Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1392: 10 Habits of Super-Healthy People

Episode Date: October 1, 2020

In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin cover ten of the most important habits shared by healthy people. The important skill of modeling successful people’s actions and habits. (2:37) 10 Habits of Supe...r-Healthy People. (7:08) #1 – Planned (break)fast. (8:12) #2 – Track water intake. (13:57) #3 – Take walk breaks. (18:26) #4 – Unplug from tech. (24:38) #5 – Follow in love with growth, instead of winning. (30:00) #6 – Prioritize and optimize sleep. (35:03) #7 – Build muscle and lift weights. (40:38) #8 – Go outside and get fresh air. (44:42) #9 – Stay mobile. (47:32) #10 – Have a mindfulness practice. (49:54) Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Fitness Products Visit Four Sigmatic for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout Mind Pump #1385: How To Start Your Fitness & Fat Loss Journey Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked – Book by Adam Alter Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss 5 Long-Term Benefits of Resistance Training – MInd Pump Blog MAPS Starter | MAPS Fitness Products MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Alone | Netflix Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts. Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. In this episode of Mind Pump the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment podcast, we sat down and talked about the habits that we've seen are super healthy clients have. In other words, we sat down and talked about the last 20 years that we've worked as trainers and we talked about the clients that we knew that did exceptionally well. There's people who had very healthy, effortlessly healthy lifestyles, people who didn't gain the weight back and didn't have this yo-yo relationship with exercise and diet.
Starting point is 00:00:45 People who were truly healthy, we narrowed down 10 habits that they all seemed to have in common. Now this podcast is brought to you by our sponsor, four-sigmatic. Four-sigmatic has some of the best mushroom-based supplements you'll find. Anyway, now one of my favorite products from them is cordiceps.
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Starting point is 00:02:32 Again, that's at mapsfitnisproducts.com. One of the best lessons I learned as an early trainer, both for myself and for my clients, very simple. It's very, very simple. I remember one of my mentors, my early mentors told me, he told me it was kind of like a hack, right? He didn't use that word,
Starting point is 00:02:51 but he said, this is like a secret. He said, look at people who are very successful in whatever area you think, you're looking to get better at. So business, working out, nutrition, whatever, find people who you admire, and then just look at their habits, look at their actions, and just copy them for a little while. See what they're doing. You don't even need to understand it necessarily. Studying them without being creepy. Studying them and copying them. And I did this.
Starting point is 00:03:21 I did this with my workouts. I would watch people who seem to respond really well and do real well, and I'd copy them and I'd learn through that process. I did this as a trainer as an early trainer. I had a lot of passion, a lot of energy, a lot of excitement, but I did not have a ton of knowledge. I was brand new. So I looked at the trainers around me
Starting point is 00:03:40 that I thought were really, really good trainers, and I watched them and copied them. I did this when I had my studio, watching my physical therapists in there, and what they did, and massage therapists, the acupuncturists. And I really think that this is an important skill to really pay attention to the habits of people that you may want to be like and figure out why they do those things and what the benefits are on them, copy them. So maybe we could do this episode and talk about those types of things.
Starting point is 00:04:05 I love this conversation, and I love the way you took it because this is something that I definitely think was a major contributor to the success I had early on in my career. That was something I didn't have a lot of experience. I didn't have an education in the background of kinesiology or sports medicine. And so what I did have have an education in the background of kinesiology or sports medicine.
Starting point is 00:04:26 And so, what I did have was an opportunity to work in a place that was highly competitive. And there was 20 trainers there, and it was very easy to see who the best was. And they were right. I could see who was training the most clients, how much money they were making. And I immediately attached myself to this guy and just asked a million questions. And I remember years later, and when I got into leadership and I had my own staff, it just blew my mind how many people did not do that.
Starting point is 00:04:55 Like why would you not look to your peers or look at somebody in the space that is having a ton of success and model many of the things that they are doing to have success? Doesn't mean you got to be them, doesn't mean you've got to actually copy them, but model after a lot of the habits that they've put in place because it's normally not something magical that has made this person so successful, it's that they've put a series of habits together that have created this success and whatever endeavor that they're pursuing. Yeah, and it's a, it's really a series of trial and error that they may have gone through to figure these things out. That you can avoid a lot of that trial and error by observing
Starting point is 00:05:34 what they do, what are their habits, why are they so successful in this particular area, and then just emulate them. And again, it's not about not being who you are, it really what it is is about emulating them and then learning along through the process and then developing similar habits, or what you'll find at least I should say, is you end up developing similar habits because you start to find consistencies
Starting point is 00:06:00 among people who tend to be successful in different areas. The most successful people that I've been around are sponges and they definitely pay attention to a lot of these other people around them who are doing very well. That was something that I, you know, I prided myself on in terms of, especially with personal training.
Starting point is 00:06:20 I wanted to know how everybody was organizing things, like what kind of, you kind of communication was most effective with their clients, like how they could get them to adopt these other healthy habits, especially with nutrition. That was such a hard one for me to nail down in the very beginning. It took a long time and I would sit and listen
Starting point is 00:06:40 and I would listen to the presentations of other trainers and how they'd explain it, listen to dieticians. I even brought in a dietician for myself, my own business to up the value of what I was presenting my clients, and I did that purposely to learn from them and to model some of what they were promoting to my clients. And then I would take that with me on. I have this knowledge now that I can pass on,
Starting point is 00:07:05 and it can come from me. Right, right. So here's what we did, right? So, you know, Adam, Justin and myself, for a long time, were trainers who train clients or we train trainers, who train clients. And so through this process, we've been exposed to thousands, if you add them all up, right, thousands of people that we've either worked with
Starting point is 00:07:26 directly or by proxy, right, through other trainers. And this is over the course of two decades. And what you end up seeing are patterns over that long period of time. You train one person, two people, ten people. You may not pick up on patterns, but when you do this for 15, 20 years and you do this with a lot of people,
Starting point is 00:07:45 very clear patterns start to emerge. And so what we did in this episode is we listed, you know, 10 habits that we've seen that are consistent among the super healthy people that we've been around. The people who seem to do it effortlessly, the people who seem to have the best overall health, the people who seem to do it forever. These are not people that are in and out, but rather it's a part of who they are.
Starting point is 00:08:11 Well, the very first one that we listed is plan breakfast. And I love how you had Doug put it up on the notes by putting a hyphen, right? So it's break, break fast. Yes. Because some people I know right away might be thinking, well, wait a second, what if I interment it fast and what if I don't exactly do breakfast? And I think there's a lot of arguments for both. Right. And I think the key to this first one is the planning piece.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Yes. Not so much do you eat at 6am or 9am or 2 o'clock in the afternoon, but it's that you have structure for the very first meal that you eat for the day. And the people that I've seen that have had the most success around nutrition do this. They map out that first meal and all the other ones, but the first one is so important to kick off the day
Starting point is 00:08:58 and set the tone. It totally does set the tone because here's, so let me give you an analogy, right? Let's say you have an important presentation at work, right? This is a presentation that your, your potential promotion hinges upon. So you got to do this big presentation. Do you walk into it and then just, you know, wing it, do you just shoot from the hip or do you plan for it?
Starting point is 00:09:23 Do you think about the scenarios and what to talk about and how to present the things you wanna present? Now if you're a smart person, you plan. You don't just walk in and then just shoot from the hip because your chances of success are much higher by planning. So this is what we've observed training clients is that people who don't plan breakfast and again, break fast, meaning the first meal of the day. So this could be in the morning, it could be in the afternoon, training clients is that people who don't plan breakfast,
Starting point is 00:09:45 and again, break fast, meaning the first meal of the day. So this could be in the morning, it could be in the afternoon, but essentially, the first meal of however many meals you're gonna have throughout that day, people who plan it are more thoughtful, it sets the tone, and they tend to eat better throughout the day. Now people who don't plan it, it tends to become
Starting point is 00:10:03 a race against the nutrition. It tends to become this battle throughout the day. Now people who don't plan it, it tends to become a race against the nutrition. It tends to become this battle throughout the day, like, oh my gosh, I'm late, gotta get to work, what can I eat or I have an eating thing now, I'm starving, let me just grab this quick thing. And then the rest of the day tends to follow suit. And I can argue that the things that you eat probably is among some of the most important thing
Starting point is 00:10:24 that you can plan throughout your whole day because your health does affect everything. Everything that you do, so the food that you eat is extremely important and planning it is just prioritizing. And when you plan it, your odds of success are much higher. You also got to take an account too that, and I know that this has happened. You guys, It's not like we've planned every single meal of our lives since we've been personal trainers, but the days that I forget to set this up or I neglect planning for what my first meal is gonna look like, what ends up happening,
Starting point is 00:10:55 and I'm sure this happens to other people, you get your cup of coffee and that's it, and you get in the car and you rush to work, and then you get busy with your day, and then hours go by, and there was no planning to that. It wasn't like I was intentionally intermittent fasting or trying to do that, I was just busy. And then as the days go by,
Starting point is 00:11:11 all of a sudden hunger starts to kick in because I haven't eaten for a long period of time. And then what follows that are all the crazy cravings. And what follows that is typically this struggle of, oh my God, fighting off this craving of what I really want and what's convenient and fast versus, oh, what I should have and I should go prepare this. And it's like, it's very easy to make that quick decision
Starting point is 00:11:32 that isn't ideal for you when you haven't set up and you haven't planned. Plus your options that are surrounding you at the time usually aren't all that ideal. So you're getting yourself in that situation where now I'm really hungry, I haven't really planned what can I get in a pinch right now. It's usually not like the best thing for you at that point. And so I like the conversation that this is really more about the
Starting point is 00:11:57 structure of it as opposed to like, let's give you these very specific food items that you need to focus on for breakfast because it's just not realistic. Everybody has such like individual biodiversity and you know needs that they have and also people have different reactions towards food. So you wanna set it up whatever's best for you, you specifically to then carry you throughout your day and have that energy to pull from.
Starting point is 00:12:23 Right, so here's an example of planning for breakfast. So yesterday, you know, I'm having dinner with Jessica and I open the fridge and I go, oh, we don't have any eggs. So I'm gonna go to the grocery store and get some eggs because that way I can have those for breakfast tomorrow. That's as simple as that. It's as simple as being a little bit prepared and planning for knowing that you're gonna eat in a way that's healthy and balanced for you. And Adam, you mentioned even planning to fast. There's a very, very big difference in how I feel
Starting point is 00:12:53 when I plan to fast versus when I don't eat because I didn't think about it. Right, yeah. Very different feeling. If I'm just not eating because I'm too busy and we got meetings and stuff going on, the mindset that I have is much more like, I just need to do something real quick.
Starting point is 00:13:07 Reactionary. Right. If I think to myself tomorrow I'm gonna fast, now if I don't eat, I don't have that same reactionary mindset. And it's really all about the planning. It doesn't have to be super planned. Will you, where you meal prep and all your food is prepared? It can be that, but it can be as simple as tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:13:26 I'm gonna wake up at this time, which gives me 20 minutes, which gives me enough time to eat this kind of breakfast. And at lunch time, I'm gonna bring this food so I can eat that or I'm gonna schedule this much time to have a break so I can eat it this place. So you know ahead of time what you're gonna do and the successful people that I've worked with, the super healthy people, none of them fly by the seat of their pants when it comes to
Starting point is 00:13:48 nutrition. They just don't. All of them have at least some sort of planning that goes into, especially breakfast, but usually all of their meals. So speaking of planning, it brings me to the next one, which, and I remember when we first start this podcast, you guys used to like to razz me and tease me about my water jug that I used to carry around, right? So, and here's the thing, like before I used, I never used to do that before competing.
Starting point is 00:14:12 I can totally got into a point where, you know, I needed to track and that was important to getting ready for stage. I just said, oh, just, you know, make an effort to drink water, but I wasn't really counting or tracking or paying attention to. And one of the things that I noticed when I really started to track one, I realized how much
Starting point is 00:14:28 I under-consumed water. Then two, I found when I was busy trying to drink water all day long, that it kept me from making other poor food choices and also drinking my calories and elsewhere. It had this kind of two-pronged thing that helped with my success in my journey of health and fitness. And so that's something that I once I piece that kind of together, it became like a mandatory thing that I would just teach clients.
Starting point is 00:14:56 And obviously depending on their size, it's a different amount that I'm telling them to target. Although I think anywhere from a half a gallon to a gallon is a pretty good generic number for most people. And I would tell them, hey, you know, I want you to measure that out and plan to hit that every day. And because they were focused on that, they would make other good decisions throughout their day. Yeah, I remember when you're going through that, like a big epiphany for you. And I took that to myself to try and start tracking and seeing how much water
Starting point is 00:15:26 I was really consuming. And when I was going through that process, I realized like even some normal nagging kind of achy pains that I was experiencing my joints, like I was much better, you know, those were eliminated on some level just trying to remain hydrated. There's lots of benefits to being hydrated that I didn't even consider, especially like two, like being more foggy and not as clear thinking as well. It was pretty crazy. Yeah, you notice big differences in your skin. I know this was a great selling point
Starting point is 00:15:58 for my female clients where they'd say, hey, let's aim to drink this much water and then let's pay attention to your skin. They're like, oh my gosh, I can't believe how different you know, my skin looks. This is probably one of the most stark contrast between healthy people and unhealthy people. Healthy people, they drink,
Starting point is 00:16:16 they have a different relationship with water. That's what, that is their beverage. It's water, I just drink water. Anything else is like a dessert or a treat and is very occasional. I just drink water. Anything else is like a dessert or a treat, and it is very occasional. Unhealthy people, water tends to not be the main beverage. The main beverages tend to be coffees, teas, sodas, juices,
Starting point is 00:16:38 things with flavor. And because they've developed that relationship with liquids that have flavor, water to them seems boring. It seems, I've actually had clients tell me they don't like the taste of water, which always was weird to me because water, I don't understand, that's supposed to have... It's refreshing, so yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:54 That's supposed to have a taste, right? But super healthy people have a completely different relationship with water. If you go out with them to a restaurant or you go out with them to go eat anywhere else, you notice that when the waiter or waitress comes and says, hey, would you like anything to drink? 99% of the time they say, oh, just water.
Starting point is 00:17:12 I just want water. Almost never would they say I'll have something else that has flavor in it. And this again, this is a huge start contract. That's how I, so this is something I showed Katrina not that long ago because we were having a water discussion like, because we, this is how we, when we eat out, we most always drink water or tea. And, you know, I feel like the waiter looks at us like we're being cheap.
Starting point is 00:17:33 Yeah. Like it's because we're trying to save money and not do that. I'm like, whatever, you know what I'm saying? Who cares? Give me a boss. But then I totally like look around in the restaurant and I'm like, you can tell people that are health conscious,
Starting point is 00:17:45 you pay attention to what's on the table. And a lot of times you'll notice the people that look healthier and fit are drinking water at the table versus drinking the soda, the beer, the wine or all the other great drinks that you can get when you eat out. And I always look at it like it's like a double win. It's like, oh, I save it because Jesus, when you have drinks at a restaurant,
Starting point is 00:18:04 it's like three to five dollars for a drink, and if you get multiple drinks in a sitting, you know, you're spending extra 20 bucks just in drinking your calories. So, it's like another two-pronged win for me. It's like, okay, not only am I managing my calories better, I'm also in taking my water and take, and then I'm also saving a couple bucks in my wallet too.
Starting point is 00:18:25 That's awesome. The next one, this one's an interesting one because I first noticed this when I had this one client, I got close to, he was a successful business person. He was always active, but he ended up hiring me because he wanted a structured workout programming. And he was very successful with his workouts as well, easy to train, kind of like Doug. Doug was a great client his workouts as well, easy to train.
Starting point is 00:18:45 Kind of like Doug, you know, Doug was a great client too. He just, he did it applied and learned, and it's just great working with people like that. But anyhow, he had invited me to his company to speak to his employees about health and fitness, because he thought it would be a good thing for me to go talk to some of his staff. So I actually went to his work and spent the whole day with him. And one thing really struck me, very interesting about this guy, whenever he would meet, and I stuck with him all day long,
Starting point is 00:19:11 it was pretty cool, I shadowed him all day long. What was really cool is that he would, whenever he'd have a meeting with someone, someone would meet up with him and be like, oh, we're supposed to have our meeting right now, be like, all right, cool, let's go outside. And then they'd walk and have their meeting. So every time he met,
Starting point is 00:19:24 what he did, he did this like five times that day. Every time he'd meet with one of his employees and they'd give them a rundown on statistics or costs or margins or whatever, they would go for a walk outside. And I asked him about this. I said, why do you, I noticed you walk, is this because you're so fit, you know, fitness conscious is because you like to maintain your fitness. He goes, actually, that's the side effect. He goes, it's cool that I walk throughout the day.
Starting point is 00:19:47 He goes, when I track my steps, I'm like 20,000 because whenever I'm talking to somebody, I go for a walk. He goes, but that wasn't the primary reason why I did that. He goes, I did that because I noticed it made me sharper. When I didn't do that, I wasn't as sharp. I didn't feel like I could really empathize as well. My staff, I noticed when we would walk,
Starting point is 00:20:06 they were able to convey what they were conveying, brainstorming was much better. By the way, this is a habit that you see artists do quite a bit. When artists get stuck, when they're writing a book or they're making music and they get stuck on a particular thing, one of the things that they'll do to get through that writer's block or that block is to go for a walk. So one thing that I noticed, I noticed it's definitely
Starting point is 00:20:27 with him and then I paid attention to it to the rest of my clients that were really successful. The really successful clients that I trained took walk breaks. They weren't workout breaks, they were walk breaks. So like after lunch, after breakfast, you know, when they're having a meeting, when they're talking to somebody, when they're on the phone, they would just go do these short 10, 15 minute walkbakes
Starting point is 00:20:48 breaks throughout the day. Well, we've shared the research that supports that when you pair a current habit with a new habit, the success rate is like dramatically higher. Right. So pairing walking with something else that you have to do every single day, and this example you're giving right now,
Starting point is 00:21:03 the guy who's, you know, got meetings, he does probably every single day with, you know, have to do every single day. And this example you're giving right now, the guy who's got meetings he does probably every single day with three to five people. So very easy to say, hey, every time I'm gonna meet with this person, I'm also gonna walk into it. I do that here, right? So we have a staff here, and I meet with them on a weekly basis,
Starting point is 00:21:19 and when I'm kind of getting the upload on whatever they're working on project-wise, instead of us sitting in an office or sitting down in the studio and talking, I normally have them good up and go walk with me and download me on all the information while we're walking around the block. So it's very easy for me to create that.
Starting point is 00:21:37 The other one that I always love to do is with eating, right? We all have multiple meals that we eat a day, and if I can just make a habit out of, hey, getting up after I'm done eating, I'm going to walk. I've improved digestion. I'm going to increase my steps, burn more calories. And it's easy for me to be consistent with that. And what people don't realize is those little 10 minute walks paired with meetings, paired with eating adds up to be a lot of extra steps and movement and calorie burn in a day and in the week and in months.
Starting point is 00:22:09 And that's massive difference and could be the difference between somebody losing 15 to 20 pounds more fat a year. So it's and it's a really easy thing to stay consistent with asking someone to go to the gym every day and you know, train intensely for an hour is a major commitment for a lot of people, but asking most people that, hey, when you do the certain things in the day, can you just do this walking or add that? That's a lot easier.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Yeah, I mean, I've pretty much eliminated all treadmill. I used to jump on the treadmill to try and get my cardio, just like everybody else, just to get that additional movement if I'm trying to keep my weight at a certain amount or whatever. So, you know, just like you guys have said, in terms of like using it for those, you know,
Starting point is 00:22:50 meetings or for, you know, digestion, huge, but also me commuting, I have like a 45 minute commuting back home. And so the first thing I do when I get home, which is, it kind of kills like three birds of one stone. I get home, the kids come out with me, the dogs come out with me, everybody sort of like downloads me about their day, like how this online school thing
Starting point is 00:23:15 has been going, like, you know, what your struggles have been, like it's just a much better conversation than it is when I come in and everybody's sort of in their own corner and, you know, off on their own. So it's a great way to then connect with people as well. Yeah, and let me put it this way. Let's say you did three, ten minutes, and here's a wonderful thing about walk breaks. It doesn't feel like a scheduled workout.
Starting point is 00:23:38 It's a lot easier to maintain. But let me think about it this way. If you did three, ten minute walks a day, okay? First of all, easy to digest. It's a 10 minute walk. 10 minutes is easy to spare at any given moment throughout the day. You do it after breakfast, lunch,
Starting point is 00:23:53 and there's three of them. That's 30 minutes of walking cardio every single day. How much easier is it to do that than to schedule a 30 minute cardio session? It's a lot easier. Not only that, but the frequent short walk breaks have been shown to improve mood better than a dedicated concentrated bout of cardio.
Starting point is 00:24:14 They seem to burn more body fat. They seem to improve productivity better than the concentrated bouts of cardio. So in my personal opinion, and especially through observing clients, walk breaks in terms of being able to stick to it long term, in terms of long term success with your health, far better than the structured, you know, intense bouts of cardio. Now the next one is one that I think, first of all, was not on my list just, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:43 maybe five to 10 years ago. And although we didn't order these in priority, I think this one is going to be one of the most important ones going forward in the future. And that is the importance of unplugging and making a conscious effort to detach from all of our tech. I know you guys used to tease the shit out of me about the Adam Atler book that I shared years ago, but that was life changing for me.
Starting point is 00:25:10 Like reading that and I feel like, you know, pulling the curtains back on how they've designed this tech to be so addictive and to attract people. And rightfully so, it's a business and that's what they're trying to do. So I'm not demonizing the tools but I think a lot of consumers are just completely unaware. They're oblivious.
Starting point is 00:25:30 Yeah, unaware and I think if you were you probably be a little more reluctant to hand your kid an iPad at two years old and do things like that that you don't know that may be setting you up for greater challenges as they get older and so because of, I think this is one of the most important things. And that is just scheduling that and putting yourself, and what I do for myself to protect myself from going down the rabbit hole of emails and social media and just tech in general is I have a hard time at night,
Starting point is 00:26:01 that just at that time, I don't care how busy I am at work or what's going on, that the phone goes up in my room, plugged in the charger for the night, and I don't see it till the next day, and then I also have a time in the morning that I still wait before I get up and just look at social media or look at emails
Starting point is 00:26:19 or look at text messages right away. So I have that window that I allow myself to consume and or use for work purposes, and once it I have that window that I allow myself to consume and or use for work purposes. And once it's outside that window, I shut that down. And I think that this is going to become such an important practice for people in the future because it's so easy to get sucked in. Well, it's one of the more challenging one, I think, people will face because it's engineered in such a way where almost like everything is on the phone now. I mean, you could justify.
Starting point is 00:26:51 I could justify, I need this for directions. I need this for so and so is gonna call me and I need to text all these people and I need to check my emails and like everything is there. And so it's very challenging time that we're in now to be able to put that aside. And really just revolves back to the first thing with the scheduling of food,
Starting point is 00:27:11 it's the same mentality going into that. Really have to start structuring your day in such a way where you're not reactionary towards all these things, you're ahead of it. So I'm gonna be ahead of it. I'm gonna plan this window during my day to accomplish as much as possible. And if I don't, it's okay. I'm just to be ahead of it. I'm going to plan this window during my day to accomplish as much as possible. And if I don't, it's okay.
Starting point is 00:27:27 I'm just going to focus tomorrow. Yeah, probably the biggest benefit of doing this is the shift and perspective that you get because what technology tends to do, and this is especially if you are on social media or reading news articles or Facebook, Instagram Facebook, Instagram, you know, all the different, you know, media outlets online, what they tend to do, they tend to distort your perception of reality. So a simple example would be, you know, you're on Instagram, you're
Starting point is 00:27:58 following a bunch of fitness pages because you like to learn about fitness and health, but it's a lot of pictures of impossibly fit, perfect looking bodies. And without realizing, even if you're a self-aware person, without realizing it, your brain starts to perceive that as the norm. So then you start to perceive yourself as far worse than you may actually be in terms of your levels of fitness,
Starting point is 00:28:20 which can tend to make you feel worse. Another good example is reading news articles. If I go on any news outlet, I'm gonna read click-bady articles about what's going on in the world. So I'm gonna read about some kid that got kidnapped over here and some sex trafficking ring over there
Starting point is 00:28:37 and this drug bust over there. But my brain perceives it is happening in front of me. And I'm gonna develop a lot of fear and anxiety around this. Look, we've known this for a long time. In fact, psychologists and therapists have told clients with lots of anxiety and stress to stop watching the news for decades.
Starting point is 00:28:54 This is before technology got so good at putting this stuff in your face. And what happens when you unplug is you start to change your perception a little bit because now your perception is being shaped on real world interactions. You go outside, you talk to your neighbors, you talk to your friends and family members, and what you start to realize is,
Starting point is 00:29:13 oh, people are not nearly as crazy as it seems on social media. People are not as perfect looking as maybe I perceived on social media. You get that real connection. We evolved communicating with people in real life. It's a totally different feeling. And there's a reward there, I think people forgot.
Starting point is 00:29:31 The person to person interactions, you get something out of that. Like you don't get virtually. And it seems that this platform is so convenient that now I have access to grandma across the country. I have all these different family members now that I could pay attention to, but a phone call would go a lot further,
Starting point is 00:29:52 or actual FaceTime, obviously, a person to person, you get a lot of tremendous value out of that. Yes, absolutely. Now the next one, this reminds me of another client that I trained who I learned a lot from. We had this whole conversation about competitiveness, and I am naturally a very competitive person. I like to compete, I like to win at whatever I'm competing at.
Starting point is 00:30:19 And at the time when I was training this client, I was quite young, I was in my early 20s, so it was like the peak of my obsession with winning. And we were having this conversation about winning. And I said to him, I said, I love winning. It's like my favorite thing to do. I love to win. And he said, you know, that's not bad.
Starting point is 00:30:38 He said, but I could teach you a way that'll make that'll ensure that you're gonna be more successful in life. And I said, okay, what is that? He says, fall in love with growth instead of winning. And I'm like, what do you mean by that? He goes, well, in any competition, in your view, you either win or lose. In my view, you either win or learn.
Starting point is 00:31:00 He said, if you fall in love with growth, then you're going to become a better person, whether you win or lose, doesn't matter what happens. Now you can still be competitive, you can still try to win. But if you fall in love with growth, the reality is you're always winning because you're always becoming a better person.
Starting point is 00:31:16 This is something I noticed with the most successful super healthy clients that I trained, that they were very much enamored with just personal growth. It was all about growth. And they were able to set aside their ego to examine some of their own behaviors, to examine some of their nutritional behaviors or exercise behaviors. The growth-minded individuals that I trained, when I would talk to them about over-applying
Starting point is 00:31:41 intensity, what I'd sit in front of them and say, you know, Mrs. Johnson, your intensity is way too hard for your body right now. And I think that's what's preventing you from losing weight. Now, she's not growth-minded. She'd be like, what are you talking about? I'm burning more calories. I'm working out more hard. But because they were growth-minded, they said, okay, well, you're a trainer. You're obviously know what you're talking about. Let me be open-minded to what you're saying. Let me give it a shot and see what happens and because they were growth-minded They were extremely successful as a result of it. So the super healthy people I've ever worked with all of them were growth-minded By the way, they also happen to be successful on other areas of the world. I love this one This one is for sure one of my favorite ones because it took me to about 26 before the light bulb went off here. Like you, Sal, I think I was focused so much on winning
Starting point is 00:32:26 and losing was a failure. And I looked at failures or losses, like that sucks, don't want that to happen, but it wasn't as an opportunity for growth or learning. I think that didn't switch on till later, and it didn't switch on until I started working on self-improvement. So at 26 I began reading really.
Starting point is 00:32:42 I wasn't really reading much before that. And what I quickly started to pick up besides what you just alluded to, which is failures are opportunities for growth, I also noticed the momentum that you get when you're focused on personal growth. When you're seeking growth and you're wanting to get better, in any aspect, it could be learning an instrument, it could be reading on self-improvement, it could be doing working on your fitness, whenever you're doing to improve yourself, I always felt it bleed into all the other aspects of my life. And when I'm not, I can always feel like this way to the world on my shoulders. When I'm not
Starting point is 00:33:16 focused on growth, or doing something to improve who I am, making a better version of myself for every day, I can always tell how that affects every other aspect of my life. And when I'm working on that, I can feel how it bleeds into everything else. And so, from 26 on to today, that is probably one of the number one things that I would say really contributed to a lot of the success was that momentum that I gained
Starting point is 00:33:42 from always focusing on personal growth. It was cool for me to see that play out with some of my clients in particular as well, who really prioritized themselves for the first time. You could see that where now is the opportunity for them to improve physically, which then also improved other habits, their sleep improved, their school performance improved, their relationships with their parents or their significant other, they started to have better conversations.
Starting point is 00:34:15 It was just a snowball effect of things that transpired as a result of them really kind of taking that time to hone in on working on themselves and being growth-minded and going through that process. And I think that's one of these areas. If everybody could just really take the time to experience it, it takes some courage, it takes some bravery, you do something new. And I think that's obviously the big barrier for a lot of people to be challenged with.
Starting point is 00:34:46 But if you do pursue it, it really does affect everything in a positive way. Oh yeah, if your growth minded, if you're seeking growth, all these points that were listening in this episode are gonna work for you. If you're not, it's gonna be very difficult to adopt any of these if they're not ones that you already do. Now the next one took me a long time to figure out for myself,
Starting point is 00:35:04 but I did figure it out for my clients. You know, we really do take sleep for granted. And what I mean by that is I think a lot of people realize the importance of sleep, but we take it for granted because we do whatever we're doing throughout the day, and then we just turn the lights off hit the pillow and expect to have amazing sleep. It really doesn't work that way.
Starting point is 00:35:27 Now, it's not because sleep is something you have to work hard towards necessarily. Mainly, it's because modern life doesn't lend itself well to good sleep. You know, for, again, for most of human history, we are brains slowly gotten to sleep mode as the sun set. We didn't have electronic lights,
Starting point is 00:35:48 we didn't have electronics that we were looking into. We were outside doing our thing as the sun began to set, our brain got that signal, perceived it and said, okay, slowly winding down, getting ready for sleep. I'm pretty sure we didn't cook food in the middle of the night. That's like a nice dinner bell for predators all around us. So we didn't eat close to bedtime.
Starting point is 00:36:11 And our brains and bodies prepared for sleep before we got to sleep. We're not like a, it's not like your cell phone where you can just shut power off and it's off. The body actually needs to prepare itself for sleep. The most successful healthy people I've ever met actually put some priority in sleep. They actually treat, they actually take it seriously.
Starting point is 00:36:31 They don't just expect to get good sleep. They have sleep routines. Now that may look like in the past with a lot of my clients, this look like dim lights and reading. I had many, many successful clients who this was a strategy, this was just something that they did. An hour or two before bed, they have like a dim night light that they put on or a book light that they clip on the top
Starting point is 00:36:51 of the book, and they read about an hour or two before bed and go to sleep. Now for them, I don't know if they realized that they were really prioritizing sleep. I think they just thought it was a great way to wind down and read a nice book, but really what they were doing is they were setting their body up for sleep. Now we have science that shows the value of this.
Starting point is 00:37:09 When you prepare yourself for sleep by not exposing yourself to bright lights, but not eating a big meal right before bed, by having your bedroom set up for a good sleep experience, you know, cool with the blinds shut, no light coming in, it's clear, the evidence is clear. You see the stages of sleep are more effective. People fall asleep faster.
Starting point is 00:37:30 They wake up more refreshed. Hormones as a result reflect their good sleep. Fat loss is easier. Cravings tend to go down. This is a very important one. It's not a hard one to do, by the way. There's not this crazy, it's like you have to follow this crazy workout or understand nutrition in and out.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Really, it's just about taking it seriously, just preparing your body for sleep. I think a reason why it's not, a lot of people don't have success with it, because I think a lot of people are unaware they're not having success with it, right? I think a lot of people, there's nobody who doesn't sleep, right?
Starting point is 00:38:00 So everybody sleeps, so I think everybody assumes that, oh, I'm fine. I get up and so I've been sleeping my whole life every single night, I get up about my day, and I think they're just unaware of what it looks like when you really optimize sleep, at least for that's what it was for me. Like, I just assumed that because I got up every day and crushed every day, that it was, I wasn't lacking in the sleep department. And until I start just like the tracking of the water or paying attention to your macros and calculating and weighing your food, like, it's just one of those
Starting point is 00:38:30 things until you really start to pay attention to it, you don't realize how much better it can be if you put a little effort towards it. And to your point, so it can be just that simple. It could be as simple as just a green, make just like we talked about the unplugging and having a time zone. You just agree that, hey, if Katrina and I simple as just agreeing, like we talked about the unplugging and having a time zone. You just agree that, hey, Katrina and I just did this again. Like we changed it because Max is on a new sleep schedule, right?
Starting point is 00:38:52 So he sleeps about 12 hours now. He goes down at 7.30. And but he is up, like it comes 6.37. He is up and ready to be up. There's no like laying down and wanting to nap anymore or relaxing kind of what it was before because when he was getting up multiple times in the night, it was like these little three hour windows we were sleeping with him because we were constantly having to get up. Well now that he sleeps consistently, when he's ready to get up, he's ready to get up,
Starting point is 00:39:15 which means we now have to adjust our time and go into bed before Katrina and I would allow ourselves to stay up till 10, 30, 11, 30 at night on a regular basis. And now that's not working because now it's interrupting our sleep when he's ready to go for the day. And so, you know, we've set this just, hey, by 9, 30, we have to be in bed. And if we're going to, if we're still awake or without that, then we listen to an audio book or we just dim the lights and we talk and have communication for 30 minutes, like, that's kind of this new rule that we have. And it's just that simple.
Starting point is 00:39:45 You don't have to do anything crazy or add anything or put that much thought into it, but that little bit of organizing, hey, we're gonna go to bed at this time. We're gonna turn the lights down. And at that point, we're just gonna either be conversing or reading a book, it does wonders for setting your sleep up. Yeah, I think if you ask somebody,
Starting point is 00:40:02 just the random person, have you ever felt super refreshed in the best night sleep ever? And they could kind of recount a time where that happened, but what did you do that led up to that? Like I doubt they could even tell you what all that looked like. And I think if people just put more effort
Starting point is 00:40:23 in understanding how they set them up to have that feeling, to have that feeling of being refreshed and having this vibrant energy in the morning, obviously you're gonna see the benefits of that. And there is a way to do that. Right, the next one, near and dear to all of our hearts, we talk about this all the time.
Starting point is 00:40:42 And that is to build muscle and lift weights. There is no form of exercise that is better suited to combat the troubles and challenges, the health challenges of modern life like resistance training, like lifting weights. It's the only form of exercise that will positively influence your metabolism. And when I say positively, I mean speed it up.
Starting point is 00:41:06 So it actually teaches the body to burn more calories. It's also protective against a sedentary lifestyle, which is the common lifestyle that we now have. Even if you work out, most of your day is probably sedentary. Most jobs now require very, very little activity. Not necessarily a bad thing, but you want to protect against the negatives of that, building muscle does that.
Starting point is 00:41:31 It's also the only form of exercise that has been shown in men to reliably raise testosterone levels. And in women, if applied properly, it's one of the most effective ways of exercising to balance out estrogen and progesterone. Muscle also is a wonderful protection against insulin insensitivity issues or insulin resistance,
Starting point is 00:41:53 which is a big problem nowadays. By the way, brain disorders, Alzheimer's and dementia, many scientists will say is a form of insulin resistance. In fact, Alzheimer's, some scientists will call type three diabetes. Lifting weights is the best form of exercise when you consider the context of modern life. Here's the best part about it. You don't have to do it every single day. Most people can lift weights two days a week, maybe three days a week, and you're going
Starting point is 00:42:18 to reap most of the benefits that you just talked about. I'm going to even challenge that a little bit, and that's because there's a very good chance that our single topic episodes could share the most, right? So there's probably thousands of people listening to us for the first time with this, and if you're somebody who is not already into fitness and lifting weights on a consistent basis, even one day a week of a full body routine,
Starting point is 00:42:39 if you are doing all these other things, can make a huge difference in your life. That's true. And it's very different than how I would have approached fitness 10 years ago, back in the days I would never tell a client they could lift weights only one day a week, it was just like, oh my God, you need to be in here at least three to seven days a week and that's so not true.
Starting point is 00:42:56 In fact, you're far better off if you're not doing anything right now, just starting one day a week, becoming very consistent with that before you go to two and then eventually go to three. And even just doing one full body workout a week with all the other things that we're talking about, you would be surprised what a healthy person that you would be just from that alone. Yeah, I would say if you're new to working out and you need some structure and some guidance,
Starting point is 00:43:20 we have a workout program called MAP Starter, which is a great place to start, but we have a lot of workout programs you can choose from that'll fit your body and your goals, but really lifting weights is, and now we have, finally we have studies that are showing this by itself, in-compete if you compare it to other solitary forms of exercise, it's the most effective form when you consider,
Starting point is 00:43:46 modern life again, when you consider the problems that we're encountering, everything from obesity to diabetes, to osteoporosis in women, lifting weights, and again, it doesn't take much. This is a wonderful thing about it. Lifting weights is just sending a signal to your body. It says we need more muscle.
Starting point is 00:44:02 It's not like you're doing it to burn tons of calories, unlike other forms of exercise, you don't need to do it all the time to reap the amazing benefits. Yeah, and that's the thing is, it doesn't have to be all that often. I mean, strength training itself like provides you with abilities.
Starting point is 00:44:18 So strength itself is something that you wanna be able to keep and maintain because, as we age, we're gonna start losing these abilities. And this is something that we want to be able to keep and maintain, because as we age, we're going to start losing these abilities. And this is something that we need to express constantly with our joints to also prevent arthritis and other pains, and other discomforts, and really improves your overall quality of life.
Starting point is 00:44:39 So it's something definitely to consider in your routine. Totally. Now, the next one, this one's interesting to me, because as modern medicine or Western medicine progresses, one of the drawbacks sometimes is we forget old wisdom. Now, we tend to rediscover it later on, which is what's happening right now with this next one, but we did forget it for a little while, you know, at the in the early days of Western medicine, if a child was sick, if your elderly parent was sick,
Starting point is 00:45:06 or if you weren't feeling good, if you were feeling down, you were feeling sad, you were feeling a little bit of pain, something that people used to say was, go outside and get some fresh air. This was something that they did all the time. In fact, they would do this with babies, where they would have babies go and sit next to a window, or they'd put them outside to get some fresh air.
Starting point is 00:45:26 And it's because they notice, this is old wisdom, by the way. You see this in all old, you know, medicine practices, Chinese medicine, erivetic medicine as well, that going outside has these positive health effects. Now science is now supporting this, right? We see that when people go outside, feel good chemicals tend to go up, getting sunlight boost vitamin D levels and has positive effects on inflammation. And when you consider how little we go outside nowadays in modern societies, it's even more important.
Starting point is 00:45:56 If you think about all the time you spend outside versus the time you spend inside, it's probably a ratio of 95% to five percent. Probably 95% of the time you spend awake is not outside. We did not evolve that way. We need to be outside. Now there's a new solar power. You don't need to go outside all day long, but dedicating some time outside or doing maybe
Starting point is 00:46:18 some of your work outside, sitting on your laptop outside, it does have huge health benefits. This is a big one for me. I make sure every single day I go outside for at least an hour, and if I don't, I can tell a market difference in how I feel. Well, this one feeds big time into the sleep one too, right? For setting your circadian rhythm, right? So I notice a big difference when I go straight from home to work, and then we sit underneath these fluorescent lights,
Starting point is 00:46:44 and we work all day long until the sun goes down and go home and how hard it is for me to fall asleep versus when I make a conscious effort first thing in the morning to get out whether I'm walking the dogs or just going for a stroll and absorbing that sunlight early on in the day to set the tone for my timing, my clock, you know, so my so my body knows that hey it's daytime, it's beginning of the day, when it's supposed to start to wind down later on, when we're constantly getting this artificial idle time, it confuses your body into what time it is and is it time to go to bed, simply by going out and getting into the sun early on in the day, does wonders for you also setting your sleep up later on in the evening.
Starting point is 00:47:21 Oh, if you're doing the walks, like we talked about earlier, the walk breaks, there you go. You're walking. You're walking outside, so you're doing the walks, like we talked about earlier, the walk breaks, there you go. You're walking to combo right there. Yeah, you're walking outside, so you're doing your walk and you're getting, you know, you're being outside and getting that sunlight. Now, the next one, this one's also very important. This one is connected to the lifting weights, one that we talked about, and that is to stay mobile
Starting point is 00:47:39 or maintain your mobility. If, to keep it as simple as possible, really it's about practicing things you don't want your body to forget. Okay, so if you don't want your body to forget how to run, you should probably practice a little bit of running. If you don't want your body to forget how to bend over to pick something up, reach up above your head, squat down, and reach behind you. Turn, reach behind you, jump off of a curb or jump up on top of a curb. You probably want to practice these things to maintain your mobility.
Starting point is 00:48:10 Now, if you want to take it a step further and make it really effective, you do some dedicated mobility work with dedicated mobility exercises. That probably will give you the best results. I'll be even more prescriptive, right? So we created a webinar at primeprowebinar.com and it's free and it's an hour long and I take you through every major joint and we do mobility drills in there.
Starting point is 00:48:34 If you're listening to this and you're like, okay, I want to start doing this or include this routine, go through that and then begin to implement some of those moves throughout your week and you don't need to do it all in one hour setting. I take you through it in an hour setting. And if you've got that dedication and you enjoy doing it for an hour, that's totally fine. But another way you can do this is take all those movements and break them up through the week and set them up as little five, ten minute increments just to add mobility every
Starting point is 00:49:03 single day. And that in itself will do wonders for your mobility. Oh yeah, and primeprowebinar.com is free. And it's really go on there and take it, see how you feel before, see how you feel afterwards. Right, you'll feel it right away. Oh, right away, right? It's not like you got to do this for, you know,
Starting point is 00:49:19 a few weeks before you notice a difference. You'll notice a difference right away when you practice. Yeah, and it's great, because a lot of those moves will kind of show you where when your body is in alignment, the difference that you feel immediately from that. And you'll notice it in the way you carry yourself, your posture, your energy levels. It just carries with you throughout the day.
Starting point is 00:49:41 And so to be able to apply moments of, you know, these rituals throughout your day and just chunks, watch what that will do for you with all this other stuff throughout your day. Yeah, now this next one's really interesting. You know, it's funny, when you look at studies on longevity, one thing always pops out that I think scientists have a tough time talking about.
Starting point is 00:50:06 It's consistent though. Every longevity study shows that people who have a mindfulness practice, now usually is in the form of prayer. I think that's the most popular way, or most common way, people practice mindfulness, but it could also be a meditation or a gratitude practice. But every single longevity study I've ever seen that's done on lots of people shows that people who have a daily practice of prayer or mindfulness, their chances of dying from all causes is significantly lower.
Starting point is 00:50:39 By itself, this one they control all factors, Diet, activity, they control sleep, they control for smoking and alcohol. By itself, practicing mindfulness every single day reduces people's risks of all cause mortality. I was watching that show on Netflix alone where people are sent off into the Arctic. This is I think it's season six or whatever. And it's so interesting watching these people live
Starting point is 00:51:07 in the middle of nowhere for, you know, two, three, four months or whatever at a time, and to see how grateful they are when they catch a squirrel or a fish, things that we tend to take for granted, how happy they are. And it's interesting watching that and seeing how happy they feel in that moment
Starting point is 00:51:24 and how sad I feel watching Netflix eating a burger or whatever on my couch and it's like this is totally a mindset and Like anything you got to practice it to get good at it. Well, this also to to Justin's point that he's made a few times now I think comes to mind for me, which is it takes us out of that reactive state Right all many times we start our day and we're right into it. You wake up, you roll over, you open up your email, your social, you're either reacting to the likes or the dislikes or the bad comments
Starting point is 00:51:54 or the email that you got to get to work and do stuff or life hits us in the face and then we spend the whole day just reacting to all these things and never wants to we get to stop and kind of gather our thoughts, be grateful for where we are currently in our life. And then also start to wrap your brain around planning other stuff, planning all these things that we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:52:12 I feel like this one's perfect as the last habit because I feel like getting this in place helps you set the other nine up. Like if you are listening to this list, and you're like, man, it's a lot of things. I'm not really doing any of them, or there's half of them on here, I'm not really doing, start here. Start here with this one, and practice this,
Starting point is 00:52:31 whether it be meditation, whether it be prayer, whether it be just being still for a good half hour, an hour out of your day, you start there, and that will set the tone for all these other things. So what it'll do is it'll allow you to clear that mental space. You're not plugged in, you're not doing anything else, you're being still and in the moment,
Starting point is 00:52:50 and then I can sort of gather my thoughts on all these other habits that I wanna build. Well, it just also reminds me of ancient wisdom and why we have rituals and we have these things, you know, part of our day in certain cultures. It's for certain reasons. And one, especially like, too, like we pray or we meditate before we eat, like a dinner together.
Starting point is 00:53:15 And like, why do we do that? I remember going to that and watching Paul check and you had that realization of, you know, this really puts me in that parasympathetic state. Like, now I'm calming my body down, and I'm more receptive towards this food and utilizing its nutrients. And this is something that I didn't even really realize until later, if I'm in a rush and I'm eating
Starting point is 00:53:38 how that affects my gut health, and how now I'm gonna be fighting this heartburn, and all these things, as a result of not really calming myself down and being in a better state going into that. And it's the same with getting ready for bed. You know, and you see a lot of these religions and cultures that, you know, have prayer before bed or have gratitude or have meditation practices. And it's all there for a very specific reason. Yeah, it's ancient wisdom. It's wisdom that you see across the world
Starting point is 00:54:10 in every culture, they all practice this. And we tend to be okay with saying that evolution is a real thing from a biological standpoint. Oh, we see bacteria evolve, we think animals evolve. People forget that ideas evolve as well. And the ones that stick around for thousands of years, there's something to them. And every single culture that we've ever observed has some form of a mindfulness practice, either in the form of meditation or gratitude or usually in the form of prayer.
Starting point is 00:54:42 So there's a tremendous amount of value. And by the way, there's lots of these things that we're talking about that can be combined. For example, we talked about prioritizing your sleep. Why not do your gratitude or prayer or mindfulness before you go to bed? Or do that when you're walking. Oh, by the way, if you do it while you're walking,
Starting point is 00:54:59 you're also outside. So now you've hit three all in one. So all these things are not things that you have to do by themselves. They're really just habits. They're habits that you do throughout the day and do better as you pair them. And that's right, and they tend to work better
Starting point is 00:55:13 when you pair them. But again, we wrote this list because these are the things that we observed and are most successful, super healthy clients. The ones that keep it long term forever and seem to have the most effortless time doing it all. Look, MindPump is recorded on video as well as audio, come find us on YouTube so you can watch our faces while we talk. You can also find all of us on Instagram, you can find Doug, the producer at MindPump Doug, you can find Justin at MindPump Justin, you can find me at MindPump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Justin, you can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
Starting point is 00:55:46 If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media.com. The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, Maths Performance and Maths Esthetic. Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal, Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels and performs. With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal, Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers,
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