Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1962: How to Hit a Deadlift PR in 30 Days
Episode Date: December 8, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover ten steps to hit a deadlift PR in 30 days. Most of you can hit a PR in 30, but you MUST follow the RIGHT protocol. (1:45)  Ten Steps to Hit a Deadlift P...R in 30 Days. #1 – Bump calories. (3:17)  #2 - Aim for 8-9 hours of sleep. (8:31) #3- Deadlift hard/intense once a week. (11:40) #4 - Squat heavy once a week. (13:27) #5 - Hip thrust heavy once a week. (17:15) #6 – The third week, go light. (20:17) #7 - Train moderate intensity for the rest of the body. (26:41) #8 – Pre-workout supplement stack (caffeine, agmatine, theanine). (30:00) #9 - 2 hours before, eat a meal, and drink water. (35:07) #10- Right before your lift prime like this. (39:04) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! December Promotion: At-Home Holiday Bundle (MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Suspension, MAPS PRIME, and The No BS 6-Pack Formula all for the low price of $99.99!) Mind Pump #1952: How To Bulk The Right Way Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss How To Box Squat The RIGHT Way (SQUAT HEAVIER!!) How To Do A Barbell Hip Thrust The RIGHT Way! (FIX THIS!!!) Mind Pump #1872: Eight Benefits Of Lifting With Light Weight Benefits Of A Deload Week & When To Deload For Recovery And Gains – Mind Pump Theanine — Health benefits, dosage, safety, side ... - Examine.com Agmatine — Health benefits, dosage, safety, side ... - Examine.com Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake How To Foam Roll PROPERLY (AVOID THESE MISTAKES) | MIND PUMP Adam Schafer's DEEP Squat Mobility Secrets | Behind The Scenes at Mind Pump Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
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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?
Today's episode, we teach you how to hit a deadlift PR in 30 days.
No joke, if you follow these steps, a lot of you are going to hit brand new PRs in your
deadlift.
We'd love to hear from you, by the way, when this works for you.
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Check this out.
Most of you can hit a PR in 30 days,
but you have to follow the right protocol.
Yeah, of course, it's not gonna work for everybody,
but for the most part,
you should see some improvements in your numbers.
All right, let's talk about it.
Let's talk about it.
What I like about this is that what you listed out,
I think really applies to everyone.
I do think that beginners tend to see PRs more frequently just because they're beginners
in a sense.
In fact, they often see PRs in spite of doing things wrong.
That's my point of making.
So I think that new beginnings.
You might have someone who listens to, like, I don't do all those things.
I had a PR last week.
Well, if you haven't been lifting for a very long time and you know
All a lot of the stuff that you do is novel your body's reaping
No, I'm glad you said that because what we're gonna talk about is for somebody who's kind of stuck for somebody who wants to hit a PR
They've been already been working out for a while now. What does that mean for the newbie the newbie if they apply this?
Yes, if they don't they may still hit PRs because those newbie gains
come almost no matter what.
But if they apply this, they'll hit even better numbers.
They'll maximize the potential.
So in other words, this is kind of applicable to anybody.
And we organize this around, specifically around the deadlift.
And generally you can apply this to other lifts as well,
but there's some specifics in here that apply mostly to a deadlift.
And I've applied this to myself.
Every time I do this, I don't always hit a PR
because I've been doing this for so long,
but every time I apply this,
I'll definitely get to that upper limit.
And it's very predictable.
It works almost every single time.
Now, the very first one that you go to,
I think, is a really good place to start
because it's probably one of the most common mistakes
that I see is you get somebody who is dieting to lose body fat and then they also want to hit these
PRs in this lift.
And so what they don't realize is that you're feeding yourself in a calorie deficit, your
body's in a catabolic state.
So it's breaking down.
It's not building and adding in that state. And so the likelihood
of you hitting a PR that doesn't mean it's impossible. And we talk about newbies, right? So if you've
if you've just started squatting and you're only been squatting for four months of your life and you're in a calorie deficit
there is a potential that you could just because there's so much technique. Yeah. That goes into being a good squatter that your technique could improve so so much that even in a calorie deficit
You may get stronger at that lift
But for the average person who's been stuck in a plateau or been lifting or been squatting for a long time
They can't break through that one of the first mistakes I see is I look at their diet
I'm like, oh well you're eating to lean out and yet you're trying to increase strength
Yeah, increasing calories or bumping your calories for maintenance will almost, I mean, it's
pretty consistent that it will raise your strength just generally.
I mean, literally work out like you're doing now, change nothing, add, you know, 400 or
500 calories on a consistent basis.
That's important, by the way, because people typically think they're bumping calories,
but don't track and they end up making up the difference
on a weekend or something like that.
So really doesn't turn into too much of a surplus.
But if you're consistent,
like I'm gonna eat 500 more calories a day,
you'll get stronger regardless for the most part.
There's almost always this like strength boost.
And if you combine it with other factors,
you can make some huge gains.
But this is key because, generally speaking,
this will just make you stronger.
Yeah, you wanna add a quit reserve of energy
and to have that to be able to tap into.
And I think too, if you wanna kinda add in
a little bit of nutrient timing with this as well
in terms of like, you know, cycling your carbs
or like doing it in a way where you're actually like
deprived a bit and now we're introducing it before you're gonna, you know, attempt a lift. That's like a PR lift, you know, you could kind of play around with that
And it does make a fact in fact we get more specific with that later on
Yeah, but with this here with the calories
There's a couple points I want to make one an easy way to do this is
If you don't feel like tracking or whatever, but you normally eat kind of the same all the time, and you notice about yourself,
all you have to do is add an extra meal.
So it's kind of an easy way to bump your calories.
So song is everything else that is consistent.
And the second thing I'll say is through experimentation
with myself and with clients,
the calories should probably come from proteins and carbohydrates.
I don't typically see the same strength bump
when we add the extra calories with a lot of fat
unless the person was eating too low fat to begin with
and then we see this huge bump in strength.
I mean, I'd like to add to that
that I would, for the most part, for most people,
I would go protein first.
And the reason why that is,
it's best because of majority of clients
under-consumed protein or they weren't even,
they weren't at the upper threshold of the maximum amount
for the max benefits for proteins in cysts
and building muscle.
So I would tend to push them in that direction.
Now, that being said, if you're eating a ton
of protein already, then I think carbohydrates
are going to benefit you the most.
But I think that's a more rare case.
Maybe someone like you, right? Like I think that you a more rare case. Maybe someone like you, right?
Like I think that you eat a lot of protein on a very consistent basis, so you could probably
potentially just add carbs to your diet.
Even I add proteins and carbs.
Yeah, I go proteins and carbs with the extra meal.
Like you guys have seen me, and I did this recently, and all I did was add an extra meal.
My extra meal was steak and potatoes.
So carbohydrates and proteins.
Some fats came in the steak, but it was protein rich.
And that's usually where we see the benefit.
The increase in fat here can help if you're fat
and take as really low.
And this is not common, but when I did see this,
it was with female clients who ate too low of fat.
We bumped their fat and give them healthier.
But proteins and carbs, right here, proteins being most important carbohydrates to make
up the difference.
Now you didn't list this on your list, but I know that personally one of your favorite
things and why you probably did the steak is because you like to increase cholesterol
at a time like this too.
Now, what are your thoughts on, I know you didn't put that in your list.
Right, it's a little controversial.
Yeah, I specifically didn't because it's a little bit more
controversial and I guess I don't know, nuanced
because it doesn't, it's not as important
as the proteins and carbs.
Like it's not gonna make as big of a difference
as just extra calories, right?
Proteins, carbs.
But yes, studies will show that if you do this short-term
bump in dietary cholesterol, your CNS tends to fire a little bit stronger.
And I do this all the time.
I go for meeting six whole eggs a day, to 12 whole eggs a day, which that's just me.
I'll notice a bump in strength, even if my calories are all the same.
We saw old-time strongmen used to drink a lot of heavy cream and things like that to
really aid in their performance.
Yeah, so that's just a little bit more nuanced.
But I mean, for everybody, bump your calories,
be consistent about it, proteins and carbs,
that alone will get you generally stronger.
All right, this next one's interesting.
This next one's interesting because people always dismiss it,
and this is probably one of the most consistent ways
to get yourself stronger, and that's literally to aim for eight to nine hours
of sleep every night.
Now, notice how I didn't say seven to eight, right?
Seven to eight is the normal target.
I found with myself and with clients
that when I aim for eight to nine,
I almost always fall at least at eight.
When I go seven to eight, I tend to sometimes go seven.
That extra 30 minutes to an hour, even in one day,
even if you have one night of good sleep, you'll notice that you're stronger the next day. But over 30 minutes to an hour, even in one day, even if you have one night
of good sleep, you'll notice that you're stronger the next day. But over 30 days, this one
makes, uh, so is that the top process of saying eight to nine hours is because you we know
that most people, if you tell them eight to nine, they're probably more likely going to
hit seven to eight and they're going to fall a little short. Yeah, it's, it, it usually
results in more eight hour nights than saying my target at 78. So I'm saying aim for it, right?
So you're like, okay, I'm gonna wake up at 8 a.m. tomorrow,
then I'm going to bed by 11.
So that's my nine, right?
And then if I'm off a little bit, I tend to hit it.
Usually what people do when they go seven to eight
is they tend to veer towards seven, you know,
a few nights a week, right?
You know, seven hours is good.
That's supposed to be good too.
And you end up losing a little bit of sleep.
That extra 30 minutes to an hour makes a big difference.
Yeah, I mean, I talked to a power lifter that was like a real competitive power lifter,
a real good at the sport who would literally like swear by naps in like,
just like, as much as I can emulate a baby as possible, like this is what I'm,
my goal is to increase my strength. That was just like, always sleep in,
was like getting eight, 10 hours sleep,
but then also napping throughout the days.
No, what do you think is the most,
what do you think it is the most there?
Is it the stress, is it the actual rest,
is it the recovery, is it a combination of all three?
What do you think is so valuable about the amount of time
that you give yourself
to do. It's all those things. It's the the management of
inflammation so that it's appropriate. So you get the inflammation
signaling, but you don't get too much inflammation to wear.
So that's the man.
The stress.
Imagine stress, hormones, you get more growth hormone release,
IGF1, you're more primed, you're more prime for testosterone.
You're not going to get your cortisol is more appropriate.
In other words, you get the spike of cortisol in the morning,
but then it goes down nice and low, and evening allows for recovery.
It's very, very nourishing on the CNS.
The CNS needs breaks.
And if you're training hard, especially if you're lifting heavy,
you know, that's stressful on the CNS. You're cranking that amplitude to its max capacity, so to be able to give it some adequate rest is important.
You know what? Think of it this way. It's like you have an iPhone, right? There's a battery in your iPhone.
So that's like your CNS or your body. Well, imagine if your battery needs, you know, eight hours of charging,
and you always give it six hours of charging every night. You're only going to get so much of that battery output.
Well, that's like your CNS, so that sleep charges your batteries.
And a full charge is gonna give you more power
than an almost full charge.
So sleep makes a huge difference.
And studies will show the opposite to effect.
If somebody loses sleep, you notice an immediate drop
in strength almost every single time.
All right, so now let's get to the more specifics
with the deadlift.
If you're trying to bump your deadlift strength, you should definitely deadlift heavy at least
once a week, or I should say stick to once a week.
You're going to deadlift more than once a week, but heavy once a week.
More than one day a week of heavy deadlift tends to be too much for most people.
Now, heavy is very relative, right?
So what would you say is a heavy deadlifting session for somebody like how?
What percentage are we going to get? very relative, right? So what would you say is a heavy dead lifting session for somebody like how what and I know
percentage are we gonna? Yeah, I know in our power lifting
program, we use the the RPE model. I know that that's like
people like want to hear a percentage. Yeah, what's a more
general way that you would recommend the audience like, OK,
I'm going to start dead lifting heavy once week. What's my
heavy look like? OK, so I'll change the terminology and say
deadlift hard or intense once a week.
So stop about one or two reps, short of failure and keep the reps low. So you're looking at doing
sets of one to three reps. And let's say it's one rep, well it's something you could do two or three
with. Or if you're doing three reps, it's something you do, you know, four to five with. And
that's your training set. So it's hard, heavy, and keep the reps low
and the intensity is high,
but we're not lifting the failure.
You're not trying to max out your deadlift
until you get to the 30-day mark
when you're trying to hit your PR.
So basically practice with that heavy weight.
So it's like someone like me,
if I could max out at 500 pounds,
I'm probably gonna do singles and doubles with 400 for, you know,
five, five, six, seven.
Or, no, maybe even more 450, you know, something like that.
Yeah, yeah, that's what we're doing.
So you're good and close.
You're getting close, but you're, you know, you still 50 pounds off your lip.
So it's something challenging, but you're like, I could add, you know, 40 pounds to this
if I wanted to really, you know, type of push it.
And you're practicing that heavy lift and you're keeping the reps low.
And the sets should be relatively high, you know, four to five sets type of deal.
Next up is the one extra.
So nothing's going to get you better at deadlifting than deadlifting, right?
But there are exercises that have carryover.
And my experience, the squat has the most carryover to the deadlift.
If your squat goes up, your deadlift tends to go up.
So squat heavy once a week.
Now here's the key with this. During your week, the squat should
happen before the deadlift. So in other words, if you're training Monday, Wednesday and Friday,
Monday is your heavy squat day. Wednesday is your heavy deadlift day. I don't like deadlifting heavy
in the week and then going to the squat. That tends to- Is that your problem? Is your theory on that
because the deadlift is so direct on the back and then that fatigues and then doing
something like a heavy squat which you need some core and low back strength to support a heavy
squat that you don't want that to be fatigued from the deadlift.
This is mostly risk management.
So in my experience and in training clients, I don't know if you've got any of the experiences
where you go trying squat heavy a day or two after you deadlift heavy.
Doesn't feel too good, doesn't feel very safe.
Versus if I squatted heavy, even if my legs were a little sore,
I could still pull.
Anytime I back the little fatigue and then trying to brace
and make sure that that mechanism's in place
when I go into squat, that's a consideration.
You gotta make sure that you're not going into it
with fatigue otherwise.
You know, it's acceptable.
It's funny that we're talking about this
because one of my things that I have never been
able to put together is the times I've hit PRs
in deadlifting, I actually squatted pretty heavy
earlier in the week and I was kinda sore a little bit.
Like I didn't even think I was fully recovered
from my squat already,
but I was lifting heavy on squatting,
and then I at least had a day or two recovery,
and then I went into my deadlift,
and I pulled some of the best weight,
and I remember it's still feeling you
to a little bit from my squats,
but then still having this incredible deadlift.
So that's a good idea.
So that's a good idea.
The recruitment process, right, with the legs,
and obviously with deadlift,
like if you get more leg drive,
that's gonna contribute quite a bit.
You know what else I kind of contribute to it?
And I don't know if this is true or not,
is that I'm a little tight and stiff.
Correct.
And that actually favors you.
It helps.
In a deadlift.
Because a deadlift is more of a rigid lever movement
versus a squatting down.
And so the fact that I just looked at heavy squats,
I'm still a little pumped and tight
from the two days later,
going into the deadlift kind of stiff and rigid like that.
So this is an interesting anecdote.
I don't know if there's data to support this
but I agree with you.
So I always will hit a PR in deadlifts
if I hit close to a PR in squats two days before.
That happens if you ever see that.
Every PR I've hit, that I've correlated that happens to be every time that's every PR I've hit.
I've correlated that.
I'm like, that's weird.
And the tightness thing is interesting
because with the deadlift, you don't have the,
I don't know, benefit, I guess,
of lowering the weight before you lift it.
With the deadlift, you're lifting it off the floor
and how tight and tense you can be at the start
makes a huge difference.
Whereas if you're with the squat and you're lowering properly, you're kind of naturally having to be tight because you're be at the start makes a huge difference. Whereas if you're with the squat and
you're lowering properly, you're kind of naturally having to be tight because you're lowering into the
hole. With the deadlift, if you start loose at the bottom, you're losing a lot of power. You have to
create that all before you get into it. Yes. Yeah. And two, you know, really getting the lats
engaged is something that people like don't consider. If you can really kind of set yourself in that
position and, you know, direct it more to the legs.
You can have a lot better lift.
Yes. Now with the squatting heavy,
this would be similar to what the deadlift,
you're doing singles doubles, triples,
you're working at a high intensity,
but you're not going to failure.
You can even substitute this for box squats.
I found box squats to be just as effective.
The reason why you may do a box squat instead of a traditional squat is if squatting heavy
and deadlifting heavy just is working the hips and low back a little too much, then you
can do that.
But squat heavy once, then deadlift once, heavy in the week.
Now the next one is a different exercise that I've also noticed good carryover to the
deadlift.
And that is the hip thrust.
You also want to hip thrust heavy once a week.
Now here's what it looks like.
In the beginning of the week, you do a heavy squat session,
then you do a heavy deadlift session.
At the end of the week, you do your heavy hip thrust session,
works out great.
And the hip thrust has got really, really good carryover,
especially as the weight gets above,
it starts to get past the last bit, right?
That lock out.
That lock out.
That lock out of the hips.
So if you're programming it, you just need three days a week where you're doing these
kind of heavy compound lifts, where is the auxiliary deadlift type stuff going on?
Where are you fitting that in?
So you can do light dead lifts on the hip thrust day if you want, and there is just technique.
Technique, form, you're, you're looking at,
you know, really staying in the hole, staying tight. The people that I would have do this are people
who really need to work on the, their biomechanics and their feel for the deadlift. If you're deadlift,
like for me, deadlift thing is very second nature. I get right into it. I usually don't even deadlift
a second time a week. But if I'm working with someone, and I notice like, we really need to work on getting
the bar in the right position, staying tight,
they either get too low or too high
at the beginning of it,
then I'll have them do a light deadlift session.
So what my routine looked like around this time
when I hit my PR was I had a day where I was doing
like light deficit deads,
and then I would do light speed pulls.
Yeah.
Combined with one heavy low dead.
Yeah, I like that. And then I would put those on the show Yeah. Combined with one heavy load deck. Yeah, I liked that.
And then I would put those on this.
So like if I was squatting really heavy,
I would still probably deadlift, like deficit decks,
but really light.
It would be really light, full range of motion,
going really deep, controlled, squeezing the top.
It was just like a maybe eight to 10 reps, higher rep range,
and a lot easier weight.
And then on the tip, Threats day, I might be doing like speed.
I like that.
Now I want people to, you know, as they listen to this,
you're giving you lots of different options.
Air on the side of less, not on the side of more.
Yeah, you're already doing one taxing day.
You're already saying to me that you're pushing weight
that's close to a PR, that's more than enough
to elicit some growth changes.
Still on it in the tank, you know, yeah, they're ready to go.
Right.
I noticed with strength, even more so than hypertrophy, with hypertrophy, now strength
and hypertrophy super closely related.
So what I'm about to say is a little bit like, not quite splitting hairs, but it's getting
there.
But that is that training less tends to get you more strength
and pushing your capacities a little more than that
tend to give you more hypertrophy.
So in other words, part of strength is your energy,
how good you feel, how fresh you feel,
how good your CNS is.
Whereas hypertrophy, there's a little bit more stress damage.
We're kind of pushing a little bit
and we're getting building muscle. When it comes to strength, it's like, if you hear all the things that we're pushing a little bit, we're getting building muscle.
When it comes to strength, it's like,
if you hear all the things that we're talking about,
you're like, I'm gonna add all of it,
you're probably better off doing less
when it comes to trying to hit a PR
rather than doing more and more and more.
So it's the smallest thing.
No, that's a good point.
All right, and the last one, or not the last one,
the next one is on that third week,
because this is a 30 day process, right?
So we're trying to do four weeks to get to a PR.
The week before the week, you're going to try to hit your PR.
This is when you go like, dip.
This is when you lift.
Like practicing the lift.
Yeah, you want to get into your lifts,
you want to train at much lower intensity,
you just want to feel tight, you want to feel good,
you want to feel strong, because what you're trying to do
is allow your body
to really recover and be fresh for that following way.
Now, so is light considered still relative to the day
that you, so let's say you still have a heavy lifting day,
but now, when you said before, I might be doing 450.
If my max is 500, I'm doing 450 singles and doubles
or whatever, now I might do 350 or 400.
Yes, 350.
Okay.
Yeah, I'd go way down.
I'll even down to 350.
And I'm just, yeah, I'm just going through the technique
and the form and you know, feel a little bit.
I mean, you're still, you know, you're still lifting.
Yeah, yeah.
But you're not lifting with anywhere near the intensity.
And the idea is to come out of that week.
Really recovered.
Fresh.
Yeah.
In fact, some people, this is not true for everybody, but some people take a week off and come back even stronger.
Now, it's not gonna happen for a lot of you.
For a lot of you, you still wanna train that way.
But the lesson that you're trying to teach right there
and the point you're making is that you can easily overdo it.
You're less likely to underdo it in that final week.
So if anything, air on the even lighter side, you know, and just go
through the motions and not, you do not want to be getting sore from those workouts, getting ready
to lead into the next week. No, in fact, studies show that, you know, because some people will call
this, this will be similar to what they call active recovery week or what is the term that they
use for the week where you train? DeLo. DeLo, thank you. A DeLoad week studies to show that the DeLoad week is where the majority of the muscle and strength things happen the week where you train. D-load. D-load, thank you. A D-load week studies show that the D-load week is where
the majority of the muscle and strength things happen.
So like people train, train, train, train, train, train,
they get some progress and they do a D-load week.
And then the body's adaptation just advances like crazy
during that D-load week.
If you like to work out a lot, you'll probably have
noticed this yourself when you do something like
goingification.
You want to vacation for a week, you don't work out,
you expect to come back and be weaker
and all of a sudden you're stronger on all your lifts.
So that's kind of what's happening here,
and with this you want to set yourself up
for that fourth week, because your goal,
that fourth week is, I'm gonna hit a PR on my deadlift.
So you basically wanna lift light that week
and just kinda go through the motions,
feel the technique in the form.
Now what is, okay, that's specific to the deadlift.
Now what about everything else?
Everything, okay.
Yeah, everything you're going, you're going, you know,
relatively light in comparison to how you were training
the week before.
So you're still doing a workout, but you're not really
training that hard.
You're feeling super good, super fresh.
At the end of that third week, you should feel like,
ramped, like I'm ready to go.
I love really getting into the like, needy gritty and the end of that third week, you should feel like ramped. Like I'm ready to go. I love really getting into the like,
needy-gritty and the nuances of everything
with the grip and just, you know, really setting
my entire body up mechanically to,
so it's like you go to step into the heavyweight,
but you've done it so many times
and repeated that process that it's like
an automatic response going into a heavyweight.
This is where I practice the little things that make the deadlift more
efficient. So like I'll practice pushing my legs through the floor, the feeling of
that versus, versus, you know, pulling the bar off the ground. Yeah, really
bending outward with with my hands. Activate my lats. Yeah, I'll activate my
lats, drop my shoulders, activate my lats, I'll practice that,
pushing my legs through the bar, through the floor,
I'll practice taking the slack off the bar
before I lift, meaning I pull up on the bar just enough,
because you know when you first lift the weight,
there's a little bit of slack on the bar
in terms of, you know, maybe where the barbell is in the plates
or whatever, so I pull up on it a little bit,
create a little bit of tension, activate the lats,
bend the bar, push my legs through and drive my hips forward. And this is when I'll practice that technique. So
that when I go for that heavy lift, the final final week, it's like, it's on.
Now what you guys are kind of alluding to that I think is interesting. And I'm probably
wide just and I think enjoys this part of it so much is almost the sport of it. Oh,
very much. Yeah. And you create a ritual out of it. And what that reminds me of too,
you know, I shared it a while back, the
research on this that I thought was really fascinating where they
had the three different case groups that shot the free throws. And
then certain amount that didn't shoot as many free throws. And
then the person who did nothing but visualize shooting the free
throws and actually the person who visualized shooting the free
throws as much as the person who actually shot the free throws.
So almost the same percentage of increase.
Something I also remember during my PRs of any lifts was the lead up in this time of
this month, I'm thinking about it a lot.
I'm like, I'm all, I'm concerned.
I'm thinking about tomorrow, I'm going to deadlift.
Oh, I'm going to focus more on this.
Like, you're talking about the grips and these things like that.
Like, I was so into deadlifting.
And I really remember this because it was when we all first got together.
And I really, for the first time in my life, was trying to see if I could get my dead
lift up really high.
And never before that, I didn't care to do that.
And so I was thinking about it all the time.
All my lifts, all my workouts, every time I approached a gym, that day, when I, okay,
I'm going to deadlift today, but when I do it,
these are the things I'm thinking about,
and I was processing that through my head,
even when I wasn't going through it,
I think that has a lot to do.
Client the chalk the same way,
I'm like stomping my foot to dig,
so I'm getting a good anchor point there,
and like all those things we talked about
with how we really focused on bending the bar,
and we get our body like really set up to be as rigid as possible
Oh, yeah, I mean 100% you know that's that's all those things and then some I mean I'll walk up to the to the bar
and
I'll visualize that I need to rip something off the ground to save somebody or I'll
Grab the bar and I'll make this angry face and try to listen to a for you know a feeling of anger and I'll practice that
Right because then it gets me in the zone.
A lot of people don't know this,
but strength is so much a skill and so much your technique
and so much how your ability to elicit
the right emotional response.
That the difference between a PR and just
being lifting kind of heavy is there.
I mean, you can add 10 pounds, 15 pounds to a lift just by, you
know, manipulating your technique by 1% or tension or feeling or the right emotion response.
So it actually makes a difference and that's the goal. The goal here is a hit a PR. So our
goal here is to use everything we can to squeeze out every single pound. All right. Next
is a really in reference to the rest of the body.
And that is to train with moderate intensity for the rest of the body.
So a big mistake that people make when they're trying to hit a PR in a lift is they try
to hit a PR in every lift at the same time.
So they're going through like the strength cycle.
Now, there's nothing wrong with that.
And you can definitely increase your strength across the board.
And this is why I think people get confused is when they get stronger, the tend to get generally stronger. But if you're trying
to hit a PR in a specific lift, it's going to be really hard to push your body to also hit a PR
and overhead press and bench press and rows and pull-ups and stuff like that. So you want to train
everything and you want to train everything good, but your goal isn't to go crazy on everything
else. You want to leave that for the dead your goal isn't to go crazy on everything else.
You want to leave that for the dead. I think that this tip is so important.
When you're so back to my point of I'm thinking about the deadlift all time. So when I'm doing
other exercises, I'm constantly thinking about how it's going to affect my deadlift or how it
was going to compliment support. You know what I'm doing? That's right. Right, and so I would consider my programming
and my choice of intensity on other exercises
based off of what I wanted to do from the deadlift.
So if I knew I'm going into a heavy deadlift day tomorrow
and I'm excited about it, I'm thinking about it,
I'm gonna see if I can do better than what I did last week.
And then today I'm doing chest and shoulders
and some other exercises. I'm thinking about waves, like when I do this chest stuff today or I'm doing like chest and shoulders and some other exercises.
I'm thinking about ways like when I do this chest stuff today or I'm doing this and that
like I only want to go this heavy or I only want to train this hard because I want to be
really ready to go tomorrow. So I think that's such an important point to make that everybody
kind of just kind of goes through their normal routine and they're kind of crushing the
weights and everything. And what they don't realize is, even if they're following the tips you're giving, but then they're smashed,
you know, the lap pull down the day before,
like lots of pull ups, and then they don't think
that's going to affect their heavy deadlift.
Or hamstrings or something like that.
Right, right, yeah, they do it.
Leg curls really hard the day before,
and then they're gonna go over and they're gonna do deadlifts
the next day and not think that's going to affect it.
Like absolutely, it's going to affect it.
And so making sure that you're modifying,
not only exercises, but the intensity of exercises,
leading up to your, everything I built around the week
was around the deadlift.
Yes, and what I wanted to do that week in the deadlift.
Yeah, good way, because you are training heavy
with the hip thrust on the squat, which have carryover,
but everything else, you still want to work out.
So I'm not saying you go in there and don't work them out, but you're not trying to hammer
them and push them too hard.
Now this is different for everybody, but I noticed the most detrimental effects for my
deadlift when I over fatigue, and just again, it can be different from anybody, but when
I over fatigue my forearms, and how can this happen?
When I hit my arms really hard, and I noticed this just training over the years, like when I'm trying
to hit a PR in deadlift, I get that mentality
of just overall strength and I'll train and hit,
heavy curls and heavy tricep extension
and all kinds of heavy everything.
Then my forearms get a little tight and sore
and then where I'll fail is in gripping the bar.
I can't hold on to the bar.
Now for someone else, this may be too much hamstring work.
I actually had a client who hammered their calves and it hammered their deadlift because of the stability in the ankles.
So yeah, you want, again, I think you put it beautifully out of them. The idea is the center,
because we're trying to hit a pier on the deadlift. It's the center, everything around that,
not take away from your strength in that particular lift. All right, now some fun, right? Let's talk
about the pre-workout supplement stack.
And I'm going to be honest with you, this actually has the least amount to do with you hitting a PR,
but it'll do something. It'll give you a few percent. Well, I would make the case that it gives
a little bit more than you think so long as you haven't been already abusing it heading into.
Oh, so good. So like this is where, you know where you hear us talk on the show all the time about cycling off of caffeine for a while.
Like if I want a PR, I'm coming off of a week or two
where I just cycled off.
And now I'm starting to ramp up the usage of it.
That way I'm reaping the max benefits from it.
Yeah, so the first compound is caffeine.
Now here's how I like to do it based off kind of,
you know, just to piggyback off what you're saying out of them.
You have three heavy workout days. You're your squat day at the beginning of the week, you're deadlift day, and then you're hip thrust day.
So that's three days a week where you could take a nice dose of caffeine. The rest of the week your caffeine intake should be low or ideally none.
That keeps it fresh enough to where when it's time for you to do your PR,
you take your caffeine and it hits you. The mistake people make is that take the caffeine
every single day. And then it loses its effect and you have to take more and more. And then
what you end up getting is more side effects and less actual results.
Yeah, and obviously you don't want to take too much so you get that shaky feeling. That's
not going to aid in your benefit either. So it's like, you gotta know the right dose.
And I know you didn't add the smelling salts in there,
but you're like, that would be like, obviously that's a,
like a professional kind of way to handle it,
but like it's not for everybody,
but it does stimulate that focus,
which is really what you're trying to do,
is just channel all of the focus in direct,
you know, that recruitment all in one center.
Yeah, the reason why I'm putting smelling salts here is because that's that's like too vast is what I just hit or miss.
Yeah, you ever have somebody that like practice with smelling salts?
Use it. What did you do?
Yeah, but I mean, it did. It definitely helped me. It does for me. I always use a smile.
I never show them on my videos, but right before I hit play,
if you're watching me hit a heavy lift,
there was smelling salts involved.
But caffeine has been shown in studies
to reliably increase strength in people
who have a sensitivity to it.
And what I mean by that is not like,
they can't have caffeine, they're sensitive.
What I mean by that is they were off caffeine for a bit
and then they took a dose of caffeine,
and you see this strength boost from it.
Now you mentioned something,
and I'm gonna talk about a second compound here,
in reference to what you said,
you said you don't wanna take too much caffeine
to where your jittery or shaky, okay?
This is why we add thehyene.
Thehyene is an amino acid that when combined with caffeine,
makes it a smoother stimulating effect.
Now, some of someone may think like,
why would you want it to be smooth? Aren't you trying to be angry and edgy and don't
you want all this power? Think of it this way. It's like having a magnifying glass that
you shine a light through it, right? And the magnifying glass, where I position it,
will focus the light and make a point. There's two ways I can make that the point that
I'm making with the light hotter or more powerful. One way is to increase the light behind the magnifying glass.
That's your caffeine.
The other way is to focus the point even more.
That's the theonine.
Combined, you get this loud signal, which is the caffeine, and the theonine really focuses
it so that when you're doing your lift, you don't have all this energy coming out of
your body and other directions.
It's focused to lift.
That's why you want hype with focus.
Hype by itself is exhausting.
It actually results in energy loss.
You end up results in less strength.
Absolutely, yeah.
So the theine with the caffeine makes a huge difference.
And you want a two to one ratio.
So you want however much caffeine you took,
I like to take twice as much theine in.
A lot of people think one to one is good,
and my experience two to one seems to be best.
And when I give you guys caffeine a thinning,
that's what I do.
I give you guys two to one.
I mean, the biggest point, I think, for all the supplement
talk is that the key is actually to have refrain
from using too much of it, and then adding it
into your routine is when you're gonna really reap
the benefits when it comes to chasing a PR.
If you've been taking it every day and you're consistently taking it, like this is
where this is really going to matter very little, but if you did a good job of pulling caffeine out
of your diet for a while and then reintroducing it because you're trying to utilize like this,
then I see huge benefits. Totally. And now one more compound, by the way, this is all about 45 minutes
before you're going to go do your
Deadlift. You want to give yourself 45 minutes for all this stuff to kind of kick in and ramp up your CNS.
The last compound I'll say that you can add, and this is my own anecdote. It's called Agmatine.
And this is a compound closely related to Argonine, the amino acid. But it has interesting pain relieving
amino acid, but it has interesting pain relieving effects in the body to where I notice when I take it, I feel a little bit more invincible when I work out. I feel like I can just generate more force
because I have less stiffness and it is a real nice combination with a caffeine and
the theine. You'll find it in some pre workouts, but you know, a couple of grams of Agmentine
with a caffeine and theine, about 45 minutes before you're going to attempt your lift.
Next up is something that you would do two hours before you're going to attempt your dead
lift, and that is to have a nice meal and a lot of water.
I like to have a good, you know, 50 grams of carbohydrates, 40 grams of protein, and then I'll make sure I have, you know,
maybe 30 ounces of water with this meal, two hours before. So I have good carbohydrates,
good glycogen, good fuel, and my muscles are hydrated, and that's two hours before.
I do my...
And you want to kind of go through this so you know what that right amount is, because you don't
want to have any kind of sluggish...
I've added too many carbs before and actually,
you know, you know, went away from me in terms of like,
I just felt a little bit sluggish going into the lift.
And so, you know, finding that right balance
is everything.
So if you can do that, obviously the week or two before
and kind of work your way up to what that perfect meal is,
that's like, you know, how individualized
do you think this part is?
Oh, it could be very individualized.
Yeah, it's adjusting at the knee on the head too.
It could be too much too little, the wrong foods.
I mean, I really got to a point where,
because the opportunity to track
as diligent as I did for as long as I did.
Oh, you had it down to the ground.
Oh, yeah, I had it down to the ground, the time, everything.
I had to eat two meals before we were good. Just because my body, I had it down to the ground, the time, everything. I had to eat two meals before we're going.
Just because my body, I needed that much calories
to support my size and that kind of a workout.
Plus, you were training so high volume at that point, right?
So the workouts before too.
Yes, so I, and then the, and I had my stand,
which is very similar to what we, the creatures I have at,
I used to make my own homemade version of that.
That was my first meal.
Then I'd have a second large breakfast.
It was like steak, eggs, potatoes.
That was the meal.
I wanted it a good two hours before.
It was fully digested by the time I got to my workout.
I had to be really hydrated too.
I had to have at least a half a gallon of water.
Half a gallon of water, the combination of those, which was about 75 to 80 plus grams of carbohydrates plus the
big meal steak, which is probably in the eggs, which is the cholesterol to your point.
That meal, there was nothing like it. There was no supplement. There was no other supplement.
There was no other combination of meal. And I did so many different. I played with stack
and pancakes and doing all kinds of like higher carb,
like nothing compared to that combo of meals.
So I can't stress enough how powerful it can be
to kind of play with those combinations
and become aware of, and this is again,
back to why I like tracking so much
is that because of that I learned that.
I learned that like if I ever want to really,
if I want a crazy workout, I know the foods that I need to eat.
You know our meal.
Yeah, and even just to have great workouts.
So obviously, I'm not always chasing a PR
when I was competing, but I always wanted a great feel
to my workout where I felt pumped and felt energized
and there is a combination of foods that,
and I couldn't support the science behind why
that was so good for me.
I was eating out too.
I'm eating out a restaurant, it was a cafe.
It's not like I was having the most ideal, perfect,
I'm sure there was some extra butter
that was on the steak and things like that
that they cooked it in their oils.
So I know it wasn't the most healthy option
that I could have, but boy,
it sure was a great combo for me for eating it.
Yeah, for me, it's 40 grams of carbs, about 30, 40 grams,
or 50 grams of carbs, about 30, 40 grams of protein,
and you know, some fat, like, you know, 90 to 10 grams,
and then 32 ounces of water.
That was, that's mine, about two hours before,
and I just have the best workouts, I'm stronger.
If that right there, I've actually got it down to the pounds. It'll
consistently result in a good five to ten pounds more in my workout, with whatever exercise.
I'm just, you know, whatever that is, five to ten percent stronger, I notice in my workout.
And then definitely more stamina. So, and this isn't really a stamina thing because we're talking
about PR. But if I'm going to do a long workout, man, does it make a huge difference if I have that meal
two hours before? All right.
Now, right before you do your lift, how you prime is going to make a big difference.
This can be pretty individual to the person based upon movement and balance that they have
or tightness or issues that they have.
For me personally, soft tissue work is really good for PR day and I'll typically foam roll my
lats, right under my armpits, my hips, just because of those areas seem to be pretty
involved in the deadlift for me and they tend to be tight.
And then from there, I'll do body weight, hip thrust, just to activate my glutes.
And then I'll do some moderate, like intensity suitcase holds or carries, just to activate
my QL, right?
The kind of lateral stability,
because if I hurt myself, it's because that's off.
And then I get into my deadlift,
and I do a couple of few warm ups
that's working up to my PR.
Do you guys have priming specifically for your soul?
Oh, you know, 100%.
And I actually think that there,
not only is there an individual component here,
but then there also is that sport ritual component here too.
And so I kind of, I prime for all my workouts right now
and I have a couple of things that I do
that gets my general priming.
And then when I recall back to my heavy deadlifting days
and when I was chasing numbers like this,
boy, I had a very, I mean, down to the carry my bag up,
drop it down by the platform, unzip get all my stuff out, I mean, down to the carry my bag up, drop it down by the platform, you know,
unzip, get all my stuff out that I need,
my different shoes, all the stuff that I want,
my music is already playing that I need to hear
to get myself all amped up, I get down,
I do my kind of easier stuff, like my 90, 90s
and my combat, lizard with rotation,
then I get into my leg swings,
and I'm like, it's like this 10, 10, 15 minute,
like just really slowly
warming the body up, starting to get ramped up with the music,
the pre workout, starting to really set into my body and stuff like that.
And then get into the first real light, light rep of a warm up
where I'm just feeling the bar and the way that I can normally tell by that
first, you know, 135 pounds, which is nothing to pull off the round, how it comes up, like what kind of day it's going to be, based off of the way I
primed and set myself up of like, okay, I'm going to be able to get after today or
or knowing, which by the way, too, I think is an important thing that we didn't
really talk about here is that I had to learn that when the way I felt and set
one would actually steer and dictate where I was
going for that day.
So even if I said today is my heavy 450 pound day, if I got out of there and it just didn't
feel right, if this, some of the other components, the sleep was off, if something was off, then
I would scale back even more of that.
But then other times I'd get in and it's like, oh, I hit everything.
I mean, that bar felt like it had no weight on it,
pulling it up and it's like today,
today's gonna be one of those days.
Like, you can feel it.
I feel like you can, and part of that is how well
you prime into it, to get into it and get ready.
And the first time you touch that bar,
you have an idea of what kind of day it's gonna be.
Yeah, for me, if I prime right and I do a good job,
I go up to the bar and start with my warmup set
and I feel zero, I don't know,
for lack of a better term hitches in my form.
So I don't feel like it's like a two-stage deadlift.
Sometimes people with deadlift, their hips
come up too little too fast or they're too low
and they're pulling the bar into their shins.
It feels super smooth.
I also don't feel any stiffness or tightness.
I do feel tight, but I don't feel the kind of tightness
that feels limiting, I feel tight in the sense
that I feel strong.
And that's what it feels like right out the gates.
That's how I know I prime properly.
Because I get in the bar and I lift and it's like,
a piston, whoop, bar moves up and everything feels smooth.
And you've alluded to like a lot of those like secondary
muscles that are helping to stabilize everything. That's really you've alluded to like a lot of those like secondary muscles that are helping to stabilize everything.
That's really what I'm focusing on a lot of times
when I'm going into prime, making sure QL,
making sure you know, like I'm getting my shoulders
fully retracted, I'm getting myself to like
a brace and get as rigid as possible.
And one thing too, like so in this category,
like before I even go to the attempt to lift,
like I'll take like a stick and I'm just like driving it as hard as I can into the ground
because I'm just, I'm literally ramping up my central nervous system as loud as possible.
And that's the way that I can do that without like completely fatiguing it right away.
But I'm able to drive and then get everything ready.
So that when I get to the bar, I can emulate that and I can really kind of like
enhance the amount of recruitment I can do.
You know it's funny, so one of our friends,
Lane Norton, great deadlifter, right?
Natural deadlifter, I think he holds some records
in the deadlift for his body weight, drug tested,
this guy's a beast, you ever seen him when he walks up
to the bar, he stomps down, stomps down,
reaches out with his arms real tight, and then he goes down.
When he's doing, I don't know if he realizes or not, I know it's his ritual, but he's
turning on a CNS.
When he reaches out like that, he's like, oh, he's tight, like he's turning on.
I do something similar, but I don't grab a stick and drive it on the ground.
When I walk up the bar right beforehand, I do this with my teeth and I tense up my whole
body.
And what it grinded.
Yes, because what it's doing is it's like turning on my CNS to be, to feel like I'm,
I'm going to turn on and really maximize its power output.
So I do something similar, except from my, I actually go high, like Lane does this kind
of out in front. I go all the way up, but I'm actually activating my lats. Yeah.
Because one of the, one of the challenges that I had was always bending the bar and locking,
locking my, my lats in and tightening them up. So me, it's this quick activation of,
okay, there they are, so I can feel my lats,
so I stretch them real quick,
and then I get in the bar so I can tensify them
and then lock in, but yeah,
I think that the priming the routine,
plus you alluded to your isometric holy do,
I got on a kick for a while there
after you taught us the Dumfee squat,
and I think that's a really good one to prime for a deadlift or a squat before.
So that was something that I did for a while that I really liked.
And when you've done a good job of knowing like how to how to prime the position you
get into, one of the things that's cool is that you can get right into that position
and create a good isometric and that's sometimes.
That's what you want.
Yeah, that's a really good warm up right before you get in and itself.
Yeah, you're not trying to go loose heavy deadlift.
You want to get, grab the bar, get tight,
activate everything and then go.
That's going to give you more power
and it's going to take the slack off the bar,
reduce energy loss and maximize your lift.
And if you follow these steps,
your odds of hitting a PR in 30 days are pretty high.
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