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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Virtual Fitness Opportunities

Hey all, thanks for hanging in there. Last week, many of you stuck to your routine, got after it, and still were able to prioritize yourself, even if just for a moment, to get a training session in.

During this time, it’s important to keep routine and keep taking care of yourself. It’s too easy to fall off. To help you combat that, we’re hosting live workouts everyday this week on Zoom. It’s a chance for you to get coached, hang with your Gain buddies and feel normal, even if only for 45 minutes. 

Here’s the schedule for the week and links to the Zoom classes. For Instagram Live, there is no link to join, just sign on Instagram and see the @gain_sc Live Video on the top of your screen. If you can’t make the Instagram Live videos, scroll through your stories to find the replay which you can watch anytime up to 24 hours after it happens.

Along with the live workouts, we’ll be checking in, providing challenge workouts and educational content to keep you engaged and fit during this quarantine.

Monday 3/23

8am - Instagram Live workout with Justin

5:30pm - Zoom Workout with Taylor

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 5:30

Tuesday 3/24

7:30am - Zoom Workout with Justin

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 7:30am

12pm - Instagram Live Foam Rolling with Taylor

5:30pm- Zoom Workout with Alex

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS AT 5:30pm

Wednesday 3/25

7:30am - Zoom Workout with Taylor

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 7:30am

12pm - Instagram Live Mobility with Justin

5:30pm - Zoom Workout with Alex

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 5:30pm

Thursday 3/26

7:30am - Zoom Workout with Justin

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 7:30am

12pm - Instagram live mobility/stretch with Alex

5:30pm - Zoom Workout with Taylor

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 5:30pm

Friday 3/27

7:30am - Zoom Workout with Justin

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 7:30am

12pm - Zoom Workout with Taylor

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL CLASS at 12pm

Saturday 3/28

9am - Zoom Workout with Alex

CLICK TO JOIN VIRTUAL WORKOUT at 9am

Let’s do it! Be sure to let me know if you have any questions and let’s have a good week together!

Justin Miner

@justinminergian

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Bodyweight Training and At-Home Workouts

Out of the gate, let’s be clear. It’s weird. We can’t go to the gym, we’re out of our regular routines and we’re worried that we’re going to lose all our fitness gain since we can’t touch barbells or sleds or our usual band set up for the time being. Let me reassure you, the workouts we’re sending out aren’t just random bodyweight workouts you’re seeing all over the Internet.

We thoughtfully crafted these workouts. They aren’t your usual customized workouts, but you’ll hit each of the fundamental movement patterns each session, taking your body through required range of motion. We’re progressing the workouts, meaning they’re building on one another, adding more reps, or more rounds or more work in less time. We’re challenging core stability and total body mobility.

Keep training hard, move with internet. Create tension, squeeze your butt and be deliberate. If you keep up with all those things, I have no doubt once we’re back in the gym you’ll have all your old strength gains back.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Training = Adaptation

Strength and conditioning is about adaptation. You stress the body, in specific ways, to create a change, or adaptation to a certain stimulus. Textbooks call this the SAID Principle, Specific Adaption to Imposed Demands. 

What the principle doesn’t account for, is that training one thing, makes you more prepared to train for another. For example, if you spend a lot of time getting stronger, you will have an easier time adapting to a challenge of endurance, like running a 10k or biking for 90 minutes. The strength, motor control, body awareness and the knowing what it takes to make changes and adapt leaves you better prepared than someone starting from scratch. 

To put it in less words, knowing how to train for one thing gives you the ability to train and adapt to a host of other things. You know how it works, how to “put the reps in.”

The point I’m getting to; you can adapt to the current situation. From strength and conditioning, you know a few things to be true. Adaptation takes patience, consistency, a growth mindset and willingness to forgive yourself of mistakes, ditching thoughts of perfectionism and most importantly, believing in yourself. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Three More Daily Challenges

Here are three things for you to try fitting into your day. We’re all off our regular schedule and routine, so I hope these provide a nice break or change of pace for you.

1. Spend 60 minutes outside 

Nothing complicated about this one. Try to get an hour of outside time, especially if you’ll be working on the computer all day.

2. Serving of Veggie at All Meals 

If you’re cooking for yourself today, be sure to include vegetables at every meal you have. It’s a good opportunity to focus in on nutrition and making healthy choices. More veggies are a gateway to better food choices.

3. Workout Twice 

A workout can be short. It can be simple. It doesn’t have to be complicated and last 60 minutes. Try getting in two shorter session today opposed to one big long one. Maybe some bodyweight movements or cardio in the morning followed by something with weights or a mobility session in the afternoon. 

If you’re in need of some rolling and stretching, join me live on Instagram at 9am, I’ll be leading a virtual mobility class.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Control What You Can

I’ve mentioned before that I’m a big reader in stoic philosophy. I revisited this quote several times over the past week and it helped guide my decision to closed Gain’s doors. 

“The chief task in life is simply this: to identify and separate matters so that I can say clearly to myself which are externals not under my control, and which have to do with the choices I actually control. Where then do I look for good and evil? Not to uncontrollable externals, but within myself to the choices that are my own.”

- Epictetus, Discourses

Control what you can control, don’t attempt to control what you can’t.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Three Challenges for You

I have three challenges you can do while you’re at home. They aren’t workouts, per se, but instead physical challenges that will make you think about how you move and use your body. 

1. Single Foot Dish Washing 

While doing your dishes, you’re only allowed to stand on one foot. This includes taking dishes from the sink to the dish washer, but also reaching to put things in drawers or cabinets. This one is trickier than it sounds. 

2. One Show on the Floor 

When you queue up your favorite Netflix show today, sit on the floor the whole time. You can move and change position as much as you’d like, but you can’t get off the floor for the whole show. Some suggestions are cross legged, 90/90, kneeling and anything else you can think of. 

3. 60 Minutes Nasal Only 

Set a timer for 1 hour. During this hour, you’re only allowed to breathe through your nose. This is a good challenge to take on while working on the computer or folding laundry but not while you’re eating or needing to interact. Every time you lose your nose breathing and catch yourself mouth breathing (it will happen more frequently than you expect!) you do a 5 bodyweight squat penalty. Lowest number of squats at the end of the hour wins! 

If you give these a try, be sure to let me know how it goes. Good luck! 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Friday Quote

All I have for you today is this quote from James Clear’s newsletter:

“Your current habits are perfectly designed to deliver your current results.” 

Be safe out there people, wash your hands and eat your veggies! 

Justin Miner 

@justinminergain

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Those First Few Reps

When doing a new exercise, or even doing the first set of something for the day, you’ll notice that us coaches don’t say anything at least until you’ve done 3 or 4 reps. This is intentional. We’re trying to let you figure it out, get a couple of wonky reps out of the way. 

The goal is to help you develop a sense of what a “good” movement pattern is without immediate feedback, that would eventually become a movement crutch. Instead of over cueing, we’re going to let you figure them out. It’s okay the first few are a little weird, you’re learning and adapting. 

As a young coach, this was terribly difficult. I wanted everyone’s reps to be perfect all the time! As I’ve gained more experience, I realize you need those subpar reps to learn what a good one feels like. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Hidden Reps

Josh Waitzkin is a master of many things. A young chess prodigy, black belt in jujitsu, investor and now he’s pursing foiling, a high-speed version of surfing that requires a jet ski to tow you in. Waitzkin goes deep, and teaches people how to master things in unconventional ways, basically he teaches people how to learn better.

Last week I listened to him on the Tim Ferriss Podcast. The interview was full of insights, but one in particular stuck with me, because it’s an easy thing we can all apply in the gym. Find the hidden reps.

Waitzkin was referring to the easy things that you can be lazy about. Finding the hidden reps means taking those reps seriously, practicing them with effort and focus. These opportunities are abundant in the gym. 

Picking up a kettlebell for a one arm carry. It should look like a good deadlift when you get the kettlebell off the floor. Create tension, squeeze the handle and practice your deadlift, even though you’re just carrying the kettlebell. Taking the barbell out of the rack for a squat. Set your feet, get your breath. Don’t just walk out of the cage letting the bar push you around. Even getting up from the floor is an opportunity to find hidden reps. Are you moving smoothly and fluid? Or are you leaning on the wall just because it’s there?

Find more hidden reps in the gym this week. They live outside the gym as well, picking up the laundry basket, carrying groceries and doing the dishes. Hidden reps are everywhere, make sure you’re taking them.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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237

A year ago I attended a leadership workshop for business owners trying to level up. I learned a lot, more than I can wrap my head around really. The unexpected takeaway from the weekend was this blog. I needed a challenge. A way to share ideas, get out of my comfort zone and develop writing skills. I needed a new practice to commit to, stick with and grind through. Something to both love and hate at the same time. 

Sitting in LAX, early in the morning on March 10th, I wrote the first post, titled “Consistency.” It was a note to myself. Stick with it even if I failed, even if I didn’t want to continue. Well, here we are, 237 posts later. 

There were some thought provoking, conversation starting posts. There were some posts with too many typos to even bother editing. Sometimes the ideas flowed and sometimes I sat on the couch with my face in my palms, worried that this morning would be the morning I didn’t get anything posted. Through practice, grit and planning I posted every weekday for the past year.

Writing doesn’t come easy and my introverted tendency is to never share anything personal. But the words are starting to flow more, I can feel my writing develop and change and this blog provides endless conversations with you all each week. I hope by reading you’re challenged to try on different perspectives, evaluate yourself objectively and you learn something new every now and then. 

I’m proud that I did this for a year in a row, but I’m not pausing to celebrate, I’m keeping my head down and continuing the work. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain 

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Springing Ahead

Our sleep is precious. If you ever had any doubt as to how precious, just talk to someone the morning after daylight savings. Yesterday, we all woke up a little groggy, confused as to what time it really was and we all missed that hour of sleep that was stolen away from us. 

In Why We Sleep, Dr. Matthew Walker explains that there are more instances of heart attacks and car crashes when we spring ahead. We’re such creatures of habit, no wonder fast forwarding an hour ahead throws us all off. 

This isn’t a blog about writing your congress person to ditch the outdated idea, instead, it’s an appeal that you just need to deal with it. Over the past decade as a coach and trainer, every time we spring ahead our clocks I notice the changes in people the next few days after. The people who groan about it, how it throws their routine off, are more disrupted than those who just accept it is 6am now and not actually 5am. 

If you’re still dragging and feel off. Be sure to expose yourself to morning and evening light to help regulate your circadian rhythm, your body can use the sun to wake up or wind down. Shut the screens down tonight and open up a book to try and wind down so you can get to bed at a regular time. Ridiculous idea or not, we need to be able to adapt to it. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Unplug

You ever have trouble with your iPhone or WiFi modem? You probably know the easiest solution is to turn it off and turn it back on. This reset works like a charm to fix funky electronics, a common problem we all run into. 

When I saw this quote in James Clear’s newsletter, I had to share it. 

“Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes , including you.”

- Anne Lamott

Unplug this weekend and hit the reset button.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Pace Boat

Alex has come up with a great way to make you push harder on the SkiErg and rowing machine, using the built in pace boat. 

The rudimentary graphics on the screen show two boats (or skiers). The top one is you, and it moves according to your pace per 500 meters. The bottom boat is the pace boat. We can set the pace boat so it’s just out of reach for you to keep chasing it to keep the intensity high, or we can set it at a reasonable pace if we want you to keep it steady and not come out too hot. 

I gave this a shot yesterday on the rower and it brought a whole new level of intensity to my interval workout.

Give it a try the next time you’re on the erg! 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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More Foot Stuff

Lots of good discussion yesterday about feet. Today, I want to provide two simple things you can do to treat your feet better.

Roll the bottoms of them a couple times a week. Two minutes per foot is a good start. This helps untangle the mess of being in shoes and boots all the time.

Walk barefoot. You don’t need to do anything crazy, but ditch the shoes, slippers and socks while you’re cooking dinner and pay attention to what your arch and muscles are doing while you walk and stand around. 

The only way to develop strong, healthy feet is to create an awareness around what they’re doing all day. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Foot Core

Our feet get no love. We’ve been taught that our feet are weak, that they need special orthotics, maximum cushion and we shouldn’t spend anytime barefoot. Our feet are complex, and have implications for so many other parts of our body.

You probably know that I’m a fan of minimalist shoes. I wear as little shoe as possible to help my feet stay strong and adaptable. It took years of building up their strength, but once I did, I realized how messed up my feet where from years of high heeled Nike sneakers and hockey skates. 

When I saw this concept of the foot core on Instagram and had to share it here. 

McKeon, et al. wrote a paper called "The foot core system: a new paradigm for understanding intrinsic foot muscle function.”  The paper gets into the mechanisms of the foot and why us humans developed an arch to begin with. It’s was to be able to run and carry loads. 

The foot core, according to the authors are the intrinsic plantar musculature. These muscles support and stabilize the structure of the foot and the arch. What the authors call, global movers, are muscles that originate in the lower leg, and cross the ankle joint. These muscles create movement movement in the foot and help stabilize the arch. 

All of these muscles work together to build a strong, well-functioning foot and lower leg. Having a strong “foot core,” can make your feet strong and resilient, just like training your core can make your spine strong, stable and resilient. Want to start working on your foot core? Ditch the shoes during your warm up at Gain, the more time you spend barefoot the better.

Justin Miner 

@justinminergain

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More Speed = More Force

Strength is about how much force you can produce. Put another way, force is equal to how quickly you can move the mass of an object, you might remember that from physics class, F = Ma. 

So if force is the strength we produce and the mass is the load of the implement we’re using, whether a barbell or kettlebell or dumbbell, the “a” stands for acceleration. 

I feel bad for the poor small “a.” It gets no love in the strength and fitness world where more weight, or mass rules the concerns of coaches, trainers and fitness enthusiasts everywhere. If you look at the equation though, you’ll realize that if the acceleration improves, the force, or strength side of the equation will improve.  

Let’s take a push up for example. A push up is tricky to add external load. Assuming you haven’t done one on the floor, we can add more load by lowering the height of the bar. It would be in your best interest to also try to do the up motion of the push up with speed. 

This, in turn will help develop strength in that motor pattern, and all you had to do differently was push a little harder. We still want to be under control, don’t forget that, but trying to move a bit quicker will have positive implications for your strength gains. 

Justin MIner

@justinminergain

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Training with Others

Last week, Alex dropped into a gym in Boston. He made a comment about how it was weird to train with strangers. It caused me to reflect that I never lift in front of strangers and I probably don’t train with anyone besides Alex, Taylor or Hannah. If you were at the gym on Wednesday, you got to see me jump in with several others in parts of their workout.

An overlooked aspect of the gym is that very thing. Training with others, regardless if you’re doing the same thing, has this special camaraderie to it. Everyone is there to improve themselves for one reason or another and that unites all the members of a place like Gain. 

When you train alone, like I normally do, it can be hard to be motivated or push it sometimes. There’s no one for you to set a fast pace with or talk about how to make the next jump in weight. On Wednesday night the gym was busy, the music loud and I felt able to really push it- because everyone else around me was doing the same. It was a blast.

Consider this your open invitation to ask me to workout with you if you’re feeling unmotivated or not into it. I’ll be happy to hop in so we can push each other. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Hardwiring

I always tell new members at the gym, the first few weeks are a bit overwhelming. Not physically, but mentally. Gradually adding in the physical part is easy. We want the work to be digestible and not make anyone too sore just for the sake of being sore. On the mental side of things, it’s hard not to feel overwhelmed. Not only are they learning new lingo, where stuff is, trying to remember a bunch of numbers and count but they also have to learn new skills in terms of how to move. 

When learning how to squat, you need to incessantly remind yourself to squeeze you butt at the top, sit back, not down, grab the ground with you feet, amongst other things. It takes up a lot of space in your brain. The point I’m getting to is that moving is a skill. Skills must be learned through practice and repetition to make them automatic. 

From Mastery by Robert Greene: 

“In practicing a skill in the initial stages, something happens neurologically that’s important for you to understand. When you start something new, a large number of neurons in the frontal cortex are recruited and become active, helping you in the learning process… The frontal cortex expands in size in this initial phase as we focus hard on the task. But once something is repeated often enough it becomes hardwired and automatic.” 

“This process of hardwiring cannot occur if you are constantly distracted, moving from one task to another. In such a case, the neural pathways dedicated to this skill never get established; what you learn is too tedious to remain rooted in the brain.”

Put simply, we must focus if we want to get better at things. 

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Cooling Down

We’re always tinkering with how we write programs to deliver you the best results. Back when we first opened, we had clients do a cool down after their conditioning. Before long, it became obvious that after a bunch of sled march or bike sprints, people just wanted to be on their way. A lot of people skipped the cool down. 

To counteract this, we placed the mobility work prior to doing your conditioning. It worked as a nice reset before you change gears and got sweaty. When we started working on the new template, it felt like the right time to get rearrange the order and put the cool down back where it belongs, post conditioning.

When you’re hot, sweaty and out of breath, the worst thing you can do is hop in your car and be on your way. Your muscles get stiff, you might get cold and it doesn’t give your body the proper time to down shift back to baseline. 

After each workout, you have one or two simple mobility drills that we picked just for you. It’s a chance to work on problem tight areas and even more so, gives you a chance to learn stretches you can do on your own when at home or traveling. Focus on your breathing, let your heart rate drop to normal range then walk out of the gym feeling better than when you walked in.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Cold Recovery

Colds and the flu have knocked a lot of you down this winter. Being sick is always frustrating. Not feeling like yourself, groggy and wrecking your daily plans.  An observation I’ve made over the past 5 years, it takes 2 or 3 workouts to feel like yourself in the gym. 

The first workout back will be tough. Mentally, you won’t want to go and there’s this nervousness of getting sick again. Everything feels hard during this workout. Weights that were light feel out of reach. You’re breathing heavier than normal and halfway through you just want to crawl into bed. 

The second workout back gets easier. You may have some soreness from taking a week off, but otherwise you’re ready for a full workout and are feeling a bit more motivated than the first session. After the workout, on your drive home, you’ll ponder whether or not you’ll ever full recover from this cold and if all your hard work in the gym has been a waste of time, now that you’re sick and never going to recover. 

Workout number 3. Back to normal. Feeling normal may feel so far off, but it happens every time. You’re going to need those subpar workouts to shake the rust off, let your body heal and get back into the rhythm of things, both physically and mentally. 

If you’re sick, or coming off a cold, don’t be discouraged. I promise all your hard work won’t be wasted, you just need a few days to feel normal. 

Justin Miner 

@justinminergain

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