Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2010: Seven Reasons Your Workout Isn't Working
Episode Date: February 13, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover seven reasons why your progress may have stalled in the gym. 7 Reasons Your Workout Isn’t Working. (1:01) #1 - You’re working out too much. (1:40) #2... - You’re not doing enough. (7:35) #3 - Your workout is stale. (13:53) #4 - You’re not consistent. (16:37) #5 - Your diet isn’t productive. (19:57) #6 - Your sleep isn’t productive. (23:38) #7 - Hormones are not balanced. (26:44) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! February Promotion: MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, and MAPS HIIT are all 50% off! **Code FEB50 at checkout** Mind Pump #1142: Nine Signs You Are Overtraining Mind Pump #1897: Why Phasing Your Workouts Is So Important & How To Properly Switch It Up Mind Pump #1630: Ten Ways To Break Through A Plateau Mind Pump #1522: How To Stay Consistent With Your Diet & Workout Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss How Sleep Deprivation Impacts Mental Health MP Hormones Mind Pump Hormones Facebook Private Forum Mind Pump Free Resources  Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Â
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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 Brain.
Today's episode we talk about the seven reasons why your workout isn't working.
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All right, here comes a show.
Okay, so your workout isn't working for you.
Well, in today's episode,
we're gonna give you the seven most common reasons Here comes a show. Okay, so your workout isn't working for you. Well, in today's episode,
we're gonna give you the seven most common reasons
while your workout is not giving you results.
Ooh, this is a shot at Justin.
This is a whole seven.
Oh, seven.
No, it's, you know, literally, I mean, the seven
that we listed, I think, will probably cover 99%
of the reasons why somebody's workout just isn't giving them what they want,
whether it's fat loss or muscle gain or strength.
And these aren't ordered in any order, right?
Because I think that like when I went through the list,
I'm like, I definitely had plenty of clients
in each of these categories.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
So let's start with the first one.
And the first one is you're working out just too much.
This one's a hard one for people, especially fitness fanatics, I would say,
in beginners, which you would think, how can this be common for both people,
because we're on both ends of the spectrum.
Well, it's common for fitness fanatics because they love exercise so much
that they'll readily ignore the signs that their body's telling them that they're just doing too much.
In fact, what they tend to do is they tend to do more and more and more when the workout isn't producing what they want.
They keep going down that particular path.
Now beginners do this because they falsely believe that doing more will get them there faster
or and or doing too much
when you haven't done anything, doesn't take much.
So if you're a total beginner,
a 30 minute workout can be too much for your body.
Or you don't have to go to failure.
You could just have a little bit of intensity
and overdo it with your workout.
Well, I think that they're comparing themselves to what they see as a fit healthy person and what
their workouts consist of. And so immediately they jump to that type of volume and load
for their own constructed workout. Well, there's also this terrible message that is in our space that
says there's no such thing as over training just under eating.
And there's this belief that yeah, it's super popular, especially in the bodybuilding community,
that nobody's over training. It takes so much to over train like you're just under eating. And
if you were to eat more, you'd be fine or prioritize recovery, you'd be fine. And that's not true at
all. There's definitely a sweet spot. And by the way, the sweet spot is individualized. It's not the same for everybody. And so it's not going
to even be the same for you. That's right. That's right. The different points of your career,
it will be, there'll be different amounts of volume that you can handle. Also, not just
on experience, because I know that's the first thing people think, of course, as you get
more experience, you can handle more. No. Also, what the circumstances in your life are currently.
If you are under all kinds of stress, lack of sleep, you've got a lot of things going on at work
with family, that might be a time when you just can't handle the same kind of volume,
maybe you could handle just three or four years ago. And then there's this interesting paradox
where sometimes when you're relatively new, like intermediate, you can actually do more
and get away with more than if you're super advanced because when you're super advanced,
you've developed the ability to train with a higher intensity and with heavier weight.
So like, you know, let's say you've been working out for a year and you can do 10 reps with 200 pounds
and then two years later you can do 10 reps with 300 pounds. That 300 pounds will still produce a little bit more stress on your body,
even if it's something you can handle because the total load is still the total load. So
this is something you kind of have to judge as you go along and some of them may be asking
what are the signs. Well, first off, let's let's consider this. Doing too much basically means you're doing more than it is allowing your body to recover
and adapt to.
So whenever you exercise, it's a stress on the body.
The body identifies the stress, heals the damage that the stress caused, because if there's
no damage, that means there was no stress.
Heals the body, and then it tries to adapt and overcompensate.
So the same insult does not cause the same damage as before.
This is why you get stronger, it's why you get more fit.
This way you have to add weight and change your workouts.
Now, your body can tolerate a lot more than what is the ideal amount for progress.
In other words, if 10 sets of an exercise is the perfect amount for the best results,
you may be able to tolerate 15 sets, but you're not going exercise is the perfect amount for the best results, you may be able
to tolerate 15 sets, but you're not going to get the results any faster.
In fact, all you're doing at that point now is compromising your ability to recover,
so actually slowing down your progress.
So the things to pay attention to besides not getting results are things like excess fatigue,
joint pain, soreness and stiffness that doesn't seem to want to go away.
Hot, cold and tolerance.
This is what happens to me when I over-train.
I notice that I get cold easier or I get hot easier.
And sleep disturbances.
Sleep disturbances is a big one for overdoing it.
Well, where is the sweet spot?
What does the research say as far as the optimal amount
of total sets in a workout? What do we know as far as the optimal amount of total sets in a workout?
What do we know as far as how? Because that would be another way to judge this is if you're trying
to figure out, you know, am I doing too much, are you on the upper end of that or beyond what they
would recommend as optimal for most people? So the studies the made analysis show anywhere, this is
per week, anywhere between something like eight sets per body part for the week
to as high as 18 or 20 sets.
So it's like a huge range.
You know, eight to 20.
It is, but it's not that crazy because there's easily I've seen this where people are doing
50 sets in a week on a muscle group that they're doing 12 to 16 sets for chest, you know, two to three times a week. And so,
I know eight to 20 does sound like a pretty wide range. And it is a pretty wide range.
And there's a major individual variance within that. But if, and here's the thing too, if
you're around, if you think, oh, maybe this is me, but you're only doing two sets or
three sets on a muscle group per week. You're probably not.
If you're falling somewhere in that sweet spot,
you might not be, but if you're towards the upper end of that,
you may be somebody who is overreaching
and you don't even realize it.
It's interesting how even like three day a week
like in having like the days of rest in between,
is still like one of the most optimal strength driven,
like you know schedule in terms terms of your workouts are concerned.
That still has shown itself in strength athletes and your everyday average person to follow.
Yeah, absolutely. Next is the opposite, which is you're just not doing enough.
So this is somewhat less common, but still kind of common.
Your workout should provide some sort of struggle. Now, I don't mean you need to be like, you know,
gasping for air or oh my god, I can't move or this feels like war. But if there's zero stress
on the body, the body has no need to adapt and get stronger and become more fit. Remember, changes in the body,
those kinds of positive changes require energy and resources. They also require energy and resources
to maintain. And your body is always trying to be as efficient as possible. It's not going to
want to be any more fit or stronger or faster or burn any more calories than it has to, that's an evolutionary
adaptation response. It just doesn't make any sense. So, to give you an example, an extreme
example, if you sat in a chair for five years and never got up for whatever reason, let's
say you're a part of an experiment, and you do that, your leg muscles with atrophy completely
and the neural connection to those muscles with atrophy completely and the neural connection to those muscles
with atrophy to the point where you'd have to relearn
how to walk.
In fact, this happens to people when they're in accidents
and they're in a hospital bed for weeks
and they come out.
It's like your body will prune away what it doesn't need
and give you more than it needs.
It just doesn't happen.
So you have to do the right amount
and not doing enough means nothing
happens. Your body has no need. Well, and you could again kind of compare this to like your beginner
or somebody that's been doing it forever. So your beginner's kind of obvious, it's like, you know,
they're not really, you know, trying to push themselves. Yeah, they haven't really realized how to kind
of get into that discipline yet. Whereas, you know, if you go on the more experienced lift or side,
a plane yet, whereas, you know, if you go on the more experienced lifter side, it's like, you know, if you can get, you can get to
a position where God, I had this thought and then I totally lost
it. Yeah, well, I think when you're, when you're an experienced
lifter, you can do the same workout and never challenge your body
in new ways. And you see this with, oh, I got maybe not fitness
fanatics, but I would see this with members where they would come in the gym. And they would do the same machine, same weight, same
everything all the time. Yes, that's, that's exactly right. And it's two, I see this with like not
pushing yourself in terms of the weight and getting into like the routine that you've established. And
you're just kind of continuously doing this routine, the same type of weights and never really
progressively overloading it from there.
Yeah, I mean, what you guys are mentioning now, you're kind of bleeding into the third point,
which is the workout getting stale, or what I would say is like the common thing that happens
with these clients that I would hire me. They would hire me. They come in and I would assess what
they're doing. And they're always these clients. They know they have a weight for their exercise.
Yes. Oh, I do biceps curls with fives, and then I do chest flies with the 15s.
And then I do the seated row over there with 70 pounds, and then I do this on number five.
Like, they have their routine down so well that they can name me the exercise and the weight
that they use for all the exercises.
And then I'm like, well, how long you've been doing that for?
And I'm like, oh, I've been consistently doing that for years. And like, oh, I've been, I've been consistently doing that for years.
I'm, that's, that's my routine and I feel great when I do it.
It's like, yeah, but you have, your body is adapted to that so much that it doesn't,
doesn't perceive that as a stress anymore.
It's like, this is part of your routine.
Therefore, we are not challenging the body enough for it to overcome, recover, adapt, and grow.
And so that's where I see someone like this.
I, you know, in bouncing back,
since we kind of jump between these two
and the second and third point,
I would say that people that under-trained
is probably one of the least common things
that have everything that I see on here.
I actually think that under-training is the only real example that I recall seeing it
a lot is in this example of my client who's been following the workout tape.
You know, this is the same exact.
Yeah, this was more common like when I first started.
I in the like late 90s, early 2000s, when still workout cassettes and stuff like that were
still popular and they've
been following that routine for 10 years. That's more common. It's when you get somebody who's brand
new, it's actually more common that they do more than they need to because they're motivated.
And they they're they're they're they're want to change so bad or they're doctor told and you
got to do this. So they go in with this attitude of more is gonna get me more results.
And so I actually find that side more common
than somebody actually under-
More than somebody actually under-Trade.
Less detrimental to have that mentality
coming in and do less versus do more, right?
In terms of how you're gonna respond
and how you can kind of build from there.
Like it's definitely one of those,
you're setting yourself up a little better
if you do a little less, which is like contrary
to what's been marked in it.
Well, this is why I wanted Salah to bring up
what the research says as far as optimal amount of sets.
And so my advice to somebody is to count
how many total sets that you're doing in the week
for that muscle group, right?
So, oh, if I look in, you know, so if I do three full body workouts,
at the end of the week, I'm doing 12 sets for chest.
I'm always gonna, and Sal mentioned already,
eight to 20 is kind of the range.
I'm always gonna push my people to actually lean
on the lesser end, right?
So the goal you hear me say at all times in the show
is to do as little as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
So I have room to add those sets later on.
If you start right out the gates
and you're doing 20 sets for a muscle group in a week,
you're already at the peak of what they would consider
optimal with all the research.
And so I don't have a lot of room to scale you up.
I'd much rather put you at eight sets for the week.
And then we go for a while to the body adapts
and then you're not seeing results and I'm like,
okay, let's bump it up to 10 sets now. And then let's bump it up to 12. I have a lot of room.
In my experience that don't do enough crowd, it's not enough intensity.
It's usually what it is. It's just not pushing. This is the one who is curling or doing an exercise that you go,
who it burns and then they drop the weight. Or nothing. They're just doing it and they're talking to
their friend or their little next door and it's literally like a like a Social I did it though. Yeah, which I guess is better than nothing, but or classes. You see that in classes like you know
They do it. They do a class, but it's not gonna work anymore. That's the point
The third one which we kind of touched on is that your workout is just stale
I mean if you do the same thing
Every time you work out over and over
Eventually it stops working.
All workouts within reason will produce some kind of result.
All workouts eventually stop working.
It's just a fact of exercise.
Novelty is a factor.
It is a factor when it comes to getting the body to respond
and improve whether it's physical performance or strength
or stamina and as a as a side-effect
fat loss. So if you're doing the same thing over and over again and pushing yourself hard
and doing it but it's always exactly the same and you're not progressing, sometimes as
little as changing the rep range. Like this happened to me as a kid. Like I remember distinctly
doing this where my body just wasn't responding and I just changed
rep ranges and then boom I just saw phenomenal results or I changed an exercise or rest periods.
I would go from long rest periods to short rest periods.
Just your body gets used to stuff and so it's some, I'm not saying change everything
all the time but if you're not getting any results and you look at your work and you're like oh, yeah, I guess I've been in the same workout for and I work out hard and all that
stuff. But it's been the same for like a year. It doesn't even need to look that drastically different.
Right. Like because there's so many variables you can slightly tweak based on what you're kind of
bringing up in terms of like the tempo, the, you know, the position, like you're holding squats
in at the bottom position and you're pausing with it now.
And there's just like different types of angles
you can play around with.
And if you haven't done front squats versus back squats
in a long time.
And so if you just shift like some of these items
within your workout list and provide a brand new stimulus
to kind of bring in, your is going to respond in different way.
Well, if this speaks to you and you're listening right now at this episode and you're like,
oh, this could be me.
We did an episode about a year ago.
I believe it was titled Nine Ways to Progressively Overload Your Body.
And the typical way is to add weight.
I think that's the default that everybody goes to. Like, oh, I need to add more weight to the bar. And that is one of the nine strategies,
but there's far more strategies to the point that you both are making right now that you can
manipulate within the same type of a workout. So we could be doing the same exercises,
but manipulate all these other things that will actually result in new results to the body. So
if you haven't listened to that episode, you're somebody who is trying to break a plateau
and you feel like your routine is really similar.
You don't know where to go on how to change that routine up.
Listen to that episode.
I think that's a great episode for you.
Next up, this one is got to be one of the most consistent for the average person, which
is they're just not consistent enough.
They miss enough workouts,
enough weeks, they're consistent for three months, and they're not consistent for three months.
And they expect when they finally get back on it for three weeks or four weeks,
like, why isn't this working? It's like stick to it.
This is for sure the number one out of all of them.
Yeah, because we think that we put all this weight on or we lose all this muscle because we don't train
for extended period of time.
And then we expect like you do one hard month
of consistency that like it all is fixed.
Like it's a very, it's such a, you know,
building muscle is such a slow process
and then losing body fat and still holding onto muscle, right?
So simultaneously changing your body composition is a very, very slow process and requires consistency
for extended periods of time to see visual change.
Now, granted within weeks, you know, or even a week, there are changes that are happening.
But to see it visually, especially on yourself, who is looking at yourself and judging yourself at least once or twice or three times a day,
it's very, very difficult to see visual change without an extended period of time where you're consistent.
And so I would say this is the number one mistake that people make right here is, you know, thinking that,
oh man, but I've been really consistent.
Like, have you really, you know, it's easily the most common.
I mean, if you looked at the average person's workout history, it usually looks like I worked
out consistently for three months here, and then I didn't for six months, and then, oh,
that was that year that I was consistent.
And then I stopped for two years.
You're better off working out less, but just doing it more consistently than you are,
doing it for two months and then stopping for six months or so.
Well, this is why I love that we advocate for the full body routine because in my experience,
a very, a very small percentage of my clientele ever adopted a routine and then was
consistent for months or years on after
that, then what would happen is most of them would have a streak, you know, for a few weeks
or a few months, and then something happens and they get back on and then that happens again.
And so if you're going to kind of have this off and on when life happens, which is realistic
and understandable because we all have other priorities
besides going to the gym and lifting weights,
then doing a routine that requires you actually only one time
in the gym to actually get your entire body addressed,
I think is a superior way to work out for most people,
aside from what all the other studies say
as far as the benefits of it.
I think that in itself is the reason why I-
That makes it 100%.
I agree with you.
In fact, I would say that that's the biggest, most beneficial reason for full body workouts.
I'd say this, if consistency is your issue, start with something you know you can maintain,
work your full body, and then start there.
And don't add anything until what you're doing
has become a habit,
until what you're doing has become second nature.
Then add, don't add just cause you feel motivated.
Otherwise, you sell yourself up for failure
and then you end up in this kind of inconsistent model
of exercise.
All right, next up would be your diet.
Your diet just isn't productive.
Like if you have a great workout,
but your diet's terrible, it's going to be really hard to get
good results.
Now, you'll improve your fitness somewhat just because you're working out.
You may build a little bit of muscle just because you're working out.
But if you're not feeding yourself enough protein, enough calories or two little calories
or you have a nutrient deficiency, your your body's not gonna try to adapt
and improve its performance and strength,
and it's just not gonna want to.
It's gonna be very, very difficult,
especially with fat loss.
When it comes to fat loss,
if your workout could be amazing,
if your diet's terrible,
you ain't gonna lose any body fat.
Good luck.
You're not gonna work it off through work.
It's just not gonna happen.
It's too easy to eat calories,
and it's a lot of work to try to burn them.
So look at your diet as well.
Now, you don't have to have a perfect diet,
but again, if it's nothing's working,
here's the places I would look to first.
One, are you eating adequate protein?
What does that look like?
Close to about a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
Number two, look at your diet.
Am I eating more than I should?
If you are, you're not gonna get leaner.
How do I figure that out?
Track your diet for a couple weeks, look at your average.
And then if you wanna lose body fat,
cut your calories from there,
if you wanna gain weight, then add calories from there.
But without a productive diet
You'll work out it's not gonna do much for you of all the things that we're talking about today
This one is the most challenging and the reason why I find this one the most challenging is
Most people go to the gym because they want to lose body fat. That's the number one goal for people that that start working out
Okay, we've now convinced them that lifting weights is one of the best ways for them to get
in shape.
It's what's going to speed your metabolism up.
It's what's going to give you this firm tone, whatever look you say you want.
That's how you're going to shape and sculpt the body.
Okay, so I'm convinced.
I'm supposed to lift weights.
That's one of the best ways to do it.
But then you also want to lose body fat.
So you know you need to eat it in a cloric deficit.
So when's it happening to a lot of people that are stalling with progress, is they're eating
in a cloric deficit, but then they're not hitting their protein intake.
And so what's happening is the body is adapting and it's losing weight on the scale, but
at the same ratio it's losing fat, it's also losing muscle.
So then they're not seeing the body composition change
or the body fat percentage changed
that they would like to see.
So they keep testing their body fat
and their body fat is staying stagnant
or sometimes even going up
and they're scratching their head going like,
this makes no sense.
I'm eating so clean, I'm not, I'm eating low calorie,
I'm training three to four days a week
and yet my body fat percentage is staying the same or even going up.
And a lot of times that's because they're not eating adequate protein to the point you
were making.
So why also being in a caloric deficit and then strength training, you know, you're
strength training, you're sending a signal to the body that it needs to build muscles
so that I can overcome the next time you, you, you do that stress again.
But then you're under eating on calories and protein,
it's a competing signal.
And so you see people stall out here a lot.
That's right.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it's so hard wired.
Like, this is something that, you know, you have to eat every single day.
It is something that you carry with you your entire life.
And to make those adjustments a lot of times, we can easily fool ourselves that we're
doing good, or we're making these adjustments,
but it's not as clearly visible as it is
when I go to the gym and I do this work,
and this is something new I'm taking on,
but changing something that's really hardwired in you
that takes a whole lot of extra effort.
Totally.
All right, next up is your sleep.
You're not getting good sleep,
or you're not getting quality sleep.
Look, with poor sleep,
you can forget about your body adapting in any positive way. When you're getting poor sleep, your body does
not want muscle because muscle costs resources and for most human history, lack of sleep meant,
because you didn't have enough resources, you didn't have enough food. And it wants to store
body fat. It literally will change and shift its hormones in a way
to promote fat gain.
Why?
Because fat on your body is a wonderful insurance policy
against stress and famine and the fact
that you can't find resources.
So lack of sleep will crush any progress.
It'll crush strength.
It'll crush muscle.
It'll increase cravings, it'll
make fat gain much easier.
So this is a big one and this is one that a lot of people tend to ignore, especially young
people.
Yeah, I don't know what it was about this one that caused me not to focus on it because
I knew that when we sleep, this is when our body recovers. I knew that the recovery process was the most important
process in building muscle.
Yet, I guess maybe because I felt okay,
and so, you know, because I was still going to work,
still doing the things that I needed to do,
and I was still able to work out,
I was still able to play sports and have fun
and do the things that,
and I didn't feel like I was dragon-ass
because I didn't get a really good night's sleep.
I think I ignored this one for a really long time.
And then till you actually put focus on it,
I feel like it's, this is a tough one
to communicate, to get people to really grasp
and older people seem to get this.
So if you're like north of 40, I feel like you're kind of forced to learn this one.
But convincing somebody in their 20s and 30s that this is such a major part of your
success.
And if you're at a hard plateau and you're only getting six hours of sleep every night,
this could be a massive reason why.
It's because you can get away with it.
But getting away with it means you're not optimized.
So I bet you if somebody took you
and gave you optimal sleep in your 20s,
and then you saw five pounds of muscle come on your body,
you'd be like, oh, this makes a lot of sense.
The difference is when you get older,
you just can't get away with it as much
and you start to notice.
Maybe that's what it is.
Oh, no, maybe it's the effects of not having sleep way more.
Yes, that's all it is.
Like right now, if you're watching this
and you're in your 20s and you're working out
and you're not getting good sleep,
like just get better sleep, watch what happens.
That's it, just do that.
And you'll gain muscle and burn body fat
without changing anything else
just because of that right there.
That's how big of a deal it is.
In fact, lack of sleep, lack of sleep will die.
You're literally will die.
And in fact, the last, I read a study,
being sleep deprived for I think four days
gave, it gave, it was like a 50% chance
of mental illness developing from a town important.
It's a big deal.
And your body won't build muscle or progress without it.
So prioritize it if you want to get your body to progress.
All right, lastly, and this is last because if you're doing everything right and things
still seem like they're not working, you could have some hormone issues.
You could have some hormone imbalances low testosterone becoming relatively
common in men, estrogen, progesterone imbalances and testosterone deficiency
in women.
If you're doing all the stuff and you're like, I just don't feel like myself or whatever,
the only way to know is to get you hormones tested in which case an expert will look, then
you can make adjustments to your lifestyle.
And if that doesn't work, well then this is where Western medicine can become quite valuable
and hormone replacement therapy can make a big difference. So two thoughts around this one.
One, when you are beyond the age of 35, this I would say is one of the most common.
So when we, all the things we listed, I talked about some of the things that are most common
and nutrition.
As you get over 35, I would say this is like super common, that this is one of the reasons why we're
stalling out.
Second, if you're not in beyond 35 and you're, I say in your 20s, something that I recommend
now that I didn't recommend when I was early is to go get your blood work done so you
know what good feels like.
So let's say you're 25 right now and you're like, oh, I feel good.
Hormones are good, libido's good.
Like,
Yes, like,
like,
there's so much value in finding out,
okay, you feel great right now.
Let's go get your hormone profile.
So you know what,
because there's such a wide range,
when you start to understand how these,
like these panels work,
it's not like there's like a straight up score. It's like
you get this range and in that range is considered healthy. And if you get tested in your 20s and you're
on the higher end of a lot of these ranges and then you're 35 one day and you go get tested again
and you actually still fall in the healthy range,
but you're on the bottom of that range.
That can make you feel dramatically different.
And so understanding that that's why you don't feel good
is that even though a general practitioner
would do your blood work and your panels and go,
oh, you're fine, you're okay.
And you're like, oh, damn, I don't,
but I don't feel right.
And if you don't have that blood work
from when you were 25 and you know how good felt
to compare to that,
then you might not even know that you're just not
at your optimal levels.
And there's things that you can start to do
in your life to improve that.
Yep, that's right.
Good place to go to be mphormones.com
where you can kind of get that checked out.
Look, if you like the show,
head over to mindpumpfree dot com and check out our guides
we have guides that can help you with almost any health or fitness goal can
also find all of us on social media
so justin is on instagram and my pump justin atom is on instagram my pump
at him and you can find me on twitter at my pump cell
thank you for listening to mind pump
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