Couverture de Build for Health with Srdjan Injac

Build for Health with Srdjan Injac

Build for Health with Srdjan Injac

De : TruStory FM
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Build for Health is a show that flips the script on fitness. Hosted by longtime podcaster Pete Wright and strength coach Srdjan Injac of ELEV8 Fitness, this show isn’t about gym culture or getting shredded—it’s about why building muscle is the most important investment you can make in your long-term health. Each week, Pete and Srdjan break down the science, bust the myths, and offer real-world insight into how resistance training supports not just strength, but brain function, metabolic health, emotional well-being, immune resilience, and aging with independence. If you think lifting weights is just for looks, think again. It’s time to rethink strength—and build a body that’s built for life. --- Meet the Hosts Srdjan Injac is a certified strength coach and the founder of ELEV8 Fitness in Portland, Oregon. With a background in kinesiology and a lifelong passion for movement, he’s trained everyone from elite athletes to everyday professionals to feel strong, live pain-free, and age with purpose. Srdjan’s coaching style is built on evidence-based training, long-term sustainability, and a deep belief in the power of muscle as medicine. Pete Wright is a veteran podcaster, storyteller, and—most importantly—a guy who used to avoid the gym at all costs. Srdjan’s just so happens to be his trainer. As such, Pete tries to bring curiosity, candor, and a deeply personal perspective on what it really takes to change your relationship with strength... no matter how much it hurts. With a background in health communication and habit-building for adults with ADHD, Pete asks the questions we’re all wondering—and helps listeners stay curious while getting stronger.© TruStory FM Exercice et forme physique Fitness, alimentation et nutrition Hygiène et vie saine
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    Épisodes
    • Stop Collecting Sore Joints and Start Making Progress: Programming 101
      Feb 19 2026

      Here's the uncomfortable truth about most people's fitness routine: it's not a routine. It's a vibe. A loosely organized collection of exercises they kind of remember, performed at an intensity that feels appropriately unpleasant, repeated until boredom or injury ends the whole experiment. That's not training. That's just being tired on purpose.

      This week, Pete and Srdjan get into what separates people who actually progress from people who have been "getting back into it" for the last four years. The answer is periodization — which sounds like the kind of word a personal trainer uses to justify charging more, but is actually just the radical idea that your workouts should have a plan. A real one. With phases. And a reason.

      Srdjan walks through the three main approaches — linear periodization for beginners building their foundation, non-linear for intermediate lifters juggling real life, and block periodization for more advanced athletes chasing specific adaptations. He also explains the deload — the week where you go lighter on purpose, which feels like cheating but is actually the thing that lets you keep going.

      They also get into the mechanics of how a real program is built: why you start with higher reps and lower weight before you ever touch anything heavy, what progressive overload actually looks like in practice, and — crucially — why loading your biceps the same way you'd load your back is how people end up hurt and confused.

      Pete has questions. Reasonable ones. Like: does more sweat mean a better workout (no), do you have to change exercises constantly to keep making progress (also no), and does every set need to go to failure (please, no). Srdjan dismantles all of them with the patient authority of someone who has watched a lot of people make these mistakes in real time.

      And at the end, Srdjan shares what actually makes him feel like the training is working — and it's not a personal best on an app. It's a stranger at a grocery store. Which turns out to be the most unexpectedly useful piece of advice in the whole episode.

      Links & Notes

      • Submit your questions to the show!
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      35 min
    • Tracking Progress Without Losing Your Mind
      Feb 5 2026

      If you’ve ever had a great week in the gym and then let a bathroom scale talk you into thinking nothing’s working, this episode is for you. Pete and Srdjan unpack why body weight is such a noisy, unreliable metric on its own—because it can swing for reasons that have nothing to do with fat loss or fitness progress. They talk through what’s actually in that number (water, sodium, stress, sleep, inflammation, hormones, meal timing), and why daily weigh-ins can turn a normal fluctuation into an emotional roller coaster.

      From there, the conversation pivots to what’s worth tracking instead. Srdjan explains how he uses body composition testing (like InBody) to track trends over time—fat percentage, lean mass, visceral fat, muscle balance—without obsessing over single readings. They also get into the performance and “real life” markers that are often better indicators of progress: stronger lifts, smoother movement, better balance, faster recovery between sets, improved sleep and energy, fewer cravings, and the quiet wins like clothes fitting differently or feeling more solid when you move through the day.

      They close by getting practical about minimum effective tracking. Progress photos, waist-to-hip ratio, and clothing fit can tell a clearer story than a fluctuating number, especially when you’re targeting body composition changes. And there’s a deceptively important mindset point Srdjan keeps coming back to: you’re usually going to feel progress before you see it. If you’re doing the work, don’t let one number erase the evidence.

      Links & Notes

      • Submit your questions to the show!
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      24 min
    • Training After Surgery: Slow Is Fast
      Jan 29 2026

      This one is about the part of training nobody romanticizes: coming back after injury or surgery without letting impatience take the wheel. We start with a real-world case—Pete’s business partner Andy facing back-to-back knee replacements—and uses that as a proxy for anyone staring down rehab, physical therapy, and the uneasy question of “When am I actually ready to train again?” Srdjan lays out what he wants to know first (medical notes, PT progress, movement limits), and why the handoff from PT to strength work matters: PT gets you functional, but strength training is where you rebuild the stability and muscle support that keeps you from getting hurt again.

      A big thread here is pain literacy. Srdjan talks about learning to distinguish discomfort from danger—aching versus sharp pain, soreness versus joint pain—and how a good coach watches movement as much as they listen to words (because most of us underreport what we’re feeling). They also unpack the two classic traps: the underconfident “I can’t train until I’m pain-free” and the overconfident “It doesn’t hurt, so I’m fine,” and why both can get you into trouble. The throughline is slowing down, staying in control, and treating old injuries with ongoing respect even years later.

      They also get practical: using the pool to reduce joint load while keeping muscles active, prioritizing stabilizers and unilateral work for asymmetries, and reframing “rest” as active recovery rather than full stop. And there’s a nice, slightly sneaky lesson for the rehab window: if your training options shrink, tighten up what you can control—protein, calories, and habits—so the setback is real but not catastrophic.

      Links & Notes

      • Submit your questions to the show!
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      29 min
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