Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Alex Hutchinson on Developing the Power to Endure
Episode Date: November 6, 2019If you can’t endure discomfort, you’re not going to make it very far in your training, not to mention your life. Lifting weights is hard. Doing HIIT is hard. Stick to a diet is hard. Learning valu...able skills is hard. Burning the midnight oil at work is hard. Overcoming setbacks is hard. What’s more, willpower and motivation are notoriously fickle, and when they’re at a low ebb due to poor sleep, stress, angst, or whatever else get us down some days, everything only gets harder. That’s why it’s often the ability to endure that separates the successful from the unsuccessful in just about every arena of life, not just athletics Now, endurance can be defined in many ways, but my guest Alex Hutchinson has an elegant one: the strength to continue despite an increasing desire to stop. Even if you aren’t an endurance athlete (I’m not), understanding how people find the physical and mental stamina and grit to finish marathons and other even more extreme endurance events can help you reach more of your own finish lines, inside and outside of the gym. In fact, one of the reasons so many people enjoy endurance exercise is because of how it empowers them to struggle through hardship of any kind. All of this is why I invited accomplished endurance athlete, writer, and researcher Alex Hutchinson back on the show. In case you’re not familiar with Alex, he’s a New York Times bestselling author of several books including his most recent, Endure, as well as an award-winning science journalist and former physicist and national-class runner. And in this interview, he shares many of the insights he gleaned from researching and writing his book Endure, including how the brain influences our physical and mental limits, how elite athletes are able to exceed these limits, how to “recharge” after intense effort, and more. Let’s get to it. 5:49 - Can a mother lift a car to save her baby? 12:54 - How is our performance limited by our brain? 15:46 - What are some of the reasons the brain limits itself? 22:02 - What are some ways that elite athletes are able to exceed brain limitations? 26:30 - Does enduring physical pain improve your ability to push through discomfort in other areas of your life? 32:21 - What are some strategies to recharge between mentally demanding tasks? 50:51 - Does incorporating fun into your life improve sleep and decrease anxiety? Mentioned on The Show: Shop Legion Supplements Here Alex’s Website Alex’s Twitter Alex’s Book: Endure Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
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Hello there. I'm Mike Matthews. This is the Muscle Life Podcast.
And I have a newsflash for you.
If you can't endure discomfort, you're not going to make it very far in your training, not to mention
your life. Because let's face it, lifting weights is hard. Doing high intensity interval training
is hard. Sticking to a diet, or at least it can be hard. Learning valuable skills is hard, burning the midnight oil at work is hard, overcoming setbacks
is hard. And what's more, as willpower and motivation are notoriously fickle when they're at
a low ebb due to poor sleep, stress, angst, or whatever else gets us down some days, everything only gets harder. And that's why
it's often just the ability to endure that separates the successful from the unsuccessful
in just about every arena of life, not just athletics. Now, endurance can be defined in
many different ways, but my guest in this episode, Alex Hutchinson, has an elegant one, and it is the strength physical and mental stamina and grit to finish
marathons and other more extreme endurance events can help you reach more of your own finish lines,
both inside and outside of the gym. In fact, one of the reasons why so many people enjoy endurance exercise is because
of how it empowers them to be able to struggle through hardship of any kind. And that's why I
invited the one and only Alex Hutchinson back on the show to talk about this. Now, in case you are
not familiar with Alex, he is a New York Times
bestselling author of several books, including his most recent one, which is called Endure.
And he's also an award-winning science journalist. He has a popular column for Outside Magazine
called Sweat Science. If you Google that, you'll find it. And he has quite a few highly informative
articles on all kinds of things over there.
And he's also a former physicist and national class runner and just a nice guy. And in this
interview, Alex shares many of the insights that he gleaned from researching and writing his book
including how the brain influences our physical and mental limits, how elite athletes are able to
exceed these limits, how to recharge are able to exceed these limits,
how to recharge after intense effort, including what he likes to do himself personally, and more.
So let's get to the interview. Alex, you have returned. It's been a while, man. Thanks for taking the time to come back on. Yeah, thanks, Mike. It's great to be back.
Yeah. So the reason we're here is because of your latest and greatest book,
Endure. And it randomly occurred to me, I was looking over people who have been on the podcast
in the past and whose work I like, and you stood out. So like, oh, Alex has a new book,
and it's a very popular book. And it's also some of the things we're going to get into are things
that I haven't really talked about much or written about much because endurance has never really been my thing personally and really my wheelhouse in terms of educational side of things.
So I'm excited for the conversation because I do know that I have a fair amount of people in my orbit who care about this stuff.
It's just never been something that
I've dived into. Oh, fantastic. And I will make the self-serving argument that endurance is a
much broader concept than people often think about it. For everyone who doesn't know, I'm a
distance runner, right? My thing is running long distances. And I started out to write a book about
that. But the more I tried to sort of put my finger on what is endurance? How do we define it?
How do we encapsulate what it is I'm talking about?
You realize it just gets the circle gets bigger and bigger.
And I end up like have a chapter in the book called muscle.
Because if you want to know what the limits of endurance are, you have to know what the
limits of strength are.
Can the proverbial, you know, woman with a baby trapped under a car, can she lift the
car?
And if not, why not?
And if so, why?
And so, you know, I ended up with this really broad definition of endurance, the struggle
to continue against a mounting desire to stop.
So I will make the grandiose claim that this book is for everyone.
Let's just take that and run with it.
So can the proverbial mother lift the car to save the baby?
Everyone's heard that.
And I've heard, I couldn't go into it any more than I heard that it's simply kind of fake news, basically.
It's just like an urban legend.
Yeah, I think it's fake news, but with maybe a kernel of truth.
So when you dig into the literature, you find that all these sort of scientific-sounding references to what's sometimes called hysterical strength.
And people have been talking about it for centuries.
Not centuries.
Well, maybe know, centuries, not centuries, well,
maybe a couple centuries.
And it's certainly once people discovered electricity, there was this sense that if you give yourself a shock, your muscles are contracting with a strength that you could
not possibly reproduce voluntarily.
And there's also this whole sort of like insane people and drowning people.
They have quote unquote superhuman strength.
And so people started doing really good experiments.
And it was kind of taken for granted, let's say 80, 90 years ago, that this was true, that if you could
truly contract all your muscles at the right time with full strength, you would be able to
perform feats that would make people swoon. But I guess in the 1950s, people started doing careful
experiments where they're like, okay, let's see how strong you are. Now we're going to zap you,
and we're going to see whether we can use electricity to make you contract your muscles stronger. And the general finding,
and that continues to this day, people are still doing these experiments, is that when you contract
a single muscle as hard as you can, you're getting probably typically about 95% of what's there in
the muscle. So there may be a little bit left on the table, but not a ton. Where things get a little more complicated is that if you're doing something like a deadlift,
you're not just contracting one muscle, you're contracting like 17 muscles in a fairly
sophisticated combination that keeps you from, you know, falling over backwards.
And that combination may be complicated enough that it's very hard to really max yourself out under normal conditions because you're being careful to do it properly.
And that maybe under extreme conditions, you know, the baby under the car, you're able to just sort of say, ah, screw it.
I'm going to contract all 17 of those muscles as hard as I can.
We'll see what happens.
And I don't care if I break something or pull something or snap something.
And I don't care if I break something or pull something or snap something. And so there's various experiments with the Soviet weightlifting team back in the 60s where they claimed that, you know, a world-class weightlifter could get maybe 80, 85% lives in Pennsylvania, is in his mid-80s, is still actually
contributing to research. He's like, so where did you get these numbers? How did you calculate 80,
85%? He's like, I don't remember. That's like the worst answer. He's like, no, come on.
You wrote a textbook on this. I am quoting you your textbook. You put numbers in there,
and you're like, I don't remember. Okay, so thank you very little.
So sorry, that's a long rambling answer.
But the basic answer is, no, you can't just sort of double your strength.
But there's no doubt.
And we know this from experience too, that under conditions of extreme stress, you can
probably get some sort of bump.
And so if you talk about the specific example of lifting a car, the other thing is it's
like, okay, people can deadlift a thousand pounds, but a car weighs 3000 pounds. So it's impossible.
It's like, no, you're not actually lifting the car over your head or anything. You're lifting up
one axle of the car. Uh, and, and the car has shocks, which is helping the first, you know,
what you may be doing really is just taking the weight off the shocks enough that you can pull
that someone else can pull the person from under the, under the wheels. So you get some pretty well witnessed, you know, I looked
through the news reports in there, there are some pretty well witnessed events where someone's under
a car and then someone isn't. But it's not that this person is like cleaning and jerking the car,
it's that they're taking some pressure off by lifting up the bumper, you know, maybe from one
corner. So they're really just lifting one corner of the car up enough that someone else can pull the person out from under it.
Yeah. Which is maybe several hundred pounds. I mean, still a lot of weight, but not,
yeah, maybe 700, 800 even like, so, and this is not, this is not like grandma Jones. This is the
one that I found most reliable. It was this one in Arizona in about 2006. And the guy who reportedly
did it, it turns out he's deadlifted 750 pounds in the gym.
And after this event, he drove home
and noticed that he had like six cracked teeth.
He had been gritting his teeth so hard while lifting.
So this is a guy who could already,
under verifiable conditions,
be deadlifting 700 and something pounds.
Yeah, I was just gonna mention that also,
if somebody doesn't really spend any time in the gym
and maybe has never deadlifted before, they also don't know how strong they are.
Some people are just naturally stronger than others.
And so what might seem like to them some great feat of strength, which seven, eight pounds is a great feat of strength.
That's ridiculous.
But your average, I couldn't see your average person being able to do that under any circumstances
ever, but let's say it were a few hundred pounds or something like that, uh, that they were,
they were lifting a log off of somebody or moving a log or something, but if they had never
deadlifted before, and you know, I know someone, for example, uh, the, a friend of mine was there
to see it. The first time he ever deadlifted was 405 pounds.
There was 405 pounds.
So my friend was deadlifting and this other dude came up, had never deadlifted once in
his life and was like, hey, can I try that?
And my friend was like, you don't know.
Like, you don't want to try that.
And he's like, yeah, whatever.
And he got one rep.
It was his form.
You didn't know about form.
So his back was bowed and it was kind
of cringy but it doesn't matter he picked up 400 pounds for the first time and ironically he went
from there to so he found out he obviously has super freak strength and his brother's a freak
as well as far as strength goes so he's like all right i mean i'm super his lower body in particular
is pulling so then he he went off and he trained for bobsledding.
Because I guess that's what they look for.
And he has the-
That's where bobsledders come from.
It's actually smart.
I thought it was like,
I admired how he went through.
He's like, okay, this is how my body is built.
This is limb length.
And this is what I'm really good at.
This is what I'm strong at.
What could I do with this?
I'm not an athletic person.
I'm not going to, you know, he's already, he was in his twenties or whatever. I'm not going to,
I'm not going to get skilled enough at any sport that requires a lot of gross motor skills. And
he, and he, and he like narrowed it down to bobsledding. He's like, actually, I think I have
a chance at that. And I have to ask where, where he went, but he was, he was making progress as
far as I know. He was like getting up there in terms of his strength with the Olympic guys.
And so it'd be funny to see if that ever works out for him.
But imagine him.
I mean, again, if he had never done that before, he didn't know that he's strong and he's in
a situation where now he thinks that he just hulked out and like tripled his strength by
moving that log.
But not really, actually.
He's just a strong dude.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I mean, personally, I'm just hoping that if I ever witness a bike accident,
I'll be strong enough to lift a bike off somebody. But you know, we all have our goals.
I think you need to deadlift a little bit more, my friend.
Yeah, I think so too.
So let's talk about performance and the brain. How is our performance limited by our brains,
which it kind of ties into what we're talking about here, that there are actual physical limits of strength and there are perceived limits of strength. Let's
just go back to, let's say endurance in the way that you defined it, because it could apply to
strength or other things. Yeah. So, I mean, in a sense, this was the sort of fundamental question
that I wanted to try and explore, you know, if not answer while writing the book, which is,
you know, when you push as hard as you can, or you've gone for as long as you can,
you reach that point where you're like, that's it. I can't keep going, or I can't go any faster, I can't sustain this pace. What actually is holding you back? And the sort
of the traditional answer that people that I grew up with as a runner and that the physiology, you
know, physiology text will tell you is there'll be some combination of like, it's your VO2 max,
it's your, you know, your, your lactate threshold, it's the It's your core temperature, your breathing rate, whatever, your ability to get oxygen
into your muscles.
There's all these sort of mechanical things as if the human body is sort of like a very
complicated car.
Like a quantifiable hard stop or quantifiable hard stops.
Yeah, you reach your limit because that's the limit in the same way that if you try
and pour, you know, a gallon of milk into a one gallon bucket, it'll fit.
But if you try and pour a gallon and a half, it won't fit because that's, that's as much
as it can hold.
And, uh, but you know, the reality for people who test their endurance on a regular basis,
it's not like, you know, if I go out and run a mile tomorrow and then I go out and run
a mile again a week from now, I won't run exactly the same time.
And in fact, there'll be quite a bit of variation.
And it's not just the weather. And it's not just that I've gotten fitter or less fit. It's like every race is different. And so this sort of argues against this idea that there's some,
we're just a set of pipes and that's endurance is a plumbing contest to deliver oxygen to your
muscles. And the fact that in big races, your motivation is different and you can push harder.
So you get this sense that actually, maybe it's the brain that determines where your limits are. Maybe it's the brain that decides
when you should stop. And this has been the sort of the big theme in exercise physiology in the last
10 or 15 years. It's been, oh, wait, we've spent a century learning about the body,
but we've kind of left out the brain and try to understand how the brain dictates how close,
you can still think of your body as having sort of ultimate physical limits. But on any given day, your brain decides how close
you're going to get to those limits. And it may be and the idea is basically it's trying to protect
you. It's thinking if you get to those limits, you die, or, you know, maybe you die immediately,
or maybe it was just bad in an evolutionary context, that if you were chasing an antelope
across the savannah, and you just kept going until you keeled over you didn't make it back to the campfire that night to pass
on your genes so nobody really knows that the real answer but the the practical outcome is that
ultimately if you do any sort of test of endurance until and you reach your breaking point the only
there's no physical thing we can measure that will tell you where that exactly, where that breaking point is. It will be determined ultimately by your brain.
And what are some of the factors that go into the limiting by the brain? Like what are some of the,
what are some of the things that weighs to, because anyone, anyone who has played sports
for a while or worked out for a while has experienced that, you know, that especially
when you're doing something consistently, take working out just for a lot of people listening where
you you do one exercise one week with a certain amount of weight and you get a certain amount
of reps and it feels a certain way and then the next week you maybe you're not even increasing
the rate maybe maybe your programming is due to you're trying to do actually the same thing
you uh did last week and now it just feels a lot harder and you and you simply can to do actually the same thing you did last week. And now it just feels a lot harder
and you, and you simply can't do it when there doesn't seem to be any obvious reason why, you
know? Yeah. And I mean, you know, the classic example of that actually is there's all these
studies where it's like, you bring a guy into the weight room, say lift as lift as many reps as you
can in this. And sometimes it's a female experimenter and sometimes it's a male one and
people can do more when it's a female experimenter.
And no one's surprised by this.
Like, we all understand this.
But if you stop and try and say, what's the physiological change?
Why?
Because, you know, you're trying as hard as you can when the male experimenter is there.
But somehow you find a little more when the female experimenter is there.
You know, depending on the person, right?
Like, obviously, there's lots of variations.
But this is sort of a simple illustration of the fact that, you know,
explain that to me in terms of what's going on in your muscle fibers. Your muscle fibers don't know
that it's a male or a female. There's something in your, basically in your brain, in your brain's
response to the people around you. So that's an illustration of the fact that there are a
billion things that go into this, you know, how your brain sets your limits. But the simple way
of thinking about it is that ultimately the master switch
is your subjective perception of effort.
And it sounds a little bit like circular reasoning
because what I'm saying is-
Yeah, because when you're saying your,
it's like, wait a minute,
are you saying the brain's perception of effort?
Yeah, and ultimately what I'm saying is that
something will, you will reach your limits
when it feels like you've reached your limits.
And it's like, well, duh.
I mean, I know it feels like I reached my limits because I reached my limits, but I think what I'm saying,
and I hope I'm not kidding myself. I think what I'm saying is a little more profound than that,
that the only variable that tells you when you're approaching your limits is your subjective
perception of effort. And so in the lab, they often measure that with something called the
Borg scale. And it's this scale that goes bizarrely from six to 20,
where six is basically you're lying on the couch and 20 is you're screaming for mercy.
And it's not a scale of pain or anything. It's a scale of effort. How hard is this? How hard do
you have to work to keep doing what you're doing? And when you get to 19 out of 20, you are going to
stop very soon what you're doing. No ifs, ands, or buts. Now, what determines what's a 19 out of 20?
We can't stick a probe into your brain and say that's a 19. Well, people are working on that,
but for now, we can't stick a probe in your brain and say, oh, he's experiencing 17 out of 20 right
now and 15 now and 19 now. But we know we can do experiments that mess with your perception of
effort and we can see all the things. So some of them are the obvious ones in an endurance context. It's like how hard you're breathing, what your lactate levels are, you know, how, how tired your
leg muscles are, all these sorts of things will contribute to your sense of effort. But there's
also a whole other set of environmental factors that will contribute to your sense of effort,
independent of what's going on in your muscles. And so I mentioned one, like if it's a female
versus a male, uh, you know, person standing beside you and cheering you on,
but there's all sorts of other ones. I mean, there's, there's crazy experiments they do
with flashing subliminal images of like smiling faces or frowning faces on the wall while people
are doing a, an endurance test on a exercise bike. They can't even see them. It's, it's like a 10th
of a blink. It just flashes up. But the But the smiling or frowning faces change your mood a little bit, change your perception of
well-being. And if you're feeling a little better about the world, you're more like your effort is
a little lower. You just feel like things are a little easier. And so in the cycling study,
they're able to keep cycling for 12% longer when there's subliminal smiling faces flashing on the
wall. So there's all these ways that we're not really aware of that are altering our perception of how hard a particular task is. So don't watch the news before you go to
the gym. Yeah. Well, when I read that study, the thing that I thought is like, I've always sort of
rolled my eyes. You go to a gym and they have just the cheesiest motivational posters, you know,
people climbing mountains and saying, you know, the journey, not the destination or blah, blah,
blah. And I'm like, you know, who pays attention to those things? And then I thought, well, maybe subliminally,
that stuff really is getting me into the right headspace. You know, even if I'm laughing at it
on the surface, maybe it's changing my mindset. Yeah. Because otherwise, I don't know why people
invest in those posters. But anyway, I doubt there's much science going into the
maybe intuition is smarter than science maybe people can could
tell that it works you know so who knows and that right it's imagination and then and then science
follows yeah exactly hey if you like what i am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere and if
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What are some ways that elite athletes are able to exceed these limits?
I mean, like what separates?
So you have, let's say two people of,
for all intents and purposes,
these are, they have top genetics
for whatever it is that we're talking about.
They are physically very similar,
but one of them is just able to
physically outpace the other one. One's able to, you know, let's say they're kind of neck and neck
in the race. And then one of them is just able to pull ahead. Yeah. And there's some great examples
of that historically, like one of the great distance running rivalries of about 20 years ago
was two guys, an Ethiopian guy named Haley Gebrusolasi and a Kenyan guy named
Paul Turgat.
And they were the two greatest distance runners in history at the time.
And they had all these amazing duels where they were just stride for stride.
The 2000 Olympics was a classic example where they ran just sort of side by side for the
last part of the race.
And they were always separated by just a fraction of a second.
And it was Gebrusolasi who always beat Turgat.
And it's like,
they're so close to each other that physiologically you're never going to
tell the difference between them.
But for some reason,
Gabriel Solasi had just something that allowed him to just always dig that
one step deeper and get to the line,
just dip to the line a little sooner.
So what was that man?
If,
if I knew I'd be bottling it and selling it,
but,
uh,
you know,
there, there is some,
so people have different personalities, right? And some people are just more willing to suffer
than others, but there's definitely a ton of evidence that regular training changes your
ability to tolerate pain and you can get better and better and better at it. So there's, there's
a ton of studies that look at the pain tolerance and the pain threshold of well-trained athletes
versus the average person.
And what they find is that, so you can do this, for example, you can, there's lots of pain
protocols. The one they use a lot is your upper blood pressure cuff around your arm really tightly,
cut off the blood, and then you have to do, you clench your fist over and over again,
and you're not getting any oxygen. So very quickly, it gets very painful. So you see,
how many fist clenches can you handle? And if you compare athletes with non-athletes, you find that
they have exactly the same pain threshold. So the point at which they start saying,
hey, you know, that hurts, it's the same. So everyone's experiencing the same pain.
But if you ask what their pain threshold is, which is how far can you go until you say,
stop, I can't handle it anymore, then the athletes are just miles ahead of, you know, often twice as much as the ordinary
person. And this, you know, this isn't something they've trained for. Nobody's, well, nobody,
to my knowledge, sits there with a blood pressure cuff and just clenches their arm for the heck of
it. But it's something that they, nonetheless, their general ability to tolerate discomfort,
which they build up through pain or through training, allows them to enhance their pain tolerance.
I think there's something to be said, and there's data that suggests that if you experience discomfort in training, over time, you'll get better and better at it.
It's not that you don't feel pain.
It's that you develop the psychological strategies to cope with it.
Yeah, exactly.
To endure.
You start to think of pain as
information instead of being like, oh my God, I feel pain. I'm going to die. You're thinking,
I feel this pain. This tells me that I can't keep doing this indefinitely. Here's how much time I
have left. You know, I know I can pick it up a little bit, or I know I need to back off a little
bit. It should be, it becomes non, you know, a non-emotional source of information instead of
this panic signal. And there's lots
of different techniques you learn to distract yourself from pain and things like that too.
Yeah. In peak performance, Brad Stolberg and Steve Magnus, they talked about that and some
of the strategies that top athletes use to distract themselves from pain and go through that
kind of internal monologue when they're feeling pain and to avoid a panic and to avoid it from spiraling out of control
mentally.
Yeah, absolutely.
That's a great book.
And it does a really good job of taking that specific finding and making the link to other
parts of life because I do think these are generalizable.
It comes from endurance sports, but it's something that absolutely applies in other athletic contexts and also in
other life contexts when you're doing when you're doing something hard uh and you know facing
adversity you learn these tools to not panic at the first sign of trouble well you did you
segued for me because i was my next question is how does the physical ability endure? Just this is more, I mean, it'd be probably a
mixture of your opinions, your thoughts, and then whatever science would be applicable. But
what are your thoughts on how the ability to physically endure and to go through pain,
to experience discomfort? Maybe if we're talking about life, it might communicate more clearly,
if we were to say discomfort.
Some things are clearly painful, but a lot of things that we experience are not painful per se, but uncomfortable.
So how that, is there a carryover there?
Can you, by getting better at enduring physical pain through physical training, would that
then theoretically improve your ability to push through discomfort in
other areas of your life?
Yeah.
So the anecdotal answer that I'll start with is yes, absolutely.
I 100% believe that.
And I think most people I know who've gone through serious training, 100% would affirm
that it has carry over into other areas of the life.
Like you said, this is a little harder to, you know, I don't have studies where it's like people who have run cross country in college are better entrepreneurs or
whatever, you know, like those things are harder to quantify. But I think for me, what it comes
down to is this going back to this idea we're talking about before about effort as the central
switch in a sports context. It's not that you that the fundamental skill you're learning is not to,
you know, put up with the pain of lactic acid. The fundamental skill you're learning is to
persist even when your subjective perception of effort is getting high. That perception of effort
is something that's real in athletic context, but it's also what dictates whether you choose to
exercise in everyday life. It's whether you choose to keep studying late into the night before a test or keep working on a presentation even after you've gone over it 10 times or whatever,
that what you're dealing with there is your perception of effort is getting higher and
you have to decide, am I going to keep going even though my perception of effort is high and it's
telling me that I should stop? Or am I going to just decide, ah, that's enough, this is getting
uncomfortable and unpleasant? The fact that it's perception of effort, subjective perception of
effort, that is the master switch. I think that's one area of crossover. The other thing is that
there's a bunch of research showing the interchangeability of mental fatigue and physical
fatigue. Yeah, those are interesting research. I've written about this. Yeah, well, exactly.
And it's intuitive to us, but the size of the effect is so remarkable that, yeah, a little
bit of cognitive work changes your physical performance. And similarly, cognitive...
Do you want to give a couple, you already gave an example there. I didn't mean to cut you off
on that. I was just commenting because people listening may not have come across what,
because it's just in articles, but some people read articles, some people don't.
Sure.
Yeah.
And so, so the sort of seminal study in this area was, was in 2009.
And basically it involved people sitting in front of a computer for 90 minutes, which
is not a long time in terms of how long most of us sit in front of a computer.
And they did some fairly simple cognitive sort of tasks, letters flashing on the screen.
You have to hit a button depending on which letter it is and so on.
Not hard, but, but just takes sustained focus, kind of like proofreading a document or something like
that. And then after 90 minutes, they hop on an exercise bike and do an endurance test and they
do way worse. And what's remarkable is that their subjective perception of effort, which again is
this sort of master switch that determines what you're capable of. It was higher right from the
start. So as soon as they get on the bike, they're pedaling at a
preset power. And when they've been in front of the computer for 90 minutes, they're saying,
oh, this feels like a eight out of 20 or something or nine out of 20. Whereas when they are just
fresh or when they've been sitting watching a TV show instead of actually having to focus,
they're like, yeah, this is six or seven out of 20.
So there's this, they're just sitting there. So you would think that it shouldn't make any difference, but immediately it's much, much harder. And then there's actually, it goes the
other way too. There was a study that actually just came out in the last week or two where they
looked at athletes who were training hard and sort of pushing to the point where they were
overreaching. And then they did cognitive tests and brain scans on them and found that in this particular study, they found that it changed
their ability to wait for delayed gratification. So when they were given choices like, do you want
10 bucks now or 50 bucks in six months, when they got physically tired, they were far more likely to
take the easy answer and say, just give me my 10 bucks now, you know? So our minds are affected by
physical fatigue and our bodies are affected by mental fatigue.
So I think the takeaway for me
is that the line between mental fatigue
and physical fatigue is paper thin.
We're talking about fundamentally the same thing,
which is, are you willing to struggle
to continue against a mounting desire to stop,
whether it's in sports or in business or life?
What are your thoughts on recharging your batteries after,
let's say a bout of intense effort. And cause you know, I'm thinking of,
it's a trade off of, let's say working out early in the morning, right?
That's what I like to do. And I like to get out of the way. It also,
I think it's a good way to start the day.
I start out the day in a good mood and I just tend to enjoy my work more having worked out early.
But let's say, and I've experienced this.
And so let's say I've had a tough workout today, although I guess my work hasn't been too taxing today because it's been a lot of proofreading actually of like sales pages and sales copy and stuff. But so let's say I have a hard workout in the morning and then work that I feel is more draining
is probably writing.
This can be pretty draining
as you probably have experienced.
Oh yeah.
You know, it just takes a lot of focus.
It takes energy to, and anything creative really,
it takes, I think that's one of the more
mentally taxing things you can do.
And so extended period of writing and then other more cognitively demanding activities,
marketing related things.
I've noticed that as well, again, because as a creative, we really have to get into
a mindset and come up with ideas and work through decisions.
So what are your thoughts on, let's say in a day,
there are three blocks of things that are going to be pretty demanding. Whether it's physically
demanding or mentally demanding, what are some strategies for, again, just kind of recharging
in between so we can bring, maybe it's not going to be the same as if whatever we start the day
with might always be our best in terms of what we're really able to
bring to it, but to improve our ability to perform well in, let's say again, if it's three blocks of
intense effort. Yeah, that's an interesting question. And I think there's a lot of moving
pieces there. So one thing I would say is zoom out and say, your ability to tolerate those three blocks
is going to depend on a lot of things that are going on in your life.
Like, did you get a good sleep last night and the night before and the night before?
Are you eating well?
So if you've got these sort of very basic sort of ground zero things under control,
and if those three blocks that you're doing are consistent with the workload that you've been able to
maintain over previous months. Like it's not, it doesn't, you know, you haven't been just lying
around on the sofa for months and then all of a sudden you've decided to get serious. So those
are two very different things. If you're used to doing hard physical work and hard cognitive work
and you've got your life kind of in balance, then you're in a much better position to be able to bounce back from a hard workout and stuff.
I think my general advice would be
that probably the first thing you do
is gonna be the best,
but there's an exception to that
because it depends on how hard the workout is.
There's a kind of, there's a curve for workouts.
And if you do a moderate workout,
you're probably, there's a reasonable amount of evidence that your cognitive performance is going to be better.
Your attention is going to be better for the rest of the day or at least part of the day.
So, I mean, I also work out first thing in the morning.
That's my pretty much invariable pattern.
For a variety of reasons, some of them are logistical.
Just, you know, I don't want my day to get busy and all of a sudden I don't have time to work out. Partly I just like it. It's a good way to
start the day. But also I think it sets me up for, to be better at those demanding cognitive blocks,
to have gotten some fresh air, to have gotten the blood flowing, to have gotten a bunch of
brain chemicals flowing through my brain that are the consequence of exercise. There comes a point,
I, you know, and a couple of
times a week I do much harder workouts and those workouts that probably don't set me up to be at
my like peak, peak, best, best in, you know, in the hours afterwards, cause I'm exhausted.
And that's, that's a trade-off I'm willing to take. Right. So, so that, that requires some
planning. Those workouts are hard enough that I could, even if I wanted to, I couldn't do workouts
that hard every morning. So it's not like it's screwing up my entire week. But so I'm,
I'm thinking a little carefully about my week in terms of, okay, Tuesday morning, I'm meeting my
friends for a, for a really tough workout at, you know, nine o'clock at 11 o'clock. I'm not going
to expect to be, you know, solving, you know, Einstein's relativity or whatever.
I'm going to be doing some things that are useful, but I'm going to be cognizant of that. And, you know, beyond that, it's really just the obvious things of refueling after or around
workouts.
It's not like you have to, there's a specific time you have to refuel, but your calorie
intake has to be in proportion to your calorie burn and not all, not like at nine o'clock at night, you're going to be, oh man, I had a huge day today. I better have like three Big Macs or whatever, or, or even three, you know, kale salads with grilled, whatever you want. You need to be taking in calories when you're using them and that'll, that'll maximize your benefits of being able to combine multiple hard things across
different domains in a given day.
Yeah, I've found that eating, it's one of the reasons why I like eating more smaller
meals throughout the day.
And then I'll eat more calories at dinner, which once I'm at home, I'm done working for
the day.
And so I prefer to eat more calories than just because there's,
there is a bit of lethargy, even though I'm just eating like nutritious stuff,
but there still is a bit of lethargy that comes after eating a fair amount of calories.
And whereas throughout the day, I like to keep my meals smaller, probably in the range of,
I don't know, 500 calories or so, a few 500 calorie meals by the time I get home.
And those are also usually just protein. I'll have a salad at lunch. There's vegetables,
just more complex carbs, stuff that, again, my body deals pretty well with carbs. So I don't
know if it would really matter if I were eating more quickly digested things, but that's definitely has helped for me. It just has
helped keep my energy levels stable, which then also just helps with focus and attention and
having a large reserve of it or a large reservoir to pull from throughout the day.
And something else that has helped for me
is periodic breaks. I know a lot of people talk about this, but a lot of people don't do it
either. And for me, I like I'll take 15 minutes. After a few hours of work in the morning, I'll go
out for a week before we jumped on this interview, I go outside. So I'll go out in the sun, walk
around for a bit, 15 minutes. But sometimes I'm surprised that if I've been heads down for several hours, let's say writing where I'm like, I can use a little bit of a break, just go outside for 15 minutes, walk around and come back feeling pretty refreshed actually and ready to get right back into it.
into it. Maintaining good sleep hygiene, very important. I totally agree there. I think we know that. But again, a lot of people don't make that a priority because that means ultimately, usually
just means less Netflix. And that can be unacceptable to some people. Yeah. And it really
should be a law that like, you know, you look at advanced fitness technology, you know, your
heart rate variability monitor and your cryo sign or whatever.
You should not be allowed to use those if you can't prove that you've already been having
eight hours of sleep a night for at least two weeks.
It's like, don't waste your time looking for pennies when, you know, there's a big
pile of cash sitting right in front of you.
Take care of those, like you said, the eating things.
And I think that getting outside is
absolutely fantastic. Like I sort of consciously try to have an errand to run most days, you know,
so that I have to run up the street or walk up the street on a nice day and mail a letter or pick up,
you know, something that we're missing for dinner or whatever, you know, and on one level,
it's like, man, that's inefficient. You should have just bought everything on Monday or whatever. But on another level, it's like, like you said, all of a sudden, you feel so much better after that 15-minute walk, whether it's just to chill out or to run an errand. I have this sort of Puritan guilt complex, so I like to have an errand to give myself the justification for getting out there sometimes.
give myself the justification for getting out there sometimes. I know what you mean. Every minute that you're not doing something that has an explicit purpose or goal, you feel like,
what am I doing? Why am I doing this right now? Exactly. What did I do to deserve happiness?
This is crazy. And you'd mentioned something earlier, which was the idea of essentially
pushing your limits. So the more work capacity you have, basically,
the more you can continue to expand it. And I just wanted to comment on that because, yes,
I mean, anybody has experienced that. Let's say in the gym, right? That's one of the fundamental
reasons why you would periodize your training is to make it consistently harder over time and
overreach and then pull back and
then rinse and repeat. But I do think there is something to be said for that also just in life
and experiencing discomfort and being willing to push yourself a bit further, not to the point
where you, I guess in this case, it would be like maybe have a breakdown or burn out or something like that but but be able to push yourself to where you are aware that this is this is getting hard now but you know maybe you're like
i'm gonna keep going that's fine but but where that's where you really it starts to feel like
a grind and then over time though you find just like how it is in the gym, that your rate of perceived exertion, right, your RPE goes down
with the same workload. And, you know, we probably, just as we all have physical limits,
we only need to get so far in our workouts. The same could be said for in our lives, like,
no matter how much of a workaholic or how much of a grinder you are, there is only so much you can do until your work is – you're not even getting – you're just kind of treading water at this point.
But I think that for many people, they can endure a lot more than they're currently dealing with, even though what they're currently dealing with might feel like it is overwhelming
almost, or they might think that they could not take on more. And I guess that also echoes beyond
just work, right? Because life puts pressure on you. And to make any area of your life go anywhere,
it takes effort. And so you feel like you are being stretched in all these different directions
and you are having to fight a war on eight different fronts. Um, but the more you do it,
the better you get it and the more comfortable you, you get with it.
Totally. And I just want to pick up on something you said there that I, I want to emphasize that
I'm not like, I'm not a fan of like Japanese office culture, but where it's like, if you use my book, you will learn how to work 18 hours a day, then 19,
then 20 hours a day. And, you know, eventually you'll just want to jump out of your office.
Like that's not the goal of life on the way home. Exactly. And, and whether we're talking about,
you know, sport, like, I think we, we understand this in the, in the sports or the, the exercise world more that it's like, you can't just
go and lift as hard as you can every day, all day and expect that to work.
We know that you have to periodize your, your training.
We know you have to incorporate recovery.
And so I think when we generalize this out to the rest of life, the same rules apply
that the goal here isn't to work harder all the time and to have
be on this gradual escalator where you can deal with anything for, you know, it's to, to understand
that when it's time to work hard, you can probably work harder or push harder than, than you're aware
of, but you have to intersperse that with, and ideally that will free up time for you to also
relax and recover and enjoy the times in between.
And so the goal is to get away from this kind of monotone existence, whether it's in work or in
your personal life, where you're always going kind of hard, you're never recovering, you're
never really digging deep. And to get back to a sort of peaks and valleys kind of approach where
when it's time to roll, you're ready to roll. And when it's time to relax, you make time to relax.
How does that look for you in your life?
Outside, I mean, the training is pretty straightforward.
Again, a lot of people know that, but a lot of people don't think about, they don't view
the rest of their life through that lens, or they don't want to because they feel like
there was like one of those Arnold speeches where it was basically was saying, you know, any any minute if you're not if you're not working, somebody else is.
So get to work.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So, you know what?
And I thought a lot about this in the last couple of years.
And I'll give a shout out to a couple of books that people might find interesting that have had an influence on me.
One was called The Nature Fix by Florence Williams, which was all about how important it is to get outside and there's very
deep and sort of science-backed ways that it alters your state of mind and your physical
health. And another is called Good to Go, The Strange Science of Athletic Recovery and What
the Athlete and All of Us Can Learn From It it by christia schwanden which came out earlier this year it's about it looks at the science of
recovery athletic recovery which is a bit of a fad these days or a big topic these days so
nature fix one of the things that that i read that book last year and one of the first things i did i
put it down i went got my car went out and bought a secondhand kayak to stick in my garage because i
live about a block i live in a big city tor city of 4 million, but there's a river a block and a half from my house. Now I have a kayak because I thought to myself, I need to incorporate breaks and it needs to be not like I'm going to go on a big canoe trip once a year. That's great. But I want to, once a week, I want to go and spend half an hour just paddling. For one thing, get a little upper body exercise. It's always good for a runner.
hour just paddling. For one thing, get a little upper body exercise. It's always good for a runner,
but also just spend some time on the water, in the trees, and refreshing my mind. I do that during business hours. I have young kids. I got to be around in the mornings and the evenings.
If it's 10 in the morning and it's prime work time, it's like, okay, I'm still going to go,
and I'm going to go have a little kayak. And I actually started playing Tuesday afternoons.
I now play tennis with an old buddy of mine from high school.
And I found a Friday night pickup basketball game, sort of rock climbing.
So I don't know.
I'm not trying to make it sound like I'm just having a barrel of laughs all the time.
You just don't work anymore.
That's the solution.
Yeah, exactly.
Now you know why I haven't figured out what my next book is about.
But in all seriousness, it's like I'm serious about success. I want to work hard and I want to do good work. I find great value in that. But I don it's going to enhance my, my chances of doing really high quality work tomorrow and five years from now and 10 years from now. So, so that's
something I, you know, in a funny way, it might sound like you're just kind of indulging your
whims, but I'm with you on that. And I have my own commentary on, I went for a long period of time
without doing much in the way of fun, just because I was all about work.
And some work, some aspects of work are fun, but a lot of aspects are not, especially building a
business. I probably would have more fun, honestly, if I were just writing books, because I truly do
enjoy that process. And I do also enjoy building businesses, but less so just, I just do. And it also then comes with a number
of things that are not fun. You just got to do them. And so it's interesting how somebody hearing
that might think that, you know, you're just, just you being lazy, but it could be the way
that you're saying it doesn't sound like it is, but in some people, sure. It could be,
it could be just like they're running away from work. That's their version of procrastinating.
Well, sure, it could be.
It could be just like they're running away from work.
That's their version of procrastinating.
But if it's not, if it's not that, it actually, it requires, and I'm sure you'll understand this and people who are very oriented toward work will understand, it actually requires
a lower time preference to do that than it is to just do more work.
Because the instant gratification can very much be just do more work, especially when that work produces
something quantifiable, like words on a page. You are getting closer to finishing your next project,
whereas going out and kayaking, it's hard to quantify what's really the output of that.
What did I really... No, you're investing into the system, so to speak, and you're investing into the long-term knowing that
by doing that, and I'm sure in the beginning it felt a bit weird to you to go at 10 a.m. to go
kayaking. You're like, all right, this is, what am I actually doing? But to do that is in a funny
way. It actually takes, it's not the chasing the instant gratification. these opportunities. And I'm trying to, I'm like whipping myself to say, don't skip it, Alex, come on, get out there. I know you want to hit this deadline, but if you start not doing these
fun things, you'll get back to where you were a couple of years ago, where all you were doing was
running. Cause that's what you've always done as exercise and then working. And that, so it's like,
it's, I don't know if it's a sad statement on adulthood or a sad statement on me, but it,
it takes effort to make time to have these
opportunities to have fun, to get together with friends, to, to whatever, play tennis or go
climbing or whatever. This is not what happens automatically. It's not like I've got all these
opportunities to go and goof off and I'm fending them off and just accepting a few. It's like, no,
I'm working hard to make those opportunities to sustain those relationships with friends.
So that unlike when you're 15 years old and it's just life is one big goof after another,
it's like as an adult and as someone like me
and I suspect like a lot of your listeners
who are driven and pursuing success,
that's great and that's important.
And you can't just throw that out the window.
But I'm concluding that for me,
at my current state,
there's a lot to get out of these breaks, these recreational opportunities,
both physically and mentally. And so I'm making an effort and it is an effort. It's not just sort of
falling into it. Yeah. I mean, I, myself, that's why I took up golfing. And so I was living in
Florida for a while and I got into golf for that reason. I was like, I want to have one activity that I just
do for fun. And I guess I took a little bit of the fun out of it, but I guess that's my
personality. It's like, if I couldn't get good at it, I wasn't going to do it anymore. So there
was a condition there. It was like, this theoretically could be fun if I can get good.
What's good? Let's quantify that. Okay. Good is essentially a handicap of 10 or under. So if I can't get to a handicap of 10 or under giving it a few hours a week within a year and a
half, two years, I'm probably not going to want to continue because I don't like sucking at things.
And, uh, and then I dropped out when I moved to Virginia and it was just replaced with work.
And I recently last six months or so put it back in just for that reason. And I had to kind of force myself, quote unquote, in that there were definitely times where
I'm getting in the car to go to the course and I'm thinking like, should I just stay
I could work on that next whatever manuscript or the never ending list of things to do.
And I'd be like, no, no, no.
Like, start the car, let's go.
And then get there and then be glad that I, be glad that once I'm there and I'm then having fun and be glad that I'm doing it. So I can totally
relate to that. Did you find that incorporating some fun into your life affected it in ways that
you didn't expect? Did you start sleeping better i know
i've just heard from other people who have gone through this same process and they were surprised
and they're like hey i'm sleeping better and i have less anxiety and whatever yeah i mean in
a sense it was it was a little bit the opposite for me in that i was expecting miracles from it
i was you know i was reading these books like i mentioned like the nature fix and i was like okay
i'm going to start doing these things and i'm'm going to grow two feet, and I'm going to, you
know, get 50 points smarter on the IQ test and everything. Oh, you violated the cardinal,
you made the cardinal sin of life, which is high expectations. Yeah, exactly. But, you know,
the good news is that they pretty much, I mean, I didn't grow two feet, but I think that for the
most part, they were borne out in that I just feel a lot better.
Like I'm less stressed about things.
I'm happier.
I, I mean, I, I'd have to ask my family, but I suspect I'm a better, better dad.
And at least, you know, maybe not a worse husband.
I don't know.
That's always a tough, tough, delicate question.
But yeah, I mean, I think most importantly, it just made it made a difference to my mental well-being. I can't quantify if it made me a better worker. It may well be that it's a wash, that I'm spending less time, but producing work that's as good as I was doing, I'm more efficient at my work, I guess is what I'm trying to say.
important. I think one of the things you said about like getting over that activation hump,
where you think I shouldn't do this, then you get there and you think I should, that's one of the things that I've taken away from running over the years is that when I'm trying to quit or trying to
cram running into my life, you know, there's always 20 more reasons that I shouldn't go for a
run on a given day than there are reasons that I should. And what I've learned is going out for the
run is not optional. I've just made that not, I go out for a run six days a week and that run can be five minutes.
If I, if I'm too busy, if I get out for a run and I'm just like, no, I have so much
to do, I can't do this.
And I'm, my legs are tired or whatever.
I, for whatever reason, I can turn around at any point.
And sometimes I do, because sometimes I really am up against a serious deadline, but not,
you know, 99 times out of a hundred, I get out there and I'm like, you know what?
My life is not so busy that I can't spend 20 minutes or 30 minutes, or sometimes 40 minutes or whatever, you know, like, you realize
you get away from the glare of the computer screen, and you realize, I'm not that important,
I can stand to have 20 minutes of peace and quiet and outdoor time, and then you get back and
life is better, and things just seem a little more under control. But you have to make that commitment initially because you're going to face the initial
barrier that when you try and start it up, you're going to be like, oh, wait, but look at all these
emails. Holy crap, I have to answer them all. Yeah. And I think that's also something you said
for just keeping the habit in place. There's value in that. Even if it is just five minutes,
okay, you don't want to make that a habit of making it just five minutes, but I think there is value just in the fact that you did it. And so
then the next day when it comes time to do it, it's just going to be a little bit easier to go
do it than if you didn't do it. And that I think the ultimate goal when we're talking about habits
is to reach that point when you know, with certainty, it's going to happen. Like there's
no way it's not going to happen.
Maybe it's not going to be the best.
It doesn't have to be necessarily a workout.
It could even be a date night with your wife.
It's Friday night or whatever, or Thursday night or whatever it is.
It's going to happen.
Maybe we're going to be kind of tired.
Maybe we're not going to be in the best mood.
Maybe it's not going to be the best date, but it's going to happen.
And by keeping the routine in place,
even if it means that you didn't go for as long of a
run as you normally would, or maybe it was you were slower or whatever, there is value in just
the fact that you got out there and did it, right? Absolutely. And I think to bring it back to
something we were talking about earlier, you know, mental fatigue and the sort of knock-on effects of
cognitive load, it's like sitting around deciding,
should I go for my workout?
Shouldn't I?
Should I do this?
Should I do that?
I should, come on.
And you know, that wastes bandwidth.
And so that's one of the big reasons for me.
It's like, I don't, for me,
it's easier to exercise six or even seven days a week
than it is to exercise three days a week.
Because then every morning I'm like,
I wonder if I should go for a run today.
Well, let's check the weather forecast. Today looks okay, but tomorrow looks
a little better, but I'm a little busy tomorrow. So maybe I should go today. Well, on the other
hand, how am I feeling today? Let me just check my legs. Oh, let me put my hand out the window,
see how cold it is. Like, dude, just, just go out every day. Just that time you're going to
waste deciding whether you should exercise and weighing the pros and cons, use that time to just
go do the stupid workout, you know and so i i think that's for me
that's a i mean everyone's different everyone is pulled and pushed by different urges but for me
just skipping that decision making process is such a relief it's like i know i'm gonna wear the same
jeans and i today and i know i'm gonna do my same you know do my run and i know i don't have to
think about it it's just gonna happen that reminds me of a number of times where i've sat down to
watch something with my wife.
And then I swear we spend just as much time trying to decide what to watch.
It's tragic.
Yeah.
And then what we decided is we just pick the first thing that because we actually don't watch much TV.
So we we've tried to watch series, but we watch so infrequently that sometimes we're like, what the hell is going on again?
Like what?
is what we watch so infrequently that sometimes we're like, what the hell is going on again?
Like what? So we've got to pick something that you can just kind of get one and done,
maybe a documentary or maybe a movie if we have the time to do it. But just what are we kind of in the mood for? All right. What's the first thing that looks interesting? Just pick that and don't
look back. Yeah. I think the word is satisficing, right? Like what's good enough, not what's the best. Let's not find the movie that's going to blow us off our feet. And we're going to
remember for the rest of our lives. Let's just find something that's going to be okay. And yeah,
let's just get it started. Yeah, exactly. Well, one final comment I want to make, and then we
just wrap up is, um, just something that you, you is, is obviously a theme of this whole discussion.
That is the, the exertion of effort.
And I just think that there's,
I don't know if it's something you can train or exactly how you get there,
but if you can get to the more you can enjoy exerting effort,
just merely for,
for itself.
And,
you know,
I,
to put that into specific terms,
let's, let's take work. right? And I'm sure you're
similar. This is how it is for me. I know a number of people, very successful, who just actually
enjoy working for its own sake because it's a structured activity. And it's often easy to reach a state of flow where you just are fully absorbed in it and you don't
have the clacking the voices and whatever whatever is going on in your life just kind of you know
for that period everything just seems aligned and um and then and then that can carry over into
other areas of life where again i just think it's one of those like meta skills, so to speak.
If you can enjoy exerting effort, if you can, if your instinctive reaction toward the idea of having to exert yourself is not like, oh, God, okay, come on, I can do this.
But where you are actually, where you want to do it, everything in life just gets easier. Everything seems to go
better. Totally agree. I was at a conference a few years ago where one of the researchers was like,
what is the secret to great endurance athletes? Honestly, I think it's that they're benign
masochists. That's the term he uses. It's not like they're out stabbing themselves for pleasure, but they enjoy the feeling of a good, hard effort.
And I think that's a huge gift.
And some people have it more naturally than others.
But I think it's something that everyone can develop, especially if you start to associate effort with outcomes.
As a runner, you start to associate, oh, I had a good workout.
And then you realize that that led to good races later. And so you're like, I want to have more good workouts like that.
And then your whole perception of the effort that goes into those workouts changes, right? I mean,
yeah, it becomes something that you're like, this is this is a feeling that's associated
with good things. I like it. I want that feeling. Yeah, it feels productive, I guess.
Yeah. So and I think I do think it's generalizable. And I think it's something that,
again, you know, I'm sure most of your listeners are, are, are pretty serious,
you know, about getting their workouts in. I think that's something, a feeling that they
can nurture during those workouts that will have payoffs in other areas of life if they can sort of,
because, because exercise is one of those areas where the, the effort and the outcome,
you can see them pretty linearly. Like if you're Like if you're working hard, you see outcomes.
So in life, the connection is often murkier,
but you can sort of establish that pattern
that yeah, it feels good to do something.
You know, not that we want to punish ourselves
all the time or anything like that,
but yeah, doing some good hard work is satisfying.
It's really satisfying.
And especially when it's work,
it's effort put into an activity
that's organized to produce good outcomes.
And of course, so that's where, that's where life gets-
Yeah, digging a ditch is not satisfying.
Yeah, that's where life can get trickier.
I mean, but, but I mean, anybody, anybody who's been working out for long enough has
experienced that too, where you didn't really know what you're doing in the gym and you're
putting a lot of effort into something that wasn't paying much dividends, like, yeah, that's not very fun. But when you are seeing progress, of course,
that's when it becomes more fun. And that is equally applicable to other areas of life. It's
just, it can be more complex. It's easier to read a couple of books. Let's just say if it's
weightlifting on workout programming and go do a bunch of squats and see your legs get bigger and stronger. Cool.
Great. But it's, it can be harder to what's the system for, for having a great marriage.
And not only is it, even if it's not necessarily more complex in its fundamentals, now there are
just other elements that come into play, even, you know, emotionality and irrationality and with both people. And so
it can be, it can be harder to just go, Oh yeah, this is very simple. Here are the,
here's the 20% of everything out of all the things you could learn about having a good
relationship. Here's the 20% that gives you 80% and just put your effort into that consistently.
And you'll pretty much have it made. But I still think that is, there's a
validity in that, in that worldview. And that's how it goes with, I think that could be said of
probably every element of life in my opinion. Yeah, it's, it's, I agree. It's, it's, uh,
it's true. It's just harder to see it. And so you have to sort of take it on faith that this
mindset that you've learned from your workouts, you can apply other places and just do the work and do your best to figure out where
the right places to put the work is. Agreed. Agreed. And, you know, it made me think of,
I think his name is Brandon Wiggins. He's like a famous cyclist, I think.
Oh yeah. Bradley Wiggins. Bradley. Bradley. There you go. Yeah. I don't, I don't,
pops into my mind and to this point of just suffering, right? With endurance athletes who can suffer the most
is really, that was the people who win the most.
And in Pressfield, Stephen Pressfield,
he won the War of Art.
And it's just like his,
that's been one of his things, right?
It's like he can just put his ass in the chair
and just suffer through things.
And there's definitely value in that.
But I think that
it doesn't necessarily require suffering per se to have success, whether it's in the gym or outside
of the gym, but it does require enduring discomfort. Yeah. Pushing through against
the mountain desire to stop. That's the key. Absolutely. And so those are the main things
that I wanted to get your thoughts on. And so I really appreciate the discussion. Where can people find? So first off, the book, which we've mentioned a few times, is called Endure. People can get it wherever books are available, right?
Yeah, absolutely. Local bookstores are great, but Amazon's too. and where can people find you and your other work and anything else that you
want to let them know anything new and exciting that you have?
We were talking before the interview and you don't quite know what your
project is, but you say you have some ideas that are for me.
Yeah. Watch this space sometime in the next 10 years,
I'll get another book out and I apologize to my, to my editor right now.
Yeah. To find me.
So I write regularly about five times a month for Outside Magazine's
website to the column is called Sweat Science.
And actually, the easiest place to find me is on Twitter.
My handle is Sweat Science, all one word.
And that's any books or any articles that I've written or other stuff that I find interesting,
I post there.
So that's probably the easiest place to connect with me.
Awesome.
Well, thanks again for doing this, Alex.
This was a great discussion.
I look forward to the next one.
Awesome. It was a lot of fun, Mike. I appreciate it.
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