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cover of episode Why Most Women Are Training Wrong: Fix Hormones, Build Strength, and Recover Smarter w/ Dr. Andy Galpin | Part 1

Why Most Women Are Training Wrong: Fix Hormones, Build Strength, and Recover Smarter w/ Dr. Andy Galpin | Part 1

2025/1/13
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Pursuit of Wellness

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Dr. Andy Galpin
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Mari Llewellyn
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Mari Llewellyn: 我认为身体和精神上的表现都属于“表现”,而找到提升表现的方法并帮助他人改善生活,让我感到快乐。 我最近开始使用Blissy的真丝枕套,它彻底改变了我的护发和护肤方式。真丝枕套比缎面枕套更好,因为它具有抗衰老特性,可以减少细纹和皱纹,还能防止头发毛躁,保持发型,保护染发后的头发。此外,它经过皮肤科医生测试,不会堵塞毛孔,其保湿的真丝纤维可以使皮肤整夜保持湿润。它还具有抗菌和低过敏性。我喜欢凉爽的睡眠环境,我觉得真丝枕套可以保持非常凉爽。它也是一份很棒的礼物。 我经常锻炼,骑马,去健身房,总是出汗,所以需要时刻注意我的除臭问题。这就是为什么我喜欢Lume的原因。它是一款全身除臭剂,可以安全地用于身体的任何部位。腋窝、胸部下方、大腿、肚脐、臀部裂缝、外阴和脚部,它是由一位妇产科医生创造的,她亲眼目睹了体味被误诊和错误治疗的情况。Lume经临床证明可以全天候阻挡异味,并控制异味长达72小时,这对我来说太棒了。通常情况下,我早上出门后直到晚上才回来。他们有固体除臭棒、控汗除臭剂和喷雾除臭剂。所有产品都不含小苏打、对羟基苯甲酸酯,并且pH值平衡。它们的气味非常好。有清爽的柑橘、薰衣草鼠尾草或烤椰子。作为对我们听众的特别优惠,新客户可以使用我们的专属代码POW获得所有Lume产品15%的折扣。如果您将15%的折扣与已经打折的入门套装结合起来,那么入门套装的折扣将超过40%。使用代码POW,在lumediodra.com上享受15%的折扣。代码是POW,网址是L-U-M-E-D-E-O-D-O-R-A-N-T.com。请支持我们的节目,并告诉他们是我们推荐的。Lume让您闻起来更清新,保持更干燥,并从头到脚增强您的自信心。 2017年,我在一年内减掉了90磅,但这几乎是我那一年唯一想的事情。我没有孩子,也没有上学,那时我已经辍学了。我的生活也很糟糕。所以我真的没有选择。这就像一个非常孤立的情况。我认为当人们问我问题时,他们……我必须提到这一点,因为那是我生命中一个非常独特的时间,我可以真正专注于此。我确实在Orange Theory Fitness的前台工作过。我会每天带我的小餐盒来。这很有趣。但是,是的,我可以真正专注于此。对于有孩子、上学或其他事情的人来说,这太多了。 Dr. Andy Galpin: 我父母鼓励我接受高等教育,追求比他们更好的生活,这影响了我对自身发展的追求。 “表现”的定义很广泛,它不仅指体育竞技中的表现,也包括日常生活中的专注力、精力、决策能力等方面。 我的客户群体涵盖了从职业运动员到普通大众,他们都有提升自身表现的需求。 为了提升生理适应能力,我们需要减少非特异性压力源,从而更好地应对目标压力。 在追求最佳状态的过程中,需要找到一种可持续的方式,让“痛苦”在可承受范围内。 建立可持续的系统是减肥和健身成功的关键,而这取决于个人的性格和生活方式。 运动的时间安排并非最重要的因素,重要的是找到适合个人生活方式并能够坚持执行的方案。 “运动零食”指的是在一天中穿插进行的少量运动,以增加总的活动量,这与计划性锻炼相辅相成。 对于害怕力量训练的女性,我会从她们的外在形象、身体感受和运动表现三个方面入手,用科学证据打消她们的顾虑。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What is Dr. Andy Galpin's primary focus when it comes to performance optimization?

Dr. Andy Galpin focuses on helping individuals achieve their desired physical and mental performance goals, whether it's improving focus, energy, decision-making, or reducing pain. His approach is holistic, addressing both athletes and non-athletes with tailored solutions to enhance their lives.

Why does Dr. Galpin emphasize removing non-specific stressors for performance improvement?

Non-specific stressors, such as poor sleep, micronutrient deficiencies, or mental health issues, preload the body’s stress capacity, leaving little room for beneficial stress that drives adaptation. Removing these stressors allows individuals to better handle the specific stress needed for positive physiological changes like muscle growth or fat loss.

What is the significance of VO2 max in both athletes and general populations?

VO2 max is a key predictor of longevity and is crucial for both athletes and general populations. It measures the maximum amount of oxygen the body can utilize during intense exercise, reflecting cardiovascular fitness and overall health.

How does Dr. Galpin differentiate between 'cooks' and 'bakers' in fitness journeys?

Dr. Galpin categorizes individuals as 'cooks' or 'bakers' based on their approach to fitness. 'Bakers' prefer precision and detailed plans, while 'cooks' thrive on flexibility and creativity. Understanding this helps tailor systems that align with their personalities for long-term success.

What role does NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) play in caloric expenditure?

NEAT, which includes activities like fidgeting, pacing, or general movement, is a significant contributor to daily caloric expenditure. It often has a bigger impact on energy balance than structured exercise, especially during caloric restriction, where NEAT tends to decrease.

Why is strength training important for women who fear bulking up?

Strength training is essential for building muscle and achieving fitness goals without necessarily bulking up. Dr. Galpin emphasizes education and tailored training programs to address specific concerns, ensuring women achieve their desired physique while feeling strong and energized.

Chapters
Dr. Andy Galpin defines peak performance as encompassing both physical and mental aspects, aiming to enhance various life domains such as focus, energy levels, decision-making, and pain management. He finds immense joy in providing solutions that improve people's lives.
  • Peak performance includes physical and mental aspects
  • Enhancing focus, energy, decision-making, and pain management are key goals
  • Helping people achieve better lives brings immense joy

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Do you want to be more focused throughout the day? Do you want to have more energy? Do you want to make better decisions, be a better leader, feel less pain? Like, what is the thing? That's all physical performance to me. It's all mental performance. And so what I love doing the most out of all this is having an answer for somebody who's searching because they want to perform better and then being able to be like, oh, you just have to do this. This is the Pursuit of Wellness podcast, and I'm your host, Mari Llewellyn. ♪

What is up, guys? Welcome back to The Pursuit of Wellness. Today, I am joined with Dr. Andy Galpin, a world-renowned human performance scientist. This episode is so packed with insights that we split it into two parts. We talked for so long, and there's so much good information in here. You're going to want to listen to part one and two. In part one, we cover Dr. Galpin's fascinating journey with growing up on a farm to working with elite athletes, and we dive into topics like nutrition,

stress, sustainable systems, fat loss strategies, and the importance of daily movement. Part two will drop this Thursday, so stay tuned. Dr. Andy Gelfand, welcome to the show. It's a pleasure to be here. I'm going to have to read your credentials here because there's so many. You are a human performance scientist with a PhD in human bioenergetics. You work with elite athletes. You're a professor.

The list goes on. I'd love to just start by hearing how you got to where you are now. Like, where did the interest start? You know, I grew up in the country with just everybody around me who were on horses and logging and farming and things like that.

And my parents were really loving and supportive. No one where I'm from was highly educated. I could not have told you as a kid what a PhD was. I had no idea. That's crazy. I had no, I didn't have any lawyer parents or anything like that. Not to say, but we just don't need different. And so my parents were super supportive of my siblings and I, and they didn't care what we did professionally. But all they said is, you're not going to do what we did. And they just wanted a better life for us.

And so the only thing back in the 1980s and 90s then was for country people, it's like, well, you're going to go to college. We don't know what this doesn't matter. It's a different thing that it is now. So they just pushed us to go to college. And again, they could be artists or whatever we wanted to be. But just like you're not going to be a manual labor person like your entire life. So, OK, that was great. So then as a country kid, I played sports.

I wanted to be better at all those things. And I was trying to figure out how do I have a life that is not as hard as my parents. But I knew I wasn't going to be a professional athlete. I knew actually pretty quickly I didn't want to be like a sport coach. I didn't want to coach football. And then actually after I got into college and got through that stuff, I spent a little bit of time as a professional strength and conditioning coach of very high level athletes, Major League Baseball players, NFL players.

realized quickly, I didn't want to do that full time either. And so basically, I spent the rest of my career trying to figure out where, like, how do I make a career out of sports, but not doing those things? Yeah, I love science. I was a decent athlete, but not a tremendous one. And so what that meant was, I was good enough to where if I did things better, it mattered, it would be the difference between me playing and not playing. But also wasn't so bad. We're like, hey, doesn't matter what you do, you're not going to get out there kind of thing.

And so all I knew at that point in my life was the only thing I can control is working harder than everyone else, doing things better than everyone else, being more focused, so on and so forth. And if I can carry that through a college degree somehow and then try to figure out how I can do this as a profession, that was really as far as I was focused. So yeah.

collectively, that's how I really got into this field and then just was able to carve a 20-year path into making where I am now. What interests you the most about performance and optimizing? I think it's actually how well-rounded that phrase can be. So I want to be really clear. I try to like reiterate this as much as possible. I will talk a lot about the athletes and things that we do, but performance to me really means

What do you want out of your body? Yeah. Right. What do you want to do? Performance can be defined as hitting a ball better and scoring more points. Sure. No problem. But do you want to be more focused throughout the day? Do you want to have more energy? Do you want to make better decisions, be a better leader, feel less pain? Like what is the thing? That's all physical performance to me. It's all mental performance. And so what I love doing the most out of all this is having an answer for somebody who's searching for

Because they want to perform better. And then being able to be like, oh, you just have to do this. And then they go that their life is better. And it's like this amazing feeling to know you have these answers sometimes. And then you can give that gift to somebody. And then they get something more that they want. And their life is more enriched. And they're better with their family and things like that. And so that ultimately is the thing that gives me the most joy is being like, oh, hey, I have this little solution over here. Mm-hmm.

Now you want to use it to whatever you're doing. I don't even care. But that to me is what I love the most about performance. I love sports. So it's great when that gets manifested and I get to watch people I coach on TV win championships and stuff. But we have as much reward out of our non-athlete clients and folks that come to us too for the same things. It's like, wow, I was just suffering for all these years. Now this is gone. That's pretty awesome too. So do you have people who come to you who are not just...

peak performance athletes you have regular people oh 100 possibly overweight we have honestly we so we have a coaching program and we have many servicing companies but in our coaching program we will often have a pretty big dichotomy like over here on one side is you we do have plenty of professional athletes in there we have probably i don't know four or five of the highest contracts in the country in the big sports here we have all pro we have the biggest of the biggest athletes

But by number, we don't have hundreds of athletes in those programs because it's a little bit different. But for our non-athletes, which is more people, you generally have the split. And we have some people at the top where they're pretty dialed and they just want to get more focus. They're either trying to compete, they like to run races or do kayak or do some activities, kind of the weekend warrior folks. Or they're not that, but they're trying to get every last little bit of focus

brain function or back health or longevity or whatever right so we have those people who are dialed and they're trying to go from like a nine to a ten and then we have people at the opposite that are saying like i'm just starting this health journey i'm finally ready i've got to lose the weight i've got to stop the drink whatever the thing is and then they're like i'm going to commit to this but if i'm going to do that i want to start with everything perfect

That's unique to my physiology, right? So it's kind of like, I'm not going to start this journey and then be wondering, am I eating the right foods? Am I doing the right workouts for my body? I don't want that. So I want questions gone. So I start there. So we have a big split between people that will generally fall into both those buckets. So we spend more of our coaching time with definitely non-athletes than athletes. ♪

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What is something that you recommend to your athletes that you also recommend to regular people? Like for people listening who want to know the tips and tricks you give to the elite athletes, like what are some of the things you're going to pull from that routine? Okay. It's impossible for me to answer because it's going to be, we could be here for hours. Okay. Here's how I'll set it up. Joe Rogan style three hours. Yeah. Oh yeah. We've done that plenty of times.

Okay, if I started listing off to you things, I want you to tell me, is this something I'm going to give to an athlete? Okay. Or a general population person? Okay. Okay, mental focus? Oh, I feel like that's both. Okay. Yeah. VO2 max? Athlete. It's also arguably the number one predictor of longevity. Okay, so both. Okay, bone mineral density?

Both. Oh, like you can see how I can run this train, right? Yeah. There's not a metric I can pick where you're going to be like, oh, that's an athlete thing with some very small exceptions. Okay. You want to hit a baseball better. Okay. Okay. Fine. Yeah. And you want, but outside of that, like you pick your health metric, you pick your longevity metric, you pick whatever thing you care about the most. You're going to have a 99% Venn diagram overlap between these two people.

So what are the things that we give the athletes? What are the things that we give the non-athletes? It's almost identical. It's not the athlete thing that matters. What matters is, is it specific to your physiology and your demands and your goals? And that is the same answer I would say, by the way, when you say women versus men. Hey, we don't coach women versus men. What we coach is you.

Okay. Individually, your physiology demands and goals are unique to you. I don't care what body you put that in. I don't care what sport you put that in or not. We're going to coach you as a unique human being and whatever that means. Of course, there are generalities we can kind of cover that functionally split them, but it's the same as old versus young, right? Or movement person, not movement beginner. So there's, there's a thousand different categories that split people up, but the reality of it is it's just you based on your unique physiology. So

Could we go down the supplement route to answer your question? Sure. Could we go down recovery? Yeah. Sleep, right. Water. Like we could go any of these routes that you want. And what we're going to generally say is our goal with any of our athletes is to get their physiology into a position where they have the least amount of what we call performance anchors. So these are things that are holding your physiology back that are draining your system. They're, they're non-specific stressors. So what we want to do is create the way that you create physiological adaptation.

That's the fancy way to say change, right? You want to grow muscle. You want to lose fat. You want to have more or less back pain or you want a higher libido. Okay, fine. You're trying to induce some change. Awesome. Well, that is a response to stress. Adaptation happens because of stress. And so the way that you create change is you put a whole bunch of stress onto a system. The reality of it is your body can only handle so much total stress. The science word is allostatic load.

When that stress load gets too high, then any more additional stress no longer creates adaptation. It creates maladaptation, right? Backwards. And you get overrun or run down or whatever the case is. So the way that you enhance that stress load is not to actually necessarily just dump more stress on the system is to make sure you don't have any non-specific stressors.

So what that means is if you pre-fold your stress bucket 80% from shit you didn't want coming in, you don't have much room to put in the stuff that you do. So this means like I work out a little bit, I get super sore or I get exhausted. I'm like, interesting. I have a couple of meetings a day and then my brain shuts down. Interesting. Those are stressors, but I can tell you're preloaded. There's lots of different things in there, right? So if we can remove those nonspecific stressors,

our ability to put in the ones we want to create that adaptation. So it's the same goal, no matter what it is. These nonspecific stressors can be things like poor sleep.

It can be a micronutrient insufficiency. It could be a suboptimal, not even like a clinical deficiency in something in your blood, right? It could be a thousand different things. We're running environmental scans on every one of our people that go through. So there's a lot of ways that we can find things. It could be mental health, could be stress management. It could come from any of these routes.

But we're looking at all of it and we're going to see where is it coming in the most from you, remove that. And now we generally just get the back away. We want people in an environment where they're not following 600 supplements and a 90 minute routine just to go to bed every day. And like these are unrealistic long term solutions, but you have to kind of figure out what is putting the most strain in the system initially, get that out of the way and then generally let physiology do what it wants.

I was the 90 minute supplement every two hours person for a very long time. And flexibility has been like a new thing for me because I do love like a very regimented routine, but I've had to sort of ease up on that. Do you think, and this is a bit of a deep question, but do you think for someone listening who wants to be in the best shape of their life, lose fat, gain muscle, do you think suffering is a part of that? Or do you think there's a way to go about it that

is enjoyable okay so it's clearly both right um the way that you want to think about this is you want to suffer in the way that you're most able to handle okay and you want to do this in a way that is going to establish the most long-term consistency the goals you just outlined are different than other client goals we hear but let's just take the ones you said okay i want to have fat loss i want to be in the best shape of my life do you want to be in the best shape of your life for a week

The assumption is you want that to stay around for a while, right? Yes. Great. So we're automatically thinking we have to put ourself in a system that is somewhat sustainable. Yeah. Okay. So that is a different approach maybe than other approaches where...

compare this to say our professional fighters who really want to be in the best shape of their life and they only really have to be there for a week okay right because they're going to compete and they're going to fight for a world championship and things like that or to get them in good shape but they don't they're actually literally trying to peak yeah the olympics we just had this like our athletes were peaking you get it right so when i when those questions are going my head i'm literally thinking okay you're probably talking like long-term stay that way for a long time yeah so it's a different approach so to your question

What we want to do is figure out, can we get those things done in a way that is sustainable and where your suffering is a way that you can handle it? So could this be hunger suffering? Okay, fine. Some people are fine with that. Some people, that is a huge trigger. Yeah. No problem. Can it be other types of suffering? Fine. Can the suffering be, we're going to be walking more often so you don't get as much work done. Ah, God, we have to stop working. Is that, that may be a different type of suffering we ask of you.

Could be any number of things. It could be we have to actually carve out 45 minutes before sleep because we have to get more effective sleep as a huge component to effective fat loss. People like completely miss that or disregard the important role of sleep in successful fat loss.

So we will do like, it could be a number of ways to different suffer. So ultimately there's going to have to be some, but we can be as intelligent as possible and to not put you on a short sighted goal. We want to go off the long game there. And so what we'll always say with that question is a lot of people will think I have to lose weight to kind of get healthy.

That's true. Sometimes though, we need to get you healthy first to then let you have more successful weight loss. So we have to pick our suffering and be intelligent with what we ask of people. What we don't want to do is set people up into positions that are extremely unrealistic. I'm particularly sensitive to this one because I have young kids, right? You take somebody who's got kids and a job and other things going on

You're going to lose that battle if you put them in like really ridiculous food prep modes or things like that was just a bad coaching decision. Their suffering might have to come somewhere else because you're making an unrealistic expectation and they might have the willpower, focus and determination to crush it for six weeks.

But eventually that kid thing will just eat you up or lifestyle or travel or whatever the thing is for you. So you got to make sure that you're giving them a chance, a realistic shot to win against the battle that they can win.

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So back in 2017, I lost 90 pounds in a year window, but it was literally all I thought about for that year. Like I didn't have, I don't have kids. I wasn't even in school. I had dropped out at that point. My life was also a mess. So I didn't really have a choice. Like it was a very like isolated situation. And I think when people ask me questions and they, you know,

I just have to mention that because it was a very unique time of my life where I could really zone in on that. I did work at, I worked at Orange Theory Fitness at the front desk. Okay. And I'd bring my little meal prep every day. It was pretty funny. But yeah, like I could really zone in on it. And for people with kids and school and whatever else, it's a lot.

what would you say is the biggest like barrier to entry for people who want to like lose a lot of weight or have a fitness journey? Like what, what is stopping them along the way? It's, it's always about systems. So I was kind of saying a second ago, like put yourself in a better system. I'll give you a direct example. We will split people up into what I call cooks,

or bakers. All right. So you know what the difference between cooking and baking is? I feel like baking is very exact and measured and cooking is a bit more creative and flexible. Right. So initially, if you were to come to me and say, I got 90 pounds to lose, the very first thing I'm trying to figure out is, okay, what kind of a system is going to work best for you based on your situation? If you were to identify you as a cook,

And I can ask this question. Okay, Mari, like I'm going to give you this meal plan. You're going to weigh and measure everything you eat for the next six months. Yeah. Okay. That's what I did. Or we can have a call once every two weeks. We can talk about kind of some concepts and then you'll be out to pasture. Which of those would you have picked back in that day? Option A for sure. Great. So we would have said, all right, you're a baker.

You want precision, you want detail, you want systems. Even if the system isn't perfect, it doesn't matter because you actually would probably have some relief

That's anxiety because you have a plan, you have a system, you're just going to follow it. Could there be other options? Sure, sure, sure. I don't really care. I just want to know what to do and I want to win. Amazing. Other people that does the exact opposite, right? People that are what I would call a cook, that's going to give them insane anxiety because they're like, oh my God, I have no flexibility. I have no freedom. I felt claustrophobic and trapped and oh, this is going to be terrible. Yeah. If I were to give you the concepts approach back then,

You would have been more of like, ah, but like, like what to do? Like how, and you would have probably given you a worse approach because you don't know exactly what to do. So when I, when I say like systems, that's the type of stuff I'm trying to figure out, right? Am I, I'm immediately going to say, are, am I going to create chaos in your life because I'm not giving you enough detail? Then I need to give you specific detail and I don't want to give you any wiggle room.

Other people, then we're going to go the opposite direction. So when it comes to successful long-term fat loss in this example, that's the first thing we're trying to figure out. If you are, it doesn't matter if you have the kids or don't have the kids or whatever stage life you run, companies you're traveling, how can I put you in a position to succeed for your personality based on this? I would strongly encourage people at the beginning of their journey to spend at least, I'd like to say 30 days, but give me like 14 days, a week if I have to,

Being that Baker. You need to know you need to some calibration. What is six ounces of meat really look like? Yeah, what is a cup of rice? What is the serving of olive oil or whatever foods you're eating or not eating? It doesn't matter because that alone is like oh I didn't realize it when I've done this activity in my classes You will find a couple of things people are always stunned how little protein they're eating and how much fat that they're eating and

Like always like, oh my gosh, like I thought I was eating, you know, 200 grams of protein a day and I'm eating 110. And I didn't realize I'm eating 250 grams of fat a day. Like they just, they have no calibration to that stuff. So I don't necessarily need you to follow that the whole time, but we need to have a little bit of awakening and awareness so that you can go, okay. So when I ask you to eyeball stuff, we're at least in the stratosphere of realistic. If you don't have some calibration, then it's impossible. Imagine that you're driving,

And I took away your odometer and your speedometer. It was like, oh yeah, okay, great down there, but just don't ever speed. Go from here all the way to Houston and never speed. Like you have no idea what you're doing because you're always relying on that output, right? So you have to have some calibration if you're going to run the cook approach, which is kind of like concepts and things like that. You got to get some calibration. When I need to get dialed in personally,

When our athletes have to get dialed in because we have a specific weight to make or time, we always revert back to baking. So when I have to hit a goal, we get detailed. But once we've done that, then we go back into cooking mode. Yep. So when an athlete comes into the off season, we tend to give them their stuff and like concepts. Okay. Make it a little bit easier for them. Yeah, take some time off. Like I just want you to do A, B, and C, right? Make sure you kind of hit your protein numbers, get this much vegetable in per day and

get close. Okay. But then when it's like, we're getting closer and tighter and tighter, we've got to get dialed in. We get really specific. And then when the season starts, we actually kind of go back to concepts because I've got a lot going on to manage. Right. So you can play back and forth between both of these things, but my, my definitely my big advice for somebody just starting it, get a little bit calibrated. Don't worry about the specifics of the diet. Don't worry about the specifics of the exercise routine.

Be consistent, establish a baseline. Whatever it is that you're eating, okay, we'll improve the numbers later, but you've got to get a consistent pattern down, get some understanding of what we're doing. So the system is number one, and then I just gave you number two, which is you have to create stability. You don't have to eat the same thing every day, but we have to have some sort of thing. There's actually excellent research showing this. When you match people for calories per calories and for other macronutrients,

The ones that eat them more consistently at the more consistent times will have more effective weight management than those that are eating it inconsistently throughout the day. It has nothing to do with timing or anything like that. Eat one meal a day, eat six meals a day, I don't care. That doesn't really particularly matter. Physiologically, if it makes a better system for you, fine. It doesn't matter. But you need to be somewhat consistent in your approach, right? Again, within reason for you. So if you do those two things, most people will have a huge amount of progress for the first time.

six weeks, six months, or whatever that domain can be without needing to get into any detail really past that. That is always our first two battles. And once you get those down, they're typically in a really good spot. I think that's such a fantastic way of phrasing it because I've, so when I started losing weight, I used my fitness pal, like religiously tracked everything

Sure.

So I was like imitating their diets for a while. And I was like, thought I was going to be a bikini competitor, but like, that's what taught me how to eyeball a plate. So I feel like I was baking for a year and now I've been cooking for the past five years or whatever. You know, what's crazy about that? You'll hear that story. If you, you did it a year. Yeah. I'm telling you, do it for 30 days and you can go back into cook mode for a decade. Yeah. That's smart. It'll last a really, really, maybe potentially forever. Yeah. Like my wife hasn't,

gone into baker mode in probably over a decade does she weight lift she'd be like strength train yeah for sure but she was you know back in the day growing up kind of in the la thing like it was weigh and measure everything like be this specific body weight and so she spent years doing that and now she like she will tell you you could pull up anything in front of her and she will know the macros of like any amount yeah because she was like way too far down that road yeah and you know bads

position probably but now because of that the rest of her life she has a incredibly good calibration of where she's at and even for other people so her ability to portion for our kids and stuff like she knows exactly what they're getting yeah it's really beneficial it's a little bit of work it sucks it's kind of a grind i get it but it's going to pay dividends the rest of your life i also feel like people get caught up on scheduling and i don't know what you do with your clients but

I feel like everyone has a very individual lifestyle and you kind of need to make it work for you. Like I was going first thing in the morning and I still do that. Like I have to work out first thing, otherwise it's not going to happen. What do you recommend to people who feel like they don't have time in the morning or they work all day? Like,

I think people get caught up on they don't have time or it's not at the optimal time. What do you say to those people? Yeah, optimal time won't really exist for the overwhelming majority of people in terms of exercise. You can say the same thing with the number of meals you have per day, the time, right? Should I do a 12-hour fasting window? Those things don't matter. They matter very, very, very little. Same thing with exercise. I don't care at all.

Like we've seen, we've broken world records in strength sports. We've coached Olympians and weightlifting. We've done like, we've done them all. We've done thousands of normal people. And then when I say that those things don't matter much, like they really don't matter that much. Yeah. Some of our professional athletes will train at seven in the morning. Some of them don't wake up before one.

Like we've won world titles in every sport, doing it lots of different ways. So it's not that it's irrelevant. It's just not that important relative to the more contextualized parts. So when do you feel best? When do you have time? What's more realistic? What will you execute better? What will you be more consistent in? Those things just matter so much more than things like timing. The only caveat I'll give you there would be

There is some negative consequences to doing a bunch of really high intensity work really late at night. Okay. If you can avoid that, that's generally better. And we've had to do that

A number of times with clients, non-athletes typically, we deal with this with athletes, but that's part of the course, right? You're going to play a baseball game till 11 p.m. Yeah, I was going to ask you, what do you, for fighters who are going on at like 10 or 11 p.m., how do they prep for that? Like, are they not exhausted? Nope. No, because their life is scheduled around that. Really? Yeah, that's why we're never going to have a fighter wake up at 7 a.m., 8 a.m.

We only generally deal with main event fighters. So it's 8 to 9, 9.30, 10 p.m. We've also fought in many different time zones. Fight Island and Abu Dhabi and Singapore. We've been all over the place, right? And the Olympics were in Paris. We're all over there, right? Yeah.

And so what you need to do is go reverse then engineer so that that competition time is when they're peaking physically throughout the day. Got it. And so for the six to eight or 10 weeks before, their schedule is being changed so that that is when they are performing their best, which means they're going to train at 8, 9 p.m. every night.

And then it's going to be incredibly unrealistic for us to expect them to be in bed by 11. Yeah. It would be actually, even if it's possible, it would be a horrible coaching decision if you're certainly not peaking physically and cognitively two hours before your sleep time. And so those people might go to bed at 2 or 3 in the morning. And then they're sleeping until 11 or noon the next day. So now we're still getting them in their physical peak, typically like 5 to 8 hours after waking.

is going to be when their competition time is. So we are engineering their life around that because that's what they're there for. Yeah. So that is one exception. The people that are not like that, but you still kind of, I work till six and then I get off work and then I go train at 7 p.m. And then I try to go to bed at nine and you do a lot of high intensity stuff. It doesn't always happen, but it's very likely that will be detrimental to your sleep. And we'll see that in a number of areas pop up. This will a lot of times be the

I fall asleep super easy. Then I wake up in the middle of night and can't go back to sleep. Because the cortisol is up from the workout? It's not the cortisol per se that will probably be up. It's a whole host of physiological cascades that are churning and burning.

So if you want to call it cortisol, like fine as one representation of general stress, but it's like cortisol is often quite maligned when it doesn't need to be. It's super productive. But yeah, in general, like just call it the global stress response is quite high. Temperature, recovery processes, all these are in the wrong direction. And so people will often fall asleep pretty quickly because they're tired and fatigued.

But then their system gets woken up within a couple of hours and they have a really hard time going back to sleep. We can see that in the respiratory rate and their heart rate and HRV, different metrics like that. That'll pop up and we're like, okay, we have to do either some sort of very specific match down regulation. So if you are in this boat and you're like, there's no way you can work out at any other time of the day and you're not gonna do only like low intensity walks. Okay, fine. If you have to do the high intensity stuff at night, you need to leave that session or before you leave

Do a very diligent downregulation. You have to pay that thing back or you're going to have trouble sleeping and it's going to be a problem. So that downregulation piece can be a number. It's honestly specific to you. Like what helps you downregulate? Simple examples. Go to the corner of the gym or leave the gym, sit in your car, wherever that it's kind of quiet where you can be dark with something over your eyes and just breathe through your nose for five minutes. Yeah.

We can do different, like longer exhale stuff. That's fine. But the reality of it is like you sometimes just need like five to seven minutes without music blasting, without lights on super bright and not, and just bring it back down. A lot of times that alone will be enough. I've heard you use the phrase exercise snacks. Is that correct? Oh yeah, sure. Can you tell us about exercise snacks? What does that mean? Yeah, sure. So it's a basic idea of when you think about exercise, physical activity,

A lot of times we bundle it all together, but the reality of it is you want to kind of think about like physical activity as how much movement you have throughout the day. So if you're sitting at a desk all day, your general physical activity, this is a step count, right? Basic things like that. So you want to bucket physical activity as kind of a thing where all of us basically want that as high as we can realistically.

That's good, but it's not a surrogate for true structured planned exercise. Okay. We want that, right? We want some of those things over there. You don't want to fall into the trap of saying like, I work out, I do these high intensity exercise for 45 minutes a day and do it five days a week. So I'm super healthy. And then you do no physical activity.

Okay. There's lots of literature on that is not great either. So like, let's say you're having a crazy workout at 8 a.m. Yep. Hit training, strength training, and then you sit at a desk all day and you don't move again. That would be better than not doing the workout. Okay. But it would certainly be suboptimal. Yeah. We need some sort of physical movement throughout the day and we need structured exercise. That's our best component. Okay. Now in between those two areas are exercise snacks.

So what this basically says is imagine you are sitting there all day. We're all dressed up. Yeah, everyone looks so fancy over here, right? Do we look fancy? Yeah. Thanks. There's a lot of fashion around this place. It's my best outfit. Is it? No. If I dress myself, you guys would be laughing right now. Wait, who picked this out? I'm not allowed to. Nothing that goes in my house is chosen by me. Your wife is picking it? 100%. What do you wear to work every day?

to work like activewear as in like get out of my bed and go upstairs to my computer yeah yeah definitely going to be shorts and a very very old t-shirt do you have a walking treadmill i'm surprised by that i i don't like honestly i don't jam on it that much yeah um i'm a big fidgeter so if i was working in this room i would be like dancing up and not dancing but i'd be moving jumping like shaking shuffling around a lot throughout the day yeah in my office i don't like to walk i like to like pace back and forth

Half of my wall is a big whiteboard. So I'm doing stuff on there. It's like my husband. Or I'm out. I can't sit like that. I can't walk. If I'm working, I'm there. And if I'm not, I'm going to be moving around. I feel like that's an underrated thing. It's a big deal. My husband paces on the phone. He's always standing up. He never sits down. He's kind of like crazy entrepreneur vibes. Yeah.

but he's a jacked, he's a bodybuilder. He's constantly moving. And I feel like he has the craziest step count because he's just constantly, like you wouldn't think that it's having an impact, but I feel like it does. Oh, it's a massive impact. In fact, one would argue, and there's a lot of literature to support that, that is the bigger variable than anything else. So if you look at things like total daily energy expenditure, it's the amount of energy you spend, like calories you burn throughout the day. If you want to be in a caloric deficit,

Okay, you have kind of two global options. You either consume less or you move more. Fine. Now, people tend to hear that and they think the movement part means I just said exercise. You can do that. But structured, intentional, physical exercise does not burn the caloric expenditure that people think. It's not even close. The average person's probably going to do a couple of hundred calories in their workout. Yeah. They'll often think I burned 1,000 or 1,500, like really high numbers. That's really, really rare. Yeah.

It's generally a couple of hundred calories. Strength training, as much as I love it, burns very little calories. So that's not the thing that moves the needle there. There's another component to that that's called NEAT, non-exercise active thermogenesis, right? So it's the calories you burn doing non-specific fidgeting. It's your foot right now moving around, right? Yeah. It's the twitching. It's me jumping up and down. It's your husband pacing back and forth.

It's those things that is actually probably the bigger Delta in terms of your caloric expenditure than any of the other variables. There's a couple of other variables in that equation that I didn't mention like thermal effective food and things like that. But there's a strong argument to be made that that neat is a thing. That's also the thing that will go down when you have chronic caloric restriction.

So if you're on low calories for a very long time, it's not that your like basal metabolic rate goes down that much. That's the kind of amount of energy that you're burning throughout the day just to stay alive. It's the neat that starts coming down.

And if you watch bodybuilders specifically in this physique world, when they are getting low on calories, watch his fidgeting just go to zero. Right, because you don't want to use up energy. You'll just see them start like leaning on stuff all the time. Yeah. And sitting and like laying and hunching over. They have no idea that they're doing it. But their body is trying to bring caloric expenditure down because caloric intake is down. And that's the thing that shuts them down.

down a ton is is that neat thing so they'll just be like sitting there they're on stage like about to pause oh for sure yeah that's rough so did you see chris bumstead no i saw that he won though right yeah it's his last one he retired right yeah i don't follow the physique world

that much but uh i saw that because yeah six in a row and then pull the plug right do you ever coach those people because i feel like it's very aesthetic and not so much like inner health i don't coach them at all really that much like i just honestly don't find that field interesting at all really never like it's like kind of but it's like kind of anti-performance i guess i mean it is and it is like no disrespect but i grew up where like we were always going to promote

uh substance over style it was like we never wore gloves and like aesthetics i i told i told you like i hate fashion like all my passion right it's like whatever yeah um but that said it's really it's not it's really hard work yeah like those folks it's a ton of suffering so my business partner that runs all of our coaching programs dan garner he does that stuff so for those people that come in bodybuilders he competes in bodybuilding still in physique

Um, he will do all that stuff in house to me. I'm like, give me a, like figure skater. I'd rather have a figure skater than a bodybuilder. Like I just don't. Have you worked with a figure skater before? Um, I haven't, but Dan has. That's really interesting. He did a couple of, uh, Olympic medalists. Um, what is their diet like? Um, I don't know. I can imagine though. It's not gonna be that different. Really? Yeah. I mean, you have to manage calories, right? Because you gotta be, it's not that different from like our gymnasts and stuff like that. We've had to deal with anyone that's got to manage weight, but still perform. Yeah.

It's not that hard of a system. Because they're like flying through the air. Totally. But the thing that's going to get skaters is going to be things like training volume. Okay. Because they're skating so much. Yeah. And they're training so much. And so you have to keep, it's the same thing with like, honestly, it's very similar to conceptually like most distance athletes. Yeah. Because body mass is so big. It's such a big deal. And like whether you're a rower, swimmer, cyclist, like any extra body weight, that's FTP, right? For that endurance world.

It's just going to add mass that you've got to carry. But at the same time, the fueling demands are so high. So you have to really be specific about when and how you're fueling and all that to make sure that you're as lean as you can, but then not sacrificing sleep or recovery. Do you ever have equestrians? We have had like three. No. Yeah. Oh my God, I'm so curious. These would be, I wouldn't say full-time professional ones, but folks that, like we had a lawyer, actually she's from Texas.

um that like we actually have like probably two or three that are competing right now at least in a program jumpers i couldn't answer i would guess jumpers if you know it's my i grew up my mom barrel raced for forever stop i've been barrel racing yeah yeah it's great right yeah i was gonna ask you because you said you grew up in the country and i was like i figured i feel like anyone who grows up in the country ends up rodeoing somehow yeah i we we did a a little bit of that stuff i i did um

I think the first one I did was I was probably like five or six. What did you do? The same thing that every six-year-old does because you're not going to get on Broncos, right? The sheep? Yeah. That's the way to go. Mutton busting? Yeah, exactly. It's very character building, I feel like. Yeah. I remember I got so mad because I was pretty athletic as a kid.

And I was like, oh, I'm going to win. For sure. Like I had never been on one, but I was like for sure going to win. And I just fell off immediately. And I was so mad. No. Maybe it's like a balance thing. I mean, I don't know how much skill is involved. I had never done it before. I had ridden horses. I could ride a horse. I'm like, I'm definitely going to ride that. It's going to be super easy. And all these kids are going to suck. And then I didn't win immediately the first time. So I was like, I hate this. Never again. Women who come to you who are afraid of strength training. Yeah. But want...

muscle? Like, what do you tell them? So there's, it depends on what the, where the afraid is coming from. Yeah. All right. So the way we'll always break it down is look, feel, perform, right? So everyone on the planet wants to look a certain way. You define what you like or don't like differently than me. Fine. I don't care. You set the rules. Tell me what you, you don't want your shoulders to be big. Fine. Or you want them to be big. You want your weight. Like, I don't care at all. You tell me what you want to look like. Don't want to look like fine. That's look, feel. What do you want to feel like?

Right. So you want to feel strong. You don't care about feeling strong. You want to feel more energy. Great. You don't want to feel the fatigue going up. Like what is the feeling thing that you're going to care about and then perform? How do you want to perform? Right. What is that area of performance to you? Again, we talked about examples earlier. So whatever it is, once I have those and then we work backwards. Okay, great. So we're going to recommend strength training. Awesome. Why? Because it's going to hit those goals. And then I'm going to show them. We'll actually take them directly through the research.

Show them the papers that this type of training will get specifically to this goal or whatever, and it'll not achieve this outcome. So if it's an education piece, it's actually then becomes quite simple. A lot of that, as you're well aware, is rooted in very, very old, we'll call it even mythology at this point, right? We also have, I don't know how many hundreds of clients. We can look back on them and say, well, it didn't happen to those first 600 clients.

probably not gonna happen to you yeah you know like we've done this so many times yeah it's hard for them to make an argument like they're the special case who's gonna this is bulk up right like quote unquote right um and then because we have people on our team that do compete in physique

Their job professionally is to make their physique look exactly how they want. They need this muscle to grow, but not that much. So we can literally be like, tell me which one you don't want to get big and we will make sure it doesn't get big. Yeah. And which one you want to get big and we can do that. It's like not that hard of a thing to do. And so when they have that empowerment, they're like, oh, okay.

Because ultimately then it just comes down to trust saying like you promise you're gonna get me where I'm gonna get and we're not gonna pull the like, yes, you said that but then we're gonna do it anyways because we think it's better for you. We're not gonna do that. Like if you come in saying you want your glutes to get bigger, great. We're gonna make sure your glutes get bigger but you don't want your thighs bigger. Okay. Like we can manage that. It's not always perfectly realistic their expectations but we can get pretty close. So it's an education piece at the beginning.

And then it is saying, okay, just be good enough to give them what they want. And generally, we're pretty successful at that.