That he’s another diet snake oil salesman. A whole food plant based diet is the best diet for everyone (more calories and carbs if you’re going for muscle building potential). Follow Nimai Delgado, Torre Washington, Patrick Baboumian, and other plant based body builders making waves, and watch Game Changers.
I wish you had challenged him more regarding his statements about how carbs and fat intake doesn't matter for weight loss. The reason people regain weight on a high-carb, calorie restricted diet is related to inflammation and insulin resistance, which isn't addressed without lowering carb intake. Go back to your interview(s) with Jason Fung. Also, his statements about how weight loss alone will resolve fatty liver and other metabolic conditions is just false.
Eat less- around 80% of your appetite Eat less frequently- Intermittent fasting Workout 250 minutes a week Sleep sound- average hours 8 Take 30 minutes sunlight each day Have omega 3 Stay away from blue light/ screens after 9 pm Intake of Less than 100 grams of processed/ refined sugar in a week Go for a walk in nature once in a while Having some hobbies is a bonus No or less alcohol consumption ( once a week) This is my summary after watching hundreds of videos on TH-cam from top people in health and nutritional industry.
Pretty good. Few more: Change blue light to no light (even blue light keeps you awake), but blue light is a slight improvement over white light. Build social connections. Find a purpose in life.
His knowledge and ability to communicate what he has learned is very impressive. I suffered a ruptured appendix when I was five years old, and I’ve had a total of 11 abdominal surgeries over the course of my life . In spite of the childhood illness, and recurrent health issues, I have always pushed myself to exercise and stayed active ! I’m 69 have a bad shoulder, and arthritis, but I’m still exercising! Keep moving , and eat sensibly!
I can listen to this guy for a long time, he's so good at explaining things so everyone can understand, well articulated, calm, knowledgeable. This was great!!! Thanks!
Look at my FAKE STEROID muscles and pretend with me that I lifted weights for these and let me STEAL your money with my BOGUS supplements and don't tell the cops on me for BREAKING the LAW! Stay natural buddy!
I am an elder bodybuilder that Joe Wieder wanted to turn pro when I was In my early 60s to become a phenom. I worked in medicine and was a trained researcher, so after the death of my husband, the Northridge Earthquake and other stressors I decided to address my 100 lb weight gain. I met an amazing trainer who has ideas similar to Stan. I read scientic BB mag articles and took copious notes. Then with the demise of the mags, I found the digital formats fell seriously short intellectually. But then I found this video on Stan. He has pulled me back out of the guru b.s. into my roots, where I was so successful. I feel excited again at a fit, but not ideally athletic 75 y.o. This video is pure gold. I just hope the younger people will listen, as that my have been actually schooled to have shorter attention spans. But overcome this by stopping and replaying...and take those notes. I have pages just for this one vid. Parents need to check this out also. It is like a master class. The questions were on point too...just what I would have asked. In short, I was depressed with the lack of knowledge seeking and sharing in our sport, but this brings my faith back. I will be getting the book and gifting it too. I was having a days, recently, dealing with my Mom's docs who are saying the opoosite of whet Stan says here (being eugenecists), but now I feel invigorated for the fight with ignorant doctors. Never thought I would see this intentional stupidity in medicine after working 34 yrs in academic medicine with the best (who understandably got the helll out with the onset of today's craziness). Thanks for an elightening journey. Keep up the good work...sharing the truth! Best video I have seen in ages!
Beef, eggs, salmon, sardin, vegies. Strength is not in correlated with size of muscle. You can get the same result with 5 heavy reps, 10 average reps, or 20 light reps. 5 or 20 make more fatigue. Better to do 8-15 reps. Very important: 2 second negative has not a major difference with 10 second negative, but it has to be under control (slow enough) Split doesn't seem to be so important. 3 walking session, 3 lifting session
Yeah its primarily for hypertroph, but TUT is very good for breaking plateaus. So it's very good for strength aswell, coz you will be able to break plateau and lift heavier (get stronger)
@@Jazzaaaa91 I made my best progress by training once a week with Ellington Dardens 30-30-30 time under tension. It's a form of high-intensity training. 30 seconds down on the negative 30 seconds up on the positive another 30 seconds down on the negative. It hammers the deep muscle fibers. In three or four weeks I was stacking 45-pound plates on the leg press. I could not believe how my strength increased and corresponding muscle development. One movement for each body part. It worked because I gave my body time to recover. Some people can do it twice a week. Experiment and find what works best for you.
@@craigleibbrand7761 30-30-30? Godamit how do u even work 1 set min and a half? I currently have the worst Dom's ever from Tut and I'm working 4s down and 2s up 6-10rrps. Im not kidding at 40-50% of my 1RM I almost shit my pants. Though I had 3 weeks pause coz I was sick. I was expecting Dom's in my 1st week but godamn. 4th day and I'm literally glued to my bed. I mean yeah I'm weak coz I caught cold, but still man. Imagine going 1-2 reps of 100kg on benchpress 3 weeks ago to almost dying with 40kgs yesterday. Im doing it to mix it up after year and a half of consistent training. But godamit the pain is real. Any knowledge of why is it so hard and painfull? I mean y I was sick but c'mon man 40kg on bench I could lift that effortlessly 16 year ago when I was 14.
I have more respect for no man on earth than Stan Efferding. This guy is as real as it gets. He knows his business and lives it to the hilt. He has the resume' to back what he says. He lives what he speaks. He is a walking billboard for health and fitness. I've been lifting for over 45 years, so when Stan talks, I listen. This is one of the most important videos on the internet. The information here is absolutely brilliant and life-changing. Thank you.
You are totally wrong. Stan is a drug addict and he talks for money, not to help anyone. He needs to stop talking and go to rehab. This is actually the saddest thing I have seen all month. It makes me lose trust in this channel.
As a 62 year old man that was a fat kid and not athletic I can tell you that martial arts specifically Kung Fu has helped immensely with coordination. You can develop coordination at an older age. I started at 48. Not to fight but to become graceful. My two cents.
Yes, I too had an issue with his statement about coordination. I learnt to rollerskate in my 30's, despite being an utter Bambi! And what about adults that start dance classes- their balance and coordination doesn't improve?? 🤔 We must remember that not ONE person has ALL the answers when it comes to health and fitness
@@piperuk5366 I think he wasn't saying you can't improve, but more so that your best time frame to gain long term balance and coordination is around puberty.
48 minute mark this is so essential for blood sugar control. I've been a type 1 diabetic for 25 + years. My a1c is 4.9 and only take one injection of13/14 units long acting insulin daily. People can't understand how I do it.... low impact walking post meals is my secret. It's like magic.
@Lazarus Ominous there is a goldilocks time. Long enough to at least start a little digestion... getting blood flow to stomach but not soooo long the the sugar spikes. I would say 20-30 minutes post meal is perfect.
Martial Arts & Yoga is amazing at any age. I've been at it since I was 4, and I'm nearly 50 now. In the military, I was told I had a PT record at Shepard Air Force base (way back in the 90's lol) I was able to run 4 miles in 24:26 in 107 degree humid Texas heat. I even passed people running backwards through a lot of it, having fun. Martial-Arts takes your body's heart rate, flexibility, speed, strength, and adaptation to the red-line. Learning to breathe through yoga puts it all together.
He is very genuine and loves to see people succeed. He is the type of person you want in your circle of friends and advisors. I love conversations with Stan. I always learn something.
Okay I love that he says how much it matters in your childhood. I did so many different sports as a child even though I was 32 pounds at 6 years old from the Ukrainian orphanage. I walked 10 miles in my first month pregnancy then ran, swam, and surfed until 6 months then continued swimming until the day before birth Then I carried my baby for over a year with no stroller and my son out ran 5 year olds at the age of 2 And now he is 4 years old, and runs at the beach with me every morning! I love being active and I see how strong he is mentally and bodily and can out run some 6 year olds currently and stays strong while running without loosing momentum. I hope this talk helps out a lot of parents, because childhood is so important for their bodies and mind🥰
I love it when I see women who bear children not complain and blame pregnancy on everything, but actually adopt a healthy mind and body. You are a perfect example of a strong woman and I wish more would take a leaf out of your book.
@@madmike987655 I loved it all and every challenge and pure joy of motherhood. I think it’s all about enjoying the moments and embracing every shitty part of life and every amazing part! I just laugh when it’s painful and say okay the moment can only get better 😂
Love Stan's easygoing relaxed manner. He explains things calmly and is sure of himself. Knowledgable fella. Applying same principles of successful gym workouts to business and life is true. ty
Muscles form the most nitty - gritty part of the body.They help to circulate the flow of blood,to maintain the consistency and texture of the body and to regulate the various activities within the body.If our muscles are endangered or weak ,the body will be rendered helpless.Besides,muscles add shape to the body and boost our personality.We must also lose unwanted fat to avoid heart problems,obesity and other complications.Thus,there is always an ardent need to tone,shape and strengthen our muscles. I really thank Tom for all his efforts contributing to "Muscle - building".
I love Stan Efferding's down to earth, calm, grounded, common sense approach. He also still looks very healthy and young for a freaking massive 55y old. He talks the talk AND walks the walk. I should take an example and talk more calmly. It's SO much easier and comfortable to listen to!
Fantastic interview. I try to follow as many interviews with Stan that I can. Learned so much form him these last years. Keeps it simplistic and well spoken
I've dieted many times, and proved you can lose weight eating whatever you want... but I always regained the weight and more afterwards. Every. Single. Time. Then I accidently discovered intermittent fasting, and for the first time in my memory, I didn't feel hungry, I felt satiated while eating, and everything tasted great! I haven't gained weight since implementing this in my daily life, and I honestly wish I knew this a long time ago. Although I have recently changed to using erythritol in my drinks instead of sugar, and my drive to eat has dropped massively, after I discovered the fructose signalling mechanism and the weight is falling off with no effort.
After the first 10 minutes, he just seems to be more of an interruption than anything. He just keeps interjecting himself into the speaker's train of thought. I wouldn't be surprised if there were nuggets of wisdom lost because he cut the speaker off midway.
To the *incredible person* that's seeing this, I wish you all the best in life❤ don't over blame yourself, accept things and go forward. Don't let others define what “success” is for you. Get up, learn the skills needed and get after it, all the keys to a happy life is in your hands. Keep pushing.
I was expecting another yelling and tough bodybuilder, but he is different. Down to earth and calm demeanor is what kept me here for the whole video. But took me awhile to get his name. U should post his name on the video. I'm 60 yes old, and he's the calmest and friendly body builder I've ever seen on video. Thank you for all your information
BMI is the biggest con ever! I spent a career as a Royal Marine Commando. I’m 6 foot tall and around 200lbs. When I left the service I booked into my local doctors surgery. I had a full medical check, the nurse told me that I was “ clinically obese” while I stood there with just a pair of shorts on, full of muscle and a six pack!
As someone that used to work in the industry, putting on powerlifting, bodybuilding competitions, managing gym chains, etc. I never met a successful bodybuilder that wasn’t on steroids.
Sports and physique industries are just filled to the brim with PEDs of different kinds. Whether it be for muscle growth, endurance and everything in between. Diet, work ethic and all that stuff does matter. However, you don’t get the best of the best or look like Thor through his fairly crappy expensive workout app. Honesty and transparency needs to be greater. A handful of people in the space and they are doing that, which is great. A lot of the obvious PED users that stay silent is a major problem.
Wow so much information, gonna watch this again! This is by far the best explanation of diet, exercise, growth, fat loss, muscle growth and so much more in one place ! Amazing interview and guest! Thank you so much.
When Stan said “Taking a 10 minute walk after each meal is twice as effective as Metformin for reversing or preventing type two diabetes, just from moving the muscles and getting your your body to do what it's supposed to do” [48:18], do you know what study he was referring to? I would love to show it to one of my diabetic friends.
Stan never uses studies.😂 He literally has no idea what he is talking about. Preventing diabetes comes down to avoiding saturated fat and animal products. The saturated fat damages insulin producing beta cells in your pancreas. Eating to much sugar has no cause in diabetes.
I knew a person somewhat close. Heard their routine and saw their results. Results from a small picture was very pictureesque and they won 1 award. Then i met them a few years after. Obease and un-happy. They got there with a scale and super restricted diet. Almost killed her. That is now what I would have ever wanted and kept me a little chubby, and now I'm a bit fat. One meal a day, high fat. Oh my. You guys and all the others preaching are so awesome thank you so much. I need to try this lifting thing again. I tried lifting and gym life, 5 days a week for a year consistent. I knew nothing but eat protein. But I also ate everything. I gaind no weight and no abdomen definition. I was stronger but wanted some definition. Fat was still there. I was ravenous hungry. I probably ate some fat and eggs. But too many simple carbs and tons' of sweets and soda. I was defeated 20 years ago. now I'm going to try it right. Wish me luck. Thank you for this episode. I'm 10 pounds down in three weeks from one mean a day, high fat fat fat. Love it so full at night.
I lost 135 pounds and I’m now trying to build muscle but I’m grateful cause I was able to kind of even it out and not have a bunch of loose skin which was my worst fear…I feel so much better! I was pre diabetic! Had a pulmonary embolism with massive clots on my heart & lungs and I was able to heal myself
I am extremely happy to find this... This was extremely helpful and educational. I love how Tom asks questions to make them relatable to the viewer but be specific and I loved how those questions were addressed
Love his guests, but sorry, I find Tom incredibly annoying on a multitude of levels. It all feels like an overacted performance with him. But hey, the guests are awesome!
I'm 50. 6'4 156lbs.not much to me. Used to weigh 175 walking around. Ball playing weight was 187lbs. I've ever got into weights to get size. Always to be stronger and have good flexibility and explosiveness. Now I need to get my weight up for my health. This video helped me to get my first steps ordered. Calisthenics for two weeks then to the weight room. I've picked up my calories as well but it is hard for me to eat all of the time. Staying on it tho. I need the testosterone production as well. Getting old sucks... but I am going to get my quality of life lit!!!! Good video. Motivated me more!!!
If you’re not already familiar with it, look into drop sets. At 65, it’s done more for me than any workout I’ve done. I also occasionally mix it up with heavier sets with three minutes of rest (with palmar cooling recently), BFR bands, and bodyweight chins, dips, and push-ups. I’m certain, however, that the drop sets have done more for me than any other routine I’m doing. I’ve been 163 lbs. at 6’3” (144 in college) and am currently 190. Not huge, but definitely more muscular than I’ve ever been.
getting okd sucks, put your faith in Jesus , believers do get an eternal resurrected body that appears to look around 25-30 earth years old , altho there is no time in Heaven, we still eat for pleasure altho bathrooms are non existant in Heaven, the food has no calories but aside from tasting delicious certain foods will give you wisdom or knowledge or strength to handle the Glory of Heaven , there is sport in Heaven and if all those reasons arent enough our pets are there too, see kat kerr revealing Heaven and have a blessed dat🙂✝️🙏🏻
Thanks for providing great content. Some guest suggestions for future videos; Dr. Eric Berg, Thomas Delaur, Dr. Mercola, Dr. John Bergman (all of these guys can be found on TH-cam or a simple Google search)
The most knowledgeable interview regards,health,fitness,nutrition etc,I've ever came across and I've worked in the industry for 19 years! This book is a must for me! Great interview. Thanking you both.👍😊👏👏👏👏👏
I know this is an old comment and you may have already seen it. If you liked this episode then I suggest the episode of Andrew Hubermans podcast with dr Andy galpin on building strength and muscle or the other 5 videos in that series.
There is a difference in a diet and a lifestyle change. Framing something as a diet you are framing it as something that has a start and stopping point. A change in lifestyle frames it as a long term life change.
Very interesting stuff. The macros of 30/30/40 feels pretty right, not too much protein, not too little or too much fat and a reasonable amount of carbs. Feels pretty balance and also not restrictive by any means
@@riche5101 carbs, in retrospective I think 30% protein is too much. 20-25(max)% protein, 30-35% fat and 40-50% carbs is way better for digestion, not feeling heavy etc. Around 35% fat, 20% protein and 45% carbs is optimal for energy levels, digestion etc
@@trembling3674 Sounds pretty right for maintaining. For bulking I would go lower on protein to 20% and up the carbs to 45-50%. For cutting I would go 30% on protein , 35-40% carbs, 30-35% fat
Great interview with lots of information however I would like to offer one important correction: Stan was not incorrect when he stated that High levels of saturated fat causes cardiovascular disease (heart attacks) however the saturated fats that causes CV disease is serum (in the blood) saturated fats NOT dietary saturated fats and furthermore dietary saturated fats does not cause serum saturated fats. To be clear: It is the high serum saturated fats that is dangerous NOT the high saturated fats found in eggs, red meats, etc.
Stan isn't wrong when you think of his advice as a whole. Employ healthy active living and cholesterol will be the least of your problems 👍 keep on grinding 💪
I am 71yrs old 135 lbs 5'5" caucasian and I mostly cut processed and junk food over the past 2 yrs and my blood pressure is 110/60 A1C 5.0 , HDL to Triglyceride ratio 1.4 but my LDL went from 96 to 223 over a 2yr period and just from cutting processed and junk food. So LDL is not a good marker alone for good health. Dr. Nadir Ali and Dr. Paul Mason are well worth listening to about LDL.
Swarznaegger smiles when he lifts. I listen to Goggins and running cadence's to get out of body. BUT... Every morning I listen to your motivation video where you mention Derek Jeeter and Billie Jean King and have that headshot of Venus Williams. Insaaaaaanely motivating. Thanks.
He can be as articulate as he wants. Why is he red as a lobster? Don't buy it when the info comes from a guy with high blood pressure. And also don't trust training advice from an admitted steroid user
@@doodefl262 I agree. He looks like he suffers from high blood pressure. He doesn't look very healthy and be may be strong but he doesn't appear to be in good shape.
@@doodefl262 A bald, drug addict, with grey beard, with varicose veins, who can barely breath while sitting(all signs of severe toxicities and deficiencies) is trying to tell me about health. Cool story bro.
actually, he's missing a lot in nutrition, especially from the latest serious research papers. Check Jason Fung for a more accurate and realistic approach. cheers!
Blood sugar levels are determined by the amount of available energy storage in the body, not by the macronutrient content of the diet. In fact, fasting blood sugar levels do not start to rise until you have not only filled the healthy subcutaneous energy storage, but also filled the unhealthy visceral and ectopic energy storage.
Started jogging with my oldest when he was 4 years old. I hate running...I have no stamina, but I did it for the health benefits.... my 4 year old could keep up easily. But now he's 16 and has been competing in track and cross country for 2 years. He also joined jrotc raiders. He sees me lift, do calisthenics, and workout regularly. I hike 3-5 days a week at a nearby state park and took my younger kids all summer. We even go on the weekends. They worked out with me doing all of my workouts including lifting, but I just gave them 2lb weights and mostly did calisthenics with them. We do push ups, tricep dips, jumping jacks, skips, high knees, gallops, hip flexor isolation, squats, etc... all on our hikes. Make it fun and make it creative and they will keep doing it forever.
I wrestled at 126 my junior year and 138 my senior year at 5'9". 45+ years of on and off resistance training, more on than off, now 62 and 5'10", never a drug, a solid 185 pounds (around 10% BF). It took me around 20 years to put on 40 pounds of muscle naturally. Good nutrition vs bad made me more or less lean.
@@flch95 So I have been calorie counting and reality, a bit of fudging with my 10% number, more like 15%. I have dropped from 188 to 179 and now have a 1/2" pinch alongside my navel (my worst spot) but having now a well-visible ab split. To go to paper skin, I bet I could drop 10 more pounds - reality. I won't do that but I will continue to eat well and see where it takes me. The split I am running is Day 1 all front muscles, Day 2 all back muscles, Day 3 shoulders, and arms. One day one and two, I will toss in lagging body parts where I will train them with the HIT principle. So even though Day 1, I might hit rear delts one set, to absolutely can't move the weight before moving on to quads. Odd but it works for me. Day 1 I will train say, the Zercher squat for like 5-7 sets, mostly increasing weight warm-ups till the last set but will not go to absolute failure as it is a squat. But then will go to failure safely on say a leg press machine. I like to alternate so I will go from Zercher to incline DB press, then back to quads then back to chest. 20-24 sets in right around an hour. Really enjoy my gym time, focus and intensity, no phone, blinders in place.
@@christiandehlinger3731 I do something similar. Push/pull alternating so week 1 is ABA and week 2 is BAB and so on. Slightly less than ideal weekly volume per body part but with life the way it is, it’s the best I can do. I like it because it doesn’t seem as overwhelming as a full body but also not as boring as body part bro splits. The best program is the one you’re going to commit to anyway and at least I look forward to this one.
@@flch95 You are so correct! As you say, my split could be called 1/2 body push-pull. I am getting stronger and clear visible muscle changes. I started back up with consistency in January trying to hit 3 WOs a week so WO 1 or A is repeated by Day 7-8. As you say it works and I am enjoying it. Is there that bit of desire to be 195 at this BF? Sure, we are bodybuilders, but I would have to go on drugs and I won't do that.
I was born in late October. I was the youngest for everything. School, sports, name it. All of my classmates and friends were much older. I would argue that competing against older kids my whole life actually made me stronger than kids who were picked first and got more ice time. Being the youngest and smallest made me a dog! It made my compete level off the charts. The trainer always surpasses its master. I definitely feel as though my late start actually gave me the advantage in the long run because I learned to punch up my entire life. Now it's very hard to intimidate me for anything I do.
Started the gym weighing 170 at 6 foot 4. Now I'm 255 to 260. Simple diet and time/consistency. People want the quick fix and it's just not gonna work.
Great interview - I will say I never have a hard time eating protein (from animals) - I consume around 240g / day of I would say 90% animal and the 10% from whey or yogurt.
The world is gradually moving out of the "I work for my boss" era and people who choose to be entrepreneurs are securing a brighter future for themselves.
Do not trust those who recommend they pure scam. He does a homemade mooring and it works perfectly.you don't have to spend much on materials.if you need help in getting your love ones back or your ex back...
Even though I became obese in my thirties I am overwhelmingly thankful that my parents supported year round sports and that I ran everywhere walked everywhere and rode my bike everywhere while not in competitive sports. I've noticed very distinctly that my cellular memory is still there. My body knows what to do in returning to activity. I cherish that. Thanks for the talk.
Amazing interview, Stan Efferding is a treasure of knowledge. Also, the way you simplify the questions and realize what the audience wants to know is very helpful indeed, however try to interrupt less because it is a bit distracting.
I remember seeing Tom workout in L.A onetime. He's right about the aggression and anger he'd put into his work outs. I was next to him on the bench press. He was shouting and grunting going into a lift. A crazy angry look in his eyes. U would'nt wanna mess wit him. ty 4 video
I'm thinking back on it and watched this a year ago. i think it played a good part in my weight loss journey. To eat all the protein you want and it's a good weightloss strategy. i didn't pay was much attention as i should. Then found greg doucette whos a big advocate for it too. My main problem was i was metabolically broken and was not a fat burner. Or rather i was broken from eating the wrong things for so long it took a lot to get over that chemistry problem. Chronic high insulin. No fasting ever in my life before. Or was it just the extra fat jamming me up. Not sure. Walk lots, eat high protein, animal fats and no seed oils. Love you tom for brining on the smart guests.
And then there’s me. Turkey breast, pork (loin or butt), lamb, salmon, mackerel, sardines. Sometimes beef (usually steak). Preferably grass fed but not always. Some chicken. Whole farm fresh eggs, nuts (ground up nuts are always taken with my fat soluble supplements). Generous amounts of arugula, broccoli, sprouts, onions, mushrooms and beets. And other greens. A variety of berries. Avocados, radishes (and other root vegetables). Quinoa, lentils, sweet potatoes, squash. I limit my fruits, white potatoes (and other starchy options). Limited bread and pastas. Very little grains. No sodas, very little candy, cookies, high sugar and simple carbohydrate type foods. Orange, grapefruit juices in moderation. Olive, macadamia and avocado oils for cooking. Goat cheeses and other cheeses. Real butter or ghee (from grass fed sources) Dark chocolate. Plenty of water starting first thing in the morning. And with water soluble vitamins. Flax milk, whole goat milk, oat milk. Yerba Mate, various teas. Plain yogurt. Organic options when possible or feasible. I usually eat twice a day. Sometimes once a day. And occasionally three times or, skip a day no eating. Prolonged fasting (6-8 days) 3 times a year. Whole, unprocessed foods as much as possible, what doesn’t come out of a box or bag. Cardio and weight training around every four days. Walking associated with the work I do. Breathing and postural type exercises.
As an RPSGT registered sleep technologist, I can vouch for the content on sleep apnea. Its a hidden killer that is the real cause of most heart attacks via long term blood pressure issues. The apneas cause a spike in blood pressure every time you have one (which can be hundreds in a night, ). Eventually that causes high blood pressure which over time thickens the walls of you heart. The entire time that is going on your leptin and gerilyn among other hormones are thrown off causing you to crave salt and sugar, and promoting fat storage. So you get fatter and your apnea gets worse as you gain weight. You have to break the cycle. I haven't even mentioned emotional strain of lack of sleep, or reaction time and brain acuity. Pay attention to your sleep!
Coach elementary basketball in the early to mid-90s and I couldn't believe the difference in what at that time were fall babies as compared to the ones that were born the next summer and graduated high school at 17 like myself. Made a lot of sense though to me considering these children had only been on Earth less than 150 months so anyone having an advantage had a big advantage and I witnessed the same thing a child as I was a 17-year-old high school graduate and always a late bloomer physically
Though I do disagree a little bit here with Stan. I just think it's a much bigger edge all the way to graduation not so much cuz of the coaches I just think they stay further ahead of them
It was funny to watch Stan hold back his laugh when Tom said he can put on alot of muscle or gains in 3 weeks. I think Tom needs to stop saying he "lifts"...he should say he exercises or works with weights. LOL
Hello I have OCD and PTSD I never got it diagnose by a Doctor my sister has both of them and she tells me all the time get it checked out after looking at this I think I will as a man we do not like going to a Doctor at all.Thank you for the Exercise pointers God Bless.
I had my DNA tested and learned I am not overly sensitive to carbs, but I am sensitive to sugar. The presence of a certain gene also means intermittent fasting is not necessarily optimal for me because my metabolic response to starvation is to plunge. It’s nice to have some answers and not have to guess so much!
At 63 now i hit each body part 2 times every 9-11 days... i always try to mix things up doing different movements,reps and intensity... i may over due the intensity though... i have always pushed myself hard and have over trained a lot over the past 50 years..
What was your biggest takeaway from Stan?
That he has experience in all of his recommendations.
His advice was easy to understand.
Sprint more. Get the Knees Over Toes guy on here please!
That he’s another diet snake oil salesman. A whole food plant based diet is the best diet for everyone (more calories and carbs if you’re going for muscle building potential). Follow Nimai Delgado, Torre Washington, Patrick Baboumian, and other plant based body builders making waves, and watch Game Changers.
That you really trying to get swole
I wish you had challenged him more regarding his statements about how carbs and fat intake doesn't matter for weight loss. The reason people regain weight on a high-carb, calorie restricted diet is related to inflammation and insulin resistance, which isn't addressed without lowering carb intake. Go back to your interview(s) with Jason Fung. Also, his statements about how weight loss alone will resolve fatty liver and other metabolic conditions is just false.
Eat less- around 80% of your appetite
Eat less frequently- Intermittent fasting
Workout 250 minutes a week
Sleep sound- average hours 8
Take 30 minutes sunlight each day
Have omega 3
Stay away from blue light/ screens after 9 pm
Intake of Less than 100 grams of processed/ refined sugar in a week
Go for a walk in nature once in a while
Having some hobbies is a bonus
No or less alcohol consumption ( once a week)
This is my summary after watching hundreds of videos on TH-cam from top people in health and nutritional industry.
Good program
This was nice. Thank you. :)
Thank u
Don’t forget “Grounding” or earthing
Pretty good. Few more: Change blue light to no light (even blue light keeps you awake), but blue light is a slight improvement over white light. Build social connections. Find a purpose in life.
His knowledge and ability to communicate what he has learned is very impressive. I suffered a ruptured appendix when I was five years old, and I’ve had a total of 11 abdominal surgeries over the course of my life . In spite of the childhood illness, and recurrent health issues, I have always pushed myself to exercise and stayed active ! I’m 69 have a bad shoulder, and arthritis, but I’m still exercising! Keep moving , and eat sensibly!
I can listen to this guy for a long time, he's so good at explaining things so everyone can understand, well articulated, calm, knowledgeable. This was great!!! Thanks!
Did he put the PEDs he was taking when talking about building muscle?
@Crescent Chamber Artists believe what you will. This guy isn’t selling anything, just dropping knowledge
Stan is the man for sure. I so respect this guy. He's amazing.
Look at my FAKE STEROID muscles and pretend with me that I lifted weights for these and let me STEAL your money with my BOGUS supplements and don't tell the cops on me for BREAKING the LAW!
Stay natural buddy!
I’m still struck by how useful the guide is at the bottom of the screen indicating topics. Every long form TH-camr should do it.
Those time stamps are invaluable
It's the Impact Theory trademark timestamps! So helpful!
You should check out Andrew Huberman too...Good vids
That's the shit!!
Yep, I love it!
I am an elder bodybuilder that Joe Wieder wanted to turn pro when I was In my early 60s to become a phenom. I worked in medicine and was a trained researcher, so after the death of my husband, the Northridge Earthquake and other stressors I decided to address my 100 lb weight gain. I met an amazing trainer who has ideas similar to Stan. I read scientic BB mag articles and took copious notes. Then with the demise of the mags, I found the digital formats fell seriously short intellectually.
But then I found this video on Stan. He has pulled me back out of the guru b.s. into my roots, where I was so successful. I feel excited again at a fit, but not ideally athletic 75 y.o. This video is pure gold. I just hope the younger people will listen, as that my have been actually schooled to have shorter attention spans. But overcome this by stopping and replaying...and take those notes. I have pages just for this one vid. Parents need to check this out also. It is like a master class. The questions were on point too...just what I would have asked. In short, I was depressed with the lack of knowledge seeking and sharing in our sport, but this brings my faith back. I will be getting the book and gifting it too. I was having a days, recently, dealing with my Mom's docs who are saying the opoosite of whet Stan says here (being eugenecists), but now I feel invigorated for the fight with ignorant doctors. Never thought I would see this intentional stupidity in medicine after working 34 yrs in academic medicine with the best (who understandably got the helll out with the onset of today's craziness). Thanks for an elightening journey. Keep up the good work...sharing the truth! Best video I have seen in ages!
Beef, eggs, salmon, sardin, vegies.
Strength is not in correlated with size of muscle.
You can get the same result with 5 heavy reps, 10 average reps, or 20 light reps. 5 or 20 make more fatigue. Better to do 8-15 reps.
Very important: 2 second negative has not a major difference with 10 second negative, but it has to be under control (slow enough)
Split doesn't seem to be so important.
3 walking session, 3 lifting session
There is a major diff in negative coz of fatique. They even claim there's a diff in hypertrophy aswell, hence the time under tension type of training
for hypertrophy.... not strength
Yeah its primarily for hypertroph, but TUT is very good for breaking plateaus. So it's very good for strength aswell, coz you will be able to break plateau and lift heavier (get stronger)
@@Jazzaaaa91 I made my best progress by training once a week with Ellington Dardens 30-30-30 time under tension. It's a form of high-intensity training. 30 seconds down on the negative 30 seconds up on the positive another 30 seconds down on the negative. It hammers the deep muscle fibers. In three or four weeks I was stacking 45-pound plates on the leg press. I could not believe how my strength increased and corresponding muscle development. One movement for each body part. It worked because I gave my body time to recover. Some people can do it twice a week. Experiment and find what works best for you.
@@craigleibbrand7761 30-30-30? Godamit how do u even work 1 set min and a half? I currently have the worst Dom's ever from Tut and I'm working 4s down and 2s up 6-10rrps. Im not kidding at 40-50% of my 1RM I almost shit my pants. Though I had 3 weeks pause coz I was sick. I was expecting Dom's in my 1st week but godamn. 4th day and I'm literally glued to my bed. I mean yeah I'm weak coz I caught cold, but still man. Imagine going 1-2 reps of 100kg on benchpress 3 weeks ago to almost dying with 40kgs yesterday. Im doing it to mix it up after year and a half of consistent training. But godamit the pain is real. Any knowledge of why is it so hard and painfull? I mean y I was sick but c'mon man 40kg on bench I could lift that effortlessly 16 year ago when I was 14.
I have more respect for no man on earth than Stan Efferding. This guy is as real as it gets. He knows his business and lives it to the hilt. He has the resume' to back what he says. He lives what he speaks. He is a walking billboard for health and fitness. I've been lifting for over 45 years, so when Stan talks, I listen. This is one of the most important videos on the internet. The information here is absolutely brilliant and life-changing. Thank you.
Also note that oxidized cholesterol is the only bad cholesterol as has been noted by people like Doctors James and Hannah Yoseph.
You are totally wrong. Stan is a drug addict and he talks for money, not to help anyone. He needs to stop talking and go to rehab. This is actually the saddest thing I have seen all month. It makes me lose trust in this channel.
Stan does look like he has really high blood pressure.
As a 62 year old man that was a fat kid and not athletic I can tell you that martial arts specifically Kung Fu has helped immensely with coordination. You can develop coordination at an older age. I started at 48. Not to fight but to become graceful. My two cents.
Well done sir, stay graceful
Good for you sir! It’s never too late!!
Yes, I too had an issue with his statement about coordination.
I learnt to rollerskate in my 30's, despite being an utter Bambi!
And what about adults that start dance classes- their balance and coordination doesn't improve?? 🤔
We must remember that not ONE person has ALL the answers when it comes to health and fitness
@@piperuk5366 I think he wasn't saying you can't improve, but more so that your best time frame to gain long term balance and coordination is around puberty.
If you can hold a horse stance for 2 or 3 minutes you're fit!
48 minute mark this is so essential for blood sugar control. I've been a type 1 diabetic for 25 + years. My a1c is 4.9 and only take one injection of13/14 units long acting insulin daily. People can't understand how I do it.... low impact walking post meals is my secret. It's like magic.
@Lazarus Ominous there is a goldilocks time. Long enough to at least start a little digestion... getting blood flow to stomach but not soooo long the the sugar spikes. I would say 20-30 minutes post meal is perfect.
Martial Arts & Yoga is amazing at any age. I've been at it since I was 4, and I'm nearly 50 now. In the military, I was told I had a PT record at Shepard Air Force base (way back in the 90's lol) I was able to run 4 miles in 24:26 in 107 degree humid Texas heat. I even passed people running backwards through a lot of it, having fun. Martial-Arts takes your body's heart rate, flexibility, speed, strength, and adaptation to the red-line. Learning to breathe through yoga puts it all together.
There is something authentic, serene, and genuine listening to this guy. Sounds like a quality individual!
He talks nicely but he didn't say anything smart, this was more of the same.
@@Morecolour ahh yes, those people always searching for the magic bullet of wisdom.. that does not include them doing actual work.
He is very genuine and loves to see people succeed. He is the type of person you want in your circle of friends and advisors. I love conversations with Stan. I always learn something.
Okay I love that he says how much it matters in your childhood. I did so many different sports as a child even though I was 32 pounds at 6 years old from the Ukrainian orphanage.
I walked 10 miles in my first month pregnancy then ran, swam, and surfed until 6 months then continued swimming until the day before birth
Then I carried my baby for over a year with no stroller and my son out ran 5 year olds at the age of 2
And now he is 4 years old, and runs at the beach with me every morning!
I love being active and I see how strong he is mentally and bodily and can out run some 6 year olds currently and stays strong while running without loosing momentum.
I hope this talk helps out a lot of parents, because childhood is so important for their bodies and mind🥰
What an amazing Mum, a strong woman that has massive building blocks in place for your son. Obviously a proud Mum too. 👏👏👏🙋♀️
I love it when I see women who bear children not complain and blame pregnancy on everything, but actually adopt a healthy mind and body. You are a perfect example of a strong woman and I wish more would take a leaf out of your book.
@@madmike987655 I loved it all and every challenge and pure joy of motherhood. I think it’s all about enjoying the moments and embracing every shitty part of life and every amazing part!
I just laugh when it’s painful and say okay the moment can only get better 😂
You are so admirable! All you efforts will be returned with interest.
Sending you a big hug, and salute! 🤗
Eukranians are built diffrerent
Love Stan's easygoing relaxed manner. He explains things calmly and is sure of himself. Knowledgable fella. Applying same principles of successful gym workouts to business and life is true. ty
Muscles form the most nitty - gritty part of the body.They help to circulate the flow of blood,to maintain the consistency and texture of the body and to regulate the various activities within the body.If our muscles are endangered or weak ,the body will be rendered helpless.Besides,muscles add shape to the body and boost our personality.We must also lose unwanted fat to avoid heart problems,obesity and other complications.Thus,there is always an ardent need to tone,shape and strengthen our muscles.
I really thank Tom for all his efforts contributing to "Muscle - building".
You could listen to a fitness influencer” for years, or listen to Stan for 20 mins. 💪💪 Awesome interview!!
I love Stan Efferding's down to earth, calm, grounded, common sense approach. He also still looks very healthy and young for a freaking massive 55y old. He talks the talk AND walks the walk. I should take an example and talk more calmly. It's SO much easier and comfortable to listen to!
Fantastic interview. I try to follow as many interviews with Stan that I can. Learned so much form him these last years.
Keeps it simplistic and well spoken
This 2022 get yourself in the best shape possible
You owe it to yourself
Better then double jabbed w a booster
@@richybaldino4679 talk about it!
I LOVED this interview with Stan Efferding, he's such a down to earth type guy. Love him!!!!
Stay off steroids people . Even trt
I've dieted many times, and proved you can lose weight eating whatever you want... but I always regained the weight and more afterwards. Every. Single. Time. Then I accidently discovered intermittent fasting, and for the first time in my memory, I didn't feel hungry, I felt satiated while eating, and everything tasted great! I haven't gained weight since implementing this in my daily life, and I honestly wish I knew this a long time ago. Although I have recently changed to using erythritol in my drinks instead of sugar, and my drive to eat has dropped massively, after I discovered the fructose signalling mechanism and the weight is falling off with no effort.
Toms ability to ask great questions as well as walk the person through simplifying their answers makes him a world class interviewer
He kind of seems more snarky now. I always enjoyed his interviews but he is demeanor has changed
@@jsweetness5 Dude is a douche, Stan is the man tho
Sooo valuable, yes - and rare
Far too many interruptions. I want to hear the guest speak and finish conveying his thoughts.
After the first 10 minutes, he just seems to be more of an interruption than anything. He just keeps interjecting himself into the speaker's train of thought. I wouldn't be surprised if there were nuggets of wisdom lost because he cut the speaker off midway.
To the *incredible person* that's seeing this, I wish you all the best in life❤ don't over blame yourself, accept things and go forward. Don't let others define what “success” is for you. Get up, learn the skills needed and get after it, all the keys to a happy life is in your hands. Keep pushing.
...Stans Macronutrient 30/30/40 - seems very intuitive .. and the 10min walk after each meal is LEGENDARY :)
I was expecting another yelling and tough bodybuilder, but he is different. Down to earth and calm demeanor is what kept me here for the whole video. But took me awhile to get his name. U should post his name on the video. I'm 60 yes old, and he's the calmest and friendly body builder I've ever seen on video. Thank you for all your information
BMI is the biggest con ever! I spent a career as a Royal Marine Commando. I’m 6 foot tall and around 200lbs. When I left the service I booked into my local doctors surgery. I had a full medical check, the nurse told me that I was “ clinically obese” while I stood there with just a pair of shorts on, full of muscle and a six pack!
Stan is nothing short of a great inspiration for this generation.
Thanks for this wonderful interview 💛💛💛
What a comforting voice this man possesses 😊
man i love stan efferding, such a great lifter. I remember seeing videos of him back in 2013, inspired me to get into lifting.
He is a very intelligent man and understands the body more than most doctors.
EAT POTATOES
As someone that used to work in the industry, putting on powerlifting, bodybuilding competitions, managing gym chains, etc. I never met a successful bodybuilder that wasn’t on steroids.
Please describe a successful bodybuilder..
Sports and physique industries are just filled to the brim with PEDs of different kinds. Whether it be for muscle growth, endurance and everything in between.
Diet, work ethic and all that stuff does matter. However, you don’t get the best of the best or look like Thor through his fairly crappy expensive workout app.
Honesty and transparency needs to be greater. A handful of people in the space and they are doing that, which is great. A lot of the obvious PED users that stay silent is a major problem.
And?
No shit?
And what makes you think he’s not using??
Wow so much information, gonna watch this again! This is by far the best explanation of diet, exercise, growth, fat loss, muscle growth and so much more in one place ! Amazing interview and guest! Thank you so much.
When Stan said “Taking a 10 minute walk after each meal is twice as effective as Metformin for reversing or preventing type two diabetes, just from moving the muscles and getting your your body to do what it's supposed to do” [48:18], do you know what study he was referring to? I would love to show it to one of my diabetic friends.
Stan never uses studies.😂 He literally has no idea what he is talking about. Preventing diabetes comes down to avoiding saturated fat and animal products. The saturated fat damages insulin producing beta cells in your pancreas. Eating to much sugar has no cause in diabetes.
@@coltonparsons4852 what study are you referring to?
I know it's an hour long podcast, but it felt like a 20 minutes one. God damn Stan is knowledgeable, humble and non dogmatic.
I knew a person somewhat close. Heard their routine and saw their results. Results from a small picture was very pictureesque and they won 1 award. Then i met them a few years after. Obease and un-happy. They got there with a scale and super restricted diet. Almost killed her. That is now what I would have ever wanted and kept me a little chubby, and now I'm a bit fat. One meal a day, high fat. Oh my. You guys and all the others preaching are so awesome thank you so much. I need to try this lifting thing again.
I tried lifting and gym life, 5 days a week for a year consistent. I knew nothing but eat protein. But I also ate everything. I gaind no weight and no abdomen definition. I was stronger but wanted some definition. Fat was still there. I was ravenous hungry. I probably ate some fat and eggs. But too many simple carbs and tons' of sweets and soda. I was defeated 20 years ago. now I'm going to try it right. Wish me luck. Thank you for this episode. I'm 10 pounds down in three weeks from one mean a day, high fat fat fat. Love it so full at night.
I lost 135 pounds and I’m now trying to build muscle but I’m grateful cause I was able to kind of even it out and not have a bunch of loose skin which was my worst fear…I feel so much better! I was pre diabetic! Had a pulmonary embolism with massive clots on my heart & lungs and I was able to heal myself
Dr. Eric berg has a video on loose/flabbi skin here on youtube. I havent seen it yet. Been watching his nutritional vids and they have been excellent.
What's your strategy for building muscles back, any type of foods? Lost some weight/muscle too, and trying to build it back.
Congratulations!
@@nanapoku5259 you need protein to build muscle. Eggs, meat etc . You cant have muscle without consuming protein.
@@JCX-9 I do eat protein, but I guess I've not been eating enough.
I am extremely happy to find this... This was extremely helpful and educational. I love how Tom asks questions to make them relatable to the viewer but be specific and I loved how those questions were addressed
Tom, when you ask a question, you don't have to offer up potential answers to the guest. Just let them answer mate
Yeah Tom. Love you and your channel, but learn when to shut up and when not to shut up.
Tom would have a better show if he would talk a lot less, while listening more.
It's narcissism.
Right! How many people have said this. Despite those ears, the man no listen. Still love him and the show tho.
Love his guests, but sorry, I find Tom incredibly annoying on a multitude of levels. It all feels like an overacted performance with him. But hey, the guests are awesome!
23:00 - Great question Tom. This is evident of someone that's both a) thinking and b) has a solid knowledge of nutrition.
Been following Stan and his wife for years. Great people with a wealth of knowledge. This was a great interview.
I'm 50. 6'4 156lbs.not much to me. Used to weigh 175 walking around. Ball playing weight was 187lbs. I've ever got into weights to get size. Always to be stronger and have good flexibility and explosiveness. Now I need to get my weight up for my health. This video helped me to get my first steps ordered. Calisthenics for two weeks then to the weight room. I've picked up my calories as well but it is hard for me to eat all of the time. Staying on it tho. I need the testosterone production as well. Getting old sucks... but I am going to get my quality of life lit!!!! Good video. Motivated me more!!!
If you’re not already familiar with it, look into drop sets. At 65, it’s done more for me than any workout I’ve done. I also occasionally mix it up with heavier sets with three minutes of rest (with palmar cooling recently), BFR bands, and bodyweight chins, dips, and push-ups. I’m certain, however, that the drop sets have done more for me than any other routine I’m doing. I’ve been 163 lbs. at 6’3” (144 in college) and am currently 190. Not huge, but definitely more muscular than I’ve ever been.
getting okd sucks, put your faith in Jesus , believers do get an eternal resurrected body that appears to look around 25-30 earth years old , altho there is no time in Heaven, we still eat for pleasure altho bathrooms are non existant in Heaven, the food has no calories but aside from tasting delicious certain foods will give you wisdom or knowledge or strength to handle the Glory of Heaven , there is sport in Heaven and if all those reasons arent enough our pets are there too, see kat kerr revealing Heaven and have a blessed dat🙂✝️🙏🏻
Thyroid?
Thanks for providing great content. Some guest suggestions for future videos; Dr. Eric Berg, Thomas Delaur, Dr. Mercola, Dr. John Bergman (all of these guys can be found on TH-cam or a simple Google search)
Stan is so awesome. He’s full of superb knowledge and advice. Great attitude. Thanks, Tom.
Stan knows his stuff, he is always great to listen to.
The most knowledgeable interview regards,health,fitness,nutrition etc,I've ever came across and I've worked in the industry for 19 years! This book is a must for me! Great interview. Thanking you both.👍😊👏👏👏👏👏
I know this is an old comment and you may have already seen it. If you liked this episode then I suggest the episode of Andrew Hubermans podcast with dr Andy galpin on building strength and muscle or the other 5 videos in that series.
There is a difference in a diet and a lifestyle change. Framing something as a diet you are framing it as something that has a start and stopping point. A change in lifestyle frames it as a long term life change.
Sense of urgency is what I absolutely need to be motivated.
An episode where Tom could get Stan Efferding and Gabrielle Lyon on the same table and just let this two speak among themselves would be pure gold
🔥 agreed
Both fake
This man is knows what he is taking about. Very educational. Thank you!
Very interesting stuff.
The macros of 30/30/40 feels pretty right, not too much protein, not too little or too much fat and a reasonable amount of carbs. Feels pretty balance and also not restrictive by any means
which macro is 40?
@@riche5101 carbs, in retrospective I think 30% protein is too much. 20-25(max)% protein, 30-35% fat and 40-50% carbs is way better for digestion, not feeling heavy etc. Around 35% fat, 20% protein and 45% carbs is optimal for energy levels, digestion etc
@@trembling3674 Sounds pretty right for maintaining. For bulking I would go lower on protein to 20% and up the carbs to 45-50%. For cutting I would go 30% on protein , 35-40% carbs, 30-35% fat
Absolutely amazing interview and information explained in a completely understandable way.
Thank You!
Great interview with lots of information however I would like to offer one important correction: Stan was not incorrect when he stated that High levels of saturated fat causes cardiovascular disease (heart attacks) however the saturated fats that causes CV disease is serum (in the blood) saturated fats NOT dietary saturated fats and furthermore dietary saturated fats does not cause serum saturated fats. To be clear: It is the high serum saturated fats that is dangerous NOT the high saturated fats found in eggs, red meats, etc.
What causes high serum in blood ?
@@ayeshavlogsfun it's cholesterol. That can be controlled by exercise, active living and building muscle. Diet as well, of course.
Stan isn't wrong when you think of his advice as a whole. Employ healthy active living and cholesterol will be the least of your problems 👍 keep on grinding 💪
Love Stan, super smart guy. Wish this was a longer interview!
Biggest takeaway from Stan ... Simple but powerful foundation in the statement "protein, calories, resistance training".
I am 71yrs old 135 lbs 5'5" caucasian and I mostly cut processed and junk food over the past 2 yrs and my blood pressure is 110/60 A1C 5.0 , HDL to Triglyceride ratio 1.4 but my LDL went from 96 to 223 over a 2yr period and just from cutting processed and junk food. So LDL is not a good marker alone for good health. Dr. Nadir Ali and Dr. Paul Mason are well worth listening to about LDL.
and I am a male.
STANN EFFARDING!!!!
Swarznaegger smiles when he lifts. I listen to Goggins and running cadence's to get out of body. BUT... Every morning I listen to your motivation video where you mention Derek Jeeter and Billie Jean King and have that headshot of Venus Williams. Insaaaaaanely motivating. Thanks.
Finally a guy that actually knows what he is taking about when it comes to nutrition 🙌
Yes
He can be as articulate as he wants. Why is he red as a lobster? Don't buy it when the info comes from a guy with high blood pressure. And also don't trust training advice from an admitted steroid user
@@doodefl262 I agree. He looks like he suffers from high blood pressure. He doesn't look very healthy and be may be strong but he doesn't appear to be in good shape.
@@doodefl262 A bald, drug addict, with grey beard, with varicose veins, who can barely breath while sitting(all signs of severe toxicities and deficiencies) is trying to tell me about health. Cool story bro.
actually, he's missing a lot in nutrition, especially from the latest serious research papers. Check Jason Fung for a more accurate and realistic approach. cheers!
Blood sugar levels are determined by the amount of available energy storage in the body, not by the macronutrient content of the diet. In fact, fasting blood sugar levels do not start to rise until you have not only filled the healthy subcutaneous energy storage, but also filled the unhealthy visceral and ectopic energy storage.
Started jogging with my oldest when he was 4 years old. I hate running...I have no stamina, but I did it for the health benefits.... my 4 year old could keep up easily. But now he's 16 and has been competing in track and cross country for 2 years. He also joined jrotc raiders. He sees me lift, do calisthenics, and workout regularly. I hike 3-5 days a week at a nearby state park and took my younger kids all summer. We even go on the weekends. They worked out with me doing all of my workouts including lifting, but I just gave them 2lb weights and mostly did calisthenics with them. We do push ups, tricep dips, jumping jacks, skips, high knees, gallops, hip flexor isolation, squats, etc... all on our hikes. Make it fun and make it creative and they will keep doing it forever.
THIS GUY TALKS BETTER AND SMARTER THAN ANY DRs IVE EVER HEARD
“❤️The greatest glory in living lies not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall. ✈️✈️✈️
I wrestled at 126 my junior year and 138 my senior year at 5'9". 45+ years of on and off resistance training, more on than off, now 62 and 5'10", never a drug, a solid 185 pounds (around 10% BF). It took me around 20 years to put on 40 pounds of muscle naturally. Good nutrition vs bad made me more or less lean.
I think 98% of the male population would take 185 at 62 lol.
@@flch95 So I have been calorie counting and reality, a bit of fudging with my 10% number, more like 15%. I have dropped from 188 to 179 and now have a 1/2" pinch alongside my navel (my worst spot) but having now a well-visible ab split. To go to paper skin, I bet I could drop 10 more pounds - reality. I won't do that but I will continue to eat well and see where it takes me. The split I am running is Day 1 all front muscles, Day 2 all back muscles, Day 3 shoulders, and arms. One day one and two, I will toss in lagging body parts where I will train them with the HIT principle. So even though Day 1, I might hit rear delts one set, to absolutely can't move the weight before moving on to quads. Odd but it works for me. Day 1 I will train say, the Zercher squat for like 5-7 sets, mostly increasing weight warm-ups till the last set but will not go to absolute failure as it is a squat. But then will go to failure safely on say a leg press machine. I like to alternate so I will go from Zercher to incline DB press, then back to quads then back to chest. 20-24 sets in right around an hour. Really enjoy my gym time, focus and intensity, no phone, blinders in place.
@@christiandehlinger3731 I do something similar. Push/pull alternating so week 1 is ABA and week 2 is BAB and so on. Slightly less than ideal weekly volume per body part but with life the way it is, it’s the best I can do. I like it because it doesn’t seem as overwhelming as a full body but also not as boring as body part bro splits. The best program is the one you’re going to commit to anyway and at least I look forward to this one.
@@flch95 You are so correct! As you say, my split could be called 1/2 body push-pull. I am getting stronger and clear visible muscle changes. I started back up with consistency in January trying to hit 3 WOs a week so WO 1 or A is repeated by Day 7-8. As you say it works and I am enjoying it.
Is there that bit of desire to be 195 at this BF? Sure, we are bodybuilders, but I would have to go on drugs and I won't do that.
Consistency is key 🔑 in all training journeys. Love this guys knowledge.
I was born in late October. I was the youngest for everything. School, sports, name it. All of my classmates and friends were much older. I would argue that competing against older kids my whole life actually made me stronger than kids who were picked first and got more ice time. Being the youngest and smallest made me a dog! It made my compete level off the charts. The trainer always surpasses its master. I definitely feel as though my late start actually gave me the advantage in the long run because I learned to punch up my entire life. Now it's very hard to intimidate me for anything I do.
Started the gym weighing 170 at 6 foot 4. Now I'm 255 to 260. Simple diet and time/consistency. People want the quick fix and it's just not gonna work.
sounds very lean and natural. i can do 260 in a year even without the gym.
Excellent Guest, interview, Intel- Thanks!
Great interview - I will say I never have a hard time eating protein (from animals) - I consume around 240g / day of I would say 90% animal and the 10% from whey or yogurt.
Great video Thomas very interesting and so very well explained need to watch and take notes 🙏👏👏
The world is gradually moving out of the "I work for my boss" era and people who choose to be entrepreneurs are securing a brighter future for themselves.
@Bjarke la Cour Charles Soward is great but Mr. Sugiuc Poponaru is probably the best, most would agree.
Good luck with that. This year the World Economic Forum meets at the Davos Agenda.
th-cam.com/video/JZwJpieVym4/w-d-xo.html
^ LOL just a bunch of bots talking to each other
As a 42 year old woman who started working out seriously and eating better, with asperger’s and adhd, this resonates. Thank you 🥲
Do not trust those who recommend they pure scam. He does a homemade mooring and it works perfectly.you don't have to spend much on materials.if you need help in getting your love ones back or your ex back...
±2348050772031⏯⏯??????????????
You should check all of his videos. He has life changing advice from experience and research.
What an amazing show!!! Thanks for the 101 and please keep up the amazing content 👌🏼💪🏼🙏🏼
Even though I became obese in my thirties I am overwhelmingly thankful that my parents supported year round sports and that I ran everywhere walked everywhere and rode my bike everywhere while not in competitive sports. I've noticed very distinctly that my cellular memory is still there. My body knows what to do in returning to activity. I cherish that. Thanks for the talk.
What up Herman!!
GOOD TO SEE STAN HERE!!!!!! HES GIVEN ME ALOT OF INFO IN MY CAREER AND TRAINING!!!
Amazing interview, Stan Efferding is a treasure of knowledge. Also, the way you simplify the questions and realize what the audience wants to know is very helpful indeed, however try to interrupt less because it is a bit distracting.
Very informative and easy to understand. Thank you
I remember seeing Tom workout in L.A onetime. He's right about the aggression and anger he'd put into his work outs. I was next to him on the bench press. He was shouting and grunting going into a lift. A crazy angry look in his eyes. U would'nt wanna mess wit him. ty 4 video
I would have told him to shut the F up. if he was shouting.
Stop it. 😂
This was an incredible interview great questions by Tom. Very straight forward and informative.
“Develop success from failures. Discouragement and failure are two of the surest stepping stones to success.” -Cruz Antwi
I'm thinking back on it and watched this a year ago. i think it played a good part in my weight loss journey. To eat all the protein you want and it's a good weightloss strategy. i didn't pay was much attention as i should. Then found greg doucette whos a big advocate for it too. My main problem was i was metabolically broken and was not a fat burner. Or rather i was broken from eating the wrong things for so long it took a lot to get over that chemistry problem. Chronic high insulin. No fasting ever in my life before. Or was it just the extra fat jamming me up. Not sure. Walk lots, eat high protein, animal fats and no seed oils. Love you tom for brining on the smart guests.
I learn every time Stan does an interview. Walking fitness encyclopedia
Two of the greatest in their particular fields. Beasts!!! Great content.
And then there’s me.
Turkey breast, pork (loin or butt), lamb, salmon, mackerel, sardines. Sometimes beef (usually steak). Preferably grass fed but not always. Some chicken.
Whole farm fresh eggs, nuts (ground up nuts are always taken with my fat soluble supplements).
Generous amounts of arugula, broccoli, sprouts, onions, mushrooms and beets. And other greens. A variety of berries. Avocados, radishes (and other root vegetables).
Quinoa, lentils, sweet potatoes, squash.
I limit my fruits, white potatoes (and other starchy options). Limited bread and pastas. Very little grains. No sodas, very little candy, cookies, high sugar and simple carbohydrate type foods. Orange, grapefruit juices in moderation.
Olive, macadamia and avocado oils for cooking. Goat cheeses and other cheeses. Real butter or ghee (from grass fed sources) Dark chocolate.
Plenty of water starting first thing in the morning. And with water soluble vitamins. Flax milk, whole goat milk, oat milk. Yerba Mate, various teas. Plain yogurt.
Organic options when possible or feasible.
I usually eat twice a day. Sometimes once a day. And occasionally three times or, skip a day no eating. Prolonged fasting (6-8 days) 3 times a year.
Whole, unprocessed foods as much as possible, what doesn’t come out of a box or bag.
Cardio and weight training around every four days. Walking associated with the work I do. Breathing and postural type exercises.
Sounds about right. :)
As an RPSGT registered sleep technologist, I can vouch for the content on sleep apnea. Its a hidden killer that is the real cause of most heart attacks via long term blood pressure issues. The apneas cause a spike in blood pressure every time you have one (which can be hundreds in a night, ). Eventually that causes high blood pressure which over time thickens the walls of you heart. The entire time that is going on your leptin and gerilyn among other hormones are thrown off causing you to crave salt and sugar, and promoting fat storage. So you get fatter and your apnea gets worse as you gain weight. You have to break the cycle. I haven't even mentioned emotional strain of lack of sleep, or reaction time and brain acuity. Pay attention to your sleep!
What can I do to improve my husband's sleep? I believe he has sleep apnea but fails to mention to his dr
Volume level needs to be higher since your guest is so soft spoken. Tony Robbins ad comes on and blew out my eardrums. 😅
Great show though! 👍🏼
Thanks sefo 👍
What a great pass in knowledge!! Great video!! I'm subscribed!!
The hockey example he used about 12 minutes in is explained in detail in Malcolm Gladwell's book "Outliers." It's a fascinating phenomenon.
Yeah and I’m the middle of the great example it cuts to an ad and doesn’t expound upon that any longer
Coach elementary basketball in the early to mid-90s and I couldn't believe the difference in what at that time were fall babies as compared to the ones that were born the next summer and graduated high school at 17 like myself. Made a lot of sense though to me considering these children had only been on Earth less than 150 months so anyone having an advantage had a big advantage and I witnessed the same thing a child as I was a 17-year-old high school graduate and always a late bloomer physically
Though I do disagree a little bit here with Stan. I just think it's a much bigger edge all the way to graduation not so much cuz of the coaches I just think they stay further ahead of them
My must haves: Steel Cut Oats, sweet potato, dark and purple greens, garlic, onions, peppers, broccoli, beets, asparagus, aged white cheddar, mozzarella, goat cheese, whole milk, salmon, grass fed beef, bison, burger, walnuts, almonds, 100% cacao, green tea, coffee, ghee, olive oil, ACV, sea salt, banana, berries, mango.
It was funny to watch Stan hold back his laugh when Tom said he can put on alot of muscle or gains in 3 weeks.
I think Tom needs to stop saying he "lifts"...he should say he exercises or works with weights. LOL
I thought this as well, yes when I look at Tom he strikes me as a guy who just stacks on the muscle 😂
Tom has superman genes.
Maybe he's a grower, not a shower.
Hello I have OCD and PTSD I never got it diagnose by a Doctor my sister has both of them and she tells me all the time get it checked out after looking at this I think I will as a man we do not like going to a Doctor at all.Thank you for the Exercise pointers God Bless.
So true.... "The best diet is the one you'll follow."
I had my DNA tested and learned I am not overly sensitive to carbs, but I am sensitive to sugar. The presence of a certain gene also means intermittent fasting is not necessarily optimal for me because my metabolic response to starvation is to plunge.
It’s nice to have some answers and not have to guess so much!
What is the test called?
@@TheRAH1 It’s a company called ID Life
It would be nice to see Dr Amen Ra on the show!
Body recomposition is the hardest thing I have done
I found out about Stan Efferding when I watched him on Mind Pump. Awesome episode, Tom. I'm a new subscriber!
All that being said, cant take my eyes off that massive vein at side of hit head 💪
Never skip head day
Very very good video, actually listening. Tone plays a big part 💪🏾
At 63 now i hit each body part 2 times every 9-11 days... i always try to mix things up doing different movements,reps and intensity... i may over due the intensity though... i have always pushed myself hard and have over trained a lot over the past 50 years..
You must be yoke out!!
Loved this, learned SO much. Thank you 🙂