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253: How To Stay Lean, Strong And Pain-Free After 40 with Dr. John Rusin

Dr. John Rusin

 

Brief Bio:

In today’s episode, Ted interviews physical therapist, strength and conditioning coach, Dr. John Rusin. With more than a decade of elite-level training experience and advanced degrees in both exercise science and physical therapy, Dr. Rusin has developed performance, regeneration, and aesthetics programs for some of the world’s best strength, power, and endurance athletes. Dr. Rusin’s present and past client list include MLB All-Stars, NFL All-Pros, Olympic Gold, Bronze and Silver Medalists, World-Record-Holding Powerlifters, Elite Bodybuilders and Figure Competitors, All-World IronMan Triathletes, and top professional athletes from eight of the major American professional sports leagues.

He is also an internationally recognized strength coach, speaker, and writer, whose work has been popularized throughout the sports performance and fitness industries in some of the most prestigious media outlets in our industry such as Men’s Fitness, Stack Magazine, and Muscle&Strength, to name a few.

 

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How John started his strengthening and conditioning journey (6:31)
  • What got him into physical therapy (8:00 )
  • Why most people start to exercise later in life (9:08)
  • 3 Ways to stay motivated to exercise regularly (13:25)
  • The secret of why the right movements are more important than lifting heavy weights (13:42)
  • How to deadlift with proper form (15:23)
  • The #1 Tip to prevent post-workout soreness (18:11)
  • How to achieve muscle definition without overdoing it (25:14)
  • Exercise, neurotransmitters and motivation to exercise (29:12)
  • His favorite mobility and stretching routines (32:15)
  • Is overstretching bad? (38:18)
  • The most powerful and versatile training method (42:09)
  • Final advice from John (56:24)

 

Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.

 

[tweet_box design=”box_12_at” float=”none” author=”Dr.John Rusin” pic_url=”https://drjohnrusin.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/dr-john-rusin-about-page-profile-picture-e1448984802177-246×300.jpg”] “You cannot let ego drive your training. You must let intelligence drive your training.” [/tweet_box]

 

Ted’s Take-Aways

1.Make sure you’re learning from the right people in the fitness industry.

I know that can be tough because there are so many people out there and it’s hard to tell when someone has great marketing but they’re not good. Or they have poor quality marketing but they’re really good.  That’s why I have guys like John on the show. He is a solid professional to learn things from although I follow a bit of a different perspective.

2. If you are chronically getting injured you are not doing things right.

You should not be chronically injured or getting injured when you go to the gym. Now, if you’re playing a sport, then injuries happen in competition while pushing the limits. If you’re you’re training in a controlled environment like the gym, you should not be getting injured. The only exception to that would probably be a method like CrossFit—where people treat exercise as a sport.

Again, that is nothing against Crossfit–although I do have my thoughts about the good and bad aspects of that method– but that’s an example of where you’re pushing the limits and getting hurt is likely. Powerlifting is another example of where exercise is treated like a sport and the injury rate is higher than casual exercise. But if you’re in there for general fitness and you’re getting hurt, you’re doing yourself a huge disservice because once those little minor nagging injuries become chronic, they become constant obstacles to progress and consistency.

3. Make sure you’re doing some mobility work; make sure you do some flexibility work.

In the interview, we didn’t talk about the distinction between mobility and flexibility. To me, mobility exercises are activation exercises—but that’s just a semantic difference. That’s when you’re activating certain muscles so you achieve a greater control through a larger range of motion of the joint. Make sure you’re doing something in the gym to prepare you to ramp up your nervous system, to warm up your joints and your muscles. That will help you if you are already injured. Or if you’re not, it will help you prevent injuries. Injury prevention is a tough sell for most people because if you’re not injured you just don’t usually care. If you’re currently uninjured, then try to be smart and learn from other people so you don’t have to learn the hard way like many of us have had to with frustrating injuries.

 

Connect with John:

Website

www.drjohnrusin.com/FH

 

The Legendary Fat Loss Blueprint

Keep these takeaways in mind. Those are the reasons I’m finishing the Legendary Fat Loss Blueprint. It’s designed to help you burn fat at the fastest possible rate for your body while maintaining every ounce of your hard-earned muscle. I even tested it on real people just like you.

Why you should buy the Legendary Rapid Fat Loss Blueprint?

You’ve heard of low-carb diets. You know about high-protein diets. Both work, but neither is ideal.

That’s why we took the best parts of each diet and fused them into the ultimate rapid fat loss plan.

The Legendary Rapid Fat Loss Blueprint helps easily control your calories — so you don’t need to count them — and also creates the optimal hormonal environment to burn fat.

This strategic combination takes the brakes off your fat loss and delivers the fast results you want.

Don’t confuse rapid weight loss with a starvation diet, which causes your muscles to waste away along with the fat. The Legendary Fat Loss Blueprint is nothing like that.

If you want to start losing now, sign up for the Waiting List!

 

Ted Ryce is a high-performance coach, celebrity trainer, and a longevity evangelist. A leading fitness professional for over 24 years in the Miami Beach area, who has worked with celebrities like Sir Richard Branson, Rick Martin, Robert Downey, Jr., and hundreads of CEOs of multimillion-dollar companies. In addition to his fitness career, Ryce is the host of the top-rated podcast called Legendary Life, which helps men and women reclaim their health, and create the body and life they deserve.

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