Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2057: Do THIS to Get the Body You Want by Summer
Episode Date: April 20, 2023If you want to fine-tune your body for summer, Sal, Adam & Justin lay out what you need to do in this episode. The three most common types of people that are trying to get FIT by summer. (1:33) Ha...ve a plan. (4:02) 1) Beginners. (8:25) Start slow. Focus on correctional exercises. Build metabolism. 2) Build muscle mass. (19:58) Use intensity properly and get strong. Target-specific mobility. Use advanced techniques to drive size. 3) Get leaner (look good). (33:46) Focus on balance and symmetry. Bring up lagging body parts. Cycle carbs. Related Links/Products Mentioned Special Promotion: 3 Summer Bundles to get you in the BEST shape of your life for this summer! Summer Starter: MAPS Starter, 15 Minutes, Prime, Reverse Diet Guide $99, Summer Strong: Anabolic Advanced, MAPS Strong, Prime Pro, Advanced Training Techniques Guide $199, Summer Shred: MAPS HIIT, Symmetry, Aesthetic, Carb Cycling Guide $149! MASSIVE DISCOUNTS!!! Visit PRx Performance for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! MAPS Prime Pro Webinar MAPS Prime Webinar Mind Pump #1287: Why The Stability Ball Belongs In Your Workout Routine Reverse Dieting: What Is It and Should YOU Try It?? | MIND PUMP Mind Pump #2015: How To Apply Advanced Training Techniques To Build More Muscle The Breakdown Recovery Trap, Why You Aren’t Progressing – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1790: The Secret To An Attractive & Functional Body Mind Pump #1745: How To Pack On Muscle To Your Lagging/Stubborn Body Parts Carb Cycling: A Good Way To Lose Fat? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness, health, and entertainment podcast ever in the history of the world.
This is Mind Pump, right?
Today's episode is all about how to get you the best body ever by summertime.
Yeah, we're talking to you beginners.
We're also talking to those of you that want to lean out.
And we're also talking to those of you that want to build maximum muscle.
That's what we're talking about in today's episode.
By the way, we created three special bundles for this episode.
One for the beginner, one for those that want to cut and one for those you that want to build and
We discounted the hell out of them. They're super inexpensive and they all include multiple workout programs and ebooks
Specific to those goals. You can find all of those at maps april.com
Now this episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors PRX performance
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It literally comes off the wall by six inches, so you could use the garage or whatever to park your car.
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Go to PRXPerformance.com forward slash mine pump,
and that link will get you a 5% discount at checkout.
All right, here comes the show.
Summer is approaching fast.
That means everybody has a fitness goal.
Now here's a deal.
We wanted to do an episode about how to get
the best shape by summer.
Shredded, but there's a lot of people with different goals, different starting positions.
And here's the real challenge.
The real challenge is the plan.
What is the plan from now till then to get the best possible body?
Because without a plan, it's just not going to happen.
It can happen, but take a lot longer.
You're looking to do this by summer.
So in today's episode, that's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna break it down for you.
And we're gonna talk about the three most common types of people
who are trying to get fit by summer.
Who are those?
That's the beginner, who's for the first time.
Or, okay, let's be clear here, though, too.
A beginner, I would put in this category.
Not only this is your first time really getting this category, not only this is your first
time really getting at it, but also this is your first time in a long time. Yeah. So you
could be somebody who's been in and out of the gym for 10 years. But you haven't worked
out for like a year or two. Yeah, but you haven't worked out for like a year and you're
ready to get back into the swing of things. I would still put you in the beginner, even
if you're not considered a beginner in terms of lifting, you're familiar with the lifts, I think that you should still
progress as if you're because, and by the way, that's not like a knock or a bad thing.
It's actually a good thing.
There's this thing that happens to a lot of, quote unquote, advanced lifters or people
that have been lifting for most of their life
that have taken a year, two years off,
and then they wanna go right back into like,
training volume compared to what they were,
they were doing when they fell off,
and it's like, no, instead,
lift like you're a beginner,
get all those newbie gains again,
because it is like being new all over again,
even though you may have had experience in the gym
and follow
that kind of a protocol before you progress to the more advanced type of.
Yeah, so people kind of just getting started or who haven't been working out for a while
or just not familiar with different exercises and how they work.
Then the other two most common goals are I want to build lots of muscle or I want to burn
lots of body fat. I want to get rid of lots of
body fat. That covers pretty much everybody, right? Of course within those are things that are much
more specific, but that does cover every, for the most part, everybody. And depending on where you
fall, that's what will help dictate the plan because here's why people don't get results
for the most part, why people don't get results
as satisfactory as they want or as fast as they want.
I don't like to say it's fast
because sometimes people's goals are unrealistic
like I wanna lose 40 pounds and look shredded
by next month like, okay, that's not gonna happen.
But even with realistic goals,
oftentimes things don't happen fast enough because people
don't really have a plan.
And not just the plan, like, I'm going to go to the gym three days a week and I'm going
to try and eat better.
Like that's kind of part of the plan.
But I mean a real plan, like, here's how I'm going to work out the next few weeks and
then the weeks after that and then the weeks after that. And then the weeks after that.
Here's what my diet's gonna look like now.
Here's how it's gonna progress
and here's how it's going to change.
Here's what I should expect at this stage, at that stage.
Here's when I do these exercises and those exercises.
So it's methodical, it's not just super impulsive
where it's like, oh no, I gotta make up for all this time
that I haven't been putting in the gym
and I can get it all together in a really short amount of time.
Yes.
You know what's funny about what you're saying, though?
In a small snapshot of, let's say, only four weeks,
you're right, it's not the fastest way,
necessarily, per se, to maybe someone for someone to see
the results that they're looking for.
But over the course of three, six, and nine months,
it is the fastest way.
Sorry.
And I think that's why people get so hung up
is they get this like, oh, I need to lose this much weight
or I want to look a certain way
and I want to get it as fast as I possibly can.
But the fastest way to get there
is technically kind of the slower way at first
because the results ramp up on the back end
when you do things correctly.
When you jump out the gates and you throw the whole kitchen sink at your body, you may
get the initial first two to three weeks faster results than the person that's slowly building
the correct way.
I see that with the weight loss for sure.
Right.
But then they're not accounting for like maintaining that muscle mass.
They don't get the definition.
They don't get all these other attributes they're going for.
You know what it reminds me of?, you guys ever go to Universal Studio and
this is a great theme park in California and there are these places where they would film movies
and they're fake towns. So it's like it looks like you're in a western, you know, like you're
in the 17 to 1800s in the west. Boom town. Yeah, like a boom town, right? But from a distance, it looks like a saloon,
it looks like a bar, looks like a,
but then you walk on me tell it's fake.
Oh, I could like push this over with my hand
and these windows aren't real.
And nobody's inside.
So could you build a fake house
that looks like it's moving faster than a real house?
I mean, from a distance, I guess you could,
but it's not really a house, it'll topple over.
So to do this the right way,
there's only one way to do that.
And the right way gets you better results
and faster results in terms of getting closer
to the ultimate goal.
Because you could lose that initial five pounds
really quick by simply moving more and eating less.
But if your goal is 15, 20 pounds,
like in a pure body fat, it ain't gonna happen without a plan.
You need to have a specific plan.
And yes, exercise and eating differently are part of it,
but what makes up those things and what's right for you
are really what dictate just how effective it is
and the biggest mistake people have
is they don't think that far ahead,
either because they don't think that far ahead either
because they don't know because they think that and this is a common thought.
A common thought is the value of exercise is just movement.
So really doesn't matter what I do to to to to the to a large extent.
It's just am I moving?
That's great.
So there it is.
And oh, with food, it doesn't really matter too much. So long as I eat foods that are somewhat, you know,
quote unquote, healthy, whatever that means. And I eat less. And then I'll get there. Um, no, that's a tiny piece of the pie.
But really, it's there's there's there's much more that goes into it. How you exercise the exercise you do, the order that you do them,
are they appropriate to you when you apply them,
and then with food, there's a way to eat
to speed up the metabolism, to burn body fat, to build muscle,
and there's a way to do it best for your body,
and you combine those things in the right order for yourself,
your body's gonna progress, and it's gonna progress
in a way that's fast and feels more effortless
than hitting your head against the wall without a plan.
Okay, so what does that look like specifically for the beginner? I mean, obviously the first thing
that comes to mind is, you know, addressing any posture, correctional stuff so that it sets
yourself up for one, not having any potential injury, also to getting the most out of the lifts
that you're going to be going into, I think of that.
I also think of exercises that are either body weights
or little movement, I love the stability ball type stuff
where I'm working on not only posture with someone like that,
a little bit of instability, some dumbbell work,
like what is some of the programming look like
for this person?
Yeah, so the two things you want to, well there's a few things that you really want to consider
when you're a beginner. One is
understand that exercise
really is just the stimulus that tells your body to change and adapt and the stimulus
how you know it's appropriate is based off of where you're at now. In a beginner, it doesn't need much stimulus to cause the body to move in the right direction.
But there's more to that.
It's not just that it doesn't need much.
More than what it needs actually becomes too much and overcomes your body ability to change
and adapt.
So, this is not a case where if some is good more is better, there's, if some
is right, more is not right. And it'll actually get you there much slower. So you've got to have
the right dose, I would say, one of the strongest things to consider.
Yeah, I still think this is a major consideration because there seems to be this thought that you
have to be able to accomplish a certain amount of exercises or this kind of more intensified
workout for it to be any kind of more intensified workout
for it to be any kind of value
for you to even step into the gym
and for you to even start this embark on this journey at all.
For your average person,
I feel like that thought is just still out there.
When in fact, it's really just,
it's such an individualized experience
if you can understand how to really like,
you know, peer into what your body's telling you
and in, you know, in terms what your body's telling you and in, you know,
in terms of like the overall intensity adjusting
it accordingly.
So you kind of lean a little bit more on less
so you're playing on coming back as opposed to, you know,
taking it all on once.
So what comes in mind for me is I think, you know,
hopefully Andrew can have the team shoot up some clips
and videos from like some of our different programs
to give an example.
So the listener or viewer can get some visuals with that looks like. But for me, it looks like a map starter,
maps 15s type of programming with the combination of maps prime as far as the priming and posture
stuff like focus on that going in. Yeah, so let's talk again. You mentioned posture to be more
specific. It's more like what
would be referred to as correctional exercise. Make no mistake, by the way, correctional exercise is
still actual muscle. Yeah, you're still working out. Yeah. The difference is correctional exercise is
setting your body up to be able to later do some of the most effective exercises you're able to do.
So if you take a beginner, you haven't worked out for a while, just putting them under,
like if you've listened to the show before, you know that, you know, we like barbell squats,
for example, or barbell deadlift, great exercises, very effective at building muscle and speeding
up the metabolism and setting up for fat loss and all that stuff, very functional.
But if you haven't done them in a while or never putting you under a bar and have and expecting you to do a barbell squat, you're not going to derive any value.
Number one, because you don't have the skill of it.
And you don't have, you probably aren't going to have not just not the technique, but the
stability to do so.
And you'll probably hurt yourself.
So, you're, so there are prerequisite exercises and things you can do to set yourself up so that you can do
that exercise.
Yeah, just to reinforce everything really, just to make sure everything is operating properly,
you're able to get into these positions and hold and sustain those positions, which a
lot of times people don't realize, like, I'm even just in a split stance, it's hard for
me to maintain balance.
You know, right there, that's an issue.
We have to work on that.
We have to get you grounded.
We have to get you to be able to control your body.
At the level now we can add load and you're going to see a lot more substantial results
once you're able to control yourself.
Yeah, and I do want to say this again because sometimes people skip this, but try to
skip this part because they think, oh, this isn't the fat loss part.
This isn't the muscle-building part.
No, no, no, you burn body fat and build muscle
doing this as well.
There's just an order, an order of operation.
And you really want to be able to stabilize your body
and at least build enough strength in your body
to support yourself to do more of the traditional exercises.
But there's still exercises and you're still
working out.
You mentioned MAP 15, Adam.
What I like so much about a program like that, so for people aren't familiar, rather
than having someone, like for example, in the past, if I trained a beginner, I would have
them meet me two days a week and we would do about a 45 to 55 minute workout, okay?
So, and that's usually where I would start most people.
More than that would not only not be necessary, but it would probably be too much.
Again, we're talking about strength training here.
So, what we did with Maps 15 is we created a program where instead of doing two
45 to 55 minute workouts, you're doing 15 minutes every single day.
The reason why that's so great
for a lot of people, but especially beginners, is because it's hard to develop one of the
challenges with getting started with any kind of workout program is just maintaining this
new routine and structure. Like you weren't doing two one hour workouts a week before.
Now you're starting to do them and it's a new thing in your life and you got to make
time for it,
and then, okay, now I gotta be consistent
through all of life's challenges.
What we found as trainers,
when we trained people for a long time was,
it was easier for people to do a little bit every day
versus a lot sometimes.
So instead of doing two, when our workouts,
they just did 15 minutes on a daily basis.
So that is a great approach for new people.
When somebody's brand new, like when I talk to a family member,
in fact, my aunt is about to start string training.
She's like, I've never done it before.
What should I do?
Should I go two days a week and, you know,
do 45 minutes to an hour?
So I don't know.
I want you to do 15 minutes every single day.
She's like, what?
And I say, yeah, just, she's like, well,
that's actually easier.
I can squeeze it in.
I do it every single day, develops habits faster.
Sit up so that's, that's the point.
So that's a very important thing to consider.
You also, Adam mentioned the stability ball.
The stability ball entered into the fitness space
and became quite popular and got abused for a while,
where everybody was doing everything on a stability ball.
And so then we moved away from it.
But the real value of stability ball training,
that's the big, looks like a big inflatable ball, right?
The value of it is when you sit on it
or use it for exercises because it's not a chair or a bench,
it requires you to maintain stability
with your body and posture.
And you want that, you want to learn how to do that
as a beginner because there's lots of exercises
that require that.
If you do overhead exercises or rows or whatever,
and you don't haven't learned yet,
how to really stabilize your body,
this is where lower back injuries can happen
or just, you know, bad technique.
So stability ball exercises are excellent,
excellent for beginners.
One of my favorite uses for?
Yeah, I want to add to your point about Math 15, too.
I mean, this is how I just started.
So, and I wasn't completely off either.
It was just I wasn't very consistent.
I was sporadically working out one day,
then maybe another week I'd have two days,
and I have a week off, and then like so,
my training was really inconsistent just, you inconsistent just three, four months ago.
And the way I started back really being consistent was actually math.
But for that exact reason was just to help build that consistency.
I'm only doing two exercises a day.
And it's getting enough of a stimulus because it's still more total volume in a week than
what I was currently doing before that.
And that initial starting to build muscle and change my physique was literally just
from doing mass 15 before I started to scale it up.
Totally.
Now as far as diet is concerned, for most beginners,
this may sound counter, right?
This might sound a little contrary to common knowledge.
But most people think, okay, I should just cut my calories,
right?
Because most people are looking to lose weight. Not necessarily. We like to, and we found this to be more successful, to add things
to someone's diet and do what's called a reverse diet. Because we're trying to fuel muscle
building and muscle growth. Now you're going to gain tons of muscle, muscles hard to build.
But what that does, just by moving in that direction, especially if you do it the right way by adding quality protein, is you actually start to speed up your metabolism.
That makes fat loss way easier.
Think of it this way right now.
If your metabolism was 50% hotter, how much easier would it be to get lean, right?
That means you don't have to move as much.
Your body's burning those calories on its own. So a reverse diet type of an approach
where you slowly add calories, especially
through high quality protein in conjunction
with proper strength training will start to speed that metabolism up
so that we get what's called like a snowball effect
is what I used to refer to it as.
Like it starts off slow, but that snowball as it goes down the hill
gets bigger and bigger and bigger.
Well, this goes back to the original point
that I was trying to make about, you know,
if you hit, let's, most of these beginners
that would choose this beginner pathway
are probably trying to reduce body fat or lose weight, right?
And if you just start moving way more than what you were
before, say following one of these programs, right?
And reducing calorie significantly.
In the first couple of weeks, you would see more weight loss on the scale than say the
person who I tell you on the reverse diet.
But fast forward this two months, three months down the road.
And the person who did it the right way by reverse dieting first and speeding their metabolism
up is going to see fat loss come off significantly faster and then stay off and then also being
a place to maintain where they want to be forever versus the person who just cuts cuts cuts cuts
throughout the gate. And then they're a month away or a month out and their body's plateauing,
they're halfway to their goal and they're eating hardly anything and they're like,
F this is not sustainable. Which by the way, it's going to be lower. Happens to most people
when they get in this place. So 100% I'm on board like this is this person I'm reverse
dieting right now. And even though their goal may be I want to lose 20 pounds or 30 pounds.
It looked great. That bikini for summer. It's like, okay, that is the plan. But we're first
going to reverse diet and put you in a better position, metabolically, before we start to cut
out. Yeah, by the way, if this is like,
if you want to lose like 10 pounds,
like you're thinking, I just want to lose 10 pounds
of body fat, if you do this well,
oftentimes the scale doesn't move much at all,
but you did lose quite a bit of body fat
and just gained muscle.
And that means you're smaller, by the way.
I want to be very clear, muscle takes up less space per pound than body fat.
It's just more dense.
So if you lost, let's just say 10 pounds of body fat,
but gained 10 pounds of muscle,
people would think you lost 20 pounds on the scale.
Like you're just smaller, and that muscle
doesn't take up much space, but you look tighter
and more sculpted.
In fact, that would get clients,
that would happen with clients all the time. They'd come. In fact, I would get clients, that would happen
with clients all the time. They'd come to me like, sell it. I know we've only been working out
for a couple months. The scale hasn't moved. People keep asking me how much weight I've lost.
And say, well, you did lose body fat. You just gain muscle. Now your metabolism's faster and
you're smaller because body fat takes up more space. All right. The next person, the, that,
you know, type of person that is trying to get in shape for some
person, trying to build muscle, trying to gain some mass.
Usually this is a guy, typically, especially a young man or whatever, but I've had female
clients.
Yeah, I would put, I would put even like booty gains right here.
That's muscle building.
Right, right.
So I put booty gains for the bikini in this position.
I put hard gainer in this position.
I put just somebody in general
who has a harder time building muscle
and wants to build a muscular physique,
heading this way.
That's how I put all those people in this category.
Yeah, now a big thing to consider here,
and this is somebody that's already been,
you know, kind of working out.
Obviously we covered the beginner,
so you're already working out and you're like,
I just want to build, I want to get into the summer
and I want to have more muscle and more shape.
Well, for this kind of person,
usually we see big changes in their performance
in terms of the results,
by simply manipulating and utilizing intensity properly.
Okay.
Intensity is one of the most important factors
when it comes to your workouts.
It also simultaneously happens to be the one
that's the most abused.
Yes.
So, you have like frequency,
like how often you work out,
how many days a week are you working out?
That would be frequency.
Volume would be the total amount of workout exercises
and sets and reps that you do.
So if you worked out, for an hour,
that'd be more volume than if you worked out
for 20 minutes. So it's volume than if you worked out for, you know, 20 minutes.
So it's volume. And then there's intensity, which is simply how hard the workout is.
Well, you know, if you've been working out for a little while, you're trying to build muscle, you probably realized early on that,
oh, the harder I work out, the more muscle I build.
But eventually, the stops real fast. And then you think, oh, I must need to work out harder, which you, you know, you work
out even harder and then still no results.
Oh, I need to just ramp it up even more.
And then not only you're not getting results, now you're going backwards.
So intensity needs to be utilized properly and manipulated in a way to where we are working
with your body's ability to heal, recover, and adapt.
We're not just beating the crap out of yourself.
If you do this the right way, then we can trigger and amplify muscle growth.
If we do this the wrong way, then nothing happens at all.
Or worse, you actually start to go backwards.
So, some piece of advice for people. And this actually is now present in one of our most,
in our more recent maps program,
maps in a ballock, which we actually created
after already having the podcast for eight years
and interviewing experts and experimenting with more people.
As we realize that, you can utilize very high intensity training
and it will build muscle very quickly
so long as you alternate it
with less intense higher volume style workouts
and throw in some what are called de-load weeks.
And if you do that magic combination right there,
oh boy, the results have a little problem.
Which really, I mean, it's highlighting the importance
of recovering and adapting versus just healing
and getting into that kind of recovery trap
where we're working out so intensively
because it's showing us results out of the gates
because this intensity is really providing your body
that signal and that stimulus.
But if we keep on that path of just over intensity, like
over and over and over, it just gets to the point where now we're just healing now and
we're not really moving the needle forward anymore.
So this is just always something that I think most people are going on their fitness journey.
Don't really consider how vital and important the recovery processes with sleep, with nutrition,
or with also just like, unrelating your intensity of your workouts.
I also think that this person, because we are playing with things like intensity and
like failure training and stuff like that, the thing that compliments this is like a prime
pro type of layout where I have all these exercises that are designed
to make sure I keep all my joints moving optimally and healthy.
Because when you are flirting with things like intensity, you are more likely to see the
joint pain or the issues like that.
And so being staying ahead of it, knowing like, oh, you know, I kind of have this rolled
shoulder forward.
And then also I know that I'm going to be pushing like overhead presses and hitting like it days where I might be taking it to failure.
And so knowing that I need to put the work in to make sure that I'm in an advantage,
an advantageous position to make sure that I don't hurt myself and I get the max benefits for it.
So I think having something like that to complement
that type of training, I think is necessary
for this advanced person or ideal for this person.
Yeah, if you've been working out for a while
and you're trying to build muscle mass,
you've probably, hopefully, already figured out
that some exercises just build more muscle than others.
You know, like the bench press, the barbell,
usually the more difficult ones.
Yeah, the barbell squat, the deadlift,
the overhead press, right?
Those exercises just, they just build a lot of strength
and a lot of muscle in comparison to other exercises
that purport to, you know, work the same areas.
But then you wrench this problem if this is you
and you're trying to build muscle
and you're getting stronger and you're pushing intensity by lifting the failure.
Something starts to hurt. My elbow starts to bother me. I can't deadlift anymore because
my wrist bothers me or I can't overhead press. My shoulder bothers me or my lower back is
starting to get tweaked. Now I can't squat. So now you can't do these incredible muscle
building exercises because something
hurts, something's bothering you, you got to switch it out for an inferior exercise. And
maybe you'll still build some muscle, but it ain't happening nearly as fast for this person,
you know, but, you know, just to compliment what you guys are saying, it's really important
to do targeted mobility work, targeted for the areas that you know,
you know, are getting stressed quite a bit.
So like if you're bench pressing a lot,
and you're seeing your numbers go up,
and you start to notice like,
oh, my left shoulder starts to feel a little bit funny,
and I'm starting to lift big weights,
but God, I love the bench press,
it builds my chest and my shoulders
and my triceps really well,
targeted mobility work on that shoulder or targeted mobility work for your particular body
type to help with the bench press will keep those numbers moving forward.
If you don't do that, your body will literally stop you from getting stronger either because
your central nervous system will say, we're not letting you lift more, we don't feel stable
or worse, you push past that, you overcome your central nervous system's kind of, you
know, stopping mechanism and you're yourself.
Now, you're really screwed.
Now, you can't work out at all.
So targeted mobility is so important for people, really trying to build muscle mass because
usually that comes along with heavy weights and lots of, you know, intense strength training.
That will stop you in the tracks if you don't address it.
Back to the intensity thing, for somebody watching right now, when I said alternate, literally
you could do one week for, let's say, your back, 15 sets where you stop three reps short
of failure, you get a good pump.
The next week, now you're doing just four sets but all to failure.
You drop the volume, it ramped up the intensity,
alternating like that.
Oh boy, that keeps things moving in the right direction.
Do the failure every single week, like a lot of people do,
and after about three or four weeks,
that's it, you're stuck in the mud.
Well, I'm gonna add back to your priming and mobility point
that you're making.
There's at least I don't think you guys do.
I know for sure me, if I am lifting heavy bench,
overhead press, squat or deadlift,
it's mandatory that I do certain mobility drills
before I go into that, or it's almost guaranteed
that I will hurt or stress something when I do it.
For sure, it won't get the max out of the lift.
I know that.
If I try to go cold into one of those things or just do like a warm-up set, like some coaches just advocate for
and then go into it, there's no way I'm getting the most out of that lift or I'm not potentially
getting hurt out of that lift. And I know it's equal in terms of like beginner to advanced in terms
of like that, but I can't help but think like the further along I've gotten in my career, like
lifting weights, like how essential that is now that I've understood that, like because you do pay attention
to that, you peer into those little inconsistencies even more when you're lifting heavy weights
and it pressures it more.
So you, I very much have had to, you know, be humble myself and realize like I have to do
this in order to maintain the optimal function of my joints
in order to then get any progress going forward.
Because it's harder,
it gets harder and harder to get progress
the longer you're in.
Yes, the bigger and stronger you get,
the higher the risk becomes when your form is off
just a little bit, okay?
So to paint it plainly,
if you're deadlifting with a hundred pounds and your form is off a little bit. Okay, so to paint it plainly, if you're deadlifting with 100 pounds and
your form is off a little bit versus you're deadlifting with 500 pounds and your form
is off just a little bit, obviously the risk is going to be much higher with the heavier
weight because it's heavier and it's going to stress the joints a little bit differently.
Now, if you have perfect form, good stability, good control, you're fine, but when you're
off, you're off.
So targeted mobility work becomes, it's important for the beginner.
It's crucial for the person who's been working out for a long time.
Which is by the way, where the whole heavy lifting thing has got a bad rap.
Like it has something to do with the heavy weights.
Don't lift heavy because you get hurt or it's bad for your joints.
It's like, no, it's that you...
The heavier you lift, the more perfect you can lift.
You can consider that.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, I don't know how you guys treat it,
but to me, like let's say it's a day where
it's been a while since I've tried to train to failure
or push it like singles, doubles, or triples.
I, for me, I make this like rule where I have to earn that.
And part of earning that is doing the pre-work
going into that. And if I'm not willing to do all my work, then I won't do it. That's
right. It's just that simple. If I, oh, I mean, oh, I'm in a hurry, I can do this. Like,
K, well, then I'm not training to failure. I'm not pushing the risk. It's not. And so
the only way that I earn the right to lift like that is that I've done all the prerequisites
before I go into that. And I've just learned that over years I've done all the prerequisites before I go into that and I've just learned that
over years and years of making the mistake of not doing that.
Right, another thing for people trying to build
lots of muscle who have experience is at this point
you're probably somewhat well versed
in some of those pretty awesome exercises,
which is great because they're great exercises,
but here's the downside is that,
you probably think back to when you were learning
how to do a squat and then there was that beautiful period
where you just seem to get stronger every week
and muscle started to build.
And then at some point you got real good at it,
you've done it for a while now,
adding 15 pounds of the bar is really hard.
You can actually somewhat tap into that by doing certain unconventional strength building
lifts.
There's some that are out there that for some reason became unpopular that are amazing
muscle building exercises.
I would look into some of these lifts that you probably haven't done before and really
tap into some of those with you know, what they call, you know, new
Begains and they're out there like for me, for example, we created a program called map strong
You know years ago and I was familiar with a zurcher squat or a zurcher deadlift
Never really programmed it in my workouts, but it was part of our program
We were selling it, we were creating,
so I started doing them in my routine.
And it was great, it was like the first time
I started to learn how to deadlift.
Like it first took me a while, it was uncomfortable.
And then I started getting better with them.
And then I was gaining muscle like I just started working out.
This is my body, never done that.
Exercise really for a long period of time.
So there's exercises out there that I like.
Oh, there's two other exercises in that program that you didn't even name.
I got that from Snatch Crypt Deadlifts and Circus Press.
Those two movements were like, like, forgotten movements in my programming forever.
Like I didn't do it till post 10 years into my career, adding that into my routine.
Oh my God, the response from
that such great movements. That's why that's one of my favorite programs is because of all the
unconventional lifts in there that I think most people don't think to program and they're just
super beneficial. Right. Another thing of value with people in this category, and I'm going to be
careful when I say this because I know the tendency is to abuse what I'm about to talk about.
But if you do it right, they can be pretty awesome.
There are advanced training techniques that are out there that bodybuilders and power
lifters and Olympic lifters and strength athletes have used that can really amplify
results and progress.
Now, the key is to use them judiciously, be very intelligent with how you use them. So an
example would be like four straps, or negatives, or partial reps, or using bands for progressive
resistance, for example. Like these are all examples of advanced trained techniques. If you use them,
let's say you pick one and you use it once a week on a specific lift
Or twice a week and you know, maybe on another lift and you do it right you will see faster muscle building results
If you mess up and you do it too often you'll go backwards
So just word of note there are advanced train techniques out there
But you got to use them right if you use them wrong and you might as well,
you're better off not doing them at all.
Now the last person, which is probably 80% of people
going into the summers, they wanna lose weight.
They wanna get lean, they wanna get cut, shredded,
whatever, they wanna burn.
And they have experience right now,
and they're consistent, right?
Right, right, right.
So people with some experience.
Yeah, I'd say this probably,
this fits 80% maybe the listeners, right? Most of you that with some experience. Yeah, I'd say this probably, this fits 80%
maybe the listeners, right? Most of you that are listening to the podcast probably are
lifting in the gym pretty regularly or have been doing it for a while. So you have some
experience and, you know, maybe you have already kind of built a little bit of lean,
lean tissue and metabolism is getting up there already and now it's like, okay,
let's go through the reveals. Yeah, exactly. It's a reveal time.
I've got perfect amount of time getting ready to head
for like, say, fourth of July or whatever like that.
Now I want to get shredded.
Like, that's the person I think about
when we talk about the first.
Yeah, now because this is, you know,
really falls into that like aesthetic category
or looks category, I'm gonna talk a little bit about
training for balance and symmetry in the
body, which can have profound visual effects. Training the body to be balanced, you might
not see a huge change on the scale, but visually when someone looks at you, they'll notice
you'll look a lot different, a lot better. Balance can be upper to lower body, that's an obvious one,
but it can also be more commonly right to left, right?
Is your right arm way stronger than your left arm?
Is your right leg way stronger than your left leg?
Are they as fit as each other?
Unilateral training, this is where you train one side
at a time, bodybuilders have done this for a long time
to improve how they look. Training one side at a time and doing it properly can really change how you
look. Even though the scale might not move much, in fact, we had somebody in our forum, we posted
this a long time ago where she did a Dexas scan and she followed one of our programs that's designed
for this called Map Symmetry. I forgot about this. And there was like so much lean body mass on one side versus the other, so a little bit
more on her dominant side than the other.
And then she followed the program and it did exactly what it was designed to do, is it brought
up the lagging side.
And visually, you could see it, you know, and it's something that you pick up on subconsciously.
You could pick up on symmetry.
So just something to focus on.
If you're getting lean and your goal
is to really improve your aesthetics,
like try to balance out both sides
rather than just drive your body forward.
I wish I understood this when I was in my 20s.
I didn't get this.
I totally didn't get this.
I think I was like in teenage.
Your teenage to early 20s,
like you get with many clients who are obsessed
with the body part.
Oh, I just want to have big arms.
Or always want that big chest or always want big legs or a butt.
Like, we get obsessed with these body parts that we tend to be insecure about or that
we're infatuated with.
And we want that.
And if we only like were to focus more symmetrically on the body, like you'd be so much happier.
Like I think back to like, for me,
it was like arms as a kid,
like that was like this big deal,
like it's one of arms,
and so that's all I ever did.
And the reality is that even when I laid off
doing arms at the volume that I was doing
in my teens in early 20s,
and started to build a more symmetrical,
see I got more compliments about my arms than I ever did,
but yet circumference wise, they were technically an inch plus smaller than what
they were when I was training them like crazy, but it's crazy what a difference having sculpt
the shoulders does for the bicep and the tricep and the same thing goes for a good balanced
quad to hamstring to calf ratio, like when you train the body symmetrically like that,
like, it will, even if you think that you only want one body part
as all you think you care about,
that one body part will look better
when it's balanced with everything else.
So funny how much of a head turner it is
for people that are super symmetrically balanced
and athletic for sure fit.
Looking versus like, I remember seeing somebody I've seen on Instagram
in real life and was just like,
whoa, it's just, you know,
cause there's angles and there's things
that can highlight those featured body parts
and what people want.
And versus like in real life and then you see it.
It's just like, it's so,
it takes you a second to kind of put it together.
It's like it doesn't really fit.
It's rare.
It's rare to, I mean, posture and symmetry.
Yeah.
If I see someone, I say I always compliment them
because I think it's always gonna look good.
Yeah, it looks when someone stands up right
with good posture in their symmetrically balanced,
it's I think the most amazing expression
of their body or our bodies when done so and so. Yeah, it's the I think, the most amazing expression of their body or our bodies when, when, when
done so.
It's the difference between, oh, like muscular versus, oh, that's a beautiful body.
Right.
Bodybuilders have understood this for a long time.
I mean, they, they've learned for a long time that they don't just get judged on overdeveloped
body parts, but rather how it all flows and looks together.
And training for that makes a very big difference.
And again, if you're trying to get cut,
you're probably interested in,
you wanna look a particular way, don't ignore this.
This makes a very big difference in your appearance.
The other thing is to bring up balance
is to bring up body parts that may be
just specifically lagging for yourself.
Now, everybody has this, by the way,
everybody has a body part that they're not happy with.
I don't care who you talked to if they've been working out
for a while, and you say, you know,
how's your workouts going?
What do you like?
What do you don't like?
Everybody's like, oh, I have, it's my butt,
or it's my, the back of my shoulders,
or it's my back, or whatever, right?
They have that one body part.
Here's a mistake people make.
They add volume to that body part,
more exercises, more sets, and more reps,
and they do nothing else with the rest of the body.
Or they train it with more volume with the same intensity.
And so they just end up beating the crap out of this body part
over training and actually cause it to not just not progress,
but to actually regress.
Or also developing the ones that are already
overdeveloped in comparison to that.
And so even though you bring it up.
The ratio of the same.
The ratio stays the same.
So you bring up that one body part
but then the rest of them came up too.
Yeah, there's a smart way to bring up a lagging body part.
And usually you reduce volume from other areas
or you add volume to that weak body part
but you do so in a lower intensity with different exercises.
So you're not just overcoming your body's ability to adapt and recover.
You're actually bringing that body part up.
Now another part, and here's where I want to get real careful, is, you know, the calorie
burn of your workout, we've talked about this many times on the show, it's not the most
important thing.
What's more important is that you speed up your
metabolism. It's more important that you eat a particular way. We'll get to diet, of course,
because these are people who want to lose weight. But in a short period of time, let's say in eight
week period of time, you can make some pretty profound changes by burning more calories in your workout.
But you got to do it the right way, because if you do this the wrong way, what'll happen is your body will actually reduce muscle
to keep you from burning too many calories.
Remember, your body's always trying to keep itself
in balance.
So what's real popular for this is usually
high intensity interval training, right?
Hit training because studies show it burns
so many calories, oh my God, 30 minutes of hit.
It's like doing two hours of other exercise.
That's true, but it's not just a mishmash of exercises.
If you really want this to be effective,
it needs to be strength training, hit workouts.
Strength training, hit workouts that are well-programmed,
will burn a tenta calories,
will get you lean faster in a short period of time,
but you won't lose muscle.
So if I were to structure this,
the way it would look for me personally,
is a more symmetry you know, symmetry slash aesthetic
type of programming and then and and carb cycling while I'm heading into summertime.
And then the last fish it up with it.
Yeah.
And then the last two to four weeks is hit.
And I would start to reduce calories as I slowly go down.
And the way I would reduce it is through carb cycling.
So I would carb cycle, let the lower carb days be the natural, lower calorie days, let the maintenance, the surplus
days be the little bit higher calorie days. And then as I start to get closer and closer
to the end of the, you know, or whenever the time I'm trying to peak or look my best, if
I have vacation or fourth of July or whatever is when I'm going to ramp up and introduce
the the hit for those last couple of hours.
Carbcycling is, I was popularized by bodybuilders, but now lots of people are catching on.
When you cut your calories, calories are gonna come from proteins, fats, or carbohydrates.
Those are the three places you'll get calories from.
Proteins and fats are essential.
So you have to eat a certain amount of them.
You have to, absolutely have to.
Your body cannot create essential fatty acids.
It cannot create essential fatty acids. It cannot create essential amino acids, but your body actually technically doesn't
need carbohydrates. Now, I'm not advocating you never eat carbs again. I don't think
that's a very well balanced approach that also has its own negatives, but you could survive
without carbs. So when cutting calories and also simultaneously try to give yourself
enough energy for your workouts
and simultaneously try to not lose any muscle, it makes sense. And this is again, why bodybuilders did
this. It makes sense to cycle your carbs. Cut your carbs when you cut your calories. Raise them a
little bit when you need the energy for particular types of workouts. And the data shows that this actually
has some merit. People have better workouts
and psychologically the diet doesn't feel as difficult. They feel more satisfied and
they get better results. And look, I've done it all and personally, this for me is the
best way to get lean. It's just it's the easiest it feels the best and I still have decent
workouts.
I think there's more to that too. And You kind of alluded to it with the essential, your fats and protein is essential.
In my experience, almost any time I set, when you assess the diet, when you're not telling
people what to do, and like, what do they do?
Almost everybody was under-consuming, healthy fats or definitely under-consuming protein.
The idea that when you would go into this restrictive part of a diet to lean out,
to potentially cut the two things that you already are probably low on is not a good strategy.
So I've always loved utilizing carb cycling or some form of that with clients when it comes to reducing body fat.
Unless they have some sort of special condition or autoimmune issue where
I'd put them on a different type of a diet.
But for most people, I think it's one of the best strategies to lean somebody out for that
exact reason that most people don't hit their protein and healthy fats on a regular basis.
And so why would I put you on a calorie sugar diet where I pull that out when it's something
you're not consistently doing?
I just got you consistently eating that.
Now I'm gonna pull that away.
No, I'd rather pull something like carbohydrates
that aren't necessary.
So we're gonna get those fats and proteins.
Yeah.
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Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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