The Tim Ferriss Show - #816: Nsima Inyang, Mutant and Movement Coach — True Athleticism at Any Age, Microdosing Movement, “Rope Flow” as a Key Unlock, Why Sleds and Sandbags Matter, and Much More

Episode Date: June 18, 2025

Nsima Inyang (@nsimainyang) is a strength athlete, movement coach, and co-host of Mark Bell’s Power Project, one of the top fitness podcasts in the world. He is also one of the most freakis...hly athletic humans I’ve ever met. He’s a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, a professional natural bodybuilder (placed top five in the world), and an elite-level powerlifter (750-plus-pound deadlift, etc.)—but what sets him apart is how he blends all those worlds with unconventional training tools like kettlebells, maces, sandbags, and rope flow. Nsima is also the founder of The Stronger Human, a growing online community focused on strength, movement, and resilience.This episode is brought to you by:Pique premium pu’er tea crystals: https://piquelife.com/tim (20% off—valid for the lifetime of your subscription—plus a free Starter Kit, which includes a rechargeable frother and glass beaker)Momentous high-quality supplements: https://livemomentous.com/tim (code TIM for up to 35% off)Eight Sleep Pod Cover 5 sleeping solution for dynamic cooling and heating: EightSleep.com/Tim (use code TIM to get $350 off your very own Pod 5 Ultra.)*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, hello, hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferris. Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferris show, where it is my job to interview and deconstruct world-class performers from all different domains, entertainment, military, sports, business, investing. We've done 800 of these conversations and everyone is different. Everyone is intended to be tactical for you, the listener listener to give you things that you can take away and apply in this episode is dense we have a lot you can apply i just finished a very short ten minute workout we might call it micro dosing movement that's gonna come up in this episode designed by none other than today's guest and it is amazing it is so. You get so much from so little. And who is today's guest? Nsema Iyong. That is Nigerian folks, although he's American, of course,
Starting point is 00:00:54 but his background is Nigerian. And that is the spelling that I will emphasize because you are gonna wanna check this guy out everywhere you can. Nsema N-S-I-M-A and then last name, I-N-Y-A-N-G. And Insema is a strength athlete, but he's a lot more than that. He's a movement coach and cohost of Mark Bell's Power Project. Hello, Mark Bell. Been a while. Lovely to hear your name and to see your name and to read your name. And that has become one of the top fitness podcasts in the world for very good reasons.
Starting point is 00:01:26 And Sima himself is also one of the most freakishly athletic humans I have ever met in my life. And that is saying a lot. I have met a lot of mutants, but what he's done is incredible. And let me give you an example. He's a black belt in Brazilian Jiu jitsu. He's been to Masters World Championships multiple time won twice at brown belt, a professional natural bodybuilder, he placed top five in the world and an elite level power lifter, which includes things like 750 plus pound deadlifts. But what really sets him apart is how he blends these things together these different worlds with unconventional training tools, including things
Starting point is 00:02:05 like rope flow, which is actually how I was introduced to him. And my goal with inviting him to this podcast was to help myself to be pain free and to also really regain my athletic footing. I'm not just interested in having big arms or a six pack. I don't really care that much about those things. I want to be an athlete. I want to be able to move not just now, but for decades and decades and decades. And after 20 years or so of lifting and martial arts and SEMA has developed a very unique approach to helping people build muscle, move better and stay
Starting point is 00:02:39 pain free for life. He is the founder of the stronger human, a growing online community focused on strength, movement, and resilience. With hundreds of thousands of people following his YouTube content, which I highly, highly recommend, his mission is simple, help people feel powerful in their bodies again, without relying solely on machines,
Starting point is 00:02:56 cookie cutter workouts, or the fitness industry's outdated rules. And he does turn a lot upside down in this conversation, and there are a lot of recommendations, we have links to everything, of course. So you can find the stronger human community, which I am going to be a part of at school.com that's sk o ol.com slash the stronger human. You can find all the various products and so on that were refer to in this conversation at the stronger human dot store and certainly on YouTube Instagram song you can find him at in SEMA young but that is spelled
Starting point is 00:03:32 once again N S I M A I N Y A N G and one last thing if you want visuals of all the exercises and so on that we discuss in this conversation you can can find them as B roll. It's been added to this interview at youtube.com slash Tim Ferris. Okay. That's quite an intro. I'm going to leave it at that. This is very dense. I am using what I learned. I am benefiting from what I learned from in SEMA. So just a few words from the people who make this podcast possible, and then we'll get right into the meat and potatoes. Please enjoy. This episode is brought to you by PEEQ.
Starting point is 00:04:10 That's P-I-Q-U-E. I have had so much tea in my life. I've been to China. I've lived in China. In Japan, I've done tea tours. I drink a lot of tea. I've been drinking fermented Pu-erh tea, specifically pretty much every day for years now. The problem with good poo air is that it's hard to source.
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Starting point is 00:05:51 Go to peaklife.com slash tim to learn more. That's P-I-Q-U-E-L-I-F-E peaklife.com slash tim. Peaklife.com slash tim. The discount is automatically applied at checkout. Sleep is the key to it all. It is the foundation. Many of you heard me talk about how today's sponsor, 8Sleep, has improved my sleep with its pod cover. Well, they just launched their latest product, the Pod 5. I cannot wait to try it out.
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Starting point is 00:07:17 like it. So why not give it a shot? Sleep is everything. Again, that's 8sleep.com slash Tim. You can spell it out 8sleep.com slash Tim for $350 off. Shipping is available to many countries worldwide. One more time, 8sleep.com slash Tim. Optimal minimal. At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking. Can I answer your personal question?
Starting point is 00:07:41 Now or the soon, at the perfect time. What if I could be optimal? I'm a cybernetic organism living this year over a metal endoskeleton. And Seema, nice to see you. Thanks for being here in Austin. Yeah, thank you. And I thought we would start with a little setting of the table, defining of terms. What on earth is powerlifting? You are an elite level powerlifter. What does that mean?
Starting point is 00:08:12 What is the sport of powerlifting and what are your totals and what does that even mean? So the sport of powerlifting is concentrated above the three big lifts, the squat bench and deadlift, the holy grail of traditional lifts. In a meet, you have three attempts at a squat, three attempts at a bench, three attempts at a deadlift in that order. Ideally you're aiming for a nine out of nine. There's geared powerlifting where you have suits,
Starting point is 00:08:34 but that's not as popular nowadays. I did raw powerlifting. Mark Bell, who's the host of the Mark Bell's Power Project, he was a big geared lifter, and then he did some raw at the end of his career. For what I managed to get, I think I got eight out of nine at my last meet. I got a six 22 squat, a three 96 bench.
Starting point is 00:08:51 I wasn't credit four or five and I never got four or five and a 755 pound deadlift. So my total was 1758 not on record, but what I've my gym lifts for powerlifting still never got the four or five bench, but I managed to squat six 45 a little bit after that meet and I believe I45 a little bit after that meet. And I believe I deadlift 775 after that meet. All right. Yeah. So you lift.
Starting point is 00:09:11 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I lift and I still like lifting contrary to popular belief and some of the things that I've put out. People think I don't think lifting is good for you and I don't like lifting. Lifting is good for you.
Starting point is 00:09:21 You just. Yeah. I was surprised how much jazzercise you do and how many celery sticks you ate at lunch. I'm kidding. All right. So you have some bona fides and actually I was joking earlier. That's not so much joking. Reminiscing that the first time I went to super training gym with Mark Bell, who is an old friend of no Mark for a long time, amazing character in Sacramento, I saw you doing deadlift workout and I was just like, what the hell is happening for people who may have gone to a gym before they maybe even
Starting point is 00:09:54 have put on 45 pound plates. Like, what are we talking in terms of numbers of plates? What does it look like when you're deadlifting the, your current personal best at that time, you know, I was probably deadlifting in the 700 type of realm. So working sets would be maybe five, six plates. So that's 495, 585 above for sets of triples, doubles, some singles here and there. It's a lot of weight, right? Not weight I'm working with right now, but it's a lot of weight you're working with when
Starting point is 00:10:22 you're focused on powerlifting. You're focused on like moving as much weight as possible on a barbell. So yeah, it's a load. Now the way that I found you was through a video on YouTube. You have an excellent channel and very thought provoking content. And that's what grabbed me. So what was the headline of this video? The lie of traditional training, why I moved on.
Starting point is 00:10:50 All right. Lie of traditional training, why I moved on. I was like, well, that guy looks pretty jacked. I wish I had those abs and I wish I could tan as easily, but boy can dream. Let me at least find out what the lies are. And click through was actually sent to me by my friend, Kevin Rose. Yeah. And I certainly owe him a debt of gratitude for that. And maybe you can describe for listeners a video that grabbed my attention. And it
Starting point is 00:11:18 was video of a man. I believe it was with no arms? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. What is this video? So Serge Gracovetz, he is the guy who wrote the Spinal Engine, which is a book that I referenced in that video. It's a video that he showed of a man that's moving through space with no arms and no legs. And when most people think about typical human locomotion, it's thought that the arms and legs are the driver's locomotion. You swing your arms, you swing your legs forward, you move forward through space. Well, this pretty much torso is rotating through space
Starting point is 00:11:50 without arms and legs, and you can see the rotation. The con. And he's sort of quote unquote walking, right? I mean, he's moving forward in space. Yes, yes, but you see that natural figure eight rotation of the spine that's moving him through space. So in that book, The Spinal Engine and the Surge's Theory of Locomotion, is that the spine is the driver of movement and locomotion. The rotation of the spine
Starting point is 00:12:11 helps swing the arms and swing the legs through space. And for efficient human movement, you want to maintain access to that spinal engine. And what I was getting at at that video wasn't that we shouldn't train with barbells or we shouldn't train in a neutral spine. But with the focus of traditional lifting being in the sagittal plane, usually forward and backwards or within that one plane, we are always training the neutral spine and maintaining that neutral spine through everything we do. So when you're doing that all the time in the gym, and there's also a lack of breathing, which we'll probably get into later, but you train this system.
Starting point is 00:12:47 When you want to potentially go and transfer it into something else, you might not have as much access to that spinal engine as you used to over time that can potentially degrade if you actually, maybe you never really had that and it gets worse by training in the gym. And the examples I gave in that video is examples from sports that you see this type of training a lot in. It's power lifting, bodybuilding, Olympic lifting. You're talking about the sagittal plane.
Starting point is 00:13:13 The sagittal plane. Now, can you just help people visualize what that means? Sagittal, let's just say you're standing in a very narrow hallway with walls on either side and you're bending forward, you can extend backwards. Divide your body in half here from the nose, right? Okay.
Starting point is 00:13:30 So you've got a line going from your forehead down your nose, splitting your body in half. That is a sagittal plane. Got it. So when we think of a squat, when we think of a deadlift, when we think of a forward lunge is also still in the sagittal plane, even though it's a unilateral movement. These are all done in the sagittal plane, even though it's a unilateral movement. These are all done in the sagittal plane with a neutral spine. And these are most of the movements
Starting point is 00:13:47 you think about doing a pull-up, a push-up. The frontal plane divides the body in halves from front and back. So we would imagine from the head to the toe on the side of the body, that would be something like a Cossack squat, ludging to the side, a lateral lunge. Those would be the frontal plane.
Starting point is 00:14:03 And the transverse plane of movement would divide the body in half from our torso, our legs down, torso up. So that would have this rotation of the spine. Those would be those three planes, but then we can get into other ideas of rotation, which is the things you get into with rope, et cetera. But gym movements are primarily done when people are training in the sagittal plane with a neutral spine. There isn't much flexion or rotation of the spine. You're strengthening this neutral
Starting point is 00:14:36 spine, which is good, but overdoing that can degrade the ways that you want to be able to move as a human being. And the way that can show up, I mean, this is very personal for me. And part of the reason it was very attention grabbing is as we've discussed earlier today, if people want to get a good laugh, you can watch me trying rope flow and throwing around a pink kettlebell in a giant sombrero. I wish they made the pink kettlebell another color. Cause I was like, man, like this doesn't, yeah. It was kind of perfect. It was kind of perfect. So if people want a good laugh, we'll link to that as well. Our earlier movement practice, but the story that I shared
Starting point is 00:15:13 with you is three years of chronic back pain and a pretty localized to low back. Who knows? I'm sure there's some referral happening, but by and large lumbar, this sort of grand central station of musculature called the quadratus lumborum, the QL and external obliques and all this stuff. I basically get locked and spasmed in the low back and that can be triggered in any number of ways. Now on top of that, when I watched this video, it made me think back to when I was much younger and actually ran across country and you have that contralateral movement. If you walk, it's like, okay, your left shoulder moves forward as your sort of right leg and I guess probably hip move forward at the same time, that contralateral movement. And to emphasize that you had video footage
Starting point is 00:16:03 in your video showing what everyone is seeing, which is someone who's done a lot of lifting, who's walking down the street and they have no contralateral movement. What's or are they? I shouldn't say they have no contralateral movement, but it looks like their upper bodies are frozen to block to block. And you could potentially say, well, that person is muscle bound, but that's not totally accurate, right? In the sense that, correct me if I'm oversimplifying this, but it seems like they are plain bound because their movement patterns are so limited that of course, like what you train for, you're going to get more of. So they have done one piece that is maybe let's call it necessary, but not sufficient if you want athletic movement.
Starting point is 00:16:46 And you talked about also resurrecting or improving your own running and just seeing the difference, not having the expectation that I'm going to become a competitive cross country runner, but for a very, very long time, and this goes back to even like 2004, 2005, when I was in Argentina doing tango, trust me, there's a tie long time. And this goes back to even like 2004, 2005, when I was in Argentina doing tango, trust me, there's a tie in here. And a bunch of people would laugh at me and they would be like, you have cintura de pollo, cintura de pollo, which, or cinta de pollo, which would be like, you have the waist of a chicken, which like, if you try to think of a chicken, doesn't rotate, doesn't rotate. And in tango, they want you to dissociate the upper and lower body. And I had a lot of trouble with that. So they were like, you have the
Starting point is 00:17:28 waste of a chicken. Now I would like to overcome this waste of a chicken situation and watch the video. One of the exercises you have in that video is rope flow, which I want you to talk about, but I'll, I'll give people just a teaser, which is saw the video. I was like, logically, this makes a lot of sense to me. All right, biomechanically, it makes a lot of sense. It's addressing a deficit that I have, but it's a scary deficit because when I have tried to really embrace rotation before
Starting point is 00:18:00 and the sheer forces involved, very often I either overdo it, even with very low dosing. And in some cases, like the back spasms, I'm out of commission for a week or two, like I really can't sleep. And so I've really stayed away from it. But you showed this rope flow and I was actually visiting Jake Muse,
Starting point is 00:18:17 who's been on this podcast. He's the CEO of Maui New Eventison. And we went to this outdoor gym in Hawaii that they'd put together for the team over there. And there was a rope. I was like, huh, look at that. Okay. Let me try it. And I felt so good after training. I mean, training is a bit of an exaggeration after playing around with the rope. And I was like, okay, I want to pay attention to this. Because when I was really young, it's like, okay, let's do like some metabolic conditioning. Like if I'm not puking into a bucket, I didn't train properly or hard enough. But then I started training with people like Jersey Gregorick,
Starting point is 00:18:53 who he spoke about amazing world record holder in Olympic weightlifting, at least he was masters and other folks where you actually can feel better after the workout than you did beforehand. So what is this rope flow as an example and how does it demonstrate or develop the kind of stuff that we're alluding to? I'm really happy that David Weck, he's the guy who started invented rope flow. He has the progenitor. The progenitor. That's on air, David. Go ahead and clip that David.
Starting point is 00:19:23 He's going to love that. He's the one who developed, popularized, got the moves going. I mean, he came onto our show and that he showed these videos back in like these 2006, 2005 style videos, right? And doing rope flow on like a roof in, I don't know, San Jose or something or San Diego. And he came and he showed it to us maybe about- On a roof. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'll bookmark that for later. I got to send it to you. David's a. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I, I, I got a bookmark that for later. I got to send it to you.
Starting point is 00:19:47 David's a character. He's great. And I've learned so much of him by the way. I love that guy continuing to learn from him too, but back to rope flow. He came and showed it to us maybe four years ago and what he mentioned it initially, I think sometimes when you have a certain amount of experience in training or whatever, you hear something new and you're like, okay, trendy or what's swinging a rope through space really going to do for you.
Starting point is 00:20:08 But through having so many people and talking to and learning from so many people that have changed the way I move and have affected me positively, I was positive for one second. Yeah. Don't lose your train of thought because you do a lot outside of the gym or say outside of the weight training gym. Right. I very, very serious dedicated jujitsu practitioner, which is not purely in sagittal plan. It's a lot more going on. Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:33 The jujitsu for me was really fun to start. We can talk about that later, but that's the sport I started doing because I realized that all the lifting I was doing had me feeling very stiff and unathletic. So I got into jujitsu about nine or 10, almost 10 years back to try to see if I could combat the way my body was feeling, which had its own issues. But rope flow, when David told me about it initially, I was apprehensive. I got a rope, I started doing it, got frustrated, dropped it. Kind of like the girl in the park that we met today. You get a rope, you do it for a little bit, you don't know what to do, you drop it. How did he sell it to you?
Starting point is 00:21:05 Do you remember kind of what the pitch was? He talked about all the benefits and he showed it. He even like showed me some in the gym, him and his head coach, Chris Chamberlain, but it didn't necessarily stick because I didn't have kind of like a structure to it. So what I ended up doing was I ended up just like looking at a bunch of people that I could see on YouTube. I went through some of the videos that David sent me and I just tried to practice it a little bit each day.
Starting point is 00:21:29 Frustration would set in though because the flow wasn't happening. You know, it's called rope flow because I think people ask, are there sets, reps, et cetera? No, you just go, you rotate, you move, you put the rope away, you go do what you do. It's not like a workout. It's a play. Yeah. It's closer to like slacklining. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:21:47 It's play. It's a flow practice. But once things started clicking, I started seeing how it was like affecting my jujitsu. And in my jujitsu, it's inherently an asymmetrical practice, the martial art. You have a dominant side and a non-dominant side. So you'll tend to do things, whether it's sweeps,
Starting point is 00:22:04 whether it's take downs, etc. Guard passing. You go that one direction, you grease that dominant groove and your non-dominant side ends up being just this goofy mess, right? But I started realizing that- Oh, that's just your non-dominant side? No, I'm kidding. I'm saying that about myself. I'm not going to spar you. No, no, no, but seriously, but, but what slowly started happening was I started noticing like a scissor sweep. I'd really do to my right side. I'm now, Ooh, that left side rotation felt pretty powerful. I don't usually drill that. What happened there passes to my left side started feeling better. And the reason that was happening was because when doing rope flow, it's a symmetrical practice. You learn to rotate using your spine on your dominant side, but you get that rotation on
Starting point is 00:22:47 your other side. And what happens is as you do this back and forth, naturally you want to make your non-dominant side feel as good as your dominant. So now your rotation with your spine to the left side of your body or your non-dominant side starts to feel just as good as your dominant and you're moving with more symmetry through everything that you do. Yeah. And let me add something just with kind of beginner's eyes. Now that I have a PhD in rope flow after I work out this.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Well, I'll just say that one of the benefits of something like rope flow from a development of like symmetrical abilities perspective is that you get a lot of reps because you could do something in the gym that's aimed at symmetry. But like how many reps and how many sets are you actually going to do if you're programming properly? And at what point is your technique going to degrade where you might be doing more harm than good? Whereas with the rope floats, like if it doesn't feel good, you're going to know, cause it's going to be janky. You might whack yourself in the ankle, whack yourself in the back of the head like I did. Whereas if it feels fluid, you're going to know it feels fluid and you get a lot of reps. So you have the benefit of volume on your side in developing that water fuel.
Starting point is 00:24:02 So there's that benefit of volume, but at its most basic level, you learn to navigate that rope, move it through space while using your spine as the main mover. You learn to do that. Initially, it's a very handsy thing. You're using your hands a lot, but then you learn to follow the weight of the rope and use your spine, both sides. You notice if you walk after, you now have this natural swagger that starts to happen when you're walking.
Starting point is 00:24:24 You're moving through space with that spinal engine. Pete Slauson Yeah, I'm going to try to just paint a visual for people when they're imagining road flow because some people I imagine are not going to really have a video in their mind as we're talking. This is going to age me, but I'll try it anyway. So, if you imagine Arnold Schwarzenegger, Conan the Barbarian, iconic scene with the sword, with the sword, swinging it on either side, iconic scene with the sword, with the sword, swinging it on either side, okay? You got it, you got a sword in front,
Starting point is 00:24:49 now he's swinging it to either side, okay? Now imagine instead of the sword, you have a rope that is whatever this is, and I don't know, inch, inch and a half, two inches thick, something like that, like a heavy-ish rope, right? And so now imagine you're swinging this rope around, but instead of just using your hands, let's just say you bring your hands in closer to your chest and
Starting point is 00:25:09 now you're creating that figure eight with your shoulders. And that is then swinging the blade, AKA the rope. Right. So just imagine that kind of movement. Is that fair enough? That's fair. That's fair. And along with that, it's not just the spine. It's the weight shift of the feet. Cause now you're shifting from one side to the other, left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot. Right. And the one of the reasons why I believe it's helped so much with my jujitsu because jujitsu very, it's a very rotational practice when you're trying to leverage an opponent from one side or the other is because my weight shift on both sides of my body has improved from my feet.
Starting point is 00:25:45 So this is one reason why when you start to like do more rope flow and you start to get more of the underhand side of the underhand practice, you've hit a boxing bag before, right? You, you've done that type of work. Go do that type of work again and do some uppercuts, do some hooks, but remember the things that you've learned. You're learning how to generate power and rotation from the ground through your fists.
Starting point is 00:26:08 There's so many people that I've seen now that have literally said, it's improved my punching or I actually know how to throw a punch because I've learned how to swing this through space. Also, like you were explaining and the underhand, like, okay, so guys, we're talking about the Conan and the barbarian thing. We won't belabor this.
Starting point is 00:26:23 We'll obviously have some video linked if you're listening to audio, but imagine that you have the rope, it is behind you, right? You're dragging a rope. Let's just say with two hands on one side, it's thick rope. And then you pull it up in the rope is taking this sort of upward trajectory, like a diagonal that would be sort of. I know it's not the best description, but that'd be like the underhand. Whereas if you're like bringing it over your shoulder, like a whip or something, that would be the overhand.
Starting point is 00:26:50 Went to the whip again, Tim. What was that? You went to the whip again, Tim. You know, this is why you don't go to your BDSM dungeon the night before your podcast. It just bleeds over guys. I'm sorry. All right. Guilty as charged. So what appeals to me, and I mean, this is like, my enthusiasm is outstripping my experience. That's probably the story of my life, but what the
Starting point is 00:27:12 little that I've seen of say RoPlo as one tool in the toolkit, part of what appeals to me about it is that. Like my experience early on with Pavel and kettlebells, there's this weird like what the fuck transfer where people who let's say do a bunch of kettlebell work suddenly have better running times. And they're like, what? What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:27:34 What the hell is going on? Or because of the thicker diameter after over time, they don't even realize it, but suddenly the limiting factor, which was their grip on the deadlift has been not entirely removed, but improved dramatically. And when I looked at the rope flown, I'm like, okay, forget about the rope. It's a tool for engaging these other planes of movement. And if done in,
Starting point is 00:27:59 we were talking about this earlier today as well, not necessarily as an hour long workout where you're just like dying inside, but rather like flossing your teeth or getting up and taking a shower. It's like, okay, you take a shower once a day, like rope flow once a day. And over time, the adaptations that would take place. And one thing I didn't tell you, because I did confess that this is very self-serving as a meeting because I was like, I really want to dial in my programming, recognizing there are things I want to do in the future, which are not breaking powerlifting records. Ain't going to happen. It's definitely not beating you in jujitsu because I'll get my, all of my appendages snapped off. Don't need
Starting point is 00:28:32 that. But I would never do that to you. Unless dot dot dot. I appreciate that. It wouldn't take very much, but there are things I would really like to do. I would like to compete in more sports, even if it's just in a club capacity. I would love to get back on the tennis courts and get back to playing tennis. And this might require some elbow surgery, but get back to rock climbing. And also one thing I didn't mention, but probably is the thing that I would tie most directly to the rope flow. I love working on pads in Muay Thai and it is such a good workout. I'm not gonna get yet another goddamn concussion I don't need any more of those and I would really like to get to the point again where I can train on pads
Starting point is 00:29:17 Hard for lots of rounds with a really really skilled trainer I just love that experience and And I'm so bored of stationary biking for my endurance work. So bored. I mean, God bless these tools, but still it's, it's pretty boring. So where should we go? There are lots of tools in the toolkit. Let me ask you this for people who might be wondering, and guys, I'm not getting like an affiliate commission on rope sales here. Like I have no dog in this fight, but it seems to be a very versatile tool. And there are lots of versatile tools, but it is also a tool that is very hard to injure yourself with. And for me, it's like weightlifting and a lot of training. Number one, unless it's a sport, right, is about injury minimization first and foremost.
Starting point is 00:30:05 So if I add in strength training, that increases the likelihood or endurance training increases the likelihood of me getting injured, scratch it, it's out. And then I'll take my risks where I need and want to take my risks like skiing, but I don't want to take it in the weight room. How long does it take for people to see some benefits from something like rope flow and like, what have you seen in students and people who try this and stick with it for a couple of weeks? Literally I've had people that are in the strong human community that literally after day one, they're finding that they have better balance walking up the steps. And these are people in their fifties and sixties.
Starting point is 00:30:41 They're like, I'm walking upstairs and I feel more balanced. Why? Because you're shifting your weight from one side to the other in a more efficient manner because the rope has taught you how to do that. You'll feel better rather immediately. Now the question is like, how deep do you want to take? How many of these movements do you want to learn? I've seen Kelly Strat start posting more about rope flow and he's been talking about it in
Starting point is 00:31:01 the form of just being a warmup before you do any of your lifting movements as a good rotational warmup and that's great. So it can just be used for that. But I think there is a power that comes with the practice when like today we linked around four movements together, the overhand, the propeller and the dragon and the underhand. What was it called when I donkey punched myself in the back of the head with the rope? We should give that one a name. That's the Ferris. That's what you call the Ferris. The one thing I want to mention about this too is this. Honestly, I look at rope flow as kind of like its own internal martial art. Do you know internal martial arts? So when it comes to internal martial arts, like I think Tai Chi
Starting point is 00:31:38 would be considered one, Bagua would be considered an internal martial art. When it comes to these martial arts, they're not necessarily like extra martial arts like jujitsu, boxing, kickboxing, muay thai, that's based on the output, based on the damage you're gonna give to an opponent. It's, the focus is more so on breathing, mastering the movement, linking the movements together. You're more focused on what's going on internally
Starting point is 00:32:02 and what your body is doing through space. Now, there are forms of like aspects of Tai Chi that can be applied to combat, but when you see a lot of older people doing Tai Chi, it's this flowing movement practice that gets the body feeling better afterwards than when it began. In a lot of ways, just having spent a good amount of time and like early mornings and China and so on. It's kind of like people are kind of crucifying me for this, but it's kind of like Chinese yoga, in a sense, like they are moving through all of these different planes of movement.
Starting point is 00:32:29 They're doing it every day. Even the kind of rotational kidney slapping stuff. There are some similarities. Absolutely. When you look at rope flow and then you look at what these like 80, 90 year olds are doing in China in the park every morning. And they're 80 and 90, dude. That's the thing. That's so amazing to me. Like you're still moving like that at 80 and 90 you're independent. You know, like I would even assume that a lot of these people probably feel minimal amounts of pain. They feel a level of freedom in their bodies at that age. That's kind of how I look at rope flow.
Starting point is 00:32:56 When you learn to link things together. So we learned a few movements today, but there are so many more movements that you learn. And the cool thing is that you do some of this stuff this week, Tim, you're going to wake up and it's just going to be there. You don't have to think about the movement. Now you just go outside, you do it. It's no thought. It turns into a flow. It turns into a flow state practice. That's where I think the strength is, because that feels like play. It no longer feels like, you know, a frustrating rope flow practice. Although when you start learning new moves, there's a level of frustration.
Starting point is 00:33:25 I still hit myself. That eye hit you did today where you knocked your eye, I do that all the time when I'm learning new shit. The rope will still do that to me. Because the rope teaches you how to rotate. You learn how to follow its weight. It'll teach you how to rotate better by hitting you, by not rotating cleanly.
Starting point is 00:33:42 When you clean that up, then it rotates cleanly to the left and cleanly to the right. And then again, when you link all this stuff together, it's play. It's a flow state play that always feels better afterwards. Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show. About three weeks ago, I found myself between 10 and 12,000 feet going over the continental divide carrying tons of weight and I needed all the help I could get. In those circumstances, I relied on Momentous products every single day and every single night.
Starting point is 00:34:14 Now, regular listeners probably know I've been taking Momentous products consistently and testing them, the entire spectrum of their products for a long while now. But you may not know that I recently collaborated with them to put together my top picks. I always aim for a strong body and sharp mind. Of course, you need both and neither is possible without quality sleep. So I designed my performance stack to check all three boxes, CreaPure CreaTeen for muscular and cognitive support, Whey Protein Isolate for muscle mass and recovery, and Magnesium 3 & 8 for sleep.
Starting point is 00:34:42 All Momentous products are NSF and informed sports certified, which is professional athlete and Olympic level testing. So what's on the label is exactly what you're getting. Try it out for yourself and let me know what you think. So just head to livemomentous.com slash tim. That's livemomentous.com slash tim or use code tim at checkout for 35% code Tim at checkout for 35% off of your first subscription. That's live momentous.com slash Tim momentous is M O M E N T O U S live momentous.com slash Tim or code Tim for 35% off your first subscription. Now for people listening and for me oftentimes when I say for people listening, it's just because I want to ask a question for myself. I am me, oftentimes when I say for people listening, it's just because I want to ask a question for myself.
Starting point is 00:35:27 I am the type of person, I know myself well enough at this point, I am almost certainly not going to become the Muhammad Ali of rope flow or the Fred Astaire of rope flow. It's just not going to happen. What are like the bread and butter minimum effective dose? Maybe people can find this. You can point them to where they can find these things, but are there two or three movements where you're like, okay, if you're just going to do five minutes a day or 10 minutes a day, maybe it's two times five to start your day and to end your day.
Starting point is 00:36:01 What are the bread and butter moves where it's like, if you only did this, there would be a lot of upside. Yeah. What are those? That would be first off, I have a full foundations row flow course that is free. It's like 50 plus videos of it. It's at school.com slash the stronger human. Okay. It's free. Okay. Now overhand race and chase underhand race and chase propeller or dragon, which is what we did today. Yeah. Did I do race and chase? Yeah, that's true. The overhand race and chase. underhand race and chase, propeller or dragon, which is what we did today. Yeah. Did I do race and chase? You did, yeah, that's true. The overhand race and chase,
Starting point is 00:36:29 you did the underhand race and chase. Race and chase is walking while you're doing? It's not walking, you can just stand there, but you added walking into it, you added a gait pattern into it, right? So overhand race and chase, underhand race and chase, propeller, link those three together, you have a flow from side to side, right?
Starting point is 00:36:43 And those are like, that's the basics, right? You learn to link those together, you'll a flow from side to side. Right? And those are like, that's the basics, right? You learn to link those together, you'll feel better. But again, I think that you mentioned you're not going to become the mom and Ali of rope floor or whatever. But one thing that I think is good to understand is like, we got decades for this, bro. You know what I mean? Like what is three to five or 10 minutes a day
Starting point is 00:37:01 for a few years, how good are you going to be at this a year from now, just from five minutes? Like you're going to look pretty good. And then, yeah, my mom's probably listening. She didn't want me to curse. Sorry, mom. I'm going to forget and I'm going to curse myself. So blame it on my bad influence. But five years from now doing it five minutes, you'll probably do it longer because you're going to naturally just get better at it. You're going to just be moving really well with this from this minimal input. It can be a practice that beats you up, especially if, because you can get a workout from it.
Starting point is 00:37:31 It doesn't have to be that it doesn't have to be something that beats you up. But if you want to go intense with it, use a heavier rope, how much do ropes cost for people listening? Cause I didn't, I haven't even asked that. I should have asked that. Yeah. Like to get something you can use for this cause I do find a little bit of heft to be helpful, right? We started with a very lightweight, light rope,
Starting point is 00:37:49 which was almost like a lariat, like a lasso. I mean, it was very small in diameter. How much does it cost to get the magna XL? The magnum, the magnum. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's not magma. How much does one of those cost? I think the magma XL is like- Oh, it's Magma.
Starting point is 00:38:06 Magma, not Magnum. No, it's Magma. Your mind went to Magma. I know, I know, I know. It's Magma. It's red. Some people can't be saved. I got it, Magma.
Starting point is 00:38:16 Okay, God, I screwed that up twice. Okay, Magma XL. And this probably, we were kind of bouncing around. The rope itself probably weighs like two pounds two three pounds Yeah, maybe maybe less. Yeah. Yeah. All right. And how much does that cost? That one's like $80 I think it is this is a thing though If you want to just get yourself a rope from Home Depot and cut it and make a rope That's fine. You can work that you can even work with an exercise band
Starting point is 00:38:41 You might have at home you can mess with some of this using a belt Yeah, you don't want to get anything, if you just want to like do the bare bones stuff. But certain ropes like the magma Excel, the RMT rope, which I think is like 40 or $45, there's a feedback that you get from the rope because it's very smooth when you're rotating it, but kind of feels better than a home deeper rope. Doesn't mean you can't use a home deeper rope or a rope from a boating store. Boating store ropes are actually pretty good quality.
Starting point is 00:39:07 Boating stores are really good quality ropes. So you could get something from there, cut it up, make your rope, you're good, right? So that's the thing. It's like, it's a practice that if you don't want to spend anything on it, you don't have to. Or if you want to spend nothing or very minimal amounts of money, you can do that.
Starting point is 00:39:23 But then all you need is your rope, some sunlight, or you can do it indoors if you want to, and you're going to feel better. One thing I want to stress is this. Do you know who Bill Maeda is out of Hawaii? You've seen his videos. Yeah, Bill's the man, man. I love Bill.
Starting point is 00:39:40 And we had him on a show a few years back. People have probably been saying this forever, but when he told me, and when he started saying this forever, but when he told me, when he started speaking this way, it really resonated with me where he calls his workout each day, he calls it a practice. It's his practice. For people who don't know who this is, how would you describe Bill? He's a lifting samurai.
Starting point is 00:39:58 That's how I would personally describe him. How old is Bill at this point? 55 or 56. And that guy is unbelievably shredded and strong. Strong shredded. Bill has a level of also curiosity that I admire because Bill has had so much fitness experience through the years. He's done so much. He's had a lot of positive and negative experiences,
Starting point is 00:40:17 but he's also someone that as much as he knows, he's continuously open to learning more and refining his knowledge and what he teaches his clients, the people he works with. And that's one thing I really admire about him because he's continuously open to learning more and refining his knowledge and what he teaches his clients, the people he works with. And that's one thing I really admire about him because he's 50 something years old. He looks amazing. He does well, but like he's also a sponge. And that's something that I want to ideally, I hope when I'm 55 or 56, I want to remain a sponge. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:39 I don't want to lose that, but he calls his movement, his workouts of practice because he changes it up each day. He does like five, 10, 15 minutes of movement and that's his daily practice. And that's kind of the way I look at my movement practice. There are like, when I go into a gym, I have in my notes app, I have just certain things that I might be doing during that day or I'll know what I did last week. So I'll be okay. Let's maybe add this in or do something else. But I keep things around so that I get a general daily minimum amount of movement in no matter what. So I have like certain flow movement that I'll get in. I have a club by my desk. I have a sandbag by my workstation. I have a sandbag in my garage. I have rings in my kitchen. I have things spent
Starting point is 00:41:20 throughout the house and throughout my space so that when I go by them, I'm encouraged to lift them. I'm encouraged to lift the bag. I'm encouraged to swing the rope. I'm encouraged to swing the club. I do all these things on a daily basis. That has my body feeling better and better as I continue to progress at the meat and potatoes of what I'm really trying to push forward. So I have these daily minimums, which is just my practice. These are just things I do. And I'll have certain things that I might be the workout, whether it's the jujitsu or the thing I do in the gym or my garage, or maybe I go out to the field and I do some stuff, some extra work. But I have those daily minimums that are just part
Starting point is 00:41:53 of my practice that just makes sure that I'm always making progress so that the only time that I do something isn't just in my workout. Right? I want my body to be able to do these things at any time. And I mean, that underscores also some of the stuff that I saw and you explained in the video. And you have a lot of videos. This just happens to be the one that initially caught my attention. But if someone, let's just say is training the big three lifts or whatever they happen to do and they're hitting them once a week or who knows and then they're not getting really any movement practice between those. It's like, of course they're going to be very constrained to a certain plane of movement, certain types of movements. Well, let me bring this back to me. I've been watching
Starting point is 00:42:43 Conan O'Brien must go. If people haven't seen that travel show you should, you should watch it. Cause that's basically Conan's move. So I'll copy Conan here. We were talking about this back issue that's been plaguing me and how I am actually back to a point now as of just a few days ago where I'm loading more in terms of let's just say back squat, which is like a very open question as to whether to include it or not and other things, making a lot of progress ever since really surgically trying to focus on glute exercises, which seems self-evident, but I could give people a long list of stories about why that's been a challenge over the last
Starting point is 00:43:21 three years, but I've made progress and want to get back to, let's just say, doing, you know, five rounds of heavy work on tie pads and who knows, maybe even doing some jujitsu, although I have a lot of PTSD from my joint injuries. So what are some of the things you would potentially suggest? Like if you were getting me started with programming and I'm sure you'd have to do an assessment and so on, there are some of the things we talked about over lunch, we don't have to talk about these,
Starting point is 00:43:53 but like sandbag box squat, recognizing that I'm very apprehensive about the low back. If I have to sit for instance, on like a hard wood bench for 30 minutes and I don't have any padding, my back could be seized up for a week, which means basically no sleep. So I'm scared of having that experience. And I recognize that if I don't load and work on my body, not just the low back and isolation, it's never going to be fixed or improve.
Starting point is 00:44:21 So how would you think about training with respect to this? I'd have to rewind it. And we talked a little bit about this early, but I'd have to rewind things back to first off the way someone breathes through the way that they move daily, every single day. Because when you injure something initially, you injure a lower back, which has happened to me many a time in the past, when something happens that aggravates the area, you tend to hold your breath. So when you bend to grab something, you'll,
Starting point is 00:44:53 and then when you feel safe enough, you'll exhale and start breathing again. Some people do this without even realizing they'll go down to tie their shoes and they have breath holds without realizing that breath holds is now, it's just an ingrained movement pattern that they bend, hold their breath, come up, boom. They get out of the car, they're holding their breath. Many people have instances through their day that the breath is being held. And the problem with that,
Starting point is 00:45:13 the reason why that's a really big issue is because when you hold your breath, your tissues will kind of seize up to keep everything in place. That's the Valsalva maneuver, when lifters lift heavy loads and sometimes not heavy loads is meant to increase that intra abdominal pressure so that there is no movement of the spine when you're dealing with the load.
Starting point is 00:45:34 That's what it's meant to do. But also there's limited movement when you're holding your breath. So the thing that I would want to get you doing is first to make sure that you learn how to breathe while doing everything. That doesn't mean just like breathe when you're doing everything through the house, et cetera. Like even when you're going to go pick something up and you find, okay, I'm going to hold my breath when I do this. Can you slow that movement down in a way that you can try to breathe while doing it so that you're not ingraining that pathway of hold breath and do the thing? How can we do the thing and breathe?
Starting point is 00:46:14 Because when we're breathing, the body feels safe. Like if you're breathing and doing stretching, you're breathing or doing anything when it comes to movement, you move more freely. Once you hold your breath, your body goes into this time to try to stay safe. Same thing in jujitsu. When a new person starts jujitsu, the first thing that you have to tell them to do is breathe. You remember? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:35 Right? You're on bottom side control or you're in some type of position and immediately like, you're trying to produce force and you're holding your breath while doing so because you don't feel safe enough to produce that force while breathing. What this is going to do is it's going to help us to kind of get those tissues moving in the way that they should. The body's going to feel safe. So those tissues are going to start moving well and we won't have excess tension throughout
Starting point is 00:47:01 the whole system. And this is why I would tell somebody with whatever lifting that they're doing right now. Yeah. Tell me, yeah. Let's lower the loads that we're working with and learn how to use the breath while lifting, pushing, pulling, hinging. Let's learn to use the breath while doing all of this.
Starting point is 00:47:20 What this means is when we are in our concentric phase of the lift, whether it's a push when lifting, whether it's a pull when pulling, whether it's hinging or coming up from a squat or exhaling, let's just use the squat as an example, rather than a bunch of things. The squat inhale when you're going down to the hole, exhale when you're coming out of the hole. Let's learn how to do that. Because in life, if we're going to squat down to the ground, we wouldn't, we shouldn't hold our breath when going down to the ground.
Starting point is 00:47:48 But many people do. We should just kind of like, whether it's inhale when getting down there and then breathe normally, we should be able to do that. And what I want to try to help you do is I want you to make this a global phenomenon. You're having very minimal or no, unless they're purposeful breath holds, you're not holding your breath during the day. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:48:07 There's other benefits outside of this where you're not going to feel as stressed because a lot of people, when they are looking at their phone, where they're, they start thinking of something that brings level of anxiety, inherently they start to hold their breath and they don't realize it. This is something that's going to help you get rid of global tension outside of what you're doing in the gym, which is going to help you just feel better overall. And this isn't something you deal with in just a day. This is a habit change, right?
Starting point is 00:48:30 If you want to change the way you do this when you're lifting, you must lower your loads. You don't do this with maximal loads. You don't do this with heavy squats, heavy deadlifts. You don't do this when you're lifting heavy sandbags or even kettlebells, right? If you're not used to this, you work on doing this with light load. And just like you'd progressed before with heavier loads, you progressively overload your ability to lift while breathing over time. You can progressively work with heavier and heavier load. So assuming I'm working on this, yes, I'm working on the breathing.
Starting point is 00:48:58 Tim, breathe. All right. My garage is a gym. I may not have all the requisite tools at the moment. It's got all the basics. What are, whether it is me or others, but what are some of the non-negotiable exercises that you might prescribe for someone in my position where it's like, okay, I remember back in the day, I like to consider myself pretty athletic. My enthusiasm outstrips my structural integrity on some regular occasions. And I would like to train for the long game, but also like I would like to be very strong. I would like to be for me, I would like to be very strong. I still know I can develop that capacity. It's just a matter of strengthening or capacity. It's just a matter of strengthening or catering to the low back so that I'm not terrified every time I set foot in the gym of having some spasm that cost me two weeks of sleep. So let me ask you a question. So back squat or no back squat for you? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:00 Or depends on the type of backs while we're talking. All right. Because like we had box squats come up and I had some questions and concerns around that. We talked about sandbags. Like how would you think about lower body? I mean, I guess it could be full body, but like lower body loading for someone like me, I would want you to focus a little bit more on unilateral before we do more bilateral axial spine back squat. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:25 So something like different forms of lunges, the ATG split squat is a really good money movement. Do you know what the ATG split squat is? I do not know what that is. ATG split squat is something popularized by Ben Patrick. Deep knee flexion of the front knee, the back foot has a large amount of hip extension. So you're getting hip extension of the back leg, deep knee flexion of the front leg. So you're building a level of strength through long ranges of motion with that movement. So those ATU split squats, different types of lunges, I would have you focus on that
Starting point is 00:50:56 instead of the traditional actual loaded back squat for a while. I'd also say that not that bilateral squatting is bad, but if you do, maybe you start learning how to do that with a sandbag. So use a kettlebell or a sandbag with that person. You need to learn how to lift a sandbag because when you lift a sandbag, the load is in front of you. Your spine is going to be in a fairly neutral position, but you're going to have a little bit more slight, maybe flexion in that spine.
Starting point is 00:51:22 And you're going to learn how to breathe against that load while squatting down with it in front of you. So that could be a 50, 100 pound sandbag. You'll probably start there and you'll probably move forward with that over time. But the thing is, is you're not directly loading that spine right now as you're doing. You're not causing all of that compression. Not that compression is bad, but it seems as if you're a bit compression sensitive when it comes to squatting patterns because of what's going on with your back.
Starting point is 00:51:51 Now, if you did want to work on some bilateral squatting, which I don't think is a horrible idea, I would probably say if you wanted to work with the barbell, don't squat to full deep knee flexion depth. Let's stay away from that for a while. So let's do barbell back squats to a box, making sure you're maintaining tension as you go down to the box and coming up. So you're not just plopping down to the box, sitting back, losing that tension, then coming out, maintaining that tension while breathing. And you're working maybe 40, 50%, 50, maybe 60% of your one rep max, where it's like, you can actually master the movement without stressing about the load. But over time, you can inch that load up in a safe manner.
Starting point is 00:52:29 And is the reason for that just because this might help other people. So I injured myself three years ago doing a workout that did not feel like an injury at the time. It was back squatting, but I was basically going like ass to heels. And I suspect in retrospect that I was doing like a little butt wink where I was starting to, to make it simple, just kind of like round the lower back in the bottom ranges. And I think it was that kind of bending of the paper clip that caused that initial acute problem. That was a real squat, bro.
Starting point is 00:53:03 Yeah. That's how you suppose that's a real squat. So you don't squat, has to grasp. So the box would let's just say, would it be just above parallel? Something like that. Above parallel or right at 90 degrees. Yep. Basically helps to mitigate the risk of that.
Starting point is 00:53:19 Would you do something similar with the sandbag or would you do that from the floor? Like what does the range of motion look like? You could squat down to a box or you could squat all the way down with a light load if you feel comfortable. I would suggest that in your situation you inch that down over time. Like what you could do is if you have multiple sandbags you could squat down to the other sandbag or you could squat down to a box and then over time lower that height where you feel comfortable. Just make sure as you're squatting down when you hit depth you're maintaining tension. When I say maintaining tension, by the way, I mean,
Starting point is 00:53:47 you're not totally just sitting down the box limping out and then coming back up. You're inhaling as you go down to the box. You're still maintaining that position. And then you drive up. You're not losing that tension that you've created in your legs, your feet, especially as you go down, you're maintaining it. The reason why people do the Valsalva maneuver is so when they hold their breath, they can maintain structural integrity of the spine, rib cage over hips, et cetera. When you're braced and you can't move, what's keeping that integrity is the air
Starting point is 00:54:14 that you've stored in your abdomen when you're squatting down. When you're breathing while doing this, whether you're inhaling while you're going down and exhaling when coming up, the structural integrity is you're maintaining it. Like you're maintaining it while you're going down and exhaling when coming up, the structural integrity is you are maintaining it like you're maintaining it while you're breathing. So when you're breathing, you do have more room for that to happen. But you should be able to maintain that structure without the breath. When I did lift at 755, I didn't use a belt.
Starting point is 00:54:38 The main reason I didn't use a belt is I want to make sure that my structure could deadlift this weight without the need of outside assistance. The weight belt when you're using it is supposed to when you push against it, increase the amount of intra abdominal pressure you're able to create and help you maintain that. But I, when I did that, the reason why I didn't use a belt is because it didn't make sense to me to develop all this strength if I couldn't do it on my own. So when now we're breathing while doing this very Constantine, Constantine knows I think, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:09 Back in the day, a lot of Russians did that though. A lot of Russians would do that, you know, but I think that there's a knowledge there because like you want to be able to do all of this stuff on your own. Yes, it can add some, but like having to need to use a belt to do everything, to maintain your structure, I don't think it's the best idea. Now when we're using the breath, we're not getting that extra pressure that it helps create, but we're training
Starting point is 00:55:33 ourselves to always be able to maintain the right structure and maintain the right amount of tension while breathing when lifting weights. And the reason why we're doing that is because life wants us to do that. When we're going through life, when we're fighting, we're not holding our breath. And I know that some people will say, well, this isn't the gym, the gym is supposed to help you do this stuff better. The reason why I started doing this is because I wanted to make sure that the strength I was building the gym would be something that would transfer really well to the fighting that I was doing and the stuff that I was
Starting point is 00:56:05 trying to do. And in all of that, breath holding is never part of it. Unless swimming, there's breath holding. I think even for me now, when lifting something really heavy, it's an exhale. Like I will, I will, I will use like when, when people see me using sandbags, this isn't a side, but I was always somebody who like when I lifted, I purposefully wanted to stay quiet. I don't like emoting. I don't like it. It's not in my nature to be the person who has, ah, when doing stuff.
Starting point is 00:56:34 But when you learn to breathe while lifting, what ends up happening is when you're creating that force, when you're lifting that sandbag off the ground, when you're pushing, ha, that happens, right? We're lifting, ha, that happens, right? Relifting that happen. It's not because I'm trying to sound hard or tough or whatever. It's because it's like the tie fighters kicking. Same thing. It's what my body needs to do to produce the force efficiently.
Starting point is 00:56:55 And I can stay safe through it. As that started to happen, I started to feel stronger and it transfers. You know what I mean? So that's why something that actually, I think would help people kind of understand this, especially the exhaling to create tension is let's do this right now. I think you already understand, but I think it's serve growl, growl, growl. I'll do it first. Yeah. Growl. What do you feel? Do it. Just, just breathe. And then,
Starting point is 00:57:28 I feel, I mean, there's a sort of shielding. There's like, like abdominal contraction. There's a level of tension that's created most noticeable thing. Yeah. But now when you're exited, when you see a fighter, that tension is created to keep this structure in place so it's safe when producing force. So this is why when I'm lifting a heavy sandbag or when I'm coming out of the hole of a squat or when I'm deadlifting, sometimes this will come out because it's my breath helping me create a strong enough structure to not buckle under the load on lifting rather than me holding the breath and not that again not that this is bad if you're a lifter and you're doing this for
Starting point is 00:58:09 your maximal lifts i'm not telling you to just desert the valsalva maneuver but i do believe that if you learn to breathe while lifting this is one of the fundamental things that will keep you safe while lifting that will help you progress well and will help you decrease the amount of stress that it has on your body over time. Yeah. Okay. Cool. And lastly, the biggest thing I think is it'll help you get rid of excess tension that you're
Starting point is 00:58:32 holding in your body when you don't need to have that tension. A lot of people deal with that. Let's say I'm working on that. Let's say I decide box squat and give that a go. Maybe I have a safety squat, yolk or something sandbag. All right. Probably do some isolateral stuff. So ATG split squat for somebody who's listening, let's say maybe they're in a
Starting point is 00:58:53 similar boat or maybe their back is fine, but they want to get stronger using these movements. What type of set rep programming do you give to someone who's not an elite power lifter? There's no need to do anything under five or six reps. And if that's the case, you don't have to do that because over time as you work with sets of five, six, eight, tens, right? Over time, you'll naturally be able to get stronger with those in those rep schemes with those loads. And I'm not saying that heavy lifting isn't good. I do things that are three, four or five reps when I'm working with heavy loads. I still do that.
Starting point is 00:59:33 But the problem that happens with a lot of people when they get into a program that's focused on the load and the heaviness of the load, they start doing things they shouldn't do to lift that load. So if we're trying to focus on maintaining our breath, there's going to come a point where you're working with a load that you're going to find you won't be able to breathe well. You won't be able to inhale and exhale at the phases of the lift that you should be. But you also, you'll manage to lift it and you're like, okay, I'm strong enough for this.
Starting point is 00:59:57 So you'll add on more. And then you'll get to a place where you're holding your breath. And then you'll get to the place where all the times that anything's really happened for me has been when I was creating a little bit too much tension. I was holding my breath and something happens, right? Not when I was breathing with it. So that's why I don't necessarily, if you're not someone who's power lifting,
Starting point is 01:00:16 and if you're in the gym, you're just wanting to lift and get stronger, I don't want you to focus on the weight on the bar. I want you to focus on the quality of the movement. I'm by myself in my garage, so I definitely have no one to impress. So what would you suggest that? Would it be two or three sets of blank with like X number of minutes in between? Because like we were chatting a little bit and this is nothing obviously
Starting point is 01:00:37 compared to what you do, but when I was my strongest, like back in the day, which was like probably 96 when I was in China, of all places, I was doing sets of, let's just call it six to 10, but closer to six in pretty much all movements with like five to 10 minute rests, right? I was taking really long rest intervals and generally hitting. It was split push, pull legs. And it was, I was hitting each of those workouts once a week, roughly. What would you prescribe as a starting point? Like for me with sets and reps and rest
Starting point is 01:01:17 intervals and things like that. Any thoughts on how to approach it? Two to three sets per movement. I like people doing things for sets of, not sets, reps, six, 10, 12. I would say doing that kind of rep scheme. So what I would do is on certain days, if you're doing two times a week in the gym, one of those days have your movements doing maybe sets of six or so. And I would also split it up like this too. When I lift, I kind of do upper and lower body. I don't just break it up into like a push pull, whatever I do kind of full body stuff, right? So if you're doing upper and lower on a certain day for one day for your upper body movements, if you're doing sets of six or so do sets of 10 on your
Starting point is 01:01:52 lower body, eight to 10 higher. Okay. So this day, let's just say it's Monday. Upper body would be six rep sets, six rep body would be 10 higher up 10, 12 sets, yeah, 12 reps per set on another day. If you're doing a full body day again, I would say for higher up 10, 12 sets. Yeah. 12 reps per set on another day. If you're doing a full body day again, I would say for the upper body, that would now be higher repetitions and your lower body would be lower repetitions. If you're doing two full body days.
Starting point is 01:02:15 Now, I think you said you're doing push pull legs, right? And I'm not married to that. It's just easy for me to remember. There are so many ways to set things up, but for minimum effective dose, if you can do each body part twice per week, which you can probably do in two to three training days, it doesn't have to be a five week split. Literally. You can do all this two or three days in the gym for two days.
Starting point is 01:02:41 That's how I would split it up for three days. You get a little bit more leeway with volume and three days is nice because if you for example on Your first day if you find that you do better having slightly lower amounts of movements Then you can split that volume into three separate days rather than having that volume in two days instead. Does that make sense? Can you give me an example? So if you did Can you give me an example? So if you did five upper body movements and five lower body movements on one day, and then day two, you did five lower and five upper. If you're finding that you that's too much for you to do in a two day period, you could
Starting point is 01:03:14 take some of that for me. For whatever reason, handle volume very poorly. Instead of totally taking down that workload, split that workload into three days. So then you're doing, what is it? You just mentioned 20 total sets, do six sets, six sets, and then on another day, it's going to be eight sets of that movement. You split that volumes three days, you're good, but you can still do that rep scheme where you hit each body part twice a week. You managed to do some slightly lower repetition, some slightly higher repetition, you're good.
Starting point is 01:03:48 And then what about rest between sets? That's variable because some people like to have actual rest between sets, but then you can also, if you're doing on a certain day, let's say for your upper body movements that you do some push and some pull, you could superset those because they're antagonistic. So when I say antagonistic, you do, instead of arresting, you would do a pushing movement. Then you could literally just, let's say you do a push and you do a row. You could do that back to back because the recovery of each movement
Starting point is 01:04:15 doesn't necessarily get too much in the way of each other. There will be some stress from the weight you did in that specific first set, but the muscles being worked when you're doing that push movement do not get as much in the way as the muscles you're doing work in the pull movement. So you could rest if you wanted to, but you could also superset it. And one thing that I think, a concept that I want people to take from this, because I know how people love to have that specific program that they do, which is good, but learn to add an element of play into this. Learn to have an element of freedom into this. So if you feel like you want to rest or like a minute or two in between a set,
Starting point is 01:04:52 rest, you feel like you want to superset superset because again, I think that you can get very specific with it, but when you start making too many stringent rules within it, it can, for some people become quite daunting and monotonous. So something that I do is like when I'm doing like a squat, I'll sometimes do some rope flow in between just to get some rotation. Let me ask you this just to stand in for the audience here. Yeah. Do you think you could have gotten away with that earlier in your training?
Starting point is 01:05:20 Have you laid such an incredible foundation of strict, maybe monotonous training that now you're like, okay, like this body's not really going anywhere. So if I want to do some Sudoku in between my overhead presses and do some row flow over here, maybe a little pantomime in between this set and that set that you can get away with it in a way that might not serve a beginner or intermediate or is that, am I off base there? So the reason, let me mention the reason why I do rope flow in between. It's not because
Starting point is 01:05:52 it's part of a workout. It's because it helps me feel better. When I put so much compression on myself, there's level of like, for me stiffness that I feel from that set. The reason why I do the rope flow is to help me kind of undo that stiffness before my next set. That's the reason why I do it. I don't do it because it's like a super efficient part of the workout, but I do it because it helps me feel better for the next set I'm about to do. When I do a lot like, and other people notice this too, but when you do a lot of compressive
Starting point is 01:06:18 things back to back, you start to kind of feel this lower back tension and stiffness and this overall stiffness that you're creating for the workout. The stiffness isn't necessarily a bad thing if you have something especially like you don't have to do rope flow in between sets too. You do that post-workout or later that will be something that really will help you feel better. But the thing is is like when you only do that you then walk around with that stiffness that you've created and you have nothing to undo it. This is one of the reasons why a lot of people will work out. Then after their workout, they'll do dead hangs because they feel like, Oh, I'm getting this decompression in my spine from everything.
Starting point is 01:06:53 And that can feel better. But the thing is, is like, you can get that same decompression from the rope. You could get the same type of decompression from swimming. Swimming does the same thing. But the reason why I was saying all of this is like, have a structure to what you do, but allow yourself to kind of add things to it or subtract things to it. When you want the only thing that's going to help you get bigger and stronger is progressive overload over a long period of time.
Starting point is 01:07:19 It's not going to be the magic set and red scheme that you're doing right now. It's going to be what you're doing being progressed over years. Yeah. And for people listening, because I think one criticism that I get a lot is like, you didn't get this big from rope flow. Now I didn't get this big from. But at the same time I could have gotten this big while feeling better for years. If I had the other practices that I do, like the rope, the clubs, the kettlebells, if I had those practices included, it's not about getting big. It's about gaining strength and
Starting point is 01:07:52 muscle, but moving well throughout the whole process. Not focusing on the way you look, but moving like a fridge and feeling like you're old. That's That's not the goal. Right. I mean, I don't think anyone sets out to gain muscle and strength with also the goal of feeling like they're 80 years old. No one wants that, but that's where a lot of people are. And a lot of people, they'll assume that that's just part of the process. Yeah. And doesn't need, it doesn't really, it doesn't need to be at all. Yeah. You definitely need to hang out with Jersey. He'll enjoy hanging out with Jersey and on yellow.
Starting point is 01:08:28 I'm excited. No, for once you told me about it, I'm going to like them. Yeah. You guys, you guys will get a kick out of each other because for instance, like Jersey, he also does decompression, but usually hanging upside down and like, and like boots boots, but he does some like really heavy weights. Like he'll hold onto like a hundred pounds in addition to hanging upside down. Anyway, he's got his own like approach to things for very, very short duration, like five to 10 seconds. But I think you'll find a lot of his stuff thought provoking, but he is all about movement and he tracks everything meticulously with his trainees, but he'll also look at their gate and he's like, I want
Starting point is 01:09:03 to get you to the point where you walk like a dancer. He's like, that's definitely one of his explicit goals is to like watch gate and movement in that way. And when I told them that I was doing, and I think there's a place for this, I'm going to continue to do it, but you know, I was doing biking for exercise and like what his thoughts were. And he was like, terrible. He's like, he's like, that's stupid. So stupid. And Jersey, I know I'm paraphrasing here, but he was like, if you want to ride a bike because it's fun to ride from point A to point B, he's like, great. He's like, if you want to ride for 50 miles because you enjoy it. Great.
Starting point is 01:09:33 He's like, if you're doing it though, as it's like monotonous punishment and training, he's like, terrible. It's like, don't do that. Yeah. I think that, but you know, I want to mention, don't lose your train of thought, but I think that's what he's mentioning there in terms of relation to gait. It's a very smart way to try to think about some of your training because when a lot of people think about the squat, when a lot of people get their feet set, they usually have
Starting point is 01:09:55 their feet out at an angle. Slightly pointed out. Toes. Right. Slightly pointed out. Toes. You're creating this force upward with that barbell. So you're learning how to have force coming from the ground through, but
Starting point is 01:10:06 you're just going straight up and down. Now the thing to think about, and the reason why I mentioned this is when you do watch a lot of people that develop those capacities, a lot of them walk through space, it's almost like they're walking in a squat position with their feet, they're walking with their feet out like this. Yeah. They got a Charlie Chaplin mask. Yeah, the thing is, is like,
Starting point is 01:10:28 you'll see some pro NBA players walking like this. You see a lot of that. I'm not gonna necessarily say that that's bad. What I'm gonna say is over time, I used to kind of walk like that. But as I started thinking about what my feet were doing during everything I was doing, and I started thinking about doing certain exercises
Starting point is 01:10:44 that would potentially improve my gait over time now my feet face forward when I walk and I'm not intentionally doing this is just my directionality through space is now forward I'm not fighting myself trying to navigate forward with feet that are outwards that's not efficient I'm not saying everybody needs to walk with their toes forward but I'm saying when you start thinking about ways to adjust your gait with your movement, so this could be the bilateral movements like the ATG split squat, that could be using a sled. I think sleds are super powerful and the unfortunate thing is like not everyone has
Starting point is 01:11:18 access to a sled, but that is literal forward and backward force production. When you're pushing a sled, there's this force that you're learning how to push forward, but you need to have your feet moving you forward too. So you're learning over time how to push a weight forward through space. I think they're super powerful, not just for developing structural strength, but also improving one's gait over time. The way you walk will change and the rope will help with that too. But that's something to think about. Like, I don't think most people should be walking with their feet ducked out. And I used to walk like that because sumo deadlifting, the feeder here, I'm
Starting point is 01:11:53 producing force from a foot position like this squatting, I'm producing for from a foot position like this. Now, when I go and do other things, that's the way I move through space and that's not efficient. So just because I'm curious and at least long ago found a lot of dividends from doing sumo deadlifts. They're not bad by the way. Recommendations for sumo deadlifts. Any thoughts on common mistakes, tips that you've sort of principles that you've refined over time. We're like, okay, here's some of my pre-flight checklist that might be helpful to people.
Starting point is 01:12:31 And can you just describe, well, so it's called sumo deadlift because it's a deadlift. You're pulling a barbell loaded with plates off the ground, but your legs are wide. Your hands are in between your legs going down to grab the barbell. So you look like a Yokozuna like squatting down and getting ready to do the whole sumo thing. Hence the name. What recommendations might you have for people who are hoping to improve their sumo deadlift? There's this funny thing within the powerlifting community where the powerlifters are like they look at the sumo deadlift and they say that's not a real deadlift. Yeah, that's not a conventional deadlift. Conventional deadlift would be like knees inside the arms. Yeah. And it's just so funny to me. We had a, an aside Colton
Starting point is 01:13:10 Yungelbrecht. He has the highest total ever in powerlifting of around, I think I'm going to butcher this, but I think it's like 2650 at two. I think he was 275 when he did this. So he wasn't even like at the heaviest weight class. He was 275 at 22 years old. He's been parallel for three years. Highest ever. All right, so he squatted 470 kilograms, 260 kilogram bench, 470 kilogram deadlift on an eight and nine day. So he squatted and deadlift at 1,036 pounds in the same meat.
Starting point is 01:13:43 At rifle at the age of 22 years old. So the reason why I mentioned it, this is yet another reason you never start your street fights. People, I mean, I doubt you'd pick on this guy, but people are getting just never know so much stronger, so much younger. It's insane. But the reason why I mentioned Colton is because Colton does the sumo deadlift and some people roast him for that and they're like, it's not conventional.
Starting point is 01:14:05 It's like, whatever. But when we had him on the shelves, like Colton, why do you sumo deadlift? And he was like, it feels more natural. Yeah. And I was like, yeah, it does. It feels weird to bend down and pick up a barbell implement in the conventional way for, for at least for my body type. Some people with very long arms, certain like length of their femur.
Starting point is 01:14:24 Some people feel better with conventional, but the sumo for me is just made more sense because you're getting down in this hip position, you're driving with your legs. It just makes more sense in my opinion. So nothing against conventional, nothing against any other deadlift, but the sumo. Now when doing the sumo deadlift, I think one thing that people really need to focus on is like what their feet are doing. And I think this would be how it should be with every single lift. But when doing the sumo especially,
Starting point is 01:14:50 there's a cue that people get, and people get this cue in squatting too, where you'll hear knees, push your knees outward. For the squat, you push your knees out so you can have space to get in between your hips when you're squatting. Sometimes when your knees are too far forward, some people with their limb lengths
Starting point is 01:15:03 don't have the ability to get down to depth. So when you push your knees out, you provide room. The sumo deadlift, when people say push your knees out, when you push your knees out, you provide room for the barbell to ride up your body. But the other cue of rooting the feet into the ground, and I learned this cue from Kelly Sturrett's book, Becoming a Supple Leopard back in 2013.
Starting point is 01:15:23 Have you met Kelly? Met Kelly, yeah. We've had him on the show a few times. I always mention where I've learned these things because Kelly's awesome. But I learned that from his book. I also learned, and the reason why I keep my face relaxed when lifting and stuff, I also learned that from his book, Supple Leopard, because when he talks about myofascial release, you shouldn't have a pain face. If you relax, it's going to allow yourself to relax through these movements. But anyway, that's an aside rooting your feet into the ground will allow you to have
Starting point is 01:15:49 external rotation of the hips. I mean, we did a little bit of this earlier today, but just describe for people what that actually means. You're in a gym doing a sumo deadlift. You have shoes on presumably. What are you doing with your feet and legs? I think something that can help somebody understand this is using the hands,
Starting point is 01:16:07 putting your hand on a table and trying, you can actually do this with both hands. Keep your fingers planted in the table and try to see if you can rip the table apart while keeping your fingers where they are, like rip the table apart. Now, what do you feel when you do that? So in this case you're sort of externally rotating your hands, even though they're not moving. Yeah, ripping that table apart.
Starting point is 01:16:30 But what do you feel when you do that with your hands? That's actually, what do you feel? What I feel? I mean, I feel a lot of tension in my, my arms. You feel a lot of tension in your arms. What do you feel in your shoulder? Shoulders have gone down and my lats are engaged. So I mean, there's a lot going on.
Starting point is 01:16:45 So the shoulder can be compared to the hip where the hip externally rotates as you're grabbing the ground. The shoulders will have this downward rotation. Right, like as I do this, I guess it depends on, if we were doing like a pushup, it might even be better right now. Arms are extended in front of us.
Starting point is 01:16:59 If we're doing a pushup, what I would expect is that this eye of the elbow, the inside of the elbow, that let's just call it the eye kind of when you bend your arm, it would be in that crook would almost certainly rotate. I would imagine there would be some rotation and a push up position, which would then mimic the, I guess, femur. Exactly. So the reason why I wanted you to do that with your hands is I think that could help some people understand what they should be doing with their feet. You got some meaty hands, my friend.
Starting point is 01:17:26 I would not want to get slapped with those things. Jesus. Tim, I'm just saying, let me, let me, let me say this. You don't know how happy that makes me feel. Do you know why? Because you've won just slapped me and now it's not allowed. No, no, no, no, no. Over the past jujitsu and we're going to come back to the foot thing, but
Starting point is 01:17:43 jujitsu is a martial art that has a lot to do with the hands, the grip. And I've noticed that my hands have gotten bigger because I've purposely started doing more hand type of work this past year. Like the rice bucket. Like the rice bucket. I've been doing a lot of hand work because I started, because of all the gripping in the martial art, I started to feel pain in my fingers. And one thing you notice with a lot of high level black belt grapplers is their fingers are kind of mangled because of everything that happens over the years. So I started doing rice buck work and a bunch of other things,
Starting point is 01:18:11 but my hands, I'm happy you say that because my hands didn't used to be this meeting. Yeah. So thank you. You're welcome. It's working. You're welcome. Okay.
Starting point is 01:18:18 Yeah. If this jujitsu or YouTube thing doesn't work out, you know, you could go into one of those Russian slapping competitions. I would never. Yeah. I wouldn't have not worth, not worth the TBI. They would mess me up for sure. I'm not strong enough for that. But the reason why I wanted people to do that on the table and feel that is
Starting point is 01:18:33 because when a lot of people try to do this with the feet, they just grab the ground like this and like what you were doing in the park initially, they kind of just curl their toes like pinch instead of pinching slightly and then ripping apart to create that part just to be clear is not straight out to the sides. It's really like a rotational. Yes. Right. And that rotation is going to allow the knees to come out and for the sumo deadlift, the knees will pull out because you're getting external rotation of the hips, which will allow you room to drive the hips forward. Let me ask you this with the sumo
Starting point is 01:19:04 deadlift when you place your feet, let's just say straight ahead is 12 o'clock and then your toes are getting pointed out. How externally rotated are your feet to begin with? Are they as far out as you can get them and really close to the plates? Are they at 10 o'clock and two o'clock, and then you get that type of tearing apart external rotation. Nowadays, my feet would probably be at 11 and one. Okay.
Starting point is 01:19:34 All right. The reason why they're at 11 and one is because I have better mobility than I had in the past. So when I do create that torch and I have more hip mobility to even to, to create when I'm moving outwards, some people who don't have that hip mobility have to have their feet in a wider position so that they can create enough width to have their knees, not be in the way of the bar. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 01:19:53 So that's, that's totally dependent on one's hip mobility, but when you get more hip mobility, when you're creating that torch and your, your feet angle will change slightly for how comfortable you are in the position. So whatever position you have right now, there's not like, there's a golden position for the level of mobility you currently have. And as that mobility improves and as your ability to create more force improves, that position will adjust. How close to the plates are your toes? My toes? Oh, no, no. Yeah. My toes aren't like, how wide is your stance? Is it another way to put it? Like 90 degrees. So, so when I say 90 degrees, I mean,
Starting point is 01:20:25 my legs are out and my feet are like, or my knees are right below my fingers. So I'm not like, I don't have this. You see a lot of people were there. They almost have like this triangle angle with their feet. I have like a box. That's the structure I'm in the bottom position in the bottom position. Yeah. Yeah. And the bottom position it's like, boom, boom. From knee to ankle is perpendicular to the ground. From knee to ankle is perpendicular. Yeah. Interestingly enough, you notice like in Ed Cohn, he had this outward, like you'll notice he kind of like, his feet were closer together in his sumo deadlift. Yeah. And he was a crazy
Starting point is 01:20:57 sumo deadlifter, but that's where he found he was able to create the most for us. What was his crazy record setting deadlift? Some insane number. What was it like nine, nine 70 at two 20 or something. We had to put on screen. Ed Cohn's had a lot of records. Yeah. He's had a lot of records. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:14 I remember getting this book. I'm blanking on the author's name and it was like Ed Cohn, the man, the myth, the method, which was a great book. And there was a photo you want to talk about people who are well built for their sport. Like you look at Michael Phelps, you're like, okay, I could swim my whole life. Like my body doesn't look like that guy. Like his ankles are funny and like he's just perfectly built for the sport. Right. And there was a photo, I don't know if it was Wilt Chamberlain or some NBA player who was like 10 foot 10. Right. And he's next to Ed Cohn, who's not 10 foot 10. He's like five foot five.
Starting point is 01:21:45 And they put their hands together and they were the same size. And I was like, man, oh man, you could not design from scratch a better body for this exact lift. Have you ever met Ed Cohn? I don't think I have met Ed. We've had conversations before, but no, I don't think I've met him in person actually. Okay. Ed is a literal mutant to this day. The last time I saw him in person was a few years ago. I mean, is it fair to say, I mean, one of the greatest powerlifters, if not the greatest of all time? Still the greatest powerlifter of all time. I would say he's still the greatest powerlifter of all time. I think he popularized the sport so much. He got so many people into powerlifting. He inspired so many of the greatest minds in powerlifting to this day that like,
Starting point is 01:22:28 I don't think no matter what anybody else does in powerlifting, I think Ed Cohn is probably still the greatest. And then from there, it's like, well, who has the highest total in that? Like, yeah, you know what I mean? And going back to Ed's structure, first off, his hands are huge. Like I shook his hand and his hand engulfed my hand, right? Me being so much taller. It's like he ate my hand with his and made me feel so small. The second thing is the length of his arms. Ed has these- His ape index must be off the charts. He has these orangutan arms, bro. Where it's like when you look at his sumo deadlift form, it kind of makes some sense
Starting point is 01:23:03 with how easy- He doesn't have to have the legs super wide. He doesn't, he doesn't, right? So one of the things about the sumo and one of the things about lifting in general is finding the best position for your anatomical leverages. Like some people, like for example, Kelly Sturet, a lot of the time he was squatting with his feet pointed straight forward,
Starting point is 01:23:20 creating that torsion, but you look at his limb lengths, he could be really good for that. Some people, if they have a longer torso, sometimes that positionsion, but you look at his limb lengths, he could be really good for that. Some people, if they have a longer torso, sometimes that position doesn't do well for them because as they head down into the hole, their body folds. So they need, some of them need to have a much wider stance so that when they head down into the hole, they don't have this massive folding of their torso. So it's, what's one of the cool things with lifting where you'll see someone like an Olympic
Starting point is 01:23:42 lifter with beautiful mechanics, but then you also really have to pay attention to the way this person is built and you have to find the best way to move that weight through space with your leverages. Yeah, totally. Makes me think of one of my buddies, amazing striker, used to compete at a very high level. And I mean, he is like gangly as fuck. And that's part of the problem because he would be like a foot taller or he would have like eight inches of additional reach on people.
Starting point is 01:24:08 So he would just pummel the hell out of people in the same weight class. But there's certain movements. Like you want that guy to like do bench press, you're gonna come away with the misperception that he is weak. Right? It's like, no, maybe with that particular movement,
Starting point is 01:24:21 sure, it's not very well built for his dimensions. But let him throw like a power jab at your face. Like, yeah, not very well built for his dimensions. Let him throw like a power jab at your face. Like, yeah, he's well built for that. Just different body types. Let me add this in because I think this is something that can maybe give some people something to explore when it comes to their deadlift movement. When it comes to deadlifting, the things that we think about as like the conventional deadlift, the sumo deadlift. Well, you could also attempt doing like a staggered stance deadlift. So staggered stance deadlift would mean there's one foot ahead, one foot behind, the foot
Starting point is 01:24:54 behind has the heel elevated slightly like a kickstand. Kickstand can be called kickstand, staggered stance deadlift. Deadlift in that way. You could use either a straight bar, you could use a trap bar. The concepts still hold true, but the reason why I have enjoyed progressing that staggered stance deadlift and I use a trap bar when I do that is just because for me it feels as if it relates to gait a little bit better than the standard deadlifts do. Doesn't mean you shouldn't do the standard sumo or
Starting point is 01:25:21 conventional, but when I'm thinking about creating upward force, how would I jump off of the ground? When I think about that and then I think about, okay, transferring that to a barbell, I wouldn't necessarily jump off of the ground in the stance that I'm using in sumo or conventional. I would do it in this kind of staggered kickstand stance and then pop off. If I were trying to actually create force upwards, that's how I would do it. And I think that that would be worth one's time to progress. You're not going to lift as much weight initially, but over time you can build up some, I don't even like saying this because I don't want people to think of it in terms of numbers. I want people to think about the movement, but you
Starting point is 01:25:58 can get very strong doing that. And then you're also strong in this stance that can relate to how you'll actually move yourself through space, But now you're creating force with it. What are some, uh, exercises that you think, and a such a maybe trite question, but just really incredible bang for the buck exercises. And for instance, for me, and I'm not saying I'm any paragon of exercise expertise, but the two-handed kettlebell swing is just, it seems like you get so much from that exercise performed consistently with progressive resistance, whether that's in terms of loading through higher volume or increasing the weight. I mean, it is just remarkable how much I get
Starting point is 01:26:45 out of that exercise even once or twice a week. It's just astonishing to me. It continually anything else that you would throw into that type of category that come to mind with the condition that you can get somebody to the point where they can perform them safely, reasonably quickly. I think everyone should own a sandbag because picking up a sandbag off of the ground, starting light. So you get yourself, let's say you get a 75 pound bag, you fill it up to 50 pounds, you get yourself to lifting that without any type of discomfort.
Starting point is 01:27:22 And one of the reasons why I think that is so beneficial and so useful is the way that one will bend down to pick up a sandbag. Because when you bend down to pick up a barbell, it's this implement that's perfectly symmetrical. Only way that the hands are involved or when they're gripping like this, you have to get yourself in this neutral position, you hinge forward. It teaches you how to be a perfect hinge, a perfect lever. But whenever you lift a sandbag, every sandbag lift has its own,
Starting point is 01:27:53 it's never the same because of the nature of the implement. It's this shapely thing that you have to, first off, you have this open palm grip. You have to grip around it. And then you have to organize your body to lift it safely. Anybody can lift a light sandbag safely while breathing. Over time, you increase the weight. But I think that if people learn to lift sandbags well, that will be something that will actually prepare you to lift well for life because your spine isn't in this perfect neutral position as
Starting point is 01:28:20 you're doing it. There's slight curvature and you learn that it is safe to lift something with some slight rounding of the spine. Of course, with a barbell, you don't do that often unless you're doing something like a Jefferson curl, which I think they're pretty solid, especially if you don't load them to a crazy extent as you're progressing it because some people get focused on the load. By the way, what a Jefferson curl is, it's a purposeful rounding of the spine to lift a barbell off the ground. It's actually the antithesis of, I think I'm using the word antithesis correct, but it's the opposite of what you're taught to do when you deadlift to create a neutral spine. You're literally rounding your back to lift the barbell off the ground. It sounds
Starting point is 01:28:56 like a joke, but it's to ingrain in your body that my spine is okay getting to this position lifting something. But I think a sandbag would be money for people. Just for clarity, are you picking it up and then dropping it and picking it up? So a base thing that you could do is literally pick it up. So around your stomach, bring it back down to the ground. You've got to drop it, or you can lower it back down to the ground. Then there are progressions where now you pick it up, launch it up to your shoulder, bring it down to the back to the ground. So you could drop it or you can bring it slowly back down to the ground
Starting point is 01:29:28 And then you could pick it up throw it over your shoulder pick it up throw it over the opposite shoulder It's inherently a rotational throw when you become adept with it So there are progressions, but the base progression would be literally just the first thing you would do is you would just do a Sandbag deadlift then you would do a lift to the stomach then you do a lift to the first thing you would do is you would just do a sandbag deadlift, then you would do a lift to the stomach, then you would do a lift to the shoulder, then you could do a throw. And then there's a bunch of things you could do squats, you could do split squats, you could do Cossack squats, you could do lunges. Cossack squats is another one. Typically, I've just done that with like a kind of a goblet
Starting point is 01:29:58 squat type of hole on a kettlebell. But just remarkable how much you get out of that exercise as you slowly. And you know, what was wild about it to me, what a funny name. Number one is I was using it as a warmup for some acrobatic stuff that I was doing way back in the day. I was just using it as a warmup, but I noticed I was getting stronger. And so I started adding a little bit of weight, a little bit of weight. And I got to the point where I was doing Gossick squats and it's not like this
Starting point is 01:30:22 isn't that ton of weight, but it's like with a 70 or 80 pound kettlebell. And again, the transfer, I was just like, wow, I wasn't even treating this as part of my workout. I was just like over time because I was doing the acrobatic stuff very regularly. So I was like never doing it to exhaustion, just that greasing the groove. And I was like, what the hell is going on here? It's just remarkable how much it transferred. It's a money movement.
Starting point is 01:30:48 So I mentioned all those movements because these are all things that you could do throughout the day with a sandbag that you keep by your desk. You could do squats, you could do some quick lunges, you could bring it up to your shoulder, you could do some quick Cossack squats, you could do a reverse lunge. You could literally do all these movements
Starting point is 01:31:03 with a single sandbag. Are you just bear hugging the Cossack when you're doing the Cossack squat. Yeah, you keep it right there. Yeah. And then you go into a Cossack squat position. Yes, absolutely. All right. And with the Cossack squat specifically, it's particularly powerful because most people,
Starting point is 01:31:17 when it comes to training the adductors, they mainly do that with like the machine in the gym. Yeah. So adductors guys inside your thighs. I mean, that's very super like Suzanne summers, thigh master. That's adductors. Right? So if you're trying to like, if you're trying to pop a ball between your knees using your
Starting point is 01:31:38 adductors, there's a very shady side of the internet of women popping watermelons with with their adductors. Oh, wow. Yeah. That's, I thought I'd seen it all. You haven't. Will you see that? This is going to be the headline for your episode. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:31:51 But if you want the straight to do that, right. Cossack swats are going to be great. There are more specific adductor movements like the Copenhagen plank. You were saying most people who train their adductors are only using one of those machines, if they ever use that machine sparsely, they use that sparsely typically. And that ends up being a very weak link. Just for people who might wonder, because those machines are very popular and they're usually monopolized by any, not to pay with a broad brush, like a few women are just sitting on there for like
Starting point is 01:32:19 hours, it seems, working this stuff, right? Why is that a weak link compared to doing something like a caustic squat or something else? You do get some tension on those tissues when you're doing a typical squat, but not an insane amount. When you're doing a sumo deadlift, you also get some tension on that area, but not as much as when you're isolating it
Starting point is 01:32:38 in a bilateral fashion with a Cossack squat. Along with that, in the Cossack squat, you get more length of those tissues when you get to depth of the Cossack squat than you would. I'll give another bad visual for people. So people are like, what the hell are they talking about Cossack squad? So imagine the most stereotypical like Russian dancer, arms folded, like kicking out from side to side and then freeze frame on the, on the ground where like one leg is fully extended to one side and he or she is basically squatting like ass to the other heel on the
Starting point is 01:33:11 other side. Okay. Caustic squat. Yeah. Yeah. And one thing I find interesting about that is for a long time, I was really trying to get good at caustic squats and it wasn't until I was allowing myself to breathe when I got down to that position that I actually got there safely and came out. What have you found most effective for improving
Starting point is 01:33:31 ankle mobility? Right? Cause for a lot of people, if they try to do a Cossack squat, well, do you have heel up or heel down? Heel down. Heel down. Okay. So for a lot of folks, they try to do that. They're going to fall backwards if they don't have the ankle mobility, right? If the knee can't travel kind of over the toes. Yeah. Any thoughts on developing that? I think that a great conversation for you would be Ben Patrick too. Okay.
Starting point is 01:33:54 All right. Because, because, so what I'm going to tell you, what I'm going to tell you is this is why I find that I've been so lucky to learn from so many people because the only reason why I'm able to first have the level of mobility I do is because of a lot of things that I've learned from these different people. So for example, the ankle mobility you're talking about right there, some things that helped with that were the ATG split squat that I was telling you about, which is a movement that again, he popularized, but that front leg, I hope
Starting point is 01:34:19 that when this podcast comes out, maybe there's an image of an ATG split squat that can be pulled up so people can see that the front leg that's doing the split squat over time, there are regressions to that movement, by the way. So everything we've talked about, if you find that you're not getting there, regress the movement, regress the range of motion. Tell me if I'm getting it roughly right. And also I have his ATG device that is like plate loading for wrist work extensor work grip work, which is fantastic. What does ATG stand for? ATG his company stands for athletic truth group. You think it starts stands for as to grass.
Starting point is 01:34:55 Yeah, yeah. Okay. Yeah. I didn't, didn't see it coming. Okay. Got it. Athletic truth group. All right. Got it. Yeah. And Ben is a guy. One of the reasons why I appreciate Ben so much is because he's a very open minded individual. Like you'll run across so many people in these different fitness spaces and they're so dogmatic gung ho about their system. And if you do this system, this is what's going to happen when you do this, it's not good. And this is what's going to happen when you do this.
Starting point is 01:35:21 It's like everything is their system, but the people that I tend to really appreciate are the people that they may have some things that they do, but they can also see the strength in many other things. Right. And Ben is that type of person where he, he's also somebody who continues to learn, you know, he, he has these, this is what he's done, but Ben is continuously learning and applying new things to the people that he works with and himself and finds benefit. And it's one of those things where he's in the constant growth rather than finding the negatives of everything that everyone's doing right to protect his predefined fiefdom. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:53 So anyway, let me throw out something. Tell me how close this is. So there is an exercise of all places. It was actually given to me by a physio in Sweden who I chanced upon. It was like, because my back has been bothering me for so long and everybody meets like, Oh, you got to try my friends blah, right? Or this person can do this. Or you have to try my friend, the acupuncturist. Like everybody's got a suggestion. God bless them. But it ends up after a while, you become a little tone deaf to it. Cause I'm like, all right, look, I can talk to your tarot card reader and I can talk to
Starting point is 01:36:26 your Qigong person. I just not sure it's going to do anything, but this physio ended up working with a lot of professional fighters. That's not me and professional soccer players. And he really knew his stuff. I just lucked out cause this drunk guy had a party. It was like, you should meet my physio. I'm like, yeah, I'm sure I should meet your physio.
Starting point is 01:36:41 And then I just had to wide open the day the next day. And I was like, fuck it. All right, sure. I should meet your physio. And then I just had to wide open the day the next day and I was like, fuck it. All right, sure. I'll meet your physio. And Sebastian's his name ended up being excellent in Stockholm. And he gave me some very basic exercises again with the intention of remediating some of the back pain and strengthening. And one of them was elevated front foot split squats, very lightly loaded, going fully down to the bottom position where the front knee is way over the front foot toes and basically ass is on the heel. Three second pause at the bottom, back up and doing like sets of six to eight.
Starting point is 01:37:17 That's a regression for the ATG split squat. That's a regression for the flat ground ATG split squat. And to go back to what you're asking about the ankles, why is that really good for the ankles? Do you know the position that the ankle gets into is this deep position that you can, when you own that position, you lower it to the ground. And now when you own that position of the ankles, you apply that to a Cossack squat, you're able to get to full depth of a Cossack because of where the knee,
Starting point is 01:37:42 the knee is over the tone. You're in deep ankle dorsiflexion. That's how these things work. Where yeah, dorsiflexion just pull your toes towards your nose. Exactly. Yeah, toes towards your knees. That's dorsiflexion. The thing is, is like when you find that you don't have the mobility for a specific movement,
Starting point is 01:37:56 there are so many ways to regress it. With a Cossack squat, you could do a Cossack squat with a wall behind you. So the wall can help guide you down unloaded wall behind Cossack squat. You can even angle the foot outwards a little bit to allow yourself a little bit more give with that knee. You could also add some heel. You can also put it on a box if you need to and then slowly regress it down. And I want to mention the concept of regression is what got me out of knee pain is what got
Starting point is 01:38:23 me out of like pretty much all pain. But specifically, I want to mention knees because when I was in my early 20s, I had a menisectomy, partial meniscus removal. I can't remember which knee now. I think it was my left. It's something that happened in jujitsu. I also, when I was younger, I had Oshkod's slaughter and I was a soccer player. So when I got into my early 20s, like I couldn't sprint. I felt like I was probably going to have trash knees for the rest of my life. I couldn't run without pain at all. So let alone run, absolutely couldn't sprint, couldn't jump. I was doing squats and stuff and there was some pain I was having.
Starting point is 01:38:55 So I was using knee sleeves. So I was pretty certain that at this point I just need to make sure to keep them pretty strong, but like sprinting, et It's not gonna be part of the system for me That's when I came across some of Ben stuff back in like 2019 or 2018 I think came across some of his stuff on Instagram Started regressing it doing like the simplest regression. So I'll add a TG splits going on a box There's this pulse movement that you do where you just have this very small range of motion with the knee where you're just Putting yourself in slight knee flexion coming out pulsing it driving a lot of motion with the knee where you're just putting yourself in slight knee flexion, coming out, pulsing it, driving a lot of blood to the knee area. And I would progress these things over time. After four or so months, I was able to get into full deep knee positions that I was never able to get into without pain before. And
Starting point is 01:39:38 then when I started doing things like running, I was able to run without pain. And then I started sprinting without pain, but it started with regression. So the reason why I'm saying that is... I was a very princess-like sneeze-witcher. I didn't want to let it out. If I let it out it would be disgusting so when you hold it in it turns into this mousy squeal. Let's keep that in there. Let's keep that in there. If I have to sneeze again, I'll show you what the big one looks like just so I can save myself. My gosh. But I say this because regressions are the name of the game for all of this.
Starting point is 01:40:13 If you have pain doing something, there is a way to regress it and you need to own the regression before you progress. I just want to underline this because this chronic back pain has been one of the biggest challenges of my life. So I've always seen myself as athletic. I've always been able to like take a kicking and then get back on the horse and get back to athleticism. And this experience where this pain at such a pivotal cornerstone piece of your body is
Starting point is 01:40:43 tied into like every movement when you sleep like there's no escaping it psychologically, physically, emotionally. It has been such a difficult experience and giving me so much sympathy for people in chronic pain. It's like if you have not been in serious chronic pain, like it is impossible to understand what it's like until you're there. And I would say the one mantra of sorts that has allowed me to start digging out of that hole. And I use a different term for myself. I don't remember where I got it, but it was just like scale it down. And it's the same idea. It's just like, okay, let's just say hypothetically, okay, I might need this surgery in the elbow. Okay, great. I can't do X number of pushups. Okay, fine.
Starting point is 01:41:29 Do one 10th of X number of pushups. Okay. You can't do whatever it might be. Well, barbell puts too much torque in the elbow. Okay, fine. Let's use dumbbells. But the rule is like, you can't do nothing. You have to scale it down and maybe you omit exercises. Sure. But it's like train around it, train around it, train around it. It's like, for instance, the box squat. Great example. Jersey is like the alt Jersey. Greg, Greg, who I keep mentioning is like the ultimate master of regressions. To use your word, because he'll have someone like they'll do a squat and like they'll go down eight inches and he's like, that's it. And they're like, no, but I do like below parallel in the gym. And he's like, you shouldn't. they'll go down eight inches and he's like, that's it. And they're like, no, but I do like below parallel in the gym. And he's like, you shouldn't. And he's just like, okay, like your max depth is whatever I'm making this number, this number up, but it's like 36 inches off the ground. And they're like, that's a joke. And he's like, that's your assignment. He's really funny too. Cause I,
Starting point is 01:42:18 at one point I was like, so you're suggesting. And he's like, no, I'm not suggesting I am telling you. You're suggesting and he's like, no, I'm not suggesting. I am telling you. And it feels like a waste of time to start off in where he would start people. But as they develop the right mechanics and then pain free progress, and it takes like weeks, maybe even months to get back to where they think they should be. And then lo and behold, they're so much stronger. They own the position. All these eggs and pangs go away. So you can't do nothing, but you can scale it down or like regress it, right? And the other thing I'll mention just for people who may be in
Starting point is 01:42:57 a similar position to myself, where they have a lot of low back stuff. The other reason that Sebastian stuff. The other reason that Sebastian prescribed the front foot elevated split squat was to avoid hyper lordosis, right? Like overarching of the low back. I have a lot of thoracic mobility issues, so I tend to flare out and arch and he was like, okay, let's mitigate that by elevating the front foot. Yeah. All right. Cool. Dig it. I want to mention I, Ben, he has an app and on that app, he puts all his stuff there for monthly payment for people. So if you guys are in, Ben mentions that people can do this. So I'm going to mention this too.
Starting point is 01:43:37 You could go on there. You could screenshot the movements you could cancel literally. I have a program there too, and his martial arts section, and you can literally go there and you can just take it all if you want to. But the reason why I mentioned that is because all the regressions are right there. If you're looking for a way to regress all these movements, that's all there.
Starting point is 01:43:54 There's also in that school community, but just take the regressions and be patient with those regressions. Because one of the reasons that I was held back for so long was because I thought I was better than I was. I've been playing soccer for like 16 years. I've always seen myself as an athlete. So going to do some of these things
Starting point is 01:44:14 and these simple regressions, I was just like, no, I can move on to the last chapter. No, I should be able to. And then I'd always find myself in pain. I'd always find myself moving backwards. And it wasn't until I just realized, Hey, be a beginner with this, start with the regressions, own those, and then slowly progress upward. But then I was able to make all the progress to where I am now.
Starting point is 01:44:35 So it's a big shift. And I think this is the last thing I'll mention. I think one of the reasons why this is hard for some people that lift or that I've already been training for a bit is because traditional lifting is kind of easy in the sense that if you get strong with the shoulder press, you just increase that weight week by week, bicep curl, increase that way a little bit. You get this big payoff very, very quickly when you see that weight going up. But when it comes to holistic movement in some of these ranges, you will realize that you have some weak links that you have to work on with potentially no weight.
Starting point is 01:45:09 And that's not as fun as just doing the heavy shoulder press. You know what I mean? Getting the payoff. Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, I would also say it's like, you can get away at least I'll personalize it. I think this is true for a lot of people, but like, just because you can lift
Starting point is 01:45:22 more weight than your friends does not mean your form is good. I don't think my form was the worst in the world, but like just because you can lift more weight than your friends does not mean your form is good. I don't think my form was the worst in the world, but we were talking about like 96 when I was probably my biggest and strongest and arguably fattest, but it wasn't that fat, but I was doing like 400 pound ish back squats for like a set of 10. Now in retrospect, should I have been doing that? Probably not. And when I mentioned earlier, I was like, oh yeah,
Starting point is 01:45:48 probably three, four years ago, whenever it wasn't that back squat workout, when I hurt myself, I was probably going too low and having that change in the spinal position with like a butt wink. And I think that probably contributed to it. And I'm sure there are people out there who are like, Tim Ferriss can't even do a goddamn squat.
Starting point is 01:46:04 I knew it, that guy's an idiot. What I would say is you could be right. Number one. Number two is get video of your technique and have somebody who actually knows what they're doing like a very high level competitor. Look at that technique and chances are it's not as good as you think it is. Do you know what I mean? And then there comes a point where it's like, all right, I've bent the paper clips so many times. Boom, I have an injury and now it's just a wake up call. It's like, all right, let's start from scaling it back from the fundamentals, swallow my pride, take my ego down a notch and like work it back up, which is very hard to do psychologically.
Starting point is 01:46:44 Really tough. And it's like, there's so many parallels that I see here. It's like with Jersey, it's like, man, you have to check your ego at the door because you might walk in, he doesn't care. Like he really does. He's so salty. He just like, you could be world champion in XYZ and he'll be like, okay, you're going to start with 20 pound and doubles. And you're like, what? And he's like, yeah, it's like 20 pound dumbbells. Yes. Yeah. You shouldn't be doing this with more than 20 pound dumbbells. And people are just like, what? Yeah. It doesn't even compute. But then with these micro progressions, as he would call them, it's, it is incredible. Like I was saying to you, uh,
Starting point is 01:47:20 he had this Vietnam vet with a number of fused vertebra who had been walking around on body brace, could not bend in any direction, got him to the point where he's doing stiff-leg deadlifts with 315 off an elevated platform and continued doing that for decades. I mean, it's unreal. Similarly, and I haven't seen this because I haven't really been doing this term in the notes that I had for this conversation. It's not my term, but I like the term, which is micro dosing movement. I've only played with that with a few things like slacklining and it is incredible what your body can end up doing with like three to five minutes a day of slackline. You do not need, in fact, one could argue
Starting point is 01:48:06 you shouldn't do really long sessions. What are some other examples of microdosing movement? Because as I get older more and more, yes, you wanna be strong. Yes, I agree with Pavel, like strength is kind of the mother attribute in a lot of ways. Yes, you wanna have muscle mass because of sarcopenia and all this stuff as you get older. That's all true. And fundamentally, we are evolved as bodies to move in space. Like our brains are evolved to manage that interface.
Starting point is 01:48:36 And I find myself hungering for more and more athletic movement. So what are some other ways to microdose movement that might kind of produce benefits? And you can take that however you wanna take it that are surprising to folks. I think one of the simplest things one can do is start introducing different shapes of your spine, primarily a shape that I think many of us are scared about,
Starting point is 01:49:03 which is like spinal flexion, spinal flexion, reaching over, touching your toes with a rounded back. Exactly. But let me actually just rewind real quick because I want to mention, you know, Pavel talks about greasing the groove. I got introduced to microdosing by a friend of mine, Corey Schlesinger. I think he's like, just to be clear, microdosing movement, microdosing movement, not, not micro, not microdosing psilocybin, although that's fun, but microdosing movement. Corey is, I don't know if he's working with the Phoenix sons now, but he was like the director
Starting point is 01:49:33 of performance, I think for the sons recently. So I know he's working with an NBA team, but he, when he talked to us about it, he, you know, he was having a lot of his NBA athletes, he would have them do a little bit of movement before games, a little bit of movement after games, and you'd figure out ways for them to have movement sprinkled into their day so that they always felt good. Because what happens with some athletes is like, they have to have this extensive warm-up routine to get their bodies ready. And these are athletes, by the way.
Starting point is 01:49:58 So if an athlete needs this extensive warm-up routine to get ready for game day, somebody who's like sitting at a desk or just working or whatever, like the amount of prep you might need to get ready to move is far too much. The goal of microdosing movement or greasing the group as Pavel puts it, is to make it so these different movements just become a part of who you are and what you do. You don't need to prepare to bend your spine down into a flex pattern and pick something off the ground because you're just healthy and safe. You feel healthy and safe doing it. Now, the thing I'll also mention here is that there are many really smart people who are against some of the things like Jefferson curls, like Stu McGill doesn't like it. Stu doesn't like it. And I would agree to the sense of people who haven't regressed the movement enough.
Starting point is 01:50:47 If you just rush into something like a Jefferson curl that we were just talking about, where you had deep spinal flexion, you pick up a barbell or something off the ground, that's going to cause you some issue, especially if you don't feel safe doing it. You're going to hold your breath. You're going to force yourself into that position and then you'll tweak something. And then you'll say, this is a bad position or a bad movement. But when you learn to breathe through movement with no weight, like I was talking about, like, let's say you just, you decide that I'm going to pick that ball off the ground
Starting point is 01:51:16 a few times a day, flexing my back and going down to the ground. I'm going to inhale when I go down and exhale when I go up. I'm going to make myself own this movement. Doing that with no weight initially for most people is going to feel fine. And then as you improve that, you're like, okay, can I do that with a six pound kettlebell? Can I do that with a 20 pound kettlebell? Can I do that with a 30 pound kettlebell? Like, can I organize my body to lift this safely in this position?
Starting point is 01:51:42 And then you own that position because it's no longer foreign to you. Now you're no longer flexion intolerant but when you're someone who has avoided these different ranges of motion with the spine whether it's deep flexion, extension, etc. and then you go into a workout or you try doing some weighted rotational movement and then you tweak something you think that these are bad movements or bad ranges of motion but the thing is that you just didn't regress it enough and you didn't spend time with the most basic forms of those movements. So when it comes to microdosing,
Starting point is 01:52:12 one of the ways to make microdosing easy for you is to make your environment serve you. This is why, and people will just, some people might just think I'm some fitness nut for this, but I keep equipment around my area, around my desk. I have a kettlebell sitting there. I have a club sitting there. I have a 100 pound sandbag by my desk, by my work desk. I also have a gripper on the table so that if I'm doing something on my laptop
Starting point is 01:52:36 to one side, I can hit that gripper up a little bit. I have these things just sitting around to encourage me to touch them because if they're not in front of me, I am not going to do them. All this hand stuff, you give me that compliment on my hands, bro. It's because I have grip equipment everywhere. I have it in my car. I have it on my podcast desk. I have it on my work desk. I have it in the kitchen. I have it everywhere. I can't wait for you to, I think you already saw the video, but to take another look at the Abrahangs, Amel Abrahansen, because then you could just have,
Starting point is 01:53:10 I mean, you could do it off the back of like a set of stairs. That's what I do at home. But if you get like a hangboard and don't overdo the hangboard people, that is the perfect way to blow apart your tendons and ligaments. Take it easy. But that's something you sprinkle
Starting point is 01:53:25 in so easily. I sprinkle that in my rice bucket sits in front of my TV. So that's the thing just for people who are wondering what the hell we're talking about the rice bucket. Imagine like old badly dubbed Chinese kung fu movies where they like shoot that like they make their hands into spears, like shoot it into a bucket of rice and like turn their hands into different movements to toughen up their hands and their grip and so on. It would be a version of that. A lot of baseball players do that too. Right. They knew what they were talking about. They knew what they were doing. A lot of the stuff isn't new. I'm not making this stuff up. People who knew this stuff for centuries because it works.
Starting point is 01:53:58 But when I do the rice bucket, if I had to like pull out the bucket of rice from my garage every single time, I'd have to keep it in the vicinity of something that I already do stuff so that when I go by it, I'm like, I can do this for a quick minute as we're watching something and then go back. I have, for example, there's this stool called a hunker and stool, by the way, you don't need a hunker and stool. You could just have a low seat hunker and stool, hunker and stool. It was made this guy's name is Casey. He owns this company, hunker and stool. ItU-N-K-E-R-I-N stool. It was made, this guy's name is Casey.
Starting point is 01:54:25 He owns this company, Hunkerins stool. It's a low springy seat. People will see if they ever watch any of my videos, you'll see me sitting on a Hunkerins stool. Oh, I saw one of those in one of your videos. It's a low springy seat. So now you sit down. What do you use that for?
Starting point is 01:54:36 You just sit down in a squat position. You sit down in a low squat position. Okay, got it. So I noticed you have these low mats here that like maybe people might sit on for meditation, but you have these things that will encourage you to get lower to the ground. So the sandbag, I also sit down on the sandbag as it's lower to the ground and that encourages me to get down in this low position, this low squatted position to become comfortable there. So now I'm not uncomfortable getting down to the ground, which is an essential thing that we need.
Starting point is 01:55:03 You know, like some of us only get down to the ground when which is an essential thing that we need. You know, like some of us only get down to the ground when we're doing martial arts. Some of us probably can't remember the last time we purposefully went to the ground on our own volition. Maybe you fell, but can you become comfortable going down and coming up? Because now if like maybe you do fall, it's not as much of a struggle for you to figure out the puzzle of getting off the ground. It's actually not even a puzzle. You just can. Well, Kelly, you mentioned Kelly star at who, you and I go, go way, way back. And we actually were in Japan together at the same time and went on this amazing trip with a, with a group of guys. But on that trip, I mean, both of us,
Starting point is 01:55:40 it's kind of obvious when it's pointed out, but in Japan, if you're going to traditional in spending time in those types of environments, you are getting up and down all the time and you are sitting cross-legged and you are getting up and you're basically doing like Turkish get up light all the time. You are constantly getting from that sitting on the floor position to fully standing. And every once in a while, these are harder and harder to find. Like you've got a squat toilet. And it's like, that's it. And I remember asking one of my friends when I was 15, cause I'd never seen a squat toilet. It was my first time out of
Starting point is 01:56:18 the U S I'm like, what the hell is this? And I went to like a baseball game and all they had was squat toilets. And I remember asking my buddy like 15 also, I'm like, what do your old people do? And he's, he just started laughing. He's like, they've been doing it forever. They have no problem. And I was like, wow, can you imagine what would happen? Like how many ER visits and ambulances you need if suddenly that were put in like a U S stadium, like forget about it. But the fact of that greasing the groove, right? It's not like these 80 year old Japanese people are doing tons of Jefferson curls and Turkish get ups, but they are sitting down, getting up, sitting down, getting up many, many times a day in a lot of cases.
Starting point is 01:56:55 And the, even just that aspect of sitting on the ground, think about the position that the back gets in the deep knee flexion that you're getting. And many of these people can like just comfortably sit in the SESA position without a problem. The position of the ankles, the position of the knees, all these areas, when getting up and down off the ground, how healthy that is for your joints and your movement. That's why it's like, instead of thinking about all of this as like exercise, how can we build our environment that the places where we go,
Starting point is 01:57:21 even if you're at a cubicle at work, can you put certain things in there that can help you encourage you to move a little bit more? If you do that, that will make a lot of this stuff so much easier because it's less about how do we program this and more about just touch this a few times a day. After you become more comfortable sitting down in that low position a little bit more, picking up with that with the rounded back, just casually picking up that sandbag, you're not doing these things while warming up, you're just doing them. They were what you do.
Starting point is 01:57:50 Then when you want to go progress it, it's even easier is this is just how you move. For me, it wasn't until I truly set my environment up to serve my movement ability that I started making bigger and like just bigger leaps in my progress because it became less of again the structured workout that I have to go to the gym and do all the time to just this is just what I do I can just pick stuff up I purposefully hung up gymnastics rings so I can develop my skill of hanging once again so I have those just hanging the TVs right there so I'll just do some quick pull-ups and hang on it. I set up this environment and so it's almost like an environment of play. I have fun here and I think if more of us did that
Starting point is 01:58:30 it would aid in our movement progression much faster than always having to go to a gym with four walls for less lights and get this workout in. I'll bring up another person you would have a blast with if you haven't met him. I remember I got so much shit. It was funny. I got so much shit. A lot of people were interested off the bat, but I also got a lot of shit when I did an episode on gymnastics strength training with a guy named Chris Summer, coach Chris Summer, former coach of the national men's team. I think I bought his program years back. Yeah. Yeah. GST. Yeah. And I remember like there are a bunch of folks in various communities. I'm not going to name them, but there'd be pretty obvious, pretty belligerent online weightlifting communities. There's a fair number. And there's like, bah,
Starting point is 01:59:16 ha ha ha, you know, like now Tim Ferriss is into Pilates. Good luck with that. You know, good luck developing strength. And I'm like, let me see you do an iron cross, right? Let me see you do a planche with your feet off the ground and then tell me that those guys or gals aren't strong. Like, let me see you do that. But the point that I was just going to make is it doesn't have to be with a bunch of like ferns and chrome inside four walls. Like you can get so unbelievably strong and this is going to be old news to a lot of people, but with calisthenics and doing if you want to try it here, I'll give people something. They'll be like, Oh, this is so stupid. I'm like, okay, try it.
Starting point is 02:00:01 Do something called pike pulses. So there are a lot of ways you can strengthen your core and abdominals and so on. This one sit down on the floor, legs out in front of you. You're sitting up that is a pike and so your feet are straight. Now what you're going to do is put some strength into the toes, point them and now what you're going to do is reach forward on either side of your legs, not as far as you can go, but pretty far. You're probably going to be on your fingertips on either side of your legs.
Starting point is 02:00:28 Now it's very simple. All you need to do is lift your legs off the ground and just pulse up, keeping your legs completely straight, quads locked, and just bring your legs off the ground, bringing your kind of knees to your chest. Good luck with that. Do a couple of sets of like 10 or 15 of those. And if it's too easy on the first one, like bring your, your hands forward, like four or five inches, if you can do it and do it again, most people will just be murdered by that. And that is
Starting point is 02:00:53 like, you do not need a lot of space. You could do that in the smallest apartment right next to your bed. Oh, there's so many good exercises. This is like really inspiring me also to get back. I really feel like my new chapter, I have to be careful not to be too enthusiastic and hurt myself, but it's going to be like a couple of fundamentals. Like I will probably continue to do sumo deadlift in the way that I described it kind of a la Barry Scott, who trained Alison Felix way back in the day. That was in the four hour body stuff, but like the sumo deadlift with no eccentric, I just find it just transfers to so much kettlebell swings for sure. And
Starting point is 02:01:30 I was very interested. People can probably find video of you doing this, but kind of pendulum. Yeah. The pendulum swing with some kettlebell juggling. Yeah. I haven't gotten to the juggling yet, but different types of swinging rope flow to get into some new planes of movement. And then I think I'm going to re-explore some of the GST stuff because I recall doing some like basic, basic ring stuff. It's like, look, I'm not going to win any awards here. And then doing this is all body weight stuff. And I got so big, people thought they're like, oh my God, like how much heavy lifting you've been doing? And I was like, zero. Most of this is from also, because my upper arms,
Starting point is 02:02:11 like my biceps are the biggest they've been in probably a decade. And people were just like, bro, you on gear? Like what's going on? I was like, no, I'm just literally doing straight arm tension. Like I'm not even doing any, any flexion. I'm not bending my arms.
Starting point is 02:02:24 This is all ring work with fully locked arms. That's it. It's great that you mentioned this because over the years, one thing that I try to do is I try to like find stuff I'm interested in that I really suck at to improve that I'm 250 pounds. So for me, you are a lot bigger in person than you are. I mean, you're big on camera. And then I was just like, so I was like, how am I going to find this guy? And I was like, oh, he's not hard to find. Those quads are the size of my office. Jesus. But yo man, like calisthenics was something that I,
Starting point is 02:03:01 for me, I think is like a place that I'm not the strong, it's, I'm not very, very strong at some of that can be attributed to my body weight. And I've been so excited at just really nailing down all of these calisthenics basics to continue to improve so that I can do more complex movements. Because you know, one of the things that I think that frustrated me with calisthenics years ago was like these muscle ups, like, Oh, I was always making excuses of my weight, but it's just, I was not strong enough with my body weight to do these things. So one of the things with calisthenics is also owning those basics, pushups, dips, pullups,
Starting point is 02:03:36 regressing the pullups if pullups are tough. Also like regressing, like ring turnout pushups. Incredible. Like I have all sorts of show. I've had shoulder surgeries and stuff. The degree to which that has helped my shoulders, just ring turnout pushups. The scapular pull ups, like the strength of the scapula, I think is something that a lot of people as they're doing calisthenics, they don't realize is so important. And there are ways to isolate the scap and strengthen that with these movements, right. Oh my God. I realized how weak my scapular was compared to a lot of other things.
Starting point is 02:04:08 Like when I would be doing pull-ups, yes, the scapular is involved, but like I wasn't focusing on it, which is why a lot of progressions were elusive to me because my scapular wasn't that strong. Right. So I'm very excited progressing calisthenics and I'm more so excited for the next five years. I think that in five years, six years from now, I can be pretty elite at calisthenics.
Starting point is 02:04:31 And it's gonna take me that long and I'm okay with that. But that's a ways away. But I know that chipping away at that skill is gonna be one of those things that for me, when I'm 60, 70, 80, has those big, even 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, has those big dividends. Because one thing is when you see people who are very adept with their body weight,
Starting point is 02:04:51 they just have control of everything. They have their very adept with their body weight strength. You can lift weights, but just because you're strong with a barbell or strong with weights does not mean you're strong with body weight. I know many heavy people that can deadlift hundreds of pounds that struggle doing 10 pull-ups because they don't have good control of their body weight. You know, I know many heavy people that can deadlift hundreds of pounds that struggle doing 10 pull-ups because they don't have good control of their body weight. Yeah. Or just because you can lift a lot of weight and a few movements does not mean that you've bulletproofed yourself against
Starting point is 02:05:13 injury. Nope. Either. Right? Exactly. Exactly. And calisthenics is something that will show you those weak links with your control of your body and will help you improve it that overtime and your practice of wanting to rock climbing inherently. Adds the skill of calisthenics into it so it's a two for one i would love to do rock climbing and i think it's just like i do so much jiu jitsu right now that it's like. I got a pic between rock climbing calisthenics like i'll focus on the calisthenics fit do rock climbing here and there, but that's a very good practice to develop that level of strength because rock climbers, man, elite ones and even non elite rock climbers, just the way they can contort their bodies and have the strength through their grip, through their whole body. My gosh, it's another amazing practice. That's awesome for longevity that if you're struggling to find something.
Starting point is 02:06:01 Well that was part of side and knee injury this past ski season. I was super bummed and I was in a great location, but you know, I'm up in the mountains and the climbers are world-class. So I started going to a climbing gym with my ski instructor who is also very good climber. Like he sets roots and he's, he's very good, super technical. And in that gym, because we would go when I would typically want to go skiing. So let's just say in the morning, these are work days. So the gym was not empty because this is a popular competitive gym. So national team was there, silver medalist from the Olympics was there when we would go
Starting point is 02:06:37 train. So it's amazing to watch those people, number one. But secondly, what really motivated me was, yes, sure. I just love rock climbing. Cause it's along with jujitsu, it's human chess. It really like those two are actually very similar in a lot of ways. But what I noticed in this gym in particular was these groups of mostly women, but not always, mostly women who are like in their sixties and seventies
Starting point is 02:07:06 who are doing stuff that I could not conceive of doing. And they do this week in week out. I saw a guy and my buddy was complaining that he couldn't go climbing because of a hip issue. And I saw this seven year old guy with a leg brace on, climbing and I took a photo. Yeah, yeah. With a full leg brace, he could like twist his knee and he's like, I'll just use one leg and two arms and like flag with one leg. And I sent a photo to my buddy who's younger than I am.
Starting point is 02:07:36 Right. And I was like, bro, I got some bad news for you. And I was so inspired to see these people who are decades older than I am, who are doing things that I could not even approach doing right now. And I was like, I was like, okay, this is a good sport. This is a really good sport. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:54 Jiu-jitsu too. Like if you play it smart, just like gymnastics, like if I can't recall coach summer had a quote of something like there are aggressive gymnasts and they're all gymnasts. There are no aggressive old gymnasts. It's something like that. And it was just like, yeah, let's not get too ahead of ourselves. You know, the candle that burns twice as bright
Starting point is 02:08:18 burns twice as fast kind of situation. What are the non-negotiable lifts? Like if we're talking about just for lack of a better modifier, like traditional lifts, the stuff that you could do, that people could do if they walked down to a good neighborhood gym. Are there any things for you that you're like, all right, this is kind of, these are some of the ingredients in my multivitamin. It's just like I take the multivitamin every week. That's how it works. A couple of movements.
Starting point is 02:08:46 The first one would be a sled. The reason why I say sled is because it is something that grandma can do and it's something that the NFL linebacker can do. And it can be progressed or regressed to either level while causing probably most likely no issue to either. The reason why I mentioned the sled before I mentioned something like a barbell back squat or a barbell deadlift is because some people, when it comes to direct actual spinal compression
Starting point is 02:09:13 where the barbell is right here, they just can't handle forms of that compression when moving through space yet. I mean, I probably shouldn't handle it, frankly, right? Like I've been doing back squats, but there's definitely part of it is like, homie, this is not a good idea. Yeah, this is the thing though. I shouldn't handle it, frankly, right? Like I've been doing back squats, but there's definitely part of it's like, homie, this is not a good idea.
Starting point is 02:09:26 Yeah. It's this is the thing though. I think there are many forms of squatting one can do. Like we talked about sandbag squats. That's not actual loaded. That actually feels really good, right? Cause the weights from front of you are holding it. They feel safe. They feel good.
Starting point is 02:09:38 They can be progressed, but the sled is something that you can load that thing up and if it doesn't move, you just don't have the ability to produce the force to push or pull it through space. I wish everyone would be able to work with a sled because it's so safe and has such a huge ability to be progressed or regressed to any level safely for literally everyone. That's why I'm starting there. Louis Simmons was someone who, and he was the owner of West Side Barbell. He passed.
Starting point is 02:10:08 Legendary. Louis is the one who got Mark and Mark introduced the sled to me. And it's just like, the sled is powerful. So unfortunately, it's hard for some people to have that at home. I have a, I have a torque sled at my house. It's this tank sled that you can wheel around. So the torque sled is not on skids. It's on wheels with mechanical resistance. Yes. Yeah. They came out with a new one that I have. I forgot that it's model, but it's one that you can literally swivel around.
Starting point is 02:10:38 So you've seen the tanks where you have to push it. Then you have to get to the other side and push this one. You can push, swivel and turn and push this one you can push swivel and turn and push it looks like a little batmobile. That's cool. Does that allow you to pull as well? Your only put allows you to pull as well. You can hook a cable to it and then you could also push and pull it.
Starting point is 02:10:54 It has magnetic resistance so you can increase the resistance so that the harder you push the more resistance it gives you so it can build to any level of resistance. I have my mom who's 67. I have her come to my place so that she can do the sled multiple times a week. That's why I have her come because it's something she can do and progress without pain. If people can just get themselves to a place that has a sled, it's a full body movement from the feet to the hands.
Starting point is 02:11:17 What does that sled workout look like or where does it integrate into a workout? A sled can be a very meaty part of your workout. If you learn to like it, the reason why I say learn to like that exhale says so much. The reason I say you like swallowing broken glass, I have a piece of equipment for you. This thing, this slide could be a good first two, three minutes to get the knees warm when you're moving forward and backwards, or it could be a very metabolically taxing strength building workout that you can do for 20 minutes to get your heart rate up while also increasing your ability to produce force. So that's why I say like, when you're pushing a sled, your heart rate will spike, your whole body will go on fire because you're starting from your feet to produce force forward and pulling backwards.
Starting point is 02:12:08 So it'll spike the heart rate, but everything will start to get sore. Your feet, your glutes, especially when you're learning how to stack your body against that weight, like you'll see it in people who are new on the sled. Some of them aren't familiar with getting their body in the right position to produce force forward. They're too upright. The system's very open, like so upright. You mentioned, right position to produce force forward. They're too upright. The system is very open, like so upright.
Starting point is 02:12:26 You mentioned, right? So some people, they'll start pushing a sled, their ribs will be in this flared forward position, their pelvis won't be in a neutral position. It'll be like tilted back and they'll try pushing. They can't produce much force. Just a panopation for folks. If you imagine a sled, all right, so it's this, it's a sled, like a toboggan with weights on top of it.
Starting point is 02:12:43 But what you're holding on to, imagine you have like two subway poles in front of you that are like, I don't know, 18 inches apart, 24 inches apart. Those are vertical. You're holding onto those. One with your left hand, one with your right hand, and then you're pushing that. And so we're talking about like the body position, cause this is going to be one of my follow-up questions is like, what is your preferred position for pushing a sled? Like, are you bent 90 degrees at the hips staring at the ground with your head in line
Starting point is 02:13:11 with your arms as if you were doing like an overhead press? Is it, I don't know, like 20 degrees off of parallel to the ground with the upper body? Like what does it look like? Cause I've wondered about this because I, I got a sled based on actually, I think it's Mark Bell, who I owe thanks for this, a very early, early, early like Stone Age version of something like the Torque sled. Was it from Torque or was it another? I think it was another company. It was like X bro, XPRO or something like that.
Starting point is 02:13:41 I can't recall. Sorry guys that I'm butchering it. But the challenge with that for me always was like, God, I love this like hip extension and like gluten engagement. And if I'm not careful, I feel my low back. So that's what I need to account for. Like I would love to get back into sled, but I would love to hear your thoughts on just like avoiding probably too much flaring and like pointing my titties at the ceiling.
Starting point is 02:14:07 So an exaggeration, we get the idea guys. If you're like kind of arching your back unnecessarily and it's simplification. So what would your prescription be level one for the sled would be learning how to create a neutral system when pushing the sled through space. So you're inherently going to come forward a little bit. You're not going to be vertical and pushing gonna be vertical and pushing to be leaning for a little bit but you need to make sure that your rib cage is over your hips so it's like two bowls pouring into each other when we were mentioning this open system flared i know some people are watching the podcast imagine if you had a foam roller you put a foam roller right below your shoulder blades and then you basically bent your upper back. you put a foam roller right below your shoulder blades, and then you basically bent your upper back to like bring your head closer to the ground. Like that would be flaring. Right?
Starting point is 02:14:49 So you cannot produce a lot of force when you have this flared system. It's super common, by the way, people who think they don't do this, take videos of yourself doing very varied exercises. It is so common. Yes, it's extremely common. Another issue is maybe having this is a little bit less common, but too much flexion, right? So too much bending when trying to push, right? You want to be in a neutral position, a strong neutral position where your rib cage is right above your hips.
Starting point is 02:15:15 So can you explain that to me? Cause rib cage over my hips makes me think that I need to be upright. All you want to think about is like, for example, the neutral position that we think about when we're squatting down that rib position, let's now angle the body forward while maintaining that reposition and pushing the sled. That's, that's all it is. Okay. Right.
Starting point is 02:15:32 That's going to be the position that allows us to be able to produce the most force while moving forward. Let me also mention this. This is the level one pushing and pulling position that we want our rib cage in. Because for me, when I want people to progress what they do with the sled, it's a very powerful tool to allow you to push and pull in different spinal positions. So you start off by pushing and pulling the sled with a neutral spine. Then you can start to push and pull the sled laterally. So like sled is here, you're here, you're pushing the sled laterally.
Starting point is 02:16:10 You're pulling the sled laterally while maintaining a fairly neutral spine. But then over time, the strength that you can get the sled is that when you push the sled, you can push with more spinal flexion when you become more comfortable. So you can learn to produce force with spinal flexion, and then you can push with more spinal flexion when you become more comfortable. So you can learn to produce force with spinal flexion. And then you can learn to, when you're pulling the sled, you can learn to almost Jefferson curl, pull the sled in deep spinal flexion. You don't start here, but when you become comfortable, and you've been doing this with very lightweight initially,
Starting point is 02:16:40 you can be comfortable pulling this load with a deep spinal flexion. That's later on. And that's for me where the sled has become super powerful because what my goal is for myself and what I've done is I became very strong pushing and pulling a sled with the usual spine. Then I pushed and pulled with spinal extension, purposefully putting myself in this position while pulling and pushing. I pushed and pulled in deep spinal flexion, right? So that I could become very strong in this spinal position. I push and pull in deep lateral flexion. So I'll literally push the sled here with lateral flexion of the spine. I'll pull the sled here with deep lateral flexion on the
Starting point is 02:17:22 other side so that I can strengthen all of the positions of my spine with this implement. This isn't something you're able to do with the barbell. You can do spinal flexion, Jefferson curl stuff. You can do some lateral stuff, but the sled allows you to produce force on an object forward, backward and to the side with that intent of movement. When you are pulling, how are you pulling? And that sounds dumb, but do you have ropes attached
Starting point is 02:17:48 to the sled, like with the torque sled? Yeah. How are you pulling it? So the torque sled, there's two ways that I'm pulling. When I want to get into deep flexion, I have this thing, it's something that Mark made, it's called a shake strap. So it's this strap that you're able to, it's kind of like a cable attachment that you can put on a machine, but you can also put the sled. I loop my hands
Starting point is 02:18:09 through it, right? So my hands are here and then I'll let my back bend and then I'll start walking backwards in deep spinal flexion with that pulling me. There's a video of this. I can imagine like you reach through a hole and then grab it and it's sort of. Yeah, it's right there wrapped around the wrist. And literally when I'm going backwards, I'm in this position while moving backwards. Yeah. I'm in this deep spinal flex. What about like off the rack white belt version, right? Neutral spine. That's why I said, right. But are you using the. You can use either the sled attachment that whatever sledge you're using,
Starting point is 02:18:44 or you can use most sleds you're using or you can most sleds have a something that you can hook onto and then you could place that attachment and you can still push and pull with a neutral spine. I got it. What is that? What does Mark call that? It's called a shake strap. Shake strap.
Starting point is 02:18:56 Yeah. It's called a shake strap. And he sells the somewhere presumably. Yeah. Yeah. Everything, everything that I've talked about, I put it all in a place called the stronger human dot store. It's a website.
Starting point is 02:19:06 So all this equipment is there, but you can also find this at his website, which I believe is mark bells slingshot.com. So for the sandbags and everything, I mentioned ropes. It's at the stronger human dots. I was in the middle of nowhere, Italy, and I went to this gym, this tiny gym, and there was a slingshot there and I took a photo and I said it's a mark. Those things are everywhere. They're everywhere.
Starting point is 02:19:27 Like that's, that's one of the cool things about that. Like you'll see them in the most random gyms. But when it comes to that, the basic version of the sled that mom and dad can do, older people, younger, everyone can do, push and pull with a neutral spine and learn how to produce force, slowly increase the load. When you feel feel comfortable start introducing a little bit of play in your spine But when you introduce this play in your spine, don't move the spine out of that position when pushing and pulling Yeah, and probably drop the load and drop the absolutely drop the load It needs to be light
Starting point is 02:19:59 But let's say for example you start exploring with a little bit of spinal flexion when pulling the sled You get into that spinal flexion. The sled is really light. You start pulling backwards. You're breathing. You're not holding your breath. Your body learns, Hey, this is actually a good position for us to produce a little bit of force in we're strong here.
Starting point is 02:20:17 Right. Versus when most people get in that position, there's a breath hold. It feels unsafe. Something gets pulled. So for me now, the only reason I was able to progress this was because I worked on those regressions. And when a lot of trainers maybe see some of this, they're like, that's unsafe. You can't just wait a few years.
Starting point is 02:20:35 You're going to blow your back out. Like, no, I'm not going to hurt myself because my body knows that this is a good resilient position to be in. I'm not afraid of this position. So that is definitely key to keep in mind if you've slowly conditioned yourself to be safe in those positions. There's also just a lot of dogmatic like never do this nonsense that has no backing. It's like the number of classes I've been in where they're like, don't lock your knees, don't lock your arms. There are these posters that coach Chris Summer pointed me to. It's a photo of this Chinese
Starting point is 02:21:10 gymnast beast in a Maltese cross. If you want to know what that is, go check that out. And it just says underneath, lock your elbows. And it's like, yeah, if you're not dumb about it, like our body, we have this full range of movement for a reason. And look, if you're hypermobile and this and that, you got to take it into account. Yes. But also it's like, you're allowed to ask questions about the rules. Make sure you understand why the rules exist. And if the person can't explain it, like, Hmm, interesting. Well, at least like cross examine it.
Starting point is 02:21:42 One topic that you want to make sure we touched upon is soft tissue work. This is a topic near and dear to my heart. So take it away. We're sure start again. So many things. I've met Kelly Stratt, maybe three times. You know what I mean? I think he's been on the show twice and can I set the stage for people have no idea who
Starting point is 02:22:00 this is at the stage for Mr. Stratt. All right. So Kelly Sturette famous for becoming the supple leopard, which by the way, I'm not sure if he's ever shown this photo. There's a photograph of him in the gym that he started with his wife, which is him in a leopard print bathrobe, pulling a Zoolander. Not sure if that relates to the title of the book, but the point is high level PT performance coach works with the highest levels of military, highest levels of athletics. And also.
Starting point is 02:22:31 This is important to me at least is a practitioner. He walks the walk. I think for his, I think I'm getting this right for his 40th birthday. And this is a large man. He's a big boy. He's got to be 230, 240, 250, who knows? In that range. Thighs as big around as this table. Like he's going crazy if he's listening to you say this right now. Oh yeah, no, I'm just going to keep laying it on thick.
Starting point is 02:22:57 Like his legs are ridiculously large. He is a very strong man. And for his 40th though, because you would look at him, you'd be like, okay, that's a meat cube. I'm sure he's very strong in a very strong man. And for his 40th though, because you would look at him, you'd be like, okay, that's a meat cube. I'm sure he's very strong in a couple of lifts. However, for his 40th, I think it was, he wanted to power clean some ungodly number and he can't really use one of his wrists. So he catches the barbell in this like half salute with one arm, he catches it on the
Starting point is 02:23:24 shoulders. So there's that. So on his birthday, one, do you do that? He wanted to, I believe it was run an ultra marathon and not just any ultra, but the quad dip scene, which is a killer, like a widow maker. You guys can look it up. It's Northern California and do a standing backflip. So it's like you would look at him. You wouldn't assume all of these things are possible. And yet there you have Kelly star. So that that is, uh, and also formerly incredibly high level, like world-class kayaker. So this is an athlete who now helps other athletes and, and many more non-athletes in addition to that.
Starting point is 02:24:06 So I took us on a bit of a sidebar, but you were saying Kelly, I think everyone should own his book. I'm becoming a supple leopard because there's so many concepts. I bought that book in 2013 and so many concepts are things that I've continued to like build my knowledge pace on that have helped so much. For one thing from that book that was just a small mention, but went a very long way for me was keeping a relaxed face when doing myofascial release or soft tissue work. And when you're doing soft tissue work,
Starting point is 02:24:36 and we can just use an example, if you're on top of a foam roller or you're using a hard med ball, Kelly has his harder products like his Supernova product. It's very hard and you roll on top of it. It can hurt because you're now rolling your tissues on top of this hard piece of equipment, the instinctual thing to do was like grimace and what happens. Like even when I did that instinctively, I tightened up right here and those
Starting point is 02:25:01 tissues, they bind up to try to keep you safe. You hold your breath, you tighten your face. You're not able to get as deep into the tissues that you're trying to work and help become more supple. So Kelly's advice is like, get rid of your pain face. Stop. Right. Because inherently, if you just try to get this loose, get this relaxed,
Starting point is 02:25:18 you'll start to probably breathe. You'll start to get deeper in those tissues. The soft tissue work will work better. That's the goal of that. tissues, the soft tissue work will work better. That's the goal of that. Why is the soft tissue work important? The soft tissue work is important because what I've found is that when you have certain tissues that are too tense,
Starting point is 02:25:34 earlier in our conversation we were talking about not holding the breath so that you're not holding onto too much tension. But what tends to happen for many of us is we have different areas of our body that hold more tension than others. And what soft tissue or self-myofascia really does is it helps you search for areas. Like you're tacking down certain tissues that feels good, that feels good. Ooh, that feels gummy.
Starting point is 02:25:56 You're doing work on that, whether it's with a med ball or a body lever, which is the leverage tool I showed you. And when you're able to breathe and work through those areas, what you'll find is when you again, work through that and it's not as painful, you go and you move again, you might have extra range of motion. You might have less joint pain and a joint that's lower or high of the area that you were just working. And a goal of this is to have that tissue state that you create after doing soft tissue work, have that be your default. That's the goal.
Starting point is 02:26:28 Yeah, let me mention just a few things here too. One is gonna sound super bougie, but I'll say it anyway. Even when I was driving around in my POS, hand me down minivan and making next to nothing out of college, body work, And again, like scale it down. If I had to go drive into the most dangerous part of San Jose to the most sketchiest massage place, just to pay for like a 30 minute massage,
Starting point is 02:26:54 like I couldn't afford anything, like I would do that. So like bodywork and soft tissue work is something that has just been a non-negotiable for me forever. And it doesn't fix everything. It's not a panacea, but just to get into the microdosing movement, you can also microdose massage in terms of self soft tissue treatments. So before bed, pretty much whenever I'm at home, certainly before bed, I always roll. And that is not just to work on the tissues.
Starting point is 02:27:25 It's also to down regulate. And I'm not sure if there's any science to back this, but it feels like it helps me shift into more parasympathetic state house asleep. And I literally it's five minutes. I would say probably no more typically lower body, not a lot of upper body stuff, but as a result of that tiny, tiny continual dosing, it's like when I do get body work, it's very common. They're like, wow,
Starting point is 02:27:53 you're like, your muscles are very easy to work with. Like what is the story here? And it's like, yeah, it's just flossing, right? It's the daily practice of doing that soft tissue work. I haven't used it yet, but I'm excited to use, you know the person who owns this product, so this should maybe in quotation marks, just call it the nutcracker, because I think of a nutcracker. What is it called?
Starting point is 02:28:12 The body lever. The body lever. The body lever, it looks like a giant nutcracker that you can like, with your arms, use to compress your leg or your abdomen, or you could brace it against a leg and use it to like benevolently crush your arm to do forearm stuff. I mean, it looks very, very flexible. Rock climbers have used something.
Starting point is 02:28:31 I think they probably have rebranded it now called the arm aid just specifically for the forearm stuff. I think there's a company, there's a maybe rogue that had this thing that you could open up and clamp down on like your legs and arms. Like these let, yeah. Very, very similar idea. So I'm looking forward to using that. I remember I saw you, maybe it was in the same video, but you were in a sauna with a proper Bonya hat on with the nutcracker on your leg. And I was like, Ooh, I want one of those.
Starting point is 02:29:00 And I actually took a screenshot and sent it small world to Kelly Starrett. And I was like, Starrett, where do I get one of these nutcrackers? And lo and behold, full circle. And now I shall have my nutcracker. Uh, what- It's here today. Oh yeah. Yeah. All right. Look at this Christmas comes early. What other types of, because when people think soft tissue, like there are right and wrong ways to do this, right? Not everything delivers the kind of benefits one might hope. So for me, I mean, this is very 101, but it's like, if I find an area as I'm rolling out my IT band or like my vastus lateralis on the outside of the quad tends to get very,
Starting point is 02:29:38 very tight. And if I find that like gummy painful spot and it's like, okay, you don't just gloss over that, like let's sit on that for a while. Also using vibration, like even like, now they have Theraguns and stuff. I used to use a Hitachi Magic Wand for this. Funny enough. If people know, popular lesbians.
Starting point is 02:29:58 You really. Oh bro. Okay. I could see that working. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So multi-purpose, you know, but using percussion devices for sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:30:14 Also on, when I've located through foam rolling, like that painful spot, going to it with a therogun or something like it, million different devices you can choose from. Any other particular types of soft tissue work that you like to do. Let's just start like with probably some of the easiest that you can manage people like Gua Sha. You can get yourself a Gua Sha tool. You could pull out a butter knife. Yeah. Right. You can pull out a butter knife, lotion up an area that you want to work. Like let's
Starting point is 02:30:40 say that you are do a lot of gripping and your forearms are tight, pull that out, look at the area, pull that out, get the area lotioned up and then start to work those areas. Concepts when doing soft tissue work with any implement is number one, you have to breathe. The thing that people I think makes it hard for people makes them not want to do it is they do it. They feel tension in a certain area, they hold their breath, they tense up. It doesn't loosen up because they're too tense and it's a bad experience
Starting point is 02:31:07 so they don't come back and do it. So just like we were talking about how when you're doing exercise, you need to regress it to your pain-free level. Just gonna say the same thing. It's not that you regress your soft tissue work to a pain-free level, but you regress it to a level that you can breathe and try to relax while dealing with the pressure you're putting on yourself.
Starting point is 02:31:27 So if you're putting so much pressure that you just have to go like that, you would decrease the pressure. You're not ready, which is also true with manual therapy. If you have somebody working on you, right? Like if you're bracing or holding your breath or making a pain face, it's too much pressure. Mm-hmm. Absolutely way too much pressure. So that's something that can help you actually make progress with the practice because if you can keep that as your North Star, try to relax my face, make sure I'm breathing and put in as much pressure I can manage. If I'm keeping these two things in line, you can progressively overload the amount of pressure
Starting point is 02:32:00 you place on your tissues. I mean, just to pull something out. This is from, I can't remember who told me this, but it's from Thai Massage. I mean, who knows if this is originally from classic Thai Massage, but a very, very, very good Thai Massage therapist, which is an incredible art form, incredible said to me, like, there's no such thing as too deep, only too fast. You can get really deep with a lot of pressure. You just can't get there too quickly. And you can apply that to self massage. Also, like there's a guy, Jason Neamer, co creator of something called Acro yoga, amazing Thai massage therapist also. And he'll just use his forearm and his elbow
Starting point is 02:32:37 on his own, like arms on his own legs. You don't necessarily need a whole magician's kit full of tools. You can also just use your forearms. Exactly. Tennis ball at home, I think some tissues that people really leave out of the mix are their feet, especially the bottoms of his feet. You know, I was just going to say this, like a little, it looks like a tennis ball called rubs, R U B Z, but it's got little, little nubs on it. Super hard or is it soft? It's pretty hard. Super hard? Yeah, it's pretty hard, but just I will travel with it.
Starting point is 02:33:08 And it's like the amount of relief you get systemically from rolling out your feet. I think I, you know, I picked that up from his head cone actually. Okay, okay. Yeah, yeah, he talked about like decompression, a certain type of hanging is very particular device. And then I'm pretty sure he talked about rubbing out the
Starting point is 02:33:24 feet because he said it helped with his knee pain. I was like, huh, I think I'm going to try that. I'm really happy you mentioned that about Ed, because when it comes to soft tissue, there are many people within the sphere of fitness, especially on the evidence based side of fitness, that when people talk about soft tissue work, the only thing, the only rebuttal they have is like, well, there's really no research to back that up and it's probably placebo and it feels good, go ahead and do it, but there's nothing really prove it works. And the frustrating thing about not just that,
Starting point is 02:33:55 but many aspects of evidence-based fitness is that there's a waiting game to wait for a paper to tell you something works that's probably been done for centuries in many different cultures for a paper to tell you something works that's probably been done for centuries. Yeah. In many different cultures for a long time. Massage and soft tissue work has been a panacea for so many different groups of people around the globe. But we have people in exercise science that want to discount it because they don't have a paper that proves this efficacy.
Starting point is 02:34:22 So that's why I like, I don't get me wrong. I'm not saying evidence-based work isn't helpful, but don't allow evidence-based studies to block you off from trying something that might just be really beneficial for you. That's all. Yeah. Let me add something to that. Cause this is definitely a nerve for me as well. It's like, all right, look, science is amazing. Okay. Scientific method as a structured way of not fooling ourselves. Incredible tool for humankind. I mean, indispensable and Western medicine I'm going to say, and this is going to be controversial. Like the most effective healing system ever devised on the planet period full
Starting point is 02:34:58 stop. Like if you look at like infant mortality and reductions in infant mortality, the, the advent of antibiotics. I mean, this is an incredible system of healing as are many others. All of that said, as someone who has been involved with supporting early stage science now for more than a decade, science is fucking expensive and it's really slow. And what that means is also right within the realm of exercise science, it's like, you don't want to fool yourself. So you should be scientifically literate. Yes. You should pay attention to the literature if you can. Yes. By the way, that takes some training to get to the point where you can actually read
Starting point is 02:35:41 something like that properly. However, there are so many incentives that will prevent most studies from ever getting done that you could be waiting forever. And especially in the realm of exercise science where it's like you're not experimenting with a speculative type of invasive brain surgery in some far flung like third world country. It's like, no, try some soft tissue work. Who cares? Like the downside risk is so minimal. Yeah. See how you feel like learn to trust your body again, which is another
Starting point is 02:36:13 reason why I more and more so, and it's not valuing it more so, but increasingly value movement because it teaches you to get reacquainted with the subtleties of feeling your body, which autopilot linear movements in the gym do not automatically do. And then you can become a better gauge. And look, this isn't to like pat myself on the back, but like as you do more of that, it's like when we were doing the rope stuff this morning and I was like, Oh, I feel like I'm flaring. I feel like I got a little too high on that right foot. And it's like, you develop these sensitivities.
Starting point is 02:36:47 And then when you have, and look, I'm not, again, I'm not Bershnikov or I'm not a surgeon with the most delicate hands in the world. Can't read Braille, but as you develop that, you can then trust your body. It's like, all right, you'll begin to pick up patterns. And also, I'm like on a, I think I had too many exogenous ketones, but lots of personality. I'll keep going for a second. The other thing, and this came up through my archery in the last like six months. So I was training with amazing guy, Jake Kaminsky, two times silver medalist, one of the most successful archers the US has produced in the last 30, maybe 50 years. And he, like me, takes meticulous training notes, including soft tissue so that if he had a problem, he's like, this rib is
Starting point is 02:37:34 slightly out, which is a really common issue with archery. He could be like, no, it's not the last workout. He's like, he identified through patterning because he's shot a million plus arrows easily. He would be like, he would look back and he's like, it's usually five or six workouts back. And I can identify either what helped me or what the problem was. And similarly, it's like just experiment, take good notes, try not to fool yourself and keep what works. Ditch what doesn't. But man, the soft tissue stuff, it's so incredibly helpful.
Starting point is 02:38:07 And I wanted to add also, just because I mentioned the pre-bed, not to totally hijack this, but you're good. So it goes. You mentioned rope flow prior to bed, if I'm not misremembering that was not on Mike, but do you do rope before bed? Yeah, I'll do like some nights, it's maybe three or five minutes. Some nights it'll be just like flowing for 20 minutes outside my house.
Starting point is 02:38:29 And that is relaxing. And you were saying that also it helps to alleviate the morning stiffness the next day. Yeah, you know, okay. I'll come back to the soft tissue thing in a second, but Mark and I were having a conversation early last year and we were like, man, what can help us with like get rid of waking up in the morning,
Starting point is 02:38:47 just feeling that morning stiffness, not morning, you know, what, morning just body stiffness. Don't want to fix that. Right, don't want to fix that. You won't want that. That's a good sign of hormonal health. But the general morning stiffness where you just kind of like get your body,
Starting point is 02:39:00 you know, you got to wring out your body a little bit. So we thought, I thought about that for a while and then I just started doing rope flow before bed. And the first night I did rope flow before bed, which wasn't something I usually did. I usually just like, you know, I'd come home, work, maybe take a walk, go to bed, wake up, do rope flow, feel amazing. Did rope flow before bed, woke up the next morning,
Starting point is 02:39:19 I was just like, ha! Like really, I just felt like I didn't need to, my body was already lubricated. That's what I felt like. And I was like, okay, maybe this is just a one night thing. But I then noticed that the nights that I didn't do some, and all it is, is rotating before bed.
Starting point is 02:39:39 Let's just call it that. Like if you have something that you can get some natural rotation in before bed, cool. If you have the rope practice, cool. But can get some natural rotation in before bed cool if you have the rope practice cool But getting that natural spinal rotation in Before bed will help you feel better when you wake up in the morning and you won't feel Your back will not feel as stiff. It's huge So the reason why I know it works is because I have nights where I don't do it and I've also told many people in the stronger human community to try that and get let me know what they feel and
Starting point is 02:40:04 Everyone that does it wakes up feeling better in the stronger human community to try that and get, let me know what they feel and everyone that does it wakes up feeling better in the morning. So like, I know that it's one of those practices that like, if you have a practice where you do some soft tissue work, don't stop the practices you do. Just add in like three minutes, do two to five minutes before you go to bed, two to five minutes. Yeah. Scale it down, right? If you're like, I don't have 10 minutes. Like, oh, you do one minute. Everything is like, Oh, I can't have 10 minutes. Like, oh, you do one minute everything is like, Oh, I can't do one minutes. Fine. Like do three passes on the IT bed on each leg on a phone roller. Like, come on. It's like, there will be a point at which you have no excuse. And I'll add one more thing, which I guess I accidentally omitted from my mind as soft tissue
Starting point is 02:40:42 work, but it's definitely soft tissue work. And this is something that has stuck for me big time. And I've passed on to a lot of friends also to give credit where credit is due. So my mid back was bothering me. I had this really old injury and my mid back was really spasmed. And I was doing hand balancing practices a hundred years ago with a guy named Andriy Bondarenko. And I didn't train with him much. I mean, the guy is a phenom. He is a, or at least at the time was a top Cirque du Soleil performer famous for one-armed hand balancing, like one-armed handstands. He's not a big guy, right? Who knows? He probably weighs 130 pounds, maybe 140. Maybe these of people I've met personally, the most incredible combination of strength
Starting point is 02:41:27 and mobility that I've ever seen. And what's his name? I'll get his name. Yeah. Yeah. Andriy, a N D R I I bonda Renko. And I think his, his Instagram is just Andre Bondarenko. Excellent teacher. And we did some handballing stuff and I was explaining my back issues and he's like, Oh, you need to get one of these mats. And the mat was, I ended up getting the Nyoya Acu pressure mat. And is this a shock D? I might be the same thing. There are a bunch of imitators too.
Starting point is 02:41:58 There's one called bed of nails. The basic idea is it's like a thick towel with plastic golf cleats covering it. And then there's one for the neck and it fucking hurts. And even to this day, I've done it hundreds of times. Like if you're a little sensitive, especially if the tissue is inflamed, it hurts. If you stick with it past like three or four minutes, then your body chills out. And I typically stay on 10 minutes. The reason Andre introduced it to me is his
Starting point is 02:42:25 coach when he used to do team acrobatic competitions, which is a big thing in like Eastern Europe and other parts of the world where you have, it's almost like if you could imagine like cheerleading plus, plus, plus, plus, plus, where you'd also have like male only teams, female on the teams where you'd have like a flyer, someone who's doing crazy acrobatics. That would be Andre, who would get shot into the air with guys who would make like a kind of, they call it a basket with the hands. People can look this up. All of those guys would just be beaten to hell. And the coach would make all of them lay on one of these 45 minutes, for 45 minutes after every practice. And I started using it and I was like, okay, I have no idea how this works.
Starting point is 02:43:07 All I know is man does this work. And before bed, especially with a lot of my back issues, that is non-negotiable. And I'll give one trick for folks also, if you have low back issues specifically, traveling with the whole kit and caboodle is kind of a pain in the ass. Just take the neck attachment, travel with that. That'll fit easily into most suitcases. And then you can like lay on that for your low back on like the carpet in the hotel or whatever 10 minutes before you go to bed. Resolves like 50% of my low back issues for sleep.
Starting point is 02:43:39 It's incredible. So the cool thing about this is like, it's really simple as to why this all works. Blood flow. You bring pressure to an area, you drive blood and nutrients to that area after pressure is relieved. So when you have that on your back, you have that on your whole back, because I actually have the same thing at home. I have it in a box. I need to bring it back out because I did it for a while and I was like, that's cool.
Starting point is 02:43:59 I like it. It helps me relax, but I didn't keep it. So I'm going to bring that back now that you mentioned it. But all these things, they're driving a bunch of blood to that area, which now when you get up, you feel relief in those areas that you brought a level of pressure to. And that's why it's so good for healing of specific areas. And that's why when it comes to soft tissue, I don't just do the hot areas that most people would think about, like maybe the quads or the forearms, et cetera. I hit my whole body throughout
Starting point is 02:44:25 the week. So I'll do tissue work on my head. I have like a tool that I'll use. And while I'm in the sauna, I'll get on my temple. I'll get on my head. I'll get on the back of my neck. I'll get here. It must make people comfortable. This is not like you're like the public sauna. But when I do go out to the public sauna, I do take a gua sha tool and a body lever with me and I will hit that stuff in there. And usually people are like, what are you doing? That looks like it feels so good. So I'll give them the guac. That's not so bad. That's not so bad. I've been to some of the OG Russian Turkish bouts in New York city and that there are
Starting point is 02:44:56 these old guys from the old country. You're like shaving their chests in the sauna. And I'm just like, bro, you can, that's not, you shouldn't be able to do that. That's not okay. It's not okay. I've seen it on multiple occasions. So point I'm making, nutcracker, fine. I'm okay with it.
Starting point is 02:45:12 Absolutely. Yeah. But, but that's the thing you're, you're bringing blood flow to all these areas. And if you can, going back to the, what you were mentioning about learning how to heal yourself, that's what this is. Body workers are essential. They're great. I have no issue with them. But I think that if you're someone who you go to a body worker and it's usually maybe a two time a month thing, because that's what most people can afford. Like usually it's like once or
Starting point is 02:45:36 twice a month. Now you can go to a body worker multiple times a week because you are your own body worker. You learn to find the areas that first off, you learn that when you put pressure in a certain area, you get relief somewhere else. So you take a mental note. And at this point for me, I know that when I'm feeling a little something in this upper part of my glute, I know what to hit. If I'm feeling something in my wrist, I know what to hit in my forearm. Like I have these reference points of how to heal myself because I've become familiar with pressurizing my body and you can, you learn these things, you know what I mean? So, and anyone can learn this.
Starting point is 02:46:07 You don't have to have a degree with a bunch of schooling on this. You just have to touch yourself. Yeah, that's it. You just have to, yeah, you just have to experiment. Another one, and actually, oh, Dustin Moskovitz, the thank you for this co-founder of Facebook now Asana has the worst branding, which is why I always forget the product name.
Starting point is 02:46:30 It's like the back buddy. It basically looks like a very tricked out like pimp my theracane. So like theracane would be like a plastic candy can that you allows you to get to points on your back that at least I am completely unable to touch. Right. And then there's one that looks more like an S yeah. Okay. That I'm pretty sure it's called back buddy. People can look this up. If you just search Dustin Moskovitz back buddy, I'm sure the right name will come up. And I have one of these like everywhere I go as well, because there's no way I get tired.
Starting point is 02:47:05 In terms of soft tissue work, like me doing good work on my back is going to be a little tough for getting like very focused attention. All right. Anything else to add on the soft tissue side of things in terms of equipment? Get your Amazon has med balls so you can get yourself a med ball on Amazon. That's a medicine ball. Medicine ball. Yeah. Yeah. Cause like that can allow you to like, and they're, they're inexpensive. So you can get yourself a med ball on Amazon. That's a medicine ball. Medicine ball. Yeah. Cause like that can allow you to like, and they're, they're inexpensive.
Starting point is 02:47:27 So you can roll on top of it on top of your hamstrings, your quads, your, you can do some torso work, but it's like, it's a good inexpensive tool for you to get yourself some soft tissue work. And just for clarity, you are rolling on top of it or you're rolling the medicine ball on top of your leg. As an example, you're on top of it or you're rolling the medicine ball on top of your leg as an example you're on top of it yeah yeah you are on top of it using your the pressure from your body to put into that ball so I would look at these as like different these are different types of pressure the med ball allows you to put
Starting point is 02:47:56 your own pressure into that implement so there's that I think there's this woman called Jill Miller she has on Amazon tune-up fitness balls is what they're called I like those specifically because they're not extremely hard. They have a tad bit of give they're hard But they have a bit of give so you can really sink yourself into it with that pressure So I would suggest instead of like because most people they want to get the hardest balls But the thing is is like hard hard instruments, especially when you're pushing or pressurizing into them They can almost make most people Hard, hard instruments, especially when you're pushing or pressurizing into them, they can almost make most people back away from that resistance.
Starting point is 02:48:30 Most people need to use a slightly softer implement to ease themselves into this soft tissue work before moving towards like the Kelly Sturrett supernova or his peanut or any of these harder implements. So that would be some type of pressure. The body lever allows for a leverage type of pressure where now you are pressing two things into each other and you're finding that type of pressure. And then it also allows you to kind of need like you would, I got a massage with a masseuse, you now can use that pressure to need.
Starting point is 02:48:57 And then as far as other implements, there are Gua Sha tools that you can get from different companies, Amazon or whatever, where again, it's this rubbing pressure, you want to have these implements that provide you different types of that you can get from different companies, Amazon or whatever, where again, it's this rubbing pressure. You wanna have these implements that provide you different types of pressure so you can do whatever it calls for on any given day. Let me ask, just because I have to ask, or my OCD will not allow me to proceed,
Starting point is 02:49:17 or at least not land the plan on this conversation, Nordic curls, what are Nordic curls? And what does your resume look like with respect to Nordic curls. What are Nordic curls and what does your resume look like with respect to Nordic curls? The Nordic hamstring curl is something that I started doing again after I met my buddy Ben Patrick. I wasn't able to do a Nordic curl when I first met him. Okay. So explain what a Nordic curl is. A Nordic hamstring curl. Is this also something you should not just run out and try without supervision? Don't do it. Don't do it. Regress it.
Starting point is 02:49:51 If you try a Nordic curl, most people will pull their hamstring. There's a way that you could do a Nordic curl would be like, let's say there's a flat bench. Let's imagine that you have your knees on the bench. You could strap your ankles into the bench and the goal is to lean your torso down, almost kind of like, just like you're leaning your torso down, all the way down and then come up with the strength of your hamstrings. So you're not slamming down, you're not just falling,
Starting point is 02:50:16 you're going down slowly and your hamstrings are gonna be the, the hamstring strength is gonna be the limiting factor if you are able to control yourself down or bring yourself up. Yeah, exactly. So just, I mean, it is hard the way you describe it and it is even harder. I have a Siren X machine for Nordic. Yeah, I have a machine at home too. Yeah. I haven't touched it in a long time. It's a little dusty at this point, but imagine I'll give another
Starting point is 02:50:42 visual for folks. So imagine that you had like a nice thick, like memory foam at the edge of a pool. So you could put your knees down without your knees hurting. And then a really fat friend came behind you and just sat on your ankles. So now you can get to like your max height on your knees. Your knees are in line with your hips, which are in line with your shoulders and your fat
Starting point is 02:51:07 friend is sitting on your ankles, but you're like comfortable in the memory foam. And then without breaking at the hip, keeping the knees, hips and shoulders in line, you put your hands behind your back and then go all the way down. So your nose touches the water and then come all the way back up. It is so fucking hard. Okay. And then how does this fit? Why the hell am I asking you about Nordic girls? There must be some historical reason. So I saw that a few years ago. I saw that like Tyreek Hill did a certain amount of Nordic girls. Who's this person? Tyreek Hill is an NFL player. I don't watch much football, so
Starting point is 02:51:44 I forget the team he plays for, but he's like, people see him as like, uh, he's this person? Tyree kills an NFL player. I don't watch much football, so I forget the team he plays for, but he's like, people see him as like, he's one of the fastest, he's not the fastest player in the NFL. And one thing and a trend you notice amongst a lot of guys who are very fast is that they also have the ability to do a few, if not many Nordic curls. One thing about the Nordic hamstring curl,
Starting point is 02:52:04 there has been some research to back this up, but it doesn't mean you have to many Nordic curls. One thing about the Nordic hamstring curl, there has been some research to back this up, but it doesn't mean you have to do Nordic curls if you want to build resiliency and sprinting, but they progress Nordic curls on athletes that sprinted and these athletes all have less occurrence of pulling their hamstrings because of the amount of strength that you build in your hamstring at length. Because you notice at the end range of a Nordic curl, your hamstring is at this lengthened position with stress on the hamstring, which is why if you're new to movement,
Starting point is 02:52:30 you need to regress it because you could pull your hamstring in that position. It feels- Yeah, pull a hamstring by the way, it's not like, ouch, that hurt, let me sleep on it, now I'm okay the next day. Yeah. Typically, it's not one of those.
Starting point is 02:52:40 It's not, it's not, it's not nice. So when Ben talked to us and told me about the Nordic curls, tried one, couldn't get it. And I was like, what did this NFL guy do? Oh, I forgot how many I think Tyreek did maybe 12 or 13, 12 or 13. So what I wanted to do is I wanted to progress in order curls. And when I saw Tyreek's video, I was like, I want to do more than Tyreek. So for me to progress Nordic curls. And when I saw Tyreke's video, I was like, I want to do more than Tyreke. So for me to progress Nordic curls, man, I started at the
Starting point is 02:53:07 basic regressions. Like I started first off having a bench higher and going with limited range of motion. So not going all the way down, finding where my body would not be able to handle the pressure and going to that range, repping that out slowly lowering down. Took me a few months to lower down to a flat bench. I was able to finally do one Nordic curl. Then I would do a crow where I would go down and push myself up and give myself assistance. And over time that built. And then I think, correct me if I'm wrong, but I think in the video I managed to do 18 Nordic curls. I'm not sure if I did 17 or 18 Nordic curls.
Starting point is 02:53:43 Something like that. I mean, yeah, I'm, I'm relying on, uh, I'm relying on some deep research here. Yeah. So. Let me take a look here. I, I mean, I think we should pull up the tape. We'll have a video here. We'll have some footage here. Deep research says that the previous record Tyreak was 10 and you did 15. There we go. Yeah. But the point is like the differential was substantial, right? As from a percentage standpoint, you did not just like eke out barely
Starting point is 02:54:14 beating the record, beat the record substantially. Yeah. And this isn't like a world record. I think there's a guy who he's much lighter, but I think he managed to do like 25 in order curls or something like that. So it's like, I'm not the guy in the world who's done the most Nordic curls, but I want it to be Tyreek. If I'm going to be Tyreek in one thing, because I'm not faster than Tyreek, it's going to be doing more Nordic curls. But you know, it's one thing like a
Starting point is 02:54:39 strength coach who I respect so much and he's taught me a lot through the show and through what I'm able to see him do with athletes in Danny. He's someone who I love his work because he's someone who takes everything that we've managed to talk about here and he applies it to different athletes he works with. So we have certain athletes that he progresses like a lot of Nordic curls with. He'll have athletes that he does different soft tissue work with. He has athletes that he purposefully has them do certain types of static stretching, which certain people are like, static stretching isn't good for you.
Starting point is 02:55:08 But Ian knows when and where to apply these different modalities rather than saying that's just bad. We shouldn't do it. Ian is someone who understands how to use all of these things holistically to make progress. That's something that I really think most of us should try to do when it comes to our personal physical practice. All right. So bone density, I have lifted most of my life and in certain segments of my body, I
Starting point is 02:55:34 was shocked to find, I think partially due to the back injury and reducing certain types of loading, but I have below average bone density in a few segments of my body, not all. It's like the average is fine, but averages can be super misleading. You gotta be careful with averages. So the average on Dexa, great. But in certain segments, way below average. So I was like, I've been thinking about bone density a lot.
Starting point is 02:56:00 For longevity and health span, you want sufficient bone density. And there are different ways to catalyze the adaptation of increased bone density, compression, lifting, in parentheses, tension, in parentheses, isometrics, impact, jumping, right? And then rotation, which is certainly for me, and I think for a lot of people, whether they consider themselves athletes or not, that is an obvious omission a lot of the time, right? That could be mace, kettlebell juggling, rope. Yeah. And that's more so pulling at the bones. So that rotation, like it is rotation, but
Starting point is 02:56:42 it's also pulling these segments. Oh, I got it. I got it. So, okay. So you need more attention. So rope may not be actually a great example, but the kettlebell would be since it's at like the end of a kinetic chain that's getting elongated or at least stretched in that sense.
Starting point is 02:56:57 Okay. Got it. All right. Aging insurance. Certainly. This is something I think about a lot with aging parents as well. And really trying to like, he's talking to a doctor I know really well. And he's like, yeah, I call my parents trainer. And I just say, when I see, he's like, I just say, make
Starting point is 02:57:13 them cry. You have to make my parents cry because they need the bonus. Like you have to load it. It can't be comfortable or at least overly comfortable. Anything else you'd like to just add on bone density? Oh, also another one just because the one place I'm happy to spend a lot of money is on very, very, very good doctors and I'm fortunate to have really good doctors. You have to ensure you have adequate calcium absorption and that you are not taking things that could over time interfere with calcium absorption. So in addition to the stressors, you got to pay attention to what you're able to absorb on my YouTube channel.
Starting point is 02:57:51 I have a video that I made. It's like 40 something minutes on bone density that goes into everything. All right. Goes into all of this. So like if you guys want to spend some time and go and watch that video, that's it's going to be worth it for you. But one thing I want to mention, I'm happy you mentioned the jumping thing because jumping is something that we just literally stop doing. Some people, it's something that I stopped. I was a soccer player for years. And when I got into
Starting point is 02:58:16 a certain form of like practice, there was a point where I didn't jump for years, unless like, maybe I was just doing a random box jump here and there, which I ended up being really crap at because jumping is something I stopped doing. And what happens to many people is like, because they slowly stop getting off the ground, there comes a point where they never jump again. And then they're 40, 50, 60, they jump, they pull something. And then they're like, I can't do this because they can't first off, they don't have the strength to propel themselves off the ground, but they also don't have
Starting point is 02:58:44 the elasticity to be able to land and handle the force from the ground. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, it's not the jumping necessarily. It's the problem. It's the landing. It's the landing. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:58:55 So I think something that can be a great investment for many people, including those that are older, is a rebounder. You know what a rebounder is? Like a mini trampoline. Yeah, a little trampoline. There's many brands. Bellacon is like the Rolls Royce of rebounders, but there's also- Bellacon sounds like the Rolls Royce. Yeah. There's also like lesser expensive brands, but I love the rebounder. I have a rebounder.
Starting point is 02:59:15 And the reason why I like it is because like it's something that I can just keep in the backyard. And when I go outside, I can just hop on it real quick. It feels pretty meditative, but like there have been quite a few studies to show, especially in older adults, that rebounding helped them build bone density because of the low intensity jumping that it causes for them. Why I can guess that the answer here, but why is that better than say jumping rope or just jumping? It's a regression. It's the regression. You know what I mean? Because many people, they try jumping rope. Many people, their feet will get beat up a lot.
Starting point is 02:59:49 It's something that you absolutely can and should build the capacity to do. I look at jumping rope as like rebounder, light hopping, 30 seconds to a minute to two minutes of jumping rope each day or every other day. Then over time, you're going to get to a point where you can jump rope for five, 10, 15, 20 minutes. But the thing is, is the ability to jump rope without certain muscles and areas getting taxed more than others is a full body build of elasticity
Starting point is 03:00:18 from the feet all the way up to the neck, because everything needs to have the right amount of tension, but not too much tension. So what a lot of people notice when they start jumping rope is that they're like, Oh, my calves got super sore. Right. And experienced people who jump rope, it's not their calves that get super sore. It's like everything just kind of starts getting tired out because their whole
Starting point is 03:00:37 system is just popping them off the ground very lightly. Whereas when you're new to it, that impact and even your feet are too weak to handle that impact on the your feet are too weak to handle that impact on the ground, you don't pop off. So that's why a rebounder is going to be super good. Then regress jumping so you can have your hands on something and start jumping. Then just literally, what do you mean by hands on something? Put your hands on a table, hop, use that to help you have a softer landing.
Starting point is 03:01:01 Initially, you might have a lot of weight in your hands so that you, because like maybe you can't handle that landing, but over time, you're going to be able to put less weight in the hands. And then this is where I got my mom. So hopping, AKA basically. Emulating what you do kind of jump roping. Yeah, you could do that lightly. You can also kind of transfer from leg to leg light hops. But the goal is to again, do not be embarrassed with how low you have to regress
Starting point is 03:01:26 to feel comfortable with this. Don't just try starting to jump with a jump rope immediately because if you do that too soon and your body's telling you signals that you're not ready for it, whether you're getting a lot of impact in your lower back, your knees, your feet are feeling really beat up,
Starting point is 03:01:40 you need to listen to those signals and regress the hopping. I'm telling you, if you can regress hopping, do it a little bit. Doesn't have to be every day. Could be every other day, just a little bit. You will get to a point where you can start jumping rope. If you want to see an example of what not to do, people can search for the Tim Ferriss experiment parkour episode, where I went from like no jumping to let me try to learn parkour in a week. Yeah. Don't do that. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:02:05 Do not do that. Yeah. Basically just like blew apart my entire body like forest gumps braces. Uh huh. Not a good idea. Yeah. So yeah. Regress. But the reason why I think that that's so important, it's great for bone density. Like what we're saying here, but I think it's like, it allows you to bring back that skill and never lose it because Because once you're able to start hopping and it's now an effortless thing, just a little bit will allow you to hold onto it for the rest of your life. And if you have it right now, do the low intensity jump rope. Just you don't even need a jump rope. Just do some hopping each day so that you maintain that ability to just propel and
Starting point is 03:02:40 land that goes very far. And a majority of the population can't do it anymore just because one day they stopped and they never did it again. Yeah. I can't remember who told me this. I'm inclined to say Kelly Starrett because I get a lot of these from Kelly. So Kelly, I'll give you credit for this, even if it's not you, but I think it is Kelly who is quoting a famous Russian sports scientist, as I recall it, who said, once you stop jumping, you start dying. I love that. I yes, dude.
Starting point is 03:03:12 That's true. There was this video, maybe I'll be able to find it by the time this comes out, but it literally showed this young man and it showed all of his relatives that were over 40. He had something up there and he was trying to have everyone jump. No one, even actually there was a few people in their 30s, everyone tried jumping and they couldn't, they could barely get off the ground. It's such an awkward thing.
Starting point is 03:03:33 And he's someone who trains jumping, so he was able to like go super high. But it just shows that like, once you stop, it can go very quickly. But I want people to understand this doesn't mean you can't get it back. It just means that you got to treat yourself like a kid that's learning to walk again. You got to start with the basics, be okay with that taking a while. Your feet have to adapt to the stress,
Starting point is 03:03:53 your body has to adapt to handle that force. Could be a year, could be two, could be whatever. So what does a rebounder session look like? How long would you bounce on it? Literally, you could bounce on it. Like, again, just kind of like the rope, you could do a minute, you could do 10. A rebounder takes away a lot of the impact that you're going to have from like the ground because it allows you to go in and then you're able to use that energy to pop back up. So when you become like there are rebounders, like the bellicon, I think other rebounders also, they have these handles that you can use. If you find it difficult, yeah, they're all tricked out. They're like the Batmobile sled.
Starting point is 03:04:26 Yeah, there's a whole fitness trend of like people on YouTube that do rebound or exercises. Like it's a workout for them. And I think this is a great thing. Some of them are heavier. That's powerful. Somebody who is, let's say they're 100 pounds overweight, 150 pounds overweight,
Starting point is 03:04:43 but they can actually start jumping again and they can start bouncing again. But then over time they can transfer that to flat ground. Yep. Right. So that's why I think it's super powerful for everyone. If you find that jumping, you, you can't do jumping. Rebounding is great. Now I also like rebounding too, because it's something that I feel kind of.
Starting point is 03:05:02 Decompresses my system a little bit. I like it because when I get into the air, there's just like this, I can't replicate this floaty thing that happens in the air where I'm just like, it's just like you're weightless. And when you become experienced, you can really go down into the rebounder and just get super high and just, you're just literally going down and floating. When I come off of the rebounder, my body feels similar to when I finish a swim. I feel this global decompression everywhere.
Starting point is 03:05:28 So it's one of those practices that I look at that makes the body feel better afterwards than before. It can be a workout if you want it to be. I don't look at my rebounding as a workout. I look at the rebounding as a recovery practice that feeds my body and allows me to do more hard work later. I look at the rope as that too. It feeds my body and allows me to do more hard work later. I look at the rope as that too. It feeds my body and allows me to do more later. It's, it's healthy for me.
Starting point is 03:05:49 And it's just fun. I think a big thing here, all this stuff for me is fun, man. It feels like play, right? So that's very important for me. Playing the long game. It's too boring or too punishing. Ultimately, it's got to be sustainable. I'm excited to try a lot of what we've talked about.
Starting point is 03:06:16 So where can people find all things in SEMA? Me and my producer Owen Carr, we make videos on the YouTube channel, which is just my name in SEMA E-ANG. producer Owen Carr, we make videos on the YouTube channel, which is just my name and SEMA. So you can, if you want to find the bone entity video, the traditional strength training video, that's at my YouTube channel, which is just my name. SEMA. No, just to note for people, there's a silent N in there. N S I M A I N Y A N G. Yeah. If
Starting point is 03:06:43 you say my name wrong, trust me, I ain't going to get mad at you. Don't worry. Okay. So don't be scared over at my website, the stronger human dot stores. There's ropes, sandbags, kettlebells, the body lever, pretty much everything that I use it's over there at the stronger human store. And then if you want to learn rope flow for free, I have a rope flow foundations course that has like 55 modules and like over 50 videos
Starting point is 03:07:05 that go in depth, taking you from being someone who can be basic with rope flow to someone who can now flow with many different movements. That's in the stronger human community, which is on school.com slash the stronger human. And I also have stuff there where you can learn kill about flow, how to do soft tissue work pretty much. Pretty much. School.com is spelled like normal school. S-K-O-O-L. S-K-O-O-L.com slash the stronger work. Pretty much. School.com is spelled like normal school.
Starting point is 03:07:26 SKOL.com slash the stronger human. Thanks for that correction. Yeah. My goal for that place is first off, there's a great community there of over 12,000 people right now. Like I love how these people bring in their different expertise with what they're doing. Not everyone is doing all the exact same things that I do. So it's cool that I get to learn from them too.
Starting point is 03:07:43 But it's just a great community of people that are all just trying to become stronger and build their own personal physical practices. And my goal for myself there is just to put everything that I've learned there. I want to mention this, Tim, your podcast is a podcast that my me and my best friend, his name is Brian Belyea. We were listening to your show back when I was 18 years old. Like, we were listening to stuff back. Actually, no, I think I was I when I was 18 years old. Like we were listening to your stuff back. Actually, no, I think I was, I think I was 20, the 19 and 20s when we were listening to show, cause we would, uh, we would literally go on calls and be like, okay, dude, what'd you learn from this?
Starting point is 03:08:13 We'd get the books that were referenced in the show. I think we read the way of the superior man because of something you mentioned on one of your shows. Yeah. So that's what like got me on the path of like self development and learning, constant learning. And Brian would say the same thing, like me and him are going to go crazy because like, oh shit, we just went on Tim Ferriss.
Starting point is 03:08:34 So it's like, it's cool. So I want to say thank you because honestly, dude, I've listened to so much of your show, so much of your show. And it's taught me so much through the years that for me being here right now, it's literally insane to me. I'm just happy that I was able to stay kind of chill during this show. Cause this has been really cool. So I want to say thank you because you like you literally man, your stuff has
Starting point is 03:08:56 changed my life. Seriously. Amazing. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you. So glad we got to spend time together and I'm very excited to see what you do in the coming years. How old are you?
Starting point is 03:09:08 32. I turned 33 this year. Man, you got some runaway. I cannot wait to see. The fact that you're doing masters, I just, I got, I got to talk some shit. I also compete in adult. I don't only compete in masters.
Starting point is 03:09:21 Okay. Because master starts at 30, right? And I remember this past winter someone's like, yeah, you should do some Masters competitions in skiing. And I was like, what's the lowest age that one can be Masters? They're like 30. And I was like, oh, I see. So people who just stopped competing at the highest levels.
Starting point is 03:09:42 I know I'm not going to be like a mop for those guys. But there's like ranges of masters. It was like masters one, which is what I did. Right. So I compete in adult and masters. So I'm all, but there's also masters two and three. So like they do it from like 30 to 33 then 34. Yeah. So it's not like I'm competing against some six. Yes.
Starting point is 03:10:01 Sandbagging your slack. Take this guilty bitch. No, they're all old. You're slack. Take this guillotine. No, they're all around. My they're all around. Camorra your arm off. Oh yeah. Don't look at me that way. But I also compete in adult.
Starting point is 03:10:16 Take your walker and get out of here. Yeah. Yeah. Oh man. Yeah. So, oh man. Well, the very, very, very fun and super, super informative to spend time together and very inspiring because as you're talking about these things, and I'm
Starting point is 03:10:35 sure I'm not the only person, I'm sure people listening, you do a very good job of making it seem, which it is, right? Not just tangible, but achievable. Scale it down, right? You're not gonna walk in and do 600, 700 pound, 800 pound deadlifts tomorrow if you haven't been deadlifting. You don't need to do that. You shouldn't even attempt to do that. You shouldn't even attempt your one rep max.
Starting point is 03:11:02 And the payoff that you can get from layering these things in, learning to feel your body and learning to then trust your body, becoming familiar with the map that is your body and how it changes over time. The payoff with this type of micro dosing of movement, the micro dosing of soft tissue treatment, it does not need to be and turn your life upside down, change everything, transformation overnight. And it shouldn't be because that's going to fail.
Starting point is 03:11:32 And from experience, I can tell you whether it was with training with Jersey back in the day or training with coach summer back in the day, it's like these little things done consistently. If you are consistent and you add some progressive overload, doesn't mean a lot. Doesn't mean slapping on 20 pounds every time you go to the gym with extra weight. Micro progressions that are sustainable so you're not getting injured. Ideally, right? Those things will happen. Little nicks and bruises along the way. What that can add up to when I look back at some of those experiences, it's just unbelievably
Starting point is 03:12:09 impressive. And more important, fulfilling. And you can actually fully inhabit this body that by the way, like mind-body, there's no separation. It's just one integrated unit. And like we are evolved to move our bodies through space. That's why I like the idea of a brain in a jar doesn't really work. Like uploading consciousness now, like it's all integrated into the movement of the body. And I think you are an incredible ambassador for it. So thank you for that. And you're very,
Starting point is 03:12:42 very, very good educator. And that is hard to do. That is hard to do in a very crowded media landscape. And I saw that video and I was like, huh, interesting. And then Mark's name popped up and I was like, I think I recognize that fucking mutant. Hold on a second. I texted Mark and here we are. So I'm glad it happened and we will link to everything in the show notes folks. We're gonna go get some food, which I'm very excited about. And show notes as per usual, tim.blogslashpodcast will link to everything.
Starting point is 03:13:21 And I can guarantee you, if you search for this episode in SEMA and S I M A there will be one and only it's hard for me to imagine getting a collection of those. And as always folks until next time be just a bit kinder than is necessary to others and also to yourself. Very important. Compassion that doesn't include you is incomplete. me every Friday that provides a little fun before the weekend. Between one and a half and two million people subscribe to my free newsletter, my super short newsletter called Five Bold Friday. Easy to sign up, easy to cancel. It is basically a half page that I send out every Friday to share the coolest things I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week.
Starting point is 03:14:20 It's kind of like my diary of cool things. It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading, albums, perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcasts, guests, and these strange esoteric things end up in my field. And then I test them and then I share them with you. So if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend, something to think about. If you'd like to try it out,
Starting point is 03:14:51 just go to tim.blogslashfriday, type that into your browser, tim.blogslashfriday, drop in your email and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening. Sleep is the key to it all. It is the foundation many of you heard me talk about how today's sponsor 8 Sleep has improved my sleep with its pod cover. Well, they just launched their latest product, the pod five, I cannot wait to try it out. And here's why the pod five introduces eight sleeps latest product, the blanket which uses the same technology as the pods cover to extend temperature regulation across the entire body. So if you're too hot, too cold, you can fix it. If you're a couple and one of you is hot, one of you is cold. You can fix it as well.
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Starting point is 03:16:05 to get $350 off of your very own pod five ultra. You can try it at home for 30 days and return if you don't like it. So why not give it a shot. Sleep is everything. Again, that's eight sleep.com slash Tim, spell it out eight sleep.com slash Tim for $350 off. Shipping is available to many countries worldwide. One more time. eight sleep.com slash Tim. This episode is brought to you by peak. That's p i q u e. I have had so much tea in my life. I've been to China. I've lived in China. In Japan. I've done tea tours. I drink a lot of tea. I've been drinking fermented poo air tea specifically, pretty much every day for years
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