The Fountain of Youth World Summit with Ryan Lee, fitness professional, the founder of Prograde Nutrition and fitness sites Sports Specific and Work Out Pass.

Kevin: Okay. Let's talk about the four minutes. What's included in the four minute workout? I mean it seems even to a lot of people out there that four minutes just doesn't seem like enough.

Ryan: Yeah. You know, it's funny because people do say that. They say how much, how hard, is four minutes? And I speak at some big fitness conferences and there was one about a year ago where I put people through these workouts, you know high level fitness professionals. And I said, okay I'm going to give you guys a little sample. Let's do two minutes of it and they were floored. A lot of them couldn't even finish it. If you think about it like this, okay, if you want to run a mile, you know, the best milers in the world run a mile at about 4 minutes, right? 3 minutes and 58 seconds. Are you telling me that if you run a mile in four minutes you're not getting a good workout? Like four minutes doesn't sound like a lot but it is tough. When you were doing my strength exercises for 20 seconds as hard as you can and as many reps as you can and then you only rest for 10 and then you've got to do it again and you rest and do it for 8, you know. I could floor the best athletes in the world with depending on how intense I want to take it, depending on the exercise I choose. If I'm choosing real full body intense and, you know, as they get more fit you could just load up more weight and more resistance. You know, I know well over a hundred ways to do a push-up, you know, between a regular push up, a one-handed push up, a one hand, one leg push-up. You know, push up with two legs on the ball, one leg on the ball, two legs on the ball, one hand, two legs on the ball and one hand on the ball, you know.

So there's so many ways you could progress and change just one exercise to make it more difficult as you get stronger. So I'm not saying that for the rest of your life all you need to do are these four minute workouts but it's definitely a great thing to add into your routines and I've gone like a month or so that these are the only type of workouts I'll do or I'll cycle them into different workouts but I think that you'd be surprised how much of a workout you can get. And then as you get more fit you can do a couple of them. I was working up to three of these four-minute workouts a day. Sometimes I would do one or two in the morning and then I'd do one in the afternoon or one at night or you could do one in the morning, one in the afternoon and one at night.

Kevin: Yeah. This sounds like an awesome solution for people who are busy. I'm sure that's one of the reasons why you put this together. What does an average week look like if you're doing this type of program?

Ryan: The average week, you know what I like to do is try to maybe just do some straight training three times a week and rest the other two or some Aerobic training. That was in the past. I like to personally try to do these workouts five days a week.

Kevin: Okay.

Ryan: But what you can do is if you're feeling a little burnt out, you know, you could maybe do the strength exercises like a Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Tuesday, Thursday stay with the same interval with the 20 on, 10 off but choose more, you know, Anaerobic-type exercises; so maybe sprinting. So you'll sprint for 20 seconds, you rest for 10, sprint for 20, and then rest for 10, especially if you want to get into the fat burning mode.

Kevin: Right.

Ryan: Or jump rope, or jumping jacks, or mounting climbing or things like that; or a stationary bike. It's hard to do on a treadmill because by the time you start – unless it's a manual treadmill where you're powering the treadmill but on a typical motorized treadmill by the time you get it up to full sprint, you know, on the treadmill they usually go up to 12, maybe 15 miles an hour. It takes like 8 seconds or 10 seconds. By the time you get up there you're up there for 10 and then you've got to lower it again. So it doesn't really work on a treadmill. When I used to go to the gym, a typical gym, what I used to do is go into the aerobics room. I would get one of those resistance bands that most gyms have or bungee cords and I would tie it around a pole and make a big loop and then tie the other part around my waste and I would literally sprint in place.

Kevin: Okay.

Ryan: And do my