Huberman Lab - GUEST SERIES | Dr. Andy Galpin: Optimize Your Training Program for Fitness & Longevity
Episode Date: February 8, 2023In episode 4 of a 6-part series, Andy Galpin, PhD, explains how to design an effective training program for fitness, health and longevity through a 10-step approach. He covers goal setting, exercise s...election, balancing, recovery periods and real-world challenges. He provides a year-long training example that considers sleep, sunlight and social connection. The program is modifiable for personal fitness goals and experience. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman InsideTracker: https://www.insidetracker.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Optimal Fitness Programming (00:07:19) Sponsors: Eight Sleep (00:09:53) #1: Plan Fitness Goals, S.M.A.R.T. Goals (00:19:52) Intermediate Goals, Dopamine, Identify Your “Defender”, Goal Timing (00:26:25) Multiple Goals, Synergistic Goals, Interference Effects (00:36:13) Sponsor: AG1 (00:37:060 Physical Goal “Bins”, Specificity (00:48:02) Tool: #2: Identify Your “Defender”, Quadrant System, “Drop Everything and…” (01:04:330 Sponsor: InsideTracker (01:05:35) #3: Goal Timeframe & Life Events; #4: Weekly Training Frequency (01:10:33) #5: Exercise Selection, Progression (01:18:200 #6: Exercise Order, Identify Friction (01:29:20) Exercise Timing & Sleep, Down Regulation, Caffeine (01:36:24) #7: Intensity, #8: Volume, Progressive Overload, “Deloading” (01:43:59) #9: Rest Intervals, #10: “Chaos Management” (01:49:06) Fitness, Health & Longevity Goals, Proprioception & Non-Structured Exercise (01:53:41) Tool: Year-Long Program Example for Overall Fitness (02:07:58) Tool: Overall Fitness Template by Quarter, Matching Goals & Seasons (02:25:49) Training & Life Challenges: Sleep, Illness (02:32:10) Tool: Program Flexibility, 3-Day Weekly Training Program (02:37:12) Physical Activity vs. Exercise (02:40:12) Tool:4-Day Weekly Training Program, Muscular Endurance (02:51:15) Tool: 5/6-Day Weekly Training Program, Recovery (02:54:06) Program Modification, Balancing Joy (03:04:47) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Hubertman Lab guest series where I and an expert guest discuss science and science based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Hubertman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today's episode marks the fourth in the sixth episode series on fitness exercise and performance.
And today's episode is all about optimal fitness programming. That is how to design a fitness and exercise program
that can achieve the goals that you want for fitness
and for sports performance.
Dr. Andy Galpin, great to be back.
In previous episodes, you taught us about the various adaptations
that occur at the level of cells, at the level of organs,
indeed at the level of the entire body,
that underlie things like improvements in strength
and speed,
hypertrophy, aka muscle growth, and the various forms of endurance.
And you laid out beautifully the various protocols that one can do in order to achieve each
and every one of those adaptations.
Today, I'd love for you to teach us how we can combine different protocols to achieve
multiple adaptations in parallel, for instance, how to improve endurance
and strength, how to achieve some level of hypertrophy, perhaps directed hypertrophy at specific
muscle groups, while also maintaining endurance and perhaps improving speed. For instance,
and if you would, I'd love for you to tell us how we can combine different protocols and vary those
across the week, across the month, across the year so that we can make regular progress and perhaps
even you could give us a window into the ways to make the fastest progress possible.
I would love to do that.
We've invested a lot of time in the previous episodes, hovering background and concepts
and detail about the physiology so you understood why
you're making the choices you're making and why other choices are less effective.
In this discussion, I would actually like to jump maybe more directly to the answer and
get right into the protocol.
So, maybe a little bit less background.
If you're interested in that stuff, I suppose you have to go backwards a little bit and watch
some of those previous episodes.
But I would love to jump in to just some samples, some case studies, if you will, and
you can kind of walk through different protocols.
I know that over the course of my 11 years as a college professor and being in the public's
base a little bit, probably the most numerous style of question I have gotten is exactly
that. So I know the rep range for this, or I know the style of training for that adaptation,
but how do I put them together?
And I would just like to spend our time today going through those things, and the reason
I want to do it is this.
Some people listening at home, surely, just love exercise.
They're already bought in, and they're going to train no matter what.
And they're interested in just actually being more effective.
And so the way that you structure and put your plan together will in large part determine
getting more progress for less effort or actually being able to put the same amount of effort
in and getting results faster.
There's also some folks probably listening who are like, okay, I exercise,
I do what I can. I'm bought into the benefits and you've talked so elaborately over the 100
plus episodes you've done about the various benefits of exercise. But you're kind of doing it
because you know it's important, but you're not there. So for those folks, it's sort of like,
okay, how can we actually make this thing more effective? So we can make sure you hit the things you absolutely have to get for the
short and long-term benefits, right, to make sure that you're looking the way you want to look,
you're performing physically the way you want to perform, and then you can do that across
your lifespan. So how can we give you all some structure to where, again, you don't have to turn
into an absolute lover of physical fitness
and it doesn't have to take over your life, but you can still get more results for your same
time restrictions, whether that be you have two days a week or five days a week or only certain
access to equipment or experience, whatever the case may be. How can we help those folks as well
put together a protocol that will get them closer their goals with less restrictions?
Fantastic and I'm hoping that along the way you'll also point us to
how often to take the fitness assessment for each of the adaptations that you referred to in a previous episode
We will also link to that fitness assessment segment in the show no captions for this episode because that fitness assessment for different adaptations
I think is a really powerful way for people to touch in and see, you know, how much longer
endurance do they have? How, how much anaerobic capacity do they have? How much strength do they
really have? And then perhaps you'd also be willing to throw in a couple of additional
ways that we can assess our level of fitness and progress in this arc of fitness program across the year.
Amazing. I can't wait to do that.
I think it is also important before we jump in to acknowledge
a lot of folks maybe thinking to themselves,
I don't really necessarily need a plan.
Why do I have to do that? I don't have a certain goal
I'm going after, I'm not running a race anytime soon,
I'm not a competitive athlete, I go to the gym and I work out.
And that's great.
Well, I would like to try to convince you
that regardless of where you're at,
having a plan will achieve those things
we just talked about,
which is more success and a shorter timeframe.
There's actually a significant amount of research
to support this.
Those individuals who go on a specific training plan
compared to those who do not
will receive better results, right, independent of the effectiveness of the program.
Right, so we've talked in previous episodes about tons of different styles and strategies
and reiterate.
It really doesn't matter which one you pick.
The fact that you have a plan is always more effective than not having a plan.
And so again, even if you're
not planning on competing with something, if you want to shorten the amount of time you're
in the gym, get more results from it, I would strongly encourage to put something together.
The two largest reasons why people don't get results with their fitness training protocol
is number one, adherence, and then number two, some sort of progressive overload.
Both of those two things are challenging to accomplish without a plan, right?
So the reason people don't go to the gym, one of them, and one of the reasons why it takes
them so long is because they don't walk in with a very specific plan.
It's sort of like going to the grocery store and figuring out what you're going to buy
versus knowing exactly what you're going to get in your shopping list, grabbing those things and getting out.
You'll notice your time in the grocery store is half the length.
You're more productive and you didn't waste money on extra things.
Okay.
So that alone will drive adherence because you're now going to think of yourself, oh,
that 90 minute workout I do is actually really just 60.
And so now the next time you go to training, you're like, man, I don't have 90 minutes.
You realize it's only 60 or 40 or 30 or 20, whatever needs to be.
So that alone will get you there.
The second part of that, which is overload, it's very difficult to understand and remember
well the last time I did lat raises I used I think five pounds and I think I did like
12.
If you don't have some sort of system of tracking and this can be as simple as a notebook,
just writing down what you did before and doing a little bit more the next time.
That is going to
almost guarantee you success. So having some structure and this structure can be fairly good,
so we're going to talk about a bunch of different examples is something I strongly encourage everyone
to utilize for their exercise. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate
from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is also separate from Dr. Andy Galpins teaching and research roles at Cal State Fullerton.
It is, however, part of our 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,
we'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast. Our first sponsor is Momentus. Momentus
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So what sorts of things should people be thinking about when developing an overall fitness
program?
A few minutes ago, we were talking about how two of the major reasons people don't get
as much either training programs as they would like is because of one, a lack of adherence
and two, a lack of progressive overload.
So the solution to that is constructing a plan that lives within your realistic limitations.
So I would like to walk you through my 10 step approach to how I design training programs.
Now before I do that, I think it is fair and important
for the audience to understand that this is simply my approach.
I've been doing this a long time.
I played college football and I wrote my own training
programs back then.
I have and I'm still working with professional athletes
and PGA tour and NFL, the NBA, Major League Baseball,
as well as a ton of general population folks.
So this is a combination of the evidence space that we've been talking about in terms of
best practices for strength and conditioning, as well as just my years of experience.
So there are many, many ways one could do this.
I'm not even suggesting this is the best.
This is simply how I do it.
This is exactly how I handle it when a new individual
comes to me and how I teach my students.
So step number one is assessing properly
and identifying a training goal.
Now that's actually sort of funny
because we hear that a lot,
but a lot of people actually never take that step.
Not to call anybody in their room out.
What's happening here is this morning, Andy, Dr. Galpon and I were training together.
And he was providing amazing tips on form and set rep cadence and the sort of thing.
And he said, so what's your training goal for the next 12 months?
And I paused and it turned into a very long pause.
Which is an easy, nice way of saying he didn't have an answer.
I didn't have an answer. I didn't have an answer.
Of course, I don't just want to maintain what I've developed in terms of strength and
hypertruvian endurance, but I don't have a clear goal.
So I'm hoping that by the end of today's discussion, I will be on track to a clear set of goals.
It's amazing. I'm not going to bore you all here, but really, I can't stress enough how important that
step really, truly is to getting results.
The analogy we use here is if you left your house and you were attempting to get to the
grocery store and you just started driving.
And if you drove every possible road, you would eventually get to a grocery store.
And so, yes, that can work.
A better approach is saying, here's where I am.
There's where I wanna go.
What is the optimal route there?
And that's really what you're doing with goal.
So it is a boring stuff.
It is not interesting to hear.
I don't have any real hacks or tricks for you.
But it is step number one on purpose.
We have to know exactly where we're going.
You can do this in two ways.
Way number one is to just pick something.
Arbitrally decide, I'm gonna run a 5K
or I've done that before
and I wanna improve it by 10 seconds.
I wanna lose 10 pounds.
You can just pick one.
That's great.
Another way is to run through that fitness testing protocol
we described a few episodes before.
And if you do that, you can see which of these areas that maybe you have the largest lagging in,
or what is the most severe performance anchor, is how we refer to it, and then choose that as your
primary goal. So either option, some people come into training programs with a very clear goal in
mind, they want to add more muscle or whatever, whatever. Okay, great. If you're like, I don't really know, I just going to work out, then run the fitness
testing protocol. You'll see what score is the lowest in, and then you'll maybe make that a priority
for the next, to say, three months. So the first step is to identify a specific or set of
specific training goals. A really nice tool for helping you set a goal is a system called Smart.
Now there's a little bit of debate on what those acronyms actually stand for, but we'll
get close enough.
So Smart is often specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and timely.
So starting off with S specific. In general, the more specific your goal is,
the higher likelihood you will have at succeeding in that. M being measurable means it needs to be
something that you can actually put a metric on. So this can be objective or subjective, but generally,
I like to have at least one objective measure. So remembering objective is something that is not based on feeling.
It is not up to you.
This could be something simple like your body weight.
It could be how much you can bench press.
What's your one mile time?
Whatever is most important, you would actually doesn't have to be a fitness related goal.
For example, if you're using fitness as a way to enhance your sleep, the main metric you
may be interested in is, you know, my amount of hours sleep slept.
It could be something like efficiency or whatever is most interested. It could be work productive.
It doesn't really matter. So it doesn't have to actually be the fitness goal.
But what is the motivation of why you're doing it?
So that's specific, measurable,
attainable or actionable, this is often described, is something that is within your capability.
So attainable, a bad example of attainable
is something like, my goal is to win more games.
That may not be up to you,
the other team you're playing, it could influence it,
the schedule, et cetera.
So attainable should be something
that is within your control.
Realistic or relevant to you is something that is within your control. Realistic or relevant to you
is something that is, again, something realistic that you can achieve. You wouldn't want to
make a goal that is, you know, you want to double your body mass. That this is not going to
happen. So think about the constraints. How old are you? What's your training experience?
How much time do you really have to invest in this and then pick something that is realistic?
And then honestly, my little twist here is take that and minus 10%
Because typically when people put together training programs their their goal tends to be quite lofty
And they get some small percentage of the way and realize they're never going to get there and then back off
We actually sort of reminds me of a
Classic deception study that we didn't and my lab one time where we took people and
We had them do this a maximal front raise basically
So you held a dumbbell out in front of you for as long as you possibly could and
The goal here was actually it's a deception studies who were tricking them and so we said okay
We want to just get normative values to see how long people can hold this front raise and I think we use something like 5% of their body weight.
And so they came in and they did it one time.
And we timed them.
They didn't get to see the clock.
They left.
And then we said, we got to come back again, repeat it.
We got to do a couple of tries here
to get a normal value in case it's off, whatever.
Well, the participants were split up into four groups.
So group one actually was told that their time was 15% lower than that they
actually got. Group two was 5% lower. Group three was 5% higher. And group four was 15% higher.
So the second time they came in to do it, our graduate student, quote unquote, made a mistake
and left the timer in front of them. So the first time, again, they did the exercise,
they're just holding it.
They don't have any idea how long they're holding it.
The second time, they had a giant iPad set
like just a little bit off-center
or they can clearly see it.
So they watched the time go by.
And of course, what happened was those folks say
who did one minute, the very first time when they tested.
They came back in to do the second time
and they're holding it.
And we told them they actually got 45 seconds. I mean, a reality they had done a minute.
So they're holding it and holding it. And they think they only did 45 seconds. By the time
they get to like second 40, 41, 42, they get past 45, they almost all quit like 47, 48
seconds because they wanted to beat their preview score,
but then were like, cool, I beat it,
and then they quit early.
They were actually not yet to failure,
but they were just happy enough
to beat what they thought they'd done, and then they quit.
The other group on the inverse side,
again, say they got a minute,
we told them they got a minute and 15 seconds.
They got to like 45 seconds, 50 seconds,
since they started realizing, oh man, I have 30 seconds, 50 seconds, and started realizing,
oh, man, I have 30 more seconds to go. And they quit way early.
Because the carrot was way too far out. They realized, I'm never going to get
there. So I'm just going to stop now. Can you guess which group did the best on
the post test?
Ones that were just within about 5% of totally. So they wanted to improve. And so
again, say they got a minute the first time
we told them they got a minute five or sorry they got a minute five the first time
we told them they only got a minute they actually exceeded that
greatly because they wanted to PR so making sure that that goal is properly aligned it needs to be
a little bit scary.
A little bit unrealistic. Would you gonna have to work for this?
If it's too easy, you'll quit.
You won't feel like a challenge.
If it's too hard though, you'll quit early as well.
So you wanna make sure it's that reasonable balance of like,
ah, should I train today?
Or like, maybe I'll just go through,
if I do that, I'm not gonna hit.
I gotta get after it.
But not like, oh my god, like, there's just no chance here.
So you're going to walk away early.
That's a fantastic study. I have to say. It's very simple. I think it illustrates a number of important
psychological principles about goal-setting, motivation, self-perception, but also the dopamine system. You know, the dopamine system is this universal reward system
that meaning it doesn't only work for food or only work for fitness goals,
or only work for academic goals, or relationship goals,
it is the universal substrate for all of that.
I actually think there's some real gems of information
and the study design that you
describe.
So just cue that for maybe a potential collaboration between our laboratories because I think it's
very important.
But it does cue up another question relevant to fitness in particular, which is what are
your thoughts on intermediate goals?
So let's say my goal is to drop two percent of body
fat from where I am now, a year from now. Roll into the next year from now, about 2% lower
on body fat, but maintain my lean body mass, or maybe even increase it. How should I assess progress?
Because the dopamine system loves a goal,
that it loves anticipation of a goal,
but it responds best to we sort of re-up,
if you will, our dopamine.
Anytime we get a signal that we are on the right track
to that goal, and that signal could be,
okay, I did the workout, I just trust that these workouts are going to give me the result I want. But of course, we know
that when people get a glimmer of the idea or some objective feedback that they're on
the right path, that dopamine system really fires and provides motivation for continuing
toward the ultimate goal. And as we've talked about in the strength speed and hypertrophy
episode, resistance training itself has this built into it because of the infusion of blood into
the muscles. You actually get a little window into what you might get in terms of an adaptation,
simply by way of the so-called pump, whereas endurance type work generally doesn't have that.
You don't see yourself get better, drop back, and then adapting to actually get better.
But that's actually what you see with weight training. So given all of that contour of the dopamine system,
what sorts of intermediate goals should I set for myself or should somebody set for themselves?
And I realize it will probably depend on the ultimate goal. But would you say check in on progress once every
week, every month, three months?
I can't, I don't know if you can tell the look on my face.
I love this, this question in this topic.
I spend so much time on my senior graduate level program
design course.
I've been fortunate to work with a few athletes
where we've had multiple years.
And if you can really take the time to step back and go,
it's not about optimizing for the next six weeks.
And in this case, it's not the next fight.
It is the championship fight that we need to get to in three
years, or it is the Olympics which are on a quad program,
right?
You're really optimizing for that four year.
If you can have that foresight and really think about that
and then work backwards, you can see some pretty tremendous things, the sort of saying that we tend to overestimate
what we can get done on a week and underestimate what can happen in a year.
That can be extraordinarily powerful. However, you have to have those metrics
called out ahead of time because you will lose motivation in that short term
because you won't see that result immediately.
But if you remember, I'm on a path to 4%
or 2% or whatever you need to be.
Therefore, I only need to be this far right now.
I need to be that far and then that far.
It's actually quite clear.
And so what we would actually do in that scenario,
not to go like so off track here
because I can really go on this stuff,
is let's say it was the
year recommendation. You're going to actually need to go to the last part of smart which is timely.
So part of setting this goal is making sure you understand the time domain responsible and it's
actually quite great here because not to go inception on us where we're like list within a list and
Rob kills us over here
But number one of this program design thing was assessing your goal number two is identifying your defender
What I mean by that is what is stopping you from hitting that goal?
So you want to lose 2% body fat in the next
Year, okay great. What's going to stop us? Once we can achieve that, we'll go into more
of that in a second. Then you just start walking that 2% backwards. So you might have to
go something like this. Look, every time I start working out really hard, I always get
hurt. Interesting. Okay, great. So maybe instead of jumping really hard into a high intensity
interval training program, knowing we're likely
to hurt something or get burnt out or quit or whatever the defender is for you, maybe we
invest something right now which is maybe improving your flexibility or working on movement
technique, whatever is going to stop you from getting hurt, or maybe we progress slower.
So we don't get there.
That will allow us to do the work necessary
to hit that goal 12 months from now,
not two weeks from now, not two months from now.
Maybe that's not the case.
Maybe you're like, no, look, hey, I move well.
I feel like I'm in like decent shape.
I've got enough muscle mass on me.
We've talked in previous episodes
why having insufficient muscle mass
is sometimes detrimental for fat loss.
So you check all that boxes.
I don't get heard very often, right?
I got equipment around, no problem.
I've got the time in my schedule,
and I have enough muscle.
Great.
Well, now we maybe just split it up and say,
look, we got 12 months, we got 2%.
It's as simple as doing a half a percent per quarter
of the year.
And now all we're looking at is that number, right?
I don't have to necessarily get all these things done. I can go quarter half percent, half percent, half
percent, half percent. You're going to get there, right? The other scenario that I laid
out a second ago, it maybe needs to look like something like this. Quarter one is going
to be zero percent. Like, whoa, yeah, yeah, that's right. You may not lose a pound for the next three months.
We don't care.
That's not the goal of these three months.
I know that's the goal this year.
That's our major macro cycle goal.
We're going to get there, but to get there most effectively, we need to invest in, you
know, working more with your chiropractor or whatever the thing is, right?
That will allow us to then go half a percent quarter to
when we can really start training,
but we're gonna ramp into it.
Quarter three, we're gonna go another half a percent,
and now we're halfway there.
Quarter four, we've invested so much, you're ready to go,
we're gonna go hard, we're gonna get that last one percent,
that last quarter, and we're gonna get there,
and you won't be hurt.
So that makes it very clear,
and I can also envision how the precise structure of these intermediate goals would vary
depending on what sort of adaptation one is pursuing.
And I do remember from our previous episodes that fat loss itself is not an adaptation.
It is a byproduct of other adaptation.
So I just want to make sure that you know that I was paying attention.
It's committed to memory.
Absolutely.
Some goals such as fat loss are very quantifiable.
And yet they might not be linear, right?
It's hard to know, you know,
the assumption is if you ingest, you know,
X fewer calories than a required per day,
then you'll lose X amount of weight,
some percentage from body fat.
I think that queues up the idea
that we need to build some flexibility
into our thinking about these intermediate goals in order to just make sure that dopamine system
isn't tethered to exact numbers, you know, because after all, a reduction in 2% body fat, for instance,
is really desired to achieve a different sort of overall body composition or recomposition. I don't know,
by the way, that that's my exact goal. I think one of my goals is to be able to run a mile faster.
And I'm sort of haunted by this experience of wanting to run across country and college and
trying to walk on. We weren't to division one school, but the threshold for being
considered for the team was you had to run a sub-ten minute two mile,
which turns out to be very, very fast. That's really hard. I did not do that. I didn't even come close.
But, and I don't think that I could reasonably do that now, given the, I'm not interested in
committing to the kind of training required. The sacrifice isn't meaningful enough for me.
Fair enough.
But lowering one's mile time to run a mile by, I don't know, 10%, seems like a reasonable
goal across six months.
Sure.
Great.
So in the case of a goal like that, clearly there are specific training programs,
but this raises the issue of what if I have other goals as well? And at what point do people
having multiple goals start to set up collisions between goals? How do we know whether or not something
is reasonable, not just on its own, but because of the other things that one has structured into
their program? So being able to reduce some mile time by 10% in six months,
okay, maybe that's doable, maybe it's not.
You can tell me, but also being able to double the amount
that they can do for a single repetition
like extension for that matter.
At the same time, that seems,
it was seen like incompatible goals.
Right, so a couple of time, that seems, it seemed like incompatible goals. Right. So a couple of things.
Number one, the more specific and precise, you can be with a single goal, the
faster you will get there.
Generally.
So in theory, if you had one thing you wanted to achieve, the best way to go
about it is to focus on that.
Give it the most priority.
That doesn't mean you can't do anything else along the way you can, but you would want
to focus on that.
The more additional goals you bring in, the more distraction you're creating for that
primary goal.
Depending on what those goals are, you can actually do them at the same time.
Some other combinations are less effective.
Think about it like this.
We went through those nine adaptations and we went through them in a specific order on
purpose.
The closer those adaptations are together in that list, the more compatible they are to training
each other.
The further away, they become more challenging.
So just to give a few examples, if you wanted to improve your speed and power, you could
basically train those simultaneously. They would not interfere with each other at all. And in fact, since power
is speed times force, it would be complimentary. If you just walk down the line from there
to strength, hey, same thing. If you get faster, that's going to aid in strength, because
force is mass times acceleration. So if you improve acceleration, you're contributing to strength.
Same thing with power.
So speed, power, and strength are generally very complimentary.
You can absolutely train all three of those
goals at the same time and have no issues.
Getting into hypertrophy.
Now we've got a little bit of distinction.
If you're going to train strength and hypertrophy,
as we talked about in that episode, at the base,
those are going to be complimentary.
You add on some muscle, you're going to get stronger.
You start training for strength.
That's probably going to help you out on some muscle mass.
As you get to the end of that spectrum, the overlap between the two starts to go away,
such that if you truly want to maximize strength above everything else,
if you continue to train for hypertrophy as well, that's going to take too many resources
out of your recovery bin and you won't be able to do that.
The inverse would also be the same, right?
If you're training the maximize strength, you wouldn't be able to put enough volume on
to get sufficient hypertrophy.
So if you wanted to then combine speed with hypertrophy, you're going farther
away from each other, which means it's going to be more and more distraction. So the hypertrophy
training would cause a ton of fatigue. You wouldn't be able to go at max speed for your
speed or power strength. So you're going to be compromising those results. Now, speed
training won't compromise your hypertrophy training because it's non-fatiguing.
Right?
And so, boom, here we have a little bit of an interference effect one way, but probably
not the other.
Let's move down the spectrum one more time and get into endurance.
We won't go through all of these things, but you're getting the idea here.
Oh, a little bit of a high intensity intervals.
Okay, cool.
Now, would that compromise my speed, power, or strength? Probably because there's
a little bit of residual fatigue. If the volume was low enough, then you'd be fine.
All you're worried about there is not necessarily like some sort of cellular mechanism. It's
just simple fatigue. It is amount of energy expenditure versus is that compromising my
recovery to come back? Would those first three or four of those speed power strength interfere with your ability
to elevate your anaerobic capacity?
Probably not.
And almost surely, in fact, if you look at any of the literature on endurance training,
you will see that speed power and strength almost always improve endurance, right? Endurance training added on top of
strength can be detrimental, can have a neutral effect, but generally doesn't help one get stronger
by adding additional conditioning unless you're so unfit, you can't get through the volume needed
in the strength training, right? One more example here, so we don't drag this out too far.
In the case of something like, I wanna lose fat.
Well, hey, we don't have to worry about interference.
It doesn't really matter.
If you're fatigued for your hypertrophy session,
not a big deal.
We're just trying to get some work done.
If your hypertrophy session
fatigued you from your conditioning,
it's cool because you got the work done.
So you don't have to worry about it so much.
So it really depends on the actual goal.
And what you want to pay attention to is actually,
what are the chances of overlap,
which means like what are the adaptations you get physiologically,
that cross over from one to the other,
and then what are the ones that are actually
going to start interfering?
In fact, I have in my class, I have this giant matrix chart of interference effect,
going from adaptations through a whole bunch of systems, everything from handling pH,
to lymphatic drainage, to bone mental density, etc. And you can walk through these whole things and
say, which ones actually have a positive effect, which ones have a massive positive
effect, and then which ones actually have a little bit of an interference.
And perhaps if you guys are nice enough, we could throw that into a newsletter or something,
some PDF or something.
I think that would be immensely valuable.
I think some of that more extensive information when it's laid out in great form like that.
It's easy to use.
It's easy to use.
So we should do it.
Well, now we've said it.
So we. I didn't we've said it. So we
we I didn't say what do I said perhaps. I think it's a great idea. I think it's a
terrific idea. The idea that items closer to each other on the list of those
nine different adaptations are going to be easier to achieve in parallel than
items further apart makes perfect sense. And what I heard was that there's a few caveats
that might seem minor, but they're actually quite important
such as anything that is relatively low intensity
and doesn't impede recovery can probably
be included as a parallel goal.
So some speed work in conjunction
with some long duration cardio work. And it says Even though we're talking about number two on that
list and number nine on that list. In that case, the long duration of
endurance, even if it's low intensity, may actually interfere with the speed.
If the volume gets too high, if you're talking about, I went on a 30 minute
jog. For most people, that it's totally fine. What we're really talking about
here is when the miles start piling up, or the time
really starts getting there, in combination with some of the factors we've talked about
earlier, which is exercise choice.
So more eccentric landing based exercise choice is running, for example, is more likely
to interfere than cycling, because you're not landing.
Swimming is low impact.
So if you're gonna do those things,
you can hedge your bets a little bit
by choosing an exercise choice that is less impactful.
Again, if we're literally,
because there's oftentimes confusing here,
it was like, oh, don't do 10 minutes on the treadmill
before you lift, you're gonna cut, oh, like timeout.
Warm up is fine.
We're really talking about probably more than 30 plus minutes
at higher than 60% R8.
Like random number, something like that.
Depends on the person, et cetera.
But it has to be a decent chunk.
Again, you can actually fix that by then just consuming calories.
You can also fix that by making sure everything else
in the hidden invisible stressor bucket is improved.
So that's like one of our tricks that we'll get into
when we get into the recovery,
is you don't necessarily need to have to reduce
your training if you just ramp up your recovery.
I'd like to see a brief break
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I'm going to take the liberty of assuming that most people fall into one of either three
bins in terms of their goals.
Again, most people, certainly there are going to people that lie outside these bins.
I think if you pulled 100 people or 100,000 or a million people as to what their major
goals were in working out, they'd say, so nicely listed out before, aesthetic changes,
functionality and longevity.
But that one in three really kind of sit higher than most people would like to perhaps even
admit, they want to look good, which usually means they want to lose some fat, gain some muscle
in specific places.
I realize there are folks out there who want to gain a lot of muscle, just muscle everywhere.
But I think most people would like to have a little more shape here, a little more muscle
there to either balance out their aesthetic or to accentuate certain parts of their
physique.
And they would probably like to shave off some subcutaneous fat,
although there are those exceptionally lean people out there.
And they exist too.
I think it would be gain muscle in specific places, lose fat,
and do it in a way that also provides some booth
to their health span and longevity.
I would say that might even be 50% of people out there.
Again, I'm taking the liberty of guesstimating. Another bin I would venture is interested in
getting stronger and putting on more muscle. Certainly there are a number of people that are
interested in doing that, and that could even be more muscle all over, or more muscle with some
accentuation to certain areas where they happen to be weaker,
or less, less developed, as it were.
And then the third bin be people that really enjoy cardiovascular work.
Oh, I should say the second bin probably care about their longevity also, but it's not
really foremost.
Like, yeah, you know, I'm feel great now and I live to, you know, I'll live to
be whatever, but I only want to do it if I get that much muscle, right?
We know these kinds of folks.
I, yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
I pull in my class every year when I ask, like, what you guys all lift?
And of course, like, I make them put their hand up.
I'm like, you guys are in my class.
You're going to put your hand up and let you lift weights.
And then I ask, like, why do you train?
And like, health is, long-term health is like on the list.
And they all, like, I'm like like any of you that selected health are liars
Like you're 20 to 25 you are not exercising for health you are exercising because you want to look a certain way or get stronger
Once you get past that undergraduate age though the actual desire to live longer and better
Actually becomes pretty real. Yeah, I think that there are people who want to feel better
They they know that exercise and the results from exercise can make them feel better.
But yeah, that second band tends to be more focused on the aesthetic change.
It seems we're being strong.
And then the third category, I think, are people, I know a lot of folks like this, who
really enjoy what are normally considered endurance type activities.
And here, I just want to highlight again what you so beautifully illustrated in previous episodes
that you can gain a lot of endurance
even using weights or machines.
It just depends on how you use them, right?
It's not about the exercise about how you perform them
and et cetera.
And you, again, beautifully provided all those details
as to how to create endurance
regardless of equipment standards, et cetera.
But that third category seemed to be people who enjoy running, cycling, swimming,
hiking, dancing, activities that they can do
for long periods of time.
That often will involve some sort of skill
that is based on improving motor patterns.
So maybe not so much stride,
but certainly for people that are really love tennis. People that love a sport like golf, right?
Do they want to be able to not just walk you know, they want to walk the 18 holes.
They want they want to have a great golf swing, etc.
I'm not a golf player.
So forgive me if my nomenclature is off.
So I was in a three-bid golf.
Yeah, golfers.
You know, you don't play golf.
Oh, God, you don't play golf.
You wouldn't call golf player.
I played miniature golf a few times.
And that's about it. Although Stanford does have a beautiful golf course. I'm miniature golf a few times. Um, that's about it.
Although Stanford does have a beautiful golf course.
I'm told I should learn how to play golf.
I'll come up with a golf.
If you want, you come up, I'll play it.
I'll say how.
Get me on that.
I'll see it from my lab.
Um, so category one, I think is a significant fraction of people.
Yeah.
So as we lay out these different, um, ways to assess goals, and as we approach the structure of a program,
as you'll tell us, if we could perhaps touch back to those every once in a while,
I, again, I'm taking the liberty of assuming that we will, we will net about 80 to 90% of people
out there. Again, those categories being people who want to lose some fat, maybe build some
muscle and specific areas on their body and really want to be healthy. They want to feel
great and they want to have a long, health spam, aka end-of-life spam. They want to live a
long time feeling great. Second category, people want to build more muscle and strength.
Sure, they don't want to damage their health, but that's not their main focus. Their main
focus is on building muscle and strength. And then that third category of people who really want to do more endurance type work
feel great and strong doing it, but not because they can carry heavy weights while they're
doing it, but rather they can feel vital and they can push harder for longer and maybe
even translate that to some of the more recreational type activities or sports like tennis and things that are more long duration
Playing soccer or maybe even softball or things of that. Yeah surfing swimming on those three categories
Maybe we could call those bin A B and C for sake of today's discussion. I think
If you're willing to embrace. Yeah, I think that will be informative toward our listeners in a way that
Simply not assuming what people's
toward our listeners in a way that simply not assuming what people's different goals are might not be able to accomplish.
Said differently, hopefully by doing that, people will derive a lot more from the description
of the program that you're going to give us.
Love it.
Now, I am certain that I want to let you return to your list of the five things that people
need to consider when establishing an exercise program.
Yeah, great.
Let's do that.
I also do want to acknowledge acknowledge point you've brought up.
Curly exercise doesn't mean just lifting weights.
That's my background.
That's what I spend my time on.
So I sort of default to examples in that category, but it doesn't have to be that.
You've articulated plenty of other ways where you can get amazing forms of exercise that
I've nothing to do with lifting weights.
So for those folks in, was it BINC or three?
I can't remember.
Remember, we go A is gain muscle loose fat, be healthy now and forever.
Right.
BINB is get stronger gain muscle.
Don't damage your health, but not really focus on health in the immediate term. And then, Ben C is want to play or do endurance type activities,
and quote unquote, feel strong doing it.
So have more vigor to be able to do that longer
and maybe with more attention to skill, et cetera.
And of course, also want to improve their health.
Well, you've effectively done as you've given us
three different avatars with three different goals, goals. So the next step for each person or group is going to be to identify their defenders.
But before we get that, we've got to close the loop on this smart thing.
So in each case, they have either chosen that goal based on their personal preference,
or perhaps they did our fitness testing protocol and realized they needed to gain strength.
So whether the reason they chose to be in buckets B or A or C
was because of our protocol or this person of preference,
it really doesn't matter.
They still want to go through this process
of laying out their goals and making sure
that again they are specific.
So let's go through BNC, which is a great one.
So you want to have more energy and you want to feel stronger
when you're doing your kite boarding.
You want to feel stronger when you finish your round of tennis,
round of golf, game of tennis.
Okay, great.
That's a different strength.
Absolutely.
See, I know what you're saying though.
Amazing.
So that goal needs to be specific to that.
Right.
So it would be hard to make a goal like, I want to feel better at the end of my round.
Boy, that depends on too many other factors.
A better goal would be something like this.
I want to be able to run this two mile loop that I do around my neighborhood, and I want
to do it and have a lower heart rate at the end.
Or I want to be able to get my heart rate back,
my heart rate recovery back faster.
Amazing, that will probably align
with you feeling, quote unquote, stronger with it, right?
So I did the same course and either I can do it
at the same speed and it's not nearly as hard.
Or I can go faster, whichever one, it doesn't matter,
but that would be an example of a specific goal.
The other buckets you laid out
kind of already have specific goals,
like I want to get stronger.
Well, that's going to be the goal.
The other one is going to be,
I want to lose some fat.
Okay, that's kind of the goal is sort of implicit in that.
It's the other people where you're just like,
I don't want to care about that.
I just want to be able to surf the great waves and then not feel exhausted
Afterwards, all right cool. Well then you still should pick a metric
That is not that activity maybe because it won't be within your control depending on the waves and the temperature and all this stuff
That you can use as a proxy to say if I were to do something that represented me feeling probably better when I surf
What would that be?
And it's not perfect, but it would be still as specific as you could get. You still want to make sure it's measurable.
Again, this example might be something like you're gonna go to the pool and
time how long it takes you to swim 800 meters or something, right? It's attainable and then you'll set a goal
that's realistic and timely. I'm gonna improve by 5% in the next two months.
Okay, cool.
That probably falls in the realm.
And then you're making the assumption that if you did that,
you'll probably feel better when you go out
to do your primary activity, which is say, surf.
The reality of it is, every time we work with an actual athlete,
that's what we do.
At least don't come to us to lift weights.
They don't come to us to get stronger.
They come to us because they want to play better.
And they want to stand the field more.
What we're trying to convince them of is,
if you do this thing in the gym,
then that should translate into you being better
at your sport, recovering faster, being less injured.
But it's still just a proxy.
And so that's all you're doing with these other
non-specific goals, especially when they're
performance-based goals. And we didn't package it that way. But that's really what
you talked about for Ben C there. It is a performance-based goal. I want to be able to perform when
I'm in the field. And my brain, that's a sport. And your brain, it's when you're at yoga
class. It's the same thing. Like we've said this earlier in our series that if you have
a body, you're an athlete. I want to prepare your body so that it can do exactly what you want it to do.
You then get to have the choice of what you ask it to do.
You call it a sport, you call it your Saturday hike with your family.
I don't really care.
It's the same thing.
You get control of your body performing the way you want it to perform and that's what
this whole thing is about.
Great. So now that we've covered, I think, as much as we need to regarding assessing and choosing
a goal, I want to get back this idea of identifying your defender.
So you really need to think carefully about what is stopping you from hitting those
goals.
So you're forecasting a little bit.
You're also going back into your own personal history, right?
Do you have history of knee pain?
Do you have a history of working too much?
Do you have a history of a lot of travel?
Do you have a history of getting sick a lot?
What are these things that are happening that are going to stop you
from hitting your goal?
A couple of examples I've already laid out,
so we don't need to go too much longer here,
but in the case of somebody who is in maybe a bin A,
which is, I wanna lose some fat,
maybe gain a little bit of muscle.
Okay, what's stopping you from the strength
and conditioning side?
Is it the fact that you can't train consistent enough?
Is it the fact that when you go to train,
you don't know what to do?
Is it the fact that when you go to train,
you train an ass off and you're not getting results?
Okay, great.
All three of these different scenarios
are going to result in different programs
because they have different reasons you're failing.
And that is really critical.
Instead of just going, I want to fat loss program
and picking one up off the internet.
It may not actually be addressing
the point of failure for you.
So the sooner you can choose your programs
based on why you're failing,
the sooner you'll start getting results.
You have to run a little bit of a critical analysis there
and it can be something scientific
and it could be a measurement.
It also could just be you thinking about,
you've tried this in the past and why didn't it work.
I wasn't that interesting.
Okay, tell me more about why it was interesting.
Oh, I just, I'm not really into machines.
And that's all I had.
Okay, great.
Or I loved it.
I loved the gym I was at and I was getting results,
but it was so far away.
Okay, interesting.
Why did you stop before or why didn't it work?
Or if it did work in the past, amazing.
Let's go back to something similar,
but has your life changed at all?
Is there anything different about now
than when it worked three years ago?
Yes, no, maybe we run it right back.
If it is, okay, we're gonna sort of predict those things.
And you wanna work,
effectively what I'm saying is
throughout this entire 10 step process, it's going to be,
you want to make sure that there are the non-negotiables that are in your life that you know
are going to be ahead of your fitness program, and you want to work with those things not
against them, right?
Because life will win.
When it comes to your children, when it comes to your job, life is going to win.
You're going to have to give up something.
It's going to take some hard work.
But we want to fight the right battles for most people, right?
Even for our professional athletes,
we get this all the time.
It's like they have nothing else to do but train, right?
And like, we'll hold on now.
They're getting traded.
They have agents to deal with.
They may not have a contract.
They have families.
But, but, but, but,
I think life will get in the way I promise.
And so you want to fight the battles that you can win,
not ones that you're going to lose. And so that's really what this game is about. So if the
battle is, hey, my job is super hectic. Okay, great. We're going to come up with a different
strategy. That's more flexible, maybe. I'm still going to hold you to the fire. I'm not going to
be easier on you, but we're just not going to try to set up a situation where you have to do this
workout Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, because you know your job easier on you, but we're just not going to try to set up a situation where you have to do this workout Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
and Saturday, because you know your job is on the road
and you're the, provide all the, you know,
income for your family and your job.
Okay, whatever the thing is, right?
That's what we really want to identify.
So when I say identify your defenders,
you need to have a little bit of a critical analysis
on this and a little bit of a tool I'll use for this
is a modification of another system I stole from Kenny Kane,
which is what we call a quadrant system.
So you can imagine everything in your life
goes into one of four buckets.
All right, now bucket one, I'm just gonna call business.
And this is anything to do with your job,
income, sort of all those things.
Bucket two is relationships. And this is anything to do with your job, income, sort of all those things.
Bucket 2 is relationships.
So again, this could be family or love life, like anything that we would call relationships,
social connection, purpose, but anything, right?
Bucket 3 is your fitness and bucket 4 is your recovery.
So one of the first steps we take is we walk through this
and we say, all right, you have 10 points total.
And you get to distribute these 10 points
across the four areas.
So not 10 each, you get 10 total.
And so we walk through and we say, right now,
where are you giving your points?
And we could do this right now for you, you'd like or I could make up a scenario.
Do you want to do it? Sure. Great. So Andrew, right now in the last month,
if you had 10 points total in those categories, where would you be distributing the most points,
which category and how many points would that be? Business, my work.
Business, work, job, sort of all those things.
And how many at a time?
Which doesn't, I should say, ever quite feel like work.
Running a laboratory and doing the podcast doesn't ever really feel like work in the traditional
sense, but it's career, it's work.
It involves relationships, but it certainly doesn't enhance my fitness, except of my vocal chords and recovery.
So with those notes there, I would say four to five.
You pick five.
Five. Fair. That's the most common number. Five business five once again. I'm typical which makes me happy you nailed it one of the few ways
Which I've been accused of being normal I picked five for business. No kidding. What's the next highest and what's that score?
I do invest in relationships. I would say
Does have to be around
Can it be it has a whole integer, a whole integer.
Two, two. All right, we're seven out of 10 here. So would you say it is fair that you spend roughly two and a half percent of your, it's not necessarily time. It's energy, time,
focus, sort of all of these things, two and a half times as much, it's not necessarily time. It's energy, time, focus, sort of all these things.
Two and a half times as much on your business
as you do in your relationships.
It varies depending on what's going on.
It feels a little skewed in the direction of business.
So I might want to adjust to a four three ratio there.
Maybe not.
But I'm gonna hold to five.
Okay.
Two, business relationships.
And then just for sake of example,
and because this doesn't seem like a exceedingly
precise measure, it can have some slop.
Of course.
OK.
Where would you put fitness and recovery?
I definitely put energy into fitness.
So I'm going to give that also a two.
Yep.
Which leaves one for recovery.
Great.
That what you just laid out is, again, the most quintessential split you could have.
In fact, you run this game on everyone.
They're going to come up with basically the same answer unless they don't work out or whatever.
Okay. on this game, on everyone, they're gonna come up with basically the same answer. Unless they don't work out or whatever, right? Okay, so a couple of rules here.
Recovery must be at minimum half of your fitness allocation.
In your case, two to one, you're flying.
I think I say it has to be half.
It has to be five out of 10 points.
No, in case it doesn't leave much for anything else.
I would like it to be minimum 20% of the total,
which means two out of 10.
Now, and when I say recovery, I don't simply mean muscle. I mean, you need personal time.
You need meditation. You need sleep. You need to go to a concert and get out and see people.
And so like, whatever the things that that give you energy back, right? Some folks that's personal
time, some folks that's social time. Whatever that means to you, right? Yeah, I actually get a lot of energy from my work
And so it you know, that's why some of these numbers are a little bit you can always the kind of cloak the underlying dynamics
So here's what we do from this game. We look at that and we say if that's our split Andrew five three two one
Five two two one five five two two one. I'd love to be able to put three in relationships
Just because but then I need eleven out of right so here's the fun game we play.
You're currently at this and you don't get the add to 11 you have to stay at 10
there your 10 is different than my 10 maybe right but 10 is 10 there just whatever
the maximum you can actually do it's you so if we went back to our training goal
whatever that goal was for you and we went back to our training goal, whatever that goal was for you, and we went back
to our defenders, we would look at this score now and say, is three out of ten fitness
of three, right?
Fitness of two.
So it's five, two, two, three, one.
Is two out of ten sufficient to hit that training goal in that time frame you described?
And let's say you said, I want to
hit a new PR in my mile six months from now. Yeah, for simplicity sake, and also because it's largely true, I'm going to put myself in what I referred to as Bin A earlier, right? My bifap
percentage is okay. It's in the range that I would like, but I would like to bring down a little
bit, probably gain a little bit, probably
gain a little bit muscle here and there, keep, keep, regain some endurance and certainly,
certainly, my immediate and long-term health are extremely important to me.
Great.
So then the question in the main answer may be yes, that this is the optimal split for you.
If it is not, then we have to make a choice.
We either alter the goal or the timeline to make it realistic
or we alter our quadrant. And then if we're going to alter our quadrant, the next step is
critical game port. We need a list of very specific life actions that we're going to take that
allows that split to happen. So if you said, for example, I want to put three into relationships.
Great.
What specific life actions are you going to take
to pull one from fitness,
you can't pull any from recovery or one from business?
And then you don't have to actually answer this,
is you know, that personal.
I know you don't like making these things about you,
because.
Right, and that's the other reason to do it.
And it is a diabolical trick to make it to insist that these be whole integers because
I would have done, you know, like a 4.5 for business and a 2.5 for relationships.
But obviously you write through rules on this, not me.
So you would just walk that list, okay?
And then list could be something like, I promised to not work after 7 p.m. Thursday through Sunday.
Or whatever the thing is, right?
I promise I'm gonna make sure that I don't start work
before 8 a.m. or whatever, right?
No more trips.
Just make those things specific and measurable.
Not just like, I'm gonna work less.
That's never gonna go.
What is the very specific life action you're going to take?
There's gonna be alarm that goes off Tuesday night at four, five PM. And no matter
what we at Barbell shrugged, we used to have a little shirt that was like D3, AT, which
is like drop everything and train, which means at three PM in the afternoon, no matter what's
happening, we dropped everything and trained. Because that was like, when you start a business
and you're going, uh, things just run away from you, right? And it's just sort of like,
man, it's not my company, but those guys are like, we are a
strengthening company and we're not training. So we had to just make
this hard rule and it's just like a little thing that came up and it was
easy to say, drop everything and train three o'clock. There you go.
I like this drop D, E, everything A and blank. Like it could be drop
everything and you know, pick your a and blank. Like it could be job, everything and pick your favorite.
Totally, pick the relevant read.
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, I really miss reading for pleasure.
I'll put that under recovery and potentially-
Drop everything in breathe.
And with that motto.
Oh, and breathe, you were saying,
oh, and breathe, I was saying, read.
I said that too.
Yeah, because for me, reading is actually
is both recovery and relationship,
because oftentimes in my relationships,
I'm insist not insisted, I certainly didn't insist.
We've had a format of reading the same book in parallel.
Oh great.
Yeah, not necessarily side by side,
but the same book in parallel and then discussing it.
It's a wonderful practice or listening
to the same audio book.
It works well.
You can do drop everything in play.
Mm-hmm. You're just going to do something.
You're going to play video games. You're going to go play with your kid.
You're going to do whatever, play with your dog.
Like, it doesn't even have to actually be play,
but play it to you can signify personal time.
Right. It doesn't really matter.
Mm-hmm.
So, yeah, that's a...
I really like to stop everything and blank.
Got to admit that you probably shouldn't have more than what two or three of those
overall. Pretty much like one is the one to two maybe. Great. Is where you want to go after that.
So the idea is them to redistribute the numbers on this list, but through a very concrete action.
And I like this drop everything in blank because it speaks to the non-negotiable aspect of it.
Has to be. Life will get pushed. Right.
It's not a fine time to correct.
It's not in next year I'm going to.
Correct.
I love it.
Yeah.
When you put those things, those things you might as well just don't even put on your list.
Because it's not going to happen.
Yeah.
You're talking to somebody who loves rules because when they are non-negotiable rules, they provide
this incredible organizing force for the brain.
It's really a neuroscience thing in my mind.
Totally.
And actually, we did an episode on happiness
where you find that once people make a decision,
if they eliminate the possibility of other decisions,
like literally the hatches close, that is it.
Burn the boat.
The rates of subjective happiness,
immediate and long-term happiness over time go way way up.
Yeah.
So I'm convinced that the nervous system doesn't like
to keep the valves on these dopamine circuits open.
I actually think it diminishes
from the reward component.
And there are actually some data on this.
Anyway, I don't want to take us off track.
But the last part of this, what we do then,
is we take that quadrant and we take that list,
and then you're going to print it physically,
and you're going to put it in two places.
This could actually be on your phone, you can actually print it, you can screenshot,
it could be the background of your phone.
So every time you click on your phone, you immediately see that quadrant.
It's a very clear reminder of what are my priorities today, right?
Just a simple little picture.
I also like to put it in your place of failure.
So for a lot of people, that is on their laptop,
or right above their workstation, right?
It's like the thing that's going to lose
and beat your fitness is your job, typically, right?
Or it's on your TV.
It's on your Netflix control.
No, sorry, Netflix, no offense.
But you know what I mean?
Whatever the thing is that you fail for,
I played too many video games.
Great, I worked too much.
Okay, great.
And you put it there and you put it also the last component. It has to also be in the hands of somebody
who can hold you accountable. Right. Wife, training partner, business partner, whatever. So it's
like, Hey, Andrew, like you promise you were going to do X yourself. Why are you still here?
You committed to this. You got to get out of here. Someone who will be like, no, no,
it's drop everything and read,
it's eight o'clock, you're supposed to be reading,
you gotta go.
You're gonna get a check back in on that.
Check back in every week, check back in,
it doesn't matter every month.
And then you can adjust, it's fine.
You can always change the system,
but that has to now change.
You got to print a new one,
and now it's a whole new promise you've made to yourself.
So you've gotta be able to hold yourself accountable to those things. It's gotta be flexible enough to where it's a whole new promise you've made to yourself. So you've got to be able to hold yourself accountable
to those things.
It's got to be flexible enough to where it's realistic.
It can't be, I'm not going to work after six o'clock
every day.
Maybe it's just three days a week.
Maybe it's on Saturdays, I promise to work for the first two
hours so I won't work Saturday night.
Oh, whatever, or the inverse, I'm not going to work
Saturday night, you got it.
You could come up with a million examples here.
So that's the system we use to make sure
that we have now properly identified where we're going.
We found a road map to that.
And now we know exactly how we're going to stay on track.
I have to take this opportunity to add one more thing
to our drop everything list.
And you gave the example of deer, which
is maybe drop everything and read or drop everything list. And you gave the example of deer, which is maybe drop everything and reed,
or drop everything and relax,
or another example.
I have to add a deal, which is drop everything.
And this is for you, Lex, love.
Actually, one of the advantages of having a dog
or having children is that the drop everything and love
is often enforced
by the faces of those that you love.
They just show up in whatever space you happen to be in.
Especially if you work from home.
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Huberman to get 20% off. Let's move on to the next one, shall we? Number three here is going to
be what I call calendar or sort of time frame. So it's going back a little bit and saying you've
decided on this goal and you've identified the defenders.
Now we need to come up with a realistic time frame
for how long it's going to take to accomplish that goal.
And when you do that, you need to look at your life schedule.
And what I mean by that is, do you have important deadlines
coming up?
Do you have holiday?
Do you have a trip? Do you have travel? Do your children important deadlines coming up? Do you have holiday, do you have a trip,
do you have travel, do your children have something coming up?
You need to take all that information
and I literally lay out a calendar
and I write all those dates in a physical calendar first.
And the reason I'm suggesting this is you wanna work
your training backwards around that.
As we've been discussing, life will win. If you try to work your training backwards around that as we've been discussing life will win.
If you try to plan a training program that is five days a week, 90 minutes a day, and
all of a sudden you look two weeks from now and you realize you've got a grant deadline
and then you've got to take two days to go to Austin, it's just foolish.
You're going to fail and then you're going to quit and you're going to be like, man, again,
my training program failed.
So you need to figure out what the non-negotiables are in that business quadrant and just not be foolish.
All right. So let's imagine you're going to plot out, say, a 12-week training phase and you want to,
you've decided on this goal. And then you look and you realize in the middle of this 12 week span, week five is really hectic and chaotic.
Or you realize that this is a quarter in which something important is due.
Maybe you won't want to either adjust the goal.
Or what we really do in this step is going on to actually step number four, which is choose
the number of days per week you can exercise and the length in terms of amount of time,
you can truly afford to train. I would rather you underestimate that than overestimate it.
So again, you look at the calendar, you put all these non-negotiables, the deadline you cannot move in the calendar.
And then you say, look, based on this, realistically, I can conservatively train
three days a week for 60 minutes total.
And that includes the time I walk into the gym,
my warm up, my down regulation breathing at the end,
and then me getting back either in the shower and back.
Because really now it's maybe 90 minutes.
By the time you traveled, you transitioned,
you picked back up on work, you showered, you ate, et cetera.
That time just runs away from you.
And all of a sudden it was a two and a half hour thing,
even though it was a 45 minute workout.
So you really need to figure that thing out.
If you're a few weeks in and you realize,
oh, I actually have a little more time that I thought,
you can always train more.
You can do another thing, you can add up.
But what you don't wanna do is set up a program
that is requiring you to do certain exercises
on one day's or certain styles of training on another.
And then you constantly miss one of those days.
I thought I could do four days a week,
but one day a week something's getting pulled out.
That's just gonna keep you off schedule,
it's gonna make you feel like a failure,
and you're gonna run into problems with your training.
So schedule three, if you are sure you can get three,
and if there's an extra day,
we can always do other fun stuff.
All right, so that's really step three and four.
Figure out your life events over the course of this time.
How many days a week can you train, and how long in terms of minutes per workout?
Notice, we haven't selected a single exercise yet.
We haven't worried about how heavy, rest intervals, all those modifiable variables, you don't need to pick those later.
First, where are we going?
Second, how are we going to get there, which is the quadrant in identifying of defenders.
And the third is, what are the restrictions?
I need to place them myself in terms of program design based on how often and how long I can work out. That is going to allow you to
go back to some of the previous episodes and go, man, you gave us all kinds of ideas. How
do I know which one to choose? This is your answer. You're going to choose based upon the limitations
of time and frequency. So if you've already said, we're in, let's imagine we're in bucket
A or bucket C, it doesn't matter. And you go look the most I can afford with where I'm at with what's going on in my life is three
days a week. Well, we automatically know we're going to have to start training
choosing a training style that's limited to three days a week. Don't even
worry about the four or five days. Those are off the table. And now we're
so we've placed restrictions. It kind of goes back to that concept of I I think it's one of your podcasts, Guest Jocco, right?
And it's like, hey, structure gives us actually some freedom.
So by creating some restrictions here,
we're a little more free to go.
I only actually have to choose between A and B.
Rather than sitting down and going, man,
there's all 20 hours into this exercise podcast thing.
And there's so many options with 20 pick.
Well, you create a little bit of restriction and now it's easier to go, oh, my only option is A or B. And there we go.
So that's number four. That's three and four. At that point, once we're good there, now what you
want to do is go to step number five, which is actually select your exercises or your movements.
And this is going to be as simple as selecting as selecting like you know a kettlebell swing or
Running or swimming. It could be your entire exercise mode
What you want to do with exercise selection here is make sure that you're balancing those exercises across
the whole week
Not within necessarily every workout
So if you have four days a week five days a week
You want to look at the exercise selection and say, okay, I need to have somewhat of a
reasonable balance between movement patterns or muscle groups or front and
back side to side. However you're thinking of it just across that week. Right. So
again, say we're on a three-day. And we're in either of the buckets,
any of the buckets really.
And we say, okay, great.
Maybe it's not ideal if all I select
is cycling every day.
That's not a lot of balance.
I don't notice it.
There's no upper body work there.
There's no torso work.
There's no other position.
So maybe I'm gonna really focus on cycling.
So I will do the only cycling two days a week, but that third day I need to pick something for the other movement areas.
And that's going to make sure you stay in a reasonable balance. If you have an exercise
that you like, great. If you have exercise, you have access to. Again, maybe the gym is
a giant pain in the ass. And so you can say, look, it's too far away. The closest one is 45
minutes there and back. So maybe I'm going to restrict myself to only
cuddle bell and bands and running
because I can do those in my house.
Awesome.
We've actually created some freedom
because we gave ourselves some restriction.
And now we just have to figure out
how am I going to give some movement patterns
somewhat balanced across my three days.
So really, when it comes to exercise choice,
it is selecting the patterns that you know how
to execute, giving yourself against somewhat of a balance between the muscles and the joints
and the movement patterns, making sure that you are specifically targeting any muscle
group or movement that you want.
So making sure you want to improve muscle size in your glutes,
you better make sure some of the exercises you're doing at least one day a week,
you're feeling in your actual glutes. So you can check that box. It doesn't have to be every
exercise. It probably shouldn't. It doesn't even have to be every single day. But make sure it's
checked off somewhere on that list. And the last one is, is there a strategy in which you can progress it?
So if you're like, I'm just going to do body weight exercises.
Okay, great.
Well, how are you going to progress those?
In the case of like body weight, it's really hard to add load.
Maybe you can go to weight vest on or something, but then maybe you don't have that or that's
an extra thing or that can only go so far.
So what's my progression strategy going to be?
Well, in this case, maybe you just increase the complexity
by going from two legs, like say a body weight squat,
to a single leg squat, or you just
increase repetitions, or you increase time,
you're going to hold it.
My point is your progression strategy
will be based upon the restrictions that you placed
based on availability and things like that.
The last thing I would recommend here in terms of exercise progression,
to make sure that you can continue to do these things
while lowering your risk of injury both in the short term and long term,
is to progress your exercise complexity in this fashion.
So make sure, number one, you can do the exercise properly with assistance.
So let's imagine a scenario where we're going to try to squat.
So give yourself, put your hands on a bench or something like that.
Now can you execute that squat perfectly with assistance?
So you're holding onto something.
Okay, great.
If you can't, then don't progress past that.
Don't go now do a barbell back squat if you can't do it correctly
when you have assistance. But let's assume most people can do that. Okay, great. Now you can move
on to the next step, which is can you do it well without assistance? So this should be bodyweight only.
Check, cool. We're good there. Okay, now you can go ahead and move on. can you do it well with an added eccentric load?
So in this particular case, if we're learning to squat, we can do it well when I hold onto
something, that's great.
Okay, now I can do it well with just my body weight.
Now if I put a little bit of weight on whether it's a kettlebell in the front, like a goblet
squat or dumbbells to the side or whatever you want to do, can I lower it and go all the
way down and stay in perfect position? If you can do that,
great. You're allowed to go to the next step, which is, can you hold it isometrically?
So can you go all the way down and then hold that bottom position? What you don't want to do
is start adding load or speed or fatigue. If you're going down to the bottom position of the movement
and you're out of control, we really want to avoid this. So I want you to show me, you're going down to the bottom position of the movement and you're out of control, we really want to avoid this.
So I want you to show me, you can go down and you can lower the weight under control.
You can hold it in that position under control.
If we're clear there, now we can add the concentric portion.
You can now go ahead, you can lower it, you can hold that position of most
danger, now you can move up at whatever speed we want. We are all good there.
Once you can show me those things, you can add the last two steps, which are now speed,
if you choose to, and the last one which is fatigue. Right. I would really discourage people
from doing exercises to fatigue, especially with a moderate or high load,
from doing exercises to fatigue, especially with a moderate or high load,
unless you can promise me you can do these first six steps.
If you can, you can basically go hog wild
with your training and your chances of injury
are very low, again, both acute injury,
as well as long-term injury, which is just sort of like
my joints ache and all of a sudden my shoulder hurts
and things like that.
That's really what I'm looking for.
And once you're clear there, you can train pretty hard.
I really like this because recently I was showing somebody how to use a, in this case, it
was a hack squat machine.
Yeah.
I noticed that they were a very timid of getting into a deep squat position.
And they cited a previous knee injury, which is long since healed.
Right. But even with proper foot placement and everything, you just tell they were getting
ginger about it as they they approach that bottom position. But over time, with pauses at the
bottom, they've become very comfortable. And now I share going, you know, well below 90 degrees, a single between, you know, femur and lower leg.
So it was clear that it wasn't something
range of motion limited or it was just,
it was a mental thing,
but a logical one for them.
Now, after what you just said,
I think a better strategy that I could have used
would have been to have them get into that position just no
way at all, maybe nothing on the sled, and then slowly working out from there as
opposed to doing what we did in our case, which was to just convince them that
they were much stronger than they thought they were. We eventually got there,
but I'm realizing that there was far too much mental anguish involved in that
process. Yeah, this whole progression, by the way, this can all happen in one session. If you
can check the boxes like in that example, you may have been fine to jump there. It may
have just been a, hey, you're fine here. Get through it. Oh, okay. This whole progression
might take two years. I mean, this really depends on your background. If you actually have
injury history, your comfort, your confidence, like all these things. So you don't need to worry about rushing through that progression.
You don't need to get all the way to the end if you don't want especially with speed and
things like that.
But again, it can't happen.
It doesn't have to be like, well, it's a month of this, a month of like, but no, if they
feel great and you can go through one to seven and five minutes, then you're good to go.
Number six.
Number six now is just order.
So you know how many days per week you're going
to work out. You know how long they're going to take. You've selected all the exercises
you need to get done. You've balanced that across the week. Now you just need to put them
in order. And the easy answer here is generally do what's most important first in the workout.
There is some minor interference effect or some other
things there, but the reality of it is if you do the priority first, you're
probably going to be okay. So whether this priority is a muscle group, so in the
example, you want to make sure your glutes get trained. Maybe do it first. If
you're trying to maximize your back squat, you may not want to do a
bunch of glued exercises to fatigue first, but that's not the priority we picked.
We picked a different one, which is buckets A B and C. Okay, great.
By doing it first, you told me the priority was to make sure I do something
for my glutes. And then I would also like to get my back squat a little bit
stronger or whatever. Okay, fine. The same thing could be done for your endurance training.
You could do your endurance training before you're lifting.
If you understand, that means you might be compromising your lifting quality of the workout
a little bit.
But you might be fine with that.
If you say the endurance work is more important right now.
Amazing.
You don't know the answer to that though.
If you hadn't gone through steps one through four.
And that's why those things are critical. So it makes what we call chaos management,
which is things happen in the moment.
I don't know what to do. What should I choose?
That decision becomes really clear because you can always go back to beginning
of my priority was this.
Then therefore, that's my choice today.
So it provides a very simple set of instructions
for when the workout gets cut short,
when your workout has to be in a hotel
and any number of things that pop up in real life,
whether again, you're an athlete or non-athlete,
either way, life will get in the way at some point.
So you need to have rules and a system that says,
when this happens, I go right back to this
and that's my choice done Done, I'm moving on.
No decision to make here.
It's already been determined a week ago, five weeks ago.
We're often rolling.
So the order again is pretty simple.
Just put the one that is most important.
First, now I know you like to do legs on Monday.
That's great.
I actually love that too.
I do the same thing generally.
Because to me, that's almost always the most important thing. If I miss a bicep workout,
I'm probably fine, but I really don't like missing the big movement pattern. So I make sure
that those happen on a day that tend to be more stable for me. Mondays are generally pretty stable.
Things get chaotic as the week moves along for me. Others might be the opposite, right?
Others might want to go, hey, I'm actually going to keep Monday as my flexible day or
off day because I like to get a lot of my work done, get that cleared so I can have, oh,
sure.
Like working around you, some people love to train on Saturdays because it's their most
free, some people hate it.
Sure.
You tell me, what is the biggest priority and when are you the most fresh?
Monday, Tuesday, It doesn't matter.
Depends on your work schedule.
Maybe you work the weekends.
I don't know.
Right.
You decide what day of the week are you generally the most consistent, the most consistent schedule
and the most consistent energy and do the thing that is most important on that day.
It doesn't matter Monday, Tuesday, day one, day three.
We are sort of talking about this earlier, but you actually don't even have to do a week schedule.
Our brains tend to like to go year, month, week, but a lot of folks will even just run this
thing in terms of like a seven or nine day schedule. In fact, we ran a nine day training schedule
for one of my major league baseball players. And he's eight or so years in his career and he's hitting all
time PRs in velocity and he's very, very good and it was a nine day training cycle and we
ran that for the entire season. So it doesn't have to be a seven days split but it tends to
work for a lot of people because most people have a fairly consistent schedule across the
seven days. So pick the thing that is most important do it first and do it on the day of
the week that is most consistent for you, terms of schedule and energy.
I really like what you're describing. I should just say that one of the reasons I put
legs on Monday is because I tend to get enough sleep on the weekends. I generally get enough
sleep during the middle of the week, but oftentimes things will come up. I can be pretty sure,
however, that I've quote-un, caught up on my sleep on the
weekends. The snowshoes of catching up on sleep is a little dicey, scientifically, but
tend to be pretty rested by Monday morning. And actually, my week begins on Sunday.
And Sundays are when I get my long-form cardio. So those two are really non-negotiable.
And the reason that long-form cardio is on Sunday is that it can take many different forms.
It can take a hike with a weighted vest.
It can take the form of a jog.
It can be done with other people.
It can be family time.
It can be time with friends and so on.
And that's pretty hard to do during the middle of the week or pretty hard to ensure at least
for me.
I also find that by bookending the week with some non-negotiable days of training on Sunday
Monday, then if the week gets busy Tuesday, Wednesday, or even sometimes Thursday with travel and things
like that, one can sort of catch up toward the weekend. It's not ideal. I mean, ideally,
it's spaced out. But really, this isn't about what I do. This is really just to underscore the
principle you described, which is I have a very clear sense now over three decades or so of training and three decades or so of
being involved in academics and science and work of when I tend to be most rested,
when I tend to have some flexibility in my schedule, and also when I'm trying to combine fitness
with some of my social engagements, which is actually quite fun. One thing I noticed that
the four boxes that you mentioned before work relationships, fitness and recovery, some of them do have some crossover.
They all do. You know, I hike with family or friends is both relationship and fitness and so on.
But I love the principle because anything that can add consistency, as you pointed it out,
is going to greatly increase the probability of reaching one's goals. That's sort of an obvious one.
But in an earlier episode, you also said something that I wrote down and is really still ringing
in my mind, especially now, which is that consistency always beats intensity.
Correct.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
We used to do a thing when I was training NFL players for the combine many years ago, where Saturdays were supposed
to be the day they came in and we did the most regeneration.
So this is when they get bodywork done and we do hot cold contrast and sort of all these
things.
And our attendance was like 1%.
Nobody showed up.
For a massage.
Nobody showed up.
Wow.
Seems right. I remember. I love a good massage. Nobody showed up. Wow. Seems right.
But remember, I love a good massage.
Of course.
But remember, you're 18 years old.
You're likely to be getting millions of dollars handed to you in the next few weeks or months.
And...
He's not referring to me, by the way.
Yeah.
I'm actually quite a bit older than 18.
And I'm not getting handed millions of dollars each week.
Right.
So, I would think that, but those folks like they recover super fast.
They've never really had that.
And also like Friday night.
Kind of enticing.
And so, nothing was there.
And the strategy then was, what if we, instead of having an important hard training day
on Saturday?
We transition and it is only things they want to do.
So we basically identified what are the things
in training you love the most,
and let's do those Saturdays.
And it turns out for those folks, no surprise here,
it was what we call the gun show.
So they would come into the gym
and we would literally do nothing but biceps and triceps.
They'd just get a pump and then the deal was though,
you come in and literally what come in
is we would pick three guys.
Say you, you and you, you pick your favorite bicep exercise,
you pick your favorite one, you pick your favorite one,
you three over there, you pick your favorite
triceps, triceps, triceps.
And we just run a big circuit.
Like, just like, how many reps?
I don't know, I don't care.
I don't care, just like pump away.
Like, I don't even care, right?
We chose small muscle groups.
Not really going to interfere
with much. We're training them for the NFL Combine, which is like, it's not a, it's legs
performed, it's basically right. So it's like, if they smashed their biceps and triceps on a Saturday,
it's not going to influence what we did on Monday. So recovery wasn't an issue.
Once we finished the gun show though, now you have to go do your regen stuff. So if you need
caro work, you need physical therapy, whatever you're going to do.
So we would get them in the building with the low hanging fruit, and then we would actually
get them to do their work.
You can do the same thing, and I honestly do the same thing.
I tend to do either, if I'm going to do an upper lower split, I'm going to do that stuff
either Friday night or Saturday, Because it's very difficult for me
to do a hard long workout Friday night, right?
Or even Friday morning for that matter.
The same thing Saturday, I wake up
and it's now it's like, it's family mode,
it's kid things, I want to do stuff, I want, man.
But I can usually convince myself to be like,
all right, just go in there, go 20 minutes
and get your upper body stuff done.
All right, I can walk myself into that mentally.
It's harder to walk yourself into your five sets of five dead
lived.
It's sort of just like, whoa, I ain't got that in me right now.
My high intensity intervals, the max of,
I don't have that right now.
So I'll either go for my long steady state stuff,
which is like, I'm going on the bike,
I'm riding down to the beach, or coming back,
nasal only, I can get myself to go for a bike ride like that.
Whatever.
So I picked the thing that I'm likely to do on the days where I'm probably going to be
my weakest, quote unquote, not physically, but motivation wise.
For a long time, I tried to like, it just got stuck in a way where my hardest stuff was
Friday nights.
And I'm just like, why am I doing this?
I was having like a 50% success rate,
just like we were having like a no% success rate
with the NFL guys on Saturday.
So you have to be a little bit tough.
You have to grind sometimes, you have to,
you know, get some motivation and go after it.
But you also have to be like,
well, this is just stupid planning, right?
Like why put yourself in a position
where you're just failing over and over and over
when I could move it and go look those sessions
Are going to be things that are easier?
They don't require as much gusto to get up and get them done
I
Get those things done 90% of the time because the worst case like and be like all right
We're gonna go do a family thing. Give me 20 minutes. I'm just gonna run a thyrn smash
Upper body and you don't need don't need a 20 minute warm up.
It's like I can just kind of jump into those things if I had to. If I feel great, then I
can still go do something else. I could do more. I could do longer session. But you're
sort of immune to any situation. So I would book in those as I guess is what I'm saying.
What's the day you're going to have the best day? And what's the day you generally have the worst and put the programs around those situations.
I love the idea of identifying the friction points, the high friction and low friction days,
friction meaning anything that impedes you from training consistently or well. And there are so
many factors that ratchet into that sleep, other social engagements, work, Friday night, I also find it tough to
do any kind of training.
I do cardiovascular training, I do interval type training on Fridays typically, but there's
a lot of cumulative fatigue and stress that happens across the week.
And usually for a long time, I got more than a decade now, I've been telling myself that
Saturday is the day that I tried to reduce my cortisol as
much as possible from the way you go.
And then Sunday is the day that I enjoy that low cortisol state.
And that's actually what opened up into the long, slow run.
I like, she like to think of myself as a bit of a mule during those long runs.
I actually have a shirt that has a slough on it that I wear to remind myself to go slowly on those runs,
not that I ever run that fast,
but this is the whole mindset around it
is to be a bit of a mule just kind of moving through it,
and the fatigue factor is more one of,
at first there's a little bit of boredom,
but then I've noticed there's a whole different set
of mental shapes that open up under different training types.
And this is maybe something we get into a little bit
in a future episode or discussion,
that you when you train really intensely
for short periods of time, one way,
your mind goes into a particular state
when you do long duration training, you're thinking,
and indeed, even the way it affects sleep patterns
is also very different.
I think one of the great futures for neuroscience and exercise science in collaboration is to
identify how different patterns of physical movement relate to different patterns of thinking
and vice versa.
Anyway, that's something maybe to just earmark for a future conversation, but there's clearly
a relationship there.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, when we certainly know of a pretty clear relationship between even what we would classify a zone five
exercise and deep sleep. So a zone five again being you're breathing a lot through your mouth because you have to in order to bring in enough
oxygen to offset the acidity created by the
Exactly. Yeah, this is the high heart rate so I mean if you're gonna look at it and hit a number
This is the high heart rate. So, I mean, if you're gonna look at it and hit a number,
looking for something like 30 plus minutes a week,
being in the top 10% of your heart rate.
That impacts deep sleep.
Is gonna positively impact deep sleep.
As long as it's done very far away from deep sleep,
so you don't wanna do that at night.
So, you went in terms of time.
So if you hit those numbers earlier in the day,
oftentimes that will enhance sleep sleep.
Yeah, I was looking at some papers recently and the number that that kind of emerged from
those papers was that unless it's low intensity exercise, trying to exercise about six hours
or more away from your sleep time would be ideal. Now that said, for those of you that have to hit the gym
or go for a run in the evening
and then are trying to fall asleep four to six hours later,
I wouldn't want that statement to impede your regular,
your regular exercising.
Yeah, there's an easy trick to that.
Just finish it with down regulation breathing.
So that's sort of one of our things that,
if you, because that is a realistic situation, right? situation right finish work at five or even six and then by time
You're you're training or running or whatever you want to call it. Yeah, it's a 738 your home at nine
You're eating and then I'm like you can't eat two hours before bed pretty soon
You run into a number of different collision points
Yep, they make you wonder whether or not you're doing everything wrong or if it's really worth training at all
I would argue it's better to train than not to train
Yeah, it provided that you can still get to sleep.
100%.
So you have to walk a little bit of a game.
We run this issue with the NBA players, right?
You're playing games at six o'clock a night at start.
Major League Baseball is a 705, 710 pitch, right?
Sure.
And also, by the way, we're changing time zones every five days.
Right?
UFC fighters and such were usually training twice a day.
There is no option training. Or I mean We're usually training twice a day. There is no option
training or I mean, we are training twice a day always. So we have to come up with strategies
for that. And there's other like non-athletes scenarios, of course, where it's like there
is no other option here. Cool. So what we do is a couple of things. Number one, that
further away you can make it from sleep the better if possible. We do need to train though
around the same time you're going to be playing.
That has to happen.
So the harder and longer we go in the training session,
the harder and longer we go in our down regulation post-exercise.
And that is, in my estimation, the number one lever you can pull
that can help.
Now, if it really does start crushing sleep,
you're gonna have to make a critical decision there.
In general, it's not a good reason to not exercise.
But maybe you restricted to only a couple of days a week,
you go all the way up in intensity.
And the rest of the days, maybe 70%,
you stay in just kind of a working zone.
Awesome. Maybe it's a long or down
regulation. Maybe there's other strategies you can do. But yeah, you want to be careful of,
and we've had a situation a number of times where it's sort of just like sleep complaint,
sleep complaint, sleep complaints. We run full sleep studies on them in their house. We do the whole
thing with absolute rest. We come in, we do the whole thing, eye tracking, biomarkers, the whole thing. And it's like, oh, you just need to stop doing
intervals at 8 p.m. Right. And I would add to that, another incentive for being able to train
with or without caffeine is that it's very clear that even if you can fall asleep after
ingesting caffeine when the preceding hours, that caffeine consumed in the gosh, even, you can fall asleep after ingesting caffeine when the preceding hours that caffeine consumed
in the gosh, even, you know, 12,
but really, you know, eight to 10 hours,
four hours prior to bedtime,
really disrupts the architecture of sleep.
So if you critically rely on caffeine in order to train,
whatever your training might be,
and you know that sleep is important for recovery,
well, then it's pretty obvious where I'm going with this.
So having that flexibility is vitally important.
Yeah, you've probably also covered this, but you can actually measure that directly.
So by eye tracking patterns, you can actually identify the effects that caffeine has on sleep
independent of a sleep time or not.
Right, they're never positive effects.
Correct.
That said, I am a proponent of caffeine early in the day. And caffeine
does have a lot of anti neurodegenerative, as long as you're not getting anxiety, it's
pro performance, both mental and physical performance. But of course, if you do not need caffeine,
if you're one of these mutants that do not need caffeine in order to go about your daily,
living with focus and intensity, then by all means, don't start taking caffeine.
I'm not the huge fan.
I am scientifically 100% or more personally.
It doesn't, I don't do well on it.
Well, you seem to ride a little bit more of what we will call sympathetic tone, you know,
kind of shift it towards more alert.
I tend to be naturally a bit more like my bulldog Castello was a little bit more on the
mellow sleepy side and caffeine just puts me right at that alert but calm place.
And I can get away with drinking it.
I wouldn't say ridiculous, but fair amount of caffeine and remain there.
But I do restrict it until the time right up about 2pm at the latest is really when I try
to drink caffeine.
Number seven.
Great.
So number seven and eight are pretty simple.
This is now choose the intensity and the volume.
So we've discussed those at length in the previous episodes.
We probably don't have the time to go back over all those details.
So remember the adaptation you're training for and pick the appropriate rep range, total
amount of sets,
as well as the intensity to then get the corresponding adaptation.
All you have to do is select those things.
In terms of progression through a week,
the rule of thumb we say for intensity
is something around 3% per week.
All right, for volume, it will depend on what you're doing
a little bit, but anytime
you cross more than 10% per week, you're going to start running into problems. So I like
5% better. It doesn't need to be as low as three. You can jump up much more than that.
5 to 7% is better. So if you are doing, say, running, because the numbers make it easy, and you're doing 10 miles
per week total.
If you were to go up to 11 miles the next week, great, you're right around 10%.
But what you wouldn't want to do is say, I'm running 10 miles this week, and I did maybe
four Monday, three Wednesday, three Friday.
So four, three, and three, you got your 10.
Then you wouldn't want an add a mile every day.
So Monday, instead of doing four, I did five.
Wednesday, I said, I'm doing three, I did four.
Friday, I said, doing three, I did four.
You would actually, you went from 10 to 13,
which is a much higher percent jump than the 10% prescribe.
So the same thing would be true for lifting weights.
The same thing is actually true for calories
and trying to add them, etc.
So the body tends to not handle those things as well,
jumping more than 10% per week.
So keeping with this idea of increasing progressive overload,
being 10% more over some period of time.
Am I correct in assuming that I want to identify one, maybe two meaningful variables and
progressing that for those variables? So progressive overload can come in the form of any of the
modifiable variables. So you could increase the complexity of the movement. You could increase
the intensity or the load. You could increase the volume by either more sets, more reps,
or more total exercises in a day.
What about time under tension? You could also manipulate how the tempo of each repetition.
You could also manipulate how many times per day you train, so you can manipulate frequency.
You can also manipulate rest intervals. So you can progressively load any of these things.
Increase intensity. Run a little bit faster,
complete the same amount of work, slightly faster, put 5% more on the barbell or the load
or the handle or whatever you're going to do.
That's a simple way.
If you want to think about volume, in the case of endurance work is simple, mileage, time,
whatever.
In the case of lifting, all you have to do is take the amount of repetitions you're doing
per set, multiply it by the sets, add that all up.
So if you're doing three sets of 10, that's 30 repetitions.
If you did three exercises, you just did 90 repetitions.
Put that number down for Monday, put that number down for Wednesday, put that number
down for Friday, add that total up.
So say you did 90, 90, 90.
You would look and say, my total number of repetitions this week is 270.
If I want to go up 5%, then I need to go up another 15 or so total repetitions.
Great, that's all we have to do.
That's the increase.
You may keep the load exactly the same, keep the exercises the same chain, nothing else, but you want to add 15 more total reps for your week. And you may choose to
do that by adding one more repetition per set. Close it up. So last week I did three sets
of 10. This week I'm going to three sets of 11. It can be as simple as that. Again, it
can be complex. I walked you through. It can be any of the modifiable variables, but
the progression I just laid out is fairly simple.
And it's honestly the one I recommend for most people,
just because it will avoid confusion,
and it will avoid people taking massive leaps and volume.
So the typical strategy I would recommend here
is increasing load or intensity,
or a little bit of a combination slowly for about six or so weeks and then taking
what we generally call a D load.
So back down to maybe 70 percent, whatever that number is you've been doing.
So you did three sets of 10 and you worked yourself all the way up to three sets of 15.
Back that down and maybe we'll do two sets of eight for the week. And then we'll come
back the following week and go back and do the highest we've done now all of a sudden
we're going to do four sets of 12 or something like that. So if you get these little
deloads every depending on what you're doing four to eight weeks or so, you should be
in a spot where you can continually progress for a very long time, without either burning out or overloading and overstressing an injury pattern.
So the simple way, pick intensity or volume and just go up slightly every week
for a short span of time, generally around six weeks.
And then you can come back and change your strategy if you'd like.
Because you mentioned sets and repetitions here, so I wanted to remind folks
that in the episode
that we did on strength and hypertrophy,
and that also included speed,
there was a description of a terrific program for strength,
which is the three by five program,
or three to five program, as it's called,
which is to select three to five exercises,
performed for three to five repetitions,
three to five times per week, with three to
five minutes rest in between those exercises.
For three to five sets.
And if I recall correctly, the protocol for generating hypertrophy muscle growth is to
perform a minimum of 10 and probably more like 15 to 20 sets per muscle group per week.
And that can be done in a single session per muscle per week.
So one could train, for instance, quadriceps.
One day per week, as long as you're getting
that volume of sets per week,
or it could be divided up across two or three different
sessions for that individual muscle group.
Of course, people are going to target all their major
muscle groups and hopefully some of them
minor muscle groups as well.
And as I recall, the number of repetitions that can generate hypertrophy is quite broad
anywhere from six repetitions all the way up to 30 repetitions, but by the end of the
set, it should be too failure or close to failure with good form.
Is that correct?
Yeah.
And we would say close to failure is probably most appropriate. You can actually reach failure,
maybe on a few of the sets, maybe the end, and probably best to choose that with the exercises
that are safer, not that any exercise is particularly unsafe if you do it appropriately,
but you may not want to go to true failure on every set for the more complex,
larger riskier exercises. So, uh, head pretty close to failure, but not all the way.
And I realized I forgot to mention rest intervals between sets. It follows that if a large range of
repetitions are performed, that a large range of rest intervals are allowed,
meaning there could be rest intervals between sets of as low as 30 seconds between sets
or as high of two or three minutes, depending on the loads that one is using.
And that, of course, will scale with the number of repetitions.
Excellent. In fact, that sort of leads me into step number nine
of designing your own training program,
which is you've decided our goal.
We've worked our calendar out.
We've figured out how many days per week and how long we're going to work out in those
sessions.
We then went and selected our exercises.
We balanced them across the movement patterns and the muscle groups that we need, so we're
not causing excessive stress on the same exact joint or muscle group over time.
We then ordered our exercises based on priority.
All right, because of that, we have identified our goal.
We went back and we selected the volume, which is the repetitions percent,
the total amount of sets, and the load percent that matched the goal that we wanted to get or the adaptation.
Now all we have to do is fill in the rest intervals, which reflect back again the goal that we wanted to get or the adaptation. Now all we have to do is fill in the rest intervals,
which reflect back again the goal.
So generally higher rest intervals,
which means time that you rest between your sets,
higher, somewhere between two to five minutes,
for things like speed, power, and strength,
perhaps a little bit lower, although as you mentioned,
it could also stay high for
hypertrophy. And then for endurance, you follow the rest interval that reflects the type of endurance
training that you'd like to get. That's walked us through one through nine. We're almost done. We've put
together a pretty nice little protocol. It should be well rounded. It should be effective. We've also
talked about how to progress it from week to week, keeping it within, again, four to six weeks, maybe up to eight before we then take a back off.
The very last thing we have to do to make sure this training program is customized to
you, your goal and your situation, which is then going to enhance your likelihood of adherence
and consistency, as well as increase the likelihood of effectiveness.
And we just have to do a little bit of what we call chaos management, which is take a and consistency, as well as increase the likelihood of effectiveness.
We just have to do a little bit of what we call chaos management,
which is take a quick moment to think through this program looks great.
But if I had to nitpick it, where are the possible chances of failure?
And you just want to sort of think about where would I predict things would go wrong?
And if anything pops out to you,
try to come up with your solution at the beginning. And this could be a number of things.
So maybe you've picked an exercise and you realize, man, I really actually don't like that exercise.
Or maybe look at the schedule now that it's laid out in front of you. You look at your work schedule
and you're like, maybe that's a bit aggressive. I don't know, it could be any of number of things, but it is a useful exercise
to just think through everything realistically. I typically just like, it's the adage I teach
my graduate students. Before we hit submit, we're going to sleep. So it's there, it's ready,
we're going to take 12 hours, we're going to wake up the next day, look at it again
and go, are we sure we're good here?
Yep.
Make adjustments if you need it.
If not, if you feel confident, then hit send and cross your fingers.
Yeah, we were referring to submitting the manuscript.
It's interesting.
You say that I have a statement that I always make to people in my lab.
They hit submit.
And now I say that you realize you're going to wake up tomorrow morning.
There's going to be an email in your inbox that something was formatted incorrectly.
And you're going to spend tomorrow reformatting and submitting again.
So I've also learned that they're that every project is actually two projects.
I'm not trying to not die over here.
And I'm like, it's the truth.
It's done this enough times.
You know, I've done this many dozens of times.
And then there's also another trueism of science, which is that, you know,
there's the project, there's a scientific question. And then the paper is yet another project. And I
actually think this is an analogy that carries over to other domains of life. I think that anytime we
take on something, if we want to write a book or we want to get a degree or we want to a fitness
program, I think it's worth thinking about those decisions as actually taking on two major things, because
one is the planning and organization around that thing and the other is the actual performance
of the thing.
I say that because here, what you just described, this, you know, ten steps to consider and
designing a program, I think some people who are real list makers and love the precision
and the thoroughness.
And I'm one of these people thinking, this is great. I just want to check off each one of these things on the list and figure out the ideal
program for me, given period of time, et cetera.
And then other folks might be thinking, well, that's a lot.
That's just a lot to do.
But what I know with certainty is that performing those sorts of, let's just call them
what they are, those tasks of figuring out what's what,
where the defenders are, et cetera.
Without question makes everything go so much more smoothly
once you are into the actual performance,
the action of doing the exercise program or the book
or the podcast or whatever it is that you happen to do.
So I'm grateful that you brought up both the
things that act as conduits for getting good work done and this notion of defenders and
bottlenecks because if we don't consider those, I would argue that it's a very low
probability that anyone will succeed. But when one does consider those, even just a few of them,
I think the probability of success goes way, way up immediately.
That's actually a very good point.
That is a lot of work for a lot of people.
And I know when I'm consuming information, it is helpful to hear structure and systems
and design.
It's also helpful to hear actual real life examples.
So maybe the next thing we can do here is I can just walk
you through an entire setup and a program, considering folks that are in bucket A, B,
and C, and maybe I'll save a little bit of the explanation and we'll eliminate maybe some
background. I'll just walk you through what this could look like.
All right. So I created a program which should run about a year, and the
idea here is that this could be an evergreen system. So one could check off all the boxes
that we've talked about. So in general, we want to have three primary goals with exercise.
We want to look a certain way, whatever that means to you. We want to be able to perform a certain way, whether that's for life goals, like hiking
and energy or sport goals or whatever.
And then we want to be able to do that across our lifespan.
Okay.
So a program that gives you all the goals we talked about.
And a program that covers that health combine that we referred to way back in some of our
earlier discussions, which as a little bit of a recap is
What are the physical fitness parameters that we know are critical to maintaining both lifespan and wellness span and
As a bit of a reminder those are things like your grip strength
your leg strength
Your total amount of muscle mass your actual speed and power so that you can catch yourself
from a fall, your VO2 max, and your physical fitness.
So I want to program it a little bit of all that.
It's similar actually and we're kind of crossing barriers between our three buckets.
So I need to be able to control my fat.
I need to be able to have enough muscle.
That muscle needs to have enough function and I need to be able to have enough muscle. That muscle needs to have enough function.
And I need to be able to maintain range of motion so that I don't lose flexibility and get hurt. And then I need to have a good VO2 max as well as to be able to sustain energy over time. So
that was the goal of my progress. Now a couple of other things that we haven't
shattered about which are very important. You have mentioned, I think on a previous podcast
about the importance of scene light.
Is this something you've covered at one point?
I joke that I'll be going into the grave
and they'll be shoveling dirt onto me
and I'll be telling people what I'll tell you again now,
which is to get five to 30 minutes of sunlight viewing
as early in the day as possible, ideally from sunlight.
That's why it's called sunlight.
We're from bright lights of another kind
if you cannot get sunlight.
And also get that in the evening
and then avoid bright lights between the hours of 10 PM
and 4 AM unless you do shift work
in which case check out our episode on shift work.
Amazing.
So we've got a little bit of a juxtaposition
where people are like, I need to work out
and do all this training,
but then I'm also supposed to be outside.
Okay, how do I blend those two things into my training program?
Cool.
So I checked that box as well.
I built that in.
The last thing here is we've talked about structured exercise.
And just in this episode, we've really opened up and do non-structured exercise, hiking,
sports, things like that.
Well, one thing that is incredibly clear, and my colleague and friend Tommy Wood at the University of Washington published a fantastic paper very recently
on the importance of proprioception in maintaining and staving off late onset dementia and
aparthensis. Maybe just remind people of proprioception.
Yeah, absolutely. So there's structured
exercise and that's very important. But then there's also things like balance and coordination
and proprioception meaning you're adjusting to stimuli coming in from the outside world.
So this stimuli could be sound, could be light, could be smell, or in the physical case, the body,
it is where you are at in space. So I'm feeling like I'm falling to the left,
therefore I need to correct and move back to the right. So you don't get this with doing things
like a haxquat on a machine. You get this typically from being outside. So now you're smelling and
seeing things and you're also not landing with your foot in the exact same position on an even
platform. We get this from things like sport. Now I'm not only exercising, but I'm reacting to the outside world.
The ball is going over here.
My opponent's going over there.
So it's very important, in my opinion, to have at least one session per week of exercise
in which you are doing something that challenges proprioception.
Right.
So how do I fold all of these best practices into one training program?
That's not 200 hours a week, 7 days a week.
That's what I've laid out to you.
Makes sense?
Cool.
Let me walk you through it and then maybe we'll come back into each individual category and
you can ask questions about them.
So the way that I think is best is to have a goal and have that goal be around 8 to 10 weeks
long like we've been talking about. So what I gave you is let's start off with quarter number one
of the year. So perhaps January through March or so and it doesn't have to be this one but just as
an example, you decide your goal is going to be to put some muscle mass on. So we're going to prioritize adding muscle.
Okay.
Now, within that, you're going to be bulking up adding some muscle, but we're also going
to be sleeping more.
We know we need extra recovery in this session, and we need to go up in calories.
Now this happens to work nice for a couple of reasons.
But in that protocol, maybe we're going to do seven days or seven sessions a week of physical activity.
Doesn't mean seven days, but maybe those sessions are something like,
I will do one indoor sport. This could be basketball. It could be any number of things, right?
So I got my sport checked off and it's indoors. Why? I'm January to March. The weather's probably not
great for most of the world, so I'm not going to do as much outside activity. I'm going to March. The weather's probably not great for most of the world,
so I'm not gonna do as much outside activity.
I'm gonna do weights maybe three or four times a week,
and then maybe two days a week I'll go for a long walk.
Okay, again, we'll come back and I'll explain to you
why I made all these individual choices out.
So you're gonna run that for the first quarter.
At the end of this quarter, you're gonna take a D load week.
Now this could be fully off.
Maybe this is when you schedule a vacation.
Maybe this is backing off.
Maybe you just keep your walks in and you spend the extra time on your family or work or whatever else you can do.
So we've bulked up a little bit.
We've spent 12 weeks adding some mass.
Now we're going to transition into quarter two, which is where we start to actually get lean.
This is actually a pretty standard bodybuilding template,
which is you put on some mass first,
and then you get lean after that.
So now we're gonna get lean from April to June.
We're gonna bring calories down a little bit,
so now we're actually gonna play in a high book,
a lorx date, somewhat.
The days tend to get longer,
so we're gonna have more time to spend in the sun. So we're going
to shift a little bit from an indoor sport activity like the example I said earlier with basketball
to maybe stand up paliborning or some other thing where you're actually getting your sport done.
You're reacting, you're using proper reception, but now you're getting that sun in there as well
because you have a greater opportunity to actually do so and the weather probably is going to cooperate with you more often than it would in
say February
You then maybe going to pick a fitness or an exercise class
You know any number of routines where you're with multiple people and
Then two days a week in addition to that you're going to maybe live some. All right, so now we've added some muscle.
Now we've got lean and all of a sudden,
we're actually looking pretty good for the summertime.
Interesting, right?
Quarter three, July to September, we'll transition
and we'll try and get into great cardiovascular shape.
So we'll transition more into some high intensity,
interval type of stuff more frequently.
We're gonna maybe stay at maintenance calories now. We spent a little bit of time hyper and we went hype oh and now we're going to go back
to maintenance and keep along.
We're going to continue to choose some outdoor sports but maybe you change it up.
Maybe you keep the same one.
Maybe now we switch it out in the golf or now we pick a pickle ball or we play basketball
but now we just do it outside.
Any number of things you can do, right?
So maybe even we do a couple, change it up.
You do that twice a week.
You're spending more time in the sun now.
You're looking outside and you're seeing this great weather and you're not cooped up in
a gym, but you're getting your physical fitness in.
That's also going to be eating in your high intensity or your interval, your conditioning
because you're doing more stuff like that, rather than lifting energy.
And then maybe you're actually going to do some track workouts.
Maybe we'll do this on a bike or we'll do some hill sprints outside, any number of things.
And then we'll do that maybe twice a week, and then we'll still lift weights twice a
week in our gym.
The last quarter then is going gonna be October to December,
and we're gonna transition there
into more pure cardiovascular fitness, okay?
Because we're doing that, we're gonna be working harder,
and remember, cardiovascular training
is generally expelling much more calories than lifting.
So we're gonna actually go up in calories.
We're gonna return to that, and that works out kind of well because I don't know if you know or not, but people tend
to eat a little more calories from the months of, say, November through December.
Yeah, holidays and at least in Northern hemisphere colder temperatures.
Totally.
Maybe even we play with two workouts a day here.
We're trying to get really in shape.
We're trying to improve our conditioning and our endurance in multiple areas.
We're going to actually transition back into an indoor sport.
So maybe we're going to do some kit boxing
or a Jiu-Jitsu class or something like that.
We're going to maybe hit the cardio machine once or twice.
Now we're hopping on a stair master,
versus a climber,
more maybe getting an assault bike going,
something like that.
Maybe hit some machines and do our lifting there.
Maybe we had spent the rest of the early part of the year
on barbells and dumbbells,
we'll transition to some machines.
And then we'll still try to get outside and walk
twice a week.
Okay, and that gets us our outside activity,
but it's not necessarily a structured program.
So you can, we got a 15 minutes
where the weather's breaking a little bit.
So let's walk, get outside and get a walk. All right. So that's the overall structure of
everything. I would like to actually go back to the beginning now and kind of walk through each
one of these things in detail and explain why I chose certain things. I've kind of given some
hints already, but I think it'd be helpful to walk back to the beginning and start there.
Great. I love the overall structure. I have just a couple of questions. The idea of training
mostly for hypertrophy, January through March, makes sense, followed by a period from April
through June, focusing primarily on fat loss. And then from July to September, speed and interval typework.
And then October to December, you put to emphasize endurance type training.
I thought for a moment that when we got to October, December, you were going to emphasize
strength.
And I'm wondering whether or not there's any incentive for training for strength October December so that when one arrives at the hypertrophy training January through March
We're that much stronger the idea being then
There's more muscle to hold on to as one and tries to lose fat from April through June
And then July through September is the speed work or is July through September the speed slash power phase
of the program?
The July through September would be more like your higher
heart rate, learning to get all the way up,
maximum exertion, and then recovery.
And October to December is long form endurance.
Moderate to long form, right?
So it's closer to that, aerobic capacity stuff.
It is closer to longer duration
and moving through that spectrum. You are astute in pointing out that I didn't have pure strength
really in there. You certainly could fold it in, but quite literally if you spent three months
bulking up in January to March, that's going to bring some strength along the way. So you should
be fine there, but you absolutely could alter any of these variables if you
wanted to emphasize something more than other ones.
So say you actually felt like you were in the fitness testing and you identified, actually,
your endurance is pretty good, but you're struggling maybe with a little bit of strength
and maybe a little bit of lower muscle mass.
You could substitute quarter three or quarter four and say one of those quarters would be strength
and then I'll do all of my conditioning in another quarter.
And what you've really done is the programming
is still fairly simple.
You've just altered the priorities a little bit
and therefore you've altered the adaptation
across the year and why this is really important.
This template is meant to be something you can just run back
year after year after year,
and you make a subtle change like that. And now over the course of five, 10, 20 years,
you're going to be in a fantastic spot at the end. So you can make easy adjustments along the way
as priorities pop up as goals pop up, but you're going to be in a position where everything is,
there's nothing that's going to be lagging behind. You'll be in a good spot. Most of your bases are covered to be pretty lean, have a good amount of
muscle and to be in great shape. Two other questions. One, just a quick question, foresaic of
generating proper receptive feedback during the endurance phase is trail running, a good option.
Absolutely.
Great.
Thinking back to the days running cross country,
it's October of December, your trail running.
Totally.
Training for endurance.
Okay.
The ground is not super solid,
which is even better in this case, right?
So you're making more choices
and trying to not fall on your face.
Absolutely.
And then you mentioned bulking up.
And I just wanted to highlight that
There are some folks myself included
While I'd like to add a little bit of muscle here or there I'm not interested in overeating to the point where I lay down a lot of body fat stores along with then
I think a lot of people out there are not necessarily interested in quote unquote bulking up. I also
My understanding of the the literature and tell me if I'm wrong, is
that, well, there does need to be some sort of caloric surplus above what is required
to maintain body weight in order to build muscle, that many people who try and quote unquote
bulk up basically just end up expanding the size of their cheeks and face, along with their limbs and torso.
So, you know, I'm not trying to poke fun at them,
but the idea of deliberately overeating to the point
where a lot of body fat stores come along,
I would imagine that would just make the April through June phase
that much harder.
And I'm not sure it's ever been studied directly,
but I can't imagine it's all that, excuse me,
all that healthy to bring along a lot of adipose tissue in one's pursuit of hypertrophy.
You're absolutely correct.
We have not gotten into the nutritional details there, but yeah, thank you.
Good clarification point.
A couple of things.
You're not going to be doing this very long.
It's 12 weeks, right?
We're not going to be six or eight weeks.
That's not going to be easy. Number two, just since we're here to clarify, the literature is ongoing in this
area. And there's actually a handful of studies that I know are coming soon. But in general,
when I say hyperchloric here, I'm referring to an increasing caloric intake above baseline by something like 10 to 15%.
So if you normally eat 2500 calories throughout the day,
you might add another 250 to 400.
I'm not doubling calories.
I don't want you to be stuffing your face, hating food,
filling off a lot of day,
and then putting on half of your weight is fat
and half of your weight is as muscle. It is technically hyperchloric because you're eating more, which is an absolute
requirement for most people to add muscle. Some folks who have a high percentage of body fat
and a low level of fitness training can actually get away with just being either isocloric
technically or even a little bit lower and
still adding some muscle while losing some fat.
But for most folks, that's going to be challenging.
So you're going to want to be in a hyperchloric state.
Another reason I put it in here is because remember, people tend to make these extra calorie
choices during this part of the year anyways.
And so you're sort of playing into life is why I chose that, right?
It's like, hey, you can't restrict calories all the time.
It's really, really hard.
So maybe if we can put it calorie restructuring during the phases of the year, that's a little
bit easier.
And give you the freedom to have a little bit more calories during the phase of the year
when you're probably going to want to do that anyways.
Just make sure you're doing a style of training that supports that. So you're going to be
trying to add muscle when you know you're going to be adding more calories. We're going to be trying
to really push the pace on our conditioning when we know we're going to be eating more calories
anyways. And so that is actually in fact exactly why I chose those goals for those times of the
year is because we're now playing into life a little bit more.
But we again certainly do not want to be eating to an excess where it's causing some of
the problems you mentioned.
We just need to be eating a little bit more.
The last point here is the next phase, April the June, we know we're going hypochloric.
So it's always kind of nice to go, yep, we're gonna go on a little bit of a calorie deficit
here, but it's really just these few months.
And it's okay because I spent the last six months
where I wasn't restricting that much.
And then one actually where I got to eat a little bit more.
And now cool, not hard for me to convince somebody
that to go, we're gonna bring the calories down right now,
are in a month and two months,
and it's just gonna be this 12 or 16 week phase or whatever you're not being in there. So
those who are some of the rationale, uh, that I was thinking of what I decided to do that,
but thank you. That's a very important point in terms of the hyperclercates.
It's not the dirty bulk. It's, it's not the excess that a lot of folks will do.
And, uh, just a final point for folks in the Southern hemisphere.
Australia and South Americans.
We actually have a large listenership
in the Southern hemisphere.
Of course, adjust accordingly,
even though the holiday months are still in November,
December, there are of course holidays,
all your longs.
Of course, many of the major holidays
are around November, December,
but it's summer down there.
Just adjust accordingly.
There's nothing wholly about trying to achieve certain adaptations at certain times of year.
It's more about trying to eliminate bottlenecks defenders, as you mentioned, and it's really
about the sequence.
So, if we go back to that first quarter, we're going to try to add some mass for the reasons
I just described, right?
It's also tends to be pretty motivating.
You're going to start the year off, you're going to want to train and get all excited because
of your new year's resolution, and you're going to see results immediately.
We've talked about this in some of the previous episodes.
The nice part about hypertrophy training is you see your muscle scrolling right now where
the endurance stuff tends to have a little bit more of a delay gratification.
So I'm going to give you a win early.
Okay.
Now, we're also going to be sleeping more because we know and maybe we'll get into this
in a future episode that sleep is absolutely critical to recovery and critical to growing
muscle mass.
So you're going to emphasize sleep more during this part the year, also because the sun is very low.
It's harder to sleep for a lot of folks,
longer when the sun is out for longer,
especially if you don't have a perfect black outcry.
And so you're just like trying to play
with the restrictions life gives you
and optimize your scenario.
So the sun's probably not out very often,
and especially depending on where you live,
if you're anywhere like where I grew up
in the Pacific Northwest, it's going to be dark and gray and gloomy most of the day,
so it's not hard to convince you to go sleep a little bit more often.
So we'll do that.
That's also again why I chose an indoor sport, that activity, you're going to not shoot yourself
in the foot.
Being in the gym when it's cold and crappy outside is not that hard to convince
yourself to do.
So you're going to be lifting your weights, say four times a week, and then again, getting
some outside time in the form of a walk so that you can do it in the middle of work if
you have to or catching 20 minutes here there, whatever it needs to be.
The chances of you missing that walk are little and you'll still get some outside time.
You've talked about the importance of getting sunlight in even if it is overcast, so you
can still nail all those boxes and be in a pretty good spot at the end of that quarter.
Okay, so moving on to quarter two then, April to June.
A lot of people want to look good during the summer months.
You're more likely to be outside, you're more likely to have your shirt off because it's hot because you're either on vacation or going to the beach.
So let's play into that a little bit. Let's let people look a little bit better.
Yeah, if that's what they determine to be looking better
During the months when they're more likely to have that you're also more likely to have things like weddings
Over the summertime.
People don't get married often in the winter.
And so people want to look good for these events.
So let's play into what a lot of people already want.
And let's help you get leaner.
Not a lot of holidays that involve eating during that phase.
And so you're not going to feel like you're missing out
on a ton of life outside of maybe a few
smaller holidays in that phase.
The days are getting longer and so we're going to choose to get in the sun more often.
We can start getting a tan better.
We can start getting ready for summer.
And so that's why we exchanged our indoor sport, foreign outdoor sport, surfing, hiking,
cycling outside, whatever the thing is you want to do.
There's tons of them kite boarding, like I said, skateboarding.
There you go.
You know, start skating a little bit, whatever it needs to be.
So we'll do that once a week or so, and then I actually threw in a fitness class here.
And there's a couple of reasons.
One, now it's sort of nice to take the pressure programming off.
It's also nice to, if you've been lifting by yourself,
to get in there and lift to somebody else.
It's also nice to now have some social interaction.
The gamification, the group, the scoring stuff that happens in fitness classes is very,
very powerful. It tends to be somewhat fleeting, so it won't last for a long time
for some people, others it does. And so if you pepper this thing in and you know you're
going to join this activity class, even if it's not great and the program design isn't
perfect, it's fine for 10 weeks. In fact, you may really, really enjoy it. And also, again,
it gives you something new to think about. Music, Kazan, you're out of your house
if you're lifting your house.
You're in a different part of the gym.
The schedule's a little tighter.
So you can't just go work out whenever you want.
You got to sort of show up when the class is going
and you'll probably find that you just love it.
You also get some social interaction, right?
Which is something that's also very important
that we haven't really discussed yet
if you're out playing basketball by yourself or whatnot
So this is just another thing I'm trying to fold in that still allows you to check off multiple boxes of
Things that are healthy for you. You've had episodes on the importance of social connection interaction
We talked about that in the quad breakdown of making sure you have relationship time and things like that
So throwing in a fitness class and just doing honestly
something quite different is pretty fun.
But then still keeping two days a week
where you're doing a traditional strength training thing
so you have some quality control there.
Lastly, you can also then make sure
you're hitting any specific movements or muscle groups
that are very important to you.
So you don't get to control that in your fitness class,
but now you can at least do the gym and make sure you hit that muscle group
that you have an interest in it.
So now we're feeling pretty good.
We're rolling into the summer.
We're pretty lean.
We're getting out in the sun a lot.
We're bringing calories down a little bit,
and we're probably feeling pretty happy.
We're also not burnt out.
We've done a lot of fun things, and we've checked a lot of the boxes off for long-term development.
We had a combination of specificity with excellent selection, but we also folded in just a little
bit of variation so we don't have to worry about overuse injury of doing the same machines,
the same lift months and months and months after months
and slowly wearing down something
if our technique isn't perfect.
Okay?
So now we're gonna go into our quarter three,
which is the summer months, basically, up here at least,
July to September.
Well, transition, it's been a while
since we've done some conditioning.
All right, so we may have lost
a little cardio respiratory fitness.
We may have not feeling great anymore, maybe energy throughout the day is stuff is starting
to lay down.
So we're going to get in shape.
We're going to push our heart rate high and we're going to bring the calories back up
the summertime, um, Fourth of July, other holidays like this where eating is involved.
Maybe you're going to sporting events and things like that. Our sport choice is, you know, often going to be outdoors, but in fact what you'll notice
here is I've ramped the sport choice up to twice a week.
And in fact, I would encourage you to do two different types of exercise.
And one of the primary reasons for that is to spend more time outside.
A challenge we often see with people with exercises going, man, it's so nice outside.
I can't go sit in the gym for 45 minutes.
All right, I don't have that much free time.
And then here, Roman's over here, challenge me.
I need to get direct sunlight more and like, am I going to fit this in?
Well, do exercise outside.
Enjoy it.
Now, if you live down here like us, he takes sunshine for granted.
But a lot of people, I know it's like, it's only
nice for two and a half months of the year. Get outside. So let's push more of our fitness
training to outdoor activities. These sports can be intense or not, right? It could be go out
there and swim hard in the ocean. You're going to do open ocean swimming instead of swimming
in the pool indoors or whatever the case may be. So we're going to give ourselves more of a priority
of being outside, looking, we've looked pretty good,
or a little tan, and we're enjoying all the benefits
of training outside, and the lack of structure.
Still, we have structure, but not so specific
like the machines and the weights give us.
Maybe even now we're doing some track workouts.
So now we can do something like sprint the straightaway's, lock the corners.
And we don't have to again do our conditioning on the same stairmaster error machine or
wherever we're on.
So we're going to enjoy some stuff like that.
We're going to be athletic.
We're going to run.
We're going to move.
We haven't talked about that yet, right?
Everything has really been about sort of structured exercise.
Well, now we're going to do some sprint work.
We're going to get out and see that, which is a really important human quality that I
think is important to not lose.
This is actually ability to sprint.
So we'll do that.
And then we'll still make sure we lift twice a week for the same reasons I talked about
in the previous phase.
So we make sure we have some quality control there.
We maintain some of the muscle that we built in the quarter before.
We don't lose too much strength.
There is very good literature to suggest strength maintenance can be done in as little as
five sets per week for a very long time, really up to eight plus weeks if you do a little
bit.
So you're touching it enough where you're not going to get really, really weak.
But what you wouldn't want to do is go 12 or 16 weeks where you lifted no weights.
And maybe you've gotten great shape, but you're going to feel very weak after that.
So maybe that number could come down to one time a week if you really wanted it to.
But one to two days a week where you're lifting the big exercises,
the muscle groups and movements of interest, and you're good to go.
Then lastly, we roll into our final quarter, which is October to December.
And we're going to really get in great shape.
The sun is starting to come down.
We're rolling into the holidays, whether it's getting worse, we may have other outdoor activities
we want to do like, in my case, you're going on a hunting trip, you have some travel, conferences,
whatever the case may be.
And so we're going to choose an indoor sport.
And I love combat sports. So I had the example I gave earlier, it was like Jiu-Jitsu,
or maybe you just transition your basketball to inside,
or your pickleball comes inside,
or whatever it happens to be.
And you're still gonna have that twice a week.
And then maybe instead of the track workout outside,
you do that same workout indoors now,
back on some sort of machine or something like that.
Our weights are actually now down to once a week because we're really pushing the pace
on cardiovascular. We're doing it once a week to maintain it, to not lose and get too far behind. But we're really want to bring up our VO2X. We want to bring up our efficiency,
our cardiac output and everything like that. And we're still going to now walk twice a week so that we get something outside.
And I talked about why again, it's nice to have that flexibility of not having to train
outside because now you've got to warm up and do all those things.
You just get out and get a walk in.
You still get the outdoor experience.
So we run the entire thing and then you just start back the next year.
Ideally, again, at the end of every quarter,
you take a week off, whether that is a true full week off, which I'm fully in support of.
I mean, friends, we're only talking about four off weeks a year. That's absolutely fine.
Or it could even be a slight deload week if you wanted it to be. So we shouldn't run into too many
issues of overuse. We have a lot of variety. We get a lot of movement patterns in because we're mixing in sport with machines
and dumbbells. We're mixing in social interaction. We're mixing in the sun. We're mixing in enjoyment.
We're mixing in fat loss strength hypertrophy, some cardiovascular endurance. We're mixing
in calories in high. We're mixing a little bit of calories low, and we're
trying to hit as many of these nodes as possible. If you also wanted to cut each one of these a little
bit short and repeat your fitness testing at the end of every quarter, you could. I would probably
recommend doing it at least once a year, perhaps doing it maybe the third week of December or so.
So you run that testing, that's your last week of training. Then you get to go on your vacation break.
You come back the beginning of the year. You've got new goals, new targets, and you go.
If you wanted to repeat it twice a year, do the same sort of thing at the end of June.
It's fine. I know I laid these out as quarters, which is generally 12 weeks with one back-off week.
But if you wanted to make it nine weeks in a testing week and then a back off for 10 weeks,
it's fine.
It's close enough.
So, the last little thing I want to say is, let's assume you're doing the 12 weeks and
you're going to have a back off week at the end of the 12 weeks.
I would actually still then recommend having at least one back off week
Halfway through so it would look like this five weeks hard where you're progressing
You're going up up up up up up every week you're either increasing volume intensity like we talked about
Three minutes ago then week six
Deload go down to 70% volume intensity come back go hard five more weeks, and now week 12 is your true off week
where you again, take the whole thing off.
If you do that, you now have four weeks a year
where you're totally off.
You have four weeks a year where you're really backing down
and you just have five week segments all year round
where you're just gonna push it hard for year round where you're just going to push
it hard for five weeks, you're going to get a break, you're going to reset, you're going
to transition a little bit.
Now as I started this conversation off with, there are many ways you could structure your
training program throughout the year and hit those primary goals we talked about of looking
fantastic, feeling amazing and being able to do that your entire life.
All I can tell you though is I know this model works because we've done this a lot with
our clients in our Rapid Health Optimization program. And this spans everything from 25
year old folks who are competing in the Boston marathon to a lot of individuals who have never
exercised before who maybe have done a little bit of exercise.
In fact, it's quite literally all three of the buckets you laid out. We've had clients in all of
those areas, both men and women, young and old. And we've had a tremendous amount of success
transforming their lives using a very similar model to what I just laid out.
I find that overall structure to be immensely informative, and I'll tell you why in the context
of a number of examples of myself, although that's the least important of them, frankly,
but examples of family members of mine and friends of mine who've undertaken consistent
exercise training programs, but that haven't varied the program so much. And here again,
I think of the person who really loves to swim. They have a low barrier of entry to the pool or
to the ocean. They love being in the water. I am not one such person. I like being in the water,
but I don't motivate to drive to the pool or to bike to the pool or to get into the ocean that
often. Once I do it, I enjoy it. But for me, it's running and lifting weights, and it has been for a very long time. I have a family member, a close family member who doesn't
really like, quote, unquote, exercise, but loves dancing and dancing. Going out dancing, yes,
but dance classes, amazing particular, really enjoys it, loves to be distracted from the fact
that she's doing exercise and just really enjoys it and it actually is a very good dancer despite the fact that she's related to me.
And on and on. There are many examples, I think of folks that fall into the different bins that we talked about earlier, but that also tend to default towards a given structure of training one way and doing that throughout the year.
and doing that throughout the year. I can tell you right now that I'm personally going to modify my schedule according to this
four quarters per year.
It actually works because I've mostly been on the quarter system in academics for a very
long time.
I was at a university had a semester system once, but this quarter system is actually the
one that we follow academically.
So that's one reason why it's a natural fit for me. I confess that I typically don't vary up the proportions of endurance to resistance training.
I tend to keep those about three in three across the week, three resistance training sessions,
three, let's call them cardio sessions, but each one designed to achieve a different adaptation
and I've now altered those even further based on your recommendations in this episode
and previous episodes.
But what I have not done is to really think about
D-load and to really stick to the structure
that I set out to accomplish across the year.
On the topic of D-load, for me, the D-load has been
when I get overwhelmed
with work or I've gotten sick.
I don't tend to get sick that often,
but every once in a while,
I'll get knocked back with a cold or a flu.
Once every three or four years,
I seem to really get hammered
with a fever-inducing something or other,
and then I'm bedring for a couple of days,
and then I'm back at it,
and I tend to come back rather slowly,
and that tends to be my week off.
But I'm beginning to wonder whether or not part of the reason
I hit those streaks of being overwhelmed
by sickness or by stress is that I have not done a D-load period.
So one of the things that I'm going to immediately implement
is a periodic D-load according to the program that you described.
And I'm also going to start matching my specific
goals for each quarter with time of year. I don't think I've done that. And it's not because
I live in California. And by the way, folks, there are temperature variations and amount
of light per across the day variations in California as well, although they are not as dramatic
as they would be in the north. Pretty much. But of course, some listeners are not as dramatic as they would be in here the north. Pretty moderate. So, right. But of course, some of the listeners are at the equator,
so they have the opposite issue.
In any event, I'm definitely going to do that.
I'm going to start incorporating regular D-load periods.
And I am going to be very dedicated,
very disciplined about sticking to a program
for three months devoted mainly to hypertrophy,
then a three month program devoted to fat loss,
then a program devoted to, you know, a Robic output,
and then one devoted to endurance.
Although I must say it's very tempting for me
to do a very specific strength dedicated portion
because I don't tend to be particularly strong,
I'm not weak, but I'm not particularly strong.
So I might consult with you as to how I could
vary endurance and strength.
In any event, I love the idea of a macro structure
and I love the idea of delodes in anticipation
of being able to go further the long run
in terms of results.
I'm hoping this next year,
because we're just on the cusp of a new year,
we'll be the first year in which I don't find myself getting some bugger virus or whatever it
happens to be from time to time and having to back off on training for that reason. And that
prompts the question. And it's something that I want to get into in more detail with you when
you describe recovery, upcoming episode.
But a couple of quick questions, maybe there's some short or shortish answers you could provide.
If I'm not feeling well, like I really had a poor night's sleep, maybe just two to four
hours of sleep for whatever reason.
Train or don't train.
That's the first question.
Second question is, if I'm starting
to feel a little bit of a throat tickle, and I'm in that phase of denial, like I don't get sick,
I'm not getting sick, and I would I be better off bundling up some hot liquids, getting into bed,
sleeping a little bit more, et cetera, and protecting myself against that, or would I be better off
training. And then the third question is,
if I've already succumbed to a bug,
but it's not a severe bug,
I don't have elevated body temperature,
so no fever, I'm not hacking up,
not productive cough or anything like that,
but I'm doing just kind of not well, head coldish.
I, you know, sort of thing comes to mind,
and it's not seasonal allergies,
trainer don't train, leaving aside the point of whether or not, I, you know, it's sort of thing comes to mind and it's not seasonal allergies.
Train or don't train, leaving aside the point of whether or not, you know, I'm in a position to, you know, getting one else sick because obviously that's a bad idea.
Okay. So lack of sleep, I would say 30 to 40% of one's typical sleep the previous night.
Train or no train, starting to feel like one might be getting ill.
And then the third category is coming back from MungSec. Yeah. Okay. Thanks. And sorry for the extended question, but I want to make sure there was
enough detail there, because I think these are three common scenarios. We are going to cover that
in the recovery conversation that's next in detail. And I will give you very specific guidelines and we'll have a plenty of time to go into that.
The quick answer is it comes back to what phase of training you're in now to walk through
each scenario.
If it is a crummy night of sleep and I am in a phase of training in which we are trying
to cause adaptation, I have a lot of space in my schedule
and I'm really using this time to make progress
because I know coming up soon,
my schedule will change and my time to train will go down.
I'm still training.
I might use a bunch of tricks that we have
for feeling better instantaneously.
We call these little hacks.
These are acute hacks.
These are not chronic hacks. I'm gonna push the pace.
If it is really close to a D-load week, say it's Wednesday and I start my D-load next week, or
this is not one bad night of sleep. This has been four bad nights of sleep in the last five days.
This has been six kind of crummy nights over the course of the last nine. And you're starting to see a larger pattern, and that's
a different answer. So the question we're going to ask ourselves is, is this acute, or
is this a tendency or actually a chronic thing? If it's acute and we're close, we're going
to train through it. If it's acute, and we, this is not a phase of training, or we're trying to really push,
then maybe we back off a little bit.
If it's the opposite, though, we need to probably make some changes and give ourselves
some recovery.
This may include anything from a moderate training session. Maybe I'm going to go in the sauna and sit through that and do some breathing drills
and some mobility stuff.
All right, great.
Maybe I'm going to go to the gym and ride the bike at 50% art rate.
Something restorative like that gives you a little bit of energy, but it doesn't beat
you down.
That's probably where we're learning.
If you're feeling sick and you think it's coming, I'm probably going to do option two as well, which is some
sort of restorative training. So again, this tends to be moderate, it could be weights,
could be any of the stuff, maybe you're going to go out for your swim, but we're not going
to push past probably about 70%. We can absolutely induce immunosuppression with excessive training.
And so you may want to walk out of that.
The last case, which was, I think, phase number three, you said there, which is sort of like,
I got a pretty gnarly cold right now.
Am I going to train?
Most of the time for most people, I'm just going to say, just shut it down.
Get out of there, right?
If you're not going to be able to get productivity done there, you may be better off either going and sleeping,
catching up on work, doing other stuff so that the next time we go to train, you don't feel behind and we can give a good solid effort for it.
So I know other people who will train right through it.
I tend to not to be totally frank. If I'm feeling kind of junky, I'm really not going to train. I may actually probably do some hot
hot water immersion.
So bath, jacuzzi, things like that.
I actually like those better than I like sauna.
If one is ill, or you just like them better
than sauna generally.
Oh, both, actually.
Oh my, first person ever met or come on this podcast
to say you like baths in jacuzzi more than sauna.
Yeah, absolutely.
I may even do some ice, probably not a thumbnail,
because you gotta be careful there.
That's a big stressor.
And if you're already over the line,
you may be adding a pass there.
Or I may go sleep.
If I'm feeling very, very, very sleepy,
and sometimes depending on what kind of a bug you get,
that can happen.
I will just sleep.
And that might be the best choice you have.
If that means you kick the cold half a day earlier, then you just won in the aggregate.
So, um, that those are probably, it's a little bit of insight of the algorithm that I'm running
with those things. Those are highly informative answers. Thank you.
And I look forward to our discussion
about recovery so that we can go into even more depth on how to recover.
The last thing I do want to say here is kind of going back to our quarter system.
The examples I gave with the bulking up losing fat and getting into better fitness and cardiovascular fitness at the end.
Those were just samples.
Friends, please don't take that literally.
If you want to emphasize strength more, put in some more strength.
If you want to emphasize a different one of our nine adaptations, great, do that too.
If you're somebody who has a lot of body fat to lose, then maybe put that for two consecutive
sessions or every other.
You can modify them. We've talked about nine very specific training adaptations as well as in fat loss.
I only gave you four, which is just meant to be a sample that you can roll in or out, but use
those priorities to adjust that system according to what is important for you now,
five years, and then 45 years down the line for whatever that may be.
So if you are absolutely free to modify the order,
you're absolutely free to modify the primary outcome,
and then adjust the specifics within each quarter based upon
what is needed to do to optimize that outcome.
I think maybe one more tool we can offer people is
maybe giving the individual week a little more structure. So the system I laid out was sort of
like month by month and maybe we can lay out say a three day week workout program and a four day
week program. That was still hit some of the same well-rounded
adaptations that probably covers maybe not individualized per bucket that we've talked about
A, B, and C, but it's going to cover 75, 80% of what would need to occur in all three
buckets. And then you can use that last 25% for your individual goal or specialization.
So maybe we can jump into that next.
Great. Let's hear it. for your individual goal or specialization. So maybe we can jump into that next.
Great, let's hear it.
The first one I want to give you is just a basic three-day split
that again, same idea.
It's a well-rounded exercise program.
I actually wrote this all in an article
that is on XPT's website.
So perhaps we can link directly to that.
I will just jump you straight to the answer.
You can read more about why in details
in that article if you'd like. But this is day one, day two, I will just jump you straight to the answer. You can read more about why in details in that article if you'd like.
But this is day one, day two, day three.
You could do these days where you split them up, actually having, say, 24 hours in between,
or you could do these back to back.
It doesn't necessarily matter.
In this particular case, say day one, you start off and do a little bit of speed and power,
and then you may finish that with a little bit of hypertrophy. Now, if you want to gain more speed and power,
you just do more of it. If you want to maybe just do a little bit to touch it and you really
want to gain some muscle, you would do more of an emphasis there. So the template can stay
the same and you would just increase the amount of either adaptation, the speed and power stuff
or the hypertrophy based on how
height is in your priority list.
Those are combined together because as we talked about earlier, they don't necessarily
interfere with each other.
You would do the speed and power stuff first because it wouldn't hamper the hypertrophy.
If you did the hypertrophy first in that workout, it would probably compromise your speed and
power.
In that case, you would actually not be getting your adaptation.
So day one, you do that. And that could be a one-minute workout total or a two and a half hour
up to you. Then you would come back maybe the next day or two days later, whatever you'd like to do.
In your second day of exercise, you would start off with a pure strength protocol. And you would
finish that with what I'm calling just a higher heart
rate.
So this could be something like our anaerobic capacity stuff.
It could be the aerobic capacity, something where you're getting up to close to high heart
rate.
It could be those 22nd bursts.
It could be a 92nd burst five minute mile repeats.
Anything you like, you can just sort of plug and play this in.
You're getting to a spot now where you've had a little bit of speed, a little bit of strength, a little bit of hypertrophy, and you've touched a high heart rate.
So we've checked off most of the boxes already in two sessions. Our last session then would
be more of a steady state, long duration endurance. And so three day weeks, but like that is
going to be a pretty nice setup for the average person.
So this could be a Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday.
What's happening on the intervening days?
Totally off.
If you want it to be.
So I set this up as, and the best I can give you, Andy, is three days.
Okay, great.
If you have more, we could certainly improve it.
But this was my worst case scenario I've got, other things in my life, the most I can
do for exercises three days a week.
And given that it's three days brief, how approximately how long are each of these workouts going to last?
I would do whole body exercises for almost all that. I would do your full body parts. And I think you could
certainly finish that in 45 minutes of work time. A little bit of time to warm up some down
regulation at the end. You could be in and out of that gym and certainly under 60 minutes. The reality is you could probably be out of there under 50 minutes. The total
work time could be 30, 35 once you get going.
So, that's three days. As you pointed out, probably more work per week is going to be
better in terms of maximizing goals, of aesthetic goals and performance enhancing goals and longevity goals, right?
I mean, the numbers that I've heard that is that we should all try to get somewhere between 150 and
probably more like 180 to 200 minutes of zone two cardio per week minimum. But as I recall, you
consider zone two cardio so low intensity that that just walking around is, you know, qualifies as zone
is really, is it, zone one, zone two cardio?
Yeah, not to take us too far off track,
but it, I think it's actually useful to differentiate
what I consider to be exercise and physical activity.
So physical activity is out for a walk.
It is using a walking treadmill while you're at work.
It is, you know, parking farther in the parking lot and taking more steps.
These are all important.
And what's clear, you are not going to reach likely optimal health by only exercising
hard and then sitting around the other 23 and a half hours today. So it's very, very important whether you want to do that in the form of
zone one or zone two and hit 30 minutes a day. Various organizations will
say things like that. You need to have 30 minutes a day of moderate low-intensity
exercise. I don't really care. You can combine it like that if you want. What you
don't want to do is just physical activity only,
which is almost always going to be like zone one
to maybe zone two.
You also don't want to go the other end of the spectrum,
which is again, like I left hard three days a week
and then what do you do the rest of the time?
Nothing.
That's not optimal either.
And so I guess the system I've walked you through here
are the example rather I walked you through is,
you would need to maybe supplant that
with being physically active.
If you work, say you're a nurse
and you're on your feet, you're moving up and down,
you're probably actually covering a decent amount
of your physical activity
because you might be at 15,000 steps a day.
If you were sitting in front of your computer
and you do this same three days,
but you would probably need to go out of your eight
to make sure you're adding a bunch more steps.
And so you might need to add several hours of walking
to hit that 150, 180 minutes a week of physical activity.
Because the program I laid out is,
if you're doing really 45 minutes three days a week,
maybe 60 minutes at best you've hit 180, hit 180, 60 minutes times 380 a week.
So you might actually need to then throw in maybe some more specific locks.
So you could do that a number of ways.
It could be, again, actual structure and exercise.
It could be simply, I'm going to do a 10 minute walk three times a day.
It could be the exercise snacks that we talked about in a previous episode.
So there's lots of ways to engage in more physical activity, but to me, those are different oftentimes in structured
exercise.
I think many people will appreciate that you put out there for us a three-day week protocol
because many people simply don't have more time to exercise. They're putting emphasis
on these other bins in the quadrant,
and frankly, those other bins are very important as well. So, wonderful that people can check off
some critical boxes for aesthetics and performance and longevity with three days of work or work out
to per week, I should say. What are some other schedules that people can follow if they're
willing to dedicate a bit more time toward their fitness?
Sure. If you wanted to do another sample of maybe a 40 week, and again, to clarify, this
is, I'm really happy you said that. This is, this is a 40 week of structured exercise.
This would not account your physical activity moving on.
Which everybody should be doing? Absolutely. Maybe this is something like day one,
you're gonna do a strength training session
and you'll stay in the five to 10 or so repetition range.
A little bit of strength, a little bit of hypertrophy,
you've checked off a couple of boxes.
Probably whole body,
so that you get all the body parts covered or close.
We're looking at
generally multi-join exercises could be a combination of barbells, free weights,
bands, machines, anything like that would be sort of day one. You could come back
the very next day or you could wait 24 hours but the second day of your
exercise would be maybe your long duration and this is actually sort of similar to how you set it up.
It's, you do a little bit of the inverse,
but what you're kind of saying is
I'm probably gonna be a little bit sore from day one.
And I don't have any free body parts that aren't sore.
So instead of trying to do another lift or something,
I'm just gonna put in some restorative longer duration stuff.
Same exact principles for long duration we just talked about.
Could be a swim, could be any number of things, could be
your sport, could be your out, you know, ride
the bike and go for a jog in the sun, whatever
you would like to do. If you're feeling
better, maybe that's a little harder longer.
If you're feeling pretty beat up from the
day before, maybe that's a little bit shorter
and slower. You can modify it. Then maybe you take the next day off, or that's open.
Your third day of exercise is now, instead of being that five to ten repetition range
for your lift, you do something like 11 to 30 reps range.
Also, this could be exchanged for something more like body weight, more muscular endurance type of stuff.
So this is a great day, maybe it's yoga.
Maybe it is a gymnastics thing you're working on,
or any of the many other styles of training
that are not, you know, quote unquote, lifting weights,
but they're not just walking and hiking.
So it could be a Pilates or equivalent.
Anything like this,
where you're gonna get some muscular burn in there,
but it's probably not any additional weight
outside of body weight, or if it is, it's fairly minimal,
five, 10, sort of 15 pounds.
Something like that would be nice.
Could also be done in a circuit.
So we could hit our high heart rate,
and look, it hits the muscular endurance in there.
Group activity class might be nice here.
Even maybe something like a spin class might be nice here.
Even maybe something like a spin class or a dance class.
All these things could be great.
And then maybe you even finish that with 10 minutes of
some light weights. To hit the body part you say didn't get.
So maybe you did the dance class and then you finish and you do 10 minutes of upper body.
That's a 30 to make sure you get, you know, a nice pump there
because your legs probably
got some work during the dance class, but your upper body didn't.
So you balance this system out a little bit.
So all body parts got a little bit of muscular endurance.
Your heart rate got really high, came back down, and you sort of checked both of those boxes.
Now it's important to remember the hypertrophy episode.
Doing sets of, say, 15 plus repetitions per set is as effective as doing sets of 5 to
10 or 12 for hypertrophy, gaining muscle.
It's not effective, though, for strength gains.
So you wouldn't want to do this only because you'd really be doing nothing to improve your
muscle strength and you want to make sure that that box is ticked at least a little bit.
Then again, you could take the day off after this or you could roll right into your fourth
exercise day, which would be your last exercise session of the week and you would do something
more of like medium intensity.
So this is a little bit higher intensity than our second day.
And this could be something like, you know,
shadow boxing or hitting a heavy bag.
It could be a little bit of higher intensity intervals,
but not all the way up.
So maybe this is, you're gonna do a one minute on,
one minute off on the bike,
but you're only gonna go to like 85, 90% heart rate.
And then instead of going off during that one minute, you drop it down to 50%.
So it would actually look like 30 minutes of straight work, but you would have a little
bit of rolling intensity, as opposed to staying really nice and restorative.
It's going to be some work there.
And you would finish it with something like five to six minutes total of max heart rate
stuff, which lines up perfectly with that number.
You actually created in our endurance episode of hitting six minutes total per week of
maximum heart rate or close.
So you could wrap that all up kind of into one session.
You could do those in the inverse order. Thirl warm up a few minutes,
whether you want to do 30 second bursts or a minute bursts
or straight five minutes.
This is a protocol I like to use a ton on the assault bike.
It is simply a good warm up, 10 minutes solid warm up.
Recover and then I'm gonna go five minutes
and cover as much distance as I can in five minutes.
Brutal. It is brutal and it's amazing. And you like you get a lot done in five minutes.
10 minutes on the back of that is a very gradual bring back to earth there. I actually in that
case I don't need to do down regulation breathing because I've spent 10 minutes actually coming way
back down and the last two minutes or so of that is very deliberate five second inhale through the nose,
five second exhale through the nose,
while I'm barely just moving.
And you end up being in a pretty good spot.
So that again, time wise,
could easily be done in 30 minutes
and you'd be rounded off there.
So the nice part about this four day a week split,
as well as a three day a week split,
is it does give you a little bit of flexibility. And so what I mean is maybe Monday, your plan is
to do the day one left. And then any number of things popped up in life. Just shipped it
back to Tuesday, rather than saying like Monday is leg day, and then all of a sudden something
happened, you miss leg day, it's just you're doing these things in order and you would like to get all four done
in a seven day span.
But if it doesn't happen fine,
the next day you get to work out,
you just go right back into the next workout
and it doesn't matter what day they land on exactly.
For the three day routine that works very nice
because the assumption there is you really only have time
for three workouts a week.
And so that sort of implicit is there's probably some chaos happening in the schedule a
little bit and you don't really have the ability to lock in three days for a week.
That's not the case. You can go. But we're trying to listen to the
pain points that people have with exercise and see if we can give them some
solutions for those.
Several things about this program are attractive to me.
One of them you just mentioned, which is that by not
rigidly attaching individual workouts to specific days of the week,
one in theory could say, okay, I didn't get that much sleep last night.
I don't feel, I know that a lot of people say what is feel, but I don't feel recovered
or like I'm going to get that much out of the workout tomorrow.
So I'm, or today, so I'm just going to push it forward today.
And the ability to slide workouts forward or back by a day, I think is incredibly valuable
for the consistency sake.
I also really like this idea of some of the long duration
work coming a day after hitting the strength
and bit of hypertrophy work.
So this would be the day two.
One thing that I've experienced over and over
is that if I'm very sore in a given muscle group,
especially my legs, doing some low intensity cardio,
whether or not it's a jog or on the bike,
typically for me it's a jog or on the bike. It typically for me, it's a jog or even skipping rope
and then walking, skipping rope,
and walking does seem to dissipate the soreness.
I'm sure there's a mechanism for,
there's a mechanism for everything, frankly.
But I like that arrangement.
And then I also like this idea of making sure
that there's a workout
for muscular endurance,
because I feel like unless I've been stuck
without a good gym or I've decided to specifically train
body weight exercise, which I did a few years ago,
I got really excited about some of Pavlovsuttsoolins work.
Great stuff, yeah.
It's amazing.
The naked warrior, which doesn't involve training,
naked, although I suppose you could if you wanted,
but it was really about no weights,
and involved building up to pistol squats
and one arm pushups and things of that sort.
Even doing pull-ups on doors,
and I discovered that some door frames are much stronger
than others.
In hotels, I just accidentally caused some damage there.
But in any case, muskler endurance,
I think is a really interesting one
that I plan to incorporate into my schedule,
but that is, I think is one that's often overlooked
unless people really have an aversion to weights
and to machines.
You're right, and it shouldn't be because
it's pretty low-hanging fruit.
You don't need a lot of equipment for it, typically.
It doesn't hurt that bad.
You don't often get that sore out of it and you're going to feel a nice, wonderful pump afterwards.
So it's great, Moda. And as we discussed many times now, it is quite effective at hypertrophy.
Yeah, I also, I don't know if they fit specifically with muskow endurance, but if you look at the
the physiques, for example, on rock climbers, I mean, they have, to me, of course, they have
and the physiques, for example, on rock climbers. I mean, they have, to me, of course,
they have, usually, the experienced climbers
have pretty remarkable body compositions.
They tend to be lean and lie, then flexible,
all those things that many people aspire to.
The other thing is their development always looks
exceedingly balanced.
You don't really tend to see climbers,
they're like overdeveloped in the torso and underdeveloped in the arms or overdeveloped in the arms despite all
the climbing and underdeveloped and relatively in the other limb movement. That's true for
women and men. It's not a sport that I participate in, but it seems like what they're doing
is essentially muscular endurance training. Yeah, so there's really something there to be valued.
So that's a four day a week schedule with off days or rest days inserted as needed and
then just in continuing.
For those that are a bit more committed to their fitness and want to do a five or six
day a week program, would you recommend just collapsing some of the off days, paying
more attention to recovery
and cycling through more quickly?
Yeah, absolutely.
You could combine that and just run that,
either one of those programs.
So you could run that three day a week program back to back.
Do that, get that done in the six days.
So day one, speed power high perchafee, day two,
strength work with elevated heart rate,
interrobic capacity, and day three endurance,
and then just cycle through again.
You take day four off of the week, and then you go back again.
You'd be having the six days of exercise, one day off, and you'd be getting every one
of those adaptations in multiple times a week.
That is almost exactly how we would set up a six day week program.
Great.
I love the elegance and the simplicity of that and the thoroughness of it because it checks off so many if not all of the made nine major adaptations to exercise that we've been talking about these episodes.
And I suppose the one thing that I want to highlight and impose this also as a question is that
early in our discussions in a previous episode, you mentioned that so much of what people think
of and apply as it relates to resistance training is borrowed from bodybuilding and hypertrophy
training specifically, which typically involves getting close to failure or failure, sometimes
even involving rest pause where you hit failure or then set the weight down for a few seconds
and repeat these high intensity techniques, you know, accentuating the negative, so-called the centric, et cetera.
In hearing about these protocols of three day a week or four day a week, six day a week,
it's very clear to me that if one is not careful to omit that kind of thinking and suddenly
is taking their strength, work, and speed work to failure, or is pushing too hard on muscular endurance to the point
where you're just grinding out that very last pushup on every set, that the amount of soreness and the amount of recovery that
results from these workouts might start to cause progress issues. So one thing that's in the back of my mind is as you've described these
programs is that even though some of them are very brief or involve a minimum of time commitment, in particular, a three-day week, but also the four-day week
schedule, that there is a discipline involved in making sure that you stick to the workout
that you're supposed to do that day and not go ham, as they say, and just throw in a
couple extra sets of bicep curls and tricep pushes because you want to do that and you thought
you could maybe you could get away with that, but you have to come
back pretty quickly and do some serious meaning devoted speed and power work and or strength
work. And if you haven't been disciplined about not doing certain forms of exercise,
I could see how the whole thing could kind of crash quickly and one could think, oh,
this is just too much work or it's not for me.
So, this I suppose is now where the question comes, which is, what are some of the key points
that people need to keep in mind when they embrace a program?
How rigidly do they need to stay attached to, you know, today's endurance day?
I'm just doing endurance.
Today's strength day.
I'm just doing strength work.
I'm not going to take things to absolute failure
or be on failure.
I am absolutely happy with anyone modifying any of the
sample programs.
However, they would like to.
My only recommendation for the question you just posed
would be set your program. And then if you're going to make a change
fine, but that is a change to your program.
In other words, don't just make decisions every single day and make changes.
If you're doing that, you might as well not have a program.
And as we described earlier, there is clear evidence that having a program is better than
not, regardless of the effectiveness of
the program.
And so my general comment to that is, okay, fine, a day or two, you made some modifications,
no problem.
We're in a situation now where it's like you're basically changing the workout every
day as you go.
Then we just need to read right a new program.
We need to reassess where we're at because we need to have some structure.
Look, the reality of it is, I change the programming I'm going to do the day of often.
Because of any number of situations, I just don't feel like it.
I way overestimated it today.
We talked a little bit in a previous episode about auto regulation, which is a style of
periodization and program design, which you're adjusting based on how you're actually feeling
that day, but with some specific structures on how you're actually feeling that day,
but with some specific structures. So you're going to take some measurements that day and adjust. So auto regulation is a very, very effective tool. You just need to make sure that auto is dialed.
In other words, is it because your body actually needed something different, or is it because you're
now just getting a little bit lazy? Now, you're just not feeling like it today. So there's a little bit lazy. Now you're just not feeling like it today. So there's a little bit of an impossible line
to draw there.
Both scenarios are real, great area.
A lot is real in the moment.
And so you just need to be a little bit aware
of having some reality check,
listening to your body,
but then also being like, hey, no, I'm talking to you.
I'm telling you this is the plan.
We're going to do this and staying within it.
It is going to be challenging to progressively overload and therefore get a higher likelihood
of success at your training program.
If you're just making decisions and changing the program right before you work out, you're
probably not, you're probably going, for most people, you're probably going to choose
less or off more so than you choose more
Now having said that there are more than a few clients that have come through our programs where
They choose more always
They add a set they add an exercise they add in another workout and that can be okay
But we're gonna attract various markers on them. And if we see
these things consistently going down, we're going to identify whether they are, which phase of this
overtrain thing we'll talk about next, they're actually in. Some phases, I'm okay, some of them I'm not.
If we're seeing certain things happen physiologically, we're going to make a conversation. We're also then going to really think carefully about,
why are you making this choice?
Do you feel like the training isn't enough?
Okay, great.
Let's modify it then.
Are you not making progress?
Or are there some other reasons why you're doing this?
Obviously, I'm not a psychologist with therapists,
but there are clearly situations in which folks
endorse themselves with far too much exercise for reasons that are not
because it's productive to their training or goals. And if such case, we would
probably bring in somebody that specializes in those areas to clear that out
and just make sure it's like we're not doing this for anxiety issues or
energy things like if it's I just don't think the program's enough.
Okay, great, let's go back,
let's look at our metrics,
let's evaluate our tests and go over there.
But if there's other reasons
and we may bring in somebody to have that conversation.
Yeah, usually when I've seen people
deviate from programs,
because they tend to revert to something
that they've done for a long time,
it just feels really comfortable to them.
And it worked.
Yeah.
And it was giving them decent results.
So they're skeptical to try something else.
Or there is a phenotype of kind of haphazardness sometimes, especially if you get really
caffeinated before workout and just want to throw something in.
And then there's a third category.
And this is one that I've had to contend with a lot in my life, which is that I really
enjoy training with other people when I have the opportunity.
Yeah.
And certain day rolls around where you're supposed to do something and not do other things.
And people say, hey, do you want to go for a long ocean swim or you want to train and
you end up doing some, you know, Kenny Kane, this one's for you, some ridiculous, you
know, 20 wall ball crossfit type workout.
And I'm not acclimated for that sort of thing.
And then it does tend to throw things off, not because, I'm not pun intended, Kenny,
because there's nothing wrong
with a 20 sets of wall balls if that's part
of your conditioning, but if it's not appropriate
for where you are in your schedule,
it really can disrupt what you're trying to do.
And even as a non-competitive athlete,
like myself, the year has been since I've competed
in any athletic program, but as a non-competitive athlete, I think there's
a beauty to, and a really strong incentive to being disciplined about the program that one follows
as a mentoring professor that I worked with years ago used to say, come into his office,
all these ideas and things I want to do. And he'd say, let's const walk. And then you, you know, the question you always want to arrive at
in a discussion with your students is, you know,
is what's the experiment exactly?
And then you go and you do that specific experiment.
I think I view a workout the same way
that there are multiple adaptations, goals,
and things that people are trying to achieve,
really knowing why you're there each time
and really sticking to that.
Even if it means not training with other people or I always say, well,
you can train with me, but I'm not going to train with you.
Right. So that's one way to do it. Um, but really sticking to a schedule is
really what allows the progress to emerge, but that doesn't necessarily being
anti-social. You can invite people along.
In this case, I'm telling people to be the host, not the guest.
I have a little bit of a rule here, maybe I should answer
your question this way.
I actually like doing things totally different,
occasionally.
So what I'll do, when I'm traveling, I tend to do
hotel workouts.
What I mean with that is, I will go down to the workout room
and I will do a set of 10 to 15 reps of every single
machine in the exact order in which they are laid out.
Whoa.
Just for the sake of fun, like just for the sake of like a tarot card version of what
I told you, whatever comes up, I'm going to make sense of it.
And you just move.
And those are typically things I've like, I just want to move a little bit for jet lag
and other sort of purposes, right?
That's often like, I wasn't going to get to work out today.
And so now I'm going gonna do something to feel great.
I don't travel that much though.
So it's not really throwing my things off.
I also, I don't get a lot of free time.
And so if I am traveling and I'm seeing someone I haven't seen in many years
or for the first time, I mean we got to train together this week for the first time.
I'm not gonna burn that opportunity. My rule is this though. I'm not we got to train together this week for the first time.
I'm not gonna burn that opportunity.
My rule is this though,
I'm not going to do something that's gonna cost me
more than three days.
So I'm absolutely happy to get out there
and maybe tomorrow morning or tonight,
we go do something fun that's off my schedule.
I'm, I'm in, I'm in 100%.
I'm just gonna down regulate a little bit.
I'm not gonna maybe do as much as you
or as hard as you or whatever. I'll do more than I should. But if it cost me tomorrow, it was worth the exchange.
I don't have a world record. I'm setting anytime soon. I don't have, I got many years. I'm happy
to give up a couple of days of exercise to be a little sore that I need to be for the exchange of a lifetime memory.
And this stuff is so important to me.
This stuff lands as like true lifetime memories.
I can look back many of my fond memories throughout my life are training sessions with friends,
whatever it is, like doing Jiu-Jitsu with somebody who's a world champion.
We just told whatever the thing is, right?
You're like, that was really, really cool.
Absolutely worth missing two days.
If it's going to be more than three days, though where like, I'm going to be so wrecked,
I can't work out for five or six days, then I'm probably like, all right, that's kind
of nonsense.
Unless it's just like an opportunity where I'm like, I absolutely can't pass up.
So that's kind of how I think about it.
That doesn't happen too often with me though, maybe once a month and so I'm like, okay,
I'm fine.
I lost a day.
Reality of it is, it's probably more like once a quarter, but that happens like, okay, I'm fine. I lost a day. Reality of it is, it's probably one of like once a quarter
that that happens, so I don't really care.
So, you do want to balance joy and life.
You don't want to be so rigid about your training program
that it ruins and robs as experience.
Physical activity should be fun.
Your fitness and your training should be something
that makes your life better.
Not some task you have to get done Fun. Your fitness and your training should be something that makes your life better.
Not some task you have to get done so that 75 years from now, you've hit some metric
of who knows what. Just alone in your room with your training
logs. No, you know, in all seriousness, I think you
pointed the richness of life and you know, you can draw these boxes like work, relationships, and fitness or recovery, but the boundaries between those boxes are blurry
because I should say I love training with you.
I greatly enjoyed training with you this morning, not just because I was receiving so many
useful tips.
In fact, thank you.
This is the first time I've PRed in a number of things today.
Thanks to your input in the moment.
That's a replaceable kind of gift, but mostly it's the gift of getting to train
with a colleague and friend. So I want to underscore highlight and put an explanation mark behind
what you just said. Thank you once again and again for giving us so much interesting, clear,
actionable, and at times somewhat counterintuitive information
in order to build out an exceptional training program
to meet any of, and in some cases,
all of the nine major adaptations that exercise can create
toward aesthetic performance related
and health span lifespan, OK, longevity, goals.
This really a treasure trove of information there.
And I look forward to our next discussion
about how to best recover from exercise
both within the exercise bout and between exercise
bouts and in the more macroscopic structure of a week
a month, a year.
I can't wait.
I can't wait either.
I love that topic and I've got a lot to cover, so it'll be fun.
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Thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion
about fitness, exercise, and performance
with Dr. Andy Galpin.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.