Welcome to the GAIN Blog

The blog is updated Monday-Friday. Tune in for posts and discussion about health, fitness, nutrition, training experiments and reflection. We share articles, videos and more. We post the link to our Instagram story every day, make sure to follow along there to never miss a post.

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Normalizing Failure

If you've been to Gain, surely you've noticed our Core Values painted on the chalkboard.

The first item is:

Have a growth mindset. Use failure as an opportunity to learn.

It's simple to understand, but developing this growth mindset is hard. And it will make or break your gym habit.

Having a growth mindset is seeing your ability to improve. Facing challenges head on and using mistakes as fuel and knowledge to improve.

Fixed mindset is being stuck in your ways and unable to see how you could improve with harder effort, better practice or more grit.

It's should be obvious that it pays to have a growth mindset. In doing so, you give yourself permission to slip up. You can normalize failure in our perfectionist society. Skip a couple weeks at the gym, have a bad session, get frustrated with the new snatch variation - whatever it is, the growth mindset encourages you to notice where you could improve, come back and try again.

Don't be scared to fail. Be scared to stop trying.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Keep Training

Starting a strength and conditioning program is hard. It can be intimidating.

It's also likely to inspire new and different goals for yourself, but the biggest goal should be something that we all share.

Keep showing up.

Regardless of your specific goal, showing up is hardest part. And therefore, whether you realize it or not, it should be a main goal.

You'll be tired, bored with the program, hungry and just not feel like it. The best thing you can do, keep showing up. Keep training.

You need some strategy to get to the gym when you don't want to but know you should.

Skip the pit stop home after work.

Put your clothes out the night before.

Review the workout on Truecoach.

Block the time into your work schedule.

These basic habits can be the difference maker. You'll need to remind yourself to keep going, to keep showing up and keep training. Regardless of your outcome goal, get involved with your process. It'll help everything else too.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Context for Calories

When biking/skiing/rowing you may sometimes see calories on your board instead of meters.

To be clear, this number has literally nothing to do with how many calories you're burning, rather it is a measurement of power output - how much work you're doing. The faster and harder you're working, the calories click away faster, not because you're burning more (maybe you are, but that's not the point here). But because your power output, or wattage, has increased.

So why use calories instead of meters?

Honestly, it's just a different measurement available to us. Sometimes the numbers are more digestible and it can be easier to figure out a proper pace.

Just this morning, someone was doing a circuit and the final exercise was 16 calories on the AirBike. I gave them a goal of 2 minutes, and we were easily able to breakdown their pace.

16 calories in 2 minutes is 8 calories per minute, which is 4 calories every 30 seconds, or 2 calories every 15 seconds.

While we can breakdown meters like that, it's easier with calories.

What matters more than meters vs calories is the context of the workout. You can do a 10 calorie bike sprint in 10 seconds, or you can easily cruise for 10 calories per minute. Just like you can do 500m in 40 seconds all out, or do a repeatable pace taking 1 minute.

If you're unsure of how you should be pacing, be sure to ask what the context of the workout is. Should you be cranking hard, pacing or flirting with your limit?

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Protein

You know by now that keeping a food log is the best way to up your nutritional awareness.

If you're ready to level up again, the next piece to figure out is how much protein you're eating.

Many people are surprised at how little protein they eat once they see it quantified.

Instead of using an online calculator or doing some equation like 1g of protein for every pound of bodyweight, aim for a number slightly higher than what you're currently at. If you're only consuming 75g of protein a day, and want to be eating 125g, don't jump straight there. Hit 100g first and see how it goes.

Use these tips to make sure you're setting yourself up for protein success each day.

- Protein at every meal. No matter what.

- More eggs

- Find protein rich snacks (my go-to: grass fed beef sticks, greek yogurt and turkey+cheese roll ups)

- If you still need more, consider adding protein shake

If possible with protein powder, try a couple different kinds to see what you like and how your body reacts. You can also add it to something like oatmeal to to turn it into a meal of mostly carbs to a meal of protein and carbs.

Once you figure out a good level of protein, you can start using that as a way to create boundaries and guide your food choices.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Heaviest Ball in the Gym

In 2015 I learned something important about the human mind and how we create our own limitations.

Back then we had two medicine balls at the gym. An 8 pound ball and a 12 pounder.

After several months the 8 was starting to look beat up, but the 12 pounder still looked brand new. If someone was waiting for the 8 pound ball, I would suggest they try their medicine ball slams with the 12 pound ball instead.

I can't do that, they would reply, it's the heaviest ball in the gym!

So, I bought another 8 pound ball, figuring it would get used the most since our only one was already showing some wear and tear.

Fast forward and both of the 8 pound balls were wearing down and the 12 pounder was pristine.

This time, when it was time to order some new medicine balls, I bought a 20 pound and 14 pound ball.

Something funny happened.

Suddenly, the 12 pound ball was no longer the heaviest. People who wouldn't use the 12 started using the 14, since now it wasn't even close to the heaviest medicine ball in the gym.

The same thing happened with the kettlebells. No one would swing a 45 pound kettlebell when is was the heaviest one in here. But, once there were several heavier than that, more and more people started to swing the 45.

We need context for everything. Including figuring out our limitations and comfort zone.

Seeing the heaviest medicine ball in the gym can be intimidating. But it isn't intimidating when it's the second, or third heaviest.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Three Day Log

In one of my college nutrition courses we had to a log three days of eating as part of an assignment.

The requirements were log everything we consumed for three days and at least one of the days had to be a weekend.

We estimated portion sizes and used nutrition fact labels to calculate our total calories and macros for each of the three days. It's funny, just a relatively short time ago we didn't even have hundreds of apps to choose from to log our food intake and look up macros. We had to manually look up each food on a computer! Call me old fashioned, but I feel as though writing it down by hand gives you a better chance to reflect on what you've been eating.

Besides that, two points from this assignment have stuck with me.

First, you don’t really know what you’re consuming until you write it down. We all underestimate, or overestimate and forget about things that can add up. Running a tally in your head is helpful, but leaves opportunity for missed details.

You can imagine what a classroom full of college student's weekend food log looked like. That assignment showed me that one big off the rails day can deter progress - especially when it isn't one isolated day, but instead one (or two) days each and every week.

If you're spinning your nutritional wheels and starting to feel stuck, get out of the rut by collecting some data. Log at least three days, more would be better, and take a look at your food choices. You don't even need to log calories or macros to get started, just look at what you're consuming and see if you can make any obvious changes. You might be surprised at what you find.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Reasons to go to a strength and conditioning gym

Someone makes you do the hard stuff you don’t want to do.

Make the boring wok more palatable. See above.

Accountability builds consistency.

Perspective adjustments - seeing goals and challenges differently and increasing confidence.

Belong to a community with a shared goal of improving yourself.

Sometimes an easy workout is appropriate, and sometimes, you need someone to tell you that.

Warming up.

Long term development - a strength and conditioning program constantly readjusts and builds upon it set to maximize physical capacity.

Learn new skills - squatting, olympic lifting, push ups, pull ups and swings are all movement skills. Learning new skills is good for your brain.

Because no one wants to do intervals by themselves.

Foam rolling just feels better at the gym than at home, right?

Modifications. If things aren't going as planned, an experienced coach can make adjustments on the fly to elicit the desired outcome.

Shared suffering - there's something rewarding about doing hard stuff with other people.

Stick with something. Strength training is about the long game. Belonging to a gym and having a coach in your corner is imperative to keep playing.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Easier not Easy

A client recently went skiing for the first time in years.

I was eager to ask her how it went when I saw her a couple days later.

Not good, they reported back.

They couldn't believe how sore they were, how hard skiing was and they were so bummed that all the strength and conditioning didn't make skiing easy.

This scenario plays out often. I couldn't help but laugh.

Client trains hard, goes to do something for the first time, and they end up feeling bummed because it was hard.

This is the WRONG perspective.

My laughter was met with an angry stare, so I explained.

Imagine how much harder it would have been if you WERE NOT training so much.

Imagine what the recovery process would be like then.

And perhaps the most impactful question I raised to her; would you have even bothered trying if you hadn't been training like you have for the past 12+ months?

Instead of being bummed it was harder than she wanted (something we can't even quantify anyway), we shifted her perspective.

She had the confidence to take on the slopes even though it had been so long. She was sore, but not sore enough to stay in bed and skip a workout.

She was sore and tired from trying something new... Who cares! I'm more impressed by their confidence to get out there and do something than I am of the final results.

Training will make things easier, but not easy. Don't forget that perspective as you start pushing your own limits.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Components of a Strength and Conditioning Program

Strength - Adaptation intended to improve force production. Usually between 2-8 reps, or 20-30 total repetitions. Rest 90 sec- 3 min between sets. Aim for the last two reps of your set to be challenging to get the most strength gains.

Power - A strength display with speed! Power is about generating as much speed in as little time. Power training comes in many contexts, medicine balls, olympic lifts, jumping and we can even focus on it with a barbell or kettlebell. We aim for 2-5 reps and multiple sets at the same intensity, i.e., don't slow down.

Hypertrophy - Muscle building sets. Higher rep ranges between 8-12 reps. We like these sets for joint and tendon health and getting the blood pumping. Less rest is required here compared to strength sets.

Muscular Endurance - Even higher rep ranges, 12+. Does what it sounds like, improves the ability for your muscles to keep doing the same thing. We'll expose you to high rep ranges like this within the context of conditioning with little to no rest.

Accessory/Assistance - Not necessarily something we need to strive for load/rep progression. Often times it is an exercise to help a main strength lift, like doing some DB floor presses after benching. Of course, this means accessory work is ALSO hypertrophy and/or muscular endurance, and/or even strength.

There is no clean line between these different rep ranges - the training effect will blur between them.

Skill - A component of all the above. Movement and awareness of your body is a skill. Specific technique of each exercise is a skill. Showing up to the gym and training consistently is a skill. Strength and conditioning gyms are skill factories, and if you learn how to learn new skills, you'll be unstoppable.

Mobility - You have the requisite range of motion to do something, which is how we define flexibility, and you also have the stability to display control there. Consistent exposure to valuable positions is the best way to improve mobility.

Conditioning - Creating adaptations using specific metabolic pathways intended to improve endurance and stamina at both moderate to low intensities and very high intensities.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Night Time Wind Down

I'm on a hot streak with my training, and have been for a while. In fact, I can quantify it; I've trained 89 times in the past 81 days.

There are a lot of factors playing into my streak.

Besides the new found discipline from becoming a father, I've redefined what I deem a successful workout doing (very) short sessions - really hammering the minimum effective dose idea. There's something else that deserves a lot of credit, and it starts with the night before.

I've written before about how doing the dishes at night got me started training early in the morning, but there's something else I've been doing after the dishes, and I'm here to tell you it makes all the difference between a productive day of training or going through the motions.

I warm up.

Not in the sense that I get sweaty, and start bouncing around and getting amped to train. The opposite in fact.

I do any soft tissue/mobility/restorative work in anticipation of what I'm going to do the next day. Planning on some pull ups, I'll spend a few minutes working on my forearms, elbows and lats. Deadlift session? I'll open up my hips and hamstrings. For running intervals, I'll give my calves some love and hang in the couch stretch.

This accomplishes a couple things. 1. It gets me mentally prepared for tomorrow's training and helps when I'm tired and don't feel like going into the cold garage at 5am, 2. It saves me from doing those things in the morning! Instead of rolling and stretching in the morning, I focus on getting sweaty and getting started.

If you're looking for a secret weapon to get more from your training, I can't recommend enough that you get on the floor and get some quality work in the night before.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Strength and Conditioning Can Help You:

Pick up grandkids

Feel athletic

Get into a routine

Start a new lifestyle

Get stronger

Do good push ups

Build confidence

Become healthier

Rebuild an injured area

Go skiing

Have more energy

Learn how to use barbells

Upgrade your cardio

Get better at running

Go for a long hike

Improve mobility

Have a baby

Gain muscle

Reverse bone loss

Be powerful

Climb the rope

Do pull ups and box jumps

Improve balance

Handle heavy grocery bags

Belong to a community

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Intervals, Some Examples

I love intervals. They're a fantastic way to upgrade your cardio routine. You'll get a better training effect from intervals opposed to steady state conditioning. Which does have its place, but won't be the focus of this post.

Here are a some of our go-to interval protocols, how you should feel and what we're trying to accomplish.

10 sec FAST / 50 sec EASY

Feel: Lung burner. Ten seconds is short, but you should be gasping for air by the end of the round. Push the pace past your comfort zone and hang on. During the easy, take it nice and slow and work on regulating your breathing.

Goal: Increasing high intensity time. By working really hard for that short burst, we're trying to improve our anaerobic energy system and get comfortable working at high outputs.

2 min FAST / 1 min EASY

Feel: Pacing. Twice as long on the on interval will force you to pace yourself. The short rest will limit how hard you can go. Aim for being able to speak a couple words at a time, maybe 6/10 effort. If you can speak in full sentences, you need to dig a little deeper.

Goal: Aerobic capacity. By working at a slightly faster than normal pace with a short rest, we're challenging your aerobic system. Imagine you do a 10 minute AirBike time trial and get 5500m. Let's say you're doing 5x2min/1min. That's 10 minutes of "work." Ideally, since you have the rest in-between, you will get further than 5500m if you add up your work intervals.

30 sec FAST / 30 sec SLOW

Feel: Sustainable. When doing 30/30's, you should feel in control the whole time. Keep in mind, everyone's fitness levels are different, but for the most part, 30/30's are a nice introduction to interval training. We want to elevate the heart rate/breathing just a bit during the ON, and work easy enough that we can down regulate during the slow 30 seconds.

Goal: Ease into longer conditioning sessions. For some, 10 minutes steady is too much at first, and this is a good way to build up to more intense interval options. For a more trained endurance athlete, this protocol serves as a nice low intensity interval, fluctuating your heart rate slightly without letting it get too high.

This scratches the surface of some intervals we use @gain_sc. I hope this gives you an idea of how each protocol should feel so you can get the most from your training.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Counting!

A sneaky high level strength and conditioning skill is counting your reps.

There are a lot of things to think of all at once. Screwing your feet to the floor, squeezing your butt, the weird exercise names, keeping your core engaged and on top of all that, you need to remember to breathe.

At first glance counting seems like just another annoying thing to occupy your mind. It isn't. In fact, not only will it make sure you get the proper dosage of reps, it'll actually help you do all those other things, too.

Counting forces you to be engaged. Ticking off each rep, 1,2,3,4... gives you an opportunity to check in on your form, and make sure you're doing all the aforementioned things like breathing and squeezing your butt. Each time you count, remind yourself to breathe, or squeeze or get your elbows up, or whatever the thing may be.

Like I mentioned, counting is high level. But don't just count, use counting as an opportunity to clean up your movement and be more engaged on with what you're doing.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Horizontal Pulling - An Unsung Hero

Horizontal pulling, or rowing, is the unsung hero of strength and conditioning. Deadlifts, squats, and its vertical pulling counterpart, the pull up, get all the glory.

Rowing variations support these iconic movements through building upper back strength, creating healthy shoulders and improving posture.

Whatever you're rowing, be it rings, a dumbbell, kettlebells, a barbell or even a band, keep these things in mind.

Squeeze! Squeeze the handle with your whole hand. Don't let it hang in your fingers.

Don't shrug. Keep those shoulders away from your ears!

Use your upper back, not just your arms. Slide those shoulder blades across your back.

Keep your hips square (especially with single arm pulling)

Most importantly, don't forget that all those ring rows, dumbbell rows and bent over rows are part of a well-rounded program and play an important role in busting PRs in the more glamorous lifts.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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