Huberman Lab - Fitness Toolkit: Protocol & Tools to Optimize Physical Health
Episode Date: October 17, 2022I describe a fitness protocol that maximizes all the major sought-after aspects of physical fitness, including strength, endurance and flexibility. I discuss fundamentals of resistance training protoc...ols, including repetitions, sets, inter-set and inter-workout rest periods and periodization of intensity and volume to improve strength and hypertrophy. I also explain how to integrate this with endurance training across the week by controlling the duration, timing and intensity of cardiovascular workouts. I also cover science-based protocols on leveraging the mind-body connection, deliberate breathing (during and after exercise), stretching, deliberate heat and cold exposure, and non-sleep deep rest (NSDR) for better workout performance and faster recovery. Further, I tackle a range of real-world issues that can affect a consistent training schedule, such as whether you should train if you are sick, have had a poor night of sleep or had a stressful event and how to start training again after a break and whether you should train in a fasted or fed state. Physical fitness is a key variable for immediate and long-term health. This episode provides a modifiable “foundational” template that can be adjusted based on your current fitness level, goals, time constraints, and access to different types of equipment. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Huberman Lab Premium https://hubermanlab.com/premium Timestamps (00:00:00) Foundational Protocol for Fitness (00:04:35) Tool: Soleus (Calf) Push-Ups, Glucose Utilization & Metabolism (00:13:49) Sponsor: LMNT (00:18:53) Core Principles of Fitness & Modifiable Variables (00:23:37) Day 1: Long Endurance Workout (00:34:38) Day 2: Leg Resistance Training, Strength & Hypertrophy (00:36:13) Sponsor: AG1 (00:39:22) Key Principles of Resistance Training (00:51:10) Day 3: Heat & Cold Exposure, Recovery (01:00:35) Day 4: Torso & Neck Resistance Training (01:09:55) Day 5: Moderate Intensity Cardiovascular Training, Running Alternatives (01:16:43) Day 6: High-Intensity Interval Training, Maximum Heart Rate (01:24:10) Day 7: Arms, Neck & Calves Resistance Training (01:28:45) Flexibility of Foundational Protocol, Workout Spacing (01:33:00) Tool: Mind-Muscle Contraction, Physiological Sighs (01:37:10) Safety & Endurance/Cardiovascular Workouts (01:38:32) Tool: Stress or Poor Sleep & Workouts, Recovery & NSDR (01:41:20) Should You Train Fasted or Fed? (01:43:58) Tool: Static Stretching & Flexibility, Irradiation & Resistance Training (01:49:10) Tool: Hanging from a Bar & Fitness Metric (01:50:16) Should You Train Sick?, Ramping Training (01:53:33) Tool: Deliberate Slow Breathing & Recovery (01:55:00) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Momentous Supplements, Huberman Lab Premium, Neural Network Newsletter, Social Media Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today, we are discussing fitness.
A fitness, of course, is vitally important for cardiovascular health, for strength, for endurance, for lifespan, for health span.
I can't think of anyone out there that wouldn't want to have
healthy hormonal function, healthy cardiovascular function, to live
a long time and to feel vital, that is to have a long health
span, as well as a long lifespan. Fitness and fitness protocols
are tremendously powerful for developing all of that. However,
despite there being an enormous amount of information out there on the internet and in books and elsewhere,
it can be a bit overwhelming. So today's episode is really designed to synthesize science-based tools that we've covered on the podcast,
some with expert guests like Dr. Andy Galpin or Dr. Peter Atia, or World Renowned Movement Specialist, Edelport Hall,
or physiotherapist and strength and every one of them provided
a wealth of knowledge in terms of the various things that you can do to optimize very specific
or multiple aspects of fitness.
Today, we're going to do something a little bit different than usual.
Typically, on the Hubertman Lab podcast, I offer mechanism up front or first.
And then we talk about protocols that you can use that really lean on those science and science. Typically, on the Hubertman Lab podcast, I offer mechanism up front or first.
And then we talk about protocols that you can use that really lean on those science and
science-based mechanisms.
Today I'm going to describe a specific protocol that serves as a general template that anyone,
in fact, everyone can use in order to maximize all aspects of fitness, so that includes
endurance, strength, flexibility, hypertrophy, aesthetic
changes, etc. However, this general framework can also be modified, that is customized
to your particular needs. So if you're somebody who really wants to build more strength or
bigger muscles, you can change the protocol and the overall program according to that.
And I'll talk about very specific ways to do that. Or if you're somebody who really
just wants to maintain strength, but you want to build endurance, we'll talk about that. And I'll talk about very specific ways to do that. Or if you're somebody who really just wants to maintain strength, but you want to build
endurance, we'll talk about that.
And of course, we will cover real life issues such as, should you train if you are sleep
deprived?
What about food?
When should you eat?
What if you have an eaten in your hungry?
Should you still train, et cetera, et cetera?
We're going to cover all of that again in the context of this, what I would call foundational
template of fitness.
This foundational template of fitness is something that I personally use.
In fact, I've used it for over three decades, I don't believe it.
I'm that old, but I just recently turned 47.
And I still use this basic protocol or template across the week and modify it according
to what my particular goals are that year, that month, even that day, because I like you,
live in the real world, and sometimes I've been traveling
or I miss a workout, yes, it does happen,
or life isn't organized in exactly the way that I need to
in order to have everything go according
to the protocol that's on paper.
So we're gonna discuss real world issues
and how to work with the real world issues
in order to get the most out of your fitness program.
And again, by the end of today's program, I can assure you you will have a template
protocol that you can build up from, build out, change and modify, and that will really
serve your fitness goals according to the science and what peer reviewed studies and the
experts that have appeared on this podcast and other podcasts really tell us is best and
optimal for our fitness. Before we dive into today's content about fitness and fitness protocols, really tell us is best and optimal for our fitness.
Before we dive into today's content
about fitness and fitness protocols,
I wanna tell you about a brand new study
that is very exciting and frankly very unusual.
This is a study that was published
out of the University of Houston examining
a what I would call a micro exercise
or a micro movement.
It's a very small movement of a very small portion of your body.
In fact, just 1% of your musculature that when it's performed continuously while seated
has at least what they report are very dramatic positive changes in terms of blood sugar,
utilization, and metabolism.
So the title of this study is a potent physiological method to magnify and sustain soleus oxidative
metabolism, improves glucose and lipid regulation.
This study was published in I-Science, and as I mentioned earlier, it is getting a lot
of attention, and it's very unusual.
Without going into all the details of this study, let me just briefly give you a little bit
of the background. First of all, you have a muscle called the soleus. The soleus muscle is a more or less
wide flat muscle that sits beneath what most people think of as their calf, although it's part of
the calf muscle. The other portion of the calf is called the gastrocnemius. The soleus sits below
that. Now, the soleus muscle is a unique muscle because it's largely slow twitch muscle fibers.
It's designed to be used continuously over and over again
for stabilizing your body when you're standing upright,
for walking.
This is a muscle that's designed to contract over
and over and over again.
In fact, you could walk all day on this muscle
and most likely it would not get sore.
Do you probably done that and it did not get sore?
In contrast, a muscle like your bicep or your tricep, if I were to have you perform hundreds
or thousands of repetitions, even with a very light weight, you know, one pound weight
or a two pound weight, eventually it would fatigue, you would feel it sort of a burn there.
It's a very unusual set of muscles to use repeatedly, but the soleus is an unusual muscle
in that it really is designed to be used continuously.
Now, this study was focused on how people who sit a lot of the day and don't have the
opportunity for a lot of physical movement or maybe who don't even exercise at all can
improve their metabolism and glucose utilization.
Without going into a deep dive about glucose utilization, because we've done the deep dive
on this podcast, episodes such as metabolism, et cetera.
You can look those up at hubroomlab.com.
They're all timestamped and available there.
Anytime you eat, your blood sugar goes up to some extent.
So your blood glucose, as it's called,
goes up to some extent.
And then insulin is a hormone that's used to essentially
shaperone and sequester and use that blood glucose.
Or it's basically the idea is you don't want blood glucose to go too high.
Hyperinsulinemia is something associated with blood glucose that's too high because insulin goes up to essentially match the level of blood glucose.
You don't also don't want to be hypoglycemic. You don't want to have blood sugar that's too low and insulin is involved in both
regulating peaks and troughs in blood sugar, blood glucose.
So we can basically say, and this is very simple, but we can basically say that you don't
want blood glucose to be elevated too much or for too long.
That's not good.
In fact, people who have diabetes because they don't make insulin, people who have type
one diabetes do not make insulin at all, their blood glucose has is so high that they actually
have to take insulin in order to regulate it.
Otherwise, their blood glucose can go so high that it can damage cells and damage organs
that can even kill people.
People who have type 2 diabetes are so-called insulin insensitive.
They make insulin, but the receptors to insulin are not sensitive to it.
And so they make more insulin than normally would be made, and blood glucose isn't regulated,
properly, et cetera, et cetera.
The take home message about blood glucose is that you want your blood glucose levels to
go up when you eat, but not too high and you don't want them to stay elevated for too
long.
This study looked at how people who are largely sedentary or at least sitting can increase
the utilization, the clearance of glucose from the bloodstream after eating, and they also
looked at overall metabolism for people get this that we're using
just that 1% of muscle, the soleus. By doing what they call a soleus push up. So the soleus push up
can be described very simply as if you're sitting down with your knee bent at an approximately right
angle, like a square corner, and pushing up, or I should say, lifting your heel while pushing down on your toe, and contracting
the calf muscle, as it were, and then lowering the heel and then lifting that heel again,
lowering the heel, lifting the heel again.
Each one of those is what they call a soleus push-up.
This study had people continuously do soleus push-ups, and they looked at things like blood
glucose utilization, they looked at metabolism,
and so on. Now, a couple of important things about this study before I tell you what they discovered,
which was, frankly, pretty miraculous, almost hard to believe, and yet I believe the data, the data
look to be collected quite well, and there are a lot of statistics, and the study looks to be quite
thorough. First of all, they used an equal number of male and female subjects.
There were a wide range of body mass indices, okay?
So this wasn't just super fit people
or people that were purely sedentary and not fit.
They used a wide variety of ages, time of day,
people who tended to walk a lot or not walk a lot.
They measured changes in metabolism
and blood glucose utilization in people
that had done these soleus pushups while seated in the laboratory. glucose utilization in people that had done
these solius pushups while seated in the laboratory.
And I must say they had them do these solius pushups for quite a long while continuously.
So they had them do it for as long as 270 minutes total throughout the day.
So if you divide that, that's four and a half hours.
You might say, well, four and a half hours of lifting the heel and putting the heel down,
lifting the heel, putting the heel down, that's a lot.
But they didn't always do it continuously.
They had some breaks in there.
So this is the sort of thing that you could imagine.
You or other people could do while seated, while doing zooms
or while on calls or maybe even while eating,
doing that sort of thing.
Although I'm not suggesting that you constantly
be focusing on soliast pushups throughout your life,
the point is that people who did these solias pushups
experienced dramatic improvements in blood sugar
regulation and in metabolism, despite the fact
that the solias is just 1% of the total musculature.
So here I'm gonna read from the abstract
about what they found.
People who did these solias pushups,
despite being a tiny muscle and using very little local energy, in fact they measured muscle
glycogen, the burn or essentially the utilization of fuel within the muscle, and there was very
little utilization of fuel within the solace itself, and that's because the solace has this
unique property of needing to basically keep you going all day, walking all day, or moving
all day, walking all day, or moving all day.
What they saw was a large magnitude, for example, 52% less post-pranandial,
that's after a meal, glucose excursion.
So, 52% less increase in blood glucose, and 60%
60 less hyperinsulinemia, so reduced levels of insulin.
They also miraculously observe that despite this being,
again, a small muscle, 1% of the total muscle mass,
so very small oxidative use,
they saw big improvements in systemic metabolic regulation.
So this is interesting, and I think something
that we should at least know about,
I'm not aware that anyone's replicated this study yet.
I know there's a ton of excitement about this study in the popular press.
And if the data turned out to hold up, which I like to imagine they will, I can understand
why there's so much excitement.
What this means is that if you're somebody who cares about blood glucose regulation, you
want to keep your metabolism running, please don't stop exercising the other ways that
you exercise.
But if you're somebody who wants to maximize your health, doing these soliast push-ups
fairly continuously while seated is going to be beneficial.
And in addition to that, I know that there are going to be people out there who, for
instance, might be injured or you're traveling and you're stuck on a plane or you're in
the classroom and you're forced to study all day or take notes all day.
You're just not getting enough opportunity
to get those steps that you wanna take,
whether or not it's 10,000 or fewer or more,
getting enough steps or movement.
Maybe you don't have time to get out and do your run,
or maybe you're also running weightlifting
and doing yoga classes and things of that sort,
but you want to further improve your fitness,
at least in terms of your metabolic health.
This seems like a terrific, very low investment way to do it, certainly zero cost.
It does take a little bit of attention, so you have to divert your attention from other
things you're doing to make sure that you're still doing these soliast pushups.
I'm sure that many of you are going to have a lot of detailed questions such as, you
know, how high did they lift the heel and did they contract the muscle very hard or not.
Couple of things about that, they did not have subjects really contract the muscle hard.
They did measure the angle of heel raise
and it was anywhere from 10 to 15 degrees,
so they didn't have to go way, way up on their tippy toes
or things of that sort.
In any event, 270 minutes, four and a half hours
of doing these soleus pushups is a lot,
but by my read of the data and the rather significant, or I should say,
very significant effects that they observed on blood glucose regulation and metabolism, etc,
seems to me that doing less would still be beneficial and that you don't necessarily have to do the
full 270 minutes in order to get the benefits that they observed. More about this study includes
the fact that the benefits they observed were very long lasting, as long as two hours after a meal, they could still see this improved blood glucose
utilization.
I don't know because I wasn't able to find it in the methods whether or not they were
doing the soleus pushups while they were consuming blood sugar in this study.
The point being that if you're somebody who cares about their fitness, this study is
interesting because what it means is that, again, if you are forced to be a mobile or sitting longer than you would
like, I feel stuck in a meeting or zooms or a class or on a plane, et cetera, or if you're
simply trying to add a bit more fitness and metabolic health to your overall regimen,
solely as pushups, at least to me, it seemed like a very low investment, simple, zero
cost tool to improve your metabolic health.
For those of you that want to prove this study in more detail, we will provide a link to this paper published in eye science in the show note caption.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Element.
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That means plenty of salt, magnesium, and potassium, the so-called electrolyte, and no
sugar.
Salt, magnesium, and potassium are critical to the function of all the cells in your body,
in particular to the function of your nerve cells, also called neurons. In fact, in order for your
neurons to function properly, all three electrolytes need to be present in the proper ratios,
and we now know that even slight reductions in electrolyte concentrations or dehydration of the
body can lead to deficits in cognitive and physical performance.
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Let's talk about fitness and let's talk about how you can develop the optimal fitness protocols
for you.
So that includes what to do each day of the week and your fitness protocol
across the week and indeed across the month and the year and even year to year.
When we had Dr. Andy Galpin on the podcast, he said something very important
that we want to keep in mind today, which is concepts are few methods are many.
That is, there are an infinite number of different programs and exercises
and certain rep schemes and different runs and burpees and push-ups, etc., etc., etc. that one
can follow. However, there are really just a few basic concepts or principles of muscle physiology,
of cardiovascular function, of connective tissue function that provide or set the basis for
the adaptations
that we call fitness or that lead to fitness.
So, I'm going to list those off now.
We can talk about a fitness protocol that's really aimed mainly toward developing skill.
That's one.
Or speed.
That's another.
Or power, which is speed times strength.
Or specifically strength. Or hypertrophy, growth of muscles,
or endurance, such as muscular endurance.
Muscular endurance is, for instance, your ability to stay in a plank position or to do
a wall sit, you know, to sit on an invisible chair against a wall, or other forms of endurance,
like near pure anaerobic endurance. So a one minute sprint or less or one minute all out cycling on a stationary bike, this
sort of thing, or endurance that occurs in the kind of three to 12 minute total duration
range.
So that might be sprints or high intensity interval type training.
It could be a all out swim swim, it could be all-out row.
That's another form of endurance taps into different fuel systems, different aspects of muscle physiology, etc.
And then endurance that lasts 30 minutes or more, which is typically what people think about when they think about
endurance, but of course the other forms of endurance matter. So we've got skill speed, power, strength hypertrophy,
muscular endurance, anaerobic endurance, what I would call three to 12 minutes endurance,
although it goes by other names as well, and 30 minutes or more endurance type exercise
and adaptations. Each and every one of these requires different principles, different concepts
in order to improve, say, your muscular strength,
or your hypertrophy, or both.
However, there's a general theme that sets beneath
all adaptations leading to fitness,
and that's what we're really gonna set down
is the base layer, the foundation of everything
we talk about today.
And that's that we need to think about
what are the modifiable variables.
Again, I'm borrowing directly from the episode with Dr. Andy Yalpin.
He was the one that said modifiable variables are the key thing to think about.
What are you going to modify?
What are you going to change in order to increase one or some of the various things I listed
off before, skill speed, power, strength, hypertrophy, endurance, et cetera, et cetera.
And some of the key concepts that emerge from that discussion are that we need to think
about progressive overload.
Normally, when people hear about progressive overload, they think about adding more weight
to a bar or picking up heavier dumbbells.
But that could also be progressive overload in the context of running up a hill of steeper
incline or running a little bit faster, a little bit further, and so on and so forth.
Now, as I promised earlier, today we are not going to drill into each and every one of the mechanisms that underlie the different adaptations that are going to develop speed and strength and
endurance, et cetera, because that was covered in the podcast with Dr. Andy Gelpin and the other
podcast with experts that I mentioned earlier. And we again will provide links to those podcasts if
you want to drill into those mechanisms.
Instead, what we're going to do is we're going to start
with a program that essentially is designed for you
to maximize all aspects of fitness, to the extent
that you can simultaneously maximize all aspects of fitness,
but then to change or modify that protocol
so that if you want to build up more, for instance,
strength and you want to just hold on to the endurance you have,
you don't want to build endurance,
at least not in that week or that month,
you can do that,
or if you want to improve your endurance
while maintaining your strength, you can do that,
and so on and so forth.
Most people I do believe would like a combination of strength
and endurance and flexibility, and maybe even hypertrophy,
particularly for certain muscle groups that maybe are not as well developed as other muscle groups.
They want to bring balance to their physique, both for sake of aesthetics and for sake of health and for sake of
general functioning to maybe even to eliminate pain.
The protocol that I'm going to describe really works as a foundational template for that as well.
So let's drill into that foundational protocol
and I'll keep referring to it as the foundational protocol,
not because it's the one that I use,
although it is the one that I use
and not because it's the one that we're talking about today,
although it's the one we're talking about today,
but because we need some general framework
from which to build out the more specific protocols
that we'll get into in a bit more detail later.
So in this foundational protocol for fitness, what you'll notice is that on any one given
day, you're going to focus on one particular aspect of fitness.
Maybe it's endurance, maybe it's strength, maybe it's hypertrophy, in particular, it
might be hypertrophy for a particular muscle group or muscle groups.
That said, across the entire week, it's designed
to bring fitness and different forms of fitness to all aspects of your body. So, this particular
protocol begins on Sunday, although that's simply the day that I happen to begin the protocol.
And again, this protocol is not important because it's the one that I follow. I follow it because
it is important. In other words, it's a one that I follow. I follow it because it is important.
In other words, it's a protocol that's really gleaned from the scientific literature
and the experts that is for you.
So this fitness protocol is really about you.
I just may refer to it as the one that I follow simply for ease of communication.
And for me, my week begins on Sunday.
So I do my very best to get a workout in on Sunday.
And for me, that workout is that of a endurance workout.
It's designed to either maintain or increase my endurance.
And the endurance type that I'm referring to
is endurance of 30 minutes or more.
In fact, for me, the goal is always to get either 60
to 75 minutes of jogging.
So this would be so-called zone-to-cardio.
People probably have heard of zone-to-cardio, but if you haven't, that's okay. Zone-to-cardio
is something that you could measure with a heart rate monitor or other device, but you
don't need to. Zone-to-cardio is the kind of cardiovascular exercise in which you're
pushing yourself to move such that you're breathing faster than normal.
Your heart is beating faster than normal.
However, you are still able to sustain a conversation.
But if you were to push yourself any harder, that is, move faster or go up a steeper incline
at the same rate, you happen to be at any one moment, you would lose that ability to speak.
You wouldn't be able to complete sentences.
You would be out of breath and you'd have to pause mid-sentence. Now, it's near impossible,
even with a heart rate monitor, to stay exactly in zone two unless you're very, very skilled
at that. So, I don't obsess over that, and in fact, I don't wear a heart rate monitor
when I do this exercise. But for me, the goal is to head out on Sunday and get 60 to 75
minutes of jogging in zone two.
Now, of course, I like to jog,
but that doesn't mean that you have to jog.
You could replace jogging with rowing on a rowing machine
or maybe even rowing an actual boat.
If you have access to that or cycling or swimming,
something that allows you continuous movement
for 60 to 75 minutes at that zone two threshold.
We talked about earlier.
For me, that can include some hills.
And when I say hills, they could be very steep hills,
but I simply slow my pace down
in order to stay in that roughly zone two range.
Or it could be that they are more low grade hills
and I might just slow down a little bit
or I might even push myself a tiny bit that day,
but really I'm just trying to build that long endurance.
I'm trying to build up my capacity
or maintain my capacity to go a long distance
without fatiguing.
Now, some days, meaning some Sundays,
since I tend to do this almost always on Sunday,
although there are exceptions,
instead of doing the 60 to 75 minute jog,
what I'll do is I will head out for a long hike
that could be two and a half hours or three hours or maybe even a four or five hour hike.
Sometimes it's very long.
And I'll do that sometimes simply to mix up the routine because sometimes jogging and jogging
the same routes gets boring to me.
I do enjoy running.
That's something I've been doing for a very long time.
But sometimes it just gets a little bit tedious and I want to do enjoy running. That's something I've been doing for a very long time. But sometimes it just gets a little bit tedious
and I want to do something different.
Also sometimes I want to be social on Sundays.
I want to head out on a hike with my partner
or I want to meet up with friends and hike with them.
And so taking a long hike on Sunday
is something that also could be quite social.
And then I don't have to worry about
also getting in my workout when heading out
on a hike with my partner or going
out to meet with friends or things of that sort. I will say that there's a specific
tool or a specific change that you can make to this Sunday long endurance or at least what I consider long for me.
I mean, it's by no means a marathon or an ironman, but this long endurance training.
And that's the use of a weight vest.
So something that I've really started utilizing
more recently, and by more recently,
I really mean within the last year or so,
is I purchased one of these weight vests
that can be anywhere from 10 to 50 pounds.
What I use in the weight vest is irrelevant,
but it certainly changes the level of effort required when taking a hike
or even a walk. Now, there's an additional benefit of the weight vest, which is that if
you are going out for a hike or even for a walk for social reasons and you're with somebody
that's not quite at the same fitness level that you are, frankly, it's a little bit rude
to just keep walking ahead of them and running back or running ahead and running back. You
know, oftentimes you really want to spend time with the person and you don't want them
to feel as if they're holding you up.
And so the weight vest is a terrific way to get some additional work than as you'll
find if you wear a weight vest.
It is additional work on say a shorter hike.
So maybe the person you're with only has time for an hour long hike or maybe they just
don't have the fitness to do a two hour or three hour hike.
So I'll throw on the weight vest and I'll head out for a walk with them or a hike with
them, or sometimes I'll go out on a long hike with the weight vest myself.
So again, the point of this for me Sunday, although it could fall on any day for you, workout
is really to build up that long form endurance.
And this fits well with what Dr. Andy Galpin and Dr. Peter Otheeho referred to as the real need to get in some long endurance
type work at some point or even multiple points throughout the week.
For me, this long Sunday jog of 60 to 75 minutes or long Sunday hike or weighted walk or
weighted hike really accomplishes that goal.
Sometimes leads to a little bit of soreness, particularly in my calves, or if I'm wearing
the weight vest, sometimes my midsection will get sore because I'm trying to remain
upright.
I think it also builds up some muscular endurance, not just cardiovascular endurance, but
again, throughout the entire time that I'm jogging or hiking, what I'm trying to get to
is a place where I can feel that my pulse rate is definitely elevated,
but it's not so elevated that I have to stop because I'm out of breath.
And because I know some people out there might be really neurotic about this sort of thing,
if you have to stop because you're out of breath, that doesn't mean that you blew the workout,
that you know, you aren't getting endurance. Of course, you're getting benefits from it.
So I'm not absolutely neurotic about always staying exactly in that heart rate zone.
I might stop and have a conversation for a moment
if it's a longer hike,
although I really try and keep moving
and I try and push myself just a little bit further
than where I'm exceedingly comfortable.
And so for me, doing this long Sunday hike or jog
really provides a foundation, a base for endurance,
that then the other endurance workouts
that I'll describe later in that type of take place later in the week can build on.
As I mentioned earlier, we will get back to the mechanisms that this taps into and why
this is so useful.
There are multiple benefits to doing these kinds of endurance type workouts and zone two
cardio.
But by putting it at the start of my week, again, my week starts on Sunday. I'm sure that regardless of how the rest of the week goes,
that I got my endurance training in.
And of course, I'm going to want to and I will do endurance training
other days during the week.
But if something comes up or I happen to get sick or I'm really behind in terms
of work and I can't get other workouts in this Sunday, long jog or hike,
really provides that fundamental, I can honestly say foundation
for cardiovascular fitness and endurance that I can hang my hat on and say, okay, I've got
that one in the bag and I can then look to other days of the week to focus on other aspects
of fitness.
Now a really important point to make about this Sunday endurance workout is that allows
you to check off a box and that box is 75 or
so minutes of zone two cardio because as you may have heard either in this podcast or
from others out there like Dr. Peter T. Yet getting 180 to 200 minutes of zone two cardio
per week has enormous positive effects on longevity and enormous positive effects on general health.
Again, in terms of cardiovascular function, but also metabolic fuel utilization,
also in terms of your musculature and your ability to use your body over long distances for
long periods of time. So while it doesn't complete all 180 to 200 minutes per week,
it certainly gets you a good distance pun intended toward that goal.
Now I want to acknowledge that some people might be starting
a fitness program.
And so 60 to 75 minutes of jogging might be too long.
Or a three hour weighted vested hike,
or some people might even do what's called a rock
like you were a rock sack, that might be too much.
In which case, certainly start with less
and go on flat ground and go at the
rate that allows you to get into zone two, but that is not excessively difficult for you.
And then as you build up fitness, you can add time or you can add weight through a weight
vest or if you don't want to buy a weight vest or can't afford one. As a simple solution
to that, I actually have a good anecdote about that. One time I was heading out for a hike
with a friend of mine,
he was a former seal team operator.
I'll never forget this and he said,
oh yeah, I'll bring you a sack
and I thought he meant like a sack lunch,
like he was gonna bring lunch.
And I showed up and he basically gave me a backpack
that was loaded with a bunch of stuff
and the backpack weighed about 40 pounds
and then we took a hike.
So I was thinking lunch, he was thinking weighted backpack
and a weighted backpack or even just any kind of strong sack that you can put over your
shoulders or even carry in your arms.
It's going to work exceedingly well to build in some extra requirement for effort.
So you certainly don't have to purchase a weight vest in order to get the benefits of
bringing additional weight along with you on these long cardiovascular events.
But again, build up over time.
You can add time. you can add time,
you can add weight, and that's also a really nice feature
of adding weight, which is at some point,
your schedule might be such,
or you just don't really want to keep adding more
and more and more time on this long endurance Sunday,
in this case, workout, in that case, add weight.
You can also, as you build up fitness, you can add
speed to it. Your zone two, and what zone two is, won't shift, but what work is required from you in
order to get into zone two, will shift. That is, as you get more and more fit, you'll have to move
faster and or bring more weight in order to stay in zone two. And that will simply tell you that you
are indeed improving your endurance. Okay, so then Monday rolls around and I like most everyone else out there.
I work on Monday.
I get right into my emails and preparation for podcasts and running my laboratory, etc.
However, I make sure that at some point on Monday, and for me that some point is typically
and ideally early in the morning, so 7 a.mam or so, I train my legs on Monday.
So that includes quadriceps, hamstrings, and calves.
Why do I do that workout on Monday and what is that workout designed to do?
Well that workout is really designed to make sure that I'm either maintaining or building
strength in my legs.
This is not simply for aesthetic reasons.
This is not simply to grow bigger calves or grow bigger quadriceps and hamstrings, although
it can accomplish that as well, depending on how you train.
We'll talk about details of training.
The reason for training legs on Monday is several fold.
First of all, they are the largest muscle groups of the body.
And by training your legs on Monday, it sets in motion a large number of metabolic processes
that carry you some distance,
even through the whole week in terms of elevating metabolism, in terms of amplifying certain
hormonal events in your body, etc. that are really beneficial. In addition to that, I'm of the belief
that the legs are the foundation of the body and provided you can train legs safely, that training
legs is vitally important, not
just for strength of the legs, but also for strength of your entire body.
Again some of that is through systemic hormonal effects because if you're going to train
the large muscle groups of your body under substantial loads, you will get systemic release
of hormones, not just testosterone, although certainly testosterone, but also things like
growth hormone, you get increases in all sorts of so-called anabolic hormones that even if you're somebody who's not trying to
increase muscle size because I realize a lot of people are not trying to do that, these
are hormones that shift your metabolism and your overall tendon strength and ligament strength
and overall musculature into what I would call a strong foundation.
So for me, Monday is leg workout.
It also just feels good to get the leg workout
out of the way early in the week.
And it accomplishes another goal,
which is that I sometimes will take one or two days
off of a leg workout because they can be very intense
and they are large muscle groups.
And I'll explain what I do on the off days.
They're not pure off days.
They actually include some recovery type training
or even some all-out training.
But by training legs on Monday, I'm able to get what I consider the hardest strength
and hypertrophy workout out of the way and again set all those positive physiological effects
in motion for the entire week.
The other thing is that no workout exists in isolation.
What you do one day is going to be determined
by what you did the previous day.
And even though the previous day,
I may have taken a three hour weight vested hike,
never are my legs so sore from that long slow endurance work
because it is long and slow,
that I'm unable to train legs.
Contrast that with a, say, high intensity interval training
workout, which comes later in the week.
And my legs might be sore.
In fact, they might not even be recovered
such that I'm able to do a real leg work.
And when I say real workout,
I'll describe what that means in a moment.
So legs come on Monday,
and I think that for those of you that are using
or interested in using resistance training,
I suggest getting your leg workout done early in the week.
And for those of you that have heard the phrase,
you know, don't skip leg day,
I will go a step further and say,
don't skip leg day in fact, make leg day your first day
of strength and hypertrophy training, put it on Monday.
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Okay, so now that we're talking about resistance training, the question is going to come up about sets and reps and all of that business.
That was covered in a lot of detail on the podcast with Dr. Andy Galpin, and I'm going to get into some of that detail now,
but I'm going to wait until I describe the entire set of workouts for the week before
I go into even more detail because there's a way of what's called periodizing, that is
changing the sets and reps, et cetera, across the week and indeed from month to month, that's
really optimal.
But I don't want to make it seem as if all of that just pertains to the leg workout, it
actually pertains to all of the resistance training.
So I'll just give you a couple of teasers
about the key principles of resistance training
that I think are almost universally,
if not universally, then generally accepted
in the strength training and physiology community.
And then later I'll get back to some
of the overarching principles
that apply to all strength and hypertrophy workouts across the week including the ones for the
torso, the arms, etc. Okay, so legs fall on Monday. I should say that leg workouts like all resistance
training workouts for me consist of about, again, I'm not neuratically attached to this, but about 10 minutes of warming
up, and then about 50, 50 to 60 minutes of real work. Now, of course, some of that is going to be
rest between sets, but by real work, I mean, really hard work, not necessarily to failure. We'll talk
about failure in a little bit, but hard work where I'm struggling to complete the final repetitions,
if not going to failure to continue to move the weight repetitions.
And again, the entire work portion of that workout is about 50 to 60 minutes.
Why? Well, past 60 minutes, you start getting increases in cortisol that really
impede recovery. And I personally am somebody that does not recover very well
from high intensity exercise. I realize that within the literature, it is believed,
and I think generally accepted, that when you stimulate muscle hypertrophy or strength increases,
it impacts the nervous system.
It also causes things like protein synthesis, etc.
There are a number of different forms of adaptation that occur to give you muscle strength and size changes. And these days people talk a lot about needing to stimulate
muscle growth or muscle strength at least every 48 hours. But I can tell you that I recover
out there slowly and I benefit from working the same muscle group about twice per week
with longer, or I should say, more days of rest in between those workouts.
So, if I train legs on Monday, believe it or not, I'm only training legs on Monday.
I do not have a second leg workout during the week.
However, on Friday, I do a high-intensity interval training session that serves two purposes.
One is it serves the purpose of triggering a certain type of endurance
and getting my heart rate very, very high. And in addition to that, because of the way I do that
workout, it acts as a sort of supplement or a more moderate intensity workout for quadriceps, hamstrings,
and calves such that I at least never lose strength. And in fact, generally build strength from one leg workout to the next provided.
I'm doing things correctly.
So what I'm not referring to is the kind of classic, you know, super high intensity training
once per week.
And then not actually training that muscle group again.
For me, it's really training each muscle group twice per week once directly and then once
indirectly, either during another
weight training workout or during a cardiovascular, I should say endurance training workout.
So again, legs on Monday, the workout is 50 to 60 minutes after a brief warm up.
I generally pick two exercises per muscle group.
So again, I'm doing calves, I'm doing quadriceps, and I'm doing hamstrings.
You should pick the exercises that work for you.
So, that's why I'm actually not going to share which exercises I use.
I'll give you a couple suggestions about the ones I do use.
But really exercise selection as Dr. Andy Galpin pointed out is a very important variable
and the key thing to emphasize for that variable is that you need to be able to perform the
movement safely.
So, I know there's a huge debate out there and people love to argue about whether or not one can squat
or deadlift for long periods of time or should
or should not.
Some people say you absolutely should.
I personally do not squat and do not deadlift.
I've actually never done much squatting or deadlifting.
And I know some people out there are probably rolling
their eyes or switching the channel at this point.
But I can say that for me, I've been able to
achieve the strength and hypertrophy goals that I've been seeking doing things like leg extensions
and hack squats or for hamstrings, doing things like leg curls and glute ham raises or for calves
doing standing and seated calf raises and so on. I think a key principle that everyone should pay
attention to is one that was taught to me
by an excellent strength coach years ago and I still use this and at least it works for me. For each muscle group, try and find an exercise in which you get that muscle into a weighted
stretch position. So this would be, for instance, the standing calf raise, you know, down at the
bottom, it's weighted and you're in a deep stretch provided you're doing the movement correctly.
As well as another exercise where you're getting contraction
in the shortened position of the muscle.
So for the hamstrings, that would be the leg curl.
For the calves, it would be a seated calf raise.
Or for the quadriceps, the leg extension is, you know,
if the machine is designed right
and you're doing it correctly,
the peak contraction is largely going to occur at the legs extended position.
But then another exercise for each muscle group that puts the muscle into more of a stretched
or at least a larger range of motion or compound type movement, but ideally where there's some
stretch there.
So I guess I will tell you what exercise I do.
For the quadriceps is gonna be leg extensions
and hack squats, I use hack squats
because I don't do free bar squats for safety reasons
and I like the hack squat machine.
I'll do leg curls and glute ham raises for hamstrings
and I'll do standing calf raises
and see calf raises for the calves.
Again, those are the movements that I use
because I can perform them safely in the repetition ranges
and with the weights that are required for me to either maintain or build leg strength and calf strength.
But you might decide that for you deadlifts are absolutely essential and terrific or squats, free bar squats are absolutely terrific or front squats.
I'm not here to tell you which exercises to do or not do. I am telling you that it's probably wise to at least consider
doing at least two exercises per muscle group, probably three maximum, if you ask me, if you're
doing your entire legs and calves in one day, but to think about doing one exercise where the
muscle is brought into that shortened peak contraction position, like leg curls or leg extensions
or seated calf raise, and then another exercise for each muscle group where there's more of elongation
and maybe even a stretch on the muscle group.
In fact, that's a principle that you'll hear me talk
about later when I talk about training
other muscle groups for strength and hypertrophy.
So now you know approximately how long to train.
You might be somebody who can get away with training
for an hour and a half.
And that won't impede your recovery.
For me, that really starts to impede my recovery.
Also, if I'm staying on task,
that 60 minute limit really works well for me.
Do I occasionally train for 75 minutes?
Yes, because if I'm waiting for a piece of equipment,
sometimes I have to just wait longer,
so that happens,
but I really try and keep the total duration
of the workout shorter.
How many sets and reps and rest intervals?
Well, that was covered by Dr. Andy Galpin as well, without getting into the total science,
here's a brief summary of how to structure that.
It's pretty clear that if you're going to do lower repetitions and heavier weights,
that you're going to want to do a bit more volume.
I know that this spits in the face of what a lot of people think, but so if you're going to want to do a bit more volume. I know that this spits in the face
of what a lot of people think,
but so if you're gonna do five sets of five,
I would consider five repetitions,
low repetition range, heavier weight.
And if you're going to train with higher repetitions,
you can do fewer sets.
That certainly works for me.
I generally follow a program
where for about a month, so three to four weeks, I will do all
my resistance training in the repetition range of about four to eight repetitions.
So that's rather heavy, a few more sets.
So it might be anywhere from three to four sets per exercise, again, still just two exercises
and longer rest between sets and you wear from two minutes
to maybe even four minutes if it's really heavy legwork.
And then for the next month, switch to repetition range that's closer to eight to twelve, maybe
even fifteen repetitions per set, but do fewer sets overall, so maybe just two to three
sets per exercise, again just two exercises per muscle group typically.
And shorten the rest between sets so that it's more in the 90s, maybe even as short as 60 seconds rest between sets, but typically 90 seconds to about two minutes or two and a half minutes.
So basically it's one month heavier, the next month slightly lighter, although I wouldn't say
light, I would say moderate weight and moderate
rep range. That tends to work well for me. It also adheres to a principle that came up
during the discussion again with Dr. Andy Galpin that for hypertrophy, you really can use
repetition ranges anywhere from five to 3030 rep. But he emphasized changing the repetition
ranges in order to offset boredom.
Frankly, I like to train heavier. I enjoy training in the 4-8 rep range.
However, I noticed that if I do that for more than four weeks in a row,
and I don't switch over to training in the 8-12, maybe in 15 repetition range for about a month,
well, then I can't make continuous progress.
I start to actually lose ground.
But by switching back and forth, I actually can make continuous progress at
least across the year. So I hope that that principle or I should say that protocol was communicated
clearly. It works very well. I assure you. Does that mean that I never get 10 repetitions
on a week when I'm supposed to train in the four to eight repetition range? No, occasionally,
I'll venture up into the 10 repetition range. But I really try and cluster the low repetition work for about a month, again, across all
workouts and all exercises and the slightly higher out even say moderate repetition work across
to the next month. One thing that you'll notice, since we are talking about total fitness programming,
is that during the month where you are doing moderate repetitions, you'll notice
that your endurance work will actually be facilitated.
And I do not think that's a coincidence.
In fact, it's not a coincidence.
It's because when you are training very heavy or in the heavier range, lower repetitions,
et cetera, you're tapping into different processes in those muscles.
So when you head out for that long Sunday hike, or as you'll soon hear, whereas on Friday,
you're gonna do high-intensity interval training,
what you'll notice is during certain months
of weight training when you're training more heavy,
those workouts will feel, literally, will feel different
than they will during the months
when you're doing moderate repetition work.
I am not a competitive athlete,
I'm not running races or triathlons like some of my friends.
I'm very impressed by them. I'm really just trying to get overall cardiovascular fitness,
overall strength, overall hypertrophy where I need it, maintain muscle size, etc. in muscle
groups where I'm just trying to maintain. That's really my goal. So I'm not trying to optimize any
of these workouts for any one performance feature. But in a little bit, we'll talk about how you can change various aspects that is variables
of this protocol in order to say, for instance, really emphasize hypertrophy or really emphasize
endurance. Okay, so with what I would call a standard endurance workout done on Sunday,
and I say standard because most people, when they hear endurance, they think of the ability to
endure, to continue in a repeated movement or exercise over some period of time.
With that workout done on Sunday, and then with the leg workout done on Monday, you can feel
really good about how you're heading into the week. However, after training legs on Monday,
I experience that doing cardiovascular workouts the next day is either inefficient or at least
doesn't really allow me to completely recover from my leg workout. Now I realize that some people are
going to immediately scoff at that and in fact there are really beautiful papers out there talking
about how one can actually do a fair amount of cardiovascular exercise without interfering with their strength and speed
and hypertrophy improvements, and vice versa.
In fact, there's a terrific review that was mentioned on the podcast with Dr. Andy Galpin.
This is a review that will provide a citation to an reference and a link to, which is the
review by Mirac and Bagley, which talks about whether or not there's interference between
strength and endurance workouts.
Really interesting review, if you want to prove that.
But with all that said, I like to take Tuesday as a no endurance, no resistance training
day.
But that doesn't mean that I'm not doing anything for my overall health and fitness.
On Tuesdays, I do a series of heat-cold contrast.
In other words, I get really, really warm and then I get really, really cold.
I get really, really warm and I get really, really cold repeatedly.
And the way I do that is by getting into a hot sauna.
So for me, that's really hot, but I've built up my heat conditioning.
So please don't do this unless you've built up your ability to withstand heat.
And I'll get in for about 20 minutes, sometimes 15, but usually 20 minutes, then I get out,
and then I will get into an ice bath or a cold water bath that's about 45 to 50 degrees
Fahrenheit.
Again, don't get into water that's so cold that you go into shock.
I'll explain what a good cold stimulus could be for you and how to determine that.
Or if I don't have access to my sauna and my ice bath, what I can do if I'm traveling
is I will take a hot bath and then alternate with cold shower, hot bath cold shower. It's
hard to do hot bath ice bath unless you have two baths. I don't know any hotel rooms,
at least I've never stayed in one that has two baths, although I'm sure they're out there.
unless you have two baths. I don't know any hotel rooms,
at least I've never stayed in one that has two baths,
although I'm sure they're out there.
But for me, this is heat cold contrast.
And really what this day is about is two things.
First of all, I'm trying to accelerate recovery
from the leg workout I did previously.
Also, if you listen to our episode
of the Hubert and Lab podcast
about deliberate heat exposure,
or you listen to our episode
of the Hubert and Lab podcast
about deliberate heat exposure or you listen to our episode of the Hover and Lab podcast about deliberate cold exposure.
I talk about some of the benefits of heat and cold and I get into a lot of details about how you can access heat.
You can do baths, you can do sonas, you can even take hot showers.
If you don't have access to any of that, you could even wrap your body from the neck down in garbage bag, plastic garbage bags.
Believe it or not, wrestlers used to do this, put on some sweats and go running,
that'll get you warm, again, be careful not to overheat,
and then you can get into a cold shower.
So there's a lot of ways, depending on your budget,
and what you have access to, I don't use cryo,
these cryotherapy chambers, they're hard to find,
they're expensive, again I use sauna and ice bath,
and I will do anywhere from three to five rounds,
which is a lot, anywhere from three to five rounds of heat for about 20 minutes and cold for about
five minutes. How cold should the cold be? We covered this in the episode on
deliberate cold exposure. Here's a general rule of thumb. It should be cold enough
that you really want to get out, but not so cold that it's unsafe. And that will
vary from person to person. So I cannot give you a simple prescriptive there.
Same thing with the heat.
Hot enough that you're sweating and that you want to get out,
but not so hot that you're running the risk
of injuring yourself or killing yourself.
And again, that will vary from person to person.
So you have to build up slowly, be careful,
and build up empirically.
I do that on Tuesdays again,
as a way to accelerate recovery.
And because it's very clear that their cardiovascular benefits may be even benefits for the brain related to the cardiovascular
benefits because worse, the brain needs a lot of blood flow and needs a lot of nutrients
and other things flowing into and out of there to breathe out and nutrients and other things
into the brain.
Heat can help accelerate that or improve that and so I'm doing that to improve cardiovascular
function, improve brain health.
And then the cold contrast provides a sort of accelerator on that or an amplifier, I think
is the better way to phrase it, on that process because in the cold you get vasoconstriction
and then in the heat you get vasodilation.
And so you're maximizing that process, which is actually a neural process.
Nerves actually innovate the blood vessels and capillaries and even the arteries in order
to allow that constriction and dilation process to occur.
So Tuesday is really about recovery, but my recovery day isn't necessarily about just laying
around and not doing anything.
I might still also take some walks that day.
Remember, I want to try and get that 200 minutes of zone two cardio across the week.
And sometimes, not often, but sometimes I'll get in a few
minutes or more of walking quickly that day.
But generally, I'm working a lot on Tuesday
as I do on Monday.
And I'm a little bit tired,
or maybe even a little bit sore from my leg workout,
the previous day, Monday.
So I try and get that hot cold contrast.
There are other benefits to hot and cold contrast. We have a description of the different protocols for hot and for
cold and their contrast. At our Huberman Lab newsletter, you can find that by going to
HubermanLab.com, go to the newsletter tab under the menu and you can sign up. You can
actually download those protocols very easily without even signing up if you just want to
access straight off. So Tuesday is really about recovery and about getting some additional cardiovascular benefits
from heat cold contrast.
One other thing that's built into the rationale for doing a lot of heat and cold on one day,
as opposed to doing it every day, well, in addition to it being a little bit more convenient,
because certainly some people don't have access to heat and cold, sauna and cold dunks,
et cetera, every day.
So maybe getting to do that one day is more
accessible or feasible. But in addition to that, it's very clear that while there are benefits
to doing sauna often, and we talked about this in the deliberate heat episode and the episode
with Dr. Ronda Patrick when she was a guest on this podcast, it's also clear that if you
do sauna seldom, that is once a week, but you do a lot of it
on one day.
So in this case, it's an hour.
If it's, remember, it's, or more, it's three to five rounds of 20 minutes of sauna
followed by about five minutes of cold or so.
By doing that all on one day, the peer-reviewed research that's covered in the episode on
deliberate heat, this is a study out of Finland, showed that you get massive, even 16 fold increases in growth hormone, which are extremely beneficial for metabolism
and for recovery.
So these massive increases in growth hormone are seen when you are doing these sessions of
sauna that are repeated on the same day, and you're only doing that about once a week,
whereas if you do sauna more often, there are certainly benefits to that, but it's time
consuming, and you need access to sauna more often than one day a week if you're
doing it more than one day a week.
But if you do it one day a week and you're doing a lot of sessions within that day, as I've
detailed here, you see these massive increases in growth hormone that are not observed if
you're doing sauna more often for the other benefits of sauna.
Now the effects of cold are many.
It's not just vasoconstriction, but the effects of cold are also counterbalanced by some
of the problems with deliberate cold exposure.
Then maybe you've heard about on this podcast and a lot of other podcasts and seem to be
a kind of a buzz theme on Twitter and elsewhere.
And the point is this, there are a number of quality studies showing that if you do deliberate
cold exposure in particular ice baths are getting into very cold water immediately after
an endurance training session or a strength and hypertrophy session, it can indeed, yes,
it can disrupt or prevent some of the adaptations that you are seeking with strength and hypertrophy
and endurance workouts.
Okay, so you heard that right,
and I believe that to be true based on now
several quality peer reviewed studies.
So by doing your deliberate cold exposure on Tuesday,
you're not going to get those effects
that is the blocking of hypertrophy,
or the blocking of strength improvement,
or the blocking or prevention of
improvements and endurance that would occur if you immediately got into the ice bath after
a hypertrophy strength or endurance workout. Now the caveat to that is if you are somebody who
likes to do cold showers, I am not aware of any data that says that cold showers cannot be performed
after a strength hypertrophy or endurance workout.
Cold showers are different than submergeant up to the neck in an ice bath or another cold
body of water for a number of different reasons.
In fact, they tap into different aspects of the nervous system entirely.
We don't have time to go into that now.
It's covered in the episode on deliberate cold exposure.
But the simple point is by doing your heat and cold contrast,
or, hey, listen, if you're somebody who doesn't have access
to sauna or you don't like hot baths
and you just do some deliberate cold exposure on Tuesday,
you are doing that separate from your strength
and hypertrophy and endurance workouts
such that it will not impede the benefits of those workouts.
Okay, so long endurance on Sunday,
leg resistance training on Monday and on Tuesday, heat cold
contrast.
That brings us to Wednesday.
And on Wednesday, we get back to a resistance training workout.
And the resistance training workout that I emphasize on Wednesday is one in which you train
your torso.
Yes, literally your torso.
I know this is counter to the so called bro science of bro splits. I don't know who originated that term. It's a
terrible term. It essentially alienates anyone who's not a bro or considers
themselves a bro. But in any case, this is not about training chest or back or
shoulders. In fact, it's really about strengthening the muscles of this torso.
And of course includes
the chest and the shoulders and the back.
And I'm sure, as I say, this a number of people out there who are obsessed with hypertrophy
and muscle growth and filling out their shirts or whatever, it may be, are they, oh, no,
you know, this is just kind of all around fitness, but no, the point is on Wednesday, you train
your torso.
And that's going to involve some pushing.
That's good.
For you, it might include some training of things like bench presses or incline presses,
as well as shoulder presses or lateral raises, things for the shoulders, as well as for
the back.
Some pulling exercises.
These could be bent over rows or chin ups or pull ups.
Again, there are enormous number of exercise for each and every one of these muscle groups.
Now I believe there's a clear benefit to training all these muscle groups together on the
same day because much in the same way that training legs all on one day can lead to the
systemic effects because they're large muscle groups.
Working both the pushing muscles and the pulling muscles of the torso on one day, at least
in the context of this program is very time efficient and tends to wick out into a number
of different dimensions of health that at least I'm interested wick out into a number of different dimensions
of health that at least I'm interested in and I think a lot of other people are interested
in.
What are those?
Well, let's think again, I want to be strong in not just my legs, but my upper body.
I also may want, may want, to engage some hypertrophy, to grow certain muscle groups in order
to create a sense of balance.
I could be for aesthetic reasons, but also for balancing strength and for health and
the integrity of the joints, et cetera.
And in addition to that, by training a bunch of different muscle groups together, you have
the opportunity to get the more systemic hormonal effects and metabolic effects that occur when
you're not just training one muscle group and isolating that one muscle group, but rather
training a bunch of muscle groups together.
So Wednesday, I trained torso, and I do that in push pull fashion just for kind of time
efficiency.
Sometimes that means doing a pushing exercise and then a pulling exercise.
Sometimes it might even mean doing a set of pushing and then a set of pulling and going
back and forth.
However, if you're in a gym, in a particular crowded gym, please don't be one of those people
that colonize as multiple pieces of equipment and says says I'm working there, I'm working there,
and that can be quite a dance,
and it can be hard to orchestrate a workout like that.
So sometimes it will be starting off
with a set of shoulder presses
and then doing all your sets of those,
and then moving to your chin ups,
and then moving perhaps back to shoulders
and realizing, ah, someone's on the machine that I wanted
or using the equipment that I wanted.
So I'll just finish up the pulling, I wanted or using the equipment that I wanted.
So I'll just finish up the pulling.
I'll finish up the back work and then going to the push.
I don't obsess over the alternation in any kind of strict way.
I really just try and get the muscles of the torso trained.
And again, it's two exercises per muscle group.
And one of those exercises is going to be something where there's, I realize this isn't
physiologically accurate, but a shortening of the muscle or where they
at the end of the movement, the muscle is under maximal contraction.
I could throw out some names of exercises just for purpose of understanding.
So this would be, you know, like cable crossovers for the chest, the peak contraction is at
the end, whereas something like an incline press, there's more of a stretch provided.
It's done over a full range of motion at the beginning of the movement.
So again, something where there's a stretch
and something where there's a peak contraction
for the shoulders, it's a little bit harder,
do other other ways to do that.
And Jeff Cavaliere has excellent workouts
available zero cost on YouTube.
He also has excellent programs on hisathleanx.com site.
But certainly has a lot of excellent protocols
on his YouTube and Instagram.
But on YouTube
you can put in his name and any muscle group that you want to train to have some terrific
videos describing exercise choice and other features of exercise parameters. Again, a peak
contraction or shortening of the muscle, peak contraction exercise, and a stretching exercise. And so for the back, one might say,
okay, I seated row or a bent over row,
or a dumbbell row where the elbow
was brought behind the torso for a peak contraction movement,
and then for more of a stretching movement
might be something like a chin up or a pullup.
And as I say this, I understand that
stretching and peak contraction aren't the exact terms that one would use if
they were a physiotherapist or a strength and conditioning coach, but I think for the typical
person who's trying to generate strength and hypertrophy in those muscles or maintain
strength and hypertrophy in those muscles, this kind of nomenclature way describing it
at least should be clear and even efficient.
And just to remind you, as with the leg workout, the total duration
of the torso workout is going to be 50 to 60 minutes after a brief warm up, the sets and repetitions
are going to be dictated in the same way that I described earlier. So for about a month, it's going
to be more sets. So anywhere from three to five sets in the lower repetition range, so four to eight repetitions.
So that's going to be heavier weights and longer rest as I described earlier, the rest
intervals.
And then for the next month, it's going to be moderate repetitions, fewer sets, the
same way I described earlier.
And if you want more details on all of that, you can find that in the newsletter related
to the optimal or foundational fitness protocol that you can access at HubermanLab.com.
One thing I should note about the Wednesday torso workout
is that I am a big believer in training.
The, what I believe is the highly avoided
or at least overlooked, but vitally important aspect
of total body stability, strength, and safety,
really, safety, which is the neck.
And I realize a lot of people don't want a large neck, and I totally understand for aesthetic
reasons why they don't want that.
It's kind of interesting, actually, if you think about it, that people who have a large neck
are often told they have no neck.
People will say, that guy has no neck, or they have no neck when, in fact, they're referring
to the fact that they have a very large neck.
I don't know how that came to be.
Someone you put in the comments, why that is.
How come when people have a big neck, they refer to it as no neck?
So why do I train the neck?
I train the neck for a couple of reasons.
One is years ago I had an accident
where I actually fell off a roof
and I'd been training my neck at that time
for a sport that I was involved in
and I walked away from it with a sore neck
but not a broken neck and I thought,
wow, it's really great that I have been training my neck.
In addition to that, I was once in a car accident
where I was parked, I just bought the car.
It's my first new car purchase.
Parked in that car with my mother and my grandfather
in the back seat at the red light
and someone rammed into us at full speed.
Now, fortunately none of us were hurt.
We were all rattled.
And once again, I was very sore in my back and in my neck,
but I think one of the reasons why I was able to essentially
walk away from that, I didn't have any sustained damage,
was because I trained my neck.
But I started training my neck for sport,
and I continued to train my neck because I noticed when
I don't train my neck, I start getting shoulder issues.
And if you talk to an excellent physiologist, like Dr. Kelly Starrett of the Ready State,
as an excellent channel, you'll find him on all the social media and standard channels
where you talk to anyone out there who really understands the strength of the torso and
the upper body and even the back.
What you learn is that, of course, being the upper portion of the spine, stabilizing your
neck is very important.
Now, training the neck can be a little bit detailed
and specific and even dangerous if you do it wrong.
Again, Jeff Cavaliere has a terrific set of videos
on training the neck properly.
I know a lot of people out there might think neck bridges.
And I used to do neck bridges.
I occasionally still sneak in a neck bridge here or there,
although I don't recommend it
because in discussions with Jeff, he will tell you and it's true that the discs eventually go and you can run into serious issues
from doing bridges and it doesn't happen gradually. So you can't notice it happening, it just happens
suddenly. So I might occasionally do a neck bridge, but in general I'll train neck by wrapping a
plate in a towel so that it won't end up with an imprint of the weight value on my head or face, and then moving the neck from side to side or front or back.
And again, we'll provide a link to those videos.
It's a terrific set of videos that describe how to train your neck properly and safely.
So even if you're not trying to grow your neck, you definitely want to make sure that you
use some light weights to make sure that your neck is stable and upright.
And I say stable and upright because it's very clear that for reasons related to
texting and staring down at computers and related to weak neck relative to the rest of the muscles
that stabilize the spine. A lot of people, their default stance or their default posture is with
chin forward and that's not good. Not only is it aesthetically not good, but it also can create all sorts of issues related to back pain
and headaches and things of that sort.
This is a real thing.
Training your neck allows you to stand upright, sit upright.
I even believe that it allows you to do things
like public speaking or have conversations
with people on the street in a way
where you are front facing as opposed to looking down.
So Wednesday is torso and neck and then comes Thursday. And that means another cardiovascular
exercise session, although it's a brief one. Unlike the endurance training on Sunday,
the cardiovascular session on Thursday, and again, for me, it falls on Thursday, but for you,
it could fall on a different day, depending on when you started this protocol, is going
to be about, again, about 35 minutes of, for me, running, although it could be rowing
or it could be cycling, it could be something of that sort.
The goal of this workout is what's important.
The goal of this workout is to tap into, remember that long list that we talked about earlier,
where you've got skill and speed and power and strength and hypertrophy, et cetera, different
forms of endurance, is to get into that range of endurance where your
heart rate is elevated quite a bit more than zone two, but that you're not really going
all out sprint.
So what that means for me is warming up for about five to 10 minutes.
That could be jogging a little bit of like calisthenics might even be hopping on a stationary
bike, although to be as I loathe the stationary bike. And then setting a timer and doing about 30,
but ideally 35 minutes of what I call 75 to 80% of all out.
Okay, now I realize this spits in the face
of all you heart rate monitor wearing super techie exercise types.
But when I think of all out sprint, I think of 100%.
And what is that?
In my mind, that's, somebody is chasing me with a needle full of poison and I am sprinting
away at maximal speed.
That for me is 100%.
So after a brief warm-up, what I'm going to do is go out typically outside, although sometimes
it has to be on a treadmill if I'm traveling and move run for about 30 to 35 minutes at
about 75 or 80% of that all out.
What that means is that I'm striving to keep a steady pace, but in reality, I don't.
I sometimes have to stop at a stoplight.
There are cars.
Please don't run into traffic, just to maintain that speed and that timing.
That would be terribly antagonistic to fitness, in particular, lifespan.
That running tends to be running in which I'm breathing hard, so I'm not able to restrict
myself to purely nasal breathing.
And I should have mentioned earlier, on the Sunday long, rock, or weighted hike or jog.
If I'm alone, I try and do pure nasal breathing.
If I'm with other people or I'm talking, obviously,
I'm not gonna do pure nasal breathing
because I'm talking, although I'm sure
that sometimes they wish I was doing pure nasal breathing.
That Thursday workout accomplishes a number of things.
First of all, it really gets my heart rate up
and it improves multiple aspects of endurance because
as you recall earlier, the different bins of endurance that include muscular endurance
anaerobic, that three to twelve minute range and then thirty minutes are longer.
None of them really precisely match what's accomplished in this thirty, five minute or so cardiovascular
session where I'm pushing hard but not all out.
But that's exactly the reason to do it,
which is that it taps into multiple fuel systems
for the muscle and multiple aspects
of the heart and capillaries and arteries and veins
that are involved in generating that movement.
So it really cuts a broad swath
into multiple categories of endurance.
And also just keep in mind what this foundational
or optimal fitness protocol is really designed
to do.
In my mind, a foundational fitness protocol is one that leaves you or has you in a state
where if you need to walk really far and carry a bunch of weight, you can do it.
If you need to lift a heavy object with your legs, you can do it.
If you need to run really fast for two minutes, you can do it.
And if you need to run a little bit further,
like maybe in 10 minutes, for whatever reason, you can do that.
So it's a really kind of all around fitness program.
And that 35 minute run, again,
could be swapped with a 35 minute Ergro,
or sometimes if you only have access to a stationary bike,
you could do that.
I suppose if you didn't have access to any equipment
and running is not your thing,
one thing that I have done,
especially if I've been stuck in a hotel
because I arrived late someplace
and I really wanna get this workout in,
you could do the dreaded burpee.
I know there are a lot of opinions out there.
Some people think burpees are downright dangerous,
other people love burpees.
You could do that.
Or you could do really fast but full jumping jacks.
I know that's a little PE class, right?
Physical education class ish. But sometimes if I need to get the workout in, what I'll do in a hotel
if I've arrived late, a particular day of travel is I will find the stairwell, the fire stairwell.
I'll make sure by the way that I can get back into the building because I've been locked in those
stairwells before. And I will simply walk really fast up the stairwell as many flights of stairs as there
are, or maybe even jog it, not quite sprint, but maybe run up those stairs over and over
and over again in order to get that 35 minutes of 75 to 80% of max output cardiovascular
work done.
And if I'm really just restricted to my hotel room, I'll just do jumping jacks for 30,
35 minutes, sometimes while watching something on TV.
And believe me, if you're doing full jumping jacks, like really extending your legs, really
getting arms overhead and really doing the full movement, by the time you hit five or
six minutes, you are going to be sweating and your heart rate is really going to be up.
I also sometimes will travel with a jump rope.
I always try and travel with a jump rope and skip rope, much to the dismay of the people who are housed below me in the hotel room.
Skipping rope I should mention can be a very effective way of getting cardiovascular training
while you're on the road, but in all seriousness, if you're in a hotel room or an apartment
and you can't really jump high and you're very good at jumping rope, what you'll find
is it's not going to get you into that higher elevated heart rate zone, okay, it can be
great for zone two type training, but if you're really good at skipping rope,
and I wouldn't say I'm really good at it, but I've done enough skipping rope that I can
just kind of cruise and talk, and it's more zone two-ish.
Even feels like walking at times.
Now you can do double unders where you're really jumping and putting the rope under your
twice each time or crossovers, etc. depending on your skill level.
But again, if you're in an apartment or you're in a hotel, that's going to be harder to do. And because of there's some skill
involved, sometimes you're stopping more often than you're continuing. By the way, and I
just have to mention this, a really terrific Instagram channel is Anna Skips. This is a teacher,
a science teacher, or I believe it's a math, math as they say in the UK, because she's
in the UK, math teacher, I don't know Anna,
but I know she skips,
because she has this amazing Instagram channel called Anna Skips.
And what's really cool about her Instagram
is she shows you her progression
from not being able to skip rope at all
to the absolutely incredible types of rope skipping
that she's doing each morning while getting sunlight,
which of course is a essential health protocol.
So check out Anna Skips on Instagram, really inspiring,
and made me want to get better at
skipping rope. I'm still working on it. Okay, so with that Thursday
cardiovascular, let's call it endurance, but cardiovascular
training workout done around rolls Friday. And on Friday, I'm going
to do another cardiovascular training session. And I alluded to
this earlier, but this cardiovascular training session is also designed
to tap into some of the ability of hard, I should say high-intensity interval training,
to tap into strength and hypertrophy increases for the legs. Because remember, we train legs on Monday.
And what the science tells us is that protein synthesis in a muscle group can be stimulated about every 42 to 72 hours. And so we've had Tuesday, off, Wednesday, off,
and Thursday, off. And you don't want to lose progress that you made from that terrific
Monday leg workout. But in order to make sure that you can do the other things that follow
in this program
and pick back up on Monday with another leg workout, at least for me with my recovery
abilities and my work schedule, I'm not going to do an entire other leg workout because it's
going to set the whole thing out of whack. That is, I won't be able to consistently do
the same workouts on the same days of each week. Now, with that said, a little bit later,
I'll explain what happens if you have to miss a workout
and how you can combine days, et cetera.
But I really strive to get certain workouts done
on certain days consistently, at least as best I can.
So Friday is high intensity interval training.
That can take a variety of different forms.
For me, the ideal thing to do, for me,
again, you could do something completely different,
exercise choice, again, should be governed by what you can do safely, so you don't enjoy
yourself, and that you can perform effectively, and that gets you, or provides you, the stimulus
that you want.
And what I'm trying to do on Friday is get my heart rate way, way up.
Talk about this in the episode with Dr. Andy Galpin.
In addition to the benefits of getting 180, 200 minutes of zone two cardio per week minimum,
it's a really good idea to get up to that max or near max heart rate at least once a
week.
And you're not going to do that for very long periods of time.
You're not going to do that for 30 minutes.
You can't sprint all out for 30 minutes unless you're Steve Prifontane.
If you haven't seen the movies without limits or Prifontane, you should absolutely see
those.
He was able to go out and run 12 laps,
what seemed to be an all-out sprint or close to it.
Incredible, but most people are not going to do that
or are going to be carried away on a stretcher
if they try.
These high-intensity interval training, for me,
ideally would be on so-called assault bike
or air-dined bike.
So these are bikes that have the fan,
which might seem like, oh, you know, just cools you off,
but actually there's a lot of resistance there.
So what I will typically do is a 20 to 30 second
all-out sprint using arms and legs,
and then 10 seconds rest, and then repeat.
All-out sprint for 20 to 30 seconds,
10 seconds rest, repeat.
And I'll do that for anywhere from eight to 12 rounds,
which trust me, even if you start out a little bit less,
or I should say not all out in density or effort,
by the time you hit the fifth or sixth one,
you will be certainly headed into
if not near your maximum heart rate.
Now, what is your maximum heart rate?
Do you need a heart rate monitor?
No, if you'd like using that sort of thing, great. But again, Andy Galbin beautifully supplied us
with the information. He said, if you take the number 220 and you subtract your age,
that for most people, most is going to be your maximum heart rate. Although for certain people who
are very fit or certain ages, that's not going to apply. So it's a little bit too crude to measure.
But it's a good starting place
and you can look up other information
or see that podcast episode.
We probably have to link to it in the show no captions.
If you want to get more details on that,
I don't use a heart rate monitor.
What I'm trying to do is get to that point
where I quote unquote feel like I want to die.
Now I don't want to die and please don't die, right?
If you're not in good cardiovascular health,
do not just jump right into this fitness protocol,
but I wanna get to the point where I really feel like
I could not pedal any faster,
or pull any faster on the assault bike, the airtime bike,
or if I'm doing this workout in a place or at a time,
or because I choose to not use a bike or a roller,
because you could all see as a roller,
I will simply do sprint jog intervals.
I will sprint for 20 or 30 seconds,
then jog for 10 seconds.
Sprint for 20 or 30 seconds,
and then jog for 10 seconds and just repeat.
I used to have a big field next to my laboratory,
my old laboratory,
and I used to bring my bulldog Costello out there.
He was really good at the first sprint part,
and then he would just lie down and watch.
He didn't even do the jog part.
I would just go back and forth, back and forth, back and forth,
panting like a bulldog non-stop, barely able to recover before sprinting again.
And the basis of this workout again is several full.
First of all, it's to get the heart rate really high up towards maximum heart rate,
at least once a week.
So you accomplish that this Friday.
Also, if you are sprinting and then jogging, or you are really pushing hard on an assault
byter or an air-dine bike, or using, for instance,
a skier or the skier machine,
or any number of different cardiovascular training tools,
you are going to get activation of the legs.
Of course, not to the same degree
as you would with squats or dead lifts
or leg extensions and leg curls.
That's simply not the case.
But you're going to trigger strength and hypertrophy and other types of adaptations in
those muscle groups.
So this for me also represents the second leg workout of the week where I'm not touching
any weights.
One important point that I don't think I've heard mentioned anywhere else, but that I hope
to have Dr. Kelly Starrett on the podcast to discuss and that I've discussed with him one on one, which is be careful
with all-out sprints or all-out anything cardiovascular exercise.
You can get injured doing those.
So for instance, if you go out and you just sprint across a field all-out 20 or 30 seconds
and then walk back and can do it again and again, don't be surprised if the next day you have some sciatica
or even some pelvic floor pain.
I don't recommend going all out on any movement
that you can't perform with perfect form.
Okay, so for me, I really try and stay away
from all out sprints.
I'll sprint at about 95% of what I can do
because I find if I go all out sprint,
I don't know what
the reason is, but it might be an overextension of a limb or something like that.
I'm not a sprinter.
I'm not a sprinting coach.
I do hope to get Stu McMillan on here or Dan Faff.
They were excellent sprinting coaches at some point.
They're world class sprinting coaches, but I'm not a pro sprinter.
I'm not even a amateur sprinter.
I'm a fitness sprinter.
So the aerodynamic or assault bike or the rower is really a safer option for me.
And if I'm running or I'm doing some sort of movement where I'm unconstrained really
in terms of how far my stride is, I mean, I'm obviously constrained by the musculature.
I'm really careful to not overextend or do something like that.
And the only way to do that is to not go all out.
So again, the goal for this Friday workout is to really get the heart rate high, do high
intensity interval training, or a number of different ways you could do that.
You can look up H-I-I-T, hit workouts online, find the one that's best for you, and really
pick something that's safe that you can do consistently.
And I believe that ideally, we'll also trigger a bit of either strength and hypertrophy and
speed power maintenance, or even give you a little bit of a
stimulus so that by time you roll around to that leg workout on again on Monday, you've got a
little bit of an additional boost to your leg strength hypertrophy, speed and power. So we've covered
Sunday through Friday and then Saturday rolls around and Saturday is when you train arms, calves, and neck.
So this may sound as if you're training a bunch of small muscle groups, biceps, triceps,
neck, and calves.
And that's true.
But I should mention that you are also training your torso a second time and you're doing
it indirectly, or sometimes not indirectly.
Why do I say this?
Well, keep in mind again, that for strength and hypertrophy,
you're going for that once about every 48 to 72 hours.
You want to stimulate that on Wednesday
is when you train your torso, right?
Chest shoulders back and neck.
You've had Thursday to rest, Friday to rest.
I know a lot of people are going to want to emphasize
those body parts and they're going to think,
oh, I have to train it twice a week,
but if you have modest recovery ability or low recovery ability, such as I do, and you're
doing these other cardiovascular training sessions, et cetera, well, then on Saturday
is when you will train arms, calves, and neck directly, but included in that, remember
two exercises per muscle group, one with a peak contraction, one with somewhat of a stretch in there, included in that. Remember two exercises per muscle group, one with a peak contraction, one with somewhat of a stretch in there included in that. I suggest doing some sort of dip
movement, which I think it was povlsat soulins that the dip is synonymous with, or at
least similar to an upper body squat. Excuse me, povls, if I got that wrong, maybe it wasn't
you that said that, but Big and Myer of his work, and certainly the dip is a great exercise
to hit multiple muscle groups, it chest shoulders and triceps, maybe even some back to some
extent depending on how you do it.
So doing some dipping movement will indirectly stimulate strength hypertrophy, et cetera,
in the chest and shoulders, and including some sort of pulling movement for the bicep like a chin up or palms facing
movement pulling up from to the bar, especially if it's a close grip type movement, but even if it's
a wide grip type movement, will of course trigger strength and hypertrophy maintenance or improvements
in the biceps, but will also trigger strength hypertrophy in the lats, in the back.
Okay, so Saturday is this arm workout
that I'll just give an example of a potential workout
where you might do a few more exercises,
and maybe not just two, but maybe three,
to make sure you get the torso indirect stimulation.
So what would this look like?
Well, this might be your sort of classic dumbbell curls
for the bicep, and maybe incline curl for the bicep
because it has more of a stretch.
So on an incline bench.
And then you might finish with two sets of chin ups.
So palms facing you chin ups are three sets of chin ups, depending on whether or not
you're in a heavier load month or a more moderate weight month.
Again, activating the bicep's muscles because arm's day, but also activating strength and
hypertrophy in the lats or at least maintaining it so that
because you're not training those torso muscles again until Wednesday, you're not allowing the hypertrophy and strength gains that you
generated on Wednesday to atrophy to disappear.
Then thinking about triceps, it might be some sort of triceps isolation or peak contraction
movement.
So that could be tricep kickback or some overhead extension would be more of a stretch type
movement than a kickback, but then also doing regular old dips.
You might even start with dips, which again are going to activate those torso muscles and
the triceps.
And then calf work in the same way that you did on Monday and neck work.
Again, I am a believer in training neck
multiple times per week.
And if you are able to finish all of that in 45 or 50 minutes,
great.
Most people will find when you're doing a lot of small muscle
groups, it actually takes longer because you have to go
around to more exercises.
But again, just adhere to the same principles we talked
about before.
About 50, 5, 0 to 60 minutes of real work after a warmup
with an asterisk next to that,
that if someone's on the equipment
or you can't find the dumbbells you need, et cetera,
then maybe 75 minutes max,
but really trying to not extend that workout too long,
making sure that you activate the arms directly
but also activating the torso muscles indirectly.
And again, I won't repeat it this time again, but following
the same weight and repetition and rest interval scheme that we talked about earlier, a bit
heavier, lower reps, more sets, and longer rest for about a month. And then alternating
to more repetitions, yet fewer sets, shorter rest intervals, and do that for about a month.
This carries through for all the resistance training workouts, regardless of the day of the week.
So we've completed the total arc across the week and we can summarize it as saying,
Sunday is, let's just say long endurance, Monday is leg resistance training, Tuesday,
heat cold contrast, Wednesday, torso training, plus neck, Thursday, I would call it moderate
intensity cardiovascular exercise, so that 35 minute, moderate intensity cardiovascular
exercise, Friday high intensity interval training of sprinting or some variation there
of. And Saturday, arms, calves, neck, and torso indirect work. That's the total structure,
but I want to emphasize again, you do not need to start this
on Sunday.
That is, you could make the long endurance work start on Tuesday and then just fill in
the rest as described before.
It's really up to you.
There's another important point I want to make, which is that neither I nor anyone is
going to be successful in doing the exact workouts on the exact same days
of every week because of travel, work, illness,
other demands, et cetera.
The thing about the schedule that I like so much
that I do believe that will benefit you as well
is that you have some flexibility there.
What's the flexibility?
Well, let's say you train your typical Sunday
workout of endurance, then you train legs on Monday, and then
you don't manage to do your heat cold contrast on Tuesday for whatever reason. Well, you can
put it on Wednesday, just make sure that if you're going to do the cold stimulus that you
don't do it too close, not within four ideally eight hours after the training of torso,
but you could do it before,
or you could do it just heat and skip the cold
that particular week, all right?
Not ideal, but better than not doing anything.
Let's say, for instance, the leg workout was particularly brutal.
You don't sleep that well on Monday night or Tuesday night.
Well, then should you do the torso workout on Wednesday?
Well, I would say, why not move the heat cold contrast to Wednesday and then push that torso
workout to Thursday and maybe also try and do that 35 minute run on Thursday, every once
in a while, rather than lose the total control of the program and let everything shuffle forward.
Here's the basic principle.
I do believe that any one of these workouts, whether it's endurance or resistance training, can be shifted either
one day forward or one day back, right? You could delay it by a day or you could accelerate
it by a day in order to make sure that you get everything done across the week. In fact,
I would say the best way to think about this foundational fitness program is not
from the details up, but from the top down, from the big picture down to the details,
and say to yourself, once a week, you're going to get some long endurance in.
Another day during the week, you're going to make sure that you get a kind of moderate,
faster endurance workout in.
And then one other day during the week, you're going to get an all-out sprint, high intensity, cardiovascular exercise workout in. And then one other day, training the week, you're gonna get an all-out sprint high intensity
cardiovascular exercise workout in.
You're gonna get those three workouts in somehow.
And then in addition to that,
you will also do resistance training
for every muscle group in your body.
And that means doing your legs hard at least once a week.
Your torso hard at least once a week.
And your arms hard at least once a week. And torso hard at least once a week, and your arms hard at least once a week.
And of course, you are also paying attention to train your calves.
And I do, for reasons I've described before, believe that you want to train your neck,
at least to keep it strong.
You may not want to generate hypertrophy there.
People vary in terms of how quickly their neck grows.
Some people grow very, very fast.
Other people, for the life of them, they can't get much hypertrophy in their neck.
But keeping that neck strong, at least through some very light work to
moderate weight work. Very, very important for reasons I stated earlier. If you set out those goals,
then the specific days that you do each workout isn't as critical, but the specific spacing is.
So for instance, you're not going to want to do your high-intensity interval training the day after you train your legs, because if you're doing
that high-intensity interval training correctly, you're going to be taxing your legs and eating
into their recovery, and so you want to space them out by two or three days. So I think you'll notice
that the point is really to optimize everything on the whole rather than any one specific aspect of training
or adaptation.
Now, that said, I do realize that some people might be hyper focused on things like strength
and hypertrophy and the aesthetics that come with it.
A key point about strength hypertrophy and weight training.
This is something that has been covered on multiple podcasts.
Certainly, the one with Jeff Cavaliere and with Dr. Andy Galpin and the one that I did
on building muscle strength and hypertrophy,
the solo episode.
And that is the following.
It is the rare individual who has perfectly balanced
musculature, right?
Most people can be a bit quad dominant
or hamstring dominant or they have trouble
activating their glutes or somebody has a terrible time trying to activate their chest muscles
but they're very strong in the back, etc.
It's very clear that we can know that not just based on aesthetics, but based on
deliberate contractability of those muscles.
So I don't want to get into this in too much detail for sake of time, but this is something
that has peer-reviewed research to support it
and was also discussed extensively with Jeff Cavaliere
when he was a guest.
And then actually he's really popularized this notion
and it's absolutely true, which is that if you can
contract a muscle very hard to the point
where it almost feels like it's cramping,
if you can do that even when there's no weight
in your hand or there's no resistance against it,
so you're just using your mind muscle connection
to contract that muscle hard and isolate it.
Chances are you'll be able to generate hypertrophy
and strength gains pretty easily in that muscle
compared to muscles that you have a harder time activating.
So during all resistance training,
that mind muscle link is really important.
So much so that some people will even try and emphasize
contraction of the muscles in between sets, etc. I personally, because I'm not somebody who
likes a mirror when I work out and I'm not somebody who wants to spend time in between
sets flexing muscles, etc. For whatever reason, I want to actually rest between sets and I'm
more concerned with performance during those sets and really putting my mind into the muscle
during the set. I really try and emphasize deep during those sets and really putting my mind into the muscle during the set.
I really try and emphasize deep relaxation between sets.
And so here's a tool that again is built out of science.
And I should say peer reviewed studies,
some of which are being done in my lab,
but other labs as well,
which is that in between sets,
what I really strive to do is to bring my heart rate down
as much as possible, call myself down as much as possible.
And I'll do the so-called physiological sigh
in order to do that.
That's two inhales through the nose, back to back.
And then long, full exhale through the mouth.
I just did it partially there for a sake of time again.
So a big deep inhale through the nose
and then sneak in a little bit more on a second inhale
to maximally inflate the lungs and the avioli, the lungs.
And then a full exhale of all your air via the mouth to empty your
lungs.
That's the fastest way that we are aware of to calm your nervous system down.
And really in between sets, you can use that to calm yourself down and conserve energy,
but then as you move into the weight training set, you really want to ratchet up your focus
and attention to the muscles that you're want to ratchet up your focus and attention
to the muscles that you're going to be using.
Now, I'd like to acknowledge that there's a huge range
of parameters in terms of how to actually perform
during the set.
You can focus on a particular muscle and try and really isolate
from the beginning of the movement.
Some people will really try and isolate it only
during the peak interaction.
Some people will accentuate the negative.
There's speed and cadence.
There are, again, remember, concepts are few, methods are many, and if you're interested
in the various methods of eccentric and concentrics and all the different ways of changing up cadence
and so forth during sets, there's an enormous amount of quality information out there far
too much for us to get into into detail now.
But what I described as the general principles of how to set your mind, if you will, during
the set, you should be focused on the muscles that you're using and or moving the weight.
If movement of the weight is more important, you can either focus on moving the weight or
challenging muscles, right?
You can either try and isolate muscles and make specific muscles, do the work or simply
moving the weight.
Moving the weight is going to be more geared towards strength improvements, but focusing on the muscle is so-called
my muscle link is going to shift that very same set more toward hypertrophy.
I realize I'm painting with a broad brush here, but nonetheless, this is grounded in the
way that the nervous system governs muscular contraction.
And while I think most people are familiar with the number of different variables associated
with the resistance training, you know, sets, reps, rest intervals, cadence, et cetera.
There are also a tremendous number of very important variables for endurance and any kind of cardiovascular
training.
And there are a lot of excellent resources out there about that.
I think the most important one, in fact, I will go on record saying what I believe to
be the most important variable for any endurance or cardiovascular training
is that because it's a repetitive movement, that you're able to complete the movement
safely, meaning you're not putting your body into range of motion or into positions that
can damage joints or put you in any kind of compromised state.
And some of you might think, well, that seems kind of silly.
But if you've ever set the, for instance, the seat too high on a stationary bike and then
done, you know, airdine or assault bike type interval training sprints, if it's set too
high and you're over striding as it were, the next day you can really pay the price in
terms of some back pain or sciatica.
And sometimes that pain can extend for quite a while.
So of course, you don't want to approach any exercise with so much caution that it's
neurotic and preventive. And yet you don't want to approach any exercise in any way that's
so cavalier. Forgive the pun, Jeff, that you're also going to compromise your, the integrity
of your joints and musculature and connective tissue. Let's talk about some real world practical
variables. For instance, let's say you get a poor to terrible night sleep. Should you train
the next day or not? Well that really depends. I can honestly say I've had some
of the best training sessions, resistance training or endurance training sessions
after a really poor night sleep, but that's the rare event. More often than not
if I'm not sleeping well, I've had a terrible night sleep. The next day, I will just skip training
that day. I know that will shock a number of you out there, or perhaps you're already
calling me names, weak, etc. But I find that if I've slept really poorly or I've had a
very stressful event the day before and I don't sleep well, training the next day sets me
up for getting ill and getting ill sets me up for not being able to train for multiple
days.
So it is my preference in that case to skip a day and really focus on recovery.
And then as I mentioned earlier, slide that workout to the next day and rarely double that
workout up with another workout, but then just slide the schedule forward by a day.
But I really try and strive that is, I really try to double up at least some workouts
later in the week in that case,
so that I can get back on schedule
of starting the seven day protocol again on the same day.
I don't wanna be excessively vague there.
What I'm trying to say is I try and adhere to the same schedule,
but if I get a poor night's sleep,
I'll just simply skip the workout the next day.
Slide the workout forward. There is one exception to that and it's an important exception, which is there are times when I've
not slept well or I've had some particularly stressful event the day before and haven't slept well.
But I'm able to do so-called NSTR non-sleep deep rest the next day. So there have been times when
I've only got three or four hours of sleep the night before and I'm feeling really behind the ball the next morning. I really want
to get my workout in. So instead what I will do is a 10, but ideally in that case, a
30 or even 60 minutes non-sleep deep rest. And there's a 10 minute non-sleep deep rest
protocol read by me. But it is a non-spiritual, non-mystical, science-supported, non-sleep, deep-rest
protocol available on YouTube.
You can simply put my name, Huberman, put NSDR and VirtuSan, V-I-R-T-U-S-A-N, into YouTube
and you'll find that script.
There are other NSDR scripts that you can find now on Spotify and on YouTube.
If you fall asleep during those non-sleep deep rest scripts, that's great.
And if you don't, you will also find
that it will restore your ability to perform mental
and physical work.
So there are times when I haven't gotten as much sleep
as I would like, or I'm feeling a bit more stressed
for whatever reason, and I'll do NSTR,
and then I will go train, and that often works fabulously
well for me, and then I don't have to skip a workout entirely just
because I didn't get a good night's sleep.
A lot of people ask whether or not you should train
fasted or fed.
And this is a very controversial area.
I personally prefer to do my cardiovascular work,
not having eaten anything in the previous three to 10 hours.
And typically that's because I wake up
and I'll do the cardiovascular training within about an hour of waking up
Sometimes later because my first meal generally falls generally not always falls around 11 a.m
I don't do any kind of formal intermittent fasting
But typically my meal schedule somewhere between 11 a.m. and my last bite of food is around 8 p.m
But I'm not super strict about that. I might eat in you know
It's late this 9 p.m. And I might eat something at 10 a.m. if I wake up really hungry, I might have
something before 11 a.m. I'm not neurotic about it. But in terms of training, I like to train
fasted and that includes the resistance training workouts and those come early in the day for
me. And typically if I'm going to train legs on Monday for instance, which is when I train
legs, I'll make sure that the night before I'm ingesting some starch, some carbohydrate,
like rice or pasta or something in that sort, to make sure that when I do that morning leg workout, I have enough glycogen in the muscles, etc.
Again, nutrition is a somewhat controversial area. In fact, it can evoke very strong feelings because I know we've got vegans and we've got omnivores and we've got carnivores and people who are keto. This isn't really the format for us to get into all of that.
I think the rule to follow is figure out
what optimizes your training for your particular training goals.
For me, that most often means training fasted
and then eating pretty soon after I train
and if it's a high intensity resistance training workout
and frankly all of my resistance training workouts
are pretty high intensity.
I'm not going to failure on every set,
but at least about 30% of those sets,
I'm going to failure.
And the other sets I'm working very hard nonetheless.
Well, then I eat some starches after I train
and I also ingest some protein in the form of a protein drink
or a meal that includes some protein food.
But I don't like to eat before I do resistance training
or at least not within the hour to eat before I do resistance training or not or at least
not within the hour or two before I do resistance training. There are exceptions to that. And
I should say that the same basically applies to endurance work. If I'm going to head out
for a run, typically I don't want my belly full of food or any food at all, but there are
times where I wake up hungry and I very much need to eat something or I have something
scheduled socially like a breakfast and I'll have that breakfast.
And then an hour or 90 minutes later, I'll do my workout because I want to make sure that
I finish the workout.
I again, I'm not neurotically attached to training fasted or fed for me.
Fasted is preferred, but if I have to train fed better to train then to not train at all.
We haven't talked so much about flexibility yet, but we did an entire episode of the
Heberman Lab podcast on flexibility, and I encourage you to check out that episode if you're
interested in increasing your flexibility.
But the basic takeaway from that episode is that if you look at what I like to call the
center of mass of the research, that is most of the studies and what the conclusions of
most of the quality studies point to, so not the exceptions, but the kind of general rules that have been
gleaned over time from multiple labs, over multiple decades, etc. What you find is that
static stretching that is holding a stretch and in fact exhaling and relaxing the midsection
in torso and relaxing into the stretch as opposed to staying full of air and tense,
but mentally and physically relaxing into the stretch, but not stretching
maximally. That is not extending as far as you possibly can go, but more like 60% or even less.
And then holding those static stretches for anywhere from 30 to 60 seconds and then repeating.
Doing that two or three times throughout the week for multiple muscle groups, so it could be for
quadriceps, could be for hamstrings, for your lats, their protocols out there. In fact,
we have a newsletter that is focused entirely on protocols for flexibility and stretching.
You can find that again by going hubermanlab.com. You don't even need to sign up for the newsletter,
although we invite you to, if you like, but you can simply go there, scroll down to the flexibility newsletter and all the protocols are there for each of the muscle groups, etc.
But what I typically try and do is some stretching in the evening because I train in the morning, as I'm perhaps getting ready for bed or if the TV is on which in our house doesn't typically go on because we don't have a TV,
but of course there are computers and people
are on their computers, et cetera.
Well, I'll try and do some stretching while I do that.
I also have a standing desk, so during the day at work,
regardless of whether or not I train that morning or not,
or I'm gonna train in the afternoon,
I'll try and do some static stretching.
For my hamstrings, my quads, my lats, my shoulders, my back,
really doesn't take much time
and I really try to space that out throughout the week,
which, if you look at the peer reviewed research,
matches well to what's known to be most effective,
which are going to be short repeated sessions,
ideally every day, but truth told, I fail,
categorically fail, I was about to think
whether or not I ever stretch every day.
I fail to do it every day, but I get about three or so stretching sessions in per week,
and again, it's just static hold, trying to really relax into the stretch.
Now, the relax into the stretch is something that's been talked about in martial art circles,
and Pavlesa Tsuolin has an excellent book on stretching.
We can provide a link to that.
Talks about this.
Has a lot to do with relaxation of the nervous system
and the way that the nerves innovate muscles
and allow for stretch, if you will,
also the way that the tendons and ligaments
are integrated by nerves.
The converse is also true.
And here, again, this is a principle
that Pavel is put forth.
I believe he calls it irradiation,
meaning irradiating out or emanating out from a source,
which is that while exhaling and relaxing
the torso, the midsection, some people call it the core, although some people don't like that term,
can facilitate relaxation and stretching through a larger range of motion. So too can contracting
the core, the midsection, or gripping very tightly with the fist
can facilitate muscular contraction
because of the way that the nervous system
heavily, we can even say over-represents,
the fists in the brain.
And so how would you apply this
to your overall foundational fitness protocol?
Well, it turns out that, let's say you're doing
movement that involves one limb moving and then the other.
Let's say it's bicep curls, just for sake of example.
It turns out that you will actually be stronger
in moving that dumbbell with the arm that happens
to be moving if you grip the handle very tightly
but also grip the handle of the opposite dumbbell
very tightly.
Now that said, in between sets,
I encourage you to do the opposite tightly. Now that said in between sets, I encourage you
to do the opposite to try and completely relax in between sets, combine that with a physiological
sigh. And then when the set, the next set commences, employ that very strong grip, both
again of the of the weight that's moving in the and the weight that at that moment might
be stationary or in isometric position. So the nervous system, of course, is what controls
muscles. And that operates
in both directions. If you want to relax, try and use long exhales, maybe even physiological
size and really concentrate on mentally and physically relaxing in particular your core
and your fists. And if you want to generate force, you want to move a heavy barbell or
dumbbell, you want to do a chin up with the maximal force. That's when you can employ the opposite,
which would be to grip the bar or dumbbell, et cetera,
very tightly, and you want to contract your core
or even fill your body with air as a plug-all the leaks, et cetera.
So this gets into kind of form and movement,
which is an extensive, near infinite landscape of discussion,
again, that we don't have time to go into.
I just want to mention those two nervous system relatedrelated tips because I suppose as a neuroscientist,
they appeal to me because they are grounded in fundamental principles of how the nervous
system integrates muscle, and I know that they will benefit you the first time you use them
and every time. Speaking of grip and nervous system and fitness and longevity, Dr. Peter
Atia, who is a medical doctor, was a guest on the Hubertman Lab podcast and provided an
enormous wealth of information on that podcast episode.
I really encourage you to check it out when you have time.
And of course, has his own spectacular podcast, The Drive with Peter Atia.
Peter, Dr. Atia, I should say, often talks about certain movements or exercises that you
should perform, not just to improve your fitness, but also to touch into or measure how fit
you are and how well you are progressing toward a long lifespan and health span.
And one of those includes the ability to hang from a bar for a minute or longer.
And there are a number of different expectations that one can have of how long they should be
able to hang from a bar depending on their age and their fitness level, et cetera, please check out Dr. Atia's podcast and his various social media sites to get more information
on that.
But what I can tell you is that if you're going to hang from a bar and you want to hang
from that bar as long as possible, which turns out to be an interesting and important metric
of your health, then gripping the bar very tightly will actually help.
Earlier we talked about whether or not to train if you're sleep deprived
and how to recover from what I would say is moderate sleep deprivation by doing NSDR as opposed to total sleep deprivation like being up all night or having a truly miserable night, which case I
think you should just skip training the next day and slide it forward. Now a similar issue comes up
from time to time where people wonder whether or not they should train
or not if they are sick. Here, there's all sorts of crazy gym lore and sport specific lore. For instance,
I used to hear this. When I ran cross country, there was this adage that if the symptoms were from
the neck up, you could still train.
That is, if you were really congested
and you had a headache, you could still run.
Whereas if it was in your chest and your lungs,
you couldn't run.
I don't think there's any data whatsoever to support,
whether or not that's true or whether it's not true,
for myself and because my general goal is to be training
and fit over time, but also to include general health in the fitness equation, that is to not be sick or chronically sick and certainly
not to get other people sick.
If I have a little tiny sniffle, I think I might be getting sick.
Even then, I'm a little cautious in the sense that I'm not going to do my typical workout.
I might stop it about 15 minutes earlier and I would do that not by neglecting any body
parts or anything of that sort if it's a weight training workout by simply reducing the total
number of sets.
I probably wouldn't do any sets to failure if I did.
I might reduce the total number or percentage of sets to failure from about 30% of sets
to maybe closer to 10% of sets, something like that.
And if it was endurance work, I might throttle back by 10 or 20% and I was short in the
total duration of the workout.
And I often find that because of the known, yes, peer reviewed, known immune system enhancing
effects of exercise, sometimes that alone will allow me to avoid getting sick.
But of course, I'm also careful to get home,
take a hot shower, not stress myself out.
If I can avoid getting myself stressed out
and focus on sleep, NSTR, other forms of recovery,
good nutrition, et cetera.
If however, I have a real sniffle, a cold,
I'm not feeling well, or I think I might be coming down
with a flu, I absolutely do not train and I don't get back into training of any kind until I'm
Completely recovered. So what I'm basically saying is that no, I don't believe you should train if you're sick and
perhaps equally importantly when you come back from a layoff of any kind whether or not because of illness or for whatever reason I
Do believe that because your body is a bit untrained,
it's not ideal to jump right back into maximal training
and to take one, maybe two weeks of ramping up
to the full duration and intensity of workouts
that then I would continue on going for,
however many cycles I can complete
before I hit another sickness or I hit another gap in my schedule due to family
obligations or other obligations, etc.
So we've covered a lot of tools and protocols and variables related to fitness, but we have
by no means covered all the available tools and protocols and variables.
Before we wrap up, I do want to emphasize one tool.
It's a very easy, in fact, zero cost, very low time commitment tool.
And this was one that was provided,
again, by Dr. Andy Galpin,
when he was on the Heberman Lab podcast.
And it's a tool that there is excellent research
to support the effectiveness of,
and that I do believe should come at the end
of every training session.
And that's to do three to five minutes of deliberately
slow breathing. It sounds so simple, three to five minutes of deliberately slowed breathing.
So this could be while you're in the shower, or when you arrive at your car, you might
sit in your car quietly and do that if you have time, or maybe even while you're driving
back to or onto your next destination, just to really slow down your breathing, to really
look at the recovery period that has to follow each training session, and of course during
which the adaptations, the changes that make you more fit than you were going into the exercise
occur.
And that three to five minutes of deliberately slowed breathing has been shown in Andy's
group and in related
experiments, not exactly the same, but related experiments in our laboratory and another
laboratories to really so-called downshift the nervous system and really set you up for
maximal recovery, rapid recovery, and allow you to lean into the next training session
with full intensity when that training session eventually arrives.
So it's a very simple tool, but a very potent tool
for your overall fitness.
So thank you for joining me for this discussion
of what I'm calling a foundational,
or I guess we could even get bold
and call it an optimal fitness protocol,
although the word optimal is a tricky one.
There's no real optimal fitness protocol.
And today what I've really tried to focus on
is this foundational protocol
because it does allow you to check off call. And today what I've really tried to focus on is this foundational protocol because
it does allow you to check off most if not all the boxes related to strength, endurance,
hypertrophy, speed, power, flexibility. It will also teach you how to regulate your nervous
system up and down. That is to ramp up and focus, mind muscle link, etc.
And then quickly calm down, physiological size, three to five minute decompress breathing
at the end of training, etc.
Really even though I talked about the protocol that I follow, and again that we will provide
as a newsletter at HubermanLive.com if you want to look at it in more detail.
Even though we talked about it in the context of what I do, again, I really want to emphasize
that this protocol and the description of this protocol and all its variables, it's really for you
and for you to tailor to your specific needs. So please take the protocol into consideration,
but do not treat it as wholly treated as a starting point from which you can adapt it to your
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So thank you for joining me today for our discussion about building your optimal toolkit
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And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.
toolkit for fitness and last but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.