The Rich Roll Podcast - Built To Move: Kelly & Juliet Starrett On Functional Strength, Mobility, And Falling In Love With Movement
Episode Date: June 26, 2023How do we move with ease? Maintain flexibility as we age? And how do we counteract the physical effects of technology dependence, sedentary living, and other modern ways of life? Here to help us answe...r these important questions are movement experts and co-authors of Built To Move Kelly & Juliet Starrett. Dr. Kelly Starett is a globally renowned physical therapist and strength coach who consults with athletes from the NFL, NBA, NHL, and MLB the US Olympic Team—along with elite Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard forces. Juliet is a 3-time white water rafting world champion and CEO of The Ready State, the mobility coaching company they founded together. Today we cover everything from pain management to ideal recovery and post-workout practices, the essential elements of a home gym, and easy ways to change sedentary habits and integrate more movement into your daily life. Show notes + MORE Watch on Youtube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: LMNT: drinkLMNT.com/RICHROLL BetterHelp: BetterHelp.com/RICHROLL AG1: drinkAG1.com/RICHROLL Peace + Plants, Rich
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The Rich Roll Podcast.
Mobility is really the ability to do the things you want to be able to do with your body.
Do you have your native range of motion and can you control that native range of motion?
have your native range of motion and can you control that native range of motion?
How do we move with ease? How do we maintain flexibility as we age and address issues before they become injuries? There are ways that you can change your environment so that these are just
things you do without having to rely on willpower or motivation. Today, we dive deep into all things mobility
with two legends of movement, Kelly and Juliet Starrett.
Dr. Kelly Starrett is a globally renowned physical therapist and strength coach,
and his wife Juliet is a three-time Whitewater Rafting World Champion
and CEO of The Ready State, which is the mobility coaching company they founded together.
They've worked with some of the world's premier athletes, as well as everyday average folks.
And together, they co-wrote the recently published Built to Move,
which is this sort of holy text on all things movement.
Your range of motion doesn't have to change because you age.
We also talk about how to future-proof your body from injury
and many other fascinating and important topics. And it's all coming up quick, but first.
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Okay. Kelly and Juliet are just absolute wizards of pain-free movement and mobility. And look,
we're only given one body in our lives. And this conversation really
inspired me to take further ownership of my body. And I certainly hope it does the same for you. So
without further ado, please enjoy my conversation with Kelly and Juliet Starrett.
So nice to meet you. As I said, when you walk in the door, I feel like you guys are old friends.
I've been following you for so long and just appreciate all the incredible content that you
share with the world so liberally. And although I probably haven't been the best student along the
way, I do watch the videos and I've listened to you guys on many, many podcasts. And I'm really
excited to have you here today on the occasion of, of built to move the new
book.
And, uh, you know, it's like, there's so much to talk about.
I don't even know where to begin.
Well, I, I just want to shout right back out at you because you are an OG in the space
and we, we were talking before the podcast, but Kelly and I've been listening to and following
you for so long and you're just, it's been such a pleasure to watch this whole thing grow. And just the library
of amazing podcasts you've created is so cool. I appreciate that. It's like, forget that about
time. I can't believe it's such a pleasure to be here. Thank you. Um, in thinking about, uh, today,
uh, you know, it occurred to me that it must be very gratifying to see, like, this mainstream discourse around mobility, functional strength, stability, all these things that, you know, you guys have been shouting from the mountaintops about for so long.
It feels like culture is finally catching up to something that, you know, you guys have
been steeped in forever. I think you're right. I mean, there's actually just an article in the
wall street journal the other day about how to improve your hip mobility. And I was like, okay,
mobility is having a moment. If there's a wall street journal article about how to improve your
hip mobility. So, um, I think, yes, I think, uh, people are starting to get the
message. I will say though, that I think there's still quite a bit of confusion around what
mobility means and why people should care about it. And so I think that's one of the things we're
trying to do in the world is continue to try to sort of clarify what that means, at least to us,
um, and, and help people understand why they should care.
I might just add that I've had to adopt a mantra.
The glacial pace is the breakneck pace.
Yeah, I've heard you say that.
I love that.
It is really difficult to change or to influence
or to give people better tools and let it permeate.
At risk of sounding doom and gloom,
fitness has done a really good job of becoming
very sophisticated and there are great trusted resources some of the people we talked earlier
about but maybe we've left a whole lot of people behind and if it's starting to happen where we can
have these kind of bigger conversations then it's it's a reflection i think of people recognizing
that maybe what we've been doing hasn't really served them as well as we thought. And that,
there's a big opportunity. There's, I think, a mismatch between the truth, and I think we really
saw it in the pandemic of, you know, how are people able to self-soothe or take care of
themselves or feed themselves? They didn't have kettlebells at home. They didn't know how to cook.
And we just sort of left people behind. So it is, it is
gratifying very much. And I'm also sorry for popularizing the word mobility. Cause I think
it's like, it's like I invented the word core. It's like the least sexy word ever. We're like,
I can't believe we've had to say mobility this many times in our life. Well, you were the first
to really popularize it. And then it became part of the common, you know, vernacular and you had
to, it's so much so that you had to change the name of your company from Mobility Wood to the Ready State. But in looking at, you know,
kind of telescoping up and trying to understand what has happened, the way I see it is, yes,
you kind of cut your teeth working with elite athletes, Olympic athletes, special forces,
first responders, all these like kind of highly specialized people who are very performance oriented
or who have like very specific goals
that they're striving for.
And through that process,
you were able to not only help these people,
but learn and get really into the deepest trenches
of what this is all about.
But then you can take that and through this book
and now kind of what your current focus is
to translate that for the mainstream audience.
And I think that the time is really right for this
for a couple of reasons.
The first of which is there's an explosion
in interest in longevity.
And certainly, you know, a core principle
in trying to live, you know, a core principle in trying to live, uh, you know,
your longest best life is your functional strength and mobility. Can you get up off the ground? You
know, are you able to move? Are you able to put a bag in the, you know, above your head on the
airplane and all that kind of stuff? Um, and then also, uh, this, this, this, this sort of rising interest
in rewilding our lives, right?
This is something you talk about in the book
and refer to quite regularly
that we have unwilded ourselves, right?
And so the principles that you teach,
although they're highly applicable
to all of these elite scenarios,
are more broadly applicable
and more profoundly applicable, I think, to everybody
who's thinking about, you know, what's it going to be like when I turn 80? And how come I don't
feel so good when all I do is stare at a screen all day and then go home and watch Netflix?
Well, I think we can even go a step further and say that in the last chunk of time where we've
got to go in and see everyone's dirty laundry, people whose lives are on the line or professions are on the line about how their body works, has really given us an
indication of what are core essential practices off of which you can build elite performance.
Because you understand that being a professional athlete is tricky. We have family and nutrition
and travel and sleep, and there's a lot of masters to serve in that world. And one of the things that we have come to realize is that if we could truly take
sport and realize its potential, then sport was a laboratory through which we should transform
society. And that was, that's really been a lens and one that we weren't, I don't think really
ready to adopt fully 10 years ago, but now we're realizing that that's our sort of,
our, you know, our calling.
And in so much that we're trying to get
and take these lessons,
that way sport can actually mean more to us.
It can be a laboratory and a place,
a teaching hospital, a test kitchen,
where we can really understand what happens
when people are under stress
and all these different situations.
And simultaneously, we saw that some of those basics get missed by the best in the world. They have blind spots.
And then we find that a lot of people are confused about what a good foundational practice looks
like. And we should be able to take those lessons and actually say, hey, look, we understand that
you're not an elite athlete, but you're just a middle-aged dad who wants to stay up with his local mountain bike club.
That's me.
And what are the ways where I can do that in the context of my busy life so I don't have to throw everything away?
And I think that really is an opportunity for us to make sense of all of the bright people working in this high-performance world.
the, you know, bright people working in this high performance world.
And I would just add to that the other sort of lens through which we, I think, have evolved as humans over the last 10 years.
You mean us?
Together.
Yeah.
Both of us together.
But, you know, when we wrote Supple Leopard, we were really focused exactly like you said
on, you know, elite athletes and how to perform better and lift more weights and run faster.
And that was really our focus, both as individuals and in terms of what message we wanted to put out into the world. But then we've spent
the last year, last 10 years, raising kids in this like really quaint suburban neighborhood
around busy professional parents who are not in the health and fitness business at all. So while
we have this whole cohort of friends and professional colleagues who are, and they're all like us, optimizing their health and tracking everything and taking the right supplements and trying whatever new exercise program is out.
In contrast, we're also friends with a whole community of people who are busy ad executives and attorneys and tech people.
And maybe they never exercise, but what they share universally
is they actually all really do care about their health and they are interested in durability and
longevity, but ultimately they're very confused about what to do, where to start. We've really
become this node in our community where people, anytime there's some new health thing out,
people are like, should I be intermittent fasting? Wait, should I switch to keto? Should I do the whole 30? You know, should
I try a 45? Wait, should I, should I do zone two cardio? How much should I lift? And, um, we've
just been this source of, of questions and seeing the amount of confusion that just sort of everyday
people who care about their health have. And they, there hasn't been sort of, we wanted to be able
to say, you know, hey, you know, like how much should I sleep? Here's built to move. You know,
how much should I take care of my body? Here's built to move. So it's really been this sort of
10 year evolution of, you know, spending time in a community of people who really are focused on
health and care about longevity and durability, but really have no blueprint at all.
longevity and durability, but really have no blueprint at all.
Yeah, it really is a paradox.
We've never had greater access to information, but there's this waterfall of inputs that ultimately do nothing beyond just paralyze us, right?
Because we just don't know what to choose.
Like this is something I'm experiencing right now with a lower back issue that I have.
I'm sure we're going to get into that because I'm going to make it all about me. But yeah, you know, think about like morning routines or any,
it's like, oh, it's like, oh, if you want to optimize, you know, like optimization and all
of that, it's like, I don't have three hours in the morning to like do my sauna and do my cold
plunge and do my meditation and stare at the sunlight and then journal. And then I have to meditate, all these things.
It's like for the normal person, they're like,
can you just give me something that works
within the construct of my life?
I'm not trying to optimize or be an elite athlete.
I'm not gonna join the seals,
but I just don't wanna feel like crap.
And it would be great if I had a little bit more energy
when I get home
from work and my kids are demanding my attention.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, your mention of your low back pain is also sort of a very important
thing that I left out when I talked about those people in our community.
I mean, what we see in that, in that group are people who don't really care about having
shredded abs and they don't care about optimizing at all.
But a lot of them are dealing with pain and they, you know, they don't care about optimizing at all. But a lot of them
are dealing with pain and they, you know, they aren't sure how to manage that and are worried
that's going to become their identity. And in many cases, their sort of ongoing pain issues have
taken them out of the things they love to do physically, which then, as you know, has all
these downstream consequences because so much of what, so, you know, so much of the community that
many of us get revolves around some kind of physical activity or personal identity or personal
identity you're a pickleball club or whatever it is you do and so when people get sidelined from
being able to do the things they love physically it has all of these hardcore downstream consequences
especially in terms of their mental health and so that's kind of the other piece we saw is that
you know these people again you know they they want to be out of pain. They want to feel good in their
body and they want to be able to, you know, pay it, play a game of pickleball on the weekends
with their friends. Like that's their, their goal. And we, I don't think in the health and
fitness space have been speaking to those people. I think there's a bit of a change, um, and a bit
more of a focus on basics lately, you know, coming in from
our community. But I think, you know, you're exactly right. Like they could care less about
optimizing. Right. Sometimes we get to work in camps and I was at a big camp for water polo at
a big division one university. And so all of the superstars are there, all the athletes, and then
there's a hundred teenagers there. And I ask, and I do this
all the time. I'm like, how many people in here are pain-free? And you would think, you know,
you're a 15 year old woman, like, you know, can you have pain? And every hand doesn't go up. No
one is pain-free. The reality is that this pain is really an experience that is human. And one of
the things I think is happening a little bit, which is great, is that we're shifting this narrative about who owns pain. Because what we said for a long time, especially
in the athletic community, was pain is a medical problem. And that trickles down to, well, I don't
have time to manage my pain or my pain's not so bad that I can't do my job or live my life. So
I'll just have this nagging thing until it gets so bad I can't occupy my role in the family or do my,
you know, occupy my role in the team. Or, you know, if you're back hurt so bad, you can't go
to work, that's a medical emergency. And so one of the things that we've been trying to shift is
saying, hey, look, there's a whole lot we can do to empower people to be able to self-soothe without
bourbon, without THC or ibuprofen or opiates. The way we literally handled it as a medical problem.
We left people to become feral and managing their own pain.
And I think as we are getting more complicated or more complex and sophisticated about this,
one of the things we know is that pain doesn't mean injury.
It doesn't even mean tissue trauma or damage.
It's a request for change.
So part of what we're trying to say in this book is,
hey, we can try to treat pain and use it just as another metric. Like if you were stiff this
morning because you were a big workout yesterday, you're not thinking, you know, you've got, you
know, some, you know, you didn't contract rabies, you just are sore, right? From your run. And so
if we can shift that narrative a little bit and then also empower people that, hey, there's a
whole lot they can do. And some of that is sleep and some of that is nutrition and some of that is down regulation.
But a lot of it is there's some inputs you can do that are really safe and really easy. And then we
can have the next conversation because maybe you don't want to go for a walk because your knee
hurts. One quick thing I will add though, is that if you want to make all of my busy working mom
friends like scream at the top of their lungs to the hills,
it is tell them to do those things as a morning routine
and tell them that if they want to be healthy humans,
like it literally, if you want to like make a bunch of like 45 year old women real mad,
it's that morning routine stuff.
Because they're like, I'm making breakfast and lunches for my kids
and driving to the drop
off lane. And what are you talking about? I should meditate for half an hour and journal.
They go crazy. So we definitely, we haven't done a good job of speaking to that audience.
Well, even beyond that, and I'm speaking from personal experience as a time crunched person
who's interested in their fitness, I know, and who's dealing with some
pain right now, I have all kinds of protocols and exercises and do that. And all of them are like,
you know, kind of small little things and, you know, like just air squats and, you know,
that kind of stuff, a lot of the stuff that's in your book. And I still have a mental barrier to
doing that because like, I just want to go throw some weights around or like get my workout in and
feel like I got something done
and get to the studio and I can't be bothered.
And that doesn't even like account for when you're like
trying to be a competitive athlete and time crunched,
where it's all about your fitness and your training.
And the kind of stuff that you talk about in this book
just feels indulgent or something that you would do, you know, if you had
tons of time, which you don't, or if you're in a crisis situation, right? Which obviously has led
me to this place that I'm in. So, however you want to get there is reasonable and rational,
right? I wait till it's crisis. That's, you know, I like a lot of pressure. I'm sort of a
procrastinator. And athletes with a high pain threshold.
There's also that too.
Yeah, they'll dig a hole deeper.
That's right.
I mean, so, you know, one of the things I think is really important that we have wrapped,
started to really wrap our heads around is this behavior modification habit forming idea.
And so Juliet points out that, you know, we can't just give people lists of things.
Hey, exercise more, eat more fruits and vegetables. Like that seems not to be working very well,
as well as it could. And so some of this, I think what, one of the things that I think is good in
here, and we actually came up with this idea working with the Marine Aviation Weapons Tactical
Group, was looking at, okay, you're very time crunched and you're underslept. We have 24 hours.
Where are we going to fit these behaviors that don't also ask you to give something else up?
How do we expand what it is you're doing, not take away?
Because if you are coping with your family and stress and management because you need to go Peloton or run or deadlift, whatever it is,
what we don't want to say is, hey, why don't you go to a, you know, a balance class or, you know, you're not going to do that.
Go to like a one hour balance class. You're like, yeah, no, I'm not doing that.
And also like be bad at it and like, you know, be embarrassed.
Also be bad at it, right. So, you know, the real question is trying to look at what a 24 hour day
time schedule is and say, where are the places where we have some agency and some control?
And then we start to say, well,
how can we constrain the environment a little bit
so that you don't have to make another heroic,
like, you know, I'm gonna get up off the couch now
and, you know, and juice or, you know what I mean?
Whatever it is that you're doing, you know,
we're, people have a finite amount of will.
How can we shape the environment
so you don't, you can do the right thing automatically
without having to make a heroic decision?
Yeah, I mean, that's very similar to the kind of things
that Dan Buettner talks about
with respect to the blue zones.
It's sort of like looking at these cultures
that have a long history of longevity and happiness
and trying to deconstruct how they've arrived in this place and
then create a template for our modern world. And so much of it is about making that healthy choice
or that healthy behavior, the convenient and easy choice, as opposed to the burdensome thing.
Yeah. Otherwise it's not, it's not going to work. So Kelly was just, I think, as we told you on a
ski trip in Japan, Japan, and he was,
he had for most of the trip was sharing a room with another guy and the guy
got a cold.
So they needed to separate rooms and they got to the next hotel and the hotel
staff was kind of freaking out.
Cause they're like,
well,
we don't actually have an extra room.
And when their guide actually pushed a little more and got some more
information from the hotel staff,
it turned out that they just didn't have like a Western room available.
And by Western room,
that means the bed is high up off the ground
and there's a normal, like an American size table.
And the sink and shower are at our height.
But they did have plenty of Japanese style rooms
where the bed is on the floor and the table's on the floor
and you shower sitting on the floor.
But in their mind, they're like,
well, this American guy can't handle this.
And Kelly's like, I've been waiting for this my whole life.
Yeah, like Mr.
Maybe choose me.
Yeah, choose me, choose me.
But it is, you know, Kelly took a video of this room and I was like, man,
you know, we wouldn't all have so much trouble getting up and down off the floor
if we got up and down off the floor to go to bed.
And, you know, even things like, like the, you know,
he showed me the video of the room and even things like the air conditioning controls are like at that level, like knee level, because the presumption is you're going to be sort of, you know, moving around on the ground.
You're squatting on the ground.
You're crawling around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so, so your range of motion is not one more thing that you have to add in.
Yeah.
It's just built in.
Yeah.
But yeah, we see in those blue zones, it's, it's, you know, people aren't making a choice every single day to do these habits that are good for them.
It's just, their environment is perfectly set up, so they aren't making choice.
It's just what they do.
And there's inherent soft, you know, less technical, I didn't take this turmeric and do this secret school program.
I had to walk to the market and I saw my neighbors.
And so suddenly I feel like I live in a community, right?
And there are all of these sort of loose connections.
One of the things that happens
is that all of those behaviors start to stack.
And I think that's one of the problems.
We have experts, Matt Walker's book is great.
But sometimes you fail to kind of think about how,
well, my non-exercise activity during the day,
the number of steps actually makes me tired enough
to actually fall asleep.
And I start making decisions
about some of the things I'm gonna do,
put in my body, not put in my body
because it'll affect my sleep later on.
And suddenly what we start to see is that,
man, if we get people who are rested,
they start to feel better
and their pain starts to diminish
or their brain becomes less sensitive or easily sensitized or perceiving their body as a threat.
And then we start to roll a little bit, you know, and then you want to move a little bit more.
You're a little bit more excited at four o'clock when you have a window of opportunity. So
I think that's one of the magic pieces here is how do we construct a day-to-day that isn't crazy,
that anyone can wrap their heads around that also just begets these one plus one
equals three moments.
Yeah, just nudging you gently in the right direction,
you know, repeatedly throughout the day,
every single day.
And I'm like you, Rich,
I wanna suffer and breathe hard.
Yeah.
You know, if I, and I often-
It doesn't count for shit
unless you got that going on, right?
And you can suffer.
I have one hour a day.
Yeah, I'm sure.
Real suffer.
I have, let's say, one hour in my time crunch schedule a day,
and I'm always going to default to choosing to do some form of suffering,
whether that's a CrossFit workout or mountain biking or something like that.
I'm always going to choose that.
I'm never going to be the person who's like,
I should probably take a recovery day, and instead I'm going to go to a yoga class and
I enjoy yoga, but I mean, I am never going to be someone who chooses going to yoga over doing a
workout if I have, if I only can choose one. Um, and so I'm in the same boat as you in, in,
in order for me to actually figure out ways to do some of these sort of range of motion,
mobility practices and practice things like balance. Like it has to of these sort of range of motion mobility practices and practice things
like balance. Like it has to just be sort of like baked into other things I'm doing. Otherwise I
literally won't do it because I often feel like I really have that one sacred hour a day to do what
I want. And what I want is workout. You mentioned earlier that there's a lot of confusion around
what you mean when you talk about mobility. So
let's just clarify that. And I kind of want to build on that to get into the various, you know,
principles that form the framework of this book and your philosophy. Well, I mean, I'll start and
maybe take a swing at this. I think, I mean, at this point you ought to be able to define it, right? Yes. To us, you know, mobility is, is really the ability to be able to move freely through
your environment and do the things you want to be able to do with your body, whatever
those things may be.
Now we, we offer a lot of tools, which we call mobilizations, which are things you can
do to help improve your mobility and range of motion.
But, you know, to us at the highest level, it's a, it's the ability to move freely,
ideally without pain, or at least minimizing pain and feel to do the things you love to do.
And if I added it, how did I do pretty, pretty good for an attorney? I, uh, you've been in the
game for a minute. I can tell. I would add your body. Everyone agrees that your shoulder should be able to do certain things and that your spine should be able to do certain things and your hips should be able to do certain things.
Every physician, every orthopedic surgeon, every physical therapist, we all agree how much shoulder is normal, how much your ankle should be able to move.
The problem is that we don't give people benchmarks for what is normative or what you should be able to do.
And our lives sometimes don't ask us of that.
And so suddenly when we have pain or a problem, that range of motion is never part of the conversation about, hey, I see that your steering wheel doesn't go all the way to the left.
Let's just make sure that you can, you know, the pilots where they take off, you know, they check to make sure everything's working right.
make sure that you can, you know, the pilots where they take off, you know,
they check to make sure everything's working right.
So we could also define mobility as,
do you have your native range of motion
and can you control that native range of motion?
So are you a skilled person?
And what Juliet said is all of that is important,
but really what is it you wanna do in your world
and environment and how do you wanna express this body?
That's the most important thing. And I think that's where we got in the weeds.
You know, yeah, hip range of motion is important.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But if it prevents you from doing something
or you're having pain,
and that's also conjoined with the fact
that you don't have access to that range,
maybe that's the reason you should care.
Well, and like, let me just give you one example.
Like if you just asked anyone on the street,
like, do you care about your hip range of motion? They're to be like no why would i care about that um but but as an example we were
recently talking to a friend of ours who has a four month old baby and has both sets of parents
visiting and their his parents are like in their mid-60s so um you know not that much older than
us and they uh his mother is able to get up, get up and down off the ground and sit with the baby.
But his mother-in-law can't get down onto the ground or up off of the ground.
And so can't sit on the floor and play with the grandchild.
And that's one of those things that you don't think about until it's like a use it or lose it kind of thing.
But like that right there is hip range of motion. So you may not care athletically
about hip range of motion because you're not trying to run faster or lift more weights or,
you know, whatever an athlete might need to care about hip range of motion for. But, you know,
most people would say, man, do you, you know, do you want to be able to sit on the floor and play
with your grandchild when you have one? And they'd be like, yes, I do. Um, and so, you know, that's
one of the reasons why people should care about their hip range of motion. Right.
I feel that humans are not very good at casting their gaze that far into the future, though.
So true.
Especially, like, it's not until...
Yeah, if you're 25.
Yeah, if you're 20, like, you're just like, I'll deal with that when I can.
Or that's not going to happen to me.
Yes.
Especially with an elite athlete, like, forget about it, right?
especially with an elite athlete, like forget about it. Right. So the barrier to being able to, you know,
convince somebody that these things are important has to be,
it's like a high bar for you, right. To, to like communicate with people like,
Hey, you know, we can talk about longevity. How long do you want to live?
What is it that you want to be able to do when you're 80 and 90, et cetera.
But when you're 30, even in, in your forties and,
and you're essentially pain-free or
you don't have some kind of injury, that's a challenge. But it is true that whether it's
heart disease, diabetes, any kind of brain degeneration, similarly with our physical
bodies, these things are progressive. And if you're not working on this stuff far in advance of those aging years, you're going to have a problem.
But if you do undergo, you know, sort of shoulder the responsibility of doing these things that you guys talk about so much, you're taking out this insurance policy to be able to do all those things in your later years.
But it's just that humans are not good at like, you know, evaluating the cost benefit analysis
of these sorts of things. And our environment gives us a lot of cues or guides us into poor
decisions. I just, I think New York times had an article just recently about how some of our foods
hijack our brain chemistry, right? Our modern foods is umamis. We just think, oh, they're so
good. So here's a story. I was a young physio student watching the cardiac catheter lab
and I'm watching a really wealthy kid, a wealthy man in San Francisco and his whole family's
outside and he has three beautiful daughters, which I can start to like put myself in his shoes.
He has this amazing wife, killer law practice. He's rich in every definition of the term. He's
one life and he's in there having three stents put in his heart and he's rich in every definition of the term. He's one life and he's in there having
three stents put in his heart and he's overweight. And what I thought in that moment was, if this guy
has every resource and every reason to live, and it's still that hard to change and to make these
things to keep himself alive with his family, what recourse does an average person, mortal person without his resources have? And
really that was a kind of a shocker. And I think if I'd video the two women, you know, putting in
the catheter, like chain smoking, you know, like as a matter of fact, that may have showed him that
video, maybe that would have changed his behavior. But, you know, it's really difficult to sort of
untangle what seems like the biggest Gordian knot in your life. Where do I go?
Especially since sometimes we don't see the results right away.
Yeah. So when, when, when talking about mobility and movement, you know, how do you diagnose
somebody's mobility? Like everybody, you know, you guys have like this superpower. You could
like look at somebody just sitting or standing or walking and be like,
oh, I see 10 things wrong with like what's happening there.
Like most people don't have that ability
and don't think about that kind of stuff.
You know, the average person,
if they're pain-free is gonna say,
well, this is not, I can walk and I can get up
and sit down and all that kind of stuff.
So where does one begin to try to self-diagnose
and understand their own mobility capacity limitations and what they should be focused on working on?
Well, in this book, we literally identify five areas where we think that if people just kept an eye on it, like just kept an eye on it.
A vital sign.
Yeah, we call them vital signs.
You have these 10 things. Yeah. We have these 10 vital signs, but we specifically chose the word vital sign because
it started coming up more and more in the pandemic. Actually, everyone was like tracking
all these vital signs, like their SEO too. And, you know, obviously everybody knows that 120 over
80 is like, okay, blood pressure. And if you go over that, it's something you should keep an eye
on. And so that's why we, we thought, well, if, if regular people can keep an eye on a vital sign like blood pressure, then why can't there be some movement-specific or health-specific vital
signs?
And so obviously the human body is the most complicated thing in the known universe, but
we really tried to boil it down to a few areas of range of motion we thought people should
keep an eye on or that we consider to be vital signs.
And we do have these simple tests in the book that people can just do once and sort of say,
okay, this is where I'm at. This is something I need to keep an eye on. This is something I'm
doing great at. And then the things we suggest for people to work on them, we think we've suggested
things that they can literally do while they're watching Netflix at night or while they're still
sitting at their office. we've really tried to make
it so that you don't have to go to the one-hour mobility balance class and you
know journal in the morning in order to get it in order to get these things done
but you know I think they're just some simple tests I think if everybody had a
real baseline of what their range of motion was in their big movers their
hips their shoulders their ankles and and just literally kept an eye on it.
Turns out everyone has a universal language, running.
Everyone knows.
When I say run, everyone knows exactly what I mean, right?
This is why the running community is global.
If we use yoga as a movement language, everyone has probably done yoga a little bit.
Everyone knows what chaturanga and downward dog is.
So we have some touch tones of movement
that we can all agree on.
If I say push up, everyone knows what a push up is.
But what's nice about that is we now have this formal
language of diagnostic movement that everyone has heard of
or at least been exposed to.
And it's not the language of rehab.
I think rehab gets confusing.
There's so many ways to restore position
or help to activate or normalize.
And that is like, hey, I speak Esperanto,
but I speak classic Greek and this is my,
but this training language is pretty ubiquitous.
And one of the things that Juliet pointed out was
when we can make some of these diagnostics in that normative language of squatting up and down, standing on one leg, you know, suddenly, you know, can you get into this position and squeeze your butt?
Suddenly we have a universal language that reflects the movements that we do.
If I say lunge, usually everyone knows what a lunge looks like or if a pushup looks like or putting your arms over your head.
So that, I think, is a way where we can begin to cast a bigger net and have people come into understanding what it is maybe that they're limiting or what we're having struggle with.
And, you know, we set some booby traps in this book.
You know, it's pretty shocking.
We were hanging out with one of our super strong, badass athlete friends who struggled to get up off the ground. And then he was like,
whoa, my hips. And I was like, oh, your hips tight. Like I didn't know. And I think when we
kind of confront people with tests and that we think are very reasonable because we've gotten
to see the world a little bit and they're confronted with it, then they are knowing,
hey, maybe that's something I need to work on.
And I think, again, creating that vital sign line
helps people to make decisions
once they know they're above or below.
So early in the book, you have this test.
It's like, okay, let's see what's up.
Like cross your legs, you know,
lower yourself down into a cross-legged position. And now, you know, try to stand up
without using your hands or, you know,
kind of using the side of your legs to like, you know,
and so I'm like, I'll do it.
And I was able to do it, but like,
it was harder than I thought it would be.
My back kind of hurt. You're Rich Roll. I mean, you're like, come on, it was hard, harder than I thought it would be. My, my back kind of hurt.
You're Rich Roll.
I mean, you're like, come on, I'm me.
You're like a legend, Rich.
Well, my, like, here's the thing. And this is kind of like what I wanted to get into, which is just because if you're an elite athlete or super fit, like these are not necessarily predictors of whether you have great range of motion or mobility.
And in fact, it could be quite the opposite
because you're so specialized
at a certain subset of activities
that it makes you kind of brittle
in terms of being like a robust overall,
like mobile, functional, flexible athlete.
I mean, Kelly, I know you grew up in Europe and were exposed to all different kinds of sports and became this like
generalist. And that was sort of the root of like, you know, all of the work that, that you've done
since and appreciating like the importance of, of, you know, having like a robust battery of
different kinds of activities that you do as an athlete, but elite athletes are just good at one thing,
right? And so actually that makes them kind of fragile in the context of overall, like, you know,
kind of stability, mobility, et cetera. And how do you, in an elite population,
what are our minimums? And we can, we can, for the people who are nerding out on this deep,
you know, if I'm an elite sprinter,
so Stuart Millen of Altus Tracking. Sure, I know.
You know Stuart.
I've never met him, but like on Twitter,
I love like his feed and like all his-
Shout out to one of the greatest coaches I've ever met.
But Stuart and I got into this conversation
about how much dorsiflexion, ankle range of motion,
his elite sprinters needed, right?
Where he's coaching Andre Degrasse,
like pretty good sprinter.
And he's like, my sprinters only need zero. They need zero degrees. And I was like,
totally agree. That's how much they need to do their sport. But does he need more range of motion
in his hips and ankles to go downstairs? And he was like, Ooh, wait, what? And then I was like,
does he train? Do you go to the weight room? Do you need more than some ankle range of motion,
zero ankle range of motion to perform the training? So what we can start to say is, do you have enough range of motion?
And as a coach, I want to make sure you have enough range of motion so that you don't kind
of create alternative strategies to solving movement problems. And I think one of the
problems with being a human being is we're so robust for a long time until something changes
or we can't get away with a strategy that worked for us. You may even be the best in the world at
using this strategy, but that strategy doesn't actually hint at the possibility or total
possibility of your physiology. That if we improved your hip extension, your ability to get your knee
behind your butt effectively, we actually can make you more efficient, more effective, and potentially solve or prevent weird tweaks in
the system, like your low back pain or your knee pain. So on the one hand, with those athletes,
we want to give credence to, hey, your job is to do this sport. What are the minimums
so that we don't end up creating? And sometimes we have to use pain as a diagnostic.
Oh, you're starting to get achy?
Let's keep an eye on that.
But for the rest of us,
we have an opportunity
to create a little bit more robust platform
of generalism, right?
And one of our tests with all of our athletes
is we're like, oh, you think you're a good athlete?
Jump into a yoga class.
Let us know how you do there.
Can you stand on one foot and breathe?
Oh, you couldn't.
Oh, maybe your elite program isn't so elite. You can't even do downward dog and take a breath.
We've been like totally against sports specialization for kids. And we've been like
really trying hard not to have our own kids become specialists. They both play water polo.
And we sent them this winter in Tahoe to a Pilates class and they were destroyed for like four days. And these are
kids who, you know, are training all the time. So, you know, we're trying to, um, this isn't
really related to your question, but you know, we are always like, Hey, if you think your program
is so great, like go try someone else's program. If you love CrossFit, go do some other program
and see how you fare. Right. Especially if you're not an elite athlete, obviously elite athletes
need to get so specialized and they have to, I think, leave a lot of things behind, right? If you look at elite cyclists, it's like, well,
they have zero upper body strength on purpose. Um, but you know, for the rest of us, it's like,
Hey, we should all, you know, become generalists and at least try, try some of these other things,
including our own kids. It is crazy how, how untransferable some of that, like, you know, real specialized fitness can be.
Like if you're a Tour de France cyclist,
you're so like, yeah,
you have zero upper body strength or whatever,
like you're so adapted and efficient
at doing this one thing.
But the minute you take that person
and put them into some other kind of environment,
they're hapless, right?
And there isn't like a robustness to all of that.
And, you know, look, you have to do that
to be at the highest level of that sport.
And, you know, any athlete who's trying to be an elite
in their specific thing is gonna get really good
and efficient at that one thing,
but there's gonna be atrophies of other muscle groups
and all kinds of other, you know,
sort of downstream byproducts of that specialization
that create physical workarounds, right?
Like, so I just, as somebody who, you know,
I love the fact that you've worked with swimmers.
I come from a swimming background
and then did this triathlon thing and, you know,
got very efficient at that one thing,
but became like really not overall, like all that stable.
Like my, like, you know,
I used to be really flexible as a swimmer
and I had great balance and yoga and all that.
And like a lot of that,
like now when I try to do that,
I'm like, wow, like I'm like kind of messed up.
Like I have a lot of work to do
and now I've got this back pain
and everyone's telling me I got to get my glutes to fire.
And I was like, I don't even know what that means.
Like what does that mean?
I know, I know, you know.
You need to hire people to walk around. That's like one of those internet things that people say, you're like, get your glutes to fire and I was like, I don't even know what that means. What does that mean? I know, I know. You need to hire people to walk around.
That's like one of those internet things that people say, you're like, get your glutes to
fire.
In fairness, I have consulted with lots of bright people who've given me great advice
and, and, and, and, you know, there's, and, and it's been beneficial to me, but there
also is that paralysis too, where it's like you have conventional, uh, Western medicine
people telling me like you a conventional Western medicine people telling like you 100% need surgery
and then a whole battery of alternative modalities
and practitioners, all of which are really great people
who've given me a lot of tools,
but also it's sort of like, there's so much,
like I just don't quite know what to do.
I don't even know, that wasn't a question.
I just like gave you a ton at you
about a whole bunch of different stuff.
But anyway.
If we pull that apart, the first thing is,
I think we have confused people
about what is a health practice.
And so I think we can actually take exercise out of it.
If you have any 90 year olds
or a hundred year olds in your family,
and a lot of people listening do,
how fit and jacked are they?
They probably came of age in a generation
where they did not,
but they were doing something,
good genetics plus some behaviors,
good relationships.
They eat.
They moved a ton.
They moved a ton.
They were always moving.
I just saw a world record set in the 5K
by that 90-year-old woman.
Did you see that?
I did, yeah.
I was like, she can outrun me.
She's amazing.
So one of the things we can do
is help to pull that apart
because I think what we
said was as long as you could just crush it on the Peloton, you're good, right? And it was easy
to measure that cardiorespiratory fitness, cardiometabolic fitness and get a wattage,
but it doesn't speak to all the wonders and ranges. So if you look at something like Joseph
Pilates and what he was trying to solve, you can really see genius in his methodology and system. If you jump into any yoga class, there are positions that are
foundational to the function of the human. And that's why yoga will persist forever. Can you get
into this end range position where you don't have a lot of control? Can you breathe and stabilize
there? I mean, that is just a practice that you could do forever, layer onto anyone. And any of
my athletes ask me, I'm like, yeah, do yoga.
Whenever you wanna do it,
it's one of those all you can eat buffets.
One of the things that we see then is if we sold that,
in the season, we have this kind of competitive time,
sports specialization training, sports specific training.
And the only goal is to make you a better triathlete.
That's the season.
But we come out of the season
and we're into general physical preparedness where we can start to open up a little bit and say, hey, I see that
the session cost or the sport cost caused you to specialize or miss some ranges. And that's what
we're not typically doing with a lot of seasons, especially as we go year round and our kids,
you know, we, you said we used to play all these different sports. We used to allow the different exposure to these positions and shapes and different things
account for all of the possibility and variability.
And as that play has gotten diminished, as the, as the amount of exposure has come diminished,
we're realizing we're having to teach a lot of formal movement skills to kids and really
good athletes because they didn't have it as a child.
So in season, there's only one goal to win. of formal movement skills to kids and really good athletes because they didn't have it as a child.
So in season, there's only one goal to win. And we're going to burn everything we need to do on the bonfire of winning and keep you in the game and minimize. And the second the season's over,
we start to expand that a little bit. That makes sense.
And that's an easier way to wrap your head around it to say, it's okay that you became
hyper-specialized, but we didn't have the tools and didn't prepare you to say,
okay, now I'm out of season.
What's essential to make me robust again?
And I would say too that just in the broader community,
and I see this a lot with parents of kids I know
that are doing athletics,
is I can't tell you how many times a parent has asked me,
well, I really want to get my kid
into a mountain bike specific
strength and conditioning program or what secret strength and conditioning programs should my kid
who swims be doing? And, you know, our response to that is always like, well, they need to do
general physical preparedness. Like every kid probably could stand to practice balance and get
more agile and get a little bit stronger and, you stronger and work on their motor control and stability.
Coordination, I think every kid and adult
could stand to do all of those things.
But I do think this whole idea of,
well, if I'm a specialized athlete,
then all of everything I need to do is specialized.
It's like, it's become part of our psyche.
Yoga, kettlebell, hill sprints,
that's a pretty vicious combination.
I mean, you're gonna go a long way like that.
How many Tour de France cyclists do you have
like doing kettlebell workouts?
A lot of them.
During the season, though, not as much.
One of the things that I think is amazing,
and you know this, you've run into
and worked with so many mutants.
You know, Peter Sagan could be a world champion in multiple sports.
I think he's that talented.
He's brilliant at what he does.
Levi Lighthammer is a very good family friend for a long time.
He grew up ski racing.
He's a really good athlete.
And sometimes I think it's easy to pull the athleticism out.
If you look at the best athletes in the world,
they were always good athletes and athletics.
They didn't necessarily just, you know,
I do this one little thing.
So, you know, what we're finding though,
is if you wanna win, you have to be durable.
And suddenly durability comes in the form
of some really simple strength training.
How much strength training in season?
Enough not to ruin your surfing. Enough not to ruin your surfing,
enough not to ruin your sport, enough that you,
one of the things we're always asked to do is we come in
and can you help us untangle this?
We wanna win, make it through the season longer.
And we have to look at all of the pieces.
Tell me about your sleep.
Oh, my sleep is wretched.
Okay, it's really hard for us to understand what's going on.
One time we're working with a CrossFit Games champion
who was having this really weird knee pain.
And my friends are brilliant coaches and I'm not bad.
And we're talking about all things.
Ultimately, she was traveling alone without her partner
and she slept with the TV on at night
because it made her feel safe in
the room. But that TV on all night long kind of messed up her sleep a little bit, right? She
didn't actually recover. And that was what made her brain start to perceive her knee as a problem.
So it's important that we're looking at all of the features that kind of go into making a robust
person. And sometimes it is fueling, believe it or not. And sometimes it is,
you don't have any range of motion here.
And some of it is,
you're not even strong in this position.
So that's why I think these single approaches
don't necessarily work.
We always have to take a systems approach.
Yeah.
And in the book, you have these 10 vital signs,
you go through them chapter by chapter
that begins with sort of getting up.
How do you get up off the ground?
I mean, it's like basic stuff, right?
But then it's like hip extension, like you're talking about.
But to you, you nailed it.
Right, like I, go ahead.
No, just that, but if I grab someone off the street
and say, I got 20 bucks if you can do this,
you'd be shocked at how we have set,
the bar has gone away from us and has gone very low.
Right, and in addressing that,
like back to the whole, like we've become unwilded
and we need to rewild ourselves.
This conversation often is rather binary.
And I'm thinking about my friend, Tony Riddle.
I don't know if you know who Tony is.
Do you know who Tony is? Like the natural, he's this guy in the UK and he was, he was a, you know,
he was a strength coach and had a gym and, you know, had this lifestyle and, and had a sort of
an existential crisis. And, and now he's kind of like this rewilding expert who has, um, broken
some amazing records
in barefoot running.
Like he runs barefoot all over the UK
and holds these retreats and has kids,
but he's taken all the furniture out of his house
and there's no chairs.
And like, it's all like, you know, Japanese in the,
you know, you're crouching and you're squatting
and you're, it's all, you know,
this kind of movement and breath work.
And a lot of the things that you talk about,
but I guess the point I'm trying to make
is that it's rather extreme.
Like you need the extremes as an example,
like here's a guy who's really doing it, you know,
but for most people,
the moms in your neighborhood or whatever,
they're not gonna like get rid of the chairs
in their house, right?
So it's like, I see you guys like in the middle
as a translator of what works and, you know, the principles behind kind of what Tony's doing, but translating it in a way that is accessible for like the person who lives in the world.
I mean, you're exactly right.
Like nobody in our neighborhood is going to get rid of their living room couch and, you know, furniture in order to have a fully floor.
The mid-century modern couch, no way.
Yeah, there's like no way anybody's doing that.
I agree with you.
But yeah, I mean, I think you're exactly right.
I mean, I think that's what we're trying to really come at this from like the most reasonable
place we can, which are, you know, what are the things that you can do that can also exist
within your normal environment?
You know, like we have a couch and chairs in our living room, but we happen to have
some mats in our living room that you can sit on so we can sit on the floor and be comfortable
as well.
And so we're just trying to really strike that balance all the time by saying, hey, it is important to take care of your body.
We believe in rewilding the body like we're total fans of anything related to rewilding.
But it's also got to fit within the context of people's lives.
I mean, I think, you know, the third rail in this book, of course, is food because everybody, you know, the food
thing is so charged and such a part of people's identity. You know, but one of the things that
people I know don't want to do is they're like, well, I'm not going to follow anything that is
not going to allow me to go out to dinner with my friends every so often on the weekends.
You know, if I have to follow a diet that means I can't enjoy a community meal with my friends,
like I'm out, right? And, you know, so many of the diets and
suggestions people have mean they can't eat dinner with their kids or they can't go out to dinner on
the weekends with their friends. And, you know, for most people that trade-off and loss of community
and connection just isn't worth it from a health standpoint. And so, you know, we really tried to
think about like, what can people actually do within the context of like being a regular person
who wants to like be a normal part of society
and not totally on the fringes.
Juliet has done, she is into nutrition,
has done some nutrition coaching
and like some studying nutrition
through Precision Nutrition.
I hate that stuff.
It just doesn't speak to me.
And I see all the third rail opportunities,
like, you know, the cuts on the internet
I'm gonna get if I say something.
Careful. Get ready, get if I say something. Careful.
Get ready, get ready Kels.
But I had to back into it
because we had to talk about the health of your tissues
and we had to talk about your healing properties
and I deal with people who are injured.
You know, oftentimes there's two cohorts of people
who come and see us professionally at the high level.
I used to win, I'm not winning anymore.
Why am I winning? Help me. I used to win. I'm not winning anymore. Why am I winning?
Help me. I got injured winning and I don't want to be injured because it's keeping from winning.
And it turns out micronutrients are hugely important to your healing and your body. And what I mean micronutrients, I'm talking about vitamins and minerals. And what is the revolution
in performance nutrition? Food. That's what we're now back in. Alan Lim, Stacey Sims, you know, hey, are you
eating fruits and vegetables? Yes or no? One or zero? Because that, you know, no shade on a 900
calorie cup of coffee, but there's no micronutrients in that fat MCT bomb that you're having. It's not
actually, I mean, it's a fuel, but it's not a vitamin source. There's no nourishment. There's
no nourishment. So if I'm going to try to get you to use all this collagen you're taking, you better have some vitamin C on board. Well,
where does vitamin C come from? Am I just taking more pills and eating this ground bison? Is that
my recipe for the future? And so what we've tried to do here around the nutrition piece,
because we had to in our work to be able to talk about keeping muscle mass on or leaning out or body composition
or just having what you need on board.
And it turns out people don't eat enough fruits
and vegetables, period, anywhere.
And especially kids, shocker, right?
And so we could start there.
And what we try to do is cast this net and saying,
you're vegetarian, cool, I respect that.
But let's make sure you're getting some protein
and you're actually getting fruits and vegetables as vegetarian, you're vegan, Cool, I respect that. But let's make sure you're getting some protein and you're actually getting fruits and vegetables
as a vegetarian.
You're vegan?
Cool, we respect that.
You're a carnivore?
Cool, you can eat these berries with your raw liver,
whatever that is that you need to do to be you
and identify.
But there are these certain metrics and baselines.
And principles.
Principles that underpin that,
that give you a lot of freedom.
And we do think that people are smart enough
to make the decisions,
but then you can start to say,
wow, I thought I was eating a great way,
but we just saw that study that came out
that most kids aren't eating any fruits.
You know, most kids are 56% of the kids
aren't eating any vegetables.
Like that may be a long-term problem for us as a society.
I think it's pretty certain to be a long-term problem. It already is
a long-term problem. That's right. That is. We're reaping it right now when you look at
the incidence of obesity and type 2 diabetes and prediabetes. And metabolic health is kind of a
core piece in your nutrition chapter, like having metabolic flexibility and all of that, like that's a newer conversation
where there's a lot of emergent science coming out.
So I'm super interested in looking at that.
And perhaps that's a way into talking a little bit
about the wearable technology.
Like you've got a, I assume those are,
those are aura rings that you got on.
I got the whoop on.
And that's another piece when it comes to the suburban moms
or like the average person,
we're now in a situation where we have all these data points
like we can look at like, oh, my sleep stages and my HRV
and my resting heart rate and my metabolic rate
and my skin temperature.
But it's like, what do I do with it?
How do I interpret this?
What's important about this?
Do I have a second glass of wine or not based on that?
And with the kind of continuous glucose monitors also
like monitoring glucose intake and how to make sense of that.
I think there's a lot of risk of people
leaping to conclusions with these data points
and then making poorly informed decisions about nutrition, et cetera, because they don't understand the complexity and the nuance of what all these data points are trying to tell them.
Setting aside also just the accuracy of all of these things, which I think you can't rely on too much.
No, I mean, I'm often wearing more than
one tracking. So, you know, between the two of us, I mean, Kelly does really enjoy this aura ring,
but he hates, um, wearables and tracking as a general rule. He just, he's not into it. And I,
on the other hand, I'm a total nerd and I love like tracking everything and seeing everything.
But I think, um, over my own life of having every single possible wearable and tracking every possible piece of data, for me, when push comes to shove, the only one that really matters and is really actionable for me is my step count, which I literally could get from like a $5 pedometer that was made in the 60s.
You already have one on your phone.
And I already have that on my phone.
And you're exactly right.
that on my phone. You know, and, you know, you're exactly right. I mean, you know, I could be wearing a garment and an aura ring and do a workout and it would track completely different calories and,
you know, different metrics and I would get different sleep scores and my heart rate
variability would show up as, you know, different on each one. So, you know, I sort of enjoy seeing
at a high level, you know, how my sleep looks on my aura ring that's really what i use that for we recognize people are unique and your tolerances and your history and all the things going on
so you get to we run at this always is here's what most people are going to experience drinking
alcohol before you go to bed typically will impact your sleep so that doesn't mean we don't drink
alcohol that just means we make it now an
informed decision about alcohol related to sleep that, Hey, I'm with friends. There's an amazing
bottle of wine out. I haven't had a margarita in a long time. It's hot. I'm gonna have a margarita,
but I know the trade-off is here. And I think that helps us to make informed decisions about
some of these behaviors. Let me tell a story about our friend
who works with Whoop, Kate Courtney. I don't know if you've met Kate. Yeah, yeah. I haven't met her,
but I know she is. We have the same managers. Oh, okay. So Kate Courtney is one of the greatest
American mountain bikers, cyclists ever. She's a world champion. She's a superstar and one of the
most complete athletes I've ever met. Just really pays attention and is thoughtful about details.
She's racing for the world championship title,
her first world championship, and she wakes up
and her whoop says, poor recovery.
And she's like, nope, it's wrong.
She has like a 12, it's red.
And she's like, no way, I feel great, I'm gonna win today.
And so she just ignores it.
And she goes off and wins, and then calls up whoop and was
like, Hey, your algorithm's off. And they're like, we're whoop. We're not off. And, and then they
were like, you're right. We were off. And she got this weird data telling her to ignore how she felt.
Right. And again, instead of taking that piece of information and saying, huh, how does this,
you know, integrate into my behavior and my understanding of how I feel myself and trusting that because she's done that and she's so capable of it, she could have said, oh, my device is
telling me not to race today. But here we have such an incredible athlete who's done an amazing
job of understanding herself, controlling what she can control, setting the parameters to win
that she was like, oh, that data doesn't make sense with the whole. And I think that's amazing. And simultaneously, we have people who come in with chronic pain and
persistent pain. And the first thing I ask them is how much you're walking and tell me about your
sleep. Those are the first two questions about anything that's going on. And, you know, one of
the things they're like, I said, great. I'm like, great. Prove it. You know, it's what gets measured,
gets managed, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, I think, you know, what I take from what you just shared and what
I agree with is that these are tools and they are powerful tools if you have the right relationship
with them. Like you have to look at trends over time and not get too caught up in individual
data points because, you know, like maybe the thing flips up or like,
you know, you don't know how the, so it's like, and look, I love my whoop. I leave it on and
they're a great sponsor of the show and all of that. And I get a lot of value in it. And I think
on the sleep piece, one thing I've learned, and it was interesting, you talked about this in the
book, like you realize that if you, if you're trying to get eight hours of sleep, like you
better be in bed for like nine hours.
I mean, I was gonna-
Because you're not actually asleep
the whole time that you think you're asleep.
No, I was actually gonna say that when Kelly was talking.
I mean, that's the other key learning that this,
you know, one of these tools have given us
is that we really had no idea
until we started tracking that,
that, you know, the average person
is losing a whole hour of sleep.
I think Matt Walker talks about that in his book as well. But but you know, between Matt Walker's book and actually seeing it in real
life, realizing that, oh, okay, going to bed at 10 and waking up at six is not eight hours of sleep,
that's seven hours of sleep. That was a big revelation for us. And these tools are what
helped us get that. So I'm with you. I mean, I think there's, there are tools. And I think if
you, you know, you don't, as long as they're not dictating how you feel, which I think actually can happen, but as long as they're not dictating how you feel and you have a good relationship with them, then they're great.
And they also have to fit in.
Early on, I became sort of mini-obsessed with HRV when it was just new.
That shit's complicated.
It is.
And there was an HRV device that came out.
Can I tell the story? Oh, please. Yeah. Okay,. And there was an HRV device that came out. Can I tell the story?
Oh, please.
Yeah.
Okay.
So we get like an early, early HRV thing.
This is probably 2012.
Like you probably got one of these.
I don't even know what company it was, but in order to track his HRV, he had to get up
and be up for 15 minutes, but then he had to go back and lay down and put all these
nodes all over his body and then lay there for 20 minutes.
This sounds like a Tim Ferriss thing.
And meanwhile, at this point, our kids are like, you know, seven and four and they're awake and like, we're trying to get them ready for school and make breakfast and make lunches.
And I was training for the Molokai.
So I was like, I am an elite middle-aged dad who's going to slay this.
I need this information.
And I finally, after like four days, I was like,
dude, like this whole thing we're doing in the morning,
like you need to be present helping with this kid thing.
We had funny, and I'd be like, you just ruined it.
Now I have to lay here longer.
So we got in this whole battle about,
cause you know, he had to go.
And so obviously that wasn't sustainable.
And you know, the technology has gotten so much better since then, but that was where we started.
But what is important to understand about heart rate variability? Like I just, all I, I know is
that, okay, when it's low, like that's not good and you should chill out. And when it's high,
like, okay, that's, you have a green light to like push it. Well, I think that's a really great use of it.
You know, I suspect you are a very durable person
and that I could throw a lot of stress at you
and you can swallow that down
and kind of normalize the next day.
That would be my guess based on your past.
You might be surprised.
You could suffer through, you know,
we're not experts in heart rate variability.
It's another piece of the equation.
We're trying to understand inputs and outputs.
And where can we help people understand why they may not be recovering or feeling as good,
even though they feel like they're doing the thing.
So, you know, one of the things that statement that we have is we're like, the bigger the
engine, the of the things that, uh, statement that we have is we're like the bigger, the engine, the bigger, the brakes, you need a really, if you're an executive person, you're, you know,
working hard, you're an athlete, you're a working single mother. You need to have a set of tools to
be able to hit the brakes at the end of the night. I think it's like the moto people are like,
you're either wide open on the gas or you're on the brakes and the back wheel is locked up as
you're sliding. And I think we're really good at opening the gas now you're on the brakes and the back wheel is locked up as you're sliding.
And I think we're really good at opening the gas now.
And if you look at so much of what happened the last 10 years before, we've kind of gotten into sauna and cold and down regulation.
It was all about how do we wake up and go.
And then you get to the end of the day and you don't know how to calm down.
This came to view a few years ago.
We had a friend who got a blood panel and it freaked her out because she said she was pre-diabetic and some of her liver markers
were off. And so the first thing we said was, well, tell us about your day. Are you under stress? I
mean, like, we need to know a little bit about you, not just show me how many macros you counted.
And she said, well, you know, I'm under a lot of stress. And we're like, how do you cope with that
stress? And she said, well, I usually drink some wine of stress. And we're like, how do you cope with that stress? And she said, well, I usually drink some wine before bed.
Okay, great.
So tell us about that.
We're curious.
And she's like, well, sometimes it's two bottles of wine.
And that, if I just walked in and was like,
well, you're crazy.
No wonder you can't drink two bottles of wine.
If I take her only strategy of self-coping
and not understand that's the tool she was given,
and that's what she discovered on her
own. Then shame on me. I'm a really terrible performance coach. And I think that's where
we started to really understand this notion of trying to look at stress and how people are
coping with their stress so they can hit the brakes in their own home at that hyper-local.
You don't have to go somewhere. You don't have to hire an expert. You should be able to self-soothe
in the evening.
And the heart rate variability
is just one of those pieces, I think.
Yeah, yeah.
I think also one of the things
Kelly and I have really tried to pay attention to,
and I think it took turning 40 for us
to have the maturity to do this,
because we both do like to bleed through our eyes
and suffer in training.
But that is, the question we ask ourselves a lot is,
do we have a desire to train? And then we actually try to listen to that. And we try to not be,
you know, not let our device override that. Like, you know, it's really powerful if you're someone
who uses and moves your body to actually sort of listen to that inner, do I have a desire to train?
And then, and then, you know, and then actually follow through with that. And, you know, if we
wake up and don't have a desire to train, then that's a day where we just walk. And, you know, and then actually follow through with that. And, you know, if we wake up and don't have a desire to train, then that's a day where we just walk.
Yeah.
And, you know, it's for us, that's an evolution because we, in the old days, it was like we would.
That's not, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it didn't matter.
It was like six days a week, no matter what, maybe you take one day off.
And so, you know, we have, we really have tried to learn how to listen a little better to our own bodies.
And you're talking about, what's interesting is that that's an individual.
As soon as you're on a team, you're on a triathlon team, you're on a soccer team, you're going to have to perform.
And this is what time practice is for everybody.
So you don't have the luxury of really dialing up and dialing down.
And so it becomes even more incumbent on us to ask, how can we control what we can control?
on us to ask, how can we control what we can control?
You know, when we work,
we're working with a division one water polo team at a local university.
That's really good.
Cal, shout out.
They are-
Go Bears.
Go Bears.
They are an incredible-
Sorry.
Please.
I know, I know.
It had to come up at some point.
They are an incredible coaches, a world-class.
The women are amazing.
Like I really am inspired. I just
volunteer and just get to be around. And I, one of the things I tell those women is they're not
outworking the competition. That model has sailed where you just like, I'll sneak in some extra
volume. I'll do a little bit extra. Everyone is doing that. So what's the limiter now? The limiter
for what we believe is how well you can adapt to the stress.
Whoever can adapt the best can handle higher volume and still show up and be fresher. And we've been saying that forever, right?
Whoever does the most volume is the freshest winds.
I think that's like Alan Lamb or Pavel or someone.
And so then we can say, well, if that's a generality,
can we apply that to humans, right?
How can I show up for my family on the
weekends without being torched or in the evening, you know, and not, not black out on the couch
because I'm so exhausted. How can I adapt to the stresses in my life, whether they're good or bad
and manage that in a way that leaves me or intact or leaves me to have more stress.
And one of the things that we believe is believe it or not, people think they're working really
hard. They're not. And they could actually work harder. And one of the things that we believe is, believe it or not, people think they're working really hard. They're not.
And they could actually work harder.
So some of this isn't just playing defense.
Don't do this because you'll make it injured.
We just think, actually, you're only working at like 50%.
You know what I mean?
You can actually go harder.
I think it's a very interesting time because this conversation around recovery,
holding back, like trying to calibrate your output so that you're properly bouncing back and can be fresh for the next day is, even if you guys have been talking about it for a long time,
is pretty new. Like,
you know, I'm older than you guys and I'm a product of that era where it's just like,
you just go as hard and as long and as much as you can until you just absolutely break yourself.
Like, you know, swimming in the eighties, it was like volume. I mean, we were doing 20,000
meters a day every day. And you're going into, you're just, there was no like, okay, today you're gonna ease off.
No, you just go in and you go as hard as you can
for as long as you can.
And I walked around like a zombie
for like a decade and a half.
And then you roll the dice on a two week taper
and see how it goes.
And there was no like-
That's bananas.
What you just said, by the way, is so bananas.
Oh, I mean, this was the whole sport, you know,
and I'm sure there were other sports
that kind of approached this similarly.
It was like, how much volume can we actually do?
Just to add to that really quickly,
I was a rower at Cal.
It's similar.
And I mean, it was 30 hours a week plus of training,
but you know, we would train for three hours in the morning
and then like another four hours in the afternoon.
And even though the rowing season is spring we would start doing that on like
august 1st i mean it was just like yeah non it was just like how was your fueling ourselves how
was your nutrition all i ate was red vines and just and bagels it was calories calorie it didn't
matter what and um like the idea like oh you need to be fresh for the workout.
What are you talking about?
No one ever talked about that.
That was like not part of the conversation.
Not for nothing, like five hours of swimming a day
for a race that literally is like 47 seconds long.
And you were really good.
Yeah, good.
But like now I look at the times now
and I can't even relate to the sport.
Like the progress is extraordinary
and that is due in no small part, I'm sure,
to the kind of work that you guys do
and understanding how the body works
and the importance, the primacy of recovery.
Like allowing your body to repair itself
in between training sessions, like what is that about?
Like literally just being a zombie for as long as possible
and being in a chronic state of overtraining,
which really is an injury.
Like that is an injured.
It's a stress and it's a stressor on the body.
It's a stressor on the body.
If you can't do your job or occupy a role in the team,
we call that an injury.
Right, clear mechanism of injury.
There's a bone sticking out of your arm, right?
There's a fever, something going on.
Does being a zombie count?
Zombie, I think we're gonna add that in.
That's a really important piece.
I can't show up and perform the way I should perform.
And it's tricky.
It's tricky working with young people.
We have two teenagers and we are,
turns out the strictest parents in the whole,
we're like, you will have to sleep.
You'll have to eat these fruits and vegetables.
I heard you tell a story, like what is, what's required in order for somebody
to date your daughter these days?
Have you updated that?
Like, well, it's, it's actually worked.
So we, um, it's worked to prevent her from dating.
Yeah, basically.
I mean, um, you know, just the, the myriad ways our kids are going to need to be in therapy
in their twenties is it's starting, it's starting to add up, I think.
But, you know, Kelly used to make his own, like, strongman stones.
Yeah, he doesn't.
You know, and I would come into the backyard on, like, a Sunday afternoon, and there he is stirring the concrete and pouring it into these molds.
And I was like, you are such a weirdo.
Like, I'm even into this stuff, but that's weird.
Yeah.
And so we've had two or three of these.
You know, what do they weigh?
A hundred, 150 pounds.
Some are a little heavier.
I thought you said 200 pounds.
I think it might be 200 pounds.
And so we have, we have these stones in our yard.
And Kelly's rule has always been, well, when Georgia starts dating someone, like if, you know, if he, if he or she wants to date our daughter, they need to be able to lift up this stone.
And I said, and my point of view was like,
no, no, no, you don't want the kid.
You know, you don't want like the oversized 17-year-old kid
with like all the testosterone dating your daughter.
I was like, that's actually the exact opposite kid you want.
The one kid who can lift that is actually not the kid you want.
Yeah, you don't want that kid dating your daughter.
But nevertheless, our daughter does have this lovely boyfriend named Yannick.
And fortunately, the kid loves to train.
And he can actually pick up the stone.
He heard the story finally.
He heard the story.
And rolled it out of the yard.
Yeah.
And then one day, he sent me a picture with the stone on his shoulder.
That's pretty funny.
Yeah, so Kelly was so proud.
You know, I think what's interesting about that is I actually stole that idea from, I think it was Dan John, who said, you know, he had this test of like overhead squatting your body weight 10 times.
And as a test, and as you get heavier and heavier, that becomes quite a thing.
But just overhead squatting a barbell is quite a thing.
But no one does that without practicing.
No one does that without practicing. No one does that without training. And so my intention with this is no kid just comes in and picks up the stone without having some things
built in. Like this kid trains, this kid loves to play, this kid is interested in, you know,
theoretically it was a screening device and maybe it was a little blunt, but you know.
The idea is that-
We also had that diet that we did in like 1999, right?
Yeah, that's right. The vertical diet. Only protein shakes.
No, it wasn't vertical diet.
It was something else.
Velocity diet.
We briefly followed Dan John's diet.
Because we like to tinker.
Tinkers.
This was probably like 2003.
We made it 36 hours.
And the diet is you just eat protein powder for 30 days.
Oh, God.
I don't think it was 30 days.
Was it 30 days?
It was supposed to be 30 days.
Lord help us all.
But keep in mind that this was in the dawn of protein powder where you could
only get it in these, you could only get it at GNC and it was in these giant houses.
Yeah, Weight Gainer 900.
It was like Weight Gainer 900.
And I actually was practicing law at this point.
So I'm trying to do this for the, and I think we made it 48 hours.
How, that is so messed up.
I would like it if you didn't tell that story anymore.
That is so, it shows us that like-
It makes it okay because it was 2003.
Body composition is the reason
I think most people come to nutrition.
You know, if you're an athlete,
maybe you come to nutrition
because you're like,
it is a secret weapon to fuel and do these things.
But for most people,
they initiate a conversation
because it's about body composition
or my cholesterol is so high,
I gotta stop eating this bacon. Either a health crisis or I mean, weight loss. When you say body composition, for most people it's about body composition or my cholesterol is so high, I gotta stop eating this. Yeah, either a health crisis or I mean, weight loss.
When you say body composition,
for most people it's weight loss.
Let's say weight loss, that's right.
And imagine if I'm just like,
hey, why don't you just eat some food?
Protein powder for 30 days?
No, that's, that metal taste in your mouth,
it doesn't go away.
Food?
Yeah, food.
You know, I think that's really, as we're trying to untangle this, you know, we keep flip-flopping back and forth between here, if you want to win a world championship, this is what we recommend.
And we are going to help you find your blind spots so you can be more durable.
And simultaneously, because that's our view through this.
This is what we talk about with all of the seals and Delta Force and all of these things.
And simultaneously, we know what's good for the goose is good for the gander.
So how do we scale that through?
That comes from even ideas where I got to work with really good coaches.
Mike Bergner is a good example who was coaching high school kids in the morning.
And then he'd go home in his evening and be coaching Olympians in Olympic lifting. And being there on either side of his day, I could see the through
thinking in his methodology. What was essential? Why is he teaching this first skill? And how's
that skill progressed to go to the Olympics? And we should be able to do those things with
these principles that, you know, this is the foundation and then you can get
really sharp and pointy as, as you need to, to, to go as far as you want, because really, you know,
we always talk about potential and, you know, sometimes I think it's easy to get doom and gloom,
but really you can feel better and do more in your life if you take care of the care and feeding of
this, this husk. Yeah. I mean, the way that I see kind of the value
of your work in the context of,
at least with respect to elite athletes,
is with respect to the best of the best,
what's good for the goose isn't always good for the gander
because they're doing something so specific
and they're training really hard
and they're training only specific muscle,
all that kind of stuff ultimately is potentially at odds
with longevity, long-term health, like all these other,
it's like if you're chasing a performance goal,
that goal is not necessarily in alignment
with long-term health goals.
Or even relationships, right?
Yeah, or everything else in your life, right?
And you kind of come in and say,
well, we have all these other things that will help you long-term be the best elite athlete,
but also are in service of your life as a civilian down the line. Um, which I think is going to
happen. Yeah. Which yeah. Ultimately, despite you thinking you're going to be like in that elite
state for the rest of your life, you will not. I was at, so I swam at Stanford in the late 80s
and my coach, Skip Kenny, recently passed away.
And there was a memorial service for him up in Fresno
where he moved, it was his hometown.
He moved there after he retired.
And so a ton of alumni, people that I swam with
over the years showed up for this event and I was standing at the reception
and just off to the side was Anthony Moss,
who in my era was the number two,
200 butterflyer in the world, Pablo Morales,
winningest NCAA swimmer in history at the time,
never lost a race at NCAA championships.
And Sean Murphy, who was a Canadian backstroker,
went to the Olympics, incredible finalist at the Olympics.
And all three of them,
this was the era in which the underwater dolphin kick
was being pioneered for the first time.
And all three of these guys,
like their knees bow back, were bowing bowing backwards and they were standing like,
you know, like they're all standing like this.
Like my knees hyper extend a little bit,
but like Anthony's literally looked like a bow
back that way, like that, right?
And I'm noticing this and I knew this about them
and it's what made them,
those three guys were the best underwater dolphin kickers
in the world at the time.
Like they could go underwater faster than anybody.
And I went up to Anthony
because he had the most extreme, like, you know, bow.
And I'm like, how's your back?
And he's like, it's terrible.
I've got bulged discs.
I've had two, you know, I can't remember.
I don't think he's had surgery,
but he's had chronic problems. He can't do flip turns in the pool anymore. And I was like, yeah, you know, I can't remember. I don't think he's had surgery, but he's had chronic problems.
He can't do flip turns in the pool anymore.
And I was like, yeah, me too, man.
Like, what do you think that's about?
And so I'm interested.
So the reason I bring that up is,
it is that contrast between like,
that quality made them extraordinary at that one thing.
But here we are, we're in our fifties
and there's chronic pain problems as a result of,
that's just the way he stands.
It's probably the way he's always stood.
It made him great at that one thing
and now is causing him pain.
So that dissonance between what makes you great
and elite at one thing
and how you wanna feel later in life
and be stable, bulletproof, mobile, functional,
and the rest.
We were hanging out with Sean Payton,
who is now coach at Denver.
And we were working with the Saints
and he had just gone to a Hall of Fame gala
and all of the coaches that he worshiped
as his mentors had to be helped on stage
with like multiple people
helping them they were so crippled and he just said to himself okay that that can't be me you
want to jump in well yeah we we actually just were uh talking to our old friend mark bell
who what is a world champion power lifter i don't know if you've heard of mark yeah yeah
but he's a smelly bell guy mark smellyelly Bell. But when he won his world championship, he was 330 pounds and sort of by all conventional metrics,
like super unhealthy. Like he couldn't tie a shoe and he felt terrible. And, you know,
he probably, his blood panel was probably horrible at that time. And he was taking massive amounts of
performance enhancing drugs. And, you know, it just like he was basically not doing well from a health standpoint but that
body allowed him to win a world championship um and then a few years later he got injured doing
a lift and kind of had this light bulb moment and realized that that that wasn't how he wanted to
live his whole life and he's actually spent the last 10 years basically trying to like totally
overhaul his body rewild his body. And his transformation is exceptional.
And he's going to run the Boston marathon. Um, but he started literally by just walking three
times a day for 10 minutes. You know, he really started small and, and realized he had to take
these real baby steps to sort of, you know, figure out how to get back to health and transform his
body and lose all that weight and gain back some of his mobility. But I mean, you know, it's been a slow process.
It's taken him 10 years of baby steps and just adding in, you know, adding in different practices
as his body got, you know, better and more mobile and healthier. And now 10 years later, he's running
a marathon next month. And let me apologize to all the athletes in the eighties who went before
in the nineties, we broke a lot of people, the model you were right. As long as the clock was
faster and you did it and solved it, there were a lot of eggs that were broken that didn't need
to be broken. And if you could survive because you had the will and the coach and the support,
you maybe came out of that and thrived or survived and did well enough.
One of the things that we like to say is you should come out of this thing unharmed,
even if you're elite, crashes are going to happen. Of course, there's going to be, you know,
you may have some laxity in your shoulders. There's some things like that that are related,
but it isn't necessarily a given that because they were able to have a greater range of motion and
hyperextend their knees a little bit, it's called genu recorvodum. That doesn't always translate to
low back dysfunction. But what we see is this special skill that gave them this incredible
kick and big range doesn't necessarily, we didn't know how to control it or support it or take some of the load out of the
low back. And what we did was we just said, well, as long, we worship the clock instead of saying,
is there, is there, are there inputs in there? Think about the nutrition, you know, I mean,
just power bar was just on the scene. I remember hearing like, I think it's Dave Scott talking
about like running with bags of figs and bananas. Bananas and dates. Oh my gosh.
And so if that's how far we've come,
we know what we know because we broke a lot of people.
And I wanna say that absolutely you're right,
that sometimes there is a cost at being an elite.
There is a cost, but not necessarily it's one-to-one
that that had to be the outcome.
It was the only outcome we knew how to deliver at that time.
But if you look at, you know,
what Stanford has done to support its athletes,
because we work there,
they're really sophisticated about nutrition
and, you know, and supporting.
And it looks like a very, I mean, you know,
cause you go back, but it's, you're like, where am I?
Is this is Mars?
Yeah, it's a completely different place
from when I was there in a good way.
Well, maybe we can say you can do this
and you don't necessarily have to have spinal surgery.
Right, right, right.
So in thinking about like these vital signs
and the kind of principles around mobility
and stability, et cetera.
I wanna talk a little bit about like some of the,
you know, core things that the listener
or somebody who's watching this
should be thinking about incorporating
into their daily routine.
Like, I don't wanna complicate people's morning routines,
of course, God forbid, but like, you know,
what are some of the key things that you think, you know, move the, you know, move the needle the most that people are not thinking
about, not practicing about, not, you know. How about let's, let's start with just some,
getting some input, beginning a conversation with your body about pain or about making yourself feel
better. We think that in our clinical experiences
that if we had people do a little bit of myofascial work,
rolling, soft tissue, self-massage,
whatever language you're comfortable with,
in the evening before they went to bed,
that was a great entree into understanding your body,
feeling your blind spots,
getting non-threatening input into the system.
So if you, in the evening, could sit down next to a ball,
a tennis ball, a softball, roller, and ask yourself from the day,
what's sore?
What hurts?
What's achy?
And I'm going to commit 10 minutes.
The first part of this show I'm watching, I'm just going to roll around on whatever,
ails me.
That's a really important conversation you could begin to have.
And I'm talking about 10 minutes.
Like, that's super reasonable.
And the reason we started shifting that to the day,
from the day and the gym to the evening,
was that we saw that people didn't actually do it or want to do it as a team.
But in the evening, they had time and agency,
and nothing was happening at the end of the day.
Like, you're on Facebook, you're surfing Instagram.
So there was this great moment
where you could do some self-care.
And 10 minutes a night usually turns into 12 to 14 minutes
because you discover something.
You can sit on your coffee table,
put that ball right in your hamstrings, just roll around.
Then the next sort of level there is we could say,
hey, can you take a full breath in that position?
So if you're working on something
or you've got some aspect of your body that hurts and you push on it
And that takes your breath away or you catch your breath
Then we found an area of interest and it doesn't mean we need to shy away from that
It's okay that that's uncomfortable to compression
So when the first things we can do is say am I doing hurt harm to myself?
No, not at all
You can if you can take a full breath in and out you're signaling to your is safe. Nerves are king of the breath. The breath is king of the
brain. That's Iyengar 101. And why breathing is such an important part of yoga is teaching your
body to accept and be able to control those positions by breathing there. Your brain says,
it's not a threat. So if you find a painful spot or a sore spot or an uncomfortable spot,
you found a spot and all you need to do is take a four second inhale there, contract into the ball roller
and hold that for four seconds.
We call that an isometric in the parlance, right?
You're just building a tension or a movement without motion in the limb.
And then exhale a long time for eight seconds, long exhale.
And what you'll find is if you just repeat that cycle a few times, whatever hurts in that area
that you're working sometimes starts to hurt less.
You're desensitizing, you're changing your,
some threat, resetting some threat signals.
And if you started doing that on your back,
your hips, your calves, your feet,
what you realize is, wow, I can make myself feel better.
And because you did it before you bed,
it's like getting a massage.
You tend to sleep a little bit.
You're down-regulating.
Yeah. And we snuck in breath practice.
And you had to get up and down off the ground in order to do that work.
You ruined it. Exactly right. That's exactly right.
Yeah. And I mean, I think we talked about it a little bit earlier, but we are really such huge
fans of people, you know, taking, using these practices and thinking about how they can
constrain or change their environment so they don't have to think about it. You know, we have
standing desks everywhere at our office, so you can sit, we have stools, but the default is a
stand. And so it just makes it not a choice if you're, you know, you can't rely on your willpower
that day. And, you know, we have mobility tools all over our living room floor and we have easy
ways to sit on the floor and we have balance boards all over our house and, you know, we have mobility tools all over our living room floor and we have easy ways to sit on the floor and we have balance boards all over our house and, you know, ways to practice balance.
And, you know, I'm sure you've heard of Chris Hinshaw's old man balance test where you put your shoes on.
Oh, this is great.
Everyone.
You're welcome.
Everyone listening should do this test.
You stand.
What's it called again?
It's called the Chris Hinshaw.
And it's called the old man balance test.
And he actually created it. Um,
so that he would have something to compete against his kids and win. And so, uh, the idea is you put
your socks and shoes on the floor and you stand on one leg and you reach down and grab your sock
and you put on your sock without putting that foot down. And then you reach down and grab your shoe
and put your shoe on and tie it. And then you switch and do it on the other side. And it's a
really great two minute balance practice. And that's how I put my shoes on every single day, you know,
and that's something, you know, that's just this little, you know, small behavior that,
that we add into our day. That's easy and fun and you can, you know, challenge your kids to do it.
And so, you know, that's just one of those things that we've snuck in and said, Hey,
there are ways that you can change your environment and just slightly think about your environment differently so that these are just things you do without having to rely on willpower or motivation.
I think I would struggle with that.
Everyone struggles with it.
It's hard.
It's hard.
And that's okay.
Keep in mind that if you just grease that, I mean, I don't know where you're living, some kind of barefoot cult.
That's cool.
But some of what we're trying to do is that dynamic balance work.
And if you can just start to think about your environment a little differently, then that's
something you never have to do ever again.
I don't need you to work on balance because you did all this.
And if you really want to make it super gnarly, put your shoe three feet away from you.
You have to do like a crazy lunge or drinking game to get it.
But when you start to shape your world this way,
rinse, wash, repeat for a decade
and let me know how that goes for you.
And you brought it up.
It's difficult for us to imagine our futures.
I think in economics,
we always think that the future is gonna be more valuable.
I think there's a term and phrase for that.
But in willpower, we always think Kelly started tomorrow is not going to eat the cookie and he'll start yoga
tomorrow. Right. But that's that future self is never as valuable as today. And you'll have more
money and more time and you'll be able to do all the things that you can, you can do today.
I think it's also important for people to, you know, once you, you know, with his old man balance
test, for example, you know, we traveled yesterday, sat on a plane, did a lot of driving. I may have
had a harder training session. And so, you know, every single day, my experience is different with
it. I have some days where I just grease it and get my shoe and sock on, tie my shoe. And I'm like,
I am crushing this. And then other days based on, you know, what's been going on in my life,
it's different, but it's all just sort of information I have.
And I'm able to say, hey, I'm struggling a little bit with my balance today.
I'm feeling a little bit stiff.
Maybe I should spend a little time mobilizing my hips today and make sure I get enough steps in because I was stuck sitting all day yesterday on a plane.
It's just information on which we can make different decisions.
And the vital sign is a good piece of data.
It's called the SOLEC.
Standing one leg, eyes closed.
And you should be able to stand on one leg, remove the visual field, that's with the eyes closed, and balance for 20 seconds without touching.
That's the benchmark.
And it sounds really easy, but it's not.
I was just speaking at a big conference and a provider from Norway came
up and he said, you know, what we do is that the Solek is actually too hard for most people.
And so what we do is we put them in front of a wall, a white wall. So you can do this with
your parents so they can touch the wall, but the white wall allows them to keep their eyes open,
but removes the visual information. Because what happens is as we get older, we stop feeling,
Right, right.
Because what happens is as we get older,
we stop feeling,
I mean, remember the foot has so much real estate in the brain, right?
That homunculus sort of sensory motor cortex part.
And if you take away the eyes,
if you have down-regulated how good your feet are,
you know, how surfaces you're on,
you take away a lot of key balance visual information.
He started doing this because everyone falls,
elderly fall in Norway in snow storms
because it's all white
and you don't get any visual information.
Or in crowds, people fall in crowds
because you can't see where the ground is and understand.
So, you know, it turns out, of course,
that we're obsessed with foot function
and being barefoot and having rock solid rad feet
makes you better at surfing and everything else.
Yeah, and it's such a simple thing, right?
And not sexy.
It seems like it would be easier,
at least when you get older, to get harder.
But when we started working on,
there's obviously from our friends at FMS,
and it's originally a Gary Gray idea,
this Y balance test,
where you can actually have someone stand on one leg
and then just make a Y,
you know, the, the, the, the first part of the Y goes out in front of you. And then there's the
two other arms go behind you and you can just reach out as far as you can with your foot and
take a breath there. And we use it as a dynamic warmup. I hand you a medicine ball and then I'm
like, okay, how far can you get that foot out in front of you? And suddenly you realize, oh,
there is time for me to play more in some of
my training. If you're jumping on the trainer, I love to, I mean, mountain biking is our jam.
And I spent a lot of time on the trainer and during my warmups for the trainers, when I do a
lot of exploring and playing and I see something on internet and I'm like, Ooh, that rope looks
cool. Or that's fun. I use it as a, as a warmup device. And I think one of the things we could give to all the athletes listening and people who like to exercise is incorporate a
little bit more play into your training. Still do the training. You're still going to, we're still
going to suffer and do brutal one minute on pieces or whatever it is we're going to do.
But there's a lot of exploration and it may be as simple as Juliet and I love to go out and play
Frisbee, you know, before we go. Or like we have double Dutch ropes at our office. And I don't know the
last time you tried to do double Dutch, but it's really hard. It might've been, it might be 50
years at this point. Yeah. Yeah. It's early 80s. If I've ever tried it, I don't know. It's how we
pick a kickoff team. Yeah. But you know, we have double Dutch ropes around and we have balance
boards and we have, you know, in our garage at our house, we have a pegboard and, you know, every single teenager who walks through our garage beelines directly for the pegboard and like tries their luck on the pegboard.
the bike and crush yourself. You know, we just try to try to make some of this fun because,
you know, it is fun to use your body and be able to use your body and connect with other people and,
you know, throw a ball and throw a Frisbee. And if there was one thing though,
people love to ask us, what's the one mobilization? Oh yeah. It's my favorite thing to watch Kelly's face when someone asks him this, his, he does this, like, yeah, hey Kelly, if I just do one
thing, like what would it be? You know? And, and so he, his head like tilts to the side and then
he kind of starts like twitching a little bit. Um, and then really asking it was what's not
important, right? Yeah. And so I just peek out from the background and I'm like the couch stretch.
I think today we are not spending enough time with the hip and extension. And if you go to a yoga class and jump into Warrior One, you're like, wow, you're really into this kind of triangle pose, split stance position.
And there's a reason that's so heavily in a lot of the movements of rehab, of sort of movement practice.
It's such an important position. That's the position we walk around in, being able to take my leg behind me and sprint and sprint faster. And if
I want to run faster, I'm going to be able to need to have that knee further and further behind my
butt into a lunge. But it's the one thing I think we're witnessing as modern people, because we do
so much sitting and so much work on the computer,
we're seeing that people are losing that capacity to effectively have that leg behind them.
And we have a test in there called the couch stretch test, which is a shocker. And to your
point earlier, someone said, you know, you, Hey, I can't act on my glutes. One of the things that
happens is that if that into your line, so the line running down the front of your body, your quads, the connective tissue system, your hip capsule, if you can't bring that
hip effectively behind you, like in a deep lunge and squeeze your butt, that tells us we sort of
are being inhibited by that position. And oftentimes what happens is that we end up in
shapes where we're not very competent. We don't even have the range or we don't have the exposure there, whatever is the limiter.
And that can inhibit our ability to control that.
And one of the reasons we see that stiff quads, being on a bike, kicking, long lever kicking all day long, rectus femoris, all the running can make us really stiff.
All of a sudden, when we're in hip extension or hip extension, we can't squeeze the butt
effectively or recruit very effectively. We call it positional inhibition that can contribute to
the loss of glute function controlling the back. So whether it's knee pain or low back pain,
and we have so many stories of us adding in these movements, some lunges, some Bulgarian split
squats, some isometrics in these positions
and people's backs get better, their knees get better, their butts turn on.
That would be the thing I would say.
Yeah.
The one thing.
The one thing.
I'm sorry, everyone.
The one thing.
The one thing.
Plus vegetables.
Well, that's like the main antidote for all the sitting and the sedentary lifestyle.
That is like, that is the low hanging fruit.
That's the one thing that like we're all doing too much of
that's contributing to all of these imbalances
and ultimately, you know, atrophies of certain muscle groups
that lead to our pelvises not being like, you know,
like all of the kinds of things that have those lower back
and knee downstream, you know, injury repercussions.
And when people, if you're listening to this
and you're like, hey, I've got some pain in my body,
it can be really daunting to say what's going on there.
You know, and if I give you this laundry list
of like sleep, nutrition, hydration, stress,
breathing practice, you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Okay, that's a lot.
I got to work on that.
But one of the things you can absolutely control right away
is your range of motion.
And oftentimes when you go see a physician or we're
trying to manage pain and positions, no one really owns range of motion or position. What we end up
seeing is there's all this conversation about the tissue health or getting stronger, but no one ever
checks your native range of motion. And we see this actually as a feature of a lot of the very
sophisticated training. So we've had the pleasure
of working with the 49ers last year. And one of the things their strength and conditioning staff
has identified was the rehab staff is putting out fires and trying to get return players to the
field. The strength staff is trying to develop the capacities and physiology. Let's get you stronger
and fitter, but no one really owned full position. So they had athletes who were coming in who
couldn't bring their knees up very high
or missing hip extension or ankles.
And they were realizing that they weren't really seeing it.
And then the rehab staff might put people out
back into play, but they were pain-free or healed
and now they got to do their job.
And the strength staff was like, didn't get enough.
So enough time to develop these positions.
But as a mortal person,
if I discover that there's
some aspect of my tissue system, I have shoulder pain, for example, just saying is a, I don't,
but you get the idea. If I can't put my arm over my head, that's a really simple place to start
by restoring the function of your body. And you can imagine if you're swimming and you're
ineffective at putting your arm over your head, that's going to be tricky.
Sure. Right? So when we can start giving people some simple diagnostics, some vital signs around key movement features, that can be a really powerful way to untangle what seems like very complex pain problems.
Yeah.
I mean, the question that I have as a follow-up to that is where does flexibility come in?
is where does flexibility come in? Because when you talk about range of motion,
particularly if you're over indexing on strength work,
you're going to reduce your range of motion.
Not necessarily, you shouldn't.
Well, like I just know if I start throwing heavy weight
around, like suddenly, like I'm swinging my arms
around my shoulder, it doesn't feel the way it did
prior to putting on a little bit more muscle mass,
unless I really focus on making sure
that I'm maintaining that level of flexibility.
You can't just say to someone, get stronger.
I just saw a great coach named Franz Bosch talk about,
if you get hypertrophy on athletes,
you just get them big,
you can actually really wreck their coordination.
You change the penation, that's how the fibers align.
You change angles of pull. You change how the fibers align. You change angles of pull.
You change how the brain is interpreting what's going on.
You have to account, you can't just say get stronger.
Otherwise we just give you blood pressure,
blood flow restriction cuffs and an assault bike
and we would just get everyone big.
Well, yeah, and on the extreme spectrum of that,
just look at a bodybuilder.
They can't like, they can barely move.
They have no range of motion at all.
Yeah, like our friend Mark Bell.
He literally couldn't,
like he had to put a shoe on with a stick.
Did you watch Physical 100?
No.
Oh, this great Korean show
where they brought in like 100.
Oh yeah, I've seen the ads for it,
but I haven't watched it.
It is really fun.
It's like ripped up like Korean dudes.
And men and women who are badass.
Wrestlers, skeleton athletes,
track cyclists. We won't give it away. It's very diverse though. Ilers, skeleton athletes, track cyclists.
We won't give it away.
It's very diverse, though.
I mean, it's like every kind of, you know, there's some dancers.
It's a really mixed group.
There's a 50-kilo concrete ball.
And then there's a test.
They call it like the Hercules test or something, Atlas.
And they had to just hold it.
They had a couple strong men and another guy.
Well, you had to get it over your head.
You had to get it over your head.
Get it over your head and then stand there and hold it.
And there's a jacked bodybuilder in there. And you're like, well, that guy. I mean, clearly that's the guy. Well, you had to get it over your head. You had to get it over your head. Get it over your head and then stand there and hold it. And there's a jacked bodybuilder in there.
You're like, well, that guy.
I mean, clearly that's the guy.
He's definitely going to win.
Unless you have any insider knowledge.
And that guy couldn't even get the ball over his head and hold it for one second.
Everyone else held it for two hours.
He couldn't even find a position because the cost of his aesthetic drive
had nothing to do with the application of that.
And I think one of the things
that you bring a really good point to
is our fetishization of the gym and gym culture
hasn't necessarily always connected to,
am I training for something?
What's the minimum dose in the gym
so I can be a better swimmer?
We're like, oh, just get bigger and stronger.
Strength is never a weakness.
If it starts to mess up your swim,
that's real.
If you can't put your arms over your head
because you're so strong, then.
Yeah, or you just start to cramp up.
You could.
Yeah.
You don't have to.
But somewhere in there,
I think Tyler Hamilton said in his book,
would you rather have your hematocrit up two points or be two pounds lighter?
He's like, two pounds lighter.
Because strength to weight does make a difference.
That matters.
So those are all considerations.
And if your point is that I'm doing something, we call that session cost.
something, we call that session cost. And if that thing is removing my ability to move freely,
I need to either modify it or put in another stimulus to maintain my range. It doesn't necessarily mean just because I got a little bit stronger that I have to change my technique or
style, but it could certainly if we're not keeping an eye on it. And I think that was why a lot of
athletes were like, hey, I'm a worse swimmer when I do this leg press. Yeah, you start bulking up and suddenly you can't,
you don't have the flow and the technique
and the range of motion.
I believe you.
Yeah, but the important distinction here is that mobility,
like mobility work is not the same as stretching.
And you make that point pretty clearly in the book.
Like there is a distinction between these two things, just because you're stretching, pretty clearly in, in the book. Like there is a distinction
between these two things, just because you're stretching, you're not working on your, your
mobility. Not necessarily. Not necessarily. I mean, you could be, but you know, and I'll let
Kelly talk about the anatomy part of this, but I mean, I think what we learned in the eighties and
nineties, and I know I did when I was a D one athlete at Cal is that nobody ever really did
much stretching because it didn't work that much. Right? We were just all passively stretching our tissues.
You guys stretched?
You would swing your arms around?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was like incredibly flexible.
And then when I got back into multi-sport in my 40s,
there was this idea like,
oh, you shouldn't stretch if you're a runner.
And I kind of bought into that.
And I've lost a lot of that flexibility to my detriment.
Like I wish I had kept that up.
And I think that that has been harmful to me.
Your range of motion doesn't,
I wanna jump in on you,
your range of motion doesn't have to change because you age.
That's the one physical, you're gonna be less powerful.
You may be able to maintain your aerobic power
for a long time.
We know that that to be true,
but your ability to express your range of motion
in your joints doesn't have to degrade necessarily.
You may have bony blocks and a patina of athleticism.
You gotta work through the fascia and all that kind of stuff.
Right, but as we take this systems approach,
you being able to get up and down off the ground
or flex your knee all the way doesn't have to go away.
And I think that that's important right to
remember to consider for people yeah um squatting oh boy people love to talk about squatting they
do they're you know i couldn't agree more obsessed with dead lifting and squatting for some reason
you know what's amazing we just made two new things. Uh, one of them is a, a pad that makes it easier,
easier to do a Bulgarian split squat. So you can slip this pad on end of a barbell and you can put
your foot up there and it's really does help you get into a lunge and it doesn't work. People hate
it. They don't like to do this movement. It doesn't sell. It's like one of our best ideas.
We just did another thing that allows you to do hip thrusts,
which is when you lay on a,
like a bench and you put a barbell on your hips and it's kind of a modified
squat.
People love that.
And to your point,
it's so much more fun to squat.
It is not fun to sprint lunge,
get into these split stance positions.
But why are these so important?
Like, why did you, you know,
make, you know, an entire vital sign chapter on squatting? Like, why is this so key in your mind? You know, really you're going to lower yourself up and down a bunch. So you squat all the time,
whether you like it or not. And notice in this in this this book We don't talk about squatting weights
We just talk about the ability to access the squat and the reason that's such a fundamental position
Is that it ties in a lot of joints and a lot of tissue systems all at once?
So we don't just look at your ankle or ankle by itself or knee by itself or hip by itself
We're looking at the coordinating the system
And getting up and down
out of a chair, off the toilet, all of those things, very important. Cycling is a bunch of
single leg squats done in that position. So what we can start to ask is, I don't always have to be
a bilateral squat. Can I do a single leg squat in that position? But when we say squat, what we
really mean is I'm in a hinged shape and my knee is bending towards my chest.
That's really the definition of a squat.
So to take squatting away means that you're going to not be moving in your environment very well.
And it's an easy diagnostic for people to quickly pick up if they're having these gross motor restrictions or can't access these positions.
I think that's what's, that's amazing. And if you want to go in Japan or toilet in another country, or you're
going to find that sitting by the side of the road, waiting for a bus, we should be, have access
to these positions. These are resting positions. And I also, you know, there's data to show that
people in those cultures have far fewer orthopedic injuries, hip replacements, low back pain, you know, and sort of
a lot of the chronic issues and pain problems that we have, you know, as Western humans that are
sitting in chairs and have lost the ability to squat. It's melasana in yoga, right? It's this
deep squat position. And one of the reasons that it's so important is that it's one of the ways
where we can get really good flexion in the lumbar spine where when we sit all the way down like we're just hanging out whether your heels
are off the ground or not your knee comes to your chest you take that knee in full range of motion
you take that hip into that aspect of full range of motion and the lumbar spine reverses and so
it's a restorative position for so much of the extension, arching forces that are sort of modern and endemic to us.
It's a way of restoring and putting in loaded flexion into people in a really graded position.
And that's my most challenged position for me of all the tests in this book.
That's where I struggle the most.
And like you said, you wish you'd focused a little bit more.
I mean, my ankle range of motion is terrible.
And, you know, I was still with terrible range of ankle range of motion, able to be a D1
rower at Cal and go on to win three world championships in paddling.
You do a flip turn.
And, you know.
Are you pushing off the wall in a squat?
Well, certainly you are.
Yeah.
So it turns out maybe, you know, if we had been more effective, we could have
shaved more time by getting you and training you into positions to be more efficient.
Just to be clear, you don't have to be a huge squatter. I think a squat is a practice. We can
goblet squat, hold something in front of you. You could just air squat. I think there are better
ways and more effective ways for most
people to train the system. Do I need to have my mother-in-law do heavy back squats? No, we've
definitely fetishized it because it's easy to see progress. I can put another kilo on the bar.
It's easy to measure that I've changed some capacity, but does it make me better at my sport?
Maybe not. So there's an old saying, train the deadlift,
train the hinge, kettlebell swings, good mornings,
those kinds of things, practice the squat.
Right, but the ability to squat,
even if it's just air squat, do it without pain, et cetera,
becomes like this proxy for longevity, right?
Like the longer that you can kind of maintain
your ability to do that, puts you in the longer that you can kind of maintain your ability
to do that, puts you in a position
where you're not gonna fall down and break your hip,
or you're gonna have that kind of flexibility.
Or your pelvic floor is gonna work better.
You're gonna start to expose the connective tissue systems
of your body to the forces that were there
and have been there all along,
because you used to toilet on the ground.
I'm not trying to make romanticize paleo living.
I don't like we watch, we watch alone
and now we're like primitive living.
We watch alone and we have no skills.
Primitive living is not for me.
I'm not into it.
It's actually, yeah, I was really happy to see that.
Like there is a fetishization of like, you know,
the ancestral lifestyle, all that.
And you're like.
Yeah, really, not for us.
The first time I took. us first time i'm like that
is i mean listen you talk about you know the de-wilding and the re-wilding and all of that
like there is wisdom and trying to be live our lives more in alignment with certain aspects of
how we've evolved to be etc but that doesn't mean we're we need to you know martyr ourselves no
on the contrary yeah yeah i i you know i martyr ourselves. No, on the contrary.
Yeah, you know, first time I ever was sort of discovered paleo,
I was like, that makes sense.
I'm eating more whole foods.
Like, that makes sense.
The old osteopathic model was don't eat anything that's white and don't eat anything that doesn't rot.
And I was like, well, that's also really good, right?
That pulls out a lot of things that are potentially irritant to people.
So I sent this to Julia.
I was like, what do you think about this?
This, by the way, was in like 2003. So it like early yeah i remember i remember all paleo right and i
did a little i was probably still at my law firm i did a little bit of google research whatever you
could do back then and the first paleo recipe that came up was a recipe for like larva soup
or something and i was like dude kelly we're not doing this like I was like this is way too extreme for us like it's not up our this whole paleo thing is
like you know I was like people in the Paleolithic era died at age 30 a lot of
change has changed in the last 150 years for sure and what we can say is like you
know there's a definitely a trend of getting a little bit more light in the
morning people are talking about that yeah there's definitely a trend to getting a little bit more light in the morning.
People are talking about that.
There's one guy responsible for that.
You may have heard that you're supposed to face the sun in the morning.
But what we can start to say is,
well, what are the biologic processes
that are required for my body to function well?
And a good example is walking.
Your lymphatic system is the sewage system of your body.
So everyone knows their cardiovascular system,
you have capillaries, arteries, veins,
but your lymphatic system is how you move
all of the other waste, normal waste from your body.
So if you've injured yourself, you get swelling,
all of that swelling is evacuated
through your lymphatic system. Your joints are drained through your lymphatic system.
The proteins break down, the small, the gut things, all of those things get recycled back
into the body through lymphatic system. Your lymphatic system is built into your movement
system. What drives the lymphatic clearage? It turns out it's pumping of the muscles.
So if you don't squeeze your lower limbs,
you don't actually decongest and circulate.
So Andy Weil talked about, was it cross pattern motion?
Well, maybe it was just that we were moving
and in that moving and breathing,
we're starting to decongest and move the waist out.
And if you've ever had a sink that's clogged up,
that is an example of what's happening
when you sit on an airplane and you get cankles.
You're not decongesting.
Which is why doctors are so obsessed with getting people up out of bed as soon as they can after surgery.
Because the only way to really clear your lymph is to walk around, is to move, keep moving.
Keep moving.
So now we can start to say, well, if walking is about drainage, how many steps do I need in order to facilitate that?
And it turns out 6,000 to 8,000 is a pretty good number to get people moving.
And again, that's not even about burning calories.
That's not about strong feet.
That's just about circulation.
Circulation. So I think when you're right, when we can push back on this you know, hunting my own chickens in my backyard, I don't need to do that.
But somehow there are some things that used to happen to us. We used to sit on the ground a lot.
We cooked on the ground. We toilet on the ground. We slept on the ground. We walked around.
There's some things we did that we probably could do a little more.
We were in, in a persistent state
of like low energy movement, right?
Like we were just kind of like moving
throughout the day consistently.
That's another blue zones thing as well.
Like, and we don't really do that.
Like, even if we, and you make this point in the book,
like we, you may go to the gym and kill it,
but then you sit in a chair all day.
And like, you know, it's certainly, that's me, you know,
that's a lot of people, right?
And this is not great.
And we're not saying that that's-
You're not flushing out, you're not like,
all of that kind of stuff, you know, is not happening.
So if you're an elite athlete or someone who trains hard,
because I think that the distinguishing
between elite athlete and someone who trains like that
is your genetics and what you're doing with it.
Because as you have seen,
people are training really hard and gotten really sophisticated about their
training.
They're training like,
you know,
they're training like the elites,
whether they can handle it or not.
And one of the things we know is if you want to have a better adaptation to
that,
you need to keep continuing to decongest and continue to move along those ways. Exercise movement. And whatever that looks like to you. And bringing it back to that, you need to continue to decongest and continue to move along those
non-exercise movement.
That's it.
Whatever that looks like to you.
And bringing it back to sunlight.
That's, you know, one of the, I mean, we're obsessed with walking, as I think, you know,
and just general movement and non-exercise activity throughout the day.
But, you know, it's also this bonus thing where you get a little bit of sunlight on
your body.
You decongest your tissues.
You, you, you know, accumulate a bunch of non-exercise activity.
Check this out.
Our daughter, Caroline, was a preemie.
And Juliet had placenta previa.
Caroline comes a little early.
We are being discharged from UCSF.
Really good hospital.
Super gnarly.
Caroline, who is 5'10 now, her Apgar was two.
She was very small and purple and she's a monster.
And they were like, okay, you're leaving.
And Juliet is breastfeeding.
She's made this heroic effort to get milk into our kid.
And they're like, you just got to give your kid these vitamins.
And I was like, look at me.
Yeah.
Kelly's like, isn't breast milk like God's food?
Like the perfect food.
What are you talking about?
I have to get these vitamins.
I just know enough as a physical therapist to be annoying.
And this is UCSF.
Right.
This place is the shit.
They are the shit.
And they saved both my kid and my wife.
I'm very grateful.
So I asked them, what do you mean I have to give my kid these vitamins?
I'm like, have you tasted these vitamins?
Like, they're awful.
And why do I give my kid these vitamins?
She's drinking milk.
And they were like, well, you just really got to do it.
And I was like, what's the problem?
And they said, well, the problem is women in San Francisco don't get enough sun or don't
go into the sun.
So there's not enough vitamin D in the milk.
And so the child oftentimes-
So we were like, so we could just go into the sun with our baby and then not have to
take these vitamins.
with our baby and then not have to take these vitamins.
And so we, you know, we just would lay our little teeny daughter who was like six pounds at this point, we would just lay her in the sun for like three minutes a day and she was
fine.
That's how they used to get rid of jaundice in the kids.
So that's, that's a kind of a case study of, of the fact that we make some of these
from no fault of our own.
We find ourselves in environments where we have to now be a little bit more conscious
about some of these other things.
Yeah.
A sort of analogous thing that you talk about
or like a counterintuitive sort of thing
that I was really happy to see
because I've always agreed with this,
but never really was validated for it,
which is that you should not put ice on an injury, right?
Like it's always struck me as wrong.
Like, it's like, oh, you got to get the inflammation down.
It's like, it's inflamed for a reason.
Your body is sending all of this stuff there.
Where did you figure that out?
Who told you that?
Like, that's crazy.
I have to tell the backstory here.
So I think this was back in 2011, maybe.
We were at the CrossFit Games, and we met up with a guy, Gary Reinold, who wrote the book Iced.
And he was really the first person to—
In my world.
In our world, anyway, to take this different perspective on icing.
And at that time, though, the guy who had created Rice had already—
Gabe Merkin.
He had already turned the corner and said that was actually terrible.
That's rest, ice, compression elevation.
That was terrible advice.
So, you know, there was starting to be this groundswell of people talking about how icing injuries was not the way to go.
And we put up this one hour long video on YouTube where Kelly was interviewing Gary Reinhold about icing injuries.
And that thing got, well, first of all, this was in the dawn of time and we were unpro.
So we put the video on YouTube and the title of it was like IMG underscore 447.
And we just put it out.
You know, it was the olden days.
And we put it out and this thing starts getting thousands and thousands of views.
But I mean, there's been a couple things we've put out into the world that have generated
a lot of hate and skepticism.
And I think that icing video was probably top of the list because it was so shocking
to people.
I mean, it's just default.
If a kid injures themselves, you make an ice bag.
You know, it's just this, it was so part of our understanding of how to manage an injury
in the short term that people were like
really bothered by this advice and you know slowly but surely i think people you know the
word's been getting out that icing injuries is not the way that you actually you know you want
to welcome that swelling the cold plunge community people are realizing maybe we need to put that
that cold a little bit further away farther from stimulus. Yeah. And that's not even the same thing as icing something for hours.
The reason you train is to create the stimulus and an adaptation.
And if you are robbing your body of that adaptation by getting in the cold,
then you've just undercut the purpose of the training itself.
And I,
I believe in ice baths.
I have an ice bath.
I think it's great,
but I think you have to be conscious about the timing,
when, the purpose and all of that.
And listen, if it's halftime at the Superbowl
and you blow your knee out
and you got to get back in the game,
put some ice on it.
And you want to reduce that inflammation,
reduce the pain so you can go,
if there's an immediacy to the thing.
But if you're trying to heal yourself,
you want heat.
You want to get blood flow in there.
You want to get your immune system sending what it needs to be sending to that area to repair it as quickly as possible.
Yeah, and you're right.
It can be a short-term pain reliever, but it's not a great long-term strategy.
If your kid gets a bee sting, give her a bag of ice.
And if you cut off your finger, you should put it in ice.
That's also another useful medical way.
Where did you figure that out?
Because that is really so progressive.
It just seemed obvious to me,
but it was so contrarian.
Like, I don't know.
I never really talked to anybody about it,
but I've always preferred putting heat
on any kind of injury over ice for that reason.
The head athletic trainers in Major League Baseball now
basically say, we don't ice anymore.
And if you're doing that,
you can't keep up with, you know,
how we're managing these soft tissue injuries and really what what you can see is well is the body so sophisticated that we're going to modulate this process of angiogenesis and
remodeling tissues with by getting it cold and and for everyone who's out there who isn't into
the cold physiology when you have an injury your body sends out a whole bunch of chemical signals to the rest of
your body. And these circulating cells, local stem cells, circulating stem cells come and repair that.
The macrophages, they gobble up the tissue. And what can happen when you get something cold is
you cut that connection. You suppress prostaglandin release. That's the same reason where we say now we're like, Ooh, ibuprofen, maybe let's not use ibuprofen because it may do the same,
you know, healing limiting problem. You're going to go on. But on the other side of that coin,
you know, if you have to go out there and perform as an athlete and you need to take a couple of
ibuprofen because that's how you're going to make it through your game or sport, then that's fine.
I mean, you know, we're not anti usingusing, anti-inflammatory in the right context, but, you know, it's, but I will
say that, you know, even though there's been a conversation about this icing thing for well over
10 years, maybe 15 years at this point, I mean, still it's the default though, for most of the
people we know who have an ACL tear or, you know, any kind of orthopedic surgery for the recommendation
from the physician to send
them home to ice or get a game ready. So, I mean, we're making little baby steps and trying to get
that word out, but it's still, people really still want to go for the ice right away.
You feel like you're doing something. I think that's what it is. And until, like so many other
behaviors, until we give someone else something else to do, we're going to default to the thing
that makes me feel like I've done something. I took this pill that has micronutrients in it. That must be good enough as eating a salad
or vegetables, right? Or fruits. And yes, that's better than nothing. But in this situation,
it just turns out now we were incomplete in our thinking and we reserved the right to evolve our
positions. And here's one where we think we weren't as effective as we were. And the proof is we're returning people to play
at higher levels of function faster because now people are healing at the rates of human beings.
Then we're not delaying that or retarding that healing process. We're just saying, hey,
there's no such thing as a fast healer. You're going to heal at your genetic limit.
Let's at least get you to that limit.
Right, and not unnecessarily slow it down.
I mean, it seems to me to be a conversation
around the difference between a chronic,
talking about inflammation,
is it a chronic inflammation or is it an acute inflammation?
If you have an injury, you have an acute inflammation,
you need to figure out how to address that.
Chronic inflammation, that's a different protocol and a different set of problems that need to be looked
at. Yeah, that's right. That's right. And it's okay to become more nuanced and not just attack
everything with the same hammer. I think that's absolutely okay. And, and even if we just, you
know, sometimes people get a little confused on this and we love getting cold. We think it's
really fun and maybe that's just the best part of it. It's super fun that we feel better and wait for this.
Everyone, all you touchy feely data people, athletes that feel better tend to perform better.
People that feel better in their lives tend to be more stoked and do better. So if icing,
getting in a cold plunge, excuse me, makes you feel better. I'm down with it. It could be range
of motion for your vasculature.
It could just be-
Well, there's hormonal impacts to it as well.
What I'm saying is there are so many aspects
of monkeying with being uncomfortable.
You know, Laird says, Laird Hamilton says,
hey, heating up and cooling down
are the two most expensive processes
your body engages with.
Let's become more efficient at that.
That seems reasonable.
Have you ever done heat training for Ironman?
No, I know, but I know like people who train for bad water
put treadmills in saunas and things like that.
So we know we can adapt to these things a little bit.
Yeah, I mean, our friend Michael Easter wrote a great book
called The Comfort Crisis.
And one of his main points is that we've,
in our modern world, we no longer feel any discomfort. And one
of the easiest ways to do that is to get hot and cold. And so, you know, that's one of the 10,000
reasons that we love those two things. But, you know, I think the other side benefit of, you know,
our own heat and cold practice is for us, and this may be, you know, what's been the greatest part of
us for us is that it's a chance for us to connect together. And then also
we use it as a community building. It's a social thing. It's a social thing. We've had some of the
best connections and conversations with our friends and community and people who come over
for dinner in the sauna that we've had in the last 10 years. And I mean, so there are a myriad of
well-studied health benefits at this point to sauning and definitely emerging in terms of
cold plunging.
But, you know, if I could look back
and say the greatest thing that, you know,
our sauna has done for us is just connection.
Yeah.
Gabby and Laird call the sauna the truth barrel.
Yes.
And then Neil Strauss and Gabby
had a podcast called the truth barrel
where they would get someone in the sauna
to have a conversation.
I think even, I think Tim Ferriss
was the first one
to do that when he had a he did rick he had rick rubin in his in his sauna for a podcast
conversation like the heat will bring the truth and then you see the guests slowly start to like
by the end of the podcast they're sitting on the floor of the sauna you know and it's like gabby
and laird are just totally fine and the guest like dead. They crank it up to like 220.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, it's no joke.
It is no joke.
It gets in that thing for sure.
But you have your own sauna cold plunge protocol in the book.
I can't remember exactly,
but I think it's three minutes in the cold and then kind of go back a number of times.
Think of it this way.
We think we, again, we're privy to a lot of tech
and a lot of ideas, but we think that the functional unit of measurement is the household.
It's you and your roommates, you and your partners, you and your kids and family. And that's where the
real change happens. And that concept of hyperlocality of really understanding what's
going on in the context of someone's life, that's how we make the big change.
So we can come in with these big principles, but ultimately it's you, and I need to understand where you're going to put this in and what your resources are.
And any time we can move something into the household, like a shower that gets hot and cold or massage or some kind of thing where you don't have to go
out. We see that adherence goes up. We see that compliance goes up and it becomes manageable.
And especially in those people who are working really hard, I want you to have your castle set
up to the extent that you can so that you don't have to make another decision or go to the place.
If it's easy for you to step out and get hot, cool, you'll do it. And if it's, if you have to walk across the street, the chances of you doing
drop to zero. Right. Uh, which, which beautifully segues. And the next thing I wanted to ask you
about selfishly, which is I'm in the process of building a home gym, right? We got like a 40 foot
shipping container that we're customizing with a deck out front and stuff like that.
So it's gonna take a couple months.
We're in the middle of the build right now.
And I haven't acquired any kind of equipment for it yet.
So obviously you two are the best people to ask like,
what are the things that I should get?
What should I avoid?
Like, so 40 foot it's big, it's pretty big.
Oh yeah.
But it's not like unlimited space.
I have like a indoor bike trainer
and I've got a hydro rowing machine.
Great.
So I have those two things,
but then what kind of weight equipment should I be getting?
What should I be looking at?
What are the essentials?
Quick backstory.
Did you know our first gym was a shipping container?
No, I didn't know that.
So we actually started San Francisco CrossFit in 2005. And because real estate was so expensive in San Francisco and CrossFit was so emergent and we actually weren't starting it to be a business. We were just starting it because we were like, hey, this CrossFit thing is fun. And, you know, and I was Kelly had a full time physical therapy job. I had a big firm law firm job. So this was a complete side hustle for us.
time physical therapy job. I had a big firm law firm job. So this was a complete side hustle for us. And so we actually had the idea to get a shipping container and put all of our equipment
inside the shipping container. And then we got this awning. Um, it was like a awning is awning
the right word for it. This canopy. And you could say tent if you're disrespecting us.
We were outside. Our entire gym was outside for seven years from 2005 to 2012.
And our members, you know, we had 350 members and our members would come and work out outside in the rain or shine.
And eventually we moved inside into a cool building in the Presidio.
But we've been laughing during the pandemic because everyone's like, look at this thing I'm doing, outdoor gym.
And we were like, hey, we were the first, like we invented the outdoor gym
and we saw all the positives and negatives of having an outdoor gym. Um, when there's any
kind of weather, but, um, I would say that the main thing that people sort of think is my gym
at home needs to look like a college strength and conditioning platform. I need all the likes.
Think about the old school programs at Stanford. You walk in there and you're like, whoa, this is an impressive gym. Maybe you need a squat rack maybe because that's convenient, but those can be squat stands. So really I think it comes back to, you have a couple monostructural pieces of cardio equipment, which you love that you're going to do because it's easy to get intervals in when you're compressed for time. Otherwise go out, right?
that you're gonna do, because it's easy to get intervals in
when you're compressed for time.
Otherwise go out, right?
Dumbbells, kettlebells,
maybe one barbell for pressing overhead.
I think overhead, we could come into this and say,
well, what are the fundamental positions
and shapes we should train?
Especially as a person who's not 20s
trying to win world championships anymore.
You know, I am a huge fan of deadlifting with a hex bar, right? A trap bar
deadlift because we can really get control and we can put the tissues into good shapes,
but it really is a lot simpler having medicine balls, having things to pick up and carry those
where I'd put all my energy. Like I am not, I, I have such a bad wrist from paddling all those years and broken that I can't handle a regular barbell anymore.
I have to use a sort of a neutral grip, but I can handle all the sandbags.
And really, how do we make you durable in a short amount of time when you're, what's the minimum effective play dose so that you can go out and do what you want to do?
And then what is it your family likes to do?
What's their
input and leaving it as open as possible as the game. Cause it is easy to be like, Oh, this is so
fun. What a, you know, let me go to rogue and there's a couple of things. I mean, there's a
couple of things I would add. It sounds like you have a bike, but I would really recommend getting
an assault bike or some kind of, um, you know, bike arms if you don't know. And, and there's two
reasons for that. Number one, because it seems like you do like to go hard in the paint you really can't go hard in the paint on an assault
bike but number two in the event that anyone in your household ever faces an injury or a surgery
that is the the single piece of equipment we recommend people get who have because you can
do it with three limbs yeah no impact no impact so. So the amount of people that we've put on
with a cast, a knee surgery, a brace on that thing
and done three-limbed biking is all the people.
And in fact, in all of our surgery recovery protocols,
that's the one piece of equipment
we recommend everybody get.
Because just for your psychological health,
getting injured and going through a surgery
and not being able to move your body.
And that's like the first thing you can always do is three limbed anything on that
bike. So to me, that's like one of the greatest investments you can have if you can invest in a
gym. And, and what I would say is, as you are an experienced mover, you have this ability to go
out in the world and do those things. I want you to spend your tissue tolerance credits on actual sports. So do I care
that you can full snatch? No, I don't. But I care that you can muscle snatch a dumbbell, right? And
from a hang position. And what we'll see is that a lot of the training decisions I think make sense
for people like my age, I'm 50 this year, is I want high physiology, low skill, where I can get all the bang for the buck
and then go stand up paddle or go ride my mountain bike
or spend my Achilles credits running the hills
instead of smoking myself with exercises.
Right, yeah, that's certainly my attitude.
I'm not trying to like yeah completely wreck myself i just want to be
sturdy stable mobile flexible functional pain free so i can go and do all the other things that
i enjoy and you know basically work on maintaining that to the best of my ability for as long as
possible i think you could do your entire i mean you could get a barbell if that's something that you, if you like to do barbell work, but I think you could get all the stimulus you want
with some dumbbells, some kettlebells, a couple of heavy balls, a few sandbags. I mean, the, the,
the amount of things that you can do with just those things are infinite. And, and, you know,
to me, you can get so much bang for your buck with that. So, I mean, if you, if you like to do
barbell training, then I would get a squat rack and a couple pounds of weights.
Don't go crazy.
Recently, one of our friends was like,
they're building their gym out,
and they're like, what do you think of this?
I'm like, I'm not sure you need a competition bench.
Like, that seems a little excessive.
Like, you know, you can floor press just fine.
But if you just have a rack where you can,
and a bench or whatever,
where you can do all the great all the
multiple things and they swing out you can get them so they they tuck away and then it's a pull-up
bar too you know you can make your rack a pull-up bar so that's a bonus on that subject of like
making you know movement a priority in the home the obvious kind of next thing that i want to
talk to you guys about is you know parenting and how you instill a passion for movement
and in young people, right?
Like it reminds me of Peter Atiyah talking about
watching his kids when they were young
and realizing that kids are naturally geniuses at movement.
Like they're able to do things that now, you know,
we wish we could do.
So we are all built to move, that now, you know, we wish we could do. So we are all
built to move the title of your book, right? And children know exactly what to do. And somewhere
along the line, we lose that, that, that touch, that connectivity, that capacity to move like a
supple leopard, right? So like, how do you guys think about this and practice it in your own home and talk about
it with respect to young people i think the the way we've approached parenting in every respect
is is trying to sort of do as we do not do as we say and so we've always had a home gym and i think
that that is such an important part of teaching our kids how much we love movement and
how much we value movement. And, you know, there's, and I also have a group of ladies who comes over
and works out at my house three or four times a week. And, and, you know, as we said, we have
peg boards and pull up bars and balance boards and, you know, double under or double Dutch ropes
around the house. You want to set a lot of traps for your kids. Yeah. We want to, we've just tried
to set a lot of traps and, and show them that, you know, movement is a priority for us.
One of the things I've seen in now that I'm in my late 40s is that the friends of mine who didn't grow up moving in some way are the ones that have really struggled to figure out how to fit exercise into their life now as adults.
into their life now as adults.
And so one of the things I really wanted and was sort of intentional about,
and I think both of us were,
was that I was like, when my daughters leave the home,
I want them to want to move on their own,
to be motivated on their own,
to keep moving their body
because they've learned how much better they feel
if they just keep moving.
And we like to tell a story way back
when our daughter Georgia was like nine, we had occasion to do all this genetic testing on the whole family. We did all this genetic testing on all of us. Sorry, you know, we like to tell a story way back when our daughter, Georgia was like nine,
we had occasion to do all this genetic testing on the whole family. We did all this genetic
testing on all of us. And I know, and, uh, it turned out that Georgia is had a low genetic
drive to move our daughter, Georgia and Georgia does a genetic marker for that. There's a genetic
marker on desire to move. And so Georgia has a low genetic drive to move. And that's actually
obvious. She loves to bake and left her own devices. She probably would bake and watch.
She even created a subscription. She has a subscription cookie company. And, um, and,
but what we, so when we got that piece of information, we realized, Hey, this is a kid
who might be need to be pushed a little bit more to move because she's not just, she's not going
to naturally get off the couch and start moving. And so we definitely made sure that, you know,
she was involved in some kind of sport or activity. I think the other key thing we did is that we made
movement. Our kids were allowed to choose what type of movement they wanted to do, but not whether or
not to do movement. And, you know, that's one of the ways I think we found ourselves to be like
the strictest parents. Like we give our kids choice, but it's within these very clear sort
of parameters. And that movement was one of them. Movement was not, whether or not they moved was
not a choice and how they wanted to move. Sky's the limit. We wanted to give our kids the opportunity
to try anything they wanted, because I'm really a true believer that if you find a type
of movement that you like and enjoy, and that's fun for you, then you will do it and probably for
your entire life. And so my goal was to let see my daughter Georgia go off to college, which she's
going to do this year, and know that on her own accord, without any outside motivation, she was,
she was going to know that if she kept moving, that she would feel better and do better in school and have better, more connected relationships and feel good in her body and be able to do things she wants to do.
And it's so interesting to see that, you know, we didn't really see that click individually for her until about two years ago when she was 15 or 16.
And now the kid who, when she was younger, would bake and then go sit on the couch and watch movies, now bakes and then goes out to our home gym and deadlifts. not frustrations, but, you know, queries or challenges around like how to instill or
inspire movement in young teenagers that aren't interested in listening to their parents or
expert is someone who lives a mile away. Yeah. And I'm doing, it's not like I'm not the example,
you know, I'm like, I'm doing it every day. And my wife is doing it in her own way. Like
we are modeling that and yet it's not connecting necessarily.
I think one of the
solutions is
when our daughters are exercising
with their friends, they're in
an environment where there's a team doing
it, that reduces a lot of
the drag. I'm
like, let's go front squat and do sprints.
My daughter's like, that's
so boring.
But, you know, it lights me up.
You know, I have this insane desire to move.
You know, gamifying it, putting in a class setting,
those are the ways when we have, you know,
you two at this end of the table have, you know,
you can be, live a life of austerity
and put in the work and grind
for its own satisfaction.
But that's not a lot of the reason that especially young people love to do it.
They like to relate.
Yes.
It's very cool that Georgia now can go back squad.
And she's in, as an aside, she's in a little bit of a power struggle with our school right
now who has a great weight room because the coach there wants her to do this foundations
work.
And she's like, no, no, no, I don't need to do that foundations work.
I just want to come in and squat.
Do you know who my parents are?
Don't I get a pass on that?
Yeah, she really wants to get a pass.
She's like, what do I need to do?
Power snatch?
Like, what do you need?
Anton is not giving her a pass.
Anton, this is for you.
So, you know, one of the things I've learned,
that's the best.
I've learned working with this women's water polo team is that the women like to do things together differently than boys or men. I'll do it on my own. And so thinking differently about that solution, putting our daughters into environments with their friends, that really made a big difference. And creating a social
structure around it really made a big difference. And I would say also, you know, what are we
talking about? Do your, how fit do your 14 year old need to be? When we talk about shaping the
environment, one of the things that Juliet and I figured out early on when our kids were in
elementary school was we created a walking school bus. And we realized that we lived within a mile and a half of
the school and we can set, we, we do this thing where I'd work the drop off lane. And if you've
ever had a kid, you work the drop off lane. It's like the most depressing place on earth.
The drop open the door. You hear the, the hate and the stress of each family roils out. And then
you absorb it. I love you. I love you. You absorb it as the parent volunteer. That's opened the
door. And it's like the worst experience. So what I said was, maybe we you. I love you. You absorb it as the parent volunteer that's opened the door. It's like the worst experience.
It's the worst.
So what I said was,
maybe we don't have to do that ever again.
We could just walk our kids.
Juliet's created this walking school bus,
but that was a great example of making it
so that we all walked as a family.
And that wasn't one more thing we had to do.
Like at the end of the day,
your dad's trumping in being like, let's go exercise.
You know, like that was
i made my kids cry a lot yeah like teaching them to olympic lift yeah like quick side story um
i said you know kelly's been really worried our whole kid's life about being like that dad
at sporting events and so but but the problem is the in my view the pendulum swung too far
and at one point i said to kelly i was Hey, so our kids should at least get some benefit from the fact that they're Kelly Starrett's kids. Like,
like you don't ever coach them or cause he's so worried about being that dad. And so I said,
so I was like, you've got to start weightlifting with our daughter, Caroline. Like you've got to
start weightlifting. And of course she was very resistant to it and not excited. And there were
three occasions where she came in from the side yard and was crying and she was like, dad was mean.
Dad was mean. And so look at your foot pressure kid. So anyway, that's when I realized we needed
to outsource. And so we actually started sending her to this Olympic lifting club and she on her
own in with a group of other kids actually really learned how to like weightlifting and learned the fundamental skills with these great coaches. And, you know, we took ourselves out
of the equation there. And so, you know, we're definitely fans of outsourcing.
Yeah. It's interesting how that works. Like they just, it can't be the parent.
It can't. And like, I'm thinking of, I had Joe to send on here and he's talking about his parents
and I was like, this dude is insane. Like,
Oh my,
we just had him on our podcast.
His kids up at four in the morning and yeah.
You know,
Oh my God.
Trudge up a mountain before they can open up their Christmas Christmas presents.
Quitter's office is closed.
The quitter's office.
Did you tell you about the quitter's office?
No,
but I can imagine.
I think one of the things that,
you know,
my,
my daughters were gifted because their mother is a world champion and a sufferer.
And you get your mitochondria from your mom.
So children, you're welcome.
Three-time world champion, superstar.
We, as a family, like to go into the woods and wilderness.
We love to run rivers and be active outside.
And pulling our kids into that forces us to do those things.
and pulling our kids into that forces us to do those things.
And so making your kids uncomfortable because you do this as a family
is a really great way to do it.
And for some families who are saying,
hey, I wanna struggle or I struggle with this,
let's go for a walk after dinner for 10 minutes.
That's what our family does.
And it could be a simple beginning a conversation
of doing that together.
And again, I think we're gonna have to culturally
have to wrap our heads around
what is it to be a human being and a member of society?
How do we do a better job supporting coaches?
How do we put PE back?
And it's a big multilayer problem.
What you can do is start to control some of this in home
just through activity. And theoretically, again, give your kids all the opportunities to do as many different sports and
as diverse experiences. And then when they start to get older, you can specialize.
And I just want to make very clear, we have met a massive amount of resistance. You are not alone.
And in George's case, it did seem like it was more of a maturity thing. Like she turned, you know, 16 plus 17.
And that was when there was kind of a shift.
I think she saw the difference in her body composition.
If she exercised, like I think she probably had some external motivation from just like wanting to look a certain way.
She had the hardest shot in like the league on water polo.
And people were like, where did she learn to throw?
So I'm like muscle snatch.
But I mean, getting our 14 year old daughter who probably will be a division one water
polo goalie, um, who is extremely athletic and a gifted athlete.
But I mean, getting her to like leave Tik TOK in her bedroom is a serious challenge.
Right?
So what we started doing recently is in between all of the training, we just do little micro sessions.
We just keep it.
It's like 20 minutes.
We're just going to do one movement.
That's going to be enough.
Really, the idea of never do nothing.
Like there's always things you can do in your house together.
And Caroline, who is crazy and awesome, she was like, hey, can we throw knives out here too?
And I was like, you bet.
So front squats and knives knives she likes to throw knives
so now she's like hey you know i fetch the knives i'm like you want to go throw a knife she's like
yeah i'm like why don't we press in between i think that's really reasonable so making about
music making it the most enjoyable experience possible you know anytime you're doing any sport
activity with your kids.
I mean, we used to, with Caroline, we'd go hiking.
We loved to hike.
And we invented these things called emo bears.
And they're gummy bears.
And when our daughter started getting emo and all glummy, I'd whip out the emo bear
and boom, she'd be back.
I was like, hey, how about a couple of gummy bears?
So, you know, I think you have to do high manipulation to learn to like to exercise
and train and be in that training
environment. That's a learned experience. And I do think keeping it playful and fun. I mean,
we went through like a, Kelly will get mad that I describe it this way, but like a bow and arrow
phase. How did I say? We went through a bow and arrow phase. So we have all these targets at our
house and, you know, so kids can go in the backyard and do that. And, you know, we just,
anything that they're willing to do that and you know we just anything that
they're willing to do that seems fun to them like we're game like we're in you know if they want
some cool device we're like yes we're in you know the other thing and this is you know the most
inaccessible sport for most people but i mean one of the most fun things we've done with our kids is
ski um because you know nobody's on their phones you're on the chairlift you have this a ton of
time to connect we're outside um so we've had a ton of fun doing that with our kids
too. Um, but it's very inaccessible, but I think you don't ever get to take your foot off the gas.
I think that's really, and if we, if we use this algorithm, we've been talking about like scaling
from, you know, children all the way up to the Olympics. Think about how hard it is for adults
to develop the practice and love to suffer
and be uncomfortable. It takes a minute to do that and to change those behaviors. So you just
have to put it in front of your kids in micro doses for decade plus. That's how long it's going
to take, I think. Yeah. And our dear friend T.J. gave us this, he told us this story and his kids
were in high school at the time and our kids were in middle school. But he said one of the things he'd noticed with parenting
is that if you think of parenting like a marathon,
he noticed that a lot of parents stop running the marathon at mile 24
when their kids are 15.
They sort of give up.
Pull the hamstring, and you go on without the gas.
Yeah, the foot comes off the gas.
They're pretty much baked.
Yeah, they're pretty much baked.
They're pretty independent.
And his point of view was like, well, actually,
that's when you need to put your foot on the gas. Like that's when they're the most mature, the most, you know, most able to, you know, absorb information. They actually, they pretend like they don't, but they need the most support, you know, and then that's actually the time to sort of put your foot on the gas as far as parenting. And so that really had an impact on us. And so I think we've been trying to, you know, make sure in our own way that, you know, we're
going to run across the finish line of the marathon and really be present and kind of
stay on them when they're in high school.
George is a senior.
She's looking at, last year was looking at colleges and doesn't want to play in college,
understands and recognizes that collegiate athletics is professional athletics.
And it's just like, that's not for me.
And, but one of the things she graded every university checked on
was the weight room and training facilities.
And I was like, it's perfect.
And she was super bummed that sometimes she's like-
Daddy's girl.
Yeah, Kelly was so proud.
Like we had these, like we went on this Midwestern tour
and she created these spreadsheets
and it was like, you know, overall campus feel gym.
And she actually really loved the University of Indiana. And it's like one of the most beautiful campuses i've ever
seen it's like hogwarts and we went into the gym and she's like nope she's like no way i'm out
peace out literally that why are the kettlebells so far from the rowing machine she was really
confused and she you know she said and and the other thing she noticed is she said there's no
women in the mate in the weight room at this college gym in Indiana.
She's like, I'm out.
Olympic lifting and powerlifting were the original amateur sports
because they really could, with just a York barbell set,
you could train yourself in your basement.
And if we can get back to some of those basic competencies
and exposure of kids to these things, you don't have to be a weightlifter,
but I want you to be able to be comfortable with that. Well, on that subject, I'm sure you've put
quite a bit of thought into how you would revamp, you know, PE, physical education in the school
system. Like it's a disaster. You know, when I grew up, it was the president's physical fitness
test and dodgeball and what have you. But in terms of something that needs an upgrade, I mean, this is certainly, you know, primed for that, given the fact that childhood obesity rates are through the roof and through devices, et cetera.
You know, young people are more sedentary and less engaged with physical activity than perhaps they have ever been.
So, like, we need to solve this
problem and i don't think we maybe you both have like such genetic drives to move and cope
but you know if you'd given me all this tech i'm sure bucketed yeah rich and i into this like
suffer lawyer category i know exactly he's just like he's just put us over here in this like
suffer lawyer over here yeah we suffer lawyer. Over here.
We're just one unit.
You're like, we're just one unit and then there's him. In his mind, we represent one thing.
Yeah, it's okay.
Multi-dimensional suffer.
Yes.
What you really just brought up was sort of two things.
One is how can we reconfigure what we're doing during the school day where kids are mandated to be there. It's a
government activity. What does that look like so we can get more movement in, right? And that may
mean we need to give kids three meals a day there, or they can take a snack home. They can have
access to good food there for the first time. Of course, that's tricky. You know, if we just
started something like the daily mile, which they started in the UK, just kids have to walk a mile
a day, right? Just during that time, who time who what what teacher can't administer a walking mile every
kid has to walk a mile we started the first our kids went to we did a google talk in 2010 about
looking at the workforce and then we realized that we were not applying our lessons to our children
and we went into our local elementary school and said,
what do you think about this radical idea of creating a different kind of classroom where
kids could move more? They could stand, they could fidget, they could sit on the ground. We
could give them more movement choice. And our principal was like, yes, let's do it. And then
in the next course of a year, we flipped the entire school, became the first all moving school
in the world. So kids had all this agency and choice and the desk was individually hired for them. So we didn't have to program in a specific program. We
just made it so that there was more movement in the day. And so there's that one piece of what
happens if you couldn't drop your kid off, you know, or you had to drop your kid off to a walking
place or something like that. How can you, how could you get more movement in? Cause I think
we need to do that. And then simultaneously redefining PE is not this horror show of the flexed arm hang
tests where we do kids who don't move or don't have any families that move.
How can we start to use that time to explore dance, yoga, weightlifting?
And what movements do we think that every child should know how to do
in order to progress? What movement skills? And so it becomes a skill base, just like
reading or math or anything else. We could do the same thing with that. And there's a real
opportunity for that. I think there's a real hunger and awareness because I think parents
are like, holy crap, we're behind. No parent wants their child to be unhealthy.
And I do think there's a lot of separate from pe things that could be done i mean one of the things that drives me insane and
i went to like 500 pta meetings and now my kids are in elementary school but our elementary school
was set up so that on rainy days the kids would stay inside at recess and watch movies and i was
like that is the craziest thing i've ever heard like i mean i grew up in a snowy climate and we
actually would put on our snow gear and go outside and play.
So the notion that kids have to sit inside and watch movies when it's raining and that they're not going to get a cold, they're not going to get sick, and kids actually love to play outside in the rain.
So that was a battle I tried to fight and lost.
But I mean, to me, that's just one of those simple things that it's like kids can go outside in cold weather, and kids can outside in the rain and they need to, they need to move their bodies and they need to play.
The other thing is that something like 90% of kids live within a mile and a half of their own
elementary school. And, you know, when we were kids, it was like 75% of kids biked or walked
to school. And now it's like 15%. You know, we've just had this huge drop, you know, schools have
rebuilt themselves around the whole concept of the drop-off lane that we talked about before.
And so, I mean, yes, the PE programs need to be massively revamped, but I also think there's all
this sort of connected stuff. How do we make sure kids can move more in the classroom? How do we
build in things like the daily mile? How do we make sure little kids are getting all the time
they need to play outside at school? How do we facilitate environments where kids can walk and bike to school safely? And I think even that would
make a huge difference because, you know, tackling the specific PE problem is such a huge one. It
makes me feel tired to think about it. But I mean, we agree. You don't have to solve the problem for
the school district. You have to solve the problem for your classroom. So you have a child in a classroom, you can improve that classroom. The teacher is the functional unit
of that. And there's all of those things. And if your teacher can teach math and skills and
social studies, they can teach squatting. And there are tons of resources available.
What we're going to have to do is think differently about the problem because clearly
who owns this? That's the issue. No one wants to own it.
Yeah, well, it's a grassroots problem
in the classroom with the teacher
and the students in that particular classroom.
And it's a federal program issue
that scales all the way up to the White House.
So the question is, is there a political will for this?
Like I remember when Michelle Obama was the first lady and
there was initiatives around moving and like eating healthy and, you know, that did not go
well. And it's like insane. Do you remember Jamie Oliver was like run out of the country and it's
pizza is not a vegetable. How dare anybody come in and try to like improve, you know, the health
and welfare of, of young people. Like Like I think the last time physical fitness
in the public school system was a thing
was when Arnold Schwarzenegger was talking about it, right?
Like, I don't know what the current state of it is now,
but I know it's decrepit in comparison to what it could be.
And there's certainly a need,
but there's so much bureaucratic red tape.
All you can do is like you said, Kelly,
is get involved in your kid's classroom
and try to begin there.
The other thing is to say, okay, this high school, middle school, elementary school problem is beyond
my skill. But then there is this thing, this kind of irregular army of youth sports. So the youth
sport coach becomes even more important because this may be the only time where kids learn to
move and play. That's a good point.
And we actually, the data is pretty good that a lot of kids actually do engage in small sports.
It's not everywhere and it's not equal for sure. But the data is that kids are starting to play
so that we now can think, well, how can we support the coaches? Because that may be the
only place where kids are getting any actual coaching. It's not about basketball. It's
how do I self-regulate and how do I calm down
and what does movement skills look like?
So we have to, I think, be clever enough
to look at some other opportunities to support.
And right now, there's Positive Coaching Alliance
and some of these things,
but who teaches volunteer coaches how to coach kids?
It doesn't happen.
Well, and I think a lot of,
as we were talking about before,
where your kids often don't wanna hear the message from you, but they can better hear it from
other people in their lives. And oftentimes that could be a coach. And so if youth coaches did get
into the game of a little bit of like, you know, teaching kids how to take care of their tissues
and, you know, telling kids they do need to sleep and maybe get off their phones, like that would
be such a support for, I think all of us parents who are trying really hard within our own homes, you know, sometimes that outside voice is really what
kids need to hear to actually try to make change. And so they can't hear it from their parents. No,
they can't hear from their parents. But man, if we had our youth coaches out there saying,
Hey, you guys really need to put your phone down and get eight hours of sleep. If you want to
perform on the soccer game tomorrow and Hey, you guys should probably eat a few vegetables. And
Hey, here's this $2 foam roller. Like if if your calves are sore you can do some input i mean
that alone would make a huge difference right uh but how dare you you know how dare you volunteer
it's tricky it's tricky it's really complicated it shouldn't be but it is right and you know we'll
we'll let you know how the experiment goes, our kids.
Well, also on the subject of the White House and stuff like that, is it correct that you have worked with the president?
Is this true?
That's correct.
Is this like you signed an NDA on this?
What are we talking about here?
We have a friend who is the physical therapist and coach to, was to president Obama
and also to president Biden.
And he is a good friend of ours and says, Hey, we need help with resources.
Or do you have ideas for this?
Or how do we solve this problem?
And, uh, I think we can say now because he's just a citizen, but one of the strangest experiences
we had is making an air gapped computer full of mobility drills and things where I talked
directly to President Obama. That was very uncomfortable for me.
And little strategies, you know, like we're obviously huge fans of standing desks, but
Obama was writing his next book and he finds that he can concentrate the most and the best
when he is sitting. But he also was uncomfortable and couldn't figure out a good sitting setup.
So we consulted with him on,
okay, here's sort of a sitting desk setup
where you can still manage to get some movement in
and fidget and be able to keep your brain alive,
but actually be in a sitting position.
I mean, it's really like minor stuff like that,
but that makes a difference in the end.
It's pretty cool.
How do we keep weight on an aging executive?
I mean, these are the real questions.
How do we, you know, whoever-
Aging executive.
You know, whoever is doing this job,
how can we support them so that they can do the job the best?
That's really-
And we have put our name in the hat,
although no one's come a calling,
but our name is in the hat
to be on the president's physical fitness council,
which we would really-
Well, that's a no brainer.
We would love to do that.
I mean, that would really be like, you know, an amazing thing. And really, we would love to do that. I mean,
that would really be like, you know, an amazing thing. And we think we have something to contribute,
but no one's come a calling. So, well, I'm, I'm setting you up for that layup and, uh, and,
and, you know, on the subject of keeping, uh, president Obama on the basketball court, right?
Well, yes, that's very true. Um, you know, one of the. This is a great allegory for everything we're talking about.
President Obama is a great athlete and very competitive.
He's said as much.
And one of the things that was happening was he would play basketball at the White House,
and he was ruining a lot of cabinet members and staff members.
They were having catastrophic injuries.
The most dangerous sport for a middle-aged person.
He's burning out his whole staff.
He's burning out his staff.
They were like tearing their ACLs.
Quad ligament tears, Achilles.
You know, the most dangerous sport
for middle-aged people is basketball
because you go from zero to sprinting,
lateral movement, don't have the tissues.
You haven't exposed yourself to,
when's the last time you jumped rope, much less cut?
Well, I think it's now been surpassed by pickleball though that's true i don't know if we have the perfect data on that but we think but i think that's that's the allegory
for how can you be prepared to come off the couch and theoretically come out intact and have more
fun especially when the game ready when the president asks you to play basketball will you
be ready yeah that's what i want. Without having to sacrifice your ACL.
This was super fun, you guys.
I really appreciate your time.
I'm a huge fan of the work that you're doing.
I think it's really important.
And the new book, Built to Move,
it's got, like we talked about,
the 10 chapters,
which kind of goes through
seriatim, all of these practices that are very easily incorporated into our lives.
And obviously, you know, super important to keep us moving and stable and mobile and flexible
and all the good stuff.
And I might just start practicing.
Can't wait to see.
Can't wait to see lower your issue
let us know if you have any blind spots
and we're really grateful to have
that's a whole other podcast
Juliet but we'll get to it
let's do it
you and I can sit down and have a
sufferfest slash
recovering lawyer retired lawyer
conversation as well
I look forward to that
thank you so much for having us
it was really fun to chat.
Really, really, really cool.
So if people want to check you out,
obviously pick up the book, Built to Move,
but thereadystate.com.
You've got tons of materials and programs there.
Your YouTube channel, The Ready State as well.
You know, a million videos and on Instagram.
Anywhere else you want to direct people.
That's it.
Those are the two things, builttomove.com.
All right.
Thanks, you guys.
Thank you so much.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Until next time.
Peace.
Blants.
That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation.
To learn more about today's guest, including links and resources related to everything discussed today, visit the episode page at richroll.com, where you can find the entire podcast archive, as well as podcast merch, my books, Finding Ultra, Voicing Change in the
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