The Peter Attia Drive - #261 ‒ Training for The Centenarian Decathlon: zone 2, VO2 max, stability, and strength | Peter Attia, M.D.
Episode Date: July 10, 2023View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter In this special episode filmed live in front of readers of Outl...ive, Peter answers questions revolving around his concept of the centenarian decathlon. He starts by defining the “marginal decade” and how that shapes his training for the events and activities that make up his personal centenarian decathlon. Peter explains how he coaches patients through the challenges of customizing their own list and building out a training plan, including how to set fitness goals early in life in preparation for the marginal decade. From there, he dives into training within the four pillars (zone 2, VO2 max, stability, and strength), including the minimum effective dose, how to split your time, his personal protocols, and other considerations. Additionally, he touches on bone mineral density, female-specific considerations, working through injuries, and the profound impact training can have on the overall quality of life. We discuss: The best interventions for longevity [2:15]; The marginal decade and the centenarian decathlon [4:45]; Peter’s personal list of events for his “centenarian decathlon” and how he helps patients create their own list [8:00]; Determining your fitness goals early in life in preparation for the marginal decade, metrics to track, and more [15:00]; How does playing sports like tennis, basketball, or golf fit into training for the centenarian decathlon? [24:15]; Training within the four pillars: minimum effect dose, how to split your time, and other considerations [27:45]; Advice for the older person and why it’s never too late to start [33:45]; Bone mineral density and other female-specific concerns and considerations [36:15]; Training advice for those with minimal access to a gym or equipment [39:30]; Injuries: prevention and working through existing conditions [41:00]; Cardiorespiratory training: how to split time between zone 2 and VO2 max training, and different modalities for a true zone 2 workout [44:15]; VO2 max training: modalities, Peter’s protocol, and how to monitor progress [54:45]; The profound impact training can have on the overall quality of life [58:15]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
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Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast.
I'm your host, Peter Atia.
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Now without further delay, here's today's episode.
Welcome to a special episode of the drive.
For this week's episode, we're going to release the live AMA that we recorded celebrating
the release of Outlive, which was recorded in April.
We received a good bit of feedback from those who were invited and able
to attend this episode live, so we decided to make it more widely available.
Our AMAs of course are typically reserved only for our subscribers, so if you're not
a subscriber, this might give you a bit of an idea what our AMAs are like, although this
is not the typical format, usually our AMAs go a little bit deeper into content than this
one, but nevertheless, hopefully this gives you a sense of what we're up to.
In this episode, we really focus the entire conversation around the Centenary and Decathlon.
We speak about the events in my Centenary and Decathlon and how I decided on them and
how I work with patients to create their own list.
We then talk about how people can know if they're on track for their Centenary and Decathlon
across a variety of ages and the various fitness tests that can help determine that.
We focus the rest of the discussion around training
for the Centenary into Catalan,
including what that training should look like,
whether you're older, younger, new to exercise, or a veteran,
and we talk about some questions that came up around Zone 2
and VO2 max training.
So, without further delay, I hope you enjoy this special episode of The Drive.
Oh!
Oh!
Never done a live event, never done a live AMA,
everything has been recorded, so how you feel?
Ready.
You feel like there's more pressure on this
because there is, you can't screw up.
Everything you say is officially written in stone.
Yeah.
That's good.
We'll see how it goes.
So what we're doing tonight, today, depending
on where you're at, is kind of an AMA
that's all focused on one thing,
which is the Centenary into Cathlong.
And so what we did is for everyone who pre-ordered,
they could sign up for the event,
they submitted a bunch of questions.
We went through, I mean, there was thousands of questions, so right off the bat, we'll
apologize to anybody who we can't answer the question, but we tried to group them together,
kind of organize them a bit, really to try and get through as much as we can.
So if anyone has heard our AMAs before, they'll probably know sometimes we can go into a little
bit of detail, and sometimes we can go into a little bit of detail
and sometimes one question can take a while, but the goal for this one is more of that rapid
fire. Let's see how many we can get out and it should be good. So anything you want to add
or say before we get rolling? No, but feel free to interrupt me if I'm being too long-winded.
All right, we'll just point at the watch and say we got to speed it up.
So I think what would be helpful is because we dig in a lot of questions around, hey,
what's the best thing you can do for longevity? Like, there's only one thing, you know, you have
five tactics in the toolkit, but if there's one thing people should focus on, what would that be?
And maybe it'd be worth just kind of giving a little piece on that, just as we set the stage
on why we decided to focus on the sensory into
catholone and kind of why you think
that's so important for people's longevity journey.
Yeah, I mean, look, it's an impossible question
to answer because if you've got a person
who's sleeping four hours a night,
if you don't fix that, nothing else will matter.
If you have a person who's malnourished, you know, you sort of have to address these issues. But generally speaking,
if everything in your life is a six or seven out of 10, taking your exercise to a 10 out of 10
is going to have a greater impact on both the length and quality of your life than any of the other
domains that I can think of perhaps with the exception of emotional health.
That's one that can be such a binary thing.
If you take a person, for example, like me,
where that house is not in order,
until that's addressed,
all the exercise in the world wouldn't fix that either.
So it's a tough question.
I get asked that question all the time.
I wish I had a slick answer for it,
but that's really the best I can say.
Yeah, if anyone's read the book
and has a really quick 30-second answer, they want to email
to us that Peter can steal.
Feel free to do that because we'll take it.
So I think it'd be helpful.
Maybe let's just quickly define sentinarian to Caffelon, marginal decade, two terms that
we use quite a bit.
Obviously, people will have read the book, but I think it's still good to just get a quick definition
on that because it will sent the stone
for everything we're going to cover.
Yeah, marginal decade is the last decade of your life.
So everyone will have a marginal decade.
Most people certainly don't know the day they enter it.
Sometimes you know when you're in it,
especially if you're in the end of it a person,
probably has a sense of that appreciation.
But it is an important model
because I think that the marginal decade for most people is really a period of poor life
quality. Physical health has usually declined significantly. Cognitive health potentially
has declined as well. As I observed, many people in their marginal decades, including people
have been close to, I noticed that there can be a great sense of withdrawal
because of these things, right?
You're not participating in life.
So the idea here is quite simple,
which is if you plan to have a remarkable marginal decade,
by definition, it means that all the decades
that came before it also had to be pretty remarkable
and the analogy I use and the book is that of an archer, probably
because that's what I am. But if you really want to be proficient at 50 yards with a bow and arrow,
practice at 100 and you'll be amazed at how simple 50 becomes and 60 and 70 and 80. It's a very
non-linear relationship in terms of accuracy with a bow and arrow. The centenary into Calfon becomes the scaffolding upon which I actually think of this.
So this again came from an idea or an observation I suppose I had in my own life, which was from
age 13 to about 42.
I was constantly involved in something very specific that I was training for.
So I never exercised.
I trained. I trained for boxing. I never exercised. I trained.
I trained for boxing.
I trained for cycling.
I trained for swimming.
I had competitions.
I had meets.
And everything I did vis-a-vis exercise was in service
of a goal.
And that made it very easy.
There was real specificity to what I did.
And then when I sort of hung up my bike,
I realized, oh my god, I don't know what I'm doing.
I mean, I'm still exercising, but it didn't feel like it had a purpose.
And I sort of realized that's actually how most people exercise.
And when compared to the alternative, which is not exercising, that's okay.
But I realized, as I thought more about this marginal decade, I needed to be very specific
in my training to make sure I didn't arrive there and sort of leave it to chance would I be strong enough healthy enough have enough balance all of those things.
And so what I realized is I had to you know to borrow the phrase from any Duke I had to back cast from that marginal decade around a set of very specific events and that set of events we would call the centenary into cathlon and everybody's gonna very specific events. And that set of events, we would call the Centenary in Decathlon.
And everybody's going to pick different events.
These can be activities of daily living.
These could be very specific recreational activities.
I think it's a good idea to have both in there.
And the more specifically you train for those,
the more directed your training is.
And I think what would be helpful right now is,
I know you have that list right next to you,
is maybe just reading through your list.
And again, as you kind of stated,
your list doesn't mean it has to be everyone else's list.
But a lot of times, I think, when there's newer concepts,
where people are trying to figure out how this works,
it's helpful to hear an example.
So do you kind of want to just burn through your list
and let people know how you're thinking about this in your life?
I will say this. It's organized in a way that's a bit confusing
because in my mind, I'm constantly thinking, okay, mobility and strength matter,
aerobic capacity matters, so sort of aerobic efficiency matters, peak aerobic performance matters.
I mean, in the back of my mind thinking, I have to make sure I can do all of those things well.
And then some of my mind thinking, I have to make sure I can do all of those things well.
And then some of my centenary into Catholic Olympics are like exercises or metrics or feats
and others are activities.
So I'll try to add a bit of color here.
Real quick, you kind of mentioned your four pillars of exercise, but people also know
them by different things, which is zone two, maybe our VO2 max.
So do you just kind of want to explain how I do it?
Yeah, so when I talk about aerobic efficiency, that zone two, when our VO2 max. So do you just kind of want to explain how I do it? Yeah, so when I talk about aerobic efficiency,
that zone two, when I talk about peak aerobic output,
that's VO2 max strength, stability,
in with stability is mobility, balance, things like that.
Okay, so in no particular order,
pick up a 30 pound child from a squatted position
or from a crib.
Those are two very difficult positions.
So that requires strength, stability, mobility. Get up off the floor with one point of support.
That's stability and strength. Place a 30 pound suitcase overhead, strength, also
mobility, dead hang for 30 seconds, strength and stability, farmer walk for one
minute with 25% of body weight in each hand. So again, it's something that today I could do for a day.
That's really pushing the bounds of what I would want to be able to do in my 80s, for example,
strength and anaerobic. Pull or push a weighted sled, 100 feet with, and I've put in here kind of
a metric of resistance. Again, what is that really all about? This is kind of one of those things.
If you're in a dangerous situation,
a spouse has fallen, you have to pull somebody out of the way
or something like that.
Walk up and down stairs with feet pointed perfectly forward.
So if your feet are pointed perfectly forward
as you're walking up and down flights of stairs,
it means you still have the ankle mobility to do that.
So you can get an angle between your foot
and your tibia, your shin into an acute angle as opposed to having to turn
your feet outward.
Single leg stand with eyes open for 30 seconds,
with eyes closed for 15 seconds.
Single leg get up without support.
So like getting up off a seat, for example,
hex bar deadlift my body weight for five reps.
We got pretty aggressive not now.
A dumbbell lunge in perfect form
with 15% of my body weight in each hand for 10 reps.
Cover three miles in one hour by foot.
So that's 20 minute mile is pretty slow,
but if you think about being able to do it
in the last decade of your life,
carry 20 pounds up four flights of stairs, produce a VO2 max above 30 milliliters per minute per
kilogram.
And if you can do that, that basically buys you a whole bunch of activities.
That means you could walk up a 6% grade at three miles an hour for a period of time, not
necessarily for an hour, but perhaps for 20, 15 minutes.
Tread water for 10 minutes.
Not that I have a plan to,
but you get, and you think about what's implied.
Like, that's a very functionally aerobic thing to do.
Scale a ledge at shoulder height,
or pull myself out of a pool onto a deck
12 inches above the water surface.
Single leg glute bridge, 15 reps without loading my lumbar spine and
do a plank in perfect form with scapular retracted no hip sag for one minute. So I have several
of these lists. There are things that I would add to this that are, you know, I have on
a different list that get more into recreational activities. I do want to be able to pull a
50 pound bow back, a compound bow that's 50 pounds. And the compound bow, of course, lets off as you get further, but
you still have to be able to pull 50 pounds at the outset.
So it's helpful for people because if you think about the list, you made very specific
things, but you kind of hinted at, there's a reason behind everything. The dumbbell being
able to lift it is grandkids, great kids, you want to be able to play with them. You
can only get off the ground is you want to be able
to live by yourself or with a spouse and be able to like,
fully move, not worry about falling.
And so if anyone's having trouble kind of thinking
about how they do it, it's sometimes helpful to just
take a step back and be like, you know,
do you want to live in a city area where you can walk
to get groceries and bring them back.
And then you can get specific from there too. So for anyone who's kind of thinking, okay, what specifically should they think
about for that? Always feel free to take a step back and then get detailed going forward.
Now, you mentioned earlier kind of emotional health. There wasn't anything on there on your list
as it relates to that. And we did get a few questions on that.
And also, you know, you kind of talked about how physical and cognitive,
as you get older, is always going to decline,
but emotional health on the other end,
that's only piece of health span that can actually go up.
And so, is it purposefully you don't have that on your centenary into cathola unless?
Yeah, the centenary into cathola is focusing purely on that physical piece that is invariably
going to decline.
So it doesn't really get into the cognitive or as you said, the emotional part, which,
you know, for really doing that right, should be getting better as we age.
When you talk to your patients about this, because I know you work with every patient, you
want them to be able to create this list and kind of anchor
back to it because like you said, you're not training for a marathon, you're not training
for a triathlon, you're really training for this.
What advice, what encouragement do you give them is they're starting to kind of think
through, okay, how do I create this list, how do I start to build this process in my mind?
We've gone through several iterations on this.
Initially, we asked patients to do what I did, which is just sit down and come up with
the list.
That didn't produce as much fruit, perhaps because people weren't putting as much thought
into it as I was.
It just wasn't something they were spending all of their time thinking about.
So what we do now is we give them a list of about 50 items.
About half of them are activities of daily living, about half of them are sort
of feats of fitness or strength. And we say, pick 10. And we've gone through multiple iterations
of this. We used to say, pick as many as you want, that turned out to be. So now it's
like pick 10. So you have to really think about this. You have to prioritize what are the
10 most important things to you on this list? And then we ask the question, okay,
to do those things, do you know what is required?
Do you know what's required to pick up a 30 pound
child off the ground?
What type of stability is required?
What type of strength is required?
And how much will that require you to be able to do today
based on the extrapolation of how much
those, each of those parameters declines.
And one of the questions we got come through,
a ton was, those are the things you wanna do at 100.
To be clear, I don't expect to live to 100.
If you look at my wall chart, it says 88,
so call it in my 80s,
it's probably where I hope to be.
And your marginal decade, yeah. So how are you thinking about I hope to be. And your marginal decade, yeah.
So how are you thinking about, okay?
So in your marginal decade, you want to be able to do that.
You know, there's people who are listening
who are gonna be in their 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s.
The people who are on the younger spectrum of that
were kind of wondering, you can do all those right now,
easy all day every day.
So how do you think about how much you should be able to do
in your 30s or 40s or 50s?
Kinda how do you talk to patients about
how they kind of like backcast and figure out,
okay, my goal at 40s should be X to be Y at 80.
We have a pretty good sense of how major parameters
like strength and VO2 max decline with age.
And so even though I can do everything on that list blindfolded, it's going to take a lot
of work to make sure that my VO2 max is 30 to 32 mils per minute per kilogram in 30 to
40 years, especially if it's closer to 40 years.
And truthfully, like right now, my VO2 max is not what I'd like it to be.
It's probably in the mid-50s, which is, again, fine for somebody my age,
but I really would like a bigger margin of error
and maybe want it to be mid to high-50s as opposed to low to mid-50s.
So if you're 30, if you're 20 years younger than me, the bar is even higher.
So paradoxically, the youngest people aren't necessarily in the best shape here on a relative basis.
They might be in absolute terms, but they have longer to maintain that.
And therefore, they have to be starting from a higher place.
You mentioned VO2 max there.
Do you maybe want to talk about a few metrics or test people could do so they can understand
Where they're at currently from a cardio perspective and let's say a strength perspective?
Vot Max is I don't know that it's necessarily the single best metric of cardio respiratory fitness
But it's certainly the one that's been studied the most and it's obviously the one that for which we have the most data
It's also one that you can go out and get done on your own
It's a hundred dollar test maybe a hundred and fifty150 test you can go and find any, in most cities, they would be able
to do this for you. There are also free versions you can estimate it. You could run a Cooper's
test or various versions of these tests, which we've talked about elsewhere, and you can
just look that up to if you want to run, know how to do that protocol. So you don't need
to even spend a dollar to estimate your VO2 max if you're willing to go down to a track and run a mile or something. So the question
then becomes what are some other metrics that go with it? Well, I mean, certainly strength
metrics matter. We've talked about some of those things. A great metric for both upper body
strength and grip strength and a bit of stamina to boot is a farmer carry. And so, you know,
for men, we'd like to say a guy
in his 40s should be able to carry his body weight
for a minute.
So half his body weight in each hand.
Do you maybe want to explain what a farmer carry is
for people who aren't familiar?
Yeah, it's literally just carrying and walking.
So if a person weighs 180 pounds,
can they put 90 pounds in each hand and walk for a minute?
For a woman whose 40 we would want to see that at about 75% of her weight.
So just do the math and adjust accordingly.
I've talked about the dead hang.
That's another great one for grip strength.
Again, we have sort of metrics that we would look at.
We would say a man in his 40s, we'd want to see two minutes of dead hang for a woman
a minute and a half.
And then of course, that gets discounted by roughly 10 to 15 seconds per decade as you go
from 40 to 50, etc.
There are other great examples of strength, a wall sit, for example.
Can you do a wall sit for two minutes?
So you're sitting with your back against the wall, your thighs are parallel to the ground,
you're not using your hands.
And basically this is a one way to test leg strength.
There are better ways to do it.
We typically do this in a more free form where we have people do, we have people do an air
squat where they're hovering but not using their back for support.
So now it's a little more stressful because you're not just using your legs but you have
to stabilize.
Whereas on the wall sit, you get all the stabilization for free
because you're pushing back into the wall.
So, there are no shortage of ways to do this kind of thing
and probably beyond the scope of our discussion now
to go through all the different ways.
Zone two, of course, is another really important thing to do.
So there's the technical way it's defined
based on lactate production,
but again, the simplest way for most people
is the RPE way, right?
Is zone two is that threshold where you go from being able to speak while you're exercising,
but being uncomfortable to not being able to speak.
And where most people cross that threshold is where you will now start to net accumulate
lactate with your activity.
And so figuring out and demonstrating that you can generate
more and more work at that level,
whether it be wattage or speed
or whatever you're metric you're using,
that becomes also just an enormous way
to track your progress.
And do you not to put you on the spot
and make an awkward, but I think with RPE and zone two,
sometimes people don't know what that level is of,
like if I'm talking like this,
is that okay? Should it be like, I can only get one word out every five seconds. Do you
kind of know for me? I mean, it feels like if I'm on my bike doing a zone two and my wife
comes in or one of my kids comes in to talk to me, I'm like, I can talk. I'm like, hey,
yeah. Okay. Yeah, I got it.
Yep, I'll pick them up.
You know, do I want to sit there and talk?
No, but I can.
If I could talk like this, I'm in zone one.
If you and I went for a walk, we're in zone one.
In fact, you've rocked with me.
Most of rucking is below zone two, except when you're going up the hills.
Where's this brutal?
Then you're not talking.
Then you're out of zone two. So there's very little of a ruck that's actually in zone two, except when you're going up the hills. Which is brutal. But then you're not talking. Then you're out of zone two.
So there's very little of a ruck that's actually in zone two.
The closest I can get to zone two is doing that shuffle run.
I can do sort of a light shuffle.
But if I'm walking, it's hard, but it's not hard enough.
And if I'm walking flat, it's too easy.
If I'm walking up a hill, it's too hard.
And another important piece is muscle mass.
And I know you typically will kind of piece is muscle mass.
And I know you typically will kind of look at muscle mass based on metrics from a DEXA
scan.
And then there's also, you know, certain percentiles that you want to see patients in.
So maybe talk a little bit about that because that way, anyone who's listening to this
and is curious, okay, how do I stack up from a muscle perspective?
Do I need to increase?
Am I okay? They can go out and get one of these done relatively cheap, the relatively easy to find, and
there's a few core metrics. So maybe just talk about that for us.
Yeah, I think everybody should have a dexascant, you just have to know this data. You have to know
your bone mineral density. I think you have to know how much visceral fat you have, and I think you
you have to know how much muscle mass you have. Obviously you're also getting body fat, which is important, but it's not as important as
those other three.
Adexascan will either automatically calculate for you or at least give you the data to calculate
for yourself, something called the ALMI and the FFMI.
So the ALMI stands for Epindicular Lean Mass Index and again, sometimes it's just spit
out in the report, but if it's not, you would simply go to the report
where it shows you lean mass for left leg, right leg, left arm, right arm.
And you add those three up, make sure they're in kilogram.
So if they're in pounds, you have to convert them to kilograms, divide by 2.204.
And then divide that by your height in meters squared.
And if that's given an inch of your feet, you have to make the conversion.
So, and then you'll get a number, right?
It could be 8, 9, 10, if you're a male, 5, 6, 7, 8, if you're a female.
And then there are noograms that will tell you for your age and for your sex, what percentile
you are in.
And we want all of our patients to be at or above the 75th percentile for ALMI.
And again, it's associative data, but it's very strong associative data, which is,
look, muscle mass is a great integrator of exercise and strength.
So hemoglobin A1C is a metric that is effectively an integral function for glucose.
So you get this number 6.5 and it
tells you, directionally, over the last three months, your average blood glucose
has been 140 milligrams per deciliter. So the hemoglobin A1C integrated the area
under the curve and spit out that number. And similarly, that's effectively what
VO2 max muscle mass and strength are doing. They are integrators of the work that it takes
to have a high VO2 max, to have high muscle mass, to have high strength. And the work that goes into
that is the secret sauce. In other words, it's not so much the muscle mass, I think, that is the
most important thing. It's what you had to do to get said muscle mass and what that muscle mass will then do vis-a-vis
metabolic function. And of course, the implication with respect to the functional side of things.
So muscle mass and strength are not equivalent. And when put head-to-head strength beats muscle
mass as a predictor of lifespan, but all of these things are important metrics to be tracking.
So I think then the rest of the conversation will kind of focus on the actual training piece of it.
So that was the bulk of questions that we received, which is how much should I be training,
how much in the different pillars, how do you best train zone to, how often, how many times a week,
VO2 max.
So I think we'll kind of now start getting into those
pieces. But I think what would be helpful is we also receive a lot of questions from people who are
like, hey, I play basketball four times a week. I play tennis, I play golf, hey, I, like I do
marathons, I maybe just, I go to the gym and I lift. Is that okay? or how important is it to actually be really specific to train
for this and to hit all of those pillars?
Well, again, I think it depends on your objective.
So everything has to be compared to the alternative.
So the person says, look, I'm playing tennis twice a week, I'm playing basketball twice
a week, and I'm lifting weights once a week.
Am I doing great?
The answer is, yeah, you are doing great,
relative to most people, but I don't think that that's a recipe for success if you want to be in
the best shape possible in your last decade. And the reason being is sports like any sport, whether
it be basketball, tennis, swimming, any particular sport, has
so much repetitive stress in it that you're going to develop movement issues.
You're going to have asymmetries, in joints, in muscles, and you want to balance those things
out as much as possible.
So again, if you want to be able to play golf every week and you're going to walk five
miles, that's great.
But you have to acknowledge like every time you're swinging that club, it's asymmetric.
So you have to think about what am I doing to counteract that?
Same with tennis, same with basketball.
And so again, it just depends on how much time a person is willing to put into this.
You know, I don't want to suggest that everybody needs to do this because I acknowledge it's
really difficult.
If it wasn't difficult, everybody would be doing it already.
By definition, this is really a complicated idea,
and maybe I just have the privilege of two things.
One, I got to experience my marginal decade in my 20s.
I had that back injury when I was 28
that left me unable to walk for three months. And in so much pain,
I didn't know my name for a year. And during that period of time, I would have given my
life to have had everything back. So when I got it back, it's just, it's seared into my
brain, what it feels like to be so immobile, so debilitated and in so much pain. And I think that's just the greatest
gift I ever received was to have that time machine to basically go and experience the last decade
of my life and then get zapped back to being 28 with a totally different mindset of, yeah, I never
want that to happen again. And at least I'll do everything in my power to make sure it doesn't.
So long answer to a short question, but the reality of it is you really do need to be training
very specifically.
And that means a lot of really silly looking, unsexy things that I do every day.
Sometimes as little as 10 minutes a day, sometimes as much as an hour a day, just on the stability
stuff, just on the movement piece.
But I wouldn't trade it for anything because the way my body feels, I'm thanked for it.
So now let's talk about, so if someone's listening, they're like, okay, I want to train for
this.
And I'm willing to put in the work for the four pillars.
So the strength, stability, zone two, VO2 max, just to keep it simple.
What's the minimum effective dose where it's okay, how much per week does someone need to commit to be able to hit
Those four things and then we can get into each of them in a little more detail
But just you know from a minimum effective dose if they have kids busy job
Families don't have a ton of time. What should they strive to set out for?
Well, it depends where you're starting right so the effective dose, if you're doing nothing is not that much.
You're gonna get huge benefits when you go from nothing
to probably three hours a week.
That would be an enormous improvement.
So I don't know, that's the right way to think about it.
Well, let's maybe let's just start there.
So let's say someone starts at nothing,
so you're saying, okay, start at three hours a week.
How are you breaking that out?
Well, if you only had three hours a week to commit to this,
you know, I think you'd have to put probably
an hour of that into steady state aerobic training,
zone two.
I think you'd have to put an hour of that into strength training.
I think you'd probably want to put 20 minutes of that or 30 minutes of that across one or
two sessions into high intensity aerobic training.
So not hit intervals, by the way, but sort of the longer intervals that are VO2 max appropriate.
And then the remainder of that time, call it another 30 or 40 minutes, spread out at 10 minutes
a day into some of the stability training.
And again, I think it's important to understand, if you say, look, I'm only willing to devote
60 minutes a week to this stability stuff, which seems so boring.
Should I just blast it out in one one hour session?
The answer is no.
You're better off doing 10 minutes a day, six days a week.
There's really something to the neurologic pattern that comes from practicing your IAP,
practicing your breathing, your sick-apular cars, your CAT-COW exercises.
Doing that for 10 minutes every day is better off than just trying to do it all in one shot.
So, anyway, that's probably how I would structure a three-hour program.
And for the, on the stability side, you kind of mentioned a few exercises there.
And actually, what you and Beth did is we recorded those videos of you and the gym.
And so those are available, peteratia-md.com slash outlive slash videos.
And so anyone who wants to learn more about, okay, what are those stability exercises that
I could do 10 minutes a day?
Real short, real simple videos.
You can go check them out.
So we won't spend time double clicking on those because, as you've said it before, you
really have to see it to understand it as opposed to just hearing about it.
And so let's say, then someone is like, okay, I'll start with three hours a week.
How often do you ratchet that up?
Does that get increased every week?
Does it get increased every month?
Does it when certain milestones are hit?
Well, it depends what the limiting factor is.
So usually when a person starts at three hours per week,
it's because that's the only time
they're willing to put into it.
Conversely, if a person's never lifted a finger
and they say, oh my God, like, I'm
willing to do whatever it takes, and they only start a three hours a week because you don't
want to injure them, then you're in that situation where how much can you ratchet it up?
And I'd probably ratchet a person up every six weeks in a scenario like that. But I think
the far more typical scenario is, okay, I'm willing to do three hours. I do three hours
a week.
Usually a person sort of starts to habituate to that stress.
And one of the important principles of training
is a principle that most people have heard
have called progressive overload.
So in one way or another, the training, the load,
the ask needs to get more complicated,
needs to get more difficult.
So if you're talking about strength training,
that could mean heavier weight.
That could mean more reps, more sets, less rest between
other things that make it more complicated, such as using BFR.
So, we're always looking for ways to make this more demanding.
For example, at my stage now, I'm not adding time anymore.
I am at the limits of how much I'm willing to spend on this.
My kids are young.
Every minute I'm doing that, I'm not spending time with them
or I'm not working or, you know,
I'm just falling behind in some of the area of my life.
So, you know, I'm already spending about as much time
as I'm willing to spend in the gym
and it's probably on the strength side six hours a week.
So I have to find other ways to add that demand.
The other thing I would be doing is thinking
about where the deficits are.
So let's say you have that person
that's at three hours per week,
maybe their ALMI is already at the 70th percentile,
and they're actually reasonably strong,
but their aerobic training is an atrocity.
So then I'm gonna disproportionately add to that,
as opposed to just equally build all of them
Conversely, you know, we have a patient in our practice upon entering the practice
I mean this guy's VO2 max was probably above 60 and he is 60
But he's been a lifelong runner, but he never touched away in his life
So he has you know very little muscle mass and this is a guy who we're actually saying look
We're probably going to need your run a little bit less. And your running is amazing. And you're very fortunate
that you haven't been injured doing it. We want you to keep running as long as you can.
But we also have to address some of these other issues because you do have some of the
really common issues of runners, some of the very common imbalances and things like that.
So in his case, it was like, can we subtract a little bit of running time and start to get
you doing strength training?
So people almost need to take just an inventory of what they're doing and where their strengths
are.
And that's where it's good to know, where is your VO2 max?
How does your DEXA scan look?
Can you farmer carry what percent of your weight?
And if it's high and that piece is good, it's like, okay, keep training that, but then fill in those deficits. You know, so we kind of hinted
that the three hours per week really is for the people who are time limited. What about
different ages? Because we did get a lot of questions of, you know, I'm older. Is it too
late for me to start training for this? And if the answer is no, how should I think about that? Because
I'm not as young, I can't quite bounce back. I'm not as strong as when I'm younger. They
might be coming into this with not as much strength. And so when you have a patient like that,
do you think about how they should tackle this differently? Are they on kind of a different
program than if someone was 30?
How do you think about that from an age perspective?
Everybody's different.
An age is definitely one of the factors that calls for sort of nuance around programming.
I'll say this.
And I think I've talked about this on a previous podcast.
I don't recall which one.
There was a study that was done in Australia.
I think we talked about on one of our podcasts, actually, where an investigator took a group of women with osteopenia or osteoporosis. So these
women had very low bone density. They'd never exercised in their life. If I'm not mistaken,
no one was younger than in their mid 60s. They were probably, you know, in their 70s.
And these women were put on a pumping iron regimen. I mean, literally like old school in a gym
picking up weights walking around. This wasn't like some fancy posh Pilates class. This was
pickup weights. And I think by the end of this study, one of the women may even got to the point
where she was dead lifting her body weight. Imagine that 120 pound woman picking up on 20 pounds
off the ground.
Well, that was a great example because it was documented in a clinical trial. There are so many
stories of these things that you just see that I just have to believe that people are far more
resilient than they can imagine. And I write about one example of this in the case of Barry.
Barry is someone who gets mentioned in, I think it's in the stability chapter actually. Here's a guy who traded his health for wealth, which is a pretty standard
refrain, and then retired and had all the money in the world and realized, wait a minute,
like I can't do anything. My body hurts so much. And if you look at Barry today, I mean,
the guy's functioning better than he was 20 years ago. So, I think it really just comes down to being consistent
and having a real sense of purpose around this stuff.
And obviously, you have to be smart about it.
I mean, you can injure yourself in the process of these things.
So, having someone who knows how to kind of guide that
and using common sense is essential.
But I would never want anybody to come away from this thinking
I'm too old to do anything about it.
I think as long as you're breathing, you have a chance to do something about it.
On that front, you kind of mentioned osteophenial osteoporosis. We did get a lot of other questions
to outside of age, which is, is there anything female specific that they should be thinking
about as it relates to sentinary into caflon? And I know Dexascan in addition to the muscle,
it can also give bone mineral density,
which is very important as we age. So maybe you want to talk a second about BMD, and then also
why that's something that maybe females specifically should be paying attention to thinking about.
And then ultimately, how that leads to how they should be training.
Bone mineral density is very important for both sexes, but women are at a greater risk.
The reason for that is the way bones work, and I'm oversimplifying a little bit, but bones
effectively have strain gauges in them, and they respond to tensile stress.
So when a muscle is contracting, the muscle via the tendon is attached to the bone, and
as the muscle contracts, the bone is compressing.
So imagine a strain gauge inside the bone that senses that, that's a mechanical signal
that gets converted into a chemical signal, so mechanical to chemical via estrogen. Estrogen is the hormone that does the signal transduction,
and that tells osteoblasts and osteoclasts,
which are the bone-building, bone reabsorbing cells,
to make the bone stronger, not weaker.
So in other words, the user lose it,
philosophy is at play here,
and estrogen is the key link. Now men and women have estrogen
and it's very important for both sexes. The difference is women lose estrogen precipitously
in midlife, and therefore women are more at risk for osteophenia and osteoporosis. Now,
for men and women alike, it's very difficult to add bone density after you reach the critical
period of maturation typically in the early 20s.
So unfortunately, most of our audience has passed that point.
I'm not sitting here having a discussion with teenagers, but of course, if I am, the answer
is load-bearing, load-bearing, load-bearing.
Reach your genetic potential while you have a chance.
But for those of us who are past that point, the key is how much can you slow the rate of decline,
and nothing is more important for that than load bearing activity. And in fact, it needs to be
heavy load bearing activity. Walking does not count as load bearing activity. Running certainly
better than swimming or cycling where you're not bearing load, but
none of those compare to strength training.
Strength training is really the most important piece of maintaining bone mineral density,
and it must be supported from an endocrine perspective with the appropriate amount of
estrogen and potentially testosterone, and certainly with the correct nutrition and supplementation
such as vitamin D and the right amount of protein and things like that.
One of the other questions we received is people were saying, hey, like what if you can't
afford a trainer, maybe don't have a gym to go to, how much of this can you do kind of
without fancy equipment, maybe with body weight?
How do you think about that in terms of as people are wanting to train for this?
You can definitely do quite a bit of stuff with body weight, but I would also encourage people to say like,
if I don't have a lot of room, can I at least get some dumbbells and kettlebells?
And you know, they do make these dumbbells. They're not cheap, but they're efficient,
and they're cheaper than buying all the sets, where, know one dumbbell has multiple links in it so it could be 70 pounds 60 pounds 50 pounds
etc depending on where you click it. So I feel like if you're going to think about okay what's the most efficient way to do this.
I would say you do want to splurge on a few pieces of equipment and certainly heavy enough dumbbells that you can get into carrying would be important.
I think resistance bands are also really important.
I've had a couple periods in my life where I haven't had access to a gym for three or
four weeks.
And during those periods of time, traveling with heavy resistance bands was essential.
And if I could have added to that, having some dumbbells makes a big difference.
So it's definitely easier if you have access to a gym or you can go to a gym like a TRX is probably another really great
piece of device for people who don't know what that is. That's kind of this
strap device that you either hang around a rack or something or you can even put it behind a door.
You just make sure the door isn't you're on the right side of the door so the door can't open.
And you can do a lot of exercises with that as well.
What about injury?
So you kind of mentioned there earlier being conscious of if you're starting out just
to not get injured.
How should people think about this if they're either coming into it with previous injuries
if they're worried about injury, especially kind of in the older population,
is, you know, is that where the stability work can be much more effective? Is it, if you haven't
lifted much weight, start lower and work on positioning and how the movement works, or how should
people think about the injury piece?
You know, this is something where I think you just have to be careful, and I don't think it would
be reasonable for me to represent that I can offer an answer
that would cover that in a broad way.
For example, we did a podcast with Alton Baron looking at injuries of the shoulder,
neck elbow hand.
Was that like a six-hour podcast?
That was very long.
It was like definitely one of our three longest podcasts, up with maybe Tom Day's
Spring and Matt Walker.
And that didn't even really get into the rehabilitation.
That just talked about like what's at the root of it.
You know, I've certainly done a number of videos
with Kyler Brown where we've gone over some of my rehab
post-shoulder surgery.
So I think the truth of it is you're just,
unfortunately, I hate to say this, it sounds like,
but you've got to be able to align with people
who understand how to not paint by numbers in their approach to rehabilitation.
So maybe one way to help screen for that is basically when you meet a practitioner, just
spending some time talking to them about their philosophy around your particular injury.
For example, before I had my shoulder surgery, I wanted to understand all the details of early
versus late mobilization, the trade
off between range of motion and stability. These are trade-offs when you're repairing
a joint as flexible as the shoulder. You can make it really stable again if you're willing
to give up all range of motion and vice versa. I hate to say it, but I think you just have
to become a more involved consumer of your care in that regard. But unfortunately, I just
can't offer some blanket piece of advice around injury.
But for the most part, even if someone's dealing with an injury, you would highly encourage
them to not let them just give up on working out because of that injury.
No, I mean, if anything, that should be motivation to get better.
Injuries, it depends where you are in your life cycle.
But for most people who I think are listening to us right now,
if you have a nagging injury and you take the approach
of I'm just gonna sort of ignore it
and it's not necessarily getting better,
you're on a very slippery slope.
I know someone very well
who's had a shoulder injury for the last six months
and it's not getting better.
It's clearly not getting better,
but more importantly, she's beginning to atrophy around it.
She's becoming so weak, and her pain is so significant
around it that she's altered all of her movement patterns
in response to this.
You know, she's younger than I am.
Sorry, I sort of had a heart to heart with her recently
and said, what do you think the natural history of this is?
Like, do you just think this is magically
gonna get better when you're 70? No chance. You need to do X, Y, and Z right now. And yeah, that means you're
going to have to invest, like at least three hours a week in doing this kind of rehab to see if
you can get this better without surgery. And maybe it will require surgery. I don't think it will
actually in this particular case. But it's the alternative is worse. Let's touch on VO2 max again.
So a lot of people reached out and said, how should I train for VO2 max?
So if you take away the only three hours a week to do everything, if it's someone saying,
okay, my muscle mass is good, but my VO2 max sucks, what program should I get on?
So the first thing to remember is you've got to be spending if you're really committed to
developing your credit respiratory fitness, you know, I think I talked about this in one of
the podcasts, maybe it was on Tim's podcast, you're trying to maximize the area of a triangle.
So the triangle has a base and the triangle has a peak.
And the goal is how big an area can I get?
Not how wide, not how tall.
You don't want one that's this wide and this tall,
and you don't want one that's this tall and this wide.
You want the max.
The base is your zone two.
The peak is your VO2 max.
From a training perspective, the rule of thumb
that is applicable for people like us, i.e. normal people,
and the best athletes in the world is roughly 80-20.
80% of your volume is down here, 20% of your volume up here. In fact, some of the really,
really elites are probably closer to 90-10. So you're saying no matter if you're just an ordinary
athlete or you're the best of the best, it's still roughly the same.
Tadi Bhagachar, who's the greatest cyclist on this planet, two-time winner of the Tour de France,
absolutely mopping up the field of cyclists like their children.
That guy's doing 80 to 90% of his training at Zone 2.
And I know that for a red fact, because we know who his coaches.
So then let's maybe talk about that, Pierre So maybe let's just step back and say.
I didn't answer your question by the way about VioTemax,
which we can come to.
Yeah, so maybe I was just gonna say,
maybe let's just cover the whole pyramid.
So what's the training of the whole pyramid?
If you know it's kind of 80% 20%, let's break out.
So I just start with how much time am I willing to put into this?
Now I gotta be honest with you,
I wish I could be putting 10 hours a week into cardio.
I mean, historically I've put in 14 to 20 hours a week in Dacardio. I mean, historically, I've put in 14 to 20 hours
a week in Dacardio up until 10 years ago.
So like I really miss those days.
I miss being insanely fit.
I'd miss that terribly, and I miss the joy
of that much training.
It's simply not possible today.
For all of the obligations that I have,
and I've done the math 10 ways to Sunday,
I'd have to give up something I'm not willing
to give up. I've had to give up archery or give up driving or give up my kids.
There's something like I'm just not willing to give any of these things up.
So I basically start with what's the most amount of time I can put into dedicated cardio.
And for me, it's like four to five hours a week, not including rocking.
I sort of keep that in its own bucket.
So then it's a very simple calculation. 80% of that time is zone two, and 20% of that time is VO2 max.
And how are you breaking out?
Let's just start with zone two.
How many?
I divided into four workouts a week.
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday.
And do you always recommend doing it over,
like let's say you could do four hours in one day?
Is there the same benefit of doing all your zone two in one day versus spreading it out?
You know, I've talked about this within you go.
His view is if you can get at least 30 to 45 minutes, you should spread them out.
Again, if you're only able to commit an hour to it, it might be one hour once or 30 minutes
twice, but I'm sort of doing 45 minutes
to 60 minutes each time is what I do. Are you doing zone two, VO two max on the same
day? One of those days. So, so Tuesday, Thursday is just zone two, and then two long sessions
of stability training called an hour of zone two and hour of stability. Actually, I want to just walk you through the whole week.
That'll be easier. So Monday is just strength training.
So that's about 90 minutes to two hours when you include the stability training that I do as well.
So movement prep stability training, strength training, and that's all lower body.
That's Monday. Tuesday is zone two followed by dedicated hour of stability.
Wednesday is upper body strength and stability. Again, 90 minutes to two hours. Thursday is a repeat of Tuesday. Friday is a repeat of Monday.
Saturday is zone two in the morning, upper body strength, repeat of Wednesday in the afternoon. Sunday is zone two followed by
VO2 max. And what you ever do VO2 max before you do zone two? I generally don't just because
I like to have a lot of reps before I go for broke. So even when I was like a cyclist
and doing two,
VO2 max workouts a week,
they were always preceded by the metric
we would use on a bike was kilojoules.
So how many kilojoules of work would you do
before you would do the super hard sets?
And it had to be at least a thousand kilojoules,
which it translates to at least a thousand calories of work.
Four zone two, I know you said you kind of like to break it up.
If someone is like, hey, you know,
I can do four days a week of zone two,
but I can only do 15 minutes a day.
What'd you say?
That I'd compress it.
I would say do two thirties.
So in your zone two sessions,
you like to do at least 30.
At a minimum, yeah.
When you're in those zone twos,
are you like when you hit the bike and the clock starts? I do it all mine on a bike. Sometimes on a minimum, yeah. When you're in those zone twos, are you, like, when you hit the bike and the clock starts,
I do it all mine on a bike, sometimes on a treadmill, but what I do is the computer is programming
to the Wahoo kicker, which is the device I'm sitting on.
So it's taking 10 minutes to ramp me up.
Maybe just walk through what modalities can people do zone two on, treadmill, bike?
Anything that is steady state.
So swimming is a great way to do it,
because you can really swim in a pool at a steady state.
Running is a great way to do it,
because you can pretty much run at a steady state.
Cycling outdoors is generally hard,
unless you have, like, fiesta island
was a great place to train.
I used to train at fiesta island
because for people who don't know where that is in San Diego,
it's where all with a time trial bike races were. And it's just a seven kilometer loop
that you can ride on without lights or any,
like there's no traffic or anything that gets in your way.
But for the most, I wouldn't be able to do zone two outside here in Austin.
It's too hilly and there's too much traffic.
It fits and starts.
I can do my VO2 max here because I go to a hill
and that's my favorite way to do VO2
max is on a hill that's about a mile long and just do very hard up the hill and then
easy down the hill.
A treadmill is another great way to do it.
Just front of a walking, inclined typically.
Rowing machine, if you're really a good rower, you have to be efficient enough.
Most people are not efficient enough and they don't have the strength,
they don't have the stability to row really well
for 45 minutes.
Stair climber is another really good one.
Depends again, if you're starting out,
brisk walking is probably good enough too.
We don't have to get into all the reasons
of the benefits of zone two,
because we have so many podcasts within you go.
So I'm a lot of people can listen to, but you kind hinted at another thing there, which is when you start your zone two
workouts, you'll ramp up, but also a lot of times we get questions where, you know, hey,
I did a 90 minute workout and I was in zone two for 45 minutes of it. Am I good?
I think what you mean in that question is, you know, like I went out for a three hour
bike ride today. When I got back, my computer told me I was in, I did 44 minutes of zone
two.
So two issues there.
One is that's just a zone two based on heart rate.
That's generally the worst approximation of zone two.
So zone two really is more based on lactate if we're going to be purely accurate or at a
minimum, RPE.
But even if you pass it that that 45 minutes of zone two from your heart rate
is roughly accurate, it's not the same physiologically because usually you're passing in and out of zone two
in that situation, and so you're not getting kind of that constant steady state churn, which you're
looking for. What we're really kind of looking for is the harnessing of mitochondrial efficiency,
and to do that, you have to be able to push
oxidative phosphorylation right to its limit
before you trip into glycolysis.
And you're just at the limit of that glycolysis
being the dominant energy source.
Whereas if you're on that ride,
you're going into and out of glycolysis constantly.
So it's not that you're so much in zone two for 45 minutes
as that you passed through zone two
for a sum total of 45 minutes,
which again, there's still value in that,
but not for what we're talking about.
And what about VO2 max?
What modalities can you do VO2 max training on?
You know, here I think it's probably the easier in a way, right?
Because it's pretty much anything that gets your heart rate
up and gets you very tired.
So, you know, look, it could be an air bike, it could be a regular bike, it could be a stationary bike,
stair climber, treadmill, running outside, you know, the sky's almost the limit.
Something like burpees is probably pretty tough once you get into something that
intense like jumping because the sweet spot for VO2 max is kind of three to eight minute intervals.
So you don't want to be doing things that are so intense that you can't do them for at least three
minutes. And so that's why I'd kind of hold off on that stuff. I mean, when I was young and I was
really fit, I did a lot of it with jumping, but I can't jump for three minutes anymore. I'm not
that fit anymore. So I have to rely on easier things. What's your current VO2 max workout? So you mentioned kind of three to eight minutes on, is it?
Typically, I do four on four off, is sort of where I spend most of my time. Sometimes three on three off
on a rowing machine. I got into that quite a bit last summer, but these days, and sometimes,
by the way, I just am in a bit of a rush and I'll just do one minute
on two minute off at a much higher intensity on the stair climbers. So I have one of those,
like industrial grade strength climbers. And sometimes I'll just go sprint for a minute
up the stairs and then takes me two minutes to get my heart rate back down to about a hundred
and then repeat that for 20 to 30 minutes.
So that's kind of like my poor man's cheating VO2 max workout.
But what I really like to do is four minute repeats, four minutes on, four minutes off.
And on the four minutes on, are you going 100% for the full, like how should someone
think about?
You have to play with this.
This is years and years of practice to know what that feels like.
So again, I'm doing this on a bike,
so I'm looking at wattage.
And my watts are so low now I'm embarrassed.
So I'm not gonna tell you what the watts are
because there's so much lower than they used to be.
But I know, I have a sense of what I need to average
my wattage over those four minutes.
So I might go out at 105% of that wattage, and it feels pretty easy for the first minute.
If it doesn't, I've gone too hard.
By three minutes, I'm very uncomfortable.
In that last minute, IE, at four minutes, I don't have much left.
If you go out all out in that first minute, you're not going to get to four minutes.
You're just going to crash, and you're sort of not in that zone. There's no question, I positive split
the thing, meaning I do more work in the first half than the second, but I don't want it
to be more than about 10%.
How much of this can it improve for people, right? So if people are saying, okay, I'm willing
to put in the work for zone two, I'm willing to put in the work to increase my VO2 max.
Is this something, if it's been two weeks, a month,
two months, and they're not seeing maybe huge increases like they should get discouraged? I mean,
I don't think you're going to get in your VO2 max tested every three months, you know, so it's
how should people think about just monitoring progress in order to see if improvements are
happening just to keep people motivated? Well, again, it depends on what modality you're using, but yeah, I don't think you need to test
your VO2 max more than once a year. What you're looking for is you pick a modality and I'll give you
an answer. So let's take a bike. Okay. So again, most stationary bikes have a power meter. If you're
riding outdoors, you'd probably want to have a power meter. I do think it's the great equalizer, so speed can be misleading because of wind and stuff like that. So you'll know how
much water you can do. So when you start out, you might only be able to put out 150 watts for the
four minutes. But if in six months, you're putting out 175 watts for those four minutes, assuming that
your weight has an increased significantly,
your VO2 max has gone up.
Again, the other thing to keep in mind with VO2 max is weight plays an important role in
it because it is VO2 max in liters per minute divided by your weight in kilograms.
So if the name of the game for you is, how do I maximize my2 max? In total absolute terms, you can really game the system.
My VO2 max when I was cycling was high because I was very light and I was disproportionately
light in my upper body.
And your upper body is contributing nothing to the VO2 max for most tests because it's
basically tested on a bike or on a treadmill. So you get punished for any upper
body mass and you're only rewarded for lower body mass. So the lighter your upper body is,
the better you are. It can also be good motivation to people who, and let's say on the two-by-two
nutrition framework, if you maybe are overnourished and you do lose weight while you're starting to get
the cardio, you can see a good jump in your VO2 max if you're losing excess weight.
Yeah, it just comes down to how long you're willing to put into this.
The literature on this suggests you can only improve your VO2 max by 50%.
But the literature is typically looking at eight week studies.
So what we're interested in is a lifetime of training.
And in a lifetime of training, you can increase your VO2 max by 50%. So there is a strong genetic component to it. You know, when you see these
people who have freakishly high VO2 maxes in the 80s, there's unquestionably a strong
genetic component to that, but they're also training like crazy.
Well, and you kind of hinted, right, which is the goal for people who are wanting to start
training for the Cincinnati Catholic for them is thinking about it based on their lifetime horizon.
It's not something that's going to play out as I can train for this for six months.
It's not like I'm going to train for a marathon after I train for the marathon.
I'm going to go back to doing what I was doing.
You really do want to create a program that you can keep up with for years and decades. And also, you keep that timeline
perspective of, okay, I don't need to increase in a sane amount because what I want to do
is not get injured, be able to do something that I can do, find enjoyment out of it, and
find value. Well, that kind of took us at time. This was a little bit of a shorter AMA
for us. We also just kind of speed
around those questions, but hopefully people found some value out of it and just kind of
to build off what they learned. But any last piece of advice that you would want to give
people as they think about, sent an air into Kaplan as I think about their longevity
journey, again, kind of assuming people read the book, you know, what advice would
you give them?
Advice may be not, but certainly incentive would be the following.
We talk so much about the benefits of exercise in terms of how much it reduces the risk
of chronic disease, how much it reduces all cause mortality.
You've probably heard me say this before, but it's worth repeating.
If I knew that all this training I was doing, everything
I'm doing, if I knew that it was going to shorten my life by a year, I would still do it
purely for the improvement in quality of life between now and the end of my life. The fact
that it's not shortening my life by a year, the fact that it's probably adding five to seven years to my life. And improving the quality of my life
means day in and day out. I just think it's about the most important thing that I can do vis-a-vis
my physical health. There's other elements of health that we didn't get to. That would be sort of
my parting thought. And of course, my parting comment would be a thanks to everyone who's listening
to this. Because by definition, if you're listening to this you were an early
purchaser of outlive so I really want to thank you for that means a lot to me
I think I mentioned this once before on our podcast, but it's probably worth repeating. I never thought that a book would
mean as much as it has in terms of how personal it feels and how attached to
the thing that I feel as it's out there. And there's no other piece of content I've ever created.
There's no blog post I ever felt this attached to or newsletter or podcast. There's just nothing.
And this feels oddly personal. And therefore, whenever I go somewhere and I run into someone
and they send me a message about it and they say,
hey, I got your book, I read it, I really liked it.
To me, it means more to me than I thought I would.
I'm sorry that I can't be thanking each and every one of you
in person for purchasing the book as early as you did.
Hopefully this is the next best thing.
And so thank you very much.
And I should say too, the one thing I forgot to mention earlier
is if anyone who has a physical copy of the book if you haven't popped
The jacket cover off yet and seeing the actual cover
There is something on the actual cover too itself that was a special design and again
Shut up to no one's mentioned that yet
Not a lot we got in a few but again
Rodrigo Corral and that whole crew just awesome not only on the jacket cover, but again, Rodrigo Carral and that whole crew just awesome, not only on the jacket cover,
but the physical.
What's that called?
The board, what do they call the hard cover or the thing?
There's a name for that, and I forgot.
I just called the book.
The book.
It's a different question, but it's a little Easter I got there for people, but awesome.
All right, Peter, thank you very much.
Thanks very much.
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