Habits and Hustle - Episode 203: Sal Di Stefano, Part 3 - Host of Mindpump Podcast, an Author, and Fitlosopher
Episode Date: January 3, 2023Sal Di Stefano is a Host of Mindpump Podcast, an Author, and Fitlosopher. After being on the podcast a number of times and being friends with Jen you'd wonder what they'd have to talk about still, but... with time only comes deeper more specific conversations. Sal and Jen get into it about supplements, fasting, specific routines, diet, sleep, and every other buzzword spinning around the health and fitness space. Voicing their own personal distaste for the fads and explaining exactly what has worked for them and others around them. Needing the knowledge of two absolute experts who have made themselves "bio-hacking" guinea pigs through every trend in the industry? Wanting people to cut through the bs and finally be honest about achieving fitness goals? These two don't hold back. Check it out! To check out a few episodes visit travischappell.com/show Find out Jen's secret to getting anything you want out of life 👉 https://www.jennifercohen.com/the-secret-to-getting-anything-you-want-in-life Mindpump - https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/sal-bio ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Did you learn something from tuning in today? Please pay it forward and write us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts. 📧If you have feedback for the show, please email habitsandhustlepod@gmail.com 📙Get yourself a copy of Jennifer Cohen’s newest book from Habit Nest, Badass Body Goals Journal. ℹ️Habits & Hustle Website - http://habitshustle.com 📚Habit Nest Website - https://habitnest.com/ 📱Follow Jennifer - Instagram - https://instagram.com/therealjencohen - Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/therealjencohen - Twitter - https://twitter.com/therealjencohen - Jennifer’s Website - https://jennifercohen.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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All right guys we made it. We made it to 2023. Happy new year. This is going to be the best one yet.
I'm not a big person in these new year resolutions because I don't ever believe in waiting
till January 1st. ever believe in waiting till January
1st, I believe in starting right away.
Finally, my book, Bigger Better Bolder, has been out now for probably a week and I want
to say thank you to everybody who pre-ordered it because it debuted at number one in business
and I am just so grateful and thankful for you guys.
I really do believe that we all can be more bold and show up in our life in
it real way with a little introspection, a little self-awareness, and we can design whatever
we want for ourselves. I believe in creating a rich life, and that's not just money you guys.
That's about relationships, meaningful relationships, meaningful experiences. Now if we're not
born being bold, you can learn being bold. I have a workbook in the back of the book. So it
keeps people accountable and you see yourselves getting bolder by doing these little bold moves.
So we are not just acquiescing to a good enough life, but we're actually really going after
and chasing the life we want.
Want this to be a two-way conversation.
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everyone. Let's make it the best one yet. I got this Tony Robbins you're listening to Habits in Hustle.
Crash it.
Alright you guys we are starting 2023 off strong alright our first January episode is with
one of my favorite people one of the hosts of Mind Pump podcast.
Sal Distifano.
Now when I say we're whole we're strong, I mean both literally and figuratively.
This guy is just a wealth of knowledge in the fitness space.
I mean, you can't really ask him anything that he doesn't like go down in the weeds, deep,
deep down.
I mean, the guy is so well researched and so knowledgeable. I love
having him on the podcast. This is now going to be his probably third time on, but he's a very
good friend of habits and hustle. I'm a very good friend of mine, Pump. I am so excited for you guys
to listen to this podcast. We cover everything, fitness, nutrition, supplements, and everything in between. Enjoy.
Leave me a review.
Let me know what you think.
And here we go.
This is a very interesting episode.
I'm doing a podcast with one of my favorite people, Sal, I think I've had you on like what
three times now.
I think so.
Is this going to be the third time?
This will be the third time.
This will be the third time.
This will be the third time I've been on the show.
Yes, and I'm looking at your book, but I would have you
on regardless.
Thank you.
So, Sal is one of, I guess, four.
He's a quarter of mind pump.
Yes.
And if you saw him, he actually looks like Wolverine.
Oh, my God.
And we're going to get right into that.
But I have to say, this is, before I even go, like what you look like, if people are just listening,
he looks like Wolverine at its height. I'm actually using the Mind Pump Studio. So this is incredible.
I love the studio. I can get really used to this really fast. This is that unbelievable studio.
And it's basically habits and hustle in the mind pump studio, which I think
I'm going to, like I said, I think I'm going to do this more often.
We can do this like maybe monthly or by monthly.
Oh, you're always welcome here.
Yeah.
One of our favorite people, 100%.
Well, thank you.
I can bring other guests in here and use your studio.
Maybe we'll talk about it.
Doug, is that will that be okay for you?
Yeah, we can talk.
Yeah, okay, I love that.
That's like basically like blowing me off, all right.
No.
Okay, it's okay.
I get it.
Just kidding.
Yeah, it's okay.
But anyway, so I walk in because I was doing an episode on mind pump and now we're swapping
and now Sal is going to be doing an episode of Habits and Hustle.
I see you and I was blown away as usual because you are so ripped.
It's shocking that you're in your 40s.
It's shocking.
You look better than any 21-year-old ever.
Oh, man.
Thank you.
I'm super blushing right now.
No, you're probably on the Liver King diet.
For those of you who don't know,
Liver King got busted for being taking,
like, he's this guy only eats liver
and he was busted for
recently. Take your hell as steroids and get blown out.
HGH for 20,000 or 15,000 dollars worth of HGH a month. And I think you do it
like you do it naturally. Yeah, mostly I've been on testosterone replacement therapy
for two years. So when I was younger, I got into fitness
for a lot of the same reasons a lot of people do, right?
A lot of insecurities about my body
and wanted to change how I looked.
And that led me to some unhealthy practices.
And that's kind of the journey through fitness, right?
When you first get into it,
I think a lot of people do it for vanity reasons
or insecurities, but if you stick to it long
enough, you start to develop better relationship or you have to, right?
Or you'll end up hurting yourself.
Well in my maybe late 20s, during this time, there was like this gray market in the supplement
space for what they call pro hormones, but they weren't.
They were actually designer steroids.
I didn't know this at the time.
I just knew that they worked, but they called them pro hormones. And I took them and they worked. And I think that period of time might
have done some damage to my hormone system. So once I hit like late 30s, early 40s, I
started noticing just like just changes. Like I just my energy was low. I wasn't feeling
good. And then consider I'm a fitness expert. so I've been working out, I eat right,
I get good sleep, I take the right supplements,
I was optimizing everything,
but I was just kind of not feeling like myself,
and I was telling my wife,
I don't feel like myself, I don't know what's going on,
but I never really got my hormones tested
because my libido was okay, so I always thought
low testosterone meant libido would be in the tank.
Well, my libido was okay, so I never thought, testosterone, libido would be in the tank. Well, my libido was okay.
So I never thought, well, maybe my testosterone's low.
So I just kind of went along with that.
Well, anyway, we, you know, because of the podcast mind pump,
lots of companies approach us wanting to work with us.
And we've been getting these hormone replacement facilities
wanting to work with us because this is a big issue now,
especially with men,
testosterone levels have been declining for decades.
Testosterone replacement therapies becoming more and more, I guess you'd be with us, it's
something that you're seeing more men actually need because their levels are low.
And so these companies kept approaching us and we kept turning them down because we weren't
really interested.
Well, one of them said, hey, we'll give you guys free hormone tests just so we can talk with you guys. And so we said, what the hell? I haven't
got my hormone levels checked ever. So let's go do this. So we all got our hormone levels
checked. And to my surprise, it was actually quite devastating. My numbers came back super
low. How low? My total testosterone was 247. So to give you an example, the range of would be considered normal is like from 300 to 1000.
Okay. Now here I am, workout, lift weights, eat right, get good sleep, try to optimize everything.
And my levels were so low that a general practitioner would even put me on testosterone.
Wasn't like they were kind of low. It was like at a range.
Were you still at that point? Were you still, at that point,
were you still able to build muscle?
I mean, I had this base of muscle that I had built.
So remember, I had been lifting weights
to size 14.
So, I mean, I was definitely stronger than the average person.
I had optimized everything else.
By the way, this goes to show just how much you can
optimize your life through other means.
Because I was still functioning, I was still doing work.
I definitely didn't feel like myself, but I was able to do to live my life.
Well, anyway, when that number came back, I was super devastated, called my wife.
I was so upset.
I'm like, how can this be?
I do all this stuff.
I work out.
So I talked to the doctor, tried changing things to see if it could affect it
but I'd already been doing everything right I guess and
It didn't really budge too much and because I'd already been you know
I'm already in my I'm already 40 at the time. I'd already had my kids or whatever. I said you know what?
Low testosterone is really bad for your health
I've already done all the stuff that I can do to optimize my testosterone. It's still low. At this point, if I don't supplement with exogenous testosterone,
I'm actually going to, I can potentially suffer consequences like higher rates of heart disease,
cancer, dementia, that kind of stuff. So I went on testosterone replacement there. So I've been on
that now for the last few years. and through the facility I work with,
now they work with us as a company.
I've also tried peptides, which is a very interesting segment,
going on testosterone or peptides.
The peptides.
Peptides are interesting.
So I tried, there's a few of them that I tried.
Oh wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
we should test testosterone now, by the way, now being.
Oh, so when I do my testosterone injection, it'll peak, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait Exogist testosterone? Is it, it helps? What is that? What is that from outside the body?
Right, so it's not my own.
Is it bio-addedicol though?
I mean, molecularly identical.
It's not from a human cadaver.
It's synthetic, but it's identical to testosterone.
Well, because they always talk about bio-identical
is the best versus another kind.
So I don't know much about this.
I don't think they do that with testosterone.
Oh, they do.
I do know that there's markets for that with like
progesterone and estrogen, I believe.
But I'm not super versed on it.
So I don't want to comment too much
because I don't want to mislead anybody.
Well, no, I'm because what I want,
I think this is a very hot topic
because of hormones in general, super hot topic.
And you're a great person to talk to about this
because I have questions about myself, however,
what I find interesting is someone like you,
like you said, who's optimizing everything
that you would have a higher level of testosterone
and you still don't, what does that mean?
What are the factors that you think are environmentally,
potentially lowering that testosterone?
Well, for me, the best clue that I have is that period of time, and I'd say my late 20s
when I was using over-the-counter designer steroids.
Yeah, that we were saying.
Yeah, so again, they were marketed as pro-hormones.
A real pro-hormone is like DHA, right?
It's a hormone that through three or four steps can be turned into other hormones.
Through three or four steps can be turned into other hormones
steroids are
Derivatives of testosterone that act directly on the angiogen receptor, okay, so testosterone then there's steroids that are
molecular least changed to be
Maybe less angiogenic more anabolic or have different characteristics So you'll see like steroids that are better for endurance some are better for power
Muscle growth that kind of stuff, right? So what they did during
this period of time and the supplement space was at the time we had laws that made selling
steroids illegal. However, the way that they specified what was illegal was they were very specific.
So what supplement companies did, which was very smart, I guess, from a business standpoint,
is they went back and they went to pharmaceutical companies that researched steroids that then
decided not to bring them to market.
Because they had never been put on market, because they were never really technically available,
they were never explicitly made illegal.
So these companies were allowed to sell them in this kind of gray market and they marketed them as pro hormones with names like Superdrawal, Metal One Testosterone, Haladrawal, like I'm
naming a few of these right.
But now I know they were actually steroids that I bought over the counter.
And they worked, of course.
And so I think that that might have damaged
my hormone system. And it didn't show up until I hit about 40 or started getting to 40.
And I don't think that would have happened had I not done that because again, I lead a healthy
fit lifestyle. So. Well, I'm only asking, I'm asking for a lot of people. Because I think it's a very
one of these questions that people are asking themselves
a lot, that they're why they're not gaining much,
like why they're not, they work out
and they're not getting the, the lean muscle mass
that they would or they're,
or they're libido or whatever,
and especially in your forties, right?
And, and also me too, by the way,
so like I, I live weights,
I do all the things that my testosterone is very low.
Do you think there's a difference for a woman or a man?
So this is kind of an interesting topic
because there's a range of what's considered normal.
Right.
Then there's what's best for you.
That's partially based off of your symptoms
and how you feel.
And that could be based off of things
like Androgen receptor density.
So like you could be a man with lower testosterone,
but have such high Androgen receptor density that that lower testosterone is
acting like higher testosterone. Or you could be a man who is his his
normal levels of testosterone were really high. Then they go down.
There's still not so low that you that you would be qualified as low testosterone,
but they're lower than that what they normally are, so you're not feeling like you used to.
But I do want to be very clear before we continue, because I don't want to give the wrong
idea.
Hormones usually are a reflection of your health, okay?
So if you improve your health, you tend to get a balanced, healthy hormone profile. And what you don't want
to do is mask poor health or mask symptoms through taking hormones. So like, let's say I
was getting shitty sleep or I had a crappy diet or I was overtraining or I didn't work
out and I had low testosterone. And then I go take testosterone. Like yeah, I'll start
to feel better, but I'm not really fixing the low testosterone. And then I go take testosterone. Like yeah, I'll start to feel better,
but I'm not really fixing the root cause.
And my health isn't getting necessarily improved.
In my circumstance, I was doing everything right.
And it was the testosterone itself was the issue.
But I also wanna be clear, when you go on testosterone
replacement therapy, it's not exactly the same
as your normal natural
hormones. Not because the hormone isn't the same, but just, you know, when you take an injection,
it's testosterone, which is how most men will take it. Your levels go up very quickly in 24-48
hours peak and then they slowly start to decline until your next injection. Testosterone levels don't
work like that naturally. A man's testosterone tends to peak in the morning, drop a little bit at night, it goes higher,
sometimes lower at other times. Because I'm on exogenous testosterone, if I lose sleep
or I do something, you know, that's not good for my health, my testosterone is still going
to be high. Or at the end of the week, it's going to be low because I have to wait for
my next, you know next dose of testosterone.
So I basically, the message I'm trying to say here
is ideally you wanna do things the right, the natural way.
Ideally you wanna be healthy, you wanna be fit,
and then you wanna your hormones to reflect that.
In the event that that's not happening,
then Western medicine can really provide you
with some good answers because what you don't want is you don't want to be
a healthy, quote unquote, healthy male,
also have low testosterone because that low testosterone
now by itself can cause some health risk.
Just like with low thyroid or any other hormone.
So do you think overtraining can lower your testosterone?
Oh, right away.
Yeah, if you lose sleep, there were some studies that I talked about on the show where I think
two nights of bad sleep can lower testosterone like 30%.
Over training, too much stress can lower testosterone.
More, too much cardio.
Can cardio wreak havoc on someone's body as they age?
Definitely.
Yeah, lots of any type of exercise, too much exercise in general.
Lots of cardiovascular exercise can lead to lower testosterone
because it tends to tell the body to pair muscle down
to make you a more efficient cardio machine.
So if you want like lots and lots of like long distance
endurance, you don't necessarily want a lot of muscle.
You want to kind of be light and you want muscles
that aren't strong, but have a lot of stamina. You want to kind of be light and you want muscles that aren't strong But have a lot of stamina and so what you'll find is when you when you're pushing towards lots of endurance and stamina
Let's say you do lots of long distance running your body will organize its hormones to make you better at endurance running
And that usually looks like lower testosterone levels
So do would you say then probably endurance athletes and like people who do these ultra
marathon's, marathon's, times of long distance running?
Would you say though that category of people probably do have a lower testosterone?
If they were to switch to strength training, more strength training, less of that long
distance type of training, then you would see typically their testosterone levels rise because
they're telling the body to build muscle through the strength training. Also, we have to be careful
because when we talk about extreme athletes or high level athletes, when you're training for
high performance, you're moving out of the realm of health, right? Because there's health and then
there's high performance. So like, you know, a proboscopal player is an incredible
athlete, but they're not the picture of health.
Now, if you compare them to the average couch potato,
they are, but-
No, it's such a, you know what, that is so true, right?
Because then you're playing in a different category.
It's extreme.
It's extreme.
So nothing extreme is good for you.
No, not for longevity.
A lot for longevity.
No, no, I do, now there now there's some caveats here, right?
Which is life quality also and enjoyment.
So the way that I personally train
is I place much more, if not most of my emphasis
on strength training and muscle building.
And I know that there's, I could add more cardiovascular training,
I could add more mobility training
to give me better longevity,
but because I enjoy it so much,
there's also that life quality and satisfaction.
So it's like, having the glass of wine,
like okay, it's having some glasses of wine,
is it great for my physiological health?
No, probably not, but sometimes it's okay for your psychological health and enjoying yourself
in the moment.
So you also want to balance that out because you can get so extreme in the longevity
sphere where you're like, you know, I eat very little, I don't overstress my body, I
only do moderate exercise, I don't argue with anyone, I get no stress, I don't do anything
like outside of this little bubble.
So it's a, it's a, it's a definitely a nuanced conversation.
But yeah, if you talk about extreme performance in any direction, you're not talking about
longevity.
You've moved out of longevity.
And now you're, you're, you're definitely trading longevity for performance.
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Well, I wanted to circle back and I want to forget about the question I asked you about
peptides.
Yes.
How do you think pet pet, but what are peptides to people who don't know?
Can you, can you try is peptides in replacement of like a testosterone hormone?
What do they do for you?
So peptides are not, or not, they don't replace your hormones.
Peptides cause, they can cause hormonal or biochemical actions in the body.
Next simulation.
Yes, they are designed to act on certain receptors.
So like, for example, Ibuda moron is a gruelin agonist,
so it mimics the hormone gruelin.
Why would you want to do that?
Well, because then it stimulates growth hormone.
So taking Ibuda moron will raise your growth hormone levels.
Does it actually work?
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Here's another gray market, by the way.
You can go online and buy peptides and then administer them yourself at your own risk.
I do not think that's a good idea.
These have real effects in the body.
You need to work with a doctor, a physician who does your blood work who tests you.
For example, if you do like a growth hormone releasing peptide and you think, oh, it's
a peptide, I bought online, what's the big deal? It's not actual growth
hormone, right? You could still affect insulin sensitivity, right? You could still potentially
give yourself problems because too much growth hormone can cause insulin insensitivity, right?
And if you're predisposed to like pre-dibities, then you probably don't want to take those types of peptides, right?
There's this whole category of peptides that are really interesting, or there's a whole slew
of peptides that are really interesting.
I've messed with a few of them for the podcast sake, just to be able to talk about them.
For example, there's one called, this one's a funny one, it's called PT141, I think is
the name of it.
Oh, I don't know that one.
I know one two. BPC PT141, I think is the name of it. Oh, I don't know that one.
I know one two.
BPC157, I think.
That one's more for recovery.
Healing your joints, stuff like that.
There's another one that everyone was taking,
Joe Rogan take a bunch of them for CJC.
CJC, 12 A.
Yeah, something with 12, 9 or something like that.
Something like that.
That raises growth hormone.
Yeah, but I took it for two weeks because of my dog like my we we I have a doctor friend
He's like try this. It's amazing. I thought I was like retaining water. It will make you retain water
Really? I'm like I'm getting fat. Yeah raising growth hormone will make you hold the little water for sure
So the how is so this is not something that's a panacea for everybody. Number one. No, that has real effects on the body.
But no, what I mean is, are these things good for men,
but not great for women?
It depends on the person.
I don't want to hold water.
Yeah, well, some people like holding a little water.
Like if you're trying to build muscle,
some water retention is good.
You get better pumps, muscles contract harder,
you increase your strength a little bit.
Some women can't close your pants.
That was my side effect.
Well some women like a little water retention because it makes their faces look fuller,
maybe not as gone, especially if they're super lean.
I should belly look bigger.
Maybe, right?
So, I mean, it depends.
And I don't, I like to do self experimentation.
I don't do any of this without my doctor looking at experimentation. I don't do any of this without, you know, my doctor looking at certain things and I do part of this for the podcast.
Would I recommend this to clients? Here's what I would say to a client. Like, how's your diet?
How's your exercise? How's your sleep? Like, if those things aren't great, like, don't waste your time,
you know, messing with this kind of stuff because it's not gonna really help you But some of them are interesting like the one I was telling you PT-141
It was designed to act like
Melanin and so melanin I think I'm saying right is the hormone that darkens your skin
So if you inject this you could get you get like a little bit of a tan over time
Without having to go out in the sun. What's that's what it was made for. The side effect of it was a libido boost,
especially in women.
So how do you think they market this peptide?
How?
To women for libido boost.
Hold on a minute.
Is that really true?
That's what the literature says.
And I tried it and it definitely works.
It does?
It did for me.
I know Adam mess with a little bit.
He said it worked for Katrina. So I mean, it's fun, interesting stuff. I should try that. I know Adam mess with a little bit. He said it worked for Katrina.
So I mean, it's fun, interesting stuff.
I should try that.
I want to try it.
So look into it.
Again, work with it.
What's it called?
I think it's PT-141, I think is the name of it.
But you want to work with a doctor and make sure.
And again, these are all like.
And so basically it raises your libido,
but it's supposed to make you look tanned over time.
That's the reason why it was originally developed.
But that's like a lot of these things.
Like do you know about ozampic?
No, what is that?
You don't know about, oh my god,
I'm going to school you, my dear.
What is it?
So ozampic is a drug that it's basically this too,
it's wagovie and ozampic.
And it's a diabetes drug, but it's become a craze
in Hollywood and in life, for weight loss.
People are losing an exorbitance amount of weight.
This is a pressure appetite.
It basically gives you that feeling of being full.
Gas, it's basically, you're not able to eat as much because you're full.
Now, the side effects are nausea, headaches, diarrhea, or constipation. There's so many side effects,
but the results are people are losing a lot of weight. And it's based on this one thing. It's called
what's the drug? It's the same, ozempic is the same as a wagovie,
the main thing in it.
There's one drug right now that's being marketed for.
Yeah, you must know it, hold on a second.
I gotta pull it out.
I'm gonna put it out.
I invested in a company that actually makes that drug.
Is this Samaritan?
Samaritan.
Yeah, I think that might be it.
Yeah, what's it got to say?
I'm gonna look it up to make sure
that I'm not wrong here.
Okay, the main thing in it is, no,
semoglutide.
Oh, semoglutide.
Yeah, it's SSSSS.
Semoglutide.
Sorry, semarolin was something else.
You're right.
Yeah.
And so it became, it's become like a great,
everyone's talking about it.
So it literally is a diabetes drug
to like kind of balance out your insulin.
And everyone's, a lot of people, I shouldn't say everyone,
and it's a lot of controversy over it.
I'm always very careful when I talk about this stuff
because I've been doing this for so long, Jen.
I've been training myself since I was a kid,
training other people for a long time too.
So I've been, you know, I trained clients and,
you know, ran gyms and I trained trainers for almost two and a half
decades.
I understand that the real benefits you get from exercise are not the cosmetic effects.
Right, the vanity.
Oh, yeah.
You get from, yes, there's health benefits and all that stuff, but really how you feel
you're psyche, the journey and the process is where you gain some of the benefits.
And so like, even if they invented a pill that gave you all the physical results of exercise,
you still wouldn't get the benefits, the same benefits of exercise.
So even if you could take a pill and know I'm rich, but I don't have to work out or do
anything, you still are, it's like, it'd be like being dropped off on the top of Mount
Everest, you know, you didn't climb it.
You got a nice view. Exactly. But it's like, it'd be like being dropped off on the top of Mount Everest. You know, you didn't climb it. You got a nice view.
Exactly.
But it's not the same.
So I'm always very careful.
Plus also, I'm careful to talk about this stuff
because people think even steroids,
even anabolic steroids, okay?
And we know how powerful they are.
They're banned in every athletic organization
and whatever.
When you look at anabolic steroids effects
versus hard work, exercise, eating right,
getting good sleep, discipline,
throwing some genetics in there.
Steroids is like 3%.
It's like 3% compared to all this other stuff.
So supplements, peptides, all those other things,
they can be beneficial when added to a formula that's
really good and balanced and working.
They're enhancers, that's what it is.
Yes, otherwise, they don't do a whole lot.
It's like the average person listening right now is struggling to lose 20 or 30 pounds
or the guy who's like, man, I have no energy.
I don't feel good or whatever.
And they're listening right now.
The answer isn't not in any of the stuff that we're talking about.
No, I agree.
That's fine.
I think to me, the way that is like,
that's fine tuning or enhancing sometimes.
Yeah.
But this is the way I want to talk to you about.
Because I could tell you, by the way,
not to interrupt you, but I could tell you specifically
what the differences were with between low testosterone
and high testosterone.
Because nothing else changed for me.
I exercised like I did before.
My diet is still good, like it was before.
I sleep is good. All the stuff is the same. The only difference is I went from low testosterone
to high testosterone. I can tell you exactly what the difference is. It is.
About 11 pounds of muscle and I'm burning about six to 700 more calories a day because of the
added muscle. So that's a fashion metabolism. But that's it. So about 11 pounds of muscle.
That's it, that's a lot.
It sounds like a lot, right?
But I'm a big guy.
So 11 pounds is like, for me,
it's like, I go from 200 to 211.
Okay, so.
Yeah, but look at your muscle mat.
Sure.
And your lean muscle mat.
I mean, you don't have, it's like, you're defined.
So this is what I was gonna say.
You're like, you're in a different category
because you know what you're doing.
You're optimizing everything.
I want to talk about the most, like a lot, most people.
Let's say they have 10 pounds to look.
Most people as, you know, in middle age
or when they, you know, people who are just naturally
or they are taking care of themselves,
they are working out, they are watching what they eat,
they're doing all the basics, right?
And they still have 10 pounds, five 10 pounds.
To me, that's the hardest, that's the hardest part
to lose, that's the hardest part to focus on.
I think it's easier when you have 30 pounds to lose, right?
Cause, and you're not doing everything, right?
It's for the people who are doing everything, right?
And they still can't lose that last 10 or they've gained it because of circumstance,
like just life, you know, age, whatever. What kind of advice or what can people do to
fine tune and to kind of tweak their lifestyle habits to lose that last five or 10 hours.
That's a really good question
because I know, I've worked with lots of clients
and that is a really frustrating position to be in
because it's not like, like you said,
like, oh, I gotta lose 30 pounds,
I'm not exercising, meaning like garbage.
It's like, I'm doing all the stuff.
Why?
And really doing the stuff, not lying, though.
What's going on?
There's two ways to look at this,
or two avenues you could look at
in terms of the solution for this.
One is to work harder at what you're doing,
and the other one is to work smarter at what you're doing.
In this particular scenario,
now if I'm talking to the average person
who's not exercising, it's work harder.
Like, all right, get up and move, right?
You're not doing anything. We're not talking about that person. When I'm talking to the average person who's not exercising, it's work harder. Like, all right, get up and move, right? You're not doing anything.
Right. We're not talking about that.
When I'm talking about this person, the answer is almost never to work harder. They're already
doing that. They're already pushed. In fact, they've probably already pushed that button
to work harder so many times and are frustrated because they're getting minimal results. It's
almost always, they're not efficient enough. They're not effective enough with the time that they are spending working out, or they're
not effective enough with their diet or their sleep, or there's a piece that's missing
there.
And it usually is their workout.
Usually what they're doing with their workout is they're doing more and more and more,
trying to burn more and more and more calories, and they're not focused enough on teaching their body to burn more calories on its own.
They're not focused enough on, it's like this, it's like, okay, I'm making so much money,
okay, and I'm working 60 hours a week, and I want to become wealthy.
Do I work 100 hours a week?
Okay, now what?
Now I'm stuck.
How do I keep making more money?
Or I could say, is there a way I could take the money that I'm making and invest it in a way so that it makes more money forming?
So that's how you want to think when you're at this point. When you're at this point here,
where you've got that last 10 pounds and you're doing all this work, don't think how much
more can I do? Think how can I do this in a way that's much more effective? And one of
the most effective possible things you could do, especially when it comes to getting leaner, is to build some muscle.
Build some muscle because muscle is money in,
it's like invested money.
It burns calories for you.
It makes the fat loss easier because it speeds up
your metabolism.
So typically when I look at somebody's routine,
I'll take their total workout and I'll say,
okay, how much time are you devoted to workouts
that don't build muscle?
Let's take that away.
Let's devote it more towards building muscle
or maybe you're working out so much
that your body can build muscle
because you're over training.
And let's cut some of that,
give your body some rest,
feed you a little bit more protein
and see if we can build some muscle.
And then what happens is you start to get compounding effects.
Okay, so Sal said, I'm working out five days a week,
but four days a week of his running,
one day a week is lifting weights.
He said lift a weight three days a week
and only run twice a week.
Yeah, let me do that.
Okay, nothing's happening yet, but I'm feeling stronger,
I'm feeling stronger.
Oh, wait a minute, I think I'm starting to get leaner.
Oh, wow, look, this is starting to accelerate.
As the muscle comes on the body,
you get the compounding effects of getting leaner.
So in those cases, it's almost,
and that's just one example,
and I gave you an example that's the most common, I would say.
But in most cases, I'll look at someone's workout
and they're either doing too much,
or they're doing the wrong kind of workouts.
And then in which case, I'll leave a scale it back
or change our workouts to make a more efficient,
more time efficient.
More efficient.
But that goes back to the whole thing
that you said earlier, right?
Like you're gonna do the thing you like the most
and the thing you don't like, you're not gonna wanna do.
So it's about quality of life too, right?
Yes.
If someone's someone who doesn't love to lift heavy weight and they really love tennis and dancing and cardio, right? Yes. If someone's someone who doesn't love to lift heavy weight, and they really love tennis and
dancing and cardio, right, they're going to go do that.
So it's better to do that than to something that you have, or then versus doing nothing.
Well, you're talking about, I think, is the best answer, which is, you know, we get this
question sometimes, it's like, you know, I haven't found a career that i love or how do i because you know
people say oh you guys love what you do so much like the key is to to to do
what you love that way you never work it in your life no no the key is to
learn how to love what you do that's the key like if you can do that
then you're then you're doing great. So in this particular example, okay, I want to lose this last 10 pounds, but I love dance.
And that's how I work out.
It sells as I lift more weights, but I don't want to lift more weights.
I like to do dance.
Learn to love your body the way it is.
It's the, I want my cake and eat it too type of deal.
Like, I get that.
I get that we want everything.
But I think many times, and again, especially
in this category of people that we're talking about, because I think fitness fanatics in
this category can be especially harsh with their self-criticism.
Many times, I can't tell you how many times, Jen, people are like, oh, I can't lose that
extra 10 pounds, and I look at them, and I'm like, you look amazing.
I don't think you see what other people see.
I think you might be a little harsh on yourself.
Like learn to love and accept the body that you have
and learn to love and accept the way
that you enjoy working out.
And okay, so you don't have an extra quarter inch
on your arms if you're a guy.
You don't have that fine, you're not,
15% body fat, but maybe you're, you know, 17%
but you're doing all this amazing stuff. Like, you know, I think it's probably better
long term for long term happiness, which is, I mean, what else could you possibly want? But that,
right? To just be happy with what you're doing and the way you look.
Easier said than done, speaking. Like, look at you, right? Like we, you're, uh,
you know why I shake my head at you, right? Like we, you're, uh,
you know why I shake my head when you say that?
Yeah.
Let me ask you this, you're in the fitness space, okay?
You know our space very well.
Some of the most fit looking ripped people,
you probably find some of the hardest,
most challenging body image issues.
I, I, I want to say that that's why I'm asking these questions
for a friend.
No, I love that.
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I feel like we are the hardest and most critical, you know, like because you've trained so much
that you notice every nuance
and see every imperfection.
But most people aren't in the category
of fanatical fitness people, right?
Where it's like you and I, where we do it a lot,
we've been doing it for a whole life.
And so we notice this nook, this cranny,
how this can be better, how this,
I'm talking about people who maybe not at that level,
even maybe above average in like activity,
who are struggling, who are doing all the weight lifting,
and who are doing all those things,
and still not getting a result that they want.
How much of it is not training just on nutrition?
Are there like key factors? People should be
focusing on that they're not. I'm a big like you. I believe in protein is super important
for building, building muscle. What's your take on protein that's not animal protein
and what some key tricks that people can do on the on the nutrition side that can help
With fat loss, you know, okay, so nutrition is a great topic
because it's by far
the most nuanced and
This got the hot the greatest degree of individual variance and here's why first off
Now there are some general truths with diet.
So I don't want to be like, it's all up in the air.
No, no, there's some general truths,
and we'll get to those.
But when we're talking about nutrition and diet,
let's kind of dive into why it's so nuanced
and there's such a massive individual variance.
Well, number one, biologically, we're all very different.
I have a microbiome that's quite unique to my body. Physiologically, I don't necessarily
react and respond to food the same way as the next person, like something. So I may eat
something that made me, maybe affects my digestion poor, whereas for them, it feels okay, or
maybe it causes a spike in insulin with me, but to the next person, maybe not so much, maybe a food gives me a little bit more energy, gives
them a little less energy.
This one makes me a little more full, maybe for the other person, it doesn't work so well
for satiety.
So there's all that.
But then let's add in a huge factor, which is the psychological effects and attachments
and connections to food.
Like, what is food?
Yeah, it's proteins, fats, carbs, and calories.
Is that all that food is?
Now, the top 10 reasons why people have nothing to do with fueling their body with proteins,
fats, and carbs.
It has usually to do with enjoyment, celebration, morning, anxiety, stress, boredom, emotional.
Boredoms a big one.
Yes, it could be, I eat this food because traditionally,
this is what I ate when I was a kid
and I have attachment to this particular thing
or I don't like that because one time I got sick
and now I don't like it anymore
when I eat that or whatever, right?
So food is extremely complex when you connect it
to the person, okay?
And you have to consider that when you're trying to talk
about what's gonna work best for me,
what's gonna be the best diet for me?
Now I can talk about what studies say,
it's true that protein produces the most satiety
in the body, meaning it'll fill you up the fastest
and keep you full the longest.
So it's really good for maintaining your calories.
Protein is essential, meaning you have to consume it.
Your body can't make essential amino acids,
you have to eat them.
Fat is also essential, meaning there's certain
essential fatty acids, you have to consume
otherwise you won't feel the thrive.
Carbohydrates, not essential.
You never have to eat a single carbohydrate
that doesn't mean that's ideal, though.
Carbohydrates need to be consumed by a lot of people to have an ideal diet to give them the best energy and the best feel, not stuff. You don't want to overeat, that's a general rule. Eating too much
of anything is bad for you. In fact, eating the right amount negates many of the negative effects
of certain foods. So like sugar, if your cow is low, sugar doesn't have as bad of an effect,
not nearly as bad of an effect on the body.
Same thing with certain fats.
You want to eat in a way to where you develop a good relationship with food.
Like that's a general truth.
Like if you're constantly reaching for food to blunt emotions,
or if you're using food like a drug, okay?
Or if you eat mindlessly or without presence,
that can be an issue, right?
And studies will show this, like if you eat food
in front of the TV or in front of your phone,
you'll consume like 10 to 15% more calories.
Absolutely.
Just on average.
It's also habitual, right?
Because you're used to eating this at that time or you're used to eating this while
you watch TV.
It's like changing those habits.
Yes.
This is going to fly in.
I think this is, this might be controversial, but it's, I'll back it up.
It's, I think it's very true.
Your body knows how to eat healthy.
It knows how to eat in a balanced, healthy way.
The problem is we're so disconnected from our bodies
and we're so disconnected from understanding
all of the values of food,
from an awareness standpoint,
that we don't know how to listen to those signals.
So the path to healthy eating is starts with education,
proteins, fats, carbs, calories, what's the right amount
for my body, from this cognitive standpoint,
what's the right amount of protein,
what, and then from there it's awareness,
what foods make me feel good?
Which ones give me the best digestion?
What's one's affect my skin the best?
Which ones make me feel good? Which ones make me the best digestion. What's one's affect my skin the best? Which ones make me feel good?
Which ones make me feel bad?
Which ones do I reach for when I'm anxious, sad, or stressed?
What foods are hard for me to stop eating, right?
Like bring awareness around that stuff,
and then you can start to develop a more intuitive style
of eating where, like for me, for example,
I crave well-cooked vegetables when my
digestion is off.
Like I crave them, and I didn't start that way.
It started with me becoming aware of my digestion's off.
If I eat well-cooked vegetables, it tends to fix my digestion.
So I started doing that, and then eventually I developed this behavior where that's what
I want when my digestion is off. Yeah.
Yeah.
So, that's kind of the path towards sustainable long-term healthy eating.
And I will add one thing.
If you're looking for a body that looks good, quote unquote, looks good, just try to be
healthy because chasing health results in a body that that looks healthy and that usually looks good if you chase
Looking good you'll oftentimes sacrifice your health in which case then you stopped you stopped looking good
And you can see this with people who are body obsessed at some point that they can't
Take enough substances. They can't do enough plastic surgeries
and everything starts to fall apart.
Or their health goes poorly and then forget all the looks.
So it's really a good North Star, right?
It's a good guiding principle.
It's like, okay, how do I optimize my health with my food?
What does that mean?
I feel good, I feel healthy, I've got good digestion, I sleep well, my skin feels
good, I have good energy.
If you kind of aim towards that, that'll point you in the right direction most of the time
versus what's going to make me look ripped, what's going to make me look good?
Because that often times that body obsession tends to lead us towards sacrificing our health.
And then we end up with nothing.
So you're winding down with a podcast. Sounds like you have no plans to leave the couch tonight.
Nope, you just want to unzip your jeans, slip on a pair of fuzzy slippers,
and rip open a bag of skinny pop popcorn. Because the only place you're going tonight
is the bottom of this bag of popcorn.
Keep coming back. You got plenty of space.
Oof, not how you would have done that.
You like working with people you can rely on by USA, a who has helped guide the military community for the past 100 years.
USA, a get a quote today.
Well, then how, but yeah, I agree with that.
I think I love that saying that you say, though,
that's great.
When you chase health, you chase health,
don't chase aesthetics, and then the rest
will follow kind of thing.
It does.
It does.
Yeah, it was just, you know, you know what,
you know what, it really hit me,
is it while it hit me as a trainer,
cause it was always a better trainer
of my clients than I was myself.
So I was really good with this in my clients
before I really figured this out for me.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, because, I mean,
this is, I think most people, right?
Like, like, you know, talk to therapists, right?
And like, really good with their patients
and they have a lot of issues.
And then they have the most screwed up people at,
exactly.
So, it's so true though, right?
Like whatever you're teaching is usually
you're bad at it yourself.
Yeah, it's something you're working on yourself.
Yeah.
So I was really good.
A lot of trainers become trainers by the way.
And that's a lot of people get into the fitness business
to your point, right?
100%.
So I was really doing my clients with this.
And it just dawned on me.
It's like, oh my god, when I get my clients
to really want to be healthy, they get all the results
they want.
And then they stick.
The results stick because they're valuing the health rather than just the appearance.
It also dawned on me when you look at studies on why we consider certain things attractive.
Why do we consider healthy skin attractive?
Why is there a hip to waist ratio that we tend to universally find attractive?
Why do we find a shoulder to waist ratio?
And man, that's attractive.
You know, why is muscle more attractive than no muscle?
Why is a certain body fat percentage
considered attractive versus too little body fat
or too much body fat?
It's because it's all reflective of health.
Evolutionarily speaking, if you saw somebody, they're these are the signals that you would get to tell you this person is
healthy, is vibrant, is fertile. I want to mate with them or whatever. So there's just
reflections of health. Now we've perverted them all through plastic surgeries and drugs
and stuff like that. It's on such a rise. You know that you can't even,
it's a rise like what, 10,000% plastic surgery,
just based on the fact that,
I think even since COVID,
because so many people are more obsessive,
are obsessing on how they look,
because all they were doing was looking at zooms
of themselves and social media and the filters.
So now people wanna look like the filters,
and if they don't look like the filter,
they think they're ugly.
It makes me sad.
I mean, I have kids, you know.
Yeah.
And it makes me sad because they're growing up in this,
in this world and I suffered from body dysmorphia.
You know, like I said, that's why I started working out.
Do you think you still suffer from it?
Oh yeah, I don't think you get rid of it.
I think you get better with it.
I still, I'm pretty sure I don't see
myself the way that maybe other people do.
Yeah, because you always sound super surprised when I say, oh my God, you look so ripped, you're
so big. And it's like, you're like, what do you mean? Like, you are one of these people
that we're talking about. I 100%. It's definitely something that I don't I wouldn't say I struggle with
anymore But it's there I'm aware of it right I'm aware of it. Well, I'm just aware. I'm aware. I'm aware. You think you look good
I think I'm comfortable. I'm very comfortable in my skin
So do I judge the way I look and say I look good or look bad if I go down that road? I think I could definitely
That the body just more fuel definitely rear its head if I start to go down that road, I think I could definitely, that the body just more feel will definitely rear its head.
If I start to go down that.
So it's just more about being comfortable in my own skin, I guess.
But like if you take your shirt off in the mirror,
are you looking for every imperfection?
I used to.
Now, now, not really so much.
I don't study myself like I used to.
You know when I was a kid,
it's like you're looking in the mirror, like is this changing? Is that changing? What's this
look like? What's that look like? Not really, not anymore. Not studying it, but like I used
to like, you know, in your own off of a podcast, let's say, or like in your own home, are
you ever like, oh, shit, like I have a little bit of my love hand. Oh, like, God, I had
this happen. Like I'm doing it. Like, are you hard on yourself? I had this happen. Like, I'm doing it. Are you hard on yourself?
Don't lie.
Don't lie.
No, that's a good question.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
let me think about that for a second.
Huh, I think I can be, I'm sure I can be.
I haven't been in a while, but I've been on a pretty good role.
So it's hard to say.
I haven't had any like situations where I haven't been able
to work out for a long time.
I'm something like, you know, or.
So when you're consistently, habitually doing what
you're supposed to, you feel good.
Yeah, I do, but I'm not sure which one comes first.
I think part of it is this mental.
Okay, so I, this 100% I'll identify.
It's an exercise very much there, a peter for me, for sure.
If I had an exercise, I'd be tough, a tough person to, to be able to.
Me too. Yeah, so it's definitely very therapeutic for me.
You know, I know it's there, but I think I'm better with it.
I know I'm better with it.
I'm definitely comfortable in my skin because I identify more, less with my body and more
with, like what I do here on the podcast, with being a father and a husband, you know it would bother me the most would be loss of function.
In other words, if I felt weak or if I felt like I couldn't do what I could do before, that would bother me more now than how I looked.
And I think it's because I know what that means. Like, oh my God, I can't do that thing anymore. What if I can't play with my kids or what if I,
but look, here's a deal, Jen.
I'm gonna have to deal with that at some point.
I can't, you know, we all get older.
I should say, if I'm blessed to continue to get older,
I'm gonna have to deal with that as well.
So it's gonna be like, it's, look,
it's a constant game of acceptance always.
It never stops.
I was gonna say, it's like also the,
when you know what you had,
and then you see it, you see yourself losing it.
You're like, what is going on here?
And then it becomes like this, you're chasing youth,
you're chasing perfection.
When you can't, face time, it's fleeting.
You can't stop the clock, right?
So this whole idea of longevity
and biohacking your way to youthfulness.
What is your take on it?
Do you think it's become, it's become so extreme?
As long as it's coming from a healthy place.
It's not, let's be honest.
Yeah, that's the thing.
I think it's doing it out of a healthy place.
People are trying to slow down the clock and stop the aging process.
Yeah, if it's out of rejecting the aging process, I think that's a real.
I think that's a problem.
I agree with you.
I think if it's like, oh, this is going to help maintain my mobility, my independence,
improve my quality of life.
But come on.
How many people are really doing it for those reasons? They're not. I mean, I know that. maintain my mobility, my independence, improve my quality of life. But come on.
How many people are really doing it for those reasons?
They're not.
I mean, I know that.
I think Ben Greenfeld's doing it because he wants to have more
mobility when he's 80.
I don't think so.
I know in our space, especially, I mean,
I know I'm fitness in particular,
not just health, but fitness in particular.
The vast majority of people are doing it
because they want to look good.
Right.
And because they're trying to fill a hole, right?
Or there's an emptiness.
And I'm going to tell you right now,
you're not going to find it.
You ain't going to find it until you learn to accept
yourself and accept, I guess, reality.
So it's just not going to happen.
If you use fitness in that way, fitness
can become very dysfunctional.
Well, also, do these quick fixes or whatever you want to call them actually work?
I mean, I don't know, I have the red light at my house.
I have a stonet at my house.
I have a cold plan jet at my house.
My house looks like a wellness spot.
Yeah.
Okay, and I'm sure like, you know, you're the peptide and the testosterone and the supplements.
I mean, at what, like, how much of this stuff is stuff that basically costs a lot of money and keeps,
basically, it's making the economy millions of dollars, right?
Because everyone's chasing youth.
Yeah.
Look, if you looked at a pie, the pie represented 100, all that stuff is like one or two percent. That's the truth.
Right.
All the 99% is your exercise, mindset, sleep, and diet.
Now, the question should be how much of a difference can exercise diet, sleep, and mindset
make in your life profound.
Profound.
It's the most powerful antidepressant known to man. It's the most...
This is by data, facts, okay. It's the most powerful enziolitic, right? Antanxiety known
to man. It is a vehicle for personal growth. If you follow it and you do it for the right
reasons, you learn acceptance, you learn discipline, you learn about the value of work and effort,
acceptance because you accept your body for what it is
because you're not going to keep going forever.
Once you realize you ain't going to look like
your favorite model, well, you keep going anyway
and you accept that you're your own person.
So it has profound effects,
but more so because it's that journey that you're on.
And it can have those profound effects.
All that other stuff is cool and it can be fun, but it's so small.
Now, the question is, well, why is it talked about all the time?
Because they can sell that.
Yeah, of course, it's actually something that the funnel can send you there.
They can monetize it.
Or they can monetize it.
This is a thing, What works isn't sexy.
You know, at the end of the day,
the things that work are the still the basics.
Yes.
It's exercise, move more, sleep more, eat better.
Like these things, and these things
have no price tag on it.
No, it's free.
No, and it's literally, and the data is very clear on this.
Proper exercise, good diet, good sleep, good spiritual practice.
I want to include that because the spiritual practice has been shown to be profoundly
impactful on mental health and longevity. Okay, it's also shown of and success of life, success of marriage, success as a parent,
just overall.
And then, you know, you could throw mindset in there, I think, you could probably throw in there.
But that's like it right there. I know that sounds like, oh, that's it. Well, that's a lot.
And community, I think, too, is in there, too.
Yeah. Oh, yeah. You're relationships. Thank you.
Or community, like, peeping people around you. Like, that's why have you, you know about the blue zones, right?
And the people who lived the longest are the ones who have like the deepest communities around them.
And honestly, walking was the most most important best exercise by a lifestyle. I agree. I think walking
for a few different reasons. One, most people can still walk and that means that they can, they
they don't have to like learn the technique and skill of it. So the injury rate is low. It's easy,
have to learn the technique and skill of it. So the injury rate is low. It's easy, it's convenient,
and as a result, it's one of those things that people can do on a very consistent basis. So, no, walking is number, it's actually one of the best forms to exercise for those reasons.
And if you add something else to it, strength training. And then you've got...
And then you're good. But yeah, people don't want to hear that. So that's why then
that's why a lot of these like these salesmen, you know, biohackers sell a shitton
and make a bazillion dollars because they can't,
they can't make money off of go walk outside or, you know,
like go, you know, that doesn't sell.
People don't, and I guess my question is,
what is behind the psychology of,
we all know psychologically and intuitively what works.
And yet we're still able to be tricked
and or manipulated or we wanna be tricked.
I know we wanna, we allow the manipulation.
Like I know, like we're having this conversation, right?
About what really works.
And like you and I have done it all, we know it all.
And at the same time, I'm a sucker.
I'll go get that red light.
I'll go do that, cool.
I'll go do all these things.
Why do we still behave and go down those rabbit holes
and those paths, even if we know better?
Yeah, well, you're an efficient auto, right,
with health and fitness.
So for you, it's probably more fun
to try different things. Yeah, besides, you're, you're an aficionado, right, with health and fitness. So for you, it's probably more fun to try different things. Yeah, besides that,
like for me also, I think for the average person, they want to
be lied to, they want to believe that their answer is in a
drug or a device or a special diet, you know, where they just
don't eat this one thing or just eat this thing, they want to
believe it. And they want to be fooled.
People, because the other option requires work time, right?
It takes work and time.
Now, here's the myth.
Here's the lie.
Here's the big lie, right?
The big lie is doing it the right way is hard.
That's not correct. Doing it the wrong way is harder.
Now, you might think it's not harder to sit on your couch, not move, or to eat whatever
you want, or to take some pills, or whatever, but the truth is, it's harder and you'll see.
You'll see how much harder it is to have poor health. You'll see how much harder it is
to not do that work. Right.
So it's a choose your hard.
It's a myth.
It's totally a myth.
And the truth is it's cheaper and easier
to do things the right way.
It just takes people willing to be uncomfortable,
willing to grow into change,
because growth and change come from being uncomfortable.
That's all it takes.
It takes that.
So you have to be willing to do that.
And then when you do it, and you do it consistently, and you do it long enough, and you go on
this journey, you start to just gain all these tremendous, incredible benefits.
But you can't, I mean, I think people just, they want to believe in the lies, because
they don't want to take that step.
They also want to take their responsibility.
I think it's, you know, it's like,
somebody could sit there and say,
wow, it's my fault.
It's my fault that I'm unhealthy.
Or they'd be like, not my fault, it's my genetics.
Or I just, I'm not taking the right supplement.
Or, oh, it's this thing that I'm not doing.
I got to go do this, you know,
shine this light on me and that'll make it happen.
That'll make it, that'll like lean me out.
It'll improve my metabolism.
What do you think of, how much of it you think is genetics?
How much of, how much can you trick your baseline?
So when you think of genetics, think of it this way,
think of a wide range of potential, okay?
So like, from let's say zero to a hundred. Your lifestyle
determines where you fall in that scale. Your genetics determine where that scale is.
So like LeBron James, okay, let's say for basketball skill, the scale is zero to a
thousand, okay. He was probably born with like seven hundred to a thousand, okay? He was probably born with like 700 to a thousand was his range and
mine's somewhere like a hundred to 300.
I would say ten.
Or maybe whatever, right? Well, I can get as good as 300 with hard work and effort and
he can be as bad as 500 or whatever with doing no work and no effort. So yes, you have
your genetics, but you also have this range that you can work with and that's what your
lifestyle does, you know, helps determine. Now my question to people who ask that is,
who cares, what are you gonna do now?
Okay, you got your genetics mean that you can't be super ripped
or you're not gonna be the strongest
or the fastest person, okay?
Like, that's what you got, what are you gonna do now?
Right, that's the cards that were dealt to you.
How are you gonna play that hand? That's it. That's it. That's what you got, what you're gonna do now. Right, that's the cards that were dealt to you. How are you gonna play that hand?
It's this, you can.
That's it, now it's up to you.
Now you got your potential.
Go work with your potential.
And I'm gonna tell you something right now.
Hard work discipline, effort, and growth.
It usually trumps genetics and talent.
Okay, and I'm not talking about the extremes.
Yes, there's people who are like,
so talented, it's ridiculous,
but I know way more super talented losers than, you know,
I know a lot of those people,
and I know people who are like, not very talented,
but through growth, effort, and work,
made a lot out of themselves.
Yeah, you sound like me.
This is literally my book, by the way.
I say that all the time, but I know so many super smart dumbasses out there who are doing
nothing. And I know a bunch of dumbos who are like living the high life, having the best time,
being super successful, and have everything they ever wanted. You don't even mean like, I don't
and being super successful and have everything they ever wanted. You know what I mean?
I don't believe that you should just fall on that
as your excuse for life of like why this is the why now.
Yeah, that's a shitty way to live, man.
It's a sad shitty way to live.
And look, again, your choices are
accept what you can't change and focus on what you can't,
or dwell on the stuff that you can't change.
That's a prison.
Why would you wanna be stuck there?
Look, read books on POWs or people
who've been through some really challenging things.
Read, there's some really, really good stuff out there
and you'll read, age old philosophies on this.
Stoicism talks about this as well.
It's like, even if the result were the same,
even if the end result were the same,
versus with person A, who focuses on the stuff
that they can't change, versus person B,
who focuses on what they can't change.
The person who focuses on what they can change
will feel different and better,
because they feel like they have some autonomy,
like they have some control.
So regardless across the board, it's a better choice.
Now, I don't believe they're on the same place at all.
I think we have so much evidence to show that
if you focus on the things that you can change
and ignore the stuff that you can't,
you're gonna turn out much better.
The evidence is clear on that, but even if it wasn't,
it's like you're gonna feel,
you're just gonna feel much better. So, and that's the road to success and anything.
It's definitely the road to success and fitness. I could tell you right now, meeting with someone,
if someone's gonna have that right attitude for long-term fitness success versus failure.
And it's the difference between the person who comes to me is like, everybody's overweight
in my family, there's nothing I can do to my genetics
I just like food too much the sucks. I hate exercise versus the person that's like hey
You know, what can't what can I do? Let me try some different things. I'm willing to learn
I want to I want to try making some changes. I'm not focused on the stuff
I can I can change and and the stuff I can control like that person is gonna do well
I agree with you my gosh
It's like it's like you're singing my song.
What's this, I mean, I think I always,
I'm still on this whole intermittent fasting thing
with people, like what is your take on this?
I mean, I find whenever something is super popular
and has been a fat, you find out in five years from now,
oh, actually whoops, we were wrong,
it's actually the opposite effect on your body.
You know, like, what did, you don't intermittent fast?
I can, sometimes.
Do you sometimes?
Yeah, I think fast things, benefits, physiological benefits
are massively overstated.
I think fastings, spiritual and behavioral benefits,
okay, on the right person, can be profound.
Fasting has been present in every major religion
for thousands of years for a reason.
They didn't do it for fitness or health or any of that stuff.
They did it for the spiritual aspects
because it's detachment.
It's detachment from one of our most basic needs.
I think the value is there.
So unless you have an eating disorder like anorexia,
bulimia, or you have really dysfunctional eating, though in those cases, you don't want to use fasting
because that can turn into something really bad. I think fasting from food can be profound
because you grow up in modern society, you have food around you all the time, not eating
for two days. Well, you'll have to face some demons, you'll have to deal with certain
emotions and ways that you use food. You may help shift how you look at food, but I also think fasting from electronics can
be profound or fasting from TV or entertainment or anything that you have this attachment to.
I think that's where the value is.
Physiologically, I mean, you know, maybe some benefits, calories, friction seems to provide
the same benefits.
I think in some cases,
fasting is probably unhealthy physiologically for some people.
Maybe people under a lot of stress,
fasting might not be so good.
Women tend to be more sensitive to fasting than men,
in that particular regard.
Why is that?
I can't fast, it's impossible for me.
A woman's body is much more sensitive to stresses that could render her
infertile or dangerous to her young or to being pregnant.
So going without calories, if the woman's body is already under a lot of stress or already
really lean, that may make the body like freeze up because in change hormones to make the woman less fertile
or whatever because it's not necessarily a good environment for, you know, for getting pregnant.
So that's just a kind of like a evolution everything.
Whereas with men, that's not so much of a pressure.
So that's probably why a woman tends to, women tend to be more, I say tend to because it's
not always true, but they tend to be more sensitive to that.
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I find what happens is if I'm not eating for that finite period of time,
I'll end up binge eating and eat all those calories I would have eaten earlier,
just later on in the day because I'm starving.
Yeah, that's the bad.
That could definitely encourage a bad relationship to food.
That's what I noticed with people is they'll, a lot of people is they'll fast and they'll
have their little eating window and they just end up like restrict binging.
I was like, how's that healthy?
That's exactly what I'm saying.
That doesn't seem healthy, you know?
It's that's, I mean, you identified that in yourself.
So, and that's smart that you did that.
I think people need to be a little bit more honest with themselves and be like, yeah,
because I know people who fast,
and then you look at when they do eat,
you're like, are you being honest with yourself?
They're not.
I think it's, but people are falling victim
of these trends and think, oh, it causes your body
to burn fat than it does this.
It does that.
I think even having butter in your coffee, to me,
I know myself well enough to know,
that's just extra calories,
because I'm still going to be eating later on.
It's not going to stop me from eating.
Yeah, no.
No, somebody monetize that, monetize fasting.
Very well, on by the way,
a lot of these biohackers,
if you see them, they're, I don't know, 40 or 45,
whatever, and they look at their 140,
they don't look like they're like,
they're Benjamin Button, they don't need to be down.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I don't know.
That whole space is very interesting to me.
And it's a very marketing, heavy.
I mean, it's tough.
That's like, all right, who do you get your advice from
when it comes to health and fitness?
People who talk about how to do it in a sustainable way.
I think that's who you need to listen to.
Well, you're super knowledgeable, though.
So what it would you say in your space,
because you're like a philosopher on top of it, but all.
But what would you say is you're sped?
Do you think you know supplements really well,
fitness really well, nutrient?
You seem to have a great grasp on all of it.
What would you say it, not tricks,
but number, what would you say are like key things
that the average Joe,
who is someone who's active and fit,
could do that they don't know about.
Like is there like a supplement?
Like let's just say,
if I, I, I, Omega three,
I know it's not Omega three,
but I'm saying like in a perfect world to kind of things I omega three, I know it's not omega three, but I'm saying like in a perfect
world to kind of things that you people, why does this keep on ringing when I keep on
it? There's no, it says silent mode on and it keeps on ringing. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, already fit, who are already active, right? They're doing all the right things that we talked about.
Since you're an expert in all these things and you're so well read, what are some things
that people could add and supplement and enhance their program that is not part of the
mainstream that we can incorporate?
Oh, yeah.
So, it's going to sound basic and boring, but get tested for your nutrient levels because
nothing supplementing can be profound when you're supplementing a deficiency.
So you can be fit healthy, whatever, and find that your magnesium is low, zinc is low,
copper might be low.
And what happens to your body if your magnesium or zinc are low?
Oh, exactly levels can go up.
You can notice digestive issues.
Like I got tested recently and my copper
to zinc ratio was off.
And because my copper was low,
my skin and hair pigmentation was lighter.
So actually my hair was wider than it could be.
And I could also have reduced levels of energy and stamina.
Really?
So I started supplementing to balance them out.
And my hair got darker So I started supplementing to balance them out, and my hair got darker,
and I started feeling healthier.
So get your nutrient levels tested.
How often?
Oh, that's a good question.
You probably don't need to do it
more than maybe twice a year.
I don't think you need to,
unless something radically changes in your life,
you probably don't need to check it
more than once or twice a year.
But once you get tested, actually it would be be more often if you do have a deficiency because you want to see how
well you're supplementing for it. So like if you have low vitamin D, make sure you get tested
three months later. So you can see that it's working, that you're absorbing what you're taking or
whatever, because it could be in some other underlying factor like malabsorption or something like
that. But test your nutrient levels and make sure that your nutrient levels where they need to be because that'll be profound when you supplement for
that if that becomes, if that is indeed an issue. And then the second one that most people
mess up on a sleep, a lot of fitness and health people, the difference between seven and
a half hours of sleep and eight hours of sleep is huge. Half hour, huge, huge. Aim for eight hours of good sleep
every single night, watch what happens.
It's like game changer.
That half an hour makes a difference.
Game changer.
Just a little bit.
Just try it.
Try it out and see how you feel.
It's, it's, especially if you work out hard,
you need a little bit more sleep than the average person
or if you work hard, that kind of stuff.
Like, give yourself good eight hours of sleep.
I tell sometimes I tell people go for eight and a half,
nine hours, especially if they're really under more stress
than usual, or really, really training their bodies hard.
But go for that eight, because most people aim for eight,
but end up hitting seven.
Actually make it eight, and watch what happens to how you feel.
You'll notice within a day or two,
you'll feel sharper, your verbal fluency improves,
your mood improves.
That was a big one for me.
Like going from 78 hours, just in a better mood.
I'm less snappy, you know, my kids are my wife, just better mood.
Do you drink coffee?
I don't drink coffee, but I do take caffeine.
Like caffeine pills?
Yeah, I'll take caffeine pills or a caffeine supplement
most mornings, but I'll take more of it on my hard workout days. So before my workout. So I use it as an ergo genic supplement. So would that be like how people used to be in the in the old days? Remember
a fedora was such a big thing? Oh yeah, I was huge with that. That was you ever too. I thought
was the best thing in the world. Oh gosh, yeah. Little bit we know we were taking herbal speed. I know
who knew, right? I loved it.
And then do you think, are you taking caffeine?
Doesn't act like an ephedra?
Like does it really, is it better to drink coffee or take a supplement of caffeine?
Coffee is really healthy for the most part.
But for energy purposes.
Yeah, it's for the most part it's healthy so long as it's appropriate for the person.
Because you know, if you're, you could also have bad sleep as a result of caffeine,
you could have you be under too much stress in which case caffeine can amplify that. But
the reason why I don't drink coffee is I don't tolerate it well with my gut. So if I drink coffee
it tends to bother my stomach. You've a lot of digested problems. Oh yeah, that's where my that's
where my health issues will work. Yeah. Could you say that a few things like you like vegetables
that are really cooked because of your digested? Oh yeah, I had a big I mean when in my early 30s. I had I mean my digestion went terrible
I thought I had Crohn's disease and I had to completely change my that's the the message you hear now was developed
Then because of my health my health took a turn for the worse
And it's my that's where it hits me. I know other people it's in other parts of the body
But for me, it's my digestion.
It's your gut.
Yeah, definitely.
So I didn't mean to interrupt you.
Just finish what you were saying.
You were saying the coffee.
The coffee is coffee is great source of antioxidants.
It's very healthy, even decafed,
because coffee itself is healthy.
So if you tolerate it well,
it's the best way to get caffeine, absolutely.
Better than the caffeine.
And so how do you take pre workout?
I mean, I take it as a pre workout.
I'll take caffeine.
So that is your pre workout.
Yeah, so I'll go caffeine plus theinein because theinein balances out the caffeine.
You take a supplement?
Yeah.
I mean, I'll ask the theinein.
There's coffee now that's made with theinein.
I know.
Right?
Yeah. Yeah, do you like that?
I have, I've tried it, it's good.
Is it like enough of the inine to make a difference?
You want to typically go one to one or two to one.
So I like to go two to one, thinning the caffeine.
So if I go 200 milligrams caffeine,
I'll go 300 to 400 milligrams of the inine.
What does the inine do?
Thinine helps, it's like it calms the brain and the body.
So caffeine gives you the energy, but then you can get the jittery shakiness, the
feeling smooths it out.
So caffeine, you get this real smooth, kind of euphoric, long lasting energy.
And so how long before your workout do you take it?
About 40 minutes.
40 minutes in the pill form.
If you drink coffee, you can.
Pill form or supplement form, I developed a supplement with organifi called peak power.'s got caffeine and it's all do that sometimes. I didn't know that yeah
Yeah, I co co co brand. I didn't know that. Yeah, what is it? So it's called peak power and it's it's a it's an energy supplement
So it's got caffeine, but it's also got things like lion's mane and bicocha and herbs. Does it work? Oh, yeah
It's a good time. Really. Oh, yeah, You've never set me any of it. I just literally just
came out with it. You know what? We have some in the back. So before you leave I'll give you one.
Oh my gosh. I want to try it. Yeah, you could try it out. What do you think of like,
like, would that be considered a pre-workout? Yes, it would be, but it's not the
I guess classic category of pre-workouts, because it's not, I'm not all about like giving people crazy stimulants and making them crack that other head
Right, I want like I'm also health focused. So it's got the the stimulants, but it's not like you're not gonna take it in like
You know like your colors, right?
So yeah, I get you like a C4
Yeah, well, yeah stuff like that. Yeah, I mean, I mean, that's one, when I, so do you believe in shakes?
Like, are you a shake person?
It depends on the situation.
So I think protein shakes can be useful
if you don't hit your protein targets.
So like, at the end of the day,
oh, I missed my protein target.
Let me supplement with protein.
But I don't, I think that you shouldn't replace food
with shakes.
That's terrible.
You think so, yeah.
Whole foods, nothing like whole foods.
No, but if you're like making like a lot of people, their thing is in the morning, they'll
have a shake. That's fine.
But versus like, what would be an ideal breakfast?
For most people, it's a fat protein containing breakfast. It tends to balance out insulin
and blood sugar levels and it gives people good, consistent energy, but it's not true
for everybody.
Some people do better with a carbohydrate type breakfast.
How do you know who you are?
How you feel?
You got to become aware of how you feel.
You know, eat your breakfast and do I have good energy?
Am I getting energy dips?
How's my digestion?
But most people are good with like a protein-based type breakfast like eggs.
Eggs are like nature's superfood.
One of the most healthy foods on the planet.
I would eat the same breakfast for 25 years, okay?
And I recently got my Tet, my nutrients tested.
Tell me what you think of this actually.
Because I think this happens quite a bit with people.
Turns out I'm highly allergic to eggs.
I've been eating five eggs a day for 25 years.
Well, allergic or you have,
highly-calling tolerance.
No, not intolerance.
I asked the same thing.
It was bright red, like, it was flat.
So IGE, like,
antibodies or whatever.
Highly allergic, like,
it was like 125 times.
But you ate them every day.
Every single day.
So what happens when you eat them?
So this is what I was going to,
nothing, I guess, I don't know.
That's why I was going to,
I stopped eating them like a month and a half ago thinking no so here's what I hate about those tests
is but you just told us to go take these tests well no that's not a nutrient test that's your
testing antibodies what's interesting I know I know I'm not tasting I'm okay let's I'll tell you
why yeah you may be right yeah what's interesting about that is if you do, in fact, have an autoimmune reaction to
them, but you've been eating them every day.
Yeah.
You might be better off eating them every day because in some cases, now this is not my realm
of expertise, but in some cases avoid, because they'll tell kids with food allergies this,
they give them a little exposure every day, so they don't get the anaphylactic shock when
they get exposed to it on accident. So I'm wondering what will happen if you be
the eggs now, if you'll get a really bad reaction.
So does that mean I was allergic? I mean, or why would it come up like that?
That's a very strange, I don't know. That's really weird.
Because it's something I, that was like a, but you know, no allergic, like physical symptoms
reaction. No, not that I knew of. I mean, that's why I was like, oh, okay.
This is when testing can annoy the shot of me
because they'll tell you, oh, this is what I'm like,
but I feel, everything feels okay.
That's when I say listen to your body,
but again, I wanna caution because of that.
And this is from a guy that is like the top nutrition guy
in the country.
He does all the sports teams, does everybody.
And he's like, get off of that.
What do you, have you heard of black current oil?
Oh, a bit.
I don't know, I'm not superverse,
but I've seen it as a supplement.
It's supposed to be high in iron.
No, it's supposed to be high in...
Well, I'm thinking about black glasses.
666.
Oh, okay, okay.
Would you go and be six?
It's supposed to be told me to go on. He says that's what I needed to be on. Also, six, six, six. Oh, okay, okay. Would you go and be six? It's supposedly told me to go on,
he says that's what I needed to be on.
Also, Elkharnitine.
Do you think of the Elkharnitine?
I mean, if you eat a lot of red meat,
you're probably okay with that.
I don't need a lot of red meat.
I like chicken.
I like chicken.
Yeah, Elkharnitine's in chicken too.
It's an amino acid.
It's an amino acid, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But wait a second, so the shake.
So let's get back to this.
Yeah.
You tell, you said it's something.
You said the caffeine pills. you said the theineine.
I got that.
Give us some other things that you do and also some other things
that the average Joe who's not you.
Yeah, what would it know to do that can maybe help enhance
whatever they have?
Well, great.
One of the best supplements known to man is creating.
And they're saying now women should be doing it.
Everybody.
Why?
It's, it's healthy.
It helps cognitive function.
It's good for the heart.
It's got antioxidant properties, helps build strength, build muscle.
It's a longevity supplement.
It's not just for athletic performance.
Cratein, your body uses it to make ATP.
ATP is what every mitochondria in your body uses
as one of its primary sources of energy.
It's anti-aging.
Everybody should take creatine.
So why does it, it's exactly,
why hasn't anyone said that before?
Why now?
It's how it already happened.
It's starting to happen.
No, it's happening for the last, like a little bit,
but it wasn't five years ago.
If a girl would take creatine, it'd be like, oh my God, you're going to get so mass,
you're going to build such a mass.
You're going to get bauji.
Because it was originally marketed for building muscle because it does make you stronger.
But, and so that kind of overshadowed it, right?
Because that was the messaging.
But, no, I mean, all the studies on creatin, this antidepressant effects, it's got cognitive
boosting effects.
It's good for the skin.
It's antioxidant, good for the heart.
It's literally, you're going,
in the next five to 10 years,
you're gonna see creatine in every wellness supplement.
It's gonna be like,
they're already giving it to,
they're already adding it to supplements for the elderly
in like care homes and stuff
because they're noticing that it's got these health benefits.
Okay, so how much creatine should we take?
You know, two to five grams a day is about right?
So you could put it in a shake.
Yeah, you could put a shake or just take a straight,
create team on a hydrate.
Okay, is there, and also, okay,
give us a couple more supplements?
Or in general, it doesn't have to be supplements.
Just I want things that like, I want pro tips
that you can give to somebody who is already active
and just wants to kind of get a little more bump.
Yeah, a little more bump.
They would never know otherwise.
Like, oh my God, I never knew that.
Beta Alain is a supplement that can help
with muscular stamina and endurance.
It's a small effect, but it's real.
Some people don't like it though, because if you take it, it'll feel like a tingling under
your skin, so it kind of feels weird for some people.
So that's a good, that's a supplement.
Gosh, everything else is kind of like hit or miss depending on the individual.
You know, and what might work for one person is it going to really do much for another person.
I wish I could give you more, but supplements just aren't magic.
It doesn't have to be supplements. It could be a food. It could be an exercise.
Here, which are-
Here, I'll give you a-
Give me your top exercise and your top food.
Top exercise. I'll give you the top exercises, okay.
Some kind of a press, some kind of a horizontal press,
some kind of an overhead press, some kind of a row,
some kind of a squat, and then something
that includes rotation.
There's five categories of exercises
that'll really cover 95% of movement
and developing your body.
So there's that right there.
Foods, here's a good tip.
Whatever you're eating, eat your protein first. That tends to lead to more appropriate calorie
consumption, better satiety, and it, and you obviously because you hit your protein targets,
it helps with muscle building and fitness. So when you're looking at your dish, a food,
finish your protein, then eat the rest. So don't eat it all at the same time, honey.
No, eat the protein first. Huh? Okay. Do you believe in a cheat day or you think that's
just silly? No, it's terrible. You just eat some days you eat other foods and other
days you eat other foods. That whole concept of cheat encourages that that restrict binge
mentality with food, which I'm not a fan of.
It's a dysfunctional way of looking at food.
What are you cheating on?
You know what I mean?
Who are you cheating on?
It's weird.
It's weird.
So you don't do that.
No, I don't communicate it that way.
And I mean, I know that the guy, he said,
get the hell out of here.
The cleaner's gonna come now. Okay, I can wrap it up. We can do he said, get the hell out of here. The cleaner's gonna come now.
Okay, I can wrap it up.
We can do this again, which I'm sure we will.
Do you want me to?
How long has this been?
It's been like, oh, we've been over an hour.
Oh, okay.
I'll wrap this up with my friend Sal,
because you can come on anytime.
You're always welcome on the podcast, especially when I'm using
your office.
I appreciate it.
The book is called The Resistance Training Revolution.
It's been out for a little bit, but it's excellent.
He is, for those of you who don't know, Sal is honestly,
I'm not just saying this because you are in front of me,
but it's because it's the truth.
One of the best resources I've ever known
in terms of information in the health and fitness space,
because you are so well read and you put a lot of effort
and you are a guinea pig. And like you are, you're not one end of the spectrum or the pendulum or the other.
You really are somebody who sees nuance and understands that not everybody is the same.
I think that you're like a great, a great person to kind of bounce stuff off of or like to look at as a,
as someone of someone of expertise.
So thank you so much.
No, I believe it.
So thank you for being on this podcast.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
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