Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2657: The Over-50 Fitness & Health Plan
Episode Date: August 7, 2025The Over-50 Fitness & Health Plan The body is always adapting; if you do it right, you will respond great! (1:42) Considerations to take into account when constructing a routine for this avatar. (...5:49) The RIGHT Way to Workout & Eat to Get GREAT Results if You’re Over 50 Years Old. An effective full-body workout 2 days a week. (8:52) Day 1: Push a sled, incline dumbbell chest press, cable rows, standing dumbbell shoulder press, dumbbell curls, press down, and a plank. (12:02) Day 2: Trap bar deadlift, push-ups, pull-downs, rear flys, hammer curls, closer grip push-ups, cable chop, and standing calf raises. (18:03) Activity: Aim for 8k steps a day, then 10k, and then 12k steps a day. (21:57) Diet: Women eat 30, men eat 45 grams of protein per meal FIRST, eat veggies SECOND, and eat a starch or fruit LAST. (23:40) Sleep: No electronics, take glycine and magnesium before bed, and aim for a 9-hour window. (26:13) Supplements: Multivitamin, 2000IU Vitamin D plus K, and creatine 10 grams a day. (26:57) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit MASSZYMES by biOptimizers for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP10 at checkout for 10% off any order. ** August Special: MAPS 15 50% off! ** Code MUSCLE50 at checkout ** How Do I Choose The Right Weight? (LIFT RESPONSIBLY) – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump TV - YouTube – Search ALL exercises with videos and coaching cues mentioned above. The Active Plank- An 6-Pack Building Powerhouse – YouTube Walking 8,000 steps just 1-2 days a week linked to significant health benefits Mind Pump # 2402: The 5 Reasons Why Walking is King for Fat Loss (Burn More Fat than Running & How to Do it Correctly) Mind Pump # 2650: Top 7 Underrated Supplements Mind Pump # 2497: The Amazing & Weird Side Effects of Creatine 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, Mind Pump with your hosts.
Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness, health, and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Today's episode is for those of you over the age of 50 who want to be fit, healthy, lean, and strong.
In this episode, we give you the workout, the diet, how to sleep.
We talk about supplements.
You have everything you need in this work, in this episode.
We know you're going to love it.
By the way, this episode is brought to you by a sponsor.
Mass Zimes.
These are digestive enzymes that help break down those proteins, carbohydrates, and fats
for better digestion and better nutrient absorption.
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Go to mass zimes.com.
That's M-A-S-Z-Y-M-E-S dot com forward slash mind pump.
Use the code Mind Pump 10, get 10% off.
We also have a sale on a workout program.
month. MAPS 15 is 50% off. Now this isn't some random quick workout routine. It's a fully
structured program that solves the number one fitness problem staying consistent. With
MAPS 15, you'll get short 15 minute daily workouts that you can stick to. They build muscle,
they burn body fat. It's just 15 minutes a day and you can do them at home with minimal equipment
or if you want to use barbells and dumbbells, there's a version in that for those as
as well. Head over to mindpumpmedia.com forward slash maps dash 15 dash minutes and use the code
muscle 50 at checkout for the 50% off. Back to the show. Fitness and health over 50 workouts, diet,
look, if you do it right, your body will respond. You'll get incredible results. The problem is
most people do it wrong. They mess up. And then they blame it on age. It's not age. It's how you're
doing it today. We're going to talk about the right way to work.
workout and eat to get great results if you're over 50 years old.
I looked ahead here.
We're going to put together like a legit plan for people.
Let's give them a plan.
I want people to leave with something they can actually practice.
Concrete.
That they can do themselves.
I want to start off by saying, and there's many studies on this.
In fact, there's studies on 70 and 80-year-olds around this.
Your body never loses the ability to build muscle and improve its fitness.
Now, the difference is the potential, right?
The max strength and fitness for a 70-year-old is going to be different than when they
were 20.
That's true.
That being said, your body still adapts.
And it's remarkable at how it adapts.
There was a recent study with people in their 70s, and they built exceptional muscle
and strength in a very short period of time.
The reason why I'm saying that is there are challenges as we age that if we apply exercise
wrong. We don't respond. We get more aches and pains. It feels like we're just working out for no
reason. This is not making me feel great. Why isn't this body fat coming off my body? And it has
more to do with the methods and how you're applying them that does your age. It really does.
And a majority of our clients back in the day when we used to train people. This is it.
They were in the stage group. Yeah. Do you think the misconception out there is really because of a lot of
the marketing for like, let's say, like, Asper cream or like Advil or, you know, like, they're always
like highlighting these pain points of your aging. They scream give up. Yeah, exactly. It's like,
give up. Take this instead for all these aches and pay. Instead of like realizing there's still a lot
of potential left for you to still build muscle and improve. Yeah, I can't tell you how many clients I
had in this age group, in their 50s, that they didn't really have a fitness lifestyle in the past.
and then, you know, after training with me
and applying it the right way,
this is so important, everybody.
Like, if you do it the right way
with considerations,
which we're going to talk about,
because there are general considerations
for people in this age group.
If you do it right, you respond great.
And many of these people would tell me,
I'm in the best shape of my life.
That's right.
And I never thought this would happen.
There's another way to reframe this, too,
for that person who feels discouraged or,
oh, my God, I'm so out of shape
or I've never lifted weights.
and this seems like it's so far away.
The positive side of that is, man,
anything we do is going to be a novel stimulus.
And in the game of adaptation,
that's a huge win for us.
Like the fact that you haven't done anything,
so I have to do very little to get your body moving
in the right direction,
which I think that's a very positive way to look at that.
You look at it like, oh, my God,
I had this long mountain to climb.
But it's like, hey, but you know what's cool
is that you haven't done any of these movements.
I'm going to teach you and the body is going to right away start going,
oh, my God, this is new.
This is different.
And that is such a, the game of novelty when you have been doing this for a real long time,
it gets difficult.
You've been lifting for 20 years.
One of the challenges of being consistent, yes, you may be healthy or stronger, a higher ceiling
than that person, but also getting this novel stimulus and always having to kind of progressively
overload the body to see more results versus the person who's deconditioned out of shape.
This is all new, scary.
that's actually a really good thing because we're going to start seeing change relatively quick.
If you follow what we're about to say so long as it's appropriate, because of course we're doing a general episode,
this should be appropriate for about 80% of the people watching this.
If you follow this, you're going to see really good results and you're going to feel good
and it's not going to feel like you're beating the crap out of yourself.
One of the big mistakes people make in all age groups when they start a workout is they overapply everything,
thinking that that's going to get them faster results.
So that's not true at all.
Now, some of the considerations that we need to take when constructing a routine around somebody over the age of 50.
Well, one, joint issues and pain is a bigger consideration.
Okay.
That's a fact.
So we pick exercises or we pick movements where that becomes less of an issue.
Yeah.
Okay.
There's going to be exercises in here that are effective that give you great results that build strength and muscle and speed up the metabolism and help balance out your hormones.
that tend to be easier on the joints.
And we picked exercises where we're not trading results for safety.
Sometimes that's what happens, right?
The best exercises over here,
but I have to really take away the,
in order to make it safe,
I'm also taking away its effectiveness.
That's not necessarily true with a lot of movements.
So we picked exercises that are safer,
less likely to cause pain.
Many people watch this, most people watching this,
so long as you don't have major injuries,
are going to be able to perform these movements
and get phenomenal results.
Here's another truth, by the way, as you get older.
I did say that your ultimate potential definitely reduces as you get older.
I don't think I need to make that case.
However, this is also a fact.
A fit 25-year-old is only this much different than an average 25-year-old.
There's definitely a difference, but it's not a huge difference.
When you're 50, 60, 70, and your fit, the difference between you and your peers is massive.
It's massive.
A 55-year-old that does things right,
that exercises that takes care of themselves
in the right ways like we're going to talk about
is so different from their 55-year-old peers
who don't do these things.
They almost appear to be in a different universe.
And that's the thing that you need to consider here
is when you start to do this
and you start to become more fit,
watch what happens over the course of six months in a year.
Look at yourself versus your peers who aren't doing this
and they're going to be blown away.
A fit 55 to 60-year-old is in better health and condition than a average 30-year-old.
That's right.
I mean, that's- The evidence is the day that shows that.
Think about that.
You could be 55 years old or above and be healthier, fitter, stronger, better shape, all the markers than the average 30-year-old.
That's right.
And you can control that.
And doing the, I love the exercises you picked.
I looked at the stuff that you did.
And it does really open it for everybody, right?
You hear on this podcast a lot, we talk about the benefits of barbell back squats and barbell
deadlifts and just how that's such a great movement, the biggest bang for your buckling with it.
But in reality, when you go back to our list of clients that we've all trained, there was a big
percentage of them that I couldn't start there.
You know, we had to work to that.
And sometimes it took years to even get to a place where we could do that.
And so the plan that you put together right now looks more realistic to.
the average beginning program that I started a lot of people on before I could ever get them to
ultimately those things. Right. So the workout is going to be, consist of two days of strength
training, full body. Now, you might be thinking, is that enough? Yes. In fact, it's more than enough.
Two days a week of full body, effective strength training. By the way, effective doesn't mean
you beat the crap out of yourself either. Effective just means effective. Two days a week of,
in combination with daily activity,
which we'll get to as well.
But two days a week
of structured strength training,
full body, done properly,
will build phenomenal muscle,
will build phenomenal strength,
will help your metabolism move
in a faster position or place
so you can burn more body fat.
It's full body two days a week.
And if you're listening to this
and you don't think it's enough,
trust me, try it yourself.
Try it for 60 days and see what happens.
You'll get stronger on a regular basis,
on a consistent basis following this program.
Yeah, I want to comment on something.
I'm sure you'd get around to saying if so I'm going to beat you to it that because I know one of the questions that people get after we lay out the exercises and kind of the program is, well, what weight do I choose? What do I do? Approach it with just practice. Do not overthink the amount of weight you need to do. And like that is that important. It's like if we haven't been doing any of these movements, pick a very light and easy weight and just go practice the movement. Go get good at the movement. That especially in those first couple months is going to take you.
so far, if you're not doing any of these things, and I start you off really light and easy,
and it's really just go there and practice these movement. You're going to see so many benefits.
You're still going to build muscle. Just from that. Just from that without, because I know that
that's the next hurdle that people get is like, okay, got it. Here's the exercises. Well, how much weight
do I do? And how hard do I have to push? It's like, don't think like that. This is one of those
situations, too, where, yeah, you pick the lighter weight, but also you can control your effort with
that movement and by what I mean by that is really increasing your tension your
contraction or your muscle you can intrinsically create a bit more effort and output that way
which is a safer way to do which then also increases your strength and then naturally will
allow you to then pick a heavier load right so what it's going to look like so here's some
metrics for you number one you should feel better at the end of the workout than you did in the
beginning okay so when you're doing this workout if at the end of the workout you feel like you
survived it. You feel like you beat yourself up. You went too hard. You should feel good.
At the end of it, you should feel like, man, you know what? I feel energized. That means you
had a good workout. Now, the workout will be challenging. You should challenge yourself,
but don't go beyond challenging yourself. Pick weights that are kind of hard, but ones that allow
you to, like Adam said, practice the movement and have good perfect technique. Okay. Both workouts are
full body. We're going to go through day one first. And both workouts start with a lower body
And typically what you do when you train full body is you start with the larger muscle groups and you move to the smaller muscle groups. Now, why is that? Well, one of the reasons is small muscle groups are involved often in the larger muscle group exercises. You don't want to fatigue them before you need to, number one. Number two, you want to do the harder exercise at the beginning when you have the most energy and end with the ones that require the least amount of energy. So let's start with day one. So day one, we're going to do a leg exercise. And you're going to start
by pushing a sled.
Pushing a sled is an exceptional way to build strength and muscle and the lower body.
It's also simultaneously incredibly functional.
It's one of the few lower body exercises that doesn't just involve the upper leg,
but it involves a lower leg and the foot.
You're extending all the way through.
You're on the balls of your feet and you're pushing.
There is no negative portion of the rep.
So when you're lifting a weight, the positive portion would be me curling a weight.
The negative is me lowering it with resistance.
lowering a weight causes more damage and soreness, pushing a sled.
More stress around the joint.
There is no negative.
It's just pushing.
So what you want to do is you want to get yourself a sled.
Most gyms have them.
Load it with some weight.
You want to challenge yourself a little bit.
And you want to push it for about 20 to 30 steps.
That's how you do this exercise.
And it's a great lower body exercise.
And you want to do it for three sets, three rounds.
By the way, in between each set, you should rest around two minutes.
Okay.
You're not trying to go through every exercise.
one after another. This is strength training, not cardio training. We're trying to build muscle.
The rest in between sets is what makes it strength training. It's what builds the muscle.
If you don't rest, what you're going to get is stamina, which is okay if that's what you want,
but you're going to miss out on the muscle building, metabolism boosting, hormone balancing
effects that strength training provides. And to emphasize what Justin said, as you go through
choosing the weight, again, don't overthink that. Choose a weight that's somewhat challenging,
but what you can do is do long, slow stride.
to emphasize the intensity.
Then you also get the extra benefits of really kind of challenging your mobility,
priming yourself nice and slow and controlled.
You can intensify it without adding more load to it.
So don't overthink.
How much weight do I put on the sled?
You can always slow it down and take longer, deeper strides.
That's how I would approach this.
Right.
So three sets of that.
Next, we're going to move to a chest exercise.
I chose incline dumbbell chest press.
I like the incline because it puts the shoulders in a,
better position than a flat bench.
A flat bench is fine as well.
It's just a little bit more technical.
Some people have issues with that,
especially when they first start exercising.
And laying flat on your back can be an issue for a beginner sometimes.
For sometimes laying on your back can cause issues
where you need to get back up,
getting down with dumbbells can be difficult.
Inclined is a little bit more, a little easier.
And so with an incline dumbbell chest press,
you are working the shoulders, the triceps, and the chest.
And again, you want to do three sets.
Rep wise, I think if the reps are anywhere
between 8 to 15, we're perfectly fine.
I don't care if it's 8.
I don't care if it's 15, but keep it within that range.
Lower than 8, higher than 15.
Now we're moving out of what I would be considering effective at this point with the
repetition.
And just so the audience knows, every single exercise that we talk about or describe today,
you can go to the Mind Pump YouTube channel, put in on YouTube, put in Mind Pump,
and then the exercise, and you will see us teaching and performing this exercise.
So if you need a video demonstration,
of what the form and technique looks like with coaching cues.
It's on our YouTube channel.
It's absolutely free.
You literally would just put in mind pump
and then the exercise that we are mentioning right now
and then you'll see the breakdown.
Yeah, I love that you pick the incline especially
because one of the biggest problems we see
is this protraction of the shoulder,
which causes, you know, some pain there to occur.
So to be able to naturally allow those gravity
to kind of pull and set you in that better position
with your shoulders.
The incline bench is preferable.
Yes.
Next up are cable rows.
I love this exercise for everybody.
Stay true.
Now with the cable row, you want to sit nice and tall.
And what you want to imagine is you want to bring your shoulder blades together and down, right?
You want to fight the urge to shrug your shoulders and definitely don't let your shoulders roll forward.
You're pulling the handle to your belly, squeezing the shoulders back and down.
This is a posture exercise.
It strengthens the muscles of the back, in particular the midback muscles.
and people benefit greatly from this,
especially people in the Sage Group.
This will make you feel taller
if you do this properly.
You'll stand up and feel so good
from doing this one.
Next up, standing shoulder dumbbell press.
This is just standing straight up,
taking a pair of dumbbells,
pressing them up nice and tall
and bringing them down all the way.
This is a shoulder and tricep exercise.
And then we're going to finish off
with some easier movements.
Dumbel curls, a tricep press down.
I chose a press down because that tends to be easy
on the elbows. Sometimes overhead movements with triceps can cause people elbow pain. So
pressing straight down perfectly fine. And then you're going to do a plank. So a plank is where
you hold yourself in this elevated position on your forearms. Tuck your tailbone a little bit and
hold this for 20, 30 or 60 seconds. What we're trying to do here is build strength and stability
in the core, which is going to help support your low back. And I chose a plank because it's a
safer exercise for the low back for a lot of people. I like that you're challenging
the standing, I mean, to regress that, though, just to be safe, if, like, there's any stress in the
lower back and you don't know how to brace properly, you can always sit and do the shoulder
press out where you can even kneel, which I would even prefer, do a kneeling shoulder press.
And then the plank, although probably sounds like the most basic of all these movements, I would
highly recommend watching the YouTube video that Sal teaches the plank on that YouTube
channel because I do think this is a commonly misdone exercise in the gym. You see people
tend to arch their low back. And so we tend to coach with like this tucking of the tailbone,
exaggerating that a little bit because I think it's not only it's it's safer. It's more proper and
it engages the core. So you're not resting the weight on the low back, which tends to be how most
people do this exercise. So even though that seems basic, most people go, oh, I know what a plank is. And
they just get down and do it, watch that video.
Yeah, next up, we have a deadlift, but I picked a trap bar deadlift,
way less potential strain on the low back.
It's far less technical.
It's easier to do, but it's still a deadlift.
It's still a great deadlift exercise, and it's one that is exceptional at building the
strength of the low back, the glutes, the hips, the hamstrings.
A trap bar is just the bar that you stand inside of, handles are at your size.
Nice neutral grip, which I always love.
Brace your core.
stand up with it, put it down.
Here's a mistake a lot of people make.
They go up and down real fast.
Bring it down to the floor.
Let it sit on the floor for a good second or two.
Pause, brace your core, come back up.
That's how you do a rep, three sets.
Such a great entry-level hinge movement, right?
There's like there's no way we build a program
that doesn't have some sort of a hinge in there.
This is probably the safest entry-level place to take everybody from.
And you can get really strong, tremendous benefit from it.
And it is the natural regression
to like a traditional type of a deadlift.
Next up is a push-up.
Now, of course, you can go on the floor and do push-ups,
and if you can do push-ups that way, that's great.
But a lot of you might not be able to.
Elevate yourself.
Elevate.
So what this would look like is my hands are on a bench,
or I can use a bar on a squat rack or a Smith machine.
I can lift it up as much as I need
to where I'm not bending over quite that much.
And the reason why I like push-ups is it involves core stability.
I've got to brace my core while I do this.
Very functional chest, shoulder, and tricep exercise.
This is actually my favorite way to use the Smith machine.
I prefer it actually to the bench because it's nice to get that like firm grip.
And you have all the levels.
So I could take a client.
I mean, I could take a client who cannot.
I mean, I've had clients so deconditioned that just pushing their body weight off the wall is, is challenging
enough.
So taking somebody on a Smith machine where they're, you know, this angle and then here, then here,
and then you can progress them very nicely.
And what a great way to show that client who couldn't do that.
that progression to where they eventually can do a traditional push-up.
Next up is a pull-down, so this is a pull-down machine, and you're going to just take
a regular overhand grip.
You don't want to go too wide.
You want to go about shoulder width, so nothing crazy, and you're going to pull the bar
down to your upper chest, stick your chest up, pull their shoulders down and back.
This is a great back exercise.
Too wide, you're probably going to feel it in your shoulders.
I know you see a lot of bodybuilders do that.
Not a bad exercise, but it requires more shoulder mobility.
So you're literally going to take about a shoulder width grip on that.
Next up, we're going to do what's called a rear fly.
With the rear fly, you want to lay on an incline bench so it supports your chest,
and you just take these dumbbells and you separate them out.
This is going to work the back of the shoulders, and it's also going to work on some of your posture.
Then we get to the easier exercises, hammer curls, just like regular curls, except your hands stay neutral.
And then you have a closer grip push-up.
So again, you can go back to whatever bar you used.
And rather than having your hands outside your shoulders, now put your hands about shoulder width.
this is more of a tricep exercise.
And you try and keep those elbows in close.
That's it.
And then next up, we have a cable chop.
This is great for rotation, strengthening the core.
And it's literally you just take a cable, stand with your feet together,
and you want to use your body to rotate across the body.
All of these, by the way, are three sets.
All of these are eight to 15 repetitions.
And then finally, a standing calf raise for the calves.
Most gyms have a calf-raised machine.
And if they don't, you can stand on a block and do them with just your body weight.
Love it.
basic exercise, this basic workout that we just gave, if you're starting a workout, this right
here will have you progressing for six months to a year. I mean, honestly, you don't have to
change much. What's going to change is the amount of weight that you continue to use on each
exercise. You can add more and more and more. It covers the entire body. And again, you want to feel
better at the end of the workout than you did at first. The intensity will naturally progress as
you become more fit. And you're going to see when it feels like. Since we're talking about the
workout portion, and I think this goes hand in hand with the activity, even though I know you
have diet coming up next. I think it's important to talk about activity because the very
common question I get from the client who's super motivated right now is, what if I want to do more?
What if I want to come to? This is where I'm going to encourage my client to walk.
And typically what I want to know is like the baseline where they're currently at.
So I love using any Apple Watch, Fitbit, or a ring, whatever tracker. It doesn't matter.
Anything that you can get a cheap $4 on Amazon pedometer, but just get an idea of where our baseline
steps are. And we're going to start.
Now, I know you put as a target right at the gate to start for about $8,000.
I think that's a great goal.
Typically, I just figure out where their baseline is, and I add $2,000 every week.
And that the goal is, hey, if you got, if you, you have more time, you have days,
you want to go to the gym more often or whatever, walk.
This is where you're just going to, we're going to encourage more movement and activity right here.
We don't need to necessarily do anything more strength training yet.
Walking is one of the best forms of daily activity.
It results in very, very low risk of injury.
it has tremendous health benefits.
Generally speaking, 8,000 steps is what you want to aim for.
8,000 is where you'll get about 80% of the benefits that we see from daily activity.
And I like measuring steps because it's just what you do throughout the day.
So if you want, you can get on a treadmill and try to hit this.
Or what I like to do with my clients is track your steps throughout the day.
And if they're low, just go out for another little walk.
And basically by the end of the day, you want to hit 8,000 steps.
Once that feels easy, then you can move it up to 10,000 steps.
and once that feels easy, then 12,000 steps.
And if you did 12,000 steps on a regular basis daily
plus two strength training workouts, like we said,
great shape.
That is a great pro-health, pro-muscle,
going to get leaner, feel-good type of routine.
Now let's get to diet.
I'm going to give some very basic suggestions for diet.
And by the way, these are basic suggestions
that have a high ROI, return on investment.
There's lots of different things you can do with your diet,
but we like to give advice on the ones that tend to move the needle the most,
that are also the most simple.
And I'm going to generalize here.
Women, I want you to aim for about 30 grams of protein per meal.
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner, 30 grams of protein.
For men, 45 grams of protein.
Now, here's the kicker.
Eat it first.
Whatever your plate looks like, here's your 30 grams or 45 grams of protein.
Eat that first.
That has the highest satiety effect.
So it tends to naturally make you want to eat less.
It also causes, it is really good for insulin sensitivity.
It helps stabilize blood sugar, which makes you feel better.
It also helps with fat burning.
So do that first.
Second on the plate are vegetables.
Eat that second.
And then finally, you can have your starches or your fruit.
All right, here's the best part of all this.
Eat until you're satisfied.
I'm not going to tell you to eat less.
If you just do this and you stick to whole natural foods,
you will see yourself get leaner in a nice, consistent basis.
So 30 grams or 45 grams of protein first,
you have your vegetables next
and then eat your starch
or your fruit
eat to you're satisfied
if that's what your meals
look like with no processed foods
you're going to crush
you're going to get great great results
and I'd like to add to this
because what's really common
you get somebody doing crude strength
exercise like this
moving more like this
the appetite will kick up
and I actually want to feed you
I want you to eat
so let's say you're eating three meals
you're adhering exactly what sounds
and you're like man I'm still hungry
have another meal
just like same same format too
have another.
meal, eat it with 45, if you're men, grams of protein, eat it first, women, 30.
And like, because you're still landing at three meals for women, 90 grams of protein.
For men, only about 130 grams or 135 grams of protein.
That's still on the lower end of protein.
We can still afford another high protein.
You can have another meal.
Another meal.
So, and that's how we start here.
This is where I want them to start.
And then if they come back to me, like, Adam, I am just, I am hungry.
My appetites.
Have another meal.
Good.
Have another.
You're getting a bad muscle.
Good.
That's a good sign.
That's our metabolism kicking up.
and I do not want to restrict from it.
I want to feed it, and I want to give it another meal,
and I want to just, again, stick to those same exact rules all the way through.
That's going to serve you really well here.
Now, what you don't do is aim for processed foods in this case.
Notice I'm talking about whole natural foods.
Again, if you just do this, you're going to see yourself get leaner and build muscle at the same time.
All right, now we're going to talk about sleep.
Sleep is very important.
Turn off your electronics an hour before bed.
And again, I'm going to preface this.
We're going to talk about the things that make the biggest difference, okay?
Give yourself a nine-hour window every night.
So go to bed and then wake up, and that should be nine hours.
And the reason why it's nine hours is that helps guarantee about seven and a half to eight hours, right?
We don't go to sleep right when you hit the pillow.
So nine hours every single night.
And here are the two supplements, the two things you can take before going to bed that studies have shown to have the biggest impact on improving sleep quality that are also not narcotics or not hormones.
Okay.
You take about three grams of glycine.
This is an amino acid.
and then have some magnesium before bed.
That combination for many people
improves the quality of their sleep.
Now, since we're talking about supplements,
here are the supplements that make the biggest difference
for many people, but especially people in the sage group,
a multivitamin, about 2,000 I use of vitamin D plus K.
So if you buy a vitamin D supplement,
you'll get the one that includes vitamin K.
They're both needed to be used appropriately or, you know, to be effectively.
And then cratine.
Cratine is the longevity supplement.
It has profound effects on muscle, longevity, health, and cognitive function.
Aim for 5 to 10 grams a day.
10 grams, better for the brain.
5 grams is just for muscle.
If you do 10 grams a day, divide the doses up throughout the day.
10 grams all at once tends to cause muscle, stomach distress.
So what it would look like would be I'd have 3 grams with breakfast, 3 grams with lunch,
three grams with dinner, and that's not going to bother your stomach.
and creatine. Again, a great
longevity. It's actually the
longevity supplement for health
and for muscle building and it'll help
indirectly with fat loss. And I want
to add to this advice goes for
anybody, whether you
were a ex-athlet
used to be in great shape. If you
are just getting back on your routine
and you are in your 50s, start here
no matter what. No matter how advanced
of a level you think you were before
because I can't tell you how many
50-year-old clients that hired me that were,
old athletes were really jacked before and so when I would train them like this it's not enough
no it's enough I can do more we could do this why aren't we do it like this is all you need to do
this is all you need to do and watch how far this takes especially for like the first six months the
first six months this will take you so far in really the the thing you want to focus is consistency
can I check all the boxes that we just said day in and day out and how many of those days can I
string in a row that in itself
is difficult. That in itself is difficult. And so if you find yourself with extra time and you're
wanting to do more workouts, spend more time planning the other things to make sure you're successful.
If you are really, really good about doing your workouts, you want to do more of them. But then you're
a little inconsistent with the diet. Well, then maybe take that extra time and plan your meals out
so you hit your meals on time. Or maybe you take that time to get to bed earlier and get better
sleep. So try to check all those boxes, be consistent with that and watch what happens in the next six months.
The last thing I'll add is the right dose is the best dose.
Again, just to add to what Adam said, doing more will not get you faster results.
Doing more will get you slower results.
We'll actually compromise your body's ability to adapt.
Adapt meaning build muscle, improve stamina and endurance and burn body fat.
Look, if you like this show, come find us on Instagram.
You can find us at Mind Pump Media.
We'll see you there.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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