Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1835: Why Resistance Training Is the Best Form of Exercise for Fat Loss and Overall Health
Episode Date: June 13, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover ten reasons why resistance training is a superior form of exercise. When it comes to fat loss and health, NOTHING beats resistance training! (2:22) 10 Ways Re...sistance Training is the Best Form of Exercise for Fat Loss & Health. #1 – Speeds up metabolism. (9:25) #2 – This allows you to target, sculpt and strengthen specific body parts. (16:24) #3 - Hormone effects. (20:21) #4 – You don’t need to do it often. (26:39) #5 - Results stick around longer. (32:15) #6 - Results come back faster. (35:09) #7 - Builds bones. (39:53) #8 - Extremely moldable. (42:37) #9 - Best for the brain. (45:23) #10 - Best anti-cancer effects. (49:19) Related Links/Products Mentioned Special Promotion: MAPS Resistance 50% off! **Promo code RESIST50 at checkout** Visit Chili Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Father’s Day Special: Free Shipping on all apparel and equipment for $150.00 or more 6/10-6/24 June Promotion: Shredded Summer Bundle or MAPS HIIT 50% off! **Promo code JUNE50 at checkout** Why Resistance Training is the Best Form of Exercise – Mind Pump Blog 5 Long-Term Benefits of Resistance Training – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1027: 3 Steps To Speed Up Your Metabolism Mind Pump #1745: How To Pack On Muscle To Your Lagging/Stubborn Body Parts Mind Pump #1790: The Secret To An Attractive & Functional Body Androgen receptor content following heavy resistance exercise in men 3 seconds of weight lifting a day could be enough to build strength if it’s intense, small study finds How 'muscle memory' can help you get back in shape, according to a new study Strength training can help protect the brain from degeneration Mind Pump #1802: Seven Surprising Benefits Of Exercise The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Okay, now in today's episode, we talk about resistance training, also known as strength training,
and why it's the most
effective form of exercise in head to head competition with other forms of exercise when
it comes to fat loss, health and longevity.
By the way, we have a program called Maps Resistant.
It's an ideal resistance training program for people who are more on the beginner side.
Okay, so if you're just getting started or you've only been working out for a short
period of time, and you want a good resistance training routine
that's gonna give you some of the benefits
that we talk about in this episode.
Check it out, and by the way, Maps Resistance
is 50% off right now because of this episode.
So you can actually get that program for half off.
So if you're interested, go to mapsresistence.com
and then use the code resist50.
So resist50 no space for that discount.
Now this episode is brought to you by our sponsor, Chili Sleep.
So Chili Sleep, these are experts in improving your sleep quality.
And one of the products, one of my favorite products that I've ever used is the Uler.
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All right, here comes the show.
All right, look, here's the deal.
When it comes to fat loss and health,
nothing beats resistance training.
It's actually the best form of exercise
when you compare it to other forms of exercise,
head to head when it comes to those two things.
And that's what we're gonna talk about today.
Do you think that we haven't beat this drum enough?
We need to beat it more.
I feel like we're gonna beat it a bigger drum.
I know, you know, just what I think
that we should lay off of this.
It never surprises, it surprises me.
Somebody messaging that they're still trying to run the body fat off.
Yeah, you know what's in weight training?
Totally, you know what's great is that,
because we've been doing this for a long time.
And when you, you obviously train people for a long time
and you really care about them,
you start to figure this out
because you see what works, what doesn't work,
considering how many times a week people want to work out
and what their goals are and what works long term.
But what was frustrating for years,
and I'm sure you guys were like this,
was that the medical community and the scientific community,
they weren't up to speed.
Like all the studies on health longevity,
maybe not now, so over the last 15 years,
we've seen some great studies,
but especially over the last 10 years.
But before that, if you looked up exercise and health,
it was none of them used strength training or resistance training.
The only studies done on strength training
or resistance training, 15, 20 years ago,
were done on athletic performance.
So if you looked at what forms of exercise help improve longevity or fat loss or blood
lipids or whatever, it was always cardiovascular activity.
It was almost never strength training.
So we had nothing to point to.
And so what people did when they thought of strength training or resistance training,
they looked at bodybuilders, which is a terrible way to judge it because bodybuilders are
extreme.
Yeah.
Those are extreme athletes doing things that are not healthy to their bodies.
And so it just didn't get it the credit that it deserved.
But luckily today, we have lots of studies now showing just how powerful strength training
is for fat loss and longevity, which, you know, those two things were never put in the
same sentence.
Do you think that was a lack of not put in the same sentence. With that sentence.
Do you think that was a lack of not knowing
by the medical community, or do you think that was a conscious
choice because they evaluated risk versus reward
and just assumed, oh, weight trainings too risky.
Therefore, let's point people in the direction
of just running, because that's an easy,
simpler form for them to do.
Yeah, I think it was cultural, right?
Like, to your point, like, I think culture was very much driven
in the cardiovascular side of things.
Because I can get you to get off the couch
and just start moving, that was a lot easier,
ease of access in terms of like,
I didn't have to educate myself quite as extensively
as I did now having to go into the weight training side of things.
Plus, the only example of that, really that everybody knew was bodybuilders educate myself quite as extensively as I did, you know, now having to go into the weight training side of things.
Plus, the only example of that really that everybody knew
was bodybuilders that were pretty extreme in their efforts.
Yeah, but also, imagine if you're a researcher, okay?
And you're like, let's look at exercise
and how it impacts longevity.
You're not, you're probably not a strength coach
or an expert in exercise.
You're just a researcher.
So you look at all the forms of exercise,
you're like, I'm gonna pick,
let's have these 30 participants run or bike.
You have them do strength training.
Well, you need access to equipment.
You gotta know how to do strength training.
There's a million of one different ways to do it.
And if you're doing an animal study, good luck.
It's easy putting a hamster in a hamster wheel, have a hamster do something that simulates
strength training.
You got to have, it's a much more complex study and test.
And also nobody thought to go in that direction because exercise for a long time had always
been like fitness had always been compared to like stamina, right?
So like how long you can endure.
Being in shape was really like, what everybody desired. Yeah. compared to like stamina, right? So like how long you can endure? What's coming?
Being in shape was really like,
what everybody desired.
Yeah, so it wasn't, it was just that.
That's all it was until researchers started
to really look at, let's look at this other four,
let's look at all these other forms of exercise
and see how they impact our health.
And so the thing is when you're in a,
as a particular field and you have experts in that field, they often will
tell you, hey, here's what we're seeing, but the science usually takes a decade or two
to fall off.
When was Jack Lillane most popular?
Was it the 60s, 70s, obviously all the way?
I know, three to the 80s, but when did he become really popular?
Oh, he was, as far back as the 60s, yeah, yeah, yeah, a long time.
Okay, I think it was 60s, yeah,
or it was his like the real pinnacle of his fame,
I would think.
Cause he's probably the single most impactful person
when it comes to connecting strength training to health.
Totally.
Up into that point, and even around that time,
and even afterwards, you know, strength training,
it was connected to bodybuilding.
And bodybuilding wasn't thought of as healthy.
It wasn't thought of as like, oh, these people are in pursuit of ultimate health.
They were more the people that were into sculpting a physique and looking a certain way and
being impressive.
It wasn't like, oh, these guys are in, are the some of the healthiest people out there.
Really wasn't.
Yeah, no, and even then, even then, if popular media, like movies,
that's what people see, right?
Jacqueline was kind of well known.
He had this popular TV show
where he would teach people to do exercises
and he would just use a chair.
So I don't know if you guys ever seen these videos.
He's wearing like,
if you've seen his warm-ups,
that was my favorite,
the timidest wire for the singers.
Yeah, and he'd have like these little,
almost look like ballet slippers
and he'd do like leg lifts.
And you know, and you would do, you do kind of like body weight type strengthening stuff
But popular media was if you saw anybody that did strength training
It was the it was the beach those B movies those beach B movies and they were dumb
Narcissistic. Yeah muscle bound, you know, which obviously we know that's baloney
Bodybuilders who were super you know infatuated with their own bodies,
they'd look in the mirror, they're stupid.
And so people never connected strength training to health.
And then you had pumping iron, which that was a documentary
that kind of went mainstream, but that was about bodybuilders.
Still about the way you look.
Yeah, and it was about bodybuilding.
And it's extreme.
Like you see Arnold and Lou, especially back then,
and people are like, wow, that's extreme,
and that's crazy.
I don't want to look like that.
You know, that's not, and also is that healthy?
I don't know.
Well, plus, I mean, we are inundated with information
that heart health was like the most important thing.
And to immediately address heart health,
we assume like cardiovascular training
was the best option for that.
And like everything, even with our diet was focused around heart health and it was like
lowering the fat intake.
And like low fat was like, you know, the direction we were supposed to.
It was obviously solar bomb.
What year was it when we really started to see the studies come forward about resistance
training and connection to your metabolism?
Oh boy. That's more recent.
The more recent studies on strength training
and health have happened in the last 10 years.
Before that, you really didn't see too many at all.
And we're seeing more and more coming out now.
And you did talk about one of the most important ways
or reasons why strength training is so effective for fat
loss and longevity.
And that is that it's the only form of exercise that will reliably, if done properly, will
reliably teach your body to burn more calories on its own.
Like if there was one thing that I could do to solve the obesity epidemic, that was really
effective. If I could snap my fingers the obesity epidemic, that was really effective.
If I could snap my fingers like Thanos and had some kind of, you know, the glove or whatever,
make something happen, it would be boost everybody's metabolism by 50%.
We would solve obesity right out the gates and lots of health issues associated with that.
Now why is metabolism such an important thing to try to boost?
Because once you boost it, it doesn't require you to move or do activity
in order to burn those calories. This makes it a very sustainable, you know, for lack of a term, convenient way
to burn body fat. Especially look, the bottom line is it would be great if we could get the average American to
you know, have an hour or more of activity every day. Not gonna happen. It's just not gonna happen. They're not fitness enthusiasts. They're the average American to, you know, have an hour or more of activity every day, not
going to happen. It's just not going to happen. They're not fitness enthusiasts. They're
the average person. And for them, exercise isn't their favorite thing in the world. It's
just a tool that'll improve the quality of your life. And if it's done right, it'll do
so if it's done wrong, it won't. And then they stop. So what we want to do is we want to,
we want to pick a form of exercise that can make your metabolism
burn more calories so that you don't have to spend tons of time trying to burn calories.
Which by the way, trying to burn calories, your body adapts to that eventually anyway,
and you end up getting, no, you still have some health effects, but you, the calorie
burning effects start to flatten out quite a bit.
That's why you see people plateau so hard with that approach, with fat loss.
My six year old aunt is experiencing this right now.
She's the one that is married to my uncle
who works for the company ironically.
And I've been telling her this message
like since I've been in training, you know, 20 years, right?
So I've been telling her this forever
and she's, you know, fallen into the, you know,
jazz or size type of training or the cardio for exercise.
And she called me the other day,
I think I told you guys this about my son
going into surgery and just to check up on him
and stuff like that.
And she goes, oh, I've been meaning to tell you too,
I've finally listened to what you said
about just focusing on strain training.
I cut out trying to do any sort of crazy cardio.
I'm targeting my protein and all I'm doing
is I'm following this resistance training program ironically not one of ours
Four times, you know, which is really funny, right? So what that's whatever
You're lifting weights. I don't give a shit that you're not using the programs you could have for free
Whatever, you know, so she's lifting weight
But what she's tripping out on is she's like and she's been consistent now for about four months
She's like, you know, it's so crazy out on my,
I went to Kansas City back to see her family,
and you know, there, you know, me,
I like to drink my wine,
and there's nothing but barbecue there,
so we're eating out, and she goes,
I do this trip every couple months.
It's very, to go back and see my family,
and I typically eat and do whatever I want,
and then come back, and she goes,
and every time I come back,
I come back with, you know, 15, 10, 15 pounds,
I put on myself, she goes, I came back, and the scale would literally move like one pound, and come back with 15, 10, 15 pounds, I put them all up. She goes, I came back and the scale literally moved like one pound.
And she goes, and I did the same behaviors as I've always done.
I said, this is what I've been trying to explain to you forever.
What you end up doing in the past is, but get ready for a trip like that.
You run on the treadmill, you restrict calories, you get a little lean, get ready to go
into that.
But then you've also slowed your metabolism down. So now your body cannot eat as many calories as you could if you would have actually not done that.
Instead, try to increase calories and build strength and then head of that trip.
So basically, you just, you gave yourself more room and flexibility.
This is what I've been trying to tell you what metabolic flexibility is all about.
And you now have it in your spreadsheet.
You're like, yeah, no, it's amazing.
It's not to mention, if the value of your exercise
is in the calorie burn that you get from when you do it,
the second you stop it, you lose the value.
If the value of your exercise is in the adaptation,
then you don't lose that value when you stop.
Takes a lot longer to lose that value.
Your body would have to adapt in the other direction,
which takes a lot longer.
Then you stop doing your cardio, calories are done.
You stop lifting weights or doing strength training,
that muscle sticks around for a long time.
But there are people that will argue,
I've seen studies that show that one pound of muscle
only burns an extra 10 calories.
Well, first of all, first of all, that's not nothing.
You gain five pounds of muscle,
you're burning 50 more calories a day,
do the math over the course of a year.
That's how people become obese. People don't become obese by gaining 20 pounds in a month. It's usually 20 pounds over the course of two or three years.
So that's not nothing. However, there's more to the story than that. You have a range of calories that you can burn with the same lean body mass that you have.
In other words, your body can become more or less efficient with calories with the same
lean body mass.
What makes you more or less efficient?
Well, the signals you send your body, how you feed your body.
And if I'm telling my body to prioritize strength and muscle and I feed my body appropriately,
it tips the scale to less efficient with calories.
It's more likely to burn more calories.
So the metabolism boost that I see with clients,
when they do everything right,
and they gain five pounds of muscle,
is not 50 more calories a day.
It's more like 500 calories and more a day or more,
which would take you an hour and a half of cardio,
or two hours of cardio, just to burn.
So, and no other form of exercise does this.
Nothing else will boost your metabolism,
like strength training.
So this is one of the biggest benefits of it.
Right, and when you recomposition,
I don't know the word for that,
but like when you go through and you acquire more muscle
and replace, you know, your fat with muscle,
it promotes more movement.
So you're more prone to want to actually go out
and be more active and do things as well.
Well, that's the behavioral aspect that nobody talks about.
Also, that happens, which I bring up on the show all the time.
Like I always notice that when I'm lifting and training consistently.
More energy.
Yeah, I have more energy throughout my day.
Yes.
And I'm just more productive.
And it's downstream effect.
It's neat.
It's not exercise that you would count.
It's just I'm more likely to get up and help Katrina with cleaning the house.
I'm more likely to get up and help Katrina with cleaning the house. I'm more likely to get up and wrestle around
and play with my son versus,
oh, when I'm not exercising, I'm not straining,
I'm not eating well, I feel lethargic, I feel lazy,
I come home, I just want to sit down on the couch
because I feel tired.
It's like, those studies don't account for that
because they're just trying to measure,
like, oh fat burns this much,
calorie muscle burns this much.
Therefore, it's only this valuable.
And so there's other downstream effects that you get from it.
Okay, someone might be wondering, well, does another forms of exercise give you energy too?
Yes, if you improve your health, however, we're talking about metabolism.
When your body becomes less efficient with calories, part of the way that it does it
is it provides more energy to be burned. So you do get more energy. You also generate more heat people who lift weights or do strength training notice that
their body feels warmer because your body burns more calories just through heating itself
up.
If your body is trying to become more efficient and burn less calories, it'll reduce your
energy so you try to move more less.
And you'll also notice that you have less tolerance to cold because you already feel kind
of cold.
All right, here's the next one.
And this is a, this is supremely unique to strength training.
Primarily because strength training has such a variety of,
there's no, like name one form of exercise
that has the variety of exercises or movements
that strength training has, right?
You can't find one that competes.
That means that strength training or resistance training
allows you to
Target sculpt and strengthen your body, okay? So if I run I'm using my legs a lot right if I cycle
I'm using my legs a lot if I swim I'm using my whole body a lot
But I'm using it in this very repetitive kind of motion if I play any sport
There's this kind of repetitive type of you know if I if I see someone run, cycle, swim, I can tell
Simply by looking at their movement. With strength training, I can say I want to develop more of my glutes. I can say
I want to sculpt my shoulders to look a particular way. I can say I want to work more on my midsection and build and sculpt that way.
It's as in it's of course there's nothing like this, but it's as close as you can get to being
a sculptor.
Imagine if your body was a piece of clay and you take some off here and build some there
and really sculpt and shape your body, what a wonderful attribute of this form of extra.
Yeah, well, a lot of pain we've found is related to weakness. So weakness is in your support system.
And to be able to identify areas of your body to strengthen,
the resistance training is the most appropriate way
to train to address a lot of these things.
So that way too, now your body is more resilient,
more supported in its movement patterns,
which then reduces the amount of pain
you're gonna experience.
Well, and it may sound superficial,
but also when we look at a body that we're attracted to,
a lot of the formula that goes into that is symmetry.
And balance, yeah.
Symmetry and balance.
And it's less of like, oh, that person has 2% more body fat,
or five more pounds of muscle,
it's more about their balance and symmetry that they have their body.
And that's what we tend to be attracted to.
And they have all kinds of stuff to support that.
That when we look at a person, it's the ratios of their hips, to their shoulders, to their
waist, to things like that that we are drawn to.
And it's less about, oh, that person's 5% body fat, therefore, they're attractive, or oh, that person has 10 more pounds of muscle, therefore attractive, it's
that you can actually take resistance training, look at your body and go like, oh, I'm out
of balance here, or I could have more shoulders, or, you know, more glutes to your point, and
like have this more symmetrical physique.
Yeah, you could target what you want to develop and shape, and also, here's your evidence
right here. Rehab specialist, here's your evidence right here.
Rehab specialists, physical therapists, sports medicine practitioners.
What form of exercise is their primary form that they use to rehab people?
Strength training.
They don't use other forms of exercise.
Why?
Because it's targeted.
Why is it important for it to be targeted?
Because when I'm dealing with an injury, I have to look at the individual and say,
what is it that caused that injury? Or what did you have surgery on? What are we
working on? They don't use general forms of exercise. So strength training is extremely specific
and then back to the you know the aesthetic aspect of it. Look, I'm not going to I mean we can't
gloss over this. One of the main motivators for people working out is they want to look good.
Yeah. Well, okay, you could work out and generally look better,
or what if you could look better,
but also have a say in what parts of your body
you change the most.
Like, tell me one form of exercise, I can go and say,
I want, you know, more developed upper chest,
and I want a better, more sculpted lower back and hamstrings.
Like, what activities, I'd have to like create
a weird type of movement pattern to do that,
or I could just go do some strength training,
pick specific exercises,
place more focus on those areas,
and then boom, I shape and sculpt my body.
I mean, I think that's pretty awesome.
All right, next effect, I like this one
because this one really convinces people
when it comes to strength training.
And that's the hormone effects.
Now, I wanna be clear, improving your health
almost always will give you a better hormone profile.
So no matter what you do, if your health improves
and your man with low testosterone,
or you're a woman with an imbalance
in estrogen or progesterone, your cortisol is high when it shouldn't be or you have insulin
resistance, just improving your health, you'll see things get better.
But only one form of exercise directly influences your hormones to make them, to move them
in a more youthful way or to develop a more youthful hormone profile.
Here's why. When I tell my body to build muscle, the way one of the ways that it does so is
it uses hormones. Hormones are signolars in the body. Okay, so we know what testosterone
does, we know what estrogen does, progesterone, growth hormone insulin. They have specific
roles in the body. If my body says, or knows,
hey, it's time to build some muscle and some strength,
what hormones are associated with more muscle
and more strength?
Testosterone.
In both men and women, by the way,
testosterone is very important in women
as it is in men.
Low testosterone women causes the same side effects
that you see in men.
The difference is, of course, the amount, right? Just right just like by the way estrogen is important in men as well
If a man has no estrogen health is terrible they feel bad just like it would be in women
They're just different ratios, but testosterone is a hormone that helps drive muscle
So testosterone goes higher. What are the effects of that better libido more motivation more drive
It's like a dopamine feel likeido, more motivation, more drive.
It's like a dopamine feel.
Like I have more energy, right?
Estrogen and progesterone are women balanced out.
An imbalance estrogen progesterone ratio in women makes it hard to burn body fat, makes
it hard to build muscle.
A balanced one is more ideal for building muscle.
So then the body, it organizes estrogen and progesterone.
What about insulin?
Your body becomes more sensitive to insulin.
A lot of people don't know this,
but insulin is an anabolic hormone.
It's actually one of the most anabolic hormones
that there is around.
Growth hormone, right?
We hear about these youth centers, right?
That give people growth hormone
and make them feel younger.
Growth hormone is a youth hormone.
You find an 18-year-old, you compare them to a 48-year-old,
you can see a big difference in growth hormone.
Well, what makes growth hormone go up reliably?
Strength training.
Why? Because you're telling the body to build muscle.
What about cortisol?
Cortisol is a stress hormone.
A lot of people don't know this, but cortisol is not a bad hormone.
It just has to be appropriate, meaning it goes up in the morning and starts
to taper off at night and it can't be too high all the time.
Your body can't build muscle very well if cortisol is high all the time.
So if you're sending the appropriate signal that says build muscle and strength,
you're also feeding your body appropriately, your body balances out cortisol.
So if you want a youthful, balanced, healthy hormone profile and you want to use
exercises a way to do so, nothing does it more directly than strength.
Do you think that's because you're almost tricking your body into thinking that it's a young body that's growing?
Because you're sending a signal to adapt and grow
basically initially.
If you were lifting weights,
that's the signal.
Still a need to grow.
Right, you're sending a signal saying,
hey, we need to add muscle,
we need to get bigger or stronger, we need to write.
So you're sending the signal to build to grow.
And that is the same signal that you naturally have
when you're this young child that's growing into adulthood. So you think there's like a, almost like a mechanism that
we're almost like you're tricking and feeling, we'll cut into thinking that it's still young.
But yeah, kind of. And also it's just your body. Remember, your body isn't know you're in
the jam or you're doing pushups in your bedroom. It just knows that there's a stress.
Right. That's what I mean by that. It just thing, it just knows that, hey, we need to get stronger.
Yes. And we need to get stronger. Just like you, when you're a young child, it's what I mean by that. It just knows that, hey, we need to get stronger. Yes, we need to get stronger. Just like when you're a young child,
it's not like you're doing anything other than it's like,
oh, you're making you grow.
Yeah, muscle in general is just better at dealing with stress.
Right?
If you're in the environment of stress,
your body, it's promoting that signal for your body
to be able to meet that demand.
And the best way to do that is to build muscle to resist. And so like in terms of tissue in your body, like it's more optimal for
you to consist more of muscle to it. It also does it. It also does this. There was a
study that was done. I want to say five years ago, around five years ago, where they compared
men and their testosterone levels and then how the men responded to strength training. And in this study, the theory was men with higher testosterone will build more
muscle than men with lower testosterone.
Now everybody in the study, they didn't have dramatic testosterone ranges.
So it wasn't like people were at a range.
They were, you know, within range, but somewhere, you know, 900, you know,
1000 other people were 700, 600.
And what they found was that the levels of testosterone
had a small effect.
It was the Androgen receptor density
that had the largest effect.
What is that?
Those are the receptors that testosterone attaches to
so it can do its thing.
Only one form of exercise reliably increases
Androgen receptor density, strain training.
You build a little bit of muscle,
you automatically increase your Androgen receptor density, strain training. You build a little bit of muscle, you automatically increase your Androgen receptors,
meaning even if your testosterone only goes up 10%,
that extra testosterone at 10% is like another 30%,
because of the Androgen receptor.
Density, it makes testosterone more effective.
And again, what are the effects on?
And by the way, it's not gonna raise testosterone
out of range like your bodybuilding,
taking anabolic steroids, if any women are watching it, like, I don't want, I don't want to grow a beard or whatever, it's not gonna race that testosterone out of range like your body building taking anabolic steroids, if any women are watching it,
like I don't want, I don't want to grow a beard
or whatever, that's not gonna happen.
But what you will get is a healthy high,
and what does that feel like?
Again, energy, libido, strength,
you just feel, it's a feel good,
hormone, it's an anabolic youthful hormone,
just like the other ones I talked about.
And again, because strength training tells the body
to build muscle, it's a direct way
of moving your hormones to become more youthful.
Now, on the flip side, if I do a form of exercise
that makes me lose muscle, let's say I go
like crazy long distance running,
where my body's trying to pair muscle down
to make me more efficient at this type of activity.
It will also organize its hormones in a way to do so.
It's hard to lose a lot of muscle
when you're testosterone-tie, so what happens?
Study show this.
Tons and tons and tons of crazy cardio,
especially combined with a calorie restriction.
Lower.
It's testosterone.
Lower testosterone level, so.
One of my favorite things about all the benefits
that you're talking about right now is your next point,
which is how little you have to do this.
That's the part that I think is so appealing to people because let's be honest,
not everybody is fitness enthusiast. Most people do want to live a healthier, fit, or life,
but then also have many other priorities. Don't love going to the gym, don't love exercising and sweating
and pushing themselves really hard. So it is literally the only form of exercise that you could do such a small amount and have such a large
impact positively on your head. And most people know that it's good for them, right?
It's just one of those things, but it's an extra step for their routine that they're just not willing to make that leap
because it seems so daunting. It seems like that time.
Which is so weird to me though,
because somebody will go outside
and they decide they're gonna get a shape
and then they'll start running every day
for a half hour and hour,
which is exhausting and rough on the knees.
And you could take that one day of running for an hour
and divide that by three, you know,
what would that be, 20 minutes, right?
20 minutes in my mouth.
20 minute sessions of lifting over the better results.
And get way better results.
Way better results.
20 minutes of lifting weights, three days a week compared to that
what person goes out and runs their ass off for an hour.
Yeah, you get make a massive impact.
Way more benefits.
And here's why it's because when you look at exercise,
different forms of exercise,
don't judge that their value on the calorie burn,
judge their value on the adaptations that they induce.
And because strength training induces adaptations
that are so favorable, which we've been talking about,
hormone profile, speeding up the metabolism,
and much more we'll get into,
you don't need to do a lot of it.
As long as you send that signal to build that strength and that muscle, you're good.
So what does that mean for the average person?
This is true.
Okay.
I've trained people for over two, well, now almost two and a half decades.
The average person will reap all the benefits of strength training, all the amazing benefits
of strength training with two days a week.
I trained the vast majority of my clients two days a week.
Now, I do wanna be clear,
that doesn't mean I didn't encourage them
to just increase their activity every day.
That doesn't mean I didn't encourage them to eat healthier
and that doesn't mean they didn't need to eat healthier.
Like all that stuff is still true,
get good sleep, all that stuff.
But we came to exercise.
If I had a client two days a week
and then they watched the eight relatively healthy,
they got good sleep, whatever,
they got great results. I couldn't, there isn't a form of exercise that would do that that would even come close to doing that
In fact, there was a study that I just shared with you guys that showed that
Three it was literally the title of it was three seconds of strength training
Built build strength and muscle three seconds now if you look at a at the study, what it is, it was a really intense, eccentric contraction,
meaning they held something really heavy, lowered it really slow, and that was it, and
they did that once a day.
These people, now, you're not going to get in great shape over time doing that, or whatever.
However, in that short, I think it was a three month study, 10% increase in strength.
Show me another form of exercise that you do for three seconds
and get any adaptation.
Stretch for three seconds, run for three seconds.
Are you gonna get any improvements and performance?
Strength training is such a valuable, powerful way
to induce adaptations, which means you don't have to do a lot of it.
What's the value of that?
Well, you said it, Adam.
You, the average person, look, we all became known in this area, in the Bay Area here, before you said it Adam, the average person, look we all became known in this area
in the Bay area here before we start the podcast for being very good trainers.
We all had clients with great results, they stayed with us for a long time, all of us did
a good job of that and part of that formula was what, figuring out how can I get people
great results working out two or three days a week.
How many of your clients, what percentage of your clients turned into fitness fanatics that worked out
four, five, six days less than five?
Yeah, less than five percent.
Yeah, it was two, three days a week.
Strength training does that.
Other forms of exercise, you'll get some benefit,
but no, where?
Well, this is one of the biggest disconnects
that I think that we have in the fitness spaces.
We still have these fitness enthusiasts that are preaching
the message that speaks to them.
Yes.
That's centered around motivation and hard work and training every day.
You're not doing enough.
Yeah, ever.
Yeah, and I just think that it's the wrong, if our real desired outcome is to reach the
80%, the majority of our population that are getting, you know, more and more obese.
If that's our real desired outcome is to help
the majority of people, then that message to me
is getting lost in translation because they hear that
and they think like, I don't wanna do that.
I would just rather enjoy,
their way they would respond, clients would respond.
I'd rather just enjoy life and then die
when I was supposed to die.
Even if that means I gotta die five or 10 years earlier, their attitude is that I don't
want to work like that. I don't have a desire to look like that.
Well, it's okay. I'm going to use an analogy. I know you'll love this one Adam. It's
like trying to build wealth. So I can either work more hours and be like work more hours
more, more hours, or I could find a way to take my money and invest it so that it grows
without me. Boosting your metabolism, influencing adaptations that affect your hormones in positive ways,
that's like investing, allowing my body to work for me.
Now, if people want to work out every day and be active and become fitness enthusiasts,
oh my God, it's great.
I would be a dream for me.
I think that would be incredible.
But if the truth is, most people are not going to do that.
And if knowing that people will work out, if we're good, if we do a good job, and we convince people, and they
build a good relationship to exercise and all that stuff, two or three days a week, this
is the form of exercise you need to pick.
Now that takes us to the next one, which is, and this is really crazy, and the studies
on this are phenomenal.
When you get results from exercise, your body's adapting to that form of exercise because
it's trying to make you better at that form of exercise.
Okay, so it's understandable that when you stop that form of exercise, eventually your
body adapts in the opposite direction, right?
Because your body's only as fit or only as has as much endurance and only builds as
much strength as it thinks it needs.
If you sit down, if you lay in bed all day and do nothing, you'll see your body slowly
wither away
as your body adapts in that direction.
Okay, knowing that, one form of exercise,
where you get the results, you get the adaptations,
one form of exercise has the results stick around
the longest when you stop, and it's not even close,
and that's strength training, not even close.
In fact, the newest study I just saw showed that young men
and women who lifted weights in this study
built up a certain amount of strength and muscle.
They had them stop working out.
Do you know when they started to see strength and muscle gains?
Excuse me, strength and muscle loss after two weeks.
After two weeks off, and it was 1% and each week
you saw this 1% and it started to accelerate
after the longer they went without accelerate after you, you know,
the longer they went without it. Now you go build endurance and you take a week off
and then go try running again and see how much you're going to start all over again.
Yeah, you do anything and you watch what happens to those adaptations. When it comes to strength
and muscle, it sticks around. Why is this valuable? Because the average person, if they work
out two or three
a week, like we said earlier, they're still going to miss weeks.
Well, I'll go right back to my point. I made with my aunt. I mean, a lot of people's
life, they get ready, they have a trip, they're going to go for a week where they know they're
going to eat and drink and have a good time and stuff like that. And by her building some
strength and muscle, she is built an insurance plan for herself that week. If all she did
was run, and then she doesn't run and she goes and eats and drinks, all
those extra calories end up getting stored as body fat.
But because she had built her metabolism up by building muscle and she only took a week
off, she really didn't take that big of a step backwards.
Yes.
And there was that other study too that compared two groups of men where one group would
work out for three weeks, then take a week off, three weeks, take a week off. The other group worked out every single week. At the end of the
six-th week, 16-week study, same results. Name one form of exercise that'll do that, right?
Now, I'm not saying I do want to be clear, there's other values that come from being active every
single day. So I'm not saying you stop working out for two weeks and you don't lose any of the
value. There's lots of value.
That's not the point of this conversation.
The point of the conversation right now is to highlight
how beneficial and how little of work that you can do
to get great results using this form of exercise.
How much more flexibility you have with that approach
versus any other programs out there
or approaches that you can do in terms of train your body.
Like, strength training just allows so much more freedom with it.
Yes. Now, here's the next point which connects to that, which is when you do lose some of
the results, getting them back when it comes to muscle is remarkable.
Something called muscle memory, well documented.
So, you don't believe me, just type that in, studies on muscle memory.
And what is muscle memory?
I'll give you an example.
Let's say it takes you, let's say you're a woman,
and you start working out, and you start doing
strain training, and you take it really seriously.
You follow a MAPS program, so you got good workout programming.
You're feeding yourself a appropriately good protein
intake, you're sleeping good, everything lined up.
And over the course of a year, you gain,
let's say, 10 pounds of muscle,
which would be a lot for a woman to gain in a year.
But let's say she did, and she's really sculpted
and her metabolism now is through the roof,
and she's loving life, and she's leaner.
And then let's say the following year,
something happens, and she just stops.
She just stops working out for three months,
and her diet kinda goes to crap,
and maybe she's not eating enough protein,
and who knows, right?
And in those three months,
she lost all 10 pounds of muscle.
And then after three months, she's like,
okay, I'm ready to get back into it.
She starts working out again.
She'll gain that 10 pounds back in like two months.
Or faster.
Or faster.
Yeah.
It took her a year to gain it initially,
but once you build it,
you develop something called muscle memory.
This has to do with satellite cells and how the body, the muscles actually respond it to,
to building once they've already built in the first place.
And it's a bit, a bit of a complicated process.
But again, it's well documented.
But however long it takes you to build the first, the first time, it's a fraction of that,
the second or third or fourth time.
Well, I've, I remember experiencing this even just by breaking my arm, right?
Like being in a cast and just seeing how, man,
it was one of those things where I just got freaked out
because I'm like, man, my arm is so small right now
because the atrophy rather quickly.
And then just to take the next few months
and see how rapidly my body was able to regain
that strength and start building those muscles back.
It was pretty amazing.
This is one of my favorite parts about actually getting old or older.
Oh, yeah.
Is that your point you're making is it actually compounds.
So like when I fall off say for a few months or I'm inconsistent for a while, now when
I get back, the results, I get back to more muscle than I ever had at a faster
rate than I ever have today than just 10 years ago.
10 years ago, I fall off the wagon for a couple months.
Yes, I still have muscle memory because I'd already put 10 years in of lifting and a certain
amount of that comes back.
But I've built exponentially more since then, so that's compounded.
So now, it's like,
I was explaining this to Katrina the day,
she's just like, I hate you.
When we both fall off and we get back on our thing,
it's like, I feel like you are,
like within a week, or even a few workouts,
she's like, I feel like you're already
look like you're in great shape again.
I'm like, what that is?
It's compounded interest of decades now,
lifting weights.
I was like, I wasn't like that.
I said, when I was my early 20s, if I fell off for a little bit, I was like I wasn't like that. I said it was when I was my early 20s
If I fell off for a little bit
I felt like I was always on the struggle to kind of get back to where I was before
But over time of under iron of lifting and lifting and slowly progressing and slowly progressing
Now when I fall out of shape first of all my out of shape is better than 10 years ago's good shape
And then when I decide to kick it back up and pick up the volume again and consistency,
I get back into shape really, really fast. It's one of the coolest parts about being an older
lifter who's been lifting for a really long time. Oh, dude, I know old bodybuilders.
And they weren't competitive, so they were natural. They didn't do the anabolic steroid route
or anything like that. But these are old bodybuilders now in their 50s and 60s,
members of gyms that I've managed.
And they would come in and they would just,
you just see this great muscle on them, whatever.
And I'd watch their workouts and they weren't doing anything crazy.
And I'd ask them, like, man, how do you stay so muscle?
So muscle, I'd say, dude, I've had this muscle for so long.
Now that I'm older, I don't have to do very much to keep it.
And if I stop, it comes back really fast. Like, when I was a kid, I remember one guy that particularly
told me, I was such a skinny kid, you know, and it was so hard to build it. He goes, but
now it's like, the muscles really easy to keep. And their studies actually show, I think
like one seventh of the volume, it takes the build your muscle is all that's required
to maintain it. So it's a wonderful form of exercise as you age because the results
stick around and it's easy to get them back when you lose them. Which again, understanding
modern life and understanding the average person, most people are not going to be consistent
weekend a week out year and year over year. This things are going to happen, they're going
to stop, they're going to lose some of it or whatever. But how wonderful that the first time
you gained it as hard as it was, it's so much easier to gain it back the second time when you get back to it.
Makes it such a, again, a very sustainable form of fitness.
Here's the next one.
I'll tell a story, just kind of illustrate this next point.
I had a client once that she hired me specifically because she was experiencing bone loss.
She was in osteophenia and she was on the border line
between osteophenia and osteoporosis.
So osteophenia is what happens before osteoporosis.
Once you're an osteoporosis gets pretty bad.
This is where the bones get so weak
and if you continue to go down that path,
I mean they get brittle, they break,
and it's a terrible, terrible,
it's got really bad longevity with osteoporosis.
So she hired me to help her build her bones back.
Now up until this point, they had her supplementing
with vitamin D and calcium she was on in,
I forgot the name of the drug.
I wanna say phoza max, which is kinda like an autoimmune
type drug to help try to stop the bone loss.
She was walking and hiking and it was just every year.
Every year she'd go get this bone scan,
and they would see this kind of decline.
The walking and the hiking slowed it down
a tiny bit in her lower extremities,
upper extremities continued to accelerate.
So she came to me and she said,
I've read, this was years ago,
I've read that strength training,
you know, it was great for building the bones.
I said, oh, nothing builds the bones,
like strength training, because muscles, anchor, and bones. In said, oh, nothing builds the bones like strain training because muscles, anchor and bones.
In fact, strain training, we could call it bone building
just like we could call it muscle building.
Okay.
Literally, it's directly builds bones.
So we did, we strained strain.
And remember, she was at the time in her mid 60s,
I wanna say, and I trained her,
and I think we had like four months before her next bone scan.
So for four months, and I mean, because she was a beginner,
it was basic two days a week, you know,
standing squats, no way, you know, pushups on an elevated
platform, like very basic exercise, you would have a 65 year
old do that's never lifted weights.
Anyway, she went, got a bone scan and she comes in,
it was her day off, she comes in super excited, shows me the results.
She goes, for the first time in years,
not only did we stop the bone loss, but it actually started to reverse and she goes, my doctor would like to get on the phone with you.
I got on the phone with this doctor and he's like, this is insane. He goes, you know, I have a lot of patients and
None of them do strength training. He goes, this right here is this is a big deal. And has that I've never seen this before.
Yeah, we don't talk about this benefit enough, I think,
between how resistance training affects,
not just your muscles, but also your ligaments,
your tendons, your bone tissue,
like everything that makes up your musculoskeletal system.
And it's like, for you to be able to apply
the right amount of force to resist and provide growth, it's
going to provide growth in all those areas and reinforce the strength in all those areas.
So you can have that kind of able bodied longevity that we all want.
Well, this also brings us to our next point that I think is so important, is that it's
so cool, is that where resistance training is extremely moldable and no matter what your goal or adaptation,
you're seeking, you can change the way
you decide to resistance training.
Obviously, she comes in and tells you that,
you're not focusing the same way,
you're focusing the teenage boy
who's like, I wanna put on as much mass as possible.
Or the guy who's like, I need to lose 50 pounds of body fat
as much as I can, as much much as I can as fast I can.
That's what's so cool about this is although it's a similar form of exercise. There's so many
different ways you can mold it based off the client. Well, okay, let's say your expertise is running
and a new client comes in the door and they're a paraplegic. Sorry, we can't do running. Sorry, sound exercise we could do. Or someone comes in and one arm is half as long as the other or an amputee
or whatever, you name it, okay. Strength training, I could do with anybody. I can do strength
training literally. If they can move, I can apply resistance to movement to have them
build. You can't pick a form of exercise
that says individualize it.
And at every level.
Every level.
Which is amazing too.
I mean, I've had clients, we really can't do a whole lot,
but guess what?
We can create tension and we can load the body.
And so there's just, again, to that point of it being
modable, like even if you have a limitation
and you have an injury, like there's ways to work around that.
It doesn't need like this whole body cardiovascular output. No, it's again, I've trained kids, I've trained
paraplegics, I've trained amputees, I've trained people with all kinds of injuries and surgeries,
men, women, tall, short, you know, doesn't, especially with free weights because free weights are
free. So they go to the individual and bands, which I can attach anywhere and create resistance wherever I want.
And it's also, again, like I said earlier, why rehab specialists, any kind of rehab you
need, you go to a rehab specialist, they use forms of resistance training.
So there's nothing that is as moldable as this form of exercise.
Well, yeah, how many times have you guys met a client and you can meet them wherever
they're at, right?
So how many times have you had a a client and you can meet them wherever they're at, right?
So how many times have you had a client who was like unbelievably obese and could barely move
or really, really old and can barely move?
And the training was getting up and down from a chair.
Yeah.
But that is a form of resistance training.
And it's at the level that that person is currently at and I can build from that.
It's resistant.
That person comes in, right?
And I can't make them run.
They can't make them run
The can't have any master they can go do they can't do some jazz or size fucking group class like they can't do
There's a lot of things they can't do but we can resist and strain
We can find a way to mold it to their their life where they're currently at and meet them there and slowly progress them to where they can
Eventually do like a barbells water in the movement. All right. Let's talk about brain health
This is this is something now more and more people are talking about because we're seeing rates
of dementia and Alzheimer's kind of skyrocket and Western medicine really focused on trying
to find a cure for this.
Well, guess what?
There's only one form of exercise, one non-medical intervention that's been shown to halt the
progression of beta
amyloid plaques.
These are the things that we think are one of the main causes of the symptoms of Alzheimer's.
In fact, only one form of exercise not only been shown to halt it, but possibly even reverse.
That strength training, there was a study dud out of Sydney, Australia, and strength, it
blew them away that this form of exercise actually did something that
they can't find anything else that can do.
And there's medications that don't even operate as well as this does.
Now why is this the case?
Probably because building muscle makes your body very insulin sensitive.
Muscle is a sugar glucose thirsty tissue.
And one of the most effective ways to improve insulin sensitivity is to build a little bit of muscle.
Well, a lot of researchers call Alzheimer's and dementia type three diabetes.
It's your brain or your body's inability to utilize insulin and process glucose properly,
which can cause some of these issues.
That's why when you get someone on with Alzheimer's or dementia and you put them on a ketogenic
no carbohydrate diet, you often see an improvement in cognitive function.
While strength training makes the brain healthier through this process, and again, generally improving
your health will be good for your brain.
So I want to be clear, it's not like other forms of exercise don't help your brain.
Just getting healthier will help your brain, but none of them come close to strength training
in the literature that is looking at exercise and brain health.
What's weird is, I mean, we just always think of the brain as this problem solving machine,
right?
And like we're sitting there and we're trying to get as much input as possible to learn
into, you know, memory bank, a lot of information or try to work our way through problems, like
cognitively, but you're doing that with your body all the time and all of these, like,
signals and your nervous system
like reacting and responding.
This is all stimulus that keeps the brain super active
and involved.
Yes, it's math.
Your brain is computing at any unbelievable level.
And it's doing crazy math, whether you think you are or not,
to throw a ball or to do a barbell squat,
the mathematical complexity that the brain is having to do
while doing that, we make it sound like it's no big deal.
You just grab and you throw something,
but the formula is it's having to do in order to do that.
And then if you're not doing any of that stuff,
like the brain or like every other part of your body,
it prunes it off if it doesn't need to.
If you don't challenge it in that way,
then it says, oh, there's no reason.
There's no reason for me to use this this way
because this person isn't asking its body to do it.
Yeah, along those lines, when you do other forms of exercise,
they tend to look the same and be repetitive over time.
So yes, it has some, in that aspect, brain boosting effects.
However, at some point, it's the same thing over and over.
I'm on a bike, I'm running, I'm walking,
it's the same thing over and over again, right on a bike, I'm running, I'm walking. It's the same thing over and over again, right?
Strength training because of its variety.
Because I'm moving in different times.
It's different math every time.
I'm moving in different planes.
I'm rotating, I'm going laterally.
I'm up and down, I'm moving horizontally
with all these different exercises.
You develop what's called this
proprioceptive intelligence or part of your brain.
Literally knowing where your body is in space
With strength training is different than it is with other forms of exercise now they all will benefit this to some extent
But again because strength training provides so many different exercises
You know if you run it's always the same thing over and over again. It's right. It's like learning
multiplication and just multiplication but ignoring
Division or algebra or all these other things.
When you are doing all those different movements,
you're talking about with strain training,
you're having to learn all forms of mathematics.
It's not just that same formula over and over
and over that you got good at,
you're challenging the brain in a much different way.
Excellent.
All right, this last one is important because,
as of, I mean, I looked this up this morning,
and the statistics
say that one out of every three of us will have cancer or die of cancer in our lifetime.
That's big, right?
It's 33% of us.
And it's a nasty disease and they're very complex and it's oftentimes as a slow agonizing
death and nobody wants cancer.
Well, they've done studies to show the anti-cancer effects of exercise. Now all
forms of exercise if they improve your health will reduce cancer, okay? All forms of exercise.
However, none of them came close to strength training. Strength training by itself in the
latest studies reduced cancer risk by over a quarter. So 25% reduction in cancer just
from strength training. Now to be clear, the study showed that strength training in combination with other forms of
exercise had the largest reduction in cancer.
But when you do head-to-head, none of them came close to strength training.
Now why do I, again, why are we talking about one form of exercise when it's probably
ideal to use multiple?
Because I do want to be very clear.
In a perfect world, you'd have a strength training component, you'd have a cardiovascular
component, you'd have a mobility and flexibility component, you'd have a meditative component.
But the reality is most people are going to work out two or three days a week, they're
going to pick one form of exercise.
That's the same reason why you play a foundation before you build a house.
Of course all the other shit matters, the frames, the wall, the stucco, all stuff like that.
But you're going to spend the time to lay in the foundation. First, strength training is a foundation of health.
You focus there first, and then absolutely you build the rest of
it. And I think it's important to create activity and meditation
and walking and going on the occasional run. I think all those
things are great. But if you if you ignore resistance training and
you pursue all of it, you're ignoring the foundation.
Well, I think too.
We just didn't realize the weight of it
till recently, like at the last 10 years or so,
like our priorities were just off
in terms of where to focus first.
And I think that that's why we have to kind of highlight it
a little bit more resistance training, all the benefits
because people need to realize like what that will do in terms of moving the needle
for them the most versus these other forms of training.
Yeah, I mean, when you're like, okay, I'm ready to start exercising, I'm going to improve
my health, and you're looking at a list of types of exercise.
You want to pick the one, you want to start with the one that's going to give you the
most impact for the amount of time that you're going to be able to spend doing it.
And that's strength training just across the board.
And with this cancer, an anti-cancer effect, it's clear.
I mean, nothing comes close.
Part of it probably has to do with the hormone balancing effects.
Part of it, there's some studies that show that the muscle building process actually releases
anti-cancer chemicals in the system.
It actually utilizes pro-growth chemicals in a way to build muscle,
in which case if these pro growth chemicals are high
and you don't have the signal to build muscle,
maybe it's gonna help go in fuel cancer cells.
There's a lot of theories as to why,
but it is very clear that strength training
has the greatest anti-cancer effects.
And the argument I always make to people is this,
like you should, and you should
is not the same as reality or pragmatism, but you should be active every day.
You should incorporate a multitude of different exercise modalities for optimal health and longevity.
But here's a reality, you're not going to, most people aren't going to.
So if we're going to pick one and then you want to add to it, that's fine, but let's pick strength training.
Let's pick resistance training that should be the cornerstone of your routine. And then if you you're consistent with that you love it and you're doing great and you want to do more then build on now
We can build upon that look if you like mine pump if you like our information
Head over to minepump free calm and download some of our guides
We have guides that can help you with almost any health or fitness goal
You can also find all of us on social media. So Justin is on Instagram at mine pump
Justin Adam is on Instagram at Mind Pump Adam,
and you can find me on Twitter at Mind Pump Cell.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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