Today, I’m going to discuss a concept that was introduced to me by a favorite mentor of mine, and though he isn’t the originator of the idea, I’m still so grateful they shared it with me: “get to yes”. What does it mean? It means that, when presented with a challenge or a question, instead of flat out saying it can’t be done, or explaining WHY it can’t be done, find a way to “get to yes”. Decide it CAN be done FIRST, and then figure out WHAT it will take in order to get there. So often, we discover that the things we say “can’t” be done are really things that are just very very difficult to get done, but they can, in fact, get done. Get to yes will, of course, apply to any subject, but applying that lens specifically to training and nutrition will prove invaluable to any trainee willing to apply it.
When I ran
5/3/1 Building the Monolith, I only budgeted myself an hour a day to train. I
trained first thing in the morning, and did not want to wake my spouse up any
earlier than that for the sake of my training.
If you’ve not seen the program, it has a prodigious amount of training
volume packed into each day. I had
observed many reports of the program saying a typical training day lasted
90-120 minutes. BUT, I had already
decided I was going to run the program, so now I had to “get to yes”. I analyzed what tools I had available to me,
and discovered that giant sets, short rest periods, and setting up my gym the
day before I was supposed to train would set me up to succeed. I spent a solid week determining which
pairing of exercises would work best to allow me to get in all the work I
needed without totally obliterating a muscle group, since I’d have to turn
right around and repeat the giant set as soon as it was done in order to meet
my timeline. It would have been easy to
look at the program and just say “it can’t be done”: getting to yes was far
more difficult but, in turn, it got me the results I wanted. I just had to be at peace with the fact that
the solution was going to SUCK.
And that’s
the big part about “getting to yes”: you can’t let difficulty, reasonability,
logic or conventions prevent you from getting to yes. The world is full of “no”: getting to yes
requires some thinking and strategy.
That’s totally fine: find out WHAT it takes to get to yes, and then,
from THERE, determine what it is you are and are not willing to do. My “get to yes” of Building the Monolith
could have very well included an option of “train for longer than 60 minutes”,
and in turn, I personally would reject it.
It’s no longer about the answer being an impossible answer: it’s about
the answer including a path I don’t want to travel. Get super unreasonable in your “get to
yes”. “I want to gain 60lbs in the next
3 months”. Oh, ok, cool: looks like
we’re going to be needing to eat 10k calories a day, split over 5 meals at 2k a
meal, every single day, while also getting 8 hours of sleep for recovery. You might be unwilling to do that, and that’s
fine: you GOT to yes. We no longer ruled
the goal as impossible: we simply discovered we weren’t willing to do what it
takes to get there.
In turn,
regularly practicing “getting to yes” identifies to us WHERE our boundaries are
and what we are and are not willing to compromise on. For me, personally, I will easily give up sleep
to reach my goals. Sleep just isn’t that
important to me, and my solipsism has me honestly doubt its necessity as far as
reaching my goals go. So if I have big
training or nutrition goals that are going to require a lot of time to
accomplish: no problem dude; I’ll just sleep 2 fewer hours. Other people find such a notion borderline
grotesque, and would never sacrifice a minute of sleep. Those are their boundaries. But maybe those people are willing to employ
a meal prep/delivery company, whereas I won’t do that as I’d rather spend my
money on ANYTHING other than that.
However, if both of us were diligent in our “getting to yes”, we BOTH
had those ideas at some point as a viable solution to reaching our goal: we
just personally decided on where we would not compromise in our getting to yes.
Make this a
regular practice in your daily lives.
Seek out challenges and difficulties and find out what “getting to yes”
would require. Ultimately, employ
methods that ARE within your means. It’s
cheating to be stupid and say “I just need to win the lottery and then be
independently wealthy, and then I can eat and train however I want!” It’s far more genuine to approach it in
earnest and say “I could work a side job, or I could stop drinking on weekends
and save that money, pack lunch to work rather than eat out every day, or
switch from name brand to off brand products, or recycle cans, etc etc, to be
able to afford to eat and train the way I need”. You can identify where the time suckers are
in your day and shave them off to find an extra 15 minutes to get in the
mobility work you think you need, rather than saying you just need more
time. You could no joke actually try
calling up Louie Simmons and ask if you can train at Westside (worse that
happens is he says no) rather than lament about how confusing the system is and
how there are no good gyms in your area.
Either way, get to yes FIRST, and then figure out if you’re willing to
do what it takes to get there.
Hey, this is really great stuff. Thanks for all these posts. I‘ve been following you since I saw your nutrition plan and I’ve been reading your archived posts. It’s been easy to follow (adding and subtracting pieces to the core meal). I’m going to try this getting to yes each day, even when I feel like shit.
ReplyDeleteAwesome dude: great to have you following along as a reader.
DeleteFeel the same way. Your approach to nutrition has helped me immensely with size, strength, and recovering from eating issues!
DeleteThat really means a lot dude. I'm happy to hear you've been able to benefit. It still blows me away sometimes to hear the impact this blog has had.
DeleteReally great post! So true, before we say we cant, we should figure out how to get to yes and THEN decide if that's past our boundaries or not. And if we do that we can probably push ourselves to reach our objective. I am applying this today in MAKING time for my meal prep!
ReplyDeleteHell yeah dude. Make the most of it.
DeleteThank you, I really needed to hear this!
ReplyDeleteAnytime dude. It's a great principle.
DeleteGreat post and blog, just found it whilst browsing Reddit! Ive ran 531 in the past but havent again due to time constraints- do you have your routine anywhere?
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated dude. My current programming is an amalgamtion of things that have worked for me in the past. I recently posted my press workout. Give it a look.
Deletehttps://mythicalstrength.blogspot.com/2020/09/a-pressing-matter-building-strong.html
In full disclosure though, if 5/3/1 was eliminated due to time constraints, I'm not sure this will work much better.
Excellent thanks, I'll have a read through. Since having my first kid I'm still trying to find the balance so this article really gave me food for thought
DeleteThis one definitely rings true. A lot of things that I would have thought were impossible in the world (wireless streaming video, high performance electric cars, etc) have been solved by people willing to go at them with the most bizarre approach because they were convinced it could be done, just nobody had bothered to try. And usually it turned out to be easier than everyone thought once someone was willing to commit to getting it done. Definitely solid advice, even if sometimes you can't get to yes it's still a good mental exercise to exhaust your options.
ReplyDelete" I just had to be at peace with the fact that the solution was going to SUCK."
ReplyDeleteThis is the key. Now that my spouse has been called back from furlough, I found myself asking the question, "How am I supposed to run when I'm home all day with a 4 month old?" The answer is pretty simple: get up earlier and run before he has to leave. I will be more tired. I won't get to stay up as late as I'd like. It's going to suck, but if running is at all a priority, this is the solution.