Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 317: Bucking Fitness Trends and Driving Results with Mike Doehla
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Hey, everybody, welcome into another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast.
As always, I'm your host, Danny Matranga.
And in this episode, I'm sitting down with Mike Dola.
Mike was the founder of Stronger You, a very big fitness and nutrition coaching company.
He made an exit from that company to spend more time with his
family and kids, but he is still absolutely loaded with fitness wisdom. He's a little cut and dry,
and some people might think direct, but the wisdom he shares is built on the back of years
helping thousands of people get into real shape. And despite making an exit to spend more time with
the people he loves, he's still very much in the fitness space. And he's somebody who has a ton of
wisdom to share. So I think you'll love this episode. Sit back and enjoy the chat with Mike
Dola. This podcast wouldn't be possible if it wasn't thanks to support from our awesome partners,
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Good. How are you doing, Danny?
I'm doing really well. I'm happy to have you on. A little note for the guests who didn't get
enough from the intro. Mike, somebody who's been very successful in the fitness and nutrition space
as a coach and as a businessman. And he's somebody who I'd heard of many times,
but I'd never put a face to a name until he more recently started getting some content picked up
and shared by people who I really like. And I kept finding your posts and being like,
wow, this guy has a really good way of looking at fitness and nutrition and it's practical and
it's influenced by having done it professionally, by having done it with a family now. And there's
just so much wisdom in all of these posts.
And then one day I saw your face and I was like, oh, this is Mike Dola, who I think I'd heard about
from Andrew Coates and at least five other people and never knew what you looked like.
So I'm pumped to have you in front of me and be talking today and hopefully extracting some of this wisdom that you've got, because I think you have some of the best takes to use a more kind of in vogue term of
any fitness person on the internet right now. You've got some fire, bro.
I appreciate that, man. It means a lot coming from you because I feel the same way about your stuff.
Really, it's just because I'm a little older.
I'm experienced.
I've seen a lot of stuff and I got a, you know, in my seven years in the industry,
I pretty much put in like five lifetimes of work and a crap ton of clients.
So I've seen a ton of stuff.
So it's really just a result of having my eyes open and paying attention during that time.
Well, I think that's something I'd love to start with is just
seven years and you worked really hard during that seven years.
And I think when I talk to other coaches or fitness personalities or personal trainers,
whatever you want to label yourself, a lot of them are trying to disconnect from the work
very early on.
They don't want to apply.
I don't want to do training sessions. I don't want to work
with clients. I just want to look good and get paid for looking good and get affiliations and
affiliate marketing, etc. And so whenever I know someone who's been successful as a coach or in
building a fitness brand, I love to hear what that work looked like, what it felt like.
I'm sure for you, it's fun to
look back. They say, you don't know you're in the good days when you're in the good days.
And maybe looking back, you really love that grind. But what was that seven years
and five lifetimes worth of work like? Dude, it's crazy because I say this a lot.
A lot of our colleagues in the industry, they're basically just the clients they complain about
in terms of, I don't want to
work hard and I want the result. And for me, it was like my journey in the fitness industry was,
was never supposed to end like this in terms of like selling a business and retiring and being
like dad and just doing whatever. I just wanted to help a lot of people figure this food stuff
out or this fitness stuff out. So like this was play to me.
And this is what a lot of like startup founders will talk about. They'll say like, if you find
something that's play to you, but work for others, like you'll excel at it. And that's the thing I
want like our colleagues to think about is what about this business feels like play to you? What
value does that provide for others? Can you exchange that value for money and make a decent living?
Like you probably can.
So for me, it was just, dude, I had this damn cell phone and I have my original cell phone,
the iPhone 6 Plus in my drawer over here.
I had a callus on my finger because I had it in my hand at all times.
I worked full time when I first started.
So like I'm literally hiding in bathrooms and in the attic of the office to reply to
clients.
I was just constantly thinking about the world and what analogy I can make like something
into for people like calories and speed limit signs.
Like I'm driving to work and I'm like, oh, like you don't have to be perfect with calories.
You just kind of have to be close.
And I would just put stuff out there and I would interact with the clients and all the
right places and all the coaches. And I would build networks of people that, uh, a wanted to
be clients and B wanted to work here. So it was really like, I wasn't working like 15 hours a day,
but I was present probably about 15 hours a day, sun up to the moment my eyes shut and
I fell asleep. And then I would probably dream about work. So it was kind of crazy. It's kind
of what's needed, I believe, to succeed. You kind of have to be a little bit crazy about it.
Otherwise, you're not going to be in the right place at the right time. And you're not
going to see those clients asking questions in the right places or just getting all that real
world feedback. And I'm not like a typical business guy where I project out and plan
and strategize and all that. I was just really good at seeing feedback from everybody and reacting
to it and just getting a crap ton of clients because our program was giving them awesome results and it was a really cool community so
i was just on man it was my life it was my identity and then one day i'm just like
there's more to this and i felt like i felt like i got the ring and like i could step back and let
the young guns come and play um and i still you know I still go to the playground and shoot sometimes on Instagram,
but I'm not formally in the field right now. No, I think that's wonderful, man. I'm passionate
about fitness and I'm passionate about my health. And right now I'm in that tunnel of working very
hard. And I think the prospect of stepping away from that is every
bit as exciting as it is intimidating, because obviously working in fitness becomes a piece of
one's identity, but you're always attached to fitness through your own health and wellbeing.
But it can be a lot to be a coach and to run a coaching company and a coaching business.
And I think you hit on it, like sun up to sun down.
And I think people in our space, they just don't want to do that grind.
They've never had to do that grind.
The self-selecting nature of this industry is the better looking you are and the better
your physique is, the easier it tends to be to make money. So some people just enter with good looks, good physiques, and things tend to come easy and
they just kind of never really want to work a whole lot harder than that. When you were doing
those sunup to sundown days, what was training like? What was eating like? What were some of
the things you had to do to get that business from being a baby to being at a place where you can exit? I like to explore those moments because they're so seldomly talked about because they're not very glorious. But I pull a lot, extract a lot from them. And I think other people do too.
lot from them. And I think other people do too. Yeah. For me, it was like, I could have definitely made the fitness stuff work just as good as I did before it. But when I was leading into the
nutrition space, like, cause I was trying to train people in my garage. Like I had a small
CrossFit affiliate with like seven to 10 members. Like it was nothing. So I was working out at work
after my full-time job. When I
transitioned to the online thing, and then I ended up quitting my job and I was just like
glued to this thing, the cell phone, I didn't feel like training as much. So like the strongest I've
ever been, the best shape I've ever been was probably, probably 2015 when I, when I started
stronger to the company. and then over time I
was like I don't really care as much about being strong um I'd rather honestly be just in the weeds
like with all my clients and I was doing enough like I didn't you know I didn't fall off too much
um but my strength suffered because like I didn't do that stuff sure and that was my personal choice
like I could have made it work. You know, I could easily
pick up my cell phone between sets, stuff like that. But I just didn't care as much about it.
I think when I was like in the grind, like that was what I wanted to do. And people used to ask
me like, what do you do for fun? I'm like, I just, I work, I talk about food stuff. And it was so
rewarding because, you know, not only was it, did it allow me to quit my
full-time job in HR? That was just like, just not fun. It was changing the lives of people. So
like, unless you're a sociopath, like that makes you like, you get high off that.
Like that was my dopamine. I'm like, man, every day, all day, people are like, you changed my
life. You changed my life. You changed my life. You changed
my life. Then staff are like, I quit my job. I'm living the dream. And I'm like, holy shit. Like,
how can I slow down? So that was like, dude, it was the most fun I've ever had. You know what I
mean? Like fatherhood is the greatest thing, but that was like, that was just fun, man. Every day,
you and your crew just dominating the industry and helping a shit ton of people
and not even doing traditional marketing.
So knowing all your clients are coming because they're happy, that is the unicorn type business
that those things can happen and you can just enjoy it with your, with your buddies at work. Like it's so cool. Yeah, no, I, I, I'm smiling because I think back
to having worked at like 24 hour fitness and having had a corporate quota on like, yo,
you're going to sell a hundred grand worth of personal training this month. Yep. And I remember being like 22 and working with like five of my boys.
And we're all probably
between the ages of 22 and 26.
And just being so excited
to try to sell
what are at 24-hour fitness,
what are basically 45-minute long
adult encouragement sessions. Yeah. But at the same time,
the high that I got from knowing like, okay, the harder we work, the more people work out,
the more people get fit. It really can turn you into an animal around your work. And I think that
a lot of people preach like, oh, you must have balance.
And I do think there's an important balance to be struck between work and personal life.
But you probably would agree if you're working in a field like fitness or like nutrition,
where you see for every unit of work I put out, I generate a unit of societal positivity. People genuinely benefit from the work I do.
It's hard not to want to put in 12, 14, 16, and 18-hour days.
Right. And I was super present. I was in a new relationship. We ended up getting married, so
I didn't blow that because of my job. I was always around because it was like on a cell phone like i could
answer stuff and then i could do stuff like we traveled all over the place i had i remember
putting out a survey one time and someone was like you shouldn't travel so much because not
everybody can travel and it makes us feel bad and i'm like damn like i'm answering you and i'm in
costa rica like and that's not it's interesting. Right. So like, I didn't,
I didn't give up life. I just had it as all one big part of life. And yes, I'm not, I'm not stupid.
Like I had my head in my cell phone, probably at parties and birthdays and all kinds of stuff. Like
so many people would make a comment. Oh, you're on your phone again. I'm like, yeah, but I'm not
on my phone, like doing something stupid. i'm on my phone helping someone with food and i'm making a living
or i'm talking to staff members so like what people see is like this cell phone in this guy's
hand he's ignoring us it's like i'm i'm building the foundation for my family to be comfortable
while helping a crap ton of people so So I don't feel bad about it,
but I think back and I'm like, man, the perception of what I would do in public spaces was probably
pretty interesting. Yeah. Speaking of perception of public spaces, when you look out as a hyper informed observer on this current landscape of
fitness and nutrition on the internet,
all content driving to various fitness and nutrition businesses.
So maybe just when you look online and you see this space now as an informed
observer,
what are some of the things that have peaked your,
not necessarily interest maybe even
your frustration but like when you look at it now from the outside you have to have a stance that
very few people do like what what what are you looking at now and thinking oh shit here we are
yeah it's like it's it's interesting because like i'm not in the circles where like people are like
pushing all this bullshit right most of my circles are like people are like pushing all this bullshit.
Right.
Like most of my circles are like,
like people like us,
people that people that get it,
that know what matters.
But I find a lot of people,
like a lot of the customers in this industry,
they still want fat loss and they want health and all those other things.
And it seems like our,
our colleagues are very,
very heavily leaning towards
like not talking about fat loss stuff anymore. And it's almost like any feelings. Yeah. And that's,
that's tough. Like a post I put up the other day with like 24, like statements of like,
just things I believe someone commented, like, thank you. Thank you. Uh, someone said,
I shouldn't say good days. And I was like, because it implies like there's bad days or good foods, bad foods. And I'm like, well, it's incredibly hard to communicate effectively when I have to worry about every single word affecting every single person's like perception.
fat loss. I say fat in general, like I say these things because it's so much easier to communicate.
And I understand there will be collateral damage. And I am careful with my words, even more so now than I've ever been. You know, I have two little daughters, like
four month old and a 23 month old. So like these kids are going to grow up in a world that
still is kind of mean to people who are of a certain size. And I don't,
I don't like that. So I do carefully try to, you know, the words I say, I do choose carefully, but
to me, like the industry, it looks, it all looks very similar. Like a lot of people are saying the
same things, saying like using the same content, using the same like editing software. So like,
if I'm scrolling and I see people, I'm like, what's different about this person than
another person?
The one thing I see is I don't see any clients.
I want to see the client stories.
I want to hear the good news because everyone's saying the stuff that works, but I'm not really
seeing the results and the people.
And that doesn't necessarily mean pictures and things like that.
But I don't know the comments, the shares of stuff like that.
I think it's a great point. You know, I've kicked this around myself because I'm one of the few
people in our space that still trains. Like I spend 40 hours a week training clients one-on-one,
which a lot of people are like, fuck, I can't wait to get away from that. And I'm like, all right, that's fine.
That's a great indicator of where your alignment really is.
And then I do the social media shit on top of that, which really is just mostly like
short form written, trite snippets from the interactions I'm having.
But I'm in there and I'm working. And I thought to myself the other day, if I just had a cameraman in here and, and was just like,
Hey, here's, here's how I'm going to clean up this thing for my client, or here's this thing
I'm working on with my client. It would probably be 10 times easier than what I do, uh, like writing
stuff. And it would probably be one of the few, if, if not the only account
that's actually like, Hey, here's me training a real person. And here's how this, here's how
this might benefit you. But there's just, the risk is you don't know if the algorithm wants that,
right? Like that's what I have trouble with. Cause like truth be told, I would love to have
a hundred thousand followers because I know that means that a lot more people are seeing my stuff.
have a hundred thousand followers because I know that means that a lot more people are seeing my stuff and there's probably some ego in there right like no matter what we do we we want that right
so I'm too lazy to play that algorithm game you know like I want to do it but I'm like like there
there will be weeks where I don't feel like saying a thing and then there will be you know I'll go
weeks where I want to say three things a day but I'm like oh is that too much so like i'm glad i don't have to do it as a job and i could just kind of do
it for fun now but it's hard man and what works now for the algorithms didn't work six months ago
and then that didn't work six months before that so it's like who's going to be the one to figure
it out next and then everybody's going to do it right it's so it's very it's very, who's going to be the one to figure it out next? And then everybody's going to do it, right? It's very cyclical.
I, of course, play all of these games.
And you have to.
I win sometimes, I lose sometimes.
What allows me to do it,
because I do entirely agree with you,
the days where I have four or five posts come out of me are like
i'm wanting to chamber some of them for the days where i'm like this whole fucking thing is so
stupid hilariously stupid and then and then you know there are moments where somebody will leave
a comment and i'm like i'm not going to. I'm not going to engage. And then sure enough,
I'm like, all right, you're the one, you're going to get the smoke. You type out the comment and
you press reply. And it's like, you can't at this person because they're such a pussy that they have
their settings turned off. So they like to basically take shots and then run. They throw
their grenade and run. You can't even at them. There are all these moments with the content thing where I'm either hyper-motivated
or entirely disillusioned. I'm like, this is just a stupid game. But the thing that allows me to do
it is the same thing that allows me to stay in shape. It's just like, I'm probably going to
fucking force myself to do it at least once, even when don't want to on a day i don't want to i
would be i would not be in very good shape if i did not have that that singular feature um and i
know you have that so i feel like you will get to a hundred thousand followers by virtue of just
posting good shit and occasionally having one rocket fuel off um but every time i try to get more followers i don't it's only when i just post better shit
yeah it's goodman is on a um like a quest to get like 50k more and i'm like you're gonna you're
gonna do it because you have the momentum and you know how to type for what people
like share and it's like i call like i call a lot of the stuff like share bait it's like
it's all things that people are going to put out there.
And I'm over here like, hey, starvation mode is bullshit.
And you're not tracking calories correctly.
And so I suffer because if other coaches don't have the same tone as me, they're not going
to share that because they're going to think of their people and they're going to say,
wow, that's going to hurt their feelings.
Yep.
That's going to hurt my client's feelings.
So I'm not going to share Mike's stuff.
And I'll tell them like, listen, I helped probably 500 times more people than almost
anyone in the field will.
And most people are fine with this stuff.
Most adults actually laugh when you call their bullshit.
Like they're actually really cool with it.
Yeah.
I think we just moved away from that more generally.
I mean, this is something just to talk about relationships.
I mean, when you get into fitness, you have a lot of conversations that you're not either capable of having at the time or qualified to have because most people's weight problem is an emotional regulation problem existing in an obesogenic environment, right? So
you get to know what people really struggle with, especially when you do it in person,
because you can just be having someone in the middle of a set of squats and they'll just be
like, yeah, you know, I think my husband's cheating on me. You're like, uh, so you learn
a lot about people. And I'm, I'm wondering, you know, you're in a relationship that's,
you know, you're successful in your relationship,
you have a good marriage, you have two lovely children.
What have you, in your approach to nutrition, it's less soft than many people are.
How do you show up as dad and as a husband and as a coach for two kids?
How do you walk that line and what do you borrow and what do you not borrow?
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Back to the show. Yeah. I'm a very like, it's weird because there's like a lot of areas of life. Like someone would call me a pessimist, but I'm like, I'm not pessimistic. I'm real.
Like I'm a realist because I've seen how this shit goes.
Like the dumbest stuff, like we get a furniture delivery.
I'm like, it's going to be damaged.
I know it.
I saw how they took it out of the truck.
I open it up and it's damaged.
So someone would say, oh, he's pessimistic.
I'm like, no, I've just seen this happen.
So I don't know.
I try to not give that vibe of pessimism or negativity.
I'm just a very logical, like critical thinker with most things.
And I like probably to a fault will like overthink a lot of stuff and over explain
when people specifically, my wife is like, just shut up and listen. Like, I don't need,
I don't need you to solve that problem. Um, and then with the kids stuff, like,
do you think like there's a lot of fitness accounts? Like there's 9,000 different parenting
accounts. Oh my gosh. Dude, it's crazy, man. It's like, no joke. Like I's 9,000 different parenting accounts. Oh my gosh.
It's crazy, man. It's like, no joke. Like I'm like, I'm on Reddit and there's a science,
like science-based parenting section. Sure. And I said to them one time and it got some traction.
I was like, sometimes I wonder that the people in here are much like the nutrition industry,
where I come from, where there will be one study that suggests this and you forget that
everything else exists in the same world. So like these, these parents that are like,
don't ever say no, don't praise your kid too much because then they'll, they'll only do things for
praise. I'm like, how do you get this right? Like, how do you get it right? You just try to create
an environment just like food where most of the good stuff happens just by default and you don't think that like me saying no or
good job to my kid that just did something cool is going to mess them up you know because they
can i could do everything right they could have one friend at school that influences them to do
something stupid and everything's out the window yeah so like, I just think like we're kind of in control, but we're not really in control of
everything. And the same goes for food. Like you mentioned the emotional regulation, like
something could have happened in someone's life when they were seven. And now we're dealing with
it as their nutrition coach. Like that's just, it's heavy stuff, you know?
It is. And I think, you know, you talk about, I tend to lean generally more realistic, more analytical.
And I think that does bring with it an aura of pessimism.
But I think you can be a pessimist without exuding pessimism.
It's just harder.
It's just harder.
It's just harder. It's just harder. But it's like to say, if you're naturally really bold and daring and brash, and you throw yourself into a fight, are you more brave than the person who's
very reserved and non-confrontational who steps up and embraces the conflict? Probably not.
So anybody who I know that's naturally a little bit
more analytical, realistic, pessimistic, who goes out into the world and says, I'm still going to
fucking do everything I can to drive a hyper positive outcome. I think those are the people
who are really working the hardest. They're not giving it because it'd be easy to just sit around
and be a nihilist and be like,
you know, everybody's going to be fat.
This ain't getting any better.
You know, everybody just give up,
just fucking pray to the Ozempic Overlord
and have ChatGPT write you a workout program
that maybe, you know, you may or may not do.
Yeah, but that's like,
that's a thought in my head sometimes.
I'm like, as a whole,
we're probably going to get worse, but there's still going to be thousands of people that we can all affect.
So why not try? Same thing goes for entrepreneurism. You're trying to build a business
yourself, but most people are going to fail and be out of the industry in six months,
eight months, whatever. There's still going to fail and be out of the industry in six months, eight months, whatever.
You're still like, there's still going to be people that succeed.
So like, if someone asks me, hey, Mike, I want to be a nutrition coach and do what you did.
I'm like, hey, like, slow down.
Like, if I had to do it all over again, I probably couldn't do this. So let's just get you enough clients to quit your job and live happily ever after.
Like, you don't want to build what I built because you probably will go insane. So, yeah.
And people don't want to hear that because they don't want to be told that the
work that they need to do is very challenging and very long and very lonely.
But it's, it's fun for a time until it's not, or until you realize that there's
more fun to be had in other areas, which isn't a bad thing. No, it's crazy, man. Business is nuts.
It's just one of those crazy things. And you see a lot of people succeed. So you just think like,
oh, I can do it. And that's a problem with a lot of the clients that they see the Arnold Schwarzenegger and they're like, I'm going to do
that. It's like, well, dude, this guy not only put in the work, he is the only one of him.
So it's got to be the right person doing the right job.
So true. If you want to eat better, stop going inside grocery stores,
order online so you get exactly what you need and
nothing else. Why did when I read that, I thought immediately like, yeah, this could pretty much
solve obesity right here. You just get the food delivered. You can't be tempted. Is that something
you do? Because I have to say it would solve about 90% of my
problems to just have all my clients' Instacarts and credit cards.
Right. So I don't have a big problem with food. I could walk by any number of cookies and just
be like, all right, cool, whatever. I don't necessarily know why that is. Maybe I was just
raised with cookies or cookies, whatever. No big
deal. But most people I know, nowadays, there's what 40,000 items in a grocery store. Our
grandparents probably had 150 in these little markets when they were growing up. So there's
just so many temptations and so many options. You're just going to go down these aisles and impulse
pie, even if you have a list. So like, don't even go to the grocery store, like just order online.
Like before we got out, before we started recording, I was looking at my phone because
my wife was asking me if I wanted to add anything to our order. I didn't even bother thinking about
it because I know I probably would have just added something we didn't need. So this is what
I tell people, like just order online. So you don't have to worry about all the temptations, but then they,
they debate me, right? They're like, but Mike, I'm supposed to get steps in. I'm like, geez,
like it's the grocery store, the only place you could do it. So you just have to make it easier
to do well. That's, that's it. So like, if you're going to the grocery store and you're like,
oh, I got to try this. I got to try that. It's like, well, you're going to the grocery store and you're like oh i gotta try this i gotta try that it's like well you just you want to do that and you also want to be more fit so
you can't jump in the pool and stay wet or stay dry like you have to pick like what do you want
to do yeah and you have to put yourself in positions where you're less likely to make
mistakes as often as you reasonably can yeah um right Like don't live in a bubble, but.
Yeah, but you must insulate yourself. If like you said, if you and I are similar in this way that are some confluence of genetic and personal factors make us a little bit more resilient when we walk by foods that people might graze on.
But I'll use a client as an example. She
texted me in the middle of the day because she felt as though she had to tell me.
And this is something that you see a lot. It was just like a total confession post. I'm like,
okay, you're a raised Catholic. She texted me at 1130. I just left Costco and I had a
fucking hot dog and an ice cream. And I was like, hey, it's all right.
Thanks for telling me what we're going to bounce back.
And she's like, I was so good.
I didn't buy any junk though.
And I was like, no, but what you did was you went into Costco and you said no to as many
things as you had the bandwidth to say no to.
And then were overcome by the hot dog and ice cream on the way
out. Had you simply gone in reverse order, you might've been overcome by one of the items on
the shelf, but you said no to a lot of things and you saw what happens when your metaphorical
willpower meter goes to zero.
You fought as many bad guys as you could fight, and then you went to zero and you lost.
And it was just such a good indicator that like, wow, if you just don't expose yourself to all of the shit by reorganizing your home environment, not going into the break room so often, you give yourself such
a better chance of succeeding. And I think that grocery delivery, while some people would see it
as impractical, the time you save and the exposure that you reduce to these foods that you have a
tendency to buy and over consume over long enough times it would solve a lot of people's problems there should be like an insta instacart plug-in like the i'm a i'm fat plug-in like yo i'm fat
insta oh you got the instacart fatty plug-in cool like you can't add that to your cart it was
blocked and then you save you save money too yeah so like what why say they yeah People say it would cost more, but that is only the marginal increase per item from using the service.
But you are certainly not going to be inclined to buy all the shit that you didn't need to buy that you were.
And whatever time you are going to spend, if your time is worth whatever your hourly rate is, you're going to save at least one hour,
maybe two. Oh dude. It's that, that's why that was my big reason for suggesting that to my wife.
Cause like, I'm always the one going and I'm like, Oh my God, I don't want to do this. And
like, no one has bags anymore. So if I forget the bags in the car and I'm inside, I'm like,
Oh my God, I got to buy new bags. It's just, it's not a fun experience for me.
It stresses me out. So let's not do that. I'm sure you can't help but think in your mind,
and this is something I know is true for my clients and for a lot of people who are fortunate
enough to have a relatively high earning capacity. You're standing here and I was like, oh man,
I've been at Officeot for three fucking hours
of my life this week waiting to get something laminated and i'm like i have burned scorched
lit on fire three hours of what i could have just done if i yeah you know had this done by somebody
else um our clients pay for for services like coaching but they're reluctant to pay a 3% marginal tax on every item they get at the grocery store because it's a different frame than they're used to.
Yeah.
Well, it's funny.
We think a lot of clients will be like, oh, I'm not going to sign up because of cost.
And then they end up signing up and then they buy five different appliances to make chicken. And I'm like, come on. It was never the money. It was just, you didn't know
the value of the program, which is completely understandable. But you don't need five items
to cook chicken. People are irrational all over the place.
Yes. And we are collectors and consumers and we will always value goods more than services until we need services. Here's one I love. And I think that this really speaks to just, I do think our industry has softened in so many good ways, but I do think they've maintained softness in areas that are clearly picking and choosing.
And one of them is alcohol.
And you said one of the weirdest things regarding health is how often people ridicule certain
ingredients, but never say anything about alcohol.
And I would raise you and say one of the weirdest things about the fitness industry
is how brave and bold people are about innocuous things
like seed oils and artificial sweeteners, but how courageous or how silent and puny they are about
obvious shit like alcohol. Why do you think that is? I mean, I know why you probably think that is.
Yeah. I mean, well, it it's like they don't want to
give it up they want to they want to make fun of the things that they don't have a problem avoiding
so like the ingredient the random ingredients the seed oils the sugar the artificial sweetener
whatever like they will ridicule these things but they will be drunk and i can't i'm it's almost
embarrassing to say how many times
I've done this and how excited I get about it. But this happens on Facebook mainly when you
can scroll people's old profile pictures. Every time someone says the shit to me, I look at their
pictures and I'm like, scroll, scroll, scroll four pictures back, getting shit faced on a boat.
Like you're, you're ridiculing this person for
eating a cookie, but you're drunk every other day or every weekend. Like that's worse. Like what,
so are you healthy or are you just like conveniently healthy? Yeah. Do you just want
to give up the things that you want to give up? Are you healthy or are you a thin alcoholic?
that you want to give up. Are you healthy or are you a thin alcoholic? Yeah. Yeah.
There's obviously gray area there, but I might be a little more cynical than you in that. Yes, I do think a lot of coaches enjoy alcohol and are able to maintain a better physique than the
average person while enjoying alcohol. But I also think a lot of them are bankrolled by Chardonnay
Cheryl and they do not want to bite the hand that feeds them. They want to be the coach that lets you have a glass of wine because, yes, calorically, you can have a glass of wine a night and lose weight. who are borderline alcoholics or plenty of normal weight adults,
but you can't drink alcohol regularly and be healthy.
And that's not really a hot take. You know,
if we go back to what you mentioned earlier about how people will do this with
parenting literature or nutrition literature, they'll be like, Oh, Hey,
I found one study that like has clearly made me decide to avoid seed oils altogether. It's like, oh, hey, I found one study that has clearly made me decide to avoid seed oils altogether.
It's like, yeah, but you're ignoring a huge body of literature that says large amounts of saturated fats are bad for your heart.
And that's been there.
So I see that with alcohol.
A lot of people don't want to poke that bear.
And I don't know.
I kind of like it.
I kind of like poking that bear.
And maybe it's because I don't drink. Yeah. And I don't know i kind of like it i kind of like poking that bear and maybe it's because
i don't drink yeah and i don't mind like i'm i drink every now and then very very seldomly like
i'm personally invested in a local brewery like i don't i'm not completely against alcohol but
it's one of those things that we know is not healthy so like if you do it that's cool but don't live a life
that you know exudes health and do that and never say anything about it you know like i know like
jordan syatt the other day i think was posted about wine he's like i know this isn't like a
health thing but i want to enjoy it and i'm like yeah that's that's what people should do at times
but it's just a very hypocritical, I don't
know, like aura that people put out there.
Yeah.
And I'll be, I'll be honest.
Like I have my vices.
I, I, I use certain substances.
I live in California.
We have great weed.
What can I say?
Yeah.
And I'm so painfully aware of the way that my use of that substance could or couldn't get away from me.
And I do think with alcohol, we've normalized it to the point where a lot of people function with a really dangerous amount of alcohol in their system.
And I don't think it's a bad move to have a more honest discussion about it as an industry, even if
it does hurt our bottom line, because I'd rather make less and have healthier, thinner clients
than have a bankroll of people who are like, well, my coach doesn't care that I drink or,
or he's the coach who lets me drink. I've, I've seen so many people.
Yeah. If we said you couldn't.
Yeah. Like, like I would like, if I had it my way, I would literally just lock you in a cage and feed
you every meal for 30 days. And, and, you know, it'd be the best weight loss program ever.
I legit want to do stuff like that. Like obviously not lock in a cage, but it's so
like, there's just too many people out there that are like, no matter what I do, I can't lose weight.
I'm like, okay, well, this should be a TV show where I get six to eight of you in a house.
Put it somewhere nice.
I don't care.
We do the workouts.
We do the food.
Go to bed on time.
You meditate.
You do whatever the hell you want to do.
But I'm going to, I'm going to prove to you that you can lose weight because I'm going to see your
every move. And that's people's issue is they have no idea what they're doing. They just make
mistakes and they don't realize it, or they just kind of willfully ignorant about it. So I want to,
I want to lock people in a house and prove them wrong yeah i want to lock them in
a cage not really but i you know that's why i work with all these all my friends who are still
coaches and trainers and we have these hilarious discussions about like yeah i i guarantee you uh
if i locked you in a shed and you know yeah just gave you a barbell and three meals a day of rice chicken and
whatever fucking vegetable you wanted yep uh you would have incredible results but you would hate
it but you'd be done with it and i know but at least they would know at least they would know
oh crap okay it does work maybe it is something I'm doing wrong. That's the biggest
thing for me. And this is probably like, I don't know, some issue I have is like,
I want to be right about this. And I want to show you that I'm right about it because
it's going to make your life better. It will be a painful, but very revealing experience.
Yeah. It's like you don't get to 250 pounds by making the right food decisions. You don't get
there and stay there by eating 1,200 calories. You do by eating 1,200 calories some days during
some hours of the day, but you're probably eating 3,000 most of the time and you just don't know it.
So true. If your goal is fat loss, you should see results in a
manner of weeks. If you don't address potential oversights instead of staying the course, why?
Because staying the course means heading in the wrong direction for longer. Finding a new course
is where the results are. I agree. I think that weight loss can take time, but I think it leaves, even slow weight loss leaves
clues and you should know very quickly if you are in a deficit or if you're not.
And I think a lot of people, you know, they don't, they don't want to count calories,
but they want to, they know they need to be in a deficit.
And you post, you posted something the other day.
I don't have it here.
Like you got to pick two.
Like these are the, these are the other day. I don't have it here. You got to pick two. These are the six things. And I'd like to kind of close with that. For people that are listening, what are the highest leverage, longest leverage? Do these things if you refuse to track and you refuse to follow a training program and you, but you want things that are
really long levers that really work. Yeah. So I posted this maybe last week or something.
I called it the pick two plan for easy fat loss. Like, because right. There's, there's people that
don't want to track things, which I understand. Like I still, like, if someone's like, I don't
want to track, I'm like, well, let me show you the value of it. And then you can decide,
because I think people are too quick to say they don't want to track because they think it's harder and more pain in the ass than it is. But the value of data like cannot be ignored. It is so valuable with this stuff. But again, I understand people don't want to do it. So I thought of things like, like the alcohol, like try, like try this for 45 days,
pick, pick any two, no alcohol, uh, eat out 50% of the time that you do now eliminate stacking
completely because a lot of people just snack and they don't even realize it happens. Um,
walk 10,000 steps again, an arbitrary number. There's nothing magic about 10,000, but it's
probably more than the average person is doing now. Um 30 to 45 grams of fiber every day. 45 is probably a lot, but see what happens.
No eating with TV, computer, or phone. Again, distracted eating. For some reason,
they did a study on this. They paid to actually prove that people eat a lot more when
they're distracted um i'm not surprised i love those ones those studies that you're just like
oh wow i'm so fucking glad we wasted money proving what i what clearly we already do right
like a study when people drink they're more violent like oh yeah yeah we we know um and then
or eat like 30 to 45 grams of
protein in every meal that you have. So there's just a bunch of little things that kind of are
related to like excess calories being consumed or hunger not being addressed. And if you do these
things and you improve activity in some way, like it becomes easy. And I just think the average person is just forgetting some of the basics and
they're going right towards these restrictive,
silly diets that we argue against all the time.
I agree. I loved that post. That's a, that's one that I, when I saw it,
I was like, Oh man, I've, I've tried,
I have tried to articulate that same sentiment many times and just haven't been able to do it
that well. Just pick a couple of things. Maybe you don't want to do all the things that you think you
need to do. So just pick a few and maybe you do a few for 45 days and then you're like, oh,
I'm going to have a couple of drinks now. And then you go to a different thing.
Yeah. You can just recycle through flipping two two on
and two off but you're right it's hard to be operating at a place where you're doing two of
those even just two and simultaneously like gaining fat and i look at those habits and i'm like i don't
do anything fucking special at all but i do all of those have those are the habits that i do i don't do anything fucking special at all but i do all of those have those are the habits that i do i don't do a damn thing on top of that yeah but i do those which which again i've kind of backed
my way into this by virtue of a lot of fortune and i feel empathetic for people who struggle
with their weight you know we make these jokes about locking you in a shed or putting you on a reality show.
But the truth is, I think a lot of what people...
People know what they need to do.
They just need to be gently guided to finding a routine that's palatable enough to help them do it.
And I think that being a more real and being a little bit more potentially pessimistic,
but cut and dry for sure, I think the industry needs a little bit more potentially pessimistic, but cut and dry for sure.
I think the industry needs a little bit more of that. And I think we got a little too soft.
So I'm glad we got to talk today, Mike. I appreciate your time and your wisdom and
all of your contributions. And I'm going to get you 100,000 followers with how much I share your
shit because I think I share two to three years years a week you're probably my favorite my favorite uh short form content creator in the
space so i'm happy to have the chance to chat brother yeah dude this is great and i think
you're going to be at the conference uh aram's conference in march is it yeah i think i'm going
to go i'm going to go there yeah i'd love to meet you in person and not take you out for a drink
yeah yeah just
chill and sip on some water or protein shake or something yeah that's it all right brother
thanks a bunch all right dan talk soon