10 Minutes of Tennis: Learn What to Change after 50 (years old) with Hall of Fame Special Guest David Matthews
Transcript
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Speaker:Good morning, we have just in Yeo, a world-renowned tennis coach in Australia.
Speaker:Wait, Aussie in Australia is what I'm supposed to say.
Speaker:And we will enjoy his t-shirt without mentioning it.
Speaker:So we appreciate you being here this morning.
Speaker:We also have a special guest star, which that phrase I think is usually reserved for musicians.
Speaker:And no, it's not that Dave Matthews.
Speaker:We have the actual Dave Matthews with us, who next time we'll get him
Speaker:maybe his bike friendly Atlanta background.
Speaker:Like I've got my go-tennis background.
Speaker:We'll talk to creative, that's what they call it these days.
Speaker:We'll talk to creative about that Dave.
Speaker:But first, what I want to do, Justin, is I want to recap.
Speaker:Because this is a follow-up conversation.
Speaker:It's a follow-up conversation from our What to Change after 40 initial conversation.
Speaker:I want you, if you don't mind, give us a quick recap.
Speaker:Keep it 90 seconds if you can to what we were talking about.
Speaker:What do we mean by What to Change after 40 when it comes to tennis?
Speaker:I think what we were talking about is making sure you know where your limitations are
Speaker:and trying to become more, I guess, what we call efficient in your swing.
Speaker:And so not trying to hit the ball the same as you were in your 20s.
Speaker:And make some adjustments.
Speaker:And you can do that just even staying within your own swing,
Speaker:but just being a little more mechanically minded, I guess,
Speaker:to the word or by mechanically minded.
Speaker:If we want to speak it that way.
Speaker:But I see a lot of guys over 40 struggling on surge, struggling on forearms,
Speaker:struggling on ready stance.
Speaker:There's a whole bunch of things that they start to lose as they get all the because of posture.
Speaker:So over 40 focus on mobility, focus on agility, focus on taking care of your body.
Speaker:And make some adjustments in your swing as the quickest way I can tell you.
Speaker:Internal rotation at the shoulder,
Speaker:stop coming all the way back here, make it a little shorter and compact.
Speaker:And you'll be amazed how much harder you can still hit the ball.
Speaker:Now to just me a little more, I guess the way it's compact and understanding your limitations after 40.
Speaker:Understand your limitations. I like that a lot.
Speaker:That's why I see you see the older players kind of just bring the arm up and take a quick serve
Speaker:and just get the point started because they're not necessarily coming in,
Speaker:hitting ACEs anymore. There's a humility that comes with aging.
Speaker:Dave, stop.
Speaker:Just because you're a terrible example of these things.
Speaker:I don't appreciate that.
Speaker:Tommy has his Instagram lately showing like a 45,
Speaker:fact in the ball.
Speaker:Funny, really, and he goes about two steps this way, two steps that way.
Speaker:He's not really moving. That's what I heard about the same thing with Carlos Alcaraz
Speaker:and hitting with Juan Carlos Ferreira.
Speaker:Ferreiro can still hit with Alcaraz as long as he doesn't have to go to the other side of the court.
Speaker:If you see him hitting, he's a little more compact on both sides.
Speaker:He doesn't get as much rotation as he does, but he's still incredible.
Speaker:You see, you can see he's doing the same thing.
Speaker:You can just stand there once, watch, go, bang, bang, bang, like table tennis.
Speaker:Let's see you kick him through.
Speaker:In that case, there's a humility to it.
Speaker:That's when I want to next go to Dave and say, "Okay, Dave, you got a couple of years on us."
Speaker:Get a few years on us.
Speaker:I want to ask the next question that says, "If I'm 45, I'm actually 46.
Speaker:Justin's 50. If you're 60, you've had that experience of being through your 50s.
Speaker:What have you had to change even further? Is there more humility that says, "Okay, I'm a little
Speaker:bit older." I will point out that you're a terrible example of this being some superhero tennis player.
Speaker:But as the example of how do you make that adjustment into your 50s after your 40s?
Speaker:Yeah, I agree. I've done things probably wacko different than most people.
Speaker:Like Justin said, taking care of your body. You know as well as anybody, I'm an icing freak.
Speaker:Not too many people have 15 blue ice packs in their freezer waiting to come home every night.
Speaker:And just because of teaching, you put them on your legs so that you hopefully survive longer.
Speaker:Like somebody says, "Long time's in tennis, it's not a sprint."
Speaker:It's a long drawn out two, three hour match. It's got a lot of twists and turns in it.
Speaker:But anyway, getting over 50 and still playing, I was still playing double-aid 1 tennis.
Speaker:One of my great partners, Scott Lindsey. I tell people all the time, he carried me all the time.
Speaker:He's a great guy. He's going to say, "No, I didn't." You're served with doing pretty well.
Speaker:I said, "Yeah, 52. I was doing pretty well."
Speaker:Still playing national international events. But at 50, I started, I didn't really notice it because
Speaker:the one thing I will say going through 40 to 50, if you're still very active, playing was,
Speaker:you don't lose that much. I didn't. Now like you said, maybe that's just a rare case.
Speaker:But most people don't live in a tennis environment like I did. They work nine to five.
Speaker:They have kids and family and I get it. That's all part of the mix.
Speaker:I get the same thing, but I still play in an national event.
Speaker:So, losing it, the old additive, if you don't use it, you lose it. It is true.
Speaker:It is true. Before worn, when you stop using it on a weekly basis, you're going to lose it.
Speaker:And lose parts of it slowly but surely, it gets in there.
Speaker:So anyway, but last five to seven years, when I was going to do another period of my life,
Speaker:I have learned that over 60, you better get ready because what you have lost, gaining it back is a
Speaker:ginormous change. You get it. You get it. You get it. You get my humility. It's crazy.
Speaker:But back to what Justin was saying about your mobility, or it even dominoes again.
Speaker:Maybe one of my, I was telling, I remember what I was in my college years and I'd get up in the middle of
Speaker:No Man's Land. People, oh, you got a coach in that coach. I said, just listen. I'm working on my
Speaker:80 and over game. And they're like, what are you talking about? I go. I played with people that were 70 and 80
Speaker:years old when I was young and they stand in the middle of No Man's Land. I know why now. And I used to laugh
Speaker:at it, but hey, I'm there. And you know, things you change, I dropped shots a lot more because I know
Speaker:everybody on my court playing as a super seniors now at 65 and over. Everybody's mobility is
Speaker:challenged. Everybody's. So it's another game. You start like Justin says, you, you make amendments to
Speaker:your strokes, you make them a little shorter, you know, as long as you're hitting a lot, you still got
Speaker:some muscle strength to help support the racket. The rackets now do a lot more than what we grew up with.
Speaker:So don't push it. Use it, you know, and we know as well as anybody, people don't learn to use the
Speaker:racket like they should. They want to use that brute strength that ego, I call it the ego.
Speaker:You know, ego comes in one basketball, you can cut your swing down 25% and hit the same ball. But
Speaker:as you get older, you don't have that option. Your body starts going, oh my god, I think I just
Speaker:tore my rotated cuff hitting a forehand. I mean, what are you doing? You got to cut it down a little
Speaker:smaller, you know, like Justin says, you got to cut your stroke a little and use the strength you have
Speaker:to reproduce the same ball that Justin play. That makes sense. So there's a humility there now. How
Speaker:much different did you say, and you say that it's that daily, if you're playing tennis daily, let's say
Speaker:the normal tennis player, the average tennis player is playing once, maybe the average one and a half
Speaker:times a week. Yeah, it's probably an average. Maybe they get in a practice. It's not like you or
Speaker:Justin where you're on court, potentially getting a chance to hit balls every like hit balls, like
Speaker:not like me bouncing a orange dot ball to kids, but you're hitting real tennis balls and you're getting
Speaker:to feel that and you don't really lose it. For me, I saw I took three years off from playing tennis
Speaker:and it's it's gone. Everything I got is gone. And all I had was those cool things that I could do.
Speaker:There's no way I'm going to beat Justin head to head. I'm hitting 97 drop shots and just hoping
Speaker:that he breaks his ankle so I can win this match. But I'm going to make some changes trying to get
Speaker:it back and saying, okay, Justin and I talked about the different types of serve. Is it possible Justin
Speaker:maybe the serve that I had no longer is the serve that I need? And now as I as I pass that 40 into 50
Speaker:and there's a humility there Justin that you agree with? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, I don't believe
Speaker:in that teaching old dog new tricks. I mean, you can teach it out to do new tricks in a different way
Speaker:within what they already know. And that's why I keep saying you can keep playing. You just can't keep playing
Speaker:the way you were in your 20s. And if you can let go of that, you actually can still keep playing.
Speaker:And another really cool, cool stat or help on all of this is Vic Braden, one of the most
Speaker:biggest legends ever of this game. And I wouldn't say necessarily playing what is, but his knowledge
Speaker:and what he did for this sport is off the charts. And one of the things he really showed is that
Speaker:because of the speed between racket to racket in the last three generations, there's just no way
Speaker:I'll play it and get from the baseline to a service line without having to hit another ball.
Speaker:You just can't get past. So if everyone say close to it, close to them like, when do you talk about that?
Speaker:You got to be Carlos and be quick enough to get past them the baseline to serve slide and still now the ball.
Speaker:So that was Vic one. Sorry, Justin was Vic one. It was either one that said you get two steps.
Speaker:He'd hit to serve two steps and then you hit the next ball two steps. Was anything brain?
Speaker:He was he was yes. And he was also one of the first guys that said we have to scrap the split step.
Speaker:We have to create the reaction step, which is one foot in the next one or one foot in the next one.
Speaker:So you never split step and then move to the volley. You actually split with one foot and move to another foot.
Speaker:So then you're always two steps ahead and he proved if you practice that enough, your split step becomes one leg
Speaker:and then push to this where you see it. But you're now two steps ahead when you make contact.
Speaker:And he was saying that's the only way we're going to get to the net with the speed between racket to racket now.
Speaker:And that's even an amateur level because what we have to understand amateur level, professional level,
Speaker:the pros just process the ball and process and you know like know what's going to happen
Speaker:quicker than what an amateur does. So it's the same same stuff. It's just you just kind of get to the net
Speaker:passing up. So in 70s and 80s, the guys that had it right, you hit a ball stationary, hit another ball,
Speaker:stationary, the net a ball, you can do that but if you can do it on one leg and start doing it like
Speaker:Vic was talking about, you can get even further in. But you know, again, no limitations.
Speaker:Know that you can adjust the game a little bit and still keep playing.
Speaker:You know, and I think what Dave brought up really good point is that usually there are other guys
Speaker:at the other end with the same limitation. So you know, just know what you could play against his
Speaker:limitations like, you know, so you know, if he's not a good move or he's trying to get a lot of drops
Speaker:or tell you, but you'll find that guy probably stands three quarter court bus to match.
Speaker:He's already he's already in no man's land. Exactly.
Speaker:Our 10 minutes are up Justin. Let's go. Let's go long term. So we're going to say thank you Dave
Speaker:Justin to our 10 minutes of tennis. We will continue on Instagram and YouTube for the longer
Speaker:conversation. Gentlemen, thank you so much. Thank you. He's a Lada. Cheers.
Speaker:All right. So now we're just running YouTube and Instagram. So I like that. I like that
Speaker:conversation about the like what you said Dave about the hanging out in no man's land where you see
Speaker:in the beginning as coaches, we say no, no, no, there's a reason it's called that. Get out of there.
Speaker:The ball is going to bounce at your feet, but if you're only realizing you're getting two steps
Speaker:anyway, yeah, that that guy in his 60s that I was trying not to lose to when I was in my 20s,
Speaker:that's just hitting the ballies the whole match. Right. If you can't hit around him,
Speaker:then that's what he's trying to force you to do. You have to go around that guy to make a move
Speaker:then I hit the ball out. Right. So that old that more experienced player can take down a younger
Speaker:player at the time, which I'm realizing I'm calling it a humility where it's basically the
Speaker:where I'm finding the positive thing to say as opposed to Dave where he says the problem is the ego,
Speaker:which is the opposite of humility. So that works to say, okay, now Dave, if I'm going to say here's
Speaker:our longer conversation. If you can give me you can give me three things that you would suggest.
Speaker:To say actionable points of view that say here's what you can change. Is it switching to a
Speaker:unadjusted what what the limited what's the abbreviated sorry that's the word Justin for the
Speaker:serve an abbreviated serve or maybe you do serve in volleyball even though it's not really
Speaker:what you used to do. Do you have three things you can give us that say here are actually some things
Speaker:you can change? Yeah, I think I think you know like I think me adjust around the same page with it,
Speaker:you know when you start abbreviating and at the same time it's you incorporate better returns
Speaker:to serve and things like that in a younger person's game you know 30 20 30 40 year old.
Speaker:You have to learn to shorten your your stroke because the time there is just not there. You know
Speaker:you you can scream like I had a conversation I mean when I was first coaching out there here in Atlanta,
Speaker:I kept telling people you know you're coming to them you want to if you want to serve in volleyball
Speaker:you're coming to the net and they're thinking well I'm going to get to the middle of the service block
Speaker:and I'm like on what train what train that you get there on because I ain't never got there
Speaker:and I'm six five so we that'll work and so it's funny because I came home that night
Speaker:and I think Edberg was on on the TV like US Open late at night and I counted like 12 points in a
Speaker:row he served you know like a long game and he you know he's balling at every point serving in
Speaker:ball in and 9 out of 10 of his first ballies were within the service line and a yard behind
Speaker:his first volley and so I counted when I called the guy up on the phone and I said okay turn on
Speaker:this match it's on right now watch and you know he he's watching he's watching this goes this can't be
Speaker:right I said it's right a hundred percent of the time you're you're not watching what you think you're
Speaker:seeing his second volley that's a whole another game but if that first volley is not on point into a
Speaker:deep corner your second volley ain't going to exist you're going to get passed in a heartbeat
Speaker:Justin's over his finger they're going yep we've all seen that one and so you know I tell people
Speaker:all the time you're coming in but you really if you watch the pros warm up their volleys they're
Speaker:all standing on the service line because that's the most important volley the rest of them are
Speaker:cheesecakes that's a joke when you get up in the middle service block and I tell people all the time
Speaker:well you're serving volley and I go if I get past middle of the service block and have it one to point
Speaker:I haven't done my job my volley's really staked and so I realized where in the court I am
Speaker:I can't just I you can't just fly to the net you're going to get lob by everybody on the other side of
Speaker:the net you know Justin going yep yep and so you know changing uh I think moving you know because
Speaker:your mobility does become a little bit of a factor if you're going to go to the net which is still a
Speaker:viable play for me and anybody you just gotta be realistic with your movement you know your movement
Speaker:is not going to stay at 40 years old anymore it's over so learning how to have volley which is what
Speaker:I've been doing for oh my god 45 years you know I can take a half volley and hit a drop half volley
Speaker:off of it we're touched and you know people are like a six five guy doing that but sorry I've been ahead
Speaker:of the curve a little bit but um you know that I think is one uh because you've been cut
Speaker:down your return of serve stroke because of lack of time with the bigger players or you know the bigger
Speaker:ball that you're hitting uh you should be adapted to be able to step into the court take serves
Speaker:earlier um and just get them at their feet and you're already in the court so you might as well
Speaker:just come on in and make it fun uh you're gonna get to every ball no but you learn how to read players
Speaker:and that's the evolution of tennis as you read players and you read shot selection and what you
Speaker:minimize on the other side because of your shot that becomes even more of a chess match and fun
Speaker:part of the game to me um Justin you got anything to add there uh I'd say two things you become an
Speaker:expert at zero and four shots and you also have a very good reminder which everyone seems to forget
Speaker:is read the other players racket read the ball ball I mean anything that can speed up the perception
Speaker:so that you can actually use whatever mobility you do have and react to what you do that um everyone
Speaker:forgets to read the racket I mean I I'm constantly shouting like just watch my racket just
Speaker:look all of a sudden their split sets faster they're coming forward they're seeing the the left
Speaker:the right they're seeing everything that's like hey like I said you got that you see if you're watching
Speaker:but really you're just watching the ball and by the time I guess the net you're now reacting so
Speaker:let's let's watch the racket and more you watch the racket the better you'll become uh
Speaker:right maybe my two biggest ones for anyone at the 40 and over 50 is keep remembering
Speaker:to watch the racket and try to zero to four shots feeling what am I creating
Speaker:you know we're playing bids but we're playing bids to four no playing b is eight you know so
Speaker:and that makes a lot of sense knowing we're also playing a lot more doubles as we get older
Speaker:yeah I mean you even come from that that Atlanta mindset typically which there's a lot of doubles here
Speaker:anyway because they're more leagues than anywhere in the world but we come from that point of view of okay
Speaker:now I'm I'm getting older I gotta get smarter I'm gonna hit my serve I have lost a match to that guy
Speaker:who tapped in the serve and sprinted to the net when it was a city final match it was embarrassing
Speaker:I couldn't figure out how to beat that guy so there are those strange scenarios where it somehow works
Speaker:but as we get older as we realize that we've got to learn how to how to have a half-bally I like
Speaker:that day take some practice time and spend some time in no man's land and call up Justin or Dave
Speaker:and say hey I need to work on my my oh shit shots right I gotta work on that I had it balls at my
Speaker:feet what am I gonna do get comfortable with those shots that you're typically avoiding because now
Speaker:we don't have the footwork to necessarily get out of the way and get back in the way and and make
Speaker:those adjustments and if you're gonna keep my third one is if you're gonna keep something to your
Speaker:70s and your eddies don't lose your squat I mean it's just incredible when someone gets a good
Speaker:squat stance and good like give me one more actually there's one more really important one this is
Speaker:one it's a big one for everybody you're hit with the amount of people that continue to feel like
Speaker:they've got to be jump in itch and your hips are limited as you get older they have to be
Speaker:stance as the more narrow for you to be able to use your feet in your legs again and if you keep
Speaker:if if you were near in your 20s in your here in your 30s you're about here in your 40s and then
Speaker:50s well maybe you're in the same but but don't be out here in your 40s and it's just no way
Speaker:you're gonna react or move or do it and that's probably why you slow it's not that you can't move
Speaker:it's just your hips they lose their mobility so your stance becomes more narrow and that's one I
Speaker:pick up up a lot of people I said look put your feet together jump in the end lane okay that's
Speaker:where you that's your hips right there you know they're like oh yeah but I'm here I'm like how you can't
Speaker:move there and that's another example of and I'll take that and and specify the advice stop watching
Speaker:the guys on television and thinking you can do it you're not them right don't come in and hit
Speaker:that volley where the racket moves all you you don't have that when we say don't swing it your
Speaker:volleys we mean it don't say but Rudge or Federer does it or the what's the big wide like you said the
Speaker:the joke of a split step returners are you're not them right talk to your coach find out who you
Speaker:really are and actually realize the humility and saying here's where it maintained this lane this
Speaker:is where you need to be I got one last question Dave you're an avid cyclist
Speaker:that's theoretically bad for a tennis player with the hips going from the hips from Justin
Speaker:to where okay I'm on this bicycle and I'm doing the same thing over and over and over again
Speaker:and I'm hearing I'm hearing different things so I want to ask the question of how you believe the
Speaker:cycling helps you besides just fitness and fitness is good it keeps you healthy keeps you fit
Speaker:as long as you don't die so please don't die riding a bicycle on the road please
Speaker:I'm asking you Dave please don't do that but but that but that repetitive movement on the bicycle
Speaker:Justin talks about how we're sitting and how our angle is and how that helps us
Speaker:as tennis players and sometimes it can be a detriment how do you how do you combine still continuing
Speaker:tennis with the cycling when I'm getting some advice that maybe we shouldn't do that or maybe
Speaker:everybody shouldn't do that yeah right um number one and I was going to add on just just had four
Speaker:fingers over there I'm going to add a fifth one as you go through your 40s 50s 60s 70s because I
Speaker:remember one year back when I was like 40 35 40 I went to a the national intersectionals out in
Speaker:Arizona had all the sections represented 13 sections represented you know a team competition
Speaker:and they started doing testing people versus you know not really versus each other but they started
Speaker:doing testing to see you know when you got to be 40 what was your you know how was your stretching
Speaker:you know could you touch your toes could you jump in things like that and I was off the chart
Speaker:because I don't know why but I was cycling a lot my quad strength was phenomenal uh you know they
Speaker:they they head where you're sitting on the floor and you reach out over your toes you know when you
Speaker:try and you know everybody was reaching their toes and I was like I was like a risk past my toes
Speaker:and people were like what in the world and I said I do a lot of stretching and I do a lot of
Speaker:stamina work on my bike and they were like whoa and you know I had a friend of mine when I was in
Speaker:college on my one year college basketball that I played we went and visited one of his friends
Speaker:tree Rollins of the Atlanta Holtz who was having knee surgery down in Columbus where I where I grew up
Speaker:and Dr. Houston walked in Houston clinic was the name of the clinic he was a world-renowned knee
Speaker:surgeon still he I don't know if he still is but anyway uh tree had just had knee surgery that
Speaker:afternoon before at like four in the afternoon and the next morning Dr. Houston walks in with an
Speaker:exercise bike and tree was like Doc I need some pain meds la la la la la he can get your butt out of
Speaker:bed and get on the bike you're trying to get back in the lineup get on the bike and I said so I got
Speaker:a question for you what if you got on the bike before you came to see you he goes probably wouldn't be
Speaker:here because the the quad and the bicycle builds the quad better than anything to support the knee
Speaker:that's what we like and why so many people have knee surgeries and so you think about the pounding
Speaker:that we get on a tennis court and it's unbelievable I mean starting stopping oh my god and so what I
Speaker:decided at about the age of about twenty two or three was to stop doing all my running and start
Speaker:cycling so that I take the pounding off but I build the muscle without the pounding I get my heart
Speaker:strong life hopefully gets longer and yeah you know and that's what my nonprofit does now is trying
Speaker:to create safer streets for everybody but uh yeah you know people need to drive a little better I
Speaker:hate to say it but you know I'm never seen a bicycle that kills somebody so you know we have to
Speaker:attack the root of the problem and that is the killing machine and the ego behind it and so you know
Speaker:I don't know how we're gonna address all that there's a lot of stuff in our society we need to change
Speaker:and fix what that's one of them one of many as roads get you know but you know stretching is a huge
Speaker:part uh I've started the last two months ago I started a medicine ball workout where there's also
Speaker:a lot of yoga kind of stretches with a lightweight medicine ball it's killing me because of the you know
Speaker:once you're over sixty you start losing muscle mass whether you like it or not and if you ain't
Speaker:doing something to fix it or to help it stay in position you know like you got it you're gonna lose it
Speaker:so you know all you 50 year olds get ready the the ladders coming your way and you better not get on
Speaker:it so stretching is a big part of it big part of it doesn't yeah 100 percent I mean that's pretty
Speaker:impressive for a six foot guy to put his hand past his foot just down I got to reach my foot so
Speaker:but I did I mean I was doing first a hundred miles a week in running and and I quit all of that
Speaker:yeah for the second tennis for the second it's running running will destroy your tennis because
Speaker:just tighten your hand needs and your hand needs panicking for anything so uh and you can't sprint and
Speaker:you can't use it fast much five is and there's I mean there's just so many bliss list uh so running
Speaker:long distance running and that I mean any kind of running he's right with jarring you can build your
Speaker:legs by doing the bike um but you know I again saying thing it's help for him and what's work it
Speaker:works for you I say go for it you know um I could see the benefit for a six foot five guy on a bike
Speaker:it would actually help him with his sweat step it's yep so I can see that we're actually with
Speaker:help but a guy who's maybe five eleven might be good to tight and to the ground lower and um I've
Speaker:just seen I've seen bike I've seen both sides so um the bike stuff I've seen people on pelotons every
Speaker:single day and they can't react around the court because again it's slow to reach versus fast which
Speaker:and uh and and and it and it loons a little bit of their um deep sweat so they lose their hip range
Speaker:because they used to just this far this far uh so so again it's wet all up what's better for you
Speaker:and what's not better for you you know for some people though I don't do much static stretching I've
Speaker:got a lot of dynamic stretching I find static one is boring and two I feel like I hurt things so
Speaker:yeah you know you do what you know and you you know uh you know I'll see people go to yoga and go
Speaker:oh man for the mean bucks and then next thing you know they're like oh I just tore something
Speaker:okay because you've pulled something to do something it's not used to doing so it's um
Speaker:well now to I'll toot my wife's horn a little bit and say that's I think why we invented pelotis
Speaker:and especially as we age it's uh I call it the the exercise verb the workout version of yoga
Speaker:whether it sounds like what Dave you're describing with your medicine ball it sounds like a bit
Speaker:essentially as a pelotis workout which we're protecting the feet we're staying aligned we're staying
Speaker:move it isn't just yoga where I'm trying to hold my antenna you know yoga was designed to connect
Speaker:the human body with the vibrations of the universe and center and meditate that it's a different concept
Speaker:where pelotis is going to take you and say hey you know what if you're doing a lot of cycling and you're
Speaker:doing this one thing my wife is gonna say well how about we do some hip circles and how about we
Speaker:extend those things and we work on those squats and we add that in as one of the things that you're
Speaker:doing in the same way I just bought my little my little magnetic bracelet to lose a few pounds right
Speaker:and they say it can't be the only part of your weight loss program like does anybody think the
Speaker:what the wristband is gonna help you no it's a it's a talisman it's the thing that reminds you to
Speaker:stop eating too much and go workout do your thing but it's it's one of many things that we need to do
Speaker:and if we're playing tennis you get out there and you hit some balls and that's good for you just
Speaker:and wants the fast twitch he's gonna say hey this you know man cannot live on cycling alone and Dave
Speaker:I will say man sometimes die from cycling alone so be careful out there on the roads gentleman
Speaker:I'm out of time I appreciate it we'll follow up maybe we'll do a what to change after 60 in a few
Speaker:months but I appreciate your time guys thanks so much we'll talk soon well there you have it we
Speaker:want to thank rejuvenate.com for use of the studio and be sure to hit that follow button for more
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Speaker:world and with that we're out see you next time
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