Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2230: How to Optimize Your Training, Diet & Lifestyle After Age 40

Episode Date: December 18, 2023

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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. Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts. Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. You just found the most downloaded fitness, health, and entertainment podcast. This is Mind Pup. All right, we're launching a brand new program. It's called Maps 40 plus. We actually wrote a program specifically for people
Starting point is 00:00:27 over the age of 40. This is also the first workout program that includes lifestyle programming. So not just your workout, but lifestyle programming. And we also include dietary and supplement guidelines. And so that's what we're going to talk about in today's episode. Special considerations when you turn over 40 exercises, workouts, you know, what kinds of things you do in the morning and the evening to help bring back
Starting point is 00:00:53 those youthful level of hormones. Now, because it's a brand new program and it's a brand new launch, it's gonna be on sale, okay? So if you are interested, you go to maps40plus.com. 40 is the number 40. So maps, the number 40, and then plus.com. And use the code 40 launch. So 40 launch will get you $80 off, and you'll get two ebooks that are included.
Starting point is 00:01:23 One of them is the Health Babes Guide to balancing hormones, and the other one is the four-phase histamine reset plan. These are both incredible, incredible books from Dr. Becky Campbell and her team. By the way, this sale and this offer ends Sunday, December sale and this offer ends Sunday, December 24th. So if you're interested in the $80 off and the free e-books, you got to get this program before the 24th. Now, this episode is brought to you by sponsor. Viori, Viori makes at leisure where that looks good. It's comfortable last a long time. It's everywhere. You already know who they are. Go through our link. Get yourself 20% off. Go to vjoryclothing.com, that's vu, oriclothing.com forward slash mining pump. And on that link, you'll get 20% off. All right, here comes a show.
Starting point is 00:02:12 They call turning 40 over the hill. I guess that's because after you turn 40, everything goes downhill. You're not as strong, you gain body fat, a lot easier. It's harder to build muscle. You just don't feel the same. Now, when I was younger, I used to scoff at that. That's not true. I think it's just because you're not living the way you used to. But then I turned 40 and I did notice some differences myself. So in today's episode, we're going to
Starting point is 00:02:39 talk about the unique challenges that are posed to people who turn 40. Why they may be in those challenges, why it's harder to build muscle, why they find joint pain more common, hormone changes, should they work out like everyone else? That's what we're gonna talk about in today's episode. So this particular topic's funny because, I've been training people for a long time. I started training people as a kid, and I would always training people for a long time. I started training people as a kid,
Starting point is 00:03:06 and I would always hear people, clients say to me, you just wait, you just wait to get older. Just wait and see. You'll see what I'm talking about. So you can catch up. Now to be honest, a lot of that had to do with their lifestyle. Okay, so that's for sure. There's definitely, well, I don't think I need to make
Starting point is 00:03:24 the argument, but your lifestyle, how you exercise, sleep, eat, I mean, there's a massive impact on how you feel, your performance, body fat, muscle, that whole thing. But age also plays a role for sure. When all those things are equal, and I experienced this myself, I, right around, I would say, is it got to like 37, 38?
Starting point is 00:03:47 It did start noticing a few things and so this became a lot more personal. So, you know, having, talking about this and creating a program specifically for people in this age group, interesting, it was a lot of fun because I don't think I would have done this or been able to do this, you know, 15 years ago Well, yeah, you couldn't you wouldn't have the experience?
Starting point is 00:04:09 Yeah, I mean, it's a perspective going in. Yeah, do you still I mean I still think it has very little to do with the number and the age and still a lot to do with the behaviors or or lack of habits that we had in our earlier. So like, even though we would all consider ourselves healthy, 20, 30 year olds, like we exercise, we lifted weights, you know, hit your protein intake. For the most part, we probably had relatively good diets. But I think there's a lot of things that we probably did chronically that was not good for us as far as addressing sleep mobility
Starting point is 00:04:48 recovery You know there's plenty of times when I did You know abuse alcohol and substances and times where I did Benj and overeater stuff myself to gain weight. So you know, I still would make the argument that most of it has to do with just behavior, behaviors or poor choices that have accumulated over time. That's a big part. Now, affected because I'm, like those things, I don't think I thought were affecting me
Starting point is 00:05:18 because at that time in my life, when I'm 25 and I made that decision, your body was so resilient, you bounced back. And I just think that over years and years and years, it's compiled. And now in the 40s, I feel all the physiological changes that my body has happened. And now a lot of the things that I ignored
Starting point is 00:05:39 or I didn't think were that important have now become very important. Yeah, I think too, and even from my own perspective, but also a lot of the clients I trained, it was a lot of the mentality of sprinting. Like we could tackle a lot of this at once and sort of resolve some of these things we knew that were probably weren't benefiting us very often
Starting point is 00:06:01 or we fell off a bit of the training or the nutrition got a little bit out of hand, but you know what, I'll just kind of tackle that before summer, or you know, I'll try and get everything kind of back in order. And each time you do that, like year after year gets harder, harder, more difficult. And it just wasn't like a repeated lifestyle habit of I'm continuously making the right decisions, making the right behaviors. It was more of a, I'm gonna make up for this when it's beneficial to me.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Look, look, in a nutshell, every decade things do change with how your body responds, your hormones, how your body recuperates and adapts. And there's a reason why people talk about the age of 40 being over the hill, right, that term, because that's when things, especially if you don't do the right things, that's when you really start to notice.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Now, I noticed with my peers, right? So, you know, I've been, all of us have been working out for years and years and years. And there was a difference between myself and my peers who didn't do those things. I could see a difference, I could feel a difference. But man, when we hit 30, the difference got bigger. When we hit 40, the difference now looks massive.
Starting point is 00:07:14 Like my 40-year-old peers that don't do the things that I do, there's such a vast, massive difference between our health and our function, not to mention just how we look, but all the other important stuff. So in a nutshell, here's really what this is. Yes, your body's different when you're 40 and older. Yes, but here's the other part to it. There's a lot of stuff you can do. That'll counteract a lot of these negative things that you'll notice right around that age.
Starting point is 00:07:45 And we've talked about this on the show many times. Your workout, your diet, your lifestyle, should, you should mold it around the context of your life. And that includes your age. In other words, what is going to keep you healthy and fit at 20 is not the same as what's going to keep you healthy and fit when you're 40. And that's not going to be the same as when you're 70 or 80. Okay. Now the general guidelines are the same. What does that mean? Well, you want to move, right? You don't want to overeat. You want to make sure you get good sleep and you're adequately hydrated. You don't have nutrient efficiencies.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Like, that's all generally true. But when you boil it down, there's some big differences in the considerations that you have. And so all of our programs really are designed for specific avatars. Some are more for beginners, others more for advanced, some are for power lifters, you know, some are for more for athletes, and then you can modify them and
Starting point is 00:08:53 individualize them based off of your goals and how you feel about stuff. But this is really the first time that we've really tackled the age thing. Like, what are the considerations that we generally see with people that are 40 years old and older? One of them, and we'll start with, let's talk about some of these, right? One of them is hormones. If you take a man or woman who lives a regular life and you test their hormones, their testosterone, estrogen,
Starting point is 00:09:25 progesterone, their thyroid, their growth hormone, their cortisol. If you were to look at them at 20, and then you looked at them again at 40, all things being equal, you'll see differences. You will see some differences. Women tend to have a larger change right around that time, but men do as well.
Starting point is 00:09:43 I don't know, man, testosterone levels start to decline, especially if they don't do anything to offset it. Now, here's the good news is that when you modify your lifestyle, your diet and your exercise, you can maintain, I mean, near youthful levels of hormones through your lifestyle. But if you don't use the tools at your disposal, then your hormone levels start to change quite a bit. Now, what does this feel like? Well,
Starting point is 00:10:13 it feels like, here's a big one that people notice as they get older. Well, okay, we'll get to the obvious ones because you named on low energy. Obviously, well, here's an interesting one. How about the way you store body fat? Okay. If you're listening or watching this podcast, you may notice this, that when I gained 10 pounds now, versus 15 years ago, it doesn't seem to go to the same places. If you're a woman, you may notice more belly fat,
Starting point is 00:10:39 whereas before it used to go to your hips and thighs. If you're a man, you may notice more body fat in your upper body, up in your chest area, in your neck area. What's that? When I used to gain body fat, I was a guy, younger, it was kind of just in my belly. Now I'm gaining it in kind of these different areas.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Well, that, we know through studies, is related to changes in hormones. That's a very unique and interesting one. Now, you mentioned, of course, energy levels. That's a big one. L habito. L habito is another massive one. You can have a very youthful libido, but oftentimes people in the stage group notice they don't. And it's a, now there's a lot of things that go into libido or worse sometimes they think they're normal or there's nothing wrong Because they've been that way for decades now, right? I mean more often than not when I have trained somebody That's over 40 and I ask questions around their libido or drive or their testosterone level
Starting point is 00:11:40 And if they haven't tested many times they'll be like I'm fine. Yeah, I'm good And then we go and we get their their testing done and they're like in the floor and if they haven't tested, many times they'll be like, I'm fine, I'm good. And then we go and we get their testing done, and they're like in the floor, and then we get it corrected, and they go, oh my God, I feel amazing, they just didn't know. Well, what's that old saying? You put a boil, you drop a frog in a pot of boiling water,
Starting point is 00:12:00 it'll jump right out. But if you put it in warm or cool water, and slowly boil it, it'll die. It won't jump you put it in the and warm or cool water and slowly boil it, it'll die. It won't jump out because it took time to get to that point. What you're talking about Adam is not this dress because you would know, right? If you went from like youthful hormone levels one day and then in two days you went to this like really bad hormone probably, no, oh my god, something's wrong. You go to the doctor. But if it's like a gradual slow change.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And yeah, and you're throwing band aids on top of it, a little more coffee in the morning. You know, okay, here's some sedatives at night. Oh, I need a nantangxiety medication. Oh, here to throw an SSRI on top of that. Here, let's do this thing, let's do that thing. Not realizing that your hormones went from where they would have called optocensinoptimal
Starting point is 00:12:48 to terrible because it was this step approach that probably started right around your early to mid-30s. And you didn't start to like really notice until you get to your mid-40s and it was something's off. Oh, man, and it's funny because sleep is one of those things hormone wise that you know if you're getting really good sleep Your ability to you know keep things somewhat balanced is so much greater than when you get older You notice when you don't get good sleep you don't just bounce back like these are things that like
Starting point is 00:13:19 At my entire day sometimes my week is affected by like a couple nights of poor sleep or it becomes your new Default it becomes I only get four hours of sleep just because my body just wants to get up and then now I'm just making this a routine And so it's just kind of it's one of those things it gets away from you and then now you know trying to correct it makes it even you know crazier there's a silver lining in that point Now, you know, trying to correct it makes it even crazier. There's a silver lining in that point. And probably the part that I think excited me the most about putting together this program because we attacked lifestyle and it was first time ever like an age group is that all
Starting point is 00:14:00 those things that you now notice, or the negative things that you notice as you've got older, the silver lining in that is when you make these adjustments, right, when you actually decide to put together a sleep routine, when you finally decide to do things to optimize your hormone levels, when you start tweaking these things, you actually really feel it dramatically, dramatically, where I felt like in my 20s, if you've messed with some of these, you turn some of these knobs, I would give you the like, yeah, maybe kind of feel it. We're with clients now that are over 40, if I get someone to dial in their hormones, or dial in their sleep, dial in some of these things,
Starting point is 00:14:40 holy crap. What did you know? So this, I'll bring up a interesting study I read years ago on this. Now, this is within healthy ranges that I'm referring to, okay? So, if you're outside of this, then this might not make a big difference. But for men, what they found with healthy men, so healthy active men, healthy active men will have testosterone levels that are healthy, right?
Starting point is 00:15:03 So the hormones reflect your health typically. So they're healthy, testosterone levels are gonna be pretty good. But what they found when they compared like men in their 20s, to men in their 30s, 40s, and 50s, was even though they were healthy, there still was a little bit of a difference in testosterone. It was still a little less as the men get older.
Starting point is 00:15:22 Not a lot less, but a little less. Here's what they found though, that the healthy, active, older man had a more concentrated amount of Androgen receptors. They had better Androgen receptor density. Okay, so for people who don't know what that means, the Androgen receptors are what testosterone attach to. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:46 The more receptors you have, the more active or powerful whatever amount of testosterone you have is. So as men get older, if they're healthy and they do the right things, even if testosterone does start to decline a little bit, your angiogen receptor density gets better. You know what that means? That means it doesn't matter. Your testosterone went down a little bit, your angrogen receptor density gets better. You know what that means? That means it doesn't matter. Your testosterone went down a little bit. In fact, there's other studies that show that within a healthy, optimal range, right?
Starting point is 00:16:15 So we're not talking about extremes here. So I want to be clear. Within a range that's considered healthy and yet somewhat optimal, it was not the testosterone levels that dictated how much muscle the men built. It was the Androgen receptors, how dense they were. So this is a silver lining, if you're a man listening right now, in that if we can, and we'll talk about some of the stuff
Starting point is 00:16:38 that we put together, but as you start to work with your body and get your hormones to look more youthful, right, or to get to those youthful profiles, you'll probably respond better than if you were in your 20s and you were doing some of this stuff. Now, I don't know of any studies on women in this particular case, but I would surmise that there's a similar. Women also have angiogen receptors. Believe it or not, a lot of people don't think that testosterone is the male hormone.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Tostosterone is extremely important for women as well. Just as important as it is for men, the difference is the ratios when a woman has low testosterone, she has the same side effects or effects that a man will. So I would surmise that it would be something very similar. And also, just to kind of point in this direction, when you look at top level strength sports like powerlifting, and you look at the records that people set in their 20s, 30s and 40s, many world records are set when people are in their late 30s, early 40s. Okay, so these are world records. Okay, so what's my point with what I'm saying is that
Starting point is 00:17:47 although age does play a role, if you know how to change your lifestyle and work out and die it accordingly, then it's not gonna play a huge role. It plays a huge role because your lifestyle hasn't changed even though your age has changed. So what does that look like? So think about this, right?
Starting point is 00:18:08 You take your 28-year-old versus, let's say, your 45-year-old. So we'll have an age gap there. Typically, who has more responsibilities? The 45-year-old is going to have more responsibilities. You're probably dealing with kids, a career, fully new career. You got way more to lose. Like all of us, the three of us are all entrepreneurs.
Starting point is 00:18:33 Okay, we all have wives and children now. Changing your business and starting a new business, it's a lot scarier now than it was before you had kids and you were younger, nobody's dependent. So you've got that on top of you. You're also, your time is spread out a little bit differently. Because of those responsibilities, I got things to do that have nothing to do with like what I want to do just for me. I got to do things for other people. I got to do things for my kids. I got to do things for my kids, I gotta do things for my business, I have responsibilities, I do things for my wife. So I don't just have the time to just go waste in the gym,
Starting point is 00:19:12 which when you're a kid, you kinda do. You go do a lot of stuff in the gym. I could go spend two and a half hours, it doesn't matter what I'm doing in there. Most people over 40, even if they wanted to, they couldn't. Even if we put together the perfect workout, I was two and a half hours long, they'd laugh because they'd be like,
Starting point is 00:19:28 where was that two and a half hours? Right, right. So that's another big challenge that we need to, you have to tackle. Another one is joint issues. Now, there's this myth out there that your joints just go bad as you get older. That doesn't, you don't start to notice age-related joint issues that have specifically to do
Starting point is 00:19:51 with your age until you're much older. Typically, what it is, after 40 and 50s, is that if you've been moving in ways that are suboptimally, you've just been doing it for longer. So, if you're 25 and you've been running not great or you've been squatting not the best or you've been sitting down for a long time, you in your 45, you've just been doing it for 20 more years. Now it's going to start to show up. And so the workout has to consider that. You can't just throw the same workout as somebody who's 45 and 25 without considering that.
Starting point is 00:20:25 You know, the silver lining in this, again, is forcing you to make better choices around your exercise selection, the amount of time that you've spent on the working out, the intensity level that you train at. It has to be balanced with stress, though. All these things that I think initially when you start to age, you start thinking as like, these are all these negative things. These are all, oh, my joints now, oh, I only have this much time, or oh, I've got all this other stress.
Starting point is 00:20:55 But really what I ended up doing is it forces you to really nail down what is ideal for me, and how does that compliment the rest of my life, which ultimately leads you to this like better way of living anyways. Yeah. Give me more efficient and more effective with everything you do. Just takes more intention.
Starting point is 00:21:12 Yes. And I think that's the biggest takeaway I've found about like, you know, getting older is just like, again, yeah, you have more responsibility, you have less time to just really burn. And so I want to only stick with things that are actually going to move things for for me the most. And, and too, along with age comes wisdom. And so you go through a lot of that process, hopefully you get to point where you realize, okay, this really works well with my body. And this is what I need to stick with and, and
Starting point is 00:21:41 create that consistency. That's why this is my favorite part about being 40 plus and going through all this and figuring this out is like I've cut out all the fat. I've cut out all the other, I mean, I used to spend two hours plus in the gym. And I was in, I wasn't in better shape than what I am today. Like I was literally spinning my wheels most of the time.
Starting point is 00:22:03 And a lot of stuff was overtraining and overdoing stuff and way more than I need to or doing a lot of things that were way less effective than other things or neglecting the stuff that was going to move the needle more with my overall health. Where now if piece that together, it's like, man, the stuff that I do in the gym now is way less, but elicits a lot more results for me and compliments my life. And I think that's the silver lining and all of this stuff that,
Starting point is 00:22:30 oh, these are all these challenges that we have as we get older, but really all it's done is forced me to focus on, okay, what are the big rocks that in my lifestyle and in my training and in my nutrition that I need to hone in on. And I feel like that's probably the funnest part about putting this all together was piecing that together on the same way that we would with a client. Well, obviously, we'll start with workout.
Starting point is 00:22:58 We talk about that all the time on the show. Now all exercises have value. okay? Some are more valuable for some things and others more valuable for other things. But ultimately, the best exercise for you is going to be the one that you can perform with the best technique and the best form that allows you to accomplish the goal that you're trying to accomplish. With that in mind, you have to consider when I'm training somebody or working with somebody that's over 40, I have to consider certain things. A couple of things that are quite common are core stability, hip movement and mobility,
Starting point is 00:23:39 shoulder mobility, and then knee and ankle type stuff, but knee being the big one. I said ankle because oftentimes it comes from the ankles but they don't typically complain about their ankles, they typically will complain about their knees. Now, person comes to me, I want to build muscle-borne body fat and if I consider those things, there's a selection of exercises that I can choose from that are going to be more effective. Period, end of story because they're more appropriate. There's just, there's just going to be exercises that are going to be more effective when you consider those things. I'll use a silly example, but this is a tool that I used as a trainer, which I used more of as a trainer, that I personally
Starting point is 00:24:23 discovered the value of by using it on myself. Just one silly example, which is a sled. I used more of as a trainer that I personally discovered the value of by using it on myself, just one silly example, which is a sled. A sled, the rate of injury, how it moves the joints is so much friendlier than any other lower body exercise that would be in the same category of muscle building, strength,
Starting point is 00:24:45 building, and fat burning. There's a lot of safe, you know, there's a lot of, I don't want to say safe because all exercises are safe if you do them right. But there's a lot of lower risk, lower body exercises, but the tradeoff is always this. It's not going to build muscle as much. It's not going to be as effective for fat burning. But hey, you know, your hip bothers you, you won't hurt your back.
Starting point is 00:25:06 So I want you to. The sled is interesting because the sled is a high performance producing. If you do it right and you program it right tool that's up there with like the barbell squat, barbell lunges, Bulgarian squat, that kind of stuff. It's up there, but it's also, it's one of the few exercises, or I say I say tools, that simultaneously in the same category as safe correctional type exercises. Okay. It's rare to find by anybody who's a trainer coach, strength coach, you know this. You got your categories of exercises. If you tell a strength coach and you say, pick, give me the top four lower body muscle
Starting point is 00:25:52 building, power building, fat burning exercises. And also pick me the top four correctional exercise, safest, lowest risk of injury and pain exercises. None of them are gonna match, except for the ones you can do with the sled. Okay, that's what's so rare about it. But there are other movements like that for the rest of the body,
Starting point is 00:26:12 and there are ways that you can program them. So when creating a workout for someone who's over 40, this is a very strong consideration. What exercises are we gonna use that kind of fit both categories? Because what I hate is this. This is what I hate. I hate this. I hate and I won't settle for none of us well. We will not settle for trading results. Like, okay, you're going to get less results, but you know, you're older so you have to do this thing over here.
Starting point is 00:26:41 And I know that's that there's cases where that's true. But the whole point here was, can we do this with both? Can we do both? Can we make this feel good on your body, but also kick ass. Yeah, you still want the results. That's right. You know, considering some of those other factors of higher risk in terms of joint impact. And there are exercises that will require a bit more of that joint stability and strength. And if we're already in a position where we have little bit of joint dysfunction, we're addressing it with mobility practices,
Starting point is 00:27:15 we're trying to kind of reintegrate that and make sure that all that is in order. Meanwhile, I wanna build strength, I wanna keep my muscles built and developed. We can incorporate things like the sled to accomplish that very effectively. And also too, it's just one of those things that it carries over and translates towards functional activity. So things around the house, being active, being strong, active, and energetic in your everyday life
Starting point is 00:27:48 is gonna benefit your interactions with other people, your family, your work, all these other things to consider. So it's just, you know, adding all that up and assessing what has the most value now in terms of efficiency and effectiveness from each exercise is something to consider. I really thought of it like this or think of it like this.
Starting point is 00:28:10 You know, when we wrote maps and a ball of math performance, maps aesthetic, when you add all those up, it's about nine months worth of programming. So there's still like three months left. If I've got a client that I'm training that's over 40, I feel like this is something that comes in annually every year. So every year, and then say they love those programs, right?
Starting point is 00:28:30 Anna Balk's been great from they saw great results, performance, they love the aesthetic, they love training that way. And this is somebody who's over 40. I'm cycling this in as their fourth program. It just, it just makes total sense that we always have this to balance them out and to keep them feeling good forever. I see it like that. Yeah, well, look, just to give you another example of what I'm talking about, okay? If you listen to show for longer than a week, you've heard us talk about the value
Starting point is 00:28:57 of the barbell squat, phenomenal exercise. One of the best movements you can do, one of the best muscle builders, if you perform it right, it's going to improve the health of every joint that's involved, which is pretty much most of the body. It's extremely functional. There's a lot of carryover. It's just, they call it the king of all exercises for a reason, but it is a high-skill exercise. In comparison to others, you have to have good mobility, good control, good stability, because if you don't do it right, then it can become something that can cause pain and injury.
Starting point is 00:29:28 Okay, so you could take a barbell squat, and you could change one little thing about it, that pretty much doesn't take away any of the results you get from the squat, but does dramatically reduce the potential risk that comes from the squat when your form isn't just right. And that is to eliminate the need to change directions as you're doing the squat itself.
Starting point is 00:29:54 In other words, when you're put, let's say you put a hundred pounds in your back and you're squatting down, when you change directions to come back up in a split second, you're actually squatting more than a hundred pounds. There's momentum is involved, okay? And that's typically when people cause problems, either chronic issues or acute issues, chronic in the sense that over time they're like, oh, my knee bothers me or whatever, or acutely like, yeah, I got to the bottom, try to come up strain and I got hurt. Well, a box squat, A box squat is literally a squat
Starting point is 00:30:26 that gets rid of that changing directions because you sit down and come back up. There is no, you're squatting 200 pounds, it's 200 pounds a whole time because you sit on the box and then you come up rather. So that's just one simple, very simple example of what I'm talking about. Now, there's a lot more that goes into programming
Starting point is 00:30:45 or workout like sets and wraps and when you do lower wraps or when you do higher wraps and when you combine them and when you include things that are more plyometric, you might think to yourself, what does plyometrics have to do with working out over 40? I'm gonna tell you something right now. If you're over 40 and you're listening right now, and I tell you, if you get up and run as fast as you can,
Starting point is 00:31:06 do you think you're gonna hurt yourself and you are a little afraid? Jump off a truck. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're gonna be like, if that makes you kind of like, oh yeah, if I try to take off right now, or if I tried to jump off of something,
Starting point is 00:31:18 like a bench at the gym, I probably hurt myself, it's because you've lost that skill because you stopped practicing it. In this program, we also included ways of redeveloping that skill. Why do you need that skill? Because life is not controlled. So it's going to be a moment when you stop off the curb wrong. Your kid's going to need something. You need to grab something real quick. This is when people tend to hurt themselves, but there's a proper way to program that. Now, that's just the workout portion of what we had to put together.
Starting point is 00:31:46 The real considerations though, the ones that were, we were, we really sat down and spent a lot of time was in the lifestyle, this is the first program we've ever created. This is the part I'm most excited about. This is the fun part. This is the first program, but we give you lifestyle programming, and we have dietary guidelines and advice as well. It's the first program we've ever done that. This is why I think this will forever become my annual tune up program. The way, and I'm going to do this one right now, the way that I think I'm going to approach this, and you just kind of went over just
Starting point is 00:32:27 some, some basic concepts in the programming of the training, which I'm excited to do, but I'm more excited about the lifestyle stuff because of all the things like we're going to address the morning stuff, the evening stuff, the diet, all these things. And really what I'm looking for in all these lifestyle, you know, goals that we have or the things that we set as far as like the hacks and stuff is when I apply them, the things that I notice as far as a return. And like where have I been missing big time, right? And so that's why I like it is like this annual reminder because it's not like there's things that have included in here that we've never talked about before or I've never done before, but the question
Starting point is 00:33:08 is like, oh, yeah, how consistent have I been with that? And if I am applying those things, you know, which one's giving me the biggest return? And so I love the idea of this program being this annual tune up on the exercise side and then also like an annual check-in with myself on the lifestyle side. So I think of like exercise tune up, lifestyle check-in is like the way I'm looking at the way I'm going to approach this. Right, because if you can ritualize this,
Starting point is 00:33:32 like what a benefit that's gonna provide you with everything else you're pursuing, especially physically, and two, to get on track with your diet and to get on track with your sleep and all these other factors that we know move the needle so much in terms of overall recovery. So you try any of these other programs too. I love that as like a sort of a check-in to see where we can improve. Well, here's the main considerations with the lifestyle guidelines that we included in this program. So number one, we looked at
Starting point is 00:34:08 what are things, well here's some of the problems we need to deal with. One insulin resistance starts to become an issue right around now. This is when your body isn't responding to the same amounts of insulin as it used to and this is a big problem. Okay Insulin resistance is connected to, I don't think you can find a chronic health issue that doesn't have this as a component or as a root cause. I mean, dementia, Alzheimer's is due
Starting point is 00:34:39 to insulin resistance, heart disease, cancers, low energy, cancers, low energy, like, you know, mitochondrial dysfunction, right? These are the, what they would refer to as the powerhouses of the cell. So we looked at, okay, how do we, we want to improve insulin sensitivity. Obviously the workout does a lot of that,
Starting point is 00:34:59 strength training, well, the best things you could do. But what are the other things that we could do that improve insulin sensitivity? Here's the second one. Cortisol. Uh-oh, everybody here's cortisol, they think, that's a terrible hormone, a stress hormone, get rid of it.
Starting point is 00:35:12 No, no, no. Cortisol is an essential hormone in the body. If you had no cortisol, you'd be terribly unhealthy, would not be a good thing, okay? So everybody talks about crushing cortisol, lowering cortisol. That's actually not accurate. What really needs to happen is you need to have appropriate cortisol levels in the morning, and in the evening, this is the way cortisol is supposed to look. You wake up and cortisol goes up. Cortisol produces energy, wakes you
Starting point is 00:35:44 up a little bit, gets you moving. Then it starts to taper off and come down in the evening. That's when you start to relax and rest, and then you want to go to sleep. What happens when people's cortisol levels are all kind of all over the place, is they either A, get this inverted cortisol pattern, or cortisol doesn't want to go up in the morning, so give me big coffee to kind of give me this artificial energy.
Starting point is 00:36:11 Then because of their body's inability to deal with stress, because they're not in good health, because they don't exercise right, or they don't eat right, or have good sleep, or lots of other reasons, the cortisol starts to respond later in the day. And then they find themselves, how many times have you heard this from a client like this that we're talking about? We're like, I have no energy all day long. And then when it's time to go to bed, I can't sleep. Yeah. It's like I'm exhausted at lunch time. We have a meeting at work. I can barely keep my eyes open. I think to myself, I can't wait to go to bed tonight. Go home, deal with the kids. Do the thing, put the kids down, try to go to sleep.
Starting point is 00:36:46 Why am I tossing and turning? What the hell is going on? So that inverted cortisol ratio is what a lot of people are dealing with or you get this cortisol level that's kind of high all the time. By the way, there's you could start to develop a resistance to most hormones, cortisol being one of them, meaning your body stops responding to it. And so your body needs to make more and more cortisol.
Starting point is 00:37:12 So now you're kind of this higher state of stress. High cortisol levels that are inappropriate, high all the time, I've been connected to things like this role body fat in the gut. So you may notice like, I'm storing more body fat, like I gained 10 pounds, I've gained 10 pounds before, but why is it all in my belly now? That I never had a belly before, could be connected to something like that.
Starting point is 00:37:34 We're also looking at optimizing the hormones to testosterone, estrogen, and progesterone. And having them be youthful and appropriate. And then the final one is growth hormone. Growth hormone is the youth hormone. You'll see, you'll hear about celebrities taking human growth hormone to make themselves for younger and all that kind of stuff.
Starting point is 00:37:52 So that was one consideration. The second consideration was, what are things that people can do to make their bodies more resilient to stress? Because you're gonna be more stressed out when you're older, just because you have more responsibilities. If you're 45 years old and you don't have any responsibilities, go find another podcast because you need some help.
Starting point is 00:38:14 Most of us at that point, you've got some big responsibilities and that's a good thing. But what are the things you can do in your lifestyle to help you deal with those things? And then here's the third consideration with the lifestyle guidelines and programming. Is it going to give you a big bang for your buck and is it something people can do? Right? So if I read a study that said, you know, you have to swim in salt water at 3 a.m. for 15 minutes. And then like, I'm not going to advertise.
Starting point is 00:38:42 I'm not. Who's going to do that? No one's going to do that? And who's gonna do that? Who's gonna follow that? And for how long? So what we did is we picked the ones that gave you the most bang for your buck, the ones that help regulate cortisol, the ones that help your body adapt to stress,
Starting point is 00:38:55 by the way, that means you're gonna build more muscle, burn more body fat, because those are both adaptations. And the ones that are doable, the ones that are doable, that where you're gonna look at these and you're not gonna say to yourself like, oh that's great, now you just added 15 more chores to my day that I'm not gonna be able to apply. And then what we did is we put it together in a way to where the goal is not to be perfect,
Starting point is 00:39:18 nobody's perfect, the goal is to simply move through the phases and get a little better each time. That's what's pretty awesome about the way we set it up. Well, my recommendation would be to actually print off the checklist, right? So there's morning, evening, lifestyle hack, and there's like check boxes that I know that we've created within the program. Right. And so glad you said that Adam, because there are things you can do in the morning to help
Starting point is 00:39:42 optimize hormone levels that you want in the morning and also optimize how you feel because you're about to get your day started. Then there are different things that you do in the evening to help bring cortisol down to help with insulin sensitivity. And then help growth hormone come up when you go to sleep because that's when you want the growth hormone to come up.
Starting point is 00:40:03 So there's morning things and evening things, and then we have general health guidelines that we included. But then we also included dietary guidelines, which we usually typically don't touch, but we wanted to include these in here, because you're probably a wiser consumer at this point. And so I said, hey, let's throw in some dietary guidelines because we think this will give them a lot of what they're looking at. We also threw in some supplement guidelines.
Starting point is 00:40:32 I don't think, have we ever added supplement guidelines? No, no. Yeah, I feel like this is like for you too. I feel like you've attracted so many other supplement nuts that want to know what you're taking, why you take it. And it's like, okay, let's look at all the common things that people are deficient in, especially things that are more common as we age. What are some basic recommendations around that and things that
Starting point is 00:40:53 we would end again, back to your point of, it's like we threw the whole gamut of every supplement out there. It was like, what are the ones that are the common offenders? What are the ones that are going to move the needle the most and which ones would you recommend in that order and that's what made it to the main program? 100% good. Yeah, no, and the actual lifestyle checklist, I mean, we're just trying to find those things that we know, you stack these dominoes together,
Starting point is 00:41:19 it's going to get you closer to those natural rhythms. And it's about getting your body sort of back in sync with the sort of that optimal setup. So we do have that bit of a spike in the morning and then we sort of are able to calm down. And it doesn't just happen. It is the point of all of this. It's like you just have to be a little bit more intentional.
Starting point is 00:41:40 You know, as we go forward in age, and this is just one of those things that just helps you to really be intentional with your everyday behaviors. And if you could just do one of them consistently, that's a win. And then now we build off of that. I'll give a couple examples.
Starting point is 00:41:57 I'll give you more than a couple examples. One, we've talked about before, but I like to bring this up because it makes a big difference. This makes a very big difference in your health, your hormones, your, how your body responds to exercise stuff like that. And we've talked about this before, but this is one of the things that we
Starting point is 00:42:11 recommend that you do both in the morning and night. And that is to go to bed and wake up at the same time every single day. Go to bed, wake up, same time every day. And the reason for this is because we've talked about this before on the show. When you go to bed later on a Friday night feeling like you're going to sleep in Saturday and you do that again Saturday night, by the time Monday comes around it's time to go to work, you've given yourself a jet lag. Okay, you've actually changed your circadian rhythm by two or three hours,
Starting point is 00:42:39 and it takes about two days to readjust. So now Monday sucks, Tuesday and then Wednesday you're back to normal. Now you think to yourself like, well I could deal with it, drink a little more coffee or whatever, look at the data on messing up your circadian rhythm even by two or three hours on health. Profound impacts.
Starting point is 00:42:58 So it's, it sounds silly, but the reason why we put that one in there is because of the impact that that will have on all the things that we've been talking about. Fat loss, muscle gain, energy, libido, go to bed, wake up at the same time. All right, here's one that's unique for the morning. And we put on here just kind of some guidelines that kind of walk you through, but you will be using cold water in the morning as part of your shower.
Starting point is 00:43:25 Okay, now why would you do that in the morning? What's the big deal with that? Well, we talked about cortisol. We want your cortisol to learn to be higher in the morning. Well, it's gonna help raise that and give you some of that energy. It's also gonna help your body or make your body produce more of what are known
Starting point is 00:43:40 as cataclylamines, epinephrine, nor epinephrine. These are energy producing chemicals. Why do you wanna do that in the morning? Because unless you're gonna wake up and go back to bed, you got stuff to do, this is when you want those things. You don't want those before you go to bed. All right, what about when you go to bed? Well, here's two things that we included in there.
Starting point is 00:44:01 There's a lot of things, by the way, that we included in there. But here's to that, maybe not so obvious, that when you look at the data, actually have some pretty profound effects on all the stuff that we talked about. One of them is to box breathe before or when you're in bed.
Starting point is 00:44:17 Box breathing, now what does that do? That kicks your parasympathetic into gear, because you're without realize, especially if you live in this state, you might not realize that your body is in this sympathetic central nervous system state. So sympathetic fight or flight, parasympathetic rest and digest box breathing, especially when you schedule it, program it and do it the way that we explain it, kicks in the parasympathetic. Now, why do you want that? Well, you get better sleep. Okay, that's good.
Starting point is 00:44:45 I sleep better. But what else does it do? You make more growth hormone. If you're in a stressed state and you go to sleep, even if you force yourself to sleep in a stress state, you take an ambion or you take a benzo or you drink or something to make yourself go to sleep or you're so exhausted, you knock yourself out, you're not producing the same amount of growth hormone or melatonin. Well, doing this before you go to bed will have a positive impact on those things. Another thing, again, this sounds silly, but when you look at the data and that's what we did,
Starting point is 00:45:15 this was a simple thing that has a big impact, is to write down a few things that you're grateful for. Oh, that sounds so woo and silly or whatever. No, it has an impact on a person's consistency. Yes. On their consistency and their workouts, again, on the how the rest and digest part happens while they sleep. Those are just a few, but there's a lot in there that we've listed that you can work through and build upon along with the program to work out, along with the dietary guidelines. And again, it's all specifically for,
Starting point is 00:45:50 and like I said, I actually didn't say this on here, I said this before we started recording. The most personal program that we've ever created, because I'm in there, I'm in the mid 40 now, so I didn't just turn 40, I got this. This is all the good stuff. I'm in there, so this is all the stuff that I've pieced together that I used to do with my clients,
Starting point is 00:46:08 but that I really see the value in, because I do them with myself. By the way, this program we're launching right now, and because we're just launching it, it's gonna be on sale. So it's discounted. We're gonna take $80 off the price, okay? So it's Maps 40 plus. So maps 40
Starting point is 00:46:27 PLUS dot com use the code 40 launch. So that's 40 launch and you'll get $80 off and there's going to be some free stuff that we include with that as well. That offer will expire Sunday, December 24th. Also, if you like this show, head over to MindPumpFree.com and check out some of our free guides. We have free guides that can help you with many fitness goals. You can also find all of us on social media.
Starting point is 00:46:54 Just think it can be found on Instagram at MindPump Justin. You can find me at MindPump to Stefano and Adam at MindPump Atom. Thank you for listening to MindPump. 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 Superbumble at MindPumpMedia.com. The RGB Superbumble includes maps and a ballad, maps performance, and maps aesthetic.
Starting point is 00:47:19 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 but at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30 day money bag guarantee and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com. If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family. We thank you for your support and until next time, this is MindPump.
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