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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20k Per Day

We take over 20,000 breaths every day.

Most of that runs on autopilot through our autonomic nervous system. You don’t even have to consider it, but you body adjusts for what you’re doing and what environment you’re in and makes sure you don’t all of a sudden stop breathing. It’s very impressive.

I’m not suggesting you get rid of all your personal belongings and go on a full-time meditation retreat, however spending a little bit of time thinking about your breath, and the way that you’re breathing can be a powerful tool.

Here are a few experiments for you to play with to pay attention to a handful of those 20k breaths each day.

When warming up for intervals, how many breaths (full in/out) do you get in a minute? I try keep it easy the first couple minutes and see how many breaths  I can hold on to. This helps me avoid coming out too hot. Around 10-12 breaths per minute is super chill pace.

Squatting, benching, deadlifting, etc. any of those moves in the gym are a chance to breathe. Typically we want a full inhale/exhale per rep. Example, you breathe in at the top of a push up, lower your self, starting pushing up while exhaling. Connecting the breath to reps will leave you feeling stronger and more stable.

When I’m out of breath, how many breaths will it take me to get back under control (I’ll watch my HR monitor as I do this too to try and correlate specific HRs with how I breathe/feel). Often I make it to 10 and then lose count, but it helps it suck less!

Here’s your invitation to lay on the floor after a tough workout. By laying down you’re supporting your spine, and making it easier for your breathing mechanics to work smoothly. Try to take deep breaths with longer exhales for a few minutes, or 30-50 breaths, after your next workout.

Don’t forget to thank your autonomic nervous system for breathing while you read this!

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Running, I've Missed You

Last week I shifted gears from olympic weightlifting mode to running mode to prepare for the Mount Washington Auto Road Race on June 15th. I was reminded of all the reasons why I love running, and here’s a random list of them.

  • Running with Clem. It’s just the best. We met a horse yesterday and she handled it better than the last time.

  • Seeing the woods start to turn green this time of year.

  • How it can be so hard to get out for a run (took me from 6am-3pm yesterday) but once you do it’s usually worth it.

  • No phone - filming all my lifts for video review meant training time wasn’t a break from my phone. When I hit the trails I leave it behind.

  • Running downhill.

  • Heart rate data.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Friday Thoughts 32

Welcome to Friday Thoughts, where I share some of my favorite posts I saw on Instagram this week. Enjoy!

Jordan has a knack for creating awesome analogies that really stick. Check this one out abut making progress.

I usually run alone, but whenever I run with someone else it always goes by so fast.

Yes! Rounding your back a little won’t kill you, but awareness in the way you move will make you feel better!

401 pounds! What how close he keeps the bar. Incredible technique.

Speaking of incredible technique. There’s a great documentary about these Pakistani stone lifters on Netflix, though I can’t remember what it was called…

This could also read, it’s not boring for your body.

Thanks for reading, see you next week!

Justin MIner

@justinminergain

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Olympic Weightlifting Meet Recap

You may know I participated in my first Olympic Weightlifting meet this past weekend. While I have been dabbling in the lifts, called the snatch and the clean and jerk since I was in high school, I never actually competed before.


In November 2023 I saw the Seacoast Open Weightlifting Meet was happening in April.  I decided it would be the perfect chance to train for 6 months and really commit to giving the sport a go. It would also be a chance for me to hire a coach, and hopefully become more technically proficient in the lifts so I could hit some big lifetime PRs at 35.


I was eager for the meet to happen. This happens with races too. A few weeks out I feel ready and just want to get it over with. In this case I hit a big PR for the snatch, 225 pounds, 8 days before the meet on singlet Saturday (you lift heavy and try out your singlet for the meet). Everything was clicking and I was able to continue making small technique adjustments that transformed my lift.


The next week training was dialed back and I focused on making sure my quads weren’t too stiff. I got my diet in check, since I would have to weigh in 2 hours before I lifted too. I spent most of these months trying to gain weight (to lift more weight) but right before the meet I was anxious I wouldn’t make it. It wouldn’t have really mattered, I would have just been bumped into the next category, but I wanted to do it right, and making weight is part of the sport. I ate light three days before and avoided electrolytes (they help you hold on to water). I made my weight class without problem, but was very happen to munch down two peanut butter and jellies and chug some salty water afterwards.


About an hour after weight in it was time to start warming up. This is where the sport aspect comes into play, and it’s all about timing and pacing. When your session starts, everyone in the session gets 3 attempts at a snatch. Once the bar is loaded, it never gets lighter, so the weight that you will lift determines the order of the lifters. You can change your lift up to 3 times. So you need to be warmed and ready to lift max weights, but you can’t do them too far from your first attempt to too close. This was another situation I was so happy to have a coach telling me when to take my warm up lifts, and changing the plates on the bar was nice too.


When I was my turn, I came from the warm up room out back and couldn’t believe how many people were there! The platform is basically a stage, and it was a little nerve wracking. I opened up at 95 kilos, about 90% of my best lift. I stuck it and being up on stage made the weight feel like nothing. Someone else had a crack at 95 then it was my turn again. I went to 98 kilos. I forgot how to lift on this attempt. I tried to over muscle it and didn’t let my technique do its thing. The meet is a balancing act of being cool and calm and totally amped to crush weights. That time I got too amped. Since I missed, it would be my turn again.


I went up to 100 kilos, 220 pounds. I was much more patient on this lift, but I still missed it. If it were training and I could have tried again, I would have gotten it. I was bummed, I really wanted to snatch 100 kilos in the meet and came up short. My coach said it’s over, now time to clean and jerk. I ate some food, drank some water and started warming up the clean and jerk after a 10 minute break.


The weights felt light on the clean and jerk. When I took my last warm up lift, it felt awesome. I also thought it was 112 kilos, but it ended up being 115, which was supposed to be my opening weight. I opened at 118 kilos instead and stuck it well. The next guy was opening at 125, so it would be my turn again. I went to 123 kilos, or 271 pounds. I missed it in the same was I did my second snatch. Just kind of flubbed it. That meant it was my turn again. To me, this was the most exciting part of the meet. I had a ton of pressure to hit this lift. I needed to be amped up to lift this heavy bar over my head, but stay calm enough to be patient and remember my technique. It was hard to do with so many people watching right in front of you, I’m used to lifting by myself! I just sat there, and tried controlling my breath and keeping my heart rate down. I tried to take my time and be chill.


I hit the 123 smoothly and was pumped. I would have loved to get a 4th attempt on both the snatch and the clean and jerk, but that’s competition and that’s what happens sometimes. I ended up going 95kg snatch, 123kg clean and jerk for a 218kg total. The goal was 100/125/225. So I came up short on my goal but had an amazing experience nonetheless.


I’ve learned a ton and really appreciate this awesome and weird sport even more than I already did. Thanks to everyone who came out to support me and asked how it went this week. I’ll be back on the platform for sure, but first, time to train for some running this summer.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Steps, Sleep and Protein

If you want to gather some information about your lifestyle, I would try recommend 3 things; total protein grams consumed, hours of sleep and daily steps.

By knowing how many grams of protein you get we can set a realistic target. Focusing on protein can help better food choices fall into place.

Sleep gives a clear picture of how much rest and recovery you’re getting. Until you track it, it’s impossible to know. Getting more productive rest can boost your workout performance and leave you feeling recharged every morning.

Steps show how much NEAT (non-exercise activity thermogenesis) you’re getting and if you’re moving enough during the day. There’s nothing magic about ten thousand. Seriously. Instead, figure out where you’re at and focus on getting a couple thousand more consistently.

With those three stats you can determine lifestyle alterations that will positively move the needle towards your goals.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Strategic Not Heroic

One of our Core Values is:

Consistency and moderation over intensity.

While intensity does have its place. We often times skip the consistent part and go for intensity. This leads to burn out instead of trust in the process.

We want you to commit to being healthier for the long term. This isn't a quick fix.

Let's make consistency just as important as intensity.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Friday Thoughts 31

Welcome to this week’s edition of Friday thoughts, where I share half formed blog ideas or my favorite Instagram posts I saw throughout the week. Enjoy!


  • Seacoast Open. After 6 months of training, I’m taking on my first Olympic-style weightlifting meet this Sunday. Details are here for anyone who wants to check it out.

  • As Mike Boyle famously says, “if you just want sore legs, we can skip the workout and I can hit your thighs with a baseball bat instead.”

  • I love the idea of “leaving room to improve.” I would often find myself in that trap while training for this meet. It would be the first week of the program and I would be feeling good and I would have to check myself and remind myself that I’ll have to do this again for the next few weeks, there will be another chance. There’s nothing wrong with leaving a little in the tank to allow yourself to progress.

  • I’m still not sure what ultra filtered means, but I like it in my coffee.

That’s all for this week. See you next time.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Fluctuate

I’ve been trying to gain a few pounds for the weightlifting meet. I was between weight categories and I decided to eat up to the 102kg weight class.

With the meet just a few days away, I’ve been weighing myself a lot. Throughout the day I’ll hop on and see what it says. I want to be as heavy as possible without going over 102.0kg.

I know from working in the fitness industry for so long that the scale can mess with your head.

I know that my weight will fluctuate throughout the day based on food, water, clothing, electrolytes and bathroom trips.

Even knowing that information the scale is still messing with me.  I lost 6.5 pounds from Monday to Tuesday!

Obviously this is a special circumstance, and I have to weigh in for the competition.

For everyday life though, it’s been a good reminder that the number on the scale can mess with you.

It can fluctuate up and down some much just throughout the day just based on how much water you’re absorbing. There are scenarios that call for it, but most of the time, you’re better off keeping away from that thing and figuring out a different way to measure progress.

Justin Miner

@Justinminergain

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Seacoast Open Details

Here details for the Seacoast Open, the weightlifting meet I’ll be competing in this weekend.

Sunday April 21st

Seacoast Athletics, North Hampton

My session is from 2pm-4pm and Riley’s starts at 12pm

I appreciate everyone wishing me luck! Parking details below for anyone who’s going to check it out.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Gym Lingo: Rounds vs. Sets

Sets and rounds are similar terms that mean basically the same thing. It’s how many rotations you will complete an exercise or series of exercises.

I differentiate between the two when writing a program.

I use sets when describing something with a prescribed rest. Whether it is heavy squats or 400m running intervals, if it has a programmed rest, it’s a set.

Example

Back squat 5 sets of 5 @ 70% of max with a 2 minute rest b/t sets

Or

8 sets of 400m run @ moderate pace with a 90 second rest

Rounds on the other hand are more casual. Complete 5 rounds at a steady pace. Or complete 5 rounds for time, or as fast as possible. While there isn’t a prescribed rest within a round, you can take a break and pace yourself to ensure quality.

Complete 3 rounds at a steady pace:

8 push ups

10 ring rows

12 mb slams

Or complete 3 rounds for time:

50ft sled march

10 bw squats

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Shut Eye

In their book Built to Move, Kelly and Juliet Starrett outline these 10 tips to get the best rest and recovery every night. You may know some of these, but hopefully you can learn a thing or two to help you get a higher quality night of sleep.

Go to sleep and wake up at the same time, even weekends.

We keep out babies on toddlers on strict sleep schedules, why don’t we do that as adults?

Move more throughout the day.

More movement throughout the day is going to help you hit the hay later. TL;DR: walk more to wear yourself out.

Careful with caffeine

Caffeine takes time for our system to process it. Even if you’re a fast caffeine metabolizer (like me, I got my DNA tested), it can still affect your sleep, wait for it…. Even if you fall asleep without issue - it’s likely disrupting the restfulness and quality of your sleep. I’ve found that if I have caffeine too late, I’ll fall asleep without issue, but often wake up ‘too’ early the next morning unable to fall back asleep. Try out a couple different cut off times and see what works best for you.

No phones in the bed.

Right after GAIN opened I bought an analog alarm clock. I was waking up and immediately grabbing my phone to refresh my email. Not exactly a chill morning wake up. These days I still leave my phone downstairs.

Cut the alcohol

Anyone who has worn a Garmin or a WHOOP strap for a consistent period of time will tell you that alcohol negatively impacts their sleep. Audit your consumption and see how your sleep score changes after indulging.

Cool down

A cool room is the best place to sleep. Try turning the thermostat down a bit before bed and see if it helps you unwind.

Night time wind down

The Starrett’s recommend setting an alarm 60 minutes before bed to remind you to start your routine. They recommend doing your mobility work and foam rolling at night to help promote a parasympathetic response, or helping your nervous system wind down.

Dark and quiet

Blackout shades are amazing. Especially if you’re early to bed people like us.

Overestimate the time you need in bed.

This one is hard to wrap your head around. They’re saying if you want 8 hours, you better plan to be in bed for 9 hours. It’ll take you a while to fall asleep, and if you wake up at all for the bathroom, or toss and turn, all those minutes don’t count toward you sleep total. I’ve been thinking about and using this one for the past year and it can motivate me get into bed sooner.

Mimic your bedtime when you travel.

Stay consistent when you can.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Friday Thoughts 30

Welcome back to Friday Thoughts, where I share some of my favorite Instagram posts I saved this week. Enjoy!

Upgrade your balance. Taking some breaths and looking around is a way to upgrade your balance practice.

Came across this April 2015 throwback this week.

What!

World record bench presser, Jen Thompson, has her two teenage boys hand her the 120 pound dumbbells. Amazing! I’ve never benched more than the 100s.

The never ending rope trick!

Thanks for reading, see you Monday.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Slowing Time Down

Several months ago I took the USA Weightlifting Coaches’ course. It’s been a seminar I’ve wanted attended for a while and it was nice to check it off my bucket list.

One of the more fascinating things I learned was how fast the Olympic lifts happen - The bar speed on a snatch is something like 1.2-1.5 meters/second. The lift is over in less than a second, and so much happens in to get a barbell from the floor to over your head. You have to be aggressive and precise.

A few times a week I upload videos to my coach and he breaks them down, analyzes  them and provides feedback for me to work on at my next session. My technique and understanding of the lifts has improved drastically, but the other day I felt it all come together at once.

I was working up to 85% of my max. I watched my video back from my last set and noticed a slight jump forward - something we’ve been working on for a while. I decide to go up 5 pounds, or 2 kilos as we say in weightlifting, and try to end on a smoother lift. What happened was crazy, and I didn’t even realize was possible.

Time slowed down.

I set up like I always do. Step to the bar, left foot then right, found good foot pressure, grabbed the bar, right hand first, sipped a big breath in and picked a spot to look at. I rocked up to load my hips and when I dropped back down into my starting position I pushed the bar off the floor and the next half second felt like a minute. Like I was watching a slow motion video of myself.

I could feel the bar moving by the inch and I heard cues in my head and was making adjustments on the fly. Your knee should be vertical as you pass it, get your chest up as soon as the bar is past your knees, sweep the bar, drive vertically - don’t lean back, put the bar where you want it! I even had the fleeting thought as I dropped under the bar to catch it - how am I thinking of all this at once?

I nailed the lift. My coach said it was the best snatch he’s ever seen me do. My understanding of the lift completely changed after that one attempt. All these little pieces I have been working on, small adjustments, micro tweaks came all together and time slowed down.

The goal is 100 kilos so I’ve still got a ways to go, but I’m thrilled with my progress, and the whole process of refining these skills for the past 6 months.

Many of you have asked for the details about the meet - the meet is in North Hampton on 4/21. Riley will lift around 12pm and I’ll start around 2pm. Here are some details about the meet and I’ll post them again next week.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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More Rest, Less Reps

Here are some gym hacks you should know about.

They’re not really hacks either. They’re sound training principles that go against the norm of how peoples’ expectation of workouts should be.

The first is to rest more.

If something feels hard, and your goal is to improve strength. Chill out.

Resting longer allows the stuff that happens in your muscles run its program to gear up for the next bout of effort. That extra minute or two can be the difference in a weight feeling really easy or too hard.

If something feels really heavy, remember that isn’t a bad thing if you’re trying to build strength. You need stress to build strength and that struggle is good!

Too much of a struggle can be an issue though. We still want proper form and often times the way to ensure better form with a heavier weight or harder skill is to cut back on the reps.

If your program says do 8, but you just increased a weight for the first time, you can do 5 or 6 reps to build confidence and get some practice. Keep the movement quality high instead of completing 8 sloppy reps.

Experienced gym-goers get this, and it’s a valuable framework to keep you playing the long game.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Away Gains

All the strength gains you want to make at the gym happen while you’re away from the gym, during the other 23 hours of the day.

If you want to improve your performance and crush your goals, consider the following questions.

Are you providing enough fuel for what you want to do?

Are you drinking water? Taking some electrolytes?

Are you recovering? How many hours of sleep do you get consistently?

Feeling stressed out? How are you dealing with that stress?

Getting enough daily movement? Have a mobility practice or stretching routine?

All these things factor in to how you body feels and performs. And they’re all things that happened away from the gym, the other 23 hours.

If you want to upgrade your in gym performance, the best place to start is what you’re doing when you’re not at the gym.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Add to Subtract

Gyms are so good at helping people make changes in their life is because it’s a new thing to add in.

You need to commute to the gym, be there for an hour and commute back to home or work or wherever. You can’t fake it. You have to carve out that time and actually show up.

Health and fitness often emphasizes subtraction. Take diets for example, they often eliminate something that is deemed “bad.” Cut this thing out, stop doing this, no more of this type of food. The restriction and focus on what you can’t do makes compliance difficult.

If you’re having trouble getting to the gym, remember, once you add this habit in, other good habits are going to fall in place and you’ll subtract bad habits with the addition of your new one.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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The Day There Was No Blog

Haunted by the lack of internet and power two weeks in a row!

There’s no Friday Thoughts post today.

Just a reminder that while streaks are impressive, getting back to it after a falter is just as, if not more, impressive than the original streak. It all comes down to consistency.

Have a great weekend!

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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Training Ramblings

My weightlifting meet is 17 days away.


I get 3 attempts in the snatch, and the clean and jerk, to score a total, the sum of my best of each in kilos. Each lift requires getting a barbell from the ground to overhead.


I’ve been training for this since November. I have a coach who writes my program and gives me feedback on my lifts through video review. I’ve enjoyed the training and having the commitment to the meet, it’s been easy to get moving and train on most days with the meet hanging over my head. My technique and understanding of the movements has drastically improved too. Which is was probably a bigger goal than just throwing more weight around (although I really want that 100 kilo snatch).


I’m happy we’re getting closer. I feel ready and also craving a break from chucking heavy barbells around. And a lot of people around me are gearing up for Spring trail runs, and that’s got me thinking ahead to what my next phase of training will look like when this is all said and done.


That’s not to say I’ll be moving on from weightlifting entirely, either. I plan to take a break for running in the summer and then get back to it in the fall.


I’ve had a great year of training and a big part of that is thinking of parts of the year as different sport seasons. I was a better runner when I ran year round, but having taken a break from it has made me appreciate it more, and at least crave it more than I thought I would.


Training for both those sports at the same time presents an interesting challenge. They’re on opposite ends of the athletic spectrum. Weightlifting is all about power and bebing explosive for fractions of a second, while running is about a long sustained effort. Being heavier is an advantage for weightlifting while a disadvantage for running and so on.


Here’s a snapshot of my progress on the lifts.

245 clean and jerk attempt March 2021

245 Clean and Jerk March 2024

Thanks for reading.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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SOLEC

It’s rare someone comes in and doesn’t say that need to work on balance. Balance can be frustrating to train, because you need to challenge your balance in order to improve it. I learned this acronym last year in Built to Move, and it’s something you should know, too.

SOLEC: Standing on One Leg Eyes Closed.

That’s the test. Stand on one leg with your eyes closed, see how long you can last.

Your eyes play a big role in balancing and when you take that away it’s a big challenge.

Try the test with your eyes open and compare to your eyes closed score.

There’s a big range for a good target time here. At least a few seconds eyes closed is the bare minimum and getting 15 seconds with eyes closed is the gold standard. This will show you the key role your vision has with your balance. Give it a shot!

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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March by the Numbers

As we talked about yesterday, the start of a new month is a great time to look back and gather data and use that information to make changes for the new month.

Here’s my March by the numbers.

Daily average steps: 7187

An increase of nearly 900 per day! While I haven’t been trying to walk more, we’ve been outside more and with that comes more movement. That and the 6 mile run I did on the 31st got me 18,000 steps and padded my average!

Sleep: 7hr 25min average

About the same, 3 minutes more than last. I got 8 hours 5 times compared to February’s 8. My goal is to get 8 more consistently, and while I’m just making excuses, I did get 7:59 a couple times too!

Workouts: 21

I’m still on a weightlifting plan for the upcoming meet on April 21. I do 4 weightlifting-focused workouts in each week. In March, I also did the 3 CrossFit open workouts (one per week) and went on two trail runs, my first since October.

I was nervous about running out on the trails. My training has been very focused on lifting and eating and trying to move weight and become more technically proficient with a barbell. I was worried the new stimulus of trail running would light up my legs.

My legs were tired after, but not anything too crazy. I’m itching to move on from the weightlifting focus and I now feel less nervous about shifting gears too. I’ll be running the Mount Washington Auto Road Race in June.

Justin Miner

@justinminergain

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