That’s true but at the same time it gives only the basic information that you’ll need to start, which is expected since going too much in depth would be out of topic and waste time
@@righthandman7330 90 % of deep information is completely useless for the average guy who wants to improve his body composition and go from sedentary office slob to healthy adult
@@righthandman7330I’d actually say a lot of people who train don’t even know a lot of what’s in this video, most people don’t jump straight into in depth research when they start and probably take a year or two to even figure out the basics of doing it right
Love that these videos don’t have weird clickbaity premises like “creatine’s bad side effect…” and then it turns out the video was just to debunk that it causes hair loss. Legit value provided here.
Ngl... I save these kind of videos to rewatch them to get better unstanding of everything. Gots to be one of the most informational channel ive seen. Please keep pumping up these videos!
I think everyone should just train for everything because it’s possible, I really cringe when I see some people sacrifice everything just for one extra pound of muscle mass
Fantastic and well constructed video, but I do have one criticism: why no mention of Range of Motion and Stretching training in the health & longevity section? From my experience, this is what helps the most in preventing major and minor injuries on a day to day basis - especially as we age.
Good point. There is evidence that if you are performing resistance training through a full range of motion it can be just as effective for developing range of motion as stretching. But adding some additional stretching could certainly be beneficial 👍
@@FlowHighPerformance1you’re behind on the stretching research there. That resistance training myth of it being all you need for stretching has been played out for a while now.
@@Leo-yn5fx any sources? And to what need are you referring here? Everyday agility, or 'extreme' agility? I had problems with my hamstrings being too short for about a decade, and stretched often to try and change this. Then I restarted lifting a few years ago, and my overall agility - including that of my hamstrings - increased massively, to where I never really feel the need to stretch anymore. I mean, a good, full range of motion exercise IS a (dynamic) stretch as well. I still stretch after long walks or hikes or other activities where I don't use full range of motion. But I think only muscles that I don't ever train full range of motion could perhaps benefit from stretching; I'm thinking stabilizers like around the scapula or hip. Or am I wrong here?
Yo, my mind is seriously blown out! I had been LOOKING for this, and the way you covered it, with the DEPTH! Oh my Lord, that's really impressive! Keep it up!
For anyone trying to get into shape after being inactive for a long time, or all their life like in my case, here is what works so that you get results without burn out or injury. 1 weights loss Step one is to get to a healthy weight through calorie deficit, having extra fat on you will make every physical movement harder, and so you should get rid of that weight first 2 stretching and mobility Your joints are weak from lack of use, they need to be strengthened and restored to proper form, do things such as training for the splits, and other movements that will unlock your mobility, and strengthen your joints in the process, preventing injury in the future. 3 calisthenics If you want to harness the strength of your body, you should first be able to manipulate the weight of your body effectively, doing things such as push-ups, squats, pull-ups, and hinges using only your bodyweight will help you build your base of strength and coordination, master this before moving on. 4 strength training / skills training From here you are already way healthier then the average person, but if you want more then it’s time to specialize, you can train endurance, strength, skills such as hand stands and flips, whatever you want, they should come relatively easy to you now that you have done steps 1-3 to prime your body for adaptation. These sections of course overlap quite a bit, but it’s a basic roadmap to keep you injury free and on target.
@@poto7500 fat does not make you stronger when gravity is constantly pulling you down, I can demonstrate by through an extra 60 pounds or n your back while your doing push ups. And carbs are better energy, if you need energy then eat gummy bears
You can definitely put together an intelligent program that fixes all these at once. Also for overweight people, calisthenics is one of the last things you should prioritize. Asking a person with plantar fasciitis from their ankles dying and having bad hips and knees from weak ankles to do a squat is just asking for trouble. I trained this 6'2 300 pound dude for MONTHS and even with a great diet, it took him like 8 months to do an unassisted dip at 250 because we had to stabilize his long limbs for his heavy body and he started out only being able to shoulder press 30's. Also in general, asking untrained women to do a pushup or pull-up is disheartening in general for them, let alone the overweight inactive ones. 9/10 you should pair (movement patterns with machine work, and isometric calisthenic holds) with short enough breaks to increase cardiovascular health. And then have them foam roll and stretch for the first few weeks cause their fascia is almost always super tight and restrictive because the golgi tendon receptor doesn't allow for certain movements(like the splits) without the necessary exposure and locks up the body to accomplish the bare minimum.
@@smithmichael8144 that’s why step one is weight loss, then flexibility to strengthen joints. You could probably come up with a program that can do all of this at once, but simplicity is one of the biggest factors for if someone will stick to a routine or not, so for any average person looking for basic results it should work great.
1. Skill Practice - Specific Skills Important Skill Badminton Second is physical performance High Exposure , Low Specificity -> Repeated Practice of a single skill Controlled Environment Hundred Forehand shots on a tennis court More Low Exposure High Specificty Replicating Match Play Timing , Decision Making , Positioning Etc. More advance athletes require more game specific training Health & Longevity Resistance Training - Muscless Mass , Stregth , Bone Density , Mobility - 2-3 weeks 45-60min session Cardiorespiratory Training - Reduce Blood Pressure - Resting Heart Rate - Improve Blood Lipids - Insulin Sensitivity - Bone Density - Muscle Atrophy 2-3 Week Combination of low and High Intensity Training Body Composition -
All those things are my goals, lol. Well, jokes aside, I guess strength and body comp take a backseat to health. I'm doing resistance training 4 days a week, generally in the 6-8 rep range when possible (using calisthenics, which don't always have smooth progressions), for a combination of strength and muscle growth. Mobility and cardio on two other days. Just that, and changing my diet, has given me drastic overall improvements in the last year since I started taking it seriously. Although I expect I'll never have big muscles, because I just can't afford to eat enough. I'm still losing weight despite trying to "gaintain", lol. I don't care to much though. In terms of body comp, I'll be happy with good shoulder to hip ratios and some muscle tone.
Personally I am currently focused on body composition because I want to reach a certain goal. When I reached that goal I will focus on a performance goal I have, and once I have reached that I will only focus on my health. I will be doing all of this natural, and hopefully within 10 years.
I probably wont make a video on this topic, but I think it is okay to perform light training while recovering from illness (so long as you are not infecting others)
Thanks for the reply! I am avoiding cardio and lifting at 80% max 1 rep for 10 reps for upper body compound movements but struggling with lower compound movements
Woooow!! That's a lot of topics dude. I guess training and having a healthy life REALLY is a school. Welp, may as well keep learning, proud to join the fam man!!
This video really helped me to rap up some of my ideas. So, I was thinking about participating in a Nacional Muaythai competition. To do so I have to go to my kickboxing/Muaythai gym beetween 3 to 6 times a week, otherwise, my master wont let me go. This is for me and all of my colleagues. To me this is always annoying because I like to train there and train at home some wheights and calisthenics in order to build muscle and strenght. But when I do both, which happens to be also during school time it becomes mentally and physically tiring. Even though I've been training in my Kickboxing/Muaythai gym for almost 11years, this problem is something I face every time I go to some event. While watching the video i started to do some workouts to do at home in my head and it all made sense. I simply have to lower the time of my home training by lowering sets and figuring out which are the exercises that work best for me in each muscle group. It is annoying to have to lower my sets and exercises at home but at least I will get more rest in my muscles, probably while still being able to mantain my current physic and have more time to study. With this I will do 3 to 6 Muaythai trains per week and 3 workouts with weigths and calisthenics at home per week ( i will be focusing on performance because trying to mantain both at the same time is to much for the body and because right now my priorities are performance and school)
In the section on Skill Practice for Sport Performance, what do the terms 'Exposure' and 'Specificity' mean? What is more 'exposed' by repeated practice of a skill in a controlled environment? Is 'Specificity' referring to how specific the exercise environment is to allow for skill replication?
It's so overwhelming. So many different exercises. What exactly are you supposed to do? It's confusing and daunting to get into. I all care about is health. That's how I feel. This video is helpful
For health, its probably a good idea to: 1. maintain a healthy body fat (~10-20% M, ~18-28% F) 2. get enough total daily steps (>7k / day) 3. resistance train 2-4x / week 4. maybe perform 1-3 cardio sessions / week
@@FlowHighPerformance1Thx for this answer 🙏🏾. Although I have a question about nutrition. Is 2500 kcal good enough if you're doing resistance training for 4x in a week? And how do I eat enough protein while spending not too much money? I was thinking to start doing meal preps to be cheaper
From what I've understood from recent research I've read, muscle amount is one of the greatest indicators of general health - so could one thereby say that efforts to increase muscle growth, for most people and in most cases, will also be efforts to improve their general health?
Yes to an extent. I think having a good amount of muscle mass (especially in the elderly) is good for health. Although, Beyond this, I am not sure if additional muscle mass has additional health benefits - and may actually be detrimental at the extreme 🤔
There are some people advocating compound movement with relatively large range of body motion with weights, such as carrying a dumbbell or kettlebell to first do a squat and then lift it overhead. If the weight is also kind of heavy to me, can such exercise serve both as cardio and resistance training? Or we cannot have both?
@@FlowHighPerformance1 Most kettlebell exercises are kind of this type of compound movement, so they are not also ideal for anything? BTW, what are ideal cardio exercises?
1- 5:58, i know about this, but I'm thinking what is a practical benefit of this fact? Like what advice we can give according to this? 2- 10:31, I'm wondering is there RIR recommended for strength? 3- 20:57, I always run out of breath during Squat, that i can't complete the set, so I started moderate cardio (brisk walking to jogging all less than 6 mph speed) 25 min 3 times a week but i don't feel it will have significant impact, what do you think ? And if this would be effective how long would it takes to make difference (like one month or 4 month for example)?
1. This means we should probably rely more on diet as opposed to exercise to induce a calorie deficit 2. generally, training a little further from failure produces the best strength gains (further than around 3 RIR). However, you will eventually need to train closer to failure to lift maximal loads 3. Not sure about this one, but maybe? Instead, I would squat with lower rep ranges to minimise cardiorespiratory fatigue 👍
I could only exercise and stretch for twice a week because I usually don't have the time to do them in the week days from Monday to Friday. My goals for exercising are for better performance in thinking, strength, speed and my health. Any suggestions? Like what exercises and stretchs should I perform weekly?
Another question I may want to ask: how much muscle is good enough for health purpose? If I don't aim to compete in sports or for personal satisfaction to a muscular body, what level of muscle is kind of enough?
soo I have question is Resistance training is the same as bodybuilldig, and lets say if i workout for 5-8 reps with heavy loads will that build me muscles mass and strength?
1. Resistance training means lifting weights. This can be done for the purposes of strength and/or muscle growth. 2. 1-5 reps is best for strength development, 5-20 reps is best for muscle growth. 5-8 reps gives you a decent stimulus for both
@@FlowHighPerformance1 brother u are the best i don’t think u know how much you help me thank you sir for spreading true information thank u from all my heart and btw should i go heavy in 5-8 reps
Hey FHP, can you make a video on submaximal training? Like instead of performing 3x10 to 0-1RIR, we perform 6x5 with 5RIR. There are a few powerlifters training with this approach and they've made great progress. Also, do sets done to failure exponentially increase fatigue as the reps are closer to failure?
The submaximal training approach works well for strength training, but less so for hypertrophy. Yes, training closer to failure is more fatiguing, but more so on heavy compound lifts, and less so on isolations 👍
@@aliendroneservices6621 well I for one wouldnt be able to do more than 1 set per 10 minutes if I truly trained to failure each set. Is there a way to fix this?
If we need 10k steps everyday, what happens on strength training day? Lets say i do push exercise in the morning, should i still achieve 10k steps as well, or it was reduced to 6/7k because i already do strength training?
I like the intent of this video but i think it's missing something important: a distinction between compound and isolation exercise. Powerlifting is mentioned and the compound exercises are listed, but what about bodybuilding using isolation exercises? What techniques would those be?
@@FlowHighPerformance1 I should clarify that when I said "techniques", I meant exercises. While both powerlifting and bodybuilding can be used individually to pursue strength and body composition, and heath; their exercise selection are suitable for different purposes. Powerlifting, with it's focus on lifting the most amount of weight, involves compound exercises because compound exercises are the best choice for that purpose. Bodybuilding, however, is not about lifting the most amount of weight. Its focus is efficient muscle development. The video gives a hint as to what kind of exercise to do: "exercise in which the target muscle is the limiting factor". My question was: Which exercises would those be? But after looking at your website's list of exercises, I can tell that you don't know.
Not necessarily. Depends whether you are trying to be in a surplus, deficit or maintenance. Energy expenditure probably wont be influenced much compered between strength vs hypertrophy training 👍
It means that you want fatigue of the muscle group you are trying to target (eg. chest during a bench press, back during rows etc.) to be what causes you to stop the set. As opposed to stopping the set because your cardiorespiratory system was fatigued, or because other accessory muscles fatigued
Yes, because duration is dependant on the intensity of the cardio. A shorter, high-intensity session can produce similar health benefits to longer, low-intensity cardio. Both are good, and ideally you would want to include some high-intensity cardio once per week 👍
finally, the one video to rule them all
That’s true but at the same time it gives only the basic information that you’ll need to start, which is expected since going too much in depth would be out of topic and waste time
@@righthandman7330 90 % of deep information is completely useless for the average guy who wants to improve his body composition and go from sedentary office slob to healthy adult
@@righthandman7330I’d actually say a lot of people who train don’t even know a lot of what’s in this video, most people don’t jump straight into in depth research when they start and probably take a year or two to even figure out the basics of doing it right
Frodo Baggins
The one video to find them
Best fitness videos on RUclips. Been training for 35 years and still keep learning new things from these.
That's awesome to hear! Glad the videos are helpful 👍
Any cool tips for training both strength and flexibility you could recommend?
35 years ?! that's crazy dang
"you live and learn"
400 pages worth of info in half an hour ! amazing !
The power of video than books
Love that these videos don’t have weird clickbaity premises like “creatine’s bad side effect…” and then it turns out the video was just to debunk that it causes hair loss. Legit value provided here.
💪
Ngl... I save these kind of videos to rewatch them to get better unstanding of everything. Gots to be one of the most informational channel ive seen. Please keep pumping up these videos!
Glad to hear it! Will definitely keep the videos coming 👍
Every person should watch this whether they are just starting out or are experienced
I never thought i can get any extra information after all these years of training, this video couldn't be better
I think everyone should just train for everything because it’s possible, I really cringe when I see some people sacrifice everything just for one extra pound of muscle mass
Yes, in most cases it isn't worth being ultra specific at the expense of everything else 👍
But my gainz 😭
That's I want.
Build muscles and train my cardio
I agree especially for people who play sports that obviously require health, muscle, and athleticism.
This is the only youtube show with the minute details of fitness works.
I found this channel while trying to recover from covid weakness.
Glad you enjoy the content 👍
So well made, you really get across crucial information one needs to implement in their training program without getting lost in a sea of details.
Glad it was helpful 👍
@@FlowHighPerformance1 This is gold info!
Glad that you tube recommended this video.
Fantastic and well constructed video, but I do have one criticism: why no mention of Range of Motion and Stretching training in the health & longevity section? From my experience, this is what helps the most in preventing major and minor injuries on a day to day basis - especially as we age.
Good point. There is evidence that if you are performing resistance training through a full range of motion it can be just as effective for developing range of motion as stretching. But adding some additional stretching could certainly be beneficial 👍
@@FlowHighPerformance1you’re behind on the stretching research there. That resistance training myth of it being all you need for stretching has been played out for a while now.
@@Leo-yn5fx any sources? And to what need are you referring here? Everyday agility, or 'extreme' agility?
I had problems with my hamstrings being too short for about a decade, and stretched often to try and change this. Then I restarted lifting a few years ago, and my overall agility - including that of my hamstrings - increased massively, to where I never really feel the need to stretch anymore. I mean, a good, full range of motion exercise IS a (dynamic) stretch as well. I still stretch after long walks or hikes or other activities where I don't use full range of motion. But I think only muscles that I don't ever train full range of motion could perhaps benefit from stretching; I'm thinking stabilizers like around the scapula or hip. Or am I wrong here?
Amazing work. Always on point, to detail. Each and every video is just amazing and inspirational.
Cheers, glad to hear it 👍
Yo, my mind is seriously blown out! I had been LOOKING for this, and the way you covered it, with the DEPTH! Oh my Lord, that's really impressive! Keep it up!
glad it was helpful 👍
For anyone trying to get into shape after being inactive for a long time, or all their life like in my case, here is what works so that you get results without burn out or injury.
1 weights loss
Step one is to get to a healthy weight through calorie deficit, having extra fat on you will make every physical movement harder, and so you should get rid of that weight first
2 stretching and mobility
Your joints are weak from lack of use, they need to be strengthened and restored to proper form, do things such as training for the splits, and other movements that will unlock your mobility, and strengthen your joints in the process, preventing injury in the future.
3 calisthenics
If you want to harness the strength of your body, you should first be able to manipulate the weight of your body effectively, doing things such as push-ups, squats, pull-ups, and hinges using only your bodyweight will help you build your base of strength and coordination, master this before moving on.
4 strength training / skills training
From here you are already way healthier then the average person, but if you want more then it’s time to specialize, you can train endurance, strength, skills such as hand stands and flips, whatever you want, they should come relatively easy to you now that you have done steps 1-3 to prime your body for adaptation.
These sections of course overlap quite a bit, but it’s a basic roadmap to keep you injury free and on target.
Thanks for sharing your experience 👍
Not really, fat makes you slightly stronger and acts as fuel, you should use that as an advantage
@@poto7500 fat does not make you stronger when gravity is constantly pulling you down, I can demonstrate by through an extra 60 pounds or n your back while your doing push ups.
And carbs are better energy, if you need energy then eat gummy bears
You can definitely put together an intelligent program that fixes all these at once. Also for overweight people, calisthenics is one of the last things you should prioritize. Asking a person with plantar fasciitis from their ankles dying and having bad hips and knees from weak ankles to do a squat is just asking for trouble. I trained this 6'2 300 pound dude for MONTHS and even with a great diet, it took him like 8 months to do an unassisted dip at 250 because we had to stabilize his long limbs for his heavy body and he started out only being able to shoulder press 30's. Also in general, asking untrained women to do a pushup or pull-up is disheartening in general for them, let alone the overweight inactive ones. 9/10 you should pair (movement patterns with machine work, and isometric calisthenic holds) with short enough breaks to increase cardiovascular health. And then have them foam roll and stretch for the first few weeks cause their fascia is almost always super tight and restrictive because the golgi tendon receptor doesn't allow for certain movements(like the splits) without the necessary exposure and locks up the body to accomplish the bare minimum.
@@smithmichael8144 that’s why step one is weight loss, then flexibility to strengthen joints. You could probably come up with a program that can do all of this at once, but simplicity is one of the biggest factors for if someone will stick to a routine or not, so for any average person looking for basic results it should work great.
This is the best video on these subjects Ive ever seen, excellent work.
glad to hear it 👍
1. Skill Practice
- Specific Skills
Important Skill
Badminton
Second is physical performance
High Exposure , Low Specificity
-> Repeated Practice of a single skill
Controlled Environment
Hundred Forehand shots on a tennis court
More
Low Exposure High Specificty
Replicating Match Play
Timing , Decision Making , Positioning Etc.
More advance athletes require more game specific training
Health & Longevity
Resistance Training
- Muscless Mass , Stregth , Bone Density
, Mobility
- 2-3 weeks
45-60min session
Cardiorespiratory Training
- Reduce Blood Pressure
- Resting Heart Rate
- Improve Blood Lipids
- Insulin Sensitivity
- Bone Density
- Muscle Atrophy
2-3 Week
Combination of low and High Intensity Training
Body Composition
-
All those things are my goals, lol. Well, jokes aside, I guess strength and body comp take a backseat to health. I'm doing resistance training 4 days a week, generally in the 6-8 rep range when possible (using calisthenics, which don't always have smooth progressions), for a combination of strength and muscle growth. Mobility and cardio on two other days.
Just that, and changing my diet, has given me drastic overall improvements in the last year since I started taking it seriously. Although I expect I'll never have big muscles, because I just can't afford to eat enough. I'm still losing weight despite trying to "gaintain", lol. I don't care to much though. In terms of body comp, I'll be happy with good shoulder to hip ratios and some muscle tone.
Nice! Keep up the good work 👍
My 2years of gym experience summarized + new info gained.......thanks for your efforts
no problem 👍
0:58 Japan 🔥
🤣 🗾🎌
Another upload from the goat 🙏
Great video. Very concise way to sum up almost everything about Health.
I am so thankful for the scientific explanations too. i really appreciate the vid
glad to hear it 👍
Most in-depth THING I’ve ever heard. And I know a real life young Sheldon!
Personally I am currently focused on body composition because I want to reach a certain goal. When I reached that goal I will focus on a performance goal I have, and once I have reached that I will only focus on my health. I will be doing all of this natural, and hopefully within 10 years.
Balance is the key
Functional strength. Functional fitness. This should cover it all.
"Get after it."
-Jocko Willink
Excellent video as always!
Would you be able to do a video of the pros (if any) and cons of working out while feeling ill 🤒
I probably wont make a video on this topic, but I think it is okay to perform light training while recovering from illness (so long as you are not infecting others)
Thanks for the reply!
I am avoiding cardio and lifting at 80% max 1 rep for 10 reps for upper body compound movements but struggling with lower compound movements
Woooow!! That's a lot of topics dude. I guess training and having a healthy life REALLY is a school. Welp, may as well keep learning, proud to join the fam man!!
Can you please make a video on how to make body strong as fighters
Check out this video
ruclips.net/video/OvdeZKt_S4M/видео.html
best video about workout i've seen
Hey, absolutelly love it.
Where did you find such a complex sort of information ? What source do you usulally use?
Thanks😌
combination of experience, scientific research and formal education
this channel deserve like and subscribe
great to the point video backed by science..... can you please make a video on working out empty stomach for muscle gain.... thanks
I have this one on my list 👍
@@FlowHighPerformance1 looking forward to the video thanks
I totally did get something out of it. Thank you
no problem 👍
This video really helped me to rap up some of my ideas. So, I was thinking about participating in a Nacional Muaythai competition. To do so I have to go to my kickboxing/Muaythai gym beetween 3 to 6 times a week, otherwise, my master wont let me go. This is for me and all of my colleagues.
To me this is always annoying because I like to train there and train at home some wheights and calisthenics in order to build muscle and strenght. But when I do both, which happens to be also during school time it becomes mentally and physically tiring. Even though I've been training in my Kickboxing/Muaythai gym for almost 11years, this problem is something I face every time I go to some event.
While watching the video i started to do some workouts to do at home in my head and it all made sense. I simply have to lower the time of my home training by lowering sets and figuring out which are the exercises that work best for me in each muscle group. It is annoying to have to lower my sets and exercises at home but at least I will get more rest in my muscles, probably while still being able to mantain my current physic and have more time to study. With this I will do 3 to 6 Muaythai trains per week and 3 workouts with weigths and calisthenics at home per week ( i will be focusing on performance because trying to mantain both at the same time is to much for the body and because right now my priorities are performance and school)
Exactly. Adjust the time and effort you allocate to different goals based in your current priorities 👍
Some useful body fitness video finally
Yet again, an awesome video
Great video, one of the best I Have seen on here
Glad it was helpful 👍
Ate an ice cream cone before watching this
🤣
Same bro, McFlurry was BOGO
Just from these comments I think I’m going to love this video.
Fantastic video!! Good work.
Glad you liked it 👍
I've been looking for sumn like this
In the section on Skill Practice for Sport Performance, what do the terms 'Exposure' and 'Specificity' mean?
What is more 'exposed' by repeated practice of a skill in a controlled environment?
Is 'Specificity' referring to how specific the exercise environment is to allow for skill replication?
Yes, you are correct. Exposure refers to more total repetition of a specific skill, specificity refers to how similar it is to match-play 👍
best video i've ever seen for training brother
Glad you liked it 👍
We need a video about joint recovery, and working out.
I touch on this topic in many videos. I don't think it needs an entire video to itself 👍
Very informative thanks for ur effort. Hopefully this comment get enough likes to encourage u to make the video@@FlowHighPerformance1
Very informative. Refer back to in future .
It's so overwhelming. So many different exercises. What exactly are you supposed to do? It's confusing and daunting to get into. I all care about is health. That's how I feel. This video is helpful
For health, its probably a good idea to:
1. maintain a healthy body fat (~10-20% M, ~18-28% F)
2. get enough total daily steps (>7k / day)
3. resistance train 2-4x / week
4. maybe perform 1-3 cardio sessions / week
@@FlowHighPerformance1Thx for this answer 🙏🏾. Although I have a question about nutrition. Is 2500 kcal good enough if you're doing resistance training for 4x in a week? And how do I eat enough protein while spending not too much money? I was thinking to start doing meal preps to be cheaper
You forgot to mention running being good for bone density since you need to load the bones in both a compressed&flexed manner
Yes for sure. Although weight training is also good for bone density too 🦴
I want all 4
Same. What's your plan ?
This is a great video. Thanks.
no problem
Great video!
hey it would be amazing if you could put spanish subtitles so you can reach a larger audience
That would be great, but unfortunately I don't speak Spanish
Best video, all information in one place. Thank you so much
no problem 👍
For the body composition part you should also talk about bones to be complete. Training is also able to make them stronger.
true. most forms of exercise are going to be beneficial for bone density
Summaries it all , thank you ❤
no problem 👍
My focus are strength, power and speed
0:50 2:39 6:22
Well im liking this so far. 🎉
amazing knowledge
Thanks, GOAT!
no problem
Great content, useful information, I hope that you will become more successful in the future👍👍❤❤
glad you enjoyed the video 👍
Very helpful video
Glad to hear it 👍
Hold on (watches one video, scrolls through channel, realizes)...this channel is everything I need for excersize
🤣
Why just Muscle and Fat in the Body Composition part and not bone density and nerves etc?
because this video was focussed on muscle & fat
From what I've understood from recent research I've read, muscle amount is one of the greatest indicators of general health - so could one thereby say that efforts to increase muscle growth, for most people and in most cases, will also be efforts to improve their general health?
Yes to an extent. I think having a good amount of muscle mass (especially in the elderly) is good for health. Although, Beyond this, I am not sure if additional muscle mass has additional health benefits - and may actually be detrimental at the extreme 🤔
Thanks ❤ sir
There are some people advocating compound movement with relatively large range of body motion with weights, such as carrying a dumbbell or kettlebell to first do a squat and then lift it overhead. If the weight is also kind of heavy to me, can such exercise serve both as cardio and resistance training? Or we cannot have both?
It can serve as both to some degree. Although it probably wont be ideal for either goal
@@FlowHighPerformance1 Most kettlebell exercises are kind of this type of compound movement, so they are not also ideal for anything?
BTW, what are ideal cardio exercises?
1- 5:58, i know about this, but I'm thinking what is a practical benefit of this fact? Like what advice we can give according to this?
2- 10:31, I'm wondering is there RIR recommended for strength?
3- 20:57, I always run out of breath during Squat, that i can't complete the set, so I started moderate cardio (brisk walking to jogging all less than 6 mph speed) 25 min 3 times a week but i don't feel it will have significant impact, what do you think ? And if this would be effective how long would it takes to make difference (like one month or 4 month for example)?
1. This means we should probably rely more on diet as opposed to exercise to induce a calorie deficit
2. generally, training a little further from failure produces the best strength gains (further than around 3 RIR). However, you will eventually need to train closer to failure to lift maximal loads
3. Not sure about this one, but maybe? Instead, I would squat with lower rep ranges to minimise cardiorespiratory fatigue 👍
Hello very good video. Can you make a video about gaining weigth and maintaining muscle growth? Please i need some guidance!
Hi. Here are some videos that you might enjoy
ruclips.net/video/cthe3Gtcsik/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/u7zIANCuJLE/видео.html
Aesthetics 👀
I could only exercise and stretch for twice a week because I usually don't have the time to do them in the week days from Monday to Friday. My goals for exercising are for better performance in thinking, strength, speed and my health. Any suggestions? Like what exercises and stretchs should I perform weekly?
I'd recommend hypertrophy-style resistance training. Train with full range of motion and you will also achieve mobility benefits too 👍
Another question I may want to ask: how much muscle is good enough for health purpose? If I don't aim to compete in sports or for personal satisfaction to a muscular body, what level of muscle is kind of enough?
If you are feeling good and you can do everything functional that you want, then that is enough.
soo I have question is Resistance training is the same as bodybuilldig, and lets say if i workout for 5-8 reps with heavy loads will that build me muscles mass and strength?
1. Resistance training means lifting weights. This can be done for the purposes of strength and/or muscle growth.
2. 1-5 reps is best for strength development, 5-20 reps is best for muscle growth. 5-8 reps gives you a decent stimulus for both
@@FlowHighPerformance1 brother u are the best i don’t think u know how much you help me thank you sir for spreading true information thank u from all my heart and btw should i go heavy in 5-8 reps
Hey FHP, can you make a video on submaximal training? Like instead of performing 3x10 to 0-1RIR, we perform 6x5 with 5RIR. There are a few powerlifters training with this approach and they've made great progress. Also, do sets done to failure exponentially increase fatigue as the reps are closer to failure?
The submaximal training approach works well for strength training, but less so for hypertrophy. Yes, training closer to failure is more fatiguing, but more so on heavy compound lifts, and less so on isolations 👍
RIR is a hallucination. Either one exercised to failure, or one did not.
@@aliendroneservices6621 well I for one wouldnt be able to do more than 1 set per 10 minutes if I truly trained to failure each set. Is there a way to fix this?
@@afj810 Yes. Stop performing "multiple sets".
@@aliendroneservices6621 that goes against the fundamentals of resistance training
Thanks gives me a knowledge
no problem
Insane video
thank you !!! Cheers
Sport training for me: 14:26
please add eng subtitle for translating other languages
maybe for future videos
Is rdl and skater hops a good combo for contrast graining and what about forward lunges and skater hops
It could work. Id say a higher output exercise like squat, deadlift or trap bar deadlift might be better options 👍
How many reps to train for hypertrophy that transfers to strength?
5-10
With that much volume and intensity, you pointed out for muscle growth, you will overtrain and progressively deload
It's certainly a possibility. Check out this video on overtraining as it relates to hypertrophy training ruclips.net/video/wcH4a5xl-wU/видео.html
So, Is Myofibrillar Hypertrophy the one that takes place with resistance training?
yes
I'm skinny tall.... Any advice friends
🤷
If we need 10k steps everyday, what happens on strength training day? Lets say i do push exercise in the morning, should i still achieve 10k steps as well, or it was reduced to 6/7k because i already do strength training?
Still try and get 10k steps even on lifting days. Although if you dont have the time, then it is fine to reduce to 6-7k on lifting days 👍
@@FlowHighPerformance1thank you so much for the answer! 🙏
@@FlowHighPerformance1hey man can i ask one more thing? Do you think creatine (powder) was safe and important? What is your stance on creatine?
I like the intent of this video but i think it's missing something important: a distinction between compound and isolation exercise. Powerlifting is mentioned and the compound exercises are listed, but what about bodybuilding using isolation exercises? What techniques would those be?
I dont really understand what question you are trying to ask here
@@FlowHighPerformance1 I should clarify that when I said "techniques", I meant exercises.
While both powerlifting and bodybuilding can be used individually to pursue strength and body composition, and heath; their exercise selection are suitable for different purposes.
Powerlifting, with it's focus on lifting the most amount of weight, involves compound exercises because compound exercises are the best choice for that purpose.
Bodybuilding, however, is not about lifting the most amount of weight. Its focus is efficient muscle development.
The video gives a hint as to what kind of exercise to do: "exercise in which the target muscle is the limiting factor". My question was: Which exercises would those be? But after looking at your website's list of exercises, I can tell that you don't know.
@@FlowHighPerformance1 I don't mean to offend you.
video muito bom, infelizmente tive não tem em portugues esse video
desculpe, eu não falo português
I'm from India ❤️❤❤❤❤❤❤
should I eat more calories when training for strength than when training for muscle mass or just eat a slightly larger amount than usual?
Not necessarily. Depends whether you are trying to be in a surplus, deficit or maintenance. Energy expenditure probably wont be influenced much compered between strength vs hypertrophy training 👍
How to train if i do body building and boxing at the same time? (Not into professional)
Do boxing training. Then lift in the gym with a hypertrophy intent 👍
What does it mean "ensure the target muscle is the limiter of each set"?
It means that you want fatigue of the muscle group you are trying to target (eg. chest during a bench press, back during rows etc.) to be what causes you to stop the set. As opposed to stopping the set because your cardiorespiratory system was fatigued, or because other accessory muscles fatigued
thanks you
No problem 👍
No problem 👍
I would argue that most people are aiming to decrease muscle and increase fat
then this information doesn't apply
You didnot mention how much duration for cardio respiratory for health benefits . Only frequency is mentioned here
Yes, because duration is dependant on the intensity of the cardio. A shorter, high-intensity session can produce similar health benefits to longer, low-intensity cardio. Both are good, and ideally you would want to include some high-intensity cardio once per week 👍
who else trains for health
Nobody
@@RandomStuff-is2yf Yet it's the most important
I only train for health
All of these give health, just balance them
@@RandomStuff-is2yfno, everyone technically trains for health
Bro I love you
The .7 gm per lb for protein. Do you use your goal weight or current weight?
Depends on your current body fat. Check out this video for more detail ruclips.net/video/t_UQz2pTpQc/видео.html
How long are the cycles ?
You don't need to train for each goal in phases. You can just train the ones that are relevant to you
How to train for overall health and fitness?
well, it depends on what you mean by that