Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1897: Why Phasing Your Workouts Is So Important & How to Properly Switch It Up
Episode Date: September 8, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover eight reasons why switching up your workouts is critical for continued progress in the gym. 1897: Why Phasing Your Workouts Is So Important & How to Properly S...witch It Up There are a few rules in fitness, and here is one of them. Almost all reasonable approaches actually work, but none of them work forever. And none of them work all the time. (2:31) The guys share their own experiences with being dogmatic with their training. (6:54)  Eight Reasons Why Phasing Your Workouts Is So Important & How to Properly Switch It Up.  #1 - Novelty can induce positive change physically. (14:13) #2 - Novelty can induce positive change mentally. (16:30) #3 - Low reps benefits. (23:25) #4 - Higher reps benefits. (29:56) #5 - Short rest period benefits. (33:50) #6 - Long rest period benefits. (39:39) #7 - Different exercise benefits (different planes, strength specific, isolation vs compound). (43:54) #8 - Reduces risk of injury. (50:23) Related Links/Products Mentioned Limited Time Unconventional Bundle (MAPS Strong, MAPS OCR, MAPS Suspension) for $99.99! Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #1630: Ten Ways To Break Through A Plateau Mind Pump #1790: The Secret To An Attractive & Functional Body 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, right? This is a very important episode.
It's probably the one that's going to get most of you. If you listen to progress, to get your body as to change in a positive way, to get things
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All right, here comes a show.
There are a few rules in fitness.
Here's one of them, almost all reasonable approaches actually work,
but none of them work forever and none of them work all the time.
So this is the reason why I find it really funny
when you get people that are,
they've attached themselves to a modality of training
that has worked out really well for them
or they've gone really deep into,
and that could be anything, right?
So this includes bodybuilding, crossfitters,
strong men competitors, the functional movement
guy, and they identify so strongly with that modality, or constantly selling everybody
on why it's the best.
The irony in that to me is like, everything is the best, and then it's not.
You don't stop working. Right. and that to me is like, everything is the best and then it's not. You know what I'm saying?
It's not even necessarily right,
because someone will make the argument
that it doesn't stop, it never stops working.
You're always staying strong, fit or mobile
or whatever the case may be, but it's like,
at one point, especially when we're talking about
what most people are in search of, right?
Building muscle, losing body fat, being healthy, being more mobile,
like those are kind of likely encompasses, I'd say, the broad stroke of most
people's goals.
So when that, when that's your pursuit, right, you're ideally,
everything works great.
Everything is the best for a moment in time and then something else is better.
Yeah, it's because it's transformative. So I get that. It's like you're in pursuit of a particular goal.
Maybe it's a performance goal and I want to get stronger at a particular lift or like you said,
I'm trying to burn body fat or build muscle and then you do something and it works. And because it's transformative,
you attach yourself to the thing that you're doing,
and you lose sight of the, maybe why it worked.
And maybe, and here's the real issue.
And this is why this is gonna be such a good episode.
Because you attach yourself to the, you know,
what you did to get this particular result,
you then become blind to the detriment of that particular method
as you continue doing it,
or you become blind to the fact that it stops working,
that you're not responding anymore.
I mean, how many times have you gotten stuck in that?
I've gotten stuck to it.
Well, I've got to any many times.
I also think, you know, it's not all the person
who's going through the journey's fault.
I do take responsibility as a fitness leader in the space on us.
We tend to get very dogmatic about whatever it is that we attach ourselves to as fitness
leaders.
I think we're just as guilty of this.
If you're just this person who's trying to find their way in health and fitness, and you finally find this modality
that speaks to you or gives you the greatest return
that you've ever seen.
It's really easy to go deep down the rabbit hole.
And the deeper you go and the more intelligent people
you find in that modality, the more convincing they are
that this is the way, it's very religious-like.
Oh yeah.
I mean, it feels that way to me
when I look at all the different.
It's transformative, that's why it feels that way.
Yeah, and the deeper you go,
the more and the more intelligent people
that you speak that are in that space,
the more they try and sell you on the idea
that this is the best way to train.
Oh, you want to be sold.
I'll give you an example.
I'll create a fictional example, but I think this will resonate with a lot of people.
It's like somebody, they're trying to lose weight.
Maybe they've died it many times and fell on and off the wagon.
Then they discover powerlifting.
They start powerlifting, and because it's focused on strength, takes them away from trying
to die it so hard,
they finally feed their body properly,
their metabolism speeds up, they get leaner,
and now they're like powerlifting is the answer.
So now they do it for two or three years,
their hip starts to bother them.
Maybe their knee starts to hurt,
they're not working in different planes of motion,
they start to develop in balances,
but they ignore it, I'm gonna wear a knee brace,
I'm gonna keep moving, maybe I gotta keep doing this is the answer.
And they ignore the signs and signals
that their body's telling them
because they've become dogmatic about this particular approach.
And we get stuck in this.
I can't tell you how many times I've done this.
My first, the very first time I really became aware
that I would do this,
it didn't mean that I stopped it,
by the way, because I kept repeating it.
But the very first time was when I first started working out,
my first introduction to strength training
was Arnold Schwarzenegger's Encyclopedia Bodybuilding,
which I love that.
I still have the original one.
We have it here, in fact, it's all taped together.
And he advocates for this kind of high volume,
double split routine,
this traditional bodybuilding type workout.
And I responded to it.
It was the first thing I ever did with strength training.
And then it stopped working for me.
I wasn't building any more muscle.
I wasn't getting any stronger.
I don't know what to do.
Then I read about this guy, I mean, Mike Menser,
whose approach was completely opposite.
He wrote a book called Heavy Duty.
And it was literally as far away from high volume,
you know, traditional bodybuilding as you could get.
It was like one set to failure, that's it.
That sends the signal.
Any more than that is too much and blah, blah, blah.
So I followed it and what happened?
My body responded like crazy.
And I became dogmatic about that.
And I followed that well beyond the time the wheels fell off
where my body stopped responding, but I was so dogmatic about.
And I did that with reps schemes.
I did that with exercises. I did that with reps schemes. I did that with exercises.
I did that with methods until I finally came to a place which took me a long time.
And I learned this with my clients way before I learned this with myself, because how many
times I have to say this, but it's very true.
Trainers tend to be much better with their clients than they are with themselves.
I had to learn this lesson over and over until finally I said, oh, I see what happens here.
I got to switch gears before the wheels fall off
before I start to hurt.
That's how I get my body to feel good
and how to maintain my health.
And that's when I started to really phase my workouts
in a more scheduled way, rather than waiting until
the signs were so loud in my body
that I was forced to change.
Well, I think inevitably, you know,
we don't realize that our body is changing.
And with a changed body, it needs to be provided something different. So wherever you are in the
beginning, and you feel this great success, and things are moving in the right direction,
you're actually transforming your body as you go, which means you actually need to provide it something different.
Which is tough because it's like you finally found something that you can hone in on that
feels like it's the answer, it's working.
This is the way.
I finally found the button, which is actually providing change, but inevitably, your body
is so effective at being able to adapt and then make that the new
standard, that in order to have any further success, you need to provide a completely different
stimulus.
My journey in this is really funny because I was really resistant to camps.
There was a part of me that kind of figured this out early,
but it didn't come full circle till later on.
Like I was this type of person.
And this is how I was even like in high schools,
a kid well before working out, like don't put me in the box.
I don't identify as the skater kid,
the gangster kid, the athlete kid.
It's like I had wanted to be like whoever I wanted to be.
Cream your own box.
I did.
I did.
That's exactly right.
So I ended up sticking myself still in the box thinking I was not being put in a box
Right, and so I was this like okay, I'm not good. I'm gonna be it because we are what we're all looting to right now is the power of novelty
when it comes to training right and so then I quickly
Didn't realize or I mean I quickly became this guy and later on realized that I was so the novelty
guy that I, every workout was novel. Every workout was different and unique and because I did get
that part right, like I did understand like there's tremendous value in it where I lost it was,
oh, there is some value in these camps for a temporary amount of time.
Period of time.
Yeah.
And then reap the benefits from that and then move out of that and then move into another
one.
But I was so resistant to those camps that I was like, I'm the everything guy.
And then I never actually organized my programs to where I could actually measure the success that they were.
Well, there's two parts to phasing your workouts. One part is the novelty, which you've got,
which you're talking about you got. The other part is following a phase. So if you don't,
you have to do both to phase properly. Faising is not working out different every single
time. It's also not working out the same all the time. It's actually working out the
same for a period of time,
allowing your body to gain adaptations,
allowing your body to change and progress,
and then moving to something different.
That's what phasing is.
And again, it's how you do it makes all the difference
in the world.
So it's not, I'm going to the go to the gym
and I have a hat full of exercises and repskiings and I
just pull something out.
So it's different every single time.
It's also not, I do the exact same workout.
I only bodybuild, I only power lift, I only train this repskiing, I only do these exercises
and I only crossfit.
It's also not that.
It's actually a combination of the two.
It's interesting to think about it too because there's like each method has its own strengths but also has
its own weakness. Totally. And it's so it's the further along you go, like it exactly,
like it, it, it brings about the weaknesses you can see them more visibly with, with your
buy. So say you're doing powerlifting for, you know, an extended amount of time where,
you know, in terms of like stress on the joints, that
really starts to come to surface later on if you don't weave into something else that's
maybe re-fortifying your joints.
I totally visualize.
And I remember Justin and I when we were building that app, we totally were creating this.
And I still think that there's some value to at least creating this for people to see is like
this visual representation of each modality that we're talking about, power lifter body
builder, cross fitter, mobility guy.
Yeah, whatever, right?
All of them.
And then if we next to it, there was this like video game avatar scoring system, mobility endurance stamina flexibility general health
You know saying like and and then we and then we could help people look at and go like oh here's here's all the great attributes
Of training this way. It doesn't mean you can't get to all of them
But you there's definitely going to be to your point
to all of them, but there's definitely going to be to your point, attributes that are stronger in certain modalities and weaker than others. And if your pursuit is overall health, longevity,
and you want all of it, there's tremendous value in weaving in and out of all of them. So you
reap the best benefits of all of that. That's because the timeline is your life. So I think people forget this when
they work out their timeline is three months, Hawaii, getting married, going to Vegas, whatever.
But the reality is it's forever. So if you just want to be a you want to power lift for the rest
of your life, you better believe you're going to have to go through phases of mobility and some endurance
training. You're going to have to do through phases of mobility and some endurance training.
You're gonna have to do unilateral work,
even though it doesn't seem obvious to you.
If this is something you wanna pursue
for the rest of your life, yes,
you're gonna have to do those things.
So, I think the first thing to understand
is that novelty can induce positive changes
in a physical way.
And the key here is to,
and the reason why is that when you change things,
you are now highlighting certain imbalances and weakness
because your body gets really good
at doing what you do a lot,
and it does it really, really well,
and it doesn't need to do other things.
In other words, it'll get really good at squatting
at the expense of unilateral single leg squats
because it doesn't need that.
It's gonna put all its forces, all its resources
to doing the specific thing that you do really super well.
So if all you ever do is bilateral squatting,
you get really good at bilateral squatting,
but then there's some imbalances and weaknesses
that develop as a result of that.
And you don't really see them necessarily,
or you're not able to target them
until you go unilaterally.
I remember the first time I experienced this, right?
So I fell in love with deadlifting and squatting early on.
I did that like crazy.
It gave me great results in terms of muscle, in terms of strength.
I felt real awesome.
And then I remember, I went to do a workout with someone and they wanted to do backstep lunges.
And I thought to myself, well, you know, I don't remember what it was, but okay, if I could squat 300 pounds, I should be able to back step lunges. And I thought to myself, well, you know, I don't remember what it was, but okay,
if I could squat 300 pounds,
I should be able to back step lunge
with 100 pounds on my back with good form.
I mean, it's 100 pounds.
It's less than half of the weight that I could squat,
comfortably, for example.
I don't remember what the weight was,
but it was something along those lines.
Well, I go to do a back step lunge,
and it is, I am not able to do it stable well at all
I remember feeling like I'm gonna pull something. I got to go away. I was in Paris like oh, I can't I can't do and so what all
I did was as I stopped doing it. I just went back to squatting right when a reality
I should have done is focused on the back steps lunging which was highlighting an imbalance and a weakness. And so that's a lot of what novelty can do.
Novelty can take your body, highlight those weaknesses, strengthen them, and then those
weaknesses now lo longer hold you back from your main pursuit.
Because you better believe if you're bilateral squatting all the time, the imbalance you
have from right to left is one of the things that's preventing you from hitting a new PR.
It's one of those things.
And the only way to really address it sometimes is to go and train in a different way,
or at least apply some training in a different way.
You know, in this kind of transition
to the next point, but it's also important with this one,
which is, and this is something I've experienced personally
and something I've experienced with all my clients,
is that the thing that you are resistant to the most typically ends up being the most beneficial.
And it's really tough for you. So let's say you're the the strong man powerlifter guy.
Like you make fun of the wierry mobility movement dude. I mean that's like he is the he is the
epitome of all your jokes and you guys
are like, I would never want to be that or the yoga guy, right? Those, but yet that is probably
the most important thing that that person could start to add in their life and vice versa, right?
The the guy that's so into movement and his body weight and yoga and mobility and looks at
like strong man that are moving in the same plane all the time
and really heavy weight is just like,
oh my God, that's so, it's like,
but you have no idea how beneficial that would probably,
and that just, and so the things
that I think we're most resistant to,
I think end up providing some of the most value physically,
but also I think mentally.
Mentally massively because the biggest lesson
that I learned through fitness, that I continue to learn is to be open, open-minded.
Right.
Humble.
Yes.
Yeah, that's a big one, man.
How many of you humble?
Come on, that's the first lesson you learn, but you have to keep learning it.
Like, you first learn it, because whatever you do, first you suck.
So I was like, oh, I'm not that strong.
Oh, I can't squat.
In order to keep doing this, I got to humble myself.
Or I'll hurt myself or I'm just gonna quit.
You keep learning that.
But like, let's talk about,
let's be more specific about the mental changes
that novelty can bring.
Working out with heavy weight for three reps
is a completely different mental state
and focus than working out for 15 reps
or trying to get mind a muscle connection
or trying to do a super set or try to do mobility.
Working on mobility has some commonalities, but a lot of differences from doing max PR
types of lifts.
Can both of those contribute to a mentality that gives you more longevity with fitness
and makes you better at each?
Yes, absolutely.
That's where I think a lot of the benefit lies and it's funny, you know, taking somebody
through a completely different workout and getting them to be like, okay, let me do this
for the next four weeks.
I know I'm a bodybuilder guy, but let me try this mobility thing for the next four weeks
with my training.
It's a shift in mentality that benefits them all the way around. Well, it's interesting to me too, because the sports world is similar in this, that it sort
of simulates certain aspects of your body's ability. And you can display that in a coordinated
fashion versus like in the gym, you're you're segmenting different parts of that.
So let's say, I'm alignment in my first moves,
I have to get up as explosively as possible
and that's my deficit.
I don't have enough power, I don't have enough snap,
I don't have that speed.
I can train that and I can work specifically on that mentality.
I can grind heavy weights and be able to
have that kind of force generation to work exclusively on that. Or if my endurance sucks and I'm
dogging it, you know, towards, you know, the third quarter, that's something that I can actually
implement that with a higher rep count. I can cut out some rest periods, I can force myself to get better
at that very specific skill set. And that's what training is to me. And this is where I get so
frustrated when we convolut all of it. And things like a, you know, circuit training, CrossFit,
like things like that where it's, it starts to just merge it all together where, for me, the greatest aspects of it was to
be able to parse out different elements of that and exclusively get better.
Yeah, we think that the only things that are growing and changing are like our muscles
when we train, the brain actually adapts before your muscles do, and it continues to adapt.
You learn exercises, you learn movement,
you learn how to fire muscles,
your brain and your central nervous system
learns power output, it learns how to safely
output maximal power, how to control certain things.
A lot of things are happening mentally,
which is why exercise, one of the reasons put maximal power, had to control certain things. A lot of things are happening mentally,
which is why exercise, one of the reasons why exercise has been shown to be one of the
most effective ways to prevent cognitive decline. It's not just that it keeps your body
healthy, that's a big part, and the brain is a part of the body. It's also, you're training
your brain just as much. You may, you do a whole workout with strength training
and you have to learn those movements,
do a different phase and you have to learn
a new way of training or slightly different way.
So you're operating system.
A new operating system.
This is one of the more challenging things
that we have with our audience or people
that go through our programs is trying to figure that out.
I mean, how many times have we done the live callers
and we have somebody who, we just had this just a day
where somebody's going through phase one of performance,
they get into phase two of performance
and there's like, oh my God, it's too much.
It's all this credit.
It's like part of the reason why they're challenged
after we dig deeper and find out what's going on.
We ask a bunch of questions and we go,
it sounds like you're applying the mentality
that you had in phase one, which is get strong,
the kind of five by five,
lift heavy type of mentality.
And now we've moved over into these
multi-planar movements with stability components
and utilateral components.
Totally different.
Totally different.
Yeah, you got to change your mind.
And extremely challenging.
And forces to suppress the ego and go like,
oh, I, I know I can, you know, do a lunge with so much weight. And therefore, now I'm doing this
exercise that is like a lunge where I have like a, you know, the reverse lunge to press landmine
exercise in there. And you have to dramatically reduce the weight. And then you're hung up on this
like, oh, it's so light away. It's like's not the point you you haven't shifted your mentality. It's no longer about how much weight
Can I lift in this exercise and it's more and what we try to explain to people I think in layman's terms is you're trying to make the movement
Look beautiful now in this face this phase is all about the movement and thinking about
Perfecting that and if that means you got to take all the weight off the bar,
then so be it, because that is the adaptation
that we're chasing here, is we are trying to get
so good at that movement.
And if you're still hung up on how much weight is on the bar,
you're not going to reap the most benefits out of that face.
That's right, yeah.
Faising changes the body and it changes the mind,
but let's get a little bit more specifics
about kind of some of the more common ways
that we phase workouts.
Like rep ranges, I think is a very simple, easy way, right?
So if you're doing the same workout, same exercises,
not saying this is how you should always do it,
but one way to change things up
and to phase your workouts is to go from one rep range to
a different rep range and what you'll find is they all have different values.
Okay, so like the low rep range, for example, is a different value than the higher rep range.
The low rep range, what you find is less mind-of-muscle connection, but more full-body power and
strength intention.
Okay, so when I'm doing a deadlift for two or three reps,
I'm not thinking lats, I'm not thinking traps,
I'm not thinking glutes, I'm thinking,
how can I organize my entire body
and generate efficient force to lift maximal load?
How can I take everything?
You think of efficiency?
I don't want any power leakage.
I don't want my strength to move in any other direction.
What I'm trying to do with this particular bar,
and what that does is it creates this unit in my body.
Now, physically, the way it feels
is solid, hard, and strong.
It's a very different feel from higher reps.
It's quite distinct.
In fact, old school bodybuilders used to say,
and there's no studies by the way on this.
This is all anecdotal, but there's so much anecdotal,
there's definitely something there,
and either they're explaining it wrong
or how they're explaining exactly what happened.
But what they would say is,
heavy weights, low reps,
makes dense, granite, hard looking muscle, right?
That's the look that you get from it.
Now, I don't know if it necessarily changes you
aesthetically in that way,
but that's how it feels for sure.
When I train in the heavier rep range,
I think through the process of grinding
and the way you're moving
and how you apply yourself to low reps,
it does seem to create this feeling. And I'm not talking about in the work, I'm talking about after the workouts, this time you feel all day long, solid, hard, strong, like a statue. So I can
kind of understand. It's such a different way of lifting. And I remember, I vividly remember
going through that learning curve because when I would train, even though
I didn't consider myself in a box of like a bodybuilder or that, but the way I moved the weight
was way more similar. Regardless of the phase or rep count I was in, the way I held the bar,
the way I moved the weight looked more like a body builder than it did like a power lifter
because I didn't identify with a power lift and I never trained that way before. So there was this
really interesting learning curve for me like for and I'll give you some examples like
when you lift kind of like a like a common way to lift like with a body builder is your your
wrist and feet are very relaxed. Well in fact there's a lot of movements that you'll do, like shoulder pressing and bench pressing,
where you have a broken wrist and an open palm.
You know, I'm not trying to grip the bar
and connect to the bar and then I need...
You want to feel less of other muscles more.
I do, exactly.
I want to, I actually am almost thinking
about relaxing the rest of the body
and completely focusing around this one muscle
that I'm trying to move.
And I got really good at that, really, really good at that.
But then when I had to go over to like, okay, I'm going to deadlift as much weight off this
floor.
And I'm going to start doing singles and doubles and triples and learning to grip the
bar and then feel my feet trying grip the floor.
Like that was completely foreign to me.
And it is such a different shift.
And so, and vice versa.
So if you're somebody who is all powerlifting,
it's normally a pretty hard transition
to go over to the feel just the muscle
and forget about all, you know,
getting so much into grinding power.
And so, but you can get why they explain it and say,
oh, this makes your muscles feel like granite
or look like granite.
This one gives you the round.
Well, I remember seeing it.
And again, it's anecdotal, right?
I mean, I remember my own experience of never lifting like a powerlifter.
And I've shared this on the podcast many times.
And again, for some people that are that need the studies will be like, it doesn't matter
to me, it's his own story.
I remember always chasing kind of the hypertrophy pump look all the time.
And one of the things that always discouraged me was I would leave the gym and it would
feel like all the air came out of me. And I'd have this flat and I'd look like a normal
guy. I wouldn't look like somebody who really lifted a lot of weight or has lifted as long
as I did. And I remember I'd always mess with my head until I started really strength training
and lifting heavy.
And then what I noticed was not only did I have this kind of like, you know, granite hard
look, but I looked muscular even when I wasn't aired up.
I didn't have to be completely aired up to look defined and muscular.
And it like it built a different type of muscle on my body.
I know that again, there's going to be people that I roll over that, but I remember seeing
it on people.
I've heard that for a long time, and then I remember finally applying it to myself and feeling
that going like, oh, wow, I see it now.
It's such a different mentality.
It was a definite struggle for me in a transition to that of thinking like you said
There's like parts of your body you need to remain loose and be able to
Sort of pump blood specifically into like the focused muscle group and so it was like
Okay, it was it was a total mind shift of trying to hyperconnect into that one muscle
a total mind shift of trying to hyperconnect into that one muscle versus what I would always do, which was get my body as rigid
as possible because you don't want any movement.
You want no movement, you want to stay as tight as possible.
So you don't have any leak in performance.
And so it was all about the movement of it
and being able to organize your body
so everything
works in unison.
Well, you said it perfectly.
You didn't want any leaking performance.
Me as a body builder, I didn't want to exhaust any other muscles that I didn't need to.
Yeah.
That was the thought process.
So different.
And why would I grip with my feet and my calves when I'm busting my chest?
Because I don't want, I don't want to waste any energy anywhere else.
I just want to concentrate on that one.
And what's funny is the debate between those two camps,
there's value.
Yes, yes.
And there's also, and there's also, and there's, yes.
That's it.
You know, like higher rep, let's talk about higher rep.
Yeah.
Higher reps and what's funny is when you train a low reps all time
and you go to higher reps and vice versa,
it feels unbearable.
Okay. Oh, yeah. You take someone to always train strength and the time and you go to higher reps and vice versa, it feels unbearable, okay?
Oh yeah.
You take someone who always trains strength
and low reps, you move to higher reps.
So you're gonna explode.
And they're like this sucks.
You go for higher reps, you teach them to do doubles
and singles and they're like this sucks.
It's so funny, but the higher reps,
you get the pump, you feel the burn,
you get that sweat that a lot of people
tend to worship.
And you can really target particular muscle groups
with the higher reps.
Like if I'm trying to get someone to feel their glutes,
it's hard to do with three reps.
It really is.
It's hard to get them to really feel like right now,
do you really feel your glutes squeezing?
You know, with the three-wrap exercise,
it's like, well, I feel everything.
Like I'm trying to move this heavy weight.
When I go like 15 reps, and I change the technique technique and I get them to do my muscle, that's
when people are like, oh, I can really feel my butt.
I feel it getting a pump.
Oh my God, this is so crazy.
Higher reps feels totally different.
It also builds something called, you know, and this is within reason, of course, builds something
called strength endurance.
So there's like strength.
And then there's strength endurance.
Strength is how much weight can I lift right now like all at once? Strength endurance is how much weight can I lift for
the next 25 to 30 seconds, right? Totally different feel higher rep ranges tend to work on that. So
it's totally different. Well, and different types of training and different mindsets lend themselves
different types of training and different mindsets lend themselves better for different rep ranges, right?
So like if you are the grinding strength power lifter guy
and you have to lift 50 or and you apply,
you try doing that for 20 or more.
Yeah, you apply that 50, that's why most of them bail on it.
It's just like, I don't wanna do this.
It's like zawful.
Yeah, it's awful.
You want me to squeeze the bar hard while I bet for 20 reps
Yeah, so it and I guess the the the mature, you know more advanced version of me today has really learned
To to move out of my characters when I'm in phase one of a lot of our programs
I'm thinking more like a strongman power lifter
I'm thinking more like a strongman power lifter, connecting to the ground and just trying to be powerful.
When I start moving into our phase three
of a lot of our programs and it's a lot of these higher reps,
supersets, muscle endurance, stamina, like you're alluding to,
I think more like the bodybuilder side of me.
And so learning, I don't mean it took me,
maybe others have found this easy,
but it took me a long time to be able to follow one program
and then try and move in and out of these characters
as far as mine sets when you go into work.
Yeah, and the higher reps, for me,
provides, the pumps start to get more pronounced.
I get around kind of full.
This by the way is when I'm doing it right.
Okay, because I think, I gotta be clear here.
You know, I said granite hard with the low reps.
Now I'm saying round full, kind of muscle bubbly
look with the high reps.
By the way, all of that will go away
if you're staying for too long.
So it's not like, oh, I just want the granite look.
So I'm only gonna do low reps.
What I'm talking about, you experience
when you're in a proper phase, when the body's
adapting to it.
Once it's fully adapted and you stay do it long enough, you start to lose some of that
benefit.
But the higher reps, when you switch to that, it's like, oh my gosh, this pump is insane.
It's unbearable.
You look in the mirror, things look round and full.
And you start to kind of develop this kind of look to your body,
which is different than the low rep feel and look to your body, both of which contribute ultimately
to this kind of aesthetic sculpted look, but it is a totally different feel. And every time I switch
into a phase, I first don't like it because I was used to the other one, so it feels kind of like,
ah, but then about two, three weeks into it, I love it because I see the changes in my body like this is great
Well, this kind of goes into the next one, which is where I
Was probably the most problematic for the way I used to train because the rest periods themselves like I would lend
You know a minute to three minutes the five minutes sometimes sometimes based off of how much that lift taxed me.
And to be able to now shave that down,
knowing that I only have 20, 30 seconds,
sometimes I don't have any rest in between
what a shift that was for me to,
especially ego-wise in abandoning the heavyweight
sort of protocol and working out with that type of a method.
Well, this used to be one of my favorite hacks
to help somebody who's been lifting for a really long time.
I'd give them a stopwatch or tell them to get a stopwatch.
Hey, just do me a favor this next week when you train.
Just stopwatch yourself on your rest periods, come back, report to me what they are,
and then I manipulate it.
And it would be like, because we, very few people watch the clock
and actually manage their rest periods.
And you end up falling into a pattern.
Yes, right.
If you start to time it, you're like,
oh, I rest the same similar time.
And which is why too, I don't just right away announce,
like, oh, you should rest this,
it's because I've learned over time
that depending on who you identify with,
what type of way of training you fall into,
you might be the short rest period guy,
or you might be the power usually guest, by the way.
Yeah, yeah, you're right, you're right.
I could normally look at someone you could pretty guest,
but I want to know, like, some facts, right?
So I'll have them do that.
And then I just put them in the total opposite.
And so if you lean more towards the power
lift or three to five minute guy also give you 45 second minute rest, holy shit, it's
like a whole like you've never experienced before and vice versa. If you're the circuit
training mom who loves to just never stop and she goes from exercise, exercise, exercise,
exercise and it's like a body pump class and And they go, hey, we are gonna keep loading weight on this bar.
And I want you to sit down for three, five minutes
between sets.
It's just like what?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. faster, you build strength endurance. Annic, totally, you're probably building more capillaries,
you're building more sarcoplasm,
or your capacity for sarcoplasm.
These are all the non-muscle fiber structures
that are in muscle, which actually make up
most of your muscle size.
When you look at a muscle,
something like 70% of it is non-muscle fiber.
So if you like, you drained it of% of it is non-muscle fiber.
So if you like, you drained it of all its fluid
in sarcoplasm and blood, it would lose, I don't know,
70% of its size, and you'd be left with this jerky,
like beef jerky, you'd dry a piece of steak
and it shrinks down, right?
So that's sarcoplasm that makes up the size and shape.
And it totally, you're probably building more of that
with shorter rest periods, especially when you combine it with higher reps. However, I do want
to add this and I don't, we don't need to go too long on this because this is,
this could be an episode itself. You can also combine short rest periods with heavy
weights, and it's a completely different adaptation. You could do singles. Now,
of course, you have to adjust the reps, excuse me, the weight on this, but I could
do a single of dead lifts and rest 45 seconds and do 45 second rest. Now, of course you have to adjust the reps, excuse me, the weight on this, but I could do a single of dead lifts
and rest 45 seconds and do 45 second rest.
Now, of course I can go as heavy
as when I rest a long period of time,
but it also is different.
And the reason why I'm saying this,
and again, we don't need to get stuck on this,
but the reason why I'm saying this
is all of these variables,
they don't have to go in, they don't have to be in unison.
It's not like short rest periods always goes with that.
No, there are certain things that lend themselves well
for teaching.
And then once you've taught it, then there's combinations
that you can...
They seem like they're opposites.
That speaks to the novelty point that you made.
Yes.
You know, you've got some hybrids in between a bit.
I mean, I think of this like,
like in Justin appreciate the sports analogy.
Like, you're teaching somebody all these combinations
of moves in like a sport like basketball,
like, you know, you first want to teach the fundamentals and then you teach like A move and you
get you let your body, you get really good at you adapted and then you can start playing
with them together and then different sequences and combinations to create this orchestra
of great movements and skill, like same thing goes inside the gym.
It's like when we speak most of the time,
we're speaking about the fundamentals
and the importance of getting really good
at all these different adaptations and focuses
and what tended lend themselves well
for people that are trying to get really good
at understanding all this.
But once you've done this for a long time,
like, man, then it becomes, you know,
for the first rule is break all the rules.
It's fun.
You know what I'm saying? It's to now interchange becomes, you know, the first rule is break all the rules. It's fun.
You know what I'm saying?
It's to now interchange and, you know, break the stigma around, oh, you should only
rest this long when you train this way, train the opposite and see what happens.
No, you know, you just reminded me of a conversation I had that I totally forgot about that I found
was so fascinating back in the day.
So I had a member who used to play college football and we were talking about
training and working out. And he goes, yeah, he goes, you know, a lot of football training
with string training is you, you want to get really strong, you want to rest, and then
you want to repeat that strength because in football, you do, you know, you have your
play, then, you know, somebody gets hit, you go out of bounds, you got to reset,
you're getting your huddle, whatever,
and then you do the play again.
So it kind of mimics that.
He goes, however, he goes, sometimes it's good to train
explosively and hard with short rest periods.
And I said, huh?
And he goes, yeah, sometimes in football,
you want to play, play, play, play,
you're playing against the clock.
Yes. And what you want to do is you want to play, play, play, play, you're either you're playing against a clock. You're talking twice sometimes. Yes, and what you want to do is you want to have
repeatable maximal effort with 30 seconds of rest in between.
And I was like, oh, that's so fascinating.
So that's what I mean by that combination of things
that sometimes don't seem like they should go together.
The next one is long rest periods.
And long rest periods are phenomenal at building
maximal strength, power, and long-rest periods are phenomenal at building maximal strength,
power, and really get, you know, summoning those muscle fiber contractions, like really
being able to do that.
I love long-rest periods for the typical average personal training client, because the
typical average personal training client, I'm going the picture and this is just like I'd say if they took all the people at hired trainers
When I was a trainer at least 65% of them were middle-aged women I'd say already alluded to her
Yeah, the circuit training middle-aged mom who bounced wants to lose weight
Yeah, and you know exercise exercise
Yeah, and so I would just be like cool
We're gonna rest three minutes in between we're gonna do sets of five and you're, exercise exercise. Yeah, and so I would just be like, cool, we're gonna rest three minutes in between, we're gonna do sets of five,
and you're gonna rest a long time,
and they'd be like, oh, they'd fight and him and ho about it,
and then they'd get the results and be like,
whoa, this is so crazy.
That was my favorite person to apply this to,
but long respirators are phenomenal
if you've never done them before
for building strength and muscle
and speeding up the metabolism.
Yeah, I won't even go into like the energy part of that,
but like with the main thing that I love about these long rest periods is just being able to get to that
mental state where you're like super focused because what you need for the most part is
it's almost like you got to batten all the hatches. You got to make sure that each joint
is as stable as possible when you go back to doing the lift. So the lift is all about the mechanics of it,
but now you have to be able to get in a mental place where you can literally
sum in and recruit as many muscle fibers as possible.
Fatigue gets in the way, right? Fatigue will totally interrupt that process.
Well, you can get a little bit into the energy so people understand why
the three to five minute rest period in between because that's about what it takes the average person to replenish
fully recovered.
Right.
So you break down all these energy ATP, ADP molecules and then your body utilizes so many.
I used to give this analogy for people that even though it's completely off mathematically,
I'd say you've got a, you know, a hundred of these molecules in your body, you go into
a deadlift for five reps and the body uses 75.
Then you sit down and you rest and in 30 seconds it gets to 80. In a minute it gets to 85. In two
minutes it gets to 90. And then like three to five minutes it gets to peaks back to 95. Never
returns all the way to the full 100 because you're working out and utilizing that. But then you get
replenished to that and then you go do it again.
And so, what you're doing by arresting is you're allowing
the body to fully recover, get its energy back,
so then you can put the most maximal effort into the lift.
Well, you're training energy systems
as much as you're training muscle.
And again, here's an analogy super oversimplified.
It's way more complex than this, but it's like,
if you have a car and the car has two engines,
there's one engine that's got jet fuel,
and if you wanna go quarter mile in seven seconds,
as fast as possible,
and your car knows this by how hard you push the gas pedal,
okay, you floor it, it turns that one on,
and you explode for a quarter mile.
The only detriment is that the jet fuel burns up
after the quarter mile and it's gone.
And then after that, if you keep going,
you're not gonna burn jet fuel,
you're not gonna have this crazy powerful engine,
but you'll have this backup engine
that now is running on another type of engine,
maybe diesel or something like that.
And it's just, can you keep you going
and keep you consistent in kind of giving
that slow drip of energy?
And that's what happens.
So what you need to do is you need to stop,
allow the jet fuel to replenish so you could train
that jet engine, that jet fuel, big engine again, right?
That's what the rest periods do.
Both engines are in your muscle.
Okay, so now that I made the analogy,
it sounds super simplified.
Hopefully people understand that,
but both engines train your muscle
and you need to be able to train each engine specifically in order to build and develop each one
If you only trained one all the time if I only do quarter mile turn it off and wait
I never turn on the other backup engine and if I if I never floor it
I never turn on the jet fuel engine
So you're training energy systems just as much and the long rest periods allows for this power strength engine
To to really be focused on
and that energy.
Short rest periods focus is a little bit more on the other one, both of which make up muscle,
make up your shape, make up your fitness and that kind of stuff.
The next one, which is also another way to really break up your workouts and phase, which
is a little more complex as it requires more understanding of exercise, is just different
exercises.
You know, when you do different exercises, your first off your body gets very good at
what you do very often.
And there's carryover to other things that are similar and the further away you move
from that specific movement pattern, the less carryover that you have.
For example, if I do squats all the time and I get really good at
barbell squats, I'll get a decent amount of carryover to a front squat because it's kind
of similar. It's not the same, but it's kind of similar. And then there'll be some carryover
to a lunge, which is still similar, but not as similar as a front squat. Now, if I move
all the way over to an overhead press, I'm not going to get as much carryover
at all.
This is what happens with exercises.
That's why it's so important to change exercises for the same body parts.
Get really good at back squats, then get really good at front squats, then get really
good at back step lunges, then get good at lateral lunges, then get good at, when I was
talking about the whole body, rotating, pressing, pulling, training the entire body,
learning how to train a muscle and isolation,
learning how to train it in compound ways.
Oftentimes, simply change the exercise,
gets your body to respond right away.
And then you'll see people who are like,
oh no, Barbell curls, best exercise,
verbites, and they'll be like, no, no, try a spider curl.
Fine. And then they do, like, oh my god,
my biceps grew. That's the best exercise. Like, no, no, no, try a spider curl. Fine. And then they'd be like, oh my god, my biceps grew.
That's the best exercise.
Like, no, no, no, you don't understand.
You got to do everything.
You got to change it up.
Now, my philosophy for this has changed quite a bit during my training career.
Early on, it was muscle confusion, changing the exercises all the time, always being novel
in training.
And I think I was, I was a good
exorciser because of that. You know, I'm saying I was good. I could do all
exercises pretty good. I'm saying champion exercise champion exorciser. That's
what's back in right. But I wasn't really good at any single lifts. And there
are certain lifts that you reap tremendous benefit and have a long learning curve
that you can continue to reap benefits from. And so my philosophy has changed it so that I do
believe there are certain exercises that should stay in your routine for the most part that
are that should stay in there. And then certain ones that are quickly interchanged,
meaning I can run them for a phase, a couple weeks,
and then I'm done with them onto another exercise
for that muscle group that's totally different,
and then I can move on, and what looks like that,
or for me, what that looks like is,
movements like the barbell back squat, the deadlift,
a barbell press, the big compound lifts,
they're so challenging, they're so taxing,
they're such a massive learning curve.
I still don't think I'm great at deadlifting.
I still don't think I'm great at squatting to this day.
Yeah, but take a step further, right?
It's not so much the barbell back squat,
although that's a big part of it,
it's the squat movement, right?
It's not so much the press,
it's the pressing type movement.
So one way you could do this is you could go barbell back squat
and you do that for a while
and your change can be to a front squat
or you could use a safety bar squat
or you could squat with a different tempo,
low bar, high bar, right?
It was elevated, not elevated.
Yeah, there's a lot of...
Narrow stance, wide stance, same thing with deadlift.
And then, of course, the more obvious thing is you add completely different exercises,
or place a little focus on different exercises.
And that's what this mean.
And again, phasing doesn't mean doing everything different all the time.
Phasing means focusing on things for a period of time
and then switching and you're absolutely right Adam.
There are movement patterns that should almost always
be present in your workout.
Well, on the beauty of different exercises,
and if you wanna talk about moving in different planes
and why that's something that we kind of stress every now
and then which which, you
know, isn't stressed enough, I believe, in our gyms and our, in the thoughts going in
our workouts, because what we need by that is to be able to react properly to any kind
of real world situation, any kind of functional type movement, which I hate using that word because it's just like,
everybody just hears functional in there like they assume,
it's some wacky exercise.
But really what we're trying to do is to be able to get your body
to have the strength and familiarity when you place it
in certain positions and to be able to get yourself out
of those positions.
And so that way you do that to where you build that support system around the joints,
you build that support system to be able to summon the kind of strength that's usable.
So compound lists, obviously, that's where we're going to stay for the majority to build muscle, build overall strength, be able to maximize our general output of force.
But how do we reinforce it?
How do we keep the body intact and intract for the long hole?
Yeah.
I mean, what use is being able to squat 400 pounds if when you're outside, taking out the
garbage, you mistep a little bit off the curb and you're outside taking out the garbage,
you mistep a little bit off the curb and you throw your back out.
That happens to people, strong people.
Like, oh man, I turned the wrong way and then,
oh my gosh, I hurt myself.
How is this possible?
I can lift so much in the gym.
That's functional.
That's what we're talking about.
We're talking about functional and different exercises.
Trains your body in different ways
and just gives you more well-rounded strength.
Now, what does this look like aesthetically?
A balanced physique.
It gives you a balanced physique.
We all know the example of the guy or girl
that is muscular, but it doesn't look right.
They move wrong.
They don't move like they're put together right.
Muscle bound, right?
That's the term that they used to use back in the day
because of the way people look like they moved
because they worked out a particular way all the time.
Well, different exercises, forget about the function,
forget about the fact that it makes you move better,
and a lot of people are aesthetically driven.
It'll give you a balanced, beautiful physique
because performance, you know,
detriment tend to show up over time aesthetically as well,
which brings us to the last one,
which is
phasing your workouts reduces your risk of injury, okay?
It just does because you train your body
in a more balanced way.
If I train in a strength,
one of the signs that I have personally,
because I can get stuck, right?
Like anybody, I get stuck in my favorite phases
of working out.
And I tend to get stuck in a strength phase.
It's one of my favorites.
I just love it.
I totally enjoy it.
And the signs that I used to ignore
that I'm a little better now at listening to
are joint pain.
If I stay in that phase too long,
there's telltale areas of my body that'll start to hurt.
Like if I bench press and I'm trying to get stronger
at the bench press and I focus on it
and my strength goes up, my strength goes up and then I start to feel
peck insertion pain a little bit,
like I used to ignore that but now I'm like,
oh I got a phase into something a little different.
Same thing with the squat, like if I push it, push it,
push it, oh little S-I joint on the right side,
you know type of pain, that means I need to switch it.
Well, when I switch things properly and face things
probably I don't feel that.
And if I push that long enough and don't listen to it,
it usually turns into an actual injury
that I need to take a break from exercise.
And nothing's worse for progress than not working out, right?
I feel like this is of all the points.
This is the one where when you're under 30 years old,
you're less interested in this conversation.
Of course.
As you get older, it becomes the most important part of this.
You're unbreakable when you're young. You just have an experience to get. Of course, as you get older, it becomes probably the most important part of this.
You're unbreakable when you're young.
You just haven't experienced it yet.
But the truth be told, this is the number one indicator for me to change things or move
faces or introduce new exercises is, you know, all these years of lifting and training,
I'd like to think I'm pretty in tune with my body
and it's normally discomfort, pain,
soreness, tightness, lack of movement.
Those are all these indicators that I need to move out
of what I'm doing and change up what I'm doing
and you get really good at paying attention to that.
And catching it before, I think when we're young, we tend to ignore or think that we're invincible until it finally catches up,
but you know, father time is undefeated. So eventually, this becomes a high priority.
It does. And at the end of the day, look, here's the bottom line. At the end of the day,
if you're, pursue really is to move, perform, and look your best. And that just for now, but, man,
I want to look amazing, and I want to keep looking amazing. I want to move amazing. I want
to keep moving amazing. Being open-minded and phasing your workouts and trying different
things, things that may be unconventional to you, is one of the best ways to do this. And
over time, what you'll develop is this very balanced, well moving muscular,
the kind of body that you want,
that you're seeking by staying in one particular type
of training that you don't realize you actually get
by moving in and out of different types of training.
Look, if you like our information,
head over to mindpumpfreed.com and check out 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 my pump
Justin Adam is on Instagram at my pump Adam and you can find me on Twitter at mine pump south
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