Cover image of show The Better Body Fitness Podcast

The Better Body Fitness Podcast

Podcast by Andrew Della Pelle

English

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About The Better Body Fitness Podcast

Train for Longevity, not a mirror. Most fitness is a lie; looking fit doesn't mean you’re ready for the long haul. I’m Andy, a 14-year veteran who reversed non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) after realizing I was rotting from the inside. We focus on Nervous System Regulation, Functional Strength, and real Weight Loss. This is your Health 401k. Every rep today is an investment to your future self; so that you stay an asset to your family and a strong force in your own life. Build a body that’s Built to Last. Stop training for a photoshoot. Join the mission today!

All episodes

14 episodes

episode Why You Work Out but Don’t Feel Stronger artwork

Why You Work Out but Don’t Feel Stronger

Why do people work out consistently but still feel like they’re not getting stronger? It’s one of the most common questions people ask in the gym. Many people hit a workout plateau where progress suddenly slows down or stops. The weights feel the same, the reps feel the same, and gym progress doesn’t seem to move forward. This episode of the Better Body Fitness Podcast explains why workouts stop working and what’s actually happening inside your body during strength training. Most people believe getting stronger is just about building bigger muscles. While building muscle does matter, strength is actually the result of two systems working together: the muscular system and the nervous system. Your muscles produce force, but your nervous system controls how that force is produced. Every time you lift a weight, your brain sends signals through your nervous system telling your muscles how many fibers to activate and how much force to generate. This communication process is known as neuromuscular efficiency, and it plays a major role in how muscles grow and how strength develops. This is why someone can go to the gym consistently and still feel like they aren’t getting stronger. They might be exercising regularly, but if their training isn’t improving how their nervous system activates their muscles, strength gains can slow down. Another major reason people stop seeing progress is the body’s natural ability to adapt. In exercise science, this is called the SAID principle, which stands for Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demands. Your body adapts specifically to the type of training stress you place on it. When someone first starts strength training, almost everything challenges the body. Muscles get sore, movements feel unfamiliar, and the body works hard to adjust to the new demand. But eventually the body becomes efficient. If workouts stay the same week after week—same exercises, same weight, same repetitions—the body adapts to that demand and no longer needs to improve. This is where many strength plateaus and workout plateaus begin. To understand how to break through that plateau, it helps to understand how muscles actually produce force. Muscles are made up of bundles called fascicles, and inside those bundles are muscle fibers. These fibers contract to create force. Groups of these fibers are controlled by the nervous system through structures called motor units. When a movement requires more force—like lifting heavier weight—the body recruits more motor units and activates more muscle fibers. The more fibers working together, the more force the body can produce. However, the body only recruits more muscle fibers when the demand requires it. If the workout demand stays the same, muscle recruitment stays the same, and strength gains stop. This is why progressive overload is one of the most important principles in strength training for beginners and experienced lifters alike. Progressive overload simply means gradually increasing the demand placed on your body over time. This could mean lifting heavier weight, performing more repetitions, improving control of a movement, or increasing training intensity. Small increases in training demand are what tell the body it needs to adapt. Over time, these small changes improve muscle activation, increase motor unit recruitment, and lead to real improvements in strength and muscle growth. Understanding how your muscles, nervous system, and training demands work together makes it much easier to train properly, break through plateaus, and continue building strength over the long run.

7 Mar 2026 - 16 min
episode Why Your Joints Feel Older Than You Are, And How To Take Them Back artwork

Why Your Joints Feel Older Than You Are, And How To Take Them Back

If you’ve ever caught yourself moving more cautiously than you used to, stepping off a curb carefully, twisting slower than before, avoiding deep squats, or feeling stiff when you wake up, this episode is for you. A lot of adults assume joint stiffness, knee pain, shoulder tightness, or “feeling old” is just part of aging. But most of the time, that cautious feeling isn’t age. It’s a loss of joint function and movement capacity that’s been narrowing for years without you even realizing it. In this episode of Better Body Fitness, Andy breaks down exactly why your joints feel older than you are, and how to take them back. You’ll learn how different joint classifications in the body, hinge joints like the knee and elbow, ball-and-socket joints like the hip and shoulder, pivot joints in the neck, and gliding joints in the wrist, are designed to move differently for a reason. When we train and live mostly in straight lines, we slowly lose rotation, lateral movement, and control. That loss of motion doesn’t show up immediately as an injury. It shows up as stiffness, instability, and hesitation. This episode dives deep into: * Why knee pain often starts at the hip * Why shoulder tightness often begins in the thoracic spine * How the kinetic chain connects everything in your body * What synovial joints are and why synovial fluid matters for joint health * Why morning stiffness happens (and how to fix it in under 2 minutes) * How ligaments actually function and why they adapt slower than muscle * The role of collagen in joint stability * Why bone density matters after age 30 * How resistance training and weight-bearing exercise protect long-term joint health * Why stability training is different from just “getting stronger” Andy shares examples from everyday situations, stepping off uneven ground, twisting to grab groceries, lifting awkwardly, getting up from the floor, to show how most joint issues don’t come from one big injury. They come from years of narrowed movement patterns. If you’ve ever searched: * “Why do my knees hurt?” * “Why does my shoulder feel tight overhead?” * “How to fix stiff hips” * “Best mobility exercises for adults” * “How to improve joint health naturally” * “Why am I stiff in the morning?” * “How to increase bone density after 40” * “How to strengthen ligaments” * “How to stop feeling old” This episode gives you answers. You’ll also get a practical five-part joint reset plan that goes far beyond generic stretching routines. Instead of random mobility drills, this episode teaches you how to: 1. Restore hip and shoulder rotation safely 2. Improve synovial fluid circulation for smoother joints 3. Build ligament strength and joint stability with tempo training 4. Fix movement patterns by understanding the kinetic chain 5. Load your skeleton strategically to maintain bone density and longevity This isn’t about chasing pain relief. It’s about expanding movement capacity so you stop feeling fragile in everyday life. Whether you’re in your 30s trying to stay ahead of joint issues, in your 40s dealing with stiffness, or in your 50s wondering why your body doesn’t move the way it used to, this episode explains the science of joint health in a way that actually makes sense. You’ll walk away understanding: * The difference between joint damage and joint deconditioning * Why hesitation is an early warning sign * How to rebuild trust in your movement * How to train for longevity instead of decline If your goal is long-term mobility, strength, and independence, not just aesthetics, this episode will change how you look at your training. If you’re serious about improving joint mobility, increasing stability, preventing knee pain, improving shoulder range of motion, strengthening connective tissue, protecting bone density, and building a body that stays capable for decades, this episode lays the foundation. Listen now, and start expanding your movement instead of shrinking it.

25 Feb 2026 - 26 min
episode STOP the Stiffness: 5 Steps to Reset Your Joints Right Now artwork

STOP the Stiffness: 5 Steps to Reset Your Joints Right Now

I’m Andy. I’ve spent 14 years as a veteran, and now I’m a personal trainer and a first aid and CPR instructor. I’ve seen thousands of people stop moving because they think their joints are just "wearing out." Most of us assume that stiffness and grinding are just parts of getting older. But the reality for the vast majority of people is that your joints aren't broken; they’re just being used incorrectly. It comes down to how your bone surfaces interact. When you move, your bones have to do three things: roll, slide, and spin. When you stay still too long or your muscles get tight, they pull your bones together. This creates too much pressure. Instead of rolling smoothly, the bones slide and create friction. That "gritty" feeling in your knees is literally your bone surfaces rubbing together because they’ve lost the ability to roll. Here are five literal steps to fix this: 1. Morning Rotations: Before you get out of bed, do slow rotations for your ankles, knees, hips, wrists, and shoulders. This spinning motion acts as a physical pump to move fluid into the joint space. 2. Check Your Tracking: Every time you sit or stand, make sure your knees stay lined up with your middle toes. This keeps the bones in the correct path so they can roll without grinding. 3. Release Muscle Tension: Use a firm ball to press into the muscles around your joints, like your quads. This tells your nervous system to let the muscles relax, which reduces the pressure inside the joint. 4. Move Every 30 Minutes: Your cartilage gets its nutrients from movement. If you sit still, you’re starving the tissue. Change your position every half hour. 5. Stay Hydrated: Cartilage is mostly water. If you’re dehydrated, that padding becomes thin. Drink enough water to keep that tissue thick and resilient. Your joints are built to last. You just have to move them the way they were designed to move. Important The 5-Step Reset: 1. Rotate joints daily for fluid. 2. Keep knees tracked over toes. 3. Use a ball to reduce joint pressure. 4. Change positions every 30 minutes. 5. Drink water for cartilage health.

15 Feb 2026 - 14 min
episode Why Your Back and Elbows Hurt: Real-Life Anatomy & Fitness artwork

Why Your Back and Elbows Hurt: Real-Life Anatomy & Fitness

Ever feel like your body is just a collection of "clicks" and "pops"? You aren't alone. In this episode, we’re looking at the raw reality of how we move—and how we fail—during normal daily chores. We start with a story from a grocery store parking lot: a regular guy in his 40s trying to lift a bag of dog food, and his entire frame looking like it was about to snap. If you’ve ever dealt with back pain, neck pain, or that nagging stinging in your elbow, this is the manual you never got. We are using the foundation of Human Movement Science to break down the anatomy of your frame. We’re moving past "gym talk" and looking at the actual anchors and the backbone that hold you together. What we cover in this episode: * The Anchors (Processes): Why your muscles pull on your bones and why "loose bolts" at your elbow (Epicondyles) and hip (Trochanter) lead to chronic pain. * The Backbone (Spine): Breaking down the 7-12-5 rule. We look at the Cervical spine (neck), the Thoracic spine (mid-back), and why your Lumbar spine (low back) is taking the hit for your "frozen" mid-back. * Shock Absorbers (Discs): How to "water" your intervertebral discs so they don't go flat like an old tire. * The S-Curve: Why your spine is actually a spring, and how to find your Neutral Spine to handle the weight of the world. Practical Hacks & Exercises Included: 1. Isometric Squeezes: A 30-second trick to fix elbow pain while you’re driving. 2. The Double Chin Lift: How to stop "Tech Neck" and headaches at your desk. 3. The Doorway Twist: A 1-minute move to unfreeze your mid-back. 4. The 30-30 Rule: The secret to keeping your spine hydrated during long workdays. Stop being a "Soft Target" for gravity. It’s time to upgrade your hardware and start moving with power. Whether you’re into fitness, health, or just want to get through the day without reaching for ibuprofen, this guide to anatomy and movement is for you. Stay active, stay dense, and keep moving.

8 Feb 2026 - 20 min
episode The Real Reason Old Age Steals Your Independence (It’s Not Aging) artwork

The Real Reason Old Age Steals Your Independence (It’s Not Aging)

Your frame is your freedom. This episode breaks down the real reason people lose independence as they age—and it has nothing to do with “getting old.” We dive into bone density, strength training, aging, and mobility, explaining how a slow, invisible loss of skeletal strength leads to frailty, falls, and loss of independence later in life. Using clear examples and NASM-based science, we uncover how osteoblasts and osteoclasts, Wolff’s Law, and long-term lifestyle choices determine whether you stay strong—or become dependent. This isn’t about aesthetics or fitness trends. It’s about functional strength, longevity, and aging without losing freedom. Whether you’re in your 20s building peak bone mass, in your 40s trying to slow bone loss, or in your 70s fighting to stay independent, this episode explains why lifting heavy, applying stress, and moving your body are non-negotiable. If you care about bone health, preventing osteoporosis, avoiding falls, maintaining mobility, and staying dangerous as you age, this episode is for you.

2 Feb 2026 - 18 min
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