Huberman Lab - How to Improve Your Mobility, Posture & Flexibility | Dr. Kelly Starrett
Episode Date: December 9, 2024In this episode, my guest is Dr. Kelly Starrett, DPT, a world-renowned physical therapist, best-selling author, and expert on improving movement in fitness, sports, and daily life. We discuss strategi...es to enhance mobility and flexibility to boost physical performance and overall health, including ways to offset aging, heal from injuries faster, and correct movement or strength imbalances. Topics include zero- and low-cost tools, such as how to warm up effectively, prepare mentally for workouts, properly use foam rollers, perform fascial release, and apply heat or cold for pain management and tissue recovery. We also cover the best flexibility protocols. Dr. Starrett explains how to optimize default postures for sitting, standing, and everyday activities. Listeners will gain practical, easy-to-implement knowledge to improve their health and physical performance. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Maui Nui Venison: https://mauinuivenison.com/huberman Joovv: https://joovv.com/huberman Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00:00 Dr. Kelly Starrett 00:02:44 Sponsors: Maui Nui & Joovv 00:05:46 Movement; Tool: Daily Floor Sitting 00:12:50 Tools: Stacking Behaviors, Stretching, Floor Sitting 00:17:07 Transferring Skills; Movement-Rich Environments; Range of Motion 00:23:47 Sponsor: AG1 00:25:18 Warm-Ups & Play 00:30:51 Asymmetries & Training 00:38:27 Maximizing Gym Time; Tool: 10, 10, 10 at 10 00:42:41 Tool: Warming Up with Play; Breathwork 00:47:26 Sponsors: Function & Eight Sleep 00:50:35 Tool: Foam Rolling, Uses, Types & Technique 01:01:30 Injury vs. Incident, Pain 01:05:54 Managing Pain & Stiffness, Tool: D2R2 Method 01:11:04 Posture, Neck Work 01:19:58 Sponsor: LMNT 01:21:33 Pelvic Floor, Prostate Pain 01:28:06 Urination & Men, Pelvic Floor; Tool: Camel Pose 01:33:42 Mobilizing the Pelvic Floor, Urogenital Health 01:38:27 Abdominals, Rotational Power, Spinal Engine Work 01:43:51 Dynamic & Novel Movements; Endurance & Strength Propensities 01:50:29 Tool: Workout Intensity; Consistency & Workout Longevity 01:57:41 Hip Extension, Tools: Couch Stretch, Bosch Snatch 02:09:38 Fundamental Shapes & Training, Hip Extension, Movement Culture 02:21:06 Training for Life & Fun 02:30:20 Aging with Range of Motion & Control; Mental State & Training 02:35:38 Fascia, Myofascial Mobilization 02:41:17 Rolfing, Tool: Tissue Mobilization & Reducing Discomfort 02:45:14 Deliberate Heat & Cold, Training, Injury & Healing 02:54:35 Desire to Train, Physical Practice 02:58:54 Balanced Nutrition; Eating Behaviors & Social Media 03:10:23 Sustainable Nutrition & Training; Tool: 3 Vegetable Rule 03:14:30 Supplements 03:23:05 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow & Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast,
where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
My guest today is Dr. Kelly Starrett.
Dr. Kelly Starrett is a doctor of physical therapy and one of the world's experts in movement.
That is, he teaches people how to move better for sake of sport, for sake of recreational fitness, and for everyday living.
Today we discuss several important topics,
including how best to warm up for any and all workouts.
He also tells us how to improve our movement patterns
for cardiovascular exercise, for sport, for resistance training,
across the board how to move better,
and how to improve our range of motion
with the minimal amount of time investment.
We hear a lot about different forms of stretching,
we hear about dynamic stretching, we hear about passive stretching.
Dr. Starrett explains how to improve
our range of motion across our entire body,
in the best possible ways,
as well as how to offset or repair any imbalances
that stem from musculoskeletal problems
or from neural issues,
and how to reduce soreness,
how to improve our posture,
seated, standing, and movement-based posture.
We talk about nutrition.
So today's episode covers an immense amount
of actionable information that I'm certain all of you
will benefit from.
Dr. Kelly Starrett has authored several best-selling books,
some of which you may have heard of,
such as supple leopard.
He was actually one of the first people
to become synonymous with the use of a lacrosse ball
or foam roller, but really even though a lot of people
have talked about those, what he was really doing there
was to emphasize the importance of understanding
the relationship between the skeleton, the muscles,
the nervous system, and the fascia.
And today we also talk about fascia,
which is an incredibly interesting and important topic.
In addition to consulting and coaching
for various college level and professional athletes and teams,
Dr. Kelly Starrett and his wife, Juliette Staret,
co-own the Ready State.
And we provide a link to the level
the Ready State and the Show Note captions.
There they have a plethora of useful information
and actionable protocols.
I should mention years ago, I took one of the courses
from the Ready State.
It's a really interesting course that we touch
on some of the protocols from today.
It's all about pelvic floor.
So whether you're male or female and regardless of age,
understanding your pelvic floor,
how to take care of your pelvic floor
in the context of exercise, posture, et cetera,
is vitally important for all sorts of vitally important bodily functions.
So today we also touch on that.
By the end of today's episode,
I'm certain that you will be armed with a number of new, highly actionable protocols.
I should emphasize these protocols take very little time and have an outsized positive effect on your movement, your posture, and your overall health.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Maui Nui-Nui Venison.
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Today's episode is also brought to us by Jove.
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Now, if there's one thing that I have consistently emphasized on this podcast,
it's the incredible impact that light can have on our biology.
Now, in addition to sunlight, red light and near-infrared light have been shown to have
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And now for my discussion with Dr. Kelly Starat.
Dr. Kelly Starat.
Welcome.
Thank you, my friend.
I've been wanting to get you on here for a long time.
For many reasons.
Not the least of which is that you've just pioneered so many areas of health and fitness that I don't even know where to start, frankly.
But let's jump in with the big M with movement. You're an expert in dissecting complex movement, figuring out how people can move better.
And also figuring out how people who are doing what they think are simple movements are actually making their life either more complex or more painful than it needs to be.
So you're also known for helping people with so-called mobility, which of course falls under the umbrella of movement.
And I can't see somebody do a foam roll or anything with a lacrosseball where they're loosening up or talking about fascia without also thinking about you.
So that should frame today's conversation at least partially well.
To kick things off, when you look at how most people sit, walk, and.
and do their, quote-unquote, exercise, resistance training,
and or cardiovascular, hopefully, and cardiovascular training.
What are some of the most common problems that you see?
Is it imbalance, like leaning to one side?
Is it that their bodies are trained into asymmetry?
Is there any way to kind of mass diagnose everybody all at once in this first question?
Let me borrow a couple analogies from one of my favorite people, Katie Bowman.
and first thing is she will point out, and it's not a perfect analogy, so bear with us,
is this notion of mechanotransduction, which means that at a cellular level, your tissues,
some of your tissues specifically need mechanical input to express themselves.
You want a strong tendon? How do you get a strong tendon? You have to load it, right?
Does it do tendon things? Does it lengthening under load? Does it express shortening under load?
Does it do isometric holds? So we can start at that level.
She points out that if you put a, again, not a perfect analogy, but if you put an orca into captivity, over a while, that orca fin will start to fold over.
Folded fin syndrome, it's nicer than flopper, floppy fin syndrome. That's hurtful.
And what you're doing is when you alter the environment that this amazing animal lives in.
It's not swimming. It's not fighting. It's not hunting. You're not loading the base of that fin.
And so what happens is that collagen breaks down.
and we start to see changes in that, in that expression of that.
So what we can start to say is, again, not romanticizing the Pleistocene era when human beings were paleo.
But what is it that we need in our daily dose lives to maintain the integrity of our tissue systems, exposure,
so that our brain says this is safe so that you actually have tendons and ligaments that can do what tendons and ligaments can do.
And fascia, that can be springy.
If, borrow another sort of kiddiebohmanism,
if we have a movement language, an actual language made up of words,
how many words are you using today?
And most of us aren't using that many words.
So very few words.
So I sit, I stand, I walk very slowly.
I sit, I stand, and walk very slowly.
So everything is just in those few.
And then I go exercise using the same words.
I'm on the exercise bike, right?
I'm on an elliptical, which doesn't actually ask me to have any hip extension.
And suddenly you can see that our movement language, which we're really codifying under intensity, load, right, we're becoming very competent in these adaptation positions sitting.
What ends up happening?
Well, we start to see that our bodies are adaptation machines.
And they just begin to adapt.
And so suddenly what we have is a human body that doesn't express normative range.
The brain may not think that that range is even safe and put there.
then we start to sort of minimize the movement choices that the brain has,
the movement options that the brain has.
So really the question is, you know, at low loads,
let's establish things.
At low loads and low speeds, you can get away with everything.
Why?
Because this body is rad.
And it's designed, it's durable, it's not fragile.
It's designed to be ridden hard and put away wet for a long time.
Remember when you were 17 would cut off your hand?
It would grow back the next day, right?
You would.
Think about the falls you took skating.
And you'd be like, oh, that sucked the next day.
Put your shoulder back in.
You just kind of respawn.
So what is it that we need to put into our movement diet?
And then we can start to separate out.
Should that be exercise or should that be movement?
And now the real filter that we should be beginning these real and earnest conversations about is,
what is it in the environment, given that I'm a busy working person?
And maybe I have some agency in the morning and maybe I have some agency in the afternoon.
But let's take exercise out of it.
one-hour discrete, working on Zone 2 cardio, working on right my evidence-based practice.
What should I be doing the rest of the time?
So, for example, one of the things that we're huge fans of the evening is sitting on the ground
for 20 or 30 minutes.
In what cross-layered, squatting?
Yes.
Long sit, side-saddle, 99.
Any time you need to fidget, fidget.
And what you'll see is you start to accumulate exposure, which I think in my worldview is
the first order of magnitude and problem-solving is how do we have the...
of human be exposed to the thing we're trying to change or improve or restore normative ranges.
So that would be in the evening, just getting down on the floor?
Yeah, that behavior alone, cultures that toilet on the ground, sleep on the ground.
We start to see fall risk in our elderly populations attenuate zero, approximate zero, lower hip away, lower, low back away.
And it may just be that we're using and touching some shapes.
and our bodies are saying, hey, let's just keep that around.
Let's normalize what the hip should be able to do.
In terms of your connective tissue, think about, you know, the idea here is that we're loading you passively, actively, whatever, that you're saying to your brain, muscle, you know, this is a quote from one of my PT instructors.
And this is really important.
If people take this away, they should listen to this.
Muscles and tissues are like obedient dogs.
at no age do you stop adapting
at no age do you stop healing
those things slow down
it's a little bit harder
to have the same adaptation we did
we weren't in full-fledged puberty
but you can always adapt
in the first order of business
if you spend 20 or 30 minutes
sitting on the ground
you're going to start to see
that my hamstring starts to feel better
my hips start to feel a little better
because I'm just spending time
in these ranges and my body's going to start
to adapt as I increase my movement language
would you extend what you just said
to I'm like if somebody has a hardwood floor
and maybe a little low pile rug or something like that,
and they're going to, I don't know,
watch a podcast or a movie or show it in the evening.
They stretch out in, you know, like on their belly,
like sort of up dog or cobra or whatever it's called.
So basically any kind of movement where you're on the ground,
any kind of squatting, and maybe they start to stretch a bit here and there.
Oh, so now we're into the real magic, the behavior.
Where are we going to stack these behaviors?
So if you have to get up and down off the ground,
Plus one, right? I got to get up and down off the ground every day. So if you're an older person
who may hasn't gotten off the ground, I'm older, I'm just talking about over 50, you may not have
gotten them down off the ground for 100 years. You just don't do it anymore, right? We want to hear
why I think MMA is so amazing. You have to get up and down off the ground a lot, right, if you do,
go to Jits, right? How about yoga? How about Pilates? You're like, wow, there's a lot of time
organizing on the ground. So a lot of people, Ida Rolf really said, hey, how do we help the person
organizing gravity first and foremost, right? Then we have someone like Philip Beach, who is this
incredible, he wrote this book on functional embryology, which I highly recommend, called
muscles and meridians, I think, muscles and meridians. But his hypothesis is that one of the
ways that the body tunes itself is by being on the ground. Again, restoring native ranges,
re-approximating joints, right, kneeling, walking. And if you just took a step,
back and said, what's it look like for the last 10,000 years? You know, when have we, 10,000 years
ago, my understanding is that I'm a little fatter, your femur's a little longer, but we're pretty
much the same people. Maybe I don't digest milk yet. Maybe that's the understanding. But ultimately,
what behaviors have changed, we're off the ground. And so this is an easy, don't need any equipment,
can drop this in. I can answer my emails, watch TV. That seems like how we're going to improve
and be able to start to untangle this very complex coordinate,
when people have a lot going on.
I love this.
And as you pointed out, sorry, the roller's already there.
So if you're sitting there and the roller's there,
another barrier to adherence knocked out.
So you're like, oh, might as well, just what's stiff today?
What hurts today?
How could I have some self-soothing input?
And when we're working at high levels of performance,
like the highest levels,
these range of motion, like keeping you being able to access
the full sort of arsenal of what you can do with your body,
this movement solutions, sort of like Edelportal plus the Olympics, right?
You would see that this is an easy way for our lead athletes to work
and integrate without having to do another thing.
So what I'm getting here is that everybody, regardless of age,
should get down on the ground once a day and get up off the ground at some point.
You can use whatever you want to help you get up and down the ground.
So those you're listening, you're like, I can't do that.
You know, there's a test we write about in the book that if you just do criss-cross applesau standing,
you should be able to lower yourself to the ground and stand back up without using your hands.
So across the feet, for those that are just listening, cross the feet,
and then just slowly lower yourself into a seat.
Don't collapse.
Just lower yourself to the ground.
And then without putting your hands down or a knee down, can you stand back up?
And should one be able to do it with either foot over the other?
It seems like I should use my left leg and right leg.
equally, right? I shouldn't have a good side and a bad side. But what's interesting is the data,
I think, is that, like, it's a nice predictor of all-cause mortality, morbidity. That's fine.
But what it really hints at is your changes in how your body interacts with the environment.
That because you've adapted, suddenly the skill that you've done 100,000 times, 200,000 times
of the kids and crisscross apple sauce, you suddenly are confronted as an adult with a skill,
you can no longer perform. And it doesn't require massive hip range of motion.
It doesn't require four-inch motion in your ankles.
It's actually a really fair test.
But if you're missing some of these end ranges, you're going to struggle.
And it's nice now that I have this, like, what's the session cost?
I've become a love cycling, mountain biking is my jam.
But if I ride my bike a ton, my hips get super tight.
But if I have some assessments, just like vital signs, blood pressure,
120 over 80, that's not good blood pressure, but it's a nice, decent reference.
Now I create some movement minimums that help me understand how my body's
interacting with stress, environment, nutrition, exercise, etc.
For some people, maybe me, if I were to, you know, sit cross-legged on the ground for a bit
and then stand up.
Oh, yeah.
If it hasn't been in a while, I'm like kind of like just kind of ache.
But I consider myself pretty, you know, pretty mobile.
Once I warm up, I can run for an hour and a half, jog for an hour and a half.
Once I get warmed up in the gym, I can move what, at least for me is satisfying amounts of weight.
So I wouldn't say that I'm out of shape.
I wouldn't say I'm in spectacular shape.
Is it normal for us after a certain age to kind of feel like we creak or ache as we move in or out of a new movement?
I mean, does it fit with being still a healthy person or should we just not have any of those kinds of like, that was like the guy that was like that was rough.
Yeah, that was super rough.
Yeah, maybe, you know, sitting for 30 minutes and standing up and feeling like you have to kind of open yourself up with a can opener, so to speak.
Well, a couple things there.
One is you said, new movement.
So one of the ways we define best athlete is who's the person who can transfer the skill, their current skill set, and pick up the new skill the fastest.
So what I'll say is, if you want to test how fit you are, how good your program is, go in a jump to someone else's program.
Let me know how that goes.
Can you perform the skills?
Are you skilled?
I'm chuckling because I joined Cameron Haynes for his weight workout, which is high repetition circuit work that went on for about 45 minutes.
None of the weights were particularly heavy, but it's just nonstop.
I was sore, and I normally don't get sore for more than a half day, if at all.
Soreness hasn't really ever been an issue for me.
I was sore for almost a week and a half, maybe two weeks.
It was insane.
This is so good.
It opens up the next thing, right?
Founder of Crosswood, Greg Glassman, one of my earliest influences coaches, says,
we failed the margins of our experience.
So what you just saw was, hey, here is this.
metabolic pathway range work that I have not inoculated myself to. And I think we're at an
interesting place where fitness has become hobby. Fitness has become sort of my personal pastime.
And I can go to the gym and I can look jacked. You're jacked and tan. You're very handsome,
49-year-old. But what we start to see is the things that make us look aesthetically pleasing or
I'm functional enough, isn't the same thing as preparing for sport or transferring to new skill.
And in fact, I would say if I had a spectrum of activities, I'd put like fitnessing over here.
Like, I go to a camp.
I just do a million reps.
I breathe hard.
It's super fun.
I'm in Zumba.
Like I'm mirroring and I have positive regard.
And I see my friends.
On the other side, we have very much sports-specific training.
The only goal is to support the sport.
If you're an elite soccer player, we have goals off-season.
but in the in season, it's to support your body to win.
But one step back from that I'd call sports preparation training,
which is where we start to see sort of some really pattern interference between
what the internet says I should do to have huge quads
and the best way to create an elite sprinter or an elite footballer.
In that sports preparation training, I can be, think of it, GPP plus looking at positions
and how things transfer.
Franz Bosch is a great example of sports preparation training.
He's a Dutch thinker. His books are great. And you'll see, understand that really what we're trying to do is in sports preparation is say, hey, what is this complex system in front of us? What's the minimal amount of input so that we can still go and project ourselves into the world through sport and performance? And on the other side, suddenly we do come up confronted with, hey, I'm doing this thing and I jump in with my friend and I get brutalized, which is actually a problem that we have with people, really good fit athletes. And I throw them into.
like a group fitness class, and they can do so much work that they wreck themselves for weeks.
And that's probably what happened.
You're so strong and you know how to just be uncomfortable and you just did this freakish amount
of work without giving yourself a chance to adapt.
And that happens all the time.
So going back to the getting down on the ground once a day.
Oh, yeah.
And then getting up, I'd like to just, I want to get to fitness and sports training as well.
but is there another practice or set of practices related to where we do our profession work?
Yeah.
So I can stand.
I have a standing desk.
I have a drafting table and I'll sit stand.
I'll stand for a while.
I'll sit.
Stand for a while, sit.
I have a stool.
I like to be at a stool that's where my back is not supported.
And so I try and vary as much as I can.
Love that.
And thanks to you, I got, thanks to your recommendation, that is I bought one of those
little kickstands that goes on.
underneath the desk from Rogue. I don't have any financial relationship to Rogue. I've sent them.
You're making tens of dollars on this fidget stand. No, I sent them, I send them money like everyone
else would. One could probably build one too. This is a little fidget stand. I love that thing,
because it reminds me to swing my foot while I'm there, even while I'm standing. So that's what
I've done to try and keep some mobility during the day. And I want to double click on that because
that's really amazing. Because what you've done is said, hey, I can't control this aspect of my environment.
I have to do some deep work. That means I might need to perch.
or I might have to sit at a conference table.
And then what we can start to say is, well, what other choices do I have?
And now if we work with a typical person and you say you have some agency before you leave
for work and then your agency doesn't return until you get home, right?
What are you going to do during the day to keep the body moving, right, so that it's easier
to escape to your afternoon class?
I think that's the thing.
And what you've just described is what my wife would call a movement-rich environment.
How do I pepper the environment with inputs so that I'm not just in a tiny movement language?
I love that.
I want to go back to the sitting on the ground should it be painful, should it be sore?
One aspect of your physiology that will not change doesn't have to change is your range of motion as you get older.
We should be able to maintain our range of motion.
So what's interesting is that if we're suddenly confronted with tasks that ask us to be in certain positions that we're not comfortable,
with we're going to be sore. You bet. You're going to have to squeeze your butt and something you said
earlier like, once I'm warmed up, I love that phrase. Once I've had my 27 supplements and my
coffee and my activation, I've gotten into my sauna, I can do anything. I feel great. The real question
is, should I have to do all that stuff? For high performance, absolutely. But should I have to do all
of this prep to have native range of motion, to have baseline range of motion? Probably not.
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As long as we're there, I'm just going to tell you what's worked best for me in terms of warming up.
And I'd love to know your thoughts.
Years ago, I think it was a Charles Pollockwin poster or something like that,
where it was suggested to do relatively low repetition warm up.
Love it.
As opposed to going in and doing, you know, 15 reps, then 10, then 8, or whatever it is.
And I've found over the years what's allowed me to get strongest and stay strongest for me
is to, sure, I'll go in and do the first set of a movement, a resistance training movement,
maybe eight repetitions just to get some blood flowing and remind my brain.
Practice.
You know, what the range of motion is right.
Yeah, absolutely.
Then I'll do maybe just, you know, five, four, two repetitions of subsequent three sets.
So five, four, and then two repetition sets with heavier loads.
and it's just to prepare my nervous system for heavier loads.
And then when I start my actual quote unquote work sets,
I can get a lot more real work done.
And this for me was like spit in the face of everything I had read,
everything I'd seen that you need to hire repetition in warmups.
And it has allowed me to progress more or less continuously
over the decades that I've been training.
And I'm not a natural athlete.
I'm just not.
I've trained for a long, long time,
but I would never fall under what you would call like natural athlete.
I don't have a low recovery quotient.
all that stuff. And so for me, it was like a shocker, but it makes total sense. Prepare the nervous
system for the work you're about to do and don't follow some preconceived idea that you have to
do high repetition warm up or even moderate repetition warm up. And lo and behold, you get much stronger.
And if you want to grow muscle, you can grow more muscle. Why haven't we heard more about this?
Why don't people in fitness talk more? I know you do, and please do, talk about the nervous
system. And the fact that it's not just all about warming up and getting blood flow. It's really about
preparing the brain and spinal cord and all this stuff in there.
Let's say, a couple variables there.
What's your training age, right?
If I'm going to take a beginner and you and the same thing, we can make big jumps.
You know, we've delisted together a decade ago.
Like, we can just go.
We know our bodies, the patterns are well ingrained, our tissues have exposure here, right?
There's some things we can do.
So I love that you're starting to see that what's the minimal amount of warm up to do the task?
And on some days, you may be sore, maybe stiff, and he takes a little more time to go.
Get right underneath it.
One of the things I think we have this opportunity to do is put play back into warm-ups.
So one of the things is that I suspect, and please correct me if I'm wrong, you don't find a lot of joy in doing these like rote, A, B, the world's greatest stretch, want, want, why, do the active, like, it's not that fun.
So let me talk about my experience working with a team at Berkeley.
I have this shout out to the women's water polo team at Berkeley,
who are my just total family.
These women are incredible.
But it came into the sport and looked around and I saw really ineffective warmups.
That weren't a good use of the time that didn't prepare us to get into a fight in 20 minutes or 30 minutes later.
So if you went through your warm up and said, I'm going to be in a fight.
am I prepared for that or not?
And that's a nice, like, rubric to say, I'm nervous system arousal.
I have a little sweat on.
I've practiced, right?
You know, I've touched some positions and shapes.
But, you know, what I see is that there's, in the typical training session, there's a lot of work to get done.
So now I think training has become very, very dense.
You know, here's this piece.
Here's this piece.
Now I do the succession of work.
I got to hit these, these card.
And so the warm up for me has been one of the last places where I can get you to explore new movements, something you saw on the internet, play around.
If you came to my gym, you know, or we came to my house now, I'd be like, let's go throw the medicine ball for five minutes.
And there's no wrong way, but I want you to start to explore speed.
I want to explore catch an object and going fast.
And what we haven't done, and I suspect I wouldn't say that your warm up is the best way.
I'd say it's one way to get to the thing that we want faster.
and potentially you stopped doing what didn't work
and what didn't serve you,
which I really want people to understand
is that if you're not blind going through some program,
I want you to say, does this serve me?
Because my experience working now 20 years
with the best teams and athletes
and organizations on the planet
is athletes do what work
and they stop doing what doesn't work.
Isn't that interesting?
Right?
So what I love is that you started to get under heavy loads
relatively quickly.
And movements you had real competency
see an exposure with? Yes, because what we want to do is come back to say, what's the least
amount of work I can do to have the biggest adaptation? And three hours in the gym doesn't
fit into your life. And it doesn't fit into the typical person's life. And theoretically,
you're going to have to go do a sport. So you're going to have to recover from this sport
and this training session, right? You were like, hey, I can't even handle this high volume.
You know, it's a ding on me too. I can't handle the same high volume as my friends can.
So wasting your time, in quotation marks, with lots of high-volume sets of an empty barbell
might have been useful at some point, and maybe it doesn't serve you as well now.
Or because you have to put so many plates on that bar that's just, that's a warm-up by itself, right?
That's not an issue for me.
That's not an issue for me.
But that's what you just said is a perfect opportunity for me to mention something that I've
noticed, which prompts a question, which is I noticed that I have some asymmetry.
My right shoulder naturally sits a little lower than my left.
whenever I get a little back tweak,
it's always on the same side, et cetera, et cetera.
I know this varies for everybody.
And I noticed that I was always picking up the weights
and rewracking them,
because I rewrack my weights like a grown-up,
rewracking them on the same side.
So I've made it a point now to switch up,
you know, which side of my body I do them from.
Yeah, yeah, that's great.
And notice I'm significantly weaker
on one side of my body.
I mean, not to the point where, you know,
I have to use two different sets of dumb,
or two different dumbbells
if I'm doing curls or something, but just noticing these natural asymmetry starting to show up because I'm a right-hander or who knows, or I skateboarded.
So, you know, I've spent a lot of my life, early life, with my left foot forward and my right foot pushing.
And as a consequence, there are a lot of asymmetry.
So what I've tried to do is correct those asymmetries in the between movement movements, but also to stagger my stance during curls and then switch it each time or maybe even overemphasize the weaker side.
I have no professional training in any of this.
I've just found that it's made for better posture, more evenly distributed strength.
And I must say all of that is based on teachings that I read in your books and through conversations with you about,
here, we have these natural imbalances.
And there are little things that we can do that take moments that can correct those imbalances.
So if you would, could you sort of expand on the number and type of imbalances that you most commonly see and some ways for people to remedy them, excuse me?
Let's, if we just took the word imbalance and put it to the side for a second, because it's sort of a non-specific term.
Like, are we testing your hamstring to your quad?
Like, what's the ideal ratio here?
Like, if you're a professional pitcher, I hope your arm, right arm looks different than your left arm, right?
But what we can say is, number one, imbalances don't necessarily cause pain.
Let's be clear about that.
we should be using our time in the gym as training to find deficiencies in blind spots in our patterns, in our skill, in our brains, feeling comfortable with a certain movement.
And what you just hit was that it's, boy, it's really easy to get a lot of variability just doing the things I want to do anyway.
So now I'm in a tandem stance.
I skate, left foot forward, right?
but, you know, suddenly that's my dominant stance.
If you're going to ask me to do anything of consequence, I'm going to adopt that stance.
But suddenly I get to have some exposure here.
So what's the point of the gym?
What's the point of training?
Just to work on some cardiorespiratory output, you know, that the science says, is it to move into play?
Is it the brains of, you know, problem solving machine?
Let's give it some problems to solve.
So you suddenly have a new problem to solve.
And I would even say that weakness isn't even the right idea.
just like here is a pattern that I'm not as effective at, as efficient at.
So when we go into the gym sort of with this great curiosity,
then it's a really rich place and a really, frankly, the only safe place
because there isn't contact and sport and we're not fighting and dancing and moving.
And we can really do this controlled formal movement
where we can really see inputs and outputs.
I explained my mother-in-law a long time ago
what was happening when we were developing our model
to understand movement.
And I explained it, and she was like,
oh, you mean it makes the invisible visible?
That's right, is that this is a place
to understand how your range of motion is changing,
how your skills are changing, right?
Over the course of a season,
or the course of, you know, something going on your life,
a season in your life,
suddenly you're like, wow, my left hip is a little tight
or my left shoulders, my internal rotation is going away.
Hard to see when you're swimming.
Really easy to see when we're done bell snatch, right?
And what we're trying to do then is take the gym,
not only have it be a stimulus for adaptation,
but have it be a really great place to uncover changes in my movement,
changes in expression of that movement.
And so really what you see, again, if I just do this one thing over and over again,
that's patterning, that's repetition, that's practice, right?
And what you've done is just said, hey, let me change my brain.
Let me open the door handle with my left side.
And coming into the gym with that curiosity means that we can have seven bottom lines.
We're working on your fascia.
We're working on these energy systems.
We're working on these movement skills.
But simultaneously, we can have fun.
We can work on understanding our range of motion.
So for me, I think it's easier to say, let's frame mobility as do you, here's my definition.
Do you have access to normative range of motion?
The range of motion, every physician, every physical therapist, every Cairo agrees on.
Shoulder.
It's 180 degrees.
Whoop.
A flexion.
So for those listening, this is lifting your arm above head.
so you can bring your hand basically, you know, above the center of your head.
And what you can see right now is Andrew has his elbow bent, his hip, head tip to the side,
his internally rotated.
He's solving the problem, which is what his brain is saying.
Compensation.
Right?
Right.
You better on the size now.
If you want to use the word compensation, I want to put that on you.
But what I'd say is that's an incomplete position.
Doesn't mean you have pain.
Doesn't mean you're not the world champion.
But it means we may have some latent capacity we could chase.
And the next question for me then is, what is it that's missing potentially in your training that we're not having this exposure?
We're not doing enough close grip hanging.
We're not doing seesaw press, right, where the arm is straight up.
We're always gripping on a barbell.
Right.
I'm not handling enough dumbbells or kettlebells overhead.
And then we can say, well, do I need some position transfer exercises, some mobility work
to restore that so we can use it again?
And then more importantly, how does that turn up for you in a way that impacts your sport
or your job?
That's what's really interesting.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
So what I'm hearing is that when we go into the gym or wherever we do our resistance
training work, that we should think about it as a place to, yes, perform to exceed our previous
you know, reps and sets and way, yeah, because that's part of the-
It's fun and easy to measure.
Hardly see, are you getting better at soccer?
I don't know, but I put another keel on my bench today.
Like, that's fun.
Lex Friedman, who of course everybody knows from the Lex Friedman podcast, likes to make fun
of Americans because he's Russian, but he's actually American now for being meatheads
because we like to spend so much time in gyms, working out as opposed to doing sports.
I assure him that I've also done and do sports now,
but he likes to make that point.
And I think it's a fair one in that,
well, he's a resilient jiu-jitsu guy.
So in any event, the gym is also a place for diagnosis
to diagnose where we don't have as much range of motion as we could.
And, you know, that's very helpful, I think, for people to hear
because most people are time-limited.
They don't have, if they're getting their, you know,
two or three resistance training workouts
per week plus two or three cardiovascular training workouts
and they're listening to Peter or Tia
so they're trying to hang from a bar for 90 seconds or more
and they're doing some farmer carries
and they're doing their zone too
and they're throwing on a weight vest
and they're fidgeting under their desk
at some point you can start to understand
why people are like whoa this is starting to become overwhelming
what you're talking about is going and doing
your typical workout but paying attention
to wear some
for lack of a better word I'll call them asymmetry
or not full range of motion being expressed where that might be happening.
I keep coming back to this,
but this thing about getting down under the ground for 30 minutes each night
while watching TV or maybe even while eating dinner
or while talking to your family or partner,
I think it's fantastic.
It also gives me an excuse to push the sofas off to the side of the room
because I have this weird neuroticism about furniture in the middle of the room.
So I'm imagining getting mats down on the floor, the living room.
And suddenly we're not programming
another thing that's, I think one of the things that's happened, and it's a good thing.
It's a feature of the system.
Strength conditioning in the last 20 years has become very sophisticated.
So Juliette and I, my wife and CEO, opened our gym in 2005.
This was the CrossFit gym.
San Francisco CrossFit.
That's right.
Beautiful location.
21st CrossFit in the world early.
But we couldn't buy a kettlebell in San Francisco.
We had to drive to Santa Cruz.
That says a lot about San Francisco.
I can say that because I'm from the Bay Area.
But there was one place in San Cruz that sold them,
played against sports that imported these Russian kettlebells.
Thank you, Pavel.
And we had to make this trek down to buy them.
So the fitness, I think we, I bought my first pair of Olympic lifting shoes out of the back of someone's car, like a drug deal.
Olympic lifting shoes?
Yeah, yeah.
Like you just couldn't buy them.
Flats old shoes.
No, actually an Olympic lifting shoe with like a heel.
But like you can buy those at like three different stores in Malibu right now.
Like you go right over there.
There's, it's, we've normal, you can buy kettlebells at Target.
So the world has become much more sophisticated.
Sometimes like the overhead squat is a good example.
Fantastic diagnostic tool tells us a lot.
So bar held overhead.
Yeah, squat down, super simple.
All you have to do is have normal range of motion and your joints and tissues.
Well, it helps.
Juliet likes to say I was bending before I was big.
But, you know, the idea here, though, is let's go ahead and also put
skill back into this. But most people weren't overhead squatting, you know, at all. It wasn't part of
their language. Now everyone knows what an overhead squad is, right? Dan John, CrossFit, all the Olympic
lifters have been doing this forever. But what we are seeing is that the natural evolution of
fitness and strengthening is that we've become, we've gotten really decorative in our room.
So we create this room that's just every inch has a knick-knack, has an assistance. This is my
Tibreys, isn't my neck thing. It's a very decorative experience. And instead of asking what was
essential in terms of energy systems and positions that I can train so that I could go use those credits.
You know, for lack of a better word, fitness has become very recursive. I have this zone two so I can do more
zone two, or I have pull-ups because they begat more pull-ups instead of, well, how did that make you
swim? What's the minimum amount of time we can spend in the gym so that you can go express that? Lex is right.
a sport or an activity.
And look, there are times in your life where the gym is the only thing you got.
You know, Juliet and I, when we had two kids and a baby or two kids in our businesses,
we did the 10, 10, 10, 10 at 10, which is like 10 air squats, Ted Kennelbell swings,
10 pull-ups at 10 p.m. for 10 minutes.
And I was like, elite.
My fitness is elite.
You do that every day?
Well, I just did it when I could do it, right?
Because that's all I could fit in.
So, you know, I think what's happened is we have now sold people this idea that fitness happens
and a one-hour block, and if it's not an hour, you know, then it's not worth doing.
And if you kept a bar loaded in your garage, you could walk out there and do sets in between making
dinner.
You kept a kettle on your kitchen.
You could do Povils, four swings on the minute for 20 minutes, and at least have some
exposure loading.
So a long way around the barn of saying, I want to protect your gym time because it's really
sacred, amazing time, where you can have fun, explore ranges, get strong, get jacked, feel
great about yourself, interact with your friends.
And what I don't want to do is encroach anymore on that magic time because we have a lot
to get done in the gym physiologically.
If we're going to compete against these other teams, if we're going to beat Stanford, we're
going to need to really maximize that time in the gym.
So that means we need to push out some of these other behaviors so we're not stacking
them in and they're eroding the time we could be squatting or benching or cleaning or running
or sprinting or cutting or playing.
You mentioned warming up with play, which I think is a wonderful concept.
and presumably brings about more dynamic movement.
100%.
And another reason I like it is that I loathe warming up,
aside from the types of warm-ups that I just described.
I hate it.
And I'm beginning to realize that the way I've been training,
even though it's been, I would say useful and successful for where I've been,
I've been thinking a lot about what I want to do heading into the new year.
I love it.
This is not like a New Year's episode.
This is, you know, evergreen because it's you.
But we have a new year coming.
A lot of people are going to naturally mark the time during and after the holidays as a transition point.
And if one wanted to start to not necessarily completely restructure their fitness, but wanted to start incorporating a few things.
So we've got sitting down in the evening for 30 minutes.
We've got incorporating play into the warm up.
What would that look like?
Are we taking a tennis ball and bouncing it off the ground?
We're setting some rule in playing a game?
Sure.
Sure. What if I'm alone? Am I playing a little handball type game against the wall?
Absolutely. See something on the internet? Want to learn new skill? This is the time to put it in.
I'm going to talk about my brilliant friend David Weck. He has something called rope flow that he created.
And it's just a piece of climbing rope. And he will talk about all the things that will do. For me, I get a thousand PNF patterns. I tie my upper body into my lower body into my lower body.
Could you explain PNF? Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry, everyone.
That's a model of facilitating movement developed at Kaiser Vallejo.
It is by knot and cabot, I think.
Maybe I'm getting confused in those.
And anyway, the bottom line is this, how do we help the body restore movement by using its own positional awareness?
Got it.
So if you've ever done a hamstring stretch where someone holds you and you resist, that contract, relax is a style, it's a technique born out of PNF.
Got it.
Okay, no problem. Perfect. So he's got these ropes.
And so suddenly, like I use this with all my teams.
It's suddenly I'm spinning ropes.
I'm getting thousands of evolutions of the wrist turning, the elbow turning, the shoulder turning.
I'm generating speed in weird positions that would be vulnerable and not as effective at high load, high stakes.
I get to twist.
I can tie my eyes into it.
I can develop my stance.
And in five minutes of messing around, you're like, oh, I feel good.
And we've added some speed to that, right?
Because a lot of the warm-ups I see people do, I'm like, hey, there was no speed.
You know what sport is?
Speed.
And you haven't added any velocity to your training.
So where are we going to do that?
I love this.
I'm excited to...
Dave Weck does a lot of amazing things.
His rope is a foundational piece of my...
If you work with me and you have shoulder pain and neck pain, you're going to get my
shoulder spin up or David Wex's rope flow every day.
That's part of our homework.
What are we going to do to give you exposure and restore what you're supposed to do with your body?
So walk into the gym, use the bathroom, hydrate, whatever it is you need to do, and then five to ten minutes of some play type dynamic activity.
Sure. Throw a medicine ball around. Jump on a mini trampoline. Pick up a barbell, do a complex, do some breath holdwork. There's a perfect place to lay on all the breath hold work.
I think they call it dry face breath holding, right? It's this dynamic apnea work where you're basically holding your breath.
So, for example, with our teams, we try to have, this is a magic number, seven sort of hypoxic events where we do something on a breath hold until the athlete has a crisis and has to breathe.
And part of that is I want to get the brain ready for these high CO2 levels, right?
And I want to challenge respiration.
And it's so easy.
Get on the bike.
Here's something everyone can do for five minutes.
I want you to take a 10 second inhale on the bike, hold your breath as long as you can.
When the bomb goes off in your face, recover nose only, start at the next one at the next minute.
And what you're going to see is, wow, that was really uncomfortable, really psychologically preparing myself to get into a fight.
That came from the French free divers.
One of the coaches I was working, there's like, here's something we used to do with our French free divers.
I was like, this is so good.
McKenzie, Laird Hamilton, Wimhoff, the people who have been exposed,
using us to dynamic apnea work is amazing.
But that's another example of something I can do
instead of mindlessly just being on and I got to get a sweat.
Like, let's go ahead and just layer in play and destruction.
I love it.
Do not lay on the ground of foam roll.
Let me say that again.
Do not lay on the ground of foam roll.
That's the worst way to get ready for a fight ever.
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Somehow, I mean, we could talk about how.
It's not a coincidence.
You became synonymous with foam rolling.
It became synonymous with you.
That's okay.
I mean, it's not okay.
It's okay with me.
They weren't saying about me,
but I was about to say it's okay.
You know, anytime somebody goes public facing
and starts to try and educate people, you know, people,
there's certain things that are sticky.
They have, like, high salience.
Like, yes, I like to get into a cold plunge,
but how I, how Andrew Huberman became associated with cold plunging
or buying a cold plunges is wild.
I mean, sure, I own one and, you know, this sort of thing.
And I think they're great for shifting your state.
But it's hardly the cornerstone of my life or my existence.
But I love it.
I use it.
But I think foam rolling, I think, looked different enough
from what people,
had not seen before
and it
you know these things just
they have a stickiness to them
who knows why
what is the deal with foam rolling
is there a utility to foam rolling
absolutely
is there a wrong way to do it
no but there's a way that's
not a great use of your time
okay right so what we're all looking at
is we have finite amount of time
and what's my goal to
quickly touch my whole body
you know what are we trying to do
so if I was using
soft tissue mobilization or using a roller or a ball or something, what's my goal here? Well, I think
and the research is very clear. It can help with pain. It can restore range of motion. Again, very clear. And I want to point out sort of one of my
research friends, Brent Brookbush, the Brookbush Institute, has incredible summaries of musculoskeletal care.
Brent is a genius. And if you go on his site, there's a little hourglass and you can search like
trigger points. And you'll see all of the deep dive research, analysis of the meta research,
like you'll be like, okay, this is really excellent. And it is tricky because, you know,
what doesn't work for my body or wasn't a good use for a time now is useless and it's easy to
shout on the internet. So what's our goal? If I was in pain and was about to exercise,
a quick two or three minute intervention working on, let's call it, desensitization of the tissues.
Let's be mechanism agnostic for a second and say that's a really low level to entry, safe, highly effective way for you to suddenly feel better.
So we create a window of opportunity to move.
That's really cool.
I love that.
No physical therapist in the room.
No one went blind.
You didn't dislocate, right?
So that could be a really excellent use of some soft tissue work.
The same way a boxer would go or an MMA fighter or the Olympic lifters in China, they have people who are giving non-threatening,
input to the body to tell the brain it's safe or to rehydrate something or get some, again,
is it just stimulus so that the brain says it's safe? Sure. Are we restoring how the tissue
slide and glide? Sure. A lot of times, I think if you look at any of the mobility work,
I'll just put writ large, really comes down to just doing a couple things. Most of them are just
isometrics. So we have a lot of isometrics, which everyone can agree is good stuff. And we do a lot
tempo work. It's really just moving slowly through range. It just may be that I'm using a different
tool to have that isometric stimulus or that tempo moving slowly stimulus. So we like to say,
let's use mobilizations, mobilizing the tissues. Why are we doing it? What are we trying to do?
Well, pain is a good reason. And again, multifactoral, highly subjective, why do I have pain
while I got in a fight with my wife and I didn't eat and I, you know, twisted my knee back in Vietnam
and, you know, who knows, right? But what are the inputs that I have to self-south and desensitized?
And it turns out a ball and a roller is a really good one. So I can use those to help myself feel
better. Did that solve the problem? Did that solve two weeks of shitty sleep?
Did that solve my poor nutrition and lack of fiber? Did that solve the fact that I don't feel
in this environment? No, but it got me a window of opportunity where I can go feel better in my
body. Is anyone against that? No. Okay. So what we can also say is, hey, this is a great way to do what?
Restore your range of motion. A one tool and a system of tools to get you to do what have normative
range again, right? For whatever reason, your lats are super stiff. You're, again, it's more
complicated than that, but sometimes it's not more complicated than that. And if I just get you getting
some input into there, maybe what can restore that range of motion or create a window where you can
go use it again. Lastly, I would say,
is that it's a wonderful tool to decrease doms, delayed onset muscle so in the evening,
you blew out your quads, do a little soft tissue work, and what you'll see is maybe that's blood flow,
maybe it's non-threatening input, maybe it's just massage, maybe it's just the parasympathetic input
that massage has, touch, right, just downregulates. Maybe those are the reasons I feel better.
But the bottom line is, is that a good use for time? Yes. Are all techniques on the rule are the same? No.
right? And I think that's where we've lost our minds is that if you, yeah, you just rolled up and down your calf, didn't do anything. I'm like, yeah, well, you just, what are you doing? Right? What if I rolled side to side? And so suddenly we can start to layer in some really complex thinking around this. How about this? You have a roller out and I put my calf on there and I start rolling side to side. Should that be uncomfortable? I'm guessing you're going to say no, but, you know, and I like that.
Anytime I've used a roller,
anytime I've used a roller,
I'm like, man, that hurts.
I don't want to do.
That sucks.
Well, I mean, I don't mind it.
Like, it's not like the kind of,
it's not like level, level eight pain or anything.
It's just, it's sort of like,
it feels very localized.
Yeah.
Even if the roller is a big fat Costello,
the bulldog size roller,
it feels like someone's kind of kneading down
in between my muscle fibers.
And then I start to think,
maybe I just have like low fiber density.
And if I were Mark Bell or something,
then this would feel comfortable.
But, you know, I always feel like the roller's going down to the bone.
And you remember now the face of LFD, low fiber density.
So, you know, what I think what we can do is let's establish some guidelines for people.
Because this is one of the ways that we can feel better on our home without bourbon, without ibuprofen, without THC.
Like, we need to give people some tools that don't, like that aren't just...
Without having to buy a sauna.
If you can afford one great, but not every...
I mean, this whole thing with sauna, love saunas.
But, you know, well, until very reasonable.
recently in my life, like I couldn't afford a sauna until very recently. You know, even as a
tenured professor at Stanford, I'll just say that, right? You can actually be angry at your
parents for not giving you a sauna. You know, when I was a kid and my dad and I used to go to the
Y in the evening sometimes when I was little and I'd shoot baskets or he would, he would lift weights,
Nautilus machines back then. Yeah. And then, um, get brutally big on those. And then we'd sit in the sauna
or there was a hot tub. And you had a different set of trauma, traumatic experience of sitting
in the sauna at the Y. No, actually, I learned how, um, I learned how to make eye, how, how
I learned how men over 40 spoke in 1985.
There you go.
There you go.
There you go.
If everyone had a roller and a ball, there's a lot of dysfunction and discomfort we can manage.
If you push on a tissue, we expect that tissue to be painless to compression or not
uncomfortable to compression.
Again, pain is a weird word.
I don't want to set that up.
but you shouldn't be uncomfortable to compression.
What's nice is that if I push on something,
all I'm doing is is just a vector isometric.
Instead of pulling an isometric
through the length of the tissue,
I'm putting it at a different vector and angle.
So that would just be one.
I could start there.
And if it was uncomfortable, well, guess what?
Now I can get my nervous system involved.
So I can teach my brain
that it's safe to create a contraction here.
So what do I do?
It's flex.
Flex it.
Hold it for four seconds.
This is very basic, I realize.
But for many people,
they're either already foam rolling and doing it incorrectly
or they're not foam rolling.
We want them to do it correctly.
So if I understand correctly,
it's, quote, unquote, okay to flex the muscle
that you have in contact with the foam roller
while you're rolling.
If I find something that's uncomfortable
or stiff or doesn't feel like my other side,
I'm going to stop.
I found a place to work.
I'm going to build, take a big inhale.
So I take a four second inhale.
I want to teach myself
that I need to be able to breathe in this position,
My one of my friends Greg Cook is like if you can't breathe in a position you don't own a position
You know that sounds very I-en-garde too
But what we're gonna do is we're gonna say it's okay to breathe here and I'm gonna contract here
And then I'm gonna slowly relax and soften that's tempo that's moving slowly and I can handle higher loads and what'll end up happening
Is if I repeat that cycle two or three times guess what my brain desensitizes that changes range of motion my brain suddenly is like that's not a problem any
more. So we just move on. And in two or three cycles of that contraction, breath hold, long exhale,
that starts to sound familiar, right? How do I calm down, long exhales? I'm not trying to spin up.
I'm trying to say this is safe. I've done that with my breath. I've done that with contraction.
I'm just getting input in, just touch to my body, especially on parts that maybe don't bark at me
very often, right? People are shocked to learn that sometimes when they have knee pain,
how stiff their quads are.
And then we can test it, load it, feel it, palpate it.
And I'm like, those things are just stiff.
And when we unstiff in them, whatever technique you want to use, restore sliding surfaces,
get neural input in there.
We create range of motion.
Suddenly we change a motion dynamic.
Improved efficiency.
The brain says, hey, that's no longer a threat or we're experiencing that as a new
pattern or position.
That'd be enough to reduce your pain.
But pain isn't the only reason we're mobilizing.
We're mobilizing so that we can reduce session cost so we can work out harder the next day
and keep an eye on our minimums of our range of motion.
Love this.
And another just very basic question because I'll be honest, I haven't foam rolled much in my life.
And it doesn't have to be a big foam roll, everyone.
Sometimes those big white, those are pool noodles, right?
That's what it was for.
I think like made in Colleen, Texas is like a manufacturing byproduct.
And someone's like, we could put these in the pool.
pool and then some physical therapist is like sweet like that thing's way too big and too hard and
too square and too soft like there's a whole bunch of things like sometimes you need an elbow sometimes
you need a forearm sometimes you need a thumb so you can have much smaller diameter i'm a much bigger fan of
smaller diameter rollers i just think they fit your body better thank you for that um also very helpful
um let's say i want to quote unquote loosen up or um or move out some potential soreness or
muscle like the quadricep.
Does it make sense to start in the middle of that muscle, the top?
Like, does it, can you work above and below the knee?
Are all of those things going to help?
I realize this is a much fuller discussion than we can have.
No, but I think this is, like, how should I approach?
I'm like, okay, you know, my, my, my, my quads are a little sore, or my back is sore.
Do I go straight to the back or do I start with another, with another body region?
I don't think it matters.
What I want interested is inputs and outputs, right?
what I'm really interested in is, what did you do to make yourself feel better?
Did you just hope it would just go away?
And then one day it didn't, and then you had to activate the emergency medical system.
So let's define a couple things.
What is an injury?
This is a great question.
Injury for us is there's a clear mechanism of mechanical trauma.
There's a bone sticking out of your leg, Andrew.
Time to go to the hospital.
Injured.
Right.
You're injured.
Right.
I heard a snap and a pop.
Yikes.
I have night sweats, dizziness, fever,
vomiting, nausea, unaccounted for weight loss, weight gain, changes in my bladder, bowel, bowel,
bowel function, problem like coughs, or sore, those are red flags. You're not sore. You're sick.
Let me introduce you the doctor again, right? If your pain or dysfunction is so bad, you can't
occupy a role in your family, can't occupy a role in society, can't occupy a role in the team,
that's an emergency problem. That is a medical condition that needs medical. So you come in today,
you tweet your back. It may need, we need to activate.
EMS. You need to go to hospital. We need to get, because it's so severe you can't do your job.
Everything else, I want to call non-injury. I want to be very specific with the language of use.
We call it an incident. It actually comes out of this sort of language. There's a guy, here's the
long way around the barn. I read this great book called Deep Survival, which is Lawrence Gonzalez,
which is about why people end up in survival situations. And it's literally a lot about, like,
we got away with it for a long time. And then,
I just didn't have a, you know, I ended up two miles out sea.
I've done it a million times.
And this time, right, that's it.
But there was a footnote in there from a book called Normal Accidents by Charles Perrow,
who was recently passed on.
I emailed Charles because I was like, this is blown my mind.
He calls, a lot of times we'll have trivial events in non-trivial systems.
So he's taking systems thinking.
He's looking at complex system organization.
And his idea is that an accident, a normal accident,
is actually just expression of the system
if you gave the system long enough to express itself.
The inputs and outputs are so tightly coupled
that it's difficult to see what causes what
and how they influence each other.
That's the body.
So your stiff shoulder isn't a problem
until you fall on the ice.
And then that stiff shoulder suddenly can't take over pressure
and overhead, and you tear your rotator cuff off at high speed.
You'd say, oh, Black Swan event, super crazy.
But that's actually just a normal expression.
of that shoulder system if we gave it enough time to express itself.
So he has sort of like incident and accident.
So an incident is I want us to start to think about incident level problems,
are pain, loss of range of motion, numbness tingle,
we're becoming curious.
Why is the brain sending me the signal?
Pain is a request for change.
So if we ask our athletic population,
I just did this with 100 kids.
I'm like, how many of you are pain free?
100 high school kids, two hands go up.
Two.
High school.
High school.
So what we're suddenly realizing is that pain is very much a part of the athletic condition,
the human experience, certainly the athletic experience.
You've been in pain a billion times and still gone out and done the thing.
So what we want to do is saying pain is not always a medical problem.
It's a medical problem when the rest of the time we're saying,
how are you using fitness, training as a scaffolding to understand nutrition,
hydration, soft tissue work, desensitization, re-perfusion of the tissues.
So that's what we're trying to do in sport and training is empower people to say,
what's going on with my body?
And why don't I feel the way I do or why does something hurt and why can't I remedy that?
And then when I run out of ideas, let me go get some help.
So the rolling we can think of as a way to, you know, move out soreness,
prepare us for more work the next day or something like that.
I love that.
But is it fair to say that we can also use the roller as a diagnostic tool?
Sure.
Like if I'm feeling like an unusual amount of, well, not unusual, but let's just say that I'm feeling like a wuss.
Because when I lie down on that roller and I kind of like, you know, like slide back and forth like I've seen the videos of you and other folks doing that, I'm like, that really hurts.
Does that necessarily mean something's wrong?
No.
Okay.
No.
It means that for whatever reason, those tissues have become sensitized.
and that your brain is interpreting that stiffness as a threat.
And it's reading it as pain, right?
And some people, they don't have that.
They just, their tissues feel like this,
but they don't have pain when they do that.
But that's not a normal tissue.
You should be like layers of warm silk sliding over steel springs.
And what you're seeing.
Is that what quality tissue should feel like?
Layers of silk over steel springs.
Layers of silk over steel springs.
And what we see is that we are loading and training
at such high intensity,
It's such density now that our tissues get stiff.
I'm just going to hang stiffness as, for whatever reason, high fibrootic, high density of tissues, whatever reason the tissues don't behave the way the joint system should.
Right.
And that's a problem because my training shouldn't mitigate or attenuate or change my range of motion.
It can, but now how am I keeping an eye on those changes?
Or, as you said earlier, as I do.
a sport and I start to do a sport and specialize, I'm throwing, throwing, or I swim, or I kick on one side,
how can I start to identify as my body is changing and adapting that sport so I can drag myself back to a sort of a greater readiness?
And that's one of the reasons that that mobilization tool is such a powerful tool.
Again, however you want to do it.
I think it's useful for us when we have, we came up with this thing called the D2R2 model because the other way was taken, R2D2.
So the first sort of business is I want to desensitize if something hurts.
If something hurts, let's desensitize it.
I can do that all different ways.
Scraping is powerful desensitization.
Isometrics can be really useful.
Rolling, BFR can give me desensitization.
There's so many techniques to make my body.
Flood restriction.
Yeah, blood flow restriction.
So that no longer my brain is perceiving this as a threat.
Because if you're in pain, you cannot generate the same amount of force or wattage or output.
And your brain is going to start to truncate.
It's going to start to lop off your movement.
solutions, right? It's just going to happen. So we want our, we want everyone to be saying,
hey, we don't panic. We have pain. We just treat it like another diagnostic tool.
Then second, D, right, we desensitize. And then we ask, is this something that be decongested?
So decongestion means that oftentimes tissues that are swollen become more easily sensitized.
Tissues that are swollen and congested don't heal as fast. If you have a swollen ankle,
those collagen fibers will not knit together as fast as a, right?
If you have a joint that's swollen or a tissue is swollen, your brain will shut down force production in and around that joint system.
Is swelling an emergency?
No.
Is a swollen joint environment really healthy for the integrity and surface of the joint?
No, we want to manage that.
But oftentimes when someone comes in and the tissue is congested, right?
Sometimes we say swelling and we think ankle, right, only capsules.
But here we have a, if you've ever flown on an airplane and had cancels, that's congested tissue.
If we manage that congestion, if we move those lymphatics along, we muscle contraction drives the
lymphatic drainage, the lymph system is the sewage system of the body. De-congested tissues
often express less pain. And what we find is that in broken bones or soft tissue injuries,
if we can better evacuate that swelling, better evacuate that congestion, not only do we see
you're now healing at the rate of a human being.
We're not rate limiting the healing,
but also we can help you manage that sensitivity.
Then the third one is,
can we get some blood flow in there?
You said, once I warm up, it feel great.
Welcome to the power of blood flow.
Tushes become hydrated.
We're shifting blood from the stomach,
all the things that happens, right?
All that venous return is coming back on board.
But suddenly we see that if we get something pumped full of blood,
it tends to be less painful.
And that's a really easy.
So if I have an old orthopedic thing,
maybe I spend a few minutes just getting a huge quad pump on the leg extension machine,
then I go squat heavy.
So now I have desensitization, decongestion, re-perfusion.
Whatever tool you want to use for these is fair game with me.
Just how I've come to kind of conceptualize these different tools.
And the last one is restore.
Do you have full range of motion, full normal in that joint, yes or no?
Because that's the last thing that we talk about because you're still able to perform your sport
at college or do your job, but we're not seeing how,
in excess, your ability to not excess that range of motion,
maybe limiting your movement choice and potentially overloading a tissue
by making it work in a less effective manner.
Or even just leading to progressively worse and worse posture,
which is probably...
Well, define posture for me,
because I think that's a really great place to start, right?
Yeah, I can define bad posture
is when you catch yourself in a reflection
and you realize, well, I'm starting to look more like a C
than a knot.
That's so great.
The question is, is that a matter of aesthetic?
or pain?
Well, certainly for me it's not pain, but, you know, I...
It's not becoming injury.
I notice that it's not becoming...
I notice that unless I pay attention to my posture while sitting,
unless I do a, you know, like, ridge my fingers together
and pull my chin back a few times a day that I'm just naturally starting to tip over forward
towards my text messages that aren't even in my hands right now.
And I think this is, you know, the younger generation.
I mean, now that I'm 49, I can talk like that, right?
I mean, it's striking.
Were you born in the 1900s?
They are.
Late 1900s?
Yeah, exactly.
They're starting to look like a, they're shaped like a sea.
It's, and I'm a big believer in people, especially men doing network.
I feel like if, especially if you especially.
How about especially people doing that work?
Yeah, well, here's the thing.
Anytime I'm happy to go there with this one, maybe even at the risk of being politically
incorrect.
Any time I've suggested that women also do network, they,
say no. You should see my goalie daughter because for every pound stronger your neck is,
your reduction in concussion risk drops huge a pound. Thank you. So we keep the iron neck by the door
and she walks in and there's a, we have a video in our family where she's doing her iron neck train.
She looks at me. She's like, Dad, this is why I don't have a boyfriend. Thank you. Sorry, Caroline,
but that's the way it goes, right? Because she's like, look at me. I look like an idiot. But she loves
having a big strong neck that doesn't, can take the shot from the ball. Yeah. Listen, I wish
everyone would train their neck. I had an accent where I fell off a roof, walked away from it. My neck was sore, but I heard it and felt it. And I was like, oh, goodness. But it was actually from skateboarding stuff and falling and that I started training my neck years ago and realized that, wow, when I trained my neck, I'm one of the few people in my age cohort that doesn't complain about shoulder pain. Now, maybe I don't have full range of motion. Maybe I'm hanging out with the wrong people. But anytime I see somebody with really broad shoulders where their neck is really inside of their jaw,
line, it looks like a head was placed on the wrong action figure body. I just want to go over to them
and say, listen, A, it's aesthetically ridiculous. It looks like one of those flipbooks and the kids where
you can change the head, the body, and the legs to be different animals. More seriously, it's a
hazard because it's your upper spine. It's clearly not in line with the rest of your strength profile.
And the other one is the more incentive-based thing is, hey, listen, if you train your neck,
everything else gets stronger and your head and your brain is going to be safer. And as a
neuroscientists, they usually listen to the last piece.
Love it. Love it. I'm so glad we're talking about this. I do bridges. I know that they can be risky.
With tongue in the roof from my mouth, I do bridges to the back. And then I do have a four-way neck machine or I use a plate.
Jeff Cavalier's got a great video of how to do this that we can link to how to do it safely.
You got to close the chain by having a hand on the ground, this kind of thing, to do it safely.
But I've just found that neckwork also serves posture. Poster serves the ability to make eye contact when you have those things we call
conversations with people in real life. And I do think these things stack up to, we won't call it
psychological confidence, but the ability to meet somebody, you know, like firm handshake,
you know, I'm trying to crush the other person's hand, look people in the eye, stand up straight,
whatever your height. These things really matter in subtle ways or not so subtle ways. I think that
I do feel like, like, yes, that the younger generation and the older generation that they sort of drop,
they kind of drop out of certain elements of life. If you're looking down at the ground or your
phone all the time. You can't look people in the eye. You're posturally not right. You're in pain.
You're not as strong as you could be. I mean, these things stack up to being like in a aquarium
full of fish. You're becoming the fish in the background that's like, you know, like it was kind of
sickly. And the other fish you're getting all the good stuff. And, you know, if you define posture
as like the Latin word root is position. So we're really saying is, I have good position, I have bad
position. I have bad position. One of the way.
I think we've lost the narrative a little bit is we try to give people these extrinsic cues to correct
their posture. Shoulders back and down, check your tint. So all of a sudden you're like,
when am I going to be a human being? How do I practice this when I'm doing a complex skill?
So the organization of your body, the organization of your spine, particularly, really is a
reflection of your movement habits, your behaviors, your self-identity. There's a lot of things in
there, right? You didn't get the job. You won the, the guy. You got. You. You got. You. You
the number from Juliet.
Or you're sleep deprived, even.
100%.
And I'm going to call myself out
because people are going to do it.
There are many times on this podcast
when I go and I look at the,
because I do listen to the podcast,
trying to see places I can improve, et cetera.
And I'll be like, wow, my posture,
I'm like hunched over.
And I think to myself and I'll go and I look.
You're just reflecting my posture.
No, no.
And I track my sleep.
So, you know, I'll go back and look.
I'll be like, yeah,
I wasn't sleeping as well those days or whatever it is, right?
I mean, I think that we are all guilty
of not paying enough attention to our posture.
So what we can do is we could
define posture is there is a median range of the joint positioning where we simultaneously have
most access to our physiology, right? And I'll explain that a little more. But also, those shapes
aren't associated with increased pain risk and increased injury risk, which is real. The research
does bear that, that there are positions and shapes that lead to less effective movement and
are more likely to experience pain. It's probabilistic. It's not. It's not.
guaranteed. It's more likely. So one of the things that I think you could you could
understand is, hey, do you want to have access to all of the machinery? So go ahead and slouch,
go ahead with me, and then just turn over your shoulder. How far can you turn?
Now very far. Now watch this. Get into a position where you take a huge breath. Get to the biggest
position when you take the biggest breath. Okay, so that's a pretty rock and shape. Now turn
your head. It goes further. So by you being queued,
can you adopt a shape
an organization of your trunk
that allowed you to ventilate
a little bit more effectively.
You completely change
and reorganize your structure
which led to an improvement and output.
So when I'm working with people,
there's only two things
I really can wrap my head around.
One is, do you have normative range of motion?
Yes or no.
What are the tools we have to restore that
and improve that?
And does that expression
give us greater biomotor output?
Because those are objective measures.
When biomotor output, I mean range of motion, force production, power, right?
I see that I can express the physiology in a unique way that makes me, you know, more effective.
And that is why you'll see suddenly we have this definition that is maintaining the physiology
and aspects.
I'm not going to have as good shoulder flexion with my arm over ahead is when I'm sitting up
taller or in a position where I can take a bigger breath.
And I think that's what's really great because that gets us away from good posture,
bad posture, into, hey, that position doesn't serve you as well in these circumstances.
And in this position, I'm working with the parake rescue team in the Air Force.
The number one reason they were having back injuries was getting the litter out of the helicopter
because they have a litter, the soldiers there with all their gear on.
They've got a lift from a totally weird flexed position, right?
And this just turns out that's not a really effective posture position.
position shape that transfers to handle this higher loads.
So what do we do? We work on the range of motion. We give them skills to try to organize more
effectively in that shape. And lo and behold, we can reduce injury risk and injury incident
in those soldiers. Right. So what we're always thinking about here is let's get away from good
and bad and posture doesn't matter. And it also doesn't matter at low load, low speed.
And I want to be very clear about that. So you can get away with murder.
at low velocities and low speeds, but speed kills.
Oh, everyone's fine, but when that speed wobble starts to happen,
we start to see greater likelihood of deflection from posture.
Your abs don't work as effectively.
You can't create the same intramedominal pressure, right?
Check, check, check, check.
So that's why we always are saying, hey, is this true that you're saying under high, load,
high speed when there's consequence?
Because maybe this set of conditions works under these conditions,
but it doesn't work across all conditions.
And for me, I'm trying to take the best information I have working in sports and performance
and trying to transmute that to my family, transmute that to my neighborhood and to the kids I'm
working with.
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As long as we're talking about posture,
feels like a good transition point to pelvic floor.
Years ago, and this is a plug for the material that you put out online and in books, but long before we met, I decided to sign up for your men's pelvic floor course.
Outsold our woman's pelvic floor course, two to one.
It was so interesting because, you know, at that time, one could go online and learn a little bit about pelvic floor.
Everyone, and we talked about this with a couple different guests on this podcast, including the director of male sexual health.
He's an MD PhD, or at least an MD, as I recall, Mike Eisenberg at Stanford.
We talked about this with Mary Claire Haver and other people in the female health domain.
I'm glad we're normalizing this conversation.
Yeah, we normalize this conversation.
You know, that the pelvic floor is rich with vascular for blood flow and neural input for controlling muscles, either passively or actively.
And I'll tell you, the number of people I know who have urinary issues, sexual dysfunction issues,
I know because they tell me that they squat heavy in the gym,
they do their kegels and things like that.
Then I've had guests on like Mike Eisenberg and others,
and they say, yeah, actually, if you have a tight pelvic floor,
doing kegels is about the worst thing you could ever do
for urinary function or erection function.
That's right.
You know, because you're sending it in the wrong direction.
You need to learn to relax your pelvic floor.
Then some women will say,
and it seems to be women that report this,
whether or not men just have this but don't report it.
I don't know.
I've had people write to me and say,
yeah, you know, I'll do some lower body work in the gym
and some urine is sneaking out.
And it's like, well, pelvic floor.
And you had this great course on pelvic floor
that taught me, among other things.
And I will say, I wasn't suffering any of those particular issues,
but I had prostate pain in my 30s.
And I was like, what's going on?
Went and got my PSA measured.
Perfectly normal.
Thought, what's going on?
Started researching online, read your work.
I realized, oh, I think I might just have tight pelvic floor.
Started doing certain things, including you taught me how to sit down and stand up correctly in this video.
It's like you have to keep your sternum high, right?
I think you said it was like a stately, a stately.
Let me just, there's no wrong way or right way to stand up or sit down, everyone.
But there are ways that reflect increased function, especially when you're in a dysfunctional state.
Right, right.
Yeah, right.
I don't want to, we're not trying to yet tell people what to do or not to do.
But it was like, wow, you know, I'm probably hunched over too much.
I think my hips are back too far when I'm sitting.
And maybe I'll move to a standing desk or a sit stand desk, which is what I did.
Lo and behold, prostate pain goes away.
Yeah.
You know, and had I not found that course, I might have gone down the path of medication or something else.
Took care of everything.
I also, I will say the other thing I learned was I tend to have a slight anterior pelvic tilt.
So thinking about the pelvis, like a bowl, as I understand, like if that bowl could be, you know,
ridge of that bowl could be parallel to the ground or tilted forward, the anterior pelvic tilt,
or back, posterior pelvic tilt. Neutral seems like a good idea, but most people tend to have
some natural propensity towards one or the other. I pretty much always wore flat shoes.
Adidas or skateboard shoes are pretty flat. I lucked out there.
The shoe game is strong today?
The shoe game is strong today. Adidas still wear them every day. I love them.
Or no shoes, which is great.
And I noticed, okay, that corrected some of that prostitution.
pain too.
By making, oh, excuse me, what helped correct it was to make sure that in the gym,
I did something, it turned out to be glute ham raises that would put my, take my pelvis
through a fairly full range of motion from, you know, posterior to anterior tilt.
And I've come to love the glute ham raise.
We're talking full range glute ham raises as one of the most useful tools, just posturally
for pelvic floor.
So not, it's not about having huge hamstring.
Right.
Resetting it, high neurologic compilates.
to actually do the thing.
One of the things I hinted at earlier is, like,
I'm chased biomutter output, right?
Intramedinal pressure and being able to have a pelvic floor
that works for you is part of that system.
Like, again, we can take the physiology
and goose it up and down.
What's interesting about,
I had a famous friend who was filming a TV show
and we were working on his internal rotation of his hip.
So if you imagine someone on your back
and I bring your knee to your chest
and I swing your foot away from your midline, right?
The femur rolls in.
That's interrotation of the femur for everyone.
And I worked on his internal rotation of his femur
and just improved his hip flexion,
need a chest, just got those things going.
I get this text that night and he's like,
bro, what is up with my boners?
They're out of control.
What is going on?
Out of control in the positive direction?
Positive.
Okay.
And I was like, well, there's this thing called blood flow.
and when we improve blood flow,
turns out reperfusion is on the list of things that we chase.
So he'd been crimping the hose, so to speak.
Just stiff, right?
And I think when we start to see that endopelvic fascia is a system,
it's so easy for us to be reductionist.
Like, I wouldn't even say you had prostate pain.
I would say you had pain in your prostate area.
Right.
And in fact, that's what we were still, the prostate region, right?
And because P.S.
You're like, I don't know where my prostate is.
Okay, that's pain in my prostate.
general sense, and I also saw that PSA level was well within normal, actually low range.
And I was like, what in the world is going on here? And you start, you know, you can find some
pretty scary stuff online about spinal cord injuries and this kind of thing, did what we just
talked about. And boom, it's never been an issue again. We have all the Olympic lifting gyms,
even our gym, we kept a towel on the platforms so that women particularly would pee themselves
when they would receive a heavy clean, heavy snatch.
And we would just wipe it up.
They'd actually urinate on the platform.
Oh, yeah.
That happens all the time, all over the Olympics, everywhere.
You'll see that, that is, blattering continents is not normal, right?
Totally normal to poop yourself before a fight.
That's what animals do.
Totally not normal to pee yourself.
Peeing yourself is a sign of dysregulation, for sure.
So what we're, as you're seeing is, though, hey, I can't manage this high intramed
intra-abdominal pressure I'm creating, and what ends up happening is we pee ourselves.
So we can start by saying, well, are there positions in shapes?
Theoretically, I want your pelvic floor to work in all the shapes.
It's maximally, and there'll be some shapes where it just doesn't work as effectively.
And if you're a man, so we're getting into it, if you go pee, you'll see a lot of men will
put their hand on the wall, and they'll adopt an anterior pelvic tilt to pee.
And what they'll do is basically just turn the pelvic floor off.
And so if you stand up and do a big anterior pelvic tilt,
your pelvic floor will lose some of its tone
and it's easier to initiate a string.
So anterior pelvic tilt again, folks,
is imagine your pelvis as a bowl,
you're tilting it forward like you're going to pour water out of the bowl,
which is a fair analogy here.
That's right.
You're saying, ideally, they keep a neutral pelvis
and use the force of their muscles control and their bladder.
No, no, no.
I'm saying that it's much more difficult to pee
in this position where we have high control over these systems.
And what you'll see is that most people will adopt a shape where they basically inhibit their pelvic floor so they can pee standing up.
I can't believe we're going to dissect urine-poster.
Surinating posture, but I think it's really important.
Let's contrast that to the famous sculpture of the boy peeing and he's like leaning back.
Leaning back.
Same posture.
His pelvis is forward and he's leaning back.
That's the same posture.
So people with sons will know this, right?
So, you know, when you're a young kid, young boy, you can like, it almost feels like you can pee over a car if you had to.
Maybe I tried that.
I'm just saying.
It was a Volkswagen.
Right.
Right.
So, but here's, so is there a proper posture for pee?
No.
No, no.
But initiating a stream, maintaining a stream is, like, that's a sign of sexual health, of functional health.
It's your general health.
And what's nice now is notice how we got to this very nuanced conversation about erectile dysfunction
or about bladder, insufficiency, about, right, peeing ourselves.
We got there through performance by we'll have athletes who literally had a whole bunch of babies,
suddenly have difficult time creating high and abdominal tone, will jump rope and as soon as,
and pee, and as soon as they come back to a more organized position that allows them to transfer energy more effectively,
recruit better musculature, have better organization, ping stops.
So what we suddenly...
Are women athletes.
So you recommend that they jump rope?
Well, yeah, absolutely.
Eventually, I need to challenge that floor.
That's an easy way to do it.
But what we see is, can you squeeze your butt and jump at the same time?
And what you'll find is that a lot of people, as soon as they adopt this into your pelvic tilt, glute goes off.
And they don't have that glute control.
So that can be problematic for a whole host of features.
So imagine, I was hoping.
I was hoping we're going to get to hip extension eventually.
But, you know, what we see is that stiffness in the front of the quads, anterior line of the fascia,
stiff front of the capsule, whatever the mechanism is.
We do a lot of sitting.
We're just squatters.
My inability to take my knee behind my hip, we call this knees behind butt, knees behind butt guy.
That's what I want to be known as.
Knee, but goes behind your butt like you're to lunch.
That's right.
Sorry, Ben.
And then what you're going to see is a lot of times when we put people in those positions,
they can't get a good glute squeeze.
Okay.
Could one practice this?
I'm thinking about it's been a while since I've taken a yoga class.
And squeeze your butt, you would be like, yeah, I can practice this.
Okay, so there's a pose in yoga, and I'm not an advanced yogi, but I've taken a few yoga classes in my day,
where you're on your, you're basically propped up sitting on your knees.
So it's sort of like in the camel.
High kneeling.
Yeah, high kneeling.
And then.
Hard to squeeze your butt there, isn't it?
It's hard to squeeze your butt there.
Because of all the forces yanking you anteriorly.
those fascial lines, the quads,
you're basically in that high kneeling position,
and because the lower leg is bent behind you,
you're being dragged forward,
and it's difficult to squeeze your butt
and extend over backwards.
So there's that, do they call it camel pose
where you reach back and grab your heels
and you're supposed to look up at the ceiling?
That's a gnarly one.
It's a gnarly one.
If you do it in the Bay Area,
the T-shirt will say,
don't be surprised if some emotions come up.
If you do this in Austin, Texas,
they just say, it's supposed to hurt, keep going.
I'm just joking here.
This is like regional humor.
But in any event, I think that's actually accurate, by the way.
But in any event, it is a slightly unusual for most people who aren't accustomed to it to do that pose.
Again, doing that pose, I bring it up for a reason.
And if you don't do that pose, you might do kipping pull-ups.
That's a global extension position.
All we're doing is taking the spine and putting a huge global load in it instead of a localized load.
So an anterior pelvic tilt, you might think of localized.
extension and flexion where I have one or two segments doing the lion's share.
Whenever we can prefer to have global flexion and extension,
because the spine maintains its integrity a little more effectively.
So doing things like wheel pose.
Awesome.
Putting your hands up near your ears, pushing it flat on the ground,
pushing up into an arc shape on the ground.
Great diagnostics.
Is this something that most people should be able to do?
Yes.
Can most people probably do it?
No.
Can we then break down the components of it?
Yeah, absolutely.
Even Iyngar, yogi master, started to bring in props, blocks, and belts
because he was seeing that his students weren't able to achieve some of the base shapes.
And what they were doing was human jenga to get into those patterns.
They were just solving the problem.
And he was like, hold up, let's not go around the problem.
Let's support you while we load you and breathe in these positions and shapes.
Given that most people don't have a ton of time,
for movement,
designated blocks of time for movement.
If one we're going to do, let's say,
some attempt toward wheel pose practice
or camel pose practice,
or any number of the other things
that we're talking about here,
which are taking the body into positions
that we're not naturally putting it into,
given our activities.
Yeah, sport or otherwise.
Nailed that.
Would you suggest doing these
at the end of a resistance training workout?
Sure. When does it work for you?
At some point, you need to be exposed
in this position.
When are you going to get exposed to this position?
If it happens to be able to be clumped in with your training, fantastic.
If it's at home in the evening, fantastic.
If you've done sun salutation before, it's old school, right?
It's almost like they were like, let's get this system going a little bit.
So later on the day, it's a little bit easier.
So at some point, we need to expose you to some positions.
We have something called the hip spin-up.
And typically for my athletic populations, my teams especially, I'm like, hey, I want you to do one of three things in the morning.
You got 10 minutes.
It's all masking.
Eight to 10 minutes.
Hip spin up, shoulder spin up, or breath spin up.
Just do one of those.
If your back hurts or knee hurts, you get hip spin up.
If your shoulder or neck hurts, you get shoulder spin up.
And then if not, just cycle through those.
So at least in the morning we're starting to touch some of these crucial shapes that you're never in.
And if you do the hip spin up and suffer, I'm like, well, that's telling me about your movement history, your injury history, your movement diet.
And again, nothing that we do on the ready state is related to supernatural levels of range of motion, just basic range of motion.
The range of motion, again, that everyone learns in med school, everyone learns in physical therapy school.
So what's fun about what you've said around this sort of this pelvic floor health piece is that when we get people doing some mobilization really brought to me, really brought my attention of Jill Miller, is that we start mobilizing the endopelvic fascia.
We just land a ball, just anywhere from your pubic bone to your diphthyphoid process, but particularly
belly button south, you'll see that none of that should be uncomfortable.
And one of the reasons we see high incidence of, you know, pelvic floor dysfunction, but also
high incidence of sports hernias, is that we have a hip that doesn't work very well and ends up dragging
that pelvis into positions where it's not muscually very strong, right?
I can get out of position where I have a lot of good sort of activation or or access.
to those positions. Then I have fascia and musculature that's super stiff because every time you do
abs, you celebrate the stiffness, right? You do abs. You're like, oh, I'm sore today. I'm going to
have some ice cream. When's the last time you managed your hamstrings or quads? Probably yesterday.
When's the last time you rolled out your abs and your obliques? Never? Previous life. Right. Previous life
before you respond. So I think one of the things that we're seeing is, again, that would be a perfect
time doing the evening. Don't go to the gym and lay on the kettlebell and be a creepy guy. Instead,
Pull out that volleyball at home.
Pull out that princess ball.
You got at Walgreens.
And start having a conversation with your pelvic floor.
Turns out, your abdomen, the pelvic floor can also be mobilized.
So we just, it's really simple.
Front of your pelvis is your pubic bone.
That's the front of the pelvic floor.
The back is your coxics.
And each is your tubaroscis, your sit bones is the side.
Everything else is your pelvic floor.
So you can take a ball and just stay away from the holes.
and if anything hurts to compression,
you found a problem
so you can contract and relax
and apply that same tissue.
So I might be on my side,
I might be rolling with the ball right underneath me.
You would just be sitting down on your coffee table
and just putting that ball
in and around your pelvis
and around your glutes
and around your pelvic floor, right?
You might be dangerously close to your grundle,
you're welcome.
So the idea here though is
oftentimes we'll have athletes with back pain,
we're not looking at their pelvic floor or hip pain,
but you have six short hip rotators, right?
You don't just have a couple rotators.
You have a huge rotator cuff of the hip,
and some of those things are congruent
and kind of part of that pelvic floor.
So it's not that I need to go after my pelvic floor every day,
because again, let me just add another thing to do your list.
But if something changes,
I suddenly wake up and I don't have an erection.
I suddenly are discovering that I'm peeing myself
because I'm an elite cyclist, right?
And something's happening that I'm like,
oh, I know what to do here. Let me start to work on my belly. Let me see if I can work on
restoring my positions. And can I do a little pelvic floor mobilization? And that's a great
place to start. And which doctor was involved? None. Which pelvic floor therapist was involved
none. In fact, if you carry that to your specialist, they're going to be like, all right,
we get to have the real conversation now because you've already done the other stuff.
One thing that frightens me, and maybe unnecessarily so, is when I see men in particular
doing crunch work, like ab work, crunching, with ankles crossed.
A, because people tend to cross the same ankle over the other one.
They don't symmetrically switch sides.
That's my good side, bro.
And my other understanding is that this can also lead to some pelvic floor issues in asymmetries.
Simple solution could be to not cross the ankles while doing like repeated
contraction work of the abdominals. Am I being silly? I would put that lower on the list of problems
I have, right? Like I think if we went into the world right now and looked at people doing
curls, you know, curl ups, the real thing is, is that your only way that you're training
the abdominals? You know, am I, do I have a bigger range of motion of the trunk? There are so many
ways to be thinking about what the trunk should be doing and reducing it down to this one curl. I think
if one of the things that we're looking at,
like I'd much rather you hang from a bar
and curl up.
Yeah. So this is pretty much
I won't say the only ab work I do.
I do some anti-rotation work by staggering my stance
when I do curls or anything else
because it's a very time-efficient way to do it,
making sure my belly button is staying straight.
So you're resisting the temptation to rock from side to side
and you get the anti-rotation work, obviously
switching up the stance. But doing what you
describe, hanging from a bar, doing pikes.
To me, you're also getting grip work.
Yes.
time efficiency.
You're also not just separating the abs and working with the abdominals with the knee to the chest.
Because that's really what we're seeing is that do you only need your abs working in this position?
So basically you're reproducing another seated position except you're crunching your chest to your seated knee.
And that's really what that position is.
Do we do it long?
What happens if you do with long lever?
Short lever means the elbow is bent.
Long lever is the elbow straight.
Short lever is the knee is bent.
long lever is the leg is straight.
So why aren't we working in all those patterns and positions?
And then being creative.
There are so many great resources.
The kids at Dave Durante has a free ab workout.
He's an Olympic gymnast from Stanford, superstar.
But you can go on to, I think it's Iron Monkey.
Sorry, guys.
And what you'll see is there's so much fun ways to play
and think about what the role of the trunk should do.
And I think we're moving beyond, thank goodness, this like, I have to be a rigid robot all the time, and that we need to ask, what is the trunk supposed to do?
A good way of thinking about this.
And I think your sit-up is a good analogy.
Really, a book that makes the rounds from time to time is a book called The Spinal Engine by Serge Grakowitzky.
And he really talks about the trunk as a driver of power, not just as a chassis of which the big engine moves.
And that really is a nice conceptual way of simplifying movement.
But if we define functional movement, most people agree it works in a wave of contraction from trunk to periphery, from core to sleeve, from axillary skeleton to peripheral skeleton.
But that means, boy, there are positions where I'm really effective and can generate a lot of force, and there'll be positions where I can't.
But if my spine can't handle flexion, it's not a spine.
If it can't extension, it's not a spine.
If you can't rotate and be into these complex position and shapes, I'm like red flag.
So how are you training that thing?
And if your only rigid dogma is straight up and down,
which is a great reason to do mobility work,
because suddenly we can side bend and we can twist.
And am I exposing myself to some of those shapes?
And so we call that work, borrowing from one of my Olympic friends,
Stu McMillan spinal engine work,
putting PVC, side bending, playing with the different shapes.
And again, if you threw, get into the David Weckrope's,
if you threw medicine balls,
you would suddenly see you're like, you're right, I can't be a rigid piece.
How am I training the functionality of my trunk beyond just my six-pack?
Because straight curling will certainly give you a six-pack,
but that doesn't necessarily mean you're going to surf with power, run with power,
punch with power, et cetera.
I mean, look at what just happened with those fights, right,
with the women, you know, fighting, just the rotational power that they have.
You can't get that from just crunches with your legs.
The fight right before the Tyson and Jake Paul fight was,
arguably the best fight and people had seen in a long, long time.
The spirit of it and just the, I mean, they were just incredible.
Everyone watches women's sports.
That was really great.
So I think what's great now is if we can get people to start to be curious and to play.
And, you know, I'm not saying you need 10,000 different movements,
but instead of just hanging from the bar and doing knees to elbows or toes to bar,
what happened if you brought your right foot to your left hand?
And you started adding in a rotation to that.
And suddenly you're like, I suck at this.
And ultimately what I want to do is I want to uncover every deficiency in this play
because I'm still going to deadlift, I'm still going to swing, I'm still going to lunge,
and do all the things that I know that makes me feel robust and makes me ride my bike better
and be a better kayaker.
But simultaneously, there's a lot of play on either side of that.
I love that you're defining progression as incorporating these novel movements exploring.
Dude, that's West Side 101.
Lou Simmons.
So, I mean, like, hey, this week we're squatting with this bar.
Then we're squatting with this bar.
And then we're changing your height.
Then we're changing your stance.
I mean, west side barbell has been doing this forever.
I didn't realize they did that.
I knew they were, like, crazy, gnarly, like, in there all the time.
Every bar has its own max, right?
And so what they've done is said, hey, the squat pattern is the thing we're training.
But how do we put another twist to the pretzel?
Now the weight's in front.
Now the weight's behind.
Now it's out.
And now it's too deep.
And now we're box squatting.
And like, wow, you're going to have to be a really competent, skilled squatter.
to handle all that. It seems like in so many sports, not just for resistance training, but in so many
sports, there's this shift now toward being an ATV and all-trained vehicle. Like, you can't afford to
just be good at one thing, you know? And the cool thing about it is that, you know, the more dynamic
range that people are expressing, the more kind of evolution you see of any kind of sport. And I think
we're going to see this with fitness too. I'm realizing this as we have this conversation, that what
you're really suggesting is that people explore their movement patterns. I love this thing that I've
you say for years, and I know McKenzie harps on this too, which is Brian McKenzie, that is,
you should be able to breathe well in every position. It's such a fun test, actually. It's such an
easy test, you know, squat down, like you're going to get something out of the cupboard. See if you
can take like a full belly breath there. How simple is that? See if you can get your belly going
out on the inhale there. I like to do this test myself every once. So I hang from the bar.
You know, those pikes. I don't get very many of them. Admittedly, I'm doing like five sets of five.
Awesome. Occasionally we'll try and twist a little bit. And as my grip strength improves
slightly maybe I'll be able to get more. Usually my grip strength goes first.
It's smaller legs. It would be easier.
I'll take that as either a compliment or an insult coming from you, Kelly.
Kelly's exceedingly strong. He deadlifted 600 pounds on the regular. He's, he's
exceedingly strong. And he has incredible endurance. You're actually more of an endurance guy.
I think this is worth mentioning that you have more. That's why I'm not very strong.
You have more of, I'm right, but.
Have you seen my strong friends? I'm not, I'm not deflecting. Your physical.
physiology is definitely biased towards certain things, like unequivocally. And what I am not good at is being
brutally strong. Oh, I've been training for 20 plus years. Hard training. Longer than that, 30 years.
And this is all I can deadlift? That's pathetic. You see my strong friends? So what you see is that I've
been cramming a square peg into a round hole because I really like it. But really, I should be
probably 190 pounds and I should be an aerobic athlete. Right. Like if we threw a hundred pound
backpack on you and went backpacking, you'd be fine. You'd be like, even now in the, you're sitting
at somewhere like 240, right? You're like 6'2. You can go for days. Like you're naturally an
endurance athlete. Absolutely. And I think it's worth saying because if people are listening, Kelly's a big guy.
All my training is biased towards you cannot believe how much conditioning I do. I am a disciple of
Joel Jameson. I'm a huge fan of trying to look at where I'm spending my time in these
different heart rate zones. And then, you know, I'm just such a nerd of
that because my primary sport is trying to keep up with my wife on the mountain bike.
I think this is really important because I think we've been talking a lot about things
kind of adjacent to resistance training. I think it's a wonderful shift now in culture that
resistance training is being used done by young people, by older people, women and men. You know,
it's fantastic. This was not the case 10 years ago. This was definitely not the case 20 years ago.
No, for sure. It was like bodybuilders, football, preseason football players and military
where the only people weight training.
Now, it's everywhere.
But you're naturally an endurance athlete.
I'm guessing that most people, I'm assuming, is this true,
fall into the slower twitch, kind of more endurance propensity than,
I mean, how many truly naturally strong fast fiber type people are walking around out there
if we just took the general population?
The ones that are are sprinters and super springing,
you know who those people are.
They're mutants.
you know um i think i was always best at a skilled sport that use conditioning or use strength
when i compare myself to my friends who have huge aerobic engines it's embarrassing i'm always the
weakest fattest slowest smallest person in the room and it is i can't like if you just want to
ego check just come out hang out with me just meet my friends see the people we're working with
And you'll see, you're like, okay, genetics is not the same.
I think we've told a little bit of a lie in the internet sphere
that, like, if you eat this way and you do these, you'll be elite.
And like, we can certainly say that you have a training effect for sure.
And you should do that, but that's not the same thing as being a mutant.
And there are just so mean mutants out there.
Shocking.
Yeah, I think it's actually a worthwhile exercise to figure out what one's natural leanings are.
That's what do you like to do.
How about that?
I just think it's important that we remind ourselves that the whole point of this is to have the most fun.
And what you'll see, he put up a video of some Chinese elementary school kids and the Chinese Olympic lifting team coaches coming and assessing their kids.
And very quickly, they put kids over at squats, they had them jump on a single leg, they had them do double jumps.
And they were like, you, you, you, you have your parents call me.
Right. So you can already see that coordination matters, wiring matters, and they were able to say, hey, these are the things that we think are going to make good Olympic lifters. So those kids, I think we start to split cohort early on. But most important is everyone needs to weightlift, period. And it's not light, two pink dumbbells. It's real heavy weightlifting. But how much do you need to do to be better at your sport or to minimize your spine? Those are the spine changes or osteopenia or osteoporosis. Those are great.
conversations, but not necessarily conversations about performance, right? So it's almost like we need
to divide this into like aesthetics and I'm keeping myself intact in versus I want to go to the Olympics
because what you're seeing on the world right now is that everyone's an expert. I'm like,
can I see how you work with 40 athletes? Can I see how you periodize that? Can I see how you
manage travel and nutrition? Can I see how, you know, you were responsible or not responsible
for this team having all its members? So what we're seeing is that it's a, this performance.
thing is a really big task, and it gets confused and watered down a little bit by everyone
fitnesses. Well, I squat, so I'm an expert, too. Not the same. Our good friend Kenny Kane
taught me something. He's shaking his head. He's shaking his head. The best. He's a wonderful
guy. You're not going to find him on social media because a few years ago he just decided to take his gym
and himself off social media. He's a very, very talented trainer. So we're going to give you his phone number.
We're going to have you call him because you can't DM him.
Very talented athlete and wonderful person.
He taught me something, I would say about eight years ago that I've found, oh, so useful for my training longevity, my enjoyment of training.
And it was this, very simple.
80% of your workouts, Andrew, he said, are going to be at 80% of what you could do that day.
Okay, that involves some humility.
I like to sweat hard.
I associate intensity with hard work, et cetera.
he said 10% are going to be at 90% intensity,
meaning 100% is the most you could give,
possibly in whatever time is allotted on that day,
given the sleep, given the nutrition,
given the life circumstances on that day.
The readiness for that day.
Right.
And then here's where it breaks down a little bit more.
5% are going to be at 95%
and 5% across the year
are going to be maximum 100%
everything you can give,
do or die workouts that day.
And for me last year,
I believe it was, was that was the rock carry Cam Hans' podcast. I gave everything I had.
Of course, had the mountain been a little bit higher, I'd like to think I would have gone a little bit
further, but I gave everything I could because that rock was slippery and it was muddy and my
hamstring was out the day when we started. I was in pain when we started. Anyway,
I think that advice that Kenny gave me was some of the best advice I've ever heard because
my tendency would have been and had been to come in and go at 90, 95 or 100% every single workout.
It got you a long way.
That got you a long way.
Yep.
And it also brought me to this place where after eight or 10 weeks of training, I would get a cold
or I'd get some nagging thing, a little thing, not, you know, wouldn't put me under, but then, or
that I need to take a week off.
Normal accident theory.
Right.
So I think I'd love your thoughts on Kenny's recommendation.
For me, it's one of the things that I pass along anytime.
says, about some fitness advice? I said, well, listen, I'm a neuroscientist, not a fitness guy,
but I know a thing or two based on the mistakes I've made. Here's a great piece of advice
that's really helped me. 80% of your workouts, 80% intensity. Another 10% at 90% than the 95,
you know, 5% at 95 and 5% across the year are the all-out, everything you can give,
leave it all on the mat type workouts. We could start with a simple idea. We say,
let's be consistent before we're heroic. Right. If your intensity causes you to not be able to
to show up for the gym for three days. I'm like, sweet. That was sweet. And our aptation response
to that is sucky, right? I much rather you be getting more consistent and not blowing yourself out.
Remember that? There was a phase where we're like, you shouldn't be sore when you leave the gym.
Remember that? Like, there were people would talk about, hey, leave some reps in reserve. Like,
show up the next day, grease the groove. That's old Pavel Sotsolene stuff. I think that's really good
advice, especially since most people are not 20. Most people, and when you're 20, you need to go
find out what the limits are. Touch the fence, the electric fence once in a while, right?
Lick the, the, lick all the doorknops. Let's just call it that way. But, you know, what ends
up happening is there's a lot of things have to be in place for you to be able to go to the well
that many times. And what we know now, because we have all of this data, is that we can make
better progress, not burning it to the ground every single time. And it's difficult for us because
if I'm just fitnessing, how do I quantify that?
Right?
It's easy for us to quantify another kilo or another watt.
That makes it a lot easier.
And what you'll see is that the best practices of these athletes,
we do spend a lot of 70 to 80% heart rate.
That's what we call recovery.
And Joel Jameson language is 80 to 90.
We're calling that conditioning, 90 and above overload.
But what I think is nice is that that gives me a lot of,
there are some days where I touch 78 or 80% and it's hard because I'm,
sleep deprived, stressed out.
My nutrition hasn't been great.
I'm sleeping in a strange bed, right, you know, traveling, whatever.
So I think what you're seeing is something that one of my early coaches talked about,
Mike Berger, and he says, when the frying pan's hot, let's cook.
And that means I need to know myself.
And as a coach, I need to know you.
And I'm like, Andrew, you look great today.
How do you feel great?
Let's go.
Let's go chase something, right?
And when the frying pan's hot, we cook, but the frying pan is not always hot.
And if you pour in bang energy and jack 3D,
and you can't even hear inputs and outputs.
So I think that's such solid, reasonable advice.
And really what we're looking at is,
how can we get you to train much more consistently
longer and longer and longer?
You can only go to the well a few times.
And what I'll tell you is that is I still love to power clean.
It's like my favorite thing.
And that 100 kilo power clean is heavier than it was when I was 40, you know?
And I wanted pretend like that,
100 kilo power clean is not a problem, but I actually have to progress and get myself there.
And there are days where I'm like, oh, 80 kilos is my jam today.
So I think that's really good advice and difficult for us to say, how are we measuring success
in our training?
Subjective experience?
No, no problem.
Let me give you a baby.
Keep this newborn alive.
And then let's go see how hard your training is the next day.
You're going to be terrible.
You haven't slept online.
You're stressed, right?
So I think what's nice is having some objective measurements around maybe body composition is one of them, that that's important to you.
But are you getting faster over the course of a week?
What are you testing?
How do we know inputs and outputs?
And right now we're just doing, we're baking a lot.
We're making a lot of suicides, right?
The old fountain drink where you just makes all the things, you know, they always taste the same at the end like crap.
But that suicide where you mixed all the fountain drinks is a little bit of what we're seeing in that.
and one way of protecting ourselves is saying, hey, let's make sure you can train tomorrow.
Suicides, I was reflecting on that the other day for some reason why at a wedding or a party,
young, typically it's a Y chromosome associated disorder to feel like you had to mix a bunch of
stuff and then get someone to drink it.
You're not wrong.
Non-alcoholic drinks for young kids, by the way, but mixing all the sodas, putting M&Ms.
It's just something like, all my male friends are little kids.
And I think that's what we see a little bit.
And if you, if you, I am a deep coach nerve.
I love fitness. I love fitnessing. I'll jump into any class anytime. Like, sure, let's go. Let's see. You know, it's so fun. But I need to see, I do get to watch sort of trends come and go. Things get very hot. You know, they get very popular. And again, the fitness has become a hobby. It's an amuse. And that's okay. It's totally okay that gym is a hobby. But that doesn't hint about what's the best way to develop capacity, elite capacity, long-term.
longevity capacity, those things almost don't go together.
Let's talk about hip extension.
Oh, bless you.
As somebody who doesn't like the elliptical or stationary bike, but loves the assault bike,
I love the assault bike.
I don't know why.
It just feels like really good work.
It is hard work.
But you're not going to find me on an elevator.
The Canadian bill made it harder with the echo bike.
Thanks for making it worse.
But what is it the echo bike?
The rogue echo bike is even worse than the assault bike.
The assault bike, by the way, folks, is the way.
one with the fan.
And I'm not sure if they put,
the fan is for resistance,
not to keep you cool,
but it has that effect somewhat.
In the winter,
you'll know what the fan does.
So the echo bike is a harder assault bike.
It's just like, imagine doing it on fire
uphill in the sand with a headwind.
Then you're like, okay,
this is,
if you can make it worse, it's worse.
If you have one of these,
I'm going to swing by this winter break
and try this thing.
But I love that because high physiology,
low skill.
That's great.
You just described me in a nutshell.
I can take anyone, not know how to know anything about your range of motion,
and I can be like, who are you physiologically today?
Let me introduce this freakish amount of work in this tiny range of motion that's very safe.
So we can really touch high intensity very safely there.
Yeah, I like it much more than the skier.
I'll do the skier every once in a while, but I find that the skier, if I just sit and stand a bunch of times,
I'd be like, I can just do this for 15 days.
See, I was like, is this exercise?
And I'm like, am I doing this right?
I don't know.
For some reason, it doesn't feel like work.
The assault bike always feels like work.
Always feels like work.
Okay, so hip extension.
The assault bike is not hip extension.
Typically, you know, tend to be, people tend to be hunch forward.
You can get upright, right?
You can still don't have any hip extension.
No hip extension.
Let's talk about if I'm squatting and I stand up, I'm extending the hip.
As you stand out.
Right?
I'm going from flexion to extension.
Yeah, one thing that I think for people listening that, at least is helpful for me
when hearing about squat
is to think about
whether or not it's a deadlift or a squat.
You can imagine taking your hands,
putting your fingers at your hips,
and hiding your hands in your,
in that joint between the femur
and your pelvis as you go down,
right? Your hands get tucked into the fold
between the two,
and as you stand up, it opens.
So it's hip hinge, they typically call it, right?
And I think what you,
we look at the squat and the lunge is very,
they're cousins, and the difference is long lever,
short lever.
And typically how you're holding the weight.
That's the only difference.
and sometimes upright torso position,
but ultimately we're really looking at,
you know, what's happening with the degree of bend of the knee, right?
That's why they're such elegant cousins.
But if I'm squatting down and I stand up,
people are like, I'm working on extension.
Work on extension all the time.
I'm like, okay, now let's continue this extension conversation
and bring that knee behind your butt into a lunge,
and that's hip extension.
And if there's one thing that I'm seeing across
so many of the populations I work with
is we're starting to see changes
and erosion in this fundamental
expression of power.
The only people we don't see it is our Olympic sprinters.
And you'll see
the pockets like we work with the all blacks
and we're obsessed
on maintaining the hip extension
in these very strong athletes because
it means that they can run faster on the field.
Rugby team for those.
Am I correct in thinking
that hip extension
we can think of as a partially reflecting hamstring function
where the hamstring is responsible for bringing the heel up toward the butt
but also for bringing the femur back behind the torso.
I realize I'm not using the PT language.
By the way, the PT's online.
I'm sorry, everyone.
Your community of the PTs, you guys just crack me up.
In the field of medicine, there's an analogous sub-specialty of medicine
where they have the similar kind of like orneriness.
And it's being a PT is very competitive.
And so there's a, you don't do this, but the PT community, it's like, it's, you can make a car,
you can make a whole sitcom about this.
The attacks often range from significant to like cluster around petty, not because they're
not knowledgeable, but because there's so much nuance in this field, right?
And it seems that there are a few things that everyone agrees on.
And then everything else, people love to argue in community, out of community.
So anytime I say anything about movement of the body, I want to just, just.
say, I realize I'm probably not using the correct language.
Perfect.
I'm going to use that same defense of petty clustering the pettiness.
Clustering the pettiness.
I'm sorry all the physical therapists out there.
I haven't represented you in the way that you would like to be represented.
I'll say I'm just talking about my own experience.
It's just differences in nomenclature.
Right.
And I'm trying to be very meticulous in my language today.
I appreciate that.
One of the things that we want to look at is, and this is a Philip Beach,
Muscles Meridians idea, is that there are contractual fields.
And this goes along with, if we look at Thomas Myers' anatomy trains,
I've seen the system as a system of systems.
So we start to look at your back and your erectors,
and then we tie that into the glutes,
and then we tie that into the hamstrings and tie the calf.
It's kind of almost wraps around the door, the bottom of the foot, right?
The planar surface of the foot.
So suddenly we're looking at this global system
that's designed to create this mass extension position.
locomotion, we start to lock some of those pieces down a little bit.
But one of the things that we've seen is that when you aren't competent in this position,
your hamstrings, for example, have to do a lot more work because your butt is no longer
working on hip extension.
Your adductors are restricted and they're not bringing you back into flexion.
So suddenly what we see is that your hamstrings are having to do the work of calf, but
and one of your hamstrings are tied all the time,
you don't have hip extension.
So a simple test we do is called the couch stretch.
And all I need to do is face a wall,
then turn away from the wall.
So you're kneeling on the ground, hands and knees away from the wall.
You're going to put one of your knees in the corner.
So your foot is going straight up and down.
The knee is in the corner of the wall.
And then I want you to see if you can squeeze your butt in that position.
It's still hands and knees,
except one foot now is kind of in the corner, down the wall,
going towards your butt.
that's position one.
And a lot of people are going to struggle with recruiting and activating their butt in that position
because it's what I'm calling positionally inhibited.
We don't know what the mechanism is.
So you're getting the knee back behind the torso, much as one would if you were sprinting
and the back rear leg is extended.
But really, we're just flexing the lower leg.
We're flexing the lower leg shank, right, that lower limb.
Second position is to come up into a high kneeling position.
So you just bring your knee up until like you're kneeling, except that we have a
trailing leg now with a leg that's going up the wall.
So front leg is a sort of a right angle, right?
You're a foot on the ground, right angle.
That's right.
Rear leg is a knee tucked in the corner.
That's exactly right.
At the floor, where the floor meets the couch.
Foot is up on the couch?
Nope, just on the ground.
Okay.
And we'll provide a link to it.
Yeah, and I called the couch dress because I created this thing a long time ago,
and I created on the couch from my young athletes while they were watching TV, right?
I just needed some hip extension exposure.
but we can do it on the wall, you can do on the couch.
Ultimately, what we try to see is, do you have glute squeeze?
Can you take a breath?
If your breath starts to get real small in this position, I'm like, huh, so every time
your knee comes behind your body, you can't breathe anymore?
How's that working for you when you run?
Is that good or bad?
Seems to me that your breath should remain pretty constant, independent of what your hip does.
So then we like to see if people can come to a more upright position.
So that's kind of position three.
So a little bit more upright torso, we're starting to increase
hip demands as the torso comes upright.
Torses coming upright.
The knee is moving further away
from the chest on that loaded leg.
And what you'll see is that most people
are going to be like, wow, that's real stiff.
Or I can't even get there.
Or I can't breathe there.
I have to banana back to get there.
And I certainly can't scoes my butt there.
And I want to tell everyone, this is a low-level test.
The real test is your front foot goes up
on a 12-inch to 18-inch box.
So we're not even in the test yet.
With front leg extended?
No, front leg just up higher.
So we elevate the front leg into what's called a hip lock.
So that front leg is suddenly taking my pelvis and rotating it posteriorly.
Knee is running into pelvis.
Pelvis is like tucking.
And now you're really going to see what's going on with your hip extension.
So this is the equivalent position, more or less, of front knee sprinting.
Like really like jutted up in the air.
Exactly right.
Maybe even past the belly button.
Definitely past the belly button.
At least 90.
rear leg behind you.
So this is sort of like, you know, caught in mid-sride.
That's right.
And so suddenly we have this nice test
that allows us to see in our competency there.
And I want to remind you, if you do the couch stretch and filament,
your knee is actually in hip extension.
It's not your knee isn't even behind your butt here.
It's that hard, and I'm still biasing it towards flexion.
So what we're seeing is that you have a real deficit of hip extension.
So that's one way to improve it.
You can just do the test, camp out there, take some breath,
contract, relax, breathe, do your resistant isometrics,
whatever we want to do there.
So many ways to judge that up, rotate, side bend.
The question is, how are you now loading that thing in your life?
So we can put a band on you and get you do some isometric standing,
but show me in your movement language in the gym
how you're reinforcing hip extension.
So when we were talking about deadlifting with a tandem stance,
still not hip extension, right?
I'm extending the hip,
but that trail leg is not.
Rear foot elevated split squat.
Ding, ding, ding, ding.
We start to get there, right?
Bulgarians, flipping a tire.
Like any time where I need to be able to,
a big lunge is a good example.
Forward lunge, back lunge.
Tell me about flipping a tire.
So you're talking about flipping a tire,
but then at the top of the movement,
you're doing like a kettlebell swing
where you buck your hips forward.
Like you're going to try and pee over that Volkswagen.
You're pushing over.
Don't try and pee at the top.
That's right.
But you're talking about bucking the hips forward.
That's right.
Suddenly you're upright.
and that leg, that trailing leg is an extension in a long lever position.
So we spend a lot of programming.
One of the best persons at this is Franz Bosch.
I mentioned earlier, and he has something I've termed like the Bosch snatch.
So if you imagine being in a double stance, so I'm just like I'm swinging a kettlebell,
if I took a plate or a dumbbell, it doesn't matter.
I'm just going to basically go from a hip hinge.
And as I go overhead with the weight of the load, whatever is appropriate for you,
I'm going to take my front foot and step it up on a box.
So all of a sudden, I'm going from a flexed position in the hip.
C-shaped body.
Right, or upright torso but hinged.
C-shaped, right?
Weird C.
And then Hvelteca C.
And then I'm going to step forward, and now I'm going to have that one of those legs is going to be an extension.
And so suddenly, now we're adding speed to this extension because that's not what we do with reverse rear foot elevated split squats.
We're not loading that in speed.
So we start to add the speed component to what we're doing,
and suddenly we've discovered another way to challenge your movement.
It doesn't just always be heavier.
It can also be faster.
So I'm basically, if imagine if I was, here's a great example.
I love pressing.
I think overhead pressing is the bees' knees.
It's one of my non-negotiables.
We're going to press.
Seesaw press, overhead press, we're pressing.
But if I take your front foot and put it up on a box,
make sure that back foot is straight with all your toes on the ground
and press from that position,
you're going to find out why you're,
don't have any hip extension.
It's going to be so, you won't even think about the weight.
You'll think about your groin exploding.
So a lot of...
Do you recommend people probe that, those mechanics?
With very light dumbbells at first.
Go press.
Go find out how you can press overhead.
And you're going to see that, like, wow, this tandem stands front foot elevated,
you know, press is going to kill you.
There's a movement I do.
I'm guessing...
Well, I'm curious if it activates hip extension the way I think it does.
Here's what I've been doing that I've found useful.
I don't know if it's...
It's true or not.
But what I'll do is I'll tie a fairly thick band to a pull-up bar.
I'll squat down.
I'll hold it like I'm holding like a pole in front of like a pole carrier in a in a parade or something.
I'll squat down and I'll jump up.
But instead of, but I'll buck my hips forward at the top.
So like feet go out in front.
It's very unnatural movement actually as opposed to jumping and putting my toes down, pointing my toes down.
My toes are kicking forward.
So I'm trying to mimic the top of a kettlebell swing at the top of this movement.
I would say, you know, one of the things that is useful for me as I am asked to come and tear through people's programming and look for holes in their movement practices.
We look at fundamental shapes.
So what's nice is that, okay, hang on everyone, let me define exercise for you.
Let me just, I'll just give you a little framework.
And I'll start by saying something inflammatory.
The shoulder's not that complicated.
It doesn't do that many things.
It goes overhead, goes out to the side,
goes in the front, it goes in the back.
That's what your shoulder does.
You can bend the elbow, you can twist in all those shapes,
but those are the four fundamental primary organizations
of the shape, of the shoulder.
Hip has flexion, extension, right?
Really, I can go laterally,
but that's just a different kind of squat.
But really, like, am I squatting with a foot really narrow
or am I squatting a little bit wider?
So what we can then do is say in these fundamental bookends, these benchmarks, this is what we call archetype,
suddenly I can ask, well, how are you loading your overhead position?
So if you're always pressing on a bar or pulling on a lat down machine, you actually are overhead,
but you're not in the fullest expression over overhead, right, which is your arm straight up and down parallel by your ears.
Hands over the top of your head.
Stams over your head.
Right.
So what we can then do is say, well, what tools do you like to use?
Cettlebell's great.
That's one of the reasons kettlebells are so great.
Single arm, I can't hold it out here.
It's going to fall.
I have to finish over my head, right?
Dumbbell's the same.
But the kettlebell is a salt.
It constrains us to express full overhead motion.
I can look at, do you have enough interrotation with the hand by the side?
Are you doing enough pressing-like activities?
Chaturanga, the finished position of my row, right?
Bench press, dip, running.
Those are all movements where my shoulder comes into.
extension, whether the arm is straight or bent.
So what's nice now is I can say, well, am I distracting those tissues or compressing those tissues?
Well, you're like, well, what do you mean?
I'm like, are you pressing or are you doing a pull-up, right?
Pressing overhead or doing a pull-up?
That's compressing or distraction, right?
Very simple ways of looking at these movements.
We can say, well, how are you coming there?
Did you get there from a snatch or did you get there from a front rack position?
So we can look at start position and finish position.
And suddenly what you're realizing is you're like, oh, I'm starting to understand the root movements
and root positions that help me improve performance,
predict future performance,
and help me get through pain.
Because if I have people not expressing
the highest levels of expression of the movement,
that's something we can improve.
That's technique, right?
It's not just get bigger and stronger.
It's, hey, let's be more technically proficient.
So I have all of these ways of looking at
the movement selection choices.
Again, what are you comfortable with?
But then I can challenge it with load,
make it heavier.
We can do volume.
We could add speed.
We could add cardiorespiratory demand.
You could do more than five, and suddenly you have to do 20,
and we have metabolic demand in there.
You and I are competing all of a sudden, right?
Now, suddenly, I go from open torque to close torque.
I go from giving you a barbell to a dumbbell, right?
I go from open chain to close chain.
Suddenly, we're like, holy, block practice, random practice.
I have all the tools for me to understand,
are you competent putting your arms over your head,
or are you exposing these shapes under these different?
different domains. And I think when we only look at sort of a few ranges of motion, and we only look at load is the way, then we lose all the opportunity and richness of programming.
Got it. Well, let me come back to my silly example of the band and the jump thing and say, okay, so for getting better hip extension, which is what I think a lot of people need is what I'm hearing. A lot of people are in hip flexion.
So you're jumping and then coming up.
Yeah. I mean, or, you know, we've seen these beautiful images of certainly not me, but like people doing long.
jump where they're kind of like in an arch position, something.
So the idea is because with the band, it's safe, right?
You know, trying to get the hip into extension or feet out in front of the jumping.
It's a kipping pull-up without a pull-up.
You're just kipping on the bar.
And I don't kip on my pull-ups, by the way.
Because I'm a time under, no, I don't keep on my pull-ups.
I train with Ben Bruno from time to time.
You keep on a pull-up with Ben Bruno there.
You're never going to hear the end of it.
Ever.
So I don't.
But I don't anyway.
I'm a time under attention.
That's fine.
I'm going to say that I love strict pull-ups.
I do more strict pull-ups and you can imagine.
But if you can't Kip, there's something around with you.
Okay, got it.
We'll argue about this more offline.
But I love to sprint.
So that's hip extension.
Absolutely.
Love to sprint.
Love to sprint.
And I love jumping.
Like I'm a big believer in this maybe true, maybe not true idea that as we get older,
we tend to jump and land less.
A lot of injuries come from,
you know, lack of eccentric load.
There's an old saying out of the Soviet system
when you stop jumping, you start dying.
I believe that.
And the lowest form could be trampolining,
the highest, another low form jump roping.
Highest form starting to be really powerful.
I love it.
You're killing it.
And what's great now is you've just made this switch
where you start describing your training
in blocks of positions.
What position am I training?
What shape am I reinforcing?
right that's a really not it's not a muscle remember your muscles are not wired for movement
your brain is wired for movement right you can't you don't have any selective control over a
single muscle in your body that's a mistake so you're not really working your biceps you're
working arm flexion right in a variety of positions this squat exercise biases my quads more
but i'm not actually quadding right because that's impossible yeah i think that the um the misconception
The broad misconception is that resistance training is just to build and strengthen muscles in a bodybuilding kind of fashion.
And no disrespect to the bodybuilders.
No, we learned a lot.
But, you know, we learned a ton.
And yet most people would probably do well to think about functional movements.
In fact, there are a few Instagram accounts that really like to come after, not just me, but a lot of people that have talked about resistance training at all that talk about functional patterns.
And I have to say, as much as the messaging sometimes I think is a little bit of.
abrasive. I pay attention to these, and I have seen some of the before and afters that they'll
show for people that will incorporate into their training, like throwing or, you know, ballistic
movements from, you know, fully stopped sprinting out the gate kind of thing and focusing immensely
on balancing the two sides of the body. And without ever having done those programs, I have to say,
like, yeah, like a lot of these people had some pretty dysfunctional patterns, and they look like
they're doing better. And I think it's because I must, I have to assume that they're incorporating
a much broader range of movements, more hip extension,
working the two sides of the body, all the things that you're talking about,
all the things that you're talking about.
And so I think that the bodybuilding piece, I think,
is a great thing for getting people out the gate.
I always say the amazing thing about resistance training,
forgive me for going long here, but I think this is something that if somebody is
not naturally inclined to exercise or resistance training,
resistance training is one of the few forms of exercise that, because of the blood flow,
the so-called pump, give people a visual and sensation-based window into the progress they might make.
Hell yeah.
Right.
I mean, this is unlike going for a run and getting to, like, at the end of your run, you see a little less body fat,
and then two days later, you've reduced your body fat percentage, right?
It gives you a window into your future when you resistance train that way.
And a gateway into a conversation that's very complex.
This is all I think about.
And people are like, hey, I just want to feel better and I don't want to get hurt in my calves when I run.
You're like, okay, it can be really simple.
And also, you have your right to look jacked and tan.
I mean, you can be jacked all you want.
Mark Bell makes this point.
Every single post.
Look, I think there's something that I try.
We don't ever punch down.
We just don't, you know, just point to what we do.
This is our model.
But any model that someone's on the Internet, a model has to do three things.
It has to explain current phenomenon, right?
It has to predict future phenomenon.
And it has to be easily communicated.
So let me see your model how it works.
How does it explain if I do your thing, will I get better at this thing, right?
That's the thing I'm interested in, right?
So what I see is, oh, a lot of recursive, fun fitness where people feel better.
But I still have to go over here in squat or I still have to go over here and become conditioned.
But you can see the truth of needing to expose people to bigger ranges of motion and more skilled movement than,
and some of the things we're getting traditionally in the gym, right?
And I think one of the things that we saw with like a pivot towards movement culture, right,
kind of coined by Ido Portal, is that what we were seeing is that the gym didn't beget necessarily better movers.
What we had was people originally doing a skill, throwing something, running track and field.
We would train and then go do more of that.
And then what we did is we took the gym or took the sports skill movement out of it and we just remained in the gym.
And you can see the reaction to that as well.
You're not very elegant.
You don't have any moving solutions.
You don't transfer your energy very well.
You're not graceful.
You have no rhythm.
So the real key for us is like I think we want to put playback in there.
And you can see what the reaction is to, hey, if we're just doing bench press and hack squats, maybe they're.
that's not making the best mover, but it's certainly making a jack guy who's what we call it.
What is it in that movie, Hot Girl Fit?
Where, you know, it's one of the recent movies where the guy is, who's the guy from Twisters,
that incredible actor he was in, Top Gun.
Anyway, he's swimming and the girl is like, hey, why are you out of breath?
He's like, I don't do cardio.
I just do abs and biceps.
She's like, oh, my God, you're hot girl fit.
Like, you have this big engine that looks good with no-go.
and I want to make sure that, no offense to all the hot girls out there,
but the idea here is what is it you want to do with your body?
Let's start there.
And then we can start to say, well, what do you have access to?
What's your training age?
And it's a nuanced conversation.
It's probably why you should have a coach and develop a coach for the rest of your life.
But let's not pretend having abs and big biceps is going to make you a good MMA fighter, right?
And you can see why the resistance of, hey, that made me less athletic.
We want to be careful of that.
Yeah, I like using the resistance training
to make me stronger and better at running.
Yes.
And that's my, that's actually, that's what's in my mind.
Yes.
I only ran cross-country one season in high school.
It wasn't very good, but really enjoyed it.
But I love running.
I've been running for a long time.
And I'll never be a-
I ran cross-country one year in high school.
Maybe we ran against each other.
Oh, no, you're a year older than I am.
So I want to, yeah, well, I'll tell the story some other time.
It's not, my stories aren't irrelevant here.
But I use resistance training to be able to run better, faster, further without pain for me.
That is what I would hope we look at training for.
Now apply a longevity lens, a durability lens, right?
Or, as Juliet says, she's like, don't you want to just be able to pop off the couch and go on adventures?
Right?
I want to have a body that's capable of that.
I think what we've been pitching in the gym
doesn't really do that.
And even that,
I just want everyone to hear
and double click on what Andrews said,
that framework is that I now have a third-party objective measure.
Does my running get better with my training?
It's a really great way to evaluate your training.
Am I faster?
Do I feel better?
It's really worked for me,
and it keeps me out of any kind of gravitational pull
toward just trying to get more weight
on the hack squat machine,
which I enjoy progressive overload.
I enjoy doing movements better with more weight, et cetera.
But I find that the gym just becomes this, when it's a closed loop,
it just becomes this kind of like endless exploration of like what am I really,
also at this age I want to maintain strength and build some muscle perhaps.
Do you want to get heavier?
I don't.
Isn't that weird?
I don't.
No.
You need much muscle as you can because winter's coming.
My goal is to actually get much stronger without getting bigger.
And to keep my endurance going, I like to do one long rocker run per week at one shorter run, one sprint-type run.
I just figure like I'll be- Everyone, what you just described for a typical person is doing a long piece, a short piece, and a high-intensity piece, that's right.
That is really, that's the crack.
Yeah, that's what I do every week if I'm, you know, most weeks.
And then I'll lift, you know, legs one day, you know, torso, everyone laughs, torso, what kind of thing is that, you know, torso, including neck and abs.
Let's take the next level. Let's go flank too. You want to get torso on flank. We're really confused.
Do you work on my flanks? And then I'll do the what could be called distal muscles. I'll do an extra workout for calves, biceps and triceps and forearms and grip strength on Saturday. And that combination of things, right? This isn't about my training. To me, meets the demands of life. Like, I can sprint for the airplane with my luggage and get there and not cough up both lungs. I can go backpacking. Like if you say, hey, let's go backpacking or Grand Canyon tomorrow.
You're going to carry 75 pounds sack.
What a great test.
I'll be a little bit sore at night, but it'll feel good.
I'll feel good sore, right?
We can go to the gym together, and I can put, you know, what feels to me like a respectable
amount of weight on the hack squat.
We do some full-range glute ham raises.
I can hang from a bar, but I'm not trying to beat a pull-up record or run a marathon.
I find that any time I've gone to the extreme in any one kind of training, I end up injured,
sick, and I'm just not interested in that.
And I like to think, I could be wrong, I'm projecting here probably, that
I'm representative of what most people want.
I also want to be able to overeat a little bit every now and again.
Like Thanksgiving's coming a little bit.
I also want to be able to not have to eat all day and then eat a big dinner and not
dissolve into a puddle in my own tears because I'm neurotically worried about something
nutrition-based.
Like I tend to, I basically skip one meal a day just by virtue of my schedule.
That's right.
It's like non-intentional intermittent fasting.
And the people who are obsessive about protein will say, well, gosh, that isn't as good.
But yeah, okay, so maybe I get a little bit less muscle.
I'm not doing, I don't want to be so neurotic about my training that I'm not focusing on the bigger missions of my life.
And notice that what you said was, I train so I can have fun.
And I just want to double click on, we have sucked the joy and the play and exposure out of training and out of fitness.
And now it's, I have to have this V02 Max, so I'll live to 150 and I have to do, right?
And you forgot that we, this whole thing is so you've.
you can go spend some credits.
So I like to say the gym and all that really focused training is spending time on credits.
But one of my coach friends, Nicole Christensen says, CrossFit Roots, she's like, we don't nature for time.
Stop naturing for time.
Like this, we're surfing so we can surf all day and we can surf more waves than the other kids
because you're not fit enough, right?
I want to go hike and then ride my bike and play and ski and do all the things I want to do with my body.
And that made me, I want to hold my kids or I want to do my job and this.
you know, in this warehouse, we start to train for life in a little bit more simple way,
and it doesn't feel like this crazy burden. And it also happens to be the best tool to understand
how you're moving. Because my expert coaches can watch you run and be like, that's what we're working on.
And I'll go right to the thing, right? But for the rest of us, we need to say, wow, my shoulder,
that bench, that fly dumbbell bench was a little bit tricky. I'm losing some shoulder extension, right? Or at least I'm
touching these shapes. And that ends up being a really interesting diagnostic tool where we can
really take a shot at improving function and reducing muscular skeletal distress. And I think this is the
template for it. Yeah. Enjoying your training and including enjoying training hard is one of the best
things one can do years ago when I was skateboarding. I mean, I ruined skateboarding for myself because
got picked up out of sympathy, to be fair, by a couple sponsors and then got obsessed with the fact that,
you know, I wasn't progressing, that broke my foot.
And, you know, pretty soon I didn't hate it.
I loved it and I loved the community, but it turned into something else.
And had I just taken a step back from it and said, all right, I'm decent at this, I could get better.
And I'm just going to focus on doing it for pleasure and make up living some other way.
I'd probably be doing, you know, like, you know, front side inverts in pools now.
And unfortunately, I'm not.
I'm lucky if I get a nice little front side grind on coping.
But whereas with fitness, resistance training and running, I love resistance training and running.
A cup of coffee before my workout tastes 10 times better because I'm going to work out.
I love to use it as an opportunity.
Listen to music.
Listen to podcasts.
There's so much that's in and around it that's still just pure pleasure, even on the
days when I'm like at 95% of output or 100% of output or 80% of output.
Or 80% of output.
I'm like, I just am having so much fun.
That's right.
And I can't wait to get back in there.
So when we're, we are looking at society health, right?
The first thing we argue instead of saying what's most important.
we say, what is it you want to do?
And who are your friends you're going to do it with?
And are you going to do it a lot?
Let's start there.
Then we can start to weasel in everything,
especially with social isolation,
with sort of lack of community.
I mean, I feel like sport is the last place
where people congregate, right?
Sports, sidelines, this is the sort of, you know,
lingua franca of the whole, you know, world.
I've taught on every continent,
except Antarctica, everyone knows what a push-up is,
everyone knows what a deadlift is.
It's not science.
Sorry, it's not math.
That's not the universal language.
It is bench press.
Everyone knows.
And everyone can tell you how much you bench in any language.
So there are some things there that are universal.
I think when we look at the humanism, moving organism,
then we can really start to not feel crazy about how our world is changing.
But how do we fight back by setting up more opportunity to move more?
And for me, the whole lens ends up being like,
we basically, is we're trying to parse through a complex problem. So I have a world champion who's injured, two-time world champion, isn't able to finish a tour. You know, the first question I asked them is, tell me about your sleep. I'm a rough sleeper. Oh, tell me more about that, right? Because I can't even tell your inputs and outputs unless we're getting to sleep. Then I say, well, tell me about your nutrition. I eat clean. Great. Find that for me. I don't even know what that means. Clean. Turns out undercaloried, under nutrition, doesn't get enough macros, doesn't get enough
micros. I'm like, oh, we start to correct that. We start to collect sleep. When we really start
to divide some of the behaviors into, for me, as a 51-year-old, I'm obsessed with my tissues not failing.
Like tearing an achilles is like every physical therapist's worst nightmare. And I jump rope every day,
and I have great range. I do so many isometrics. I'm just not going to tear my Achilles.
Now I'm going to tear my Achilles. But I'm not going to tear my achilles. So tissue health is part of
that. So now I have to look at nutrition. I have to look at my blood work. And I have to look at my
sleep, right, so that I can really define some of those things as that creates a readiness,
tissue tolerance, health, then I can be looking at the other things. And that's really,
as we start to get, again, the framework of sport or framework of play creates this place
where I can suddenly start to understand inputs and outputs and how to take care of this carcass
so that I can do what I want with my body, which is our new definition of mobility. Can I do
what I want with my body and can I be pain free?
Am I correct in my very non-scientific assessment of Instagram accounts,
whereby when I see a 80 to 100-year-old person moving well,
that person tends to be doing something sort of gymnastics related.
There's this incredible video guy, Chinese guy, very tall Chinese guy doing essentially
skin the cat and then into a pull-up, skin the cat, people can look it up.
It doesn't involve actual cats.
hopefully.
It shouldn't.
85-year-old woman sprinting.
So we're talking gymnastics-type movement.
Didn't stop.
Sprinting movement.
Rarely, sometimes it'll be somebody in a gym
lifting a heavy weight, but more often than that,
it's gymnastic type movement, pull-up, dip, parallel bar,
balance beam, sprinting.
Is that what got them there?
Or is that just the expression of what?
Genetics, do they feel safe?
Show me nutrition, show me their training age.
But what's noticeable there is that we have disciplines that require greater range of motion
and skill of body control and high power output.
Right? Huh.
So one of the things that we do in our programming for adults is I make you sprint once a week,
like sprint, because people have not sprinted.
And I don't mean you can go out and run.
I don't think you're capable of that.
But I'm going to put you on a bike.
I'm going to put you in control.
And I'm going to see what your peak wattage is, that sprinting.
So ideally, I would love you to be able to do some hill sprints and repeats,
but I don't think you have the tissue tolerance or the range of emotion for that,
and I know what the outcome is going to be.
But I can put you on a bike and say, can we hit this peak wattage?
And what you just discovered there was, hey, I still need to maintain my ability to move quickly
and have control through great ranges of motion.
That is a recipe for, you know, why if you did yoga and did some sprints,
you're going to be pretty badass.
You know, that's a pretty good way.
And why people who just do the elliptical and the little small dumbbells are, they're fooling themselves?
It's a lot of busy work.
There's a lot of busy work out there.
It makes people feel like they're involved in a program.
Again, the way we want to take our feelings out of it, how do you progress those pink dumbbells?
A thousand reps is 2,000 reps, right?
Show me progression.
Suddenly, I can't progress and regress those things.
The other thing I want to say is like, is it making the thing better?
What are we training for?
And, you know, I think it feels decorative to have busy work.
And I do all this prehab corrective exercise.
I'm like, hold up.
Why don't we do the thing we're doing and regress and progress that and ask if you have
native range of motion, yes or no?
But, you know, if we look at the typical person, especially someone listening to this
podcast, they don't have two hours in the gym.
So if your program is requiring two hours of me, I'm out.
It requires an hour of me, I might be out.
You know, I'm so busy that sometimes I eat lots of 30 and 40 minute pieces.
is peppered throughout plus a lot of other play, and that's good enough.
So we really do need to look at how people are finding themselves in their environments
to ask, is this appropriate for you?
And what's essential?
And it turns out a lot of this, you know, 20-something playing around,
vidying yourself in the gym is great when you have three or four hours in the gym.
Yeah, listening to an entire album or podcast or book chapters in sequence,
I think, is, if I may, far more valuable than a lot of,
allowing oneself the opportunity to text and be on social media during a workout because
it just becomes a very distracted thing.
I think that the workout of any kind is also an opportunity for building concentration.
And one can listen to podcasts or books, et cetera, or an album sequentially through.
But I find, at least for myself, if I work out in a way that's interrupted by social
media or texting or email, because it's available there, that it carries through into the
rest of the day that I'm more distracted.
I believe you.
How about that?
I believe you.
And that's what's so great is you're like, hey, that doesn't work for me.
You know, I find that my best thinking is done under enormous aerobic load.
Like, I literally am like, oh, and I have an often jump up and write something on the whiteboard and then go back and do my thing because, you know, I'm just creates flow state.
And if I'm distracted, I can't really hear what's going on.
And there's a time when I want to distract myself, you know, and there's a time when I want to be amused.
That's fine.
You know, I've got to do two-hour ride.
Getting ready for a four-day backcountry ski trip here in February.
But notice I've already been getting ready for it in the beginning of November.
I am ready.
It's taking me going to ramp up.
And so much of my training now is going towards can I successfully do these four hard days the way I want to.
So some things come down a little bit.
Strength cut down down.
I change my body composition.
I'd like to be a little bit lighter.
I'm playing, but there's some times where I have to get two and three hours in of steady work done,
and I'm like, headphones, you know what I mean?
So it's okay to be amused.
You don't have to be a monk doing what you're doing, but I really like what you said.
I feel distracted.
Yeah, let's use it as a concentration time, right?
Let's use this interaction time.
The gym shouldn't be the loneliest place in the world.
If you're not making eye contact and talking, high-fiving, get a different gym.
I would be remiss if I didn't ask you about fascia.
You and Jill Miller were some of the first people that I ever heard talk about fasha in an elaborate way, in a way that allowed me to finally understand what this incredible aspect of our physiology, the many things that it's doing.
I realize this is a vast discussion that we could take several more hours.
I'm not a fashire researcher.
Right. And yet I think, as I recall, you're one of the first people to talk about, you know, the relationship telling people that there's fashia.
Now we have this thing called fascia.
Clearly an important part of our physiology, our ability to move.
To what extent do you think that tight fascia, quote unquote, I'm probably offending many
people in this moment, tight fascia restricts our movement and that working on facial
release or maneuvering facial.
Mobilization, thank you, can allow us to move better, maybe better posture, maybe even feel
better.
And there are a lot of theories, some probably wrong, some probably.
right about what fascia can and can't do for us.
But what are some things about fascia
that you find particularly interesting
that you'd like to pass along?
I think what we should do is
if you pull fascia out of the human moving equation,
human doesn't, it fails to stop moving, right?
So the recent, like, we've just discovered fascia,
right? That's not really entirely true.
There's a really, like, 20-year-old set of videos
by a guy who's, he describes themselves as a somenot.
It's the name's Gilheadly,
did these live dissections on YouTube.
I don't even know if he's still there, but he basically did all of this gross anatomy for free
on the internet.
And he describes, one of the first people really described fascia as this sort of incredible,
you know, connective tissue network that envelops, wraps, you know, stores energy,
communicates, is tensionality.
In full disclosure, I went to school in Boulder, and I may have dated a girl who went to
Rolfing school and was a Rolfer.
And Ida Rolf was one of the first people to really talk about how can we mobilize fasha
with touch.
So I was introduced to fascia in the 90s when I had Rolphing done on me.
So when I'm trying to help someone think about pain or restore position, and this is overly
gross, but it'll create a framework for people, we ask, is this an environmental problem?
Are you poorly hydrated?
Because your tissues need to be hydrated to slide.
Are you inflamed?
That's why we talk about nutrition and we talk about sleep.
Okay, so we have this environmental piece.
Then I often will say, hey, do we have just a movement problem?
Do you just have crappy technique?
Like, let's fix the technique first.
Let's get you moving to the highest expression of the movement first.
Hey, turn your foot straighter.
Let's recentrate that joint.
Can we have a better organization?
Then we start to say, because sometimes it's just a movement problem, just you needed some queuing.
We say, is this a joint capsule problem?
Because capsule is a bag of connect tissue that surrounds all your joints,
and it can account for huge chunks of your range of motion limitation.
So a lot of we do is we, after we try to mobilize to a joint tissue,
and again, that's my own bias, the way I was trained as an Australian trained manual therapist,
this Maitland School.
Then we say, well, is this just a good old-fashioned muscle restriction?
And we call it muscle dynamics, because that includes high tone, stress, fear,
but trigger points are well-documented phenomenon.
Muscles get stiff.
They become fibrotic, right?
You could have high-tone trying to protect you, all those reasons.
But that still could limit your range of motion.
And lastly, we say sliding surfaces.
So instead of kind of talking about all the different layers of dermis and skin and fascia,
we say, do the things that slide, are they sliding?
So if you grab your skin on your forehead, it should slide in all the directions.
Notice that the skin should slide all the directions over your tendons, right?
If I grab your typical person's Achilles and grab the skin over the Achilles, it doesn't budge.
It's like to have an exoskeleton that's that,
facial kind of compartment, and it's seized, it's adhered, it's bound to the underlying
surfaces, which creates tissue restriction and higher tension. So when we're mobilizing these tissues,
we're trying to keep tissues sliding and gliding. That's an easy way of thinking about it.
Nerves have to run through nerve tunnels, taking huge breaths, keeps all of those, you know,
aspects of your trunk moving. And we just need to be thinking in like a systems approach. So
sometimes if you went and saw an ART practitioner and it didn't solve your problem
this is active release therapy yeah okay it may not have been a fascial problem right if you
went and saw someone who only worked on the muscles it may not have been a muscle problem if you
went and saw a chiropractor and they worked on your on your joint structures right or a good physio
it may not be a joint restriction problem if you saw a coach and they couldn't cue you out of it it may
not have been a, so what we need to do is we recognize that if more squats just solved all the
problems, wouldn't we have solved all the problems? If rolling on a roller had solved all the
problems, seems like we would have solved all the problems. So I think what ends up happening is
we want to put fascia equally as an important part of the system. And one of the ways that
we can directly impact that in a free way, at home, is to begin a conversation of just some
simple myofasional mobilization. In fact, myofascial means muscle fascial. But there are
osteofascial connections? Does the fascia glide over the bone there? We can look at the tendinous
facial connections. And again, do these tissues slide and glide the way they're supposed to slide and glide?
And that's a much easier way to look at it. And then I'm going to test and retest, not with subjective
pain, but how is your range of motion and access to your range of motion?
Thank you for that. I've wanted to try rolfing for a long time. And then a friend of mine,
who's a former CEL team operator, told me that.
that at some point during the role thing that he received,
that they put a glove on and went up his nostril
and did some facial relief on the release,
excuse me, on the inside of his nose.
And it, quote, it was the most painful experience he ever had.
And I was like, all right, well.
I don't know if you know anyone in Naval Special Warfare,
but they're so soft.
Right.
I didn't say that.
Kelly said that.
You know who you are, my friends.
But I, you know, that, I confess, you know,
You know, it's not like I avoid pain at all costs, but that that made me think that I might not want to do rolfing.
I also don't want someone putting their finger up my nose.
So I'm assuming that I could say, hey, I want try rolfing.
And I don't need to get, because you hear this stuff like, oh, you know, there's all this emotional release, which, you know, there are other ways to get that.
I guess is it always painful, is the question.
Does it need to be painful?
His statement is pretty severe.
So let's pull Rolfing on the side because I'm not a Rolfing.
But let's just say that mobilizing your tissues doesn't have to be painful.
In fact, it's likely that you'll experience some discomfort.
But let's talk about a couple guideposts for you.
Number one, you always have to be able to take a full breath.
Right.
So if I'm mobilizing you or you're mobilizing yourself and you suddenly stop breathing, you're going too deep.
So an easy way for you is to say, hey, do I have, can I breathe here?
Number two, I like to have volitional contraction.
So if I'm mobilizing or someone's doing something, I should be able to flex them out.
I should have control over that.
If the pain or depth or pressure is putting too much load on the system where I literally
lose normal muscular control, what am I doing?
Right?
And then, you know, those two pieces, can I take a breath here, do I have control here?
Those go a long way to keeping me in the bounds.
And then we tend to not work on a tissue longer than five minutes.
Just because I want to get the rest of it tomorrow.
And if you give me 10 minutes of work, that's incredible.
We like to put the soft tissue work before we go to bed.
And what we found was that we had better adherence.
No one's doing anything productive in the 10 minutes before they go to the bedroom.
Number two, like a child, when you put a child to bed, you're like, first we take a bath, then we read the book, and then we go to bed, right?
Your brain is like, I know what comes next.
So if you do this rolling or on your soft tissue work, self-massage, you are training your brain to know what comes next.
We find that when people have engaged in massage or self-massage, they don't stand up and want to fight anyone.
They're very relaxed.
If you've ever gone to a spa and had a massage,
you don't go out and snatch or get into a fight afterwards,
you're so chill, bro.
So we found it's a great way to, as Jill Miller says,
switch on the off switch.
That's a beautiful way of talking about that.
How do I tell myself to shift out of this, you know,
fight or flight into coming down?
Five minutes per body part, start anywhere on the leg,
start any, what's stiff, what's asking?
Can I breathe?
Can I contract?
You're going to see that that's a really simple way
to start getting same input.
And not all your tissues are the same.
If you come to me with knee pain,
I'm going to want to be able to look at your positions,
but I'm also going to want to be able to stay on your quads.
I mean, my full body weight.
And if you can't take that, I'm calling that incomplete.
And those people out there who are going to be like,
whoa, that's heavy duty,
you have not worked with my population
who have monster thighs on our thick and fibrotic
and it takes real weight.
So we all have different sensitivities,
but if I respect your ability to take a breath,
and contract, then all of a sudden
we're upregulating.
What I recommend is you go to Thailand.
You get a Thai massage
from a 65-year-old master woman
who weighs 109 pounds,
and when she is working
on your quads and you tap out, she's like,
no, I'm not done here. If you felt your
quads, you're going to realize how low the bar
is. All right.
Heat and cold.
You were one of the first people that told me,
hey, listen, cold's great, cold plunges,
cold showers are great for shifting your state, for resilience training.
It's fun.
It's fun.
I swam with Laird's pool this morning.
Did the breath hold cold laps?
It's fun.
I'm going to put in quotation marks.
Yeah.
Sometimes it's type two fun.
It definitely will shift one state for many hours afterwards for reasons we now understand.
But you were one of the first people to point out to me that for injuries, oftentimes,
it's better to profuse the tissue and that heat some.
sometimes perhaps, is the more favorable tool if you had to pick one.
That's right.
So you, I think, have even talked about that there is research to show that cold water
immersion can attenuate training effects.
If done in the six to eight hours after hypertrophy and strength training, because of its
potent anti-inflammatory properties, prevent some of the inflammation that would prompt
the adaptation response.
Put simply, if your goal is bigger muscles and getting stronger,
don't do immersion-based deliberate cold exposure
in the six to eight hours after your training.
Fine to do it on other days.
Fine to do it beforehand.
In fact, athletes at Stanford do that on the basis of a lot of work
from Craig Heller and others,
find it not doing it at all if you don't want to do it.
Again, I'm not a, I'm not going to die on the sword of cold plunging,
but it can attenuate or even prevent those.
But at other times, it's a great tool for reducing inflammation, shifting one's mental and physical state in the great direction. Look, it always sucks to get in the thing. The whole point is you feel much better when you get out than you did before you ever got in. That's the simplest way to put it. I'm a middle-aged guy who wanted to be the best middle-aged mountain biker in my neighborhood. Is my tining of my plunge going to affect my ability to be that mediocre athlete? No. So stop it. People are like, Wednesday.
the optimal time. I'm like, when's it work for you?
Does that first thing in the morning? Juliet
found that if she
got hot and plunged it in the night, she was
like woken up and fired
up and ready. He's like, I'm not going to sleep now.
And I get hot and cold, hot and cold and it's like
someone hits an emergency break, right?
So, first of all, when's it work for you?
Right? Second of all, if there is
a performance concern, we try to put it as far
away from training as we can. That's what we say.
Training in the evening? Plunge before.
If you like, you train the in the morning,
plunge in the evening. Like, get cold. That's cool.
But what you hinted at is the same reasons why we don't ice injuries because it limits our body's ability to heal.
So it rate limits, and it might do it by phasic restriction.
Your body eventually your body is going to warm up anyway.
So one of the things we like to say is your body either heals at the rate of a human being or it heals slower.
So there's no such thing as a fast healer.
You're just, oh, you're really good at healing at the rate of human physiology.
And the rest of us are doing dumb things that are rate limiting our healing.
nutrition, sleep, right?
When we are talking about anyone after surgery or injury, our benchmark in the line in the sand
is eight hours of laying in bed without looking at your phone.
That's minimum.
And I don't care if you're sleeping because resting is the next best thing, but I can't actually
understand inputs and outputs.
And let me be super clear.
If you're trying to grow a body, learn a skill, change your body composition, get stronger,
heal, that all rhymes with eight hours.
look seven as our minimum. And of course, you're human being. You're going to get by. I was stressed
out last night and wanted to come on to this show with my friend Andrew and do a good job. Like,
I didn't get great sleep. But I'm a human being. I'm still going to show up. So what's nice then
is we can start to say, okay, what can we control in terms of managing and upregulating, boosting
maximal healing rate for humans? And it turns out cold water may not be the best. Icing something
might suppress prostate gland and release, right? Which means that you can think of it as,
you have these circulating stem cells.
And again, sorry, everyone, we get this just very cursory.
And we need the chemical signalers from the injured damaged tissue to call those things to be.
But if I iced that and suppress that, some of those cells can go swinging on past.
There was a great study I saw a million years ago, and it looked at ibuprofen usage in Australian military tactical athletes who had bad ankle sprains.
and those athletes who are given ibuprofen,
which does the same thing as ice,
suppresses prostate gland release, right,
cuts off some of those chemical signals
were back faster
than their counterparts
who did not have the ibuprofen,
but they had chronic ankle instability
because they did not have a sufficient healing response
because they had shut that healing response down.
So what we find is,
look, your body will wait until it warms back up,
but if you think you're going to do
angiogenesis and make new capillaries and modulate all these things by slapping a non-specific
ice pad for a non-specific amount of time over a non-specific tissue you've got to be kidding me and so it's
really mickey mouse does ice help for margaritas that are warm yes open heart surgery yes right waking you up
in the morning waking you up in the morning hey i have a kid who needs a placebo i can numb that thing
and give my kids some placebo ice that's great definitely can work for pain control because as soon as you're
numb, you can't feel anything. But what's going to happen when you pull that thing off? We're going to
come back. So we've found that we have much better. And again, instead of saying that's bad, we're
turning out and saying we have so many better tools now to manage congestion, because that's really
what we're trying to do with ice and healing is we're trying to stop swelling, right? But is swelling
a mistake by the body? And chances are it's not really a mistake. Again, two and a half million years
of evolution. This stuff's pretty awesome. But what we know is failure to move in a
evacuate that swelling is a problem. So when we get people on non-fatiguing muscle contraction
NMS devices like the H-wave or something like that, we find that we can actually decongest and keep
moving in controlled ways. And we have much better clinical outcomes than we do if we ice.
What about heating pads, hot water bottles, sauna? Do you sit in the sauna? Yes, I do. Love the sauna.
How often are you in the sauna? Whenever I can, you know. And sometimes it's short sessions and
Sometimes it's super hot sessions, and sometimes I just get hot and cold a couple of times.
And I try, like you said earlier, I'm not after some specific adaptation response.
The sauna is a great way for us to chill out and hang out.
And sometimes we're bored, and we've got to make dinner or move on.
So, you know, I try to sauna.
If there's anything I do, I sauna a lot.
Bigger the engine, the bigger the brakes.
And for me, it's such a big break.
You mentioned Laird.
I've seen Laird drag the assault bike into the sauna, something most people probably shouldn't do.
because they would die of hyperthermia.
We call that Restrepo.
It's the worst place on Earth.
It's an interesting tool, though, the heat.
I find that if I get the sauna uncomfortably hot
and then force myself to breathe super slowly
only through my nose so that I don't actually feel
like a burning sensation on the inside of my nostrils
and I just do that for 10, 15 minutes,
that it's wonderful stress resilience training.
How great is that?
But very different than the cold plunge where you can either muscle through it or distract yourself or whatever.
In the heat, you know, your heart rate's going up and there's this temptation to, I'm like to follow that heart rate toward a more elevated stress state.
And so I find that you can get very, very hot.
Obviously, be safe about this, folks, but still maintain a lot of calm.
And I think it's a wonderful tool, but you have to kind of work at it.
And I enjoy this, by the way.
So people are probably thinking, here you go again.
like why not just enjoy the sauna?
But I like to listen to Gregorian chants
or something in there and do this like very like
how even and calm can I stay
at 2.15 or 220.
And I wear the cap so those higher heats
don't register to the brain.
You will drive yourself out.
Eventually your brain is going to just,
what drives me out of the sauna now is I wretch.
I actually like feel like I'm going to vomit
because I've gotten so hot.
My brain stem is like, bro.
You can just override.
So I'm like, blah, got to get that.
And I get out of the sauna.
And then one of the reasons I love the cold so much,
we jump in our pool or our cold plunge is that I can get back in the sauna.
Right, right.
It's the contrast.
I try to do it once a week.
Sona cold, sauna cold, sauna cold, sonacold, sonacold.
Once a week.
You know, again, not training for any specific thing except to be able to go back to Jocco's house
because I did sauna at Jocco's house with some family members of his and friends.
And I think they wanted to see when I would tell.
They wanted to crush you.
So they went, I think they cranked that thing to like 22, 230.
and they called,
he got me on this.
I ended up down on the floor,
you know,
and they were teasing me
because it's obviously cooler down
on the floor
than it is up top.
And so they call that
the Huberman spot,
the wimpy spot.
But yeah, he's a beast
with the song.
Everyone, it's not a contest.
And what...
It is in the willing household.
I'll tell you, it absolutely is.
One of the things I like
about the heat and the cold
is that it informs me
about my readiness state.
Because just like my CO2 tolerance,
My breath holds are very short when I'm stressed and under recovered.
My heat tolerance drops dramatically, and so does my cold tolerance.
It's easier to pick up really fast.
I start shivering right away.
I'm like, whoa, I've been in here for 30 seconds.
I'm already shivering.
I'm like, huh, another piece of day that says maybe I need to make it a 70% day in the gym and move.
I don't have to take a day off.
We believe, Gillette and I believe in this thing called desire to train.
we wake up every day like you
probably self-medicated with some exercise as kids
right and we start thinking about what we're going to exercise
what are we going to do we're going to ride our bikes what are we going to lift
like wait when we wake up we start thinking about when are we going to do it
and we wake up on some days and it's not there
and what we ask ourselves is it not there why is it not there is it me
I should be there we should go train anyway but we really try to listen to that voice
and when there's no desire to train it's really strange how it correlates
with crap heat tolerance crap CO2 tolerance
crap cold tolerance.
And I think it's a nice way
of understanding yourself
from sort of a third party objective measure.
Especially as you get good at this.
You're like, wow, that really sucked today.
Yeah, I love that.
I think assessing one's degree
of kind of forward center of mass
for effort is great.
I'm borrowing this analogy
from somebody else.
I didn't come up with this.
He said, with all things,
you're back on your heels,
flat-footed or forward center of mass.
And I think we've heard a lot
about trying to encourage ourselves
always be forward center mass what i'm hearing today is that great to do that sometimes great sometimes
to back off but to just explore the full range of um for lack of a better way to put it sort of um
emotional range of motion you know yeah and remember ultimately all this is supposed to be additive right
and it's supposed to inoculate me by creating a framework that makes more durable my body and my my
my relationships. I mean, we didn't even talk about the fact that the sauna is like, it's just
glue for people. It allows people to come together. I think one of the things I've noticed with my
male friends is that it gives us a place like once a week where we get together because it's so
hot. We all super vulnerable. The truth barrel. We talk with our friends and we kind of share stories
and it can be talked about our lives. And so it creates a framework for that. And if that was the
benefit of the sauna, I'm in. Just that alone, right? That my wife and I,
feel more connected after taking us on together.
I'm like, oh, who cares about the heat shot proteins and Alzheimer's?
That's probably important too.
But I like having a lot of bottom things.
And I think it's easy for us to sort of so hyper-science and hyper-tactic things that we forget.
The whole point of the brain is to be around other brains.
That's it.
That's why the brain exists.
And then those brains go do rad shit in the world together.
And sometimes it's that simple.
And when we start throwing that filter on, it becomes a lot more sustainable.
I'm not interested to be in 110.
I'm interested to being durable enough
to take the hits on the way to 110.
I love that.
Some of my best friendships have been forged in the sauna.
That's true, right?
And not by pushing ourselves necessarily.
Just become the thing, you know?
It's so cool.
I know that some of my New Zealand teams have a kava.
They call it recovery.
And sometimes they'll share a have a kava ceremony
and drink a little kava and then jump in the sauna.
And, boy, it really binds the boys.
You know, they really creates a downregulation effect.
I mean, it's, so, you know, I think, again, my own bias, because I love this stuff,
is that I think all of it is about physical input.
So if we took a sort of macro step back, what do you say is, what does your physical practice look like?
Tell me about your physical practice.
Well, I get up and move my body, and I try to eat a fruit and some protein before I get out the door,
and I walk all day long, and I try not to sit in one period of place for a long period of time.
and then I get home, and if I'm lucky enough to exercise, I do,
and then I sat on the floor and I rolled a little bit.
That's a full practice.
You walked, you got sunlight, you know what I mean?
And that, I think, is a much better way of thinking about this
versus sort of let me add another line of code to your programming
where now you're doing three sets of tandem and this thing.
What are your thoughts on nutrition?
You seem to be pretty balanced about this.
Before we started recording,
you were talking about some meatloaf recipe.
that sound pretty amazing.
Clearly you love food.
I'm not going to say I'm the best at meatloaf,
but I may be seven out of 11 times
bamboo terrace bench champion.
I'm going to get a tattoo, but it's fine.
You enjoy food.
I love food.
So you like to eat and you cook a bit as well.
Most people feel, I think,
kind of overwhelmed the discussions about nutrition.
Now we're trying to get a gram of protein
per pound of body weight, which I subscribe to.
But if I'm supposed to,
spread that out across the day.
Sometimes I'm doing that.
Sometimes I'm not.
I like fruits and vegetables.
Do you feel like a failure
because you didn't have ground?
I mean, honestly,
it can feel for people like,
oh, I didn't do it.
No, I think if people make getting high quality,
high protein to calorie ratio foods
as the foundation of their diet,
and then eating some vegetables
and eating some fruit.
Whoa, bro, what about the peels?
You're going to kill people at that time.
And then I love that small.
That's dangerous, son.
I'll eat the orange peel if it's a really good orange.
I will.
People who know me.
I've gotten some wide eyes at meals where I'll take the lemons out of my drink.
I'll just eat the whole thing down.
I don't care.
Someone will tell me why it's going to kill me, but I don't eat the seeds, but I'll eat the peel too.
So some vegetables, fruit, and then some starches, you know, per energetic requirements
and or real life.
Like, I'm not going to stay away from the sourdough bread because I don't need a starch
that.
I don't have a little bit of it.
Like, you know, I feel like we've lost our rational approach to eating because people feel
these quantifiable metrics of, you know, calories and protein, they're important, clearly.
But I've always known you to be somebody who's very balanced about the occasional ice cream,
yes, steak, but also vegetables.
I mean, A, why do you think that the nutrition conversation has gotten so distracted,
even contentious?
And B, what do you do?
And, you know, if you were going to raise a kid, you've raised kids.
If you were going to raise a kid and say, here's what, like, balanced nutrition looks like.
to you.
Yeah.
I'm not calling you nutrition,
as I'm saying,
to you.
How do you see this picture?
What I want to point out
is that if we're going to have a conversation,
remember my real job, day job is high performance.
I'm going to have to talk about body composition.
I'm going to have to talk about fueling.
Do you have enough carbs on board to do what we're going to do?
Are you eating to recover to reduce the session cost, right?
How do we minimize the sort of the physiologic cost
of this training and this competition?
And that's all wrapped around nutrition.
Nutrition.
I already hinted at I'm going to have to talk
and ultimately ask you to get a blood,
panel and make sure that you have everything on board so that your tissues are tissues and can
handle the loading or prescribing them. So I didn't want to get into nutrition at all because it's
always about body composition for me. And I'm like, that's the most boring reason. Like we,
Sean Stevenson wrote a beautiful book about creating a table culture and a culture around eating for
your family. So for me, the functional unit of change is the household. That's the place where I want to
make and put all my energy in time. That's how we'll transform society, one household at a time.
But sitting down with your kids, the research around eating with your kids, like twice or three
times a week, is phenomenal, right? Like, cooking is beautiful. I have to become more nuanced
because if I have a team I'm working with, like we had a tournament two weeks ago at Stanford,
we played four games. That's four collegiate, nationally ranked teams. And that's four collegiate, nationally ranked
teams that we're playing badasses. How do I fuel those women? How do I get them? What do they want to
eat? What makes them feel good? What makes them feel bad? How do we balance all of that? Like,
I found out that putting food on a table with a tablecloth increased calories. Again, as a high
performance for me, I'm like, how are the ways that I can be thinking about this from a practical
standpoint. My personal thing is that we focus on trying to create, this has been really useful
for Julian and I'm an objective measure, 0.8 to 1 grams of protein, which means I don't measure
anymore. Per pound of body weight. Yeah, I'm 51 years old, per pound body weight. So what does that
mean? It means that I really try to prioritize protein every meal. Super simple. And I try not to eat
one protein. I try to eat all the proteins, right? That's probably better. I try not to choose
personally very fatty proteins because my genetics don't really support it. If I want to see triglycerides
and things go through the roof,
then I'll, you know, watch me eat eggs and butter and steak.
Like keto gives me diarrhea.
So what I'll say is I try to go for leaner proteins there.
And then on the fruits and vegetables,
because I think we have a real problem with not enough micronutrients,
again, talking about tissue health,
and definitely not enough fiber.
Those are huge problems.
And if I get 800 grams of fruits and vegetables,
this is a nutrition strategy promoted by our friend,
E.C. Sincowski,
of at Optimize Me Nutrition,
she put this 800 gram challenge
based on some research,
and it changed everything
because suddenly I was like,
oh my God, I got to eat more food.
I have to eat more fruits and vegetables.
And I was stuffing myself
with fruits and vegetables,
getting enough protein that I was like,
I guess there's no room for a cookie.
You know, and what I really liked about that,
it was agnostic about your cultural preferences.
It didn't matter if you were vegan,
didn't matter for vegetarian,
didn't matter if you were a carnivore.
You want to do carnivore plus berries?
Knock yourself right out.
It gave people permission to have their food identities, but it also met the minimums.
And then we can dose up and dose down based on what your performance needs are.
And this is 800 grams, not of carbohydrate.
This is 8,000 grams.
It's like four big apples.
Gotcha.
A banana is like 80 to 100 grams.
Okay.
Yeah.
If you want to be real dangerous, you ate eight bananas today, you could die.
I mean, you could die.
And a big salad with, you know, less cucumber, tomato.
Probably two to 300 grams.
Okay, so then you'd also want to get some fruit,
maybe some cruciferous vegetables, et cetera.
Check this out.
Again, I'm just going to do some boy math here.
Starbucks cookie, delicious.
Really?
300 calories.
I'm just to call it delicious, right?
A pound of cherries is 230 calories.
So eat a pound of cherries and tell me you're like,
ah, I still want something sweet.
A pound of melon?
What's it, like 220 calories?
A pound of melon?
So, calorically, not very dense, right, but nutritionally super dense.
So we end up loading a ton of more food on, and it really does prioritize those things.
And from a performance standpoint, one of our friends is this incredible nutritionist at Michigan football.
Abigail is amazing there.
And she will tell me about how she's using nutrition as intervention for sports performance.
And she'll have men come up to her and say, Abigail,
I pooped today.
And she's like, yeah, that's great.
You know, you should poop every day.
And they're like, no, no, you understand?
I pooped yesterday, too.
And it's the first time these kids have pooped consecutively.
They don't poop regularly.
And I think, again, if I'm just trying to get out in the weeds and talk about what's normal
and not normal, we should talk about you didn't eat fiber.
And she's like, wait until you poop twice in one day.
And they were like, that's crazy.
I've never, my whole life.
And the difference is they start.
started eating fruits and vegetables and fiber.
And when we start to create those benchmarks,
it's a lot easier for me to see inputs and outputs.
And then we can argue about,
can you choke down 100 grams of carbs an hour
because you're in my elite cyclist?
You know, I think you'd be shocked at how my,
a lot of my athletes have changed their relationship around food
because it serves their needs.
It's not their identity around control.
And it's something that Julie and I've been very cautious of
is if you have two daughters,
just speaking, we're really concerned about career,
creating dysfunctional patterns or relationships to food.
Because in this fitness space, it can be real gnarly.
Yeah, I see the progression from, you know, sitcoms of the type that we grew up on
to reality TV shows to social media where social media can do so much good,
education-wise, et cetera, connection.
But it's basically a reality TV show that everyone's been able to cast themselves in if they want.
And certain characters are casting their,
physique. Certain figures are casting their outrageous behavior and, you know, we're all in this reality
TV show called social media. I think that's really the best way to describe it. You know, when people
start to feel like, oh, wow, these people are getting attention for this reason or that reason,
it creates a gravitational pull toward people behaving a certain way and then obviously some of that
can be really self-destructive. Do you win health? I mean, this is a great question I ask people.
So, like, you shredded down, super dysfunctional eating,
can't go out and eat with friends,
you don't drink anything with calories.
Like, it's really gnarly to be hyper-lean.
And then what I'll say is when you took your shirt off,
did you win Instagram?
Did you win?
Because you got another 60, 70 years on this planet.
How does that work?
We don't really die.
We'll manipulate macros to take weight on or put weight off players.
In-season, out of season.
You know, we'll have really good athletes say,
I think I should lose four pounds the next two weeks for this thing.
And I'm like, hold up.
I'm not going to put you in another stressor when we're trying to, like, let's go ahead
and talk about body composition after the season.
But ultimately, when we really get people on board with how food has the potential to enrich
their relationships, how fun it is to cook, how fun it is to prep, how fun it is to serve
other people, then we have this really different relationship with fueling.
and that's really remarkable.
But it is really easy to say, I won.
And now I'm like, okay, so this 90-day fast,
there are so many fitness things out there
where they start with a fast
or brutal calorie restriction.
And I'm like, that's your jam
to get people lean fast.
It's just to slam off the calories.
Like, we know what's going to happen.
How many people have done
some kind of 30-day, 90-day thing
and the next day it's like they're off the rails.
So if you're doing some body recomp
and then you're off the rails,
For me, I'm like, I don't think that was very good because this is a long season we're playing.
I think it's, I have to be careful here because I realize this gets into some issues.
When I did an episode about anorexia, I learned that, first of all, anorexia has existed for centuries.
This idea that it's more prominent now with social media, actually the numbers don't bear out.
What does bear out is that it is the most deadly, the most deadly by far of all the psychiatric illnesses.
Oh, interesting.
It leads to death in a far greater percentage of cases than any other psychiatric illness, including bipolar, where people often commit suicide, a great, much higher percentage of people who commit suicide who are bipolar, etc.
So it's a really serious thing.
And yet we assume that social media has made that worse.
But there's this now cluster of all these different eating disorders that don't qualify as full-blown anorexia neurosis, sort of like ADHD now.
we understand people are having attention deficit issues that might not be clinical ADHD,
but that cluster around it and like people's adults and children's inability to hold their attention
on an idea or topic for any appreciable amount of time. So it's a very serious thing. I love that today
you've talked about enjoying your training, like really enjoying your training, all aspects, the
resistance part, the cardiovascular part, the mobility part, you know, in the evening, getting down
on the floor, also enjoying eating with people, enjoying the sauna. I mean, I think
You know, people see the big guy that you are, the amazing track record you have of working with all these incredible athletes and you're quite accomplished athlete yourself.
And I think this is the first time for me anyway that I realize like you're, you are thinking about how to make this whole thing pleasurable and mesh it with real life, which I'm realizing now shouldn't come as a surprise because you have a family, a flourishing family, in addition to a flourishing business with the ready state and so forth.
I think if there's one message that really comes through over and over again, it's like, how.
can you make fitness and nutrition and health part of your life, but not let it take over your
life or your mind in a way that isn't healthy? Yeah. Thank you for that. And if that's coming across
at all, I think we're doing a better job. And I would say certainly tempered as I've gotten
more reasonable. You know, I think we get older and you can see a little bit more of the horizon.
And, you know, you start to wrap your hands around. How are we going to solve these problems in
these different places. And what is sustainable? You know, I really think that that's, you know,
we seek quick inputs and outputs that are high levels of sports performance. And simultaneously,
again, I want to take those lessons and transmute them to my own household and a really
sustainable, fun way. The nutrition piece is such a dangerous one. And young right now,
Julie and I are very obsessed with youth sports and spending time with seeing if we can improve that
experience for families. So they come out unharmed. And, you know, Reds relative energy deficiency in
sport, you know, is where we start to see that kids are not eating enough to fuel activity and their
growing body simultaneously. And it's really hard on their physiologies. And it starts to show up with
lost periods. It starts to show up with stress fractures, right? And we start to see sort of this,
some degradation in sort of the body's tissues, but can really crash a lot of problems. And, you know,
Stacey Sims is probably the first person to really put it on my radar of, hey, you're a physio coach.
I need you to become an expert with the people that you're working with.
Are you eating enough support?
And I see some of the elite women I work with, elite women really battle, this is the body I need to get paid and to win world championships.
And that's not the body that people want on the Instagram.
And, you know, should I have a salad after this training?
I'm like, we just play for three hours.
No, you're not going to eat a salad.
I'm like, go get this big ass burrito.
And then we'll talk about your salad next, you know.
So it sounds like the athletes are under-eating.
Yes.
And my understanding, anyway, the statistics seem to-
Which I know is confusing, but, you know,
potentially not thinking about food at the right times.
And within the general population of non-athletes,
especially youth, however, it seems that people are over-consuming calories.
So there seems to be two populations clustering out here.
We have a, this reminds we have a rule at our house for dinner.
we have a three vegetable rule.
This is from when we work with Margaret Garvey,
who cooks a protein, whatever that is,
and has also three vegetables.
And that's where she starts.
And I had one daughter who is like a gourmet chef, Georgia,
is just a total badass, you know, G.
And then I have Caroline, who is the pickiest human being on the leg?
Isn't brown?
I'm not eating.
And she's getting better.
But when we had three vegetables,
suddenly what we saw was that she might eat one.
Right?
And we could start to have exposure.
but I think if we crowd out some of the,
because we don't want to have a restrictive house, right?
But, you know, if we crowd out some of the other foods,
we found that it was a lot easier for us to say,
this is what we're eating,
and we eat this together as a family.
And then if those other foods,
I mean, your teenagers are going to leave the house
and eat whatever they want.
Just be clear, everybody.
So you might as well stuff them with the good stuff at home.
I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you about supplements.
These days, we hear a lot about creatine.
Creatine, creatine, creatine.
I like creatine, been taking it for years.
We'll occasionally do a washout where I just kind of let a bunch of water out of my body.
Why not?
And then get back to it.
I don't do it for any specific reason.
I just do it.
I travel and forget to bring creatines.
I'm like, okay.
Yeah, but most of the time I'm taking five to 10 grams a day.
Okay.
We've heard about the body benefits, the brain benefits.
For athletes and just, quote-unquote, exercisers, the typical person listening to this podcast.
Do you recommend creatine?
What are some of the things that in your household?
I'm getting this picture.
And I've been in your home.
And I will say that the spirit in your home is a wonderful one.
Brian McKenzie and I showed up more or less unannounced at one point.
And like, there's, it's a delightful thing.
Like, people's spirits are up.
It's a space station.
It's a space station of Stoke.
You know, like, you want to be part of it, you can come in.
Thank you.
It's a great environment.
And it was very warming to see that and the way that you embrace all these different aspects of life.
And you're, it's busy and it's hectic and it's fun.
And people care for one another.
and they're direct with one another,
but in a way that's really supportive.
It's really, in my mind, a great model for a home.
And it's really, it stayed with me,
and it's really a pleasure to reflect on it.
A five, J-star.
Yeah, but it's a team effort in there for sure.
So I'll just ask this.
What supplements do you think are,
if not necessary, then highly desirable for most people?
And then for athletes,
and maybe, because we get this question a lot now,
especially after Stacey came on the podcast,
for the female athletes you work with?
in particular, are there supplements that add on to that initial batch?
So I think we can divide these things into food-like things, right, and then sort of performance.
Yeah, like way protein, it's just a protein replacement, high-quality, high-protein to calorie ratio.
That's right.
And if you don't handle way, like, my athletes, I'm like, let me introduce you these vegetarian proteins.
And that's because you're having a hard time timing your meals or just getting enough protein
because sometimes you just don't feel like it.
So great, great utilization there.
For Caroline, she gets omegas at night
because she doesn't want to have any accidental fish burp at school.
She's a teenager.
So she takes them before she goes to bed.
And we're really interested in brain health.
And there's some early research.
And again, not my expertise that I've heard of,
read about, talk to people about,
that vitamin D, creatine, and amegas might help attenuate symptoms of
concussion if they get hit, right? So post-pre. So those things are on Carolyn. She gets creatine
every day. She gets an omega-every-day. And she gets vitamin D. And some of that is probably there's
enough vitamin D during the summer because I could pull it out. But we live in northern climes and
they're indoors. And there's good research. I think Dan Garner had a great piece just talking about
vitamin D supplementation in the military and the decrease of like risk of of fractures in
the foot just with vitamin D.
So that's the start for me.
I take a good multi because I'm like, I'm just going to cover the basis, you know?
And then you can look, I think the next sort of valence of interest is, have you had a blood
panel?
How are your vitamin B levels?
Is there anything we need to do based on your environment or your genetics?
And then I think it gets real in the weeds past that.
And again, play around with that.
one of my super smart friends was like,
I think you should take a statin, a small dose statin,
once a week.
And I was like, all right.
So I was like, better take some COQ10 with that.
It's an experiment I'm running, right?
Downsides are low.
I'm getting my blood panels, talk to my physician.
But so COQ10 is on the menu for me,
just to make sure I don't have anything.
And so I think suddenly what we should be looking at
is how do I round out?
My family doesn't eat fish,
so we're not getting enough.
some amegos from those sources.
And no one will eat walnuts,
but I'm the only one to eat walnuts.
So, you know,
how do I round out my nutrition
with some supplementation?
And is there a benefit
for some other things
that, with my genetics
or with what's going on?
Like, JSTAR has a mutated
MTFHR gene, right?
And so we are always watching
B vitamins for her.
Right.
Poor methyl later.
Right.
Poor methylator.
Exactly.
JSTR is his wife.
That's right.
Sorry.
Jay Stizzle.
You guys have such an awesome relationship.
You guys have poke fun at one another.
You're clearly awesome companions to one another,
and you do great work together.
I am the broken anchor of the relationship.
I like so.
She is, you know, what's really interesting is I have,
I'm a little bit like you, I think.
I'm excitable.
I get obsessed with things.
It's super fun.
Go down rabbit holes.
I like to experiment.
And Jay Starr is like the true North,
like, no, that sounds fishy.
We're not doing that.
You know, like, I came home one time, and I was like, you know what?
This cow's milk is out of here.
Our family is only drinking goat milk.
I only had the best goat milk.
I just had the best goat milk.
And Julia was like, sure, that's going to laugh.
And I gave some goat milk to Georgia, and she's like, hucked it across the room.
She's a baby.
And then I drank the goat milk and, like, vomited into the sink.
And I had goat milk on my lip.
And Juliet just is so patient by saying, huh, I wonder if that's a good idea.
I wonder if you will stick around.
So she's the rudder.
She is 100% the rudder.
She is a three-time world champion, everyone.
She's a rower at Cal.
And she is my training partner.
She's the greatest training partner ever had.
We use training as another way of spending time together.
I love it.
Thanks for sharing a little bit of the picture of your home.
It matches exactly my experience.
Chaos.
And chaos, a little bit of chaos and a ton of love.
And I've been quoting him a lot lately.
I cannot take any credit for this.
But Naval, who is, you know, famous on.
on various podcasts.
He says, you know, what are we really shooting for in life?
It's a fit, energetic body.
This is Naval, not me, by the way.
He said, fit energetic body, a calm mind and resources.
We ought to have resources and a homeful love.
So, I don't know, from, you know, that's the list.
Spending the rest of your life working on those,
and you're going to have a really, it's going to be really fun.
And I just want to remind people, you hear me say it again, that they should all be enjoyable.
And it is fun to track.
And it's also, you know, which devices am I wearing right now?
I'm not wearing a single device, you know, because I want to feel.
And sometimes I track and sometimes I don't track.
And how am I feeling?
And ultimately, everything is really coming down to how do I come to understand my own process
and my interaction with the world process.
And I think I'm getting better at 51 of knowing I don't need.
six cookies and I really need to get more fruits and vegetables and sleep and I don't need a
device to tell me that.
Love it.
Well, Kelly, Dr. Starrett, thank you so much for coming on here today and sharing with us
so much, we covered so much, you covered so much, I mean, pelvic floor, fascia, cold heat,
movement patterns, you give us a ton of practical tools, getting down on the floor, sit,
stand, and on and on.
but a small portal into the vast amount of knowledge you have in that head of yours.
And I just have to say that, you know, it's been a delight today because these little bits have
come through about who I know you to be in the rest of the world.
This is the real world.
We just happen to have microphones in front of us, the rest of the world.
And you've been at this a while, this business of trying to help people figure out best ways
to move, how to be a better athlete, how to, you know, improve one's fitness, how to
take a rational, fun, hardworking approach at times, but also fun, playful, recreational approach
to this really key aspect of our health and many key aspects of our health. So I just want to thank you
for coming here today, for doing the work that you do. And, you know, you are one of the real ones,
as they say. Oh, my brother. Thank you so much. And you walk the walk. You're strong. You can go far.
You have fun doing it. Your great husband and dad. And you've been a great friend to me.
So thanks for coming on here.
Let's get you back again.
And just thanks for being you.
My pleasure.
Anytime.
And thanks all the great Huberman,
people that make this thing possible.
It's really a thing.
Thanks, brother.
Thank you.
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion
with Dr. Kelly Starrett.
To learn more about Kelly Starrett
and the work that he does
with his wife, Juliet, Starrett,
at the Ready State,
as well as to find links to Dr. Starrett's excellent books,
please see the show note captions.
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