Autonomy by GMB Fitness

GMB Fitness

Autonomy means deciding and moving. Ryan, Andy, and Jarlo aren't here to shill for some stupid supplement company. This show explores fitness as a way to play your own game and do more of what matters, all based on decades of training, coaching, and clinical experience. And truly awful jokes. If you hate every formulaic fitness podcast, you just might be in the right place.

  1. 3 Out of 10 Protocol for Training with Pain or Injury

    1 DAY AGO

    3 Out of 10 Protocol for Training with Pain or Injury

    Ask a question Two ways people get it wrong with training around injuries: rest until everything feels perfect (three weeks becomes three months becomes deconditioned and afraid to start), or push through and hope (which usually extends the flare).  Both worked when you were 22. They don't anymore. Jarlo Ilano (physical therapist, GMB co-founder) and Andy Fossett walk through the framework Jarlo uses with patients and we use across our programs. A discomfort scale, an irritability test, and a way to keep training while you recover. What's covered: Why "rest until pain-free" stops working past your 30s, and what active rest actually looks likeThe 3-out-of-10 discomfort scale: what it measures, how to track it through a session, and why we use 3 instead of the 5 that shows up in post-op researchIrritability as a diagnostic: the difference between pain that fades when you stop and pain that lingers after the stressor is goneThe delayed-reaction problem (you felt fine during, you wake up wrecked) and how to read the next 24 hoursThe "split everything in half" rule for your first session backHow to control variables when you train injured: pick a familiar movement, fix the time, vary the loadWhy every rep is already a modification, and why that mindset beats hunting for the perfect substitute exerciseThis one's for anyone who's hit middle age (which Jarlo points out starts way earlier than you think) and noticed the rules have changed. You can run the framework yourself, and it works across most of the common stuff: knees, shoulders, tendons, adductors. Support the show 👉 Try a free strength and agility workout

    41 min
  2. 2 APR

    When Sleep Advice Fails

    Ask a question Sleep Is a Practice We've talked about sleep before — our PM routines, keeping it dark and cool and quiet, putting down the phone, all the adulting 101 tips that every Instagram account and bestselling book has been yelling at you for years. You know all of it. So we polled 119 members of our coaching community about their sleep. A third of them are struggling, and the comments made one thing very clear: nobody has a knowledge problem. They have a life problem. Toddlers, menopause, business anxiety, shift-working spouses, bodies that wake up at 3am to replay every unfinished task from the last decade. This episode is about what to do when you already know the basics and your life won't cooperate. Resources: 5 Quality Sleep Strategies to Feel Well-Rested and More Productive - Our article on the fundamentals of better sleepEvening Stretching Routine - Ryan's pre-bed routine to help you relax and sleep betterYour PM Routine - Our earlier episode on building an evening routine that sets you up for the next dayHow to Practice Recovery - Our episode on autoregulation and learning to read your body's recovery needsRespiration - Our breathing program for managing stress, calming your nervous system, and improving recoveryRecovery - Structured active recovery sessions with light movement, self-massage, and full-body awareness workAlpha Posse - Our coaching community where this sleep conversation started Pick one thing from this episode. One. Practice it for two weeks. If it's breathing before bed, do it every night. If it's moving your phone out of the bedroom, do it every night. If it's the evening stretch routine, commit.  See what actually changes for you, then decide if it stays. Support the show 👉 Try a free strength and agility workout

    40 min
  3. 24 MAR

    4 Training Seasons (And Why You Need All of Them)

    Ask a question Most people think training is about constant progress. Getting stronger. More flexible. Better conditioned. Always moving forward. And when that’s not happening, it feels like something’s gone wrong. But that idea falls apart pretty quickly when you look at how anything actually develops over time. Athletes don’t train at peak intensity all year. They periodize their with pre-season, in-season, and off-season. Your work has busy periods and slower stretches. Even your energy across a week shifts depending on sleep, stress, and everything else going on in your life. Training works the same way. There are seasons to it. Not just one. In this episode, we break down four of them: Building — when you’re putting focused effort into improving a specific skill or qualityMaintenance Mode — doing just enough to keep what you’ve built while your attention goes elsewhereDamage Control — adjusting when something’s off, whether that’s an injury, fatigue, or just life hitting hardExploring / Performing — using what you’ve built in less structured, more variable, real-world waysThe mistake most people make is treating “building” as the only phase that counts. But trying to build everything, all the time, usually leads to stalled progress, frustration, or getting hurt. A better approach is understanding which season each part of your training is in, and adjusting accordingly. You might be building mobility, maintaining strength, managing a cranky shoulder, and exploring new movement patterns all in the same week. That’s how sustainable progress actually works. We’ll walk through how each of these phases works, why they’re all necessary, and how to train in each one so that even maintenance or damage control still move you forward. Because the goal isn’t to always be pushing harder. It’s to keep making progress over time without burning yourself out in the process. Support the show 👉 Try a free strength and agility workout

    40 min
  4. 10 FEB

    Reps Don't Count - Organizing Your Training Around Time Under Attention

    Ask a question Andy and Ryan discuss the use of timed sets vs rep counting in the Praxis Protocol, emphasizing the importance of quality movement over quantity. The conversation covers the significance of adjusting intensity, the idea of mechanical drop sets, and the distinction between time under tension and time under attention. They also address how to measure progress without relying on numerical goals, encouraging listeners to focus on their improvement in movement quality. Takeaways GMB emphasizes quality of movement over quantity in training.The five P's framework helps organize practice effectively.Timed sets allow for a focus on quality rather than counting reps.Adjusting intensity and scaling movements is crucial for progress.Mechanical drop sets can be applied to bodyweight exercises.Time under tension is important, but time under attention is key for practice.Measuring progress can be based on how well you perform movements, not just numbers.Quality movement leads to better performance in sports and daily activities.The goal of training should be to improve functional movement skills.Practicing with a focus on quality can prevent injuries and enhance performance.Chapters 00:00 Introduction to the Podcast and GMB's Unique Approach 02:22 Understanding the Five P's Framework 05:21 Quality Over Quantity in Movement Practice 08:34 The Importance of Timed Sets in Training 11:27 Challenges with Traditional Rep Counting 14:12 Transitioning to Quality-Focused Training 17:23 Conclusion and Future Directions 18:56 Scaling Movements and Adjustments 21:59 Understanding Mechanical Drop Sets 23:53 Bodyweight Variations and Drop Sets 27:22 Quality Over Quantity in Training 29:26 Time Under Tension vs. Time Under Attention 35:31 Focusing on Progress Beyond Numbers Support the show 👉 Try a free strength and agility workout

    45 min
4.6
out of 5
24 Ratings

About

Autonomy means deciding and moving. Ryan, Andy, and Jarlo aren't here to shill for some stupid supplement company. This show explores fitness as a way to play your own game and do more of what matters, all based on decades of training, coaching, and clinical experience. And truly awful jokes. If you hate every formulaic fitness podcast, you just might be in the right place.

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