Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Austin Current on the Unsung Benefits of Strength Training
Episode Date: April 5, 2023There’s more to strength training than building bigger biceps or a bigger booty. While many people start their fitness journey with the goal of improving their physique, the benefits of resistance ...training go far beyond looks. From improving bone density to reducing the risk of chronic diseases, strength training can help you lead a healthier, longer, and more fulfilling life. To talk about the non-muscle related benefits of lifting weights, I invited Austin Current back on the podcast. In our first chat, Austin and I talked about his book Science of Strength Training, which is a visual encyclopedia and comprehensive resource that dives into anatomy and the physiology of muscle growth. If you’re not familiar with Austin, not only is he an educator and author, but he’s a coach and co-founder of Physique Development, a coaching collective that works with everyday fitness folks and competitors alike. In this interview, Austin and I discuss . . . - The “other” benefits of progressive resistance training including improving bone health, metabolic health, cardiovascular health, mental health, and mobility - The brain health benefits of training, including cognitive abilities, mental sharpness, and reducing depression and anxiety - Minimizing the risk of various diseases, including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain cancers - The importance of maintaining fitness habits and avoiding “extreme” thinking and mindsets - Compensating for modern conveniences that lead to sedentary living, and how to get started with easy and enjoyable exercise routines - How physical activity affects our quality of life as we age - And more . . . So, if you’re looking to learn about the non-aesthetic benefits of strength training, listen to this episode and let me know your thoughts! Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (2:35) - What are some benefits of strength training besides aesthetic reasons? (11:30) - What is brain health and how does strength training relate to it? (31:22) - Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip (33:46) - How does strength train compare to other types of training? (49:51) - Why do you prefer to do yoga? (53:30) - What are your thoughts on stronger people having longevity? (1:23:45) - is there anything you would like to add? (1:28:37) - Where can we find you and your work? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Austin’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/austincurrent_/ Physique Development: https://physiquedevelopment.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, this is Muscle For Life. I'm Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today for a
new episode on some of the unsung, and in some cases, depending on how much you know, surprising
benefits of strength training. Because there's a lot more to get from strength training than
just bigger biceps and bigger butt cheeks. Of course, most people, especially most younger people,
they start their fitness journey with the goal of improving their physique, and there's nothing
wrong with that. And what we see in the mirror is always a motivating factor forever. No matter how
long somebody has been training, at least 50% of the reason why they keep showing up and keep putting in the work is they
want to look a certain way. And that doesn't mean that they are selfish or narcissistic or anything
other than somebody who wants to look fit, who wants to look healthy. Now, one of the cool things
about strength training is there are many other benefits. There are many other reasons that have
nothing to do with vanity to do regular
strength training workouts. They are going to improve your bone density. They are going to
reduce the risk of many types of diseases. They are going to help you live a longer, healthier,
and even more fulfilling life. And in this episode, you're going to learn about those
types of benefits of strength training, the ones that go deeper than what you see in the mirror. And you're going to be hearing
from Austin Current. He is my guest and he is coming back on the podcast. This is his second
appearance. In our first chat, we talked about his new book, Science of Strength Training,
which is a visual encyclopedia and comprehensive resource
that dives into anatomy and the physiology of muscle growth. And if you like this chat,
you probably will like his book. I think he did a great job with it, so I definitely recommend
checking it out. And in case you are not familiar with Austin, he is an educator. He is an author.
He is also a coach and the co-founder of Physique Development, which is a coaching group that works with everyday fitness folk and competitors alike.
Hey, Austin, thanks for coming back on my podcast. It's been a bit.
It's been a while, man. And I know we had some scheduling feats there for a bit,
but I'm glad we could make it happen.
Yeah, yeah. I'm excited to talk with you today about, uh, before we started recording
joking that it's kind of a more mature discussion about strength training. And by that, what I mean
for people listening is, so in my experience in the last 10, 11 years, uh, you know, I've
heard from, uh, worked with many people and if it's a younger guy and we're talking about strength training, why strength
training? It's mostly aesthetics, as they say, like you could start to talk about some of the
things that we're going to talk about, or Austin mostly is going to be talking about. You could
talk about better bone health and metabolic health and cardiovascular mental health, mobility,
blah, blah, blah. And the younger guy, let's say he's a guy in his twenties is probably
going to be like, yeah, that sounds good, but my biceps are going to get bigger. Correct. And
yes, yes. Your biceps will get bigger too. Yes. That will happen. However, there are many other
people who are less interested in getting bigger biceps. Many women, for example, who I've spoken to over the years,
yes, they have their own, often have their own look that they want to achieve, but that does
not involve, like you tell a guy, young guy, strength training can make you jacked. And that's
about all you need to tell him. And he's sold. You say that even to a young woman, in my experience, many of them
are not thinking about getting jacked. That's not how they would put it. In fact, that sounds like
bulky. That sounds like not what they want. And that's another discussion, but just perception,
right? And, and, and so, and then there also are many people in my experience who are, let's say,
people in my experience who are, let's say 40 plus, who are simply not as concerned with trying to get really big biceps guys who, as they once were maybe in their twenties, or
they, they think that they really can't gain much muscle anymore, which is not true, but again,
perceptions. And so many of those people, this is, I think that today's
discussion is not going to be for people who want to get into strength training just to get jacked.
Like, yes, strength training can make you jacked, but today's discussion is going to be about all
the other things that strength training can do for your health and for your wellbeing. And why
I would say that it's a form of exercise that everybody
should be doing. It doesn't mean that everybody has to be lifting barbells per se, but some sort
of strength training is, I think, a form of exercise that everybody should be doing regardless
of their age, regardless of how much they care about getting big muscles.
And yeah, so I think I'll just stop there and give it over to you.
Yeah, so muscle, man, it's, as we were saying
before we hopped on, like, again, it's,
muscle's a great side effect of training,
or added muscle tissue is a great side effect of training,
as I like to say.
And it's something that, you know,
I think it's really productive.
It's like, what gets you into it, Right. Cause it's like the strength training or the
resistance, really progressive resistance training in general. Right. So any sort of
resistance we're fighting against that's, you know, placing enough of a stimulus or a stress
on your, on your system and your structure is going to be productive. Right. Cause as we know,
you know, as Steve Carell so eloquently put it
in 40-Year-Old Virgin,
if you don't use it, you lose it, right?
And that's very true.
Like with our brain, with our cognitive abilities,
with our physical abilities,
with your athleticism coordination,
like if you don't use it, you will lose it, right?
And that isn't to say you can't gain it back,
but it's not going to stay there long term just because you did it once.
Right. It needs to be a repeated thing across a lifespan.
And I think, you know, like my book, Science of Strength Training, obviously highlights muscle physiology.
It highlights how muscles grow. And that's kind of what we talked about.
That's exactly what we talked about in the first episode I was on last year, I think it was somewhere around there a year ago. And,
you know, that was more like the mechanisms that sort of drive and drive that process forward of
adding new muscle tissue. But I would say the book actually has more, more information, but I think
more important information in my own mind of kind of that target reader and
the true impact strength training can have, which is again, more on the bone density,
the lowered risk of osteoporosis leading into later in life, dynopenia, sarcopenia, all these
things, right? So sarcopenia is like the muscle loss over a lifetime or over time. And dynopenia
is a loss of muscle strength and power, right?
Which as we get into older age, right?
We can kind of look at our grandparents and are your grandparents, if they're still around,
are they active?
Have they been active their whole life?
And how mobile are they?
How independent are they?
Did they go into a home early, right?
And we can see, I think one of the most startling statistics that I've read, and I came across this when I was when I was writing the book, was over the next 40 years, the number of adults over 65 years of age will more than double in the United States from 46 million to 98 million.
Right. And so that's I mean, that's all of us that are probably listening to this or having this conversation, right?
And the importance of establishing habitual exercise and, you know, something that helps us with healthy aging, you know, something that just cannot be overstated, right?
It can't be ignored.
Because with that is our health and our energy.
And with that is our quality of life.
I recently, I read a book called die with zero that
I liked and in in the book the author talks about thinking about the different types of experiences
that you want to have in your life and then kind of overlaying that on the different periods of
aging in your life and understanding that as your health and your energy inevitably, if your health
declines, your energy levels decline, your willingness and then your ability to just do
certain things declines. And so that's one of the reasons why, to your point, it is very smart to
make a habit when you are younger of preserving health, preserving the ability to move and stay
active and thereby also preserving your energy levels, physical and just psychological.
So when you're in your 60s or 70s, which is when many people, it's when their net worth is
highest and they have a lot of time that now they didn't have when they were in their thirties or
maybe forties. And so theoretically, Oh, with, with money and time can come freedom to do all
these things and have such a great life, not without health and with that energy and mobility.
Right. Exactly. And I think that's the, it's a very weird inverse relationship we all kind of share, especially in Western culture,
is like typically the more successful we get over time, right, the higher our general net worth is,
and the more that freedom of time kind of opens up, on average, the way we're going typically
also unfortunately matches with the least healthy
you'll ever be and the most immobile you'll ever be. And so I don't know, there's few situations
I could imagine that are outside of the obvious ones that are more depressive to think about.
You know, it's like, what would you rather have? No money and all your faculties
and you're the most healthy you've ever been,
the most mobile you've ever been.
You can have all the freedom you want.
Net worth is lower or net worth is highest it's ever been.
You had all the money you could ever want,
but you can't move.
You're a prisoner in your own vessel
that you can interact with the world in.
And it's like, our body is this thing
where it's essentially our brain's ability to manipulate the outside world, right? I mean, we can't do much
without our brain. We can do, we can do many things without parts of our body, but without
parts of our brain, we're pretty, pretty rendered or, you know, our ability to do things to manipulate
the outside world are drastically less. So it's very important and especially keep that vessel, keep that thing
that allows you to interact with the outside world and fulfill those things that you want to fulfill,
live the life you want to live. But not only does the physical activity and the progressive
resistance training, is that a modality, a very efficient and effective one to not only help the body adapt and grow over time and stay
resilient, but also it also comes right back to keeping your mind healthy and your brain healthy,
right? Allowing you to continue to hopefully live your best life as you have more money and freedom
to actually live your best life, right? You want those two to kind of align, not have this like
unfortunate inverse relationship with, which is kind of the direction we're headed in many ways.
Well, let's, uh, just because you mentioned it and it's on the list and it is just a popular
topic, perennial, and it seems like growing in popularity as of recently, and that is brain
health and how strength training relates to
brain health and what that means practically speaking. Because I think sometimes what
people run into, especially younger people, a lot of this sounds, they would agree intellectually,
but it's kind of abstract because they feel great. And especially if they're in their 20s or 30s,
they're basically invincible. And so there's that. And then there's also when you hear, oh, okay, brain health. Yeah,
of course, having a healthy brain is good. And, and some of these other things we'll talk about.
Yeah. Metabolic health. Okay. Having a healthy metabolism is good. Cardiovascular is good.
But what does that really mean in actual kind of real world terms? And again, we might as well start with
brain health because you mentioned it and it's a, it's a very popular topic.
Yeah. I think the most, the most pronounced ones have to do with positive effects on
neurogenesis, which is essentially the process by which new neurons, which are just the messengers
are formed in the brain. Right. And second to that as well is the neuroplasticity, which are just the messengers are formed in the brain, right? And second to
that as well is the neuroplasticity, which are, you know, neurogenesis and neuroplasticity
are two terms you've probably heard at least at some point in your life, potentially neuroplasticity,
probably more so, which is just this like general umbrella term that refers to the brain's ability
to sort of modify, change and adapt
structurally and function throughout your life in response to the experiences you have.
Right. So again, like imagine the state of your brain being trapped in sort of an isolated place,
right? We go nuts, right? You start to deteriorate, you go clinically insane. Your experiences are what's
actually allowing you to, to sort of modify change and adapt that structure positively towards,
towards new and better. And again, like between the neurogenesis, the neuroplasticity,
those things help really lead to improvements in learning cognition and memory, mood and sleep,
to improvements in learning, cognition, and memory, mood, and sleep, which I think are the most practical things, especially as we start to age. Our overall cognition and executive function,
our ability to basically do cognitively demanding tasks, lessons, right? You become a little bit
slower. My brain isn't what it used to be. All these things are sort of repeated, right? You
hear your parents say it, you hear your grandparents say it. Particularly with fluid intelligence,
right? Like we're as crystallized, you know, you can have accumulated a lot of knowledge and that's
great, but your ability to figure things out, to not just recall information, but like you're
saying, to have to figure out a puzzle of some sort, not literally
a puzzle could be in life. Like, oh, I have a problem. How do I figure this out? What do I do?
Or just that mental sharpness. Yeah. So exactly. So your mental sharpness and your ability to
actually carry out those tasks and actually carry out the complexity of that, of what's
demanded to work through a problem. Right. So, you know, you can remember back in school when
you had to work, you know, your, your hand at a math exam and you're having to work through a problem, right? So, you know, you can remember back in school when you had to work, you know, you're, you're handed a math exam and you're having to work through
a very complex problem. I think this is kind of where, I don't know how related this is,
but I think we write off math. I don't use a ton of math in my life, I'll say, but I'm always
extremely grateful. And I always kind of have a contrarian view to my friends who like always kind of like
bad mouth the math that they had to do early in school, you know, and.
Yeah.
And say how it was pointless.
Like when's the last time I even used high school algebra, let alone.
Yeah.
But to me, it's it's more of a representation.
And I think this has a relationship to what we're talking about here.
And it's it's your ability to what we're talking about here. And it's,
it's your ability to show up and work through demanding tasks. You know, so math, it's cognitive,
right? It's very cerebral, you have to work through it. And it's very demanding. It's very complex, you have to have a lot of surrounding information, typically on how these, these
formulas work together and what order you use them. It requires working memory.
Like you have to remember,
especially with more complex math,
like you have to remember what you did up here
and how that relates to down here.
And I don't know a better representation
of the problems that we face in our adult lives than that.
Like to me, like that's a very good representation
of how adulthood works.
It's you're presented a problem,
you're working off of formulaic responses
that are hopefully somewhat successful
or happened in the past,
and you're trying to resolve the issue or problem
by moving your way through the problem
towards an answer or a resolution to that problem, right?
And that's essentially, you know,
that's obviously math, in my opinion,
math's relationship to life and adulthood, also, I think it plays in really well. And the relationship is fairly intimate between that and also like resistance training, right? Or physical activity in any way. It's just sort of the way I think about it, sort of the physical representation of it rather than the mental or cognitive
representation, right? It's your ability to have to show up, work through a set of problems, i.e.
sets, reps, rest period. And then you come out the other side with, you're working through that
problem of staving off, you know, decline of mental faculties, physical faculties, things that
are really non-negotiables that are inescapable for all of us,
at least at this point in history, you know, you, there's not going to be a time where you
don't have to pay attention to, you know, your calorie management can't just go into the wind,
your ability to show up and continue to care about your physical health can't go away
if you plan on being a healthy individual, right? So there's all these like non-negotiables that we have to keep up with on a day-to-day basis.
And, you know, one of the biggest things that kind of comes out of all of this is the benefits
of strength training and physical activity are extremely clear, you know, and I will get into
that more today. And like, you know, you've written about it in your books. I've written
about it in my book. Like the challenge really becomes like performing the activity consistently throughout one's
lifespan, right. To really reap its benefits. And so I think a mature conversation really is
centered around benefits beyond aesthetically growing, you know, like your biceps or having,
you know, huge laughs to where your shirts don't fit. Yeah. Your butt, you know, having, you know, huge lats to where your shirts don't fit. Yeah, your butt, you know, having,
I don't want my pants to fit, but it's, it's really kind of what, how can we have a better
conversation, a more mature conversation that has more impacts on everyone's life more so than just
people who want to add a little bit of muscle tissue. And I would say that that can appeal to many more people than only talking about the aesthetic component of gaining muscle. Like,
yeah, that appeals to a lot of people, but there are many, many, and you know this, and I know this
many, many, many people, millions of people out there who come to me. And I know some of these
people have come to you and they'll say, I don't really care that much about, it'll be a guy or a woman saying, I don't care to look like
a bodybuilder or a weightlifter. So like, what's in this for me? Sure, I'll take some extra muscle,
but it doesn't mean that much to me. So what else do you got? What I have is a better aging process
and the ability to have more independence
and a better quality of life throughout your life
as you age, right?
And it's kind of always kind of coming back to that.
How do you wanna feel?
It's compounding interest, right?
And in real time.
It's like, if you wanna have a certain amount of money when you retire, it's the smaller bits of money that you invest and compound over
time that ultimately gets you to that end goal, right? Of how you want to exist later in life,
if we have the luxury of making it that far, right? And we're always kind of, to me, again,
like there's a very intimate relationship between those two things, right?
So exercise in a lot of ways is just that compounding interest.
You're putting in the small bits of effort on a daily, weekly, monthly basis, yearly
basis that ultimately, if done consistently, have a net return every year and essentially
gets you closer and closer to how you want to feel, be, and exist when you
are older, right? And you want to have all these things because once they decline past a certain
point, it seems super hard to regain it. You know, there are promising things with elderly folks, but
it is something, you know, if you start to develop signs, earlier signs of Alzheimer's, dementia, like there's ways to sort of stave that off for a certain amount of time.
But could it have been more prevented or at least more delayed by another five, 10 years if you would have been doing the things you should have been doing, that you know you should have been doing, or finding a way to get done versus sort of putting it off because muscle wasn't your first priority, you know?
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I've commented that it's never too late to, to start and to improve health and
wellbeing, but sometimes it is too late to achieve certain outcomes. And that's, that's just a
reality. That's not what some people want to hear.
I don't mean that to discourage anybody, but that is a reality. I mean, there is a point where if
you've neglected your health for too long, it's never too late to do something to improve it.
But you might not be able to reach the state that you really want to reach and that you
could have reached and maintained if you would have
done things differently. And so, yeah, why don't we get into some of these, some of these things.
I also, I'll say like, you know, strength training is good because strong people are
harder to kill, right? Strong things are harder to break. And so, and so we're talking about
reducing the risk of different types of disease and dysfunction,
as well as, of course, improving function, which is cool that you get actually both sides of that coin, so to speak, where you are gaining positive things immediately when you engage
in regular strength training that you notice.
And then you also are mitigating or avoiding things altogether that would have otherwise occurred later if you hadn't done this,
right? You know, that gets into things that, you know, we continue as a, as a culture to really
deal with at a, at an alarming rate, which is cardiovascular disease, certain cancers,
type two diabetes, all of these things, and just obesity in general, all of these things
are avoidable in many ways or treatable proactively by participating in these things,
right? And, you know, I don't, obviously, I'm a proponent for progressive resistance training
and strength training and, and fighting against resistance, right. But that's, that's my chosen way of, you know, putting this message out into the world,
but really just general physical activity, cardiovascular activity, or cardiovascular
work and aerobic, aerobic work and, and strength training, like all these things to me kind of
coexist. Right. And one of the best ways I've, I've seen it put, I want to say it was like a,
may have been like a, I'm going to say Stuart Phillips study or maybe in a different one, but
beside the point, essentially they came out to say like, you know, one of the big issues
that we face with, with exercise, right. right, is always the time component and the questions of what is the most productive way
to tick all of these boxes that we essentially need to tick? How do we use that time wisely?
Right. And so, you know, a lot of research goes, goes to that where it's like, okay,
we know all these things can help generally with, you know, cognitive decline. We know that
they can generally help with,
with physical decline and loss of independence later in life and lower risk of disease and all
of these things. But what, and that that's across the board of like just general physical activity,
aerobic activity or aerobic work and strength training. But yeah, starting with even walks,
like if you just go for a couple of walks every day, you are going to be achieving some degree of, of all of those things. But is that to say that walking is the best way you could use the 30 to 45 minutes that you have? No, no, it's great. It's yeah, it's great. Again, if that's all you can do, do it. But if you can do some other things,
then there are some other things worth considering. Absolutely. And things that you're going to,
going to attached, you know, not only a physical enjoyment, but a psychological enjoyment as well,
right? Something that's challenging to you. You know, I think it's, that's another important
aspect to all this is continuing to do things. And this is something that continues to show up. You know, the more I
dig into, to reading this literature and stuff is it mainly comes down to challenges that we face
consistently. Right. And those, those can be cognitive challenges or physical challenges,
right. Or even emotional challenges, things that create that resilience
that we need to carry ourselves through life,
you know, are really established
through these simple practices, right?
And I think in a big way,
we really like to overthink a lot of things.
And it's something that I've tried to minimize
in my own writing or, you know, speaking on
podcasts about or whatever it's, you know, before we hopped on as well, we were kind
of talking about all these, these petty arguments that happen between, you know, colleagues
in the fitness space that ultimately are sort of just happening and being sent into a void
that ultimately are sort of unhelpful, in my opinion,
to the consumer, to the 99% of people
who actually need this information, right?
And I think a very important filter to have,
you know, if you're a coach listening to this
or a trainer or just someone who puts out information
to people that need this help
is what you're saying or what you,
what you're putting out motivating someone or enticing them or giving them hope towards
improvement towards the physical exercise, or is it detracting them from it? Right. So what's your
message actually putting out? And I think a lot of the, the very nuanced petty arguments that
happen, especially in our little corner of the internet are just, you know, if we, like I was saying before, like if we could spend that time.
And energy, we only have so much energy every day that we can give to anything until we just
kind of tap out. Right. I mean, yeah. So, I mean, that's such a big part of it is, is,
is what you're putting out actually helping others and contribute positively to this,
this real issue that we're having. Right. I mean, obesity and all of the things that come with that,
be it cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, depression, being a huge one,
anxiety being a huge one. Those are two other things, depression and anxiety that
are, have been shown pretty clearly within the research to, to have improvements with strength training.
You know, the depression one's super interesting and, you know, I'm definitely not the one to go
into the weeds and rabbit hole here about serious depression or major depression disorder in general,
but, you know, it is one of the, you know, I have a thing here written down. It's the leading cause
of global disease burden that affects over 300 million people, 300 million people worldwide.
Right. And so imagine just taking basically the population of the U.S., the ones that we can even like track.
Right. Or have written, you know, that. So there's definitely more of them.
That's a major issue, too. It's not a minor issue, which we've probably all experienced.
If we've if we've lived a little bit, we've all
experienced to some degree. And if you look at, I realized this really, if you look at the symptoms
of like mild depression, it was like, Oh yeah, I got, I've definitely experienced that. And
especially I, if I, if I push myself where all I'm doing is working, no social life,
very little time with my family and I've done it multiple times. So yeah, I've definitely been there. I mean, it's my own creation and it was
good to know that like, okay, I have a limit. I can only go to this level of like doing nothing
but working essentially before it creates this mild level of depression. And so just to your point, I mean, who knows how
many more tens of millions of people are dealing with something that hasn't been clinically
diagnosed and would not be diagnosed as a serious problem, but is it can be, it can feel like kind
of a serious problem as an individual because it messes up your sleep and it just messes with your life. And you're like, uh, this is not good. Exactly. Yeah. And in, in terms of like looking at major
depression and I pulled this from, from a paper on the topic of kind of linking major depression
disorder with basically the, the impacts of a physical activity. And I want to say specifically to strength work or strength
training, basically linking neurotrophins, which essentially are, just for that word,
neurotrophin, essentially a closely related family of proteins in the brain that contribute to
survival, growth, and maintenance of our neurons, right? Our neurons being the information messengers,
those, those electrical impulses and chemical signals that transmit information, you know,
to different, basically across the brain, right? So you see those, like, if you've ever seen like
a brain imaging or whatever, like a, like a visual representation of these neurons kind of
communicating and synapses firing and all of these things, right? Those are, that's how we create things and make them happen with our body, right?
Those, the parts in the brain have to communicate, right?
So with, with strength training specifically and with physical activity, the main neurotrophin
that they look at that has the biggest link to depression is brain derived neurotrophic
factor, which just BDNF is a way easier way to put that.
But it has been proven to be the one of the most highly inducible neurotrophic factor, which just BDNF is a way easier way to put that. But it has been proven
to be the one of the most highly inducible neurotrophins with physical activity. And it
emulates, and what I've read, it does similar things to what these medications for depression
are doing is inducing that excitability of that neurotrophin, the dose you're getting of that, right?
I mean, how that shows up in those growth factors alone.
So nerve growth factors, the other neurotrophin that is in that family that you typically
see grouped in there, but they play pivotal roles in the formation and the plasticity
of our brains, which we talked about earlier in terms of that neurogenesis and neuroplasticity is being very, very important as we age and allowing us to continue to adapt to what
challenges life hits us with, right? And strength training and physical activity are the
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one-on-one coaching service is right for you. who are at least remotely informed would agree that both a bit of both is better. Um, doing some
strength, strength training and cardiovascular endurance training is going to give you the best
of everything. And some people argue about how you should dose those things. Like, should it be,
cause we only have so much time to do this stuff. And so should I spend 70 or 80% of my time on
the strength training or the cardio and vice versa? So maybe you want to comment on that.
And then also part of the discussion is, okay, so if I really only have time to choose one realistically, and that is a lot of people, they have a few hours per week realistically.
And not to go off on a tangent, but I think it's kind of ironic to watch fitness influencers smugly declare that people, they don't have
too little time.
They just are bad at managing their time.
When the fitness influencer is like 25, yeah, no children, single, their job is basically
to have big biceps.
And this is kind of a therapy for them.
Like exercise is part of their own personal
therapy program right so no in in the real world when people have jobs and uh when they have kids
and so forth it really can come down to no no i have you know three hours a week really that i can
i can give to to exercise and so then the question that often falls is, is strength training the
best bang for my buck? And how does that compare to, you know, just going out and riding a bike or,
you know, going on a run? Yeah. And I think there's a lot of ways to kind of attack this.
And I think we start generally with what we were kind of saying earlier with,
And I think we start generally with what we were kind of saying earlier with, it's just important first off to move, get activity and move first and foremost.
So like if the barrier of entry for you right now is, well, I'm intimidated by the fact
that I'm either really out of shape, never been to a gym before, you know, insert your
friction point there and that's keeping you from
doing the thing, then start with the lower, lowest, essentially barrier of entry there. So
start with just any movement, right? So we were saying earlier, just like generally getting out
to walk and improving your non-exercise related activity, your non-structured exercise activity.
And by improving that, you know, that, you know, you've written
extensively about this, I'm sure. I know I've read some of your pieces on this, but, you know,
looking at neat, so non-exercise related activities is one of the best ways to manage
your overall health and your body composition in general. That doesn't involve you really doing
anything that's extremely vigorous. It doesn't involve you having to go to a gym. that doesn't involve you really doing anything that's extremely vigorous.
It doesn't involve you having to go to a gym.
It doesn't involve you having to get new running shoes.
It doesn't involve any barrier of entry outside of having some time to move your body.
And this includes like cleaning.
This includes all of these things.
Just like even, even, okay, you got to drive somewhere.
Don't park so close to the entrance and make yourself walk a little bit.
And you arrive somewhere.
Can you take the stairs?
Is that feasible?
Okay, take the stairs instead of the elevators.
Even silly things like that.
But you do that enough of these little slight adjustments in how you go about your daily routine.
You can rack up a lot of steps.
Not that you have to go for any specific target,
but if you do get to 10,000 steps a day,
that represents what, about an hour and a half of walking.
And sure, there's nothing magical about that,
but that's a good target, that's healthy.
It's a great target to have.
And again, it's the lowest barrier of entry, right?
So yeah, and I think too, because like, this is sort of the issue.
We're all going to have to, and I've tried to think more about this and I will answer
those questions, but I've tried to think more about like with every day, the conveniences
of our world continue to get better, right?
And the more convenient our lives get, especially outside of like our professional lives, the more convenient our overall life gets, typically the worse our
health outcome is going to be in many ways, right? So your groceries get delivered. Okay. There's
probably two to 3000 steps of you walking around the grocery store. The fact that, you know, we can
sit all day with our modern conveniences of whether
it's working from home, there's no commute involved, there's no movement involved, technically,
like, my bedroom is literally 10 steps away from where I'm at right now, right? So to make my
living, I could just take 10 steps, do my work, walk downstairs, that's another 10 steps. And you
can very easily see how the fact that I don't now, now I don't have to leave my house. It really creates without me being aware of it.
It really creates an issue for my own health in the short term, but also in the also in the long term.
Right.
And so we really have to sort of fight against these these modern conveniences that we do have.
And that's, you know, I think that's where you get a lot of pushback to.
Or compensate for them knowingly, right?
Like take the grocery delivery.
I love that I can get my groceries delivered.
I'm not bashing that.
I hate the grocery store.
No, no, I know.
But it's a good point.
And it's just like, as someone who will only, like one of the criteria for when I moved
out of Virginia is to where I ended up in Florida is can I get groceries
delivered? Cause I'm not going grocery shop and I'm not taking my time. I'm just not. And, and my
wife, she could, but right now she's too busy with building a house and things. And so even that
would be like, yes, she could do it. We of course would make it work if we had to, but the convenience
is great. However, to your point with too many of these conveniences comes the
problem of just sedentary living if you don't consciously compensate for them, like the bike
back here that I hop on or going out for walks or doing a strength training workout and so forth.
Yeah, we have to start to compensate and make up for the lost activity that we used to naturally get in our lives, right? So if you think back to a time, let's say when, you know, I always think
back to like when I was in college and when I was like, you know, prepping for bodybuilding shows
and photo shoots and like, I could stay really, not only I was obviously younger and blah, blah,
blah, but my day-to-day involved naturally getting 15 to 20,000 steps a day. I got that while
I was at work. And so by the time I got to my training session, I didn't have to worry about
much additional cardio for the sake of working through my energy expenditure.
Yeah. If you're, if you're walking three hours a day, I mean, that's what that is. Like,
think about people listening. That's like going for, if you have to go for walks,
all right, but you do three hours of walks a day.
Yeah, I mean, you're walking, yeah,
miles and miles and miles a day
just by going about your daily life and living your life.
Like, if you have that, and you know,
it's the difference between a person who works at a desk,
probably at their house or, you know,
at a cubicle-based job or something,
or an office-based job versus a construction worker or someone who cleans houses,
you know, all day or whatever it's like, or paints or does something that's physical.
The energy expenditures, they are drastically different, you know, could be a thousand, you know, thousand, 2000 calorie difference of energy expenditure per day based off of,
of just the way you're living your life, right?
And if, again, like what I was saying earlier
is these are inescapable realities that we all face.
And so it comes down again
to fighting against these conveniences.
Obviously, they're fantastic
and we have to pick and choose
which ones we're gonna allow
to sort of take over ourselves, right?
So Netflix is great. I love TV. I love watching shows and getting involved into stories. I love that.
But I also understand that I probably need to walk an extra hour a day for that because,
or an extra hour to an hour and a half to two hours a day because I work at home all day.
I drive to the
gym, no walking involved there. I kind of walk around the gym obviously to do my training,
but that's probably less than a thousand steps in the gym. And then I come home and you end up
getting into a routine of you cook dinner, you watch your shows, get ready for bed, repeat,
right? And I'm the same person, same goals, but my life is drastically different in the way that I live it.
Right. And so we have to start to really consider and think about how we can work against those
things and, and compensate physically for those things that we're missing out on. But to get to
your, to get to the question between cardio, cardiovascular training and resistance training,
you know, there's, again, it's a lot of this research is still very early on and they're
really trying to, these are the questions. And that's why I kind of mentioned this earlier is
like, we understand generally that these things are important and we understand that they positively
impact our overall health and wellbeing, especially as we age. But the definitive difference,
But the definitive difference, there's some theories, but the definitive difference isn't as clear as much as you got to kind of break it down into its individual parts, right?
So within resistance training, you know, we sort of need to think about the global response
we're getting from a muscular work standpoint and what that does,
what our muscles do as an organ for our overall health, right? And the biggest one kind of,
yeah, specifically, right? And so again, that's the difference of growing muscle tissue in the
upper body, right? Again, going for runs is fantastic. But if you only run or bike, like I used to work
with, I used to work with a couple people who did Ironmans and probably people that are in the best
cardiovascular shape I've ever seen have giant legs and just stick thin upper bodies. These
people individually, not all Ironman people. I've seen some freaks out there, but. And the giant
legs is that's not from the running, right? That's probably from the bicycling. That's from the biking, right?
And the reason I say that is a lot of people running is the easiest type of exercise,
cardiovascular exercise. If a lot of people who get into exercise, if they're going to start with
cardio, they start with running because you just get some shoes and you go out and run.
Yeah. And it's very, again, it kind of always comes back to that. Anyone who's listening to
this more, again, more mature conversation around strength training and physical activity. It's,
again, it comes back to start with the lowest barrier of entry, start with what you not only
can do, but also something that you know, you're going to enjoy that reinforces the habit, right?
It's sort of like starting to read books. Don't start with the longest, hardest book to read that
you could pick.
Start with the easiest book, the lowest barrier of entry, get into the habit of actually reading
books, and then slowly titrate up the level of advancement or demand that that book is having
on you, right? Or is demanding of you. And it's the same thing with exercise, in my opinion.
But when it comes to the difference between the two, right, we can break them into
their separate things. And I think per time spent doing the thing, I do think that resistance
training comes out on top in terms of overall net positive influence on our overall health,
in terms of all the things that it can do, especially in terms of the muscle
and strength aspect of things. And especially that spread across the body in a more appropriate
way that in a lot of this term is, is, you know, depending on how you view this term, but
is more quote unquote functional, which I'm very hesitant to even use that. But
in terms of the way that we live life.
Yeah. But in this case, it's like actually kind of literal, like, yes, it's literally more
functional. Like you can function better in your, in your day-to-day activities.
Like, yeah. Like any, any, anyone who's went to a, or anyone who did like basic
health classes or went to university and took like your basic exercise physiology class,
or went to university and took like your basic exercise physiology class, you talk about activities of daily living that those ADLs are drilled into your head of being significant,
right? We've put a ton of value. And I, I remember being young in college and, you know, I was,
I swear, like half the semester we were talking about everything always came back to these
activities of daily living. And I remember in my head, I'm like, dude semester we were talking about, everything always came back to these activities of daily living.
And I remember in my head, I'm like, dude, who cares?
It just kind of goes back to when you're young, it's just, how can I get stronger, bigger,
faster?
How can I do all these things, right?
Leaner, if we're using your titles.
But it really kind of comes into play of how truly important those activities
of daily living are and how those feed more functionally into your life, right? So strength
training, again, is going to be more of that global impact across every joint of our body
that we're training, right? So your ability to things up overhead or lower them out of cabinets,
your ability to move about your house, your ability to get up off the couch, your ability to just move in different planes of motion and have the mobility, but also
the strength within that mobility to actually function and not get hurt.
And all of these things, right, are reinforced through strength training and resistance training.
So whereas, you know, solely just doing aerobic exercise, depending on how you're choosing
to do it, right?
Obviously there's different, you know, if you're choosing to sprint, then all right,
you know, like that's pretty intense and you're going to get a lot of, you're going to get a lot
of residual benefit from that and crossover benefit from that. But, you know, if your
modality is like, I hop on the elliptical and I move in the sagittal plane for 90 minutes a week.
Okay, great for your overall cardiovascular health, but your ability to hang on, not only
build new muscle tissue, but hang on to that muscle tissue you have is going to be a lot
lower or very, very minimal.
Your ability to hang on to strength, which becomes extremely important into your middle
age and later years of life life you're not going to
hang on to that right and so it seems to be that if you had to choose in my opinion and what i've
read again i want to say it's a stewart phillips uh study that they did back in 2020 around this
was around again the beginning of the or kind of like midway through 2020 when i think they started
writing it as like the pandemic hit because they were trying to get people trying to kind of like midway through 2020 when I think they started writing it as like the pandemic hit
because they were trying to get people trying to kind of come out with some standardized
recommendations around if you had to choose, if you only had so much time and you have to choose
one, strength training is going to be the most effective and efficient modality for improving
muscle mass, improving strength, improving the cognitive decline,
improving all of these other things,
mobility, you name it.
So yeah, I mean, when we're looking at just soul,
if you had to choose,
I do think resistance training is the best bang for your buck, right?
But that is to say, I think the ultimate best combination,
the most holistic combination of things,
and I know in my own experiences I think the ultimate best combination, the most holistic combination of things.
And I know in my own experiences of kind of doing all of these things in isolation as separate things in my life and then doing them all together, I think a more holistic way
of viewing it, if you have the time, is going to be some sort of combination between resistance
training, like strength training, cardiovascular work or cardiovascular training,
and some type of restorative meditative practice
that involves like, whether that's just meditation
or just my preference would be yoga.
I think the combination of all of those things
are gonna create the best holistic approach
to what you could achieve from a fitness standpoint
and just an overall health and wellbeing standpoint. But again, if you had to choose one, I think strength training comes out
on top, but they're still working through some of those mechanisms. Yeah. Yeah. We'll go back to,
I want to ask on yoga. So why that and what type of yoga, if there is a type that you're doing,
or if you just have found some yoga exercises that you like and you just do them at home.
Yeah, I know.
So, you know, my wife is a big yogi.
She really loves yoga and Pilates and those type of fitness pursuits
or health pursuits or exercise modalities.
And I'd say she dragged me into my first,
I used to do yoga when I was bodybuilding
and that was really restorative for me.
And I think in a large part,
just how much you're in need of a parasympathetic activity, something that is restorative. It allows
you to, to enter that more rest and digest state. And again, just allow yourself to, to be in a more
parasympathetic state versus just this overactive, sympathetic,
just drive and, and energy coming from, you know, cortisol throughout the day, just because you're,
you're constantly in a rush and in a hurry and you're going from lift, you're going to work,
you're going here. And yoga, I think fits in from a, you know, an obvious, you know,
looking at like mobility and having time to sit and stretch. But it's also just,
again, it's meditative. It's introspective. It's something that challenges your mind and body in
just a different way. And so I think in terms of just overall health in general and well-being,
but also feeling the best I've ever felt was when I was doing a combination between yoga.
And again, like that was like one
to two times a week, max, like just having a yoga practice, at least some, some form of it,
I think is important. And some form of cardiovascular, again, this could be
one, two, three days a week, whatever that is for you. And then some sort of resistance training
two to three times per week. Like I, I think when we hear you need to go to the gym,
you need to resistance train,
we think, okay, we first think of the muscle thing
or the, you know, I'm not interested in the muscle thing.
Why would I do that?
And so hopefully our conversation today
kind of entices you of all the other benefits
that come from it that aren't muscle related, right?
And helping save off, you know,
neurodegenerative diseases as you age,
your loss of independence as you age, your loss of independence as
you age, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, all these things. Or maybe that are, I mean,
these things, some of these things are related to muscle, but it's not about having big muscles or
pretty muscles. It's about these functional, I guess you could say, these other benefits
aside from just what you see, which is kind of interesting perspective. I can,
I can see this. I've, I've been into weightlifting for so long. I think I've maybe lost this
perspective personally, but they, they associate maybe how we would look like they don't really
want to look like us because they have ideas of what people think about people who look like us.
Like, you know, the go-to is that how many times have you heard that just meathead?
That's what you are. You're just a meathead. Same thing with me. I don't care. I don't take
personal offense. I get it. People see big biceps and a lot of guys who have big biceps are kind of
meatheads who are into this stuff. A lot of guys who are in the gym five days a week, training hard,
big biceps, they're kind of meatheads. And so some people are even, they're
concerned about how other people will see them if they were to get these big muscles,
not to go off on a tangent, but just kind of, it's an interesting, I've the psychology of that
is kind of interesting to me just because I'm not the person who cares anyway. And I don't do it to
try to look one way or
another to other people. But anyway, so we have some of these things that are related
to having muscle. I also wanted to just ask you about maybe people have heard that
all cause mortality. So death from any and all causes, there's an association between that and
just how much
muscle you have. I know a lot of people that I've spoken with are surprised to learn that, that,
that, oh, like more muscular people who are also stronger people are literally harder to kill.
Like you are more likely to survive everything that life can throw at you by having those bigger
biceps, not literally the biceps, but by having more muscle.
Yeah, and again, I don't have that pulled up,
but it is true, man.
And it's something, again,
that muscle does relate to that directly.
And I think too, it's not the,
I think, again, I think it's the,
we like to put things in boxes and categorize things, right?
So it's the, we like to put things in boxes and categorize things, right? So it's, you know, initially, depending on how you were introduced to strength training, right?
A lot of people are introduced via maybe bodybuilding culture or now more of like an influencer culture that is typically rooted in extremes.
And it's rooted in, you know, okay, I have to go six, you know, five or six
days a week for two hours. You know, I got to eat a certain way. I got a X, Y, and Z. Right. And
that's, that's how they've been introduced to the gym, you know, and, or resistance training in
general, or just to, to, to muscular work. And, you know, fortunately, and that's a lot of people.
That's a lot of even people, let's say middle-aged people who have never done any of this and
they're on social media.
And so what do they do?
Like, all right, I think I'm going to, I'm thinking about doing some strength training.
Let me, let me see, like, well, what does this world look like?
What should I do?
And man, what a cesspool you're going to find yourself in, man.
And I think it's great overall. Like,
I think it's really knocked down the barrier of entry for people to kind of be,
go in a little bit more informed. And I think that's a really big positive to the social media
movement that we've had, you know, and how popular fitness has become, especially on social media.
You know, it's up there with the other big hitters like fashion and, and you name it truly entertaining and, you know, people that are interested in entertained
by watching fitness content, which is inspired, it's motivating, you know, that's a positive
thing that I see. But again, like you're getting, you're sort of indoctrinated into this way of
thinking that, oh, it has to look this way. Right. But instead, if you were introduced
in a way of, you know, maybe going with, maybe you're, you know, let's say you're off of social
media, you're not introduced that way, but there's a local, let's say one of your parents goes to
lift and they bring you along, they go a few days a week, they do kind of this full body split.
They're training hard at a, you know, they have enough training volume, enough training
intensity there.
They go, they enjoy it, and they reinforce the fact that it makes them feel better and
function better in life.
It's kept them away from having to get on, you know, blood pressure medication and cholesterol
medication and all of these things that we see a lot of our parents and grandparents
have to get on.
Those are two individuals
that would have drastically different viewpoints
of what's actually needed for the health benefits
of strength training versus the people
who are sort of in the extreme camp
and overwhelmed by this reality
that they think strength training has to be, right?
And bodybuilding style training happens to be
one of the safest, and that's backed by the research that we do have. But that doesn't
mean it doesn't have its own inherent risks, obviously, but it is one of the safest ways
to go about obtaining all these benefits that we're talking about today that are related to
all cause mortality and, and diseases and cancers and, you know, diabetes and all these different
things, but also helps, you know, put on the muscle that we do need or the muscle that we're
trying to maintain and the muscle and strength that we're trying to maintain, which I think is a large,
in the muscle and strength that we're trying to maintain, which I think is a large,
a lost conversation more so than this constant state of, well, this, this doesn't help you grow muscle or gain a bunch of strength. And it's like, yeah, but like, does it, it allows you to maintain
it though. That's still net positive. Right. And it's, I think, again, there's so much marketing,
you know, and, and language around, well, it's pointless if it doesn't help you grow,
gain or something, right? It's then it's a pointless thing to, to try or to do.
Or that it's just far inferior to this more scientifically optimal thing. Okay, if your
goal is to gain as much muscle and strength as you possibly can as quickly as you possibly
can, then that might be an appropriate criticism.
But if that is not your goal, then actually what is, we can remove scientific, what is
more optimal is what you're saying is the routine that somebody can follow.
It takes up a couple hours of their time every week.
They generally enjoy it. They
generally look forward to their workouts. They feel good after their workouts and on and on and
on. I think too, I was thinking about this the other day. I think a lot of it, typically the,
the best things for our health are the most boring things that we sort of overlook as,
as being as important as they are, right?
So, you know, sleep, trying to manage, you know, having some sort of calorie management tools within your tool belt of daily living,
you know, not doing anything in the extremes is fairly boring, right?
Like, we want to go from one extreme.
I think that's why, you know, parts of the diet culture are so popular.
I think that's why parts of the diet culture are so popular.
It's, okay, the boring stuff that's actually going to test you more long-term, that's actually harder to consistently do long-term and consistently over time, then, okay, I did,
you know, I did Atkins back when I was, you know, it's some 50, 60 year old person telling you about they did this intense diet or one bodybuilding show back in the day. And you look at them and
they're in, you know, the worst health you've ever seen. And you're like, okay, but it's the extreme. Or they go from one kind of extreme, let's say diet to another.
And it could also, you have people who follow the same kind of approach. Maybe these are people who
are like, they are fitness fanatics, but they'll go from one extreme type of training program to another and some of that maybe is is novelty and
just the the emotional stimulation that comes with novelty and and i totally agree that i've tweeted
about this and and and put this and put that idea into podcasts and just one of the things that that
resonated with people is this point of a lot of uh a lot of what
you're going to get out of strength training a lot of what you're going to get out of just fitness in
general is is kind of boring and the ability to do these boring things over long periods of time
actually is what sets the fitness elite apart from the people who are not so super fit.
And yes, you can find exceptions to every rule, but that generally is the rule.
The fittest people, even on social media, and maybe they might not show this.
They might show a workout with all these
exotic exercises, a lot of novelty, and they might represent that as like,
this is my workout that I did.
But in some cases, I mean, I know some people, I wouldn't say they're friends, but I know of people who do this, like they have their Instagram workouts, then they have their actual
workouts and they don't really show their actual workouts.
Like they do their, they, they get at least three kind of boring, you know, they might
get in their push, pull legs and it's basic exercises, compound heavyweights, blah, blah, blah. And, and they, they, they don't change that up much because they're actually trying to progress on those exercises. And that's not what you see on their social media though. You see the splashy stuff, the, the, again, the exotic, you see the sizzle and you know,'s it's the unfortunately the latter gets a lot more
attention than the former and so these people what they say as well you know i'm just i'm giving the
market what what it wants basically like hey if i post these boring workouts it doesn't really get
any traction people don't really care if i post weird shit, it gets a lot of traction.
And people seem to care.
So I'm going to give them more weird shit.
And I don't agree with that.
But there is a logic to it, I guess you could say.
There is, man.
And it's, again, there's always exceptions to the rules, right?
We were talking about that before we hopped on, right?
There's always an exception.
We were talking about it in a different way.
But there's always exceptions to rules.
And again, I kind of try to, I try to view all of this a little bit more holistically as I've
gotten older and how does this play out and how does this metaphorically look in other parts of
life? And that's typically the healthiest people you come across. The most successful people you come across, you name it, are people that are, that have
really hunkered down and majored in the boring shit, right?
Like they're super routine.
They, and that isn't to say you can't have spontaneity, you know, spontaneity within
your life and have novelty.
That's fantastic.
Whatever keeps you in it.
But that's a personality thing. And
that's a deeper conversation, probably not for me to have. But the most boring things
done consistently are the things that almost always come out on top. And again, it always
come, it kind of goes back to what sells, right? And typically our more general recommendations that people actually latch onto are the exciting
things, right? It is the, you know, 4am wake ups. It is the, you know, 4am and then a cold shower,
ice bath, sauna, journal, million things. Then I get into my day, which if that's your cup of tea,
then send it, man, like have a great time. And I hopefully,
hopefully it's productive for you, but it's, it's, it's rare that that's the thing that's
actually making you successful. It's probably not at all. It's the thing. It's the fact that
you showed up to work and you did the things you didn't necessarily always wanted to do.
You did it consistently day in, day out, month in, month out, year in, year out.
You did that in your professional life. You did it in your personal life. And you did that in your physical life
from a physical activity standpoint. Just hopefully what people can take from this
conversation is one of the most important things about all of this is finding what works for you and understanding that what you see as, you know,
potentially the, the barrier of entry being super high and difficult, it's just not the truth.
And taking the conversations around like exercise snacks, which are, you know, which has been,
you know, talked about pretty widely, which is great, which is, you know, we can gain a lot of
benefit from these short bursts of, of exercise, these five, 10, 15 minute little bursts of exercise. People listening, you can do
that. You don't have to be at a gym because now we're talking about just, there are plenty of
body weight things you can do. If you're going to do a quick, let's say it's a 10 minute body weight
workout. And even if you're pretty fit, you can find some progressions of different body
weight exercises that are actually kind of difficult. Now, are you going to get, if you're
fit, are you going to gain a lot of, or let's just, let's just say, are you going to gain any
additional muscle and strength by doing, if you could only do body weight stuff? Probably not.
But could you maintain your muscle? Yes. Could you maintain
a lot of your strength? Probably, especially if you could add some bands, which again,
inexpensive, you can have them just in your house. Anyway, so go ahead. I just wanted to jump in.
And this is a good point that is very practical that people who don't want to go to the gym or
can't get to a gym, sometimes getting to a gym means driving at least an hour for people. And
that hour, that's all they actually have to give to a workout. So how are they supposed to do it?
Exactly. And it's for me, and again, the older I've gotten, and I know a lot of,
you know, the content I put out is, you know, I'm in the gym, I'm training, I'm educating,
I'm teaching people how to do certain exercises and whatever. But I don't want that to overshadow the importance of just getting in and doing something.
Right. And don't don't be try not to be overwhelmed by this.
This need for extreme. Right.
This need for like, I'd be if I'm going to this black or white thinking. Right.
It's just the all or nothing mentality, right?
Yeah. It's really easy to fall into. And again, it's, it's the novelty, it's the sexiness,
it's the appeal, what that is and, and how it sounds even to other people, right? So
if you, you know, if that's something that drives you externally or extrinsically
to make these big changes or do these extreme things
for more extrinsic value,
how other people are viewing what you're doing.
And I think novelty becomes a little bit more important.
But as soon as you kind of bring things intrinsic
and how you actually value that thing and actually
how it's repaying your life internally which reflects externally then i think simple person
change in or shift in perspective i think really starts to to have a positive effect towards this
again this reinforcement of this low barrier of entry you truly need to have you know again like you
can talk about it from a training perspective but you can also talk about it nutritionally right
you know okay start to add in more of the good or or okay why don't we swap the the soda for diet
soda it's not going to give you cancer it's not going to kill you uh would it be better if you
didn't have any maybe you might be able to make that argument. It might not matter. But if you're currently drinking hundreds of calories of
sugary beverages every day, can we replace that with sweet beverages that are now zero calories?
Great. That's a win. Huge win. Huge win. And you getting, you going from 1,000 steps a day
to 4,000 steps a day, massive win.
You going from zero training sessions a week
to 60 minutes a week, which, you know,
maybe split up into two sessions or three sessions even,
huge win, right?
And I, you know, I know this may not, again,
it sounds sexy or the people who, you know,
typically listen to Mike's podcast
to learn about the new and novel ways
to build as much muscle as possible.
But I think this is an important conversation.
Even if it's not directly important to you right now,
it will be in the future.
I promise you, aging is inescapable at this point.
So we're all aging every day, every moment of the day.
And it's up to you to really kind of put the work in throughout your life and try to stave that off
the best you can and keep yourself in the game as long as you can, as best as you can. Right. And
again, although this may not be sexy information now, it's going to become a lot sexier as you age, right?
I mean, hell, even having hair in your older years
is a sexy attribute, right?
Imagine being in shape, right?
So, you know, use that as motivation if you want,
you know, just be a sexy elderly person walking around.
But again, it's a message to put out into the world. And I think
it's an important one that, again, as we get lost in the extremes too often, we think it's that it's
this all or nothing thing. It's this, it's this light switch. Right. And I'm like, I learned the
fitness style thing from like, I think Eric Helms originally, I originally heard from Eric Helms
back in the day, but instead of thinking about things as like this light switch, think about it as like a dimmer
switch, a dial, right? Where you're at different times of your life, you're turning it up and down.
And, you know, if you're in a stressful period or you're, you're in a period of time where
maybe you haven't ever worked out or you haven't ever, you haven't been in the gym for a long time and your dial is
on extremely low or the light's off, turn that dial just a tad bit. Start small. Start with
something that's achievable. Start with something that you know you're going to try to, you're going
to have some enjoyment in and you can create a routine around. And that's a zero to one change
to use Peter Thiel's analogy, because you went
from darkness, you can't see anything. Oh, you actually can start seeing like, it's not, it's
not well illuminated. You can't see the details, but you're starting to see, you went from seeing
nothing at all to like, oh, I can see that's significant. So I think the best representation
of this is just imagine, you know, so I always turn
the brightness down on my TVs at my house because they're always extremely just way
too high.
Why is my TV so bright?
Especially like when it's not bright outside.
And so, you know, turning your TV down to like zero brightness renders your TV fairly
useless.
Like it turns into a glorified radio.
But as soon as you go from zero to one
on your TV's brightness,
now all of a sudden you see the picture.
You see things start to become,
start to illuminate and become,
in higher definition,
the brighter and brighter and brighter you get,
which makes the viewing experience
a lot more pleasurable, right?
And it creates this vibrance to what...
I mean, it adds a whole new
dimension really, right? To the, to the experience. Yeah. So I think, again, it's a great metaphor for
again, going just from zero to one and starting small and, and creating really achievable
routines for yourself. Right. And I, I think, you know, James Clear always talks about this
type of stuff as it relates to habits and stuff. And I even talks about his exercise
habits a lot, which I think is great. And he even talks about his exercise habits a lot,
which I think is great.
And he typically puts these types of spins on it.
And I think it's really, really important.
And it's an important conversation to have
just to not be overwhelmed
by what you think you should be doing,
but just try to do the thing that you know you can do now.
And again, think about things more as a dial,
more so than a switch that you can turn up and down
rather than being kind of in this all or nothing mindset.
For people watching, unfortunately,
Austin's camera just, it's actually kind of funny.
We were talking about, okay, so we're at zero now.
We're down to brightness zero
for the rest of the
interview fortunately we're wrapping up so it's not a big deal but anyway to quickly just jump
in with what might be a cliche but it's i think relevant the 80 20 rule that i'm sure everybody
has heard of if we apply that to exercise and health i think it is more accurate rather than
inaccurate to say that if we were to look at our total ability to train,
to, to, to push our body, I think of maybe a, a professional athlete is that like they try to,
they try to get to a hundred. We can go from zero to 100 here and they try to run themselves as
close to 100 as they can, because that's what it takes to compete at that level.
So if we can exert ourselves,
let's say just 20% of what would be a hundred percent for us, if we had to, if in another life,
we were a professional athlete and we were training, you know, like some of these, some
of these guys and gals are training hours and hours and hours every day, blah, blah, blah.
So if we're just doing 20% of what we could do, what would be our 100%, maybe even in our current capacity, we can enjoy, with just 20% of our capacity for effort.
Would you agree with that?
I would.
And I think there's actually some research to support this.
I can't recall the exact study, but I think there is actually research to support this,
especially as it relates to strength training and resistance training.
So we know our first few sets are the most stimulating sets.
And I think they did a study where they compared doing one set basically to failure
or within a rep of failure versus, you know, three sets of a different RPE or RIR.
Further from failure for people like to,
or wondering what that means,
but further away from failure versus closer to failure.
Easier sets versus, so, but there was a lot of,
basically there was sort of with that,
I don't remember the exact percentage,
but it was something like the person who did that first set basically achieved
80% of what the total benefit ended up being of that total set of exercise, whatever.
I think I know which research you're talking about. I couldn't give the title or details,
but I'm having deja vu of reading something that, and it kind of stuck in my mind
as that's an interesting piece of information. It is. And also like, where does that ultimately
put us in terms of the usefulness of, again, what's the lowest barrier of entry for us
when it comes to training? And so, you know, if you can get into the gym twice per week and train
each muscle group with one movement, you know, with one to two sets that are close enough to
failure, like you're going to probably reap 80% of the reward that you're ultimately going to,
to get if you were in there doing, you know, an hour long workout or, you know, this more of a
bodybuilding style workout.
That's a great tip. That really is. Cause it's very counterintuitive people who are new to this.
I'm sure if they're listening, they're surprised to hear that because one hard set, let's say it's
30 minutes of training, doing a few different exercises, maybe two hard sets, full body split. And you do that
just a couple of times per week. And people who are new to this might, they just might have a
hard time believing like that's actually going to do something really. Yes, it will really.
Yeah, it really will. And it's going to, so think about this too. I think this is a helpful way to
think about, um, from a, from a practical standpoint. This is something that like clients that I work with that just don't have a ton of time to dedicate to this. The shorter amount of time you have, the more intensity you need to more important the less total work you're doing.
So what more work or more volume of work allows us to do is just train that work at a lower relative intensity and further away from failure. That essentially is what more work extended out at a lower intensity
allows us to do is allows us to achieve the same stimulatory benefits as the shorter amount at a
higher intensity. And that's just, that's just a good, good thing to understand for training
programming in general. Yes, exactly. And that's why there is, again, these relationships that we,
we sort of have within programming and you would recognize
if you saw it in your programming of why things are certain ways, but it's a very helpful tool
to use of, okay, I only have, okay, I only have 10 minutes, you know, and like with Mike there,
if Mike only has 10 minutes today to do something, what would he do? Would he go on a 10 minute walk?
Okay, that's, that's good.
If we had a good, better, best, it's okay.
Would he go on a 10 minute walk?
That's the good.
The better would be some sort of slightly more intense.
Maybe it's a 10 minute jog or Mike goes on a, basically like does 10 minutes of like
as much sprints that he can do on the bike
that's behind him, you know, like a 10 minute high, really high intensity, all out 10 minutes.
That's the best version of what that is. Right. But if also, but in this situation, if Mike had
30 minutes, then he could reap the reward. He's getting probably out of that 10 minutes
in that 30 by doing at a lower intensity. So you wouldn't have to go as all out and you could go
a little bit less and still get a good benefit from that. But with less time, we need more
intensity. With more time, you can afford to have less intensity. And I think that's,
that people sort of intuitively do that at the gym anyways, you know, because when you have people
that do two hour workouts. Yeah, exactly. I was just saying, you see these two hour workouts and
if you watch like, and you were, you were to assign a reps in reserve to a lot of their sets,
you would be like, I mean, who knows the bar? It never, it was moving so fast. I can't,
I don't know, five, like it looked easy. Like they just stopped. They didn't even slow down one bit. It was hard to discern rep one from rep eight, you know?
Yeah. So, you know, you could do 10 sets at a five RPE, or you could do three sets at a
eight or nine. You're probably doing the same amount of stimulating work, right? And this kind
of goes back to like effective reps and all of that stuff. But, um, yeah, the, it's the, the ultimate goal of that part of the conversation essentially is
the less time you have, try and come with more intensity, um, to reap the same benefit, but also,
you know, if you can only do one set of something, take it as close to failure as you can within safety, you know, being safe and working within
your, your, uh, your ability to, to safely perform those movements. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
For some people that might be a, they still have a couple of good reps left. It might be three
and with a more experienced weightlifter, that might be a one.
Right. And again, it kind of comes down to the exercises you're choosing too, right?
So if you know you only have, okay, how can I knock out one hard set where I'm training,
you know, my quads and my glutes safely and I only got one set, I may choose something
like the leg press over a back squat because I can safely take the leg press closer to
failure than I can the back squat.
So in terms of a productive one movement for my quads and glutes for that day, if I only have
20 minutes to train, that's going to be more productive and conducive towards what I'm trying
to achieve. Or in my gym, they have a pendulum squat, which is cool. This is the first gym.
And I would prefer that even over a leg press, because I have to say, I'm willing to push hard on the leg press, but I still like to leave one or two still.
Like, I don't like to reach a grinder on the leg press because it's kind of uncomfortable in your back and the position that's in.
It's just, it concerns me a little bit.
So that pendulum squat, though, I mean, if you wanted, you could go right to failure.
And if you have any skill at any of
this, you're not going to, you're not going to get hurt. You're just not because of the motion.
Yeah. You can get stuck, but I have no concerns if I want to push a set to like, all right,
I'm going to make this one real hard. I'm not going to go to failure, but I'm willing to grind
out that final rep. And as I've gotten older, I'm much less willing to do that
on certainly a lot of free weight exercises,
on a deadlift,
I'm not willing to do any grinders.
I just don't see the reason
given my circumstances
and what my goals are.
A back squat, any kind of squat,
even a leg press and so forth.
So, yeah.
But yeah, main point there is it's don't
overthink it. Um, start with the lowest barrier of entry, you know, especially if you're someone
who just only has 20 minutes, three times a week, you know, maybe that's, maybe that's some kettle
bells, resistance bands and dumbbells at your house. Maybe that's, you know, you, you really
enjoy the gym, but you only, you only got 20 minutes, you know, three times a week, try and go in understanding that that shouldn't be the workout
where you have, you know, 90 second, 120 second rest periods either like move through, be
effective and efficient with your time and train close to failure for that 20 minutes.
And ultimately you're going to be in a really good position to reap all of the health benefits
that we're talking about here today that are outside of maximizing muscle gain, right?
Because I think also in our conversation around optimal training, we often only talk about
optimal insofar as it relates to muscle specifically, right? And again, like for
90% of the people on this earth, they don't need to grow the optimal amount of muscle mass as much
as they need to optimize the workout that's going to actually aid towards a health benefit moving
into the future versus optimizing their, their muscle accretion
over time, you know, a six month period or 12 month period or something like that. Right.
Important difference. Yeah, totally agree. And I think, um, hopefully we have made that point
sufficiently. I think we have and, and given and given and giving people some good practical
takeaways and so i think with that we can just uh wrap it up unless there's anything else that
you wanted to add something that i haven't asked or that's just kind of bouncing around in your
head um no nothing at all i i think that that was a a good start to a conversation around the the
benefits of strength training and physical
activity that are kind of non aesthetically based. And that's, you know, a goal that I have
to put, you know, put more of that out into the world when the main conversation typically is
around how much muscle can we gain rather than how much benefit can we, yeah, how shredded and lean and,
you know, magazine, you know, front page of the magazine model, can we look it's,
okay, there's a certain age, I think you start to get to that you're sort of, okay,
that's less important to me now than having energy, having a cognitive ability,
having the opportunity to be physically able to
play with my kids or. And still looking good. Those, I mean, I think, I think it's important
to start to condition ourselves psychologically when we're a bit younger, because let's face it,
as we get older, we look worse. I mean, I'll speak to myself.
And that applies to everything that we care about when we look in the mirror.
Unfortunately, it all just tends to look a bit worse as we get older.
Now, if we talk about our physique, can we have a great physique as we get older?
Yes.
As a rule, though, if you look at a 55-year-old fit guy or fit gal, so if you compare that same person to let's say they've been fit their entire life, you compare them at 25, they can still be in great shape relative to their ages, but their physique looked better at 25. It's just everything just seemed to look a bit better. Sometimes it's not even exactly clear why.
Now they just look older and it looks worse, period, right?
And so can you find outliers?
Yeah, there are some people who still look ridiculous in their 50s and 60s, great genetics
and whatever.
But for most of us, we have to accept that while we can always look great and
feel great for our age, for our age is a part of the equation. And so it's just something I've
thought about. And I found it just kind of useful for myself as a reminder that looking great at 25 is
different than looking great at 55.
And so I think the more that we can, especially as we get older, continue to look very good
for our age, look fit and have a great physique.
But again, keeping in mind that it's not going to always be the same.
We are not always going to look as shredded and
jacked and awesome as we did when we were in our twenties. And now we have all of these other
things though, that we care about. And a lot of the things we've discussed in this podcast
that we can purposely put more importance on than when we were younger, because we just wanted to
have ab veins and we didn't really care
about our cardiovascular health in our 20s.
We just wanted to look awesome,
look like a superhero or whatever.
Right, and again, that's a management of expectations
and we have to have that throughout our life
and every area of our life, right?
You can't, you gotta manage expectations appropriately.
Yeah, that's an important point to end on.
But I, yeah, I don't have anything else to share.
I appreciate you having me back on as I talk about this.
I think it's really important.
And I know as I get older,
which is, you know, funny to say,
but I mean, as I age,
these things become more important.
And more importantly,
as my parents age and my grandparents age and seeing all the loved ones in my around me, you know, who I see, you know, every week or every month or whatever, it write it in a way that it, it did sort of
reduce the friction of entry. It reduced the barrier of entry for someone to go from either.
I've never been in the gym or I haven't been in the gym in a long time. It really intimidates me
to, I can try and look at this resource and say, Oh, now I'm a little bit more informed. I
understand how things should, should kind of look and I can go in with a plan, you know?
So I can kind of fit in a little bit more
and not look as lost or feel as lost
when I step foot into the gym,
either for the first time or the first time
in a really long time.
So I do appreciate you having me back on, man.
Yeah, absolutely.
And why don't we just tell people
where they can find you and find your work?
You mentioned your book once or twice,
but let's just mention it one more time
if they want to check it out. Yeah, so Amazon is the easiest place to find your work. You mentioned your book once or twice, but let's just mention it one more time if they want to check it out.
Yeah, so Amazon is the easiest place to find the book.
That's Science of Strength Training.
It's a yellow cover.
That's enough information there.
You'll find it.
Yeah, a lot of great information,
a lot of great visuals.
So yeah, if people like,
if they're familiar,
we were talking about this before we recorded,
Frederic Delevier, however you pronounce his name,
if anybody is familiar with his work and like that, I think you really like Austin's
because it's similar and it's very visual, but there's different information in the book and
it's a different type of visual. It's cool. It was well done. Thank you. I appreciate that. And
yeah, I owe a ton to the illustrators on that and the editors and stuff like that as well. But yeah,
Instagram is probably the easiest place to find me.
And that's just Austin Current, just my name.
If you just search Austin, I'm the bearded guy.
He usually populates.
So check that out.
And you can usually find,
that's sort of the central hub for all the information.
So if you wanna follow that.
And then the book actually has its own Instagram as well.
If you search Science of Strength Training on Instagram,
if you're just kind of interested in this information,
that Instagram can actually help.
I break things down that are in the book
and then I actually expand on topics
that are a little further than I was able to in the book.
So it's kind of just a cool resource
if you're interested in the science behind this stuff
or getting into it, so.
Awesome, well, thanks again for taking your time.
Austin, I really appreciate it. And. Awesome. Well, thanks again for taking your time. Awesome. I really appreciate
it. And this was a great discussion and I'm sure we can think of another one. Maybe when this one
comes out, we'll brainstorm what part three could be about. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I
hope you found it helpful. And if you did subscribe to the show, because it makes sure that you don't
miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it
increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it a little bit more
easily found by other people who may like it just as much as you. And if you didn't like something
about this episode or about the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email,
mike at muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I can do better or just
what your thoughts are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future.
I read everything myself. I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive
feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode, and I hope to hear from you soon.