FoundMyFitness - #111 The Optimal Mobility Protocol for a Durable Body | Dr. Kelly Starrett
Episode Date: April 24, 2026Get access to more than 200 episodes of my premium podcast (The Aliquot) when you sign up as a FoundMyFitness Premium Member Range of motion is the one aspect of your physiology that doesn't have to... decline with age, but neglect almost guarantees that it will. In this episode, Dr. Kelly Starrett explains how to build a durable body by restoring the movement patterns that modern life strips away. He also lays out a clear framework for raising resilient young athletes grounded in sleep, fueling, play, and skill development rather than early specialization and excess volume. Timestamps: (00:00) Introduction (06:24) Why pain doesn't always mean you're injured (08:37) How to manage persistent pain without stopping training (13:51) Does foam rolling really improve pain and mobility? (17:01) Can soft tissue work reduce soreness and help you unwind? (19:06) Why soreness isn't proof of a good workout (21:04) Is neck pain after overhead pressing a mobility issue? (26:04) How to test your mobility at home (27:52) The Cindy workout and why it works (28:48) What your warmup should actually accomplish (33:03) Why "don't get injured" is the wrong warmup goal (35:56) What if you don't have time to warm up? (38:56) How to maintain hip mobility in minutes a day (40:23) The sit-and-rise test for hip mobility (42:25) Can the sit-and-rise test really predict longevity? (43:52) Why fitness doesn't guarantee mobility (47:04) Improving shoulder mobility for desk workers (51:23) How much shoulder mobility work do you really need? (52:40) Can breath holds help prime and reset the nervous system? (55:50) How breathing mechanics affect spinal mobility (58:34) Do breath holds improve athletic performance? (1:01:11) Fit vs. sport-ready—what's the difference? (1:05:14) How to breathe during heavy lifts (1:08:56) Can planks help you practice better breathing? (1:14:16) Training for life vs. living to train (1:17:36) How should non-athletes think about training? (1:23:37) Why adults need leisure-time activity (1:27:32) What's really behind your nagging pain? (1:30:38) The couch stretch test for hip extension (1:32:38) How to test shoulder internal rotation (1:35:34) Why do perimenopausal women get frozen shoulder? (1:38:25) Can running benefit recovery after lifting? (1:39:40) Heat or cold for recovery—which and when? (1:42:59) Can heat exposure support tendon repair? (1:46:36) How to make desk work less sedentary (1:52:52) Why is sitting on the ground so important? (1:55:46) Why mobility doesn't have to decline with age (2:01:37) The surprising power of "movement snacks" (2:08:34) Why never do nothing beats all or nothing (2:13:34) Is our culture the real barrier to movement? (2:17:20) Why rucking is such an accessible way to train (2:19:22) Are you getting enough time outside? (2:24:32) Why better nutrition starts with what you're missing (2:29:18) What's gone wrong with youth sports? (2:31:26) Why sleep matters for young athletes (2:36:02) How to manage food and sleep around late practices (2:38:41) Should kids avoid specializing in one sport? (2:41:27) Why unstructured play is essential for kids (2:47:18) When should kids start strength training? (2:49:51) Can martial arts build movement skills in kids? (2:51:15) Why do so many kids drop out of sports? (2:55:09) Sleep, fueling, and pain in young athletes (2:56:46) What if your kid is a picky eater? (3:00:06) Handstands, skipping, and the foundations of youth training (3:02:24) Can simple jumping drills reduce ACL injuries in kids? (3:04:44) How 10 minutes of play can build movement skills (3:06:22) What should young athletes remove before adding more? Show notes are available by clicking here Watch this episode on YouTube
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, friends. Today, my guest is Dr. Kelly Starrett, a remarkable person I've admired for a very long time,
and someone who's truly reshaped the way we think about movement, pain, and physical resilience.
Kelly is not only a doctor at physical therapy. He's a celebrated movement expert, a coach,
but also a best-selling author who's inspired countless people from professional athletes to everyday individuals
to reclaim and maintain their mobility and physical durability over a lifetime.
Kelly is the co-founder and chief health officer of the Ready State,
co-founder of San Francisco CrossFit,
and author of some influential books,
including Becoming a Supple Leopard,
ready to run, deskbound, and built to move.
But beyond all of these accomplishments,
what's drawn me to Kelly's work for years
is his rare gift for taking complex movement science
and translating it into practical, actionable guidance
that just makes sense.
He has been a tireless,
advocate for the idea that mobility isn't just an accessory to our training, it's foundational
for how we move, how we recover, adapt, and continue enjoying the things we love as we age.
And that perspective shines throughout this conversation. This was a deeply enjoyable
and insightful conversation and one I've genuinely been looking forward to for years. In this
episode, you will learn why pain does not always mean injury and how to think more intelligently
about nagging pain that shows up during training.
What a warm-up should actually accomplish
and why the goal is not just avoiding injury,
but improving tissue readiness, movement quality, and performance.
How to assess and improve hip and shoulder mobility,
including simple at-home tests that can reveal missing range of motion.
Why breathing mechanics matter for spinal movement,
force production, pain modulation, and athletic performance.
How movement snacks,
walking, floor sitting, and better desk setups can help offset the cost of a sedentary life.
How to think about blood flow, heat exposure, cold exposure, and simple self-care tools for recovery.
Why Kelty's framework, Train for Life, don't live to train, may be one of the most useful ideas
for anyone who wants to stay strong, stay capable, and physically independent as they age.
And we also discuss what's gone wrong in youth sports, from over-specialization and
under recovery, to sleep deprivation, poor fueling, and the disappearance of free play,
and what parents can do about it. And so much more. Before we dive in, if you haven't already
downloaded my free How to Train according to the expert's guide, this is a great companion to
today's episode. It distills insights from more than 100 conversations with leading exercise
scientists into practical evidence-based protocols for strength, hypertrophy, cardiorespiratory fitness,
body composition, and even sauna use. You can download it right now for free at how to trainguide.com.
Once again, that's how to train guide.com. And if you value this podcast and want to support
rigorous independent health and performance content, please consider becoming a Found My Fitness
premium member. You may have noticed that this podcast does not have commercial sponsors.
It is 100% fan supported by listeners like you. When you become a premium,
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how to optimize recovery and prevent overtraining, and so much more. We have over 145 Aliquot
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A huge thank you to all of those who support.
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Once again, that's FoundMyFitness.com forward slash premium, P-R-E-M-I-U-M.
And now on to the podcast with Dr. Kelly Starrett.
Welcome back to the podcast.
I'm really excited to be sitting here with Dr. Kelly Starrett, who I kind of
sounds cheesy, but like, I mean, this is, this is 10 years in the making, I feel like. I mean,
I've known about your work for a very long time. And it really wasn't until I started to get
into CrossFit training that it kind of popped back up into my head and my world. Why is that?
Why is that? I mean, I mean, you're a legend. You're a legend, Kelly. So I'm super excited to have
this conversation with you. And we were kind of chatting about where to start because there's, it's, it's, it's really
hard decision where to start having a conversation. There's so many fun things to talk about,
right? So many fun things. And we're in what we're calling the beginning of third wave of fitness
and strength conditioning. Like first wave you remember was like power nut malt malt,
malt, nut power bars, bad hurry monitors. Second wave is just this this fever dream over the last
20 years of like mass integration and technology and YouTube. And now we're finally saying,
okay, well, what can we discard? And really what? And really what?
does matter to us. And I think it's really an exciting time, potentially, where we can say,
okay, that was some craziness. We live in these very decorative rooms, like your grandma's room
with all the doilies. It's like oppressive and you don't know where to start or where to sit.
That's where we've just come from. So now how do we take that pastiche of strength,
conditioning, fitness, body composition, bodybuilding, and then say, well, what's important for your
kids? How do you have this body that you trust? Doesn't hurt.
It's a good time.
Yes, what lessons have we learned?
A body that doesn't hurt.
That's kind of a great place to start.
I mean, I have this question about common mistakes that I would say people that are like myself, you know, we're intelligent, very much committed, motivated exercises.
And yet we still have this pain and, you know, we're working out with the pain.
what are some common mistakes that, you know, myself and others that are like me are making?
Let's frame this first, that pain doesn't always mean you're injured, right?
We want everyone to recognize pain as a request for change.
That's a great place to start.
And so you can use it a little bit like a check engine light.
So when your knee hurts after that run or that thing you did, don't panic.
It's giving you, it's asking, hey, pay attention.
And that can be modulated by a lot of features that people are starting to get their hands around.
Oh, you're super stressed when drinking last night, didn't sleep, right?
How's your nutrition?
As starters, much less, we even talked about your range of motion or did you warm up or
did you cool down.
Did you just redline like an elite athlete?
Because we have access to that now and then sit at your desk the rest of the day.
It's sort of not really having a good adaptation response.
So when we begin to pull with that, I think the first thing we can start to say is, hey,
let's become curious.
Let's not catastrophize because it really is.
Like what we expect is I'm going to have any pain. It's like when I was 15. My back hurts.
It must be rabies. It must be, you know, I've tweaked myself in some way that potentially
is going to be really detrimental and never, never figured out. Versus, hey, my body's asking for
some input. What tools do I have? And when do I even begin to think, do I need help or not?
Because when we ask all the people we work with, who's pain free? Very few hands go up.
So what we have to do is start to say, okay, maybe pain is a part of the human experience.
And we really haven't done a good job talking about it.
We've got a good job masking it and certainly medicalizing it.
But, you know, what about your kids when your kid comes home after soccer and she has a painful heel or a painful knee?
Like, where do we begin to not freak out?
And yet self-soothe a little bit.
I think that's a really wonderful place to start.
I, for myself, you know, I get this sort of nagging pain.
I have one in my shoulder and I have a little bit like in the tendon in my forearm.
And it's not enough that it's like an injury where I can't work out.
That's right.
But it's enough where I do feel more limited in my workouts.
And oftentimes I work with a coach, as you know, she's amazing.
She's amazing.
But, you know, she'll say, okay, well, let's do a different movement today because you're
feeling a little bit more pain if you're doing, you know, for example, like heavy deadlifts.
Yeah.
But, you know, for someone that has their nutrition, pretty much dialed in for the most part
and get enough sleep, you know.
So like some of the pillars of health are there.
And yet you still have the pain.
Like where do you start to look like first?
What a great, great entree.
And you're like, I think I'm doing it, right?
So when I work with people who have persistent pain and chronic pain,
which by the way, nearly all of my athlete friends, all of the pros, everyone I've ever
worked with is basically like, I've never been 100%.
Maybe when I was 10 years old, I was 100%.
Everything else is working around some discomfort.
or a tweak.
And if you ever play a sport, I mean, God forbid, you're going to get tweaked, right?
The gym is actually the safest place on the planet to really control the variables.
So what we can start to say is, well, hey, the first order businesses, I don't care what it is.
I just don't want to have it, right?
Just give me back to it.
And we can do that through a lot of simple tools called desensitization.
Because as everyone knows, thanks a large part to this podcast too, your brain does not
your brain interprets what's going on with your body.
Your elbow isn't screaming pain.
Your brain thinks that that is maybe a threat signal,
or it's interpreting this symptom, this information as threat.
And so what we want, because we have seen all the time
where someone's like limping around,
and some beautiful people walk by, the limp goes away, you know,
and then they're limping again.
And so you can really override these things.
And if you've ever been in a fight, have ever been in a fight?
Like a physical fight?
Yeah.
No.
Oh, okay.
So the dirtiest secret about fighting is you don't feel any pain while you're fighting
because your brain is like, that's not important right now.
You're going to feel pain after the fight.
But during the fight, less pain.
So does the activation of the sympathetic nervous system play a role in that?
Yes, yes.
And so we can override these things.
What we try to say is, hey, what are the tools available to you?
Could you scrape?
Can you cup?
Can you massage?
Can you use some isometrics?
What about some percussion?
Or there's some simple ways you're like, okay, it feels better.
Let's move.
And it creates a window of opportunity for us to move, which is the same.
tools and techniques we use for all of our teams, right? We're still going to go out in March.
When we define injury, which is something clever, you said, hey, it's not so bad that I need
to go get help. That's the marker where suddenly I can't occupy my role in my family, can't do
my job. Right. If you're back hurt so bad, you're not going to work. That's a medical emergency,
right? All the red flags, night sweats, disson, this is fever, vomiting, vomiting, nausea,
that seems obvious. Your child has a fever. She's not, you know, doesn't need a voodoo floss or
knee, hey, there's a clear mechanism of injury. I tweaked my, I felt a pop, there's a bone
sticking out of my leg, stepped off a curb. Okay, those are clear indicators that I need to
activate the emergency medical system. Everything else is a feature of training and nutrition and sleep.
In fact, we want to treat pain just like loss of range of motion, just like loss of force
production, just another sort of data. Like, oh, HRV is off, low pain. We should see those as similar
in terms of the information they give us, right?
Except, you know, you can have crappy sleep and poor recovery and still, you know,
but that's annoying.
So then we can ask, well, hey, is there some decongestion that could happen in these tissues?
Well, suddenly we're like, oh, I understand why it's sauna and walking and compression and
normatech boots and maybe I use an NMES device or lymphatic drainage or voodoo.
There's a lot of things we could do to facilitate moving congestion.
moving swelling up the chain and clearing it because a congested tissue like, you know,
someone has OA and their knee, osteoarthritis.
And they haven't done anything, but the knee has reacted to the loading and maybe the
nutrition and the sleep and whatever.
And now it's swollen.
And so what we're thinking is, hey, the typical person can run around with a congested tissue
and that congestion can rate limit healing, but it also limit blood flow.
But also, it can very much be the driver of sensitivity.
So you can sensitize a tissue by having kind of congestion in an old tissue.
Then we could ask, well, what about blood flow?
Did it get better once you warmed up?
Because yeah, once you start to warm up, starts to feel better.
Ah, that's probably not a problem.
That's, you know, their brain saying, hey, let's get some blood flow.
How do we take the garbage out, bring the groceries in?
And the last thing we say is, well, what about the range of motion?
Because that never gets checked, right?
Well, I can do what I want to do well enough.
but what if it was that you had a big chunk of missing range of motion?
Well, suddenly we could improve that, you can improve that, while working on these other systems.
And by the time we've worked through that little rubric, chances are your brain's like,
it's not a problem.
Let's go lift.
All right.
So when it comes to foam rollers, I mean, it's something that I've heard such mixed data and evidence.
And I say heard because I haven't really dive into the literature myself to look at what it says.
but you've got real world experience.
You know the science.
Can foam rolling help you work through, you know, a painful point?
Yes. Yes.
How do we do it?
Like, what should I be doing?
So let's start with that foam roller doesn't solve all the problems.
If it's solved all the problems, there'd be no problems.
We've gotten that message, right?
But you may need a smaller ball.
You may need something harder.
You might need something that fits your body a little differently.
There's no, we always talk in a systems approach that if laying on the ground and rolling back and forth fixed knee cancer, we would have fixed knee rabies already.
Like we would have solved these problems. The research is clear though that can help range of motion. I can help with blood flow. It can help desensitize painful things. And pretty soon if we haven't defined our terms, it can be a little sticky. So if I have you laying your quad, your quad,
on a roller, and then contract and relax, that's a very sophisticated thing we're doing there.
We're teaching your brain. It's safe to develop force in this position. But that's just really
a sneaky version of an isometric again, right? So suddenly we realize that, you know, if I give
context to some of the soft tissue work I'm doing, instead of just laying down and hoping I'm
pressing guess, I'm a little bit more thoughtful about, hey, I'm going to work above an area of
pain, we're below an area of pain, recognizing that maybe my calves or my quads could be contributing
to knee pain. We find that when people get enough of a dose of something, we tend to say,
hey, let's limit this to five minutes per muscle system so you don't overdo it. But we can actually
get in there long enough that we can make some change. That seems to make a difference. If it's so
painful that you're not breathing, you're just signaling threat and contracting all the time,
that's no good. So one of the things we like to say to people is, hey, let's make sure.
sure you can take a breath while you're doing that. So the two kind of rules that you're never
going to overdo it is if you can breathe. It might be really uncomfortable, but you should breathe.
And number two, you should be able to control. You should be able to contract. So if you're
overwhelming your nervous system where you can't have any muscle control, maybe that's a little bit
too much. And then, you know, keep in mind that there's a lot of body workers in the world.
So either they're scamming us because there's so many massage, Thai massage, Shiazatsu, like,
Or there's something to that.
And even if we just said, hey, how about the whole thing is just about low side of control,
that you get home and you're like something hurts and I have some agency and control over it.
Making long-term tissue changes, we got to load, we need to move.
We have to, you know, but this is a powerful tool to get out of pain, restore range of motion, right,
to improve blood flow, to downregulate.
We like to do the soft tissue work in the evening, for example.
So number one, we're already sitting on the ground.
But if we do engage in 10 minutes of soft tissue work, we found that that had a huge
parasympathetic input, like a massage.
You never gets off the massage table and is like, let's fight.
It just doesn't happen, right?
But a little bit of self-massage, you're signaling to the brain, it's safe, you're relaxing,
you're touching things that are tight or restricted or restoring how tissues are sliding
and gliding.
And then we'll get the rest of it tomorrow.
And what you'll find is that you, brains like, we sit on the ground,
then we do the soft tissue, then we go to bed.
Now you're starting to be set up a habit.
Now you start to downregulate your breathing changes.
That's really, really powerful.
Soft tissue work is one feature of the whole system.
It's not the only feature.
Isometrics are really powerful.
But what's most important is that we have a range of motion we're trying to improve
and we're doing test retest on that range of motion.
Did that restore?
Or you mentioned DOMs, delay non-sup muscle.
soreness, workout really hard, you went for a run, that running is getting those tissues
sliding and gliding again, right? Just restoring those free nerve endings, getting
faster to move. I submit that, and the research supports that if you do soft tissue work after
heavy training, decrease your doms. So is that valid to have less soreness and pain after
training? Seems good to me. I like it to that. I'll point two resources for you. There's, I think
it's flexibility research, incredible Instagram follow, all of the science,
all of the research, really, you know, very clear.
And then my friend Brent Brookbush, the Brookbush Institute, has written and aggregated so
much research about the science of all this that I want to talk about how we have
integrated the science into actual practice.
That's my expertise.
But if you really want, go to the Brookbush Institute.
There's so much research there about, you know, what these things do, how effective
if they are inter-rater reliability, et cetera, et cetera.
Can you tell me about this misconception that you need soreness to have had a good workout?
Oh, right?
I mean, I've, I had that mentality for, I don't even know how long.
I mean, I still battle it.
I'm still like, what was it?
I know.
I'm not sore enough.
How about this?
You train and you actually felt good.
And then you could, I mean, move.
You, everyone who's a beginner, you're going to be sore.
Sorry.
Sorry, not sorry.
You know, you're going to get off the toilet.
and you're going to have, you're going to curse out your coach and these squats, right?
But what we start to see is over time that soreness gets in the way of your performance, right?
Decreased force production.
The goal is to have this right adaptation response where we can still go out and perform,
but not be so brutalized and sore that we're surprised and it diminishes us.
So you don't have to get sore, but we want to have enough of a stimulus to do.
disrupt homeostasis. And your mileage may vary based on your nutrition. I recently found out
I was needed to get on an iron supplement, me, right? Isn't that interesting? Curious.
Was not taking enough omega-3s. You recently were like, hey, probably need up that. I was taking my
daily dose, my omega-3 index, not sufficient. Get on the iron, get on the omega-3s, guess who gets less
sore in his training? This guy. Because, you know, we can, so there's, what my point is that
There's a lot of things we can do to mitigate soreness, but just we're going to do a bunch of work
until you're sore. And I think that's progress. That's not progress. Right. And also perhaps
you're just using, you know, muscle groups that you don't often use, right? I mean, that's the other thing.
And more importantly, did all that soreness change your bone density? Did you get stronger?
Like, what are your metrics? Like, you're just sore? You did a bunch of work in our sore.
Again, there's no, you haven't moved the needle. You just created a lot of noise.
Right. Speaking of soreness, the other thing I wanted to ask you about, and this is a problem I've had for many years, but I also know at least two to three other women who have the exact same problem and no, it's not frozen shoulder. It's overhead weight. So like having like, you know, if you're doing a snatch, I guess, right? Or like doing weight overhead, whether it's dumbbells or a barbell or anything that's, you know, weight. And it's, you know, weight. And it's, you know, it's.
having a neck problem with it.
Like not while you're doing it so much, but like the next day, that's really persistent.
So have you, do you have any idea?
Is this like a mobility problem?
Do you know what I'm talking?
Have you heard of this?
Well, first of all, let's say that there's very much technique involved with putting weights
over our head as effectively and powerful as we could.
I know you have an excellent coach.
Number two is that we might become curious about the fact that, hey, I have.
have tissues that are really fibroic and stiff. So anything we could do about that. So if we just
played press and guess, traps feel tight afterwards. Like, let's get you on a roller. Let's get you on
a ball. Let's start working and see if we can restore motion to these segments. And then run our test
again. Does it make us feel better? Then we could also ask, do you have full range of motion
overhead? And it could be that you're working in positions because you have incomplete overhead
position. You can still do it and it doesn't hurt, but you're not doing it as efficiently.
maybe this signal is one of those things that you're we can improve that okay yeah i mean this is
something like even back when you know and i believe in serial anecdotal empiricism which is what you
described yeah it is and and it's even with lighter dumbbells like if i do you know eight eight with
each hand so i'm 16 total overhead presses you know and it's like i i've been avoiding the overhead
press because of fear of activating and it is the traps that get sore and sometimes it even
spasms. But it's something that I've now two friends, two girlfriends, I have the exact same
problem where they can't do overhead process. And how reasonable that you're like, hey, I do this
exercise and it hurts me or makes me hurt or I don't feel good afterwards. I'm a little afraid
of doing that exercise. That seems very reasonable to me. Well, the neck pain, I mean, it'll be,
it'll last. It'll affect my sleeve. Yeah. And then it's like this vicious cycle. So, you know,
and I've seen a physical therapist about it. And it's kind of like, well, is it a compensation thing
where you're like, you know, like you're mentioning maybe I'm not as full range of motion.
And so something else is tightening up or I'm overcompensating in some other way.
That's not really being beneficial.
An easy way to start.
So number one, as I would say, hey, let's start getting you some hanging where your arms are pale over your head and taking some breaths and do that.
And let's see if we start to expose that overhead position.
As we get into complex understanding of movement, we look at start position effectiveness and finish position.
So if I'm pressing overhead and I'm starting in a less effective position, then it's really difficult for me to end in a great position, right? That's why that bottom up kettlebell press forces us to be in a good shape as we press overhead. But if I don't have complete overhead position, my overhead position is here where I have to internally rotate a little bit. I'll achieve some overhead like shape, but that's not full position. So even if I'm pressing a barbell out here where I'm not anywhere near.
full overhead position, I would still check this full overhead position. And it could be that we just
don't have as efficient access for whatever reason, because you've had this amazing life. And now
this movement is highlighting something for us that we can become curious about. Because you should
be able to press overhead. I'm assisted pull-ups. Doesn't hurt. Doesn't flare up with that hanging.
I'm going to do more of it. I do hang. And it feels good. I like it. If you're doing pull-ups,
you're hanging already. You're there. Yeah. I do pull. I do pull. I do pull.
ups and I don't have that problem. So it's definitely, you know, we can we can constrain it.
You know, if I have you put your thumbs backwards, then the shoulder by necessity is going to be
a mechanically sort of more effective position where I'm going to have better features of stability.
The capsules wound up. The mechanic of pressing is a little bit better. And in this situation,
I might even have you, you know, when anyone has pain with a problem, an area or a movement,
there's two things we can always do. We can always pause if I have a painful range.
or B, I slow down.
So we can slow this down a little bit and ask you to show me that you've got control,
signal that it's safe to the brain, et cetera,
instead of sort of,
I'm overhead,
right?
And I didn't really touch some of those overhead shapes and really use it as a diagnostic.
But in this situation,
I'd be really curious.
Again,
let's look at your range of motion of that shoulder.
I bet that there's some rhyming things that maybe I've got a little restricted
because I didn't know and I'm doing all the things.
And now I'm getting this feedback that this position
and it doesn't always feel good.
Once in a while, it's fine,
but if it's happening all the time,
then we can come curious about it.
How would a person at home, like, let's, you know,
I'm talking about my problem,
but other people have thyroid filling the blank problems.
Only there was an app that had all of these simple movement tests
you could do at home.
And that's what,
and that's the app that app again?
What's the name of that app again?
It's called the mobility coach.
The mobility coach.
And the reason what we're trying to do is,
so let me, I'll lay out for you real quick.
Built to Move,
we've got really simple,
pedestrian assessments and some range of motion.
These are some things.
So entree in.
The app has really sophisticated self-assessments,
but easy to do, easy to understand.
We're going to look at fundamental ranges,
and you should see it in the context.
You'd be like, oh, I understand why we're doing that.
Maybe you don't understand why we're looking at rotation
in some of these things, but there are components there,
and that all belongs in the hand of the user.
Then we have a whole host of professional courses
where we're much more sophisticated about complete, incomplete, hands-on assessing.
But we don't need that.
For the average person, we should be able to know what our movement minimums are
and then start to identify opportunities to work and restore those positions.
Because that is really part of the conversation that gets lost in search or in service
of performance and wattage.
We're not looking at did you express normative ranges, even though the classic
Strength and conditioning really does ask us to have full range of motion. That's why classic
Strengthing conditioning is all the same. Front squat, back squat, lunge, pull up, bench. Those are all
tests. I've been on every continent except Antarctica. Everyone knows what a push-up is. That is our
universal expression of shoulder extension in a short lever position. Right. I don't need a bunch of
tests. I need to see how well and how much range you have in a push-up. I love push-ups.
My favorite workout to do anytime I'm traveling is the Cindy workout.
Oh, isn't that so simple?
I've done Cindy more than any other workout in the history of the world, everyone.
Cindy is the best workout.
Maybe we should explain what that is to people.
So it's five pull-ups, 10 push-ups, 15 air squats.
You can do it on the minute.
You can do it as many rounds as you want.
You have 10 minutes.
You have 15 minutes.
That body weight volume is excellent.
Put a bike on it for two minutes.
Do a round.
Put a bike on it.
Do three rounds.
We call it Cindy ish.
And pretty soon you can rinse, wash, repeat that combo forever.
My favorite Cindy-ish workout for me is like if I'm in my, you know, like I said, I'm traveling, I'm in a hotel, is I'll do the bodyweight squats and then do pushups and then Vips.
And there, there it is.
And what you've just described is in 20 minutes.
20 minutes, right.
You've got tons of exposure.
No equipment.
Wonderful.
Wonderful.
This, we have so many different things that you mentioned to get into.
in terms of range of motion, you know, the blood flow, especially the tendons, you know,
not how about a blood flow, the tendons. But maybe we can start there with this range of motion
and warming up, you know, because, I mean, so I worked with my coach, and thankfully, you know,
she knows what she's doing. And so if I hadn't had her, I wouldn't really have known
the difference between warming up and stretching. I certainly wouldn't really understand
what the goal of warming up is. And you're going to edit.
educate me even more, but just from learning through experiencing what she tells me to do,
I've realized that it's like, okay, first thing, you know, I'm just kind of like, I do two minutes
of just getting my heart rate up. First thing. So it's either rowing or jumping rope.
And then after that two minutes, then we kind of get into more range of motion, you know,
if I'm doing arms, I'll do pass-throughs with a pole. Or we'll do, you know, body weight squats
first if I'm going to be squatting that day
and then we go barbell only squats and I
eventually like, you know, gradually get
to the weight that I'm eventually going to
do but I'm warming up. But I wouldn't have known
to do all that if I was just kind of working out of my own.
That's crazy. How did we fail,
Dr. Patrick? Where you're like, hey, I'm not,
I'm about to go do this crazy thing
and maybe I just spun on the bike for 10 minutes
and I looked around. We just
haven't really taught people, hey, here's
what it looks like. And theoretically, we should have gotten that in high school when we were still
engaged in sports, competitive sports, before we all became wreck athletes. But what you see is that
there's a real opportunity to help people feel better and prepare for the movement. And don't
be wrong, I think you should be able to sprint down the street, grab a baby out of a burning,
you know, building and fight off a tiger like that. Probably not the best expression of your
physiology in those moments. But we should we should be able to do those.
things cold, right? But when we start to look around, we start to see that most people aren't
treating their warm up as a chance to feel better. Who am I today as I show up at this gym for
this thing? Because your range of motion is a little bit of a moving target. And it's like a
credit score, one of our friends says. And so you're sort of touching base with, how tired am I? How
springy am I what's going on you're getting to know this carcass today right and that might
mean hey you know I just you are flying over the place suddenly you're a little bit stiff from that
plane ride you you're squatting doesn't feel the same so we're trying to remind the brain
of fundamental movement patterns we're trying to get hot and sweaty we're trying to wake up the
nervous system you are doing this jumping which is activating you're getting hot and sweaty
you're shifting blood there's a lot of things that can happen but also
Also, we see that this is a great opportunity to add in some movement and wait for it, play, right?
You can explore positions and shape safely here.
Tell your brain, if I end up in this shape later on, it's going to be safe.
Some of those pass-throughs there, we're starting to see rope flow, kind of some of these physical culture ideas from people like Ito Portal, Fighting Monkey,
we're bringing those things back into our warm-ups.
And a simple way to ask this is if we treated your workout like it was a fight, you and I were going to fight, what does our warmup look like?
It does not look like I'm laying on the ground, doing some foam rolling, right?
Like you're jumping rope and getting hot and prepping yourself and doing some hypoxic work and breathing and activating and integrating with the people you're like, we're about to fight.
Like that's a really nice sort of rubric for, am I prepared or have I used this warm up as an opportunity to be like, I am not good?
today. I'm just going to take it easy. I can use it as a self-assessment. So that's what we
try to do in the warm-up. Sometimes it gets a little bit watered down. As a coach, I try to not
do the same warm-up every single day. I try to keep my athletes guessing. I want them to be entertained.
I want them to be curious. And that's a really opportunity to put some of these things we see
in the internet. Hey, that looks like fun. Let me try that as part of my warm-up. How much is doing,
you know, a warm up that's properly a warm up, play a role in helping with injury prevention.
Well, I think from a simple idea that we have a chance to prime and remind our brains that movement
is a skill, right? Sometimes we have, like, we're like, all movement is good, right? It's all, like,
the movement optimists are like, it doesn't matter what you do. And we're like, well, from a, from injury,
which is not what we're trying to do.
We're never on this track of,
hey, let's warm up so we don't get injured.
I think that's kind of a fool's errand.
And it's not really inspiring.
Don't get injured.
Like, I'm not injured.
You know, what's going to happen
that I'm going to get injured?
Instead, we think, hey, we can actually get more work done.
We can feel better as we do it.
You have less discomfort as we do it.
And what we tend to see is we don't get as stiff afterwards.
And so oftentimes when we're trying to compress
a lot of really dense work
into a little time, we don't leave permission for us to really get tissues hyper-perfuse,
like blood flow, ready to go. If the first motion you do is push the sled and you
tear your Achilles, I'm like, well, that tissue wasn't as prepared maybe as it could have been.
Maybe we could have mitigated some of these aches and tweaks. Maybe some of those insertions
of those connective tissues weren't so, you know, friable and dry. Just like the rotator
cuff, for example, it just takes a minute. It's like hard-packed earth. And if you just take
a exercise, which is like a hoe, is blasting on hardbacked earth. The water doesn't really soak in.
Takes a second for those tissues to, you know, to really become well perfused. And then you might
have better range of motion. And more important, you'll have better power, better work tolerance.
And then afterwards, there's all these models that exist already. Like the Soviets used to say,
if you leave the gym stiff, you're going to be stiff. I think if we take a look at some of our
movement traditions, people have been training and thinking seriously about this for a long time,
but we have sucked the joy out of the and the potential out of,
uh,
potentiation out of warm up for sure.
But to your point,
when we're dripped in sweat,
so I coach at Cal Berkeley and I travel with the women's water polo team.
So I'm their performance director.
And, uh,
our joke is like,
I'm the health coach,
right?
And sometimes that means I hand out snacks and sometimes that means I'm doing mobility
work.
I'm helping them manage pain.
But I also run the warmups and the sort of amongst other things.
and we'll be battling another team.
That team has our coats on, and they're real stiff and not really trained to each other.
Our women are down to their sports bras.
We are battling and fighting, ready to go.
And I'm like, which team do you want to be part of here?
Right.
And so we can really use that warm up time to connect, play, integrate, have fun,
and perform better because those tissues are better ready to go.
I sometimes do a really short, if I don't have a lot of time, I'm traveling or I have to get to a podcast or something, and I know I need to get like my blood flow up for at least 10 minutes.
Like it's important for me, cognition.
Yeah.
You know, it doesn't matter what I do.
Changing your state.
I'm transitioning into now going from brain to, you know, meat.
Right.
But sometimes I'll get on my peloton and I'll do two back to back to Bata.
So it's like a 10 minute, two to one ratio, 20 seconds on, 10 seconds off, 30 second recovery in between.
But I don't warm up before I get on that bike and I do that.
And what I'm hearing from you is like even that type of, you know, hyperperfusion, as you called it, like where you're getting all of a sudden, you're going from nothing to boom, you're getting that blood flow up, man, you're going hard, needs a warm up.
Well, what we could start to say is, are we trying to meet all of your movement needs only?
by the time we get there.
So what we can start to say is, well, what does the rest of the day look like?
Because if you're just going from sitting to more sitting and we have a little, like, that's
already great.
You're getting your heart rate up.
You're starting to breathe.
We could put in breath holds there.
We could do hypoxic work there.
We could, you know, you just taking the resistance out and going fast.
It could be a really great way of, you know, priming yourself.
I think the key here, though, is what if we had a little movement first thing in the morning?
What if a, like, we do a thing that we kind of give people three options.
We're like, hey, as a place to start, I'd like you do the hip spin up, the shoulder spin up, or a breath spin up before you leave the house.
Because if the day gets away from you and you can't train or you can't exercise, we want to have said, well, what does a physical day look like for a person?
How do we get more movement in throughout the rest of the day instead of just saving it up?
Because what I really like to do is recognize that you're busy working human.
and then if we had a little bit of hip prep in the morning,
we worked at a desk that gave us movement choice.
Maybe we sat on the floor.
Maybe we sat at the computer.
We walked around a little bit at lunch.
Then by the time I actually got to my workout,
I'm not going from zero to 60.
I'm going from 40 to 60 because I've prepared my body a little bit more.
Maybe that's a great way to sneaking in.
And the rest of the thing is, hey, when we have the opportunity to do a better thing, fine.
Sometimes I'm at the airport and I grab a full.
fruit bucket, you know, a $17, you know, cup of grapes and two horrible eggs.
Like, that is really not great food, but it's going to do today.
And now we'll get the rest of it tomorrow.
We're not worried about it.
The main thing is, I love that you are thinking about this as a physical practice.
And, hey, there's nothing wrong with taking the first five sets under the bar and taking
your time and just moving slowly and adding weight.
Hey, you don't have, sometimes when we have time and luxury to play and move and prep,
Let's do it. If not, let's just be a little bit more conscientious about it.
Awesome. What is this hip, like if you're, if you're drawing, you're talking about this hip mobility or hip prep.
Like what does that look like?
Well, number one, we wanted something that you could do. Imagine like, again, homage to the people who've thought about critically about some of these things.
Yoga has sun salutation. What I thought was, what a great practice. If everyone did sun salutation every single day, before
they left the house. They've touched them on ranges. They reminded their brain. They had to breathe.
They had to rotate. They had to weight bear. They had to move their spines a little bit.
Right. That's great. But that sun citation sometimes comes entrapped in a little bit of too much
asana, a little bit too much spirituality. And sometimes our athletes are like, really?
This doesn't feel athletic enough. So I was like, what could we do to sort of simulate that?
And that's where I came up with the idea of the hip spin up, which was fundamental positions of flexion
and rotation of the hip, we touch some end range tissues, we throw some isometrics in,
we make your spine work with your hips, just ground-based, don't need any equipment, can be scaled,
and it gives you a touch of like, hey, what is, am I at least at these full ranges of motion
for a second today? Because I think what ends up happening oftentimes is that we can live in a
world where we're not asked to actually do all the things our bodies can do. And now we're having
to be like, okay, here's your vitamin, here's your X and such, to make.
up for the fact that we're not really doing the things we need to do with our bodies.
What is a simple hip mobility test look like?
Well, the question here is, you know, what should the hip should, what should the hip be able
to do, right?
And I'd say hip as in the chain, right?
But that's the big primary engine.
The spine is the first engine.
But then we have these big primary engines of the hips and the shoulders.
And what's interesting about that conversation is that if I ask people who are very sophisticated
about the running training or their nutrition.
I'm like, what should the hip should be able to do?
What's normal?
What's far from normal?
What does every physician agree we should be able to do?
They have no idea.
What's normal hip flexion?
Bring your knee to your chest.
Well, this was really where we recognized that one of the problems that we had or opportunities
we had is to make these range of motion tests part of the training so that I could,
the stimulus for adaptation exercise was also the diagnostic tool.
Right? So I can understand what's going on. So easily we all should be able to squat hip crease below the knee. Right. That's a really simple test. And if you're struggling to do that, tells me a little bit about your readiness today. And again, you could be stiff. You could have old injuries. You could have, you know, there's no judgment there. If you stand on one leg, you should be able to pull your other knee up past 90 degrees. And most people would struggle for that. We have a simple test in the last book called the Sit and Rise Test, which everyone has heard.
heard of now. Just lower yourself to the ground, crisscross applesauce, right, without falling,
and then without putting a knee down or hand down, pop back up. And so what's nice about that is that
that's not even a full range of motion test. It's not even, doesn't require that much strength,
but it's a good indicator that you might be missing some hip flexion. Being able to fold forward
to shift your weight is really the limiter there. So if we can begin to create some fence posts,
some guidelines for people to understand what's more normative or not around their own range of
motion, then you can keep it on it. And the sit and rise test, isn't there some data on that
with associations in longevity? Yeah. Basically, imagine that all of these things are proxies, right?
As you've talked about, like, I don't really care what your grip strength is. I care what you do
with that grip strength. But if you're doing a lot of fun stuff with your grip strength, your grip strength
is going to be good. So it's a proxy for all these other things, right? And that test tells us a
lot about your movement choice, your ability to solve movement problems, your ability to, you know,
modulate your balance. And so it may not be that that's the end all, be off, put a hand down,
you could probably still be 100. I mean, we probably have some antis in our lives who are over 90,
who've never done the sit and rise test, never done keto, never went to a high intensity exercise
class, but there's something about their lifestyle. We just got back from Japan. We're sleeping
on the ground, cultures that toilet on the ground, sleep on the ground, eat on the ground,
fall risk in the elderly drops to almost zero, osteoarthritis and the hips in low back drops
to almost zero. There's something about maybe we should touch these shapes once in a while.
And then that makes it so that it's on the map of the brain. We're touching and loading those tissues.
The brain doesn't start to pare down some of that movement as irrelevant. So really the question
is, what should I do every day? And then now we can.
and ask the next following questions, what are essential movements and strengthening,
which is really just a formal movement practice under load.
Yes. And that is my next question because I recently did this sit and rise test with someone
who is in good shape. They work out. And I had no problem getting up and doing the sit and
rise test. And they did. That's right. So how can someone be healthy, work out? I mean,
when I mean, like strength and conditioning both. Right there. They're doing
running, they're doing squats, deadlifts, and have trouble with a sit and rise test.
It's a great question. What it hints at, and what I love is get to a place where you and I
have our own ways we like to train, right? You just, you have things, you're like your big power
cleaner and deadlifter and rower. You're, you know, do these hard things. Power cleaning is the
hardest thing. I hate doing it, but I do it. It's almost like it's an Olympic sport and you'll spend
the rest of your life working at it, right?
Okay.
That aside.
So that aside, what we can say is you have your way of training,
things that we love, the way we like to move our bodies in the sports we play.
I actually be able to take any third party system and thrive there.
So if you go to yoga and you get your butt kicked, like yoga is not crazy.
Yoga is just saying, hey, here's what humans should be able to do with no load,
but we're going to hold these isometrics and you have to be able to breathe for a long time.
Go to Pilates class.
If you're really elite, you'll spank Pilates.
You might be sore afterwards because there are some shapes you don't spend a lot of time
and that are normative towards Pilates, right, that are signature Pilates.
But ideally, we should take whatever you're doing and run it through a blood panel.
How do you like to eat?
Cool, I believe you.
Let's go ahead and check over here.
And so that third-party validation is a nice test.
And what we often see is we've compared sort of the capacity of physiology.
And we've confused that with choice, skill, right, coordination.
but I can generate thousands of watts over here,
but I'm not very coordinated.
Or because I've generated thousands of watts over here,
it's cost me my rotation of my hip or my hip extension.
And ultimately, you can do that for a while
until you want to learn new skill,
until that tissue is somehow a little bit misused
because it doesn't have its normal ranges of motion.
And I think when we ask people to sort of engage in some baseline testing,
then we can start to understand,
inputs and outputs. And so if I have an elite cyclist, I'm working in the Tour de France,
we don't really spend a ton of time in hip extension training knee behind the butt like a lunge.
We are in those shapes to make sure that we restore power, keep the hip doing what it needs to do.
We don't necessarily have to train in those shapes as heavily as we might with an Olympic sprinter.
So, but we need to look at where is this person able to put some of these isometrics or some mobility work or some soft tissue work to keep it, you know,
the sort of the window open. Because what we're really trying to do for the typical person,
again, we're all basically rec athletes at some point, is we're trying to say, let's maintain
as much range as we can, right? Let's, and by that we'll say, how do I maintain movement choice,
movement options, how do I pick up a new skill? How do I have a body that's free and unencumbered?
We covered this hip thing, but the shoulders is another kind of obsession of mine because I do get some
hang there's a couple of questions I want to ask and one has to do with obviously the ways
to assess shoulder mobility but the other is like you know I do work at a desk a lot and we're
going to get into desk ergonomics people because that's also an interest of mine as well as I
know other people are interested but what can someone who is desk working a lot but also who lifts
you know what what's I would say a common problem in those individuals in terms of like their shoulder
mobility and what would be a good, you know, ROI in terms of like working your shoulder to reset
it. Yeah. Let's take a look and you'll split the upper body from the lower body because it's easy
to go for a walk and we can decongest, right? The lymphatics are built into our muscle system. The
lymphatic system is suites system of the body and it's bootstrapped into our muscles. And so if we go
for a walk, that calf is acting like a second heart. It's pumping. We're dumping all those lymphatics
through the groin through that muscle contraction.
And it's easy to say, hey, let's decongest.
I ran, I did something, and now I'm just going to walk a little bit more in the day.
It's one of the reasons, you know, if you fly on an airplane, you get cancels.
It's lack of movement that's giving you those cancels, right?
That's congestion of the tissues.
Well, it's easy on the, but if I say, hey, I'm going to need you to get on this rower for an hour.
You're going to be like, bro, I'm not doing that.
Get on this assault bike for an hour decongest.
What?
It's impossible.
And so sometimes it's hard to get enough.
exaggerated cross-pattern motion and movement of the upper body to decongest it the way we're working.
So what we can say then suddenly is, well, what tools will have available to me?
Well, number one, maybe a little bit of shoulder motion where I'm touching some fundamental
shapes during the day.
That'd be easy.
And that's an easy place to start because it's, you know, for example, it's easy never
to have to put your bra on in the back, right?
that would be a test of internal rotation and some extension, that aptly scratch test,
all the, you know, hey, let's look at the, if you do the FMS test, can you get your hand behind your back?
But if you're not practicing and in those shapes ever, it's going to be tricky.
And if you start loading the upper body significantly the way you are,
the way we're kind of modern training has sort of influenced us,
remember that the first thing the body does after training stimulus is it lays down more collagen.
It makes the container stronger to withstand now.
When it starts to put the muscle down inside that, the fascial connective tissue containers are set up first.
We have a bigger engine frame than we can make a bigger engine.
So if you don't do anything, you're going to become stiff and fibrotic.
Like, welcome to being, you know, big squats.
I mean, they're going to make your quads stiff if you don't keep around it.
All that running can make your quads very stiff, right?
So suddenly we can ask around the shoulders.
well, let's make sure that we're doing something to keep an eye on this range of motion.
And I could hint at you could do something like the shoulder spin up in the morning,
which is just touching some fundamental shapes with some arm swings.
It's very simple.
You could do something like David Wex rope flow, which is super fun and very easy to touch a bunch of shapes.
It's basically imagine like P&F patterns, which were this kind of model of looking at how we load the shoulder in this rehab that came out,
these diagonals and rotation. And if you just spin a rope a whole bunch, you're going to touch a ton of
rotation. You're going to be in some of fundamental shapes. It's really fast. It's easy. It's great
prep. Or we could go a step further and say, okay, we've trained all day long. Now we're going to
hook you up to this very sophisticated neuromuscular device that's going to decongest the tissues.
But ultimately, we want to remind you that the body is not fragile. It's designed to be loaded and
adapt forever. So let's at the very least keep an eye on our range of motion. And I just came from
the airport where I just got to see people put their arms over their head in the scanner. And it's sort of a
disaster, right? I mean, they're just banana back, internally rotate. Like people just don't,
aren't very confident putting their arms over their head anymore. But it's because their life doesn't
ask them to do that. And how often I like, like, what, how much time do you think someone should
spend like myself who is desks sitting a lot and many of us are? And I do work out, you know, but as you
said, I'm not doing that throughout the day. So like, you know, is there a couple minutes a day?
Yeah, I think we saw if you started this conversation about when you could say, hey, I think my
lower body is the big problem. Let's focus on that for a week. Upper body is my shoulders are really,
that's the thing I want to feel better at. Well, what we could do is almost say, well,
let's look at a day. That's maybe the, the keystone idea. And the morning, what did you do in the
morning? Did you just get up on the laptop right away? Could we go for a five minute,
walk. Could we just get you engaged in a breath practice? I mean, just getting your rib cage moving
through some breathing, like something even looks like old school Wim Hof style breathing or oxygen advantage.
Just getting your trunk moving and the trunk wall a little more compliant, you're going to see
your shoulder blades work better. And if your shoulder blades work better on your trunk,
you're going to have better arm function. But if my trunk gets stiff because I sit in a C shape
and I don't really take any big breaths, then maybe I'm going to see some decreased function
in the shoulder blade. So a couple minutes of the day in the morning, then I'm just going to not worry. I'm
just going to move as much as I can during the day. That's my goal. Is the breath work? Like, is it
equivalent? Like, let's say I do get up and I go for that. Let's say short run, you know, two miles.
Awesome. Is that doing something similar as the breathwork or is there something independent? Because you
mentioned the trunk. Yes. Well, I think what we haven't helped people understand.
is a ventilation efficiency is very much a skill. And you, you know, doing some formal, thoughtful, full
range of motion of the trunk, full exhale range of motion of the trunk, I would say that most people are
probably occupying some mid-range in their breathing. They're very shallow breathing. They're stiff.
They're just breathing in their available container. If we look at the work, Jill Miller wrote a great book
called body by breath, simple ways to mobilize the trunk. So we actually have better diaphragm function,
better pelvic floor function. Brian McKenzie really brought some of the work back into,
hey, let's take a look at this interesting physiology that we could harness. Right. I Angar,
here we were back at yoga. Nerves are king of the breath. The breath is king of the brain. So one of the
easiest ways we can change state is by being a little bit more conscientious about our breathing.
But I think you're hinting at like, when and where do I do all this? So one of the things that we love,
is if you're on the bike and that's part of your warm up,
let's just drop in a couple simple breath routine practices
that make you have to touch that range of motion.
Can you give me an example?
Yeah, yeah.
This is from the French free divers I was working with, when they're coaches.
During a simple warmup, they take a 10 second inhale,
which is going to kill the average person.
That's a long inhale.
And then they do a max breath hold on that inhale for as long as they can.
And then recover nose only, breathing,
which is going to constrain the breathing.
You're going to have to really be functional on that diaphragm.
You're going to have to work harder.
You're going to prep that.
And you repeat that every minute.
10 second inhale, max breath hold, repeat every minute.
Another simple example is just, hey, every minute, I just want you to exhale as long as you can.
Go ham as long as you can on an exhale.
And when you need to breathe, go ahead and, you know, just keep it moving instead of stopping.
So we can almost use some of this hypoxic work where we just,
put you into a little dynamic apnea where we ask you to work, do a little breath hold of some kind.
Suddenly, you're going to have to touch that range of motion. You're going to have to get caught up.
You're breathing all the way out. You're being a little bit more intentional. And then we've already set up your brain to be a little bit more CO2 tolerant.
And we've done a couple other things. So the first time that that lactate starts spiking, CO2 starts to climb, your brain is like, it's fine. We've already done this a bunch.
So it's like preparing the nervous system.
Oh, I love that. Or reclaiming.
that because I'm trashed from this trip or go and drink with my friends or the big work volume
last week or, you know, it allows me to reset a little bit. What I think we're really seeing
some of the innovation is how do we stack these behaviors. So I'm not giving them another listicle
of things you have to do. And that's what we want to do. How do I integrate this until you're
on the bike? Great. Let's do some breathwork on the bike. What if you become a little dizzy when you're
doing this breathwork? Is that a sign of anything? Or is that normal? Or is that normal?
normal? I think if you are holding your breath to the place you're passing out, maybe, you know,
take that back a notch. Yeah. Right. But if you get a little uncomfortable, that's cool. And if you get a little
luminous, just take a second. Like, you know, I think that's the word that the yogis would do. It was
luminous, right? Your face is tingling. You're like, what's going on? But really, you're just changing
probably what's happening with pH or some aspect of that breathing system is being modulated
and you're feeling a little tingly, totally okay. Unfortunately, those things go away. All the getting
high on your own supply that you get from, you know, it all just becomes normalized.
So I would say, you know, one of the reasons we start with breath, any times one has neck pain,
and you sometimes have mid-back pain or low back pain, we teach the breath mechanic first.
because it's such a powerful way of desensitizing a painful spine or irritated spine.
We normalize a lot of motion and around the spine.
The book that everyone loves to reference is called The Spinal Engine by Gracovetsky.
And it's a really, like, it's a hard book to read everyone.
It's like gnarly biomechanics of salamanders, side-mending.
But really hints at that this is a really great whip, that the spine is a powerful engine.
and initiator of movement.
And that's actually how we define functional movement in the first place.
Works of a wave of contraction from trunk to periphery,
from core to sleeve,
from axillary skeleton to peripheral skeleton.
And it's one of the reasons we take a moment to always organize the trunk
into a little bit better position if we can
because it allows us to have better function, right?
So if I'm slouching at my computer,
hard to take a big breath there, hard to turn my neck there.
If I'm driving in my car or I'm on my bike,
and I'm like, is there a position here
where I could take a bigger breath?
Well, suddenly we might not say that that's a good position or bad position.
We're just like, hey, that position doesn't give me access to as much physiology, as much power, as much volume, as much rotation, as much range of motion.
So we might make decisions about how we organize the body to maintain the integrity of the breathing movement system.
And that's a good indicator of when we start to look at the breath and our ability to take a diaphragm breath, breathe laterally in the ribs.
actually get some motion in the upper back and trunk.
We suddenly see that we can start to flip on lights in the room that was once dark.
And lo and behold, we also got the brain and the mind okay with high CO2s.
So for example, with Berkeley, we try to have seven hypoxic events before we compete.
So I want the women I work with to die seven times in a controlled death, right?
Like we're going to jump rope and hold her breath.
and then put a little bit of that hypoxic load on.
And then later on, we're in the pool doing something of consequence.
It's a lot easier.
Is the response to the slight hypoxic event kind of like an adaptation where you're kind of depriving the tissue of a little bit of oxygen?
And therefore it's like, oh, I got to like make things move faster and better so that that doesn't happen again.
It may there.
It's more likely because it would probably, there's probably there's probably.
some systemic like blood flow restriction like thing that happens right like if you can truly desaturate
but for the typical person who says hey i want to run a 5k for example or i'm doing a half marathon or
something like that um you know they tend to over breathe so they tend as soon as it gets hard
mouth breathing opens very shallow and turns out they really can't access all the oxygen on the
hemoglobin and this is sorry that everyone this is a primer on on you know physiology but it's
the CO2, high levels of CO2, that allow you to strip the oxygen off the hemoglobin.
And again, let me point at Butrako, oxygen advantage, Bramacchins, all the people have been
talked about this forever, all the yogis.
But if we can get the brainstem to handle high circulating CO2s by practicing, exposing that brainstem
to these climbing CO2 levels, then we're able to tolerate higher workloads, strip more oxygen
off and not quickly scrub, ha, breathe off.
off that and now we can actually get more work done because it's the CO2 that's triggering the breathing
response, right? And we don't sort of realize that that's very trainable and that we can suddenly
really get a lot more work done and feel better and less stress than our bodies if we can handle
those high CO2s. But that's uncomfortable. So these seven sort of slightly hypoxic events really are
just the breath work that you're doing before your competition?
100%. And then instead of saying, hey, let's lay down, we might do.
that. You and I put our hands on each other's shoulders. We take a breath in, we're a breath out,
and then you and I wrestle a little bit. And so suddenly now I'm thinking whoever breathes first,
loses, we're battling a little bit and doing something dynamic. And then we're both going to have
this moment of fugue. And that's what we're trying to do is make it so that when that happens,
when that first interval hits, you're much more capable. I wonder, I used to be a surfer.
I no longer am able to call myself that. I mean, I still know how to
surf. Always a surfer. But, you know, even back in the days when I used to actually go surfing,
like, every day, like, I was still terrified every time I'd paddle up, particularly in, like, you know,
with the big swell. Valid. And I'm wondering if, and now it's even worse, like, if I go out,
like, a couple times a year. And it's like, it's like, oh my gosh, it's just, even though I'm so fit,
I mean, I'm not so fit. I just, I'm fit. You're fit. Yeah. You know, but it's still, like,
paddling is hard and holding my breath and, like, you know, getting bombarding.
by the waves. I'm wondering if doing some kind of breath work before going out and paddling out,
because the fear also gets me, right? Where it's like, I know it's coming. I know I'm holding my
breath for a long period of time and it's scary and I don't like it. So I'm wondering if that
would prepare me for... 100%. And let me introduce you to the work of Laird Hamilton and Gabby
Reese, who are really the first people who, for me, put this into the language and context of
performance, that they, for whatever reason, Laird got onto Wimhoff and recognized that if he
trained for these, to be able to handle this very dynamic work on a breath hold, that he could get
more work done, get held down longer, pop back up, recover faster. And so he saw it as a competitive
advantage. And then those two cleverly just were like, boy, we can repurpose this into a lot of
aspects of our life. And in your experience, what you're actually describing is something that's very
common these days where I have this very fit human who now goes and does a sport that they don't
do often or a sport they used to do, but now they're so fit, and it's easy to overdo it. It's easy
not to have that exposure, and it's easy to suddenly maybe recognize that like, hey, there's some
aspect of my training that's not preparing me for this sport. And ideally, I think one of the
things that's happened that's interesting is that people are exercising because it's about
health, right? It's my bone density and it's my VO2 max and right. Well, you're also,
you're athletic and you're doing an athlete and you do sports. But we forgot that the reason we
used to train was to get better for something. And I think I really want to recouple that.
What are you training for for people? Because ideally, you can't, you still need to go do your
sport. We wish we could just be fit and then go do sports. And that's certainly a recipe for
overuse because you can be like, I surf for four hours today. My first time back. You're like,
why do my shoulders hurt so bad? Well, you haven't loaded those tissues. You haven't said it's safe to your brain.
So you hint at something really important, which is that the brain is really a tool that's designed for
safety and survival. It's not designed for optimization. And so when we take this lesson that your
brain is really trying to protect you and is like, what's a threat, not a threat, there's a reason you're
like, I'm a little concerned about being held down and like because you probably did that once or twice.
And your brain's like, we're not doing that again.
And I see what you're doing.
You're dragging us back out.
So how do we signal safety to the body?
How do we signal safety to the brain?
Well, that would be one way.
But suddenly you start to expand that.
Sleep is safety.
Nutrition is safety.
Having access to my range of motion is safety, right?
Things that don't hurt is safe.
We can really start to put in a lot of ideas around how do we help the brain
optimize for performance through feeling safe.
And that, you know, having some hypoxic events before.
hand can be a really easy way. And you can even do this walking with your dog. I mean,
I don't know if you're a psycho like me, but I might walk my dog and be like, if I breathe
before that sign, everyone in my family is going to be wiped out by meteor. And I play these games
where I'm like, I have to just hold my breath to a certain place. And when you get into the weeds
on some of the Gracies always were working on breath holds, always interested in this hypoxic work.
because ultimately, as you know in sports,
and doing activities,
it's this breathing piece that's the limiting factor so often.
I'm sorry to take it here, Kelly,
but like I'm thinking about my heavy lifts now.
Like how I've never really, you know, done.
I just breathe how I'm supposed to.
I just breathe how I breathe when I'm lifting.
Breathe early, breathe often.
Sounds good.
Breathe early, breathe often.
No, I mean, that's what we do.
I'm just going to bring my skills in
and not recognize that,
whoa, this breath, it could be a real opportunity to get better and to learn other skills.
You're absolutely right that there's opportunity here.
So how should I be breathing when I am, you know, I'm doing a heavy squat, front squat,
and, you know, I got to come back up and like there's, you know, I'm grunting, like,
all of that.
Like, I'm kind of just, you know, this is all new for me.
I've been lifting for about that, I would say, the last year and a half, maybe two years now.
But, you know, relatively new.
So fun.
So fun.
but also I'm realizing like you start to then realize, oh, I can optimize here and I can optimize here and, you know.
Maybe even use a different language that.
Instead of optimized, we're like, well, I can become more skilled.
Wow.
I think I deadlifted for like 20 years before I actually deadlifted for the first time.
I was like, oh, that's what she meant a long time ago.
Oh, I think I understand.
And sometimes I work out.
I'm like, I might do something.
We love something called an E-Tot, which is every 30 seconds, you have to do a lift.
It's an easy way for adults for me to rate limit my ego, protect myself, put a little
cardio-respatory demand or metabolic demand on my working.
But sometimes I've done 20 lifts, 20 singles before I'm like, oh, okay, now I'm connected
again.
Now it's starting to go.
So putting that skill in there is very much the game.
And it's okay for us to be skill-limited, not be limited by how strong your hips are.
Like how nice that we have to, we look at all the things.
And I'm like, well, it looks like the limitation for you is that you're just not very good
is this? That's really fun. But in that moment, I'll tell a story about one of our two-time
Olympians and heavy weights. His name's Wes Kitt. And he's an incredible athlete and an Olympian
in Olympic lifting in heavy weights, which are the strongest humans on the planet, right?
His coach, Dave Spitz, who is a genius, local at Cal Strength, was like, hey, can you meet with
Wes? He was just at the Pan Am Games, received a heavy clean over 400 and passed out, right,
on stage pressurizing for the next jerk right putting cleaning is getting up to your shoulders
jerking is pro over your head and i was like well that doesn't sound like a good way to win right and so
west came in and what we worked on was him pressurizing under those loads could he sequence
and take a second and do a little bit more diligence about getting more air in creating this high
intramedinal pressure and when we started working on that with him same drill same skills but just
And then also being a little conscientious.
He never missed a jerk again.
Like set the American record, qualified for the Olympics.
So we can at the highest level, at low level, low speed, walking around, you know, the breathing, you can have one lung and still climb Everest.
Like, we're so efficient.
But on the other hand, when we start to look at, hey, we're going to do these five reps on this squat, I need you to get back to that breath.
Your first breath is great.
You get back to the top.
Can we pressurize again?
Can we pressurize again?
And suddenly that becomes a skill.
Can I breathe while I'm under this load?
And if that doesn't sound like something you can relate to, go ahead and do a plank because
everyone on this call or listening has probably done a plank and watch what happens
when you plank.
You stop breathing or you breathe very shallowly.
So show me you can maintain this reference volume, taking these huge breaths in and out while
you're doing some of these mundane skills.
You're back at yoga again.
So that, is that a good, you know, thing to practice would be like doing the plank and really just trying to like breathe and be pressurize as you call it.
Yeah, yeah.
And what you can certainly see is, wow, as soon as it gets a little bit hard, the first thing that goes out is the window.
So when I work with coaches and teams or even a group of people will do, like you, do a little demo.
Let's do a squat or do something.
And the first thing people do is hold their breath.
Why?
Because they've created a little stable trunk, requires less.
skill, less movement control, and they can simplify the system. So if I just hold my breath,
then I can do a skill for a while. And what we actually, many of us are doing is going from
breathhold to breath hold to breath hold to breath hold when we work. And you're not actually
limited by your strength. You're limited by our ability to manage oxygen use because you're not
breathing. You're going from breath hold to breath hold. And you'll see it and actually watch your
kids, watch people like they literally are existing in a world where they're going from breath hold to
breath hold. And oftentimes we're like, oh, that's a curious strategy, giving that we're aerobic
animals. Right. So just take some time, focus on your breath while you're doing a static hold.
I like that. And train your, train your bra. Yeah. And look, if we can, we establish this way.
If we lay you down the ground and I have you take the biggest breath in through your belly,
through your ribs, through your chest, through your upper back, we could measure that, right? But I call that
the reference volume because there's no load on your spine. You don't have to. You don't have
do anything like you're out of gravity we can just like what's the most air in we can get and we can
practice that put your hands here breathe here right we can measure that then in gravity i basically
want you to be at 90% of that so now there are all these competing demands on that but if i
suddenly have an idea of how much air i should be able to move in and out and then i drop down into a
plank and i'm at 30% taking these really shallow breaths you're like what are you doing you know
because now why does your swimming suck why does right you can
and start to see that you're making, you're losing capacity.
And again, the reason we're interested in this is that we're interested in training
these available capacities in the mundane things that we're already doing.
And so with just a few twists to the pretzel, we can really josh up and get even more bang for
the buck.
I'm excited.
I'm going to, we do, I do planks often, you know, mostly at the end of my workout with
my coach.
And so I'm going to start practicing the breath work.
And you'll be shocked.
You're like, wow, I really aren't breathing here.
That's what is, and what a great strategy.
What a great strategy that our brain goes, this is complicated, this is potential a little dangerous.
We'll just simplify the system.
We just have so many wonderful workarounds as the body to maintain capacity, maintain range of motion.
Let's keep you in the game.
Let's make it so you can still get your hand to your face and you can negotiate the world.
Right.
We have all of these workarounds.
It's funny because you mentioned Gabby and Laird, who I have, are mutual friends.
And I've, over the years, something has come up every time, but I was supposed to go train with them and do their, their expertise.
The pool work at the house.
Yeah, yeah.
And I know it's going to happen one day.
It's a bucket list item.
I'm going to be more prepared for it.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
For sure.
Less embarrassed.
And what it's really great is I just, I want you to appreciate that when Laird is there, Laird has 17, 20,
100 levels of hell.
Like there's some way to exceed your capacity, right?
And that's what all good training is.
We're trying to say, how skilled are you as a mover?
And then we're going to add a little bit of construct or constraint to exceed your ability.
And then we're going to try to keep you there.
That's our hypothesis.
We're going to test our hypothesis.
Like, that's all we do in an exercise.
And that might be adding load.
That might be adding speed.
Hey, did you notice the first time you had to squat after rowing that it was a little bit
harder to squat.
Breathing real hard makes that skill harder.
Oh, yeah.
When my coach has, it's like if I design the workouts that we do, like at the end of our
session, it's hard.
After you're, after you're doing the rowing and then you have to go right into the
squat or look out for the cleaning and then doing your front squat.
So what you've just discovered there is that, hey, this movement is a skill, and there
are a lot of ways to challenge that skill.
I hand you a barbell.
I hand you dumbbells.
I flip you upside down.
Now we're competing.
Now there's a little psychology of,
hey, I have to do this thing and I'm not sure I can.
I'm the imposter voice, the fear voice.
Now you're breathing hard.
Now I have to do 20 reps.
Now, and you see that there are so many ways to manipulate that,
that ultimately, when we start to view strength conditioning
as coordination training with resistance,
the resistance is a lot.
But if we're just about, we have a lot of,
choice here to make this hard. But if it's just about capacity, then let's just give you an
exercise bike and do some dumb work. But it's not. How do we become more skilled? And I guess I think
one of the critiques and a valid critique of the last 20 years of strength conditioning, it's become
very capacity based. We're so interested in capacity. But your VO2 max means nothing unless you
can handle and carry that with skill. You have this great quote.
Train for life, don't live to train, which, I mean, you kind of touched on it a little bit.
And we're talking about both ends of the spectrum here.
I mean, obviously there are athletes that are training for something.
But there's a lot of people listening to this podcast that are not athletes.
They're just interested in being healthy.
Let's, okay, then, if that athlete word is not the right word.
Okay, what is the right word?
What is the right move?
Because I think what we want to say is that everyone,
needs to move their body. We're getting that message. But we want you to not, I've been saying this
lately, and it's very unpopular, but pull-ups are the worst sport there is. It's what a terrible sport pull-ups are.
It's not interesting. No one cares. Like going from 20 to 25 pull-ups, it's great for you. Did it make you a better
swimmer? Did it make you better surfer? So ultimately, in this quest for bigger front squats,
It's like strength is never a weakness, you know, less slave to be like, whoa, whoa, whoa, at what cost to actually have you, have you left the house and done in a sport? Have you tested your fitness? Have you spent your fitness credits? We run a program for adults over 40. You know, it's like what does a strength, conditioning movement lifestyle program look like for a busy person who's not interested in necessarily, you know, snatching one rep max at the Olympics again? And one of the things that we see there is that,
people are still treating exercise like a commodity where it's I have to do the makeup sets of math
homework if I miss a day I go back I'm like hold up hold up hold up that's not what good
consistent strength conditioning practice looks like at any sport level if you and I are competing
we had a tournament this weekend we come back in we reclaim right your positions there's actual
life going on hey we're working on you know what you'll see is that the strength
conditioning done by real sports teams changes a lot. Travel, competition, off season, in season,
when do we turn up? I can't, I mean, one of my critiques of strength conditioning right now is that
like if you train kids the way we're training adults who don't do sports or train anyone
like adults who don't do sports, you will crush them and they won't be able to do their sport.
So if you and I train together and then you're like, Kelly, I wasn't able to surf today because
I'm so beat up. I'm like, well, it doesn't matter. It does matter. So ultimately, we're trying
to get to a place where we can start to think about this training as having context instead of
just being recursive hell where, oh, my VO2 came down or my pull-ups came down. I lost some capacity.
Yes, you shouldn't lose capacity. You went on vacation, right? You did a sport. You did, you hike the Grand
Canyon. Like, of course your pull-ups are going to change. Come back in and get restarted again.
Don't see it as this like perfect decorative room, which doesn't match your lifestyle, your stress,
your nutrition. We kind of were like, look what the Soviet is. We're like, look what the Soviet
are doing. They could like you're going to be 82.3% of your one rep max on Tuesday, three weeks
from now. Are you serious? Like you don't even know where you are going to be in the world three
weeks from now. How could we possibly plan for that? And I don't know if you're going to get sick or
your kids are going to get sick or you're going to have a deadline at work. So let's go ahead
and just give ourselves permission. What's the goal today to find relative loads and relative
speeds and relative skill? And then we'll will go on. Yeah. I think there's a lot of people that
perhaps don't even play sports. And I mean, adults here, I'm mostly talking about adults,
that are thinking about these statistics in their head, like, oh, I'm 50 years old, I'm 60 years old,
my muscle mass is declining, my strength is declining, you know, my cardiorespiratory fitness is
declining, and they're scared about that aging process, and they're trying to battle it and
slow it. And so they're like, well, I need to, you know, put stress on any muscles to get the adaptations.
I need to, you know, make sure I'm growing at the least maintaining muscle mass, you know, building
strength. I need to make sure I'm, you know, keeping my, my blood flow going and, you know,
challenging my lungs and my heart, right, my cardiorespiratory system. And so for them, they're,
like you're saying, it's the gym is kind of like a checklist. A checklist. Exactly. It's a checklist.
and so, yeah, so how should those people think about training?
And what types of training should they, I mean, what's their mindset like and then translate
that to action?
That is like, here we go, the million-dard question, right?
What does it look like?
The most important thing, I think, let's take another model.
Humans in America don't eat fruits and vegetables.
We like to pretend like we do, we don't.
We don't, no one gets enough fiber.
Not five percent of us get enough fiber day.
Okay.
So, so we have, we have what we should do and what we are doing, right?
The most important thing is to find a way that you like to move your body in community.
That's the most important thing.
How are you, do you enjoy dance?
Let's go dance.
So what we need to do first and say is if we just reduce exercise to like this physiologic, you know, input so that my heart rate, you know, my blood pressure,
I'm exercising my body.
That's a side effect.
I want you to exercise so that you can have better communication with your partners,
a more fun household, that you're in a community.
Like that's what we are supposed to do.
Then we can take a look at that and say, okay, we have a physical practice, movement practice,
game play, which is really important.
Then we can say, what's the minimum dose over here of loading of cardiorespiratory demand?
And theoretically, you can do that in an enjoyable way too.
You know, you have mentioned CrossFit, and we discover CrossFit in 2004.
We opened a CrossFit gym in 2005.
The model of CrossFit, especially modern, sophisticated CrossFit programming, is that there are a lot of needs being met simultaneously.
You're going to get strong.
You're going to become skilled.
You're going to have to do this under a high aerobic demand and metabolic demand.
And simultaneously, it's pretty fun.
You know, my wife has would describe her.
as having exercise ADD.
Like she doesn't want to do the same thing every single day.
Like I can eat the same breakfast for now to the end of time.
She's like, nope, that's not for me.
So what we want to do is, again, go in and say, well, what are the things that you need to do?
And now we can start to ask, what do you have access to?
What's, you know, how, you know, do you have a weight?
Where are you going to do that?
How often are you going to do that?
And we really end up getting in the weeds very quickly.
and more importantly, into the right conversation.
And, you know, they sell kettlebells at Target now.
You know, and if you just had a kettlebell at home and did some swings, you know,
in your kitchen for 10 or 15 minutes, plus went to dance class, plus through a frisbee,
we're going to start to approximate some pretty good, well-balanced fitness.
And then we can take that the things that you like to do and the minimums of these things.
Like, we love it.
People hang from a bar.
If you can hang three minutes a day,
work on that's such a great thing to do.
Why?
Good for your neck,
good for your back,
good for your shoulders, right?
We tend to find that people who can hang
have less shoulder pain, less neck pain.
It's a fundamental position
and what we're really doing
when we're hanging.
Three minutes.
Three minutes.
In total.
What we're really doing
when we're hanging is an isometric.
And we're just telling our brain
these are really important positions to be in
and that hanging really popularized by Ida Pertal
was the first reason to be like,
let's aggregate hanging.
We start to see that shoulders hurt less,
back works better,
neck functions more effectively
because we're just spending time
in these end ranges.
You don't like to hang?
Let me introduce you to Downward Dog.
Downward Dog is another version of spending
a lot of time with your arms of your head.
If you ever gone to yoga class,
you spend like two and a half years
in Downward Dog for a reason
because it's a really important position.
So now,
theoretically I can take
all the things Dr. Patrick does, all things that Dr. Kelly does, and then we can test them
and say, who's got the best? And does it get me, if my V-O-2 max has improved a little bit or
it's good enough? Isn't that what we want to do, just discover what's good enough so that we, again,
can be pain-free, have the most movement choice, play, pick up skills, occupy our role.
And then if we want to go to the Olympics, that's a slightly different conversation.
But for the average person, we should be able to say, hey, our goal isn't to be so
specialized that we're afraid to have a margarita or drink and eat an assay bowl, right?
Like we want to have tolerance in the system and be amazing.
You know, one of my personal, you know, bugaboos is I don't always want to talk about body
composition.
You know, I really stayed away from nutrition conversations because it was always about
losing body fat.
I have to talk about it because I want to talk about your tissue health.
I want to talk about all the things that are going to allow you to not get injured or tweaked.
Simultaneously, one of my goals is to be less gross for my wife.
You know, she is my wife is the CEO. She has these abs. She's just like superstar rad woman. And I just, I don't want her to leave me. So I want to be less gross. I love, Kelly, how you added leisure time activity in that equation. You mentioned dancing or whatever it is you like to do. For me, it's tennis. Because I've had, I've had Dr. Ben Levine, do you know, but have you heard Ben Levine? I mean, he's a rock star in, you know, the exercise physiology world when it comes to your cardiovascular health, right? And.
And his prescription for life from just, you know, decades of aggregating data, you know, looking at individuals from an age range from, you know, younger athletes, middle age, older.
Really, that is an important part of the equation in addition to the other, you know, the exercise volume and the types of exercise that people are doing.
It's got to be at least an hour a week of leisure time activity in the equation.
Oh, I've never heard a minimum of leisure time activity.
But yes, yes, yes, we do not play enough.
You're right.
And you're absolutely right.
Especially, I mean, kids play a lot.
And we're going to get into kids too.
But we're both parents and I'm very interested in that.
But adults don't play enough.
And even adults like that are interested in health and fitness and improving the way
they age and feeling better, being more mobile, all of that, even even those adults oftentimes don't have any sort of leisure time activity.
I mean, and that could be even riding a bike with a group.
Oh, that's leisure time activity.
Right. Oh yeah, 100%.
You know, tennis. I guess pickleball is making a comeback now. I don't know how you feel about that, but, you know, that's...
Pickleball will save America.
Yeah. I mean, it's a lot of older people are getting into it. My mom's like, I'm going to start doing pickleball.
So I love that leisure time activities back in the equation because I feel like we lost that as an adult, as adults.
We somehow lost the fun of, you know, playing a sport.
I was just in Hawaii this weekend. We were speaking at the University of Hawaii and working with some different...
We did a keynote there.
And then I worked with the Strengthening Additioning staff, right?
Just had a session with University of White Athletics, Go Bose.
And on the outside wall of the Kinesse department is a sign that's really old from the 70s that were replaced.
It says leisure, like leisure activity research or leisure activity research, something like that.
And Jill and I were like, look at that.
They were like, someone was looking at like sports and playing sports as a way of getting fit.
like quantifying that.
And we have a really good friend who, Nicole Christensen, CrossFit Roots, she says,
hey, my family doesn't nature for time.
So any, like, health benefits that we get from riding our bikes or paddling or doing
it, like, that's just free money because it's in service of our sport.
So let's go ahead and get fit for our sport.
And so if you're a runner, here's this radical idea.
Train for running because running is your sport, right?
And pelotoning is a terrible sport.
And that's just the worst fun, right?
And yet, like, we've figured out, hey, I got to be fit.
There's just some really efficient ways to do it in my home, et cetera.
Someone told me this weekend who works at the University of Whitey Law School
that the treadmill was invented in prison because no one could think of a more demoralizing thing
than doing a bunch of work that didn't do anything.
I was like, wow, okay.
Sign me up.
Yeah.
Pelotons changed my life for the 10-minute blood flow when I am on the go.
I am such a fan of the exercise bike.
We can protect people's range of motion.
It's what we call high physiology, low-skill.
Not many people die.
Your knee doesn't dislocate.
You can get a lot of work done really fast on that thing.
If we had the exercise bike in every household in America, we would see a lot of changes.
comma, you know, I don't know if that scales or is very egalitarian or democratizing.
Oh, it's everyone needs a complex solution to a complex problem.
Right.
Exactly.
Well, let's talk a little bit about the healing because, you know, just I want to, it's
something that I'm personally interested in because I do, as I mentioned at the start
of this podcast, do have pain.
It's not debilitating pain and it usually goes away pretty shortly after whatever, you know,
exercise I'm doing.
but it's annoying and I want to know you know like should I be doing things you mentioned voodoo floss
you know there's the lacrosse ball so so it's like the tendon I have these you know it's like
it seems as though my my nagging pain I know a lot of people experience this you know is there is
you know what's the science behind this is it really just increasing the blood flow to these
not very well you know vascularized tissues yeah that that could be it it could be it could be
that you tweaked yourself a long time.
We have a thousand just so stories, right?
It's really easy.
I think they call it harking, right?
Yeah.
You look at a data set afterwards.
You're like, oh, here's what I meant to do.
So if we're looking at a complex system and we're trying to derive essential information
of that complexity, it's important that we take a look at the environment the person lives
in.
And that maybe is not the first conversation because that's annoying, hey, my shoulder's
killing me. I can't play my game. Tell me about your stress. Like, bro, like, that's not the
place for, like, come on. Make this stop hurting. Then we can talk about my stress. So, but we, we do
try to create benchmarks. And we call them vital signs for those people, sleep, nutrition,
et cetera, because we do sometimes end up, rec, give me an anecdote here. We had a woman at our gym
who had a bad ankle sprain kind of tear in one of her ligaments. We had a lot of physios at our gym.
She healed back up.
We got her back.
She's fully returned to play.
A couple months later, I walked back into the gym.
She's wearing her boot again.
And I was like, oh, no.
Like, you injured herself again.
She's like, I don't know what happened.
I just woke up and it started hurting.
And when I said to her was, tell me more.
And I was like, what's going on?
Like, this is not how the brain works.
It's not how your body works.
Like, I've seen you move after this thing.
She's like, well, my dog just died.
And that death was so significant for her
that her brain was basically took stock
what was going on.
her body was like, must be the ankle again.
So just lowering that, that sensitive, raising that sensitivity by that stressful event was
enough for her to trigger her brain thinking that body was unsafe.
So as we're working through this and trying to gather information about a complex system,
remember, the brain is the most sophisticated structure in the known universe.
We can start with saying, well, do you have range of motion here?
That's an easy place to start.
Because we can play press and guess where I get you to scrape and we mobilize and we can do some
isometrics, but we could be much more targeted in our approach here.
And rarely is it like the tendon, right?
We want to see that tendon in a movement system because that tendon oftentimes is just putting up
in your crap.
It's actually doing the job of like three things.
Like, for example, we have a simple test called the couch stretch.
Have you ever done the couch stretch?
You put your knee in the corner?
No, but I've heard about it.
Okay, okay.
So it's basically just a real simple assessment of some hip extension.
So if you were kneeling facing away from the wall, you put your knee in the corner.
So your foot is going up the wall.
And then you bring your other leg up into a high kneeling position.
Right.
So it's kind like a lunge, but your leg is really bent and going up the wall.
So it's a short lever lunge position.
And what we're looking for there is can you get your back upright without banana backing, without just kind of arching?
can you take a breath there
and then can you squeeze your butt there?
And what we often find is that people are so restricted in their quads
that can't even get into that test position
because they're so restricted for whatever reason
but also it inhibits their ability to squeeze their butt.
So what we see is sometimes when people are missing hip extension
because this is really a simple test
of looking at what the tissues should be able to do
as we move towards extension,
getting that knee behind my butt like a lunge or run,
that butt gets inhibited because the quads are tight, the pelvis tips over, whatever reason.
The brain is basically like, we can't fire that glute against this resistance.
So we use that as a assessment for, hey, let's spend some time here, isometrics.
We can get your butt practicing that squeezing.
So your brain says, oh, in this position, I can do a normal muscular drill, get my butt squeezing when the quads are tight.
But that's a good example of why a lot of times people have really stiff hamstrings all the time.
They're always sitting in a bent position.
And then the hamstring is doing the work of the butt and the hamstring all the time instead of the butt doing its job and the hamstring doing its job together.
So it's a good example of sometimes that hamstring pathology could be as a result of working in incomplete positions where a lot of my physiology is sort of what I call positionally inhibited.
And the same thing could be true of your shoulder.
So what do we do?
So you mentioned spending some time in the isometric position to help.
Yeah.
And for everyone, that just means you're pausing in a position, right?
And making your brain control that position when we stop.
So if you're doing a squat and you stop, that's an isometric.
And so shoulder hanging, I mean, hanging from a bar, would that be considered?
That might be one working on an overhead position.
There would be, we could, we also could take, if you've ever laid, like, you could lay on your back, put a lacrosse ball or some kind of ball in your T spine and put your arm over your head.
And one of the ideas that I stole right out of my instruction at physio school is that we mobilize at the position of restriction.
Whenever we can, we want to give context to the tissues that we're mobilizing.
So if I'm missing internal rotation, so if I put my arm out to my side.
So here's a quick primer for everyone.
The shoulder really does four things.
I know it seems like it does a lot more, but don't lose the narrative here.
You put your arm over your head.
Okay.
Okay, arm goes out in front, arm goes out to the side, arm goes behind.
That's really it.
In some version of that, I'm going from position to position.
What gets confusing is that the arm can bend and be straight, right, and it can rotate.
So suddenly I can get into some very complex positions, but this is just still arm out in front, right?
A plank is training what?
Arm out in front?
And we have some, we call them archetypes, right?
So a push up, the start of a row, start of a bench,
press, those are all beginning shapes that are similar. And then we can ask, you know, how am I
spending time in these shapes? Do I have any exposure of these shapes? Or do I even have access to
the shape? So if my arm is out, and I should have a rotational window of about 160 degrees. So it's
easy to see, harder to see with the arm straight, easier to see when the elbow is bent. So from 90,
arm is parallel to the ground, I should be able to go straight up to 90. That's normal range.
If my hand is here, I should be able to get my hand all the way down to my hip if I was laying on the ground without my shoulder coming forward.
And that shoulder coming forward is how your body solves the problem if you can't access that position.
And that shoulder coming forward suddenly asks that deltoid, biceps to work really hard.
The deltoids like working like a seatbelt trying to squeeze you back.
That's potentially the mechanism of injury for biceps tears, for laboral tears.
puts my rotator cuff at a huge disadvantage.
And what we can say is, it's not necessarily bad because you have pain.
It's less effective if you're trying to access all the wonderful things that your shoulder should be able to do.
So now when we give people a few quick tests, you can be like, oh, this must be my internal rotation.
And oftentimes when you just restore these fundamental shapes, pain mitigation, we get in the background.
Right.
But more importantly, what can we measure?
Power, wattage, poundage, those are the things that we were the things that we were
keep our eyes on. Have you heard? I mean, I know you've heard of it, but what causes women who are
perimenopausal to get this frozen shoulder? As you were mentioning the range back here, like some women
can't do that. I'm so glad you brought that up. So one of the things that our industry, physical
therapy, everyone all did did dirty by women for a long time is we did not recognize what
Vonder Wright, Dr. Vonder Wright, calls the musculoskeletal syndrome of menopause. And, and, and
And that when we suddenly see women in their 40s and 50s who will show up with some weird occult tendon thing, got a weird hot tendon, I want everyone to ask the fundamental question, hmm, I wonder if this is related to my gonads, right, which is my ovaries and testes.
What is happening? Is there some fundamental change in my biology that has left me, because you're doing everything's the same.
Nutrition is the same. But all of a sudden I woke up and this new body, absolutely.
we should be asking that question, does this have a hormonal component? Yes. And we want to,
we can also work on restoring your range of motion. We could also get blood flow and like we could
move slower so that doesn't hurt while simultaneously. Maybe we, we run that down. So, so essentially
you have to fix the hormone problem. I would say that for generations we didn't fix the hormone problem
for as long as there been humans. But now what I would say is we are more aware that,
that this should be a component of care for women who are perimenopausal and menopausal
when we're suddenly seeing a cult frozen shoulder. And by the way, frozen shoulder translates
in Japanese and Chinese to 50-year-old shoulder. Isn't that weird? Yes. That's what it's called
50-year-old shoulder. I haven't gotten it yet, but I'm like, I have friends that have it. I'm hearing
about it. And now I'm like scared. Well, what we can say is how do we manage range of motion?
How do we optimize? What can we control? And oftentimes that's enough. And then we may need to jump on that. But when there are changes in the tissues, and there is no parity here. We often have men who come out of being exposed to a lot of head trauma. In the military and professional sports, they've rattled their antiputary, right, through concussions. They don't really make testosterone. They don't really, you know, plus all the lifestyle things are going on. No growth hormone. Tissues.
start to fall apart. In two seconds, we're like, men, here's some testosterone. You're set, right?
We measured it. You've, you have all these concussion histories. Imagine if we applied the same thing
to women, we're like, hey, the system isn't working, and now you're starting to expose yourself
to these fundamental changes in your tissues. They're changing because of the lack of estrogen.
So seems like that would be another thing we could look into. Yeah. One other thing I want to
touch on on the sort of healing recovery spectrum is, you know, we're talking about blood flow,
profusion, the voodoo floss is like one way to get to that. I like to run on days that I'm not lifting
and I find that if I'm really sore, if I did something, if I had, if I've been traveling a week,
it's crazy. I'll travel for a week. And then I come back and I do squats and I'm like, I'm sore.
And I'm like, I've been doing these. I can't take a week off. Like, really?
I know. What? But I find that if I go for a run the next day, it is insanely important for my recovery. It really helps.
That's right. That's right. So I don't want to interrupt. Yeah. No, do. First of all, your experience there is really important. I figured out that if I move after these sessions, I feel better. And that works. And I know how to do that. So someone should not come in and say, that's wrong or let's change that. Bulley for you. Because you.
you're figuring it out that the goal is this constant motion. That's fantastic. Right. And I mean,
it's probably a lot of things going on, but I feel like blood flow is one, right? You're getting all the
goodies to your muscle to recover and your tendons and so on. But the other way to do that would be
something that I've definitely talked about a lot on this podcast, and I know that you're a fan of,
which is deliberate heat exposure through sauna or hot tub, where you're also increasing blood flow.
I mean, it's sort of mimicking moderate intensity of cardiovascular exercise.
So I wanted to get your thoughts on, first of all, using temperature, both hot and then on the opposite end of that, that would be cold, which causes vasic constriction, combining the two, how you think about, you know, using that for healing recovery.
And then we can talk about growth hormone too, because I want to bring up something as well.
I love it.
We're huge fans of entertainment of your body.
Michael Easter talks about the comfort crisis, just the.
that exposure to those ends, making you a little bit more psychologically resilient.
How about that there's probably a ton of really good science?
Thank you for showing us all about the sauna exposure, heat exposure.
Simultaneously, I would say that what if the miracle of the sauna was just that you have to
chill out and be in there with your partner and there's no phone and there's a community?
I think it can work on lots of levels.
We tend, I think the easiest way of thinking, I'll borrow this from our friend Laird and Gabby,
that heating up and cooling down are two of the most expensive things our bodies does.
And if we can become a little bit more efficient at it, that's probably a good thing.
Getting cold and getting hot might be really great for your range of motion of your vasculature,
just reminding your, you know, all those smooth vessels, this is what it means to get cold
and this is what it means to get hot.
And you're right.
Maybe the fundamental aspect of saunas that we just start moving and pumping and things start,
you know, that's great.
I'm into it.
Now we can say, well, how often, when should I?
Can I make it too hot?
You actually brought our temperature way down.
Thank you very much.
We listened.
And now we're at like 180, not 2.30.
You know, I'm not retching in the sauna anymore, you know, because I'm overheated.
But I think if we're talking about performance, great research around sauna.
We can sauna, sauna, sauna, but it's a stressor and we'll definitely smoke you.
We probably tend to use cold.
a little bit more judiciously because it can blunt adaptation to exercise, right, which is not
what we're trying to do. And yet simultaneously, I would just say, hey, if you're a middle-aged
wreck guy, get cold when it works for you, right? Don't worry about it. If we're trying to win
a gold medal, maybe we think about when we're dosing that exposure of cold so we don't blunt
any adaptation. But if we're talking about jumping in some cold water for a minute, that's not
the same thing as icing, right? Yeah, I also love how you talked about your brain and getting,
doing the hard things too. We're also training our brain, right? People freak out when they get cold.
I'm like, what's wrong with you? It's just cold, you know? And, you know, full disclosure,
my wife, I'm a professional river guides and kayakers and paddlers. We've been cold our whole life,
it feels like. So we're like, oh, this is just like my 20s, you know, being freezing in a river.
But I think it's real fun to entertain ourselves a little bit on the side. And I think maybe we can
look at some of those objects as like totemic objects that,
focus other health behaviors. Maybe that's the best, nicest thing about them. Right. Yeah. Well,
I wanted to bring up growth hormone because, one, I want to get your input on what I'm going to say,
but also because there's not a lot of research on this. There's like independent research in one area
and the other and you kind of have to connect the dots, right, which isn't always great, but it's a start.
And so we know that sauna, deliberate heat exposure, does increase growth hormone. So,
growth hormone does respond to a stressful type of, you know, stress, right? So you can do that through
exercise, you can do it through deliberate heat exposure, you can do it through, you know, intermittent
fasting. All those things have been shown to increase growth hormone. And depending on the
temperature and duration, you can get a more robust response, right? So like, the longer you do the sauna,
the more hot without going above, you know, 200 degree Fahrenheit, you're going to get a more
robust response with growth hormone. And you know the effects of growth hormone, particularly on
like tendons, making them stronger, I believe that's, that's something that's, you know, known.
So my, my idea here is like, is using the sauna also potentially, you know, helping your tendons
because of that growth hormone pulse that you're, you know, getting from doing exercise also
does, right? It elevates growth hormones well. But if we're managing, uh,
someone's pain or after injury, again, I might even say hard for me to measure that growth hormone
effect. But what is really useful is that I can get people feel better. We get better blood flow
without having to work hard on a tissue that we need to protect temporarily. Right. It's easy to do that
and sort of, I don't have to, you know, we're lucky we have a sauna, but maybe you have one at home and you
don't have to drive. We can have lots of these little sort of exposures more often. And ultimately,
I think it would be real fun to be like, I got into the sauna and look at my skin now. It's
amazing. It's one time. But it's really the consistency of these exposures. I think we just,
it's easy to sort of lose that. We love the sauna because we have a bunch of friends who are maniacs
who work really hard. They're the peak of their power. They're their families. And we find it to be
the easiest e-break to yank to slow.
them down in the evening. If you get hot and cold a couple times, you're going to fall asleep
because it's so exhausting. But what I really like is you start to say, hey, here's a practice
that's pretty easy, low skill, and maybe I could really goose my tissue healing times by optimizing
because now we start to say, well, are you getting enough protein? Are you getting enough sleep? How are we
getting that blood moving? And if there's side effects from some of these things, that's really great.
I'll take it. Right. And the nice thing now is I think there's enough research showing that even getting in a hot tub, hot bath, you could do a hot bath. Most people do have a bathtub at home. You will have to get a little pool thermometer and make sure you're at 140 Fahrenheit. So you might have to constantly refill the bath for it to stay hot for 20 minutes. But it's also more accessible, I think, now where it's like, well, people might go, I don't have a sauna. And maybe they don't have a gym membership and their gym doesn't have a sauna. So it's nice to know that they can,
even use their bathtub at home. Yes. I love that. And the way you're thinking about this is,
okay, here's what we think best practice looks like. In an elite institution, how do I transmit that
to my little home? You know, getting hot really once in a while, it's probably really good for you.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Let's kind of translate to the opposite of exercising and moving, which is what we're
doing now and sitting. And what most of us are spending, I would say the majority of our day doing.
I have to admit, I'm selfishly interested in some of the stuff that you talked about in your best-selling book, Supple-Leppard, desk ergonomics, and kind of optimizing that because I, as I mentioned to you, off-camera, embarrassingly have a standing desk. I mean, I toggle, it can toggle it up and down, and yet I'm sitting the whole time that I'm working at that desk. I use it as a standing desk, like,
10 years ago, got out of the practice. But before we get to the standing desk, I do want to just
mention, you know, there's a lot of people in my life that are affected by sitting at a desk
that I care about. And so I want this information to get to them. So where do we start?
Let's define the problem, right? It's not sitting as bad, standing as good, right? We're designed to be in
motion throughout the rest of the day for the whole day. I think that's the way you look at it.
And there are absolutely times where it's appropriate to simplify you have trained your body
through high school and college and university and grad school to be able to sit and focus.
And that is not a problem. What's a problem is these marathon bouts. So Harvard defines sedentary
lifestyle as sitting more than six hours a day in aggregate. So that's TV, dinner, commuting,
Right. All the, you know, we're having to sit like this is our organism, you know,
and again, we should have a body that's tolerant enough to handle these sitting things
without my back hurting, without my hips getting stiff. But what we can start to ask is,
okay, are there opportunities where we could break up that sitting into optional, not optional
sitting? Because remember, the goal is just to move more, right? So one of the things that's been
useful is for us is, you know, that data that says walking 8,000 steps a day reduces all
cause mortality by 51%. That's a pretty good bargain. Eight thousand steps turns out to be
clinically relevant because a lot of people can get that without having to do a big crazy walk
and organize your whole life around walking meetings. You can kind of get that eight thousand steps.
So now we've got a benchmark in there where we're instead of saying don't do this, we're saying,
hey, let's do this positive behavior. And that tends to change what's going on with all the
sedentaryness. You're like, oh, got to walk. And, you know, people have been down this road before.
You know, the healthiest people in the building were the smokers because they had to get up
and walk to the smoke place, right?
And the further way you put that, the healthier they got.
But what we can then start to say is, well, okay, I have this desk thing.
Are there any modifications to the environment that might allow me to not be as sedentary?
So we can look and go further and say, well, what is a sedentary behavior?
It's like fall and a half below one and a half metabolic equivalence.
That's really what it is.
So you remember the old treadmills?
You can be like watts, calories, Mets.
A METs is like an ERG or a watt.
It's just a measure of work output.
And one and a half metabolic equivalence is a sedentary behavior.
So any activity where I have more than one and a half metabolic equivalence,
like there's a landmark research that when the Wii came out, remember that PlayStation,
the Wii?
And they were like, we fit.
It turns out playing Wii burned as many calories as standing, right?
It wasn't the we.
It was the now we're not sitting and playing.
So if we were at a bar stool working, that's still, I can focus, but now I have to do a lot more with my trunk.
And now I'm above one and a half metabal equivalents.
As soon as I got my legs a little bit involved in the conversation, boom, above one and a half.
And not that we need to perseverate on that, but suddenly you could really do say that, hmm,
those drafters had something going on.
So we say it's not a standing workstation
until you have a place to put your foot
to get you out of this extension.
So you need like a stack or something.
And two, I want you to have a barstool
so that you can sit down, you can perch,
you can lean, you can use it as a prop,
you can put your foot on it,
you can do half pigeon pose on it, right?
And all of a sudden you're like,
wow, there's a lot of movement choice.
I think the problem with just sitting
is that we don't have a lot of movement choice here.
And as soon as I go from a sitting, traditionally sitting station to a more work-friendly position,
there's a lot more choice to fidget, move, take a break, step back, et cetera, et cetera.
And that suddenly cracks the whole thing open.
So having that range of movements really key.
And I also have a, it's a bar stool chair that I don't use anymore, but I still have it.
Yeah.
And it's kind of like you sit on it like a saddle.
It's a saddle chair.
Perfect.
You can go down the rabbit hole. You can go to IKEA and get the cheapest barstool you want there. I just want your trunk to have to work.
Yeah, you're right.
Right.
Like, as you're talking about this, I'm saying, you're going,
as soon as I sit back, woo, everything turns off.
And there's a time for that, you know, absolutely.
Let's go ahead and kick back.
Welcome to the couch.
Welcome to laying down.
But the rest of the time, we might even say, well, if we have remote work or I need some work at home,
maybe I sit on the ground.
And so suddenly what you're doing, as we come back to a kind of a conversation where
you were having, is what does a day's movement look like?
and if I'm not able to exercise, could I still say I moved enough during the day?
I took care of myself.
I was able to put all these things in while I walked.
I did some breath spin up.
I moved a little bit more when I was at work.
I sat on the ground for 20 or 30 minutes in the evening at home while watching TV and maybe I did a little mobility work.
I pulled out a roller and said, what's tight?
Look at that day.
It's pretty agnostic of exercise, but we put a lot of inputs into the body.
And sometimes that's what we're trying to do.
And since most of us go to work, maybe there's an opportunity to get some more inputs.
Why is sitting on the ground so important?
You've talked about this earlier, floor setting and the in the Japanese culture and the Asian cultures where they're squatting.
And you've mentioned in your book even, like floor sitting is important.
Why do you think it's so important?
If we look at the number one reason, people end up in nursing homes, can't get up and down off the ground independently.
So let's practice that.
Right.
So now I have this practice where I have to get up and out off the ground.
So it's built into something I'm doing.
Most of us are watching TV.
This is the truth, right?
So what we found was that this was a simple behavior to put in where you could be in some of these end range positions that you just don't touch very often.
Sit with your leg straight out in front of me.
Oh, that's uncomfortable.
Sit across leg.
Oh, that's uncomfortable.
Now kneel for a while.
Oh, that's uncomfortable.
Now side saddle.
That's uncomfortable.
So we can touch a lot.
lot of postures and most important thing as we already hinted at is this exposure and consistency.
But if you're on the ground or 20 or 30 minutes, the total time we're spending at some of these
end ranges of your hip, your knees, a typical person might not actually bend their knee all the
way. They don't bend their knee all the way. They kind of sit in a chair. They walk around.
When's the last time your heel touched your butt? And suddenly people are like, I can't kneel.
I'm like, well, when did that happen? When did that change? I mean, kids are constantly in that
constantly. So I think what we found, Philip Beach wrote a wonderful book called Muscles and Meridians.
It's a functional embryology, you nerds out there. It's the best book on embryology there is. But he has
this hypothesis that it's one of the ways that the body used to tune itself. That we spend time,
for example, loading and kneeling on the hip, re-approximates the hip into the socket. We get better
hip function after that, right? We have all these mechanics that function better when the hip has sort of
better congruency, it's better centrated. And all you need to sit on the ground or work on the ground
or kneel on the ground. And that happens automatically. Most of the time when we're sitting,
we're actually sitting on our femurs. We're not even sitting on the part of our pelvis that really
handles that weight. The isial tuberculosis, the sit bones. And so his idea is, well, we can get
into some of these fundamental shapes and patterns and restorations doing something we always used to
do. Two and a half million years, I mean, I'm a little fatter. Your femur's a little longer. But
10,000 years ago, we're the same person. What's changed? Well, we don't ever get up and down
off the ground. So suddenly you were like, oh, that yoga, that Matt Pilates, those wrestling games,
those things turn out to be hugely important. When am I going to put that in? I'm a busy working
person. I can do it in the evening sitting on the ground. And you will see your wattage change.
You'll see your power change. You'll see your power change. As we improve your range of motion
and give you more movement choice, you will see anything that you care about improve.
That's fascinating. Okay. So got to,
got to watch family movie night on the floor.
Yeah.
But also older adults, I mean, this is important because, you know, they're the last
person that ever sits on the floor because it's uncomfortable.
And it's scary.
Yeah.
Their back will start to hurt.
Yeah.
So for older adults, really, you know, sitting on the floor sounds like it's even more
important because they're practicing that getting up.
And if they use their hands and at first, fine, totally fine.
Turn on your stomach, use your couch, crawl up on the couch.
you'll see that absolutely have this conversation with your parents your parents are like
oh i've been on the ground since vietnam or since korea you know i mean like we don't get on the ground
anymore and it really is you know you'll hear people talk about playing with their grandkids and they're
like wow you know it's it's a lot to be able to get up and out off the ground and what's interesting
is your range of motion is the one part of your physiology that doesn't have to change as you age
can you imagine if we just said oh yeah everyone gets stiff because it doesn't have to
Why? It's just one, the one aspect of your, of your movement, probably going to lose some bone density, probably going to lose some muscle unless we're, you know, enhanced, right? And we have all these, but your range of motion doesn't have to change. As long as you're allowing, as long as you're practicing it, right? I mean, like, if you're not practicing it, then it's going to change. Yeah. But also, remind everyone, muscles and tissues are like obedient dogs. They adapt and readapt. It's going to be slower than when you were 17.
But you can reclaim that position in shape.
I did a talk at the Olympic club in San Francisco, which is kind of a fancy athletic club.
And they were like, we want you to talk about mobility and performance.
And I was like, great, there's going to be no chairs.
And the demographic there was decidedly over 50.
And there were so many people who wanted to have a very sophisticated conversation about performance and mobility, but couldn't sit on the ground.
And at the end, it was about an hour long.
We were doing lots of demos and things.
probably a third of the room was laying down because they couldn't sit.
Were they just experiencing pain?
Just uncomfortable.
Didn't have access to the range of motion, didn't have to do anything that required
that normative range of motion.
You know, that's a problem.
Yeah.
And it's not always a problem.
I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm glad I don't have to kill my own chickens every day.
But simultaneously, I may have to be a little bit more intentional about taking my body through its shapes.
So my mom, she has this condition.
It's an orthostatic tremor, it's called.
And so essentially, she is fine if she walks, if she's moving, if she's sitting, obviously.
But if she stands still, her legs will start to shake pretty rapid.
And so she can lose her balance really easy.
And so she's gotten in the habit of, like, if you watch her, like, you know, go do laundry in the laundry room, she'll sit down.
She will sit down on the floor and do the laundry because she can't stand.
And so even though she's 71 now, she is probably like one of the few older adults that I know that's sitting constantly because she has to because of this orthostatic tremor where she stands, you know, she stops getting the output.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so I'll tell her to keep working on her.
I love that.
I'm happy.
Yeah.
And she's also the one that gets on the floor and plays with the grandkids because she's used to being on the floor.
She's used to being on the floor.
Again, I think what's wonderful about that is we can say, first of all, we can have, hey, fall prevention, mitigation. We could get better at getting them down off the ground. We can have better. But also gives us more movement choice. And that's really what gets lost in a lot of this conversation about is letting people have access to as much physiology so they can problem solve, move in the way they want, pick up new novel skills.
You can think of movement, this is Juliet's analogy, is that, you know, when we're young, our hallway is huge.
And you have a lot of choice and what you do and, oh, we're going to play basketball and then we're surfing and then we're like, doesn't matter.
Yoga.
Okay.
You can do whatever.
And as you get older, that hallway potentially gets narrower and narrower until we're, you know, on a walker up and down that hall.
And what we're trying to do is say, hey, how do we keep that as much as wide as possible?
And we have to talk about tissue health and some range of motion.
and, you know, community.
And it's a, it's a conversation about being human.
But ultimately, we can have less suffering and still have a body that we can care and is built for adventure for as long as we try.
Right.
And that's, and I think that's, you know, that context is really matters.
I want to, you know, what's important to you?
And again, I think, you know, we wrote Seppel Leopard, it came out in 2013, very much obsessed with winning more Olympics.
Like, let's go world champions.
Like that's what, you know, and now I'm like, okay, I'm 52.
Maybe this is all about maintaining as much playability as you can, having a body that you can trust and doesn't hurt all the time.
So that you can enjoy life with your family.
I love that.
That's a really great definition of mobility.
Can you do access and can you use that in things that you love to do?
Well, it's your quote, it's your quote, train for life, right?
Don't live to train.
Well, you know, I do like training.
I love training.
I'm obsessed with training.
My wife and I love to train comma,
but it's always in the context of other things, right?
In service of.
And I think that that's really great.
And look, no shade.
If you're, the gym is your whole world, awesome.
Yeah, that's what makes you happy.
That's your life, right?
But let's also now say,
because this is the only thing I would caution is
sometimes that highly decorative room
where we're checking off all the things
is not the same thing as how do we train
people to win an Olympic medal.
you know, yeah, et cetera, et cetera.
So Kelly, I just also, since we're talking about this sedentary time and I mean how
sedentary time is defined and how that is an independent risk factor for higher all-cause
mortality, and particularly there's an interesting study that correlates it to cancer,
increased cancer risk.
I spend a lot of time sitting, a lot of us spend a lot of time sitting people that
listen to this podcast know that I've become over the years really interested in these
exercise snacks or actually, as you call them, movement snacks. And I just want to take a moment to
give you and Juliet props because you guys have been talking about these for, you know,
I don't even know how long now. It's been about almost a decade maybe. You've been, you know,
it's been quite a few years. You guys were ahead of the curve talking about the importance of, you know,
breaking up your day with moving, moving throughout the day and how it's not just about spending that
one-hour, you know, block of time at the gym. And we're trying to make up, we're trying to
overcompensate for our modern-day lifestyle, which is very sedentary. That's absolutely true.
But, you know, these, there's so much data that has come out even in the last five years. And this is
where my attention, I really became drawn to this literature, where it's undeniable that even
people that are taking advantage of everyday life situations. So they're not even necessarily
doing these structured exercise movements or these.
structured exercise snacks where they're getting up and doing body weight squats for two minutes or
something like that. They're just going around and, you know, they live on the third floor.
I'm sorry, they could live on the third floor of the building or they could work on the third
for the building. Either way, they take the stairs to get to that third floor. They don't just take
the stairs. They sprint up them. They're really going fast. Or they're taking time to play tag with
their kids or their grandkids or, you know, sprint around with their new puppy. Whatever it is,
It's this everyday situations.
They live in the city and they're not taking Uber.
You know, they're walking briskly to get to wherever they need to go, shopping or to work, right?
And so people actually live like this, believe it or not.
It is something that people still do.
And researchers have studied these people by putting accelerometers on their wrist
and studying how fast that they are, you know, this intentional types of movements that they're getting throughout the day.
And even, you know, vigorous housework, right?
To some degree, people are moving around if they're, if they're,
if they're vacuuming, really, or mopping or something like that is, I would say more moderate intensity,
but they can get their heart rate up and they're moving, right? They're moving around. And really,
I think the data is clear and repeatable where individuals that are doing, you know, these short bursts
of exercise, if they're doing three minutes of it, three minutes of it, three times a day, so a total
nine minutes a day, that's a 50% lower cardiovascular-related mortality, 50% lower cardiovascular-related
40% lower all-cause mortality, 40% lower cancer-related mortality. And this is even in individuals
that don't define themselves or identify as people that actually exercise because they're like,
no, I don't go to the gym. You don't exercise. But they do exercise. They just don't realize that
they're doing these moments. Right. So you get props because you've been talking about this. You and
Juliet both get props. You've been talking about this and really emphasizing the importance of movement
throughout the day for a long time. So thank you for that public health service.
And let's talk about how, you know, some people that perhaps they don't have a puppy or they're not a parent or they don't live on the third floor of a gym. And unfortunately, they use Instacart because they need to, you know, work more. Whatever their situation is, they're desk bound, right? That's the title of one of your bestselling books. Right. So how can individuals take, you know, time to get up and get these movement snacks, these exercise snacks?
Amen. Word. I love just the framing of this. And I suspect part of the problem,
and us not recognizing that sort of additive movement through the day is that it didn't look like
a one hour paid for exercise class, which is we've trained people to do, right? Oh, it has to be an
hour. And that means it's a half hour drive to the gym. I have to do an hour. Then there's a half
hour drive back. And that's a two-hour endeavor. I couldn't block no, you know, like you said earlier,
some of the sprinting we got people habituated doing on Peloton, that was really effective.
Go out and just quickly, you know, are you going to go to the Olympics?
We're not having that conversation.
We're saying how can we put this input in?
The research right now coming out of the Stanford Lifestyle Medicine Group is that these movement
breaks, movement snacks are even more powerful than we thought.
They can actually do a ton in terms of maintaining muscle mass or challenging.
If we even get into the pain science world, like chronic pain, persistently.
distant pain, walking really fast in your neighborhood is one of the ways that your brain
starts to pay attention, puts all those growth factors out there, rewires itself because
your brain says, oh, we're walking fast, something's going on, better make this wiring a little
bit more adaptable. So, you know, what's great about this is that means, hey, I have 10 minutes.
What could I do? Or I have 20 minutes right when I get home. That can be real work. And we actually
apply that even to when we're trying to get our kids doing some strengthening. We can even just
like 20 minutes of, hey, we got some front squats in. Like, let's go through the frisbee. I think if we
start to view recreation as, again, we'll borrow Katie Bowman, right, who is just a G. She says,
hey, if we took all your movement and made a language out of it, how many words are you using a day?
What's your vocabulary? What's your lexicon? And number one, we want to have a
a huge vocabulary, but two, we actually want to use that vocabulary during the day. And most of us
are getting up, sitting, walking around sitting, walk around a little more sit, get into a different
car, sit, walk around. That's it. That's the whole day. And then I brought my hand to my face a lot,
right? And so one of the first things we can say is, well, how do I break that up? So I'm just using
more movement, language in the day. And even just getting up and down off the ground one time
starts to blow up in that vocabulary. But to your point, you know, we don't need to obsess on this.
Let's find ways to be enjoyable, to go for a walk with our neighbors, to, you know, how can we play more or just munk around more?
And suddenly you're revisiting those park, you know, I'm sure they have a name where you're at a park and then there are these workstations.
I can't, I can't believe I'm blanking on this. You know, where suddenly you're like, you do some dips.
You hang from a bar, you, you know, you touch your toes, you bounce from, you know, pole to pull.
How do we work that in so it's not another thing a busy working mother has to do or a busy working executive person do?
And then how do we normalize that so that it's not so weird to mousse your body a little bit more instead of these very formal workout channels?
I find for myself, you know, I have a child.
I have a puppy.
and I now
Those are two different things, right?
Right, right, two different things, two different things, yes.
But, you know, there's moments in my life, in the past, where, you know, my workload is so high that I find myself, I've found myself in this, I don't have time to go, like, play with the puppy.
The puppy needs to be played.
Like, this is important.
Or, you know, go around and play, kick the ball, soccer ball with my son.
And now I find myself completely different mentality where it's like these moments are part of that, you know, I spend an hour in the morning doing my workout.
Like, this is part of it, you know, and it's more motivation for me.
Plus, I enjoy it.
And now it's like giving me a, like an excuse.
It's like, oh, I enjoy it.
And it really does add up and matter.
And it's part of that fitness equation that's always in the back of my mind.
And so I think that it does give people this kind of, they can like, it's like, oh, finally,
I mean, I don't have to always spend an hour in the gym or go for that, like, long run.
While you should be doing those as well, you can have these little, these little, I mean,
movements now.
I would go further.
Not only can you, but that's the secret to be really functional.
Look, Juliet and I are, like, there's a lot of talk of longevity.
I think it's how long of human beings been on the quest for?
for the, you know, fountain of youth forever.
So I think that's an old trope, an old archetype.
But we really want to be durable because what we think is the hits are going to come.
You're going to get sick.
Someone in your family is going to get cancer.
You're going to have a deadline.
I was skiing with my wife in Japan just three weeks ago.
I took a horrific high-speed interaction with a rope.
And I tore my ACL.
And so I have an MCL sprain, ACL, tore my meniscus.
Did you see me?
Have I mentioned it?
No, I'm still walking around.
I'm still moving.
What can I do?
stay in motion around this, and the hits are going to come for us.
So how can we prepare the tissues?
How do we prepare our brains?
And what you're hinting at is something very powerful,
that constantly being in motion and seeing the opportunities,
I'll hint back to our friend Dave Spitz, the Olympic coach.
He owned a gym and was suddenly like,
I'm out of shape, I don't train, I own this gym.
All I do is coach people.
So he started doing something called Never Do Nothing.
which was one set of bicep curls, one set of squats, one set of pushups, one air chair, one,
like there was something he could do that had net positive input.
And he got out of that all or nothing.
Instead of 90 minutes of Olympic lifting training, I'm going to do something for my body
and something that makes me feel fun to move.
I think with the greatest secret ever is a gentleman named Caleb Marshall.
his YouTube channel is The Fitness Marshall.
And if you put on one of his dance routines,
you will see very quickly he and the amazing women,
Haley and Allison, who work with him,
you could dance if you did a three or five minute dance on YouTube free,
jump on his channel.
We use it for warm-ups.
We use it for fun.
But you'll be like, wow, I'm mirroring,
I'm touching shapes,
I'm moving in ways that are novel.
Three minutes.
You don't have three minutes.
to do a little dance, I do, I bet you do.
Yeah.
The fitness marshal.
I also love what you're talking about this, you know, there's been a big push over the past,
I don't know even know how many years now, maybe 10.
This go hard, go home, right?
I mean, and like there's good lessons there too, right?
Like, yeah, you got to do it.
You got to form the habits.
I think the habits is a big part of that, which, you know, something.
You got to take the pieces that work for you.
But I think there's also burnout, you know, sometimes like you can take it to the extreme, right?
I spoke one time at Strava headquarters, right?
We had a podcast there, a live podcast, and I was like,
how many people in this office are considered themselves injured?
It was like 95% of the hands went up because what is Strava value?
Going faster, personal PRs, king of the mountain, queen of the mountain.
And what we saw was that if you're just in service of just elite,
bleeding edge, high performance, and that's the only thing that you do, that's what we get.
Well, it sounds like, you know, this, this idea of like, never do nothing. I like it. It's, it's kind of on par with Ben Levine's, like, you have to make it part of your personal hygiene. Exercise has to be a part of your personal hygiene, something you do every day. You brush your teeth. Why do you brush your teeth? You brush your teeth. You brush your teeth. You don't want to get cavities. You don't want your teeth fall out. You want good gum health, right? But, and everyone does that. Like, everyone brushes their teeth every day, at least once a day. But exercise in some way, shape, or form is something you have to do every.
day. And look at the roots of why people wouldn't want to move their bodies. Didn't have access
as a kid. Didn't come from a family that valued this. My only experience with physical education
was PE in the 80s. Like not great. Right. And so suddenly you realize that like, I don't even
identify. I identify as a creative person. Like I haven't even had the access to move. I'm a woman.
I'm not a boy. Like suddenly we're, you can see that there are a whole lot of reasons that people suddenly
get the message where they're like, what do you mean my bone density is bad? What do you mean
that I'm losing muscle? What do you mean I'm pre-diabetic? And we're starting to see that in a lot of
women in their 50s in our neighborhood who are, they're like, hey, I'm skinny and I've been
running or walking, speed hiking forever and calorie restricting because I want to be a certain
way that the universe is telling me I need to be for good or for bad. I'm going to say for bad.
And lo and behold, it doesn't hold up against that test. Right. Right. Like, hey, we'll take
what you're doing and let's third party validate it. And for whatever reason, the messages we got
don't comport with what you're saying, which is, hey, how can we engage with each other more and
more? How do we change that society? You know, we were just, I mentioned we were just a
University of Hawaii and the Queens grounds there, the Queens Park, was packed with people
just outside, walking, throwing, playing soccer. And really, this is almost a cultural
problem. As long as it's my house and Costco and then work and then that's all I go and see
and then I have some formal thing that I do twice a week, we're never going to solve the problem.
I was in China last September and you were mentioning these sort of playgrounds, these parks
where they have all these outdoor. Oh, China leads the way. Oh, yeah. I mean, it's like,
it's like mandatory. If you're 50, I mean, you're out and it's great. And I was walking around with my
family and not, you know, there's Tai Chi, a lot of Tai Chi too. And you just see them doing
the Tai Chi in the parks, and you see them doing, you know, they're doing dips and they're in,
like, we were out there doing it with them. And it's like the middle of the day. And it's like,
if you're over, I said 50, but like, it's actually surprisingly younger than what you would imagine,
like if you were here and that was the thing, which is not, but it should be. But it's,
it's true. A cultural, it's a cultural problem where, you know, we're not, we're not valuing
the importance of movement, you know, because. And we haven't constructed society so that that's
easy and valued. And there's a premium.
And it's serious, so that's a whole, that's a harder problem to solve. Obviously, that's going to involve civil engineers and everything else. That's right. But you're really looking at human environment interaction. Yeah. Is there a park? Is there a place to move myself in an urban landscape? Do, are there sidewalks? How? And suddenly you start to see that, oh, if we're really interested in getting to the bottom and having a population that's healthier and has less strain on the system and less, you know, cardioreceptory and metabolic disease,
we have to think differently about all of these things.
And they need to work on the scale of decades.
So we might start by saying, hey, if this is really important to us, I'm not sure we should rip out P.E.
out of the schools.
Right.
Right.
Yes.
I mean, also just being outside, and that's something that seems to be a message that I keep occurring.
The message I hear you talk about is, you know, getting outside and being active in some way, whether it's going for a walk or you're doing interval walking or you're going, you know, to the park and playing.
playing with kids, puppies, whatever.
Being outside also is
there's an added layer, right?
You're getting the sunlight.
You know, you're getting, you know,
that's really important for circadian rhythm regulation.
Vitamin D.
If you want to have a civil society,
be civil towards your neighbors
because you see them all the time walking.
Right.
You're with people.
100%.
Yeah.
You know,
rucking really had a moment.
I don't think we're past peak ruck maybe.
Okay.
And I love that idea
because people suddenly could put a little load
through their spines, 10, 15, 20 pounds, and walk around the neighborhood again. Everyone can walk. It's
suddenly accessible. Maybe you're not a runner. But we could load. And don't get wrong. I'm not saying
wearing a six pound weight vest is going to change your bone density issues. But if I need you to work more,
carry this pack and your feet are going to get tired carrying this pack.
I need to start rucking. So I do, sorry to interrupt you. I, you know, on weekends,
part of my leisure time is like hiking. I say hiking. It's not like really hard hiking because I'm
doing it with my eight-year-old. But we take our puppy and we go out and we do like little short
canyon hikes and stuff, an hour, hour and a half sometimes. Legit. Yeah, legit. But I'm not, and
I had a conversation with Andrew Huberman the other day and he was like, oh, do you wear a weighted vest?
And I was like, damn, why am I not doing that, right? Well, it's how easy to slip right in. And if it's
not a weighted vest, wear a backpack. I would say a backpack is even easier and better for your body.
You know, you don't have to load access. Like, I do that when I go to Disney World and walk,
That's right. That's right. What, like, let's say I wanted to get the weighted vest.
Perfect. What weight? Do you think I should start with? Yes. Start with some. You know, the idea is that, like, let's, you know, don't go to level 12. Immediately, let's say, hey, I found a vest I could afford. What does that feel like? Hey, maybe I can have, maybe I need a couple things, right? Maybe, you know, if you just left it by the door and every time you walked out, you had to carry that thing around and normalized carrying loads. Coming back to Phillip Beach, he's like, human beings throw.
we get up and down off the ground and we carry resources.
Like that's really what human beings do.
And that caring of resources.
And if you're a mother out there, can your baby around?
You're doing it already.
Right?
Carry that skirmie 10 pound thing around and you're going to be exhausted.
But how can we layer in maybe a better thing on top of something you're already doing?
And, you know, the research, if you look at the company NatureQuant and Nature Dose,
They actually have an app that will can let you know how much time you're spending outside every day and every week. And it will score that based on how rich and green your environment is. So not all time outside is equal, right? Like being outside in green, seeing far, like the parks really does change what's going on with the biology. But the average American is spending 20 minutes outside a week.
Get out. That's what the data says.
The average American is spending 20 minutes outside a week, and this is just in any environment, not necessarily nature.
That's right. That's right. They're going from their house to the work, to the, right? We're just not actually outside.
So what you start to see are there, a lot of these type 1 errors sort of, you know, woven into our biology.
Like, we don't sit on the ground. We're not actually eating fiber and fruits and vegetables.
We don't see the sun ever. We don't know our neighbors. Like what we have is,
a lot of signaling of a lot of threats to the brain.
And no wonder maybe we're not living as well as we could if we just thought differently
about the problems and taught people from much earlier ages.
Our hypothesis is Julian and I, that sport, and this is John Rainey, right, the anxious generation.
He's like, for kids, we really have two solutions, church and sport.
And what we feel like is sport is an opportunity to teach all of these things about
recovery, nutrition, mindset as a formal framework because we're all going to stop doing sports
the way we kind of traditionally think about them. We're all going to become recreational athletes
eventually. But where and when did you learn all this? Not in health. Not in Home Act. But maybe we
need to have a kind of health tech, you know, back in our schools and teach kids, hey, walking is great.
You know, it's not always about, you know, doing the least cool thing. And how do we normalize, you know,
more adult recess.
It's,
I like the idea of this app you talked about because,
you know,
we,
a lot of people measure their screen time a lot.
And it's kind of the opposite where you're looking at.
You're not obviously not going to be.
Screen time's never going away.
Yeah,
it's,
that's not going away.
It's only gotten worse.
Hopefully,
hopefully we'll swing around and make it better.
Again,
I feel like that we're coming to that point now where people are realizing how
terrible it is for health.
But with the,
with the outside time and outdoor time,
you know,
Oftentimes, when you have data, you can make a behavior change, right?
And so when people start to realize, and I know, like, for example, you know, people think about
when they're eating and how much they're eating throughout the day.
And you ask the average person, they think they're like, oh, no, I definitely eat all my food
within 12 hours.
There's no way I'm, like, still eating.
22 hours.
It's like 15 to 20 hours, you know?
And so it's not until they actually have the data that they realize that they're eating
constantly.
And so probably something similar with, I bet most people are like, there's no.
No way. I'm only getting 20 minutes a week outdoors. There's no way, right? And so it would be, I think it's kind of an interesting concept for people to kind of start paying attention to that because when you are outside, you know, especially if you're in a natural environment. And that's cool that this app is able to kind of distinguish somewhat between urban and nature because there's even been studies comparing people that exercise in an urban versus natural environment. And when I say studies that are comparing, I mean head to head comparison. This study
looked at it. So they're doing the same, you know, aerobic walking exercise in either a natural
setting or an urban environment. And it's that only in the natural setting that people are having
this really profound antidepressant effect. It's affecting their brain, their mood, their mental
health, which is at the core of a lot of our problems as well, health problems included.
So I guess where I was going with that is I do like this idea of people kind of paying more
attention to how much time they're spending outside.
If we're,
remember, I work with a lot of fancy sports teams.
I spent a lot of time with small organizations like the, you know,
different aspects of the government, Navy, the Army.
Everyone's trying to solve these problems.
And when it comes down to taking the lessons that we're learning in high
performance and transmuting them so we can ultimately have these hyperlocal effects,
which means it is the household that is the functional
unit of change. And if you want to change your whole society, grab up your parents, grab up
your in-laws, take your kids, and you're going to go for a walk in the evening after dinner. And that
could be five minutes. And that already is a quantum change. That's a three valences away from
the old behavior. And those small things, you know, applied for for decades and decades
and bone crushing consistency. I mean, you know, all this talk about sun gazing and circadian. I'm like,
when did you go outside? You're not doing that anyway. So it's very sophisticated and very complex,
but anytime we can take that and put it into the lens of when and where and how are we going to do
this with my kids or my family, then we really start to win. I like to point towards, hey, let's get
more time outside versus limit. The scarcity thing, like, for example, when we do talk about nutrition
with folks, we have a couple benchmarks. We're like, we want you to eat 800 grams of fruits and
vegetables every day. It's quantum.
That's right from E.C. Sankowski. Great study, but quantifying the sort of nutrient density
of your diet, making sure you get enough fiber. And we get a lot of calorie control in the
mix there. But it's the first time to people who are like, actually, you're not eating enough
fruit and vegetables. And by the time we had protein in there, we have a lot of calorie control
in the mix. But also, you're going to be able to keep those muscles and the bone and your
connective tissue and your brain. Right. So it's a lot easier for me to say, hey, let's go ahead
and focus on this first. And then if there's room for cookies, knock yourself right out.
Right. How many, what does 800 grams of fruits and vegetables look like for like?
Like five cups, five big cups. A big apple, maybe, you know, you could probably do that in
four big apples a day. It's really reasonable. Of course, we love to eat the rainbow. A banana is like
80 to 100 grams. But I'll take, like you're a Routabaga person and you're going to do this all
in Routabega. That's still better than you not doing it in Routabega. It's a, it's a
It's a good, this is how I like to think about nutrition as well, is like, what do you need?
What does your body need? You need to get the fruits and vegetables for the fiber, for the micronutrients.
I mean, and the balances of them are really important, too, phytochemicals.
Yes.
You need the protein, obviously, for muscle, for a lot of, I mean, you need protein for everything.
And, you know, the fats come along with that. But, yeah, I mean, once you, like, once you meet those goals and those needs, you're, everything else is, like, easy.
You're like, you don't have to worry about.
Like, you're not eating the refined sugar.
Why?
Because you don't need it.
It's not part of the equation.
And you're so full.
And it also represents, you know, look, I'm a complete advocate for cookies.
I love myself a good cookie.
But I will tell you that if that cookie represents the lion's share of my calories for the day,
that's different than, you know, I've got this really well-nourished human who's got his hitting all these things.
And again, beans are on the menu.
White potatoes are on the menu.
Like those things count lentils.
We're in there.
So I'm agnostic about your family traditions, your religious, cultural traditions.
Show me you're getting all the fruits and vegetables.
And then we can have the next conversation.
And because you know what's going to happen?
Your sleep's going to get better.
Your connect fish is going to better.
God health is going to get better.
So we start to see the whole system start to change.
Now my shoulder doesn't hurt as much anymore.
Oh, weird.
You started eating more, sleeping better.
Shoulder started feeling better too.
And, you know, you're absolutely right that when we focus.
on that, then it is less of a problem. And again, for a lot of people who are entry is into
nutrition for body composition, if you eat this way, there's a lot of calorie control in the
background. You're going to be shocked. And don't worry about the fruit, everyone. You know, you're like,
oh, my gosh, these bananas are going to kill me. They're not. You know, you're not eating the bananas.
But, you know, one of those loaves, I was just passing Starbucks, right? And one of those little
piece of lemon loaves is like 430 calories. It's so good. Do you know, you know, you're not
know how much a pound of cherries is or a pound of melons, 230 calories. So go ahead and eat a
pound of cherries. Don't do it. You'll have disaster pants. It'll be disaster. But you'll see that,
well, you can crush the crap out of fruit and have a lot of calorie control plus fiber, plus,
you know, in the background. And then that's a really nice way of saying, hey, if I'm spending,
I got to get this much time outside, it automatically limits indoor behavior. Or I've got to get this
many steps that automatically limits these, you know, so I don't have to say, don't do this.
I'm like, let's get this instead. Right. Focus on what you need. Yes, yes. Because I just love it.
It's great. A great way to think about it. And also it helps you like the process food thing.
You know, with with this, I think as people became more educated with the dangers of refined sugars,
for example, they didn't, they, they, they, they, they was focused on just this refined sugar.
It's like this tunnel vision. Refined sugar is bad. And so.
it's okay to eat these processed foods that are high protein.
Protein pretzels.
Protein pretzels.
Protein chips.
Yes, right.
I mean, like, everything, it's protein cinnamon buns with no sugar, but it's like alulose,
but it's a cinnamon bun, but it's high protein.
Right.
All of it's garbage.
It's all garbage.
It's not food.
It's a food like thing.
And there's times for that.
If I'm a high level athlete, I'm going to have to eat some processed foods because
I've got to get these calories in.
That's fueling.
That's not nutrition.
We call that.
Those are different things.
Oh, we're fueling.
let me introduce you to the bagel. We're fueling, hey, maybe there's less bagels for an average person.
All right, Kelly, I want to take this opportunity to talk to you about a topic that is of interest to me.
I know other folks are interested in as well. I think it's something that's not really discussed enough.
And that really has to do with youth sports, training youth. I mean, this is a whole big area.
And there's a lot of interest. There's a lot of excitement. There's a lot of problems.
Are there?
I mean, I guess I see them on the, you know, playing soccer field, for example.
I see, I see them arising in even young, young, young athletes.
So maybe we could just start.
I mean, actually, where do you want to start?
Where do you think is a good start place?
Let's call it the industrial youth sport complex, right?
And say that, yes, if you have a parent or you're a guardian of a child who plays,
you're probably not having the experience with sport that you are hoping to have.
It's a lot more complicated and that we're asking parents and guardians to be
sports psychologists, nutrition experts, pseudo-physos, right?
You've got to do strength and conditioning.
You're suddenly at performance timing.
When do we eat this meal between these three?
I have a child.
Wow, do we specialize?
Do we specialize in two sports simultaneously?
how do I manage the crazy parents in the crowd? It's expensive. It's not right where it's not
working. Most kids are dropping out at age 13. It's not fun anymore. Youth injuries are through the
roof. Like what's happening with sport and I think what's happening is we need to train parents
for the job they're already doing, which is become the high performance directors for their
families and begin there to sort of pull at these these strings because
theoretically we all got into sports or got our kids in sports because it was good for them.
It taught us rules about working with other people and losing and sacrifice and being coach
and taking feedback. But it doesn't feel like a really wholesome experience for everyone anymore,
does it? How do we start by just making training fun for kids?
Well, parents, is this for you? Is this for your kids first, right? And there is a direct correlation.
and I'm going to out everyone here,
the more experienced and nerly an athlete you were,
the more chill you are as a parent.
And the less experience you had playing college or professional sports,
the more hyper-agro you are as a parent for some reason.
You know, we just came out of the Olympics,
and there's a lot of talk about Norway.
Norway, what is Norway doing that they've dominated the Winter Olympics
and they don't keep score with their kids until age 13?
They have national programs that work on development.
So kids love it and continue to move.
You know, for us here, typically the tradition is winning and getting my kid to the next level so she can unlock the scholarship or go to university or be pro.
And it's just not it's not likely.
So we if we're going to tug at this, let's start to say that what can we control at home?
Instead of adding complexity on long-term youth athletic development, does your kid sleep?
So we can start there.
The golden rule is really adults need seven to eight hours of sleep.
Yes, roughly?
Yes.
Okay.
So what we say in our program is, hey, we want you to be in bed for eight hours without
looking at your phone.
You're going to sit.
And then so if you wake up and know the night, don't panic, you're just going to lay there
and rest.
Super cool.
There is not a single study that says that a child needs less than eight to ten hours
of sleep.
Zero studies say that.
Like if you're growing a body.
You need more than that, for sure.
More than that. So 8 to 10, but if you go into the typical teenager and track them, they're not sleeping at hours. So we have this fundamental problem where kids are not sleeping, not recovering, not adapting, not growing. And then we're just adding more volume and more complexity on top of a system that's not adapting to the exercise. Then we can go to nutrition. And then we can go like, you'll start to see you're like, oh, it's the same conversation. How do we normalize?
some of these things and then ask what the next step is.
I think also something that I've seen is like even starting at like an early age,
you know, five, six, seven, they're like you mentioned, it's not really, there's no focus
on development.
It's like, it's already like I want my kid to be on the A or B team.
And if they're not on the A or B team, then I want them to get there and how do I train to get
them on the A or B team?
What's wrong with that mentality?
Well, why does that mentality exist in the first place?
I think every parent wants their kid to get playtime and be recognized as the chosen one and not ride the bench.
And, you know, there's a lot there.
You know, what I can talk about is, you know, Juliet and I, we derived a lot of experience and a lot of benefits from sport.
So it was really important.
We saw, and we're such fans, but we saw that there was an opportunity to get our kids some of those same lessons.
And so we, number one, we just said, hey, sport is not optional here.
But let's define that.
You can be a dance.
You can be in yoga.
You can be in club soccer.
You have to find something you want to do, swim team.
What are the local, you know, CYO leagues?
What are the options available to us?
But you have to choose one of those.
So it wasn't optional.
You have to move year round.
And then eventually you'll find the thing that you want to do.
We did a lot of sampling of things.
And, you know, I have a daughter who is fully retired.
You know, she's a retired.
She's what's called a NARP.
Do you know this term?
No.
Non-athletic regular person at college, right?
She's not a D1 athlete.
She goes to Michigan, sudden econ.
But can snatch a barbell, cook, knows how to deal with her stiff quads, knows how to sleep, right?
Just have some tools.
She's like, oh, this is how I care for.
And then I have a child who's 5-11 is going to play a goalie at Berkeley next year.
And she is a monster, right?
So we have one kid who we graduated and retired.
one kid who we're trying to prep up and the approach is the same. And what we have to ask as
parents is, what can we control? So I'll give you an example. The sleep thing, I can't, if you want to
reduce injury risk, sleep. You want to grow and have that kid be better athlete's sleep. And what
you're really going to see is, wow, we have to have a lot of conversations at our house around tech
and bedtime. And that's going to be a big one. But can I pause you there? Because even if you have
those conversations. If you have an athlete and they're training late, because you have games late,
you're heading, practices are late. And then they have in there, let's say they're in school,
because most kids are in school. Hard school. Hard school. And the start time is early.
And they have homework to do when they get back from their training. What gives?
Well, what you'll see is now we start to say, okay, eight hours is it going to be our minimum sleep
time. So that means we all agree that we're going to go, we're going to sleep, go from, you know,
eight or we're going to go to bed at 11 because we're night owls two, and we're going to
sleep till seven, right, in this situation. Then we can at least start to say, here is our minimum
on that. And when we can steal a half hour here or steal a half hour, there we will. And you're
really bringing up the problems with this perfect secret scroll youth athletic program. I'm like,
it falls apart with, when do we eat together as a family? When do I feed my kids?
kid a snack. She comes home and we ate dinner at five, you know, but she had practiced late and
now we got to feed her again. And now, like, I'm pro cereal. Serial is like a secret post-workout
fueling panacea. Kids will eat it. My child can digest milk. So she's got cow milk on there,
right? You could choose whatever milk. But I need to get some calories in after that, right? That thing
has a little bit of protein. It's not going to be a huge, crazy fat meal. It's not going to disrupt her sleep
too much, but like you started to see, you're like, wow, when are we going to do this?
I started making breakfast from my kids.
They're in high school that they could take with them because when I start to look at my wife,
I'm like, hey, wife, you don't eat breakfast.
She's not very hungry in the morning.
My kids weren't hungry in the morning, but they were hungry a little bit later.
So I could wake them up early, force them to eat this meal they didn't want to eat,
have this terrible interaction, or I could have them sleep till 720.
They run out the door and I now have continued.
controlled breakfast. Emergency done. Omega's taken. Vitamin D taken. There's a fermented food,
then a little yogurt or kefir. There's a protein. Here's an apple cut up. I know my child leaves the
house, at least with the constructs of things that look like the first meal of the day, plus some
snacks later on, and we're rolling there. And so you really have to think, I can't play the best game.
What's the next best game I can play? Where do I have some agency and control? Because it is
really tricky. And it's going to only get trickier.
The more serious your kid gets in sport and with the demands of high school, it's,
and theoretically your kids will need to have friends, theoretically.
All right.
Let's go.
Let's rewind a little bit before high school and talk about early specialization, because
you were talking about like how important it was to sample everything and, you know,
like what are some of the pros and cons of, for example, a child just sticking to one sport
after they, you know, started doing it when they were five or whatever.
Yeah.
And stuck with it and then not really trying, you know, like let's say they're soccer and they never do baseball or basketball or something with their upper body, for example.
So what are some of the pros and cons?
Well, I would say number one is the, what's the point?
Specialization is here and it's real.
And you're never going to be the one parent who just bucks the whole tradition.
And like, it's going to take a cabal of parents to be like, we're not doing this.
We're not playing year round.
And remember, we have, we're aware, and we have children in these sports, and club goes year round, but we'll pull Caroline out, for example, and say, hey, during this time, maybe you can do another sport.
Maybe for some of these kids, the extra sport is yoga or dance or strengthening becomes the extra place to teach movement skills, because kids will become hyper-specialized very quickly.
I'm an outside hitter.
I'm a pitcher.
I do this one thing.
and we don't have a chance to develop the motor skills problem solving that happens through a diversity in sampling.
So what you can do is recognize that, hey, I can try not to say, okay, I'm going to specialize now in two sports, which is how parents solve the problem.
Now my kid is a lacrosse specialist and a soccer specialist with camps and both, right?
But we have to look at are there times off?
How do specialization is going to, is a feature.
of the system, but we have to now look at when and where we're going to put movement diversity,
other play. And I'll say, I'll take specialization over not moving. I think it's important
to recognize that free play does not exist anymore, will not exist anymore. That's a construct
of Gen X. So we use to play in the street. It just doesn't happen. And now we're going to have to
have these formal movement programming engagement because that's the only place we're going to get
that free play in in you know club soccer club basketball club those things so what can we control
are we can controlling for those things are your kids eating enough are they sleeping enough
you know do you have the skills to protect what you can protect and control we control
so that we can keep the kids moving and i think if norway has a phrase it's like the most kids for
the longest that's their goal the most kids for the longest
For the free play, the unstructured play, that was a question I was going to ask you, like, the importance of that.
And, I mean, it is weird how it doesn't, I mean, it doesn't exist anymore.
I mean, I guess we're all too afraid of everything because we have all this information and it's made us scared of everything.
I remember playing for just hours and hours outside in the streets.
I mean, I came up with games.
You invented games. It was so fun.
I mean, we had all kinds of crazy games.
Now parents have to create these sort of artificial environment.
that are playdates, right?
And so now playdates are, at least my way of, like,
trying to allow my child to get free play play.
Let's have a play date.
Here, you're in our yard, whatever, like, have at it, like, have fun.
The doors are locked.
Stay outside.
Stay outside.
They're always outside.
What, like, how is that really, is that really important for, you know, for athletes?
All youth skills are learned best under play conditions.
In fact, I would go a step further and say that play.
is the secret sauce to any adult having any fun and sticking to something in the long term.
And if you watch a soccer practice, but an elite team, it doesn't look like a lot of play.
It doesn't look like a lot of fun.
And no wonder kids are like, this sucks.
My friends aren't here.
It's not fun.
So we really have to think about protecting the sanctity of this play idea and exploration.
And, you know, David Epstein has a new book coming out about constraints.
and this constraint-led model of how can we create better play through a set of constraints,
that's how we problem-solve.
And, you know, you're hinting at, you know, where's play need to happen?
Resource.
Well, we've just stripped recess.
Like, you know, you see the playgrounds of the 70s and 80s were kill a child.
And now they're just like these neat little two-foot off the ground, round things.
There's no expiration, no feedback.
you know, think about the number of times you jumped off a swing and, you know, peak velocity
and peak apex, right? And just there's no place for kids to get this kind of input. So it's really
important that we're looking at, well, wow, tumbling and gymnastics seems to be really important
skills if you could access them, right? And again, everything I'm going to say, I'm just layering on
that not everyone can afford that or do that. But we have to think differently about what inputs we're
having earlier so that we don't have these problems later. Every kid should be required to have
PE year round and that PE could be dance, it could be weightlifting, could be yoga, could be,
right? We need that sort of movement literacy, movement competency as part of the things that we
value if we're really going to get to the bottom of because it's not, here I would say some
controversial. We have PE or we have less red dye number five. I'm going to take PE. It's going to have
a bigger impact on the world. It means we're going to have to fund it.
We're going to have to play it.
I'm with you.
Yeah.
And so I think it's, you know, we need to work on all these different systems.
I'll give you an example.
There's a physician we work with who is president of the Knee Society for ACLs.
And when a kid would tear his ACL or her ACL in the 80s and 90s, they pull up this big drill,
drill into the cortical bone.
It's very intense.
The bones are very hard.
Now they just core the bone by hand.
They just hand turn the drill because the bones are so soft.
So we're seeing this demineralization.
this less hardening of the bones of children, what is that about?
Is that why they're breaking their, they're so like more like, the kids are breaking their
bones?
We're seeing a whole host of injuries that did not exist.
Torn lats, more UCLs, more ACLs.
I mean, the epidemic of ACL right now is, is its own topic.
But when you come underneath that, what we see is didn't have, women didn't have access
to movement control, overplay.
did not have, you know, don't have good nutrition features, aren't sleeping, right?
No off-season, right?
Just what you can see is we've set up the perfect conditions and this is a normal feature
or normal accident given the sort of errors and the complexity of this person engaging in this
play, which was supposed to be fun in the first place.
And for off-season now, off-season is now, at least what I've seen is, okay, it's
off-season, but now we have this other sport, too.
I mean, and maybe that's fine, but again, going back to the unstructured free play and how important it is, it's just...
Kids don't do it. Maybe if you surf, maybe if you're into some extreme sports, skateboarding is a great example of like probably the best pickup basketball.
There are a couple pockets where that still exists, but mainly there looks like recreational sports.
Kid finds a recreational sport. She's a skateboarder. She's skating at the park all time. That's the best free play there is.
And some kids even like decide that they don't like to exercise.
And what do you?
What kid likes to exercise?
No one.
But you know what kids likes to play tag and scramble and climb and play games?
Every kid.
So I think, imagine if we just took our adult sensibility, let me introduce you to the Peloton, Johnny.
You're 12.
Like, that sucks.
That's a sucky life.
I mean, that is the, you know, that's not a steer child sport.
life. And there are mutants out there who, you know, who probably picked up early, but that's not
the whole. And I think if we, I'm going to shout out a gentleman named Jeremy Frisch.
His, uh, you can see how he programs for young, long-term youth athletic development in his community
and the number of tag games and diving and problem solving and skills and you're like, oh,
that's P.E. It really should look like that.
what about adding in strength training like at what age is that well i guess i shouldn't say that
like what's the readiness like there's a there's a readiness that people can look for so i mean
do my kids need to front squat heavy early right this is like you know like no no but what we're
doing is we're trying to solve with a complex thing a complex problem with a simple solution like our
kids need to be jumping and crawling and sprinting.
Right.
Like you're going to try to replicate sprinting with a child, like in the gym.
That's for adults.
We can start to layer in formal instruction early.
That's what gymnastics and tumbling and parkour looks like, right?
That's why we get our kids into swim teams because there's okay to layer in some
technical skills early on.
As the child moves into sort of middle school, we might start to add in a few things
or it looks like, hey, we're doing work on pull-ups,
where, you know, can you control your body weight in space?
We don't necessarily, and we're not worried about loading children
because children are loading themselves.
But, you know, it's okay to start to say,
hey, we also should have some formal movement training
on top of this play structure training.
And now when you get out there,
you'll see that there are lots of people who have good play models.
I'll point out Itoe Portal,
I'll point out gold medal,
body fitness, GMB, you know, Move Nat.
There are so many ways where we can be a little bit more formal in our movement play,
where we're exposing.
Irwan LaCore, who's the originator of MoveNet, started to ask people who can do a pull-up.
How many of you who can do pull-ups had a tree in your backyard that you could climb?
And there was like a one-to-one correlation.
I grew up climbing, grew up playing, can still do a pull-up.
So let's think in those terms, how do we change the environment?
so that there's better exposure.
Because what we're seeing is we just, kids don't tumble.
You know, we, Juliet and I worked at a, we worked field day for our school,
on middle school.
And they were like fifth graders who couldn't do a two foot hop.
Fifth graders who couldn't do a forward somersault, right?
It was shocking to us.
And we were talking about doing like, we were doing the sack race, right?
And the kids struggled to have enough hip range of motion to put the sack on.
So by the time fifth grade has come around, we're really starting to see these patterns set up
where we don't have a lot of movement fluency, movement control,
just because the environment isn't asking for it.
How do you feel about jiu-jitsu?
Is that something that's online with like the gymnastics?
Let's say they don't have gymnastics if they do jimps.
Lovely, lovely, lovely.
I think suspect that if every human jih Tzu would have a better society, right?
Because you died 10 times today.
I got choked out by this, you know, this old lady choked me out.
Like that's definitely humbling.
you learn how to have contact, that's safe contact and formal contact.
You know, there are real clear this is okay, this is not okay.
You learn to what your tolerances are.
You tap out.
You know, I mean, that would be amazing if we could create.
And once again, maybe martial arts training or some kind of training that existed for a reason.
So martial arts are another wonderful way to put kids into some formal movement skills
before we start to just say, hey, we've got to get to the gym.
And some of these, you know, movement skills and working on, I mean, trying to recreate
free play essentially in many ways.
That's right. We're trying to recreate free play.
Right. Along with nutrition and, you know, trying to really at least get that minimum
dose of like eight hours of sleep per night helps with injury prevention with kids.
Probably bigger than any other thing.
Okay.
If you are interested in protecting your children so that are less likely to injure,
sleep would be the number one thing I would lean into.
But also more importantly, not more importantly, but also equally important, would be
not just, you know, training in the sport that they're doing and just adding more volume
and adding more volume, right?
I mean, like, does that work for adults?
Hell no, it doesn't work for adults.
I know.
But it's going to work for your child who's like, you know, it's, it's, the whole thing
is bananas too.
And if you're in a sport, like, it has rink time, your children, your 12-year-olds playing at 11 o'clock
at night or has, you know, like, it is anathema to what it means to develop a person who's
durable and wants to play and enjoys the game. And, you know, those kids are going to self-select
eventually. Like, Caroline identified that she wanted to play in college and was starting to put in
the extra work much earlier. Enjores the game. That's key. So why do 13-year-olds on average,
is that the drop-12 to 13-year-olds? Why do they, why do they, I call it drop out.
Yeah, drop out. They reject it because it's not.
fun. Like they're, they suddenly aren't with their friends. They don't have a good time anymore. It's not
enjoyable. It really becomes about outcome driven, you know, one or zero. I won. I have value.
We didn't win. It wasn't fun. You know, and one of the great opportunities we have is that
where do we train adults to become coaches? So the whole American model is predicated on you
being a volunteer coach. And where did you get all that training? Maybe when you were in high school,
You've modeled some behavior from a good coach, but we don't do enough formal coach development,
even how to talk to kids at different times, or where and how we kids acquire skills and that
movement theory motor learning.
There's a lot of richness here, but we have to start to level up because right now sometimes
we're like, we just need a body, you know, and men particularly are like, well, I played in high
school, so I'm a qualified coach.
And you're like, that's just insane.
Like, you know, it's, oh, you did a sport for four years, a hundred years ago and you think you're qualified to teach this developing person. No. So we can do a lot better.
I mean, I'm certainly grateful that there's people that volunteer out there, but I can through experience tell you, as my child was doing, you know, the rec, you know, volunteer dad sport versus the actual coach, night and day difference. Yeah. And I mean, night and day difference. Yeah. And, you know, this is a community level problem, right? And I think.
you know, Julian and I are deep into a book project called Outplay. We're trying to see if we can
straighten what we can control out because we can't control, you know, private equity is coming
into youth sports. That's all I need to know, right? Oh, this is a for-profit venture that we can
maximize for efficiency and profit. You call it the sport industrial complex? Youth and sport.
Something like that, right? And what you're seeing is, it's very expensive and is it giving us better
outcomes. Do we have kids playing longer? Do we keep all the kids playing? We don't. And, you know, at some
point your child, if she is legit, will become a specialist. You know, they asked Caroline to be the
goalie for a different team, you know, when she was a junior. And I was like, too late. If you want to do
this, you're all in on this. Because that's what it takes to play at these levels. And simultaneously,
you know, one of the, I think, real opportunities we have to protect kids,
is to get them a little stronger and a little fitter.
And that can be very simple, classic strength and conditioning.
We have a lot of parents who come up to us and say,
hey, my daughter's been recruited or my son's been recruited,
but the coach is asking him what his front squad is and what his power clean is,
what are those things?
And we're like, your child's 18 and has never been in a formal strength
in-ditching program.
That's crazy.
So we're going to have to start to add some of that back in as we get into high school
so that we can come a little bit more durable,
but also some of those things can happen in your own home.
What are some of the main, I would say, important points of you and Juliet's new book,
outplay that you could kind of just easy, you know.
Oh, well, I tell it, you know, without giving the whole thing away, we have real talks.
We can establish what the research says about needing sleep, but real tactics about how you're
going to solve that sleep problem.
Okay.
The fueling is such a problem.
We see hugely under-fueling.
kids who are, I'll say, malnourished and underfueled, drinking a lot of energy drinks,
eating a lot of, you know, reactive snacks. I'm starving. I eat a bag of, you know, Doritos, you know.
So we have, we're not putting base nutrition on kids who have these growing body needs.
And then our fueling is really, really tricky. When do we eat as a family? What's the pregame
snack? So we try to really kind of get to the bottom of that. We also try to give parents a
a simple rubric for helping their kid get out of pain.
Because a lot of times your kid come, you know, when we ask, we work with big camps and
stuff all the time.
And I raise, I'm like 100 kids in here.
I'm like, who's pain free?
And like one hand goes up.
And that girl's 12 years old.
And she's wrapped in bubble tape and on drugs, obviously, because she's the anomaly.
And every other hand, these kids are like, yeah, my shoulder hurts, my back hurts,
my knee hurts.
And parents head snap around.
And they're like, what is this?
And the kids are like, you never asked.
We just thought it was normal.
And for children, particularly.
particularly, those things are so superficially myofascial typically. It's just very simple inputs.
Change the range of motion, you know, put a little isometric in there, a little soft tissue. We're back.
And what about with the nutrition part's interesting because, you know, I'm not in the middle school,
high school phase yet. I'm in like still the picky eater. I mean, I guess they continue to be picky
eaters, but for different reasons, right? And so, you know, how do you, how do you solve that problem?
when it's the kid doesn't want to eat something.
Well,
we've,
this is ungenerous,
but we've never seen a kid,
uh,
um,
not eat when they were hungry.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
So some of this is you as an adult,
like we have a three vegetable rule.
And I have one child who was a gourmet and like started a subscription
cookie business and loves to cook and eat.
And I have another child who love brown foods.
Right.
And like,
it was very picky.
And,
what we started to do is if we just had three meals three vegetables every dinner there's three
vegetables and you can eat any of those three vegetables you want but there's always three
vegetables and everything that we cooked and when we sit down and this is the meal and there's not a
snack right afterwards or a thing like this is what we're eating then you know we have to
train our kids and then there's a place for nutrition on top of that like an emergency is very
inexpensive at least you're going to get some vitamins and minerals maybe it's the lowest
form of that, but you know, that emergency, fizzy drink. Caroline has been chugging one of those
because at the very least, I know she has some vitamin C and some micronutrient in her
system when she leaves for school. And our hypothesis is that, hey, if we can control a little bit more
in the morning and a little bit in the evening, plus maybe a snack, the rest of it, you don't
have any control over it. So let's control what we can control. There, you know, a lot of times we
have a lot of conversations about when do we eat and how do we fuel. And so we sort of have some
a simple rubric like three hours out, just regular meal. And you can relate to this. You go to a swim meet.
Kids swims a 25. She gets like a 1,000 calorie jamba juice or a donut. You're like, dude,
your child does not need to eat. Like she ate breakfast. But then on the other hand, we have kids
who are playing and playing and playing and playing and don't want to eat because they're nervous,
don't have access, right? In this situation, I'm like, have you met the uncrustable? Like,
this is a powerful, you know, tool where we can get some.
calories in you to fuel what you're doing. And so on the other hand, we have to like force kids to
eat. And, and there are body composition issues there and timing issues there. And how can we
think about fueling in a way that's, you know, parents don't go insane. Yeah. Um, I like also the idea of,
it's like, this is, this is what we have. You're going to have three vegetables or you're going to be
hungry. And you'll wake up talking about breakfast. Yeah. You will. Yeah. You know, and so as we notice,
So we're not talking about optimization.
We're saying, okay, this is what humans do, and we have to learn and teach that.
And here's the framework for that, right?
You know, when we have training table, I will stand, be set up near the, you know, the buffet line.
I'm like, more rice, more fruit.
You know, I got to make these kids eat to support what they're doing in the pool or on the field.
And it's really is fueling is we see an epidemic of underfueling and rely on.
on caffeine and sugar. Wow. So in high school, high school sports? It's a real bad. Okay, I have a few
rapid fire questions for you on this. So if you have a 10 year old soccer player, you've got a 12 year old
swimmer and you got a 14 year old basketball player, what would the first month of training
look like for each of those? Would they be similar, different? How would they differ?
They differ in terms of, you know, as we've run these programs, they're different in terms of maybe
the load or the volume, but not the fundamental skills.
And I'll give you an example.
We're huge fans of handstands.
It's what I mean, talk about being upside down, learning new skill, great for shoulders.
Kids love it.
It's play.
You can walk up.
We can pike on it.
There's so many ways.
A downward dog is a handstand.
But that's a great example where everyone gets handstands.
And even my adults get handstands, right?
Because we're able to teach and learn in this play.
And that's body weight overhead.
Now, I'm going to put the same body weight overhead on this, you know, strict press.
And you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, what are you doing?
But I'm like, handstand is constraint led.
No one dies doing a handstand.
It's skill base.
Right.
Kids get it.
So we can start to do is that, hey, probably if we took the fundamentals of track and field,
running, jumping, and throwing, that might probably get us 90% of the way, right?
like who Stuart McMillan,
Altus track and field has really said,
hey, we should really teach people how to skip again.
And we now have to program skipping into our adult program,
but kids can't skip.
So if you did a track and field warm up,
threw some medicine balls around,
bounce and jumped,
rolled,
played,
like all of sudden that feels like a lot of play
and a lot of movement exposure.
And then we might say,
hey, let's work on this aspect of the barbell, or we're going to teach you a kettlebell swing,
or basic calisthenics of push-ups and lunges and pull-ups, but in a game.
In a game.
Yeah.
So body weight control, you know, done, and then we can remember we can make it hard with breathing,
and we can also make it hard with speed, and we can make it hard with, right?
There's so many ways where we can challenge that body weight control stuff without just saying,
here, hold this.
Love it.
Okay.
Next question, what are the five exercises or movement practices you would keep in nearly every youth training program?
We need to spend a lot more time jumping on landing on one leg, learning to basically do some tumbling.
There's got to be some aerobic training.
But again, that can be done with tag and play.
You can have that exposure.
We probably don't train sprinting acceleration through games enough.
That's a real opportunity there.
Um, you know, it's not about core strength for kids. It's not about, uh, you know, if we look at what the body needs to do,
I'm like here, Dr. Patrick is a squat for you. But if I had a kid jump from a seated position or do
multiple broad jumps, it's that same squat position, same squat mechanic applied at speed load,
same shapes just with a different set of tools. Does that make sense? Yeah. So we can suddenly
see that FIFA had recognized that they were having an ACL problem in soccer. It's a problem.
And they came up with a really well-documented, well-validated way of mitigating lower extremity injury
and children with some simple hopping, simple neuromuscular control drills on a single leg
and no one does it. And even if you do it well, it still purports to work. So at some point,
we've got to just have some fundamental movement length.
where we, you know, maybe it's jumping, jumping, pause, and we can, hey, push that knee out,
get that foot straighter, right? Can you take a breath there? And then can we constrain? I would
submit that if you and I played spike ball, we would touch a thousand shapes and positions that we
could not get in a formal movement practice. So more of that, and then it becomes a little bit more
formal as we start to get into high school, I think. Is your data showing that doing those sort of
movements and training programs does reduce the ACL injuries? Oh, yeah.
like dramatically. And so that's a thing that we're like, well, who owns that problem? Well, maybe the
parent at home. And we have to have coaches that are like insisting on this work because, you know,
they're like, hey, I want to coach. Right. But meanwhile, we have kids who are unprepared to be coached.
Right. Okay. So what can a parent do at home in 10 minutes for 10 minutes a day? And you're kind of talking
about somebody. There's overlap here. What can a parent do at home in 10 minutes a day that would
meaningfully improved durability and movement options?
In 10 minutes, you know, I would say you guys need to play a game.
You know, so what games are available?
One of the things we identified with Caroline as a goalie early on, and even in
Waterpull, and this came from their coaches, they said, hey, if you're really interested
in your daughters being good at Waterpull, they need to do more long toss.
We need to throw a ball.
So we went out and we started throwing a baseball, throwing a softball with a mitt, smaller
than a water pole ball.
and we do so much throwing.
And even today I see women in the pool who cannot throw.
They hawk.
It's because, and they've never thrown outside the pool ever.
So what you can start to see is, hey, what are these fundamental skills?
Maybe that's a frisbee.
Maybe we go play catch.
Maybe it's spike ball.
Maybe it's reaction off the wall.
We probably need to figure out ways to play where the brain and the eyes are the
limiter and the driver, not necessarily the physiology. That's the piece that we're really needing
to lean into now is we've got to get this brain and this eye all working together. We're having to
train that now. Like we do a lot of tennis ball work because I need kids to throw and catch and jump
and bounce. And there's lots of great examples on the web of all the drills you can do playing
around with the tennis ball. There's so many you can do. That's right. And it's, I mean, it's a tennis ball.
At the local sports store near us, there's thousands of tennis balls. And I just take it.
hundreds at a time. Yeah. And then lastly, what should be removed from a young athletes program
before adding anything new? I would say, who, that's a really good question. You know,
the sort of junk volume first, if we can, right? The sophistication that comes along with the
trappings of parents feeling like their kid is getting a leg up with like sports ladders.
We see a lot of agility training kinds of things that feel sciencey, but aren't really a
sciencey.
Really?
Right?
So, you know, we see a lot of kids working extra hard on more pitching or more throwing or
more hitting and what kids really need is, you know, gross motor skill development.
So I see, I think parents will go down the rabbit hole of.
of more hyper-specialization too early,
and they'll get more private lessons in this very small thing
because that's what they think.
But on the other side, there's so much more, you know, opportunity.
We're picking up dimes.
We're stepping over course.
Great answer.
Yeah.
Great answer.
Love it.
Well, Dr. Starr, Kelly, thank you so much.
My pleasure.
All this, like, just vast amounts of very important information,
everything from mobility to injury prevention.
to moving throughout the day,
to helping, you know, train and coach our kids better
so that they are able to handle the world, you know, better.
Able to handle the world, that's it.
Yes, yeah.
You have, there's a lot of, you've got many books,
you've got a podcast, you've got, I mean,
let's go through, people want to continue to listen to,
they want to follow you work, they want to continue to learn from you.
And you need to meet my wife.
I think that's really important.
No, for sure.
We're going to do that when,
Right.
Yes, right.
Please, everything is at the ready state.
And you can see our coaching platforms, our courses.
If you're interested in, hey, I want to begin a mobility practice.
We have an app called Mobility Coach, which is really good.
There are self-tests in there.
If you have a ball and a roller, we can really get you a long way in terms of making your body feel better at home.
And, you know, way leads to way.
There's so much.
Any one of those things are in there.
our last book Built to Move we wrote as kind of a primer because a lot of us nerds aren't doing this,
but we wanted to bring neighbors and family members and members of our athletic community along,
so we kind of wrote a prequel to everything. And I think that's a really nice place to start.
Well, awesome. Again, thank you so much for joining me today.
This has been a dream. I mean, you have been like the science voice in my head for over a decade.
Oh my gosh. Thank you. Being here is incredible. Thank you.
A big thank you to Kelly for such a wide-ranging and practical conversation.
And thank you all for listening.
For those of you still here, Kelly also has a podcast called The Ready State.
I'm also excited for Kelly and Juliet's upcoming book, Outplay, which takes on youth sports,
sleep, fueling, pain, and what it really means to help kids become durable, capable,
and resilient athletes.
And always, if you enjoyed this episode, two quick things before you go.
please make sure you've downloaded my free how to train guide, which distills key training
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