Contrary to popular belief, optimum nutrition is not one-size-fits-all. What works for others may not work for you. Our body type is dictated by genes that we cannot change. What we can do is tailor our exercise and diet so that our genes respond and are expressed the way they are supposed to.\xa0
This week, Neil joins me to explain how to personalise your optimum nutrition and exercise. Throughout the episode, we emphasise the importance of knowing your body type in building the right diet and exercise for your specific set of genes.\xa0
If you want to achieve optimum nutrition and health according to your genes, then this episode is for you.
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You can also join their free live webinar on epigenetics.
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Episode Highlights [04:17] Genes and Body Types\xa0
7 Powerful Quotes from This Episode\u2018We\u2019re all born with around 23,000 genes; we\u2019re all born with a blueprint. That\u2019s a blueprint of our genes, and those genes were given when born. But what we can do now in a way our body responds with the exercise and food we give it will dictate how our genes express themselves\u2019.
\u2018Here's my genes. Here's how I can optimise them, and how I can also be aware of perhaps some of the weaknesses that I might have and how I can make the best out of my body, and out of my mind, and out of my sporting performance and out of my health\u2019.
\u2018If you look around \u2014 look at your family, your friends, those around you \u2014 you'll see that we are all different shapes. And we should be different shapes. It's okay to be different shapes\u2019.
\u2018You can still be a long-distance runner, but it becomes more important, then, that you rest harder\u2019.
\u2018You can get gains without pain\u2019.
\u2018It's okay to be me, in all aspects\u2019.
\u2018There are advantages and there are disadvantages to every body type. The thing to take away is let's work with our advantages\u2019.
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To pushing the limits,
Lisa
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Full TranscriptIntroduction: Welcome to Pushing the Limits, the show that helps you reach your full potential, with your host, Lisa Tamati. Brought to you by lisatamati.com.
Lisa Tamati: Hi, everyone, and welcome back to Pushing the Limits this week. Coming up, I have a very good interview with Neil Wagstaff, who has been on the show regularly, my business partner at Running Hot Coaching. And today we are getting into personalized nutrition and personalized exercise. So, understanding how to build the right exercise and diet plan for your specific set of genes.\xa0 So, this is related a little bit to a couple of episodes that we've done prior, but it's focusing in on the nutrition aspects, and on the exercise aspect. So I hope you really enjoy the session.\xa0
Now Christmas is coming up. So if you haven't got your Christmas presents ready yet, you might want to grab one of my books. We've got three Running Hot and my first one, Running To Extremes, both of those chronicling my adventures all around the planet. Lots of successes and failures, and lots of laughing, lots of fun we have at those books. And my recent book, Relentless\u2014how a mother and daughter defied the odds, which is really a book about empowering you to overcome obstacles, think outside the square, take control of your own health. And it's a love story between a mother and a daughter and family. So I hope you grab one of those for your Christmas present this year. You can get them over on lisatamati.com, under the shop banner.\xa0
And before we go over to Neil, I just want to remind you, we are taking on a small\u2014very small number\u2014of clients on one-on-one sessions. If you have a health problem\u2014I just was getting asked all the time, \u2018Can you please help me with this or that problem\u2019? And so we've actually opened up a number of places, we're only dealing with 10 people at a time on their health journeys.\xa0
If you've got a complicated health journey that you want to help with, or you want high performance, or you've got some big massive goal that you have, and you need some support around your mindset, or brain injuries, or a cancer journey, or stroke, or whatever the case may be, then please reach out to us, support at lisatamati.com and tell us what you're looking for. And we can see whether we'll be able to help you. We're enjoying working with a number of people and getting some fantastic results. So, let us know if you want to do that.\xa0
Please also give a rating and review to the show if you haven't. It really, really helps the show. And I can't emphasize enough how appreciated that is when I get a rating or a review from a listener, it really makes my day. I love hearing from listeners because you don\u2019t\u2014you're always talking into a microphone, you don't actually get a lot of feedback. So, we do appreciate you telling us what you think. And if there's guest recommendations or if there's things that you want us to talk about then maybe we can add to the list, then please let us know. Okay? Reach out to us. And yes, right, over to the show now. We'll be enjoying this conversation with Neil Wagstaff, all around personalized diet and exercise.\xa0
Welcome back, everybody. Fantastic to have you with us again. Today, I have Neil Wagstaff in Havelock North, my business partner at Running Hot Coach, my long-time coach, and exercise scientist, brilliant man, welcome to the show again, Neil. Fantastic to have you back again.
Neil Wagstaff: Thanks, Lisa. Nice introduction. I like that.\xa0
Lisa: Yes, well, got to [00:03:40 unintelligible] you up a little bit. (laughs)
Neil: Very nicely. Very nicely.\xa0
Lisa: All very well entertained, by the way people.\xa0
So today's subject and I love having these conversations with Neil because we love to learn together, develop our philosophies together, train together. Yes, it's all fantastic. So today we're going to be looking at exercise and nutrition, and how to personalize it to you, so that you are doing the right diet and the right types of exercise for your particular body.\xa0
So, Neil, where do you want to start with this? Do you want to start with the body types and that type of thing?\xa0
Neil: If we give people a little bit of an overview of just the phenotype, what we're going to be looking at and then we can go into some of the body types in there. So just everyone should appreciate and understand, Lisa, they're all unique. And it's okay to be different. It's okay to be themselves. And gone are the days of the one-size-fits-all program for the exercise and nutrition point of view. And your exercise and nutrition should be personalized to you.\xa0
Now as we look at that and sort through, it is good to look at it through the lens of\u2014which is where we're going to be looking at it\u2014through the lens of epigenetics. So, as you know, we\u2019re all born with around 23,000 genes, we\u2019re all born with our blueprint. That\u2019s our blueprint of our genes, and those genes are what we\u2019re given when born. But what we can do now and where our body responds with the exercise and food we give it will dictate how our genes express themselves.\xa0
So, if we're giving ourselves the wrong type of exercise, or the wrong type of nutrition, or doing it at the wrong times of day, or a different time of day, then our genes can respond in a different way. And what we get as a result that is a phenotype, with you and I looking at each other with how we look. Our phenotype can look some differently different, it can be affected from a health point of view, if we've got the exercise, wrong time of day, wrong dosage, and the wrong intensity. And the same from nutrition point of view\u2014wrong foods, wrong time of day, and the wrong amount. And all of a sudden, our phenotype can change quite significantly. And we can end up with a body that is not in a good state from a health point of view.
Lisa: Yes, and this is where the one-size-fits-all approach of the fitness industry\u2014up until recently, at least\u2014has put certain body types in down the wrong direction. And you use a couple of terms there, I just want to clarify, and people would have heard on a couple of our earlier podcasts, if they have listened to a number of them. We're really big on understanding your genes and understanding how to optimize your genes and how to make the best out of your body, and not seeing the genes as something as deterministic. But seeing them as a, \u2018Well, here\u2019s my genes, here's how I can optimize them and how I can also be aware of perhaps some of the weaknesses that I might have, and how I can make the best out of my body and out of my mind and out of my sporting performance and out of my health\u2019.
So the word phenotype is a word that we use in our daily language now. But people probably don't quite understand what a phenotype. So, if you think of your DNA, your 23,000 genes odd, we're still counting, but around about there. And then everything that happens in your environment, or your food, your nutrition, the way you think, the perspective on life, your emotional well-being\u2014all of these things affect your genes. And what is the result of that is how you are. That includes not only the way you look physically, but also the state of your mind, the state of your body, and the state of your health. It\u2019s a combination.\xa0
So the \u2018epi\u2019 meaning above the gene, it\u2019s outside of the genes, what's influencing the genes. So when we talk about genes being turned on and off, this is where it gets exciting because we have the ability. So, we inherited our genes, we can't do anything about that, mum and dad did that for us. We are given the blueprint half from mum, half from dad, we got to make this or that. However, which genes are actually activated and which are being transcribed\u2014transcription is a word that is used in regards to genes\u2014and actually read is very much in our control.\xa0
So some people get a little bit nervous when they hear genes or \u2018Getting my gene system, maybe I'll come back with some bad genes\u2019. Well, there's no such thing really as having\u2014well, there is some bad mutations and so on\u2014but we don't need to say, \u2018Well, that means I'm going to get cancer. I've got the bracket gene, so I'm going to get cancer\u2019. Or \u2018I've got the MTHFR gene and the methylation, and I've got some bad mutations, therefore I am going to get XYZ\u2019. That's not the case. It's like, \u2018Oh, okay, got a bit of a problem here. Right, I have to do some certain interventions, or certain things that can help support my body\u2019. And that's what we're all about. And today we want to focus in on the exercise part of the puzzle, and also the nutrition part of the puzzle.\xa0
So, if we go now into some broad body types, to give you a bit of a framework to build this around, and unfortunately, the podcast, for those watching on YouTube, we do have slides and stuff, but we haven't got them with us today. It's a little bit hard to picture. But if we go in now and talk a little bit about the three major body types, Neil, can you explain visually how they look? And what, yes?\xa0
Neil: Yes. So somatotypes, as they're called, are basically three different body shapes. Okay, so different bodies are going to respond to exercise in different ways.\xa0
Okay? So an ectomorph are generally taller, longer, slimmer, low percentage of body fat, leaner, and generally, depending on what they're doing, we'll find\u2014will often struggle to put more lean tissue on. And regardless of whether exercising or not, they normally keep a similar sort of shape.\xa0
A mesomorph are normally a little bit shorter in stature, then that sort of traditional triangle shape. So broader shoulders, narrow at the waist, and shorter with the lower limbs, and they're very, very good at putting on muscle mass and usually put it on very quickly. And they're usually those a little bit more agile, quick, good coordination. And usually those good in the sporting arena as well.\xa0
Endomorphs are usually bigger bones, great putting on all tissues. So great putting on adipose tissue or body fat, also great putting on muscle. So bigger, much, much bigger units from a body point of view and evenly sort of shape with upper and lower body so that that mass is kind of distributed quite nicely across the whole body as well. And if you look around you, look at your family, your friends, those around you, you'll see that we all different shapes. And we should be different shapes, it's okay to be different shapes.\xa0
If I'm an endomorph, I don\u2019t want to spend my entire time...
Lisa: ...trying to be an ectomorph.\xa0
Neil: ...trying to be an ectomorph. But this is the way the health and fitness industry has been set up, it is the picture of, \u2018This is what we should all look like we should all look like this\u2019. And we should all be great, which for some people, they're going to fit into that box and they're going to go, \u2018Yay works for me\u2019. Others, it's just not good news. We need to trade some more individuality and personalization around it, that people getting the right results.\xa0
If we take it a step further as well, this whole process starts when you're growing in your mum's tummy. So, the science of embryology, this all happens at that phase. And if you imagine as you're growing in mum's tummy, how much energy you're given to each of your derms. So you've got your ectoderm, your mesoderm, and your endoderm. As you're developing and growing in mum\u2019s tummy, you'll get certain amount of energy into each of those derms. So this whole process of what body shape or somatotype you're going to be starting as you're growing in your mum\u2019s tummy.\xa0
As you're developing\u2014I\u2019m just kind of sit as a ecto-meso, a little more on the ecto side. So, I'm kind of taller, stroke, with muscle \u2014 I can put some muscle tissue on more than the true ectomorph could. As I was developing in my mum\u2019s tummy, I have much more energy go into my ectoderm. So, I have more development through my nervous system. So, I've got quite an active nervous system, more sensitive to pain, and a little bit of a very active mind. And probably described the body's a little bit more fragile than an endomorph body would be, which has more development through the digestive tract, and the ability to put more on tissue. So therefore, a much more resilient body, going to be better to deal with the calibre stress...
Lisa: The human weight\xa0
Neil: Endurance wise, it\u2019s great at taking a whole lot of burn, physical endurance. From an exercise point of view, it\u2019s a sort of body that's going to be well suited to powerlifting and things like that, but great endurance wise,\xa0
Lisa: Dwayne Johnson is a good example of one of those, isn\u2019t it? The Rock.\xa0
Neil: Very much so. Very, very resilient body. This whole process is starting, as you\u2014when you come into the world, you're kind of already going to be an ecto, a meso, or an endo, or a combination of\u2014you might be an ecto-meso, meso-endo, and an endo-ecto.\xa0
But if you can start to relate as you're listening and look at your body shape, and start to think about where, what sort of body shape I've got, and what sort of activities should I be doing for that for that body? And what time of day, should I be doing it? And how should, what sort of dose of exercise should I be applying? Then you can start to get some good wins. Okay, you can start get some real, real good wins with your exercise and nutrition plan.
Neil: And that's what we sort of want to cover off today, it\u2019s a little bit of a broad\u2014it's a very broad overview. So Neil, and I have a program where we actually do your genes and have a have a whole technology behind us if you wanted to go into it and do a deep dive and find out exactly what you are and where you sit and what the right recommendations are for your body\u2014the right foods, the right exercise, the right times a day.\xa0
But to just give you a broader overview here, what are some takeaways from today, so start to think where do I sit? So, I know that I sit on the ecto-meso sort of side of things. So I'm not a true-true mesomorph but I am quite muscular in built. I'm a little bit taller than your average mesomorph. So I have some ectomorph tendencies as well. So if I'm looking for me, there are certain things that are really good for me and certain things that are not so good for me.\xa0
And so, we're going to cover off a little bit today, those from them three major groups, the ectomorph, endomorph, and the mesomorph. What some high level wins that you can just take away from this podcast today and actually go, \u2018I think I fall into that category or a combination of those two\u2019, and then you can start to experiment. I mean, of course, come and see us, ask us some questions, do the program if you want to do it, but if you don't want to do it, you can take some high level wins away from this.\xa0
So for the\u2014let's start with a mesomorph because it's sort of the part that I fall into and know quite well. So the mesomorph from our body type is very good at putting on lean muscle mass, they're very quick adapters. So when they exercise, they get results quite quickly. They're very coordinated usually and quite athletic. From a personality perspective, they can be quite into challenge and into beating everybody else, very competitive. They love to express themselves. So they're quiet, they need to be able to share their thoughts. Sometimes there's no filter between the brain and the mouth. And they have a dominance in testosterone and adrenaline if they're true mesomorph. And this means that they have a bit more of a risk-taking personality, they have a lot of drive and determination, they can push through, and they tend to go hard out. And they like a lot of change, and a lot of like, challenge, and that sort of thing. So, you can see, possibly, that I fit nicely into that category with a bit of ectomorph in there as well.\xa0
So for that person, Neil, can you explain what are some of the high level wins for them from an eating and an exercise perspective?
Neil: Yes, no worries, Lisa. So natural strengths for the sort of body you're just describing is going to be good from sort of hand eye coordination point of view. So, getting involved in activities that involve good hand eye coordination. They're going to be quite agile and quick, they're going to be able to move quickly, and respond quickly. From a body awareness point of view, they're going to have good connection with their body. Often you'll find\u2014if you're the sort of body, you'll be able to pick things up quite quickly. Try sport, try an activity, and get it quite quickly. As you say, quick responders, so the type of exercise you're doing, and you're going to respond quickly to.\xa0
To be fair and probably very honest, this is the message the sort of people that the fitness industry is...\xa0
Lisa: Catering to\xa0
Neil: ...screaming about for years when you should do high intensity and sport training. So CrossFit style exercise, high-intensity interval training, short bursts of high intensity exercise worked very, very well for this body. So if you've got this body, those shorter sessions are sort of 20 to 40 minutes, is going to work very well for your body.\xa0
And things to be careful of here exercising for too long. So exercising for long periods of time, it's a lot to involve in, resulting in additional information and additional load on the body. So one of the biggest wins\u2014and we've worked a lot on this, at least ourselves as well with your programming\u2014is making sure that there\u2019s enough rest in the program. Here, it's all about going hard but then resting hard. Going hard, resting hard.\xa0
Now what often happens is, a lot of our athletes, the runners that we work with, and just people looking for general health goals as well, we find that they go hard really well, but they don't rest so well. So, you end up with that inflammation, that additional load on the body, and then the next one, you end up with the injuries, niggles, and health burnout as well.\xa0
So just, yes, rest hard and all right to work out, make sure the rest hard is there as well. Move daily, the regular movement. As I'm talking to Lisa, now she's moving around on a...
Lisa: Rocket board.\xa0
Neil: Rocket board. So she's rocking back and forth. That\u2019s great for her, it means we can do what we're doing. And she can stay in flow and she can stay in flow because she's moving regularly. For this body type, leaving it sat still, desk all day, is a recipe for disaster.\xa0
Lisa: Kills me.
Neil: So don't be sitting in the tree in the afternoon. Okay, be conscious about moving in that 2 to 4pm window, getting out and moving. If you sat at your desk, then stuff where you can work and move is very useful as well.\xa0
Lisa indicated that about having a competition\u2014the challenge, whatever you\u2019re doing, exercise-wise. This is why for the mesomorph programs like CrossFit works so well. You get a workout after the board, it\u2019s like, \u2018Right. What is the challenge for today? I don't know what it's going to be, what is it? We've got the challenge, it\u2019s up on the board, the way we go, and now the whole group of people I can be\u2019. So that\u2019s why it works so well for the mesomorph.
Looking for opportunities as well. Working out earlier in the morning. Some good wins when you work out through the afternoon. But make sure that you are dipping things down and going through your working install exercises in the late afternoon and evening.\xa0
So you turn in the body down, mobility work, meditation work, stuff that's going to slow the system down and get you into a parasympathetic state. So, you're then ready to rest and recover and go and do the same thing the next the next day.
Lisa: Don't go hard out all night, which I used to do, day and night (laughs). Relinquish.
Neil: Rest, rest, rest hard. Food wise, you can start to see that it's a similar\u2014it's going to be with the amount of movement that we're encouraging for the mesomorph. It\u2019s like, \u2018Right we're going to need to feel that\u2019. So food to this body is like kindling on a fire. If you put it in and it burns through it quickly, transit time from mouth to bomb is pretty quick.\xa0
So you need to keep fuelling. So, three good meals, with breakfast, lunch, dinner, and then regular snacks. So, you're going to be looking at up to sort of five or six meals a day, that paleo style food recommendation, again has come out from the fitness industry, is great for the mesomorph.\xa0
Lisa: This type...\xa0
Neil: Okay? And enough protein. Protein is going to be key. Often we find that a lot of mesos we work with, and some are even vegetarian or vegan, where we get some massive wins, is getting the protein up. So protein is needed for the recovery, it's needed to see more so for this body type, so getting that happening and increasing that can be can be key.
Lisa: And to that point, quickly we did a podcast was two weeks ago, I think, with Dr. David Minkoff, make sure you go and listen to that podcast because it was all about the perfect amino combination and getting the right\u2014so amino acids bring the building blocks of proteins, and this is a game changer for a lot of athletes, especially people who are in the mesomorph interview.\xa0
Definitely if you're vegan or vegetarian and try in your office body type, or if you're like me, and you're constantly dealing with a protein deficiency, then that can be really detrimental to your health. And there's a product that Dr. Minkoff has put out, which is just next level. I've had some great ones with it already with a couple of people that I'm working with and with myself. And just healing much better, much more calmer and so on because you're finally getting all the proteins that you need in the right combination.\xa0
So make sure you go and listen to that because when you have a steak, only 33% of that steak is actually going to turn into protein. So just because you eat meat, don't think you've already got it covered. So make sure you go and listen to that episode a couple of weeks ago.\xa0
Just as an aside, but the mesomorph does need a lot more protein. The mesomorph also has a lot more oxidative stress\u2014they have a lot more oxidants. So, they need a lot of antioxidant support. So these antioxidants are things like your vitamin C, which I've just done a massive series on as well. Very, very important for this body type to define as your master, antioxidant bioflavonoids.\xa0
So, getting your fruits and your veggies and your things that have got this antioxidants in there can really help this type as well.\xa0
Neil: Connecting the dots a little bit for the listeners as well, Lisa, is that we're recommending here, when we said sort of dosage wise, we were talking about that sort of 20 to 45 minutes short session.\xa0
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Now it could be, we got some runners listening and doing ultra-marathon runners like you used to, with your big distance you've done in the past, is looking at right, it doesn't mean you've got to stop running long distances and you've got to cut back to doing 20 to 45-minute sessions. You can still be a long-distance runner, but it becomes more important then that you rest harder. So the rest dosage needs to go up. Plus, really conscious then, are you getting the right amount of food in each day? And is there enough protein to support that additional workload?\xa0
So it's getting clever with going, \u2018Right. There's other exercise that I want to do, which isn't necessarily the best choice of exercise for my body type, but I love it. So I'm going to carry on doing that. But now I can use the other information I've got to go right. What do I need more of to support my body through this\u2019?\xa0
Lisa: And that's working in the grey, if you like. We've got our personal goals and then we've got our genetics and what they want. So, it's that's what we help with people to work in that grey area to make\u2014like I wanted to do ultras, I did it for 25 years and had some fantastic times and successes but it did come at a cost because I wasn't aware of all this spec being and not necessarily covering all my bases which lead to problems, as shall we say.\xa0
Okay, let's move over now to the endomorph body type. So, these are those\u2014the types of people that are bigger boned, like literally bigger boned, and they have more muscle mass, more bone mass, and they tend to be conservationists in their body type.\xa0
So, my mom's a classic example of an endomorph body type. Can level the smell of an oily rag basically, as far as food goes for a long period of time, and not lose weight and also not lose muscle which can have huge advantages and huge disadvantages.\xa0
So Neil, what are some of the exercise and food recommendations for the endomorph body type?
Neil: But generally, these guys' bodies we said when we're talking about the embryology side with the body shapes, these bodies are going to be good for endurance, they're going to be great for strength, you can put a significant amount of load through them.\xa0
Okay, so we've talked for now you start to see some differences coming in. We talked about the mesomorph, short, sharp, high-intensity, fast, explosive, quick style movements, Cross fit style stuff. Now we're going to talk about getting heavier weights. Okay? So heavier weights, lower repetitions, could be in the sort of five to eight rep range with good rest periods in between. So, you can get gains without pain. That message again, that's come out of the fitness industry over the years is, \u2018Got to keep pushing. No pain, no gain\u2019. Yes, we can get gain without the pain, that's fine. Just let the body take its time, put some good loads for a bit.\xa0
Things to take into care in here as well as we've got runners listening, which we probably have with the audience. Lisa's looking at making sure you've got a longer warm up. So, this body is going to take longer to warm up, if you're going to do some endurance stuff, give it a good 15, 20 minutes. A mesomorph body type might not need as long to warm up. Okay? There's going to be differences and care for the perfect repetitive impact and jumping without the extended warm up can still do them, but you need the longer the longer warm up for it.\xa0
Now, and generally in the morning, this body type\u2014we said with a mesomorph get up early and get into some stuff. What we're saying here with this, the endo body shape is start slower. This body is going to have a different hormone balance as well. So, getting up early and loading the body with a high intensity class at 6am is probably going to result in that body putting on all adipose tissue and body fat tissue.\xa0
So you could do bootcamp, literally three days a week. You can train like a HIIT train and get better or not change at all. So both are just crazy concepts. I train three mornings a week, I eat six meals a day, and I'm getting better. So it's looking at\u2014the morning should be about improving your circulation and rising slowly. So if you want to move, move, but keep at low volume.
Lisa: Low stress level. Go for a walk.\xa0
Neil: Low stress level. Ease into the day, spend time in nature, and then slower heavy lifting will start to get you better results.\xa0
Optimum times\u2014when doing some training is going to be later in the day. So, the later you can push your training in the day, the better against slow start, pick up steam, and then go hard. And then use your energy before you go down into the latter part of the day.
And yes, just look at low reps, try it and test it. Okay? Like you said at the start, if you want to get the exact, here you are, come and look at the program. If you want to play with it and test it, see what results you get. Some more traditional style lifting, bigger compound movements, get some good weights through the body, and that weight will\u2014sorry the body will respond well to that additional resistance. And that applies to guys and girls. Ladies, don't worry that you're going to start getting bigger. The result of this will start to change shape in a positive way by getting more load through your body.\xa0
Lisa: Exactly, and muscles are good things, girls. And an example of this is my brother Dawson, who looks like The Rock actually. And his classic training style is heavy, heavy weights, and doing them quite slowly. Whereas if you watch us two at the gym, I'm going hard out hard out, like back-to-back seats, changing. And he's sitting near with his music on and he's doing one set, and then he's having a rest, and then he's doing another set and having a rest.\xa0
And I used to think, \u2018Shit, I don't want to do that because that's wasting my day. Like I don't want to spend so long at the gym\u2019. And then he\u2019s cut it down to the size he wants. But that's the right way to exercise for his body. Conversely, with my husband, Haisley\u2014and I've said this before\u2014I used to make them do CrossFit at 6am in the morning, which was a complete disaster for his body.
Neil: You\u2019re a hard woman, Lisa.\xa0
Lisa: Yes, I am a hard woman. Poor Haisley.\xa0
And now that he does super long-distance running. And he does heavy weights, he doesn't like doing the weights particularly, so I got to drag him to the gym. But that\u2014his body responds to that heavier slower weights but don't make him do CrossFit, he won't get the results and it won't be a good experience for him.\xa0
From a meal perspective, let's talk a little bit about their eating times and the chronobiology of their\u2014when they should eat.
Neil: Yes. We talked about with the mesos that five or six times a day, the food is like kindling on a fire. Now we're going to change that. For this body type, we're looking at potentially changing the meals to say 10, 2, and 6. So later breakfast, later lunch, with lunch being the biggest meal. Lunch being the biggest meal of the day and then a smaller dinner as well. And in some key cases, depending how close you are to the meso and how close you are to the ecto in some cases, looking at\u2014for the endomorphs looking at getting rid of breakfast all together and having a longer fast in the morning. Higher vegetarian. High vegetarian intake for these bodies as well.\xa0
And it's amazing, some of the local wins we've had with some of the guys working with locally in Hawke's Bay. Big guys, big sportsmen as well, and just going from eating sort of four or five times a day, lots of meat, reducing that meat down, increasing the vegetarian portion of food that's going into a diet, longer fast in the morning. Their energy has gone through the roof, their clarity of mind has gone through the roof. Their resilience with regards to niggles and injuries that they had before, which was probably down to inflammation, has now started to go. And the results they're getting is phenomenal.\xa0
Now, again, you see in the media that everyone should be fasting\u2019s next best thing. What we're seeing now that for some people it is the next best thing, it's the perfect thing.
Lisa: For these guys, it\u2019s great.\xa0
Neil: For these guys, it\u2019s great. For others, if you put me on a fasting process like that, when we talked about the ectomorph having the high nervous development in the nervous system, need carbohydrates for the brain. I'd be out cold by lunchtime, if I follow through a meal time like that. I would have probably eaten one of my limbs.
So the more time for a person...
Lisa: I mean, you could do a fast. But you do a shorter fast don't you, Neil? So you do a 12-hour as opposed to...
Neil: Yes, so generally I won\u2019t eat after seven in the evening and then don't eat until seven again in the morning.\xa0
Lisa: So it\u2019s a 12-hour fast type of thing? Yes
Neil: So, to kick start my day, I need to eat the carbs.\xa0\xa0
Lisa: Yes. And so that's just working in with your thing. Because there is good things about fasting, don't get me wrong here. Like there is really good things about fasting for all body types to a certain degree. Woman have to be a little bit careful with a longer, longer fast, in relation to\u2014so I find and if you're of an ectomorph side of the wheel then, and to a certain extent, a meso, then your fast should be a little bit shorter.\xa0
There are some great things about fasting, especially if you're dealing with weight issues or inflammation on the body. Or if there's some specialized reasons why you want to do longer fasts for autophagy, inhibiting mTOR and things like that. But that's outside today's discussion.\xa0
But it is a general rule, a good 12-hour intermittent fast for an ecto is a great thing to give your body a rest. For an endomorph, if you can last for up to 16 hours or even longer, brilliant. And you can actually even go for longer periods of time if you're really on the endomorph side of the scale without too much detriment.\xa0
So it's a learning to understand but definitely only two to three meals a day. And not five to six meals a day is probably a key takeaway point.
Neil: Correct. And the way we've had the biggest wins just as a little summary for these guys is changing the exercise time. So, moving the exercise the later in the day, and going to three meals, at 10, 2, and 6. Huge, huge, huge wins.\xa0
Lisa: Already.\xa0
Neil: So it's simple changes, massive results.
Lisa: Yes, slower, slower periods in between your seats, or long-distance slow sort of aerobic activity perfect for these guys.\xa0
Okay, now let's go to the ectomorph, the last sort of group on the spectrum, if you like. What do these guys need?\xa0
Neil: So these guys are generally going to be your speed endurance guys and girls. They're going to be the ones that got the ability to live on that threshold. So, they often be your triathletes, your sort of middle-distance runners, those people that\u2014and some people also long-distance runners\u2014but they can live on the edge, that lactate threshold quite comfortably and enjoy it for quite long periods of time.\xa0
So high drive to do that as well. So, they want to do that, enjoy doing that. And we talked as well about them being more developed in the nervous system. So, the rhythmical exercise of cycling and running and swimming, that helps calm his body a little bit as well. So the rhythm is a good exercise, almost like a meditation, will help calm that I find being able to process my thoughts of mine while I'm on a bike or running is the best place to do it.\xa0
Things to be careful of. This body will often be stiffer through the spinal cord and will often have to tie some more rigid tissue. So, you need a balance of that speed endurance work and but also to complement that, you're going to need a lot of mobility work, flexibility work. Okay? Stuff that's going to mobilize, moving up the spine.\xa0
From a repetition point of view, we've just talked about the endomorph having higher reps. I am personally, historically would always come out...\xa0
Lisa: Oh right. Actually.\xa0
Neil: \xa0...generally done a strength block a couple of times a year. I would end up doing reps of sort of five to eight heavy lifting and that's when I'd usually pick up most of my injuries. The\xa0 reason is my body just wasn't, is...
Lisa: Not designed for that.
Neil: Not capable\u2014capable is not the right word\u2014it\u2019s not designed, as you say, to do that. I can put some heavier load through it but we need to be a lot more careful than an endomorph body would. So high reps, 12 to 20 reps, lots of mobility work and really going a day of high intensity, endurance base work followed by a day of recovery, yoga, mobility work, and peaking and troughing like that.\xa0
Okay, and good windows of opportunity with exercise around seven in the morning. And then again in the afternoon, depending on what works best for this body type. Okay, again, seeing quite big differences. Differences in body shape, therefore differences in the type of exercise you're going to respond to and the results you're going to get from it.
Lisa: Yes. Now, I think that rounds it out really nicely.\xa0
So you got your ecto, your endo, and your mesomorph.\xa0 And this is a helicopter view, guys. If you want to dig deeper into the whole science of the genetics and epigenetics, then we can get really granular. Like we can tell you, \u2018Don't eat kale, do eat spinach\u2019, like down to that root sort of level.\xa0
But just to keep it so you can take away some wins for today, those that I think, try and identify what you are. Whether you're like me, a bit of a mixture between a mesomorph and an ectomorph, and where use it on that scale, listen to this, again. Pick out some of those\u2014because this is about low hanging fruit and getting a couple of wins. And if you take away from this that you should be eating a little bit later in the day and doing your exercise later in the day, then that's a little bit already a positive one then, that\u2019s an understanding.
I think one of the biggest things that I've gotten out of this whole genetics, this whole genre of it, you and I\u2019ve gone down, Neil, in the functional genomics and the epigenetics is, it's okay to be me. In that in all aspects, whether it's us working together in our business, in the way our brains work, in the way our personality is, in the times of the day that we do things, right through to the nutrition, and right through to the social, and understanding, \u2018Hey, I was born this way\u2019.\xa0
Not that this is an excuse to be not great at something, but it does explain why I do things in a certain way, and why my brain works in a certain way, why my body reacts in certain ways. And that gives you permission to be you because like as a young woman, I know that I was always wanting to be an ectomorph. I always wanted to be the super skinny model type girl and I was a muscular athletic girl and that was not okay because that was not what I wanted to be. And I know Neil's struggled with the same thing here. Small calf muscles and thought, \u2018If I do a billion reps of calf muscle exercise, I\u2019m going to have big calves\u2019. And you're pushing should have basically, aren\u2019t you, Neil? You can\u2019t be what you\u2019re not.\xa0
Neil: They weren\u2019t enough.\xa0
Lisa: Now you love your calves because you can run a lot faster than I can, that's for sure.\xa0
Neil: Yes. They\u2019ll look great in heels.\xa0
Lisa: Exactly. And you know, for someone like mum who struggles with the weight because of the endomorph tendencies. I tell you what if she hadn't had that type of body, she wouldn't have got up out of a wheelchair after two years of being unable to walk. Because she still had muscle mass. She still had good bones, she still didn't have osteoporosis, or anything.\xa0
So there are advantages and there are disadvantages to everybody type. The thing to take away is let's work with our advantages. Let's be aware of our weaknesses and let's accept ourselves, I think, as we are and understand ourselves better. And that's probably a good place to wrap it up...
Neil: Nicely.
Lisa: ...for the day.\xa0
Neil: We'll wrapped up. Very good.
Lisa: Okay guys, well thank you very much once again for listening to us. Please do reach out to either Neil or I if you want support doing this program. We'd love to have you join us of course.\xa0
Or if you've got any other health issues or whatever you want to talk about, or your fitness journey, you're running, you've got some goals, please reach out to us. You can get us at support@lisatamati.com. Give the show a rating and review and share this please with your friends. We love doing this type of thing, aren\u2019t we, Neil?\xa0 If we could just do this all day, we\u2019ll be stoked.\xa0
Neil: Would be nice. Would be nice.\xa0
Lisa: We love teaching, we love sharing, we love having good content out there in the world. So, thanks very much, guys and we'll see you again next week.
That's it this week for Pushing The Limits. Be sure to rate, review, and share with your friends and head over and visit Lisa and her team at lisatamati.com.\xa0
The information contained in this show is not medical advice it is for educational purposes only and the opinions of guests are not the views of the show. Please seed your own medical advice from a registered medical professional.
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