Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1845: How to Do Cardio & Not Lose Muscle
Episode Date: June 27, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin how to build stamina and endurance and not lose muscle or slow the metabolism. Cardio CAN be an effective way to work out if you do it RIGHT. You do it WRONG you en...d up slowing your metabolism and losing muscle. (3:06) Six Ways How to Do Cardio & Not Lose Muscle. (4:08) #1 - Building muscle & strength should be the foundation. (6:44) #2 - Conditioning vs. Endurance (Focus on performance). (12:03) #3 - HIIT Cardio. (18:54) #4 - Be active daily (Pick something that you enjoy). (26:51) #5 - Don’t undereat (Eat enough protein). (31:37) #6 - Functional exercises. (36:18) Bonus: Improve your mobility and stability. (42:35) Introducing MAPS Cardio! (43:54) Related Links/Products Mentioned Special Launch Promotion: MAPS Cardio, plus two special e-books for $77! (Ends 7/3) **Promo code CARDIOSPECIAL at checkout** Visit NutriSense for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** June Promotion: Shredded Summer Bundle or MAPS HIIT 50% off! **Promo code JUNE50 at checkout** Mind Pump #1387: Turning Your Body Into A Fat-Burning Machine Mind Pump #1027: 3 Steps To Speed Up Your Metabolism Mind Pump #1307: How To Make Your HIIT Workout More Effective What is NEAT and Why Should You Care About it? - Mind Pump Blog Why do we Need Protein? – Mind Pump Blog The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake – Mind Pump Blog Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress – Mind Pump Blog How To Do The Sled Push The RIGHT Way! (AVOID MISTAKES!) – Mind Pump TV COUNTRY STRONG?? Increase YOUR Work Capacity (2 EXERCISES) | MIND PUMP How To Improve YOUR Work Capacity (6 MOVEMENTS) | MIND PUMP TV Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Right in today's episode, we talk about how to utilize cardio and that loose muscle
or not slow down your metabolism. So it's gonna be a great episode.
We break all that down for you.
Also, we're launching a brand new Maps workout program.
We're answering the call.
We constantly get messages about people who are like,
hey, I wanna build stamina endurance.
I like cardio.
Can you put together a program to minimize muscle loss,
to minimize the metabolism slow down?
Cause I love doing cardio based type workouts.
Well, that's what maps cardio is.
Brand new program, cardio based workouts in it.
We include days where you can do your favorite activity.
So if you like to run, swim, mountain climb, whatever, it's in there as well.
Now, it's a launch meaning we've got some cool giveaways with it.
So check this out with the launch.
If you get Maps cardio
which is a full workout program you'll also get two free ebooks which will be sold separately later on
but right now they're free. What they are is how to boost your VO2 max. So if you want to improve your VO2 max for maximum performance
you'll get that ebook that's included and we also have an ebook called How to Eat for Performance. So I had a fuel your body so you don't get that muscle pair down effect.
So you can sculpt, shape, and strengthen your body while building stamina and endurance.
Okay. Also because it's a launch, Maps Cardio is on sale.
So the retail price is going to be 117, 117.
But right now the price is $77.
So $77 bucks full access to Maps Cardio,
plus you get the e-book,
how to boost your VO2 max,
and you get the e-book, how to eat for performance.
This promotion, this launch promotion ends July 3rd,
so it's a kind of a short period.
Here's how you can learn more or sign up,
go to mapscardio.com and then use the code cardio special, all one word together
for that discount.
Now, this episode is also brought to you by one of our sponsors, NutriSense.
So this is a continuous glucose monitor company.
So you put this on your arm and it measures your glucose levels throughout the day.
So you can see how you respond to different foods, why your energy crashes, why your appetite went through the roof.
Here's the best part.
You can work with a real nutritionist.
So real nutritionist is going to work with you
to individualize your nutrition program based off of
your blood sugar levels and how they are,
how they move throughout the day.
By the way, you can also see how stress affects
blood sugar, how your sleep affects.
It's incredible technology,
plus you get the guidance of working with a real nutritionist.
Great company, go check them out, go to nutritioncense.io.
So N-U-T-R-I-S-E-N-S-E-DOT-IO,
forward slash, mine pump, and then use the code mine pump,
and you'll get $30 off.
All right, here comes the show.
Cardio can be an effective way to work out.
If you do it right, you do it wrong,
you end up slowing your metabolism down and losing muscle.
I thought you were part of team no cardio.
Yeah, I know.
No, we need to address that.
No, we need to address that because we get that,
sometimes people attach that to us.
Totally not true.
When we talk about cardio, we often talk about the people
that overdo it, that make that the foundation of the workout, especially when it comes
to weight loss, and how it can be a very ineffective tool if used improperly.
It just so happens to be 90% of the people.
Correct. Because mainstream is true, because mainstream advice when it comes to weight
loss is go do as much cardio as you can, burn lots of calories, terrible advice. And we've
talked about this a million times on the podcast, but it can send a signal to
the body to make it more efficient with calories, it pairs muscle down, and eventually
plateau, and then it makes it much more challenging, maintain the fat loss.
Look, you lose muscle with fat, you end up smaller, but the same body fat percentage.
You end up a smaller, same flabbyness version of yourself.
So what I wanna do is I wanna talk about cardio,
how to do cardio, reap the benefits,
minimize or negate the potential negatives, right?
So how do you keep muscle?
How do you keep your metabolism fast
and then gain the benefits of cardio training?
Well, yeah, because I think one of the things
that has been misunderstood is that I think when we advocate for strain training first and focusing on that and we
tell people that we normally would tell them, don't do cardio right now, that people assume
that we don't recognize all the benefits of doing cardio. Like, we do absolutely recognize
the benefits that come from doing cardio and how, and all the studies that support how good
it is for your heart,
I understand that.
But when we deal with clients, average people, most everybody that comes to us is trying
to change body composition.
They either want to build muscle or they want to burn body fat or they just want to get
an overall shape or healthier and starting your approach right out the gates with cardio
and being cardio focused because that's what they've been taught.
It's not the best tool for fat loss direction.
Right. And that's just the main point is because that's out there in the general population.
That's how they still think in approach it that way.
But there's lots of benefits to cardio and lots of different ways to apply cardio and you're training that will lift up your program.
Look, I'll tell you what, if mainstream thought
lifting weights was the best way to get in great shape
and they'd gotta go to the gym
and just lift as hard as possible, whatever,
and throw weights around,
then a lot of our podcasts will be talking about
why you shouldn't lift weights in the wrong way
or why you should use that tool in an effective way,
but it just so happens to be opposite.
Nobody's encouraged to go do strength training.
Everybody's encouraged to move as much as possible.
And so it's a tool that is utilized
in effectively, inappropriately.
And that's what I want to address is,
how do I take this tool,
which can have tremendous benefits for health?
It's fun.
Here's the other thing that we've talked about before.
Some people love that.
They love the feeling of stamina and endurance.
And I totally can understand that.
There were times in my life,
when especially when I was competing in Jiu-Jitsu or Judo,
where I got that feeling of having this crazy gas tank.
And so it can be very exhilarating,
especially if you're an athlete
or you enjoy doing those kinds of activities.
So the tremendous benefit, you just gotta do it right.
So I think let's start with the first thing,
which is, and again, we're addressing the average person
who wants to be very fit,
who likes having athletic performance,
isn't trying to lose muscle.
They want to have a fast metabolism
so that they can eat more and it's easier to sustain,
and of course, because food is so accessible and tasty, right?
So the first thing is that building muscle and strength
should still be the foundation.
So if you want to incorporate lots of cardio or use cardio
as a way to burn calories or improve your health
or boost your stamina, you still want to make some strength
training the foundation because that's what's going
to maintain strength and muscle and counter the potential
for cardio
to tell your body to pair muscle down
to become more efficient at calorie burning,
which you don't want.
Yeah, it elongates the ability to
weather a lot of the repetitive stress
because the repetitive stress of cardiovascular training,
it adds up over time with joint pain, with dysfunction, and to
be able to apply a good foundational strength and support system from the very beginning is
something that's going to keep you doing what you love to do.
If cardio really is something that you're going to be doing indefinitely, this is something
you really need to focus on, strength, to be able to support your body and those pursuits.
Well, so I want you to explain more in depth
what you kind of just went over real quick,
which is the metabolic side of it,
because that's, in my opinion, the most important thing to cover
and the thing that's misunderstood the most.
Yeah.
There's this idea that, okay, well, why would I do both then?
Why wouldn't I not just strength train and do cardio?
I get the benefits of strength training, right?
Like you keep advocating for, but then I also want the things that you're saying that cardio
provides for me.
So why would I not do both?
And why would you focus first on strength training and why is that so important when we're
talking about the metabolism?
Yeah, well, you can.
So I do want to be clear.
You can do both.
You just have to do it right.
And so what Adam's referring to, so whenever you do a form of exercise,
the reason why your body gets better at that form of activity or exercise is because it's
a stress. So it's hard, it's a stress on the body, and what your body is trying to do is
get better at that particular stress. If I push cardio too much, if that becomes the foundation
of my routine, my body is going to look, it's really going to prioritize getting better
at cardio. And the way it does
is boosting endurance, which is not a bad thing, that's great. But also, my body's trying
to learn how to burn less calories while doing that activity because cardio is a very calorie-intensive
form of exercise. No form of exercise burns as many calories in 30 minutes or an hour as
intense cardio, nothing, right? So my body wants to become more efficient,
plus I don't need much strength.
The traditional cardio type activities don't require a lot of strength.
Long distance running, cycling, long distance swimming.
Like you need some strength, but you need a little strength actually.
Really what you need a lot of stamina.
So my body says, all right, let's make this more,
let's make this body more efficient.
What it does is it pairs muscle down.
So when you look at studies where they combine calorie deficit, meaning low calories, in combination
with just cardio, you see a lot of weight loss.
But then when they break down the weight loss, you end up with a significant amount of muscle
loss.
You don't want to do that, right?
You don't want to lose 10 pounds and five of it be muscle because what you've done now is you've ended up with a slower metabolism, which means maintaining
that new body weight is going to be more challenging or losing even more body weight is even
more challenging. And half of the muscle, half of the body fat, you essentially are almost
the same body fat percentage. You're just less strong and you burn less calories,
not really a good trade.
So, and by the way, making muscle and strength
the foundation doesn't necessarily mean
that you need to lift weights more than you do cardio.
What it means is you need to place special focus
on the strength training and make sure
that you maintain or build strength along with us
because I've trained
Endurance athletes many endurance athletes
Traffleets I train an Ironman athlete one time and we only did strength training once a week and maybe some mobility stuff on the side And I would use a strength training as a gauge like oh, we're getting really weak on our strength training
So that's what I mean by the foundation and when the strength training was good
Boy, everything else was great when the strength training was good, boy, everything else was great.
When the strength training was bad,
you would see the person suffer across the board.
So that's more specifically what we mean
when we say building muscle and strength
should be the foundation, especially if you're not
this high level endurance athlete.
And your goal is, look, I want stamina endurance
and I'm gonna get lean and I want to be able
to maintain it forever.
Well, then it's even more important because you want that fast.
That's such a great point too, of course, for the metabolism, but also the point you made about
being able to measure the success that I'm having currently with my cardio routine.
Yeah.
If my goal is I want to add cardio to get the benefits from it, but at the same time too,
I don't want to lose muscle.
I won't be able to really gauge that if I hadn't first built a solid foundation of lifting consistent here.
So I know what a good bench press looks for me, what a good squat looks like for me.
And then now I can go like, okay, this is my baseline.
I want to start to introduce cardio here.
My goal is I want to start to introduce cardio while I have this solid base of weight
training.
And what I don't want to see is me to get weaker in the gym.
Can I start to add this?
And so the cardio actually benefits my weight training.
Can I actually either maintain my strength
or even potentially get stronger in the gym
without losing all this much?
And I think that's the laying the foundation first.
That's why that's so important
because how are you gonna be able to measure that
if you kind of throw everything out at once?
Totally.
And that brings me to another point,
which is, you know, you'll hear sometimes in fitness circles,
people who use the word conditioning instead of using the word endurance.
Most people, now unless you're a specific type of athlete, like you're just trying to,
you know, do a long distance runner or, you know, you want to run or cycle for 100 miles
or whatever, most people are more interested in conditioning
and not necessarily that long kind of endurance.
So what I mean by that is,
the average person loves the fact
that they could play hard, work hard,
go to the park, run, cycle, do all these different activities,
and have the conditioning to just have this great gas tank
versus just run for three hours, you know,
without stopping type of deal.
Conditioning is a little bit different than endurance. Conditioning requires more strength, it requires more stability, it's more
multifaceted. More speed. Yeah, it's more athletic, right? It's more athletic than just endurance.
And conditioning work is phenomenal for that kind of stamina endurance versus because you can build endurance
by just getting better at running slow for long distance or you can build endurance by
being able to do sled work and some pliable work and shorter rest periods and compound
exercises or circuits.
That'll build that conditioning type of stamina which most people are more interested in,
right?
This is where, yeah, you mentioned circus.
Circuits, you'll tend to see a lot more of those because of the shorter bouts.
And this is very translatable to a lot of different sports because you only get brief
intervals where you're exerting max effort and you need to move really quickly.
And that's really exhausting, but you also need a good gas tank. You need some to be able to endure that. And you can mimic that quite effectively in that kind of
setting with circuit training or these short bouts and sprints. I've also thought I've always
thought it was more functional than like long endurance total, when you think about like all the things,
the times that you may have to exert like a bunch of,
you know, energy like this,
or to have any sort of endurance whatsoever,
like the short explosive bouts are gonna be more realistic
of what you are gonna call upon,
then like what you're gonna have to go for a two hour run,
you know what I'm saying?
Like, that's not realistic.
Like, let's see your dog just takes off.
Right. Leash and I gotta go get That's why I'm before. Yeah.
Or do some yard work or some playing with your kids.
Or I mean, there's a ton of examples of when you're going to need these bursts of energy
and be able to do that on on demand. It versus how often will I have to just take off for
two hours and sustain a two hour run, right? That's, I think it's more functional
to be training this way.
Yeah, most people who are interested in this
are interested in being able to, on the weekend,
go do long hikes and swims and rock climb.
And these are people who are very active
and like to be able to do multiple things
in different things.
And that's the conditioning.
That's what we refer to when we talk about conditioning.
And by the way, one of the best ways
to measure some of this stuff is what's called VO2 max.
A lot of people aren't familiar.
I mean, fitness enthusiasts know what this is,
but, or maybe I'd say most people have heard this,
but they don't know what that means.
VO2 max really represents the amount of oxygen
that your body absorbs and utilizes
when you're exerting yourself, when you're working out.
The better that is, the better you're stamina.
So, when you can utilize more oxygen, more effectively, you just basically build a more
effective stamina and endurance machine and improving VO2 max in a lot of different ways
to do this.
One way is to build more muscle.
Automatically, you're going to improve VO2 max by being stronger and building more muscle.
And by the way, this is why you may be heard me
on the podcast say that strength
is the kind of the foundational physical pursuit.
Because of all pursuits.
Of all, because if I take,
I'd have done this with endurance athletes.
I've taken endurance athletes and they're like,
hey, I wanna get faster in my marathon time.
And I just improve their strength by 15% in the gym gym and they see this boost in endurance versus having to push
You know longer runs type of deal so that's one way to do it
And then of course the other way is traditional endurance type training cardio conditioning type work
But when that goes up your stamina goes up and you just it's basically
You can just go for longer and you have this kind of bigger gas thing. Well, what's great about talking about the VO2 Max too, is this is something that you
can improve really quick versus how long it takes to build your metabolism up or build
muscle.
It's just highlights another reason why we always talk about strength being the foundation
first is because it's much more difficult to bail lots of strength,
build lots of muscle, speed up your metabolism,
but actually manipulating your VO2 max
is actually really easy in comparison to that.
This is why you see like in high school
and even like college sports,
they have a letter called like Hell Weeks,
where it's like just one week
where they do like hardcore conditioning
right before the season.
And then now they're like in season,
already expected to play their sport.
It's not like they had to do that for six months leading up to that.
Like if you're getting ready for being as strong as you possibly can
or a bodybuilding show, I'm gonna build this physique.
Like that takes months and years to build that physique
or get that kind of strength to compete at the highest level.
But you could actually get in really good sport condition relatively quick
because of how fast you can manipulate your view.
Now, I do want to caution people that if you do this wrong,
you end up what we talked about earlier in the episode,
which is where you start to pair muscle down.
And this is where the challenge is, right?
And one of the best, I think probably one of the most common questions
that we get on social media is,
hey, how do I incorporate cardio
or how do I continue to play this sport
and not lose muscle?
Like I wanna get better at basketball
or I love running or I love swimming,
I don't wanna lose muscle though, you know?
And I've seen this before,
I've seen people do this before where they'll go
and they like to lift weights
and they like the physique that they've built.
And then they'll incorporate this athletic pursuit and then they'll start to lose the sharpness
of their muscles, or they'll start to lose the sculpt
a little bit, and that's disheartening,
because it's like, oh, I kind of want both.
Now, of course, you can't have perfect both,
but if you do it right, then what you do is you minimize
that muscle loss, or that metabolism slow down.
In fact, if you do it right, and you do it really well,
you can actually speed up your metabolism
at the same time that you build stamina and endurance.
You just have to be able to kind of program it properly.
In the way to program it improperly,
it's just to go do it as much cardio as you can.
For as long as you can, that's the wrong way to do it.
You want to program it,
similar to how you program strength training
where there's a sets and reps
and there's a tempo and a way to kind of,
you know, put your program together to get your body to do what you want versus I'm just
going to go as long as I can and tell my body, hey, let's, you know, let's, let's lose
some muscle.
One way to do this is with something called a hit cardio.
So high intensity interval training.
And I remember when, and this was all in in art during our earlier careers as personal trainers
I remember the studies came out on hey cardio blew everybody's mind because at that time
If you were in a gym in the late 90s early 2000s and you wanted a burn body fat
The way to do it
Cardio wise was to get on the elliptical get on the treadmill get on the bike and just go
You know 40 minutes 30 minutes an hour, go, go, go, go, go.
Outcome these studies showing that these 15 minute
high intensity interval training based cardio workouts
were burning as much or more body fat
than these longer sessions.
And then they concurrently showed a less of a muscle loss effect.
And some studies actually showed a little bit of a muscle building effect. In some studies actually showed a little bit
of a muscle-building effect.
Blue everybody's mind.
Yeah, much more of a muscle-preserving sort of effect to that.
And yeah, of course, people were drawn to it too
because of the time length,
because now I can do just this little bit
that has quite a bit of an effect
on being able to lose body fat
and be able to kind of get my composition
where I want it to be.
However, this is a bit more of an advanced type of method
where we are exerting max effort.
So this is high intensity meaning it's,
you are going to more of a max situation
where we're trying to exert as much effort as possible.
So it has to be really structured in a way that is minimizing the risk, but also like being able to perform it
correctly and without basically sloppy form. Well, this is the order that obviously when I'm getting
ready for a show, I'm going to introduce at one point cardio and utilize that as a tool because it
is a nice tool to get lean, right? And to get ready for getting on stage. But
this is the first way that I introduce cardio is hit. And the theory for me is like, okay,
this is the least amount of time that I have to spend in the gym to get the most bang for
my buck and risk the least amount of potential muscle loss, which is so important when I'm
getting on stage.
I'm getting on stage.
I have to present the most muscular lean physique that I can.
So I don't want to start, which just blows my mind when I still see this with these
coaches that start these athletes with cardio 12 weeks out from the show.
And they're doing this steady state hour long cardio right away.
It's like, what are you doing?
Like that early on for that long,
like they literally worked their ass off the build,
maybe what, three to five pounds in the off season of muscle.
The thought that you think you're gonna hang on to that,
starting that much cardio already that early in the prone,
you're crazy.
I would want to manipulate diet and weight training
as much as I can before I introduce cardio.
And then when I do introduce cardio, I
wanted to look like this. I wanted to be 15 minutes, 15
minutes, not even every single day, a few days. And then I
ramp it up to eventually every day. And then I start adding
other forms of cardio before I get to it, before I get ready
for stage. But I don't want to be doing that for an extended
period of time, or doing a bunch of cardio first, because I
care so much about hanging on the muscle.
Yeah, so to give an example, and this needs to be individualized,
because it could be different from person to person somewhat,
but to give an example of a difference
between a hit cardio session and a traditional cardio session.
So traditional, I'm on a stationary bike,
and I just ride at the same speed for,
I don't know, 45 minutes, right?
Hit would be more like, I do a 15 second sprint, And then I do let's say like a like a 45 second
Slow pace allow my heart rate to slow back down. You
Anjulate your effort in between. You use one of those bouts. Yes, so I catch my breath
I get ready to go and then boom another 15 second sprint and I kind of repeat that and now the key with this is you want that
interval right you want that in between sprints to give you enough time to kind of repeat that. And now the key with this is you want that interval, right?
You want that in between sprints
to give you enough time to kind of catch your breath,
give you enough time to recover enough
to exert maximal effort.
What you don't want to do,
and some people make this mistake with with Hiccardio,
is they make the interval so short
that it ends up becoming steady state cardio.
It's just harder, a little harder
than steady state cardio,
because they don't give themselves enough time to get ready to do that maximal effort again.
So the numbers I gave can be different. It could be 15 seconds and two minutes, right,
depending on the person. But essentially, that's what it is. It's intense all out by a period
of recovery, active recovery, and then you do it again.
That's why I've seen it get away from people is that that whole recovery period
of being able to be composed yourself again
to be able to exert that kind of intense force.
And it quickly can turn into just this sloppy way
of just trying to endure and get through the workout
as opposed to making sure that each exercise
has that kind of
intent where we need to get as much out as we can in that short burst, and then we take
that time to kind of regenerate and recompose.
Yeah, I'll give you an example, right?
So to give you an example of like two types of athletes that might one do more of a kind
of hit style in their sport and one do like the more steady state you look at long long distance runners obviously steady state meaning they run the same speed for long periods of time and the other one will be like soccer player.
Soccer players in a whole game run miles and miles of my view added up the miles that they ran from this amount of miles they're always moving but they're always moving. But they're not, they're moving kind of like this
active recovery pace interrupted by these
maximal effort exertions where they're sprinting
and then they're kind of cruising
and then they're sprinting and they're kind of cruising.
The performance that a soccer player has stamina wise
in the real world is very applicable
compared to a long distance runner
and their types of stamina.
So not saying one is necessarily better than the other, but I'd say 99% of the clients
that I trained that were interested in stamina and endurance would be more interested in
the soccer players type of stamina and endurance, that conditioning versus the distance runners
type of energy, sorry, stamina and endurance.
So that's the example of like hit versus,
you know, the other types of cardio.
Hit cardio also, like we said earlier,
it preserves muscle and in some cases,
even it builds a little bit of muscle
because of the explosive,
you know what it is, hit training,
hit cardio is like the strength training
of the cardio world.
It really is.
So if you wanna preserve muscle. Do you think it's that the explosiveness of the cardio world. It really is. So if you wanna, do you think it's muscle?
Do you think it's that, the explosiveness of the training
that is calling upon more muscle fibers
to actually be explosive?
Do you need more strength?
And or that you're doing such a minimal,
limited amount of time
where you're actually elevating your heart rate.
I like your butt.
Right, I mean, that's really why it's so muscle-sparing, right?
So it's important that you understand that, right?
The part of the reason why it hit is so muscle-sparing is one, you have an explosive movement that
requires more muscle fibers, you recruit more muscle fibers. So then the body sends a signal,
oh, we need to build more muscle there. And then the other aspect is, I'm only keeping my
heart rate elevated for a short period of time before I let it come back down to rest
again. So I'm not telling the body that, oh, we're going to be doing these long distance
runs for extended period of time. It's only a short period of time. So the body doesn't adapt
and pare down muscle. That has to be the reason why it's so valuable and compares.
It's the quote unquote, rest period. Not really a rest period, but it's an active recovery period.
It's the short bursts of maximal effort. It's all of the above that makes it so muscle-sparing
in comparison to the other
important.
Just to paint a picture in a visual, right?
You look at a sprinter versus, you know, your endurance marathon runner, and just look
at the body type that that typically produces.
Yep.
So you just can see, well, why are there?
It looks a bit more muscular on the side of the sprinter versus, you know, long distance
runner.
It's totally different to pursuits and the body will, will adjust based off of the stimulus
you're providing.
Yes.
Now, this next one is going to sound funny, but it's, it's so understated.
And this one I really saw the value in just as a trainer working with people.
And that is to be active daily, but here's a more important part, pick something that
you enjoy doing.
Yeah. Well, there's so many card types of activities. Let me, let here's a more important part. Pick something that you enjoy doing. There's so many types of activities,
let me take it back a little.
So many types of activities that people enjoy doing
that require a certain level of stamina and endurance,
or that build stamina endurance.
Like water skiing, swimming with your kids or your friends,
hiking, playing with your frisbee at the park or chasing each other, playing hide and go seek or playing soccer with your friends or
You know though, you know, rock climbing like there's so many activities that people enjoy doing that buy them so you're just doing them because you love doing them and
They're great ways to build stamina and endurance and the reason why they're so great is because it's not working out. You get lost in it.
You have a blast, you have a lot of fun.
And this is key.
If you want, and I always tell people this,
like, okay, you've got your two or three days a week
of strength training, you want to add cardio.
My next question is, is there anything you just enjoy doing?
That's active, that's your cardio.
Do that, go have fun.
Just find something fun that, yeah, it doesn't feel like work.
And it draws you back and you're moving your body continuously,, it's fine, it's fine. It doesn't feel like work. And it draws you back to, and you're moving your body
continuously, and there's all kinds of forms of that.
It, that appeal different people for different reasons.
But there's a lot to pull from there,
even if it's just going out for a hike all the time
or being outside.
Like for me, just, I make a rule that I just,
I'm not able to be inside.
It's a nice day.
There's no way I'm gonna be inside.
Like I have to figure it out outside.
That usually promotes a lot more just random activity and sports and things that I can
find myself involved with. Well, this is why you never hear us tell the people that love to do
these things to stop doing it just because we, because we all hear people hear us talk about cardio
and how it can be counterproductive sometimes with trying to build muscle or burn body fat.
And then we'll get questions that come in
that are like, oh my God, well, I love to do this.
I love to surf and I'm going out.
So, okay.
And then they're like,
should I stop doing that to build this muscle
or burn this body fat?
It's like, you'll never hear a say, don't do that.
Like, if you love doing something that is active
and physical and you, like, I'm never gonna tell a client
that, stop surfing or stop going for your runs
that you love to do. It's the audience that we're trying to speak to gonna tell a client that, stop surfing or stop going for your runs that you love to do.
It's the audience that we're trying to speak to
and we talk about that, are the ones that weren't doing
anything, they wanna get in shape,
and they wanna lose body fat or they wanna build muscle
and they've heard that they should do all this cardio
to get there, those of the people like,
hold on, pump your brakes.
Before you start doing all this extra activity
that you don't need to do,
let's lay the foundation and strength training first
before we start to introduce the cardio.
It's not the person who loves to do this physical activity.
If you love doing that,
it's gonna be a part of your life forever,
can maintain that.
Yeah, and I'll give a personal example.
So I'm not a big runner, that's no surprise.
I don't enjoy it, I don't think it's very fun.
Hold your laughter.
Yeah, I don't think it's very fun. I never laughter. Yeah. I don't think it's very fun.
I never have.
Thought it was very fun.
But at one point in my life, I was really into Jiu Jitsu and Judo, and I love doing it.
And I do it four days a week, and I show up to class, and I roll with people, and just
had fun.
And these are two, two and a half hour classes, and I did them for a blast.
So, and it was great.
At that time, during that period of time,
and I would do that, I did this for at least,
it was like six or seven years,
I was pretty consistent.
And at the time, my wife at the time,
my ex-wife now, but my wife at the time
had signed up for a half marathon.
And she trained for the half marathon
and she ran for it and all that stuff.
Anyway, I went to support her in the run
and I said, and I never ran.
All I did was you did, tooitsu and judo four days a week.
And I said, you know what?
Let me, I'm gonna do this with you
because it sounds like a lot of fun
and I didn't sign up for all stop if I need to.
And I ran a half marathon and I ran the whole damn thing
and it wasn't an issue.
And I never ran.
It was just, I did something that was fun
that required stamina endurance.
I didn't look at it as like this way
to build stamina endurance. It was just this really it as like this way to build stamina endurance.
It was just this really fun activity.
Now these days it's hiking.
I really enjoy going on really challenging hikes,
and I'm gonna build more stamina endurance doing that
just because I'm gonna be super consistent doing it.
So again, this can't be, I can't overstate this.
You wanna build stamina endurance
and burn more calories and be active.
Don't look at the cardio machines as your way of doing.
Now that's one way to do it, but that's boring as hell.
I don't know, look, I tell you what,
I've never had a single client that was like, my God,
I got, you know, oh, it's Sunday, I got some time.
I think I'll go on the treadmill inside the gym
and just, you know, everybody I've ever worked with
when it became to activity, it was always something else.
Something they enjoyed doing doing either a sport or
Something I enjoyed doing with friends and family pick something like that try doing that frequently great way to build stamina endurance
And you'll be most consistent doing that now the next one is one of my favorite ones to talk talk about because I think it is the
Number one and biggest mistake that people make when doing cardio,
especially when they're trying to lose body fat. Oh, is nothing will make you
pair down and lose muscle faster than not eating for performance and training like a performance
athlete doing cardio. So ramping up cardio activity while also reducing calories and nutrients, nothing will get
muscle to disappear faster than that combination.
And it is so common.
Especially if you're not eating enough protein.
I'm old enough to remember when endurance athletes were encouraged to eat tons of carbs,
tons and tons and tons of carbs, because it makes sense, right?
Carbohydrates are an easy source of fuel and energy.
You need to burn glycogen in order to perform.
So I'd get these clients and I'd look at their food,
you know, to have them keep a food log.
And you know, I'm talking about a hundred and fifty pound
male, you know, kind of endurance athlete.
And he's having like 60 grams of protein in a day.
And like hundreds of grams of carbohydrates.
And all I would do is I'd, you know,
and sometimes I wouldn't even bump their calories.
I would just say, you know what,
we're gonna trade a hundred grams of carbs
for a hundred grams of protein, same calories.
Let's see what happens.
Performance would improve.
They would get stronger.
One of the best ways to protect yourself against muscle loss
is to eat a high protein diet.
Eat close to a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
And of course, this is different from individual to individual.
So sometimes that much protein affects people digestion negatively, in which case you can
bring it down.
Studies will show that 0.6 grams per pound of body weight is probably enough to hit that
kind of maximal amount of protein.
But studies are very clear on this.
A high protein diet, all things being equal, minimizes muscle loss, and in some cases,
actually contributes to muscle gain,
even in endurance athletes.
So you got to eat, and this is one of the best things you could do.
When you're utilizing cardio,
just like we say with strength training,
fuel your body for those adaptations.
That's gonna make the fat loss much easier,
versus, you know, everybody does, they do do lots of cardio and they immediately cut their calories way
down.
Like, you cannot send your body a louder signal that says, hey, get rid of this metabolically
active muscle.
You can't send a louder signal.
You're famine right now right there.
Well, this is where it becomes even more important when we talk about actually not wanting
to see the scale move too much.
Because if you're going to do a program where you're going to introduce cardio and be training
at the straight train at the same time and your goal is fat loss, you really don't want
to see that scale move that much.
Or else it's a quick way to know that I'm probably pairing down muscle.
If you are eating like you're supposed to feeding the body enough nutrients, giving it
enough protein like you're saying, and you're straining, straining, you're lifting, and
then you're also doing cardio in there, and the scale is starting to dip down.
This is where it comes a mind-fuck for people, because I came to you as the client, and I
said, you know, Justin, I really want to lose this body fat, but I also want to feel
athletic, and I want to increase my stamina, so that's important to me.
So I want to do cardio too
What does that look like and then we start going and I think we're doing a great job because I see the scale going down
And that's part of my goal
I told you that I want to lose fat
So and I I've made the connection to losing body fat or losing my belly to what's the weight on the scale
And so I think I'm doing the right things because that is going down
But in this case, this is where I'd be very careful.
It's like, I don't want to see that in my client.
I actually, I know if I'm strength training them properly,
I'm feeding them properly and we're doing cardio,
the scale doesn't have to be moving very much.
I know I'm changing that body composition.
Yeah, now I do want to be,
you also need to be clear,
they're still getting smaller.
Right, there's a body composition change.
So if you gain five pounds of muscle
and burn five pounds of body fat,
scale is the same, but here's a difference.
Faster metabolism, stronger and smaller, smaller.
Muscle takes up, I don't know, roughly something like three-fourths
maybe of the space that body fat does.
So you've lost that much size, but the weight is the same,
but you're harder in terms of how you feel,
more sculpted, more defined, more defined, and smaller.
I just had this happen with my sister.
She's been working out and she's doing the weight,
she's doing everything right.
And I hadn't seen her in a while.
I looked at her and I'm like, how much weight have you lost?
She's like, you wanna know something?
The scale hasn't moved.
I'm like, I bet you're smaller.
She goes, oh yeah, I'm definitely smaller.
I'm like, how many calories are you able to eat now?
She goes, I mean, way more, and I'm burning way more calories.
Now eventually, if you have a lot of body fat,
eventually the scale starts to move down.
But definitely initially, you want that body composition
change to happen, and you have to feed yourself appropriately
in order to do that.
Now, I'm always like, in terms of our last point,
to really like trying to highlight this,
of a good approach of exercise selection to
complement your cardio pursuits.
And I'm always trying to get people to think in multiple planes and not always just in
this one dimensional direction.
So we do a lot of things in front of us and we stay in this one plane of motion where
our body is so much more capable of different directions.
And to be able to reinforce your joints by moving laterally, by rotating and twisting,
so important to incorporate otherwise, as we get this repetitive stress in just one specific
type of movement, it's just inevitable we're going to face pain at some point.
One of my favorite tools for this next point,
which is what you're talking about, functional exercises.
And by the way, I hate the term functional
because it's been misused quite a bit.
It's like the only thing that really covers that.
Yeah, but a tool I love for this is the sled.
I love the sled.
It's like strength training and stamina at the same time.
Driving the sled, pulling the sled.
We're the best tools out there.
Using, doing lateral movements, it's like you're sending
a strength and muscle building signal simultaneously
at the same time, right, that you're sending
an endurance and stamina signal, right?
Now you can use barbells and dumbbells and cables
and organize your strength training in a way
that'll help do this as well.
Functional exercises are typically not isolation, okay?
And I say typically,
because I could definitely use an isolation exercise
that'll improve someone's function
if that's what they require.
So all you trainers out there
that wanna pick on everything I say, yeah, of course.
But generally speaking, functional exercises
are gross motor movements, right?
They involve most of the body, they're dynamic,
they're not stuck.
They definitely don't typically use machines. You're not stuck on a track moving in one particular way.
And it does. And it uses all the different planes, right? It gives you strength and stamina in an
applicable way to activities that you do outside in the real world. Like for the people who love
stamina and endurance, for the people who love stamina and endurance,
for the people that ask us these questions,
what they really want is they wanna be able
to do their favorite things better.
Like the surfer who asks us the question,
the questions about this,
what they want is they wanna be able to surf better.
They wanna be able to surf longer with less pain, right?
Or the guy who's like, hey, I got kids
and I wanna be able to play at the park or coach their team
and I want to be able to go run drills with them
and not fall apart or be in a lot of pain, right?
This is where functional exercises are so valuable
because they allow you to do all those fun stamina-based
endurance-based activities better and longer
and with less pain.
This is where functional exercises play a big role.
Well, give me an example.
Let's take either a surfer or take somebody who has a type
of sport they like to play and they want to improve.
And they also want to do some functional exercises
that are going to benefit the stamina cardio side of that.
What are some type of training modalities
that you guys would do?
Like what specific exercises I should say?
Yeah, so obviously depends on how we program the whole thing, but I love this lead. I like
this lead because it's very functional. It has a lot of carryover. You know, coaches have
laterally you can drag and pull it so you're, you know, you're getting a lot of posterior work too.
So it's, it's very versatile in terms of like being able to kind
of cover all those different types of planes of movement
and get an ad volume to your training to be able to have
that kind of strength and build what we call work capacities.
Yes, yes, complexes are good.
Where you're doing like three slow risk too, right?
So that's another benefit.
Multiplanes, lunges, amazing.
Yes, Complexes are
great too. We're doing like three X I want to be careful with this because you can program
it's very important when you're string exercises together. Crossfit early on proved how bad
programming could be when you string exercises together. When they would put Olympic lifts
in the middle of a you know circuit and people would get hurt and stuff like that. So complexes can be very valuable. Like, if you put the right three exercises or the right
combination of movements together, they benefit each other, you get the stamina and endurance,
and you also get a strength signal with it as well. I'm glad you brought that up because I
remember there'd be times where I'd be training some client just like this and we would run like,
you know, I mean, I, what do you call them, Tri-sets or giant, giant sets where you're doing multiple exercises, kind of like a
circuit base. And I'd get people coming out of this is right when CrossFit was really
getting popular and stuff and people come out like, Oh, are you training them CrossFit?
I used to get so irritated and so mad because I wasn't CrossFit, but people just
started to think that every time you do multiple exercises, it was functional.
It was functional. Yeah. If it was a functional movement and done in consecutive order with another exercise,
right, then, oh, you must be doing CrossFit or whatever.
It's like, no, that's not what we're doing.
But I mean, there are some things that they were on the right track for, I think, with
the way they originally started programming.
I think the mistakes were to the point you made, Sal,
was they did some really technical lifts
that they would throw in the middle
of these really taxing type of exercises or runs.
And that's where you increase the risk so much
that even though you're getting great benefits
from training this way, the risk versus reward
isn't worth it.
And there's ways to reap those same benefits by programming differently.
Yes, and also, you know, using a tool in the wrong way, like, for example, explosive training,
explosive training really can build your ability to generate force in speed. However, if I take an explosive exercise
and I put it in a complex, it loses all value.
Now I'm just jumping, now I'm just getting tired, right?
And this is what you would see with CrossFit
or you would see with people who put complexes together.
So how you program your exercises together
makes a big, big difference when we're talking about complexes.
But if you do it right, you get the muscle building effect,
you get the stamina effect, it's functional,
and the risk of injury is really low.
And now this is not a point,
but I do want to also comment on this,
that one thing that can improve your cardio stamina
endurance is improving your mobility and your stability as well.
When you look at, for example, and I'll use an analogy, let's say I'm putting a car together
and trying to maximize my quarter mile, okay? One thing that you look at when you're trying to do
this is am I losing any power, am I leaking any power in ways where it's not going to be able to put
the power to the tires to the pavement. An easy example would be a car with a lot of horsepower,
they can't grip the road, right?
Lots of power lost because I'm not able to get fast
because my tires are spinning in place.
Mobility and stability work does that for your body
so that when you're running or rock climbing or surfing,
you don't get these losses of power,
these losses of stamina, trying to-
Try to attraction that stability
that you're able to then kind of generate more force
because your body is capable of doing that.
This is why studies will show this.
This is really weird, right?
But an experienced athlete will burn less calories
than an inexperienced athlete doing the same activity.
You would think it's, how does that make sense?
Well, because experienced athletes become efficient
and efficient and technical,
so mobility works very important also
and I do wanna make sure I communicate that.
Now, here's what we did, right?
So we just covered some points about cardio,
how to do it right, how to minimize muscle loss
or in some cases build a little bit of muscle.
But this requires programming and you know
Some people just want to all them for them. So here's what we did is we put together finally a cardio program
It's called maps cardio. So maps cardio is designed to build strength
stamina endurance give you a better
Gas tank. This is for people who again like to be active and do all these athletic endeavors
Also doesn't want to lose muscle,
somebody who doesn't want the metabolism slow down
that can come from doing excessive cardio.
We design this for people who like to do those things.
So that's what we have with Maps cardio.
In the program, you have workouts,
with strength training, you have cardio workouts.
So you can use cardio machines,
you could do some of the stuff outdoors,
and we've included
days in there where you get to do your favorite activity as part of your workout. So if you like to swim, if you like to run, if you like to row, if you like to rot climb, there's programmed in this
program those days. So you don't have to give up your favorite activity to follow one of our
programs, which is a critique that we would sometimes get with some of our other.
There's a literal mobility class that runs you all the way through some of the best moves
that will help to enhance your body
through these cardiovascular proceeds.
Right, now we also did this with the new,
because it's in brand new program, we're just launching it.
We also did this because people are gonna be interested
in maximizing stamina endurance by improving the VO2 max, which we covered a little bit.
And then we talked about the nutrition part, always lots of questions with nutrition.
We wrote two e-books, okay?
VO2 max had to boost that and a book on how to eat for performance.
These e-books eventually would be sold on their own.
They'll be like $47 e-books, but what we're gonna do with this launch
is we're gonna throw them in for free.
So you get Maps Cardio on its launch,
and you're also going to get the two e-books for free.
Also, because it's a launch, the price is discounted.
So instead of $117, which is how much it's gonna cost,
normally it's gonna be $77.
So for $77, you'll get Maps Cardio full workout, cardio based type workout, including
strength training, mobility, cardio workouts, all that stuff.
Plus those two e-books I talked about, I had a booster view of two Macs, I had to eat for
performance, which are included, all for that price right there.
And that's this launch.
This launch special ends July 3rd.
And if you want to get yourself started or just learn more about it,
go to mapscardio.com.
And then the code for all the stuff
that I talked about, the free e-books
and the discounted price is cardio special with no space.
So cardio special and you'll get all that stuff
hooked up for you.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body,
dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at
MindPumpMedia.com. The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps
aesthetic. Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically transform
the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee, and you can get it now plus other valuable
free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is MindPump.
Thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mindbomb.