Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2527: Breaking the February Fitness Funk... Staying Motivated After January
Episode Date: February 6, 2025Breaking the February Fitness Funk | Staying Motivated After January Common reasons people drop off going to the gym in February. (1:13) Five methods to solve the problem of staying motivated afte...r January. (5:12) #1 - Have an easy to commit to option. (6:36) #2 - Change the style of workout. (15:18) #3 - Make a more realistic commitment for time. (19:12) #4 - Read/watch something fitness-related every day. (22:44) #5 - Hire a coach. (27:08) Questions: If I reduce my training frequency, how much are my results going to slow down? (29:17) Is doing a little really better than nothing? (31:07) How do I know if a coach is good or bad? (32:31) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Eight Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump Listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP to get $350 off Pod 4 Ultra. Currently, it ships to the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Europe, and Australia. ** Special Promotion: MAPS Suspension or MAPS Bands HALF off! ** Code SB50 at checkout ** Mind Pump #2080: Get Jacked With Bands! Mind Pump #2137: The Best Suspension Training Workout Plan for Beginners Mind Pump Store Mind Pump #1172: Four Ways to Change Your Workout for Maximum Results Mind Pump #2385: Five Reasons Why You Should Hire a Trainer How Much Training is Necessary to Maintain Strength and Muscle? Mind Pump #2112: Is 15 Minutes Enough Time for an Effective Workout? Mind Pump #1622: Nine Signs Your Trainer Sucks Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind pump with your hosts, Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
It's February. All that motivation from January is starting to go away.
What do you do? In today's episode, we're talking about breaking the February fitness funk.
We're going to get you back on track
so you can get fit and awesome.
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here comes the show. It's February. It's the February Fitness Funk. This is usually when
people's motivation begins to wane. They were so hyped in January, February comes around, they start to white knuckle things
by March and April, they fall off,
that's what the stats show, that's what we experienced,
managing gyms for years and years and years.
Today's episode we're gonna talk about
how you can break that, how can you get ahead of this,
stay consistent for the rest of the year
so you can get those fitness goals, let's go.
What are the common ones?
Injury, lack of results, overcommitment on,
like what are, I'm trying to think of the top three
to five reasons why.
For falling out.
Yeah.
Because obviously everyone's motivated in January
to get started and then they get going shortly
after the drop-off starts to
happen and that we used to have stats on the top reasons why that was. Injury was
actually pretty high which I was surprised at that. Yeah and that's just you know poor
application of technique and intensity, lack of results, same thing actually poor
application. Yeah because there's really more frustrating than that right you
you you're highly motivated you decide you're gonna go to gym every day or something right you're committed to this? You're highly motivated. You decide you're going to go to the gym every day or something, right?
You're committed to this thing.
Getting after it.
Yeah.
And you're in your first month and you get your results back and it's little to no
movement.
Then you're like, F this.
So let's paint the picture because this is really super common, right?
You get super common.
And again, we worked in big gyms for years and years and years and trained clients.
And for anybody working in the gym space, they know this,
they see this, it's very predictable.
Lots of people, lots of people,
you get an increase of about 50% in traffic
in gyms of people interested in working out
and it starts right around the second week of January,
starts to pick up in January, the beginning,
but second week really starts to kick in.
You can see this by the way in gyms, it gets crazy.
And what typically happens is people make
this huge commitment.
So they went through the holidays,
they weren't working out all year the previous year.
They make this big commitment, that's it,
I'm gonna start going to the gym consistently
four days a week, or three days a week,
that's it, I'm gonna do it.
And then what they typically do is sign up for
the most intense workout class, or go to the gym,
try it on their own, and really try to beat the crap out of themselves.
And they do see some initial weight loss or some initial results, but come
February, what happens is this plateau.
Suddenly I'm going to the gym three days a week.
It's been six weeks.
I lost so much weight and it stopped.
I'm like week three now with the scale not moving.
Three weeks of doing all this hard work
and nothing's happening.
And then what happens is that initial,
beginning of the year motivation starts to fade.
But in February, the truth is in February,
we really don't see a drop off in people coming to the gym.
February is just about as busy as January.
But what happens in February are a lot of people who are plateaued,
who now are holding on for dear life and going, I'm just going to keep going, I'm just going to keep going, I'm just going to keep going.
But eventually it wears on them by March and April. That's it.
Well, it's interesting too, because February was always the biggest month as a personal trainer. I always loved it because it was like,
month as a personal trainer. I always loved it because it was like, I feel like January is over hype because that's getting everybody in the memberships and they're kind of working
it out and figuring out that they, you know, their plan and their application isn't going
the way that they thought it was going to go. And so then that was like almost a great
opportunity for trainers to come in and sit down and figure this out and really coach
them into a better way to apply this.
What a great point, Justin.
February was a massive personal training month for trainers.
You sell personal training in January as well,
but that's from a point of sale perspective.
But February, you would get a lot of members
who started in January who plateaued,
and now they're like, okay, I need help.
Now, unfortunately, it wasn't nearly enough.
Vassar and Jordan didn't have it.
Yeah, because a majority of them don't do that.
No.
A majority of them don't ask.
You wouldn't have enough trainers to service.
They'll just stop coming.
They just stop coming.
And so the strategy, now this for us,
as gym managers and trainers, this was a problem to solve
because if you have a gym or a personal training studio
or a fitness facility, if you could
find a way to capture and maintain the January hustle and bustle, the January
surge for the rest of the year, you have a very successful business. You'll beat
the competition. If you can figure this out, you have figured out one of the
biggest problems in the fitness industry. This was something that I
thought about a lot. Every year, every industry, and this was something that I thought about a lot.
Every year, every year, this was a problem
that I had to figure out and try to solve.
And it took me a long time to come to the right conclusions
because I did try a lot of strategies that just didn't work.
Like one of them was to try and make it more exciting
or to create more exciting or to create
more motivation or to try applying more intensity.
Competitions.
Competitions and none of that worked. None of that really did anything at all. What it
did was do more of what January did, which at that point, you know, that started to fade.
So I had to figure out, I had to figure out, okay, how do we get these people to stay forever
or to keep doing this for the rest of their lives? And it was February when you had to figure out, okay, how do we get these people to stay forever or to keep doing this
for the rest of their lives?
And it was February when you had to figure this out
because if you waited till April or March
when they really started to leave,
they've already made up their mind.
Yeah, it becomes too late.
Yeah, 100%.
So first off, you wanna be prepared ahead of time.
So if this is you listening right now
and you're already experiencing a plateau and you're like okay this is me things are
slowing down I feel my motivation weighing waning but I think what I'm
gonna do is I'm just gonna be just determined I'm gonna use determination
and just grit that will fail what you need to do is get ahead of the fall or
get ahead of what ends up happening.
And one of the ways you could do this is to come up with a easy to commit option
for your workouts.
I found this to be very successful for the people in my gyms and my clients.
This is when I would provide options for people where I'd say, here are some
good at home workout options.
Because that step of getting in the car, driving to the gym,
was enough sometimes to get people to stop.
But if I gave them some easier to do at home options that were effective,
what I'd find is I was able to maintain, get them to keep coming,
get them to keep going and staying kind of consistent.
Right, because you guys mentioned some of those deterrents, right?
It is like work and everything kind of sneaks back in, like the intensity of that, the projects
kind of stack up, like, you know, you start kind of easily justifying all these other
priorities over, especially if it's not really working anymore, like what your initial motivation
is starts like really fading away.
And so to now figure out like, what's going gonna work long-term if that's not what your initial thought was
You have to kind of think about those things of how can I eliminate that barrier to entry in terms of like if I have
To drive to the gym. That's a barrier
So now if I can set myself up so I can hit it at my house. That's yeah successful
I always had a
Alternative, you know bands Eventually, when suspension trainers came
around and got popular, or suspension trainer workout that they can knock out in 20 to 30
minutes at their house as an alternative. And I found that having that as an option with our
clients, and even though I was trying to get them to come to the gym to see me two or three times,
the inevitable would happen. And having that option for them to be able to do that, allow them to still do
that and feel like they weren't going backwards.
And many times it's exactly what people needed.
They actually didn't even need to come to the gym and do more.
They just needed to build that consistency and giving them that
alternative that they could do at the house.
I think was became a staple for every client.
Every client, I had the ideal program and what you're following with me
when we get in the gym.
And then we have these just in case things
or when we're traveling things.
And that's where like training with like bands,
suspension trainers, these tools became paramount
to my success with my clients.
100%.
In fact, what I would do right around this time with clients
is I would train them with these at home tools
in the gym in preparation.
Right.
So they familiarize themselves with it.
Yeah, so they'd come in and it's okay for the next
couple weeks, some of our workouts are gonna be band focused.
I love bands and I love suspension trainers
because of their convenience.
They also provide effective resistance.
So weights are great, free weights are the best, right?
But free weights take up a lot of space.
And getting convinced.
Can't travel with home.
Yeah, and convincing somebody who just started
going to the gym to go buy a weight set
with a squat rack and everything's very difficult.
It's a big ask.
But getting them to buy a suspension trainer.
Or some bands.
Or some bands.
Easy.
Pretty easy, they're inexpensive.
And so what I would do is I'd say,
okay, we're gonna do some workouts
on a suspension trainer band.
And then I'd train them on it and teach them.
And then here's what would end up happening.
What used to happen is I would see people
not show up or cancel.
Then what started happening is people would say,
oh, I don't think I can make it in tomorrow,
but I'll do that workout that you showed me
with my suspension trainer.
And they would.
They would inevitably do it, and it kept them consistent.
And again, like you said, Adam,
oftentimes their bodies actually needed that anyway.
Yeah, I think there's this misconception around workouts
that are banned or suspension trainer
that they're this inferior workout.
It's like, oh, well, if I can't get to the gym,
there's why, I'm gonna do something like that,
it's not worth it.
And it's like, oh, I'm not gonna get the same results,
it's not as good. And it's like, it's's not, I'm not going to get the same results. There's not as good.
And it's like, it's not true at all.
And the number one thing is consistency.
So if I can help my clients build habits around
just movement period, I mean, I've distilled it all
the way down and just walking if I have to.
Like that's the last alternative.
It's like, Hey, if we can't get to the gym,
that's fine.
Then we have this band or suspension type of
routine that if we can't do that, bare minimum
walk.
Like, and we would still see progress doing that, building those healthy habits of doing something,
some sort of activity, some sort of movement. It's not this massive inferior workout at all.
It's in fact really good. And many times the client who can't get to the gym, it's because
they have a lot going on at the time, a lot of stress, didn't get good sleep, busy that day.
And so a moderate workout that's suspension trainer
or band-based is a great option for that person anyways
for that workout.
So many times it ended up helping us.
Yeah, so bands are pretty interesting
in terms of the way that they provide resistance.
So when you look at using a resistance machine
or dumbbells, you have what's called a
resistance curve when it's the heaviest, when it's the lightest. So if you use a
machine, typically it's the same weight all the way through. Free weights,
depending on the movement, it could be heavier at the end of the movement or
the beginning of the movement. Like if I'm doing a standing curl, it's heavier at
the top because I'm fighting gravity directly than it is at the bottom. Bands
are always harder the more you stretch them out.
So they have this very interesting kind of resistance curve that tends
to be less damaging to the body.
And so a lot of times people would actually in this particular context, right?
They started in January, they started overdoing it a little bit.
Now they're not coming to the gym as much.
They plateaued, they start doing band workouts.
It's still resistance training,
but it also gives their body a little bit of a break.
And I would notice with some people who kick their body
into progress again,
because the bands didn't cause as much damage.
Now suspension trainers,
suspension trainers are really interesting because
they are legit like strength training.
Olympic rings are essentially what suspension trainers
are based off of.
Suspension trainers are, it doesn't matter, what I love about both bands and
suspension trainers, but especially suspension trainers, is suspension
trainers are appropriate for anyone. Now bands, if you're really strong, it can be
difficult to do certain exercises because it's hard to get bands that are
gonna provide enough resistance to somebody who's really strong.
Suspension trainer, I don't care how strong you are, and I don't care how much
of a beginner you are, if I change the angle on those bands, excuse me, on the
suspension trainer, I can make an exercise extremely advanced or I can take that
same exercise and make it very, very easy.
So it's a very appropriate way for it.
Versatility on it is just exceptional.
You have a brand out there that built a you know billion dollar franchise off of
that and that's Orange Theory because of how effective those things are. I mean
that's all they they have a stack of dumbbells but they rarely ever use that.
90% of all the workouts are built around the suspension trainer because of how
and that's it's really tough to take a class
and teach them through a strength training workout together.
And one of the only ways you could do that
is with a tool like that, is to where you can modify it
for 10 different people that are going through it,
they can all be doing a chest press
with the suspension trainer.
And you could have somebody who's 80 years old
or somebody in their prime, 25, super strong,
and make it just as challenging for each person.
And I love the instability component because I felt like that was always a major focus
with a lot of my clients, especially early on in their training with me, it was like
stability in their joints.
And so it adds that instability that I think everybody can use and or need more of.
And so I've, I fell in love with that.
If I had to choose, I Lean more towards a suspension trainer
Although I think bands are great to travel with and they have lots of pluses too
But I think it brings you in their body a lot more too. So you get more familiar with your
Limitations, I think there's there's a little bit of disassociation with weights just because I'm trying to get it to a certain place
Whereas like you're really feeling your way through these movements, and you can gradually increase
and decrease the intensity of it
just by your positioning of your body.
So it's a pretty unique tool in that regard.
Ideally, you'd want both.
Ideally, you'd want to be able, and-
I mean, we always talk about that.
Yeah, benefits.
Why limit yourself to one thing?
Totally, because-
They both have extreme benefits.
Because you could have a band set
and a suspension trainer set,
and you could store it all in one drawer in your house.
It takes up no space.
Now you have the best of both worlds.
Because bands are good too
because you could do different angles with the band.
So anyway, good tools
and it gives you an easy to commit option
when you don't make it to the gym, right?
The second thing is to change the style of your workout
or to put it differently, change the goal, right?
If your body's plateauing, if you went like full bore
through January and you're going crazy
and you're going hard, all of a sudden you plateaued,
this might be a good time to focus more on mobility.
Or it might be a good time to now focus on flexibility
or building strength or maybe a little bit of stamina.
Pure strength with rest.
Yes.
Like doing this gets things moving again.
The body is exceptional at adapting to stress.
So long as you don't over apply stress, it'll start to adapt.
But then what happens is the progress will eventually slow down as the
body learns to adapt to it.
Adaptation is how your body progresses.
But once it, you do the same thing over and over, it just stops changing. And one of the best ways to get through a plateau is to change
the focus or the style of the workout. By the way, this doesn't mean changing the style does not mean
go to do something harder. Sometimes it does, but oftentimes it just means something different.
And sometimes it means something easier, but changing the style, like this is, this is a time
tested way of getting out of
a plateau that every strength and conditioning coach, every trainer who's got experience knows about.
I mean, I know that we're talking to people right now trying to keep them motivated in February to
keep going, but I think this is the secret sauce to all levels at any time, at any period of their
training, is to continually move and change the goals.
I mean, it's the only way that I've found personally,
I've been able to stay consistent over so many years is that at one point,
if you're always focused on the same goal, eventually you actually even reach that goal.
And that may not be the thing you're thinking about right now when you're one
month in and you have a long ways to go still.
Like I'm not worried about that, Adam, but
it's if you're at one point you you're going to have to learn this.
So you can start to practice it now or you can wait until you achieve that
goal and you have to learn that lesson anyway.
So I think this is the secret sauce to staying consistent forever is that,
and it's a great way when you're focusing in a direction and you start to get
discouraged and you're like, I'm not seeing what I want to see from, you know,
what, let's change course.
And a lot of times I like to work with the body,
what we're noticing and feeling anyways. We've talked about this recently with the diet in, you know what, let's change course. And a lot of times I like to work with the body, what we're noticing and feeling anyways.
We've talked about this recently with the diet
in Christmas time, right?
We had an episode that we did about, you know,
that's a great time to, hey, right now,
there's gonna be all these extra calories
because you're gonna be going to family holiday parties
and stuff like that.
Not a great time to decide you're gonna get shredded
and cut, pretty good time for you to go,
you know what, I'm gonna reverse diet.
So I love things like that.
So pay attention to the other aspects of your life and changing goals, other
things that you want to achieve and your mindset into the gym that
makes it fresh and new again.
I like the psychological benefits of it a lot, uh, in that if you're changing
it up and you're focusing on, you know, a different skill or different
type of style of workout, a lot of times it takes you away from that fixation that you have on my
body isn't changing or this isn't happening or, you know, why can't I get to
this place that I'm trying to go so hard?
Like I'm focused now on a different way of training, which is going to help me
to be stimulated enough where I get excited about this, that the results tend
to reveal themselves
through that process a lot quicker anyways.
Yeah, and you know, kind of piggybacking off
what you guys are saying, like if you're noticing,
for example, certain aches and pains,
this is a common time when people who just got started
in January start to feel nagging injuries,
like oh, my knee's kind of bothering me a little,
oh, this is right when my ankle acts up or my shoulder.
Might a good way to, or a good direction to
change you might be pain relief.
It might be mobility.
Like, and by the way, you're not going to go
backwards by doing so.
If anything, this is going to continue.
Reinforcing your strength.
Absolutely.
So you might, I mean, the month of February
for you might be a recuperative month where
you're doing workouts that are really more focused on movement, on moving well, on improving
flexibility and mobility. That's a great direction to change to. Next up, now this
is really the psychological effects about what I'm about to talk
about are so powerful. This is one of my favorite tips and that is to make a more
realistic commitment for time spent in the gym or for workout.
So what do I mean by this?
Well, if my initial commitment in January was four days a week and I'm doing it and I'm excited because I'm getting results,
but now I'm starting to plateau, but I'm going to just, you know, white knuckle four days a week this whole time.
If you want to get ahead of that, here's what you do.
You say to yourself, you know what?
I'm starting to plateau.
I'm starting to lose motivation. I'm gonna commit to
two days a week. I'm gonna, because that's realistic. I'm gonna commit to two days a
week and that's what I'm gonna do from now on. That is much more, that is a much
more successful approach than trying to maintain four days a week and missing
two days a week because you're failing. It feels like you're failing. Man, I'm
missing those two days a week. I'm not showing up with those two days. I keep
missing those two days. I only made those two days a week. I'm not showing up with those two days. I keep missing those two days. I only made it two
days a week versus my new commitment is this and I think I could stick to it.
Win, win, win, win. And it tends to keep people in the positive, in the right
mindset by doing so. This may be the most important tip of all of them and also
the one that took me the longest to probably figure out. I think early on in my career,
I think I thought of myself as this motivator and I was,
my job was to motivate and inspire clients to work out more, work out harder,
do more, make fitness more of your life versus meeting people where they're at
in their journey and teaching them to enjoy that process and being okay with,
you know,
some people may be at three days a week, ride out the gates,
and that's a good place to start. And other people,
it might be one day a week and that's all they can commit to.
And understanding that as a good coach and leader,
it took a long time to really figure that out because, you know,
there's that added pressure of one,
I think that I'm supposed to be this motivator and inspire clients to,
I want to show my clients results as fast fast as I possibly can if they're going
to continue on and I got to grow my business and keep them coming back.
So there's this pressure of trying to get them to the results as fast as they possibly
can and they think they want that also.
So you think you're doing them a service by giving them all these things to do it.
What you're not realizing is you're overwhelming most people and most people are not like you
and aren't going gonna continue doing that.
And so learning that, okay, this person has never
been consistent with one day a week in their entire life.
Why would I think that five day a week training
this January is gonna be successful for them?
Why don't we set the bar somewhere
where they know they can accomplish that
and then we'll build on that?
I found that once I figured this out,
my clients were far more successful
and eventually all got more results than I ever got.
Yeah, one of the strategies I would have with clients
is when I would have a client that would overcommit
and I started to see that they were overcomitting
and the way I would see it is you would start to see
more inconsistency, some cancellations.
I would reset their commitment in a more realistic way
and I would actually tell them that.
I'd get on the phone and say,
John, I know we worked out three days a week,
we did that for a while, you're missing a lot of workouts,
here's what I wanna do, I'm gonna change your workouts
so that we're gonna do them now just two days a week
and let's stick with that for now
because it looks like it's hard for you
to make it consistently.
So from now on, for a while, let's do two days a week,
let's see how your body responds,
let's see if we can commit to that.
And it worked, it worked so well.
And then if they made an extra day, it was a bonus,
but it gives you a win.
So really just, again, you're looking ahead
and you're saying, you know what?
I'm feeling myself wane a little bit.
I'm gonna set my commitment a little lower
because I know I can make this and that's gonna be a win.
And then again, if you get extra,
wow, you feel like a total champion.
Uh, next up, this is a way to keep yourself, uh, kind of with, with your
mind focused or your eyes straight ahead, focused on the goal or the prize
or what you're trying to do.
And that is to set some time aside every day.
And it could be typically it's about 10 minutes.
Okay.
It's, this is not like a huge commitment.
Give yourself about 10 minutes a day, every single day to read or watch some
fitness or health related content.
And it can be anything.
It could be nutrition.
It could be supplements.
It could be wellness.
It could be strength training.
Uh, it doesn't have to be motivation.
I don't know.
A lot of people think that they need to pick something that'll hype them up.
Motivate them.
No, it could be learn something, learn something something informational. Studies on this are quite interesting. When people start consuming
educational information related to a goal that they have, they have a higher likelihood of
reaching that goal. And by the way, they've done studies on this to show that it's not the fact
that I want that goal and I'm motivated so I seek out the information but rather getting the information even
when I'm unmotivated tends to keep me on track so every day literally put it in
your calendar for 10 minutes maybe it's in the morning in my opinion that's
probably the best time to do it in the morning in the car I'm gonna listen to
10 minutes of a podcast or watch 10 minutes of fitness related content or at
lunch I'm gonna read 10 minutes of a book while I ate lunch every
single day related to fitness or health.
This is very effective at keeping people consistent.
This small thing, it's a 10 minute commitment.
It requires very little energy and effort.
I mean, it reiterates the why too.
I think sometimes people get a lot more out of their goal when they understand more benefits
in the process of working towards the goal. And I think too, this helps to kind of steer more
towards loving and falling in love with the journey of it as opposed to just getting to the
result of it. So there's a lot, I mean, it's such a monumental process that we go through
as we're trying to reclaim our health.
And there's just so many different aspects of it that anything could nutritionally, you
know, working out, sleep, and just optimizing your health in general.
There's just so many subject matter in there to explore.
Yeah.
Well, I think we've, I mean, we've seen this in the patterns of our own listeners.
The podcast consistently does about the same amount of downloads, give or take,
every month, yet thousands of new people come on board to MAPS programs for the first time.
And it's because the show is always bringing on new people, but at the same time, we're always
losing people. And what we've found is that but at the same time, we're always losing people.
And what we've found is that when people are working out,
they're consistent with listening to the podcast.
When they're not, they don't listen to the podcast.
And the sooner that you become aware of your behaviors
like that, the easier it is for you to find hacks,
to jumpstart that.
For example, this is something that Katrina and I always do
with our own communication and bond and closeness in our relationship. Anytime that we feel like we're
drifting apart because we're getting busy or we're getting distracted or there's a
lot of stress, getting back to listening to an audiobook at night has been a hack for
us. It has nothing to do with the book. It has nothing to do with what per se that we're
learning in it. It's that it's connecting us back together like that and it sparks that and ignites that growing together again. I think the same thing works in
the fitness. Instead of only listening to the podcast when you're working out, try being
consistent with listening to podcasts and as a byproduct, you'll be more consistent with working
out. That's right. People think the causality is the workouts make me consume fitness information, but this data and the studies show
that consuming the fitness information will make it
more likely that you work out as well.
The causality actually works in both directions.
What's great about this right here is it's easier.
10 minutes of fitness content or information
is an easier commitment than getting up and moving
and exercising or changing your diet.
It's just consuming that information.
So you can make that commitment.
In fact, look, we did this as coaches and trainers.
One of the things I figured out as a trainer
that really helped my clients is I would send them
fitness information.
I'd text them a new article or this new study.
And the ones that I communicated with,
with that kind of stuff the most,
were always the most consistent, like clockwork. Sowork so it's a really really effective easy tool.
Lastly probably the most effective thing you can do for your fitness and your
health is hire a good coach. Period. End of story. There is absolutely nothing
that is going to benefit you more or have a better impact or bigger impact on
your health and fitness like working with a good guide or a good coach.
In-persons, most effective,
but virtually can also be extremely effective
because this person knows what they're doing,
they know the pitfalls, they can talk you off the ledge,
they can make modifications to workouts and diet
based off of results or lack of results
or how you feel or whatever.
Hiring a good coach is, you have a teacher.
You have somebody that knows what direction to go.
And when they're good, it's so effective.
It's so effective.
The data on this is just incredible.
And it really does make a big difference.
This right here, I know it's the most expensive step
that we have, because hiring somebody costs a little bit
more, but boy, the return you get on it is just,
you really can't compare.
I feel like everybody has to have either one or the other of the last two we just said.
Either you have to be somebody who recognizes, I can't financially afford a coach and do
that.
So then I'm going to do the learning on my own.
I'm going to listen to the podcast.
I'm going to listen to MindBump every day.
That's going to be my thing when I drive to work.
I'm going to discipline myself to at least consume that content so I can start to Mindbump every day. That's gonna be my thing when I drive to work. I'm gonna do some of my play myself to at least consume that content
so I can start to learn or teach myself that.
And then if you're that type of person who's just like,
ah, I won't do that, or I like listening to music,
or there's something else,
well then investing in a coach
that's going to teach those things to you,
I think are so important.
It's an investment.
It's one of those things too,
that no matter how long you do it with a coach,
you're gonna get massive return from it.
What you learn from somebody
who's kind of holding your hand through that process,
that is getting to know your habits, your behaviors, your body, your metabolism,
the things that they're going to teach you around your health and fitness
journey are just invaluable. You'll always,
you'll always have that and the more of it that you can invest in and do the
better off you are. And I don't, no matter how good we are on this podcast,
nothing will ever
be better than that in my opinion, because that coach can dive into your,
your individual programming, your what's going on with your life and meet you
where you're currently at and the knowledge and information you give for
that. That's something you carry on forever.
Got some questions here. If I reduce my training frequency,
how much are my results going to slow down?
This is, I'm such a great question because there's a huge myth that if you work out less, you will
necessarily see worse results. This is not always true. In fact, I would say oftentimes the opposite
is true. If you're working out too much, too hard, or doing a workout that's ineffective,
doing a more effective workout less frequently,
less often, results in better results.
In fact, as a trainer, in February,
when a bunch of people would come to me
because they plateaued, one of the first things I would do
is reduce the amount that they were spending in the gym
and just give them a more effective workout.
And I don't mean a harder workout.
Whenever I say effective, the average person hears that
and says, oh, you mean you would just train them less
but just beat them up?
No, no, no. I just train them more
appropriately and effectively. Effective isn't harder, effective is better. So
doing less doesn't mean you're gonna get less results. If you do less and it's
better, you're gonna get better results. Or if you're doing too much because you
went too hard and you're over stressing your body, doing less of the same
stuff will actually result in better results.
Yeah, I think one of the most profound studies that we ever shared on here was talking about
the amount of volume that's required to maintain the muscle and the amount of frequency that
is.
It's like training is like one seventh, right?
So as long as you're getting in the gym once or twice a week, every week, even if your frequency is down
from your normal four or five, you're gonna be fine.
You're better off just being consistent
on a weekly basis of getting in there,
creating movement, doing some sort of exercise,
or getting into your home gym and getting some band work
or some suspension trainer.
As long as you keep that consistency up,
you're not gonna slow down your progress
because most of the work is gonna be in the consistency and then what you do
nutritionally, that's going to be one of the biggest things.
Is doing a little really better than doing nothing.
Oh God.
Yes.
Yeah.
Another, another big myth.
Like if I don't go beat myself up for an hour, then what a waste of time.
I might as well not go to the gym.
I was, but a lot of people still share that sentiment and it's, I did for
us hard one to break because it is like, is like especially if you're getting in the momentum
of things you really want to keep hammering you want to you know squeeze out that maximize that
opportunity while you're there and to feel like you're not putting out 100 effort it feels like
well what's it's a waste if I don't do that. I've said this so many times on this podcast that one
of the you know biggest you know momentum shifts in my journey was giving myself that
permission that I could go in and do one exercise and that's it. Giving myself that permission and
telling myself that it is not worthless, that it's I that did so much for my consistency and
the ability for me to maintain my physique and my health. It's so, I think it's so, uh, underrated just going in and getting five sets of squats. It's if you,
if you just did that, right?
If people just chose to walk a little bit more throughout the week and they
squatted five sets out of the week,
like a lot of people would be way healthier than what they currently are right
now. Yes. So doing something is better than nothing.
A little isn't just a little better than nothing. It's infinitely better than nothing.
Nothing is so bad that doing a little bit is so much better.
If you can do a little, do it.
Next question, how do I know if a coach is good or bad?
Well I could tell you some really, really good signs.
Ask them if they listen to my talk.
Well hey man, that might be right.
It's not red flag.
I mean listen, we're at a point now, okay?
We now coach trainers, we're at a point now, OK? We now coach trainers.
We certify trainers.
There's over now 1,000 that have been through our course that
are all over the country.
So I mean, that's a one way right away.
And a lot of them are looking for clients online or in person.
So when people ask me this question,
I tell them to ask that.
One, have they gone through our course?
Or two, do they listen to the show?
There's enough trainers that do
that you can find one that does.
I think that's an easy way to find out real quick.
Here's another great sign.
First off, do they give you an assessment
with your first workout?
If they're not assessing you
and looking at your movement patterns
and asking you questions,
they just take you through a workout,
that's a big red flag.
But number two, you should feel more energized
and better at the end of the workout
than you did at the beginning.
And you should feel great the day after.
If you could barely walk, you feel like you got beat up,
or you finished the workout, you almost threw up,
you can't move, not a good sign.
So judge it by how you feel.
If you feel good, you feel less pain.
Oh my God, that workout was good,
and I actually feel like I could do it again right now and I feel energized. That's a good sign.
If you feel like you got your crap beat out of you, not good. Not good at all.
Look, with this episode, because we're talking about, initially we talked about
MAPS suspension, MAPS bands or suspension trainer and bands training, we have two
programs. We have MAPS suspension, which is a suspension trainer program, great to use at home. Then we have a bands program that's also great to use at
home. They're great, convenient ways to add strength training or to do strength training.
Both of them are 50% off because this episode. So half off each one. If you're interested,
go to mapsfitnessproducts.com, but you have to use this code for the 50% off. SB50, so SB50 gets you 50% off MAPS suspension
and MAPS bands.
You can also find us on Instagram.
Justin is at Mind Pump Justin.
You can find me at Mind Pump DeStefano
and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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