Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2765: How to Start with Strength Training as a Beginner

Episode Date: January 5, 2026

Prediction on flow of gym traffic for 2026. (1:32) The Ozempic weight-loss strategy. (4:51) Biggest bang for your buck style of training. (8:17) The #1 reason most people fail on their New Yea...r's resolutions. (9:59) How much strength training is required? (11:14) Priming vs. warm-up. (14:45) The value of the stability ball for beginners. (18:23) How do I measure progress? (21:46) The importance of daily movement. (24:24) What fat loss looks like with strength training. (28:21) Related Links/Products Mentioned Special Promotion: MAPS Starter 50% off! **Code NEWYEAR50 at checkout. ** Get a free Sample Pack of LMNT's most popular drink mix flavors with any purchase! As always, LMNT offers no-questions-asked refunds on all orders. The 8-count LMNT Sample Pack doubles down on our most popular flavors: Citrus Salt, Raspberry Salt, Watermelon Salt, and Orange Salt (2 stick packs of each flavor): Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump Mind Pump Store Mind Pump #2187: Why Building Muscle Is More Important Than Losing Fat With Dr. Gabrielle Lyon Mind Pump #2761: 5 Ways to Predict Mortality (NO BLOOD TEST REQUIRED) Mind Pump #1835: Why Resistance Training Is the Best Form of Exercise for Fat Loss and Overall Health Maintaining Physical Performance: The Minimal Dose of Exercise Needed to Preserve Endurance and Strength Over Time Mind Pump #2757: When Life Gets Busy, Your Fitness Should Shrink…Not Disappear! Mind Pump #1530: Why Warm-Ups Are a Waste of Time The Wall Test | Mind Pump TV 90/90 to Pigeon Pose Hip Stretch Progression – YouTube Mind Pump #1287: Why the Stability Ball Belongs in Your Workout Routine 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 # 2545: Transform Your Body in 90 Days Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. Mind 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, we talk about strength training as a beginner. How do you get started?
Starting point is 00:00:24 By the way, we have a program design specifically for beginners who want to try strength training. It's called Maps starter. And right now for this episode, it's half off. Go to Maps FitnessProducts.com. Use the code New Year 50 for that discount. Now, this episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors, Element. This is an electrolyte powder you can add to your water, no sugar or no artificial sweeteners. That's high enough in sodium to make a difference.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Most electrolyte powders don't have enough sodium. This is a thousand milligrams per serving. What do you notice from it? Better pumps, more energy, especially if you had to hold up. food's diet or a low carb diet. Everybody, if you have a low carb diet, you need to add more sodium to your diet. Element is a great way to do it. Go to drink elementtie.com forward slash Mind Pump on that link. You'll get a free sample pack of their most popular drink mixed flavors with any purchase. All right. All right. Real quick, if you love us like we love you,
Starting point is 00:01:19 why not show it by rocking one of our shirts, hats, mugs, or training gear over at mindpumpstor.com. I'm talking right now. Hit pause. Head on over to mindpumpstor.com. That's it. Enjoy the rest of the show. By now, you probably know that strength training is an incredible way to exercise. The data proves it. It's a great way to burn body fat. Of course, build muscle and strength.
Starting point is 00:01:43 Speed up the metabolism. It's also now been shown to be one of the most effective ways of exercise for longevity and health. You want to live a long time and you want to be healthy for a long time? Strength train. Here's the problem. It's a bit complicated. So what we're going to do in today's episode, we're going to talk about how to get started. with strength training.
Starting point is 00:02:01 If you haven't done it before, or it's been a long time, we're going to break it down so you can do it the right way and get the best results. Before you get started, maybe Doug can look up some numbers for us. It'd be really cool to,
Starting point is 00:02:11 let's give a prediction on, because it's the new year right now, right? So what does this year's like flow of traffic and people getting into fitness? Always January is, you know, everyone's coming back to New Year's resolution. It's always a top, top two New Year's resolution. And so do you guys predict the highest rate of people strength training than before?
Starting point is 00:02:35 Like, what's your take on that? It's going to be an uptick a little bit, right? Yeah. After coming back from all the COVID stuff and the people getting back to the gyms, I feel like there's energy in that direction. Yeah. Well, the last few years, what's that magazine? Is it Urshah?
Starting point is 00:02:51 Yeah, they report like fitness trends. And strength training for the last few years have been at the top. Like traditional strength training. Whereas before it was, you know, other forms of exercise, Zumba, Pilates, yoga, whatever. Traditional strength training is gaining a lot of popularity. Part of that is because, well, it's taken time for people to really figure out that it's such an effective form of exercise. But the other reason, I think this is the big one, is we now have the medical community promoting it. All the data is coming back showing that, like, if you want to improve your longevity, if you want to reduce your risk of dying,
Starting point is 00:03:30 your risk of cancer, reduce your risk of breaking a bone or just frailty, strength training is at the top. When you consider the amount of time you need to commit to it versus the return, for sure it's at the top. It requires little time to produce significant results in comparison to other forms of exercise. But you've had a lot of doctors now, like Dr. Gabriel Lyon, who preaches strength training. and its popularity among women has exploded. And now what we're seeing is in people in older populations
Starting point is 00:04:06 are really starting to adopt it. But it's different in the past because in the past, people would say strength training, but it wasn't strength training. It was just using weights. And there's a difference, right? You could use weights in a way that's not strength training, like a class or a circuit style workout.
Starting point is 00:04:24 It's really more like cardio than it is strength training. Strength training has a very, there's a very clear way to do it. It's typically straight sets with rest in between sets with the goal of building muscle and building strength, not endurance, not stamina, although you'll gain some of those as a side effect. But it's literally a form of exercise that the goal is let's get stronger, let's build muscle, and then all the downstream effects of that. I wonder, though, too, if, like, OZempe and all that had a massive impact in terms of the messaging going forward from here, too, because it's not just about losing weight. And I think that's been stressed for so long. It's like, you just got to lose weight and everything, you know, your health markers and all this. It was not the case.
Starting point is 00:05:07 People are finding they've, they lose the weight, they'll stall the plateau. They keep going and they're going to be in an unhealthy place. And so I think the, you know, the tide, hopefully now people are understanding, like, muscles is. of a vital part of this whole process. And the only way to really build and develop muscle is to strength train. Okay, I didn't even think about that, Justin, that you just brought up. Did I tell you this? I don't know if I told you this off air.
Starting point is 00:05:31 I was hanging out with, I won't say the names, but old friends of ours that you go back to our early 20s and stuff. All like meathead guys, not gym, not fitness guys. Like they're not personal trainers or didn't work in the gym industry, but kind of meathead dudes lifted forever and stuff like that. And we all used, all of us used to hang out in our 20s. There was five of them and their wives. And we hadn't seen each other in like, some of them, like, 10 years.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And we all got together and had a barbecue and everything like that. Getting caught up, find out all five guys plus all five wives, all in Ozimic. Yeah. I was so blown away. And just the amount of people that are just getting on it just to lose weight as a, or using it as a strategy. These are because we're not talking about anybody in this group is obese at all. Like most of them, you know, 15 maybe. maybe 20 pounds need to lose sort of like that.
Starting point is 00:06:22 So it was really interesting for me to see somebody in my, within my immediate circle like that, that are going down this pathway. And so that it makes me ask, what you were just alluding to, Justin, is are we going to see, are we going to see a rise in strength training?
Starting point is 00:06:38 Yeah. Or because of, that's why. Oh, you think it will. That's a big part. Yeah, because doctors are recommending it because GLP1s,
Starting point is 00:06:46 one of the main mechanisms that, through which they work, right, One of the main mechanisms is they reduce your appetite significantly. So you drop your food intake and you're going to lose weight. But the way the body adapts to that is it pairs muscle down because it tries to lower your metabolic rate to meet the new caloric intake. So if you are eating low calories, you'll lose weight until your body learns how to burn those low calories. And that's it.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Then you'll stop losing weight. You'll plateau. And then you keep losing weight. You have to eat even less, right? And so what they're finding in the data with the GLP 1 is what you would expect if you just ate less in strength training, a significant percentage of the weight is muscle. So it's like 40% some of these studies of the weight is muscle. And so doctors are like, we got to stop this because, number one, you'll lose weight,
Starting point is 00:07:32 but you'll lose muscle, which isn't good because muscle is a longevity tissue. So it's a longevity organ. We know this. In fact, some of the best studies or best ways to predict all-cause mortality are related to muscle, their strength test. Like a grip strength test is one now that they're saying is a goal standard single test that will predict all-cause mortality. It's connected to muscle.
Starting point is 00:07:52 It's just how strong you are with your grit, which is a proxy for overall body strength. But if you lose muscle, the weight loss will plateau because your metabolism slows down. And also, you lose enough muscle. You're not in a better place. No. You're frail, brittle, and yeah, you're going to have all kinds of problems.
Starting point is 00:08:11 So they're recommending traditional strength training as a result. So it's just gaining popularity in that regard. But also just look, one or two days a week of strength training, proper strength training, gets you a lot of results. It really does. Like if you want a bang for your buck form of exercise, strength training does it better than anything. And it's not because it burns a lot of calories. This is where people will sometimes debate this little, well, an hour, you know, once a week or even two hours a week, twice, you know, one hour or twice a week.
Starting point is 00:08:41 Yes, a lot of calories. If you compare strength trains like running, it doesn't burn that many calories. So what are you talking about? How can this possibly produce great results? It's not the calorie burn. It's how it changes the body. It's the adaptations it induces. And then those adaptations, what do those do for your health and your body?
Starting point is 00:09:00 As you build muscle, you speed up your metabolism. So your body learns to burn more calories on its own. You also improve insulin sensitivity. You also make your testosterone more effective because you increase androgen receptor density, meaning where your testosterone attaches to and has more places. studies also show it can raise testosterone reliably, at least in comparison to other forms of exercise. It's great for skin.
Starting point is 00:09:26 It's great for joint health, if done properly, it's the best. Mobility, I mean, lack of mobility is almost always a result of just either tightness, which is weakness or just weakness. So it's this great form of exercise. The challenge, however, is in the complexity, right? So like riding a bike, basic, swimming, basic, you know, Do a class, listen to the instructor. Well, strength training is individualized, and there's like a million and one exercises.
Starting point is 00:09:52 How do I know how to do it right? Do I just go in there and beat myself up? So this is typically the challenge. Well, you bring up how much does, you know, do people need? I also think that this is one of the biggest mistakes in the new year that's made right here. Yes. Is many people will come out of the holidays and, you know, enter into January, New Year's resolution, top two resolution almost always.
Starting point is 00:10:15 and highly motivated, right? You feel thart. Yeah, you did all the eating and the enjoying and the vacation. Okay, now it's about to work and everything else going on in my life. And it's now, here's my New Year's resolution. And so people often over-commit themselves to a plan that sets them up for failure. Not only is it, and then I can't help but think during this time of like the introduction of these GLP-1s. So you have people that are already eating less food.
Starting point is 00:10:45 food, right? And then in addition to that, they come off of a layoff because of the holidays, and they're like, okay, time to turn it up. And they turn it up while simultaneously reducing these calories. And it really sets up you for failure. I mean, maybe in the immediate week or two, you see weight loss, but eventually a hard plateau. And then this is where people get. I'd argue that this is one of the number one reasons why no one follows through on their resolution. 100%. So the question, how much do we? I need. Well, number one, strength training needs to be appropriate for you. Okay. So if you're a beginner, you don't need much to get the body to move in the right direction. And anything beyond that
Starting point is 00:11:26 doesn't get you to move there any faster. That's the most important part of what I'm about to say. It's not just that the right amount gets you great results. It's that more than the right amount gets you worse results. Now, why is that? Because strength training is a stress on the body. It sends a signal that says we need more muscle, we need more strength. But part of sending that signal is the stress. And stress causes damage that you need to heal from and then adapt to. And if you're just getting started, you don't need much. And above and beyond that means you're going to, it's, your body's going to spend more time
Starting point is 00:11:59 healing than it will to adapting. And so you just get sore, you get beat up, you go back to the gym, but you don't ever really progress much. What strength training does is it causes measurable strength gains. This is how you know that it's really working. and you don't need much. Here's what the data shows. Two days a week of strength training
Starting point is 00:12:18 will get you 80% of all the results you can ever expect from strength training. So think of the best possible shape you can get from strength training. You'll get 80% of the way there with two days a week. Now that doesn't mean that your workouts are going to change or not going to change that two days a week.
Starting point is 00:12:34 You're progressing by adding weight to the bar, getting stronger, making things a little harder, but you don't need to add more days for a long time. Three days a week gets you close to 90% of all the results that you would ever get from strength training.
Starting point is 00:12:47 No other forms of exercise really produce this. That's good news for most people because most people, I mean, you know, having... As daunting as you think it is. Having, you know, scheduled time to work out, the most we could ever really demand
Starting point is 00:13:02 from people for the rest of our life is a couple days a week. This is my experience, training people. Most people are not fitness fanatics. So let's... And again, the good news is that's plenty. That's going to get you a great result. I mean, I would argue it's, it's, it's more than enough, especially the beginning.
Starting point is 00:13:16 I mean, I'm in the middle of, of, you know, I've been off now this layoff, right? So after I went through all my stuff, it's been, I think I'm coming up on 45 days. I'm back in the rhythm of things. And, you know, I'm always reminded when, and you're talking about it, this is like a 30-day layoff. I'm not like six months or a year. Or 10 years. Yeah, yeah. It's like it's a slight layoff, but it's a layoff, right?
Starting point is 00:13:39 of not hitting my protein consistently and not lifting consistently. So I'm back into that rhythm again. And I'm always just reminded of like how little I have to do, even in those couple days that I go to the gym to elicit some sort of change. I mean, it just, I was deadlifting, 135. You know, 135 is like what I would consider
Starting point is 00:14:00 a non-set or a warm-up set in the past. And three sets of that. And my hamstrings are sore for like three days. And so it's just this reminder. of like, and I know, and it's hard because especially being a dude who's lifted a lot more weight than that on the bar, I'm lifting it going like, I know I can lift way more than this, but I'm also reminding myself, yeah, but you haven't deadlifted it in a while. It's like, you're going to progress. Yeah, and I'm going to progress. Like, it's like, I'll next week, I'll slap on another 10 pounds
Starting point is 00:14:28 or whatever. And then we can. And so reminding people that are getting back into the swing of things, not only is two to three days going to get you 80% of the results, even allowing yourself to progress up to those like two full hour workouts or so is like okay in fact probably more ideal for people that's right you brought up warming up so let's talk a little bit about what this would kind of look like for people getting started uh you want to have uh a smart uh priming um session in the beginning of your strength training workout and i use the word priming uh on purpose so we could call it a warm up so everybody knows what warm up is right you go in and get the body warmed up helps prevent injury. But priming is a little different. Priming is very specific. Priming gets my body
Starting point is 00:15:12 to move in the right way so that when I do my strength training, my joints are moving optimally. Sequence of firing. That's right. And this could be quite individual. So a good example would be I'm going to do, let's say a barbell squat, kind of an advanced exercise, but let's just say this we're going to start. And let's say for me, holding the bar on my back is difficult. I don't have the shoulder mobility. I can't really bring my shoulders back and get in that position. My priming is going to be to activate those muscles so that when I get into the bar to do my set, right off the gates, I feel good. Or let's say I have a little bit of knee pain or ankle pain or hip pain or back pain.
Starting point is 00:15:46 My priming is going to target the areas that I need. So when I get into my workout, I get into my workout and I feel good. And the reduction of injury is just the, that's the bar. Above and beyond that, better connection, better results, better movement patterns. Essentially, my sets are far more effective because I'm going in feeling great and my body's moving the way closer. It's just a smarter approach and it's just something that like we hope people evolve into this and you know the warm up itself was always stressed us and like ah you know like we kind of dismiss it but um you know even just getting that
Starting point is 00:16:19 blood flow does have some impact but like to be specific and you know think of those positions like you're going to be in through your workout and set yourself up and go through those sequences and contract those muscles really feel your way through that just a little bit just to get them lit up and then get into your workout makes a massive difference. I think the reason why people have been so eh about the warm-up is that because typically the warm-up used to be this, you know. Just aimless. Yeah, aimless jumping jack, windmill, get on an elliptical.
Starting point is 00:16:51 Which is a little better than nothing. Yeah, just a little bit, though. And I think that they're, you know, I know we've tried our best to like really communicate priming, but I still think there's a lot there's a lot there for us to continue to talk about because we still get it within our own community. I see it in our private form some time where someone will ask a question like, hey, what are the best exercises for me to prime before I do a bench press? And the answer to that is like it depends on the person.
Starting point is 00:17:20 It depends on exactly what's going on with them. And it's not per exercise. It's per person that like the way the warm up is. Well, here's what we're going to, here's what we're do. Just so, because if you're listening to this and you just want some good example, I'll give you one for lower body and one for upper body. That generally works well for a lot of people. And we have free videos on this on our YouTube channel.
Starting point is 00:17:40 A wall press is great for upper body exercises. Most people need that kind of priming. And then in 1990 is a great way to prime for lower body exercises. So we have free videos on that on our YouTube channel. We'll make sure we link. Can't go wrong with those two. And you could do those. And it takes you five minutes and then you get into your extra.
Starting point is 00:17:58 And it makes a big difference. I totally agree with that. because even though that's a general statement, I would argue that 90 plus percent of my clients would benefit from both. Those are mine. Those are the ones I benefit from them. The same thing. So I think if you were to give out two generic type of movements,
Starting point is 00:18:18 one for lower body, one for upper body, that is probably going to benefit most all people significantly. Those are two for sure. All right. Let's talk a little bit about the stability ball. So I've been in the space. All three of us have been in the space for a long time. So we remember when they became a big thing.
Starting point is 00:18:33 These are the yoga balls, right? The big, big inflatable balls. And people went crazy with them. They got so popular people were doing everything with them, which took them outside of what they were good for and then started applying them in areas that weren't necessary. But there's a lot of value with stability balls, especially for beginners.
Starting point is 00:18:52 For beginners, I love stability balls because they require you to maintain good posture, maintain good technique, keep your elbows under your hands, keep your shoulders in right alignment, because if you don't have good posture and activation, you'll fall off the ball. A bench doesn't do this, right?
Starting point is 00:19:08 If I sit on a bench, I'm leaning on the bench, I'm using the bench. But if I have, give an example, like just a traditional shoulder press. If I have someone sit on a bench with the backup, they're going to lean up on the bench and do the shoulder press. But if I have someone sit on a physio ball, well, you have to like balance,
Starting point is 00:19:23 stabilize, activate my core. My elbow has to stand on my hand because if my hand goes in front of me, I'll roll back. And it just encourages better technique. So stability balls for beginners are great. Like this is what you should use for a lot of your bench exercises. Yes, especially anything laying down that you'd normally do on a bench.
Starting point is 00:19:42 It's just, it's such a better way to train that even leg drive for bench. Yes. Like if you can activate your legs and anchor yourself into the ground or like really use your glutes to kind of help support, you know, rigid body. like all of that contributes to the overall strength output. So it's like it too, it teaches you to be more stabilized, secure, and it translates so well to anything else you're going to do. Well, it addresses stability, balance, and core. We just did an episode recently where you talked about the five ways for all-cause mortality.
Starting point is 00:20:19 Yeah, the five tests. Yeah, the five tests. And one of those is balance. Yeah. And so it was a staple go-to first thing that I used as a tool with almost all of my clients when we started a program is to address that address core, stability, posture, all those things are benefited from that. And so, and I agree with you, it's one of those tools that unfortunately got bastardized. And then we kind of like, through the baby with the bathwater type of deal where it was like, oh, this is stupid. People are balancing on it on their feet and squatting and doing ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:20:53 stuff on it. So all of a sudden it became this tool that trainers talk shit about. And then, unfortunately, then the general pop goes, oh, yeah, those things are dumb. I heard people talk about it. My trainer told me about how stupid those are. It's like, no, it's an incredible tool. It's just been used improperly for so long. But when I think back to a client who's getting started, especially in the beginning of the year, coming off a layoff or have never started before, stability ball is 100% in our training program. It puts you in better position and better form. It just does. It just kind of forces it.
Starting point is 00:21:26 So it's a great tool. The plus side of it is it's inexpensive. So it's way less expensive than a bench. So if you're just getting started, like, what do I do? Physio ball dumbbells, like you're set. It's actually a better way to strength train when you first get started. Later on, you can use benches. But when you're first, especially the first few months,
Starting point is 00:21:44 stability ball is the way to go. The next thing to really understand about this is because people will say, well, how do I measure progress? Is it by the mirror? Is it by the scale? I mean, you can measure progress with those. But the best way to measure progress is strength with strength strength. I mean, I know it sounds funny, but you would be surprised at how many people don't even pay attention to this.
Starting point is 00:22:05 They get started on a strength training program. They do it for six months and they've used the same weight the whole time. Yeah. If you're getting stronger, if you could lift more or do more reps, you are moving in the right direction. And the visible effects of that will follow. It's a trail. So what you first see of strength gains, strength gains, then the body starts to visibly change and follows that.
Starting point is 00:22:28 If you continue over a three-month period, if you're just getting started, do this right, you'll get stronger consistently for a while. But definitely for the first three months. Your body will look different so long as you continue to get stronger. That's the thing you should aim for. I've been trying to communicate this with some of my family that are doing like an at-home dumbbell type of routine
Starting point is 00:22:47 and trying to wrap my brain around, why this tends to be pretty common. One of the things I think I've narrowed it down to is for sure one. I don't think this is all encompassing, but I definitely think this is one of them is that they'll open up, like let's say a MAPS program and it'll say, you know, 10 or 12 or 15 reps it calls for.
Starting point is 00:23:06 And so they choose a weight that they know that they can get to get to that many reps and they're so hung up on getting to 12 reps or what like that. And so they just choose a way that they feel confidently and they can always do that. and hoping and thinking that. Instead of challenging. Instead of challenging themselves. And so the thing that I've always, I find myself communicating a lot,
Starting point is 00:23:24 at least to family and friends that are running like one of our programs and they see that, is giving them the permission of, hey, if last week you did that with, you know, 15 pound weights and, you know, you're back to that exercise again. Maybe try 20, and it's okay if you only get nine reps. Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:40 It's okay. Challenge yourself. Yes, exactly. Strength, trying to get stronger is so important. and part of getting stronger is challenging yourself with the weight. It's more important than getting to the exact rep that your program. And so I don't know about you guys, but that's something that I have found is really common. And it's like this light bulb goes off from.
Starting point is 00:24:01 I'm like, oh, I thought I had to get to that. Totally. 10 or 12. And so I was just worried that I wasn't sure if I could get there where it's like, yeah, go ahead and put five more pounds on or 10 more pounds on. And if you're in, the goal is to aim for 12 and you fall short and you get nine, that's okay. It's like I'd rather you push the strength and do that than to pick a way that you know you're always going to get 12 at. And I think that's one of the most common things. Agreed. 100%.
Starting point is 00:24:24 All right. So next is daily movement. We got to talk about this because for two reasons. One, if you're listening to this, you may be thinking to yourself, but I thought I needed to do something every day. The studies shows or the studies show that daily activity is really good for me. That is true. What we're talking about is structured strength training. A couple days a week, you're great.
Starting point is 00:24:43 you know, three days a week, amazing. Daily activity is different. That's just movement. And the best thing for most people to track or measure or pay attention to is just your steps. Just make sure you take 8,000 steps a day. In fact, the data shows 8,000 steps is where you'll get pretty much most of the benefits you'll get from movement.
Starting point is 00:25:03 So you're doing your strength training and you're doing that and you're like, okay, I want to do the activity part. Just walk. Make sure you walk throughout the day. It's easy. Doesn't require to change into workout clothes. You're not going to get hurt doing it. and you get so many benefits from doing it.
Starting point is 00:25:15 So just walk. Just move every day. A lot of times it's the real subtle things that, yeah, we always talk about like just parking a little further away, taking the stairs. But, you know, adds up. Yeah, it's just,
Starting point is 00:25:25 it's like not sitting, you know, for me. It's like really like just intentionally, you know, throughout the day is like when I normally just sit down, I have to relax or I get home first thing I want to sit down, don't sit down. You know, extend that out for just a little bit longer and you'll be surprised how many more steps you. And if you wear a step counter,
Starting point is 00:25:41 it'll tell you. It makes such a, a huge impact. I know longtime listeners, probably tired of hearing the story, but I just, I love sharing the stuff that was massive epiphanies for us or changed the way we coached
Starting point is 00:25:55 and trained. And we always talk about when, this is long before ORA ring and Fitbit and all that, one of the first ones ever invented was called a body bug. And this body bug was like, the first like real accurate, you know, step
Starting point is 00:26:11 counter and metabolism reader, right? Like, it did a pretty good job. And so now all sudden I had, and I had all, I mean, I remember when it came. I, like, really pushed all my clients to, to wear it so I could really pay attention to, you know, what, what their activity levels were and how, you know, how effective were our workouts and how unique every individual was. And one of the biggest takeaways I got from all that data that I was collecting with my clients was how impactful the days they weren't seeing me were. You know, when I'd have these clients that, because I could get on and I had access to all their profiles. And, you know, I'd look and have been like, man, Sharon, what did you do on Saturday? Because we didn't
Starting point is 00:26:51 train. Did you go to the gym? She's like, no, I just, you know, I went grocery shopping and then I cleaned house and I worked around the moving. Yeah. And it was, and it was the difference in the calorie burn, you know, in a day compared to a day where she went to work or did her normal thing and saw me. Even if she worked out. Right. Working out with me was almost double. And it was so mind-blowing to me. And I know we don't like to teach the clients to chase calorie burn, but it blew me away that just being mindful of your activity level on that much could make a difference of a double the amount of calorie burn in a single day.
Starting point is 00:27:28 It was this big aha moment to me where it's like that's literally when I began, you know, coaching to steps. Like from that point on, I was like, oh, wow, I can significantly impact my clients by giving them step goals every day. day and it doesn't feel like it's a it's a huge reach for them or a big ask like it's not like i'm asking them goes you know i'm like hey i tracked your week you average you know 5 000 steps uh a day on average so our goal next week when we get going here is 7000 a day so just you know take a look at it by the end of the night if you're still out there go for a nice leisure walk for 20 or 30 minutes to make sure you get over that number and let's just be consistent with that and it was such an easy thing and then the amount of total extra calorie burn that I got in the entire week
Starting point is 00:28:12 was compounding. Totally. It made a huge difference in creating that caloric deficit that we're trying to create. And so huge fan of just teaching how to move more. Speaking of which, you know, fat loss is what most people's goals are. So here's talk about building muscle, building strength. All right, what about fat loss? Like, how does this connect to fat loss?
Starting point is 00:28:32 Building muscle makes your body a more effective fat burning machine. It just does. but here's what fat loss looks like with strength training. It's different than when you try to burn body fat just by doing tons of cardio and cutting calories. It looks different. Fat loss with strength training starts off slower but has a snowball effect. So typically what people do is they want to lose weight, they lace up the running shoes, and then they just start eating less.
Starting point is 00:28:57 And they initially see this fast weight loss on the scale, a lot of it being muscle, the weight they lose is muscle, and then they plateau real hard. So they'll lose weight, plateau real hard. of the 15 pounds ago, gosh, I better run more, I better eat less. And then they end up in this really unsustainable place of eating very little, doing lots of exercise. They don't like so much. And then they end up giving up.
Starting point is 00:29:18 And this is what ends up happening. With strength training, the muscle builds as you get stronger, the metabolism starts to boost. You look different already because through that process, I mean, muscle shapes your body. You'll lose a little body fat in the process. But then as the metabolism kicks up, fat loss starts to come off your body with the faster metabolism. and you end up in a place where you're not working out a ton,
Starting point is 00:29:39 you're actually eating a good amount, and you're just getting leaner and leaner and leaner. This is the plateau free way of burning body fat as by focusing on building the fat burning machinery, strength training. So although initially on the scale, you won't see a lot of weight come off initially, even though you'll start to look different,
Starting point is 00:29:57 people will probably tell you you look different. The fat loss starts to happen as the metabolism boosts, and it keeps happening without that plateau. This may be the greatest mental challenge of this entire thing that we've been talking about. Highly motivated, you clean up the diet. Maybe you've heard us talk a lot about go after your protein, just hit your protein goals, try and get stronger. Okay, check, check, check. I get all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:30:21 The next big hurdle that you will have on this journey is a lot of times when you're doing all the right things, the progress, especially when you're measuring the scale and your goal is. is fat loss is to see that happen right away. And you could be doing, like you could be hitting the protein intake. You could be walking like you're saying. You could be getting stronger. You have this perfect balance where you need to be. And the scale stays the same.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Yet you're moving as fast towards your goal as you possibly can, but because you have this beautiful exchange of you build a pound or two of muscle, you lose a pound or two of fat. You build a pound. And at the end of, say, 30 or 45 days, it looks like no movement on the scale. And so clients get really discouraged that they're doing things the wrong way or this isn't working fast enough when in reality they're moving really fast. I'm what we call the Goldilocks zone where they have this beautiful exchange of sometimes they're a little bit in a surplus and they build muscle because they're strength training the way they're supposed to.
Starting point is 00:31:23 And then sometimes they're a bit in a calorie deficit because they're moving a lot like they're supposed to and they don't eat as much. And so then they see this fluctuation maybe on the scale of up and down and a month goes by. and they've actually changed their body composition quite a bit, but the scale didn't move much, and they get discouraged and they quit. But you just stick to it, because as that metabolism starts to kick up, the fat starts to come off your body,
Starting point is 00:31:45 and you're eating more than you ever have before when you've, when you've lost weight. And this sets you up for sustainable, effective fat loss, and a body that is sculpted, not just skinny. Look, we have a beginner program. Actually, I have two great beginner programs. So if you want this all laid out for you, just getting started. We have two programs. One's called Map Starter. One's called Transform. They're
Starting point is 00:32:09 both great beginner programs. Starter is one that you can do with dumbbells and just the physial ball. And they're great because you go in there. You click on the exercise. There's a video demo. It tells you what the exercises are, how to do them, how much weight to, or how many reps you need to do, how many sets. It's basically all planned out for you. Both programs, or sorry, those programs, plus others. We also have MAPS, Anabolic, and Performance, which are more advanced. But starter is a great beginner program. It's 50% off. Because of this episode, because it's a new year, you can get it for half off and it gives you everything you need. Go to Maps Fitness Products.com. Use the code New Year 50 and that you get you 50% off. You can also find us on Instagram.
Starting point is 00:32:50 It's at Mind Pump media. We'll see you there. 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 Superbundle. at mindpumpmedia.com. The RGB Superbundle includes Maps Anabolic, Maps Performance, and Maps Aesthetic. Nine months of phased expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin
Starting point is 00:33:17 to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels, and performs. With detailed workout blueprints and over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers, but at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee,
Starting point is 00:33:38 and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources at mindpumpmedia.com. If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes and by introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family. We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is Mind Pump.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.