Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2620: The Ultimate Longevity Plan
Episode Date: June 16, 2025MAPS Longevity Launch - The Ultimate Longevity Plan A different approach to overall health & wellness. (1:29) Defining longevity and the myths surrounding the term. (3:40) 6 Steps that will get ...you the furthest when it comes to longevity, and why it’s so important. #1 - The relationship you have with health pursuits (why and how to enjoy). (9:50) #2 - LEARN diet as it applies to you. (14:28) #3 - Strength train once a week. (20:08) #4 - Mobility once a week. (24:10) #5 - Be active daily. (28:07) #6 - Use awareness tools. (30:53) How to get MAPS Longevity today! (33:37) Related Links/Products Mentioned Special MAPS Longevity Launch ** Code 50LONG for $50 off for launch price $97 ($147 retail). Bonuses: Forum access FREE for a year $97, Post Launch Kick off Zoom call $97, Expires on 6/22 (30 Day money back guarantee). ** Visit Hiya for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Receive 50% off your first order ** Workout Because You Love Yourself Not Because You Hate Yourself – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #2598: The 5 Best Diets for Any Goal & More (Listener Coaching) Why is Mobility Training Often Overlooked? Mind Pump #2402: The 5 Reasons Why Walking is King for Fat Loss (Burn More Fat than Running & How to Do it Correctly) Walking 8,000 steps just 1-2 days a week linked to significant health benefits Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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Here comes the show. Longevity. This is a buzzword you hear in the health and
fitness space. What does it mean and is this something
you should even pursue?
We're gonna talk about longevity today.
We're gonna talk about six steps that will get you
the furthest when it comes to longevity
and why it's so important.
Let's go.
I'm excited to have this conversation because I feel like,
and correct me if I'm wrong,
I feel like you've really started to move
in this direction
recently, you know? I totally feel like I've been in this for a minute. That's kind of been,
and I chuckle because obviously I was the kind of obsessed aesthetic guy for so long.
And when I look at my training and my approach just in general to health,
if you force me to categorize it,
which I would never do, but if you were to force me,
like how do you, because people ask a lot,
how are you training right now?
Well, it's hard to define, but if I were to define it,
I would say it probably looks a lot
like what we're about to talk about today.
As you were drafting this up, I'm like,
this is kind of the way I've been thinking
more often than not, and it is a different approach.
We're so used to, we're so conditioned to chase a performance goal or an aesthetic goal
or fat loss, like these, you know, but you know, once you've obtained that, and I understand
that there's, there's people listening that are like, I'd just be happy with that.
But you know, at one point you'll unlock that.
If you listen to us long enough, hopefully you'll unlock that and you'll get there.
And then eventually I feel like this is a healthier place to move to.
Well, this is the ultimate.
It's the most important consideration regardless of what your goal is because here's a secret.
I mean, the three of us trained people for a long time and all of us in the back half
of our careers became very successful in terms of having clients
show up regularly, work with us for years and years
and years, continue after.
They stopped training with us.
We don't train anymore, but they still work out.
And that's because regardless of what their goal was,
the number one consideration for us was longevity for them.
This is what we've placed.
From the very beginning.
This is what we placed at the top, top, top
because if you focus on longevity, everything else tends tends to follow and this is really where all the
other stuff flows out of. Now I think it's important before we continue how
do we define longevity? I think a lot of I would say a lot of people
misconstrue longevity for how long you're alive or how long it takes
until you die. Right. That's not what we're talking about.
Because modern medicine can stretch your life out,
but your quality of life, if you look at the data.
Well, and you could also be hit by a truck when you're 47.
Right, right, right.
That's the other one, right?
But even if you look at the data on Western societies
that have extended life span for a while now,
although now it seems to have plateaued, what you'll see is yeah, people are living longer, but the last five
years or 10 years is terrible.
Like they don't have good health, medical costs are to balloon.
They require full-time care towards the end of their life.
So when we're talking about longevity, for the sake of this episode,
we're talking about health span.
How long you can stay healthy.
How long you can be free of chronic illness,
how long you can have independence and mobility and essentially feel good.
That I think is what's important.
I think if you talk to anybody at any age and you say, hey, what would you like the
end of your life to look like, I think everybody would say, well, I'd want to be healthy.
I wouldn't want to have this drawn out terrible health like the end of your life to look like? I think everybody would say, well, I'd want to be healthy. I wouldn't want to have this drawn out
terrible health towards the end.
So that's what we're talking about is,
what are the things that contribute the most
to health span?
And how do we apply that?
And what does that mean for someone now
who's nowhere near the end of their life?
Well, and I think too, like,
if you can think of examples of people, you know,
on social media or that get notoriety
or publicity about longevity, it's usually this weird distorted version of it where they're
just trying to stay alive as long as possible.
They have no relationships.
They lock themselves in this isolated room.
They get this artificial lights.
They do all of the bio enhancements and chemicals and things, but what we're talking
about is completely different than that.
This is about quality and this is about extending the value of what a healthy lifestyle looks
like.
I'm so glad you define that because I do think that even like everything else in our space,
it comes from a good place, the origin typically is,
and then gets bastardized.
And I do think longevity has turned into this
who can outlive each other, and that's the goal here,
is like how long can you live,
and the winner is who can stay alive the longest.
And it's like, no, it's like quality of life,
and your relationship to it,
which I think is your first step and your point,
is like to me, that is one of the most important things.
I think in order to get here,
you have to work on that first.
Yeah, and again, just to back up for a second,
with what Justin was saying,
what the fitness and health space has done
is they've tried to monetize longevity,
and so what you're gonna see is a lot of information
that's gonna distort what actually contributes to health span.
So you're gonna hear a lot about some exotic nutrient
or some crazy weird biohack, you know.
Crazy peptide stack.
Yeah, and as measured by how it affects
this particular gene expression and this data.
Here's the truth and the facts.
We have really good data on what
contributes to health span.
And it's none of that stuff.
None of that stuff has been shown to
significantly impact health span, like
some of the basics, which we're going
to talk about today, and also how you
get to the place where those things
actually make the biggest impact.
What does that look like?
How do I maintain, by the way,
health isn't just being devoid of illness,
although I said that, right?
You wanna have no illness,
you wanna have no chronic health issues.
It also means you have healthy relationships,
you enjoy your life, it has meaning.
You're thriving.
You're thriving, so a lot more goes into it.
And none of what we're gonna talk about today
has anything to do with some weird, exotic,
whatever that you take or inject or replace your blood
or do this other thing.
That doesn't move the needle.
It really doesn't.
It's all the other stuff.
Well, not to mention, and you say this all the time
on the podcast, if you chase health, aesthetics follow,
and I know that, so I think some people,
I would be guilty of this if I heard
a bunch of 40 year old podcasters
trying to tell me this when I'm in my 20s,
I'd be like, oh, that's not for me.
I care about how I look and this is what I'm trying to do.
And the truth is, when we think of the people in our lives
that are some of the healthiest people that we know,
they also look really good.
And they're also strong and have stamina
and overall and happy and they're also strong and have stamina and like overall and happy and like
they're all of it.
It's not like, Oh, if you want to try and be
longevity person, you look like you have no muscle
and you can't move very well.
And it's like, no, like the ultimate healthy
longevity pursuit does look that way.
It looks good.
It looks good.
It moves good.
It feels good.
It's happy. It's all the above. good. It feels good. It's happy.
It's all the above. And to your point, there's things that we have studied for a very long
time that contribute to that, that don't include the latest and greatest science techniques
to grow your telomeres or to extend your lifespan. There's more to it that everybody in here
without spending any more money,
can actually start doing it.
Right, and again, to put it plainly, aesthetics and performance flow out of longevity.
You have a great deal of both when longevity becomes the overarching goal.
So again, what this would look like for someone is that longevity is the number one consideration.
And then you go through periods, seasons, where you do push harder towards aesthetics
and towards performance.
But where you typically live is gonna be in longevity
if this is something you wanna do for the rest of your life.
Like if you plan on working out for a year
and then stopping, then turn off this episode right now.
This is literally almost a compass.
This is, I know I always end up referring to things
as compasses, but this is literally like a
pie chart I'm always considering between those three factors.
It's always moving.
It's either performance, aesthetic, or its longevity, and that focus determines what
type of a training setting I'm going to create for myself in this period.
Right.
All right.
So the first thing to consider, the most important thing with longevity is the relationship you
have with health pursuits.
Forget about the methods, which we'll get to, but what relationship do you have to things
that contribute to your longevity?
Now, why is that important?
Well, because you're going to do this forever.
The plan is to be able to do this forever.
If your relationship with those things is for example generally
eating healthy, I'll just say eating healthy, we don't have to get specific, but I
think most of us know what unhealthy eating looks like, but generally speaking
eating healthy, if this is something you genuinely enjoy then you're going to do
it. If being active is something you genuinely enjoy then you're going to
continue to do it. So the relationship you have with the health pursuits
has to come from a place that produces enjoyment.
Otherwise, the odds that you'll continue this
for the rest of your life are very, very, very low.
So what does that look like?
Well, do you exercise because you hate yourself
or do you exercise because you hate yourself or do you exercise because you want to care for yourself?
Do you eat in a way that is either restricting
or feels like a binge?
Does it feel like it controls you
or is this a way to nourish your body?
Does your lifestyle come out of this as well?
Because if you have a good relationship,
and this is again, this was the number one thing
that we did as trainers.
When I got a client 10 years into my career, I figured this out, 10 years, I wasted so much time.
In 10 years into it, I realized if I can help them develop a good relationship with this, I win.
I'm going to win because consistency trumps all other things. And that's the ultimate goal.
So consider that.
Is this something I can learn to enjoy or, to put it differently,
how can I learn to enjoy these things that contribute to longevity?
Now to defend young Sal, young Adam, young Justin, when we first started as trainers, this can be difficult.
I mean, first of all, if you don't figure it out yourself, it's pretty hard to teach it, right?
So early on in our career, we're probably all, I mean Justin's probably all performance guy,
you and I are probably all,
I don't wanna be skinny guy, trying to be big,
and so here you are training, teaching clients,
it's tough to do this.
And the average person, when they show up to the gym
or hire a personal trainer, they tend to come there
with this idea of like, I don't like the way I look,
I don't like the way I feel,
therefore I wanna do this.
Rarely ever, if ever is it,
I'm doing this because I love myself.
And so you have to teach that as a trainer.
And I think that's the part that's probably,
this step that we're talking about,
arguably the most important and the hardest
to get people to understand.
I think a lot of that has to do with helping your
client attach all the other benefits that come from exercise and eating well versus just what
we tend to look at, which is body fat percentage of the scale or how I look in the mirror.
Eating well and exercising does so much more for our entire lives that sometimes people need help.
And a lot of like, you know, at least when I think through helping somebody out like this is like,
I have to help them make that connection. And it looks like me asking questions like,
how was your sleep, you know, yesterday? And how's your skin been? How's your hair? How's
your energy levels been? How's your mood been? How's your performance at work? Like,
how's your relationship with your spouse? Like all these things are
impacted by the way you take care of your body and if you're not looking at it
and paying attention to it, it's really hard. You'll miss it. Yeah, it's really hard to
like pursue fitness for having a good relationship with health until you start
to do those things. It's a fact that you don't perceive what you don't
focus on. That's a complete fact. They've shown this in do those things. It's a fact that you don't perceive what you don't focus on.
That's a complete fact.
They've shown this in many, many studies.
It's very easy to, things can go
when you're right through your vision.
You won't even see them if you're
focusing on something else.
You're blind to those things.
So really to put it differently,
exercise and diet or let's say health,
like the pursuits of health, those aren't your life.
Your life is this other stuff over here.
But a healthy version of you will have a better life.
No matter what happens in your life, even the worst things that will happen in your
life, think about it this way, losing a loved one when you're healthy versus losing a loved
one when you're unhealthy, very different.
One you're resilient, the other one could kill you, could literally kill you.
So a healthy version of you has a better quality of life regardless of what your life looks
like and so that's the starting point for having being able to make longevity
the cornerstone of all of your health pursuits. The next point applies to diet.
Now here's the thing about diet. There are some general rules and we can talk about them. But diet, diet needs to, the best long-term approach
with diet is to understand how different ways of eating
affect you and how to use those different ways of eating
like a Swiss army knife or like a multi-use tool.
Right tool for the right job.
That's right, because, and I'll go over some data,
but this is different from person to person,
but data will show that generally speaking,
and I'll use a more extreme example,
a low carbohydrate or no carbohydrate ketogenic style diet
seems to improve cognitive performance in a lot of people.
It's also not the best for athletic performance,
but it's great for cognitive performance.
So now we have two options.
Diet that's higher in carbohydrate
for athletic performance,
one that's low in carbohydrate for cognitive performance.
I now have an understanding,
and if that was me,
because everybody's a little different,
and we'll go through how you're gonna test these out,
but if that's you, which it's like that for me,
I now have a diet when I'm gonna go do things that are mentally
Taxing when I need to be at my absolute peak cognitive performance. For example, I'm gonna be speaking
To an auditorium full of people this coming weekend. You better believe I'm going into it
ketogenic when I'm trying to
Lift new numbers or I'm really getting into my
workouts, or let's say I'm going to go do something, let's say we're going to go plan
a long hike, I'm going to go into it with some carbohydrates in my body. That's just
two examples, but there are so many different ways of eating that you'll notice better digestion,
better sleep. This is for performance. This is for aesthetics, this is for cognitive
performance, and you can start to individualize your diet for your life.
Now you're using diet and you're leveraging it again to improve the
quality of your life, and this right here is the best, best, best approach when it
comes to diet. I know that was always our long-term strategy with our clients.
It was, yeah. Well, this was why later on in my career, I actually would have my clients do all of
these diets for that exact reason.
And it wasn't for, oh, let's figure out, is ketogenic for you for a fight?
It's like, no, let's do one of these and then together, let's talk about how you feel.
And let's talk about all the things that you notice and then I'll help you connect the
dots to why.
Not that, oh, wow, I started doing this diet
and I lost all this weight,
therefore I should be ketogenic for the rest of my life.
It's like, no, it's like,
let's figure out the things that it did for you
aside from just what it did on the scale
or what in the mirror,
because it will impact many other things
like your sleep, your cognitive, your skin,
all those things I was talking about.
So let's talk about how all those things,
if you unpack what it is,
and then we can go, okay, this makes sense when we're at this part in this part of your journey, right?
When you are getting ready to prepare for some marathon or you're getting ready to go on some backpacking thing
Okay, we're gonna eat this way other times when you're focused on school or getting your degree
Oh, maybe we're over in this direction. And so instead of us getting so
dogmatic and treating, I feel like diets, like it's like
their religions where we get, it's yours versus mine and I'm right, you're wrong versus, wait
a second, there's something to take from all of these and there's a way that an individual
can apply all of it at the right time.
That's right.
You can extract all the benefits out and really evaluate where to best place these things.
I mean, it's such a better strategy. It keeps things interesting too, because I know a lot of times
when you find like a winning combo, you can ride that out for a while, but now you're going to hit
a plateau. Now you're going to hit a moment of frustration where it's, you know, if we can
understand how to weave and navigate based upon what types of environment you're in or what type of
pursuits you're doing, now we have a lot more of a dynamic interesting way to eat.
Yeah, so general rules, right? Avoid heavily processed foods. That's like a
really good general rule. Don't overeat. That tends to be a great general rule.
But alone, and then there's essential nutrients that you need, of
course. You can't go too low on fats or
proteins, otherwise your body won't thrive. There's micronutrients that you need as well.
But aside from that, this is how you learn yourself. By the way, because here's the thing
that you need to understand. You may find a diet that you love right now, but you're not going to
be like this for the rest of your life. Things are going to happen in your life either because of injury or illness or job change
or activity level or stress level or different needs, different things that you want.
Imagine if you understood how your body felt eating different ways and how to apply them
as your life changed.
Now what does this look like?
Well this looks like for somebody listening right now,
you test them out.
How long do you test them out?
A week, two weeks, three weeks.
You can test them for a month.
See how you feel.
Take notes, digestion better, sleep is better.
Energy higher.
Not as, like pumps in the gym not as good or whatever.
Right?
Go pros and cons.
Yeah, easy to get lean, super satiety producing.
What's a con?
Very restrictive, I wouldn't be able to eat like this while traveling or something like
that, right?
You figure this out with different ways of eating so that you learn your body and now
you have a longevity outlook with your diet.
Now your diet can morph and change as your life morphs and changes.
And this is what sets you up in the long term.
There's almost never one single diet that works
now forever for people in the best way when
their context of their life changes.
There's always a different way to eat that could
help them feel better depending on what's going on.
Right.
Next, let's get to some activity.
Strength training.
Now strength training, bang for the buck, it's the
best form of exercise, meaning the time you spend in strength training with what strength training, bang for the buck, it's the best form of
exercise, meaning the time you spend in strength training with the, with what you
get from it, from a health perspective, from a perspective of hormones, a
perspective of insulin sensitivity, like it's the best. How much strength training
do you need when it comes, when you're looking long-term for longevity? Once a
week. Yeah. Once a week. Once a week.
Once a week will get you something like 70 to 75%
of all the benefits you'll probably get from strength.
I know what people are thinking,
oh there's another 30% that's out there.
But if we're talking longevity,
once a week is what you need.
Now you could interrupt this with periods of time
where there's three days a week,
but when you're talking about like for the rest of my life, four, but when you're talking about for the rest of my life,
how am I gonna keep this up for the rest of my life
and really derive the strength benefits from strength training?
The data shows one day a week, and I'll say this 100%,
towards the back half of my career,
a significant percentage of my clients,
probably half of them, only strength train one day a week.
It's so surprising how far it how far it goes. Uh,
in all the studies coming back to you of like how minimal, uh,
amount of strength training we need, but how,
how much that benefits you and impacts you for, you know,
weeks afterwards.
Especially if you were complimenting this or combining this with other
forms of activity and things that you're doing.
Yes, there's more.
It's not just strength training, right?
Right, because I'm sure there's people right now
that are like rolling their eyes,
or going like, what?
That can't be enough.
There's no way, and so absolutely it is.
I mean, this is how I've been training
for quite some time now, and it's,
and I think to your point, like,
you can have periods of your life where you sprint, right?
Where it's like, oh, this makes sense.
This is my two or three times a week for the next month because I'm off or I
don't have to work as much or I don't have that project due.
And so I'm going to really ramp up my strength training.
And what's so awesome is if you stay consistent and what consistent looks
like is even when you're quote, not ramping up, you're at least training one
time a week, you will maintain a lot more than you realize
and you'll be surprised on what you can do muscle
and strength-wise just by training one time a week,
especially paired with other activities.
And yes, this isn't just, this isn't the only activity
you're doing.
We're talking about structured exercise.
So strength training once a week.
You should be active, which we'll get to.
We'll get to all the other stuff with physical fitness.
But in terms of strength training, once a week.
And again, I had clients, I'd say maybe even half of my clients were only one day a week.
And they all saw significant gains in strength and muscle for years and years and years.
And I mean, they were doing compound lifts and it was like legit training.
It's just impactful and efficient.
Yes.
And the beauty of strength training is you progress it.
So one day a week, I could progress that for a long time.
I could progress it from the type of exercises
to the weight that's on the bar.
And again, these people were getting stronger
and stronger and stronger for years and years and years,
and they did other things as they acted.
They were active people as well.
That's right, but the strength training
was just once a week, and again, the data supports this.
When they look at the muscle building effects and all that stuff, 70% of it is training was just once a week, and again, the data supports this.
When they look at the muscle building effects and all that stuff, 70% of it is just the
one day a week.
Another reason why I really like this too is you are more like, one of the mistakes
I definitely know I made early on in my career was making the mistake of thinking that more
is better.
And if I had a client that's willing to do four days a week, then oh, we're going to
do four days a week because they're willing to do it.
Not realizing that it probably wasn't even appropriate for that person yet.
So somebody who starts their pursuit in this direction first of only one time a week, you're
more likely not going to overstress, overtrain them.
It's a good amount of volume to actually show progress in the right direction and we can
always build on that down the road or we can always
have these moments of sprinting.
Whereas if I just do whatever someone's willing to do, which might be three,
four or five times, six times a week, there's very well I could overdo that
when I could have got just as good of results or better by scaling them back
to something like this.
Right.
Next is mobility and you want to do some kind of focused mobility work once a week.
Mobility focuses on ranges of motion through connection,
so it's not static stretching.
That can be a part of mobility, but it's really about
moving through ranges of motion that involve
the different planes of motion, rotation, and laterally,
and front to back, and getting and expressing movement that you don't
want to lose.
This is the value of mobility.
Part of the value of mobility is you have better mobility.
If you focus on it, now I can squat deeper, now I can twist better, now I have less pain,
my shoulders move better.
Here's the other benefit of mobility work from a longevity standpoint.
You don't lose movements.
You don't lose movement patterns.
This is what happens to people as they get older.
I'll give a great example right here.
In fact, I just read an article on this
that the average person basically stops sprinting
by the time they hit 20.
They just stop sprinting, unless they play sports.
Is it 20?
The average person just kind of stops.
By the time they're 30, nobody sprints anymore.
Here's what happens when you stop sprinting you your body forgets how to sprint
Mm-hmm
If you're listening to this and you're in your mid to late 30s or your 40s
You know exactly what I'm talking about if you were to go pick up and try and run as fast you could you can pull
Hammy immediately. Yes, you probably were like I don't want to do that. I'll probably hurt myself. That's just one example
there are a lot of
Abilities that we lose over time because we don't focus on expressing
them because our day-to-day activities don't require them.
There's so little as asked of us because we sit at desks and we sit in cars that we lose
these abilities.
Once a week, dedicated to mobility solves this and maintains your ability to move until
the end of your life.
I mean, how many clients did you guys train that, you know,
couldn't reach above their head into the cover, can't twist,
twist to their side or one they can look to the right, but not to the left.
Like, and I don't know, I think when you're,
I think when you're a young 20 year old trainer, you, you, you can't imagine.
Yeah. You can't imagine these types of things because of where it's time.
And then as you get you, you get older and you start to notice,
and the body's crazy man.
It, if it, if you don't use it, you lose it, it will prune it off.
It's wasted in or it's wasted ability.
If it's not being used only does it keep or stay around and you're the
ability to do it.
If you, if you make it, if you make it do that.
And so the mobility thing paired with a week, a day of strength training is so powerful in the pursuit
of longevity, because part of longevity, to your point, or
another way of saying health span, right, being healthy is
the ability to do basic functions, like grab something
out of a cupboard,
maintaining ability,
yeah, or be able to squat down and pick something like those
abilities. And you can you can maintain those just
through mobility.
So a mobility day paired with strength training gives you kind of that ultimate, I'm strong
and I'm mobile and fit.
We just form into these movement patterns that we present every single day and it's
over time, it shapes your body.
So now that you're pruning and your body's eliminating some of these movements because
you just don't do them, you're going to see that in your posture.
You're going to see that in this sort of compressing, protracted, it's going to happen to you over
time and it starts out gradual.
But this is something we actively need to be expressing a lot of these different variabilities
and these different ways to move the body. So it's an important aspect of movement.
Very important.
The human body is an adaptation machine,
but one of the number one considerations for adaptation,
your body's efficiency.
And so when we talk about the pruning of skills
or movement patterns, your body's like,
we don't need this skill,
it costs us energy to maintain this skill. And because we don't need this skill, it costs us energy to maintain this skill,
and because we don't need this skill,
we're gonna get rid of it, we're gonna forget it,
and we're gonna move resources or save resources
for skills that we use on a regular basis.
So literally, if you don't use it, you lose it.
Next is to be active daily.
Okay, here's where everybody's like,
oh, one day a week of working out,
okay, one day a week of mobility.
Aren't I supposed to be active every day?
Yeah, you are.
You are supposed to be active every single day.
But this is easy.
It's walking.
It's very easy.
We love walking,
because people can still do it without hurting themselves.
Doesn't require to put on workout clothes.
You don't need to schedule it.
Just walk throughout the day.
In fact, the data on steps,
and I love tracking steps because it's objective
Okay, there's lots of ways to be active, but I like to track steps because it's pretty pretty clear
80% of the value you'll get from being active comes with about 8,000 steps a day, which is very
Achievable for the average person you go in a few walks a day
Even if you have a desk job, you'll probably get close to 8,000 steps a day
or around 8,000.
So it's totally accomplishable.
If you do this on a daily basis,
this is where you get a lot of the health benefits
that you see in the data from activity.
It's just moving on a regular basis.
Well, and the average person is stepping
less than 4,000 steps, right?
So if you're saying 8,000, it's almost double
the activity of the average person,
which is crazy that we move that little. But one of the things that's so powerful about this one, and I wish, again, it's almost double the activity of the average person, which is crazy that we move that little.
But one of the things that's so powerful about this one, and I wish,
again, another thing that I wish I understood when I was a young trainer,
you take somebody who's only stepping three, 4,000 steps a day,
and you just get them to consistently move 8,000 steps a day and tell me they
don't notice an impact. I mean, their energy levels, the way they sleep,
the way their body feels.
It's like, we were made to move.
We were.
We were made to move.
To digest food more effectively.
Everything.
And that one too is so huge, right?
That's why Sal tends to suggest the 10-minute walk after every single meal.
And again, if you've never attempted to do something like that, watch how much better
you feel.
Watch how much better you feel after you eat by getting up and just simply walking for
10 minutes three times a day. And if you do that, you'll very quickly get to that
8,000 steps even if you have a sedentary job. The reason why people get such
tremendous benefits just from what we just said right now and walking isn't
because walking or moving is somehow magical. It's akin to a nutrient deficiency.
So if I give vitamin D to somebody who doesn't have a vitamin D deficiency,
they'll notice nothing.
I give vitamin D to somebody who has a vitamin D deficiency, life-changing.
It's like I gave them a prescription drug.
It is literally life-changing.
We're so deficient in essential activity that walking 8,000 steps is
unlocking a completely new life.
That's how it is for most people, this is a big deal.
And timing it after meals, splitting up after meals,
dramatically improves its effectiveness
in terms of insulin sensitivity.
So it's literally 10 minutes after breakfast,
lunch and dinner, that'll give you a good few thousand steps
that you can add to your total.
Lastly, this connects to the first point
where we said the relationship is everything
with health pursuits.
Lastly, use tools that help improve awareness.
Now here's why.
Our brains are not wired to notice things
that we're not focusing on.
They're actually wired to notice negative things
more than they are positive things.
So things like gratitude, things like taking notes of all the other improvements in my
health because I'm exercising and eating right, aside from how I look or the scale.
Like awareness tools when you're eating to journal how you feel before and after, you
would be shocked when you practice this at how much becomes
available to you. Having clients do this for 30 days when I would have them do this, they would
keep awareness journals and it was like they were learning about themselves things that they didn't
even understand. Like I didn't know this food did this to me and I just noticed this other thing and
I noticed when I'm stressed out this is what happens and oh my god I only drink one cup of
coffee instead of two now it must be, and they're noticing all these incredible things
and they're developing this relationship
with exercise and diet that contributes to the enjoyment
that I talked about at the beginning.
It's context too, it's like writing it out
makes it more real.
Yes, different form of thinking.
Different form of thinking,
and as you're exhausting this out,
it's almost like it doesn't stay in your brain
to where you go over and over and over it again all the time and obsess over it. I'm
putting it down on paper, I can refer to it, I can learn from it, I can move on
from it and build upon it as opposed to just keeping it up in there. Well this is
even how I would coach my clients to use tools like Fitbit and stuff is I'm not
getting hung up on the percentage and the numbers as much as I'm using
it as a feedback tool for them and a tool to bring awareness to what they are or not doing.
Unfortunately, most people think they do a lot more than what they actually do. A lot of people
are very disconnected to how well or not well their sleep is. So that's where these tools come in.
You make an effort like, okay, I'm going to try and get better sleep. Okay, well, let's say I'm
journaling,
but what does that look like to the person
who's never tracked anything
or doesn't know what that's like?
It's like, you have to learn how to do that.
Either you gotta start scoring yourself
and then comparing, or you use some of these tools
that exist to be able to measure that and go like,
oh wow, I noticed that when I do X, Y, and Z,
my sleep score ends up being over 80%.
That must be working really well.
Otherwise, a lot of people are so disconnected from how all these other things are feeling
that the journaling and the tools come into play just to help them with that awareness.
It's becoming aware of how many steps am I doing?
How well am I sleeping?
How good is my energy?
And the journaling portion paired with some of these tools to me are some of the best
ways to bring somebody to that awareness that has never really tracked
or paid attention to stuff.
That's right.
So here's what we're doing.
We have a brand new program called Maps Longevity,
which includes an initial 30 day challenge.
In that are the awareness tools that we're talking about.
In that, you're gonna see how different diets
affect your body.
You're gonna help, it's gonna help you pay attention
to the positives that are happening
and help you get a more complete picture so that you can develop a relationship with these things that last forever
Of course inside there is also your workout your mobility like all the stuff
We talked about is program every single day is itemized every single day
There's something to do in there to move you along the string now
It's a nine-week program, but the first 30 days is all broken down for the first time ever
We've included this as awareness tools
that we've never included any of our programs. Now because it's a brand new
program you get it for $50 off if you sign up during the launch period. You
also get access to our private forum for an entire year for free. That's where you
can talk to us and all of our other Mindpump attendees. And also we're gonna
do what's called a post launch kickoff.
We've never done this before.
This is gonna be included free.
So we're gonna set up a Zoom link
for everybody who signs up in this launch period
and we're gonna go through it and break it down,
help people get started with that first 30 days.
And we're also gonna answer questions on that.
That all expires on the 22nd.
So if you're interested, go to mapsgevity.com. The code for the
discount all the free stuff that I said it's $50 off like I said is 50 long so
it's mapslongevity.com the code 50 long. Let's get you set up.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. 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 Super Bundle
at mindpumpmedia.com.
The RGB Super Bundle includes maps anabolic,
maps performance, and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased expert exercise programming
designed by Sal, Adam, and Justin
to systematically transform the way your body
looks, feels feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints and over 200 videos, the RGB Super Bundle is like having
Sal, Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers, but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Super Bundle has a full 30-day money-back 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 5-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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