"You throw a bucket of water on a rock and it doesn't do anything. You let a drop of water fall onto a rock everyday,it creates a hole in that rock." That's how my Sensei explained this to me.
That's stupid because the end result will have used much more water than the bucket originally contained. Edit: Holy shit you guys are really dumb. The bodybuilder will be stronger. Y'all engaging in some broscience in the comments. Stop replying to me. You're just wrong.
Back 5 years later. This clip completely changed my life. 0 exercise to multiple ultras and regular gym goer now. This is the best advice I've ever heard.
Here here. Makes total sense and anyone that has trained in any sport or even work will know that this is the only way to train. Volume beats everything.
@@adama9418 Same that him, I saw this 4 years ago and at the time I struggled going to the gym and reaching any goals. The way he explains in this video a method that both keeps you motivated AND doesnt put pressure on you makes it so much easier to live your life in a positive mindset and understanding that stuff takes time, but to do the little thing every day. For exemple instead of trying to do 3 insane sessions a week (didnt work as I would find a way to make excuses after getting exhausted) I did way more little ones where I would not be tired but pumped. Now i'm in great shape, stress way less about future goals so basically what he explains very clearly here
@@danielochoa9465 You're pushing yourself too hard. Push yourself too hard, your body breaks down. Body breaks down, you got to a doctor, in this case chiropractor. Chan ching. Crossfit pumped out huge groups of people pushing themselves too hard. Huge cha ching.
@@rayz1685 That's my noob question as well. It would seem I could be convinced that the guy going all out on Monday, despite doing less volume than the guy doing 5 per day, over time might gain more muscle or possibly strength through my rudimentary knowledge of "tearing and rebuilding" muscle. Can someone smarter than me tell me I'm wrong? I won't pretend to know.
I almost tear a back muscle doing kipping pull ups while i trined crossfit, never did them againn and eventually changed my trining to something so much how this guys says (thank god for my actual coach), and after watching this i realized how much i injured myself for nothing because crossfit going to exaustion 3/4 times a week method and how actually what i do now is as good for trianing without the pain
I've been working out forever, and this is the first time I've ever heard someone better articulate what I have always felt but never been able to properly express.
Im sort of new to working out at 43 years. I do push-ups aiming to a weekly total. Last week I did 1200 split Monday 205, Tues 150, Wed 500, Thur 0, Frid 200, Sat 150 and Sun 0. This week I'm going for 200x7 days 1400 to test this thing.
I’m new to working out at 17 and I don’t know how to apply these concepts perfectly to building strong muscle, could someone please explain? Like how often should I up the weight?
@@preztonH ...If you are newbie, it is hard to get it wrong. Just put in some effort. After a while, you will have a good understanding of where your limits are. Then your effort should be like 70% on a regular basis.
Thank you . This guy is right !!! I’m 75 and went to a physical therapist and she would show me an exercise and then tell me go do 15 reps, 3 times . Well, I did it and I messed up my right titanium hip . This man is making sense. Do 5 reps and move in to another exercise keep it flowing from one exercise to the next . I had to rest my hip for a week and then start back into training but by building muscle slowly. It’s not a race !
I agree totally. There is no reason to even count reps. Work until you feel it burn a little and go onto the next exercise. Do multiple sets every night. Before you know it your doing a lot more reps than you realize. I get more energized after working out even though I feel my muscles burning but I am never worn out the next day. My body feels ready to work out again! This video is excellent advice !
@@akuzielfire What he is saying is contrary to what Jeff says. He preaches intensity. TUT,proper technique, and lifting to FAILURE. Especially for muscle gain.
@@hushpuppy1595 no it doesn't, it's been clinically proven that high intensity leads to more gains. That being said, you need a rest day. Thus a split or full body workout is the best method of excersise
@@kylemorrison6162 Yea I can see if you aren't going super intense during a class like BJJ, muay thai, boxing etc that a lower intensity method would be more beneficial so you keep going and learning. If your goal is to pack on muscle or increase endurance then you have to train to with High intensity.
@@kylemorrison6162 that's not the question, we're not talking about building muscle. We're talking about building skills, mainly fighting skills here, he said once or twice a week go all out, otherwise keep it 70% and build on your skills rather than just conditioning. I'm sure you've never actually tried this judging by your "it's been clinically proven" statement, but like he said, George st pierre would follow this and he's a legend in the game. I'm not saying the one day on and one day off max training doesn't work, but don't say this method doesn't work as well.
00:00 Progressive training without excessive soreness 02:43 Flow training is important for reaching mastery in any activity. 05:10 Sprinting and weight lifting at maximum intensity requires breaks for recovery. 07:54 The Russians and the Cubans have a more playful and technically advanced approach to training in wrestling and boxing. 10:26 Consistent training leads to increased energy, mood, and addiction to training. 12:56 General fitness is important for overall health and to reach new levels of athleticism. 15:25 CrossFit workout and recovery 17:58 Consistency over intensity in training is key. ------------------------------------------ Progressive training without excessive soreness - Training at a manageable exertion level prevents excessive soreness - Volume of training over time determines overall progress Flow training is important for reaching mastery in any activity. - Flow training helps in achieving a state of flow, where time flies by and you are fully engaged. - A state of flow occurs when the challenge level is just right, not too difficult or too easy. - Training should be enjoyable and pleasurable to make it addictive and increase consistency. - Consistency in training is more important than intensity, which should be done occasionally. - Consistency and flow training are key to reaching mastery. Sprinting and weight lifting at maximum intensity requires breaks for recovery. - Sprinters in the world sprint once or twice a week. - Taking breaks after maximum effort ensures true maximum intensity. - Overtraining can lead to body breakdown and reduced performance. - Russian wrestlers train with long consistent practices, leading to greater success. The Russians and the Cubans have a more playful and technically advanced approach to training in wrestling and boxing. - The intensity of training is less important than the volume. - The Russians focus heavily on technique in their training. - The Cubans spar without headgear and on concrete, but injuries are rare. - There is a time and place for intensity in training. Consistent training leads to increased energy, mood, and addiction to training. - Training should be a 7/10 intensity and done daily for more training hours and a spiked metabolism. - Types of training include Jitsu, wrestling, muay thai, and some conditioning. - Enjoyment and fun are key in training, with strength and conditioning done after practice. - Different athletes may have different definitions of strength and conditioning. General fitness is important for overall health and to reach new levels of athleticism. - Specific fitness focuses on improving performance in a particular sport. - To prevent muscle imbalances, it's necessary to stimulate muscles that may not be used in your specific sport. - Exercises like squats, kettlebell swings, and hurdles can help improve stability and strength. - Sprinting and the beep test are effective cardio workouts that translate well to sports. - Tabata workouts can be beneficial if done properly and without creating excessive soreness. - CrossFit's emphasis on fatigue-seeking can be counterproductive for building skills and mastery in a specific sport. CrossFit workout and recovery - CrossFit workouts can tax the body - Recovery is important for optimal performance - Top CrossFitters follow a 70-85% intensity rule - Gymnastics can benefit CrossFit athletes with bodyweight exercises and coordination - Part-time training limits progression in jiu-jitsu - CrossFit athletes should avoid going all out every day Consistency over intensity in training is key. - Training at a high intensity every day leads to burnout and the need for rest. - Champions focus on long-term training and consistent workouts. - Young athletes should avoid coaches who try to burn them out. - Gentle training initially helps build trust before ramping up intensity.
@@andresantelo4082 the process of training to become physically fit by a regimen of exercise, diet, and rest. also : the resulting state of physical fitness. 2. : a simple form of learning involving the formation, strengthening, or weakening of an association between a stimulus and a response.
This man saved my training career. I went from burning myself out every workout because of the “gotta work hard” mentality. It eventually caused me to hate working out, and I stopped training for weeks and months. I now train 50-70% of my max and I enjoying training. Getting great benefits from it, and I look forward to every workout instead of dreading it.
Ok, I'm curious though about the gains from this type of workout. Can you still put on muscle mass this way? I don't doubt people can get fit like this but I wonder if it slows your progress at all.
@@philipmartin3425 well supposedly 10-20 sets per week for each muscle group is enough to build muscle. So imagine you did, 3 sets per day close but not to failure. Youd be smashing that target. Personally never tried it and im no expert i just do my own version of the reddit recommended routine
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@@philipmartin3425 Unlikely. You need to be close enough to failure to cause a muscular adaptation. This idea is good for athletic and mental endeavors, but for trying to build muscle no. It doesnt matter how much volume you do if your body doesn’t experience the proper amount of mechanical tension
I am a functional fitness trainer and this is one the hardest concept for some of my athletes to understand. It just people want instant gratification, we’ve lost the art of patience in these days. Well worded.
I had issues being consistent in the gym my whole adult life. For the last 10 years I started and stopped gym several times. The main thing that has stopped me has been injuries. Once I started this approach of taking it slow and consistent it is when I started having results.
Love how open minded Joe is. You could start a conversation about something Joe does not believe at all, but shows respect, hears the persons arguments, and like all good arguments can find something to relate to or useful information
Michael Newman I see your point, but I think you miss what I mean. You should always show respect and be open to all arguments, otherwise you will be stuck and never change. Hear all points and arguments, and make an educated choice on the evidence what you believe is true... otherwise if you are so stubborn to never hear people’s arguments respectfully, you are the definition of ignorance
David Goggins cares less about fitness and more about mental toughness. His focus isn’t on taking care of your body, most of what he does is unhealthy. This guy is talking about fitness.
@@jackmclane6961 I agree. David Goggins is the guy I listen to when I need a kick in the butt, and when I need to work on my discipline. But as far as actual fitness tips? He’s the last person I’d take advice from. Although, to be fair: He makes it a point to tell his listeners that the way he does things is what works FOR HIM, and that they shouldn’t try to emulate. He encourages people to do their own thing.
I applied this training analogy to my Canadian Dental Skills exam and it helped me pass it. The exam criteria was stricter than acceptable work and margin of error being very little. The exam was 8 hours long x 2 days So I practiced every day continuously for 3 months. On the day of the exam, I worked continuously, sitting on the dental unit for 8 hours straight. Although I'm not into combat sport, during that time, I hiked a small hill in my city every day, 4- 5 km loop, to calm my head.l and my body to pull through the exam.
Rewatching this years later. I applied this philosophy to my quilting years ago and it helped me actually get far more done in the span of a year than I'd done over the previous two decades. This philosophy is MORE than just for effective exercise. This is effective for just about anything you want to achieve in life.
@@HenryDube72 Just bc you don’t go so hard to the point where you are suffering and sore the next day doesnt mean that you dont get stronger with that easier workout over time. You still get stronger over time, and as you get stronger you can increase your sets or reps or weight etc. because youre new “easy workout” is at higher rate than your initial easy workout
@Gettin' Stitchy Thanks for your comment. I was only looking at this advice from a physical point of view but now I'm thinking about my school work from this point of view too lol
This makes me happy sometimes I’m working out for 1 or 1 1/2 hours and I’m think I better be sore tomorrow morning but I wake up feeling no soreness and I’m thinking to myself I did not do enough reps but I’m trying this 3 day’s workout 1 day off and repeat. Thank you for this knowledge.
@Ivey 96 I'm not sure you really listened to him. I'd like to find some common ground, a place where you and I can agree so we can recognize our commonality, and then work together from there. You must be a caring person, to take the time to type, and for that you have my respect.
@Ivey 96 yes and no. I think that he understands the “stimulus to fatigue ratio”, and he’s just trying to simplify it. Sure, staying at a RPE of 5 is dumb, but I still think that he got his point across.
@@jackli1867 im not sure if he's saying to stay at five I think he said go at 5 for a few days then at 6 if 6 is still too easy do 7 and progress the same way
Patman Patmanson You believe? Believing is the dumbest concept on earth, either know or don’t know, don’t fucking believe. That’s how you get conned. Just because someone seems more competent in your opinion, doesn’t mean he actually is competent
Overdrive Music As far as I figure they’re working on different things at a base level. Firaz is aiming for muscle strength/endurance through training in volume Goggins trains the mentality, mental toughness and goes to let your mind be able to unlock the most potential mentally “going beyond your limits”
The thing is you need to max out only once: that is either in competition or if your life depends on it. Jocko willink the seal, was talking about it that what if we are in combat and a guy gets injured, and my commander tells me to carry him to safety, and i say, nah man i maxed out on 10 sets of squats yesterday,cant do that. You need to climb a rope to get to a high place, but you maxed out on pullups a few days before. Modern bodybuilding concepts are great for building a physique, but highly impractical for real life carry over
@@ilyassvids23 he has his own philosophy of training where he tries to break the barriers on his mind, thats not a bad thing if you want the results fast, but if you are training for longevity thats not good, what all these balls to the wall celebs and atheletes dont tell you is the amount of surgeries they go through in their 40s and above to fix the damage.
Ever since I seen this this guy's wisdom has stuck in my mind. This method can be applied to virtually anything and can improve so many lives in so many ways. What a little treasure of a video clip
I did 8 pushups times 10 with 2 minutes rest because my max was around 16 3-4 times per week with one restday inbetween after two weeks+- my max rep is 25+ and it goes way easier now
This approach really helps in combat sports. Training Muay Thai, our coach would push us to the absolute limit. And yes a lot of our fighters were in great shape. But they’d also miss quite a bit of class due to injuries or being sore and exhausted. I’ve been going toward the end of Thai class and taking the days drills and conditioning going at my own pace. Still getting drained but not to my absolute limit. I’m seeing more progress now because I can go everyday.
@David Townshend I did all of those things, it was not until i paid someone for actual private lessons that all of my misconceptions were corrected though. Most people do avocado Tai Chi so you have to be careful even then.
@@angeldejko8842 I don't really care about what Joe sees through... to be honest I don't even think Joe reads they comments... I'm just curious about this guy's mentality... like what happened to him to come to such a conclusion....
as a 205 lbs, 5'10 feet tall, 44 years old male, that never before did any exercise, this approach of doing exercises and stopping just in time before feels uncomforable, has helped me a lot. i haven't loss a lot of weight, havent gained a lot of strenght , but I can say I feel phisically better than before, more "elastic". and I can do exercises every day. I used to try and get myself to the limit every other day , and rest in between but recovery time was long and I always ended abandoning the routine. hope I made my self clear, and well sorry for my bad english.
You won't drop the weight until you cut out all the junk from your diet. We're close to the same age, but I'm a bit taller. Like you, I have never really exercised. (I've been saying for years that when I do, this video will be my guide; plus, I have Pavel's books, which are terribly written, but perhaps a necessary exercise in patience in itself, but I digress...) For the last 20-ish months I have been on a very high animal fat/protein diet, only really making sure to keep my carbs under 25 grams, and have gone from 315 to 205. I won't try to dispute that at least a little exercise would have been beneficial over the same period, but I didn't need it to lose weight. I have literally sat on the couch for the last year and a half and eaten pork rinds and hamburgers. Sorry. I get a little caught up sometimes. I just have to put it out there that as a society we're almost done talking about "calories," and that's going to be great.
@@swagboy4075 People want to see results, if there is no intensity the results are almost none existent or take far to long to show and any habit will die very quickly. There is no easy way to do it, hard work is required for the results and timescale the vast majority of people are looking for, his theory looks good on paper but in reality it's intensity that gets the best results.
30-60 minutes every day, medium to high intensity, never max. EVERY SINGLE DAY for a year, rarely feel sore, never injured, but I see the great results, lost 40lb and stronger limbs with muscle tone and 6 packs. I never kill myself in training cuz I want to come back the next day.
Are we talking lifting or cardio? Lifting every day never giving your body rest seems like a recipe for disaster. Long term that will undoubtedly damage something.
Martine weights cardio and something else take turn. Weights everyday on the same muscle group doesn’t give body enough time to recover. Besides, I get bored easily. Doing the same exercise everyday will soon wear out my patience and my body will quickly adapt to it and won’t show any progress either. I’m talking about the intensity, which increase as my body gets more and more in shape.
Martine you can go around that depending on your workout split if you lets say do a 5 day split in which everyday you do a differe muscle group you should be ok longterm
Even though they're talking about fitness, this mentality translates well for almost any skill. For example in school, instead of cramming a semester worth of knowledge in a couple nights, studying an hour or two a day will net you exponentially more study time than cramming. Also with this method you could master or at least obtain so many more skills than trying to do one thing 24/7
xS0N1Kx same with not being constrained to the time limit of a semester I. Learned so much more out of school about subjects that interest me then I ever got in the class room
I think being consistent is a good thing but pairing it with the intensity is just unbeatable. I just can't wrap my mind aroud if you go to the gym and you doing half reps of max reps for every exercise is the best for you. Best science based method is know as Progressive overload and has been researches and papers all over how your body reacts to it and it has the best results.
I agree. There is this idea that you need to go to the gym and go balls to the wall. Lift the most weight possible, run the fastest you can, less focus on form and more on simply doing more. That's an easy way to burn yourself out of anything. It'll make you hate whatever you're doing. I like his take on crossfit.
I was literally thinking of farmer strength and then Joe said it. I grew up on a dairy farm and it's amazing what carrying feed pales and throwing haybales every single day at chore time for roughly 15 years growing up will do to you. Hard work is good for you. And doing it with your family alongside you is a great way of life. I am very grateful to have grown up on dairy farm. I often kick myself for not taking the farm over and raising my kids on the farm.
I had a friend growing up that did a lot of farm work and boy was he strong....I worked with him a few times and was amazed about the strength involved in that work...I respect it
@Pritesh Divekar idk he was drunk so maybe this is an indicator of a lazy philosophy where you shouldn't force things... or else. Oh well, fuck that noise. Just learn to live with consequences.
@@YogeshBhojwani - Mine is very simple - I do 2 lower body and 2 upper body days every week. 1. Lower Body Day 1 - Back Squats , RDL, Gluts, Accessories (Abductor and adductor) 2. Upper Body Day 1 - Bench Press, Pull ups, Triceps, Rows 3. Lower Body Day 2 - Front Squats, Deadlifts, Accessories (Abductor and adductor), lunges 4. Upper Body Day 2 - Overhead Press, Lateral and Front Raises, Dips, Biceps I take a day off after day 2 The rest of the days are light cardios
This interview completely changed the way I worked out. This advice helped me to become consistent and now I've put my body through an entire recomposition. My weight is the same, but I've got a lot more muscle.
No you haven’t you gain muscle when you rip your muscle fibers and over work them and then eat right and feed your muscles . It’s common science it’s not rocket science 🤦♂️
That's the thing.. It's philosophy. You still need to find what works for you. There's plenty of studies showing empirical evidence on intensity vs. volume training. They both produce different results.
Train less intense but more often. That way, over time, you get more hours training than the person who trains at full intensity and is unable to train consistently. I just saved you 20 mins. He basically repeats this over and over again. Good video though
I have bad ADHD and this video changed my life seriously I’m so strong and fit because of this video alone I do little stuff everyday that’s it but I’m stronger than ever lean and flexible
Lee Haney. An 8X Mr Olympia would say that. He would push smart training, stimulation over just pushing alot of weight and risking injuries and beating up your body. He never got injured and retired on top. Seems healthy in his old age.
@@maxmatthew1379 If you go hard everyday then your overall maximum decreases to compensate for the fact that you are over training. Let's say you run 10 miles every day because that's your max. If you instead run 7 - 8 everyday then you could potentially reach 13-14 when you really wanted to go to your max because your body wouldn't be as taxed.
behamut92 it depends on the person. If you go to your max everyday, your max will definitely increase over time. Whether it’s at the same rate will depend on how well the person recovers.
Waking up early changed my life.. Seriously !! Everything is done by the time I go to work. Then I come home ,have time to go shopping and cook healthy food. I just seem to have so much extra time. At the start it was difficult to go to bed at 9pm I felt like I was missing out on stuff but that all changed.. Stick at it man.
There's some strong logical wisdom in here. And can absolutely be applied to any developmental goal/skill in life. This is why I switched my approach from "goals" to "routines". Small wins rack up and compound and make time your best friend, and give you an edge over literally everyone who's going as hard as possible then crashing and burning. Great clip.
I actually applied this concept without knowing. I randomly tried to make my workouts fun. I'd do pyramid type of lifts. Increasing weight and lower reps if I felt a weight was too easy id do 3 sets on that same weight before increasing. By the end of the workout I'd have done tons of sets and I'd feel no soreness the next day. This increased my capacity overall in everyday life and any type of lifting itself. The weight I used to do 5 reps on I could do 8-10. Im currently doing hypertrophy focused training but I go all the way up to heavy weights lower reps then back down. I get gains in strength, performance, muscle and no soreness. I did back today deadlifts+Rows+ carries . I had an insane workout with tons of sets at different weights and I feel amazing. I don't feel tired at all. My capacity to squat, walk, run, bend, hold balance, last longer even in sex has increased.
Tom Brady is a perfect example of "Flow". The man is 43 years old in an intense sport where the average retiring age is 35. He has found a way to take care of his body and improve it, all while avoiding serious injury and over-training for nearly twenty years. Consistency and small improvements are key to succeeding in any aspect of life.
What I learned from this 20 minutes it s totally basic stuff but it was so deep that I have never thought about it in this way. What I understood is simply : -it’s about the total and the volume of training that u did during all the year - let ur training be fun by not exhausting ur body - unleash the beast mode 1 time per 2 weeks - develop ur skills and learn new ones
Probably only once a week to be honest, and for some it might be less still, every 2-3 weeks. In many ways, as you get fitter and stronger, the less you should go all out, as you are able to produce so much force and power compared to a beginner, you create a far longer recovery curve than newbies
It's about having more frequency while balancing volume, and intensity. Training beyond a certain level will release to much cortisol and adrenaline which in excess amounts will do more harm then good for recovery.
I really needed to hear this. So many times, I push myself to the limit, only to fall sick and then have to rest for a week (or more) to recover from this sickness. This time I took it slow, until I let my ego take over, and pushed hard for 2-3 days back-to-back. Guess what? I got a fever the next day, and have had to rest for far more time now to recover from it. It's time to focus on being more consistent and giving it a 7/10 every day than 10/10 every 2-3 days.
I agree with this but unfortunately it also depends on your schedule. For me, I have to go with high intensity with the every 2/3 days because I simply don’t have time to go everyday. So I have to make up for it. But I do wish I can slowly somehow start practicing this way instead.
I wish we did that in europe, but instead of that the pe teachers where I live just give you a soccer ball let you create teams and play while the teacher is on his phone.
I spent all of 2019 pushing hard and missing a lot of BJJ classes because I was too sore from weight training. Going to integrate this philosophy in 2020.
yes, practicing things...more... and not too much... it is cool how it can be applied to anything. Well said, JRE commenter. You make us all feel smart.
@@theodorerey1565 Yes. Look up the JRE clip of the guy who explains the Russian weight lifting system. Took that approach and now I enjoy working out and have been much more consistent.
I tried the flow method with my Pushups and got up to 200 Pushups daily with no rest days for 14 days consecutive. I like experimenting so I switch to high volume days then took a recovery day etc. My numbers dropped each week and now I'm back at 160 pushups daily. I also feel better doing average daily Pushups vs high volume days with rest. Update 26/6/2021. I was able to maintain daily Pushups for 60 days consecutively. At 196 Pushups I had to rest 4 days after having nerve pain in my right arm.
This is awesome. I'm the guy who has burnt himself out with constant & intense workouts, & I have all the injuries to go with it. Definitely changing my training philosophy immediately after listening to this.
Have listened to it about forty times and did not get bored so far because the way he explains so smoothly and precisely , which makes listening to him so enjoyable. Learned much from it. Peace out!
This information it so good. I regreted going hard out every time. Im struggling to go to the gym at age 37. My back, knees, elbows are in the mess. So take notes young fellas
Stretch man, stretch. Every time I'd get my ass into the gym and train regularly I'd be wrecked in about 2-3 months - sore shoulders, elbows, back, knees ...you name it, it hurt. To the point where I'd end up quitting working out, and it was #$@%! frustrating. I finally took stretching seriously about 1.5 years ago and it's changed everything. I do 3 days a week strength training with full body routines, and on alternate days I just do some ab work, light cardio and then take a solid 30 minutes to stretch and roll all the kinks out, and then the next day I'm ready to rock. I'm no beast, but I'm 46 and working out pain free for the first time in my life.Stretching did that for me.
@@74cochrane I'm 22 and I'm a beginner entering the intermediate state in weightlifting. In 3 months I acquired a lot of strength, I can lift 308lbs in deadlift and 242lbs in squat. I have good genetics but it was mostly because of me going really hard every session. Now I'm paying the price, my shoulders, lower back, hips and neck kill me everyday. That's the problem of going to failure in almost every set. At first I thought it was because of bad technique but I've recorded myself and the technique is just fine, maybe a couple of little details to improve but not sufficient enough to make me this sore even after resting for 4 days, it's all about the intensity.
This was excellent. Change your mindset and train smarter not harder. Have fun and make it addictive so you stop counting reps and hours. Flow state is the one.
Just remember to challenge yourself while flowing smarter so you don't waste your time for no reasonable stimulus. Doing cardio as strength/muscle mass training doesn't work the best after all.
@@Yupppi no doubt. However, if you're having fun then it's never a waste of time. Also, if you're having fun, you're going to want to get better naturally. It's a given that you have to push your boundaries to improve in anything in life, but your points are good.
Dont try to sugar coat things. This guy’s advice is wrong. You dont go soft on your workouts and training. Thats not training. Its just stupid to tell people that they dont have to be sore after a workout. Bullshit. You should be sore and you should enjoy and embrace the soreness as much as possible. Thats literally how muscles are activated. If you wanna be average however, please follow his advice and lift like a little bitch. Horrible advice tbh
Did you not listen dick head!!!he said start slow and build up your reps its volume and load your looking for not a big sesh and be fucked for a week your body need's time to build if your sore your not building muscle your Recovering muscles so think about that one...if you have any idea about building muscle and half a brain you'd understand,now shut da fook up and listen to the man he trained gsp ffs one of the greatest of all time fucckk you and fuccckk u
Aryan Singh for actual athletes that workout everyday and play a sport there’s no reason to be sore the next day. If your just hitting the gym to build mass or whatever then I guess it’s fine but if you’re a year in there’s really no reason to be sore everyday. Maybe on a max week or something then yeah but no reason otherwise.
@@bestmoments5877 GSP is top 2 all time IMO, Only other fighter who has an argument is Jon Jones. But some people hate GSP because of his fighting style, he’s a round for round guy. But nobody will discredit George, he’s extremely gifted and talented.
i lovecars so basically lessen the high intensity with training whether its calisthenics or actual weightlifting? Is he serious? I can do less reps for each exercise everyday? Im trying to get the V shape to my back since i have a 32 inch waist but my lats still need to develop more and mature
The point is to maximise your total training volume for the week or the month. If you're training two, three, seven times more often, you're logging more reps, you're moving more weight, and you're getting more work done overall. Training frequency trumps training intensity every time.
I remember training at a small gym in SoCal. The trainer was a LA cop with a gym as a side job/hobby. Always left there feeling like I could have done more. First time doing tire flips. Within a year, couldn’t believe how much stronger I’d become! Thanks Gino!
Indeed. However, for those who are training exclusively to lift more this is not particularly good advice. If your main goal is to get strong you will have to train with high intensity quite frequently. If you leave the gym feeling great you did something wrong in my opinion. For athletes this is not the case since their primary objective generally lies outside the realm of heavy weights. They should be more focused on improving their sport specific skills. This does not mean that you should go into the gym and try to hit a deadlift PR everyday, but you need to put your body through something it's not used to in order to stimulate the sought after strength adaptations. Periodization and moderate intensity are great tools for getting strong, but they should not be used to justify pussy workouts.
You should check out brandon Carter. He answers that. He prefers doing what this guy said as well. He started squatting every day without reaching failure for 30 days and needed to stop because his legs couldn't fit in his Jean's anymore. He did the same thing with his shoulders and they started getting bigger and he started getting stretch Marks. He interviewed another personal trainer who does the same thing. I haven't done it yet, but if two professionals who have been lifting weights for over a decade do it, I'm sure it works.
I forgot to mention, Arnold Schwarzenegger also had this approach apparently. He preferred frequency. Its brought up in the interview I mentioned with brandon carter and the other personal trainer. I used to thing power lifting and bodybuilding were two different types of training with two different results, but it's already been proven that it's not. You can get strength with less intensity and more frequency....it blew me away. I haven't done too much research into what they said, but I am going to change up my strength training to fit this type and see how it goes for me.
The Flow concept has been applied to many things in life. It started out mostly with work productivity and art creativity. The guy here is merely applying an existing concept (Flow state) to sports training. I've read the Flow book, it's very good. "Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience" by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, if anyone is interested. Highly recommended read, will get you far in many areas of life. Teaches you how to recognize where you are not being challenged enough (the activity becomes boring) versus when it is too challenging (resulting in anxiety). The challenge is to find that "sweet spot" where Flow can easily occur.
whenever I go running I always get conflicted and tell myself man, I barely ran at all today.. but then I realise after that short run I will be much more likely to come back and run again tomorrow. it's just like he said, it's all about volume. I think we gotta listen to our bodies more. there's a reason your body really wants to stop when you work too hard and all it's gonna do is make you hate working out and you will quit sooner. I really think this guy's right when he says that you don't need to do that and in fact it's probably better not to.
You're absolutely right, fuck these morons in the comments bro, starting out at a level you can do and increasing once you've mastered it is smarter and safer on your body
At the same time there is something called “junk volume” which means if you’re not pushing your body to full exhaustion then it won’t grow. It has to be the right amount of force exerted to make the muscle grow
@Countryfucius comparing ourselves to legends like these is so utterly terribly wrong. Like.. Me comparing myself as an slightly advanced but totally regular-ass gym goer to Arnold, or Ronnie or anyone who's ever made it among these pro stars, is like comparing a load of concrete to the christ the redeemer. Even the era is so different, not even mentioning what they used as for enhancements. They're so on different level it would be a preposterous mistake to take their workout plans as an example. Lol. You should know what's good for you, and doing that what's best for you. Have your own head and not just copy someone just because he/she is successful.
You can tell Joe is fascinated by what this guy has to offer he's completely content with just listening to this guy most of the interview as I think we all are
Training being addicting is the most amazing feeling. For me it came in form of gym rock climbing. The all body workout felt amazing and slowly climbed harder and harder levels still has me in the gym 4-5 a week. Beyond that I began stretching more at home and weight lifting again to benefit my passion.
@@nathanwilson3185 it’s something i ignored at first, but the progress happens during rest. everyone has their reasons; i do it because it’s a habit and a need at this point. best regards king 👑
@jeff slayer He wasn't talking about muscles. He was talking about sports. Priority here is training of sports and workouts are a medium to enhance your performance. If you're sore or broken all the time, you won't be able to learn and practice your sport in a better way. He didn't mean that just do 50%. He meant do it enough but stay away from soreness because your main aim is to practice for your sport.
@@justaufcfan4673 Well science says the only way to grow muscle is to break it down and let it heal. When youre doing high intensity weightlifting youre actually causing micro tears in your muscle, but when you give it 48 hours of rest those tears heal and now your muscle is bigger. When it comes to building muscle intensity, meaning lifting heavier and heavier weights is better than repetition. Its better to do 5 reps of 200 lbs than 100 reps of 30lbs.
@@ViewingMyMind it was a joke in line with the video as he says doing something consistently is better than do ot a few times intently but never mind 😂
Firas Zahabi: If you do 5 pull ups everyday, in one week you've done 35 Pull ups. David Goggins: If you do 500 pull ups everyday, in one week you've done 3500 Pull ups.
I always dreaded going to the gym because i was in that mindset that I needed to "work out". So when I did go to the gym I felt the need to lift, run at least a mile and make at least 500 shots. This process usually took me two hours. Now I cut the load in half and I do feel better I am never sore and i look forward to going to the gym now. This video really opened my eyes.
@@almomedvedec896 I'm doing 45 pushups a day and running a casual mile in 530 flat. I just feel good. I dont need to exhaust myself anymore. Best video I ever watched
Joe Rogan is literally becoming the wisest human being on earth and he doesn't even have to pay for these advice/stories out of pocket.
hes fully making so much money from it
G MIX we didn’t pay either
The dude has no muscles talking about fitness lol
Hiphop Forlife what a ignorant perspective 💀 do u know what this guy would do to u
despondentyouth ^ dumb
"You throw a bucket of water on a rock and it doesn't do anything. You let a drop of water fall onto a rock everyday,it creates a hole in that rock."
That's how my Sensei explained this to me.
Dwight, as senpai do you think there is a day robots and humans can coexist peacefully?
That's stupid because the end result will have used much more water than the bucket originally contained.
Edit: Holy shit you guys are really dumb. The bodybuilder will be stronger. Y'all engaging in some broscience in the comments. Stop replying to me. You're just wrong.
@@Bolizen consistency is you do less every time but it will add up to more volume over time. so yes it would used more water
@@Bolizen No that's the point.
@@berendsen817 nice save
I been doing flow state training, just flow straight past the gym
Nice.
LOL bro this crack me up
🤣
you funny asshole hahahaha good one
fkn oath bro 😂😂😂
Back 5 years later. This clip completely changed my life. 0 exercise to multiple ultras and regular gym goer now. This is the best advice I've ever heard.
damn im tryna do ultras aswell just the pain in my feet is too much aerobically im fine just pain wise
Back here 5 years later my self 👌
Nice
Dude me too. Lost 175 lbs. no weird skin either. Crazy shit.
Here here. Makes total sense and anyone that has trained in any sport or even work will know that this is the only way to train. Volume beats everything.
Joe does a good job of being open minded and exploring new ways of thinking I respect it
This is the best comment i've seen so far, i agree
You should watch the video with joe rogan and steven crowder. Joe is not very open minded
@@mathiasfrandsen5468 I think he was shitfaced that time.
@@illusion3033 haha legit was about to type this
@@astich Hugo Martin interview
These 20 mins went by fast. Coach Firaz puts you in a flow state.
ha ha i was just thinking the same thing. Now to find something that puts me in a flow state which requires me to move!!
@MUFC soccer been around for way longer than most sports and it’s the easiest sport to set up and play.
And football is also objectively the most exciting sport in the world
Haha for real. The way he talked and explained things hooked me here for the whole interview
@@ikemikekpeazu5076 you mean the real football right? That one being soccer?
JOE!! You need to have Jeff Cavalier on your podcast.
yes please
Please Joe. Jeff Cavalier
YES OMG!!!
Facts
Cavalier will only come on the show in Sober October. The time is now!
this clip literally changed my life. no exaggeration.
Please explain
@@adama9418 it completely changed the way i structure my workouts for years and im stronger and have way more muscle mass as a result
@@adama9418 Same that him, I saw this 4 years ago and at the time I struggled going to the gym and reaching any goals.
The way he explains in this video a method that both keeps you motivated AND doesnt put pressure on you makes it so much easier to live your life in a positive mindset and understanding that stuff takes time, but to do the little thing every day.
For exemple instead of trying to do 3 insane sessions a week (didnt work as I would find a way to make excuses after getting exhausted) I did way more little ones where I would not be tired but pumped.
Now i'm in great shape, stress way less about future goals so basically what he explains very clearly here
@@adama9418He most likely works out now every day with low intensity
Me as well. Completely changed my approach to everything, not just working out.
That's life advice not just gym tips
was thinking the same, this is almost philosophy
Yess I'm gonna use this for skateboarding
This is more powerful than most people here think.
Defo, most people think time is money but TIME IS LIFE
Daruda102 what¿
A chiropractor friend of mine said CrossFit was the best thing that ever happened to his business.
My chiropractor said the exact same thing.
That's so fucked up LOL
Matthew Broussard made that joke years ago...
Why? If you do crossfit does that mean you’ll need to visit a chiropractor?
@@danielochoa9465 You're pushing yourself too hard. Push yourself too hard, your body breaks down. Body breaks down, you got to a doctor, in this case chiropractor. Chan ching.
Crossfit pumped out huge groups of people pushing themselves too hard. Huge cha ching.
literally becoming a god of knowledge just watching joe rogan podcasts
64 bit same
LOL totally
@@thegingerday3008 Me too, I don't even read books anymore I just watch Joe for all my information
Try reading books.. you’d be amazed!
@@Alec____ His advice is more for athleticism as opposed to bodybuilder physic
One of my favourite JRE clips ever. 20 minutes of pure gold. I watch it every time my legs are sore.
If you feel soared, you overworked :p
@@irbazzia2590 soared? Really? Still just sore.
Went hard training back and im now sore im here now lolz
Say that to tom platz
@@gelugelu2180doesn’t apply to juice heads
Conclusion: Long-term consistency beats short-term intensity
Long term intensity >>>>>>
Nic Gillam Long term intensity is only possible if you have a decent history of long term consistency
Is this for muscle growth or strength growth?
@@rayz1685 I think it goes with everything in life
@@rayz1685 That's my noob question as well. It would seem I could be convinced that the guy going all out on Monday, despite doing less volume than the guy doing 5 per day, over time might gain more muscle or possibly strength through my rudimentary knowledge of "tearing and rebuilding" muscle.
Can someone smarter than me tell me I'm wrong? I won't pretend to know.
Very occasionally, I see a UA-cam video that really changes how I think. This is one of them.
This shouldn’t change how you think. What this guy is saying (at least relevant to weight lifting) is nonsense
@@123214matt I'll decide how to think thanks.
@@onthebeachinsitges lmao ok buddy
I almost tear a back muscle doing kipping pull ups while i trined crossfit, never did them againn and eventually changed my trining to something so much how this guys says (thank god for my actual coach), and after watching this i realized how much i injured myself for nothing because crossfit going to exaustion 3/4 times a week method and how actually what i do now is as good for trianing without the pain
@@123214matt oh Matthew, what will I do without your guidance? Good boy. Now run along eh?
I've been working out forever, and this is the first time I've ever heard someone better articulate what I have always felt but never been able to properly express.
Im sort of new to working out at 43 years. I do push-ups aiming to a weekly total. Last week I did 1200 split Monday 205, Tues 150, Wed 500, Thur 0, Frid 200, Sat 150 and Sun 0. This week I'm going for 200x7 days 1400 to test this thing.
I’m new to working out at 17 and I don’t know how to apply these concepts perfectly to building strong muscle, could someone please explain? Like how often should I up the weight?
@@preztonH i would say once you are comfortable with the current weight your lifting. as soon as it feels easy, increasee
People who have been working out forever can easily see the Crossfit method is a recipe for disaster.
@@preztonH ...If you are newbie, it is hard to get it wrong. Just put in some effort. After a while, you will have a good understanding of where your limits are. Then your effort should be like 70% on a regular basis.
Thank you . This guy is right !!! I’m 75 and went to a physical therapist and she would show me an exercise and then tell me go do 15 reps, 3 times . Well, I did it and I messed up my right titanium hip . This man is making sense.
Do 5 reps and move in to another exercise keep it flowing from one exercise to the next .
I had to rest my hip for a week and then start back into training but by building muscle slowly. It’s not a race !
Train at 70%, increase over time to 100% for a short time and drop it back down. Your new 70% is now your old 75%
I'm interested. Elaborate.
@@theodorerey1565 "Raising your habitual level " - ross edgley
5/3/1 trainings
I agree totally. There is no reason to even count reps. Work until you feel it burn a little and go onto the next exercise. Do multiple sets every night. Before you know it your doing a lot more reps than you realize. I get more energized after working out even though I feel my muscles burning but I am never worn out the next day. My body feels ready to work out again! This video is excellent advice !
@@jeffflynn375 Do you do more than 1 set per exercise everyday? If so how much time does it take between sets?
What a great guy. He just improved my understanding of exercise.
Absolutely
Watch athleanx
Same here, this was tha big ahaa moment..
@@akuzielfire What he is saying is contrary to what Jeff says. He preaches intensity. TUT,proper technique, and lifting to FAILURE. Especially for muscle gain.
sounds good, but he's wrong lol
"If you're going hard every day you're not really going hard every day"
The most genius and important quote of this whole video in my opinion.
Not really
Seriously I really wanna know if this works or not
@@hushpuppy1595 no it doesn't, it's been clinically proven that high intensity leads to more gains. That being said, you need a rest day. Thus a split or full body workout is the best method of excersise
@@kylemorrison6162 Yea I can see if you aren't going super intense during a class like BJJ, muay thai, boxing etc that a lower intensity method would be more beneficial so you keep going and learning. If your goal is to pack on muscle or increase endurance then you have to train to with High intensity.
@@kylemorrison6162 that's not the question, we're not talking about building muscle. We're talking about building skills, mainly fighting skills here, he said once or twice a week go all out, otherwise keep it 70% and build on your skills rather than just conditioning.
I'm sure you've never actually tried this judging by your "it's been clinically proven" statement, but like he said, George st pierre would follow this and he's a legend in the game. I'm not saying the one day on and one day off max training doesn't work, but don't say this method doesn't work as well.
00:00 Progressive training without excessive soreness
02:43 Flow training is important for reaching mastery in any activity.
05:10 Sprinting and weight lifting at maximum intensity requires breaks for recovery.
07:54 The Russians and the Cubans have a more playful and technically advanced approach to training in wrestling and boxing.
10:26 Consistent training leads to increased energy, mood, and addiction to training.
12:56 General fitness is important for overall health and to reach new levels of athleticism.
15:25 CrossFit workout and recovery
17:58 Consistency over intensity in training is key.
------------------------------------------
Progressive training without excessive soreness
- Training at a manageable exertion level prevents excessive soreness
- Volume of training over time determines overall progress
Flow training is important for reaching mastery in any activity.
- Flow training helps in achieving a state of flow, where time flies by and you are fully engaged.
- A state of flow occurs when the challenge level is just right, not too difficult or too easy.
- Training should be enjoyable and pleasurable to make it addictive and increase consistency.
- Consistency in training is more important than intensity, which should be done occasionally.
- Consistency and flow training are key to reaching mastery.
Sprinting and weight lifting at maximum intensity requires breaks for recovery.
- Sprinters in the world sprint once or twice a week.
- Taking breaks after maximum effort ensures true maximum intensity.
- Overtraining can lead to body breakdown and reduced performance.
- Russian wrestlers train with long consistent practices, leading to greater success.
The Russians and the Cubans have a more playful and technically advanced approach to training in wrestling and boxing.
- The intensity of training is less important than the volume.
- The Russians focus heavily on technique in their training.
- The Cubans spar without headgear and on concrete, but injuries are rare.
- There is a time and place for intensity in training.
Consistent training leads to increased energy, mood, and addiction to training.
- Training should be a 7/10 intensity and done daily for more training hours and a spiked metabolism.
- Types of training include Jitsu, wrestling, muay thai, and some conditioning.
- Enjoyment and fun are key in training, with strength and conditioning done after practice.
- Different athletes may have different definitions of strength and conditioning.
General fitness is important for overall health and to reach new levels of athleticism.
- Specific fitness focuses on improving performance in a particular sport.
- To prevent muscle imbalances, it's necessary to stimulate muscles that may not be used in your specific sport.
- Exercises like squats, kettlebell swings, and hurdles can help improve stability and strength.
- Sprinting and the beep test are effective cardio workouts that translate well to sports.
- Tabata workouts can be beneficial if done properly and without creating excessive soreness.
- CrossFit's emphasis on fatigue-seeking can be counterproductive for building skills and mastery in a specific sport.
CrossFit workout and recovery
- CrossFit workouts can tax the body
- Recovery is important for optimal performance
- Top CrossFitters follow a 70-85% intensity rule
- Gymnastics can benefit CrossFit athletes with bodyweight exercises and coordination
- Part-time training limits progression in jiu-jitsu
- CrossFit athletes should avoid going all out every day
Consistency over intensity in training is key.
- Training at a high intensity every day leads to burnout and the need for rest.
- Champions focus on long-term training and consistent workouts.
- Young athletes should avoid coaches who try to burn them out.
- Gentle training initially helps build trust before ramping up intensity.
Thank you!!
Thx!
What is "conditioning"? They talk about a few times and I don't know what it means.
@@andresantelo4082 the process of training to become physically fit by a regimen of exercise, diet, and rest. also : the resulting state of physical fitness. 2. : a simple form of learning involving the formation, strengthening, or weakening of an association between a stimulus and a response.
Thank you.
This man saved my training career. I went from burning myself out every workout because of the “gotta work hard” mentality. It eventually caused me to hate working out, and I stopped training for weeks and months. I now train 50-70% of my max and I enjoying training. Getting great benefits from it, and I look forward to every workout instead of dreading it.
Ok, I'm curious though about the gains from this type of workout. Can you still put on muscle mass this way? I don't doubt people can get fit like this but I wonder if it slows your progress at all.
@@philipmartin3425 well supposedly 10-20 sets per week for each muscle group is enough to build muscle. So imagine you did, 3 sets per day close but not to failure. Youd be smashing that target.
Personally never tried it and im no expert i just do my own version of the reddit recommended routine
same here
relly nice Muslim muscular man and athletic remodel i advise to download this version of translation ( Sahih international Qur'an pdf ) IT IS FREE ON INTERNET and ask God Help and guidance with sincerity because you can't have this big blessing without a MERCY from Almighty ALLAH THEN IF YOU HAVE any questions you can ask me later
@@philipmartin3425 Unlikely. You need to be close enough to failure to cause a muscular adaptation. This idea is good for athletic and mental endeavors, but for trying to build muscle no. It doesnt matter how much volume you do if your body doesn’t experience the proper amount of mechanical tension
I am a functional fitness trainer and this is one the hardest concept for some of my athletes to understand. It just people want instant gratification, we’ve lost the art of patience in these days. Well worded.
i just don’t feel like i working up to my full potential and end up not selling myself short
@@SA-nn3so there is definitely a balance...stretching and proper nutrition can really help with soreness as well as having proper hydration.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@TheDaveNolaShow pls be joking pls be joking pls be joking
@TheDaveNolaShow found the steven crowder viewer
I do one rep a month. I'll be beast in 702 years.
Do a rep a week and it should only take 200
@@brandoncarpenter4334 one a day?
😂
MitchHunts You'll be a beast in a week
i guess you didnt get it....keep training for intensity....see how long you live
I had issues being consistent in the gym my whole adult life. For the last 10 years I started and stopped gym several times. The main thing that has stopped me has been injuries. Once I started this approach of taking it slow and consistent it is when I started having results.
Thank you for telling your experiences. Maybe i have to try it also.
David Goggins made 4.5 thousand accounts and disliked this video. Then he ran 20 miles and did 1000 pull ups...
FACTS
@@John-G. What do you exactly mean by saying "he did deep stretching for 2-3 hours"?
What did he exactly do, also regarding a "pre" and "post" factor?
Accurate
vito corleone u should be president
Beyond The Sky he stretches every day for 2-3 hours, cause (his words) "my body is so fucked up and thight"
Love how open minded Joe is. You could start a conversation about something Joe does not believe at all, but shows respect, hears the persons arguments, and like all good arguments can find something to relate to or useful information
True
this isn't a strength, it makes him vulnerable to be influenced by complete total misinformation
Michael Newman well if you just say fuck everything you’re always going to have the same beliefs
Michael Newman he analyzes whether or not what the person is saying makes sense tho
Michael Newman I see your point, but I think you miss what I mean. You should always show respect and be open to all arguments, otherwise you will be stuck and never change. Hear all points and arguments, and make an educated choice on the evidence what you believe is true... otherwise if you are so stubborn to never hear people’s arguments respectfully, you are the definition of ignorance
I'd like to hear a discussion between him and David Goggins.
Goggins isn’t hearing any of it
David Goggins cares less about fitness and more about mental toughness. His focus isn’t on taking care of your body, most of what he does is unhealthy. This guy is talking about fitness.
@@jackmclane6961 I agree. David Goggins is the guy I listen to when I need a kick in the butt, and when I need to work on my discipline. But as far as actual fitness tips? He’s the last person I’d take advice from.
Although, to be fair: He makes it a point to tell his listeners that the way he does things is what works FOR HIM, and that they shouldn’t try to emulate. He encourages people to do their own thing.
@@killerkdawg88 if you like Goggins you should check out this guy Wes Watson
@@jackmclane6961 yeah but I’d rather look like goggins
I applied this training analogy to my Canadian Dental Skills exam and it helped me pass it. The exam criteria was stricter than acceptable work and margin of error being very little. The exam was 8 hours long x 2 days
So I practiced every day continuously for 3 months.
On the day of the exam, I worked continuously, sitting on the dental unit for 8 hours straight.
Although I'm not into combat sport, during that time, I hiked a small hill in my city every day, 4- 5 km loop, to calm my head.l and my body to pull through the exam.
Congrats man! Big accomplishment
👏👏👏👏. It works !
Congrats on passing your exam
Congrats!
Jeff Cavalier’s next video: Why listening to Zahabi is killing your gains.
Francisco Pineda 😂😂😂😂😂
Push it baby!!. Flow shmow
Francisco Pineda this is a golden comment
Francisco Pineda 😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Rewatching this years later. I applied this philosophy to my quilting years ago and it helped me actually get far more done in the span of a year than I'd done over the previous two decades. This philosophy is MORE than just for effective exercise. This is effective for just about anything you want to achieve in life.
Is it effective in building muscle because I hear muscles relax when they get used to a static number of sets.
@@HenryDube72 Just bc you don’t go so hard to the point where you are suffering and sore the next day doesnt mean that you dont get stronger with that easier workout over time. You still get stronger over time, and as you get stronger you can increase your sets or reps or weight etc. because youre new “easy workout” is at higher rate than your initial easy workout
@@TigreCorazon thanks, problem is watching too much of these gym pros leaves you confused lol.
Ok fattie
@Gettin' Stitchy Thanks for your comment. I was only looking at this advice from a physical point of view but now I'm thinking about my school work from this point of view too lol
There is a quote in baki that I like , it's: " A person that works hard can never beat a person who enjoys himself. "
Not everyone who works hard is rewarded but those succeed worked hard - Coach Kamogawa
@@Jonathan-ek7ky Hajime No Ippo?
@@gray_gogy Yup
Lmao I thought baki's philosophy was like-
Yujiro: go fuk and you'll get stronk
Baki: Ok.
@@josukehigashikata5598 ikr logic when out the window when it comes to baki so you kinda don't give a shit what good words he said
This makes me happy sometimes I’m working out for 1 or 1 1/2 hours and I’m think I better be sore tomorrow morning but I wake up feeling no soreness and I’m thinking to myself I did not do enough reps but I’m trying this 3 day’s workout 1 day off and repeat. Thank you for this knowledge.
I have the exact same right now so im happy i found this😂
And here's why Joe is one of the best; he wants to learn.
@Ivey 96 I'm not sure you really listened to him. I'd like to find some common ground, a place where you and I can agree so we can recognize our commonality, and then work together from there. You must be a caring person, to take the time to type, and for that you have my respect.
@Ivey 96 yes and no. I think that he understands the “stimulus to fatigue ratio”, and he’s just trying to simplify it. Sure, staying at a RPE of 5 is dumb, but I still think that he got his point across.
@@jackli1867 im not sure if he's saying to stay at five I think he said go at 5 for a few days then at 6 if 6 is still too easy do 7 and progress the same way
@@enoknivlac4148 that’s a terrible way to progress though. You can only increase RPE that way for at most a week.
Patman Patmanson You believe? Believing is the dumbest concept on earth, either know or don’t know, don’t fucking believe. That’s how you get conned. Just because someone seems more competent in your opinion, doesn’t mean he actually is competent
David Goggins : When you reach 60% keep going, that's where you begin.
Firaz : when you reach 60% stop
Overdrive Music
As far as I figure they’re working on different things at a base level.
Firaz is aiming for muscle strength/endurance through training in volume
Goggins trains the mentality, mental toughness and goes to let your mind be able to unlock the most potential mentally “going beyond your limits”
The thing is you need to max out only once: that is either in competition or if your life depends on it.
Jocko willink the seal, was talking about it that what if we are in combat and a guy gets injured, and my commander tells me to carry him to safety, and i say, nah man i maxed out on 10 sets of squats yesterday,cant do that. You need to climb a rope to get to a high place, but you maxed out on pullups a few days before. Modern bodybuilding concepts are great for building a physique, but highly impractical for real life carry over
@@yasirisrar5493 David goggins: thats POOPY PANTs!
@@ilyassvids23 he has his own philosophy of training where he tries to break the barriers on his mind, thats not a bad thing if you want the results fast, but if you are training for longevity thats not good, what all these balls to the wall celebs and atheletes dont tell you is the amount of surgeries they go through in their 40s and above to fix the damage.
@@yasirisrar5493 yeah i agree with that, most of us dont train to live long just to look good or be strong or compete in a sport.
Ever since I seen this this guy's wisdom has stuck in my mind. This method can be applied to virtually anything and can improve so many lives in so many ways. What a little treasure of a video clip
This is the true gold in this video right here.
Bullshit!
@@Chelsea_2001 ?
Yes! I thought the same thing.
I did 8 pushups times 10 with 2 minutes rest because my max was around 16 3-4 times per week with one restday inbetween after two weeks+- my max rep is 25+ and it goes way easier now
This approach really helps in combat sports. Training Muay Thai, our coach would push us to the absolute limit. And yes a lot of our fighters were in great shape. But they’d also miss quite a bit of class due to injuries or being sore and exhausted. I’ve been going toward the end of Thai class and taking the days drills and conditioning going at my own pace. Still getting drained but not to my absolute limit. I’m seeing more progress now because I can go everyday.
I watched this video about a year ago, took it too heart and lost 60 pounds. I have remained at the healthiest I have ever been.
Have you gained muscle
@@hushpuppy1595 some, mostly in the last six weeks or so. I do Tai Chi so I have to build it up slowly.
@David Townshend I did all of those things, it was not until i paid someone for actual private lessons that all of my misconceptions were corrected though. Most people do avocado Tai Chi so you have to be careful even then.
@@OrKkTeKk awesome to hear, mate. keep going.
@Monday_Night_BloodBowl Congratulations!!!
This was extremely educational. What a interview
Antonio Rose lol you gotta be joking
@@angeldejko8842 Care to elaborate?
@@rubyrubi1165 This guy read this on the net and came to joe rogan show lol, you can see joe sees thru his bullshit
@@angeldejko8842 I don't really care about what Joe sees through... to be honest I don't even think Joe reads they comments... I'm just curious about this guy's mentality... like what happened to him to come to such a conclusion....
2minutes in and I am calling some pseudo science bullshit already
I like that he said intensity is good periodically which means there’s a balance
Yeah bc obviously a caveman wouldn't be chasing down a gazelle every single day
@@turkeyhamman4111 i tast a little salt
as a 205 lbs, 5'10 feet tall, 44 years old male, that never before did any exercise, this approach of doing exercises and stopping just in time before feels uncomforable, has helped me a lot. i haven't loss a lot of weight, havent gained a lot of strenght , but I can say I feel phisically better than before, more "elastic". and I can do exercises every day. I used to try and get myself to the limit every other day , and rest in between but recovery time was long and I always ended abandoning the routine. hope I made my self clear, and well sorry for my bad english.
You won't drop the weight until you cut out all the junk from your diet.
We're close to the same age, but I'm a bit taller. Like you, I have never really exercised. (I've been saying for years that when I do, this video will be my guide; plus, I have Pavel's books, which are terribly written, but perhaps a necessary exercise in patience in itself, but I digress...)
For the last 20-ish months I have been on a very high animal fat/protein diet, only really making sure to keep my carbs under 25 grams, and have gone from 315 to 205.
I won't try to dispute that at least a little exercise would have been beneficial over the same period, but I didn't need it to lose weight. I have literally sat on the couch for the last year and a half and eaten pork rinds and hamburgers.
Sorry. I get a little caught up sometimes. I just have to put it out there that as a society we're almost done talking about "calories," and that's going to be great.
This advice is GOLD!!!! Not just for training, but literally for everything in life! I'm gonna start using it immidiately.
For training skill and techniques this is true but for muscle gain and maximum effort u need the intensity
For studying, that's why you're told not to cram just for the exam because you'll hate studying after
@@petrip97 yeah of course, but say for someone starting to workout and need to create a habit, it could absolutely work
@@swagboy4075 People want to see results, if there is no intensity the results are almost none existent or take far to long to show and any habit will die very quickly.
There is no easy way to do it, hard work is required for the results and timescale the vast majority of people are looking for, his theory looks good on paper but in reality it's intensity that gets the best results.
30-60 minutes every day, medium to high intensity, never max. EVERY SINGLE DAY for a year, rarely feel sore, never injured, but I see the great results, lost 40lb and stronger limbs with muscle tone and 6 packs. I never kill myself in training cuz I want to come back the next day.
Are we talking lifting or cardio? Lifting every day never giving your body rest seems like a recipe for disaster. Long term that will undoubtedly damage something.
Martine it’s called eating right and getting your sleep buddy
Martine weights cardio and something else take turn. Weights everyday on the same muscle group doesn’t give body enough time to recover. Besides, I get bored easily. Doing the same exercise everyday will soon wear out my patience and my body will quickly adapt to it and won’t show any progress either. I’m talking about the intensity, which increase as my body gets more and more in shape.
Blake Houle that’s important to fuel and recover body.
Martine you can go around that depending on your workout split if you lets say do a 5 day split in which everyday you do a differe muscle group you should be ok longterm
Even though they're talking about fitness, this mentality translates well for almost any skill. For example in school, instead of cramming a semester worth of knowledge in a couple nights, studying an hour or two a day will net you exponentially more study time than cramming. Also with this method you could master or at least obtain so many more skills than trying to do one thing 24/7
xS0N1Kx lol tell that to the professors creating the university curriculum
xS0N1Kx same with not being constrained to the time limit of a semester I. Learned so much more out of school about subjects that interest me then I ever got in the class room
I agree, though sometimes you gotta work a bit extra.
i dont understand.. you are saying you can learn any skill by psending daily few hours on it?
@@cautarepvp2079 It's effective because over time you would have worked more, overall.
David Goggins has left the chat
😁
Joe should have Jeff Cavalier on the podcast sometime.
I'd also like to see that. And I think they would have a blast
Luke Byrne yes
jeff cavalier is a living lie, he has never backed up any of his "facts" with studies
@@MrSickosBeast Clown
Hassan A-h go get some gains fatty
Consistency over intensity! Good point! That can be applied to almost anything
Except sex squidward... except sex....
Should have both, good to throw in a super intense workout in to spark to muscles on occasion.
except muscle growth
I think being consistent is a good thing but pairing it with the intensity is just unbeatable. I just can't wrap my mind aroud if you go to the gym and you doing half reps of max reps for every exercise is the best for you. Best science based method is know as Progressive overload and has been researches and papers all over how your body reacts to it and it has the best results.
Only it isn't a good point at all, consistency and intensity are both possible if you simply rotate your muscle groups.
I don't usually comment, but this dude just showed me the light.
YESSSS
I agree. There is this idea that you need to go to the gym and go balls to the wall. Lift the most weight possible, run the fastest you can, less focus on form and more on simply doing more. That's an easy way to burn yourself out of anything. It'll make you hate whatever you're doing. I like his take on crossfit.
Sergiu5955 Agreed
fuck dude me too 100%, ive been killing myself at the gym, need to back it off a bit after listening to this haha.
Sergiu5955 lazyness
I’m glad this vid came across my algorithm. Just started back working out and needed this.
I was literally thinking of farmer strength and then Joe said it. I grew up on a dairy farm and it's amazing what carrying feed pales and throwing haybales every single day at chore time for roughly 15 years growing up will do to you. Hard work is good for you. And doing it with your family alongside you is a great way of life. I am very grateful to have grown up on dairy farm. I often kick myself for not taking the farm over and raising my kids on the farm.
I had a friend growing up that did a lot of farm work and boy was he strong....I worked with him a few times and was amazed about the strength involved in that work...I respect it
YOLO! Get your family to a farm somehow!
you should kick yourself for that
Farmer’s strength is such a good example for this
I used to love going to your Dad's farm when I was a kid. He taught me a lot about my body.
"You can't force a tree to grow dude but if you do, you'll kill the tree"
-My drunk uncle at Christmas
that is wisdom
@Pritesh Divekar idk he was drunk so maybe this is an indicator of a lazy philosophy where you shouldn't force things... or else.
Oh well, fuck that noise. Just learn to live with consequences.
Your drunk uncle accidentally dropped wisdom and knowledge upon our heads.
his uncle prob means it takes patience to become greater???
I kill my tree every night
life lesson. try to have the flow state in every aspect of life. not just workouts.
Good point bro. good point.
Yep. I think it's a key knowledge in life.
Nikola Tesla touché 🙌🏻👏🏼💁🏼♀️...no wonder we burn ourselves out so quickly 😯.
This video changed my life. My injuries and niggles from workouts have drastically gone down and at the same time my strength has progressed
Can you share your routine please!
I’m wondering if I should do Full body everyday and hit every muscle without getting it sore
@@YogeshBhojwani - Mine is very simple - I do 2 lower body and 2 upper body days every week.
1. Lower Body Day 1 - Back Squats , RDL, Gluts, Accessories (Abductor and adductor)
2. Upper Body Day 1 - Bench Press, Pull ups, Triceps, Rows
3. Lower Body Day 2 - Front Squats, Deadlifts, Accessories (Abductor and adductor), lunges
4. Upper Body Day 2 - Overhead Press, Lateral and Front Raises, Dips, Biceps
I take a day off after day 2
The rest of the days are light cardios
This interview completely changed the way I worked out. This advice helped me to become consistent and now I've put my body through an entire recomposition. My weight is the same, but I've got a lot more muscle.
No you haven’t you gain muscle when you rip your muscle fibers and over work them and then eat right and feed your muscles . It’s common science it’s not rocket science 🤦♂️
Insane, I'm going to try it this way. Makes a lot of sense.
Congratulations!! Keep at it
how have you gain muscle but no weight
muscle is heavier than fat
This arguably is the best philosophy I’ve ever heard, I’m enlightened.
I'm niggad
Adrien Regelbrugge niggatron-9000
That's the thing.. It's philosophy. You still need to find what works for you. There's plenty of studies showing empirical evidence on intensity vs. volume training. They both produce different results.
@@jamiegreyy like what are some of the results that you know of comparing the 2 different methods?
@its yeshau not jesus out of shape but he would kill you in a fight.
Train less intense but more often. That way, over time, you get more hours training than the person who trains at full intensity and is unable to train consistently. I just saved you 20 mins. He basically repeats this over and over again. Good video though
He did give some good examples tho
Hahahaha thanks man
That's all well and good, but you're describing a personal discipline issue, not a scientific perspective about what grows more muscle.
@@SeraphsWitness Hello, I was merely summarizing the video :)
@@SeraphsWitness Building muscle mass isn't the only way to build strength. That's a big misconception, and a common one at that.
I have bad ADHD and this video changed my life seriously I’m so strong and fit because of this video alone I do little stuff everyday that’s it but I’m stronger than ever lean and flexible
I have it too keep going bro 💯
"Train to stimulate, not to annihilate."
Lee Haney. An 8X Mr Olympia would say that. He would push smart training, stimulation over just pushing alot of weight and risking injuries and beating up your body. He never got injured and retired on top. Seems healthy in his old age.
@@pablochavez9087 Beats going out like Ronnie Coleman, who was literally falling apart.
@@Priinsu lmao
Excellent quote. Please Include - Lee Haney after the quote
I’m your 420th like
This guy has IMMACULATE posture
lol
what is that mean ? IMMACULATE ? what is that ?
@@junazardabd8004 Without any flaws.
@@Banned4Life aaaaaah. I got it. thank you
Anyone else sit up straight after reading this?
This would give David Goggins a damn heart attack
YOU DONT KNOW ME SON!!!
🤣😂🤣 I came here for this comment.
Goggins would just look at him like "You don't know me son! Who's gonna carry the fucking boats and the logs?!" then run a 100 mile race.
Goggins would say go at maximum intensity with maximum consistency
I was looking for this comment. Higgins is the epitomy of this.
I saw this video 5 years ago when it came out, it changed my life
“If you’re going hard everyday your not going hard every day...”
Me the alt centrist you need to rest so you can go harder in comparison.
That literally makes zero sense
@@maxmatthew1379 If you go hard everyday then your overall maximum decreases to compensate for the fact that you are over training. Let's say you run 10 miles every day because that's your max. If you instead run 7 - 8 everyday then you could potentially reach 13-14 when you really wanted to go to your max because your body wouldn't be as taxed.
@@behamut92 but if I go 10 then slowly increase I could go higher faster
behamut92 it depends on the person. If you go to your max everyday, your max will definitely increase over time. Whether it’s at the same rate will depend on how well the person recovers.
im tryna get addicted to waking up early going to the gym and eating well
Waking up early changed my life.. Seriously !! Everything is done by the time I go to work. Then I come home ,have time to go shopping and cook healthy food. I just seem to have so much extra time. At the start it was difficult to go to bed at 9pm I felt like I was missing out on stuff but that all changed.. Stick at it man.
@@AndyL940 I'm trying to get in the habit as well. Sleep at 9pm wake up at 5 am and hit the gym every day. It's hard to be consistent though
The addiction doesn’t begin until you start seeing results
Trying to make that a habit, how's it treating you now?
If i don't go to the gym on one day I would feel depressed
There's some strong logical wisdom in here. And can absolutely be applied to any developmental goal/skill in life. This is why I switched my approach from "goals" to "routines". Small wins rack up and compound and make time your best friend, and give you an edge over literally everyone who's going as hard as possible then crashing and burning. Great clip.
Why not have both goals and routines? I feel like both are important
Atomic habits
This is so facts
@@cyprokka routines make goals achievable.
The power of 365 days in a year
I actually applied this concept without knowing. I randomly tried to make my workouts fun. I'd do pyramid type of lifts. Increasing weight and lower reps if I felt a weight was too easy id do 3 sets on that same weight before increasing. By the end of the workout I'd have done tons of sets and I'd feel no soreness the next day. This increased my capacity overall in everyday life and any type of lifting itself. The weight I used to do 5 reps on I could do 8-10. Im currently doing hypertrophy focused training but I go all the way up to heavy weights lower reps then back down. I get gains in strength, performance, muscle and no soreness. I did back today deadlifts+Rows+ carries . I had an insane workout with tons of sets at different weights and I feel amazing. I don't feel tired at all. My capacity to squat, walk, run, bend, hold balance, last longer even in sex has increased.
This guys is pure class. I see why he gets such amazing results from his competitors. I’m changing everything to a light fun 7 day work out.
Jackson Taylor how’s it going
Tom Brady is a perfect example of "Flow". The man is 43 years old in an intense sport where the average retiring age is 35. He has found a way to take care of his body and improve it, all while avoiding serious injury and over-training for nearly twenty years. Consistency and small improvements are key to succeeding in any aspect of life.
Dummy what position does he play??
And that’s how you win your 7th ring at 43 😂
Pshhh... I can relate. I'm in my fifties, and can still do five jumping jacks without stopping.
it's because he sucks the soul out of his son when he makes out with him
@@brendanmulrooney368 Take your shyt somewhere else Fckin Weirdo
What I learned from this 20 minutes it s totally basic stuff but it was so deep that I have never thought about it in this way.
What I understood is simply :
-it’s about the total and the volume of training that u did during all the year
- let ur training be fun by not exhausting ur body
- unleash the beast mode 1 time per 2 weeks
- develop ur skills and learn new ones
this comments under rated
Probably only once a week to be honest, and for some it might be less still, every 2-3 weeks. In many ways, as you get fitter and stronger, the less you should go all out, as you are able to produce so much force and power compared to a beginner, you create a far longer recovery curve than newbies
I heard David Beckham still holds the BLEEP test record at Man Utd. That guy was super fit.
It's about having more frequency while balancing volume, and intensity. Training beyond a certain level will release to much cortisol and adrenaline which in excess amounts will do more harm then good for recovery.
@Jesus has given you all. Repent or die. screw you and your jesus.
I really needed to hear this. So many times, I push myself to the limit, only to fall sick and then have to rest for a week (or more) to recover from this sickness. This time I took it slow, until I let my ego take over, and pushed hard for 2-3 days back-to-back. Guess what? I got a fever the next day, and have had to rest for far more time now to recover from it. It's time to focus on being more consistent and giving it a 7/10 every day than 10/10 every 2-3 days.
I agree with this but unfortunately it also depends on your schedule. For me, I have to go with high intensity with the every 2/3 days because I simply don’t have time to go everyday. So I have to make up for it. But I do wish I can slowly somehow start practicing this way instead.
This is the kind of information people charge money for, and joe rogan is putting it on UA-cam for free....either he’s insane or generous.
Totally agree that he is insane(brilliant) and generous but I think he must monetize his UA-cam channel?
fr i was thinking how do i lose weight without someone trying to sell me something then bam this pops up perfect info
Ashley King Art but never any ads
the information is false so idk why youre that shocked
noushig Avakyan how is it false?
when he started talking about the pacer test (“beep test”) I got flashbacks to middle school bro them shits hurt
elgalloblanco Lmao me and my friends always stopped at 69
The fitness gram pacer test...
throwback to when i fucking vomited my entire breakfast out at soccer tryouts
I wish we did that in europe, but instead of that the pe teachers where I live just give you a soccer ball let you create teams and play while the teacher is on his phone.
On God bruh
I spent all of 2019 pushing hard and missing a lot of BJJ classes because I was too sore from weight training. Going to integrate this philosophy in 2020.
What is bjj
@@Devastator21 Brazillian Jiu Jitsu. It's a good kick. Get on it. ;)
Update us by the end of the year
Same but with boxing
Has Covid 19 effected your training?
Training being addicting is the most amazing feeling
The coolest thing about this is that you can actually apply it in any area of your life, especially developing new skills
yes, practicing things...more... and not too much... it is cool how it can be applied to anything. Well said, JRE commenter. You make us all feel smart.
I just got a certificate from a personal trainer course, and this is the mentality the teachers thought us. Volume is always better.
does this apply to weightlifting also?
@@theodorerey1565 Yes. Look up the JRE clip of the guy who explains the Russian weight lifting system. Took that approach and now I enjoy working out and have been much more consistent.
@@theodorerey1565 Sorry, not Russian but here is the clip. ua-cam.com/video/rTAEx9WDNKg/v-deo.html&ab_channel=JREClips
@@samurai-jach Thanks!
I tried the flow method with my Pushups and got up to 200 Pushups daily with no rest days for 14 days consecutive. I like experimenting so I switch to high volume days then took a recovery day etc. My numbers dropped each week and now I'm back at 160 pushups daily. I also feel better doing average daily Pushups vs high volume days with rest.
Update 26/6/2021. I was able to maintain daily Pushups for 60 days consecutively. At 196 Pushups I had to rest 4 days after having nerve pain in my right arm.
Firaaz is an amazing person. Such an intelligent man. This has changed my perspective. Train smart.
This is awesome. I'm the guy who has burnt himself out with constant & intense workouts, & I have all the injuries to go with it. Definitely changing my training philosophy immediately after listening to this.
Have listened to it about forty times and did not get bored so far because the way he explains so smoothly and precisely , which makes listening to him so enjoyable. Learned much from it. Peace out!
This information it so good. I regreted going hard out every time. Im struggling to go to the gym at age 37. My back, knees, elbows are in the mess. So take notes young fellas
Ya I wish we had these type of knowledge when we were kids
Stretch man, stretch. Every time I'd get my ass into the gym and train regularly I'd be wrecked in about 2-3 months - sore shoulders, elbows, back, knees ...you name it, it hurt. To the point where I'd end up quitting working out, and it was #$@%! frustrating. I finally took stretching seriously about 1.5 years ago and it's changed everything. I do 3 days a week strength training with full body routines, and on alternate days I just do some ab work, light cardio and then take a solid 30 minutes to stretch and roll all the kinks out, and then the next day I'm ready to rock. I'm no beast, but I'm 46 and working out pain free for the first time in my life.Stretching did that for me.
7 years younger than you and will definitely take heed of this advise. Thanks bro
@DDream 1986 i think bodybuilder train is fine coz they are more focus in execute the right forms and not raps and not how heavy you lift.
@@74cochrane I'm 22 and I'm a beginner entering the intermediate state in weightlifting. In 3 months I acquired a lot of strength, I can lift 308lbs in deadlift and 242lbs in squat. I have good genetics but it was mostly because of me going really hard every session. Now I'm paying the price, my shoulders, lower back, hips and neck kill me everyday. That's the problem of going to failure in almost every set. At first I thought it was because of bad technique but I've recorded myself and the technique is just fine, maybe a couple of little details to improve but not sufficient enough to make me this sore even after resting for 4 days, it's all about the intensity.
This was excellent. Change your mindset and train smarter not harder. Have fun and make it addictive so you stop counting reps and hours. Flow state is the one.
Just remember to challenge yourself while flowing smarter so you don't waste your time for no reasonable stimulus. Doing cardio as strength/muscle mass training doesn't work the best after all.
@@Yupppi no doubt. However, if you're having fun then it's never a waste of time. Also, if you're having fun, you're going to want to get better naturally. It's a given that you have to push your boundaries to improve in anything in life, but your points are good.
Dont try to sugar coat things. This guy’s advice is wrong. You dont go soft on your workouts and training. Thats not training. Its just stupid to tell people that they dont have to be sore after a workout. Bullshit. You should be sore and you should enjoy and embrace the soreness as much as possible. Thats literally how muscles are activated. If you wanna be average however, please follow his advice and lift like a little bitch.
Horrible advice tbh
Did you not listen dick head!!!he said start slow and build up your reps its volume and load your looking for not a big sesh and be fucked for a week your body need's time to build if your sore your not building muscle your Recovering muscles so think about that one...if you have any idea about building muscle and half a brain you'd understand,now shut da fook up and listen to the man he trained gsp ffs one of the greatest of all time fucckk you and fuccckk u
Aryan Singh for actual athletes that workout everyday and play a sport there’s no reason to be sore the next day. If your just hitting the gym to build mass or whatever then I guess it’s fine but if you’re a year in there’s really no reason to be sore everyday. Maybe on a max week or something then yeah but no reason otherwise.
This guy has made the most sense of every fitness guy I've heard.
He's GSP's coach, I believe him
Is he really? Damn, thats dope
for all my mma guys out there, how good isGSP really?
@@bestmoments5877 GSP is top 2 all time IMO, Only other fighter who has an argument is Jon Jones. But some people hate GSP because of his fighting style, he’s a round for round guy. But nobody will discredit George, he’s extremely gifted and talented.
@@randyortons22 got it. so you would say he's even better than khabib. I've heard that he is the goat
@@bestmoments5877 GSP >
This dude challenging our beliefs and he does it so good that it's really entertaining.
Yeah he's a good speaker and has a lot of charisma
20 minutes recap : consistency over intensity
You are a saint
consistent volume.
i lovecars so basically lessen the high intensity with training whether its calisthenics or actual weightlifting? Is he serious? I can do less reps for each exercise everyday? Im trying to get the V shape to my back since i have a 32 inch waist but my lats still need to develop more and mature
The point is to maximise your total training volume for the week or the month. If you're training two, three, seven times more often, you're logging more reps, you're moving more weight, and you're getting more work done overall. Training frequency trumps training intensity every time.
This is nonsense if you want to be a body builder
Brilliant! The guest really knows what he is talking about. His logic completely makes sense.
I remember training at a small gym in SoCal. The trainer was a LA cop with a gym as a side job/hobby. Always left there feeling like I could have done more. First time doing tire flips. Within a year, couldn’t believe how much stronger I’d become! Thanks Gino!
Gino is an interesting name for a gym though
This could be applied to a lot of things in life.
Indeed. However, for those who are training exclusively to lift more this is not particularly good advice. If your main goal is to get strong you will have to train with high intensity quite frequently. If you leave the gym feeling great you did something wrong in my opinion. For athletes this is not the case since their primary objective generally lies outside the realm of heavy weights. They should be more focused on improving their sport specific skills. This does not mean that you should go into the gym and try to hit a deadlift PR everyday, but you need to put your body through something it's not used to in order to stimulate the sought after strength adaptations. Periodization and moderate intensity are great tools for getting strong, but they should not be used to justify pussy workouts.
I was just about to comment this exact sentence. In addition to the number of applications of this philosophy, could you not apply this to studying?
You should check out brandon Carter. He answers that. He prefers doing what this guy said as well. He started squatting every day without reaching failure for 30 days and needed to stop because his legs couldn't fit in his Jean's anymore. He did the same thing with his shoulders and they started getting bigger and he started getting stretch Marks. He interviewed another personal trainer who does the same thing. I haven't done it yet, but if two professionals who have been lifting weights for over a decade do it, I'm sure it works.
I forgot to mention, Arnold Schwarzenegger also had this approach apparently. He preferred frequency. Its brought up in the interview I mentioned with brandon carter and the other personal trainer. I used to thing power lifting and bodybuilding were two different types of training with two different results, but it's already been proven that it's not. You can get strength with less intensity and more frequency....it blew me away. I haven't done too much research into what they said, but I am going to change up my strength training to fit this type and see how it goes for me.
The Flow concept has been applied to many things in life. It started out mostly with work productivity and art creativity. The guy here is merely applying an existing concept (Flow state) to sports training. I've read the Flow book, it's very good. "Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience" by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, if anyone is interested. Highly recommended read, will get you far in many areas of life.
Teaches you how to recognize where you are not being challenged enough (the activity becomes boring) versus when it is too challenging (resulting in anxiety). The challenge is to find that "sweet spot" where Flow can easily occur.
whenever I go running I always get conflicted and tell myself man, I barely ran at all today.. but then I realise after that short run I will be much more likely to come back and run again tomorrow. it's just like he said, it's all about volume. I think we gotta listen to our bodies more. there's a reason your body really wants to stop when you work too hard and all it's gonna do is make you hate working out and you will quit sooner. I really think this guy's right when he says that you don't need to do that and in fact it's probably better not to.
Step out of your comfort zone pussy
You're absolutely right, fuck these morons in the comments bro, starting out at a level you can do and increasing once you've mastered it is smarter and safer on your body
Why run when you can Bhop Desinc?
That is what I go through, I always feel like I got a couple more lifts left in the tank but if don't do them I feel like I didn't give it my all,
DeSinc some of what u said Made no sense iv been working out lifting weights since 16 age im 24 now and it's awesome benefit inside n out
At the same time there is something called “junk volume” which means if you’re not pushing your body to full exhaustion then it won’t grow. It has to be the right amount of force exerted to make the muscle grow
He said the difficulty should be a 7 out of 10 scale. Not too easy, not too hard.
7 is way too easy
@Countryfucius comparing ourselves to legends like these is so utterly terribly wrong. Like.. Me comparing myself as an slightly advanced but totally regular-ass gym goer to Arnold, or Ronnie or anyone who's ever made it among these pro stars, is like comparing a load of concrete to the christ the redeemer. Even the era is so different, not even mentioning what they used as for enhancements. They're so on different level it would be a preposterous mistake to take their workout plans as an example. Lol. You should know what's good for you, and doing that what's best for you. Have your own head and not just copy someone just because he/she is successful.
@@countryfucius Have you seen Ronnie Coleman these days? His back is all messed up.
He ain’t talking bout bodybuilding and he said a 7/8
This might be the best segment I've ever listened to from a JR podcast.
You can tell Joe is fascinated by what this guy has to offer he's completely content with just listening to this guy most of the interview as I think we all are
David goggins throwing his phone at the wall after watching this.
Yeah this guys method is dumb
goggins isn't healthy nor is his mentality. its catabolic. no disrespect to him, but most people aren't him and never will be
This shit changed my whole philosophy on working out and what the point of it even is. Kudos to Firas, he has a great mind.
Training being addicting is the most amazing feeling. For me it came in form of gym rock climbing. The all body workout felt amazing and slowly climbed harder and harder levels still has me in the gym 4-5 a week. Beyond that I began stretching more at home and weight lifting again to benefit my passion.
also the worst feeling, rest days become a huge burden. you want to push your body to the absolute max but your body can’t keep up sometimes
@@alexgonzalez5390 over training is real. Go hard and rest when needed brother.
@@nathanwilson3185 it’s something i ignored at first, but the progress happens during rest. everyone has their reasons; i do it because it’s a habit and a need at this point. best regards king 👑
Yooo
And if you overtrain - you can rock climb. Awesome sport and motivates you to take care of yourself.
This is a brilliant man. It's crazy, the wide variety of people Joe gets on his show. Wild.
It's easy when you're #1
Crazy thing is that you get more exposure on jre than standard tv....people beg to get on his show
Except Jeff Cavilere though...
He’s not, no way you get the same muscle growth by half assing your workouts so you can do them every day
@jeff slayer He wasn't talking about muscles. He was talking about sports. Priority here is training of sports and workouts are a medium to enhance your performance. If you're sore or broken all the time, you won't be able to learn and practice your sport in a better way. He didn't mean that just do 50%. He meant do it enough but stay away from soreness because your main aim is to practice for your sport.
This guy is really intelligent , any athlete would be lucky to have him on there side
Too bad hes wrong. At least when it comes to building muscle.
@@adonizi Too bad you're wrong, not every sport is about building muscle
@@adonizi so what is you're theory on building muscle?
@@justaufcfan4673 Well science says the only way to grow muscle is to break it down and let it heal. When youre doing high intensity weightlifting youre actually causing micro tears in your muscle, but when you give it 48 hours of rest those tears heal and now your muscle is bigger. When it comes to building muscle intensity, meaning lifting heavier and heavier weights is better than repetition. Its better to do 5 reps of 200 lbs than 100 reps of 30lbs.
@@adonizi lolwat there are thousands of bodybuilders who train to failure
This dude ain't lying! I've been doing incremental exercises for years and they absolutely work. Start easy and work your way up and you'll do more
I'm going to watch this video consistently until I get smart
XD
Damn you sound stupid, good luck!
thats the attitude that will make you smart.
@@ViewingMyMind it was a joke in line with the video as he says doing something consistently is better than do ot a few times intently but never mind 😂
@@freakenjew thank you!
Firas Zahabi: If you do 5 pull ups everyday, in one week you've done 35 Pull ups.
David Goggins: If you do 500 pull ups everyday, in one week you've done 3500 Pull ups.
🤣🤣🤣
rofl 😂
I think that’s why David goggins broke world record and firas is a world renowned sport coach
Also guys like that ha very many a injury that requires operations etc.. you'll find they all ha e those that goes balls to the walls often
@@777tillinfinity no only if you train with wrong form. And that is usally done by people half asleep at the gym
I always dreaded going to the gym because i was in that mindset that I needed to "work out". So when I did go to the gym I felt the need to lift, run at least a mile and make at least 500 shots. This process usually took me two hours. Now I cut the load in half and I do feel better I am never sore and i look forward to going to the gym now. This video really opened my eyes.
My PT swears by 45 minute workouts. No more no less.
And how much progress have you seen and how many times a week do you train? Genuinely interested
@@almomedvedec896 I'm doing 45 pushups a day and running a casual mile in 530 flat. I just feel good. I dont need to exhaust myself anymore. Best video I ever watched
I love how u put it in simple words for the audience and summarize the guest thank u