07/27/2023
Through specialization, you can concentrate your focus and energy on building up your weak points.
This allows you to devote the appopriate volume/intensity to your target muscles to grow fast and efficiently.
If you're an advanced/strong intermediate lifter and have not been progressing much lately, consider the following...
Intensity and Frequency 💪🏼 To build your muscles, you have to train it more with higher reps, more sets and much greater frequency. At the minimum, build a training routine that you could do 3 to 4 times per week.
Isolation 💪🏼 Isolation exercises are great for targeting a specific muscle which is ideal for promoting hypertrophy to lagging tissues. Add 2 or 3 isolation movements to your programming if they aren't already incorporated.
Prioritization 💪🏼 Prioritize your weak points by programming your specialized training first so you can perform them with maximum intensity and repetition. This way, you can ensure that you can execute them with highest quality and effort possible.
Variation 💪🏼 Add a variety of exercise progressions/regressions to help prevent overtraining and plateau. This way you can almost guarantee steady progressive overload session to session.
Duration 💪🏼 A typical specialization phase lasts between 4 to 6 weeks. Use this period to squeeze every last drop out of specific exercises/variations that challenge the target tissues and/or movement patterns (before shifting to other muscle groups).
07/27/2023
Experienced lifters are so well adapted to the type of stress provided by strength training that they require a huge amount of it to keep progressing.
Because they're so much stronger than beginners, their training is already more stressful (squatting 400 pounds is more stressful than squatting 200, even if both represent 80% of your max).
If they were to raise their training stress to a level that's sufficient to keep progressing “everywhere”, they'd undoubtedly put an excessive amount of stress on their body - resulting in slower progress and possibly an injury/burnout.
That's why I love programming specialization phases.
You focus on a certain movement pattern (or 1 to 2 muscles) for a short period of time. This gives you a powerful and concentrated stimulus without increasing the overall training stress.
It works.
For those who require more variation, it's also a great approach because each workout can utilize completely different methods or loading strategies.
07/23/2023
Proper protein intake is one of the biggest things I find people miss.
In the context of building and/or maintaining lean muscle tissue, this is high priority. Getting your protein intake in order will skyrocket your recovery, progress, and how full you feel from your meals.
How much protein should you eat each day?
The general recommendation is 0.7-1.2 grams of protein per pound of body weight per day (depending on variables such as current body fat level, daily energy expenditure, individual goals, total calorie intake, etc.)
Why is this important?
👌🏼 Maximize muscle built in a gaining phase
👌🏼 Minimize muscle lost in a fat loss phase
👌🏼 Feel more satiated from your meals
👌🏼 Retain physical independence as you age
👌🏼 Recover better from exercise
When you bring up this recommended range of protein intakes, people often refer to that as a “high protein diet.”
However, the way I see it, this range is better referred to as “enough protein” for those serious about their body composition over the long term.
07/13/2023
Wow. This is Sunday nights 99.9% waxing moon rise over Mount Rainier. The incredible capture was by Debbie Heyer. She said, “It was so cool watching it roll up the left side of the mountain.”
Mount Rainier, also known as Tahoma, is a large active stratovolcano in the Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest in the United States. The mountain is located in Mount Rainier National Park about 59 miles south-southeast of Seattle.
07/12/2023
Take a moment to think about all the stretches you normally do. How can you tweak them to expand your abilities?
How can you add range?
How can you increase the demand of strength?
How can you decrease the demand of strength?
How can you manipulate gravity to your favor?
How can you reduce/increase stability?
How can you reduce, change or increase speed?
Personally, I don’t go into mobility work with a specific exercise or variation in mind. I go through a protocol of different movements and contractions to ”unglue” what needs to be unglued. If I find an area that needs extra attention, I provide that extra attention.
If you’re serious about improving your mobility, here are several variables you can use to track/measure flexibility progress (aside from increased range of motion).
💪🏼 Getting into the same position with less warm up
💪🏼 Holding the same position for longer
💪🏼 Being able to absorb more force in the same position
💪🏼 Being more comfortable in the same position
💪🏼 Having more ease moving in and out of the same position
💪🏼 Moving faster (or slower) in and out of the same position
💪🏼 Being able to produce more force in the same position.
My recommendation would be for you to first dedicate time to 1-2 positions/variations. After a few weeks of consistent practice choose another 1-2 variations. Once you’ve familiarized yourself with 6-10 variations you can now create a protocol with a sequence of movements and contractions that benefit you (and your endeavors) the most.
There’s no magic program or mobility sequence out there. The magic lies in continuity, consistency and progressive overload (with sufficient recovery) 🙏🏼
07/07/2023
And WE’RE BACK.
Shoutout to the five brave souls who showed up for my first session returning to Yamaha Motors. This transition wouldn’t even be possible without who held down the account for an entire year.
Time to GROW.
05/02/2023
It can be difficult to change nutritional habits when you have built them up for so long.
I find that when my clients are trying to make changes to their diets, the hardest changes to make are when they decrease how much they are having of something or try to take it out of their diet altogether…
🖕🏼 LESS/NO carbs
🖕🏼 LESS/NO sugar
🖕🏼 LESS/NO fat
🖕🏼 LESS/NO junk food
So things like having less/no sugar, eating less/no snacks, eliminating processed foods, decreasing soda intake, or even taking some caffeine away, tend to be more difficult tasks than when we ADD a certain nutrient or food that we might be missing.
Instead of (initially) going the full blown elimination route, try doing something like this for a better chance at sustainable change:
💪🏼 Increase your daily protein intake
💪🏼 Increase your daily water intake
💪🏼 Try to incorporate more nutrient dense, whole foods in your diet
💪🏼 Have 1 more full serving of fruits and vegetables a day
Immerse yourself in your goals.
Make sure you see them when you wake up, before you go to sleep, and you reminded of them several times a day. Set them bigger. Fully devote yourself to them.
Act with conviction and see what it transforms you into. Approaches that are constructive and flexible tend to work better in the long run.
04/07/2023
The right approach to diet feels harder at the start and progressively easier as you go.
The wrong approach feels easy when you start and progressively more demoralizing every time you quit after a few weeks.
Wanting to lose weight doesn’t make you a bad person.
Being encouraged to track or restrict your food in the efforts of looking and feeling healthier is not an eating disorder.
Fat shaming is terrible.
Shaming someone who is attempting to follow a nutritional strategy is no better.
One powerful approach that many naturally gravitate toward as they mature is a reorientation towards using their purpose as a driver for sustained health and fitness.
Think about how you want to matter and make a difference in the world.
Now think how would that powerful, purpose-driven version of you eat, exercise and live?
I doubt you will find candy, beers, doughnuts and pizza as any more than an occasional enjoyable indulgence. Instead you will find yourself fueling your body in a way that makes you feel light, energetic and vital.
This approach allows you to see your lifestyle as an extension of your life mission. You eat and exercise not to look good, but to do good. And, as a happy consequence, you are almost certain to also look good and perform better as well.
Understanding the relationship between mental and physical health is crucial in developing strategies to reduce the incidence of co-existing conditions and support those already living with mental illnesses and chronic physical conditions.
03/28/2023
Fat loss.
It can be pretty damn hard.
When you’re in a calorie deficit, hunger will inevitably occur time to time.
These 6 tips will help to minimize any hunger you feel, and make eating less calories feel more sustainable until you’ve eliminated the unwanted bodyfat.
If you’ve found this helpful or interesting, send to a friend or share on your stories.
03/20/2023
Want to be stronger in pushing? Hang.
Want to be stronger in pulling? Hang.
Want to improve sensitivity and coordination throughout the body? Hang often.
Hanging is one of the most accessible ways to begin improving your shoulder range. This form of mobility work conditions the edges of your capacity through the same mechanisms as any other form of strength/resistance training.
03/10/2023
There are several ways you can approach fat loss…
🍔 Eat whatever you like, just eat less of it and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
🥗 Eat larger amounts of very satiating (filling) low-calorie foods and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
🍽️ Eat many small frequent meals spread over the course of the day and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
🤌🏼 Eat fewer larger meals and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
😤 Cut out a major macronutrient like fat or carbohydrates and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
🫣 Spend a large portion of your day or week avoiding food (I.e. fasting) and achieve a calorie deficit that way.
If a nutritional strategy works, it's because it achieves a calorie deficit whether you're aware of it or not.
If a diet isn't working, it's because it is NOT aiding you in creating that deficit over the long term. All of the approaches mentioned can, in susceptible individuals, result in calorie excess leading to no results or even weight gain.
You can fast for half the day and still consume too many calories in your feeding window. You can cut out all carbs and still consume too many calories from fats.
You get the idea.
So what's behind the ability to sustain a calorie deficit? It's the hormonal effects of food: how your meals control hunger, energy, and cravings.
🙏🏼🙌🏼 To lose fat and keep it off requires two things: a caloric deficit as well as an ongoing suppression of hunger and cravings.
Whatever approach you choose needs to achieve both.