Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Art of Mastering the “Inner Game” of Fitness
Episode Date: January 3, 2022In this podcast, I’m sharing an excerpt from the audiobook version of my new book, Muscle For Life, which is releasing January 11th. Muscle For Life is currently on pre-order, and if you go to www.m...uscleforlifebook.com, you can learn about the big book launch bonanza that’s underway, where you can enter to win over $13,000 of awesome stuff. In this episode, I’m sharing chapter 5, which is all about mastering the “inner game” of fitness, and I’ll explain what I mean by that and then get into the details. You’ll learn how to hack your habits, willpower, and mindset so your fitness regimen feels like it’s on autopilot. Let’s get to it! Audio excerpt courtesy of Simon & Schuster Audio from MUSCLE FOR LIFE by Michael Matthews, read by Chris Henry Coffey with the author. Copyright © 2022 by Waterbury Publications, Inc. Used with permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Timestamps: 0:00 - Pre-order my new fitness book now for a chance to win over $13,000 in splendid swag: https://www.muscleforlifebook.com/ 2:30 - Chapter 5, How to Master the “Inner Game” of Fitness Mentioned on the Show: Pre-order my new fitness book now for a chance to win over $13,000 in splendid swag: https://www.muscleforlifebook.com/
Transcript
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Hey, I'm Mike Matthews, and this is Muscle for Life.
Welcome, welcome, and happy new year.
Thank you for joining me today.
And if you haven't already, please do take a moment to subscribe to the show,
because then you won't miss any new episodes,
and it'll help boost the ranking of the show in the various charts, and that helps me.
Now, today's episode is a bit different.
It is from the audiobook of my new book, Muscle for Life, which is releasing
on January 11th and which is currently on pre-order. And if you go to muscleforlifebook.com,
muscleforlifebook.com, you can learn all about the big book launch bonanza that is underway and
will continue for a couple of more weeks where you can enter to win over $13,000
of awesome stuff that I have collected up from many different companies to give away.
Real stuff too, not PDFs that I say are worth $97. I'm talking about $1,000 exercise bikes,
$500, $600, $700 sets of adjustable dumbbells, $100 kitchen appliances, and a lot more real
stuff like that stuff that many people buy every day. And that's muscleforlifebook.com.
And so today's episode is a chapter from that book all about mastering the inner game of fitness. And I explain what I mean by that
and then get into the details.
And in case you were wondering
why it is a professional reader
and not me reading the book,
it is mostly because of the timing.
It would have required a lot of time
in a short period of time for me to do it.
And I'm in a temporary housing situation.
I'm in a house that I'm getting ready to tear down.
And I don't have great acoustics in here.
Where I'm recording this podcast might have worked, but it also might have sounded a little bit off.
But it was mostly the timing.
little bit off, but it was mostly the timing. I couldn't read the entire book in the couple of weeks that I would have needed to do it in because I have a lot of other things that I have to do.
I couldn't sit down and just do six to eight hours of reading every day to get it done in time. And
so that's why a professional reader is reading it. And they probably also did a better job than I would do.
So, let's get into it, shall we?
Five.
How to master the inner game of fitness.
Any idiot can face a crisis.
It's the day-to-day living that wears you out.
Anton Chekhov. In his timeless bestseller,
The Inner Game of Tennis, Tim Galway explained that every game is composed of two parts,
an outer game and an inner game. The outer game is played against an external opponent to overcome
external challenges and reach external goals, and the inner game takes place in the mind
and is played against obstacles like lapses in concentration,
nervousness, self-doubt, self-condemnation,
and other feelings that inhibit excellence in performance.
How fitting that model is to fitness.
Books, magazines, trainers, and influencers
usually focus on the outer game of losing fat and
gaining muscle and give little attention to the inner game, which is arguably more important.
Simply knowing what to do isn't enough. You then have to actually do it and keep doing it every day,
week, month, and year. Priority, discipline, and motivation are the biggest inner game barriers.
Every week, people launch into new fitness programs with resolve and relish,
but it often doesn't take long for their enthusiasm to sputter.
They struggle to fit their diet plan into their lifestyle
and squeeze their workouts into their hectic schedule.
They experience more physical challenges than they anticipated,
and as the days and weeks pass, they see no appreciable change in their body.
In short, it's a lot of pain for very little gain,
so it's no surprise that many people give up on their fitness aspirations
within the first couple of months.
I've seen this time and time again.
Sometimes illness disturbs someone's routine
and they never return.
Other times, they take a week off and forget to come back.
Some simply stop caring.
Maybe you've been there yourself.
I know I have.
Fitness is hard,
and no matter how determined you may be,
if you're not seeing clear and consistent results,
it's only natural for your drive to dry up.
I don't want this to happen to you.
I want to do everything I can to give you your best shot at success
on the Muscle for Life program.
In fact, if I'm being honest,
I want this to be the fitness program that finally makes all the difference
and over-. That's why this chapter will help you develop a successful mindset that'll
empower you to overcome the obstacles, resist the temptations, and surmount the setbacks that we all
experience in our fitness journey. To do that, we need to tackle the three ugliest inner-game ogres standing between you and the finish line.
1. The Purpose Phantom
2. The Time Troll
3. The Consistency Creature
Let's learn how to defeat each.
Prevailing Over the Purpose Phantom People with vague, unrealistic, or uninspiring fitness goals, or none at all, are always the first to quit.
These men and women show up in the gym sporadically and often leave before even breaking a sweat.
They fall victim to situations and circumstances that cause them to falter, pesky office potlucks.
They're on the lookout for fast fixes and miracle methods.
If you're going to succeed where the masses fail, you need to inoculate yourself against these attitudes and behaviors, and this requires a little soul-searching.
Different people have different reasons for eating well and working out.
Some like how it feels to push their body to the limit. Different people have different reasons for eating well and working out.
Some like how it feels to push their body to the limit.
Others want to impress a potential sex partner.
Many want to boost their confidence and self-esteem.
Most want to improve their general health and well-being.
These are all perfectly valid reasons to get fit.
Looking great, feeling great, having high energy levels,
being more resistant to sickness and disease, and living longer. But it's important to isolate and articulate your reasons. Let's do this now, starting with the dimension of fitness that
most people find most alluring, the visual. What does your ideal body look like?
A major reason you're listening to this book is you want to look a certain way,
and there's nothing wrong with that.
Every fit person I know, including myself,
is motivated just as much by the mirror as by anything else.
Don't misread that as narcissism.
There are plenty of self-absorbed
fitness twits out there, but I see nothing wrong with playing a bit to our vanity if looking
fantastic also helps us feel great, and it does, especially if we consider how this buoyancy
enhances our ability to work, love, and play. The better we look, the better we feel, and the better we feel, the better we live.
It's really that simple.
So let's talk about you.
What does your ideal body look like?
Let's go beyond trite words and hazy daydreams.
Find a picture or two, or three or four, of the type of body you want.
Then save these pictures somewhere that's easily accessible, such as your phone or Google Drive or Dropbox. You could even print a couple out and paste them in your fitness
journal. Why? When you're on the Muscle for Life program, I want you to know you're working toward
a physique that's as real as the page you're listening to, not merely a figment of your
imagination. Not sure what to pick because you're
not sure what's possible? Start here. How would you have to look to hit the beach in a swimsuit
without self-consciousness? Find a couple pictures of that, because trust me, that we can do.
What does your ideal body feel like?
What does your ideal body feel like?
A fit, healthy body is far more pleasurable to inhabit than an unfit, unhealthy one.
The more in shape you are, the more you get to enjoy many advantages.
Higher energy levels, better moods, more alertness, clearer thinking,
fewer aches and pains, and better sleep to name just a few.
And then there's the deeper stuff like more dignity, pride, and self-fulfillment.
I want you to imagine what this will be like for you,
and then write it out in the form of individual affirmations,
which are positive statements that describe how you want to be like,
I'm full of energy all day, and my mind is quick, clear, and focused. This may seem a bit woo-woo, but research shows that writing and reading affirmations can benefit you in various
ways. A study conducted by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania found that people
who practiced affirmations exercised more than people who didn't. And another study at the University of Sussex
found that performing self-affirmations
improved working memory and cognitive performance.
I like to organize health and fitness affirmations
into four broad categories.
Physical, mental, emotional, spiritual.
Physical affirmations are all about bodily function and physical energy levels,
and they can include statements like,
I wake up rested every day, my joints are pain-free, and I don't get sick.
Mental affirmations concern your ability to focus, remember, and compute.
These might be assertions like,
I can focus deeply on the task at hand,
my memory is sharp, and my mind is clear.
Emotional affirmations relate to your feelings of positive or negative sensations,
such declarations as,
I find joy everywhere I go,
I bounce back quickly from bad news, and I give and receive love openly.
Spiritual affirmations involve your sense of purpose and motivation,
and they can include pronouncements like
I embody my best self and I know I'll succeed.
Here are a few pointers for writing more effective affirmations of any kind.
Keep them short so they're easier to process and remember.
Even four or five carefully chosen words can be powerful.
Start with I or my.
Affirmations are all about you, so it's best to start with you.
Write as though you're experiencing it right now, not in the future.
For example, I fall asleep quickly and wake up feeling rejuvenated
is superior to I will fall asleep quickly and wake up feeling rejuvenated is superior to I will fall asleep quickly and wake up feeling rejuvenated
or
Within three months, I'm falling asleep quickly and waking up feeling rejuvenated.
Don't begin with I want or I need.
You don't want to affirm needing or wanting, but being, doing, or having.
Make sure you're choosing positive statements.
Realizing your affirmations may require discarding negative behaviors and thoughts, but your words shouldn't reflect this.
Think, I'm calm, confident, and contented, and not, I'm no longer anxious and insecure,
or I enjoy my daily workouts, instead of, I don't dread exercising anymore.
daily workouts instead of, I don't dread exercising anymore. Inject emotion by including,
I'm emotion about, or I feel emotion. For example, you could say, I'm excited to follow my meal plan.
This will make your affirmations more stimulating and thus memorable and persuasive, and can even influence how you experience events
related to whatever you're affirming,
actually feeling excited to follow your meal plan, for instance.
Make your affirmations believable.
If you don't think your statement is possible,
it won't have much of an effect,
so make sure you can fully buy into it.
If you find something particularly incredible,
you can start with a qualifier like,
I'm open to… or I'm willing to believe I can…
So, are you ready to write your affirmations? Great.
Let's start with one affirmation per category, physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual.
And take as long as you need to formulate statements that resonate deeply with you.
You know you've hit on something meaningful when it sparks joy and positivity.
Now that you've formulated your first affirmations, you may be wondering what to do with them.
There are many ways to use your statements, but my favorite is reading mine every morning before starting my day and whenever I feel my spirit lagging.
This keeps my intentions alive and top of mind and helps adjust my mindset when I falter.
Also, feel free to create new affirmations whenever inspiration strikes.
What are your fitness whys?
Whereas the affirmations above define what you want to achieve, the next exercise is designed
to establish why you want to do it. Among my favorite things about being fit are the moments
when you impress yourself, where you just stop for a second and think, wow, it's awesome I did
that with my body. These are moments that put a smile on your face and a spring in your step,
and sometimes even make your day. I'm not just talking about stuff like turning heads in the
coffee shop, but eating desserts guilt-free, keeping up with my kids without getting tired,
and enjoying clothing shopping more. You know, the often small but substantial things that
confirm you're on the right track.
I've worked with thousands of people over the years, and here are a few examples of the fitness
wins they've shared with me. Getting asked for advice in the gym. Feeling more confident and
competent. Looking sexier naked. Being more productive at work. Savoring delicious food.
sexier naked, being more productive at work, savoring delicious food, pleasantly surprising their doctor, rocking their favorite clothes, setting a good example for their kids, enjoying
outdoor activities again, feeling physically and mentally strong, eliminating aches and pains,
tackling a new sport. I love these. They're great examples of personal reasons to get into killer shape,
simple, specific, and sincere. How about you? Why do you want to achieve everything you just
laid out in your affirmations? Brainstorm your reasons for getting fit and write them in your
notebook until you feel pumped up and ready to take action. Because with the Muscle for Life program, we'll make them all a reality.
Trumping the Time Troll
I don't know anybody who can find time to exercise. I've never had anyone tell me,
Mike, I have too much free time. I think I'll spend a few hours in the gym every day to get
in shape. What should I do while I'm there?
It's always the opposite.
Most of us lead busy lives, brimming with urgency and obligations,
and feel we don't have time for anything new,
let alone something as selfish as working out.
But almost always, that just isn't true.
As much as some people would like to think they're too swamped to work out,
when they analyze how they spend their every waking minute every day, they discover otherwise, especially when they realize how little time it really takes to get fit.
The reality is that people who have transformed their bodies have the same 24 hours in a day as you and me, as well as their share of daily duties to discharge.
as you and me, as well as their share of daily duties to discharge.
They still have to go to work, attend to loved ones,
attempt a social life, and remember to exfoliate,
moisturize, and have some fun now and then.
The only difference is they've decided exercise is important enough to be in the plan.
For some, that requires watching less TV or giving it up altogether.
For others, it means going to bed and waking up earlier.
For others still, it involves asking the spouse to handle the kids in the morning or evening,
or some other solution.
My point is, if you really want to carve out a couple of hours per week to train,
I'm positive you can.
That's not to say that finding the will and time for fitness is easy.
It's often a challenge, and the solution may not be convenient or comfortable, at first at least.
But who said it should be? No matter how difficult or daunting our circumstances may be,
there's always something we can do about it. If we can accept that our well-being is worthwhile,
it suddenly becomes possible. Whether we act is up to well-being is worthwhile, it suddenly becomes possible.
Whether we act is up to us. And let's face it, whenever someone says, I would do X but I can't
because Y, it's almost always hogwash unless Y is, I don't really want to. There's very little
we're incapable of. There's only how badly we want it. When we lie to ourselves and say otherwise,
what we're saying is that we find alibis more attractive than achievements,
excuses more seductive than excellence,
and comfort more desirable than challenge.
Writer Steven Pressfield coined a term for this psychological friction,
resistance.
Here's how he explained it in his best-selling book, The War of Art.
Resistance will tell you anything to keep you from doing your work. It will perjure,
fabricate, falsify, seduce, bully, cajole. Resistance is protean. It will assume any form,
if that's what it takes to deceive you. It will reason with you like a lawyer or jam a
nine millimeter in your face like a stick-up man. Resistance has no conscience. It will pledge
anything to get a deal, then double-cross you as soon as your back is turned. If you take resistance
at its word, you deserve everything you get. Resistance is always lying and always full of shit.
How do you defeat resistance and turn an I won't into an I will? You meet it in pitched battle
and you refuse to surrender. You refuse to take the easy road out. You refuse to look for reasons
to be weak. You refuse to blame anyone or anything for your condition. When you can do
those things, you can tap into a primal and powerful force that sets extraordinary people
apart from everyone else. That's the big secret. What's more, the I-don't-have-time excuse can't
pass the straight-faced test when scrutinized. Imagine that your doctor says you have a fatal
disease, and the only way to
cure it is to whirl around in circles for two hours per day. After accepting that you do indeed
have the strangest disease in the history of the human race, what would you do? Would you slink off
and resign yourself to your fate, or somehow free up the time to spin widdershins? You know without
a doubt that you'd find a way,
regardless of how busy you are. Maybe you'd work a bit less, banish streaming apps, or disappear
from social media, but somehow you'd make the time. Now think about that. You just admitted
you have a couple of hours per day waiting in the wings, available for immediate use toward
any goal of your choosing, such as
transforming your body. What's going on here? Many people understand that I don't have time
to exercise is just another way of saying it's not important enough to me. But they struggle
with prioritizing working out when the demands of their work, marriage, children, and errands
pound like jungle drums from sunrise to sunset. Some of us work more instead of working work, marriage, children, and errands pound like jungle drums from sunrise to sunset.
Some of us work more instead of working out, for instance, and others put the needs of everyone
close to them ahead of their own. Also, many women don't just work full-time jobs but also
carry much of the domestic load, including shopping, supervising kids, cooking, chaperoning,
and cleaning. When these people are told they don't lack the time to train, supervising kids, cooking, chaperoning, and cleaning.
When these people are told they don't lack the time to train, only the will, they bristle, and understandably so.
On a good day, they have maybe 30 minutes to themselves before bed,
after all the important tasks on the to-do list have been checked off.
Such situations can seem hopeless, but remember, every problem has a solution,
even this one. Many of these people have had to get creative. I've helped them assemble simple but effective home gyms for less than they'd pay for a year of gym dues. I've helped them create
30-minute bodyweight and band workouts they can do at work during lunch in the privacy of their office, or even
broken up into several 10-minute workouts throughout the day, I've suggested finding
a workout buddy with children, which allows for shared babysitting and early morning weekend
jaunts to the gym. The first step in all of these cases, however, was shifting how these guys and
gals viewed health and fitness in relation to their
lives. The time given to eating well and exercising regularly is often considered a luxury, or worse,
a self-indulgence. But here's the rub. You can make your health and wellness a priority now,
or it'll make itself a priority later. There is no third choice.
Unless we take effective measures to counter
the decline after about age 35, every day, in every way, our body wanes. We usually don't
notice it because the changes are subtle, but just as the seasons slowly shift from warm to cold,
so does our health and vitality gradually decay. Furthermore, neglecting nutrition, exercise, sleep hygiene,
and muscle definition and strength speeds up the downward spiral as the years pass.
Add in regular alcohol and tobacco use, and one can reach terminal velocity.
Bob Dylan got it right when he said,
if we're not busy being born, we're busy dying.
But wait, someone somewhere is thinking. My friend's cousin's doctor's mom's sister is 93 years old and eats like a raccoon,
smokes like a chimney, and drinks like a fish, and she's still as fit as a bull moose. I'll probably
be fine. This is silly. Every rule has exceptions, and every group has outliers,
but that doesn't negate the principles or patterns.
A century of medical literature has proven that as we get older,
snubbing the cornerstones of healthy living
greatly increases the risk of debilitating and deadly disorders,
so much so that as time goes on,
if we don't get our act together,
our chances of remaining healthy and
well become vanishingly small. If we do nurture our body with wholesome habits like proper diet,
exercise, sleep, and supplementation, however, it'll repay us with a wellspring of vigor and
vivacity for living our best life. Another important element of this discussion is quality versus quantity,
because our goal isn't merely to survive as long as possible, but to thrive. Just because your heart
is still beating doesn't mean you still feel alive. So, even if we can disregard our health
and wellness long into our golden years and somehow keep death from darkening our door,
into our golden years and somehow keep death from darkening our door, how much will we enjoy the later part of life with a body that suffers and a mind that stumbles? Why choose that path when we
can follow the advice in this audiobook instead and enjoy the fruits of beauty, strength, stamina,
mobility, and spirit as we get older? So, to Mr. and Mrs. I-really-don't-have-time-to-eat-well-and-exercise, I say,
you can choose the rigors of healthy living now or the penalties of unhealthy living later.
There is no third option.
Conquering the Consistency Creature
Raise your hand if you know the answer to this question. What's the enemy of great?
Chances are a montage of social media posts, motivational speeches, and self-help books just
flashed through your mind, all proclaiming that good is the droid you're looking for.
Good, they cry, is what's holding you back from dreaming your quest and manifesting your visions into reality.
Good, you must understand, is never good enough.
To achieve greatness, good must die.
You must strive, suffer, and surpass.
You must go big or go home.
On and on this philosophy goes,
winning wide approval among people from all walks of life.
It rings true because it's not wholly misguided.
By definition, you can't achieve the extraordinary through ordinary ideas and efforts,
but there's a problem.
It's impossible to be great all the time.
Usually, good enough is all we can muster,
and that's okay because, ironically,
a whole bunch of good enough can make you great
and that's true both inside and outside the gym.
In fact, it's the only way to get to great
without losing your nerve or sanity.
Think about it for a minute.
When was the last time you were outstanding in an activity?
When your faucet was fully open and you were in full flow?
Now consider how much effort, energy, and presence that demanded and how drained you felt afterward.
Does it make sense to expect that from yourself continually? Of course not. That's a surefire
way to destroy motivation and mood and burnout. Because as sexy as greatness is, it's equally elusive. Like the muse,
it can't be commanded, cajoled, or contracted with. It comes and goes as it pleases.
Thus, appreciate the fleeting moments of greatness, but don't hang your hat on them.
Instead, demand something else from yourself. Something rather mundane, but also readily
achievable and sustainable. Consistency.
Excellence is achieved by becoming great at being consistent, not by being consistently great.
And this mostly comes down to being good enough again and again. In fitness, this means following
your meal plan, workout program, and supplementation routine more often than not. If you can do that,
you can make steady progress that compounds over time by relieving pressure and anxiety,
reducing the risk of injury and exhaustion, and providing useful feedback.
By the same token, did I show up and put in the work is a much more productive question to ask yourself at the end of every day
than, was I great? Or even worse, was I perfect? That isn't to say that standards don't matter and
that going through the motions, avoiding hardship, and swallowing mediocrity is acceptable.
Good enough is about embracing what you've got and where you are, not what you wish you had or
where you wish you were.
It means acknowledging the fact that you can't microwave real results.
They take time, no matter how optimized your approach.
Take dieting, for example. Most people want to know the best diet for losing weight,
and these days, many of those conversations revolve around carbohydrate intake.
Guess what?
According to research conducted by scientists at Stanford University,
how much or little carbohydrate you eat doesn't matter.
What does matter is adherence to a well-designed dietary protocol,
like one that controls calories and protein intake.
That is, the people who lose the most weight are the most consistent
with their diets, not the best at avoiding carbs or any other foods. The same goes for training.
Simplistic workout programming and rock-solid consistency beats even the most scientifically
sound routines and shaky compliance every time. Thus, a few low-intensity workouts every week will always
beat out a few higher-quality training sessions per month. Similarly, an obsession with colossal
effort in the gym is a vice, not a virtue, one that inevitably leads to disappointment and flame-out.
So, stop trying to have perfect workouts. Stop trying to be invincible.
Stop trying to rush the process.
Strive for consistency instead.
Stay patient, and in time, once you've given enough good enough,
you'll gain entry to the hallowed halls of greatness.
Oh, and here's a spoiler.
You'll make mistakes along the way.
You'll eat too much sometimes,
sleepwalk through or skip workouts now and then,
and forget to take your supplements when you're in a hurry.
Don't sweat any of that or get down on yourself when you mess up.
The damage is never as bad as you may think,
and an abusive tirade of self-criticism will only make things worse.
For example, many people worry they've blown their diets after a single instance of overeating, not realizing that the amount of fat they can gain
from a meal is negligible, a few ounces. And even in the case of an entire day of reckless eating,
you might be able to gain up to a half to one pound of fat if you really tried.
Therefore, when you stumble, and you will,
show yourself the same compassion and forgiveness you'd show a friend. Research suggests that this
type of response in times of frustration and failure is associated with better willpower and
self-control because it helps us accept responsibility for our actions and steam ahead,
because it helps us accept responsibility for our actions and steam ahead, unfazed.
To help you make this mental adjustment,
I'm officially giving you a stack of hall passes
to use whenever they're needed.
Because, as I'm wont to say,
in fitness, you only need to get the most important things
mostly right most of the time.
This attitude is especially important as we get older. The human body is rugged
and resilient, but as it racks up mileage, it can't endure as much abuse as it once could.
Therefore, you can't subject yourself to the punishing workouts of your 20s and expect the
same results. You can train hard, gain plenty of muscle and strength, and lose plenty of fat,
You can train hard, gain plenty of muscle and strength, and lose plenty of fat,
but it'll likely be a slower process than when you were in college.
So don't view your time with Muscle for Life as a competition with your former self.
That's a race you can't win.
Instead, appreciate what you're capable of now and where you can go from here.
You also can't compare yourself to the photoshopped influencers you see on social media. Let's see them on hashtag hump day when they're working 60 hours per week and considering
selling a kidney to keep their kids in private school. It's also okay if you feel you've let
yourself go. It probably wasn't merely for lack of trying. You probably didn't know what to expect as you got older
and what to do to maintain your health and fitness.
And probably because of all the moronic and misleading information you were fed,
you probably did your best with the hand you were dealt.
The good news is that none of that matters now.
Somehow you've found your way to this audiobook.
And together, we'll make
up for lost time by putting you on the fast track to the body you've always wanted. As you can
imagine, your ability to establish good habits will heavily affect your progress, so I want to
share with you two powerful evidence-based strategies for making the new fitness habits
I'll be teaching you stick.
Hacking Your Habits The first technique is deceptively simple, filling out a sentence. Not just any sentence,
though. A sentence that works subconsciously to reduce your need for motivation, willpower,
and self-control. You can use it for many goals,
including exercise, diet, health, and everything else.
This sentence exists thanks to a decade of work
by a team of psychologists,
and it has three parts, what, when, and where.
A study conducted by researchers at the University of Bath
demonstrates the remarkable effectiveness of this formula.
In this experiment, 91% of participants
who were asked to create an exact exercise plan
during the next week I will partake
in at least 20 minutes of vigorous exercise
on this day, at this time, and in this place,
exercised at least once per week,
compared to just 38% of participants
who were asked to read a few
paragraphs from a random novel before working out, and 35% of participants who were asked to
read a pamphlet on the heart benefits of exercise and told that most young adults who stick to an
exercise program reduce their risk of heart disease. No, that's not a typo. By simply writing when and where exercise would occur,
follow-through skyrocketed, and curiously, education on the benefits of exercise was
no better than pleasure reading as a motivator. Similar results have been seen in other exercise
studies, as well as those analyzing other positive behaviors ranging from breast self-examination
to dietary adherence to condom usage and more.
As it happens,
there are over 100 published studies on this phenomenon,
and the conclusion is crystal clear.
If you explicitly state what you'll do,
when you'll do it, and where you'll do it,
you're much more likely to actually do it.
For example, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday,
I'll wake up at 7 a.m., drink an espresso, and go to the gym.
It will be far more effective than I'll work out a few times per week.
Every evening after dinner, I'll sit on the balcony and read 25 pages
before watching TV in place of I'll read every day.
Every day, I'll eat a salad and an apple for lunch
is preferable to I'll eat better.
Every Friday after I deposit my paycheck,
I'll go home and transfer 10% of it
into my investment account.
We'll help you grow your net worth a lot faster then.
I'll invest more than I did last year.
Every workday I'll drink from a bottle of water at my desk
and refill it whenever it's empty
will outdo I'll drink more water.
What, when, where statements are far more effective
for regulating behavior than relying on inspiration
or willpower to strike at the right moment
because they speak the brain's natural language,
creating a trigger and response mechanism
that doesn't require conscious monitoring or analysis.
I like to take this technique even further
and put my important personal and interpersonal commitments
on my calendar so they stay top of mind.
At the beginning of each day, I check that calendar,
and every time I review my pledges,
I improve my chances of following through.
You can also use your phone's assistant to remind you of daily obligations so you don't
accidentally forget. For instance, if your intention is to eat a nutritious breakfast every day,
you can set a reminder in your phone to prepare the food the night before and grab it in the
morning before you go. Don't discount the value of such spade work.
It can often be the factor that leads to follow-through, even when it's as mundane as
getting into your workout clothes first thing on Saturday morning so you're dressed for your
lunchtime workout. One of the hidden benefits of preparatory actions like these is they reduce the
amount of activation energy required to follow through on our aims.
This is a concept in chemistry that refers to the minimum amount of energy needed to activate
a chemical reaction, and it can be more broadly understood as the minimum amount of effort it
takes to start or change something. The more mental or physical energy it takes for us to
get up to speed, the more susceptible we'll be to the ebb and flow of willpower and motivation,
which can surge and slump
for reasons best known to themselves.
When resolve is high, follow through flows like breathing.
But when it's low,
implementation feels like wading into a pool of glue.
By taking simple steps to lessen our reliance
on these fickle feelings, like those
I've just shared with you, we can greatly boost our consistency, strengthen our whys, and affirm
our priorities. To help you further reduce the activation energy of eating and exercising
according to the plan, you can use another type of statement that's scientifically proven to increase self-control,
the if-then statement.
An if-then statement looks like this.
If X happens, then I'll do Y.
This works for the same reason what-where-when statements work,
specificity of stimulus and response.
And it allows you to provide for contingencies and curveballs
and reduce the need for moxie when things go sideways.
Let's take a scenario given earlier.
You've decided that every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday you'll wake up at 7 a.m., drink an espresso, and go to the gym.
To generate complementary if-then statements, think about what may impede your intentions and what you'll do in each instance.
Here's a good start. If I'm a little short on sleep, then I'll still get up at 7 a.m. and do
my workout. If I miss a morning workout, then I'll do it after work. If I can't go to the gym after
work, then I'll do the workout on Saturday or Sunday at 9 a.m. Or what about if-then statements for the what-when-where statement,
Every weekday I'll eat a salad and an apple for lunch.
If I don't have time to make my normal lunch, then I'll go to the salad place near my office.
If I have to eat out instead of following my meal plan, then I'll eat just one piece of bread and skip dessert.
If a co-worker offers me a pastry at lunch, then I'll eat just one piece of bread and skip dessert. If a co-worker offers me a pastry
at lunch, then I'll politely decline. Every what, when, where statement can be strengthened in this
way, especially after you've gotten into action and unforeseen difficulties and complications
require that you adjust and augment your systems. This process is akin to running mental simulations
to stress test your desired outcomes.
Psychologists call it mental contrasting,
and research shows that it can increase your motivation
to overcome obstacles and achieve your goals.
Remember or even review this chapter
whenever you need a shot in the arm,
and it'll help you find the power to persevere.
Recall it when you're choosing meals at your favorite restaurants,
staring down sugary treats at the grocery store,
and rolling out of bed for your morning workout like a log off a truck.
Regularly look at the pictures you've saved,
read the affirmations you've written,
and revisit the whys and implementation intentions you've saved, read the affirmations you've written, and revisit the whys and
implementation intentions you've created. Then, when you encounter difficulties or setbacks,
you may stagger, but you'll also be able to steady yourself, breathe wind back into your sails,
and speed toward your goals. Make no mistake, however, this transformation business takes time.
We live in the age of impatience.
These days, too many people wear themselves out chasing easy,
four-hour work weeks, six-minute abs, and 30-second meals.
They don't want processes and paradigms.
They want shortcuts and stratagems.
They don't want to plant in the spring and tend in the summer to earn a harvest in the fall.
They want to shirk and slack and reap a bounty they didn't sow.
Well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news,
but you can't lose 20 pounds of fat in 20 days
or reshape your butt or flatten your belly in a couple of weeks.
Upgrading your body is a rewarding undertaking,
but you have to give a lot to get a lot.
Plus, you'll learn a valuable life lesson along the way. Fitness is one of those special things you can't buy, steal, or
fake. There aren't any prizes for lying, complaining, or failing, nor any privileges for status, opinions,
or feelings. It's called working out for good reason. You either put in the work or
get put in your place. Fitness is nothing if not a tribute to the primacy of effort.
In this way, the gym is a lot more than a place to move, grunt, and sweat. It's a microcosm where
we can make contact with the deeper part of ourselves, our convictions, fears, habits,
with the deeper part of ourselves,
our convictions, fears, habits, and anxieties.
It's an arena where we can confront these opponents head-on and prove we have what it takes to vanquish them.
It's a setting where we can test the stories we tell ourselves.
It calls on us to demonstrate how we respond
to the greater struggles of life,
adversity, pain, insecurity, stress, and weakness, and in some
ways, who we really are. Hence, the gym is a training and testing ground of sorts for the body,
mind, and soul. The gym is also a source of learning because it calls on us to constantly
attempt new things. It's a forum where questions are at least as important as answers, and it
cultivates what scientists call a growth mindset
by teaching us that our abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work,
a worldview that's essentially for great accomplishment.
The gym is practical, too, not idealistic.
It's a laboratory open to all ideas and methodologies,
and it gives clear, unqualified feedback. Either
they work or they don't. In short, the gym can be so much more than merely a place to work out.
It can be a refuge from the chaos around us, a world of our own that we create to satisfy dreams
and desires. So if you feel anxious or intimidated about getting started, brace up, because soon
you'll know more about fitness than most everyone at your gym. And once you're a regular, don't be
surprised if they start coming to you for advice. In the next chapter, we'll get you a little closer
to that milestone by exploring the science of everyone's least favorite four-letter word, diet.
Key Takeaways
People with vague, unrealistic, or uninspiring fitness goals, or none, are always the first to quit.
Different people have different reasons for eating well and working out,
but it's important to isolate and articulate your reasons. Find a picture or two, or three or four, of the type of body you want and save them
somewhere that's easily accessible, like your phone or Google Drive or Dropbox. Imagine what
your ideal body feels like for you, and then write it out in the form of individual affirmations,
which are positive statements that describe how you want to be, such as, I'm full of energy all day, and my mind is
quick, clear, and focused. One of the best ways to use the statements you've formulated is to read
them every morning before you start your day or whenever your spirit is flagging. Use what, when,
where statements to reduce your need for motivation,
willpower, and self-control.
Write a sentence that explicitly states
what you'll do, when you'll do it,
and where you'll do it.
For example, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday,
I'll wake up at 7 a.m., drink an espresso,
and go to the gym.
Use if-then statements to further reduce
the activation energy of eating and exercising according to the gym. Use if-then statements to further reduce the activation energy of eating and
exercising according to the plan, like, if I'm a little short on sleep, then I'll still get up at
7am and do my workout. Well, that is it for today's episode. And if you are still listening
and you liked it, you will probably like the rest of the book Muscle for Life. Again, go to muscleforlifebook.com and learn all about the giveaway, pre-order the book, enter the giveaway,
and you can do other things to get additional entries into the giveaway. You can help spread
the word about the book launch. You can subscribe to my YouTube channel, to my other social media
accounts and other things. Again, all of the
details are over at muscleforlifebook.com. And if Muscle for Life is not for you, maybe it's for
somebody you know. If you know somebody who is looking for an enjoyable and a sustainable
fitness regimen that's going to help them lose fat and build lean muscle, eating foods they love, and doing just a few challenging but not grueling workouts per week. And especially if these people
are in the 40 plus demographic, if they have a lot of weight to lose, if they've never done
any weightlifting or maybe even any resistance training before. Muscle for Life is a better book and the programs are
better for them, men and women, than my Bigger, Leaner, Stronger or Thinner, Leaner, Stronger
programs or books. Because Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger are written
for a younger demographic, are written for people who are ready to start squatting, deadlifting,
bench pressing, overhead pressing, and who are ready to get serious about meal planning.
And those books have sold hundreds of thousands of copies and helped tens of thousands of people
that I know of lose fat, build muscle, get healthy. So great information. It works. Great
programs. They work. But there are a lot of people out there who, if I were training them personally, I would
not start them on bigger, leaner, stronger, or thinner, leaner, stronger.
We would have to work up to that.
And that is what muscle for life is for.
So again, go to muscleforlifebook.com to learn more.
And if you are interested in the book for yourself or for somebody else,
I would recommend going now because the giveaway is ending in a couple of weeks.
And if you put it off, you might forget and then it might be too late.