Three articles a week. No clickbait, no influencer noise — just what I'm reading, testing, and recommending to clients in plain words.
The science of nutrient timing has been overhyped for a decade. But there's one specific window where it does move the needle for most people. Here's what I tell clients, why it matters, and the simple rule I use with my own meals.
Cardiologists are starting to talk about VO2 max the way they used to talk about LDL. Here's why — and a practical, no-equipment way to move yours from "average" to "excellent" before 40.
After hundreds of clients, the same pattern shows up. Three short, focused sessions beat five sloppy ones — and the data backs it up. The hard part is convincing yourself you're not being lazy.
Most people get their morning meal wrong. Not because they're lazy — because nobody told them what to aim for. The simple framework I use with every new client in week one.
The walking research has gotten quietly devastating in the last three years. Here's what changed my mind, the specific step count I'm pushing for, and why "more is more" turns out to actually be true here.
Most trainers either skip it or teach a watered-down version. I think that's a mistake — and not for the reasons you'd expect. Here's how I teach it to brand-new clients in their first month, and why I'd argue it's safer than most "safer" alternatives.
Protein gets all the attention. But the average American eats about 15g of fiber a day, and we need closer to 35. The four foods I add to every client's grocery list in week one to close the gap.
If you wouldn't skip the workout, you can't skip the recovery that makes the workout do anything. The four sleep rules I now include in every client's first-month plan — and the one I personally got wrong for years.
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