Just Fly Performance Podcast
370: Jamie Smith (Strength Culture) on The Bio-Psycho-Social Lens in Human Performance Training
Today’s podcast features coach and educator, Jamie Smith. Jamie is the owner of Melbourne Strength Culture, a strength and performance-based gym in Australia. Jamie worked at high-level S+C in Australia and the US prior to starting his coaching business with Strength Culture. Now he is heavily involved in coach development and education for strength coaches.
Jamie has a truly expansive viewpoint on how we consider training in light of more global concepts. In performance training, we must look at human beings on a complete (holistic) level. To do that, it’s helpful to look at prominent and long-established fields of human collaboration and research, medicine to be exact. In medicine, the “biopsychosocial” model was conceptualized in 1977 and has been prominent, particularly in pain science.
On today’s podcast, Jamie talks about both the biopsychosocial and top-down/bottom-up models and how to integrate them into a training model. Without considering the importance of mindset and culture, as well as “bottom-up” (using intuition in the training process) coaching, athletes are not going to get the possible level of result or enjoyment of the journey. As Jamie says on the show, building awareness in the athlete or client is one of the most important things you can do, and by defining the overarching structures of the BPS and top-down vs. bottom-up training, we can better understand how our program is actually landing with those we train.
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Timestamps and Main Points
4:04 – Discussing the “beer mile” and “milk mile” competitions as track and field spin-offs
7:37 – The BPS, or “Bio Psycho Social” Model, and how it applies to training
13:28 – BPS-based ideas as to why two athletes can be on the same exact training program and get a completely different training outcome
17:42 – The philosophical concept of determinism, in light of the BPS model
23:28 – “Top-Down” vs. “Bottom-Up” methods in looking at training
39:52 – Looking at “Top-Down” vs. “Bottom-Up” concepts in training, relative to global concepts, such as investing
45:28 – Practical steps to integrating balance in Top-Down and Bottom-Up elements of a program
48:27 – Client autonomy in light of training constraints, BPS model, and buy-in
51:19 – A bottom-up approach to assigning training de-loads
1:02:15 – Skillfully assigning load ranges based on BPS and bottom-up concepts in training, and helping athletes feel “wins” in a program
Jamie Smith Quotes
“I think there are a lot of S&C coaches who have never really trained for events”
“The biology (in the BPS model) is the physical nature of the human”
“The psychological is your software, your thoughts, feelings, expectations… and ultimately those psychological things shape the lens that we see the world through”
“Social is the environment in which we place the human”
“Our thoughts, feelings, expectations, shape the way we enter processes; I truly believe the BPS model is the most encompassing model to view how we do things or look at outcomes in life”
“When you understand the BPS model, you can’t remove the mental from the physical, or the culture; when you say something, how this is going to be perceived by an individual is influenced by everything they’ve done in their whole life”
“A lot of people, became physically attached as a representation of what (rolling and smashing) would allow them to become; when a coach would come along and bash that idea, they are challenging a belief system”