Collis Stutzer

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Collis Stutzer

Collis Stutzer

@CollisStutzer

For 1:1 online coaching, workout programs and more, visit https://t.co/DJzbE4ViFM

FREE Resources انضم Kasım 2016
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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
KANSAS CITY. LOS ANGELES. NEW YORK. CHICAGO. It Doesn't Matter Where You Live, I am confident that i can help you become a version of you that you won't recognize 12 months from now. Interested in learning more? ---> foundryhp.com
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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
Did you "blow the day" yesterday? People tend to respond by skipping breakfast and doing extra cardio. But...That’s a trap. Punishing yourself with restriction only fuels the next craving. If you overindulged, forgive it, log it, and get back on plan at the very next meal.
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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
2. Keep added fats minimal. Ask for no butter or light oil when they cook it. 3. Swap sides smartly. Trade fries for rice, potatoes, or a side salad. You’ll stay in control, feel great after, and keep your progress rolling, without missing out on life.
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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
Cutting doesn’t have to mean hiding from social life or skipping dinners out. Here’s a simple framework to stay on track and enjoy yourself: 1. Focus your meal around lean proteins. Fish, chicken, or lean steak are your best friends.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
I ran 12 miles through the backroads of Franklin, Tennessee early this morning. I think this may be on my list of best places to live. Beautiful scenery. Peaceful, open spaces. Quiet, but near a fun, lively city. Proximity to a major airport. Nice weather but still some seasons.
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Ross Garner
Ross Garner@CoachRGarner·
After a couple months rolling with our previous layout - then talking with the best coaching staff in the country @fordtough301 and @CoachOsment - I decided to move all our machines to one side of the room to help with flow and productivity Post Spring Break Peak in the works
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🍂
🍂@Lovandfear·
After you get married, you’re going to meet ‘better’ people than your spouse. You’re going to meet more good-looking people; kinder and more romantic people; more intelligent and funny people. You will meet people who have in abundance what your partner lacks. The mushy and romanticized idea that your partner will be everything to you, and will satisfy all your needs and wants is idolatry. Contentment in marriage is a virtue not often spoken about. You must wake up every day appreciating everything your partner is to you, everything they have, their beauty and the things that made you marry them because if you focus on everything they don’t do well, you’ll always meet better people. Protect your heart! See their best part, and always remember that your commitment to marry is more of a duty than it is of mushy feelings. You have to stay committed even on the days you feel your spouse is no longer the best fit for you… -Buchi
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Jake Tuura
Jake Tuura@jake_tuura·
Tendons don’t require specialized training. If you train the muscle, you train the tendon. It’s not about eccentrics, isometrics, or end range. It’s about straining the tendon with a bit of time under tension… something that you accomplish with basic strength training. The reason for your tendon issues could be: normal part of ageing, past injury, metabolic issues, steroids, fluoroquinolones, peaks-and-valleys in exercise, poor plyometric ability, deficit in some other area of the kinetic chain, the list goes on.
Metabolic Uncle@MetabolicUncle

TENDON TRAINING ELIMINATES THE WEAKNESS THAT MAKES STRONG MEN FRAGILE Many guys can move serious weight in the gym but get wrecked picking up a dropped phone. That disconnect reveals something most fitness advice completely misses. Your muscles get stronger fast. Your tendons adapt three times slower. After 40, this gap becomes dangerous. One awkward movement and you're dealing with a torn Achilles, blown rotator cuff, or knee pain that won't quit for months. The standard response is backing off from activities. Taking it easy. Accepting that your body just can't handle stress anymore. That's exactly backwards. Weak tendons need controlled stress to adapt, not protection from stress. Five specific isometric holds create that adaptation. They force your tendons to handle sustained tension at their most vulnerable positions. Ten minutes, three times weekly. The results show up in everyday movement, not just gym performance. STANDING CALF RAISE HOLD Your Achilles tendon handles massive loads with every step. When it fails, you lose explosive power and develop that shuffling gait that screams fragility. The injury happens suddenly but the weakness builds over years. Eccentric loading builds tendon strength better than any other method. Tendons respond to time under tension, not repetition count. The stretched position creates the most adaptation signal. Stand on the balls of your feet at a step edge. Rise up high, then lower slowly until you feel a deep stretch in your calves. This stretched bottom position is where you hold. Your calves burn. Your Achilles feels the tension. That discomfort signals collagen remodeling in the tendon fibers. Start with 30 seconds. Add 15 seconds weekly until you reach two minutes. This takes six weeks of consistent work. Most people make three mistakes that kill their progress. First mistake is holding at the top instead of the stretched bottom. The stretched position creates tendon stress. The top position just works your calves without targeting the Achilles effectively. Second mistake is bouncing to relieve tension. Stay completely still. The sustained tension forces adaptation. Bouncing turns this into a calf exercise instead of tendon training. Third mistake is rushing progression. Adding too much time too fast creates inflammation instead of adaptation. Your tendons need gradual stress increases to remodel properly. This hold prevents the biomechanical breakdown that leads to falls and mobility loss. Your Achilles becomes capable of handling sudden direction changes and explosive movements. Stairs become effortless. You can sprint without fear. Your balance improves because ankle stability increases. No equipment needed. Just a step and two minutes. The payoff is maintaining athletic movement capacity while your peers nurse chronic tendon problems. SPANISH SQUAT HOLD Knee pain is nearly universal after 40. The standard advice is avoiding squats and accepting weak knees as inevitable. That thinking creates the exact problem it claims to prevent. The issue isn't the knee joint itself. It's weak patellar tendons that can't handle basic loads. Traditional squats train the muscles but miss the tendons. The Spanish squat hold isolates patellar tendon stress while eliminating joint compression. Place a resistance band around your knees. Stand with your back against a wall. Slide down until your thighs are parallel to the floor. Your knees should be directly over your ankles, not pushed forward. The band pulls your knees inward. Your patellar tendons resist that force while supporting your body weight. This creates tendon adaptation without grinding your knee joints. The angle matters enormously. Too shallow and you miss the tendon stress. Too deep and you create joint compression. Parallel thighs hit the zone where your patellar tendons work hardest while your knees stay protected. Start with 30 seconds using light band tension. Increase hold time first, then band resistance. Work up to 90 seconds over six weeks. The burn in your quads is normal. Sharp knee pain means you're too deep or progressing too aggressively. This eliminates the knee pain that makes stairs torture and getting up from chairs an ordeal. Your patellar tendons become load-tolerant. They can handle squats, lunges, and sudden direction changes without inflammation. Most knee problems are actually tendon problems disguised as joint problems. Weak tendons create instability, which creates compensations, which creates pain. Strong tendons create stability, which creates pain-free movement. You notice the difference in daily activities immediately. Stairs stop being a negotiation with pain. Getting out of bed doesn't require momentum and groaning. Your knees feel stable instead of fragile. You're not avoiding stress on your knees. You're preparing them to handle any stress life throws at them. Strong tendons mean strong knees. Strong knees mean confident movement. Confident movement means staying active and independent for decades. DEEP PUSH-UP ISOMETRIC HOLD Elbow and wrist pain destroy your ability to push, press, and grip. Desk work creates forward head posture that overloads your forearms. Repetitive stress from typing inflames your tendons. The result is tennis elbow, golfer's elbow, and carpal tunnel that makes basic tasks torture. The deep push-up isometric hold targets the exact problem. You're loading your elbow and wrist tendons at their most vulnerable position while building resilience through controlled stress. Get into a push-up position and lower yourself to the bottom. Your chest should be one to two inches from the floor. Your elbows stay close to your body, not flared wide. This bottom position creates maximum stretch on your elbow and wrist tendons. End range loading is the key insight. Tendons are weakest where they stretch the most. By holding at the bottom position, you're forcing adaptation at the exact point where injuries happen. Your forearm tendons learn to handle stress in their most vulnerable position. If you can't hold a full push position, start from your knees. Same principles apply. You're still loading the tendons at end range, just with less body weight. Progress from knees to full plank over four to six weeks as your tendon strength improves. Start with 20 seconds. Your arms shake. Your wrists feel the stretch. That's the signal for tendon remodeling. Add 10 seconds weekly until you reach 60 seconds. Don't rush this progression. Tendon adaptation takes time. Most people make the mistake of holding too high. They stop at mid-range where it feels easier. The bottom position is where the adaptation happens. Your tendons need to adapt to stretched positions under load. That's where real-world injuries occur. This hold eliminates the nagging elbow pain that makes lifting coffee cups uncomfortable. Your wrist tendons become resilient to repetitive stress. Tennis elbow and golfer's elbow disappear because your tendons can handle the loads that previously caused inflammation. The transfer to daily activities is immediate. Pushing doors becomes effortless. Lifting objects overhead doesn't create elbow pain. Your grip strength improves because your forearm tendons support better force transmission. You eliminate the weakness that makes simple tasks feel like injury risks. WALL EXTERNAL ROTATION HOLD Shoulder impingement and rotator cuff tears are the most common upper body injuries after 40. Forward head posture from desk work destroys shoulder mechanics. Your rotator cuff tendons get pinched between bones with every overhead movement. Eventually they tear. The wall external rotation hold targets the weakest link in shoulder stability. Your rotator cuff has four muscles but external rotation is always the weakest. When it fails, your shoulder becomes unstable and pain follows every movement. Stand arm's length from a wall. Place your right elbow against the wall at shoulder height. Your elbow should be bent 90 degrees with your forearm parallel to the floor. Press your hand backward against the wall as if you're trying to rotate your arm away from your body. This specific angle targets the posterior rotator cuff tendons that stabilize your shoulder blade. These are the muscles that pull your shoulders back and counteract forward head posture. When they're strong, your shoulders sit in proper position. When they're weak, impingement and pain follow. The wall provides perfect resistance. You control the pressure, which means you control the load on your tendons. Start with light pressure and focus on the feeling of your shoulder blade pulling back toward your spine. Begin with 30 seconds using moderate pressure. You should feel the work in the back of your shoulder and between your shoulder blades. Increase pressure first, then hold time. Work up to 60 seconds over six weeks. Most people press too hard too fast. The rotator cuff tendons are small and delicate. They adapt slowly but surely when you respect the progression. Aggressive loading creates inflammation, not strength. Consistent moderate loading creates bulletproof shoulders. This hold prevents the forward shoulder posture that leads to impingement. Your rotator cuff tendons become strong enough to stabilize your shoulder during overhead activities. Sleep becomes comfortable again because your shoulders can relax in proper position. The real world benefits are massive. Reaching overhead stops causing sharp pain. Your posture improves because your shoulders can hold themselves back. Neck pain decreases because your head sits over your shoulders instead of jutting forward. You move with confidence instead of protecting painful joints. You're not waiting for a rotator cuff tear to force you into physical therapy. You're building the tendon strength that prevents tears from happening. Strong rotator cuffs mean stable shoulders. Stable shoulders mean pain-free movement for life. ACTIVE DEAD HANG Grip strength predicts cardiovascular health, cognitive function, and lifespan better than any other single measurement. When your grip fails, everything else follows. The active dead hang isn't just hanging from a bar like dead weight. You're actively engaging your lats and shoulders to decompress your spine while building grip and upper chain tendon strength. This is compound tendon training. The difference matters. A passive hang lets your shoulders sink into their sockets. An active hang engages your lats to pull your shoulders down and back. You're creating space between your vertebrae while strengthening every tendon from your fingertips to your spine. Find a pull-up bar or sturdy overhead structure. Grab with both hands shoulder-width apart. Instead of just hanging, think about pulling your shoulders away from your ears. Your lats should engage, creating a slight hollow in your torso. This is active hanging. Start with assisted hangs if needed. Use a resistance band around your feet or stand on a box to reduce body weight. The goal is building time under tension, not ego lifting. Progress from 15 second assisted hangs to 60 second full body weight hangs over six weeks. This reverses decades of desk posture damage. Your spine decompresses, relieving pressure on discs and nerves. Your grip tendons adapt to supporting your full body weight. Your shoulder and elbow tendons get strengthened through the entire kinetic chain. The compound effect is massive. Your grip becomes vice-like. Your shoulders decompress and pain disappears. Your posture improves because your lats learn to hold your shoulders in proper position. You eliminate the forward head posture that creates neck pain and headaches. THE PROTOCOL Three times per week. Ten minutes total. Start with the minimum hold times and progress weekly. Your tendons adapt slowly but permanently when you respect the timeline. Research shows collagen synthesis peaks 72 hours after tendon loading. That's why three times per week works perfectly. You're giving your tendons the stress they need with the recovery time they require. Most training programs focus on muscle hypertrophy and ignore tendon adaptation. That creates strong muscles attached to weak tendons. The result is predictable. One awkward movement and something tears. These five holds reverse that imbalance. Your tendons become as strong as your muscles. You can handle sudden stress without injury. Your movement stays athletic and confident instead of cautious and protective. The adaptation takes weeks, not days. Tendons remodel slowly. Rushing the progression creates inflammation instead of strength. Respecting the timeline creates permanent improvement. Your body becomes resilient instead of fragile. Strong tendons mean confident movement. Confident movement means staying active for decades. Ten minutes, three times weekly. That's the investment for eliminating the weakness that makes strong men fragile.

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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
You’re not “on” or “off” your diet, you’re just making one higher calorie meal fit into an overall reasonable day. That’s how real people eat, stay social, and still make progress on body composition.
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Collis Stutzer
Collis Stutzer@CollisStutzer·
IF you crush a breakfast burrito in the morning… you don’t have to “start over.” You just have to rebalance the rest of the day. Here’s a simple rule I give clients: IF breakfast burrito → THEN make lunch and dinner lean protein + veggies only.
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Joe Aratari
Joe Aratari@JoeAratari·
Public gym thoughts: Squat pads do more harm to the squat pattern and body than it does to “protect it.”
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Will Ahmed
Will Ahmed@willahmed·
BREAKING: WHOOP RAISES $575M AT $10.1B VALUATION  I am pleased to announce that we’ve raised $575M at a $10.1B valuation to accelerate our mission of unlocking human performance and healthspan globally. This round was led by Collaborative Fund with participation from 2PointZero Group, Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), Mubadala Investment Company, Abbott, Mayo Clinic, Macquarie Capital, Glade Brook, B-Flexion, IVP, Foundry, Accomplice, Affinity Partners, Promus Ventures, and Bullhound Capital alongside a group of individual investors including Cristiano Ronaldo, LeBron James, Rory McIlroy, Virgil van Dijk, and Mathieu van der Poel. This investor group and this moment reflect a powerful evolution underway for Whoop and the broader healthcare market. Whoop was born in performance - trusted by the best athletes in the world to train, recover, and compete at the highest level. That foundation remains core to who we are. You see that in the iconic athlete investors joining this round.  But it also represents our push into broader health.  In the past 12 months, WHOOP has received medical clearances, launched blood testing, and created a platform that has saved lives. Abbott and Mayo Clinic - two of the most respected and influential institutions in global healthcare - are now investors in Whoop. These are organizations that have shaped modern medicine. Their decision to partner with us is a clear validation of where our technology is headed. Healthcare systems around the world are reactive. For too long, they have waited for people to get sick, then intervene. Chronic disease is rising and costs continue to climb. At Whoop, we believe the future looks fundamentally different. We are building the most powerful, personal, preventive health platform in the world - powered by continuous biometric data, advanced analytics, and AI to help people understand their bodies and improve their health in real time. I am grateful to our team, our members, and our partners for believing in this vision. I’ve been building this company for 14 years and I’ve never been more excited for the future.
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Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
If you've been thinking about starting a business for more than 6 months, stop. Just offer to do something. Anything. For someone else. In exchange for money. Today. And when you do, congrats, you own a business. Now you just gotta do more and better until the day you die.
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Sharran Srivatsaa
Sharran Srivatsaa@sharran·
I'm stepping in as CEO of Acquisition .com! 9 months ago, I joined my friends @LeilaHormozi and @AlexHormozi at Acquisition .com The culture, the team, and the scale of what we’re building have exceeded every expectation. Last week we announced that I'm stepping in as CEO. Leila is moving into Executive Chairwoman. Focused on long-term strategy, capital deployment, culture, and building what she calls "the Disney of Business." Alex is going deeper on the "money machine", building the operating models that make every company in our portfolio more valuable. And I'm stepping in as CEO to run and scale the business day to day, with a mandate to build the private equity firm of the future. Leila said something in her announcement that I keep coming back to: "When one person is trying to hold the present and the future at the same time, neither gets full attention." We've outgrown the original structure, and that's a problem most companies never get to have. I’m humbled to lead this team and grateful for the trust Leila and Alex have placed in me. Excited for what’s ahead.
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Hater Report
Hater Report@HaterReport·
THE CRAZIEST 15 SECONDS YOU’ll SEE 😳 THIS IS MARCH MADNESS
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RNB RADAR
RNB RADAR@rnbradar·
Just casually singing Whitney like it’s nothing… Elmiene is a generational voice 🥹.
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The Iced Coffee Hour
The Iced Coffee Hour@TheICHpodcast·
Tony Robbins reveals the seasons of life… 0-21: Spring 22-42: Summer 43-64: Fall 65-Death: Winter
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Justin Tinsley
Justin Tinsley@JustinTinsley·
The tournament is only hours old and I don't know if we’re going to see a better moment than this. In such a billion-dollar business, it’s often forgotten at its core that a coach-player dynamic — at its absolute best — sounds exactly like this.
Melissa Y. Kim@melissaykim

It was an emotional postgame presser for @HUMensBB as Bryce Harris and Ose Okojie shared their final thoughts about Howard HC Kenny Blakeney and how's changed their lives. Their answers are almost ten mins long (which obvs speaks to KB), but here's a little snippet:

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Fred Duncan
Fred Duncan@Fred__Duncan·
Glen Mills didn’t just follow the trend or get complacent because Bolt was already fast. He asked what was actually limiting performance and kept looking for the areas that could still be improved. That’s the real job of coaching. For Bolt, the answer was, surprisingly, more
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Damian Player
Damian Player@damianplayer·
this is nuts! Mark Cuban just said something every young person should hear. AI agents are GOING to run through every small and mid-size business in the country. not a single one of those owners will know how to build them. his advice is to learn claude. learn agentic workflows. just learn AI and how it works. then go to these businesses and help them because they won’t know how to do any of this shit. they have money to spend. they have deep problems. they don’t have you!
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The Iced Coffee Hour
The Iced Coffee Hour@TheICHpodcast·
Tony Robbins explains the difference between operators and owners…👀 “How could I possibly run 114 businesses, have 5 kids, 5 grandkids, travel the world, do my speaking, do all the things I do, and have a life if I was an operator… I’m an owner”
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