Unstoppable by Design

Matt Terry - Juggernaut Fitness

Stop leaving your progress to luck. Unstoppable by Design is dedicated to helping you build a life of purpose through functional fitness, health, and a growth mindset. Join Matt Terry as he dives deep into the mindset shifts and actions required to see real results in your health and personal growth. From fitness training tips to leadership and commitment. This is real talk for those ready to raise their standard. Real stories. Real results.

  1. 1 day ago

    EP56, One Year Of Reps

    Send us a question here! This is the Season 1 finale. 56 episodes. One full year of weekly drops. Well over 2,000 downloads across every platform. And today Matt closes the chapter and sets the stage for what's next. This one is part celebration, part reflection, part promise. It's also the episode for anyone who has been sitting on something. A business idea. A creative project. A book they want to write. A goal they've been circling. A lift they keep scaling out of. Matt makes the case that you do not need to be good at it on day one. You need to be willing to do the reps. A year ago, this podcast was an empty bar. Today, it's something real. Not because of talent or gear or a head start, but because of consistency. The same principle that builds bodies builds anything. Questions this episode answers: What does consistency actually look like over a year?How do you start a podcast, a business, or any new skill from zero?What is the "1% better every day" philosophy in practice?Why does showing up matter more than talent or gear?Why is the empty bar harder than a heavy back squat?How do you build something when you don't know what you're doing?What's next for the Unstoppable by Design podcast?Why take a break between podcast seasons?In this episode, we reflect on: Where This Started: A microphone, four episodes in the bank, and basically zero idea what podcasting actually was. Why the early episodes are still up, and why that gap between Episode 1 and now is the whole point.The Podcast Was A Lift: The barbell metaphor that runs the whole episode. Why showing up when the lift feels bad is exactly how it stops feeling bad. The connection between learning a snatch and learning anything new.What Showing Up Built: Over 2,000 downloads. Members using the show to understand the why behind what we program. A growing reference library on YouTube. And every single one of those downloads happened because the podcast existed in the first place.The Lesson for Anyone Sitting on Something: Public reps. Ugly reps. Reps where you cringe at the playback. Why 1% better every day is not glamorous and not viral, and why that's exactly why it works.What's Coming in Season 2: Same podcast, sharper focus. Still audio only. Possibly a new intro track. The big shift: more interviews, more members sharing their real stories, more coaches breaking down what they actually know, more voices from the broader Lakes Region community.A Message to Supporters To everyone who has supported this show, thank you. Real thank you. Because Season 2 is taking a break, Matt is turning the support feature off during the downtime. It comes back when Season 2 launches this fall. No automatic re-enrollment. We start fresh together when the show returns. The Back Catalog Lives On Every episode is available on our YouTube channel for reference any time. Pull up Episode 49 on goal setting. Pull up Episode 50 on RPE. Pull up the Olympic Lifts series (Episodes 52-55) before your next snatch day. It's all there. It's all yours. Season 2 launches this fall. We'll see you then. Until then. Be well. Be Unstoppable. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    10 min
  2. 23 June

    EP55, Olympic Lifts Made Simple, Part 4

    Send us a question here! You've spent four weeks getting ready. Now it's time to actually get good. This is the final episode of the four-week Olympic Lifts Made Simple series. After breaking down the lifts, the pull, and the catch, Matt closes the loop on the part that matters most: how to take everything we've covered and turn it into a real skill on the bar. The honest truth? You can listen to every Olympic lifting podcast on Earth and still feel like a beginner the next time you grab the bar. That's not a failure of you, and it's not a failure of the podcast. That's just how skill development works. There's a gap between understanding a lift and executing a lift, and the only thing that closes that gap is repetition with a coach watching, telling you what you can't feel yet. Questions this episode answers: How do I actually get good at Olympic lifts?Why do I plateau on snatches and cleans even when I'm working hard?Should I go heavy or focus on technique when learning Olympic lifts?Is a CrossFit class enough to learn Olympic lifting?Why do I need a coach for Olympic lifts?What's the right rep volume for learning the Olympic lifts?What is the principle of adaptation in strength training?What's the difference between a class and a clinic?How long does it take to get good at Olympic lifting?What is the Catch Me If You Can clinic at Juggernaut Fitness?In this episode, we dig into: Why More Information Won't Fix Your Lifts: The gap between understanding and execution, and why only one thing closes it.The Most Common Mistake After Listeners Get Excited: Why people go too heavy too fast, and what loading up like a veteran actually costs you in missed lifts and bad habits that take years to undo.The 30 Reps at 60% Rule: Why 30 quality reps at 60% beats 5 grindy reps at 90% every single time, and how the principle of adaptation works in plain language.The Truth About Group Classes: Our classes are world class, but they're not the optimal environment to learn Olympic lifts from scratch. Why 60 minutes with 14 people will only get you so far, and why concentrated coaching is the missing piece for almost every plateau.Why Specialty Clinics Change Everything: The shift from "in a class" to "on the platform" with hands-on, eyes-on coaching the entire time. Why this is where breakthroughs actually happen.The Catch Me If You Can Clinic with Coach Jess: What's covered, who it's for (spoiler: everyone), and why the people who come out the other side don't just lift heavier, they lift with confidence.Unstoppable Challenge: Sign up for the clinic. That's it. Don't think about it for three weeks. Don't tell yourself you'll do the next one. Don't talk yourself out of it because you don't think you're ready. You spent four weeks getting ready. That was the whole point. Catch Me If You Can Clinic - July at Juggernaut Fitness Run by Coach Jess. The clinic that has changed more members' Olympic lifts than anything else we offer. Foot positioning, setup, the bar, the pulls broken down by phases, full extension, turnovers, catches, receiving position. Hands-on, eyes-on, repeated until the patterns stick. Spots are limited on purpose. Sign up here: http://app.usekilo.com/sales-portal/juggernaut-fitness/63ce9c48-88fa-4a1a-852a-51f428b37f17 Support the Show & Win! UBC RAFFLE: Support the show for as little as $3 a month and you're entered into our next raffle drawing on July 4th, just over a week away. We're giving away a full seat in the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge ($199 value), one of our most popular programs. Easy entry, real prize. If the show has helped you, share it with someone who'd get something out of it. That's how we grow this thing. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    7 min
  3. 16 June

    EP54, Olympic Lifts Made Simple, Part 3

    Send us a question here! Here's the sentence that changes everything about Olympic lifting: your job is not to pull the bar up to you. Your job is to get yourself under the bar. That sounds like a riddle, and it's the most important idea in this whole episode. This is Part 3 of the four-week Olympic Lifts Made Simple series. After breaking down the lifts (Part 1) and the pull (Part 2), today Matt tackles the catch, the part of the lift that breaks most people's brains because it's completely backwards from how they think it should work. The bar travels a certain height because of your second pull. Once it's at its peak, it's coming back down. Gravity wins, always. So what determines whether you make the lift or miss it? Whether your body can get down to where the bar is by the time it gets there. Questions this episode answers: Why do I keep missing snatches and cleans in front of me?Why do coaches yell "feet, feet, feet" during Olympic lifts?What does "catch high and ride it down" mean?How is the snatch catch related to the overhead squat?Why does my front rack collapse during cleans?How do I fix a clean where the bar slides onto my wrists?What is a vertical finish in Olympic lifting?Why does leaning back at the top of the pull cause me to miss?Should I catch the bar in a deep squat or a quarter squat?How do I improve my catch without going heavier?Why is the catch a dropping movement and not a pulling movement?In this episode, we dig into: The Mental Flip: Why Olympic lifts are dropping movements, not pulling movements, and why beginners struggle until they understand this one shift.Speed Under the Bar: What "fast feet" actually mean, why your feet pick up and replant slightly wider, and the tall snatch and tall clean drill we use at Juggernaut to teach it.The Snatch Catch and Your Overhead Squat: Why your overhead squat is the ceiling on your snatch, and why building one builds the other.The Clean Catch and the Front Rack: Why the front rack is where most cleans go to die, the mobility issues that usually cause it, and the 30-second front rack hold drill that fixes it. Bonus: how to drill at home with a broomstick if you don't have a PVC pipe.Catch High, Ride It Down: The single coaching cue that has unlocked more pounds for Juggernaut members than anything else. Why catching high removes the fear of dropping under a moving bar, and how it bridges you to a deep catch over time.The Vertical Finish: Why leaning back at the top of the second pull sends the bar forward, and the simple cue that fixes it. "Your body is the launcher. If the launcher tips back, the rocket tips forward every time."Unstoppable Challenge: Pick one Olympic lift session this week and don't try to add weight. Use that session to drill the catch. Empty barbell or training weight only. Catch high, hold it for a beat, then ride it down. 20 reps and go home. Skill before strength. That session will pay you back for months. Up next: Part 4 closes out the series. We talk about how to actually get good at these lifts over the long haul. New episodes drop every Tuesday. Support the Show & Win! UBC RAFFLE: Support the show for as little as $3 a month and you're entered into our next raffle drawing on July 4th. We're giving away a full seat in the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge ($199 value), one of our most popular programs. Easy entry, real prize. If the show has helped you, share it with someone who'd get something out of it. That's how we grow this thing. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    9 min
  4. 9 June

    EP53, Olympic Lifts Made Simple, Part 2

    Send us a question here! If your snatch or clean feels like a guess every time you grab the bar, this episode is for you. This is Part 2 of the four-week Olympic Lifts Made Simple series, and today Matt breaks down the pull from the floor, the part where most lifters fall apart. The pull is not one motion. It's three different phases stitched together, each with its own job and its own speed. When you don't know which phase you're in, you can't fix what's broken. By the end of this episode, you'll be able to listen to your coach differently, watch a snatch on the platform differently, and feel your own pulls differently. Questions this episode answers: Why does my snatch or clean keep falling forward?What are the phases of the Olympic lift pull?What is the first pull and why is it slow?What is the transition or scoop in Olympic lifting?What is the second pull and why does it matter?Why is yanking the bar off the floor a mistake?What is the double knee bend?How fast should the bar move off the floor?Why do my hips shoot up faster than the bar?Should I pull the bar up or pull myself under the bar?Why does pulling harder with my arms make the lift worse?In this episode, we dig into: The Three Phases of the Pull: First pull (floor to knee), transition (knee to mid-thigh), and second pull (mid-thigh to full extension). Each one has a different job and a different speed.Phase One - Peel the Bar: Why the first pull should feel slow on purpose, almost boring. The biggest mistake people make in the first three inches off the floor, and the cue that fixes it.Phase Two - The Six-Inch Window Where Lifts Die: What the scoop or double knee bend actually is, why most people blast right through it, and why this is the answer when your lifts keep missing for "no reason."Phase Three - Stand Up Tall and Finish: Coach Jess's cue and why the second pull is the only place in the lift where you get to be violent. Why this phase lasts about a quarter of a second and determines almost everything.The Physics Most Lifters Ignore: Why the bar wants to travel in a straight line, why pulling harder with your arms makes things worse, and the mindset shift from "pull the bar up" to "pull yourself under the bar."Unstoppable Challenge: In your next Olympic lift session, slow down your first pull. Don't yank the bar off the floor. Set your back, take a breath, peel the bar up. Pay attention to how much more in control your transition feels when you don't rush the start. Just one session. See what changes. Up next: Part 3 of the series tackles the catch, the part of the lift that breaks most people's brains because it's completely backwards from how they think it should work. New episodes drop every Tuesday. Support the Show & Win! UBC RAFFLE: Support the show for as little as $3 a month and you're entered into our next raffle drawing on July 4th. We're giving away a full seat in the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge ($199 value), one of our most popular programs. Don't miss your shot. If the show has helped you, share it with someone who'd get something out of it. That's how we grow this thing. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    9 min
  5. 2 June

    EP52, Olympic Lifts Made Simple, Part 1

    Send us a question here! Olympic lifts have a reputation problem. People see snatches and clean and jerks at the CrossFit Games or the Olympics and assume it's a different sport entirely, something reserved for elite athletes. Matt is here to change that. This is Part 1 of a four-week series on Olympic lifting. Today's episode is the high-level entry point: what the lifts actually are, why they're some of the best general fitness tools that exist, and why every member walking into Juggernaut has a path into them, no matter their age, mobility, or experience level. If you've ever scaled out of an Olympic lift on the whiteboard, swapped a clean for barbell curls, or thought "that's not for me," this one is for you. Questions this episode answers: What are the Olympic lifts?What's the difference between a snatch and a clean and jerk?Why do CrossFit gyms program Olympic lifts?Are Olympic lifts safe for older adults or beginners?What's the difference between a power snatch and a full snatch?Why do Olympic lifts feel harder than heavier strength lifts?Can I do Olympic lifts if I have shoulder issues?What's a hang power version of a lift?Why is an empty barbell snatch harder than a heavy back squat?How do Olympic lifts help with everyday life and aging?In this episode, we dig into: The Two Lifts, Demystified: What a snatch is, what a clean and jerk is, and why every variation on the whiteboard is built off these two foundations.Why Olympic Lifts, Not Just Strength Lifts: Strength is force. Power is force times speed. Why power is the thing that goes first as you age, not strength, and why these lifts are the best tool to keep it.Real World Carryover: Catching yourself on the ice. Playing with your grandkids on the floor. Hiking the Whites with springy legs instead of trashed ones. The Olympic lifts train all of it.The Scaling Path Most People Don't Know Exists: Dumbbell hang power snatches, medicine ball cleans onto a box, the hang variations. Every member has a way in. The question isn't if, it's which version.Why the Lifts That Humble You Are the Ones That Change You: Why an empty barbell can feel harder than a max-effort squat, and why that's exactly the stimulus your body needs after the easy gains are gone.Unstoppable Challenge: The next time you see an Olympic lift on the whiteboard, don't scale it out automatically. Ask your coach what version is right for you today. You don't have to go heavy. You just have to start. That's the whole game. 1% better every day. Up next: New episodes drop every Tuesday. Part 2 of the series goes into the pull, the part most people get wrong. Support the Show & Win! UBC RAFFLE: Support the show for as little as $3 a month and you're entered into our next raffle drawing, happening this Saturday, June 6th. We're giving away a full seat in the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge ($199 value), one of our most popular programs. If you've been on the fence, now is the time. If the show has helped you, share it with someone who'd get something out of it. That's how we grow this thing. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    8 min
  6. 26 May

    EP51, Breathe Better

    Send us a question here! Are you breathing wrong without even knowing it? You take about 20,000 breaths a day, and most of them are on autopilot. But how you breathe shapes your sleep, your stress, your workouts, and how fast you recover. This solo episode breaks down three simple shifts that change how you train and how you live. In this episode, we deep dive into: Why your breath is the most underused tool you already own: Breathing is the only system that's both automatic and under your control. It's the bridge between your conscious brain and your nervous system, and it's how you tell your body whether you're safe or in danger. Shallow chest breathing sends a stress signal. Slow diaphragm breathing sends a safety signal.Nose vs mouth breathing and why it matters: Your nose is built for breathing, your mouth is built for eating and talking. Nose breathing filters the air, humidifies it, and produces nitric oxide that helps oxygen move into your bloodstream more efficiently. Mouth breathing during sleep is linked to worse sleep, dry mouth, and worse cardiovascular markers. Learn when to default to nose, and when the mouth becomes your gear shift.Box breathing, the 60 second nervous system reset: Four in, four hold, four out, four hold. Four rounds, one minute total. Used by the military, ER docs, and elite athletes because it works fast. We break down exactly when to pull it out, including before a hard workout, before a tough conversation, in the parking lot before walking into the gym, or in bed when your brain won't shut off.How to brace under the bar: A big breath through the nose, down into the belly, then brace your core like someone's about to punch you. That intra-abdominal pressure is what protects your spine on heavy squats and deadlifts. Plus the simple rule for when to exhale on each rep, and why holding your breath through a whole set is a mistake.Rhythmic breathing for runners: A 3-3 pattern for easy pace, 2-2 when you're pushing. Why finding your rhythm is one of the hardest skills for new runners to develop, and why it changes everything once you do.The Unstoppable Challenge: Pick ONE technique from this episode and use it once in the next week. Could be box breathing in your car before work, the brace on your next heavy lift, or rhythmic breathing on your next run. Notice what shifts and DM Matt on Instagram @juggernautmatt to share which one you tried. Support the Show & Win! 🎟️ Our next raffle draws Friday, June 6th, for a seat to the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge, a $199 value. For as little as $3 a month you're entered to win AND you're helping us keep this podcast going. Tap "Support the Show" in your podcast app or visit the link below. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    10 min
  7. 19 May

    EP50, RPE Explained, Why "RPE 8" Doesn't Mean What You Think It Does

    Send us a question here! Most people use RPE incorrectly, and the worst part is that they don't know it. In this episode, Matt breaks down Rate of Perceived Exertion from the ground up: what it actually means, why it beats percentage-based training, and the one misconception that could be making you train way heavier or way lighter than you think. If a coach told you to hit RPE 8 today, would you know what that feels like? Most people think RPE 8 equals 80% of their one-rep max. That's only true in one specific case. Matt explains the real math, what RPE looks like across strength, running, and Olympic lifting, and how to calibrate yourself so you actually trust the number you're writing down. Questions this episode answers: What does RPE mean in weightlifting and fitness?Is RPE 8 the same as 80% of my one-rep max?How do I use RPE if I don't know my one-rep max?What's the difference between RPE and reps in reserve (RIR)?How do I rate effort on a run if I'm not using a heart rate monitor?Why doesn't traditional RPE work well for snatches and clean and jerks?What's the talk test, and how does it tie to RPE?How do I know if I'm actually hitting my target RPE or sandbagging?Why does the same weight feel harder some days than others?Should I train to failure or stop short?In this episode, we deep dive into: Why Your One-Rep Max Isn't Fixed: And how RPE solves the moving target most percentage-based programs ignore.The 1-10 Scale, Decoded: What each number actually feels like, from "barely moving" to "everything you've got."The 80% Myth: Why RPE 8 is 92% for a single, 80% for a set of five, and 70% for a set of ten. The chart that fixes one of the most common misconceptions in strength training.RPE for Runners: The talk test, the 80/20 rule, and why most people run their easy days too hard and their hard days too easy.Why Olympic Lifting Breaks Traditional RPE: What "stay snappy" actually means and why the snatch and clean and jerk need a different framework.The Two Ego Traps: Sandbagging vs. underselling, and why honest RPE is the only RPE that works.Daily Modifiers: How sleep, stress, and life chaos change your real RPE, and why that's a feature, not a bug.The Calibration Test: The single best exercise to learn the scale fast, in one workout.Unstoppable Challenge: Pick one workout this week. Rate every working set or every running interval with an RPE number. Don't change anything else, just start paying attention. Then next week, run the Calibration Test on one of your lifts. Get the RPE Field Guide: Subscribed to the podcast through our email list? The RPE Field Guide is hitting your inbox this week. It includes the full scale, the percentage chart, the calibration test, and a quick reference for strength, running, and Olympic lifting. Support the Show & Win! UBC RAFFLE: Subscribe to the podcast to be entered into our next raffle, drawing on June 6th. We're giving away a full seat in the Ultimate Bootcamp Challenge ($199 value). One of our most popular programs. If the show has helped you, share it with someone who'd get something out of it. That's how we grow this thing. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    13 min
  8. 12 May

    EP49, Most People Don't Have Goals, They Have Wishes

    Send us a question here! Most people set goals every January and quit by February. It's not a discipline problem. The goal was never really theirs to begin with. In this episode, Matt walks through how to set a goal that actually pulls you, why your role model might be the wrong person to study, and a 3-minute exercise that'll tell you whether the goal you're chasing is real or borrowed from someone else's highlight reel. This one gets personal. Role Model vs Mentor (and why you probably need both): They do different jobs. One you study from a distance, one is in your corner pushing back. Most people conflate them and end up with neither. The Accessibility Test: Why picking a role model who's twenty steps ahead of you turns into inspiration porn instead of a useful study, and the simple filter that makes it work. The Anti-Role Model: Sometimes the most powerful person to study isn't ahead of you. It's a version of yourself you refuse to go back to. Matt shares his. The Tuesday Test (a.k.a. the Perfect Day Exercise): A 3-layer guided walkthrough that turns vague goals into specific identity. Morning, midday, evening, plus the gut check that tells you if your goal is real. Goals Aren't Additions, They're Subtractions: The part of goal setting most people skip, and why it's the difference between a goal that lands and a wish that doesn't. The 5-Point Criteria: A simple checklist for the difference between a goal that'll pull you through the boring middle and a wish that won't. If you've ever set a goal that felt flat the moment you said it out loud, this episode is for you. Support the show Follow Matt on Instagram! Interested in joining Juggernaut Fitness, either remotely or in person? Check out our website here.

    7 min

About

Stop leaving your progress to luck. Unstoppable by Design is dedicated to helping you build a life of purpose through functional fitness, health, and a growth mindset. Join Matt Terry as he dives deep into the mindset shifts and actions required to see real results in your health and personal growth. From fitness training tips to leadership and commitment. This is real talk for those ready to raise their standard. Real stories. Real results.

You Might Also Like