this is
the big challenge.
People will get stronger and they think that they'll get stronger, faster if they add
more.
When you're getting stronger, you're doing it.
Leave it alone.
You're working.
You're doing a good job.
If you're not getting stronger and you're working out, you know, four days a week, believe
it or not, for a lot of people, reduce a day.
If you're working out one day a week and you're not getting stronger, sometimes that means
adding a next day.
But that's what we mean by balance.
You want to find the balance that improves that strength.
And when you're getting stronger, you can pretty much guarantee your boosting your body's
ability to burn body fat automatically.
Now, the next one, this is one that people jump to automatically.
Way too soon.
Way too soon.
This is cardio.
This is all the categories of cardio.
Now cardio vascular activity definitely has some performance benefits.
So if you're somebody that wants to build endurance and stamina, you want to get good at cycling,
good at swimming, good at running, then that makes plenty of sense to make cardio,
vascular training, the cornerstone of your routine.
But if your goal is to build a fat burning machine,
cardio vascular activity should play not the starting role,
it should be a supporting role.
The cornerstone is resistance training
because that directly speeds up the metabolism.
Cardio does not directly speed up the metabolism.
So cardio should be as a supportive role.
Now, when we look at cardio, we want to consider
quite a few different things.
Which one's going to be the most effective at burning calories?
Cardio is a manual calorie burn, but here's a second one.
This one's actually more important.
Which style and form of cardiovascular activity is going gonna be most easiest for me to maintain forever?
Okay, for most people, this does not look like
structured 30 minutes of cardio,
X amount days a week.
You already got your structured resistance training
because that's the cornerstone.
So let's say you're doing two or three days a week
of structured resistance training.
There's your scheduled workouts.
You wanna add an additional two or three structured workouts to your schedule or an additional
30 minutes to those workouts.
It's going to make it much more difficult to stick to.
Here's my favorite way to add cardiovascular activity to increase the manual calorie burn,
build it into your life, make it something that works around your current behavior.
Here's an easy way to do it, and it works very, very well for a lot of people.
Add a 10 minute walk after every meal. That's it.
10 minute walk after breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
You're already eating those meals anyway. You're already having breakfast. You're already
having lunch, already having dinner. It feels good to walk for 10 minutes.
10 minutes is a very small commitment. It's nothing.
It's easy to get up after eating lunch and be like,
I'm going to go for a stroll around the block for 10 minutes.
But you add up all those 10 minute walks
and what do you have?
30 minutes of cardio every single day.
You have increased activity, increased calorie burn,
just from the adding it to behaviors that you already have.
I love that so much.
I love focusing more on activities
that promote productivity as well.
So things around your house that you know,
I've been waiting to get to it.
And the thing about these pursuits about,
like I wanna get into fitness,
I wanna burn body fat,
I wanna do all these things in this direction.
Why not incorporate that around things too,
that help, you know help your everyday lifestyle,
like things that,
like just cleaning my house or like doing things
around outside that need trimming
or going and taking the dogs for more walks
and things like that that are just very reasonable
and things that benefit everything else around you.
Like I just,
it's so much more of a lifestyle way to approach it that I feel has more sustainability.
That's the, the, the, here's the thing about cardio that's awesome is that it has no form.
Unless you're training specifically for a sport, like I said earlier, swimming, cycling,
running, cardio is just from this standpoint, from, from burning fat with a quarter stone of resistance training
to booster metabolism.
Cardio is just calorie burn.
So in other words, anything that is movement
can be considered cardio.
So what Justin's saying is absolutely brilliant.
It's literally, I might as well rake the leaves.
I might as well clean the kitchen.
I might as well stand in full clothes while I watch TV. That is also
manual calorie burn. And in fact, back to justice point, it's a much easier way of staying consistent.
Not only that, you have to address the adaptation process when it comes to cardio too. The body adapts
to that very fast. So not only is it just a manual calorie burn, it's a manual calorie burn that gets
less and less each time you do it.
So maybe the first time you got on that treadmill
and you got after it, you know, for a half hour hour,
you burned X amount of calories,
the next time it burns a little less,
the next time a little less,
and the next time a little less,
before or eventually,
what ends up happening is your body gets so adapted to it,
it burns very, very little calories.
So I like to, like Justin saying, make it more into lifestyle
or with Sal saying, adding it to, you know,
adding walking to after your meals,
something that is sustainable forever
that you're never gonna stop doing.
And then using cardio as a tool
because I've got something in a week or two.
I've got, you know, I've been doing this,
I've been training with Adam for the last year or two.
And oh, I've got this bachelor party
or I've got this Vegas trip
or I've got this thing I'm gonna be on a beach
in two or three weeks and hey, you know what?
I wanna turn it up a little bit
right before I go out in a bikini or whatever.
And so if that's a great time to pull this cardio card out
because then when you do it, your body will really respond
because your body's not used to doing it all the time
and it'll give you some great results for a couple weeks.
But if you go to this as your main method
of burning fat right out the gates,
you'll see an initial fall,
you'll see an initial reduction in body fat,
then the body gets adapted to it
and then where do you go from there?
That's why it's like the last place I wanna go.
It is. Now you can choose a couple
different forms of structured cardio.
You have your ready, you know, your kind of steady state traditional form of cardio. This is hiking
or cycling or long distance running and that kind of stuff. The benefits of that is it builds
endurance and it doesn't require as much skill and control typically, right. Then you have
your hit forms of cardio where you're training far higher
intensity for short periods of time. The benefit of that is it doesn't take as much time, burns
almost as many calories in a short period of time. The detriment requires more skill because
you're going so much harder. In fact, if you want to do short term hit training, one of
the best ways to do it is with weights because you're less likely to lose muscle doing it that way.
Don't recommend doing it for long periods of time.
But if you did it for like a month,
you could see like a short term fat loss start to happen.
We have a program called Maps Hit that actually does that.
And if you follow that for short periods of time,
you'll see those short bouts of fat loss.
But long term, if you want to have a good, just kind of fat burning lifestyle with the
fast metabolism, the most effective way to implement cardio is to implement it in your
life and not have it be structured and just to be active throughout the day naturally.
Now, the last thing we should definitely talk about is nutrition.
And this is important because although you do speed up your metabolism, although you get your body to burn more calories,
it's always easier to eat calories than it is to burn them. It always is. I mean, if you
speed up your metabolism to burn 800 more calories a day, which is awesome. That's a lot of
calories that you can burn naturally every single day. It's still pretty easy to eat an
or calories. I could do that in about 15 minutes.
I could drink that, yeah, man.
No problem.
So you have to pay attention to nutrition
if you want fat loss.
If you didn't pay an attention to nutrition,
you'd still get the strength and the health benefits,
but the fat loss would be very, very difficult.
So nutrition is just, it's something you need to look at.
Number one, this is something you can't get around.
You have to eat less calories
and you're burning to cause fat loss, but there are some strategies
that make that very easy.
Rather than counting calories, which is fine, you can do that.
You want to count calories, that's one way to do it.
But here's another way that you can do it.
That seems to just have the side effect be, I eat less, eat mostly whole foods, avoid
heavily processed foods.
Naturally people tend to eat about 5-600 calories
less a day when they stick to whole natural foods and with that you don't have to necessarily restrict
yourself, you're just eliminating heavily processed foods. Naturally what you see is a reduction in
calories. I'm going to go on a lemon and say you don't have to restrict at all. If you have somebody
who is eating heavily processed foods, they are overweight and the first thing I'm gonna do is I I'm gonna switch them off of processed foods to eating just whole foods
But I'm not gonna limit them at all if you tell me you're hungry
I want I want to feed you because even if you do over consume a little bit if we're doing a good job of stress
Management and strength training those extra calories should get partitioned into building
muscle. Yeah, you're going to end up using it. And I'd much rather take you there when
we're first starting off on our fat loss journey than to also reduce calories. I think
of a very similar cardio. Cardio, I say, is the last thing that I pull, pull out to really
speed up the fat loss process. So, it's reducing calories. That's the second to last thing.
Before I start cutting calories and restricting you hard,
I'd much rather just say, hey listen,
let's just get rid of the processed foods,
but I'm not gonna tell you you can eat.
If you're hungry, go eat, just choose from these whole foods.
And then what I know as a trainer and coach
is you know what, they might eat the same amount of calories.
They might even eat a little bit more
than what they were eating before.
But if they switch over to whole foods, it's gonna be really tough for them to eat a lot bit more than what they were eating before, but if they switch over to whole foods It's gonna be really tough for them to eat a lot more calories and what they were doing with processed foods
And even if they do the little bit of those extra calories more likely are gonna get
Partitioned over into building my experience when they avoid heavily processed foods
They just they lose body fat because they eat less and study show. It's about five to six hundred calories consistently
Consistently naturally. I like show, it's about five to 600 calories consistently, consistently, naturally.
I like it because it's natural, you know what I'm saying?
It's not like I'm sitting there counting everything I'm eating and oh my gosh, it's
stressful.
I'm literally just saying to myself, I'm going to stick to these whole natural foods and
eat when I'm hungry.
And then the side effect of that is I'm eating less and not even realizing it.
And this makes the fat loss much more sustainable.
Well, a lot of these processed foods,
they trick that feeling of satiety.
So like you don't really,
you're not really responsive to that anymore
to where like when you jump over to whole foods,
it's like I feel satisfied, I feel sustained.
I feel like I'm full again.
And that's just something that again,
that's that feeds into a reduction in calories. You just don't, your body doesn't feel like it'm full again, and that's just something that, again, that feeds into a reduction in calories.
You just don't, your body doesn't feel
like it needs to keep going.
Now, there is one macronutrient that I will track.
I will ask them to track, and that's protein.
Yes.
And that's mainly because most people
that were in this category of trying to lose body fat
were grossly under-eating.
They were overeating probably carbohydrates
and processed foods, sugars, things like that,
and they were under consuming protein.
And plus, I like the psychology of that, right?
I'm telling a client, listen,
I'm not gonna tell you, no, you can't eat anything.
In fact, not only am I gonna allow you to eat,
eat as much as you want, as long as you're hungry
and it's whole foods, I'm also gonna tell you,
make sure you get as enough protein,
make sure we're targeting that.
So that's the main focus.
The main focus is, okay, eat when you're hungry, whole foods,
but then also target your number for protein.
Go after that each meal.
So every time I prepare a whole food meal,
I'm looking at the protein that's in it,
and I wanna try and get my protein in my daily protein
and take it every day.
I think of protein, and I hate to say this
because it sounds so marketing and click baity.
So I'll clarify, but protein is your fat burning macronutrient.
Let me explain.
Not that you'll take protein and magically it burns body fat, but here's what I mean by
that.
Protein most strongly contributes to muscle gain.
So when you're eating your high protein diet,
this is proven beyond a shadow of a doubt,
you build more muscle.
Building more muscle speeds up the metabolism further,
making fat loss easier.
So that's number one.
Number two, protein produces the most satiety.
So when they do studies on proteins, fats, and carbs,
which one fills you up the most,
which one prevents you from overeating the most?
Protein always wins. It produces the most of tides. So when people eat a high protein diet, it also
Encourage them to eat less. So that's great. And then number three
Protein also costs the most calories to utilize. So your body actually burns energy
Using energy has to process it, and protein
is more thermogenic, that's the word that's used, than fats and carbs. So here's the three
reasons why protein is the fat burning macronutrient. Builds muscle, thus speeding up the metabolism,
it makes you eat less because it produces the most satiety, and it's the most thermogenic.
So you definitely want to hit your protein target So you definitely wanna hit your protein targets.
So if you hit your protein targets
and you aim for all whole foods,
you should naturally eat in a way,
and this is for most people, in my experience,
most people as happens, you won't eat in a way
that naturally produces fat loss.
And then if you combine it with a good strength training,
metabolism boosting routine, like map starter, if you're a beginner or maps in a ballac, if you combine it with a good strength training, metabolism boosting routine,
like map starter, if you're beginner or maps in a ball, if you have some experience, you
do the extra activity throughout the day. No, you don't need to do any structured cardio,
necessarily unless you want to burn some extra body fat in a short period of time, just
like a week or two. But otherwise, just be more active, manage your stress. Mainly by
getting good sleep, you will turn your body
into a much more effective fat burning machine.
Look, MindPump is recorded on video as well as audio.
Come check us out on YouTube MindPump Podcast.
You can also find your favorite podcast host on Instagram and the producer.
You can find Doug there too.
Look for Doug at MindPump Doug, find Justin at MindPump Justin.
You can find me at MindPump Sal and Adam at MindPump Atom. Thank you for Doug at Mind Pump Dog, find Justin at Mind Pump Justin, you can find me at Mind Pump Sal and add him at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically
improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted
RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media dot com. The RGB Superbundumble includes maps and a ballac, maps performance and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbumble is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal
trainers, but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee, and you can get it now plus other valuable
free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing MindP Pump to your friends and family. We thank you
for your support and until next time this is Mind Pump!