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I started dealing with depression and anxiety at the same time, and working with physicians. You know they're a little bit quick to push medication on you. It wasn't until I found a physician that was running marathons herself who was she suggested actually getting stronger, and when I saw what kind of a difference working out did for my mental health is when everything changed.
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This would also mean the absolute world to me and help us make better, bigger, brighter content for you and the world. Subscribe right now the number one health and wellness Jay Setti, Jay Sheetty, je Zy Jay Set. Hey everyone, Welcome back to on Purpose, the place you come to to become happier, healthier and more healed. Now in twenty twenty four, I want to help you get fitter, stronger, calmer,
and feel like you have more courage. And in order to do all those things, I'm looking for guests, experts, and thought leaders who can help you build different muscles. Today's guest is a friend of mine and she is incredible here to help us get fitter and stronger. I'm speaking about Sonata Greca, a world renowned thought leader in fitness and wellness. Sonata is the founder of we Rise, a female empowerment platform that takes a holistic approach to health, wellness,
and personal development. Sonata is also the founder of Zentoa, a women's athletic apparel brand that has outfitted thousands of women around the world. The high performance and stylish active wear. Sonata has been sought after by some of the biggest names in the world. She's trained in Mirandaka Bebbe Rexa, amongst many others, and currently Sonata works with Kim Kardashian. I'm so excited to welcome to the show my friend, an incredible thought leader, Sonata Greca.
Sonata, Welcome, Hi, Thank you so much, Thank you for having me here.
I am so happy to have you. We've been looking forward to this. I remember when I DMed you a while ago and we got connected. You came over to our home, we were hanging out. You've got to know Radi and I definitely feel like before we dive into the fitness conversation. I felt like there was a sole connection when we met, absolutely and I think that's what made me so excited to have this conversation with you.
So thanks, Jam, thank you so much for having me here. I'm so excited. And like you said, there was a spiritual connection with both yourself and Rabi and yeah and honored, So thank you so much for having me Absolutely.
Well four is here. We're already a few months in and most likely people have fallen short of some of their fitness goals. Some people might be kind of just holding on. Maybe some people are doing well as well. If someone has fitness goals, if someone has strength goals, how do you start by setting a goal? How do you stop? How do you start?
Actually, a great statistic that I just reviewed from the Rearrise app is that people were on average by week doing three and a half workout. So I was like, yes, something is working so far as about a week ago. So hopefully everybody keeps the momentum going. But if you're looking to start, I always say start small. You know, you want to climb that mountain one step at a time, versus you know, doing a day long trip so to speak. So take the smallest step, you know, start with twenty minutes.
If we cannot start with twenty minutes, start with five minutes or even one minute, and then build that habit, because it's about creating that consistent habit day after day that will carry you through. You know, a lot of the time we think the motivation is what's needed, and it's it's that habit that we create on a daily basis. So start small, Start with what is attainable. Create a daily calendar and make sure that you're placing hopefully that
workout at the same time every day. You're most likely to stick to it. Create an environment that is supportive of you working out. So if you are working out at home, create a little space for yourself with all of your items workout items, and if you're going to the gym, then lay out your workout clothes, lay out your shoes.
The night before.
Some people actually even wear their workout clothes and just sleep. And because it eliminates another step, So how can you make it more accessible and easy for yourself to accomplish that? And then what is the time of day that does actually work best for you when you feel more energetic there is no specific time that is you know, this is the best time to work out.
For whatever reason.
It's like what time is best suited for your life and lifestyle. I would suggest, if possible, for most beginners to have it in the morning, so you you know, kind of get it out of the way and don't leave it up to chance. For later in the day things occur, you know, work and kids and a million things that you have to do throughout the day. So if you leave it up to chance, you're most likely
are not going to do it. But if you're confident, if you're if you you know, set that time aside, even if it's in the afternoon, which is when I work out myself. That's when I find it that I'm most energetic, and when I find in the afternoon for myself. There is some studies that suggests that the optimal time might be between eleven AM and uh and five p. But again, I say, when is it more accessible to you?
That's key absolutely that Let's say someone and I think this is the world we live in today where we look at five minutes and go, what's the point of working out for five minutes? So what's the point of working out for five minutes, Like what can you get in five minutes?
You'll start to create a habit.
And that's what's key about making fitness long a life long activity, because I see it as not you know, a sprint, it's a lifelong marathon. You want to stay active throughout your entire life for as long as you can. So five minutes is just creating that habit. You won't see drastic results, you might see no results from five minutes, but five minutes today for a week, ten minutes the next week for a week, and then you start building from there again. That makes it just more accessible and
creates that habit. And it does take some time for a habit to be especially when it comes to fitness, to to be established. Somewhere between twenty one days might be when you're like starting to create a foundation, but some research shows that it's actually around like sixty sixty six days when you really solidify that habit of working out. So while in the you know, in the immediate term, like it doesn't really provide results, that five minutes will just set you up for success.
Absolutely. I think that's such a good point, Like we look at it as like, oh, five minutes doesn't have any value. But you committing to something exactly five minutes a day, every day, and you keeping that promise to yourself exactly turn up every single day. That's what matter is about the five exactly.
It builds that self confidence too in yourself. You know, your body listens as in with meditation too. Five minutes might not break you through to where you need to be, but five minutes every day and you're setting up that habit and you're also saying like, yes, I got this, I'm doing it. You know, I'm dedicating five minutes to myself for myself absolutely.
So Let's say someone's listening right now and they say, Sonata Jay, I'm with you. I only have five minutes. What do I do with five minutes? What should they do in a five minute work if that's all they have and they're starting out.
Yeah, there's five minutes. Just jump on you can. Let's start with the treadmill. You know, we can just warm up for a minute, do maybe a few squads, do some of the basic movements and maybe dead lifts.
You know where I'm going to this.
It's a little bit more strength training focused for me, but you know, do something to warm you up for a minute or so, and then go into some squads, go into some dead lifts, go into some like major movements that will target some of the biggest muscles in your body. Maybe do some rows, and then you've got a few movements covered.
There. Someone's at home and they don't have any gym equipment.
And no equipment, you still utilize your body weight. It's perfectly fine to do so, even if you're starting out. Squad to seat, so basically just squat to your seat, stand up, squat to your seat stand up. You can do hip thrust, back of your shoulders on the couch, feed planted on the ground, hip thrust, body weight perfectly fine. Grab a kid, put them on your hips, crust the kit or any object.
I'm a big.
Believer that you can turn anything around your house into something to work out with at a little bit of extra resistance, and it's doable.
Will you always fit and energetic and strong? Was that always been a part of your life or is it something that you had to develop at a certain point.
As a kid.
I've always been active. I love being outdoors, playing with friends. Whenever I could be outside, I would I would be on trees, picking fruit because you know, in albeing we have to kind of like forge a little bit for ourselves and or like on rooftops, just an active kit. I played sports, so I've always been active, not necessarily like strong, fit, more active into the teenage years. Unfortunately
that's shifted where you know, your body changes. So I was trying to deal with this extra way that I was like starting to carry and I started to work out for the wrong reasons, which I would consider is you know, trying to be as skinny as possible, limiting food intake to be as thin as possible. So it shifted in that fashion, and that was not a healthy way to work out. And then you know, I started
dealing with depression and anxiety at the same time. I think everything kind of like hit at the same time. And working with physicians, you know, they're a little bit quick to push medication on you, which I did. I did take, but it wasn't until I found a physician that was running marathons herself, we which she suggested, you know,
actually getting stronger. And that's what made the biggest difference for me, is gaining that strength working out for the right reasons, which for me at the time were mental.
For my mental health.
And when I saw what kind of a difference working out did for my mental health whenever, it is when everything changed. Now I was nurturing my body for health versus dieting it to be as skinny as possible. So it has taken the journey of fitness for me has taken a bit of a path, of a different path throughout the years. And then but when I found strength, When I found strength training is when I found the strength in me and I was able to overcome a lot of the things.
That were.
There were weighing on me, that were affecting me, like depression and anxiety and then eating disorders.
We'll go us through how just you know, walk us through the dangers of I guess the way like you said the wrong reasons. Walk us through some of the dangers physically and biologically of what happens to the body when we're starving the body or when we're not really helping ourselves in the right way.
Of course, I mean you if you're working and there's there's extremes to everything. So while working out is good, doing workouts to the extreme for hours on and while malnourishing the body can be detrimental to your physic or you're not incorporating those nutrients that your your body needs, so you're depleting yourself to to extreme levels, both with the nutrition and the physical activities.
So it's it is not healthy.
It's not healthy mentally, it's not healthy physically, your your your body starts to deteriorate. You know, you see your like comes and teeth interior rate, and you know everything else that goes on internally that goes with that. So
it is not healthy. It is not healthy. While being thin naturally can absolutely be healthy, there's nothing wrong with that, but when it happens in a forced manner, when you're starving yourself and when you're working out to extremes, that's when it becomes unhealthy.
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a target near you. Walk us through the different types of exercise. You obviously focus on strength training. I want to hear about the benefits of that, but you know, people are trying to make sense of like do I need to do pilarates?
Do I need to do yoga? Do I need to do hit workouts? Do I need You know, there's just so much on offer today, especially in LA, but there's so much on offer all over the world. Absolutely, people are just wondering what's going to work. I was telling you earlier that you know, if I'm doing a workout and I'm not seeing progress, either in strength or physique or whatever it may be, then you get discouraged and
then you let go of it. So walk us through the different benefits of different exercises and why strength training is a priority for you.
In my actual programming, I also incorporate some higher intensity and I try to weave in a little bit of fun cardio. So I do incorporate different modalities. It is not strictly you know, strength training or and it's not power lifting by any means training, but I do incorporate like hit sessions and some cardio because you need I value all of the components, all of the different modalities.
But for me, strength training.
Is sort of like the golden standard because that is what is going to strengthen your bones, That's what's going to build muscle mass and a vast array of other benefits that not every modality has. You know, strength training is proven to increase, like I said, bone density and muscle mass, which are so crucial to longevity and a healthy longevity. And you know, longevity now has become such a buzzword. And if you could do one thing for your longevity is strength?
Is strength train?
What's actually happening when we do strength training? Like why does it link to longevity? The bone density is an important part? What else is happening because of strength training? Because what I always hear about is you know, as you get older, if you fall over, you need the strength to pay yourself back up. But like how strength training in other ways really impacting our longevity.
Yeah, I mean, because it is our bone. Our bone density max is reached at about age twenty five to thirty, and from there we start to lose bone density, and by the age forty and on, we start to lose bone density faster than we can build it. So then what happens at that point is that when we do fall, we break a hip or a wrist, and then the chances of recovery from that are much less, so that
leads to deaths. I think there is like thirty two thousand deaths cost from fall injuries in adults like sixty five and older. And obviously, if you can build and muscles the same way, you start losing after the age of thirty, believe it or not, you start losing muscle mass at about three to eight percent every decade. So that's as sets in incredible. Those are incredible numbers. I mean, at the age thirty is a little bit slower, but then it starts to pick up at forty fifty, and
then by sixty is even faster. So if you can build as much as you can in bone and muscle as when you can, that will just help you carry They will help you carry yourself through and healthier in the older years in the later years of life, because again, you can either prevent yourself from falling or you can recover faster from an injury because your bone density is where it is more optimal than it would have been
if you hadn't been building that bone mass. And especially for women, women are more prone to ostroporosis, which is bone density laws than men, and by menopause, the numbers are staggering as to that bone density loss. And for men, actually, even though dester porosis is less than women, their causality of death, their death due to falls is higher than women.
Oh wow, So I mean a lot of the time, I know, it's like when we're in our twenties or even our thirties, we think of ourselves it's invincible, you know, we've got these amazing bodies. They're incredible, of course, but how do we prepare ourselves now when it is possible for the future ourselves? Our future self will will thank us.
This is really powerful stuff, Sonata. This is really going to connect with the audience to hear these reset studies and recognizing the changes that are happening in every decade. Because I think so many of us, like you said, and I remember that. I remember being twenty two years old and thinking I was Superman, right, and thinking nothing could defeat me. And I remember my dad kept telling me, you need to focus on your health. You need to focus on your health, and I was like, I'm healthy,
it doesn't matter. And then, you know, when I had a couple of my own personal challenges with health, really kind of stuck with me as to what an investment it needed to be. What are some of the biggest things that you consistently see getting in people's way when they're trying to get fitter and stronger. What are the challenges the most common ones that you see people that you've trained over the years that you find they struggle with.
Well, the first one is relying on feelings. A lot of people rely on motivation. I don't feel motivated, So you know, how or how do you get motivated.
To work out?
A lot of the time, it just I'm not motivated. I don't want to necessarily work out. The coziness of the home is a lot better than you know, getting up and getting moving, But it's we don't rely on that. You know, you take that, you take those feelings, you put them aside, and you put your shoes and you keep going because that's what you do. It's like brushing your teeth. There's no For me, there's no. It's a
non negotiable. Working out is a non negotiable, not just for right now, not because of usthetics, but for longevity. Like we were talking about quality longevity, aesthetics come. It's beautiful once you do the things, the right things for your body with nutrition and working out, aesthetics are a
byproduct that will come. Because a lot of people take that approach of like wanting to look a certain way, which I find can be motivating, but for it's short lived, especially if the results are taken a little bit longer, which could take longer for some people. But if you are doing it again for those right reasons, for the reasons of like I want to be as strong as I can in this body, so this body can carry me forward in a healthiest possible way for as long
as as possible. So that is the biggest one that I face, is like how do you How do I get motivated? How do I stay motivated? It's like act, don't wait for the feelings.
Act. The other thing is I'm too busy. I'm too busy.
There's always time. I'm sorry, but you can always make time for yourself. You can find that time. A lot of the time we find I'll even there. There's been even arguments back and forth with people on Instagram. You know, I don't have time, yet two hours later they're still responding to that same chain of communication. Well you had two hours right there. You have time. A lot of the time is just analyze your day. Just analyze your day as to where you're you're spending time that you
could carve out. Not saying don't watch TV or don't don't be on social media exactly do that? How can you incorporate it incorporated?
Exactly?
I'm a big, big believer of like not doing all or nothing. So even when it comes to nutrition, it's like you want to eat a burger, fine, just how can you maybe take one of the sides of the bun out?
You know what I mean?
How can you substitute half of the fries with a salad? I don't don't completely take things out, try to incorporate in your life. So find out there there is definitely always a little bit of time that you can find absolutely Yeah.
When going back to the feelings point, yeah, I found that things that are good for me feel bad before, yes, but feel amazing after exactly. And the things that are bad for me, they feel really good before, yeah, but they don't feel so great. And so I'm the same as you. When I wake up in the morning, I often go on a hike. That's like how I like to start my morning.
That's very fresh, I'm going out for a while.
Yeah, And I like being active, and I don't want to do something too strengo because my day is quite busy exactly. And I found that when I wake up in the morning, I don't want to work out. I don't feel like you, And You're so right that I just have to say to myself, I have to remind myself, but I know how I'll feel after. And when it comes to eating a burger, trust me, I want to eat a burger all the time and I have to run myself, but I know how it's going to feel after.
And so it's almost like you've got to connect your brain to the after feeling, absolutely, because the after feeling is so much more what you have to live with, because the feeling before kind of comes and go exactly. I want to eat burger, eate burg and now I don't feel so great. I don't want to work out. I ignore working out. I didn't work out. Now I don't feel so great, And you're living with that feeling after for much longer than you're living with the feeling before.
Very true.
True, So that's definitely helped me. And the busy one is so true. I mean, I feel like if I work out while watching I love watching football soccer highlights and miss watching soccer, and I don't get to watch it full. I don't get to watch full games anymore because there are different timings because I live in LA the games are in London or England, and I will put on a highlights of the game which are like twenty minutes, and I'm like, this is perfect for a
twenty minute workout. I can watch the highlights, I can work out, and it's going to force me to get through twenty minutes. If I didn't have the highlights on, I know what give up in like six yeah, And so when the highlights are on, I know that I'll be able to get through a full twenty minute workout, which is what I'm trying to do if I'm traveling or moving around. So I love that idea of incorporating.
Things, incorporating thing, And that's true when it comes to creating habits that are tough to create in the beginning. How can you tack on something that is enjoyable, like a little bit of a reward system, And a reward system doesn't have to be that I get to eat.
You know, what is the words?
What is the right reward system for being fit? Because I think a lot of people think it is getting.
You Yeah, yeah, yeah, you could be you know, like you said, you like to watch the highlights, you know, a show that you that you enjoy, or another activity that's enjoyable, you know, or if you want to treat yourself, find maybe when it comes to food, find a healthier option. I'm a great believer also in substituting. You know a lot of the recipes that I post are I have
a sweet tooth, a major sweet tooth. So how can I create recipes that are healthy, that will satisfy and it will taste just as good as the naughty.
Food.
So it's just for every person. It could be, it could be different. What that reward for them is but tack it onto it and you know are in the we Rise app we have doctor Gina whose a habits expert, habits building expert, one of the I think four leading researchers of habits, and she has so much input and so much information on how to make habits sustainable. You know, I wish I had a doctor pocket Gena.
That I.
Ask, Yeah, but yeah, she she'll have such amazing insight as to how to create and sustain these habits.
Yeah, what's the biggest misconception with strength training? What do you think people get wrong?
That woman will get like bulky and big and and gigantic. That's like the biggest thing is like I don't want to get to bulky. I don't want to get to what you hear a lot. That's what I hear a lot. And that is a huge misconception because in females, our hormones are do not allow us to get to the levels that for example, a man's physique can get naturally. It is not biologically. There's obviously different levels of hormones and different women that will promote growth in some more
or less than others. But I always say, at the very at the end of the day, you can just back off, back off if you are feeling But I guarantee you that once you start gaining a little bit of muscle, you will be addicted. You will because the the feeling of strength and confidence that it that it gives you, like a stronger body gives you. At least for me and for the peeople that I've worked with, those feelings that it gives them are far outweigh any
negative misconceptions. I'm going to say misconception because it is. It's you're not going to get big. You're not going to get huge, You're not going to be like Hulk.
I don't. Rady love strength training like it's such a passion of hers and she loves that feeling of being stronger and loves that feeling of like it's amazing to see. Because I think you are right that we have this worry that our body is going to change and look away that we don't want it to.
Look yeah yeah, yeah yeah.
What should someone eat right before a workout and right after, especially a strength training workout?
So before a workout about an hour maybe thirty minutes at most, because you only need to close. I would eat a combination of protein and carbs, maybe a little bit higher in carbs, and then afterwards meal that is higher in protein, so at least at least twenty grams of protein in that meal after the workout. I mean, the studies are a little bit all over the place
when it comes to this. Obviously, for somebody that's been working out for a long time, you're a little bit more flexible with that, or for somebody that is trying to that is trying to gain muscle mass or weight, again, it's a little bit more flexible versus a beginner. Then you have to be a little bit more strict with strict a little bit more on top of your nutrition when it comes to not just before and after, but throughout the day and at the end of the day.
Is what you're consuming throughout the day that is most important. So are you're reaching so not so focused because a lot of people focus so much on before and after.
I would start with how do you feel before a workout? Do you feel?
You know, if you're working out in the morning and you're energized enough, then feel free to work out out on an empty stomach, that's completely fine. And if you can carry that energy through. If you feel like you need to have a little bit of nutrition beforehand, that's great too. It's how do you optimize for yourself? How do you optimize for yourself?
How did genetics play a role in achieving your goals?
Genetics, they do play a role, a big role in the sense that, well, genetics will not get you out of bed because a lot of the time, you know, people see my physique and say, you know, it's all genetics. I actually had to fight against a lot of my genetics to get out of bed and work out. I'm pretty disposed to the depression and anxiety, so battling those factors,
that's a genetic factor that goes into play. But then when it comes to actual physique building, yes, you'll vary as to like the muscle mass that you will put on, but you can always improve. You know, there's not let's not even bother working out because I don't build bigger muscles. You know, you don't even know till you've tried to what capacity you can build. Genetics will play a bit of of a factor in the body that you're trying
to achieve. You know, some people will carry a little bit more weight around their stomach, so their APPS will not be as easily visible as others. So they'll have to in a healthy way, potentially diet if they can, but to see the visible abdominal abdominal abdominal muscles, not that that is a golden standard of anything, just hypothetically saying that it will take them longer than others to to to achieve that, because again genetics do play a role in that.
Talking about that, what is the health benefit of having a lower body fat percentage? What is the goal? Right, because we know that people are trying to lower their body of percentage in order to have APPS, But what's the actual health benefit of having a lower body fed percentage?
Yeah, and or even with that, you want to maintain a healthier one, so you don't want to go too low.
You don't want to be too high.
If you're going too low, then your hormone start to get messed up, and we don't want to if it goes too low, so then we start to you know, women will start to miss their period, so it will affect them that way. Obviously, that puts a body in a little bit of a frenzy. It's not homeostasius anymore. When it goes too high, then you're starting to deal with cardiovascular issues, you know, insulin resistance and all of the things that will then lead to an unhealthier individual.
So there's a range there that we should be.
Talking about cardio. You said that you incorporate cardio. Yeah, how much is cardio important inn strength training practice and how much is it not needed?
The question would be what are the reasons for adding cardio? So are you adding cardio because a lot of people think that cardio is what's going to help them lose weights, and that's not necessarily that's not true. It's all about calories in versus calories out. So if you're talking about strictly losing weight, is how many colors are you putting
in your body and how many calories you're expending. So if you're deciding to utilize strength training as a way to expand those calories, great, If you're utilizing cardio, greade, there is some studies again that suggest that you'll get faster into that fat burning phase if you're doing strength
training before and then cardio after, and also cardio. If you're doing strength training also before and cardio after, you're you're not compromising your strength training process, as if you were to do cardio beforehand, how much cardio That also is an individual basis cardio. A lot of people hate cardio. So what I try personally to do, I'll incorporated on upper body days, so I'll do somewhat of an interval training.
So I'll do an exercise at upper body focused and then thirty seconds to a minute of sprinting, and then another you know exercise or set of an upper body focused and then So that's how I make it fund in my personal training and for everybody in the wee
Rise app. And obviously if you're wanting to add more cardio because you feel like, you know, adding a steady state cardio session after a separate day, a separate part of the day, because you're wanting to be at more of a caloric deficit, that's completely fine.
As well, it sounds that you don't like cardia.
I don't love cardia.
So I ran marathons and that was great. I've run three marathons.
I enjoyed it. You do put your body through.
A lot, But I have found personally what I've achieved through strength training when it comes physically and mentally, has been far more rewarding than cardio. There's some you know, benefit to cardio in the sense that some people feel more of the endorphins and the feel good hormones during hit sessions or cardio, So there is a benefit to that. And at the end of the day, what is so wild? So let's say, while I value strength training, pick your poison at the end of the day, or pick your remedy.
I should say, pick your elixir. You know, what would that be for you? As long as you can get some activity. And so while there is hierarchies of what you want to achieve. So if you want to build muscle, strength training really is like the golden standard, right, But if you know you absolutely hate it, what is your activity of choice at the end of the day.
Is what I would say.
Walk me through what your regime was for running the marathons, like what did you how did you build up to that, what was your practice? What was your work routine and the nutrition plend.
I wish I could say that I followed one of the one of the plans because this was quite a few years ago. They've kind of build slowly and it worked on like hill sprints and you know, just a different variety of things that you need.
To work on when you're running a marathon.
But it basically started to started with three miles and then increased to five miles, and then after a week or so, increased so incrementally increasing the length that I would run till I got to the marathon. I guess, yeah, I never you never run the whole marathon when you're doing when you're practicing, it's more like up to like
eighteen miles. But it was just slowly over time building after that end, definitely feeding that that those calories that were burning almost couldn't couldn't keep the weight on me at that point.
Yeah, because you're expending so much energy.
What would you now say is a great nutrition plant while someone's strength training, Like what kind of things have you found to be really integral and useful to have? And then what have you found to be useful to leave out?
Definitely prioritizing protein. So if you're consuming about point eight to just a little bit over one gram per pound of body weight of protein per day, that's a good place to be, and then filling the rest with carbs and fats. But that's what I always say, prioritize protein. That's what's going to help not just building muscle, but just your physiological needs. You know, protein is the building
block of our body. And what you can leave out is the infamous sugars, you know, the refined sugars and so op more for complex carbs. I still like eating fruit. I know there's been fruit suddenly has become controversial. Like if you're eating fruit and vegetables, you're good. Just fit into that macro, especially if you're starting out and you want to you have a specific goal, It is important to find out what your appropriate macros are for the day.
And macros are the macro nutrients. So what is your daily intake of protein, carbohydrates, and fats. But I always prioritize protein.
And with the protein, I mean most of us are not getting close to that much.
The protein of us are not like I said, for let's say one hundred and twenty pound person, like a gram, so you need one hundred and twenty grams of protein or around that per day. So you know they're in a piece of like palm of your hand of let's say chicken, there's like twenty grams of protein, So you need to be a little bit more discerning of your meals, So always include protein with every meal and maybe even worthier snacks.
Yeah. I think for most of us it feels like protein takes up probably that twenty grams and then we're filling the rest, yeah, with carbs, fats, anything else. But I've definitely found that when I first learned about that, I just couldn't believe how hard it was to actually prioritize getting and I'm doing that plant based, which is
even harder even for my friends who eat me. Even they were saying just how challenging it was for them, like it's not easy across the board, and so raising that up to.
That, Yeah, yeah, it's important, especially as we age, believe it or not, like we need to intake even more protein.
You shared so much amazing research and studies with us today. Are there any others that really come to your mind that you think this is really important for women to know?
What?
This is really important for strength trainers to know, because some of the studies you've shared with us have really been powerful.
Yeah, I mean the muscle loss is huge. The like I said, the thirty two thousand deaths per year, which actually crazy enough, has has almost doubled from like twenty twelve to twenty twenty one, if I believe, if I remember correctly, and I wonder what's gone into that, Like why there's been such a drastic increase, and like that's due to falls during this time, Like maybe we've become less we've become less mobile, Maybe there's medications in the
market that are affecting our bone density. It's actually when it comes to depression and anxiety mood disorders, it has been found that even as little as one hundred and fifty minutes of activity per week can relieve symptoms to about forty to sixty percent forty two to sixty percent, while as compared to psychotherapy and pharmaceuticals, the numbers are
twenty percent to thirty percent in relief of symptoms. So even the highest the higher upper end limit of pharmacological products and psychotherapy doesn't even come close to what you can achieve by physical activity. And that's only at one hundred and fifty minutes per week. So to me, like that's that's mind blowing what you can achieve because and I'm not negating the need for psychotherapy or or from
pharmacological products. Absolutely, you know where it's necessary, but why not start with exercising, Like, start there you will achieve results that might be even higher than what you can do with pharmaceutical products.
That's like just over twenty minutes a day.
Yeah, exactly, just over twenty minutes a day.
That's incredible.
Yeah, absolutely, that's.
Pretty amazing to know. Yeah, wow, Like yeah, and the difference too, Like you're saying instead of twenty to thirty percent, reduced forty to sixty So.
Absolutely exactly or exactly exactly, that's.
Yeah, And you're right again, we're not telling anyone not to take things that they need to take, but absolutely the idea that why not have the full package?
Exactly? Why not have the full package?
That's what it is because a lot of the time, it can be that psychotherapy or pharmacologics don't necessarily work for some people. I think there's some statistics of like around forty percent of the people don't experience the relief that they need. So either in conjunction or starting with an exercise program that will provide significant relief. I mean, firsthand, I'm standing here as somebody that has achieved that kind of relief without now being on any pharmaceuticals. This is
why I work out every day. I don't want to experience those symptoms of the pression and anxiety and ever. So this is why I keep going.
So powerful, so powerful, so inspiring to hear that as well, Thank you, so inspiring to hear that. What was it for you that was causing that? Where was that coming from? For you? Personally?
It's been I mean, there's so many factors. I think when you're talking about being anxiety in the question experiencing that, I think some of it is genetic. Some of it is being a teenager and moving countries, going from Albania to the United States and completely in a new world, a new space. My family didn't know English at the time. I was the only one that did, so I had to support them. So I had to assume the role
of an adult at a fairly young age. So I was fourteen fifteen at the time where I had to become an adult in my family. So I think there's a cornucopia of like things that that kind of came together for me to experience anxiety and depression and trying to fit in and not you know, being a foreigner at the time, and the teenager and being bullied and made fun of all kind of let pave the path
a little bit for me to experience that. And I do feel for for for teenagers, and I do feel for the the generation that is that that is living through through these times.
It's not easy. It's not easy, but.
Find find find comfort in that discomfort of working out and in that physical activity because it will help.
Absolutely. Thank you for sharing that. Thank you so much. I wanted to talk to you a bit about steps. What's your take on the ten thousand steps.
It's a good place to start, Like I said, like walking, that's great, ten to twelve thousand. My dad does it every day, is committed to it. It's a good starting point. It's a good starting point, but it's how you make those steps quality quality steps.
You know, do you work out every day of the week most days?
But I don't.
I find that it is great to keep yourself active, even if it's something light. So if I'm not working out, I'll go for a long walk or a hike. I think it's so important to keep ourselves active because we do end up spending most of the day sitting. So even working out for an hour a day if you spend most of your day sitting, it doesn't negate that sitting. So it is important, even speaking like throughout the day to get up and take a little bit of a walk, like every half.
An hour, every hour.
So I do. I do try to keep active every single day. So if I'm not doing a full workout, I'll go for a walk like et cetera, hike.
No days are days are? I love it.
A body in motion stays in motion.
No, I know what you mean. It's it's so interesting how much, Yeah, staying sedentary is the cause of so many of our issues. We had doctor darsh and Sean a few months back, and he talked about the idea of just how much our quality of life changes because we're not getting up from our seats all day, whether at our desks or work or wherever else it may be. And so I love what you're saying about the idea of moving, even if it's not a full workout exactly.
Your rest day is my best workout day, basically basically my ideal work day. She's like, I go on a hike when I'm not working out, and I'm like, here, I am going. My hike is my workout. I love that you do you work out.
You just told me you're into calisthenics.
Yeah, that's so funny. I love it. One thing I wanted to dive into about as we're coming to her close here is you train some of the most well known people in the world who seem to work really hard. Obviously, Kim's been on the show and we always see Kim posting you and you guys training together. What have you learned about training with her? What have you learned about her from training with her?
So one thing that I've learned about Kim with training with her, it's her dedication.
She is.
She shows up, shows up on time, and it's ready to go. Never does she complain or backs away from something that I put her through, and I put her through a lot.
She never backs away. She always pushes through.
Well.
Is very impressive.
I'm not surprised she did say her workout was one of her favorite things.
She's very dedicated for sure.
Yeah, and you guys get organized right if she has a shoot coming up or she's got a specific out fit to wear for an event, like you get really.
We dial it in. We dial it in.
I did, and I ended up staying here for a little bit longer.
Than I was Yeah, I was expected.
What was it like when you first resear and said I need you to come over? What was that like? What was that conversation?
Like?
Yes, I'll be there.
Because obviously it is Kim, But I believe in working with these people that have such high influence because of the impact that they will have on the larger population. So if they can send if through them, I can send a message of strength for women. So strength is beautiful, strength is confidence, whatever that looks like. Strength doesn't have to come with big muscles, you know. But if I can send a message of strength to especially young women, then to me, I've done.
My purpose is fulfilled.
It's beautiful. What's the first thing you asked someone when they come to you, anyone that comes to work with you, what's the first thing you ask them?
How serious are you about this?
Right?
Yeah?
Great question about this?
Like, you know, are you going to give me a day here and there? Because that's just not going to achieve anything for you or myself. So you have to be serious about your help. And I like to make it even though somebody comes to me saying that they need to look a certain way. I always try to make it about help and longevity.
Yeah, it's similar in coaching. Actually, whenever I take on a client, I found that clients who are willing to dedicate and commit time exactly see phenomenal results. Other clients that I have met for two hours a day every day for two years, and other clients that have met twice a week, thrice a week for three to six months.
And then I have someone who's like kind of checking in once a month, kind of checking in once a quarter, cancel, doesn't have and you just start to know notice, And it's hard because it's not that someone is not wanting to work hard, or it's not that they're a bad person or right persons, just people have different discipline levels. But it's like, in order to really see an impact and see the results, there has to be that.
Committment, that commitment. Absolutely.
You talked about the purpose of strength training. What is the purpose of workouts like pilates and yoga and other forms. What is the purpose of those kind of workouts compared to strength training?
They like I said, I respect and utilize, have utilized myself all modalities. You know, I love yoga, but I think there are great additives. They're a great in addition to strength training because they will not most likely build muscle mass in the way that strength training can. They will build maybe endurance. They will build some endurance, They'll build flexibility and some strength, but not to the level that lifting weights will will not so in the way
that lifting weights will build your bone density. Yoga and pilates, unless you're doing some crazy yoga or mulatti, is that.
They will not do that.
But again, there is a great place and time. In addition, I believe to strength training to incorporate yoga and pilates.
What's the difference in the workout you prescribe to someone who wants to gain muscle versus someone who wants to lose weight through strength training.
They don't have to be the same at all. They could be one and the same, because again, at the end of the day, when you're building muscle, you're challenging yourself. You're challenging your muscles with a weight that you're lifting, which is expanding calories, and that's what you need in weight loss as well. You need expenditure of calories that but at a caloric deficit. So that's the only changing component is that caloric deficit. So it's more in the
nutrition versus in the workouts. I mean there is you know, you can work out, you can challenge yourself with the duration of the workout and then maintain your nutrition. Or you can eat less basically so be at a deficit in calories and then lose weight. So it doesn't have to be any difference there. It's just how you manage nutrition versus output.
Got it, got it? And if you're working out on your own without a trainer, it's much harder. How do you know what to add to make you more challenging to continue to get stronger or to continue to shift because I find like most people are working out without trying, and of course they can use the we rise at the Yeah, have that that's what we rise up.
Yeah.
Absolutely, So I'll give you the guideline if you'll give you the workouts. What you can do on your own is challenge yourself with the weights that you're lifting. So if for example, the recommended reps are between eight and twelve, when you get to that eight or ten, nine, ten twelve rep, like, how are you challenged?
Can you do ten more?
If you're doing ten more after that, or if you can't do you're doing you're doing two little weights, so you need to increase the weight. That's why you have to keep in mind. I also value strongly that mind muscle connection, so truly thinking about the working muscle. Let's actually studies that show that if you are thinking of the muscles that you're working, then that actually creates the
muscle gets bigger. There is their studies to that. So if you are slowing down the movement thinking about the muscles that you're working, I sometimes try to touch you know this is working. It sends that signal from your brain to the muscle that hey, we're working here, we're working here, and that will increase strength, will increase muscle mass.
Actually, yeah, I've heard about that, seeing the idea of people almost doing weights in their mind.
Yeah yeah, yeah.
There are studies that simply did that without any weight lifting and they found a significant difference.
Yeah. Yeah, that's the power of the mind is incredible.
What else have you done for the power of the mind to affect your body? Like, what other practices have you taken on at a mental or spiritual level that you feel have positively impacted your physical health well.
Meditation is huge in my opinion, for mental health, but also if you're wanting to visualize certain results. I feel like whenever I've been in a place where I needed to, I've competed, for example, in bodybuilding competitions in the beginning level, so that I found when it came strictly to like the physique, if you are it's basically manifestation, you know, at that cellular level, when you're thinking about the way that you want to look, or feel or present yourself.
So meditation is huge. I try to incorporate that every day journaling. I am also gratitude. Every night before going to bed, I practice gratitude.
Not sure how that relates to the physique, but it relates to the mental ass for your body absolutely absolutely.
I had to learn that. I had to learn that I definitely was very grateful for my mind and my intelligence and my abilities, but it always felt like my body was letting me down, and that negative approach to my own body only made my body let me down more. Absolutely, It's like someone in your life. If you feel like that person in your life always lets you down, guess.
What they're going to let you down because you're gonna look.
For that, yeah, exactly. And so I was always talking to my body subconsciously in that way where I was like, oh, my mind is amazing, but my body lets me down, and that my.
Words that we use are so important, you know, just in the in this recent journey that is shared about before with you, that was one of the big lessons that I learned, is the way that sometimes we talk to ourselves. The words that we use, whether they're out loud or even just spoken in silence to ourselves are.
Huge, are huge. So if you tell yourself, you know, like.
I hate my body, like I want to change this, like I hate I don't know, like my stomach. Like that's not coming from a place of love, we are less likely to achieve results if they're if that's coming
from a place of negative sentiments towards yourself. I always that's another thing that I always try to impart on whoever I'm working with, especially in person, is like I want us to start from a place of love for ourselves, not from I need to lose twenty pounds, because that again comes from like I hate this twenty pounds that's on me. But yeah, starting from a place of love for wherever we were at and for I want to do this because I want to become a healthier version of myself.
Fantastic, Sonata has been so informative talking to you today. I feel like there's been so many great insights that we can I think I'm going to be pulling on a lot of your insights to gain drive and gain focus to connect back in with my body because a lot of what you've shared with me has made me realize just how important strength training is, especially in my third is where I am now and how important it's going to be long term, even if I don't feel it right now. So thank you so much. We end
every episode with a final five. These have to be answered in one word or one sentence, and so Sonati Grecor, these are your final five. The first is what is the best health or fitness advice you've ever heard or received?
Well, the advice not necessarily Well, it's the best advice ever was to stay true to myself and to my uniqueness. So I don't think it necessarily has to deal with that's the first part, but it's to embrace your unique self and stay true to it. The advice that I would give when it comes to fitness, So it would be to just start, just start.
Second question, what is the worst advice you've ever had or received?
Stop lifting weights? He'll get you to be masculine and bulky. That's yeah, yeah, at the end of the day, it's also.
Let's not judge people for how they want to look.
You know, if they want to appear a certain way, if that's what drives them, that's what they want.
Let's allow.
Question number three, what's your hope for people in twenty twenty four?
Just to do everything from a place of love, whatever that is. So whether it's working out, nutrition, or anything in their life, just start from a place of love for themselves and for everybody around them.
Question number four, what's the first thing you do in the morning and the last thing you do atnight?
First thing I meditate? Last thing I say my gratitudes beautiful?
And fifth and final question, if you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow, what would it be?
I would say because this was one of my biggest lesson was to allow. I don't know if it makes sense, but one of the biggest lessons for me recently was to allow and stop being so much needing to control everything. So maybe this is more on a personal level, but I think if we allow for the good in our life or the love for the right type of circumstances, I think there's so much to gain from that.
It's beautiful, Sonata, Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Everyone's been listening or watching. Sonata's app is the we Rise app. We can find fitness and helped it and practices, and of course if you don't already, you can follow her on Instagram at at Sonata dot greca. Please go and follow her right now for more fitness tips, for great workouts, to get you started, to get you going. I want twenty twenty four to be a year you're stronger, fitter, and better, and Sonata is going to be a big
part of making that happen. Thank you so much, Sad again, thank you.
I appreciate it.
Energy, I'm so grateful.
Thank you so much. Thank you for having me here. I truly appreciate it. Thank you, thank you.
If you love this episode, you'll enjoy my conversation with Megan Trainer on breaking generational trauma and how to be confident from the inside out.
My therapist told me stand in the mirror, naked for five minutes.
It was already tough for me to love my body, but after the C section scar with all the stretch marks.
Now I'm looking at myself like I've been hacked.
But day three, when I did it, I was like, you know what, her thigh is a cute