Home Andrew Huberman Notes
Andrew Huberman · 2025-09-22 · 3h 03m

Build Your Ideal Physique | Dr. Bret Contreras

The 'glute guy' Dr. Bret Contreras breaks down how to build any muscle, prioritize lagging body parts, and train for life without injury.

Build Your Ideal Physique | Dr. Bret Contreras
The guest

Dr. Bret Contreras — A strength coach with a doctorate in sports science and CSCS certification, best known as 'the glute guy' for inventing the hip thrust and pioneering glute-focused training. He has over three decades of experience training everyday people, athletes, and coaches.

The gist

Andrew Huberman and Dr. Bret Contreras deliver a master class on resistance training for hypertrophy and strength. They cover optimal training frequency (2-3x per week per muscle), the central role of progressive overload, and the concept of maximum recoverable volume (MRV). Contreras explains his 'rule of thirds' for glute training across vertical, horizontal, and lateral vectors, and how to prioritize lagging body parts through short specialization blocks. They also discuss recovery genetics, the mind-muscle connection, recomposition versus bulking/cutting, and how psychological sustainability matters as much as the physiology.

Big reveals

  • Contreras reveals he invented the hip thrust, taking glute-activation bridge movements and loading them up as a real resistance exercise.
  • Claims tempo barely affects hypertrophy: a 1-second rep and an 8-second rep build muscle similarly, which 'blows people's minds.'
  • Says 2020 quarantine was 'probably the best year of all our lives' for lifting, leading him to invent 'strong lifting' (six lifts vs. powerlifting's three).
  • Cites the Bickel study showing you can maintain most muscle and strength on just one-ninth of the volume that built it.
  • Takes the controversial stance against bulking/cutting, arguing most people should recomp at maintenance and that big surpluses just add fat.
  • States flatly that 'hip dip' workouts are bogus: you can't grow muscle in an imaginary space; hip dips are anatomy plus leanness.
  • Both Huberman and Contreras argue nagging injuries quietly reduce daily movement (NEAT), explaining why staying pain-free matters for body composition.

Things worth remembering

  • You get the majority of your results from the very first working set; added volume gives diminishing, non-linear returns.
  • 74% of Contreras's followers are women; women generally recover better than men and can handle more volume.
  • His 'big six' lifts are squat, bench press, deadlift, military press, chin-up, and hip thrust.
  • A Brittany Counts study found that flexing the arm against no load for four sets of 20 grew the triceps (used to provide the resistance).
  • Most guys neglect neck training; the deadlift/shrug/row group in one study grew traps but not neck muscles at all.
  • For hypertrophy, anything from about 6 to 30 reps builds similar muscle, as long as you train hard enough.
  • You can build muscle starting resistance training at almost any age, even into your 80s or 90s, just with a blunted response.
  • Contreras has female clients hip thrusting over 600 lb (a few near 700 lb) at body weights averaging ~140 lb.
  • He recommends 'humping the ceiling' on hip thrusts: full range and reaching full hip extension beats partial reps for glute growth.
  • His most underrated tip: one all-out set to failure, two full-body workouts a week, gets you ~80% of results in 45-minute sessions.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Guest’s ownBook

Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body

Andrew Huberman

“I have a new book coming out. It's my very first book. It's entitled Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body.” — Andrew Huberman 03:01:31
Find it on Amazon