Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dan John on How to Optimize Recovery and Avoid Injury

Episode Date: July 24, 2019

Getting injured sucks. It’s not just the pain of the injury itself that’s annoying, either. You also have to alter your diet and training or even take time off altogether. Under-recovering sucks t...oo. Push yourself too far and your training becomes a slog. You’re sore all the time, your lifts stagnate (or worse, regress), and you increase the risk of hurting yourself. Such are the reasons why it’s smart to make sure you’re playing good “defense” in your fitness journey by ensuring you’re not just pushing hard in the gym (“offense”) but also taking steps to prevent injuries and optimize recovery. As you probably know, the basics get you most of the way here, like proper sleep hygiene, a nutritious diet, and a well-designed training plan. There’s more you can do, however, and that’s why I invited Dan John on the show—to dive a bit deeper into this side of training and share some non-obvious tips on how to not only decrease the risk of injury and improve recovery but also better deal with nagging issues that we all have to deal with now and then. In case you’re not familiar with Dan, he has quite the resume—he has competed in the Highland Games, written 14 books, and coached athletes and weightlifters for over 40 years now. As you can imagine, he has seen and heard it all, and in this episode, we discuss: - Easy ways to prevent injuries - The surprising benefits of loaded carries and farmer walks - How to better recover from your training, especially as you age - Powerful fitness lessons that can be applied to life and finance - And more... 6:37 - How can weightlifters prevent injury? 7:19 - What kind of injuries do box jumps cause? 16:22 - How do you do shoulder rocking? 21:59 - Why are you a fan of loaded carries and farmer walks? 26:35 - What’s a good milestone for the carry family? 28:15 - How do you like to run the sled? 29:43 - What is a good milestone for the sled? 30:33 - Is there value for the sled with everyday people who want to get fit? 31:46 - How can people over the age of 40 prevent injury? 34:57 - What can people over the age of 40 do to recover better? 43:13 - Where are your seminars and what are they like? 46:43 - What are lessons that you learn in fitness that can be applied to your personal life? 50:50 - What type of financial goals should I have? 54:18 - What type of vegetables do you eat every day? 54:36 - What type of peepers should I eat? 1:05:25 - Where can people find you and your work? 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.muscleforlife.com/signup/

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider supporting my sports nutrition company, Legion Athletics, which produces 100% natural evidence-based health and fitness supplements, including protein powders and protein bars, pre-workout and post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more. Head over to www.LegionAthletics.com now to check it out. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 10% on your entire order and it'll ship free if you are anywhere in the United States. And if you're not, it'll ship free if your order is over $100. So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love, like producing podcasts like this. Welcome, welcome to the
Starting point is 00:01:12 Muscle for Life podcast. I'm Mike Matthews with Legion Athletics, and this one is an interview with Dan John on optimizing recovery and avoiding injury. So here's the thing. Getting injured sucks. It's not just the pain either that sucks, but it's also how you have to change your training and often your diet as well to recover. You either have to take time off completely or you have to recover. You either have to take time off completely or you have to dramatically alter your programming to work around whatever is injured. And you can't train the way that you want to. You can't really push yourself in the gym and make progress. And as far as your diet goes, if you want to maximize or optimize your recovery, you are going to make sure that you are in a calorie surplus, unless it's a very
Starting point is 00:02:05 minor injury. But if it's anything remotely serious, a calorie surplus is going to speed up the process. And of course, that means putting on unwanted fat. And that's just the way it is. Getting hurt sucks. Under-recovering sucks too. It doesn't suck as much as getting injured, but ironically, it can lead to getting injured. You see, if you push yourself too far and too hard in the gym, your training becomes a slog. And if you keep going, it eventually can get dangerous because you're sore all the time, your lifts stagnate or even regress. And yes, your risk of injury goes up, at least of repetitive use injuries, usually in the joints. You'll see that often where people are pushing themselves too much, and then they will run into joint issues. Now, such are the reasons why it is smart to make sure
Starting point is 00:03:00 that you are playing good defense in your fitness journey, so to speak, and ensure you are taking steps to not only push yourself hard in the gym, that's the offense, right? But also to prevent injuries and optimize recovery. Now, as you probably know, the basics get 80% of the results are obtained by the diligent and intelligent application of the fundamentals, right? The 20% that gives you the 80%. And in the case of reducing the risk of injury and maximizing recovery, this includes things like maintaining proper sleep hygiene, eating a nutritious diet, and following a well-designed training plan. But there's more you can do, and that's why-obvious tips on how to not only decrease the risk of injury and improve recovery, but also how to better deal with some of the nagging issues that we all have to deal with now and then if we are in the gym and training hard. Shoulder problems,
Starting point is 00:04:22 for example. He gives a great tip on how to alleviate shoulder problems, something I had never heard of. Now, in case you are not familiar with Dan, he has quite the resume. He has competed in the Highland Games. He has written 14 books, and he has coached athletes and weightlifters for over 40 years now. So as you can imagine, Mr. John has seen and heard it all. And in this episode, we discuss things like how to prevent injuries, the benefits of loaded carries and farmer walks, how to better recover from your training, especially as you get older, several fitness lessons that can be applied to just life
Starting point is 00:05:06 in general and finances in particular, and more. I hope you liked the interview and find it as helpful and interesting as I did. Here it is. Hey, Dan, thanks for taking the time to talk with me today. Hey, this is great. Thank you. The timing's perfect. Yeah. Yeah. I think Roman reached out just last week, right? And he's like, Hey, can you do Monday? Sure. Why not? Yeah. I go to Australia on Wednesday and I lose, let's see, I lose Thursday. I won't have my, my life will not have a Thursday this week. I get two Mondays. So that works out kind of nice, you know? Nice, nice. I haven't been to Australia, but I've heard it's a, it's a neat place. It's, it's a long flight, I'll tell you that.
Starting point is 00:05:46 That's the biggest thing I have to concern myself with right now. Are you flying economy or business? Well, I have a thing in there. I might get free upgraded to first class, so that'll be nice. But I always fly Delta Comfort or something like that. Whatever, it's fine. It's just part of the survival of what you do, you know? No, but I know cause my wife's from Germany. So I've done in the past, not now so much now that
Starting point is 00:06:14 we're settled and have kids and things we try not to travel, but, but previously I've done many 10 hour flights. Yeah. So I know, uh, a tall-ish person, I'm like 6'2". And so 10 hours cramped into a middle seat, not exactly fun. I know the feeling. Sure. Go ahead. Yeah. But that's not what we're here to talk about. We're here to talk about, what I wanted to talk to you about is injury prevention. I think a good place to start on that injury prevention for people who are into weightlifting. It could be bodybuilding. It could be powerlifting. Yeah. One of the most important things you do if you're coaching is you got to constantly kind of keep circling. I think if I injure someone and it happens, so I try not to
Starting point is 00:07:03 hurt people in the weight room, but when you do get an injury, one of the first things you need to do as a staff or as a group, or even if you call up one of your friends, is break down what happened first. And the idea is downstream, this isn't going to happen again. And that's one of the reasons, for example, we don't do box squats. We're getting injuries from them. Pardon me, box jump. What kind of injuries?
Starting point is 00:07:25 Yeah, the shin rips, you know, where you get those massive gouges on the shin. And then one or two knee injuries, the CL kind, ACL, MCL kind of things. And so you just sit back and you say, okay, maybe we're just no good. We're not good at coaching this simple idea. Or whenever you throw box jumps into something, it's always at the wrong time. Either way, you just got to sit down sometimes and say, maybe this isn't for us. Another exercise, the exercise that kills, the bench press. You know, whenever someone bench presses, I think you need to have a lot more safeguards in place than probably any other exercise in the facility. Specifically on that, I'm sure people listening are like,
Starting point is 00:08:05 wait, what? Should I not be benching? Is that what you're saying? No, what I'm saying is it's the only exercise that kills. When I was a young lifter, it was a famous story in San Francisco. A guy was bench pressing by himself in his home with his five-year-old son. The bench comes down funny, gets over his neck, and he dies. I just realized when you said kills, you meant it literally. I thought you were talking figuratively. I thought you meant like, oh, it kills your shoulders.
Starting point is 00:08:30 No, you mean literally kills. Kills, yeah. Yeah, no, I get it. A buddy of mine at Utah State lost all of his front teeth on his hands. He had read somewhere that you can add five pounds to your bench by taking your thumbs. So instead of going around it. The old suicide grip. And he slid out and went right into his face. The fact that he survived is amazing, but let me take even
Starting point is 00:08:51 another step back. You know, I coached American football for a long time. And one of the reasons I was hired one place is that they had a shoulder injury epidemic and they were doing all these silly things like band pull-up parts and stuff like that. And I said, well, that's epidemic. And they were doing all these silly things like band pull-up parts and stuff like that. And I said, well, that's great and all, but when are the injuries happening? And they said, oh, in games. And I go, well, exactly what happened? Well, when you looked at the film of the injuries, the athletes didn't know how to roll. When they were getting tackled, they were reaching for the ground. Like, you know, my weight, your weight in collision, I'm going to stop. I'm going to stick,
Starting point is 00:09:26 I'm going to jab my finger in the ground and that's going to put me back in. And so by teaching them how to roll, to tumble, we eliminated shoulder injuries literally in one season, they're all gone. It wasn't band pull-aparts. It wasn't anything like that. So what I'm trying to get across here, Mike, is I gave you two directions on things. One is that when you're looking at injuries, okay, in the post, when an injury happens, I think you need to sit down and ask yourself, do we not teach it right? Do we not have appropriate bullet points? Do we not put it in the right time for training? You know, some exercises should be done when you're fresh.
Starting point is 00:10:00 Some exercises are off season. Some exercises maybe should never be done. And then on the other side, are we missing something so obvious when it comes to injuries? Like it wasn't weak shoulders. It was bad judgment on how to deal with being tackled. And sometimes the answer becomes very simple. When I go into the weight room and I talk to most people, it is interesting how when I first came up, you would hear mostly about knees and backs. And in the last few years, almost all the injuries I hear about are shoulders and then with its twin brother, elbows.
Starting point is 00:10:37 We have a joke about something we call MAPS, middle-aged pull-up syndrome. Middle-age pull-up syndrome. If you're after a certain age and you try to grind out an extra pull-up or two, you get this bizarre pain on the bony edge of your elbow that doesn't go away for months. And the only way to get rid of it is to not do pull-ups. But the number one thing that I see that I get complained to about now, 2019, is shoulders in the weight room. The answer is real simple to me. It's driving your car to work. It's spending your whole day on a computer. It's watching Game of Thrones for an
Starting point is 00:11:12 hour and 40 minutes. It's- Not worth anymore, by the way. Fully ruined. Spending all day looking down at your phone. And so when the head tilts forward and the shoulders come forward, and then, you know, you get that little rounding lower back, and then you go into lift, I think it puts all the pressure on the shoulder joints in an unusual way. I see so many men nowadays do one-arm bench presses, two-handed dumbbell or kettlebell bench presses, or even barbell bench presses, handed dumbbell or kettlebell bench presses, or even barbell bench presses. And you'll watch as they start to exert that their chin comes up to their chest. Instead of their head staying back on the bench, their head is now coming onto their chest because that's the position they spend so much time in. And it's interesting because there's an interesting study out of Hawaii
Starting point is 00:12:01 where the way to get rid of most of these shoulder injuries is to simply hang from a bar for 30 to 60 seconds a day. And I read the book, I looked at the study, I talked to a lot of smart strength people. And it is strange to think that something as simple as dangling from a pull-up bar, just hanging, can do miracles for the shoulder girdle. It's called the whole family of things. That's interesting. I actually haven't heard of that before. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:27 It's an interesting study. 90 out of 92 people, shoulders improved, people who are on the edge of surgery. And the two who didn't, they dropped out of the study for personal reasons. Wow. Which is just funny. So, yeah. So, we're supposed to be break eaters. You know, if you have opposable thumbs and your eyes are look forward, that's one of the things I found with javelin throwers, getting them to eliminate shoulder and even weirdly back injuries. We started having doing monkey bars and they would do monkey bars. And that first season we eliminated all of our shoulder problems. So I guess what I'm trying to say, if you don't mind, I know this is a long winded.
Starting point is 00:13:08 No, this is great. I myself, I'm like, I'm getting a pull, I'm getting a pull-up bar in the office and I'm going to hang from it 30, 60 seconds a day because I've never heard of this before. Maybe that's just my ignorance, but. There's, there's three, I'm just talking about shoulders now, but there's kind of three sides of the injury thing. Okay. The first is we talked about in the beginning, if we have exercise selection, if we do do things that cause injuries and I don't know what it would be, what would be a, well, you know how some people hate when they do dips, it kills their sternum. Right. Well, it's especially of adolescents because they're both the growth plates aren't fused yet.
Starting point is 00:13:46 Yeah, yeah. So maybe something as simple, every sophomore I have complains about dips. Well, we can shuttle dips to the side for a long time and do other things that don't hurt the sternum. The second thing is then honestly look at the injuries that happen. injuries that happen. And if you can kind of circle the sports injuries and say, well, okay, we think it's a, a prehab or rehab or strength issue, but really it's just the fact that they're not, I don't know, not wearing helmets at the right time, or the surface of that field isn't, isn't where, you know, if you have a field that has a bunch of dips, valleys, and, you know, gopher holes, it's going to be hard to undo the damage of gopher holes to the
Starting point is 00:14:26 ankle and knees. So, a better surface might be the answer there. And then I guess the third part is trying to find reasonably simple things to undo the basic general injuries we can deal with. Oddly, I like Tim Anderson's original strength. You know, you get on your hands and knees and you gently rock for, he thinks up to two minutes. You lay on your chest and you do little neck nods. You can't see me right now, but that's what I'm doing for you. And then the other one is you kind of look, you turn your head trying to find your shoes. I like people to sit in the bottom of a goblet squat for about 30 seconds at least every day. And of bottom of a goblet squat for about 30 seconds at least
Starting point is 00:15:05 every day. And of course, hang from a bar for about 30 seconds to a minute, whatever, you know, whatever's appropriate. Boy, if those simple kinds of steps can, I wouldn't ever want to say that we have surgical answer. I'm not going to say to a surgeon, no, you're wrong. But if we can kind of help the body heal itself by doing reasonable, simple things, let's do it. Maybe you don't need the 30 second hang, but the other 29 people I work with do. So we're all going to hang because sooner or later, Mike, you're going to need to hang. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I, uh, I've dealt with shoulder issues. Um, you know, some biceps tendonitis that was stemming, you know, biceal groove was all jammed up and had to work with a physical therapist.
Starting point is 00:15:49 We got it sorted out. But now to keep it staved off, what I do is, and I actually wrote an article about it just to share what I'm doing is, I do, it's about 10 minutes, a little routine every day of several yoga poses that I found have been good for, uh, there was some imbalances in my hips. Uh, external internal rotation was totally off. Like my external rotation was good on my left, bad on my right and internal vice versa. And for the shoulders, like there's like a tabletop pose or a few things that I do, but, uh, the, the hanging tabletop. Yeah, sure. So, so the hanging, I'm going to be adding myself. And just so I can understand, can you explain the rocking thing and what's the purpose of that? So you're on your stomach or you're on all fours?
Starting point is 00:16:30 So you're on, your hands are on the ground, your knees are on the ground, your feet are on the ground. So what you do in it, all you can do is sink back. And if you look, it looks like someone's squatting and you just do these little, they're called pandiculations in some places, but these little pulsing movements, you know, nice, smooth, like you're just gently moving in and out of that deep squat position. There's no load on you.
Starting point is 00:16:56 It's funny because some people sit, they'll tell me, you know, I feel like my joints are lubing. It's like, okay, that's fine. Somebody else will say, I just feel myself opening up. You let your knees widen open and you just do these gentle little rocks. And it just provides, yeah, is it mobility? Is it flexibility? I'd say yes, sure. But it's also, and I do like the idea when someone says it's lubing their joints. I like that image because really, I think one of the ways we keep our joint health is by kind of
Starting point is 00:17:26 lubing it up. Interesting. We found, uh, and this is Stu McGill's recent stuff, the great Canadian back guy. I was going to say that your philosophy seems to align with his. I had him on the show a couple of months ago. He's good dude. Yeah. Yeah. I like him a lot. Um, so, you know, you go for three, if you've got a back injury, go for three 10 minute walks a day. Because that spinal snap as you coil and uncoil the spring on every step, that is kind of, I hate to say lubing because I might not be right. But that's what it feels like. You kind of, you add a little moisture to it. It's weird when you tell somebody who's back is crunchy and you say, well, go for three 10 minute walks. And the first thing
Starting point is 00:18:05 and then do I do exercises? Well, let's try the three 10-minute walks first. It seems to do miracles sometimes. I was working with a 74-year-old man last week and he complains about sciatica, which I guess means something different than I think. For people of a certain age, sciatica is kind of the umbrella for all kinds of terms. I got my sciatica. And so I convinced them to go for a little walk before every meal. And honestly, within two days, it was like, oh, of course, there is another thought here. Maybe just simply he just needed to go for a walk.
Starting point is 00:18:42 But it does seem sometimes the simplest answer is the best when it comes to – no, we've got to differentiate. I mean, if you're in a car crash and your head goes through the windshield and you get T-boned, I mean, that's going to be a different set of recovery. Yeah, you're not going to walk it off. Yeah, spit on it, walk it off. But when you step back and say, well, okay, for stuff that's not auto accidents and stuff like that, maybe sometimes a little bit of the poison, it will help you. I mean, that would
Starting point is 00:19:12 be a little bit of the exercise. That's probably the thing that a lot of us in the last 20 years, especially I've come around to is stop taping injuries, move the injuries, you know, obviously sometimes, and listen, you got to lock things down sometimes, but to get the things moving again, when a lot of runners were having problems with certain things and they started doing those, I don't know if you've ever done that water aerobics that where they put that little vest around you
Starting point is 00:19:37 and you run in place in the water. It is the most exhausting thing I've ever done. Zero contact. I mean, I was praying to get out of there. Please, please get me out of here. Yeah. And just for people listening who want to check out the shoulder rocking. So if you go to originalstrength.net, there's a videos.
Starting point is 00:19:56 Yeah, there's a video section. Those checking it out. It looks interesting. And I'm not familiar with Tim Anderson the first time hearing about him. Oh, get him on your show. He's a great guy. He's really good. You know what I would recommend?
Starting point is 00:20:07 I mean, so for us, we do original strength every workout. That's just part of who we are because we're trying to get a little bit, a tiny bit more mobile, a tiny bit more flexible every workout, a tiny bit stronger, you know, we're trying to just keep adding that 1%, you know? And Tim's work really works well. Sometimes I think we take too big of a sledgehammer to things. Sometimes when you read flexibility books, and here on my shelf I have a few, sometimes they hit the flexibility with a sledgehammer. And I think you want to gently coax the body into mobility and flexibility increases.
Starting point is 00:20:42 I don't think you want to increase by much because some other part of the system isn't going to be able to catch up to that. We used to talk about as kids, one of the problems with kids throughout my career, I guess, the problem with taking anabolics is that you can really increase the size of the muscle very quickly, but the ligaments and tendons don't grow nearly as fast. So that's why you see, you know, whenever I hear about a guy blowing a pec off or a bicep off. Yeah, gruesome injuries. Almost always we kind of shrug our quad,
Starting point is 00:21:11 but blowing quads off, it's like we shrug our shoulder and go, well, you know, you dance with the devil. Yeah, play stupid games, win stupid prizes. Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread the word about it? Because no amount of marketing or advertising gimmicks can match the power of word of mouth. So if you are enjoying this episode and you think of someone else who might enjoy it as well, please do tell them about it. It really helps me. And if you are
Starting point is 00:21:46 going to post about it on social media, definitely tag me so I can say thank you. You can find me on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness, Twitter at Muscle for Life, and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness. I know that you are a fan of loaded carries and farmer walks. Why? Those are exercises, if you can call them that, that you don't see many people doing, at least not in the gen fit world. Go to your everyday gym. You're probably not going to be seeing anybody doing those things.
Starting point is 00:22:19 It's funny because if you go to the gym I train at, everyone does them every day. Yeah. I should have been doing my whole career. I kept bouncing into them in and out, but I had a nice thing happen to me. I blew my wrist apart and the doctor said I'd never lift weights again, but I still wanted to compete. So I realized that I could do sleds. I could do sled runs. And then pretty soon I would pick, I had this 80 pound bag and I picked that up and boy, that, that was a game changer. And then carrying the bag and dragging a sled. And then pretty soon, Mike Rosenberg sent me out some farmer bars and he said, try these. And so I would do farmer bars plus a weighted backpack, dragging a sled. And then I would do farmer bar in one hand. And then
Starting point is 00:23:02 I would do all these things, kept making stuff up then about in 2001 maybe 2002 i came out with a dvd called carried away where i came up with a lot of phrases that honestly everyone if you've ever used the word waiter walk or our suitcase you know those are my terms it's like goblet squat i invented the goblet squat that's the truth i didn't know that the reason i'll get credit for it is because you know in the age of the internet uh you can take my work on a small site and then write an article about it. And, but it's funny cause my first, I published the article on it on goblet squat, like in 2003 on men's health. And then a guy claimed to have invented it in 2008. And I thought to myself, that's, that's amazing. You know, he must've gone back to the future and then to the past.
Starting point is 00:23:46 We have this thing called the slosh pipe. And two weeks after I wrote the article on T Nation about it, the CrossFit people claimed to have invented it two weeks after the article on T Nation. It was just amazing that they had the same exact word, too, for the same exact piece of equipment. So that was kind of interesting. Marketer's got to market. Marketer's got to market, man. So yeah. So one of the problems most of your listeners are going to
Starting point is 00:24:10 have is they're still stuck in 1975 when Arnold, the educational bodybuilder came out. And when I say weightlifting, they hear bodybuilding. So I say I'm an Olympic lift. They say, what muscles that build? And the thing with loaded carries is I don't care what muscle builds. It's not bodybuilding. We're trying to build work capacity. And so when you're dragging a sled, you know, you've got, it doesn't matter the weight on the sled doesn't matter. Uh, but you say you have an 80 pound backpack on and two farmer bars weighing 85 pounds a piece, that total load on your system is asking your body to do things. Obviously, the body's thinking something bad is happening
Starting point is 00:24:53 and we still have to keep going. And then over time, one of the things you pick up when you do a loaded carry family is at some weird level, and you'll understand when you do it, your work capacity increases and you'll know it when you see it. The thing I noticed first, well, there's two things I noticed. One is I started throwing the discus in Highland Games better than I ever had in my whole life without doing traditional weightlifting. Listen, if the discus goes farther, I'm right. Whatever I told you is right. If you jump higher, run faster, it's right. That's the beauty of track and field. The other thing I also picked up on, and this is a hard one, is that instead of just throwing 12 to 18 solid throws
Starting point is 00:25:37 in a workout, I was quickly discovering that I had this reserve of extra high quality throws. And then we started having American football players do it. I got the same exact feedback. The word I use today, 2019, is snapacity. That's combining snap with work capacity. So as a football player, what I want you to do is I want you to be able to snap, bang. But I want you to be able to do that over and over and over and over again. So everybody loves the single big hit, and that's great.
Starting point is 00:26:09 But I want you to be able to maintain that for four quarters or for the entire practice. And I want you to have, if you're doing a 40-throw workout and we ask you to have 12 good throws, I want you to be able to, with your range, be out there on those 12 throws. I don't want great throw, great throw, horrific, horrific, horrific, horrific, horrific, horrific. I want you to be a little better. That's what I think you get from the loaded carry family. What's a good milestone to work toward for somebody who hasn't done them at all? Easy. Carry body weight for 100 yards. Cool. And by the way, don't forget, folks, that's going Easy. Carry body weight for 100 yards. Cool.
Starting point is 00:26:45 And by the way, don't forget, folks, that's going to be half body weight per hand. Or if you use a trap bar, you can just load up a trap. I finally found a use for a trap bar. It's great for loaded carries. For front of the walks, yeah. That is a good standard, and it's oddly harder than people think.
Starting point is 00:26:59 What do you weigh, Mike? 200. Okay. So 100-pound dumbbells aren't going to knock you on the ground. Or a 200-pound, go 205, make the math easier on the trap bar. Sure. Pick up 205 and start walking with it. And what you'll begin to pick up almost instantly is you're going to start to discover that where your chain is weak.
Starting point is 00:27:22 But from the base of your skull to your toes, there's going to be some weaknesses in your chain. And yes, it is grip sometimes. And yes, sometimes it's simply, odd thing, by the way, baseball pitchers tell me that their shoulders feel better from farmer walks. It's interesting. Farmer walks, your shoulders are being stretched by the weight being pulled to the ground. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:46 We can fix shoulders by hanging from a bar. It seems maybe what helps shoulders maybe is the shoulders just need to be pulled a little bit, but it is interesting that over time, my pitchers will tell me their shoulders actually feel a little bit bouncier again, like they used to. They're not stuck in there, if you know what I mean.
Starting point is 00:28:08 The mistake you're going to make when you do things like prowlers and sled pulls is that you're going to try to make the prowler and the sled too heavy. There's no reason to do that. How do you like to run the sled? I think it's really important to put it around your waist. The belt should go around your waist. Weight belts are great with just even a rope or a cord. If you sprint, a tire isn't great because it bounces too much. But if you're just doing a walk, it drags very nicely.
Starting point is 00:28:36 I have had metal sleds. For those of you who are cheap, and hi, I'm Dan John and I'm cheap. If you go to a place like Home Depot, they sell wheelbarrows, but don't buy the wheelbarrow. They sell the green shell of them and they have these little holes in the front. You can put a rope through the holes or a cord or whatever you got and you can throw in old pieces of cement, your children, weights, a couple slide, the wheelbarrow shell and drag that not actually in my entire life. That's by far the best one of all. There is one problem. It sounds like a jet fighter taking off. That's what I was thinking. That's going to, it's also going to rip up whatever it is you're
Starting point is 00:29:19 running on. Yeah. Well, that's, I mean, if you're on a grassy area, that's fine. Or even a turf of some kind, you're okay. I also, I've used all kinds of different ones. The thing is the only thing you have to learn with sleds, and this is just the fact of life, you do have a narrow, it's not a forever item. Okay. You can buy a kettlebell or a good Olympic bar and never buy another one. With sleds, you're going to go through them. It just grinds them out. Okay. Yeah. And what is a good milestone to work toward on the sled? See what the sled, there would be none. I was thinking maybe weight and distance or something, but yeah, I would like, and I wish I could give you something. I know that when you get over about
Starting point is 00:29:57 half body weight and sleds, you don't really use explosion anymore. But here's the thing about this, Mike, if you live near hills, well, of course I live in Utah, so I'm lucky you don't need to buy a sled. You just run up hills. But if you live in a flat place, sleds become your hill for you. So you want to have that when you're doing a sled, you don't seem, but I'm pumping my arms out now, but you want to be athletically moving with a sled. I think I don't want you to be trying to be like some poor slave coal miner. Yeah, like trying to pull a car or something. Yeah, someone whipping you on the back with sticks or something.
Starting point is 00:30:34 It should be rapid. And do you think there's value in the sled for just everyday people who want to fit? And how come? It's like running hills. How does that translate over, though, to people who are, let's say they are spending a lot of their time lifting weights and maybe they do some cardio as well, but they're not looking for athletic performance per se, you know? You say the word cardio and I'll raise you $10,000. Doing hill sprints and doing- No, it's brutal.
Starting point is 00:31:01 I know. I mean, I hate to use the word cardio because I'm doing cardio right now cause my heart's beating, but, um, it is such a hit to the body. It's shocking how much harder it is. Yeah. Yeah. I grew up playing ice hockey. And so we used to have to, I'll go, I'll go to camps and they would, they would beat us up with stuff like that. Here's the other thing about hills and sleds is there's almost no de-acceleration. So sometimes when normal people pick up the speed into a sprint, they don't decelerate appropriately and they kind of, you hear that noise as they slow down. The nice thing about sleds and hills is when you decide to decelerate, it just happens. Yeah, it's over. It's only a few steps and you're done.
Starting point is 00:31:45 One more idea for safety, I think. Yeah, yeah. What are your thoughts on preventing injury in people, let's say in their 40s and 50s and beyond? Are there common reasons why these people tend to get hurt versus younger and then what they can do to avoid it? Yeah. The information's a mere 75, 80 years old. It's what Yonda taught us years ago. Um, the basic and tonic muscles, uh, as you age and I'm 61. So I get this as you age,
Starting point is 00:32:13 certain muscles tighten. And if you're listening, folks, tighten your pecs, tighten your biceps, tighten your hip flexors and tighten your hamstrings. You'll just turn yourself into a very, very old person. Those are the muscles that tighten with age. So your pecs, your biceps,
Starting point is 00:32:31 your hip flexors, and your hamstrings, those are the basic ones, okay? So if you go in and bench press, curl, and leg press, you're actually turning yourself into an old person. And if you spend all day at the desk, which is a bench press, curl, leg press position, all you're doing is reinforcing that bad posture. So what you want to do with those is you want to stretch them. The stretches I recommend, well, if you go to my Yahoo account, DJ84123, I only have a few mobility moves up there, but the stony stretch and the windmill stick stretch those muscles. But the muscles that weaken with age, now those are the ones I would focus as you hit your 40s plus.
Starting point is 00:33:10 That's the glutes. And I always tell people, you're sitting on a gold mine. The glutes are the fountain of youth. So the glutes, the deltoids, the triceps, and the ab wall. But the ab wall, remember, is a fast twitch muscle. And this is a mistake most people make. Best ab exercise I know is vomiting by far. I mean, it's a great ab workout. Recommend it or do it however you feel.
Starting point is 00:33:35 All you need is what? What's that? Was it Ipecac? Is that the stuff? That'll do it for you. That's an easy way to get it done. But when you sit down with somebody and you go over some of this stuff, like how they train their abs almost universally, it's crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch. These slow hundreds of reps kinds of things were really one of the best ab things we know. It's comes from the wrestling community, sort of like you box someone's ab wall.
Starting point is 00:34:00 You know, if you've ever gone up and just, and can you hear this noise? Yeah. You're beating yourself up. Yeah. You, if you can can now if you do it to yourself you will get reactions but it does help to have somebody else you tap someone's ab wall slight punching you're not hurting anybody you'll find that so i had a wrestler guy telling me you should do three two minute rounds of that let me tell you man 20 seconds of it kills you. Three two-minute rounds, I don't know how the guys do that. I was impressed with that. Here's your perfect workout for your adult, okay? So, it's overhead press. That's the deltoids and the triceps among a million other things.
Starting point is 00:34:35 Have someone punch you in the stomach for a minute and then either deadlift, squat, kettlebell swing, hip thrust, whatever butt exercise you seem to know best. And then stretch your pecs and stretch your hip flexors and walk out the door because you're done. And then maybe throw up if you want to finish off the abs. Yeah. Well, yeah. Do that on Saturday morning. Yeah. Yeah. Is there anything that people in their 40s and 50s and beyond can do to recover better from their training? I hate to say this because I can't make any money on this, but it's sleep hygiene.
Starting point is 00:35:13 I mean, that's the most important thing of all. I mean, is your room completely dark? When I travel, I bring these large size, they're office clips. They can hold like a hundred pieces of paper together. Very thick clips. I'm sure you know what I'm talking about. Because when you go into a hotel room, there's always a gap in the curtain. There's always a gap.
Starting point is 00:35:32 And so you put these clips on there. Rob Wolf says you take duct tape and put duct tape over every little light that's in your bedroom. And it's weird because I travel a lot. And there's up to 17 little teeny red and green lights in most rooms I stay in. So it's real difficult to get true dark rooms. You should probably go to sleep within two hours of the sun going down. You probably shouldn't eat, I would say, two, three, four hours. I mean, you got to be reasonable on this within your bedtime.
Starting point is 00:36:06 Your room should be cool. I use a white noisemaker when I sleep. So honestly, oh, your to-do list, you should write a to-do list about an hour before you go to bed. And just so your monkey brain isn't dancing around, you got to get the Henderson report in or whatever it is. The TPS report has to be on. The TPS report, that's it. Yeah. So the number one thing is sleep hygiene. And yet most people listening to me will discount what I just said. I can vouch for that firsthand because for the last couple of years, I've had sleep issues, mostly staying asleep. I generally don't have a problem falling asleep, but I'll have trouble staying asleep. And I've tried many different things and I, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:45 I'm not doing any of the obvious things wrong. I'm doing all the obvious, all the things that you mentioned, right. And it still just comes and goes randomly almost. So I don't know if it's, if I'm just a naturally lighter sleeper at all. So that's in the time where my, I had my second kid and she's noisy or at this point, maybe it's psychosomatic, man. I don't know. I don't even have, I'm out of good ideas. Maybe I'll, maybe I'll just go do, I'll go do a sleep study for fun or something. They'll be like, yeah, I don't know. It's either psychosomatic or in your head, right? Isn't that the old phrase? Yeah. But on that, I do a one minute there's an app called one moment meditation. And I do that. Well, now I'm doing it at the end of every workout too.
Starting point is 00:37:27 So once a day, I count my breaths for one minute. And that's all it is. But what's interesting, and the reason I'm bringing this up in your case, is that a simple meditation thing, just a minute or so, can maybe highlight some of the things that might be going on in your head at 2 a.m. The thing that I find fascinating, and this comes from Maffetone, but I can tell when I'm not running on full cylinders because that one minute of counting my breaths seems like,
Starting point is 00:37:58 I keep going, when is that buzzer going to go off? Because I'm out of time. A minute should feel like a minute. Yeah. But when I'm a little stressed, a minute of breathing seems like two minutes of breathing, which is just fascinating. And you just generally feel like you just don't have enough time to do all the stuff you need or want to do.
Starting point is 00:38:16 Yeah. Yeah. So I'm stressing out because I took a minute. Such is my life. I understand. Yeah. So you're stressed out because you took a minute aside out of your day. Well, that right there should indicate why you're probably sleeping poorly. So what do you do then? Well, I also subscribe to a thing called brain.fm, brain.fm. Yeah. I like brain.fm. I use it when I'm writing. Yeah. Oh yeah. Me too. And then, you know, something like that white noise seems to help some people. It could just be the age you're going through.
Starting point is 00:38:50 Oh, sneaking up on 40 seems to be it for men. In my experience, I'm 34 turning 35 this year. Yeah. It's just, I mean, obviously, you know, like the guys at fit ranks argue that the age groups are 16 to 35, 36 to 55, and over 55. And it's funny, when I heard them say at the workshop, it tied in perfectly with the big issues I've seen. I can't speak on the women's side, and I apologize to the 51% of our population, but with men, 35-ish and 55-, seems to bring a whole new set of, I don't want to call them problems, let's call them opportunities.
Starting point is 00:39:33 Challenges works. Challenges is okay. Challenges to kind of re, it seems like some things change. Out of selfish interest. So like, what do I have ahead of me here? The need for hypertrophy work is going to become much more important than you think. The need for mobility work. You're probably going to find that smashing your face against the wall is no longer a recoverable thing. Yeah, I've noticed that in my training just in the last five years where I was able to, yeah, my recovery was just better five years ago. I mean, I was
Starting point is 00:40:06 sleeping better, so that helps. But even like the RPE of the workouts, when I think back to some of the stuff I was doing, it didn't seem that hard at the time. I just kind of did it. Whereas less intense workouts now just seem harder. So the sleep issue, don't hit it with a nuclear weapon. You know, I would not slide up to prescription drugs. Yeah, no, I wouldn't do it either. Too many risks and why go down that road? Well, it could also be maybe your kids will be one year older in a year or two and magically their sleep is better and so is your sleep.
Starting point is 00:40:40 But it could be something as simple as a hot tub, a half an hour before bed. It could be a ice shower. This is the, this is what I love about the human body. Ice showers for me, put me to sleep. I like to do it in the morning. Cause it wakes me up. It wakes you up. It puts me to sleep and it wakes you up. Uh, which I just love about the way the humans are designed. Um, maybe you need to get, I wear those silly blue blocking glasses when I watch TV at night. And that is really helpful for me. Maybe you need to wear eye shades. The place at the airport has a whole new style of flying eye shades that are really high tech and they don't have that little strap that rips into your ears. Do you meditate as you go? I mean, sometimes when I'm struggling, I'll put the earphones on and
Starting point is 00:41:29 your body produces certain enzymes as you sleep. The important thing about, you know, that guy starts talking. I don't even know what he says after he pours me to death and I fall asleep. I know I'm supposed to count my breaths and all this other stuff, but maybe you need a I know I'm supposed to count my breaths and all this other stuff, but maybe you need a change to a higher grade of sheets. I mean, but again, I would go with a very simple program, just a few simple steps first and then slowly get, you know, maybe you need to buy new curtains. Maybe you need to buy sound dampening somethings, maybe. And then of course, down the line is, you know, over the counter and then prescription
Starting point is 00:42:04 help. But boy, once you go down the road of, you know, over-the-counter and then prescription help. But boy, once you go down the road of prescriptions, then you really kind of narrow your choices in the future. Dick Notmer warned me about taking anabolics. He goes, well, what are you going to do next? Because that's going to be, once you decide to take the drugs, nothing else is ever going to have the impact. He was a big believer that all it did was put you two years into the future. But the problem is in two years in the future, you're going to have some new ideas how to improve. Six weeks, you might not. Yeah. And speaking with quite a few drug users over
Starting point is 00:42:35 the years, one of the more common, I guess you'd say regrets is just the psychological dependence that they weren't really, they weren't thinking with that, that how much different it feels when they're on cycle versus off cycle and not just in the gym, but in general. And when they've gotten a taste of what life is like, when your test is at never drops below 5,000 ngtl plus everything else, uh, it's hard for them to get off and function normally. Exactly. And of course, on the female side, some of the things are irreversible. But this, by the way, folks, this isn't an anti-drunk rant on my part. My part is from the tradition I come from coaching is that you always try to find the simplest answer,
Starting point is 00:43:21 the Occam's razor, the simplest solution first. And then you just, you try to march ahead on that. And let's be honest, if, if you discovered the perfect rep scheme for yourself when you were 14 years old, three sets of three, three days a week, three exercises, and you're the 47 time world champion, I ain't going to correct you. You know, you're doing okay or whatever it is, you know, I've Have you ever seen the movie Splash? No. Oh, delightful movie. Tom Hanks and John Candy. John Candy has his pickup line he's used since he was 10. Hey, it's always worked, you know. Okay. It's not funny if you haven't seen it.
Starting point is 00:43:58 I'll have to see the movie. What's the pickup line? He throws coins in the ground and he picks them up. He was a genius comedian. It's a wonderful show. If you've seen The Shape of Water, it's basically Splash without Tom Hanks. Okay. Which I didn't see. I'm behind on my movie watching, admittedly. Well, so you mentioned you're traveling around a lot. Are you delivering seminars or are there things that people listening, if they like what you have to say, can they come, can they come meet you? Sometimes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:27 A lot of my work would be for private audiences, you know, with the United States military and professional teams. Cool. But I also do kettlebell certs with the RKC. I'm doing a two day workshop in Australia. I'll be doing a couple in, uh, I go to England for about four or five weeks a year. I go to Ireland for about four weeks a year, uh, working. It is weird. It's funny. Cause, uh, I did a workshop in Salt Lake. I live here in Murray, Utah, and the number of workshops I do
Starting point is 00:44:57 in Salt Lake a year is almost zero, but I could work every day of the week ever in any other country. Uh, go to Poland. I went this year. I've been to Okinawa ever in any other country. I go to Poland. This year I've been to Okinawa, Poland, Hawaii. I'll go to Australia this week. And I'll get back and head right out to England. So it's a busy thing. My workshops are basically they're obviously on weightlifting and stuff. But a lot of people say I give a lot of life lessons and stuff. Because I believe that the lessons you learn in
Starting point is 00:45:25 fitness and performance are the same lessons you learn in finance and relationships. There's no difference. I mean, little and often over the long haul, you know, focus on the fundamentals. You know, I've been debt-free for a long time. I started saving money when I got my first job when I was 21. I mean, you know, saving money for retirement. Everybody listening knows both of those things, be debt-free and save money for retirement. Everybody knows it. Have an emergency fund. Everybody knows that. Just do it. I mean, I'm going to tell you to push, pull, hinge, squat, loaded carry in the weight room. I mean, most people know that, but then I have to argue with them for hours about, okay, you've done 700 sets of upper body work
Starting point is 00:46:05 and one set of squats. There's no balance there. And that's 700 sets of consumption of high status items and one set of savings. That's right. That's right. Exactly. Well, I taught at a school where a lot of these parents, there was this fad of buying these things called navigators, these massive SUVs.
Starting point is 00:46:26 Oh, yeah. Lincoln. Lincoln Navigator. And they were all buying them. And then they were complaining about how their kids aren't getting college scholarships and how they're going to afford college. And I'll be like, well, that piece of crap car that eats more gasoline than the USS Enterprise, that might be the issue, you know?
Starting point is 00:46:43 Along with the house that they can't afford. And what are some of the other key lessons that you can learn in fitness that apply elsewhere? Okay, here's one. Everybody who knows me right now knows exactly what I'm wearing. I wear a polo shirt from a company, a black polo shirt. I bought 16 of them. I have six pairs of the same barbell brand blue jeans. I have six pairs of the same shoesbell brand blue jeans. I have six pairs of the same
Starting point is 00:47:05 shoes. I wear the same thing every day. I can tell you a month from now what I'm going to have for dinner Monday, Tuesday. We have a menu in our house. I have a chores list. I only do certain chores certain days of the week. So those are what we call shark habits. One bite and you're done. So when you guys asked me to come on this podcast, what did I say? Monday. I said, Monday. How about that? That's a shark habit. I said, yes, boom, done. So shark habits are everything that's, it's not necessarily that they're unimportant to other people, but they're just these decisions. They're on off switches that I say yes or no. So everything that's not my goal, and by the way, don't take this wrong.
Starting point is 00:47:45 Don't, I don't want you to think that you're not important, but you are not my long-term goal. This podcast is wonderful. I thought it would be. So when it comes to things with business or life, I just say yes. If you ask me to go to a wedding, I say yes or no. If I say yes, I probably go right on and buy your gift right there. I'm going to make plans to fly out, whatever it is. Or I'll say no, I apologize and still buy you the gift. But on the other side is something that Pat Flynn calls pirate maps and that everything that is my goal goes here. So a pirate map is this. It's a very simple plan. Go to St. John's Island, find the white coconut tree, march seven spaces to the west, dig. Okay. So my daily pirate map,
Starting point is 00:48:33 in fact, is on the back of my computer. Number one is the night before I make my to-do list and set the coffee. I wake up to the smell of coffee every day. The first thing I do when I wake up is I try to be grateful for something. The next thing I already mentioned, it's the one moment meditation. So now half of my pirate map is done almost within a few minutes of waking up. My to-do list has already been made night before. I smell the coffee. I'm grateful. I do my one minute meditation. And the other two are simply this. I try to strive to eat at least eight different vegetables a day. I usually strive for 14. I've already done it today. And the other thing is three days a week, I do my AB, AB, AB workouts with my trainer, Ben Fogle.
Starting point is 00:49:16 And the other days of the week, I do original strength and usually like loaded carries or go for a walk. My goal, just for you guys want to know, I have a five-year-old granddaughter named Josephine and I want to dance at her wedding. I like that goal. I can relate now that I have two kids. Well, where do you have grandkids, man? That really changes things. So my grandmother died in 1925.
Starting point is 00:49:37 All my grandparents were dead by World War II. My mom died in 1980. My dad not long after. So I never met my grandparents. My kids never met theirs on my side. And this ends on my watch. So when you hear something like that, now, 20, 30 years ago, my goal might be to win the Pleasant and Highland games, to win the nationals in the discus, to compete in three different sports in a year. Then those pirate maps would have been a little
Starting point is 00:50:06 different. So what a pirate map is basically folks is about five and you can sneak it up to eight, but I've never really seen it work well after five, five items that if you do them every day, day in, day out, 365 days, a thousand days in a row, all your dreams come true. It's like what the automatic millionaire guy does. Before you even get your paycheck, 10% has gone in savings. 3% has gone into your fortune fund, this dream that you have. Whatever percent goes into your retirement and something goes into your emergency fund. And then you get this check.
Starting point is 00:50:42 And in our case, we have the mortgage taken out. We have the insurance taken out. We've had the, uh, all the bills taken out so that we get checks in this house. That's what we have. But the nice thing is the fortune fund that, that do you mind if I talk about this real quick? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm actually, uh, I'm reading the millionaire next door right now. Oh, fantastic. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's good. I like it. Well, a lot of the basics, you know, I have, I read on a rotation and so I have finance and investing as one of the topics. And I read finance books because of what they teach me about strength. I mean, what you learn in finance is the same as performance. So the first thing you should have is an emergency fund.
Starting point is 00:51:20 Generally, it's funny when I was young, they said about $1,500. They still say about $1,500. And the number you always use is what does it cost to replace a water heater. Whatever a water heater costs, that's what you need in ready access. And then number two is you could try to get debt-free, which is the greatest freedom of all. And then number three, you have this goal called your fortune. And debt-free would include no mortgages, obviously. If you can do that. Yeah. Yeah. So in December, 2009, I took my whole family to Ireland for Christmas. And that had been my goal since the day I saw their little eyes when they were born. And it took a while to put it together, but that was what I was building up for, for,
Starting point is 00:52:01 oh gosh, what, 20 years of marriage to take my daughters to Ireland for Christmas. And we did it. And to me, I think whenever you, whenever you plan something, I think you need all three. So for example, you decide to get into like exercise or performance or better fitness, I think you should have three levels. The first level may be something as simple as, you know, I want to be able to move around the house. Okay. That's, you know, if the house caught on fire, I would like to ambulate myself out. Okay. Okay. And there might be some listeners who can't and God bless
Starting point is 00:52:36 you. I'm not making fun. I'm just saying. Level two might be, you want to move better, feel better, that kind of thing. And then level three is your dream is you want to walk around in a thong on a beach and have the young sorority girls check you out and woohoo, hey, you know. And as a 61-year-old, that's all we aspire for. But, you know, whatever. You should have kind of – I always think you should have kind of three levels of when you get into something. You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. So, if you're going to get in – I'm going to, I'm going to go on a diet. Oh God. Okay. Whatever. So number one, why don't
Starting point is 00:53:09 you drink more water, eat more protein, eat more vegetables. Number two, why don't you get rid of the second level, get rid of the crap that's killing you. And then number three, the most restrictive, perfect diet the world's ever seen. And no one's ever done it. You know, I always look at, try to get, encourage people to come in at three different levels on a new goal. Yeah, that makes sense. And then the idea is what to work toward the third level if you need to, because like in the case of dieting, for example, you know, it depends, it depends what you want to do. You might be able to get to where you want to be by just cleaning things up a little bit, so to speak. On the other hand, you may need to make a meal plan, stick to it, or track your calories. There is a point where eating intuitively, it gets hard to continue losing fat if you want to get really lean, for example.
Starting point is 00:54:02 And then what's the third level? The third level is this perfect thing. Yeah. Protein, veggies, water at every meal, clean eating, whatever. like wanting to get really lean, for example. And then what's the third level? The third level is this perfect thing. Yeah. You know, protein, veggies, water at every meal, clean eating, whatever that means. And then cleaning your food first, like washing it off.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Yeah. And then the third level is, you know, entering the Mr. Greater Midvale contest or whatever it is. Yeah. What vegetables do you eat every day? You mentioned you try to get up to 14. Different.
Starting point is 00:54:24 Yeah, yeah. The goal is different. I'm sure that you're kind of rotating through the same. Like, are there staples that you- Oh, yeah. You can't. There's no way you can't have, at least where I live, you're going to have tomatoes, avocados, onions, green peppers, even though you really should probably just eat red and orange and
Starting point is 00:54:42 yellow. Why do you say that? Green peppers are not ripe. Green peppers are on their way to a different color. Didn't know that. Nor did I. And then just think about a typical salad. You know, if you had dandelion greens and whatever that other-
Starting point is 00:54:56 Spinach. Arugula. Arugula. It's amazingly easy. The one place I eat at, Landmark I order the, uh, the veggie melt and I get the, um, the vegetable soup with it. They have a great veggie soup and in there in the veggie soup, they've got green beans and peas. I mean, they've got, I mean, you're almost done. I mean, you're done with that. You know, uh, I would include olives in there.
Starting point is 00:55:23 And for people listening. So you can, you can also make this stuff at home. Oh yeah. It's easy to meal prep a bunch of soup for the week. We do that at my house. We'll take a bunch of the vegetables. I mean, I do, I like to do a stir fry at night. So that's where I'll eat a fair amount of vegetables, but then often my wife will take a bunch of vegetables and just turn it into a soup, which is a nice change for getting in healthy things. Yeah. You don't have to be a lunatic. And I do think at some level that soups might be a better engine for getting your vegetables in. Not only can you throw a lot of different ones in there,
Starting point is 00:55:56 but I think that the process of making soup with vegetables seems to unpack. I don't know if this is even true, but I think the phytochemicals come out better when they have some time to cook and simmer. Yeah. I could see that being the case, especially with certain vegetables. I mean, we know, for example, I mean, there are notable changes that occur like when you cook legumes or you cook beans, for example, it neutralizes lectins and things. So I wouldn't be surprised if also positive things that happen if you're cooking, especially because in the case of soup, whatever nutrients are being leached out of the vegetables are in the broth. So you're not losing as opposed to maybe like microwaving some vegetables in some
Starting point is 00:56:40 water and throwing the water away or something like that. Well, my favorite part of when we have ham, you know, is you take the ham bone and all the extra ham and then you make split pea soup with it. And split pea soup to me is one of the great metaphors for life. I mean, when you first look at split pea soup, you call up your wife and say, honey, I've made a terrible, tragic error. It looks terrible. Then you wait four or five more hours. You look back and it's like, I'm the best cook the world's ever seen. You have literally done nothing except let it take its time to get where it needs to be.
Starting point is 00:57:11 And I think, seriously, I think split pea soup is a life lesson. And how is life like that? Well, when I first got to Utah State University, Coach Mon, I said, what does it take to be a great discus thrower? And he said, well, Danny, you got to lift weights three days a week. Got it. You got to throw four. Got it. For the next eight years. Most people missed that last part where he said eight years. And that is the key. I mean, you got to let the soup simmer as an athlete for about eight years. You know, it is true. You should, I mean, some people say you should be at a high level in two or three years. Well, that might be true,
Starting point is 00:57:45 but you still is going to take you. I tried to rush every time I've ever made a mistake as an athlete. I tried to skirt, you know, kind of get around the reality of time and to make good splits pea soup. You can't rush it. It's like trying to rush a Turkey. I come over to your house for Thanksgiving and you, you got this block of ice that has a turkey in it and you say, we're going to eat in half an hour. I don't think so. Yeah. What are we going to be eating exactly? We're not eating that. So, you know, by the way, and one of my favorite things of the year is Thanksgiving. We have, we call it practice Thanksgiving. We probably have three or four of those a year. We just make a turkey and our friends come over and we have a practice Thanksgiving. And one of the things that, besides the communal aspects, it's the fact that
Starting point is 00:58:30 you can't rush any part of that. Tiff and I will buy the turkey on Tuesday and we might thaw it on Thursday for a Saturday meal. Probably at nine in the morning, I'll be working on that turkey and I'm not serving it till five. And that's just a great metaphor for how performance sports are in academics and love and everything else important in life. Yeah. Yeah. No, I agree with that. Things never seem to move as at least this is where I'm at in my life. I'm always at least slightly dissatisfied with the pace, despite the pace, despite the amount. It's not that I'm not working. It's not that all the people that work with me aren't working. So sometimes I even have to remind myself of that, of, okay, look at where things have gotten to in the last six years or so. And all along the way, it's the same sort
Starting point is 00:59:19 of, you know, things aren't moving fast enough. Things are not moving fast enough. And I think there's, I think that's positive to some degree because it definitely keeps me focused and keeps me from getting too lackadaisical or just contented with where I'm at. And especially because similar to you, I'm very goal oriented. And so as far as my work and my career goes, I have some specific goals that I want to achieve over the next three to five years. So I think having that never wanting to rest on my laurels type of attitude helps. But then it also contributes probably to stress and things that could be even messing up my sleep, which it's not lost on me that my sleep has gotten worse as I've taken on more in the way of businesses and obligations and commitments. And the stakes are higher in the finances. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:00:10 There's just more that goes with it. But I try to do my best to stay upbeat and just keep going. But I think I would be naive to say that it doesn't have at least some sort of toll on me. And I know like, oh, if you can reframe stress, see it as challenges, like I'm familiar with, with, with that. And I, and I agree with that. So again, I think I deal with things fairly well, but I don't think it's a coincidence that not only, I mean, I probably could just go on the list of, I've met quite a few successful people, whether it's, um, and I'd say in just in there in talking professional success
Starting point is 01:00:45 and that, that comes with varying levels of financial success, but professionally successful people, especially business people who, um, have gone through, yeah, periods where things were just tough and they weren't sleeping very well. And they always had things, uh, it's, it's like everything is always on fire and they had to just decide which fires are going to get put out first, or at least which are they going to get under control. And, you know, I don't know if there's any way to get away from that and also do bigger things. It's funny you say that because in my, I just came out with a new book and one of the things I discovered, it happened in 1979, right? I graduated from college and I had been top of the heap academically and athletically
Starting point is 01:01:31 for a long time. And then there was just like gear change in life. To me, I just like to throw my arms around this guy, little Danny John in 1979 and say, dude, you're doing fine. It's the ebb and flow of life. You know, you're okay. It's not bad. It's just that if you fall in love with summer, you got to fall in love with winter too. Cliche time goes around companies just going to, and we all know that, but it's tough sometimes. It is weird though, is that it does seem sometimes
Starting point is 01:02:00 when you'll hit the apex a few times in two or three areas of your life, but all of a sudden you can almost feel the other things. This is why I think it's so important when I learned in the second grade, Sister Maria Sumta put up on the board a compass. And on the top it said work, four points were work, rest, play, and pray. And she said, if we kept those four things in balance, play and pray. And she said, if we kept those four things in balance, don't work too hard. You know, the word workaholic wasn't even out yet. Don't play too hard. You know, if you do decide to work, you have to make sure you play, but you have to make sure you rest. And even if you don't believe in praying, but at least alone time or appreciation of nature or art,
Starting point is 01:02:45 you got to make sure you have that balance. And I've discovered in my life that if I start going too hard just for my academics, athletics, and I let the other sides fall, I crash. But if I consciously say, okay, like when I started doing the Highland Games, one of the reasons I moved to it from the discus is it was so much fun. I needed more fun. And so when you train in the Highland Games, it's a lot more fun than doing another 15,000 throws with the discus. And at the Highland Games, there's music, there's dancing, there's drinking, there's laughing. And it re-kicked my career up. So sometimes I think when we're struggling, I just sit back and look at, I have someone sit back or I look back at my compass and say, oh, here's where I made my mistake. I lost and fill in the blank from there.
Starting point is 01:03:29 I didn't have any alone time, which can happen as a parent of young kids. Moms will say, I'm never alone. I go to the bathroom and there's someone pounding on the door. Ma, ma, ma. That would be my daughter. That was a good impression. Yeah, you're welcome. Never heard that one before. Yeah, no, I can relate to that for sure. I ran across, it was an article that led me to a book. I didn't read the book. I put it on my list of books to consider reading. incorporating play as an adult and doing things that just for the sake of doing them because
Starting point is 01:04:06 they're fun and how, if I remember correctly, it was kind of like a type A personality, business person who was all just about work, work, work, and then was having problems with anxiety and probably sleep issues and other things. And then the only thing, he tried all kinds of random stuff, but the only thing that solved it in the end was to just bring some play back into his life. I forget, I didn't read the book. So, but the story was maybe you start playing sports with his friends, doing something like he realized that he didn't do anything that was fun anymore. All of his time was consumed by things that were positive and they maybe brought him satisfaction because it brought him closer to goals, but they weren't necessarily fun. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:04:50 I mean, that is, that's the great life lesson I picked up in the second grade. What, 1963 or something like that. Four, maybe. Whenever I maintain that compass, all four areas of my life, I'm happy. I sleep well. Everyone loves me. I'm king of the hill, top of the heap, all that stuff. And when I let one area go too far and that's what crushes me
Starting point is 01:05:11 down, that's just, it's a truth of my life. Yeah. Yeah. I'm sure many, many people could relate to it. So, uh, Hey, this was great. I like how the discussion, we started off with very sterile technical things, and then we've gotten off on some interesting and fun tangents. So where can people find you and your work? Obviously, you're a writer, so you mentioned that you have a new book that's out. So if you want to tell people about that and maybe your other books and anything else kind of new and exciting that you have that you want people to know about. Danjohn.net. You can find literally thousands and thousands of
Starting point is 01:05:46 free stuff, pages of free stuff there. I've been told it takes two or three reams of paper to print everything off, uh, danjohn.net. And then you can go to, uh, you can also sign up. I got this free weekly newsletter called wandering weights, which is just, you know, I just do it for fun. I find stuff online that I find interesting. And then I talk about the sword and the stone. I've written 14 books. My newest one is 40 years with the whistle. It's about being a coach for 40 years and 41 now it's selling. Well, I, a lot of the stuff we talked about, like snipacity would be in there. And I do have a chapter on sister Maria Sumter cause she's in the middle part of the book, which I call my mentors. So yeah. And you'll get a chance to hear about Ralphta because she's in the middle part of the book, which I call my mentors.
Starting point is 01:06:26 So yeah. And you'll get a chance to hear about Ralph Ma and Dick Notmeyer, Bob Jacobs, whole bunch of people you've never heard of and probably never will, but they're all shaped my life to the better. Okay. That's great. Awesome. You're going to be writing another book?
Starting point is 01:06:38 Of course. You've written so many now. I have an idea for the next one. It's time, I think, for another do this book. How to? I go to these bookstores and there's a company, I won't mention his name, but literally have cut and pasted my work and turned them into books. Really? Oh, yeah. There's no.
Starting point is 01:06:52 Have you contacted? Oh, yeah. I talked to the editor about it. And he laughed. He goes, well, you gave us the workshop at our place. I go, I know. But, man, you don't even have a. You'll usually see, like in Lou Schuler's books, always notes when I do the work,
Starting point is 01:07:05 but it's, it's a, it's a company, but it's a company that puts out a lot of stuff, but it's like they break everything down into push, pull, hand squat, loaded carry. They use my rep schemes. They use the names of the exercises I use. Uh, they have a huge section on loaded carries and not even a mention because it had to be full. So full of myself, but loaded carries and not even a mention because it hate to be full so full of myself but loaded carries and goblet squats i'm the kind of the pied piper of those things i'm the i'm the little minstrel on them so yeah plagiarism is lame especially when all they'd have to do is just credit you yeah i mean if they want to argue hey fair use you know we don't have to pay you royalties for including a small amount of information yeah okay fine but, fine. But it's a matter of manners.
Starting point is 01:07:46 It's not even. I agree 100% with you. Well, listen, I've really enjoyed this. I do have to move on now to some other exciting things in my. Some fun. But I really appreciate you coming on. Okay. That was great.
Starting point is 01:08:00 Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider supporting my sports nutrition company, Legion Athletics, which produces 100% natural evidence-based health and fitness supplements, including protein powders and protein bars, pre-workout and post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more. Head over to www.legionathletics.com now to check it out. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps. Use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 10% on your entire order and it'll ship free if you are anywhere in the United States. And if you're not, it'll ship free if your order is over $100. So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love, like producing podcasts like this.

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