Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1400: Why Everyone Should Exercise
Episode Date: October 12, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin cover 10 reasons why everyone should exercise. The difference between exercise and being active. (2:45) Mind Pump on the benefits of exercise for the average perso...n. (4:10) Why Everyone Should Exercise. (11:36) #1 – Makes you happier. (11:56) #2 – Makes fat loss easier. (16:30) #3 – Excellent for building muscle and strengthening your bones. (19:14) #4 – Increases your energy levels. (21:51) #5 – Reduces the risk of chronic diseases. (27:14) #6 – Helps skin health. (29:39) #7 – Incredible for the brain. (31:41) #8 – Improves sleep quality. (36:25) #9 – Reduces pain. (38:42) #10 – Gives you better sex. (41:15) Related Links/Products Mentioned October Special: MAPS Anabolic and No BS 6-Pack Formula Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Exercise for the treatment of depression and anxiety Treating Depression with Exercise Mind Pump #1387: Turning Your Body Into A Fat-Burning Machine 5 Long-Term Benefits of Resistance Training – Mind Pump Blog 3 Other Benefits to Resistance Training – Mind Pump Blog Physical activity, exercise, and chronic diseases: A brief review How Exercise Can Improve Your Sex Life 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.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's Top Ranked Fitness Health and Entertainment podcast,
we talk about why everybody should exercise.
Now, if you're a fitness fanatic, you might think to yourself, well, duh, everybody should exercise. Now if you're fitness fanatic, you might think to yourself, well, duh, everybody should exercise.
But believe it or not, only 22% of Americans exercise regularly.
The rest of them don't, and they need to be convinced.
This is a great episode to share with friends or family
who need to get started, who you think need to get started
with an exercise routine.
So we listed 10 scientifically proven reasons
why everyone should exercise.
You'll love this episode.
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Justin, you were doing some Googling.
I'm a big Googler.
What were you Googling?
Yeah, I was just looking up.
I'm trying to see what your average person is looking up
in terms of fitness-related topics
or just to help an advice in terms of anything
health-related.
So one of the main things was that that stood out to me
was like, what are the benefits of exercising at all?
Like for somebody just your average person
who just wants to kind of maybe eat right
or just as concerned with their job
and maintaining their family life and whatnot,
why should they exercise?
Like, what are the benefits to it?
That's good.
And I think we should probably clarify
the difference between exercise and being active.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think that's really important
because there's definitely benefits to just moving
and being active, but what we're talking about
is a little bit more structured,
a little bit more individualized.
It's exercise, exercise being something that you,
because being active is very important,
but exercise is also important
where you actually have something planned,
you know what you're doing, you train your individual body
specifically for things that you want
to focus on and work on for yourself.
Well, when Justin first said this to me,
I thought that's in silly, like, you said this to me, I thought, oh, that's silly.
Like, we're too vague.
Yeah, right?
But when I think about like the clients that I had and their family members and stuff,
you know, we all know what the statistics are as far as the obesity is on the rise, and
there's a lot of people that are really out of shape.
There's also a large portion of the population that don't exercise on a regular basis,
but still maintain their weight.
They make better food choices.
They're aware of maybe what they put in their body, and they don't really give a shit
about looking super muscular or buff.
They don't care much about aesthetics, and they just want to be healthy, and they've done
that through basically making good food choices and staying active to your point cell, but don't really exercise. And what is the case for that person
and why they should exercise? Yeah, well actually it's funny because we do get stuck in a little
bit of a bubble, right? Because when I hear, you know, like, hey, we should do a podcast about why everyone
should exercise. I think why everybody knows you should exercise.
But I just looked it up.
So statistically speaking,
under 25% of Americans meet the recommended amount
of daily activity.
So we're not even talking about actual structured exercise,
but rather just being active, right?
That's under 27%, a smaller percentage of that,
or a percentage of that small percentage number
of those people are actually doing exercise,
or actually working out.
So you're absolutely right Adam.
The vast majority of people in America,
not to mention the world, you do need to make the case
for them why they should, why should you exercise, what are the benefits,
what are the costs of not doing it, why is this so important?
Well, also, it reminds me of when we were researching apps and we were researching
ways to make an experience for somebody who wouldn't normally just get up and move around,
like the big emphasis in the tech world
is really about just getting people to stand more.
That's what they've reduced it down to.
Just because even just because of the modern comforts
in the way that like work is structured,
like sitting down, it's so easy, it's so accessible,
you really have to go out of your way to,
you know, just to stand and move around and walk.
And so they're trying to really focus just on the very simplistic things of how often
are you walking, like how often are you standing, and then they're gauging those as metrics.
But now we're not even really at the point of bringing exercise in that conversation,
which I feel is even more of a crucial step to then, you know,
getting, making their lives even that much more optimized.
Yeah. Well, life in modern societies is sedentary.
We've designed it this way.
We used to suffer from pain and problems and health issues related to, you know,
not having maybe enough nutrition or enough food
and life being too hard.
You know, washing clothes.
I remember one year as a kid,
I went to visit family in Sicily and my grandmother,
and remember this is, they're not very well off,
they're in Sicily and she had this old water bin
with what is it called, the rack that you scrub clothes on, in Sicily and she had this old like water bin
with the, what is it called? The rack that you scrub clothes on,
with the soap or whatever, the washboard.
And I said, what is this?
I didn't know anything and she said,
oh, this is how we used to wash clothes.
So I had her show me.
Washing clothes took up a lot of time.
And it was a lot of energy.
I couldn't believe how physical that kind,
just washing clothes was.
Everything was like that.
Everything we did was very physical, very active, hard.
And so we suffered a lot of issues from this,
a lot of pain, a lot of posture issues,
people with humpbacks and people with injuries
and joint inflammation as a result of really, really hard labor.
So we solved a lot of that,
but now we have the opposite problem or consequences
from the opposite, which is if you just go about
your daily life and modern societies,
you are lucky if you get a few thousand steps a day.
Not even talking about hard physical movement or activity,
just steps, a few thousand.
I mean, you could get that with like a 30 minute walk,
essentially, or an hour walk out of your entire day.
Let alone doing anything else that requires
reaching up above your head and lifting something and twisting.
We literally sit down most of the day,
and so like you said, just in a lot of what they're doing
is better than nothing. It's like damage control, but in a lot of what they're doing is better than nothing,
it's like damage control, but it's not anywhere near optimal, not even close.
Yeah, it's still like really reinforcing this reactive mentality. And I think that, you
know, that's one of those things where if I'm, if I'm just doing my normal everyday
thing, it really takes an extra step, which a lot of people just, they don't really want to consider doing more
to what they already feel might be a bit challenging
for them, but introducing challenge is what,
you know, makes you stronger,
is what, you know, makes your body healthier
and your mind sharper.
Well, we've speculated that this is the reason,
the rise of interest in obstacle course racing.
We've talked about this. I think that people subconsciously know this.
I think there's a large portion of people that sign up for these races
and they don't realize what it is that draws them to that.
I mean, if you think of a life, if you think about a forum, think about how absurd they are.
You pay money to go run up dirt hills,
carry rocks, swimming cold lakes, you know, climb obstacles.
It's like, these are all things that you could do
or you had to do a few hundred years ago
just to get by your normal day.
Yeah, and you're paying to do it.
Yeah.
And so I do think that it's in us, right,
to gravitate towards these things
because we subconsciously know that it's beneficial for us.
And I think that is a reason why we see a rise
in these obstacle course racing
all the different organizations that are out there
is I think deep down people do know this.
It's just we have to make that case for the average person
that maybe looks at
themself in the mirror and they don't think themselves is really overweight they feel all right
the doctor's not telling them they have to do anything extra they manage maybe their calories and so
they assume why do I need to exercise why do I need to spend hours in my day doing exercises in
a gym or outside
if I think that I'm healthy.
Yeah, yeah.
And you know, there's a saying in advertising
and I promise this applies to what we're talking about.
But there's a saying in advertising where you want to get
to a point where you're trading dimes for quarters.
Meaning I want to spend $1,000 on advertising.
And if I can make $1,500 for every $1,000 I invest in advertising,
well now I can grow my business and whatever, right?
With exercise, it's kind of like that.
The time that you spend on exercising, you get back in terms of quality of life, in terms
of length of life, you live longer, you live better, and you get more out of things, and
you get better experiences out of the things
that you do.
So it is a very worthwhile investment,
because there is some time that you need to invest
in exercising, but it is trading dimes for quarter.
So what we're gonna do is we're gonna go through
10 scientifically proven benefits
of structured exercise.
These are benefits that we're not speculating as trainers.
These are proven beyond a shadow of it out,
have been shown to get these kinds of benefits
from structured exercise.
Now, the first one, this is an interesting one
because for a long time, we observed this,
but there wasn't any studies to support this.
And that is that exercise generally makes you happy.
It generally improves your mood.
We now have studies to show that exercise, done properly, is as effective in the moderate
term as SSRI antidepressant drugs for treating mild to moderate,
which is the most common forms of depression.
Now, these same studies show that exercise
is probably better for the long term
because you just continue to improve.
That's for treating mild to moderate forms of depression.
But if you're just average,
you don't necessarily suffer from depression,
studies also show that structured exercise improves your outlook on life.
And here's the, and this is why this is number one in this list that we're going to go
through.
How you perceive everything around you changes everything.
If your day and your life doesn't change it all, but you now are happier in it, you
now perceive it as better.
Your entire life has changed.
You know what I'm saying?
What's that saying?
Like rather than trying to carpet the world,
put carpets on the bottom of your feet.
Right?
So rather than trying to change your whole life,
to make yourself feel better,
why not just make yourself feel better
and then your whole life is now totally different?
Now on a physiological point,
what's going on?
Are we, is it the blood, oxygen, nutrients
that's being circulated through the body?
Is it the serotonin?
Like what is causing us to actually
chemically feel happier?
Well, exercise does increase the production of,
of noraponephrine, epinephrine, catacolamines.
It changes the brain to perceive and handle stress
and anxiety better.
So literally, as you exercise, they've done studies to show that the structure of the brain
changes so that you perceive, stress and anxiety differently, and they become far less stressful
and anxious.
Is that the body's ability to adapt to this stress?
You're putting this out,
you're putting this stress on the body by exercising.
It then gets better and adapts to it.
Therefore, it will make all stress easier for you to handle.
Yes, your body literally,
just like your muscles grow from exercise
and we'll get into that as well,
you literally are training your body to feel
Happier. This is why in study after study after study
Exercise is the most consistent
Thing you can do to improve your mood. There is nothing that consistently across the board
children, men, women, old, young
You know
Disabled or able-bodied, exercise, improve,
if it's done properly and appropriately, it's an important thing that you need to say.
It improves your basically how you perceive everything.
It literally makes you happy.
It seems that when you hone in on that balance, what the body's required, energy-wise and
expenditure-wise, the body rewards itself with chemicals,
it rewards elevates your mood.
If you look at your body as this machine
that has all these inner workings,
that has this hydraulic system in it,
it has all these plumbing that needs to,
you need to supply the you know, the right work
for everything to, you know, come in and out properly
and your body will respond, you know, accordingly
and reward you for using it.
Well, your body is the filter that receives the signals
from the world, perceives them, that includes your brain,
and if it's healthy, right, think about this way.
Here's an extreme example.
Think of when you're sick.
How often are you happy when you're sick, right?
It's a, you tend to feel a little bit more depressed and down because you physically feel
depressed and down.
So they both affect each other.
Right.
So exercise physically makes your body feel better, which then mentally
makes you feel and emotionally makes you more likely to experience happiness. So what
they find is that people who exercise regularly perceive happiness to be stronger or feelings
that are like happiness to be stronger and perceive negative emotions to be weaker. So
things that normally would make me feel really anxious
or sad, now make me feel less so
because I exercise regularly.
Now the next one, this is one that a lot of people
are familiar with, but exercise, regular exercise,
especially resistance training, makes fat loss
a lot easier.
In fact, we now have lots of studies that show that just diet alone is a terrible
way to burn mostly body fat. In fact, just dieting causes a muscle and fat loss effect.
You lose weight, but you end up losing muscle. Diet alone is hard to maintain fat loss because
as you lose muscle, you slow your metabolism down,
which then makes it harder to maintain.
Well, this also goes back to discerning
between just activity and exercise,
because one is more beneficial towards actually building
muscle, which then if we are able to build more muscle
on our body, then it becomes even more easy
to shuttle and utilize this fat storage appropriately.
Well, it also gives you a lot more flexibility
in your diet and now, right?
During these times when the average person is extremely
sedentary, when we have all kinds of food
that can be delivered to us, most people that are even
contemplating whether they should or should not exercise,
probably indulge in things like wine or desserts
or things that they enjoy that are pleasurable that most of us like and
When you exercise it gives you a lot more flexibility to have these things occasionally into your diet versus I don't want to exercise
So I have to have this very regimen way of eating all time to maintain a healthy weight
Right and when you do reduce your calories if you don't send a signal to your body that says
you need muscle, what your body tries to do is slow its metabolism down to meet the
calories that you're eating.
So you cut your calories, you lose some weight, half of its muscle, half of its fat that's
supported by many studies.
That's typically the ratio of weight loss.
See you lost 10 pounds, 5 fat, 5 muscle. And now the amount of food that you're eating that caused the weight loss. See, you lost 10 pounds, five fat, five muscle,
and now the amount of food that you're eating
that caused the weight loss is now the amount of food
you need to eat to maintain,
because your metabolism has now slowed down.
So if you've ever gone on a diet and said to yourself,
I can't wait for this diet to be over
because I'm eating so little,
this can be very difficult to maintain.
Well, guess what, unless you build muscle,
you specifically build muscle,
that's gonna be the calories you're gonna be stuck with forever.
And that's a very difficult situation to be in.
Structured exercise and particular resistance training
will speed up a metabolism by 300 calories
as much as 1,500 or 1,500.
I've seen people's metabolism go way up
from resistance training.
So now here you are,
leaner and you can eat more.
Now to maintain your leaner body, you can eat more.
That's a much easier, better position to be in long term.
The next one, again, this one seems obvious,
but a lot of people don't realize this,
but exercise and again,
and specifically resistance training,
phenomenal for muscle, excellent for bones.
Now, let's talk about muscle for a second.
Your body views your muscle primarily to get you to move around and to perform the daily
tasks that you need to perform.
Your body will never make you stronger than it thinks you need to be.
That's a waste of energy, right?
Muscle burns a lot of calories and we evolved for the most part where we didn't have lots of food
So your body fights having more muscle, unless it thinks it needs to like why would I think about it this way?
Your body isn't gonna make you have a higher
You know metabolism or have a higher
You know liability with calories unless it's something that it thinks is gonna be beneficial and working out sends that signal
that tells the body, we need more muscles.
So now you have more muscle, which improves mobility,
decreases your risk of injury, protects you against
things like diabetes, you have better blood sugar control,
and then because muscle connects the bone or attaches a bone,
you have stronger bones, and we are in a bit of an epidemic of osteopenia and osteoporosis.
It's still climbing, especially in women, resistance training or exercise, structured exercise
is the only thing to consistently reverse that trend.
Well, and this is a good place to talk about that where you start with that, too.
Right?
So again, if you're one of those people that is listening to this and debating whether
you should exercise or not exercise, I think one of the common mistakes that I have found
with this person who now decides, okay, they let's say they go through all these 10 points
of here, okay, I'm sold.
I'm exercising now.
And they think they got to go into this crazy routine or program.
If you weren't doing very much exercise or any at all to begin with, just simply doing
a day or two in the week of exercise is already going to start to send a signal to the body
that it needs to build some muscle and getting the benefits of fat loss and speeding metabolism
up like the point you're sour is making right now.
So starting off slow but yet being consistent is far better off than you throwing a ton of
it at your body right away
and less likely to continue it on.
No, do it the right way.
That's why I keep saying appropriate exercise.
The appropriate amount of exercises,
what's gonna give you all these benefits
that we're talking about going too hard
or too long for your individual body.
Remember, it's all for you, right?
So don't look at someone else and say,
what, but you know, I'm gonna do what they're doing because it seems you've working for them. If it's all for you, right? So don't look at someone else and say, what, but, you know, I'm gonna do what they're doing because it seems you've working for them.
If it's wrong for you, you're not gonna get a lot of these benefits. Now, the next one is interesting
because, and I remember, you know, talking to one of my uncles about this one a long time ago,
and he's like, this doesn't make any sense, but exercise actually increases your energy levels,
which is if you think about it, kind of, of doesn't make sense because you think, how can making myself tired, sweating, and working
out give me more energy?
It's like weird energy physics, the more energy I burn, the more energy I have that doesn't
make any sense.
Well, it is totally true, studies support this 100% across the board, but here's how it
works. Very similar to how the body builds muscle when you're exercise.
Your body will only give you the amount of muscle that you need,
that it thinks you need.
So if you're lifting weights, you'll have more muscle.
If you're not lifting weights, you'll be weaker.
Okay.
Your body's only going to produce the amount of energy
at things you need.
So if you sit around all day long and you're not active
and you're not exercising or working out,
your body's only going to produce so much energy. You don't need much energy because you just sit around all day long.
If you do structured exercise, structured workouts,
well now your body's like we need to produce more energy.
We need to produce more energy because the demands on us are much higher.
Well yeah, I'm trying to to think of how I can relate this
to somebody who just thinks about their job,
just thinks about managing their home life
and everything else is sort of in between.
Well, if you just think of your work,
and let's say you're starting a new job
or like a new focus within that job,
and there's a learning curve to that.
And what you have to do is immerse yourself in
that and learn each part of the step so you can get more efficient at that, but also
you're stretching yourself. So like, let's say the work speed, I have to get something
turned in quicker and I have to get better at the way that I manage my time and my efforts
in my job to produce this result. You got to think of training your body
to be able to stretch your capacity a bit more,
to be able to achieve that part where now I have more energy
because I've been training my body
to try to stretch itself to gain more access to it.
I also think it's a bit of a momentum builder.
Like, it took me a long time to really start to notice this
in my own behaviors.
Obviously, there's many days when I come home and I have them worked out.
I don't work out every single day.
I notice there's this direct correlation with the days that I exercise in the days that
I don't.
That's this.
When I come home and it's been a long day at work, we sit in and I'm here on a podcast,
we're on computers on our phones all day,
and then I come home from a normal day,
and I have an exercise.
I have this tendency to want to continue sitting
the rest of the day, so I go home
and then I want to lay on the couch,
and then maybe Katrina says something like,
oh, hun, would you go get that down the garage?
Well, I have a three level house,
plus a garage, and it's just four levels, right?
And she'll say something like,
get something in the garage, and I'm like, oh, I grumble to get up, to go down four flights
of stairs. As if it's like so much work for me to go down there, you know, it takes me
a whole two and a half minutes to do it at most, right? Yeah. And then I then I recognize
the days where I get exercise and I come in and I almost feel guilty for sitting down.
I don't want to sit down. My body wants to keep moving and keep working.
And you know, something like she asked the same type of a question
like that where she needs something downstairs.
And I just fly downstairs and grab it and run back up.
Or I find myself coming behind her and helping out
and doing chores around the house
because I feel productive.
I already exercise for the day.
My energy levels are up.
And it tends to promote more movement through the day.
It took me a long time to connect those dots. My energy levels are up and it tends to promote more movement through the day.
It took me a long time to connect those dots, but most people that I've shared that with
and told them to watch and evaluate that in their own lives have found the exact same thing
too.
When you get that exercise in, it tends to promote more energy and more movement through
the rest of the day.
I'm back to your previous point before this about the right dose, about not like overdoing it. There is a way to provide stimulus to your body
to exercise in a way where you don't get insanely exhausted,
where you feel like you're so sore,
and I know that's a big deterrent for a lot of people
or new to working out.
They think immediately I'm gonna get incredibly sore.
I don't like that feeling,
and so why should I do that?
Well, there's a way to do that where you provide just enough
stimulus to the muscles where they're gonna respond,
and actually it's gonna elevate your energy levels.
Yeah, you should feel good after working out.
You should finish your workout and feel really good,
calm, have good energy.
You should not feel like you need to go lay down on the couch
and take an app, you probably over did it. But again, it's literally like this. Look, if you a few days a week
are lifting 100 or 200 pounds and your body gets strong to be able to do that, how easy is it going
to be to lift your kid, you know, who weighs 25 pounds? How easy is it going to be for you to lift
the bag of dog food that's 15 pounds, right? If you are expanding energy through exercise and your body is adapting and getting better
at that so that you can do an hour workout, how good are you going to feel when
you just need to walk to your desk and sit at your computer and focus on your
computer screen, right? Your body's producing the amount of energy that it
thinks you need to be active and at the moment you don't need to be active but
you've got all this extra energy. So exercise consistently, done properly, increases energy levels and obviously who couldn't
want more energy.
The next one, this is a big one for modern societies because although we've solved a lot
of acute health issues, we've seen the rise of chronic health issues. So now we see people with diabetes on the rise, that's a chronic health issue.
We have autoimmune issues or on the rise, Alzheimer's, dementia on the rise,
all these chronic health issues and really our current medicine as a tough time treating.
You know, we can kind of handle the symptoms,
but we can't cure them.
It's not like you take antibiotics for an infection.
It's gone.
You're kind of managing the symptoms.
Well, exercise, structured exercise,
has been shown across the board
to reduce the risk of all of these chronic diseases.
In some cases, it's been shown to reverse them.
I've worked with clients who were just became diabetic and came and hired me.
Then for all intents and purposes, doctors said, well, it looks like you're not diabetic
anymore.
Let's just keep doing what you're doing.
Because of the way it strengthens the body, improves its health, the chronic disease
risk dramatically lowers.
Do you think a lot of that has to do with just the partitioning of calories because
most people in modern society tend to over consume a majority of the time, even if you're
pretty good with your diet and kind of balance it out through the week and have some lower
calorie days.
For the most part, most people are over consuming and the fact that you're exercising those
calories instead of getting stored as body fat or slowing things up or
contributing to the chronic disease, it's now being partitioned over for energy, fuel, and resources
maybe to hang on to muscle. Well, you're going to be leaner, it's easier to stay lean, you have more
muscle, muscle increases insulin sensitivity, which is great for preventing diabetes and Alzheimer's.
You have a better inflammatory response in the body,
which can help with lots of autoimmune issues.
Of course, your outlook changes,
your mental state can even affect your body's risk
of getting chronic diseases.
I mean, across the board, again, studies show that,
one of the best things you could do, for example,
to reduce risk of all cause mortality
or all these chronic health issues,
is just to have structured workouts,
really beyond a shadow of a doubt,
it's been proven time and time again.
The next one, this is an interesting one,
but there's a lot of a science that
that supports this as well.
And that's that it can help skin health.
Now like the energy one that we talked about, you think to yourself, well, I know working
out makes you sweat, it produces free radicals, like how is that supposed to help skin?
Well, if you do it right, your body starts to also produce more antioxidants.
It starts to produce better compounds for your skin.
It also balances out hormones.
So exercises been shown in studies to positively influence someone's skin the way it looks
in the way it feels.
Now is this another one of those cases where the amount and the intensity that you do it
is important?
It's got to be appropriate.
Right.
So like overdoing it may not be very healthy for the skin, but the right dosage of exercise
can be extremely healthy.
Absolutely.
Because if you get in that rut of just thinking that running or walking or like repetitive
patterns is going to solve a lot of these issues, you may actually be creating more issues
down the road in terms of utilizing your oxygen and circulation effectively.
Well, that's the reason why I brought it up, because the first thing that came to mind
when you said that I was picturing somebody who was like a marathon runner, and I don't
think they have great skin.
No, but you have to consider if you overdo it, you're not going to get a lot of these things
that we're talking about.
And then of course, there's also consider somebody who trains a lot outdoors, may get more
sun exposure, more wind exposure, so you can't, it's a hard thing to compare.
But when they control for all these factors, and they look at appropriate levels of exercise,
you tend to see across the board improvements in skin as well.
Skin just looks more supple, less wrinkled, it's healthier, skin cancer rates go down from
exercising.
Just across the board, it's one of those things that you want better skin, do some structure
exercise.
Now, the next one, this one's also real important, especially because we have an aging population
here in America.
Structured exercise is amazing for the brain.
It's incredible for the brain.
There's all kinds of cognitive benefits that they've shown, and just the retention and
memory and just improvements on focus, especially.
I think focus was the big one that I know I was researching in terms of like exercise
helping to promote
That's that's one of the the biggest things we're fighting right now is like where our focus lies
We're so distractable today with all the technologies and things in front of us to be able to really hone in and focus and
Get your body to exercise exercise and get all this out.
So we can remain in that state
is highly beneficial for all across the board
in terms of home, life, work, life, et cetera.
Yeah, well, your brain utilizes sugar for energies
to run, it utilizes other forms of energy too,
but it also utilizes sugars.
And when your brain has trouble utilizing the sugar,
some scientists call it type three diabetes,
also known as things like Alzheimer's or dementia.
In fact, when you take someone who's got Alzheimer's
and you put them on a ketogenic diet,
sometimes they see improvements in performance
because the brain now is operating with less sugar.
Now that's more of a band aid than anything,
but how about increasing your insulin sensitivity,
so that doesn't happen in the first place?
Well, exercise does that, especially when you build muscle, right?
The more muscle you have, the better your body responds
to sugar and the more sensitive it becomes to insulin.
Exercise also causes spikes in brain-derived
neurotropic factor. This is like
miracle grow for the brain. And in older populations, they show that regular exercise
maintains hippocampus size and strength and health, which is great for things like memory.
Well, what about the just the communication factor? I mean, before you wiggle your fingers or stand
or sit or do any sort of movement, the very first thing that initially happens is you get a signal from the brain.
That communication for those fingers to move or for those legs to contract, just exercising is improving that connection, improving that communication.
And the lack of it, just like muscle, it'll atrophy itself., think of it that way too. I want to continue to strengthen that
communication to all parts of my body. And that's what you start to see. That's the first thing that
starts to go when you see people age. It's not necessarily, oh, they just, they get old and
then the bones get brittle and the muscle gets weak. It first starts with the lack of communication.
The more neural connections you make, the stronger the brain. Exactly.
If you stopped moving your legs, the parts of the brain that controlled your legs start
to atrophy, they start to shrink.
We know now that the initial strength gains that you get from resistance training don't
come from bigger muscles, but rather they come from improved central nervous system communication.
You actually get growth of the central nervous system, all the connections of the neurons and the things that tell the body to move.
Moving with resistance training in particular,
moving in different directions, doing different exercises,
works on your brain's proprioceptive ability.
This is knowing where your body is in space.
What you don't train or what you don't exercise,
you tend to lose that whole thatage,
what is it, lose it or no, what is it, you don't use it what you don't exercise, you tend to lose that whole, that old adage, you know, what is it, lose it or, no, what is it?
You don't use it, you lose it.
There you go, use it or lose it, right?
Totally true.
And if you exercise properly, you don't lose it
like somebody who doesn't.
Well, we see examples of this when someone's been
like in a cast, right?
You ever had a cast on your arm or leg
for a long period of time and then you break it off.
And the first time you try and wiggle or move the fingers,
those are very strange.
Those very strange and foreign.
And that's just a small window of like say three months
or six months that you were casted up,
that all of a sudden it's like learning to walk again
or to move these fingers, that's a small window.
Imagine over years and years and years
of you stopping that communication
to certain parts of the body or certain movements that the body should be able to do, you will start to lose that.
Yeah, and you know, studies will show that older populations that when they are bedridden for whatever reason, let's say they break a leg or a hip and they're in bed, you see mental decline, really ramp up and accelerate. We forget that the brain is a part of the body, by the way.
So, whatever makes the body healthy
tends to make the brain healthy as well.
It's all connected, I mean.
We gotta treat the body.
It's a holistic perspective.
The brain, the body inseparable.
You need both, and you need them both to be healthy.
So they both need to be challenged
to strengthen the entire body.
Right. Another one is sleep. Exercise gives you deeper and better sleep. Part of the reason
is because sleep is a recuperative recovery process. A lot of healing and recovery happens
when you sleep. Well, exercise for all of its benefits, it is a stress on the body. In fact,
that's why the body gets better and healthier
because it adapts to the stress.
But when you provide the stress to your body,
it also ramps up its ability to recover and recuperate.
So you'll find that when you're active and you exercise,
you go to bed, you sleep harder, deeper, and more sound.
Don't let you feel a lot of people just don't deplete themselves to these glycogen stores.
They don't ever get to the point where you get exhausted,
how much better you sleep as a result of that,
actually like expending that energy
and not keeping all that pent-up energy inside.
It provides a lot more restless sleeps for me
when I don't expend that energy.
Well, you always like to talk about how we evolve.
Like, do you think this is, is this part of like how it sets your circadian rhythm even?
Like, you get outside, you get sunlight, it tells the body naturally, oh, it's daytime,
you do activity for hundreds, thousands of years, we were very active and physical throughout
the whole day, then the sun goes down and you're exhausted.
You moved all day long, you were out in the sun, now sun goes down, you've stopped all this movement, so that then you sleep really
well. I always notice when I get a good training session in, I get outdoors that night, I always
sleep better than a day where I've been under fluorescent lights all day long and you exercise.
Yeah, something that happens to the body when you go to sleep is your body temperature drops
a little bit. This is part of the process. In fact, if it doesn't do this well, you typically have a tough time going to sleep.
Well, increasing your body temperature during the day through exercise studies shows improves
your body's ability to reduce its body temperature at night. So it actually sets you up for better sleep
in the evening. Some studies show a 65% improvement across the board.
So 65% improvement across the board in sleep
for people who just add a little bit of structured exercise.
So if you have issues with sleep,
one of the first things you could do
is try doing a little bit exercise during the day.
And then watch what happens.
The next one, this one's a big one.
Exercising reduces pain, especially nowadays.
Most of the pain that we see nowadays
in modern societies is the result of poor movement patterns,
is the result of being inactive,
of having muscle weakness, of having poor mobility.
So exercise directly results in the,
in solving the root causes of a lot of problems
that are at cause pain.
In fact, if you have pain, that's chronic,
and you go to the doctor,
and the doctor sends you to the physical therapist,
the physical therapist doesn't have you lay down
and go to sleep, they have you exercise.
Well, it's one of the best things you could do for a pain.
This is also what makes the case of the difference
between just being active and then actually exercising.
You gotta remember that if you consider yourself
an active person, the body is still going to take
the path with least resistance, right?
So it's still gonna figure out the easiest way
for you to get by your day.
And so you can be an active person,
but still not challenging range of motion,
challenging muscles that need to be firing on a regular basis.
So there's the difference between being active
and then actually actively going to exercise the body
and challenge it to where it adapts and builds muscle.
Well, there's also like somebody who has back pain
because they have a weak core.
And tight,
usually because of a weakness.
Right, that person is gonna do different exercises
than someone who has a back pain because they're back
as weak, right?
Both have back pain, both do different forms of exercise.
One of the wonderful things about exercise
and one of the big differences between exercise
and act in just being active is that exercise is targeted.
So if I train myself, I can target my areas
of pain and figure out why I have pain, train myself appropriately versus someone else
who has maybe even similar pain but coming from different areas. Just being active isn't
going to solve the root cause nearly as well as having something structured which exercise
does. That's why again, physical therapy consists
of targeted exercise.
It's specific.
It addresses the weakness, and that's what exercise provides,
which then provides that stability and security
your body needs to then maintain or regain abilities
you used to have.
Otherwise, it's a downward spiral.
Once you lose an ability and you just go
about doing activities, you're going to avoid the activities that aggravate the pain, which then just,
I mean, compounds after that. Yeah. Now, the next one's a funny one because I remember training
clients as a trainer as an early trainer. And I would start to get this comment, especially for my
older clients. And it started to become real consistent.
And I started to think, oh, this is after about three months
of exercise, I can pretty much predict
that I'm going to hear this from my older clients.
And oftentimes they were embarrassed to bring it up
or they would bring it up kind of in a sideways kind of way.
Like they come up to me and say, you know, Sal,
we've been working out now for a few months,
a couple days a week, and I'm noticing I have more energy
than they look at me, funny, and it's like,
oh, like really revved up.
Yeah, oh, so you just feel more energized.
Yeah, but I also noticed like I'm more like youthful feeling.
I'm like, oh, you can move better, I'm like,
no, no, no, no, no, you're not getting this.
Yeah, and I'm like, your sex life is improved.
And they'll be like, yeah, yeah, I'm a little embarrassed,
but yeah, and I would hear that kind of across the board, that your sex life is improved. They'll be like, yeah, yeah, I'm a little embarrassed, but yeah, and I would hear that kind of across the board
that their sex life would improve.
Exercise gives you better sex,
and it does this through a few different ways.
Number one, it makes you healthier, a healthy body
is gonna be more likely to desire,
having intercourse, as a member of that,
having sex could result in having a child,
and a healthy body doesn't wanna do that.
If it, excuse me, an unhealthy body doesn't want to do that.
And if a healthy kind of wants to do that,
improves your hormone profiles.
There's also this mental psychological effect
with just looking better.
You know, when I'm, you're improving yourself.
Yeah, when I'm feeling strong and muscular
and relatively lean, I won't want to take my clothes off more.
I feel better about myself, feel more confident, exercise, structured exercise,
consistently improves people's sex lives across the board.
I feel like the confidence one is so big here
when you're talking about sex too,
because I think just the things that you can do
with exercise that's related to better posture
and the way you carry yourself,
that has a lot to do with just your everyday confidence
and other aspects of life, but it really bleeds into this side. I think a lot to do with just your everyday confidence and other aspects of life,
but it really bleeds into this side. I think a lot of times when people have troubles either
in their marriage or relationship or just with sex or intercourse in general, this is
one of the areas is they just lack the confidence. One of the best things that you can do to
sort of build that confidence is exercise, is addressing posture stuff. You start to carry
yourself a lot more confidently.
It just bleeds into the bedroom.
It's more attractive.
And you can totally tell that by posture alone,
which if you're not actively working on yourself
and working on exercises specifically to keep you
in that upright position,
you know, just looking at you is going to be less appealing to your partner.
Yeah, I actually found some lists of studies are really interesting. So there's one study that
showed a group of women in their 40s observed that they experienced orgasms more frequently
when they incorporated strenuous exercise like resistance training into their lifestyle.
Another study, group of 178 healthy men reported that more exercise hours per week, those that
exercise more per week had higher sexual function scores.
Another one showed that a simple routine, that's a silly, but a simple routine of walking
helped improve 41 men improve their erectile dysfunction symptoms by 71%.
There's more, there's like a endless number of studies
here that I could take a pull from,
but exercise does a great job at improving your sex,
not just through feeling better,
but also the drive to have sex.
If you feel like you have less motivation to have sex,
exercise tends to improve that.
And your sex drive oftentimes can be a good reflection
of your health.
When that drops, oftentimes there's a lot of things
underlying the reason why it went down.
So for all those reasons, again, there's way more than that.
I mean, we could literally make a list that's a hundred
long.
Here's a top 10.
These are the top 10, and these are the 10
that are proven beyond a shadow of a doubt
by scientific study, by many, many studies to prove
that exercise positively influences
the 10 things that we just listened listed.
Now MindPump is recorded on video as well as audio, so if you want to watch the podcast,
come check us out on YouTube.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Doug, the producer at MindPumpDug.
You can find Justin at MindPumpD Justin.
You can find me at MindPumpSowl and me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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