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How To Train Your Central Nervous System - Unlock Your FULL Strength & Performance 

The Bioneer
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27 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 363   
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Go to squarespace.com/bioneer to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
@Spartan639
@Spartan639 2 месяца назад
I sent you an email big dog 🙏
@Jaythejet98
@Jaythejet98 2 месяца назад
@@Spartan639what’s his email address
@allenvayner4987
@allenvayner4987 Месяц назад
Soon, there is going to be the rapture. It's when there will be trumpet sounds, and after the trumpet sounds, God will lift his people from here. Also, God said people should be living by the Bible. Amen, and God bless you. ❤* John 3:16 - "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have eternal life". ❤
@NoisyRooster
@NoisyRooster Месяц назад
You, my friend, have done immaculate research and practice. Your dedication to trying something you've never tried before and then just doing it over and over again until you are good at it is admirable, and eminently worthy of imitation!
@LatimusChadimus
@LatimusChadimus 2 месяца назад
One thing I learned years ago is that if you hang on a bar every morning, you have a good reference point of how your CNS feels for the rest of the day.
@UNOwen-nn6ui
@UNOwen-nn6ui 2 месяца назад
How long should you hang? 5 mins? 2 hours?
@LatimusChadimus
@LatimusChadimus 2 месяца назад
@@UNOwen-nn6ui I would highly doubt 90% of the viewers here could last 5 minutes. Well I would start with 30 seconds every day and go a little bit longer at night to get that extra stretch or just do a minute in the morning or even 20 seconds. It's just a good way to stretch out the rib cage and the shoulder girdle as well as get your grip to wake up, and it'll act like a test to see if you need to take a day off. I hold a deep squat for 5 minutes sometimes 10 minutes or even 12 minutes every day. I don't want to hang for more than 2 minutes at a time if I did. That is definitely a lot
@UNOwen-nn6ui
@UNOwen-nn6ui 2 месяца назад
@@LatimusChadimus max i can do is 50-55 sec for now. So lets say 30 sec in the morning and max but not more than 2 min. in the evening? I can do that. Deep squat feels nice, not strenous at all i can do that for like 10-15 min. no probelm. Never tried 20 min. eventually my muscles in my feet, the sole get sore. Thanks for taking the time to answer my question
@LatimusChadimus
@LatimusChadimus 2 месяца назад
@@UNOwen-nn6ui yeah I don't always do a max hang unless I'm really really sore in the lower traps and just want to get some decompression at the connection points, but doing it every morning like I said it's just a good gauge recovery. Have you ever tried maxing out your horse stance? I know Adam has brought it up on the channel before and I do them daily, sometimes I mix other movements to go with them like Tai Chi, Indian clubs, rope flow, presses, as well as isometric holds. I even did one where I put a 50 kg barbell and held it in my elbows for 59 seconds in the horse stance and the longest I ever got to, by itself, was 5 minutes but I really don't see much value in pushing it beyond that. It did help with my endurance taking a handmade mudgar from India and I did 360s going for repetitions and then seeing how much time had passed where I got 110 in 3.5 minutes (that was much much harder than sitting there for 5 minutes)
@UNOwen-nn6ui
@UNOwen-nn6ui 2 месяца назад
@@LatimusChadimus Whats horse stance? Sounds like gung fu/tai chi? What are the benefits?
@MAHONEYDRO
@MAHONEYDRO 2 месяца назад
How to train it starts at 10:31
@-_nareba_-5878
@-_nareba_-5878 Месяц назад
Thx,🫂
@man-ty8ed
@man-ty8ed Месяц назад
Thank you.👍
@hasanifranklin6030
@hasanifranklin6030 Месяц назад
Thanks
@SingularitySurvivor
@SingularitySurvivor Месяц назад
Thanks a lot budd!!! You're the best ✨💪🏻
@sergiofernandez4566
@sergiofernandez4566 Месяц назад
Thanks
@jamesr2936
@jamesr2936 2 месяца назад
Adam this is the type of content that won't get as many views as a Deadpool training vid, but will make a huge impact on those who watch. I really appreciate this content, man. No one makes this on YT.
@jollyrancher1374
@jollyrancher1374 2 месяца назад
True. These videos are very appreciated by us
@IndiaNumberOneCoubtry
@IndiaNumberOneCoubtry 2 месяца назад
Who's Adam? This is Bruce Wayne's channel lol
@60-Is-The-New-30
@60-Is-The-New-30 2 месяца назад
Hahahhaaa, no mone makes this eh???? Bul***** I wonder what made him come up with this now!!!!!!! I am the only one that talks about this!!!! He is just talking here!!! I have been living this all my life. Where did he get this idea from suddenly!"!!!! My channel is full of this information!!!!!
@therealsnaily
@therealsnaily 2 месяца назад
@@60-Is-The-New-30 Your content is awesome, don't misunderstand me, but no need to get angry. James just wrote what is known as an hyperbole.
@jollyrancher1374
@jollyrancher1374 2 месяца назад
@@60-Is-The-New-30 are you saying bioneer gets ideas from your channel since ur one of the pioneers on youtube about these topics? Or does he copy u??
@NoLimitSquad
@NoLimitSquad 2 месяца назад
Thanks for the shoutout! The benefits of neuro training are vastly underrated💪🔥
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Of course, man! Who else would ai recommend for this stuff! Best in the biz 💪🏻
@cmaslan
@cmaslan 2 месяца назад
​@@TheBioneer Ultrahumanism???
@Kknewkles
@Kknewkles 2 месяца назад
The "map of the body" in the motor cortex part blew my mind.
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Cool, isn’t it! And a bit creepy looking… As I say: there’s actually two! One for sensation (sensory) and one for control (motor). And they’re slightly different :-)
@Yohan421-e5g
@Yohan421-e5g 2 месяца назад
it looks like a cartoon character but it makes so much sense, thanks for sharing adam​@@TheBioneer
@Aaron.Thomas
@Aaron.Thomas 2 месяца назад
In fact the motor cortex and somatosensory cortex have an interesting correlation to each other and sit next to each other separated by the central sulcus. You can find the cortexes easily by looking for the central sulcus in the brain.
@Chilldudefi313
@Chilldudefi313 Месяц назад
A bit? ​@@TheBioneerthis is really creepy
@bobbyboucher7189
@bobbyboucher7189 2 месяца назад
Perfect timing, I just started focusing on strength training instead of hypertrophy
@ericb4898
@ericb4898 2 месяца назад
Thank you for this. I'm recovering from a stroke. You have helped in almost every faucet of fitness and how to understand to use it day to day.
@blinkyschannel
@blinkyschannel 2 месяца назад
Have you looked into red light therapy and PEMF for your recovery?
@burnerjack01
@burnerjack01 2 месяца назад
My wife had a stroke after a vaccination shot. No idea if the two are connected but she lost her legs for a while. Kept at it and while weak from age and a senditary lifestyle, she made a full recovery. Never stop, never give up. Never underestimate your abilities. More powerful to you.
@jayarmstrong
@jayarmstrong 2 месяца назад
Get it 💪💪💪
@jeanpaulorl
@jeanpaulorl 2 месяца назад
How did u get ur mind muscle connection back?
@Colt45603
@Colt45603 Месяц назад
Had a bad stroke 7 years ago on right side of body ,2.5 years ago had quadruple heart bypass surgery .Through the grace of GOD at the age of 77 years old I can walk 1 mile mostly hills with a 35 lb weighted vest and weight train to push a 303 lb weighted sled . All to say don’t limit yourself to your current situation. Set a goal to better yourself and stick to it. You can do it . GOD BLESS
@wyrrlynmyrrlyn
@wyrrlynmyrrlyn 2 месяца назад
This is also why it's important to do every repetition, every burpee correctly. Doing 100 burpees and doing 80 of them badly means someone just detrained themself.
@Oromanowarful
@Oromanowarful Месяц назад
Absolutely, one should always aim for correct execution over pushing for more weight. Only when one can perform the movement in the proper way with the right support, then the stabilizing supporting muscles will allow one to advance the heavier weights but it's also strengthening the bones and joints as well.
@climbinghenge6382
@climbinghenge6382 Месяц назад
@@Oromanowarful Arnold dissagree's with this approach. He recommends strict and then cheat till failure but his goal isn't maximum strength
@Oromanowarful
@Oromanowarful Месяц назад
@climbinghenge6382 yeah. I remember reading some of his ideas in the Bible of bodybuilding if I recall correctly, though as I've gotten older, I've shifted focus more towards maintaining bone, joint and muscle strength, it helps with my job as well. I started doing something similar to progressive overload with weights not too long ago, and it's allowed my muscles to heal quicker than going beyond my max rep capacity.
@acemonsta01
@acemonsta01 Месяц назад
The straight line doesn't exist in nature and nor does the perfect burpee.
@ronaldmccutcheon1329
@ronaldmccutcheon1329 Месяц назад
I tell my clients that it has nothing to do with moving a weight from Point A to Point B. It' about contracting the muscle under load.
@rafaelabreu-canedo6698
@rafaelabreu-canedo6698 2 месяца назад
There’s mental fatigue and physical fatigue. The nervous system is also recruited in the healing/recovery. But you can fatigue hour body, even if you still have nervous system stress bandwidth. But still, amazing breakdown! Loved all the connections and thoroughness of all the latest literature. Really glad I saw this!
@antonvannelli9085
@antonvannelli9085 2 месяца назад
Specialist here. Sending strong signals is one thing via heavy reps. Sending the correct signals with strength (neural drive) is entirely different. Wonderful video, I just sent you an email as follow up. Completely agree with you on isometrics and your thought process on them. Improve the signaling of the correct systems, improve potential "strength". This is so extreme that recently I had a 15 year old client who improved his bench by 70lbs in 4 weeks, with zero lifting. Specifically targeting the nervous system to improve muscle recruitment of the correct systems is the future of strength training and rehabilitation as well.
@EnerGee_
@EnerGee_ 2 месяца назад
Are u on socials
@cashmoney3801
@cashmoney3801 2 месяца назад
how did this 15 yyo do that
@lemiureelemiur3997
@lemiureelemiur3997 2 месяца назад
​@cashmoney3801 Extrapolating the context of the video and what Anton said, I'd guess he took advantage of the lower fatigue caused by isometric max effort to spend much more time at max effort. As a practical example, lets say I want to focus on neural addaptation for a month. I can either choose isometric or isotonic exercises (like barbell bench press). Say I chose barbell bench, by week four I have either ramped up the weight over time, or focused on maximum effort. If I ramped up, I wont have spent much time practicing max effort at all, and if I focused on maximum effort, I will be so fatigued from maxing out several times a week that I will likely begin feeling weaker by then. If I had chosen isometric instead, I wouldn't have to choose whether to ramp up, I'm practicing max efforts right away. The main advantage is that you can do isometric "sets" longer. If you try moving a 95-100% effort weight on barbell intentionally slower, you'll likely fail the lift and possibly cause injury. So you're allowing neurons more time to "carve" and optimize neural pathways in the former case. It does have it's downsides of course. He touched on a few in the video: isometrics wont lengthen or shorten your muscle, and you won't be practicing the movement itself. There's much more to this, such as at what muscle lengths you train isometrics, how much can you do until fatigue hits you hard (there has to be a limit). If I were to guess, the 15 year old in question would have to be someone who had quite a bit of muscle mass to tap into. Just doing isometrics without practicing the actual movement just won't be optimal, had he benched lightly to drill the movement pattern, he would have increased even more. It's also very likely that the 70lbs increase wasn't correct in that he probably wouldn't have been able to find his actual max bench press in the first place. I.E, some people will add 70lbs to their bench over their first month whether they train isometric or isotonic, just because they have a lot of muscle to tap into.
@antonvannelli9085
@antonvannelli9085 2 месяца назад
@@lemiureelemiur3997 While I completely agree with your assessment in regards to isometrics/max etc (you clearly are educated), I actually did not have the athlete do isometrics or anything beyond specific signaling of specifically inactive/poorly utilized areas (in this case specific areas of pec major). I also had him do some extremely limited loading work after this (less than 3-5) with some extremely modified push ups, daily, to test the level of sensation and awareness (level of tension/activation) in this system. No weights were used (beyond very modified body weight) and no isometrics were used. The athlete in question did have some level of mass in the areas mentioned, but extremely poor utilization in regards to what his nervous system was activating. The majority of the mass was centered in the delts/pec minor/traps. The location of the mass itself isnt the end all be all, but it is a clue in regards what systems are being utilized and which are not.
@chandansimms9167
@chandansimms9167 Месяц назад
@@lemiureelemiur3997yeah I’m looking into isometrics. A lot of the old strongmen in the 1800s used them
@thunderthruster2338
@thunderthruster2338 2 месяца назад
My training (and results) completely transformed after finding this channel. Its awesome to see major changes, but its awesome to see you constantly improve too. I remember before you started talking about handstands and how you're doing pushups!? Just when i get down about my progress, i see my mid delt is noticably visible more than before. Or my pushups are that much easier. Its an endless war of attrition fighting over inches. I can't do anything but stretching right now though because a cold wrecking havoc on my body. But I must do what I can. But I love the channel, thanks for keeping it interesting!
@OfficialLeverKing
@OfficialLeverKing 2 месяца назад
It’s always nice to see my theories be supported by evidence. I have currently structured my program to be several months of hypertrophy training, followed by several months of strength training then several months of strength endurance training. Build the muscle, teach the body to use it, make it efficient, repeat. It’s a nice way to pace yourself in a lifelong pursuit
@arelavia225
@arelavia225 Месяц назад
Mind sharing?
@OfficialLeverKing
@OfficialLeverKing Месяц назад
@@arelavia225 What would you like shared? I build each block as it comes based on new equipment I’ve acquired and new skills I’m trying to learn. The concepts never change though.
@Tylo-games
@Tylo-games 2 месяца назад
This is the 3rd time I’ve had a question about exercise and the same day a hyper specific video is made by you answering my question. I’m scared.
@brennanmckissick6432
@brennanmckissick6432 2 месяца назад
Your ai hears you, it finds your algorithm just for you….
@fabricemichel7336
@fabricemichel7336 Месяц назад
I dont say anything they can definitely hear thoughts now
@colbybarton8182
@colbybarton8182 Месяц назад
I too think they can hear my thoughts
@therealsnaily
@therealsnaily 2 месяца назад
I can't wait for a collaboration between you and The Stone Circle!
@harryv6752
@harryv6752 2 месяца назад
That would be so rad. 🤘
@genin69
@genin69 2 месяца назад
Training guide starts at 10:30
@ineedzemedic5810
@ineedzemedic5810 Месяц назад
Thank you
@ShonenMaster33
@ShonenMaster33 Месяц назад
Thanks
@kankanarock3443
@kankanarock3443 Месяц назад
You are truly the Veritasium of workout science related videos❤
@jaketruman2299
@jaketruman2299 Месяц назад
Truly a gift. Thanks Bioneer once again you’ve not only swollen my muscles but also my brain
@crowtunnel41
@crowtunnel41 Месяц назад
I've been following this channel for quite a while now, and I'd just like to say it is incredible to see your channel growing and getting the attention it deserves from more audiences, you're amazing, man, and you've helped me a lot in my fitness journey
@ahmedtarek3782
@ahmedtarek3782 2 месяца назад
I am very happy with your content especially focusing om nervous system and some foundation of neuroscience in motor function, as a future neuroscientist in the making i can see you done great homework explaining Important principles ❤
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Thank you! I studied psychology for my undergraduate degree, so I had a head start :-)
@ahmedtarek3782
@ahmedtarek3782 Месяц назад
@@TheBioneer that's really wonderful background. I didn't expect it and happy to hear you share the same passion and interest like me . Keep you hard and beautiful work . U are very inspiring ❤️
@Hemsworths23
@Hemsworths23 2 месяца назад
I hope you can do a Bullworker video soon. Thanks for reminding us of these essential training concepts.
@apricorum7528
@apricorum7528 Месяц назад
I started practicing aim training a few weeks ago in a consistent way, and now i find myself going through all your videos, what a surprise :D. Thanks for your work
@alienautopsy9326
@alienautopsy9326 2 месяца назад
Bioneer is hiding the real weapon X in his lab. Christ, this channel is like the holy grail of human optimization. Love the music
@looweegee252
@looweegee252 Месяц назад
Whoever Invented and Designed this nervous system thing is some sort of metaphysical Genius
@redpilldredd9907
@redpilldredd9907 2 месяца назад
That's why i feel tired af. Thanks homie!
@HarryClipzFilmz
@HarryClipzFilmz Месяц назад
I am proud. I been on to this since reading Cyclomancy some years ago I would download maps of the brain and all of the bodily systems to use where to send signals to. Glad folks are knowing this stuff
@rafaelquintana7160
@rafaelquintana7160 Месяц назад
IT'S ALWAYS GOOD TO WATCH AND LISTEN TO YOU IN THIS KIND OF VIDEOS THANKS FOR YOUR TIMES AND DEDITCATION
@Tolska
@Tolska Месяц назад
This video is really good! I never realised how much sway the primary motor cortex and CNS had over muscle exertion, I'm taking notes lol
@Alatussss
@Alatussss 2 месяца назад
The best thing for training CNS I found and have been doing for a long time is horse stance. Horse stance is a marvelous exercise for lower body strength and endurance, try doing it daily and you will feel light as a feather, very fast and able to produce a lot of power in a very short period of a second, like a professional martial artist
@dudetrustme8320
@dudetrustme8320 Месяц назад
How does it feel to be one of the very few fitness/health youtubers that delivers original, creative, and informative content?
@hugoseriese5462
@hugoseriese5462 2 месяца назад
that brain-for-a-head visual is very sick!
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Thank you! I made it myself 😁
@fouchi3203
@fouchi3203 2 месяца назад
I put the video in an ai resume video to text, then i fed it to gpt asking it to make it short and simple : Lift Heavy & Explosive: Train with heavy weights (up to 95% of your max) to send strong neural signals. Practice Isometrics: Push or pull against immovable objects to maintain maximum neural drive. Repetition without Fatigue: Repeat movements to refine skills and improve motor control. Learn Advanced Skills: Incorporate complex movements for better body awareness. Add Variation: Mix up your training to challenge and strengthen neural pathways. CNS Fatigue Management: Focus on overall stress management to avoid CNS fatigue and maintain performance. Man what a time to be alive
@soumalyadas1123
@soumalyadas1123 2 месяца назад
what's the first tool you say? 'video to text'
@ishaanmalhotra3008
@ishaanmalhotra3008 2 месяца назад
Thanks!
@SpaghettiToaster
@SpaghettiToaster 2 месяца назад
There's extensions that do this automatically.
@fouchi3203
@fouchi3203 2 месяца назад
@@soumalyadas1123 type "youtube video summarizer" i used NoteGPT, it summarize any video into a text, that you can then summarize to go straight to the point and not milk me for a 25min video
@soumalyadas1123
@soumalyadas1123 2 месяца назад
@@fouchi3203 thanks buddy
@axel-wn3od
@axel-wn3od 2 месяца назад
As a female who strength trains and more I found this extremely interesting -one always hears fatigue can be caused by CNS over stimulated also importantfor females etc etc but this explains it very well thankyou
@Xander27-k3d
@Xander27-k3d Месяц назад
I remember first time at gym after long time, My central nervous system was in bad state but I managed to use my will power so much when doing back muscles that I felt strong pain in my brain, as if I forced to upgrade some dormant nerve that hasn't seen proper strenght training in it's whole life
@victorantos
@victorantos 2 месяца назад
Great video! 💪 I never realized how important it is to train the nervous system for strength gains. It’s not just about muscles, but also about how effectively our body can recruit them. This definitely gave me a new perspective on training smarter, not just harder. Thanks for the insightful tips!
@Mmmznznnxnxnnx
@Mmmznznnxnxnnx 29 дней назад
Wow thank you Bioneer ! My system is no longer nervous. 😮
@operatorblack
@operatorblack 2 месяца назад
Very important video. Always great content from you mate thank you
@fernandocisneors175
@fernandocisneors175 Месяц назад
This is the best explanation of what I do every day! Thank you sir!
@itsoracle
@itsoracle 2 месяца назад
the goat of training
@tylerj6219
@tylerj6219 28 дней назад
Could you do a video about building systems to reach your goals?
@div12335
@div12335 2 месяца назад
I love you bro. Biology explained with PRACTICAL Tips, this is how the education system should be, rather than rote memorization of useless facts.
@TheGhostPack
@TheGhostPack Месяц назад
10:37 is where he speaks about how to train it.
@srussifordwilliams
@srussifordwilliams Месяц назад
Thabk you this was an amazing video!
@davidmanning7912
@davidmanning7912 2 месяца назад
In relation to CNS and coordination and movement, have you looked at the Weck Method, and rope flow in particular? Forgive me if you've already covered it, i'm late 60's and convinced it is improving my coordination and balance. Always hugely impressed with your continuing commitment to finding and effectively communicating ways to improve fitness. Thank you. Also, good to see overcoming isometrics getting some love for their effectiveness and time efficiency
@noalane3626
@noalane3626 2 месяца назад
Talk about how the Russians figured out calisthenics should be the base because of the skill acquisition and athleticism that comes from it and the brain gains BDNF brain derived neurotrophic factor
@markd.9042
@markd.9042 Месяц назад
Based
@Cosmicflow9
@Cosmicflow9 Месяц назад
💯
@Tiago_Ogden
@Tiago_Ogden 2 месяца назад
Wow, it's great to see more of this instead of just in body by science
@DesmondNwan
@DesmondNwan Месяц назад
RU-vid recommend more vids like this to me
@markd.9042
@markd.9042 Месяц назад
Right?
@jonathanp___________3606
@jonathanp___________3606 2 месяца назад
You mentioned allostatic load briefly, and I'm interested in hearing what you've learned about clearing allostatic load. It seems like there are two modalities to this kind of active recovery, one for recovering from mind fatigue, and one for recovering from physical fatigue. How do they differ? How are they similar? And, what are some ways we can do each kind of recovery? Of course, maybe recovery from physical fatigue is passive, while recovering from mind fatigue (corresponding to clearing allostatic load) is active, but I think the questions about comparing and contrasting those kinds of recovery would still apply.
@pappin7423
@pappin7423 Месяц назад
This vid is gold thank you
@BayushiAramoro
@BayushiAramoro 2 месяца назад
This video came at the right time for me, thank you 👌
@danedube2115
@danedube2115 Месяц назад
Great Video! Loved it.
@sarahadkins2540
@sarahadkins2540 2 месяца назад
This is so cool. I would love to be able to do a handstand and power train. I was doing strength training but this was a wonderful video.
@JustTrain3.6.9
@JustTrain3.6.9 2 месяца назад
Brilliant video - very informative - thank you 👍🏽
@johndubois2513
@johndubois2513 Месяц назад
Superamazing mate
@Davlavi
@Davlavi Месяц назад
Great video.
@Joe-xj2tb
@Joe-xj2tb 2 месяца назад
Thats a better introduction than mine thank you very good job now im thinkin if should still write my guide or not i do appreciate you making this video there is an addition to this wich requires you to try to LEAVE YOUR BODY!!
@bomcstoots1
@bomcstoots1 Месяц назад
THUNDER BREATHING, FIRST FORM.
@trond5656
@trond5656 2 месяца назад
If you're unlucky and develop M.E (post-viral fatigue syndrom, CFS) there's often no way out, because then exertion causes the brain's immune-cells, the Microglia, to release destructive cytokines into the brain, hence you'll feel like having severe influenza (PEM - post-exertion malaise). It's an inflammation-response somehow triggered by exertion.
@jeanbob1481
@jeanbob1481 2 месяца назад
Exactly what happened to me. I used to do tabatha training everyday but with CFS I am fried and death for the day when I exercise too much.
@trond5656
@trond5656 2 месяца назад
@@jeanbob1481 Sorry to hear that. -In my 30's I trained every day steadily improving. Then ~once a month I felt spectacularly ill after a training, interestingly not right afterwards - then I as usual felt very accomplished - but suddenly 14 hours later! Then took a pause the next day. Over a period of 2 years these post-training breakdowns gradually became more frequent, once every 3 weeks, once every 2.. Always occurred more than 12 hours after. Until training became impossible & then incredibly ordinary activities like cleaning or walking uphill caused PEM.. Turmeric helps, take it together with fat & black pepper. Also citrulline (increases blood-circulation) - and esp MSM which is biologically active sulphur (taking it w/C-vitamine increases efficiancy) it reduces inflammation + also increases hair growth & improves skin, nails and tendons/sinews. If you can get a prescription - LDN (low-dose naltrexone) and/or LDA (low-dose abilify) can work very well.
@jeanbob1481
@jeanbob1481 2 месяца назад
@@trond5656 MSM crystal are pretty good. honestly my CFS is mostly controlled nowadays I can still do low intensity and mid intensity but tabatha only 2 times a week tops. I developped MCS(multiple chemical sensitivtiy) and this one is much harder to deal with. All of this started with a death feeling (most likely adrenal fatigue) and eventually I got costochondritis and that one left me in pain for a while then MCS and CFS started once I healed from the costo.
@nerychristian
@nerychristian 2 месяца назад
​@@trond5656fasting helps heal the mind
@sylphidstriker6909
@sylphidstriker6909 25 дней назад
i use video games for reflexes and cardio and flexibility training to keep up with it. takes years to notice but when you do you feel like a superhuman
@resentfusion5634
@resentfusion5634 2 месяца назад
Thanks for the video!
@williamberner8778
@williamberner8778 2 месяца назад
The only interesting fitness and health content creator love ur vids
@femto02
@femto02 Месяц назад
Make something on calves. It is such a pain growing them
@Fwibos
@Fwibos 2 месяца назад
Reffing Field Sports can do the same. You run, twist, walk, and sprint - sometimes backwards All the while focusing to call fouls you see in a fast-paced game.
@orhan1149
@orhan1149 2 месяца назад
Excellent content.
@PoleBrotherhood
@PoleBrotherhood 2 месяца назад
Can you make a video on learning with subconscious mind
@feeding-the-fire-within2707
@feeding-the-fire-within2707 2 месяца назад
!
@sharonromein8278
@sharonromein8278 Месяц назад
Yes!
@denisliammurphy
@denisliammurphy 2 месяца назад
Great video!
@Lex-nx7kd
@Lex-nx7kd Месяц назад
David Goggins entered the room at 19:45
@CerealQiller
@CerealQiller Месяц назад
I workout, play games and study. There are others who only study so hard work and time of effort beats everything.
@rafaelquintana7160
@rafaelquintana7160 Месяц назад
AWESOME VERY USEFUL .AND SKILLFUL THANKS FOR YOUR TIME AND VIDEOS /THANKS FOR NOW
@jerarivers4720
@jerarivers4720 Месяц назад
How would this tie into martial arts like boxing? Slower shadow boxing but more mindful and variations?
@Felnier
@Felnier 2 месяца назад
Curious if this relates to the benefits of learning while doing zone 2 cardio
@profpuffofficial2
@profpuffofficial2 Месяц назад
Denervated vs Innervated muscle
@ChadCilli
@ChadCilli Месяц назад
So many people think they have CNS fatigue when in reality it’s just peripheral fatigue.
@scott-hr3hd
@scott-hr3hd 2 месяца назад
Hmm…this explains a lot to me. For example when you do bench vs pushups or lat pull downs vs pull-ups. They don’t translate all that well because circuits that fire together wire together.
@Grumpyoldman666
@Grumpyoldman666 2 месяца назад
This why maxing out occasionally while lifting is important because your body becomes better at recruiting more motor units the more you try to lift maximum loads.
@markd.9042
@markd.9042 Месяц назад
I feel like CNS and PNS training and calisthenics should be the foundation of resistance training, but that's just me
@charleswomack2166
@charleswomack2166 Месяц назад
And unconscious control as well. IE reactions such as when you pull your hand away from a hot stove. And you're driving on the wrong side of the road!
@resir9807
@resir9807 2 месяца назад
Next up: "How to train your fingernails - unlock your full keratin potential and grow claws the size of wolverine's!"
@LatimusChadimus
@LatimusChadimus 2 месяца назад
Just like everybody has the ability to lift their big toe off the ground while leaving the other four planted, but it's really really hard to learn if you don't try.
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Exactly 👍🏻
@lilmanlil6852
@lilmanlil6852 Месяц назад
how, I want to learn 😢
@LatimusChadimus
@LatimusChadimus Месяц назад
@@lilmanlil6852 you're going to have to concentrate a lot a lot. If you have a decent amount of body awareness with the mind muscle connection, give it a try and be patient. There's no way to teach it, you just have to concentrate and try and concentrate some more and try some more
@reccar3677
@reccar3677 2 месяца назад
love it keep it up
@dezenanon8268
@dezenanon8268 Месяц назад
Love this type of content, I actually was looking into bettering my neural pathways for training and this video popped up in my feed! Thanks!
@yamazaru8236
@yamazaru8236 2 месяца назад
Was expecting something about neuroathletics here, but you may not have come across it yet. Still interesting topics here
@chandansimms9167
@chandansimms9167 Месяц назад
@Bioneer could you do a video on myostatin
@tatwing098
@tatwing098 2 месяца назад
So is it safe to say we have super natural power?
@MyltraGaming
@MyltraGaming 2 месяца назад
Love you my dear video provider
@scottandcoke1342
@scottandcoke1342 2 месяца назад
I wash myself with a rag on a stick
@utdfortreble
@utdfortreble 2 месяца назад
👏👏👏👏
@headless0ptomist198
@headless0ptomist198 Месяц назад
"Strength is also a skill and skills are learned through repetition." Someone has never had to restrain a person with special needs, my cousin used to break the fingers of doctors and nurses as a kid and as an adult he can and does break limbs if he wants to when he gets upset and he's never worked out a day in his life.
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer Месяц назад
This is actually relevant and often related to neural drive and hormones. Essentially they can recruit a greater number of muscle fibres than most people can most of the time. Combine that with less regard for their own safety (in some cases) and that’s why it’s so difficult.
@SupremeSensei98
@SupremeSensei98 Месяц назад
1 like=10 pushups(with videoproof)
@AbdurRahmaan-uv4ld
@AbdurRahmaan-uv4ld 8 часов назад
Done
@theonetrueshibe9567
@theonetrueshibe9567 2 месяца назад
Are you still doing your own 3d rendering? they keep getting better and better and really enhances the overall narrative.
@TheBioneer
@TheBioneer 2 месяца назад
Thank you so much! I am 😁 Working on a big one at the moment!
@badekar
@badekar 2 месяца назад
Loved it
@michaelandrew8493
@michaelandrew8493 2 месяца назад
I just got diagnosed with a partial slap tear. My shoulder kills hopefully pt helps. I dont want surgery
@jerremyhandel2332
@jerremyhandel2332 2 месяца назад
Iv been wiggling my ears this whole time haha but honestly thanks for hitting this topic.
@παναγιωτηςστρικος-η4υ
It's like watching Huberman&Galpin summarized
@roshanranjan8701
@roshanranjan8701 2 месяца назад
A video for ryu and akuma training pls
@ovenkloven
@ovenkloven 2 месяца назад
Best content on RU-vid
@toowavyydotbiz
@toowavyydotbiz Месяц назад
4:45 , idk bro, maybe put some chapters in your videos, or in this one; personally, i don't care what the cns is, idc how it works, when how to train cns?
@LoneEagle01
@LoneEagle01 Месяц назад
Good shyt , I subscribed
@tian1332
@tian1332 2 месяца назад
this is what im talking bout best channel for overall body conditioning
@runguy1098
@runguy1098 2 месяца назад
Is this Might Guy's training?
@essentialpunisher5181
@essentialpunisher5181 Месяц назад
How am I supposed to take advice from someone who drives on the wrong side of the road? Seriously though, great video.
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