Barbell Shrugged - How to Grow a Jacked Back: Hypertrophy Principles for Strong Back Muscles w/ Anders Varner, and Doug Larson, and Travis Mash - Barbell Shrugged #483
Episode Date: July 6, 2020Top 5 Back Strength Building Exercises: Conventional Deadlift Barbell Row Pull Up/ Chin Up Seated Cable Row Lat Pull Down EMOM Aesthetics Workout For Back Strength and Hypertrophy EMOM 10 A...1. Banded Deadlift: 225 pounds + Purple Band x 8 A2. Russian Kettlebell Swings x 20 @53 EMOM 10 B1. Banded Barbell Rows: 95# + Red Band x 8 B2. Pull Up x 5 See Full Workout HERE In today’s episode the crew discusses: What mechanisms are in play to build muscle? How do you program for such a large body part? The differences in horizontal and vertical pulling. Top exercises for strength. Best rep ranges for hypertrophy Our top exercises for growing a strong thick back And more… Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Coach Travis Mash on Instagram ———————————————— Training Programs to Build Muscle: https://bit.ly/34zcGVw Nutrition Programs to Lose Fat and Build Muscle: https://bit.ly/3eiW8FF Nutrition and Training Bundles to Save 67%: https://bit.ly/2yaxQxa Please Support Our Sponsors Shadow Creative Studios - Save $200 + Free Consult to start you podcast using code” “Shrugged” at podcast.shadowstud.io Organifi - Save 20% using code: “Shrugged” at organifi.com/shrugged www.magbreakthrough.com/shrugged - use coupon code SHRUGGED10 to save up to 40% http://onelink.to/fittogether - Brand New Fitness Social Media App Fittogether Purchase our favorite Supplements here and use code “Shrugged” to save 20% on your order: https://bit.ly/2K2Qlq4 Garage Gym Equipment and Accessories: https://bit.ly/3b6GZFj Save 5% using the coupon code “Shrugged”
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Shrug family, hope everybody had a phenomenal July 4th.
This week on Barbell Shrug, we're talking about growing a gigantic back, which is phenomenal.
It's my favorite.
I'm actually on a huge growing your back kick right now.
Kind of moved a little bit away from squatting so much all the time and getting really big
on pulling things off the ground and a lot of rowing.
It's been phenomenal for my training just to mix it up and have a lot of fun.
If you've been following some stuff on YouTube, I've been streaming some live workouts and
adding some bands in there and heavy deads and then banded rows, pull-ups, all kinds of fun stuff.
I actually put a workout in the show notes that you can check out, which is the most recent upper
body pull day that I did. And it's got a link to the YouTube channel so you can go and check it
out. Part of our EMOM aesthetics program, which has been a lot of fun because I don't have a lot of time.
We're still pretty quarantined in North Carolina. I got some basic gym equipment here,
and it's been fantastic to still be able to be excited about training. And EMOM Aesthetics has really, really been cool because it's such a short time domain that I need to be able to get a really
good workout. So go check that out on YouTube or just get into the store and go check out Emom Aesthetics,
barbellshrug.com forward slash Emom, E-M-O-M.
And you can actually use the code SHRUG to save 10% if you want to go check that program
out right now, which I highly recommend.
It's very, very much the program for
people with a busy life that have a lot of things going on, especially if you're, uh, not someone
that can spend 60, 90, two hours, 60 or 90 minutes or two hours in the gym. So get in there, check
it out. Barbellstruck.com forward slash EMOM. Uh, we also have a massive EMOM aesthetics bundle
coming out next week, which I'll talk about on Wednesday. Doug and I will have an entire show next Monday.
But before we get rolling, I want to thank our friends over at Fit Together.
The Fit Together app has been super cool.
Right now, I am giving away a customized bundle to anybody that is joining Fit Together and tagging their workouts and tagging me for the next seven days.
We have a cool group in there.
If you get over to Fit Together, you can download it in your app store.
It's F-I-T-T-O-G-E-T-H-E-R in your app store on all your devices.
But it's a fitness-specific social media app.
So no politics, no COVID-19, no testing, no rioting and protesting and news media
and people's opinions. It's just hiking and deadlifts and back squats. And it makes me so
happy because I just get to filter through all the stuff that I don't want to see. That makes
me unhappy. And I get to see just the things that I like to see,
which makes me happy.
I love fitness.
So get over to the Fit Together app.
And what we're doing is we're going to put
a customized bundle together.
So that's going to be three eBooks,
a nutrition program, and a mobility program.
It's going to be retail value of over 600 bucks,
which is really cool.
We're going to be giving it to you for free,
which is fantastic.
In order to qualify, just get over to the Fit Together app. You just friend me, join the Barbell
Shrugged group. You can search for Anders Varner. You can search for Barbell Shrugged. Then you can
join the group. Post your workouts for the next seven days, and I'll be picking a winner at the
end. I also want to thank our friends over at Organifi. It's Organifi.com forward slash shrugged.
I've been on the road so much.
I actually just got back last week from a month-long trip being on the road.
And then, of course, because life is crazy, we spent July 4th weekend on the road as well.
So I've been home for five days over the last six weeks, which is just super intense.
And Organifi has been a phenomenal resource for me.
Just when you're on the road, I'm not getting enough greens.
I'm not getting the salads.
I'm not getting the quality nutrition that I need.
So Organifi is there to bring all the vitamins and minerals into my life with their delicious,
easy to store, easy to drink, delicious tasting green, red, and gold juices.
They're easy to pack.
Not only that, just if you're in your house, put them in the fridge.
They take up very little room.
And trust me, you're just not getting all the micronutrients you need in your life.
So it's super beneficial to have them.
And you can get to Organifi.com forward slash shrugged right now.
Organifi.com forward slash shrugged.
And that's where you're going to save 20% on the green, red, and gold
juices to make sure you're getting all your vitamins and minerals.
Friends, we're going to talk about getting a jack back.
We got one commercial to do
in the middle and I'll talk to you
guys soon.
I'm ready. I have
been.
Here we go.
I got
zoom and now
my individual track. to rock me to like do you want me to like
i've been rolling for a minute yeah you're good i've been all right guys colton will just sync
it up we'll go to barbell shrugs i'm andrews varner doug larson coach travis smash today
we're talking about growing a giant back which is radical because i think us dudes we spend a lot of
time talking about growing legs
because legs are fun to us i feel like the older i get when i was younger remember when people
didn't do legs those weird people in the gym they would look at you like you were i never understood
that yeah yeah never happened to me yeah well i remember specifically being the only person
like squatting 225 and they'd be like why do you do legs you don't need those
well then crossfit showed up and i was like this is why i have legs because for the first 10 years
i'm gonna crush people and then the real athletes will show up but but um we don't talk about back
training nearly as much as growing big legs so today is the day. Doug Larson, let's get into some back training.
When you're thinking about high-level goals, back training,
how do you break this up?
Well, depends on what you're talking about.
I say the same thing every time you open the question to me.
I go, well, that depends.
I always kick it to you for the high-level thing
because you're just going to break it down. Right. That's the goal. I'm tossing you the softball, which is always the hardest thing.
It's like, hey, Doug, what do you think about fitness? Where do I go with that? Yeah. I mean,
the first thing that I usually go to, like my automatic reaction in my mind is movement patterns.
That's just, I'm a movement guy. Like I love biomechanics. I love, I love technique, all that. So like I almost always go
to movement patterns first when I think about anything related, related to training. Uh, and
then, then I can move on to how much volume to do and how often and whatever else. Uh, this is all
assuming I know the goal of somebody. We've already done all that, all that prep work, um,
in CrossFit, you you know it's a very
overhead dominant sport so i think you need a lot more vertical pulling in crossfit than than other
sports uh for a long time it seemed most crossfitters were doing way too much vertical pulling
or rather maybe not too much vertical pulling but it wasn't really balanced out with enough
horizontal pulling like they were they were very skewed on the vertical side on pull-ups
skipping pull-ups and everything else and didn't really do a whole lot of horizontal rowing and i
think that was to to people's detriment for a long time as far as shoulder health that seems to be
that seems to have been cleaned up by most high quality coaches these days uh so i think i think
horizontal pulling is is super important and most people need to incorporate
more of that into their training but uh but it depends you know if you're if you're a gymnast
you're not necessarily looking to have the biggest flashiest back but they definitely have really
strong backs and their relative strength is insane but if you're a bodybuilder well you don't
necessarily even need to be able to do um you know strict dead hang pull-ups all the way down
it's i think you should be able to do that but like you don't need to be able to do um you know strict dead hang pull-ups all the way down it's i think you should
be able to do that but like you don't need to be able to do that you can get a lot of volume done
and get a huge back and all you have to do is just look good on stage so it's it's a total goal
dependent question yeah right mash pulling 700 pounds off the ground you have to have a giant
back for that what what's like the how long
or not even how long but like when you are looking at your athletes or even in your own training
how much are they doing of just pure hypertrophy back training just because they need a lot of
back there to lift 500 pounds off the ground i I mean, probably four times a week.
I'm thinking about it.
You know, they do like two days of just like the rowing and or pull-ups.
You know, they do horizontal and vertical pulling.
And then they do, if you count like good mornings, RDLs,
where you're talking about the spinal extensors,
which a lot of people, when they say back,
they start thinking about the lats and maybe the rhomboids,
but they leave out like the spinal extensors which is that is really what we're talking about today in my opinion is yeah or that's more the core than the abs the abs really aren't that important
you know like for anything really it's the spinal extensions is what keeps you in extension
because like how could something that's in front of you keep you in extension? You can't, you know, they support, you know, they support everything, but it's the spinal
extensions that's, you know, for strength athletes, it's probably, in my opinion, the
most important group of muscles, maybe at least as important as like, you know, the
hips and the, you know, the knee extensors and the hip extensors.
So it's normally the divine factor yeah i actually
was going to you beat me to it a little bit talking about kind of like deadlifts and rdls
do you categorize that in your training or with your athletes as like leg or back movements when
you're looking at total volume and um just breaking out movement patterns for a day.
It's definitely like going to count as like, you know, there's movements that I count
that go directly towards snatch cleanser and like RDLs, good mornings, they're part of that group.
You know, like pull-ups are not, rows are not, you know, not that i don't count them towards total volume but there's
this thing called the k value i think my i might have mentioned it uh so maybe i don't know if i
did or didn't yeah we talked about it a little bit on uh on monday but these shows are going to
be so far apart you just go from the a little bit high level on that a value is like this formula
that you do to um figure out how much volume,
how much intensity per repetition you did in that cycle went towards the snatch and clean and jerk.
And once you find out that value, then you like, you can actually then,
you know, if you total 300 kilograms,
you can decide how much per repetition do you have to do to get to 310 or
315 or 20.
So it is part of that, you know, the RDLs, the good mornings,
because they're so directly related to the snatch and clean and jerk.
And powerlifting.
I think that's like as a powerlifter, like that is,
or if you want to squat more, normally what will happen,
you'll get to the point where your hips and your legs are plenty strong to squat whatever.
It will be the back that will be the deciding factor.
So it's important.
I've never missed a squat because of my legs.
Me neither.
Hardly anybody.
Because my back gives out.
Right.
Yeah, some people just think you need to make your back stronger.
And then I know you've talked with Boyle many times in debates on Twitter and wherever else.
But that's like one of his main arguments is that your back is your limiter on bilateral work.
And so to fully and completely actually tax your legs as far as they can be taxed,
if you take the back out of it, that's one of the many reasons that he promotes all the single leg work so heavily
with rear fidelity split squats and whatever whatever else uh what are your thoughts on those two
kind of ends of the spectrum where it's either make your back really really strong
and or just take your back out of the equation and and fully tax your legs because the back is
more is is built for capacity so that means that like like it is built to go high reps so then if you're
talking about you know hypertrophy specifically like five or ten then it will be your legs because
your legs will give before your back if you're talking about one rms then it's your back not
your legs because that your legs your hips are designed to to take that one big repetition
and uh but your back is not.
Does that make sense?
So that's designed for high reps.
So you can get plenty of hypertrophy,
the fives and tens.
It's just the one arm that will be the deciding factor
in the back.
But I mean, honestly,
I think that all athletes should do unilateral as well.
And to Boyle's point is like,
that's where his, I think that's where his philosophy falls short, is that if you have a
contact athlete, like football, rugby, MMA, like the back has to be incredibly strong,
and it has to be able to absorb force. So when you run into somebody, like if you can absorb that
impact and transfer it the other direction
quicker than the other guy,
well, then you just knock somebody out
or vice versa.
So that's where he falls short.
His athletes, if they run into my athletes,
are going to get mauled.
Yeah.
It's impossible to talk about back training
without kind of talking about low back pain as well as a really high level category. And you start hearing as soon as as soon as anybody talks about lifting weights and the back and instantly. I mean, it's like 80 something percent of Americans are going to have low back pain in their lives. I used to own a company specifically
dedicated to getting people stronger because of low back pain. When you start to think about,
Doug, I'll just kick this to you. When you start thinking about low back pain, what are kind of the
biggest myths in understanding that as far as like a movement pattern and and training methodologies for recognizing the difference
between like your upper back and its capabilities and then the low back and why people have so much
back pain i mean usually when people talk about back pain with respect to lifting like
they automatically go to you know super round back deadlifts performed really poorly or
or butt winking that that type of thing you know your low back back deadlifts performed really poorly or butt winking that, that type
of thing. You know, your, your low back is supposed to have a, a normal lordotic lumbar curve,
uh, where it kind of like goes forward and then curves, curves back. And if you,
if you flex, you go the exact opposite way, you're bending the back, your back the wrong way,
so to speak that mechanically there, there's a reason that you have an injury like if you if you
take the your vertebra and that you squeeze the front part of it together and you tear the back
part away from each other something's gonna tear you're gonna tear you're gonna tear ligaments
joint capsules you're gonna you're gonna squeeze the you know the annulus the very center piece of
your spinal disc you're gonna you're gonna push, um, the disc, you know, and put pressure on the nerve. And then that's where people have like,
um, you know, they say they, I threw my back out type pain where like they get like
big, sharp radiating pain through their back and down their legs. Uh, and that, that comes from,
uh, in many ways comes from just having poor technique or, or trying to move the bar further
than your range of motion, further than your range of motion
further than the range of motion of your hips ankles etc can can sustain now you're just moving
the bar lower but you're bending at the wrong place if you're flexing your low back those
little tiny joints are not set up to experience the loads of many hundreds of pounds on your back
like like your hips are are you supposed to have a strong low back because
there are like a ton of muscles there it's kind of like where those extensors are like it's their
insertion point it's not really a spot that's supposed to be you know supposed to look at
somebody and go wow that guy's like a jacked low back well it doesn't exist to clarify the question
like you are supposed to have a strong low back yes or even more specifically a stable low back like stable that's the one the most important piece is that you're you're not
moving in the presence of potential change like you could round your back but you choose not to
you can hold the isometric and not you know move into further flex and flexion if you have a flex
a flexor moment where your back is moving toward more flexion even if you're hyperextended you're
moving toward neutral there's there's there's some um some research out there to suggest that
that's even a problem uh which which is kind of counterintuitive like how would that really be a
problem but it seems to be uh so what was the original question you asked me two seconds ago
you you said the word basically is that it's just stable like yeah it's you know i i get
a lot of times it comes back and it's people like
oh i just need to strengthen my lower back and you go well i don't really want you to think about
hypertrophy in your low back what i want you to think about is stability and your your ability
to push your hips back um and that those words get confused and when you like stability is the word for what you're looking for in your low back.
Not necessarily like how do I create flexion in my lumbar spine and then flex it so that I grow a big muscle down there.
Right.
Strength and hypertrophy are not necessarily even synonymous either.
Like a lot of people that have a lot of hypertrophy in their lower back actually might have semi-weak lower backs the reason they have hypertrophy there is they've been trying to
maintain a neutral spine we'll say and then as the load pulls them into flexion they're doing a very
high load eccentric which is which is a stimulus that is that is going to grow muscle mass um at a
much faster rate than just doing
true isometrics if you're you can't really get big on isometrics like so if you have a perfect
neutral yeah you can get very strong with isometrics you can you can you can be very
stable that's kind of the definition of being stable so you're not moving you're doing an
isometric contraction uh but if you if you have poor technique and as you do your deadlifts or whatever else like you're rounding throughout the movement at any point then you might you might
have enough stimulus on those muscles to grow them but it's actually if you see someone with a lot of
hypertrophy in their low low low back that might actually mean they have bad technique and they
and they can't maintain a neutral spine even if they're even if they're brutally strong like if
someone has really thick spinal erectors lumbar spinal erectors and they deadlift 600 pounds they're obviously not
weak but their low back is weak relative to their leg strength because they can't maintain that
neutral spine um you know they probably have to to maintain the neutral spine say they have to do
500 pounds they probably maybe they could do with 500 pounds but they can't do with 600 pounds so
now relative to their leg strength they're in their hip extension strength their back strength
isometrically isn't isn't equal it's not up to par there's a when you say that that back pain
comes mainly from bad movement patterns other than like it's not really from that one thing
where you got hurt so like if you go to deadlift you you say you threw your back out you threw your
back out because your whole life is spent moving incorrectly so like when you bend over you go to deadlift and you say you threw your back out, you threw your back out because your whole life is spent moving incorrectly.
So like when you bend over, you go into flexion,
you bend over to pick up a shirt and you flex or you, you know,
you bend over to pick up a basket of clothes, you know, and you're flexing.
It's more, you know, if you talk to Stuart McGill, which we're,
we're about to warm it up, Chris. Yeah. But, like, he'll tell you that it's really about, you know,
how do the hips move and do they allow the low back to stay stable?
That is the key.
And that's what people need to, you know, are my hips moving?
Are they internally and externally rotating or abducting and abducting?
Are they flexing and extending?
And is the low
back remaining neutral the whole time? That's the key. I'm so glad you said that. Cause I think that
we started the show talking about all three of us like to talk about getting jacked because
it's, we have the movement patterns down and we don't have to worry about our hips pushing back.
But if you're a coach or you're an athlete and you're slightly concerned about having low back pain and back training or every time you lean over and do a barbell row, your back's on fire, you have to go and look at what's a hinge initiates with your chest going forward versus your hips going back, we're in a bad place.
And that is the assessment number one of either, you know, this is why having a mirror in your gym is awesome if you're training by yourself or you just want to watch yourself move.
And the importance of really having a coach if things start to get weird.
But if your hips are not the initiator of the movement, you're just headed down the wrong road.
And you got to get that issue.
Before we start worrying about adding tons of muscle, we don't want to add tons of muscle to a bunch of dysfunctional movement.
And getting your hips back is going to be primary goal number one. And then we can start layering on
lots of movements, lots of volume and lots of hypertrophy work. So we can start building muscle
and really getting into the conversation of how do you get strong as hell. And I think this is a
real, like if there is a community that does it more than anybody,
one of my favorite parts about the West side documentary is Louie.
When he was talking about the first time he jacked his backup and he was
like,
I thought I was unbreakable.
I didn't think there was a chance that I could blow my back out.
And next thing you know,
boom,
doing a good morning. Cause he probably let the thing you know, boom, doing a good morning. Cause
he probably let the air out a little too early on a good morning. And it was probably like 700
pounds or something that he was trying to good morning at the time. But, um, inside powerlifting
gyms, like how important is it, um, to be just constantly putting in all the accessory work and,
and how do you, how is that structured when you're
you know one of the strongest people in the world and and having a back and dead lifting seven
eight hundred pounds is is a reality you have to have a giant set of back muscles to to be able to
stabilize your spine from the neck down it needs to be too like you know there needs to be like
yeah i've never i have
yet to see a great strength athlete whether it's a weightlifter or a powerlifter who did not have
an amazing back you know like you look at pierce demas you look at his old uh pictures i mean his
back or lu zha zheng i don't even know if i ever say that right does anybody but like yeah yeah good but if you just say if you just say lou
no one really knows but if you just say like you lose you everybody knows oh you're talking about
the guy from china yeah oh that really strong guy does squat jerks yeah that bomb at iwf worlds
bam should have done split now he just won this last year though
yeah he's a savage he won the last two years so how great does he move lou zhao zhang i think
i think every chinese person i've ever watched lift moves like a you know like a ballet dancer
beautiful unreal yeah their movement patterns like it's just like like a ballerina
it's just beautiful like if you guys ever watched i know this is telling a secret about me but like
i actually follow worldwide ballet because like doug i love movement like movement is like what
intrigues me that's why i choose weightlifting over powerlifting is the movement is like
beautiful you know so like look at all the
chinese and it's just it's you know it's it's a genetic trait you know i feel like i've yet to
meet someone from china who even their worst mobile the least mobile person in china still
moves better than the most mobile person in america like they just move beautifully like
you know that their hips uh the way they sit in
a squat they're most always super vertical uh they're they just you know their their ankles
are completely mobile and like that's why a squad jerk would work because they can move to the the
right planes yeah still not 100% on that squad jerk but anyway that's why i find myself on
instagram watching like hook grip the slow-mo videos.
And I'm like, they make it look like if you just showed that to somebody
walking down the street, they'd be like, cool.
And then they'd keep walking and you'd go, no, no, that's 450 pounds.
Do you know how much that is?
It's incredible.
The bar doesn't move.
They just move themselves around it i mean i feel like
anybody's like if you can do a squat dirt you should because if you're really stable in that
position because like you have to move the bar the least amount of distance and so it's in theory
it's the best the way to go it's just that most people they they're so unstable in that close grip overhead squat position.
Yeah.
When you were training though, I guess really training to be the strongest man in the world.
Oh, yeah.
What was like the – how much volume and how did you kind of –
I think one of the interesting things is how do you –
when you're putting that much volume in, clearly you're eating
and everything in your life is tailored to that specific goal.
So it's not – you're getting the recovery or whatever you need.
But how much is like RDL, stability exercises, extensor exercises, deadlift, RDL, bent rows versus pure bodybuilding, hypertrophy, upper trap, lower trap, stuff like that?
How did you guys break it out?
Because you can't just sit there and RDL and good morning every single day at heavy weights.
I would do good mornings at least once a week, sometimes twice.
I would do RDLs once a week.
I would do reverse hypers twice a week.
I would do pull-ups twice a week.
I would do rows twice a week.
I would do rows twice a week. I would do, you know, and then I would do some accessory.
Like I even started towards the end when you're trying to just keep going a little bit longer.
I would do a lot of that, you know, low to mid trapezius work, a lot of rhomboid work, trying to stabilize the scapula. But so it was a lot in like the good mornings was a big reason.
Like when I was younger and I was squatting like 600 and then I did good
mornings for, you know, solid.
It was like six months maybe.
And it went from like,
I was very weak when I started doing good mornings and then I got to where I
could do four or five for sets of five.
And then my squat went from that 600 to 700 and it was a hundred percent.
The only thing I changed was adding good mornings.
And then I stayed with it probably then took it way too far.
That was the problem.
You know, there's a tipping point.
Stuart will tell us when he's on the show that there's a biological tipping point for every movement.
That eventually you go too far, which I did.
Of course, that's who I am.
I'm going to take it too far.
So, yeah, it was a lot.
It was as much.
I probably did more direct back work than i i'm
sure i did than i did direct quad work yeah did you find that good mornings uh were better for
you than rdls and if if so it kind of sounds like they were for creating uh just like a higher squat
like why do you think those two yes is it just because that's where the bar sits
more and and low back to kind of finalize the movement is well i think um more good morning
morning starts so high is that it's going to get the erectors you know like if you look at where
the bar is whereas like in the rdl it's it's always going to be over you know if you do it
correctly it's going to be always over your center of mass and it's much easier to maintain that yeah so your your erectors are not going to your spinal
extensors are not going to be working near as much but but i will say this the rdls were better i felt
that i'm positive they were better for my deadlifting obviously i mean it mimics the
movement more so like good mornings were for both but mainly for squatting rdls were
both but mainly for deadlifting yeah rdls were the opposite like what they did is i did one cycle
here's another idiot thing i look back but like so i did this cycle um of rdls where i did it
from a deficit but with tons of bands and so and that's i would do one day of that and one day of like dynamic deadlifting
and my squat went from 7 30 it was at low 7 30 that was the first time in that short period of
time that i went 800 it was a it was the biggest like is the biggest like pr i'd ever set and then
i stopped doing it like go think like why did i not keep doing it anyway? But, you know, idiot. I think that I'm telling you right now that I'm going to do more good mornings.
Just for you.
Yeah.
You changed my squat.
Yeah.
Well, I don't know what the goal would be.
But I changed the first squatting around to having full grip on the bar.
I saw you the other day.
Yeah, I really liked it a lot.
Mainly just because it is a, like we've kind of talked about,
but closing the chain at the top makes me feel more connected.
It just feels like a much stronger position and the mobility piece,
which I'm always trying to get just like the low hanging fruit that I'm not
thinking about over and over and over again.
Better mobility in there.
But we talked about this last time.
We were all out at MASH Elite.
And good mornings have just always felt so weird to me.
And one, it's because I don't practice them.
They feel weird.
And then I'm like, all right, cool.
The other part is they just wreck my whole posterior chain so much
that it leaves me just trashed for a couple days
there's a reason though you know you do them like anything else you'll adapt but if that's the case
you for sure need to do them like if you need now let me be clear to everybody listening of all the
movements in my opinion in my experience i would say be be very careful in the way you load a good morning and, like, look at it as a very long term.
Like, you know, like in a start, like I would start like 20 to 25 percent of my back squat, honestly.
So that is also why I haven't done them because I've never had such a long term approach to it is RDLs.
You can just load up and go.
Yeah.
Cause the bars are in such a good spot.
Um,
it's kind of like the mile time,
right?
Like anytime I go run,
I go run sprints.
I like go run sprints.
I feel super winded and I'm like,
okay,
I'll be back in a month.
Maybe,
maybe a year.
I don't know.
Right.
Like I'm not sticking with it or committing to the long-term thing.
So this it's now that I've been at the track three days a week, I'm like,
Oh, this is what real track training feels like.
So I need to do it with a good morning.
I'm committing.
I'm going to start doing it with an empty bar.
How would, how do you think people should go about, say you squat 300,
400 pounds, somewhere in that range, um, empty bar tens, 12, 15. I mean, like if you squat 400, you can in that range um empty bar 10s 12s 15s i mean like if you squat
400 you can start at like you know 100 pounds 95 pounds you know there'd be something super light
yeah super light and then uh you know do i would start with fives and like it's a manageable low
like four by five is good and then the the next week add like 2%, 2%.
It's that slow.
I would do what you want,
but I would do that and look at it as like,
I'm going to get my good morning up a year from now,
not in 12 weeks or six months, slowly over time.
And then, then next thing you know,
you'll be able to good morning.
Like what most people squat is like where it took it.
Like I ended up, I could do a set of five with over 600 pounds.
Very strict to where my back was, you know, parallel to the ground.
Yeah.
That's where I probably took it too far.
I remember a story with John Wellborn, who now just saying that name,
I want to reach out to him and have him on.
Where I want to say it
was like kelly starrett and him got under squat rack at like 405 and kelly starrett i want to say
it was kelly starrett because kelly's really strong and kelly was squatting and felt like he
was really cool and then wellborn came over and was like, I'm just going to match you rep for rep on good mornings at four Oh five. And it was well, well, well, it's just such a tank and such a big
human being. Um, and I remember hearing that and being like a 405 pound good morning. Like
how in the world do you even attempt something like that? Um, Doug, how often are you, uh, when
I guess, you know, even thinking about kind of movement patterns, like going. Doug, how often are you, I guess, you know,
even thinking about kind of movement patterns,
like going RDL, like the big ones, RDL, good morning, row, bent row,
and then adding the accessory stuff on top of that,
like single arm stuff.
But if you were to lay out like total volume um you know going from the bigger lifts
with the barbell to to the accessory side um how do you how do you structure that
again many ways to do that um i tend i tend i tend to right now i'm on the kind of like an
upper lower split i'm doing emom aesthetics right now so it's it's kind of like an upper lower split. I'm doing EMOM aesthetics right now. So it's, it's kind of like squat heavy on day one,
like squat and knee extension heavy on day one.
And then,
uh,
day three has some,
some Olympic stuff and some kind of light single leg work like step ups or,
uh,
or like tempo pistols.
And then,
uh,
day four of each week,
uh,
is more of a hinge dominant hamstring dominant day.
So there'll be some type of deadlift and then some type of rdl
or and or hamstring curl like ghd or glute ham raises rather so right now for me hinging
specifically is only kind of twice a week i count the cleans or snatches as as a light hinge and
then heavy deads and rdls as a uh as my heavier or slash volume hinging days but then i mean regarding
low back strength and stability is still on the squatting days if i'm doing front squats back
squats any types of you know heavy reverse lunges or whatever it is um so my back's getting a good
isometric stimulus at least at least three days a week yeah um as far as your back goes like you
can you can maintain high high volume if all you're doing
is isometrics you can do isometrics all the time because they don't really beat you up too much
so right now i'm about three days a week on on heavy isometrics uh for my low back uh upper body
volume like for for pulls and whatnot i'm twice a week on that too again i'm doing like kind of an
upper lower split whenever i think about volume, I tend to think,
you want to get 10 to 20 sets-ish per week of good quality sets.
Yeah.
Friends, we're going to take a quick break to thank our friends
over at Shadow Creative Studios.
My friend Yannick over there is going to take your podcast
from an idea to live in two weeks.
Trust me, that seems like a short period of time
because it is because anytime you launch something,
it takes a long time.
The setup with Shadow Creatives includes branding,
logos, and cover art.
It's an easy process.
All you have to do is record and upload your audio.
Everything else is done for you.
Perfectly produced episode shows up
on all the podcast channels.
It's a simple payment structure.
It can even help with sponsors so your show can be profitable on day one.
That takes a long time to do, by the way, unless you have somebody that's on your team
that really knows what's going on to actually make your podcast profitable.
The majority of the time, podcasts are just a losing money marketing venture for people.
But if you do not want to lose money,
which most people don't,
and you do not want to just make it a marketing piece,
but actually make it an asset that brings in revenue,
I highly recommend calling Yannick
over at Shadow Creative Studios.
And they're offering a big discount
of up to a $3,000 value.
So you can use the code SHugged for a free consultation and to get $200 off going to podcast.shadowstude.io.
That's P-O-D-C-A-S-T dot shadowstude, S-H-A-D-O-W-S-T-U-D dot I-O.
The link is in the description, podcast.shadowstude.io.
And just as like a reference for understanding kind of like where podcast advertising is at,
revenues are expected to grow over $659 million in 2020. There's like well over a million podcasts
now. I think it's insane.
Most of them just don't last because there's no business model.
There's no production.
It's not a quality product.
That's why you want to get over to Shadow Creatives.
Yannick has tons of experience.
He used to produce the Real Talk podcast.
Over 50% of all homes are podcast fans now.
There's over 60 million homes.
So finding your niche, getting in the fitness space,
which is I'm sure why you're listening to us,
and making your voice heard is super important. So get over to Shadow Creative Studios at podcast.shadowstude.io.
Ask for our friend Yannick.
Use the code SHRUG to save $200,
and that is where you're going to get all your podcast information.
Let's get back to the show.
Dude, it was Chris Beardsley was talking about,
it was like just what you just said.
He was talking about like when they looked at hyper-DV,
it was that 10 to 20 and anything above that was like,
it was just nothing extra happened.
Anything below that, not as much happened.
So that's like the sweet spot
he says it's ironic um that you said 10 to 20 is like perfect yeah yeah yeah so you want to kind of
kind of fluctuate your training within that range for the most part you want to just do okay 20 is
the top end of the range i'm gonna do 20 sets of everything all the time no no fluctuations you
know you might have one week where it's 12 sets, and then another week where it's 16, then 14, then 18,
and then 14, then 20.
That might be kind of how you stair-step your six weeks.
Okay, hold on, bud.
Okay, I'm going to turn it to you for this little three-year-old man right here.
Dude, when he shows up,
that little man's got on him.
It's going to be thick one day.
Everybody that's listening on podcast it's gonna be thick one day everybody let's listen on podcast
right now i can't can't see when rider shows up rider had a back on day one that dude had a thick
back he was picking up bowling balls like on the day that he was able to walk he had like an eight
pound stone carry on day one yeah like eddie hall. He's got a huge ass and a huge power belly.
Shoulders are huge.
Perfect.
It's so funny when he –
watching it when he was just like two years old.
Brute.
Dude, Doug and I used to train at this super bodybuilding gym in San Diego
called World Gym.
I think they renamed it,
uh,
like the gym,
the gym.
That's right.
The gym.
What a great place.
I'm going to the gym and then own that name.
Um,
and when you would walk in there,
like,
I think that one of the things people miss out on a lot in functional fitness
training facilities is that the fact that machines are really expensive so they're not in
there and it like the the idea like we get really hung up on the idea that like functional training
is the only way to do it like but it limits a lot specifically it it limits a lot in leg growth but
you can you can kind of like get through a lot of it with squats deadlifts some lateral movement stuff like that and legs but
specifically in back training and the number of angles that you can pull from absolutely it's
really really challenging to do uh a full back training uh the way that it can be done very well
much like bodybuilders.
Like you see those guys stand on stage and their, their,
their wings are ridiculous.
And you walk into a pure bodybuilding gym and there's not one back machine
that everybody's using. They go over and they do bent rows.
They do their good mornings, they do their RDLs.
And then they go and spend
the next 90 minutes walking down the line of the 15 different back machines. And they're pulling
from a 45, they're pulling from 90, they're pulling from 15. They have every single machine that you need to pull from every single different angle.
And there's such a benefit to having those machines around to be able to actually train
the muscles. And I think many people that have not been a part of a bodybuilding specific gym
or spent a lot of time on those machines really miss the ability to locate some of the musculature
like finding your trap finding your lower traps um the ability to just actually hit all of those
areas is a really challenging thing um and you can try to mimic it i've actually been doing
i'm gonna do a post on today look at that i'm gonna go to the gym downstairs i'm gonna set all
the bands up but one of the things that I've really been digging
with the band training is that I can put the band anywhere I want on the bar and pull. So
like a cool drop set, I'm making this up right now. This is how creativity happens.
You can start with a straight up pull down on the band and then just knock it down five inches.
And you're in a
completely different uh pulling angle you're gonna have fresh muscles and just work your way all the
way down until you're doing basically a single arm row off the bottom of the pole um there isn't
like a big question coming out of but how do you guys think about, you know, where people need to be and their ability, like,
everybody wants a big back. So how can they get all of those accessories in when most people that
are listening to the show are limited to, you know, only having dumbbells and barbells
at their disposal? I think you said it, man. To me, it'd be like the bands, you know,
if you're not going to be in a globo gym or like be in a functional facility that maybe, you know, you could really
just buy a cable machine and like, you could get a ton of what you just said, but like, but if you
don't have it, then bands, you know, and then there's lots of different angles. There's a,
you know, the, if you use dumbbells or kettlebells, you could use chest supported, you can get a bench
and be chest supported at different angles.
However, to get the pull down, that's, you know, that would be tough other than, you know, you could do pull-ups at different angles.
So you could put like your feet supported at different angles.
You could do that.
So you could be creative.
But honestly, like there's nothing more fun if you're a true meathead.
This is where you got to be a true meathead to go into a global gym and hit all those different machines like you just said and walk down that i used to love that
i'm it's my be a liar to say yeah man like i mean anyone who i feel like most people who got into
this who love it like we do like have all been through the phase of like bodybuilding and then
i feel like then you go away from it and then you come back to it yeah
i really love jack yeah here's pro tip go get straps too because your hands are going to get
tired and when your hands get tired that's usually when you stop your set but guess what's not tired
you're back so if you go get some straps and you load them up on a machine you have no reason not
to go hit just giant sets of real. It's just so much fun.
One of my favorite things to do is to just sit on the seated cable row and just go.
There is no amount of pulling that you can do that's going to,
like on the seated cable row,
that isn't going to be the most fun day of your entire training.
You're just cranking on that thing.
You can sit there for an hour, change up all the different grip widths so it's like one of the most fun i'm going to go to the globo gym as soon as it opens just to go do some back training i
miss like that stuff is so awesome but when i when i moved back down here and i joined the the globo
gym that was like the the most fun thing getting back into the globo gym scene was
that i had a full cable setup and i could just do all the seated rows you could just crank on
weights on that thing agreed man the best part about the limit training center is that when that
when weightlifting was at the otc is like in one
room it was weightlifting so you had everything all the nice bars of course all the nice plates
blocks you know the dirt blocks everything you could want for weightlifting right on the other
side of the room walk through the door and then there was the strength conditioning facility
and then you had all the machines you could want so like all the true me heads would go over there
after they were done doing weightlifting and get their pump on.
It was like a beautiful thing.
Yeah, and no matter – the machines are awesome for a couple reasons.
One, they put your body in a specific position so that you have to hit a specific muscle group that – or the specific muscle group that the machine's designed for. The other thing is like, you can't,
unless you have something that is like a band and the proper tension and you've got the experience
or you're willing to play with those tensions, it's really challenging to find that exact position
to work on whatever you're doing. But the machine is so rad because you are actually in a
in a place where pulling finding the the proper tension but if you have a dumbbell or a barbell
that weight because of gravity is going to go straight to the ground you can't hold a weight
no matter if you're doing like croc rows seal rows that
there's no hand position and body position you just can't get there and have enough like if you
grab an 80 pound dumbbell and you're gonna just row that thing forever you're just not gonna be
able to get it into a like a 45 degree angle and be able to hold that thing there
and pull and actually be able to do the reps.
So you have to be able to train those muscles in that specific way
and just without having a machine that is designed for that specific thing,
it's just really, really hard to do.
And now I'm fired up and I want to go to the Globo gym.
I'm ready for them
to unlock down so i can go get my back pump on i guess you could do like a handstand hold
you know like at different angles i mean but like hell with that like i just like a
clean and jerk yeah yeah but i would rather just like go to the global gym and go to that 15 pieces of packing.
They're the best, right?
Yeah, I totally agree.
If you could get to the machines, these are the best ones.
If you can get to the hammer strength where they have the – you can go bilateral,
but most of them are designed so that you can go single arm movement.
Those are the best.
Alternating, going back and forth left right
load them up with some straps there's you can you can do a jillion reps with that stuff not that i
want you to stay in between 10s and 20s you know do the right thing but it's just so much fun to go
do legit back training and it's when you're in a functional fitness facility and there's only
barbells maybe dumbbells and kettlebells it's just really hard to actually hit all of that stuff.
So, you know, pay the $30, get a year-long membership just for one day a week to go in and do cable rows.
Find all of the different grips.
Like, you know, the wide – you know the pull-down one?
I'm getting so excited.
I almost came out of my chair.
I set my coffee down and everything.
The lat pull-down machine is the other one that gets me so stoked.
It is – lat pull-downs are so much fun.
I didn't do a lat pull-down for, like, seven years.
That's a crime.
I should not be put in a position where I can't do a lat pulldown for that long.
It just feels so good.
And you can do different grips, neutral grip.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pro native, super native.
Like every time you change anything, it totally feels different.
And like you get that massive pump.
And like every bodybuilder, every, I think most people's favorite bodybuilders always have,
they feel like the differentiator is the back.
Like Dorian Yates, I love Dorian Yates because his back was just incredible.
And then if you look at strength athletes,
like if you look at Ed Cohn in his heyday,
his back was absolutely,
it looked like one time in Flex Magazine,
I'm pretty sure it's Flex, but we'll go with Flex.
They had a comparison of Ed Cohn versus Dorian Yates.
And honestly, their backs look super similar minus ed was pasty white you know but you didn't pan
but like their backs are both amazing and that is just you know when someone's got a huge back you
know you look at them you're like that dude is strong and probably i should mess with him you
know but like a lot of people get the big chest
and they might get some abs and then they turn you know you see their back it looks awful kind
of like legs it's like legs and back that's the difference here in in men and boys you know i go
in i do some pump my chest up in my arms you're a boy but you have a massive back and and legs
that's real that's real man stuff yeah i have a real real
theory that for the rest of my life all i need to train is legs and back everything else is fine
i'm not like i'm not gonna be able to bench a lot or enough but if you could just keep growing your
back forever and you keep getting strong in your legs you got you got 99 of the bases covered and
yeah as long as you got some wings when you
raise your arms up who cares you're ready to rock you go to the pool flying away um
doug
we were talking about training volume earlier i think for horizontal rowing i really think you
can take the the number of sets higher than 20.
Like there's some movement patterns that just don't beat you up very much.
And horizontal rowing, I feel like is one of those things that it's hard to get really sore from it.
And it doesn't really seem to be very stressful on any of your joints.
You know, like pressing tends to be more stressful on joints than pulling uh
with right with kind of the traction you get from uh from the pulling exercise as opposed to like
the approximation at the joint from the pressing exercises that's squeezing the joint together
seems to be more stressful on joints so having having horizontal rowing put in your program
you know maybe your back day is kind of two days a week but you horizontal row three or four days
a week it's just like you do three sets at the end of multiple training sessions that
you can add volume to your back training,
um,
add stability to your,
to your scapula,
et cetera,
but it won't really beat you up too much.
So if you're looking to add volume,
I think that's,
that's one area that most people can add volume without really having any big
downsides.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um,
on the, on the angles of that i think it's also um
yeah if you start doing like much higher rows into like much more scap retraction there instead
of like in a much stronger position with the elbows in tight um i think there's just some
like angles um that you got to play with in there and
find, find the sweet spot for you. Like if you're doing more like face pull stuff,
just realizing that's probably a little bit more on joint health and,
and hitting much tinier muscle groups than if you're just sitting there and
doing some really heavy seated cable rows.
Doug, I wanted to talk to you about the T-bar rows. Do you have any setup in that? Because those are, Doug, I wanted to talk to you about the T-bar rows.
Do you have any setup in that?
Because those are,
dude,
when we used to go to worlds,
that was like the first thing that we always went to was to go hit the T-bar.
Of course.
I mean,
I have a membership at lifetime fitness here.
That's never going to open again.
And they,
they,
uh,
15,000 members. That's, that that's gonna be tough to get that gym
back open again but uh yeah but they have a t-bar row and i it's a total go-to uh we'll call it a
machine it's a type of machine it's a go-to machine man i think most crossfit gyms functional
fitness facilities strength conditioning performance facilities like everyone everyone could use a t-bar
row like that's that it just is a beneficial
movement for all athletes it's very simple to set up i like the fact that your your upper back is
completely fixed or like your your torso is fixed you have to row with just your arms as opposed to
you know doing doing bro rows with a bent row with a barbell like you can always kind of row rows you
can kind of uh use momentum to to get
eek out more reps and all that which not that's not only a bad thing but but i do like the fact
that it it stabilizes you where you have to do all the pulling with your arms you don't get that in
in other settings yeah i like you know that a lot have you ever guys ever heard of um the kettlebell
batwing rows?
Where, like, the goal is to, you know, your chest is supported on, like, an incline bench.
You know, so, like, most gyms have what we're about to talk about.
So, but, like, this is, oh, Dan John, I'm totally stealing this from him, which we'll hear from him next week, too.
But, like, your goal is to pull your thumb into your, your armpits is a key.
And so you're really going to hit,
you know,
obviously your lats,
but you know,
your rhomboids because it's only that last little bit of,
of contraction that where you're actually going to really, you know,
I guess recruit the rhomboids and they're so important.
Like I,
you know,
I have a theory,
like if you get the rhomboids strong and you get your serratus anterior
strong and you get your lats strong, when you anchor that scapula into a good neutral position, it makes it so much easier to keep the entire spine in a neutral position.
Because once the scapula wings out, I feel like it's just a chain reaction where the whole thing just gives.
So if you can start and build that top part it's good it's a much better chance
because think about this how can you really how many times do you see somebody maintain a neutral
spine you know in the thoracic you know spine in the scapulate region and but yet they don't
maintain a lumbar spine it's very rare you know but so if you can really stabilize that position
then it's much easier and it's which makes strength training
much safer and stronger which is another reason you got to go around the seat of the cable row
because if you go grab one of the coolest things that doesn't exist in any functional fitness
facility is the split rope if you can do rows if you just grab the towel and do that those are the
best i mean a towel is probably the easiest way if you have
a um if you're in like a crossfit gym to mimic that but you know if you can go grab the rope
on the seated cable row and get that because one of the biggest limiting factors and what you're
talking about is that people row with the barbell and the barbell is going to hit your chest or if
you're laying on a bench and you're doing seal rows it stops it too early you never actually get the full range of motion so there's right you
could train your back as much as you want but there's still a weak link in the chain because
you're just not getting that last three inches which is the most important part of you know
keeping your scap locked down if you guys ever heard of like you know i call it face busters so
it's a rope you can use
a rope or a towel and you pull it like you're saying but then you rotate so you get external
rotate oh man i think every power lifter guaranteed should do this because you know we're so internally
rotated for the most part because you bench you bench you bench so your next thing you know you're
walking like this but like so if you like pull to a face buster so you pull back so you retract the scapula and then boom then you externally rotate as well i think it's just a
super healthy movement for you know most athletes actually just yeah i asked you about those with
the dumbbells that i i'd never seen that actually and it's like a seated dumbbell clean and jerk
looking oh yeah muscle clean and muscle clean rotate.
But I thought it was all for like rotator cuff external rotation.
I didn't know that there was like a – that you could –
Well, it's different.
I didn't even think about doing it with ropes and towels.
Right.
Yeah, because it's totally different because then with the rope,
you get the rhomboid thing too.
But, you know, when you're doing it with the seated power cleans,
it's just – you know, it's mainly just the external rotation.
So it's mostly the infraspinatus.
Yeah. Yeah. And I, I don't want to go too far down this rabbit hole, but I think that sometimes segregating some of the like shoulder work that you
could do actually is really awesome. Back workouts,
like reverse flies um stuff kind of
like you're talking about that looks a lot like shoulder work actually is really good at
strengthening um the stability in the spine which then turns into back work totally if you look at
like the shoulders and back i mean like it's hard to work one without
the other yeah really uh and you can say the same thing I guess with shoulders and even pressing
you know you're going to work a lot of anterior deltoids when you do pressing but you know back
you're definitely going to work a lot especially if you look at the traps the shoulder work
then guaranteed I think you're going to work a lot of that with me do back for sure. Yeah. I think that that's been,
uh,
as a part of my,
like just waking up and going straight to the gym has been a really cool thing.
I've been doing is just trying to get like 50 to a hundred,
like reverse flies in the morning.
I know that's a great ass and you can't do it.
Like you're always going to be using what eight,
10 pound weights.
Like nobody has a one rep max reverse fly with a two-second contraction at the top.
It just doesn't exist.
There's no amount of reverse flies with a set of ten-pound weights or dumbbells that you're going to do too much of.
You can always have a better position there and you can always do a set of 10,
20, 30,
whatever it is and just moving your scap at a good position and stabilizing
your back. Like there's, you should just always either, you know,
do it as a warmup, just accumulate reps.
Do it at the end of your workout just to accumulate reps.
If you've got 10 minutes of your day,
go find a 10 pound dumbbell or a couple of 10 pound dumbbells and,
and do them.
Like,
I think that that's something we've talked,
we've talked about the bodybuilding community and how many things they get
right when it comes to back training.
But like when you see some of those people,
like not only are their backs giant,
but there's no way to just do bent rows and and get ridiculously defined you know the smaller
muscle groups that are around there you have to go like create a stimulus that's going to grow
those muscles that just aren't used as much did you guys ever have charles pullick in on your show
of course he's he's passed away now. Never had him.
Let me tell you something I saw
with my own eyes.
You guys, do you ever
remember hearing of an old-time,
old-school, not old-time, old-school
bodybuilder named Boyer Co.?
He was massive.
He was even in Arnold's day.
In the 90s, he was making
a comeback, and he did. He looked awesome.
I saw with my own eyes, Charles Polk and take this guy.
And what he did is he like,
he assessed him and he found every single weakness, every little,
I'm talking about no Terrace major, Terrace Meyer,
every serenity interior,
every single little bitty muscle that he found that was weak or,
or underdeveloped.
And he put 20 pounds on a bodybuilder who had been lifting his whole life just by doing what you just said,
by pinpointing those little bitty muscles.
And it was amazing the way he looked after, before and after with Charles.
So like, you know, that was one of the, then I knew that this dude was different. Like Charles was like, you know,
people, some people are, you know,
they're always going to hate on anybody who's, you know,
people hate to think that there's somebody out there that much better than
them. But the truth is he's that much better. He's just incredible.
Yeah. I think that like Doug,
when you put out the hunter and raft or hunter body weight and rafts,
it like re got me thinking about how just getting the low-hanging fruit is so important for, you know, just getting all those pieces in.
Because typically we have, like, what, 45 to 60 minutes to go train hard.
And what are you always going to do?
You're going to squat, clean and jerk, snatch, bench.
You're going to hit you're going to squat clean and jerk snatch bench you're going to hit yeah all
the big rocks but if you could find these little little 10 minute spots go and you know do some
isolation stuff or just accumulate as many reps as possible and i think back training is just one
of the best like it's actually something that just in the last six, seven weeks of doing these little 10 minute sessions, um,
that I've just,
it,
it,
it's reinvigorated a lot because I'm spending a lot of time at the track for
my 45 to 60 minutes.
So I don't have that,
like those big training sessions four or five days a week,
like normal.
So now I can just go to the garage and hit 10 minutes and reverse flies,
like just all banded work. All of that stuff is just really just like finding as much of the low hanging fruit as possible to get a huge pump, get a ton of volume in with really low weights that I'm still growing.
It's just different.
And what is your schedule?
Like, you know, how often do you get to, like, squat and things like that?
I'm actually running the mile today and retesting, which is awesome.
Let's go.
Go, Anders.
Right?
So I'm up at 530.
I'm in the gym at maybe 6 o'clock.
So I turn the coffee on. I say I'm up at 530. The alarm goes off at 530. I'm up the gym at maybe 6 o'clock, so I turn the coffee on.
I say I'm up at 5.30.
The alarm goes off at 5.30.
I'm up at 5.45.
Go downstairs, turn the coffee on.
I'm in the gym at 6.
I do 100 reps of something.
Typically, it flies.
Today was 50 muscle clean to push press with an empty bar and banded rows.
Love it.
Then I'm on here with you guys.
Typically, I go get coffee and muffins with my daughter every day.
So we walk two miles together,
which is rad.
Um,
and then, uh,
I usually right before we go,
I go to the gym and do another 10 minutes of just something.
Um,
so there's two 10 minute blocks there of lifting,
uh,
and then pump on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One at one o'clock I go to the track.
Typically in the afternoon we're outside playing and I'll just be in the gym
doing something.
Um,
three days a week I'm at the track and then I actually only get like one to
two big training sessions like squat,
um,
deadlift,
stuff like that.
Like actual big things.
And I'm,
and I'm not lifting heavy at all um 275 front
squat for five by two the other day was like the biggest session i probably had as far as
lifting heavy in um six seven weeks since we went into captivity i love your outlook on that's why
i reposted your thing on barbell shrug yesterday i'm like i love your outlook and i want so badly to get there
mentally where i i'm training to enjoy and it's like almost impossible for me to lift without
wanting to go heavy and like i don't know why that is like i can't quite get past that but
like i want to get to where i'm just like enjoying it and having fun and like you know doing different
things like being okay with like letting my squat go down to go do a mile,
like running a mile. So I envy your approach.
Yeah. I would say that, I mean, I still love lifting,
but so the reason I'm testing my mile today is because I woke up on Wednesday
and for the first time in seven weeks i thought
i don't want to fucking run today and i went oh it's time to go test i'm ready to go on and move
on to the next thing like i just get really bored doing not like training in a way i just like to go
play so the the gym is just the playground. Like I say this all the time,
but if my neighbors wanted to get after it and play kickball,
I would fucking smash them in kickball.
This is great.
And I don't mean that to be rude.
I would just be,
I have an ability to just,
Oh,
you want to play kickball?
Like that'll be fun,
but I'm going to crush you. Yeah. I just want to go play and I'm not going to just, oh, you want to play kickball? Like, that'll be fun. But I'm going to crush you.
Yeah.
I just want to go play.
And I'm not going to go play just because I just want to, like, go,
eh, let's do it.
Like, I, like, really love finding out, like, at some point in this game,
it might be inning two, it might be inning five, it might be inning nine,
but at some point someone has to win.
And in order for somebody to win, we're going to have to look at each other and go, all right some point someone has to win. And in order for somebody to win,
we're going to have to look at each other and go, all right,
someone's got to win.
All I have to do is be 1% more committed to winning than everybody else,
and I'm going to win.
I'm with you on that one for sure.
That's why I mainly pick things that I'm really, really good at.
Like if I'm challenging you, I know something you don't know. like basketball but like most people like yeah yeah i feel i don't i feel like i've
we've all like think about doug he's not going to talk about it but do you think doug doesn't
walk around knowing that he could fucking kill you at any second yeah think about that like at
any moment in time if you really wanted to if like
if there was a moment where it was like no right now we're gonna do this doug would just turn his
little brain on and go well i'm gonna choke the fuck out of you right now how's that sound
yeah you're going to sleep yeah you're gonna go to sleep you don't know if you're lucky i'll let
go when you're asleep and if not not, I'll just kill you.
But your life will be in my hands.
Yeah, like I own you.
And that's everybody.
There isn't a single person in the grocery store right now that can protect themselves against Doug.
No, they're going to sleep.
And then maybe dying if he wants to kill them.
He owns them.
And it's not a bad thing it's just we all should walk around confidently
knowing like at some point if we really want to play this game i'm gonna get you and
i just like to do it across as many domains as possible knowing that you might be more athletic you might be more uh like
have a better skill set but at some point being stronger is more important and i'm just gonna get
there and you still might beat me and i'm still gonna have a lot of fun and we're still gonna be
friends at the end of this thing but look at, at some point, we're going to have to decide who wins.
And I love that moment.
It's always fun.
It's always a game.
We're all playing.
We're all on the same team.
The goal is fun.
But at some point, if we're playing golf in my front yard,
at some point, we're going to have to figure out who won the game today.
And that's important to me.
I love it
yeah me too i thought bowling i went bowling with my wife and my kids and like it was they didn't
know this but deep down i was like no damn way somebody's beating me right yeah i think it's rude
like if you just said this to your neighbor they'd be like dude you're a fucking crackhead like why
so like imagine i'm
speaking a hundred percent for doug but imagine if he was like he walked up to his neighbor and
he was like look you know we're super friends but if this coronavirus thing gets too crazy i'm gonna
choke you out and take all your food just so you know like you can't say that to people
he could but in day 150 all of a sudden doug hasn't shaved in three months
he looks more gorilla like the food shuts down who do you think's getting choked out not doug
no doug is not getting choked out by his neighbor his neighbor's out of luck yeah you better have a
gun his neighbor just lost all his peanut butter that's where it's at i'm like i don't know guns
guns are playing into this a lot in this area yeah even for me no i think i think it's yeah it's like a it's like a mentality and
uh it's we've done this our whole lives you've put yourself in a position it's not it's not
really about overtaking your neighbor it's about building confidence and it's why the gym is so
radical right you should be able like i've been speaking
for doug a lot he does like there's there's a piece of this where it's like i love mma i love
lifting weights i love playing sports you love being the strongest man in the world but why
why does it matter what's well like look it's really hard to find specific places to overcome
adversity that build confidence in your life.
And the gym is a really good one.
You can play it on your own. You can go in there and you build confidence.
You go, I can do this.
And we have all done it.
You go and learn MMA because you're constantly facing an opponent that is going to choke you out.
And you continually survive survive you continually get better
you continually get stronger i don't know how to fight anybody i that's not i don't that's one
where i'm gonna lose all the time but most people don't walk around trusting their physical capacity
in any sense of the word and most people not because they don't trust their physical capacity, they lack the
mental grit and toughness to get through things. At some point, it's just a really, really simple
way to develop toughness. Just go to the gym and add five pounds to the bar. And sooner or later,
it's going to be freaking heavy. And you either lift it or you don't. And then it becomes a mental
battle. And then after you've gotten to the point where you know, you can overcome things, then it
becomes a spiritual battle and that we all are here chasing this higher power of being our greatest
self. And now you've gone from, can I get stronger to how do I develop mental toughness to how do I
find this higher being in myself? and you get into the spiritual battle of
what why do i do all this why am i chasing this thing and it stops being about can i get girls
can i be good at sports and can i overcome obstacles and now it's how do i be my greatest
self and that's yes perseverance yes what we're all really if if you're in it long enough, why this all matters.
That was good.
Where can I find you, Travis Mash?
Good place to end it.
Yep, mashalee.com.
Check us out there or LinkedIn.
You just Travis Mash.
There it is.
Doug Larson.
Right on.
Find me on Instagram at Douglas E. Larson.
I'm Anders Varder at Anders Varder.
We're Barbell Shrugged at Barbell underscore Shrugged.
And you can hang out with us.
We got so many cool programs going out.
EMOM Aesthetics flying off the shelves.
I don't know when this is going to come out,
but we're putting together a sick aesthetics bundle
based off of the EMOM
aesthetics program as the base and then building out all of the body part
specific training programs.
So you can get over to barbell shrug.com forward slash store to make sure you
check that out and we will see you guys next week.
Awesome.
That's a wrap friends.
Make sure you get over to barbell shrugged.com forward slash emom that is
where you're going to find emom aesthetics it's actually the most fun training i've had in so
much time there's also a dope workout in the show notes um you can save 10 using the coupon code
shrugged over at the store um i want to thank our friends at organifi organifi.com forward slash
shrugged save 20 on the red, and the gold juices.
Also, our friends at the Fit Together app, if you want a customized bundle, three programs,
one nutrition, and one mobility program for free, I'm running a challenge in the Fit Together
app right now for you to upload your videos.
You have until next Friday, or this Friday, sorry,
and you can enter to win.
It's going to be radical.
Also, I want to thank our friends over at Shadow Creative Studios.
It's podcast.shadowstud.io.
That is where you're going to get all the podcast production that you would like.
And that's a wrap, friends.
We'll see you on Wednesday.