Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1990: Nine Reasons People Stop Working Out (& What to Do About It)
Episode Date: January 16, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover nine reasons people stop working out and how to get back on track.  Nine Reasons People Stop Working Out (& What to do About it). (1:45)  #1 - Lack of m...otivation or interest. (2:36) #2 - Lack of time. (4:51) #3 – Boredom. (8:43) #4 - Injuries or health issues. (11:00) #5 - Financial issues. (14:17) #6 - Lack of progress. (16:38) #7 - Life changes. (22:04) #8 - Lack of accountability. (25:23) #9 - Lack of proper guidance and instruction. (29:24) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit NCI Gut Health Masterclass for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! January Promotion: NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS SPECIAL OFFERS! (New to Weightlifting Bundle, Body Transformation Bundle, and New Year Extreme Intensity Bundle) You get massive savings with each offer. Mind Pump #1385: How To Start Your Fitness & Fat Loss Journey MAPS 15 Minutes Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress – Mind Pump Blog The Secrets Of A $100m Business – Alex & Leila Hormozi | Modern Wisdom Podcast 490 Using Workouts to Create Balance In Life – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump TV - YouTube Is it Worth it to Hire a Personal Trainer? - Mind Pump Blog 30 Days of Coaching | Mind Pump Media MAPS ANABOLIC Program - Day 1 | Phase 1 (MIND PUMP) - YouTube Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Rob Dyrdek (@robdyrdek) Instagram Alex Hormozi (@hormozi) Instagram
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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?
In today's episode, we talk about the nine reasons why people stop working out
and what you can do about it. Now, this episode is brought to you by some sponsors,
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All right, here comes the show.
In today's episode, we're gonna talk about the nine reasons
why people stop working out.
These are the most common reasons,
and what you can actually do about them.
All right, let's talk about the reason,
because it's January.
We've heard all the excuses.
Everybody's, well, lots of people.
Yeah.
Have you either started working out for the first time
or gotten back into it
or trying to increase even the amount of workouts
that they're doing.
This is like Christmas for the fitness industry,
it is for retail, right?
Just lots and lots of new people
and the problem is the vast majority of them by,
what month would you say everybody drops off, right?
I'm March April, was everybody kind of stopped?
It's a good call March.
Yeah, so what we did is we wrote down
just the top reasons why people stop
and then kind of the solution,
you know, either how to prevent them from happening
or if it happens to you, how to fix that.
Number one, lack of motivation or interest.
Yeah, that's a big one.
I think that mostly has to do with the fact
that people try to set themselves up
with workout schedules based on their kind of motivated state of mind.
So they overshoot their goals.
So they're like, I'm not working out.
Oh my god, I'm so motivated January.
I'm going to start going to the gym three days a week.
And once the motivation is gone, it becomes too big of a commitment, too much for them to continue.
So I think the key to this really is to start or to avoid this is to start slow.
Start very, very slow, something that's manageable even when the motivation fades.
It's hard to tell somebody when they're in that state of mind, because they feel like they're being so proactive
and they're really attacking their goals aggressively
and that's nothing but good.
More is always better when in fact,
when they take too much on a lot of times,
that's gonna be a deterrent for them
to stick with it long-term.
I really like the idea of making a list
of all these healthy behaviors
that you would like to include into your life.
And then your goal is just to try and implement those more
and more as the year goes on versus setting this.
Yeah, versus saying this, like,
I'm going to the gym five days for one hour,
I'm gonna do this program, I'm gonna do it.
Like, here's a bunch of things I know
that I should do more of in my life.
It would make me a healthier, better version of myself,
make that list, and that could be a little,
it'll be unique to each person. And then make it a goal to continue to implement those on a regular basis. And don't buy it off
more than you can chew. Don't be silly and go, if you list 10 or 15 things that go tomorrow,
I'm doing all 10 of these. This is, you know, start shipping away at them. You measured about it.
Yeah. And slowly include them and build some momentum. And by the way, people who have achieved long-term
consistency with exercise, it's not that they necessarily
fall in love with the workouts themselves.
Usually what happens is they fall in love
with the consistency and they have workouts that they love
and they have workouts that they don't love
and some are great and some suck and some,
they hit PRs and others or they just feel terrible,
but what they fell in love with was the consistency and the discipline of the workouts.
And that's why they never stop. That's why they're so consistent.
All right, this next one, this one's huge because there's a myth around exercise that you have
to do a lot in order to reap any benefit whatsoever. So this next one is just lack of time.
People are today more sedentary than ever,
but they're also busier than ever.
Everything is structured and scheduled.
If your kids don't even go out and play on their own
anymore, like they used to, you get the schedule play dates,
you bring your phone with you everywhere,
so you got email and contact and just,
it's like everything is so structured out that it feels like,
I just don't have the time to dedicate,
the amount of working out that I think I need to get any kind of result.
I don't think we structure this necessarily in order of like the most common, but I feel
like this is one of the most common that I hear all the time from clients because inevitably
they have work, they have all these things that have to accomplish throughout the day.
And then their priorities start to shift after a while to where they start to think,
well, if I'm spending all this time doing this fitness and I'm trying to improve, and this
is impeding on me, be able to get my work done at work, I'm not spending time with my family,
like they can make, it's really easy to make excuses in other directions when you don't properly
set yourself up for success and do like just
the right amount. I agree, but I think the mistake that many of us in the fitness community make
when addressing this is breaking down the math. Yeah. Right. So the common. So you have the time.
That's right. The common and I'm guilty of this as a young trainer. I used to do this where I would break down the total hours in a week. How much
of that's working. How much is sleeping. Let's okay. Tell me this stuff. Oh, you want to
play with your kid? Okay. How much do you on a daily and then you start to list it all
out. Then you show them like, well, look at you. You're obviously wasting four to five
hours a day. You know, I'm saying you can't commit to me to get 30 minutes or an hour
every single day. That's all I'm asking. You can't commit to me to get 30 minutes or an hour every single day.
That's all I'm asking.
It's more, obviously you don't want to do it.
You know, so you use this like guilt people
into not using that as a terrible strategy as a coach.
And the truth is, even if you kind of know it's bullshit,
that's not the strategy to lead this person
to a successful journey.
Or to lead yourself.
Yeah, and so yeah, right.
If you don't have a coach
and this is self-talk and you think you're really busy
and then you're like, no, I just need to commit,
like don't over commit, you know?
And this is what I love about something like Maps 15
is start with something that is a very easy commitment
for you and be consistent with that.
Like the habits and behaviors, the first one,
meet yourself where you're at currently right now.
Don't overextend.
Maybe the long-term goal is to get to a place where you train every day for an hour,
or five to seven days a week.
Great.
But right now, start at a place that you know will be easy and then build momentum on that
and then build time as you go on.
And you can actually enjoy it.
Right.
Which is that's what was going to continue your
effort in going into it. If you're hating it, you only lasts so long when you're punishing yourself.
Yeah, the benefits of exercise come from the adaptations that they induce and any amount is better
than no amount. So, meaning 10 minutes a day, which is 70 minutes a week, which will get your body to change, and you will see improvements in your health.
So when people would tell me,
yeah, I just don't have a lot of time.
I would say, well, how much time do you think
you can commit to exercise on a realistic basis?
There was no wrong answer.
I don't care what they told me, 20 minutes, 30 minutes,
you know, five minutes a day.
That's what we're gonna start with.
We're gonna start with five minutes a day.
And you would see changes.
By the way, as you incorporate five minutes a day or 10 minutes a day. That's what we're gonna start with. We're gonna start with five minutes a day. And you would see changes. By the way, as you incorporate
five minutes a day or 10 minutes a day or whatever,
and that becomes consistent,
you'll find naturally that you'll find the impetus
and the time to start adding more.
That happens 100% of time
with everybody that ever worked with when time was an issue.
They end up finding more of it.
All right, the next one is boredom.
A lot of people find working out to be boring at some point.
Now, those two things to understand about this.
One is any kind of activity that gets you moving, if you compare to not moving at all,
so long as it's appropriate, is way better than nothing.
So if you like to dance, if you like to hike, if you like to row, or swim, or stretch, or lefweights,
or whatever, all of that is exercise,
and you can do any of that to become more active.
The second thing, which is kind of counter this,
but they both believe in how they're going hand in hand,
is thinking that you need to be entertained all the time,
or you do everything all the time.
Sometimes you just go in and you just do what you're supposed to do.
And the reason why I'm saying that part is,
because no matter what you pick,
there are gonna be times when even the thing you enjoy,
you're not gonna enjoy it as much.
And you have to do it anyway, otherwise you're gonna lose
that consciousness.
A lot of the answer to this one is literally reframing
how you look at it.
One of the strategies that I like for that,
and we've talked about this on the podcast before,
which is looking at the exercise portion,
which most people look at as like this,
the means to get this body fat off,
the means to change this body I don't like
into the something that instead of that,
thinking about, I wanna get good at these movements, right?
I wanna get good at these exercises,
and going into it as if you're trying to practice them
to be better at the movements.
Learning skill.
Right, versus the outcome that's supposed to happen
from the consistency of the training.
Ultimately, even if that is the main goal
is to lose, say, 20 pounds or whatever,
but when you go into the workouts,
look at them as like, oh, I wanna get good at this squat.
This is also why I like the format of
like map 15 for somebody who also struggles with this. It's just like, instead of overcom
bikining it and trying to dazzle them with all kinds of different exercises and this long,
hour workout that they have to do is just from exercise to exercise and they get bored.
It's like, let's just pick one or two really good movements that I know are extremely
beneficial. And let's get good at them.
So let's really focus on the form, the technique and the strength that you're getting from
it and just hone in on getting really good at these compound lives.
This is a great strategy for someone who looks at the gym as a boring task that they have
to do every single day.
Next one is injuries or health issues.
We'll start with health issues.
Actually they're both connected in the sense that
your form of exercise needs to be appropriate for you.
The only reason why injuries and health issues become
an issue with exercise is because people are applying
exercise inappropriately for themselves.
Because exercise, first of all,
it's broad category of lots and lots of,
almost an infinite array
of methods and ways to get the body to improve its health.
And as long as they're applied appropriately, you could do this with all, with, I mean,
if you're injured, rehab involves exercise, right?
If you have, you know, a bad heart, there's a form of activity you could do to improve
your heart health, right?
You can exercise through almost anything
so long as it's appropriate.
This becomes a problem,
mainly because people work out wrong,
or they over apply intensity,
or they do too much for their body.
That's when it becomes a big issue.
Well, too, I mean, I like to look at this
as an opportunity, really look at what was benefiting you
and your training and what probably wasn't benefiting
and your training and to be able to address that
while you're going through the rehab process
and really lean into it of,
maybe I wasn't incorporating enough unilateral training.
Maybe I wasn't incorporating enough type of training
that brought me outside of this sagittal plane of movement.
And this is where to be able to not repeat the same patterns,
like this is a lesson that I hope that, you know, you take the opportunity to learn
and to now incorporate things
that you might have been deficient in.
So when we were running the gyms,
this was actually the, in the top three
of reasons why people quit the gym.
Yes.
For sure, is getting hurt.
And in my experience, the number one reason before that
is the over application of intensity.
It's this mindset that I'm coming from this motivated place.
I want to make a change.
I want to get after it.
I'm fired up.
I'm excited.
It's January and they go after it.
And they apply more intensity thinking that the more they do,
the more they get after it, the better their results will be.
It's just inappropriate for them.
Not always inappropriate.
It's also wrong.
That's right.
It's wrong.
It is not the fastest way. The faster way is the appropriate amount of intensity, which is more often than not,
a lot less. And by the way, this is a mistake even made by very experienced lifters is and again,
my personal story, I made this mistake year in and year out where fall off the wagon a little
bit, get back in it right away, know what I'm capable of doing,
get in the gym and think like I wanna get right back
to that place again.
So I start programming the way I was lifting before
and the truth is I didn't need nowhere near
that much intensity and volume to see change in my physique.
And in fact, all I end up doing is adapting
to that intensity and volume faster
and then promoting me to want to increase it more
and slowing down my progress.
So learning to less is more,
especially when you're getting started
and you're talking about intensity and volume.
Yeah, I mean, that very much reiterates my point.
It's like if you don't learn that lesson
and really take that as an opportunity to improve,
you're just gonna apply the same method.
You wanna rush through the process of rehab in order to get to that place that
you felt like you're at your peak, to be able to now apply that same type of intensity
and stress, which then you're just going to put you right back in that same position.
Yeah, totally.
The next one is financial issues.
And this one is because people think that they have to go to a gym or have exercise access to exercise equipment
in order to get a workout that's meaningful,
because otherwise what's the point
tends to be what the attitude is.
Huge myth, huge myth, you need zero exercise equipment
to have an effective workout.
None, you need zero.
In fact, I train people like this all the time
when I would go to people's homes.
I didn't even bring equipment with me.
Initially, I thought, I don't, what do I need?
I need nothing.
I'll just train somebody with their body weight.
And there's literally hundreds of exercises
you could do in movements that will require nothing
but your body and intention and good technique and form.
And you get a great workout.
So the fitness industry has sold this as a myth
because they want you to believe
that equipment is necessary. Because if you do, then you're want you to believe that equipment is necessary,
because if you do, then you're going to pay to use that equipment.
But otherwise, you need nothing.
Not to mention there are many other aspects of health that I can begin taking steps towards
that are going to improve my overall fitness that does not require a gym whatsoever.
And that goes back to the original point I made about making this list of all these
healthy habits. Like getting to bed before 10 o'clock is a healthy habit that costs you nothing.
Going outside and going for a walk two or three times a day for 10 minutes costs you nothing.
Like there's getting processed foods out of your diet, quitting the diet,
coke, stopping the smoking. I mean, there's so many,
I should save you money. There's eating less means you buy less groceries, you save money.
There's many things that you can do.
Okay, and what I love about that, like so if someone were to come, oh, I can't afford to do so,
I can't do that.
It's like, okay, let's do the things you can do.
There's a whole host of things that we can do to improve your health that will move you
in that direction.
And then what ends up happening, which is funny, is that, you know, as they get momentum,
they start to build winds,
they start to see progress and change in their health,
now suddenly the funds arrive.
They can now afford to do these things.
And the truth is, they really didn't want to do it that bad.
They were looking at excuses for why they shouldn't do it.
They didn't do the things that cost them no money
or potentially save them money.
Once they do start doing those things,
they see the momentum and now they get a little more
excited about it. Now I'm willing to maybe sacrifice something else to
spend the money on the gym.
That tends to happen, but even if they didn't do that, you don't need equipment. Just bottom
line, you just don't need any equipment to improve your health and fitness with exercise.
All right, the next one is lack of progress. Okay. Lack of progress is two things. One is
it's a poorly programmed
workout. So it's a workout that just isn't designed very well. But here's the second reason
and this is the bigger one is that people tend to only measure progress by the scale.
If the scale isn't moving, they're not progressing. Thus they're ignoring all of the other changes
that are happening in their bodies like better mood,
better libido, better energy, better sleep, less joint pain.
These are all signs of awesome progress that we tend to ignore because all we do is pay
attention to the scale.
Then because the scale is not moving, this isn't worth it.
I'm not going to do any more.
Pay attention, everything, and you'll find that you're actually progressing,
not always gonna be on the scale,
but you're gonna be progressing
in some very mean way.
Yeah, it's much like any of these new habits,
you gotta build these positive associations with it
for you to really see all the benefits of it.
Yeah, if you're just looking at that one metric,
I'm not losing weight at a rapid pace,
like I'm hoping for, you know,
that's, you're gonna get's, you're gonna get frustrated,
you're gonna get discouraged, and you know,
it's gonna demotivate you, whereas you build up
all these other accounts for different metrics
of like what's going positively, my strengths increasing,
I'm able to do more pushups than I did before,
you know, I'm outside more often, I'm getting fresh air,
I'm gonna get sleep, you know,
all of these things contribute towards your goal.
Why do you guys think this is one of the hardest?
I think I find myself to still to this day
when I think of family and friends, past clients,
people I still communicate, health and fitness to,
that this is one that I have to consistently reiterate.
And is it because of how we've been marketed to
for something like everything we tend to attach to the way we value
The weight and the look in the mirror more than everything else
It's just a vanity thing. We're so vain as humans like that. We're so hung up on I care really more about that
Like who cares that my relationships get over with my wife who cares? I'm gonna be better sleep
Who cares that I'm a nicer human to be like who care, I don't look good, right?
So is that what it is, we're so vain
that we ignore the other important signals?
They do, and I think people become impatient
because they want the scale to move so bad,
not realizing that all these other positive things
that they notice.
Contribute to that.
They're actually showing you that you're moving
in that direction.
Sometimes the weight loss doesn't happen for a little while,
but the signs that you're getting
that you're moving in the right direction
or all the things that we listed.
One day it happens all at once.
And then all of a sudden, weight loss, muscle gain, those types of things, they don't tend to happen on the slow consensus, you know, kind of slow step scale.
It tends to be like, boom, I see some progress and I don't see any for a while.
In that one metric, by the way.
But there are other ways you can measure progress.
Now, when I train clients, I got really good at this because I would see them every week. So I would remind
them, we talk about things, I would lead conversations in a way to get them to notice these things
themselves. It was very effective, but I did have to make a conscious effort to, you know,
quote unquote, remind them of these types of things. Now, after training people for the
same person for a couple years,
then it became something that they started to really value and see
and it didn't become an issue.
Yeah, so I remember also following up and asking
and I would get you to get a lot of times just like,
no, everything's the same, everything's the same, right?
And what I learned from that was many of these people,
they weren't looking for those other things.
And you have to, and I think that's why,
part of why this is challenging.
We are so vain, we're so hung up in the scale,
and how we look that we're not even really
evaluating the other things.
And then we just assume they're the same, right?
Your trainer follows up with you the week later,
and you say, oh, the scale hasn't moved,
then he goes, well, how's your sleep?
How's your energy?
How's your relationship with your wife?
How, then you're like, those are fine. It's the same. Is goes, well, how's your sleep? How's your energy? How's your relationship with your wife? How's that?
And you're like, those are fine.
It's the same.
Well, have you been really tracking the same way you look at the scale three times a day?
Have you been asking yourself, like, oh, man, am I in a better mood?
And how's my skin?
How's my hair?
Keeping a journal throughout the day makes a big difference.
Right.
I like that advice, because I feel like we need to give more than just telling people to
reframe or look at other things. I feel like this is challenging for a lot of people, because you feel like we need to give more than just telling people to reframe
or look at other things.
I feel like this is challenging for a lot of people, because you could say it all you want,
but you still are hung up on the way I look or the what's on the scale.
I'm kind of paying attention to those things, but I'm not measuring them the same way I'm
measuring my weight or judging myself in the mirror.
You need to be able to, and you know, who has a really cool method,
like this, even though it's not as weight loss.
Rob Deerdeck does this thing where he, he, he, he has tracked, and he did this really diligently
when all these aspects of his life, like the time he spends on it and then scoring himself.
And so he can evaluate at the end of every month, like, where, where he needs,
what he needs to put his attention, Where he needs to put his attention.
And I just think that's a, no, obviously not everybody's
going to do that, but I think it's an incredible exercise
to have these things that you list off
that we've been mentioning everything
from skin, hair, sleep, mood, relationships,
like production, like, and score yourself
on a consistent basis.
And then when you look at,
oh, I've been doing all these new healthy behaviors,
be objective about, are those improving?
And if you see, even though the scale
is not moving the way you want it to move right away,
but a lot of these other markers
are moving positively in the right direction,
be easy on yourself, stay the course
because the other things come and I promise.
100%.
All right, this next one is life changes.
This one's a big one because it's easy to just the fight.
Like, oh, I just, we just had a baby or I just moved or my job changed or my God, this
really stressful event happened.
This is because people do not fully realize the versatility and the power
of exercise and fitness.
What do I mean by that?
You need to use fitness or exercise
and mold it to improve the quality of your life
regardless of the context of what's going on in your life.
So that means that when things are a particular way
in your life and you're working out a particular way
and it works great for you.
Now things change.
Well, now you change your workouts. Now you're not out a particular way. And it works great for you. Now things change. Well, now you change your workouts.
Now you're not getting as much sleep
and you know how much time because you have a little,
you have a baby.
Okay, well, then you're not gonna work out as much
and you're gonna work out at a different time of the day
and you're gonna do it in a way to give you more energy,
not to sap you with the little energy that you have left
because you're losing sleep.
So, you know, stressful events happen in your life,
exercise, now use it as a way for stress relief,
or as a way to escape.
Everything's going great, getting good sleep,
got a good diet.
Well, now I'm going to go to the gym,
I'm going to go after it, I'm going to push myself,
and I'm going to have these great hard workouts.
If you take your workout and think of it like a Swiss Army
and I for something and you modify it,
it's versatile.
Now it's something that you do all the time.
It's just wonderful tool that just makes your life better.
You know, this reminds me of listening to Alex Hormozzi talk about what he thinks about
morning routines and the people that, you know, swear by these routines that they have.
And he's like, I wish to battle the guy or girl who has got to have this routine in order
for them to be successful at whatever they do.
It's like, I'd much rather be adaptable and moldable.
I'd rather be able to sleep on a concrete floor,
get up the next day and still crush work
and not have to have had all these things aligned.
I find that same thing when it comes to pursuing
your health and fitness journey is being able to be moldable
with what's currently happening in your life.
And we're funny creatures like that.
We finally find an orange theory class that we love,
and we love going to, and it's on Monday, Wednesdays,
and Fridays at this time, and it's like,
also, you get a new job, or a kid,
and that complete disrupts that.
And then you just throw out health and fitness,
because it doesn't work with your orange theory class.
It's like, oh my God, are you keeping this?
There's still this identity there.
Yeah, your success is driven now,
because of the fact that you're in this one class,
that had this very particular way they did things. And's just it's kind of human nature. We just kind of getting
stuck in that mindset that like this is the formula now for me going forward. Whereas you know,
you do have to remain flexible and adaptable and be able to take on new challenges.
No, look at your workouts and do this. Look at your life and be like, all right, what do I need right
now from my workouts to make my life better? Wow, well, right now I need some stress relief.
Or right now I need a way to burn off extra energy. Or right now I need help with my back
being tight or inflammation. And then say, okay, how can I work out in a way to compliment
these things? And now the workout is going to. As your life changes, so do your workouts.
And when you do it this way, you create this lifelong
relationship with exercise.
And as a result of that, you're consistent.
You're always consistent,
because it's always appropriate.
The workouts are always appropriate
and always benefiting you.
By the way, sometimes means you're taking time off as well.
Usually it doesn't, but sometimes it does.
All right, the next one is lack of accountability. Now, studies do show that when people do things
like have a workout partner or, you know, they know people are depending on them that they're
more likely to be consistent. Now, I get that. Now, there is a caveat to that, which is,
if you rely on that, you create this, or you rely on this external motivation,
this something on the outside of you
that keeps you consistent.
At some point, you have to learn how to make that internal
because if you rely too much on that,
at some point you're gonna run into some struggles.
But let's start with the lack of accountability
and how people can start out to help themselves
with that from an external point of view.
One of the easiest things you could do is just
tell somebody, first off, pick somebody
who you really value and you trust,
somebody who celebrates your wins and mourns losses with you.
So not a hater.
You don't wanna do this with a hater.
You're a competitive friend.
Yeah, because if it's a competitive friend,
you're like, oh, I'm gonna miss the gym to sabotage you.
Don't worry about it.
Go eat a pizza.
Who cares, working out sucks.
Absolutely.
You wanna have that friend that really cares about you.
Knows how to talk to you, knows
how to be honest with you, and just tell them say, hey, look, I'm trying to be consistent
right now.
Would you mind if I relied on you for some accountability, you know, checking on me or
all checking on you, and just be honest with me, and you know that person in your life that
you can rely on that can talk to you in a way that isn't going to both piss you off, or
you know, encourage you to do the wrong thing? So you know what I think is a really incredible accountability tool is the Rob Deer Dick
device that I just gave, which is tracking.
And I think, I mean, we see the studies that surround calorie consumption just by looking
at and tracking your food consistently, that's a form of accountability.
You're holding yourself accountable
to just be aware of what you're doing.
I think that has a lot of power of just tracking
and paying attention.
I think if you, and you being honest with yourself,
if I were to take my month goal of gym
and all the stuff that I wanna do,
and then I break it down into days and weeks,
and at the end of week, I evaluate that week,
and I score myself, oh, that was,
I'd give myself a seven and a 10,
and I have something I can look back,
and it was me who scored me, it's me
who is holding myself accountable.
I think it has a lot of power,
just tracking and paying attention to that,
and you'd be surprised on how much more consistent,
I mean, I-
That's as long as you track, right?
Because if you continue to track, it's extremely powerful.
You know what people end up doing?
They stop tracking, because they don't wanna
come themselves accountable.
Yeah, and that's what you look at it.
I mean, I'm going through this right now in,
I mean, what are we, the middle,
or almost the middle of January,
and I told you Katrina and I create all those habits.
It's been very powerful, just the fact that we wrote them down
and that we're paying attention every day,
it have we done it.
There's already been a couple days where it's like, man, it got busy, I got sick, there's
stuff going on.
And I'm looking at my list and I'm like, oh shit, the day's almost up.
And I haven't accomplished any of them.
I better do something.
Just that, the fact that I'm paying attention is already a massive accountability piece for
me to make moves in that direction.
I think it's very powerful.
I mean, yeah, this is a tough one,
because I'm a very much of a self-empowerment guy.
Like I want people to evolve to the point where they can like,
you know, be able to just do this by themselves.
They don't need that external motivation to kind of nudge them
and determine whether or not they show up that day.
However, if, you know, initially,
the there's also financial accountability.
So this is where I look at getting a coach,
a good solid coach or somebody pouring a financial commitment
and then having somebody on top of that
that's not your friend that's gonna sort of pull you,
well, we're fine, let's just go out beers or whatever.
You know, a little bit more accountability
in a non-partisan kind of a party over here and the financial
commitment on top of that and like being a schedule, I think also plays a factor.
Yeah, it's eventually want to develop that internal locus of control, right?
But extra locus control can definitely be valuable, especially when you're first kind of getting
started and you have to get through those humps of being consistent. All right, last is the lack of proper guidance and instruction.
You know, when we say exercise,
or even when we break it down and say strength training
or cardio or mobility work,
those are still large umbrellas
that encompass, I should say,
huge degrees of different forms of exercises
and how to apply them.
And you've got sets and wraps and intensity and different forms of exercises and how to apply them. And you've got sets and reps and intensity
and different forms of exercise
and different ranges of motion.
And how do I do what?
And which one do I, you know, do which ones right for me?
So I totally get this.
Number one, you have podcasts like ours
and you also have a YouTube channel like ours.
Well, we actually post video demos of exercises.
Our podcast, the goal is to educate people, teach them on how to exercise properly, how to
eat right.
So it's great to listen.
By the way, that also doubles as accountability.
There's a reason why we do five podcast episodes a week.
And that's because our goal is to give people enough episodes to help with accountability.
Listen to a fitness podcast five days a week.
You're more likely to want to exercise also on those days.
So you're more likely to get your two or three days a week
because you listen to us on a regular basis.
The other thing, and nothing beats this, by the way,
is hiring a good instructor, a coach, or a trainer.
It is expensive, but when you look at the value
that you get from it, I don't think there's
anything as valuable or as worth the cost as the cost of a good trainer or a good coach.
Nothing.
I mean, a good coach or trainer will profoundly, or has the potential, I should say, to
profoundly, positively impact your life across the board, more than almost anything else,
because that's what happens when you improve your health.
So the cost of working with someone, if you apply it and they're good and it's good fit,
I can't think of anything that's more true.
You can have your short term.
Yes. You know, even if it's a short term thing and you learn the fundamentals and you really dig
into the nuances of how to apply proper technique and nutrition, like what I should structure,
I need help and how to even track myself.
Like all these things, you know,
that a coach can really guide you and educate you through,
you can apply that now yourself going forward
from there because now you're educated.
You know, I know I'm biased because this is our show,
our business, but I actually,
one of my favorite pieces of feedback that we receive,
and it's by far one of the top three, is that when people listen to the show, they're extremely motivated
to work out or to exercise or just improve their life.
I like that as a great tool for this, because every episode there is always some sort of tip
for personal growth or improvement towards your health.
And it doesn't always have to be the excess
and owes of programming.
That's right.
Yes, that's a level to this.
Yes, that helps.
Yes, that's great.
Coaches.
Yes, contiguous.
But I mean, man, one of the things
that we've always tried to provide in this show
is that every episode you walk away
with maybe a little bit of an entertainment,
but most certainly you walk away with something that you can then apply to your life that improves your own areas for growth.
Yeah, lots of areas for health and growth. And so I think consistently just listening to show and
then plucking things out of there and implementing into you know, and it costs you nothing, right?
The show is free for you to listen to. And then if you want exercise program, we have some for sale
and then we have stuff for free. We have the 30 days of training that we have uploaded
on YouTube, which is great place for people to start that.
Let's have the first week of our most popular fitness program.
Yeah, so there's a lot of good free content.
But to me, it's also understanding that this isn't just
about great training, programming, and the stuff
that I know that we specialize in.
It's also about making steps in the right direction.
And a lot of those things don't require the Xs and O's
of programming.
Some of those are just habits and behaviors in your life.
I'm so glad you said that.
Basic, you could start real small.
You really don't have to get complex until later anyway.
So just do something as long as you're not hurting yourself
or you're over-training, you're applying the appropriate
intensity,
that's going to get your body more fit and healthier.
Look, if you like the show, check this out.
We got more free stuff for you, okay?
We just talked about guidance and instruction.
Go to mindpumpfree.com and check out our fitness guides.
They're all totally free and they can help you
with your health and fitness journey.
You can also find all of us on social media.
So Justin is on Instagram with MindPump.
Justin, Adam is on Instagram with MindPump at him and you can find me on also find all of us on social media. So Justin is on Instagram with my pump Justin,
Adam is on Instagram with my pump Adam,
and you can find me on Twitter at my pump sal.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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