Mark Bell's Power Project - Blasting & Cruising, Fixing Joint Pain, And Grip Training - Live Q&A || MBPP Ep. 1013
Episode Date: November 22, 2023In episode 1013, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza take questions from fans during a Live Q&A which cover training, diet and PEDs. Hit the bell notification and join the discord below to ma...ke sure you never miss another live stream again. Official Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! The Athletic/Casual Clothes we're wearing! 🕺 ➢ https://vuori.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! 💤 The Best Cooling Mattress in the GAME! 🛌 ➢ https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! 🥩 HIGH QUALITY PROTEIN! 🍖 ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Best STYLISH Barefoot Casual/Training Shoes! 👟 ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! 🩸 Get your BLOODWORK Done! 🩸 ➢ https://marekhealth.com/PowerProject to receive 10% off our Panel, Check Up Panel or any custom panel! Best 5 Finger Barefoot Shoes! 👟 ➢ https://Peluva.com/PowerProject Code POWERPROJECT15 to save 15% off Peluva Shoes! Sleep Better and TAPE YOUR MOUTH (Comfortable Mouth Tape) 🤐 ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject to receive a year supply of Hostage Tape and Nose Strips for less than $1 a night! 🥶 The Best Cold Plunge Money Can Buy 🥶 ➢ https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! Self Explanatory 🍆 ➢ Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: You Need Greens in your Life 🥦 ➢https://drinkag1.com/powerproject Receive a year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs! ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements! ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel! Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Just started TRT two weeks ago.
Already feeling the effects.
When can I say safely blast and cruise any advice?
I would say, you know, do more research.
They utilize 600 milligrams of testosterone with success and without a lot of negative side effects.
There's a big difference between replacement dose and a dose that would get you into like a super physiological range.
The range that would get you into a super physiological range can feel
really good. So you have to be kind of cautious of that. You have to think about it. It could be
something that you get addicted to. You just said you have three kids. Let's go ahead and stay around
as long as possible. There's some things to think about and consider, but it sounds like you're
already there. Power Project family, we've had some amazing guests on this podcast like Kurt
Engel, Tom Segura, Andrew Hooperman, and we want to be able to have more amazing guests on this podcast, and you
can help it grow by leaving us a quick
rating and review on Spotify and iTunes.
If you're listening to the podcast, just go ahead and give us a review,
let us know how you dig it, and help the podcast
grow so we can keep growing with y'all and
bring you amazing information. Enjoy the show.
People can always rely
on us to be late. That's okay, because
I did set it, so
it was originally going to be 11 so I put 11.30
I looked at the clock and realized
we're not going to make that so I put it for
11.45 so we're actually
early guys. We're
early? We're on top of things.
Yeah, that's how we roll.
That's crazy. You're mixing up some
pre-workout over there or something?
We had Vigor Steve on remember?
Oh yeah, I remember that guy.
He was talking about all these nootropic supplements but i was like okay well
what's level one man because like i'm not ready for all this shit and he said go buy respawn from
gorilla mine so i bought it and i did a half scoop yesterday felt pretty good today i'll do a full
scoop i'll never do two scoops of this shit because apparently one scoop is like 150 milligrams
caffeine oh you were right how How the fuck am I?
Oh, you need to make a pocket.
Make a thing out of the paper. Make a funnel.
Yeah.
Is this the shit that you used to do when you were younger?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, back before we had shaker cups.
How do you not work for NASA?
Right?
What the fuck?
Yeah, you need to.
Yeah.
It's like genius.
Yeah, it's like trying to figure out how to make a good protein shake.
You need a lot of details.
A lot of stow into it, right?
That camera's crooked.
Okay.
God, it's just making the...
Hey, by the way, I got a news flash for everybody.
This just in?
Yeah, this just in.
The full carnivore steak shake, it turns into fucking pudding when you put it in the fridge.
Put it in the freezer, and it kind of sort of turns into ice cream but you would have to use like some sort of cream or milk for that to work
without the use of the ninja creamy so i just all i did was ninja blender it and i threw it
in the fucking fridge and it turned into pudding was this a feature or a bug it has bugs in it. Okay. Well, I mean, yeah, extra protein, right?
Yeah.
It's the bug protein.
No.
It's, yeah, it's just a, I don't know.
I just, I didn't intend for that to happen, but I think it's a combination of the collagen and the beef isolate.
It makes it, I don't know, it makes it kind of fluffy.
It gets a little gelatinous when you put it in the fridge.
I'll give it a go.
It works amazing.
I did it with just, I did it in the fridge i'll give it a go it works amazing i did it
with just i did it with only water and ice and it worked so if it works with that you can fucking
make it work with whatever other mixtures you want to throw in there but you need like low amount of
water can't use a lot of water okay you need to make a video just showing people how i did i made
you did there's genius um oh yeah this fin Genius. Oh, yeah. This Finnegan
guy. It's Gorilla Mind Finnegan.
It's called Respawn. It's from Derek's
company. So he asked what the
fuck. It looks, it's yellow.
I don't like that. I wish it was like a punchy
color because this just makes me
It makes you nervous?
It does make me nervous. Because of the yellow dye?
While you're sipping on that, I'm going to sip on some kratom.
It does taste pretty good.
I'm going to sip on two-day-old energy drink that I didn't finish from two days ago.
Well, we'll get into this.
But someone did actually ask a question.
Already?
Not yet.
From Nicholas Otsug.
I don't even think that's how you pronounce it, but it's O-Z-U-G.
We have you guys.
Okay.
I don't even think that's how you pronounce it, but it's O-Z-U-G.
We have you guys.
Okay.
Why have you guys found that carbs from flour slash grain-based sources are like crack?
Have you found any particular grain slash flours to be more optimal for usage in minor amounts to be more satiating?
Thanks.
Miners.
I think that bread is awesome.
I think it's a great carbohydrate.
I really do.
I think Greg Doucette has talked about this quite a bit. I haven't really seen a lot of other bodybuilders talk that much about bread, but it wasn't uncommon for bodybuilders to utilize some like toast with their morning like eggs and egg whites and oatmeal and stuff like that.
I don't think there's anything wrong with bread.
I think that the only thing I can think of is just that sometimes it's like a transportation system for a lot more calories.
You're going to want to put butter on it or peanut butter or utilize it for a sandwich.
And even in those cases, not necessarily bad, but you just turn a kind of a –
you turn a carbohydrate that is somewhere
between slow and fast.
It's like a medium speed because it's highly processed, right?
But you kind of turned it into something that has fat calories as well.
And so therefore, it might be hard to stop.
You know, if you eat rolls at Thanksgiving time,
you start throwing butter on those bitches,
you're going to eat a lot of them.
And this is the thing, man.
It's like I'm the type of guy who,
when it comes to a Hawaiian roll or white bread,
stuff my face all the time with all of it, right?
I can picture you stuffing a whole entire,
like the whole little sheet of the Hawaiian roll.
I've had two sheets. Probably all the way.
I've had two.
You know when they come in those nine packets?
I've had 18 at once.
They're so good.
Nice.
They're so good.
That's so incredible.
You take that and just like smush it all together like in this tiny little ball.
And the best thing is putting butter in between.
Have you done peanut butter in Hawaiian rolls?
I haven't.
It's been years, but it's amazing.
We just start doing it.
We bring it back.
But the thing is, I would never do that with like wheat bread.
Right?
So if you want to eat bread but you don't want to eat horrible amounts of it, then get bread that you don't necessarily like that much but hits the spot just a bit.
Wheat bread for me is that.
I can't eat a lot of wheat bread.
Yeah, you eat like a little bit of it, got a little butter on it.
You had one or two slices.
You're fine.
Yeah, man.
You're like, that's stupid.
Yeah.
I do know that some people like sourdough bread.
Mm.
Yep.
And some people think that like sourdough has like more utility because, I don't know,
it's got fucking, it's like fermented or whatever.
It's supposed to be a pre-digested type of thing, I think.
Yeah.
So fermented.
Somebody else digested it for you.
Yeah.
Pre-digested bread.
Wouldn't that be something up yeah ben uh
green bread green ben greenfield bread greenfield yeah bread greenfield ben greenfield uh talks
about it quite a bit his wife uh bakes up some sourdough so if you want to try to find a recipe
for it i know i think people were doing that like during the pandemic for some reason people
were like baking bread i'm not sure why that happened but people were doing that like during the pandemic for some reason. People were like baking bread. I'm not sure why that happened, but people were like buying toilet paper and baking bread.
Yeah.
Pick up a hobby, man.
America.
Bro, something Nook, he was just explaining that sourdough and eggs, that's what I do for breakfast as well, just like he did.
It tastes amazing.
Why does it put the flavor together?
I just saw he said that.
Do you know why?
I'm not so much sure about that.
I just, I don't know.
Sourdough just tastes incredible. I'm good. Thanks? I just saw he said that. Do you know why? I'm not so much sure about that. I just, I don't know, dude.
Sourdough just tastes incredible.
I'm good, thanks.
I'll try it later, though.
I don't know.
He might be on to something.
I do feel like it is more filling, but I think that's just because the sourdough bread from the regular bread I was eating has a little bit more calories.
English muffin is like sourdough bread, right?
I don't know.
Those are delicious.
I can see what you're saying.
What do you mean?
Like taste?
Yeah, it has like a little soury taste to it. It does have a soury taste to it.
You are correct.
Do I know of it?
Yeah, I don't know why though.
I don't know why it blends well with eggs.
In South Africa, they use salt and vinegar on their eggs.
Makes sense.
Which sounds kind of interesting and sounds a little weird,
but actually tastes really good.
I've tried it before.
It's delicious.
I have to give that a go.
It makes a lot of sense.
Okay.
So a TRT question for both of you.
Why are you involved in this question?
Why am I involved?
You're sponsored by Merrick as well.
If you're on TRT, is there anything that the physician can prescribe to you to restore your testicle size?
Less TRT.
Let's hit up our correspondent, Mike O'Hearn.
Mike, if you wouldn't mind responding.
Did you see those videos that Mike did with Kenny?
I did, yeah.
Mike's at a TRT booth or something, right?
At the Olympia or something like that?
It's Transcend Labs, I believe.
Yes.
Who knows what the hell's going on?
Testicle size?
He wants to restore those balls.
Oh, I saw a cool video of, I think it was the Health Nut guy.
Of him smacking his balls.
You guys see that can andrew
pull it up he's in like i think so he's in like undies and he's like doing this underhand slap
to his nuts no way he's got like a bunch of other people you found it i'm not sure if it was him or
like it has to be is that crazy white guy right yeah it's that he drinks his own pee and stuff
but like i don't know if i don't think he was actually doing that.
I think he was fucking around, but he was smacking his balls really hard.
Why does this motherfucker do this?
I don't know who you guys are talking about.
Okay, his Instagram is CertifiedHealthNut.
He is a man that drinks his own urine for health purposes, and maybe there's a reason to it.
But do you know the thumbnail for the ball video no it would probably be more blatant than that i don't know just see if you
can find someone to smack your balls around no this motherfucker is also doing the butthole
sunning like there's the benefits of butthole sunning like he's he's on that spectrum of things
he's in the future is where he's at spectrum um anyway back to the balls a lot of
people some people believe that it's a good idea to utilize hcg i would say um listen to the podcast
that peter itea did with derrick for more plates more dates those guys know way more shit than we
know but um it seems like if you're on trT style dosages, not fitness TRT dosages,
but like actual TRT, which would be maybe like 100 to maybe possibly 200 milligrams
would be on the high end, that that would be more acceptable for you to use HCG.
I don't know all the science of it, but HCG, I'm going to say this wrong, but HCG can
basically up your estrogen levels a little bit. So you may have to kind of be careful with that
if you're also aromatizing the testosterone, which how do you know if you're aromatizing
the testosterone? I don't know. It's a guess. You can get your blood work done or you can see if
your nipples feel puffy and sensitive or if you cry during movies and stuff like that.
Maybe your estrogen is going up.
I cry during movies all the time.
You're telling me something.
Your aromatization is on point.
Anyway, so yeah, some people nowadays kind of say that HCG is a good thing to utilize while you're on TRT.
And then also people are – I know that – I mean this is more commonly – this is a more common protocol.
People use HCG when they discontinue HRT.
So it's usually like a bridge to get you in most cases.
You can also listen to our podcast that we just did with Vigorous Steve where he talks
about wanting to get his wife pregnant and he's working on that and he's taking HCG.
He might have mentioned a couple other compounds he's taking along with that.
But obviously he's off of testosterone and things that might negatively impact his sperm
count.
And you're any input there too?
No, that was
well said, yeah. Alright. I sent
you the ball slapping video.
Did you find it? I found it. We need audio
though, right? It's impressive, right?
Is it from the guy I was thinking?
It's from HealthNut. Yeah, and you want
I'm assuming you want audio on this.
I don't think there's any actual slapping
though.
There's no slapping.
Okay, well, we'll see, I guess.
A friend sends me this video of him naked getting out of the shower,
and he starts slapping his balls.
I call him up, and I'm like, what the f*** is that, dude?
And he goes, yeah, it's ancient Chinese secret.
And so I tried it, and I was like, holy s***, it's like getting kicked in the balls.
And the energy goes right up into your kidneys.
There's exercises where you stick your tongue out,
and then you rotate all your junk one way
and then the other way.
And you can actually tie heavy weights on there
and you can increase the size and girth of your penis.
And so you're supposed to knead your balls.
You don't have to slap them,
but I like to just grasp them and like massage them.
And roll them like a circle.
You can also roll them this way.
You can get into your groin.
I've seen that Asian guy talk about this before, too.
Increases semen production and testosterone.
This guy's full of shit.
Before we say he's full of shit, let's think about this.
I'm going to give it a try.
I ain't going to slap my balls super hard.
But, I mean, like, sometimes it probably is good to get a little bit of circulation
to certain things, right?
Sounds good to me.
And I mean, when's the last time you twisted your balls?
Can you remember?
We have a penis pump.
Well, we don't have like a ball pump.
We need to do something with the balls too, right?
Does that thing have a ball pump though?
Yeah, you stick your dick and balls in there.
But I mean, shit, when's the last time you twisted your balls?
That's a legit question, guys.
Well, you don't want to, like, really twist them, though.
How do you know?
Because it might help with stress.
No, because it's an actual, like, diagnosis.
You can get a twisted testy, and it's, like, really, really bad.
This is why you're here.
I know.
You see, you stop us from doing shit.
Podcast engineer slash clinician slash ball massager gynecologist oh lord jesus christ okay um smack your balls
anyway you know what's funny though when he said like oh you smack him it's like you get that
energy into your kidneys it's the same thing as like when you were a kid and you were riding a bike and you hit a bump.
You know when you did that and you felt the energy go into your kidneys?
No.
Like, that's not energy.
That's, like, that's pain.
Yeah, that's different.
It's like your balls and, like, your taint and everything got all squished.
It just makes you want to throw up and, yeah.
Yo.
Okay, so real quick.
There's a few other questions from Eric.
Used to hear about glucosamine for joints.
Now not so much.
Any thoughts on this for prevention or joint pain?
Eric.
Yeah, I used to take glucosamine for joint stuff.
I don't really take it anymore.
What's up, Andrew?
Glucosamine?
Glucosamine.
Or what's the other one?
Chondroitin.
God dang it.
Chondroitin, I guess.
Does it start with a G? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Glutamine. No, no. the other one? Chondroitin. God dang it. Chondroitin, I guess. Does it start with a G?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Glutamine.
No, no.
Isn't that?
Glutamine is typically people who used to use that for recovery.
Some people still do.
But glutamine is mainly used or was mainly marketed as like a recovery thing post-workout.
Okay, my bad.
Yeah, but glucosamine was a joint thing.
Eric, oddly enough, we've been getting into a lot,
talking about a lot,
talking about a lot of movement stuff on the podcast.
And oddly enough, if you are feeling joint pain,
it might be a good idea.
First off, if there are certain things,
like for a lot of people, bench press,
a lot of tricep pushdowns,
those things cause joint pain in the elbows.
So you might want to stop doing those things as much,
but you still want to get that joint moving.
You still want to find a way to move that joint through ranges of motion.
What I've found for the joints that used to ache for me is by improving its function through its range of motion, a lot of my – well, all of my joint pain has pretty much gone away.
So that's something – no, it's not a supplement, and it's more of a practice, but it's very helpful.
I would agree.
I think like health practices are going to be the most important thing.
If with any one, with any joints that you have, if you can try to express, try to find tension and try to find stressors that you put the body into where this shit kind of hurts, feels sketchy, sketchy, but still very, very safe and not loaded. Um, say your elbow has a lot of pain, um, rather than just, you know, bringing your
forearm towards your bicep or your forearm towards your shoulder. See if you can push your,
your back of your arm, like against the wall or something. And see if you can get like a Kelly
Sturek calls it like overpressure. So you get some of that over pressure on that area the same way ben patrick talks about with
knees over toes where you get way down on that squat and you sit down on that squat and one of
the reasons why you're sitting down there is it's opening up the knee in the front and you are um
you know dropping your hamstrings down onto your calves and you're kind of sitting in that position
and over time you know that should help you get a little stronger from those positions.
I have heard some people have some success stories with curcumin and turmeric.
I don't personally have any, I haven't really noticed anything in terms of like that reducing
inflammation for myself, but it is something that
people talk about quite a bit i also think about um some other things when i think of people talking
about inflammation and areas being like hot or or um these areas being uh just like screwed up i
guess um diet sometimes can be a factor oh yeah but it's going to be different for everybody i mean
sometimes someone like really has like a fucked up elbow and then someone's like get on a carnivore
diet and it's like okay that'll help a tiny teeny tiny bit maybe but people are in like legit pain
and sometimes they have real injuries and it doesn't always solve problems for that so you're
going to want to investigate a bunch of different things. Cold therapy, fucking unbelievable. Get your ass in a cold plunge.
And if it's mainly just your arm, that's kind of a lucky thing. And just maybe stick your arm
into some sort of cold, whatever way you can figure out a bucket of ice. If that's what's
bothering you or your knee, cold therapy can be really, really useful. More so than just putting ice on something.
I don't think that's nearly as effective.
So you might want to look into some of those ideas and concepts.
But in terms of glucosamine, I don't really think it's super beneficial.
I've never noticed anything from it.
Me neither.
Do you actually see my voodoo floss to the left of you?
Yeah, it's on the bench. It's the can you yeah yeah i was gonna say um i'm actually gonna floss
my wrist real quick but uh who talked about amazing ben talked about using this you know
while doing atg squats or while doing deep knee flexion and moving through that range of motion
um that's very helpful so you can do the same thing with your elbow you can voodoo you can you
know get the floss around your elbow i know kelly sturette has guides on youtube about how to wrap
those things up um bring get movement to that area this could be the elbow this could be the
ankles this could be the wrists i've been voodoo flossing my wrist since i had a wrist injury a
few weeks ago it's getting much better but what that'll do is like you move it around it has
compression that wrist isn't that big. Don't trigger me right now.
No, I meant like it looks nice in comparison to the forearm.
Like it makes the bicep and the forearm.
Like your wrist is really nice.
Anyway, what were we talking about?
That's what he was trying to say.
I didn't say that.
He said it.
So what you got to do is you got to take my insecurities and then put it out to the live audience, right?
Hurt people hurt people.
So that we feel better.
So you feel better.
Okay.
We can feel good about ourselves every once in a while.
Well, fuck you and your thick ass wrists.
Okay?
Fuck you and your thick wrists.
I just have a small forearm, so it makes my wrists not look so small.
If you got bitch wrists like me or bitch joints in general, take voodoo floss, wrap that bitch tight, get movement to that area, try to get it through a good range of motion, take wrap that bitch tight get movement to that area try
to get it through a good range of motion take it off blood gets driven to that area do that on a
daily basis you can even do that multiple times a day and that's something that can really help
out too it's worth it and it's cheap uh and seema do you find that like so like you're saying your
wrist are you like flossing well in this case like up the chain like up on your forearm to try to
like loosen things up you know again up the
chain or is it more direct for me for my wrist it's not a forearm issue it's it's like a direct
wrist issue i can even like i can feel the stuff in there it's not because of any type of tightness
within the forearms it's literally it was an impact injury on the wrist and since there's a lot of
small joints and stuff and small muscles in the wrist it's been taking a little bit to get better
but it has been consistently recovering even one thing it's been taking a little bit to get better,
but it has been consistently recovering.
Even one thing that's been super helpful was using the rope.
I have one of those heavy ropes and twirling the rope.
Initially when the injury happened, I couldn't even,
I couldn't even twirl a rope because the wrist was in too much pain,
but because the rope causes the wrist to move in a circular fashion,
that's been something that's been super beneficial for the recovery of the
joint since it's causing the joint to move with that little bit of resistance.
Yeah. And a lot of people, when they have pain in like a wrist, as Andrew's pointing out,
it could be some dysfunction coming from up higher. It could be something in the forearm.
It could be something all the way into the elbow. And most of the time when you're talking about
the wrist, you're talking about like some sort of lack of like mobility or something going on in the shoulder, but in SEMA's shoulders seem to be plenty mobile. So this kind of activity is great.
And then as I think it was Ben that might've pointed it out, that acts as like mechanical
leverage in a way that acts a little bit as a strengthening tool. You're actually kind of
exercising that area in the case of, especially like the ankle and the wrist it's almost like
there's like weight uh on your uh on your wrist lastly don't forget about the impact and the
importance of just throwing on some elbow sleeves and some knee sleeves here and there
it's really fucking useful it's why i did it for so many years and for somebody that is
trying to get bigger and they're trying to lift a little bit more weight i think it's amazing
like if you're trying to if you're if you're, if you're in the
gym and you were trying to push yourself a little bit, it just, to me, it makes total
sense to hork up some elbow sleeves and to, uh, get underneath some weight and it will
allow you to handle a little bit more weight for more sets and more reps.
Who wears elbow sleeves and knee sleeves?
Like just watch Chris B bumstead lift watch
um watch the rock you know like just so many people utilize not everybody but a lot of the
big bodybuilders and stuff they'll utilize them just a little extra protection on the joint
um you're not going to use them all the time you just use them when you want to
push maybe a little bit more weight or when you're pushing your volume a little bit.
I'm a big fan.
What's the smaller sleeves that you just came out called?
Those are the raw sleeves.
Those are the raw sleeves.
If you guys go to – what is it?
Markbellslingshot.com.
The raw sleeves are really cool because – and I notice it too when I do things like pull-ups and dips because all it does is it keeps the joint warm.
Yeah, I don't think you have tons of elbow issues or anything, but you wear them, right?
Yeah, it keeps the joint warm,
so it just feels more comfortable to do those movements.
And for me, it's the simplistic aspect of it.
It keeps everything warm.
So it's super comfortable.
I like the raw ones, though, because they don't take up too much space.
Well, the other sleeves, the strong sleeves
and some of the other sleeves that we sell,
they are much bulkier.
And look at Kenny.
Who's that fucking handsome-ass Captain America looking?
Jesus Christ, that guy's jacked.
But the other sleeves that we have and some other sleeves you might see on the market, they're going to do a little bit more work for you.
These are more passive if that's something that you're looking for.
We sell kind of versions of both.
But I like these a lot too.
I wore them this morning
for doing some floor presses with some chains,
which I haven't done in probably like six or seven years.
It's probably been a long time
since I'd done a floor press with some chains.
Yeah, yeah.
Power Project Family,
if you guys want to get in on our next live Q&A,
join the Discord down below
because this is pre-recorded
and we answered a bunch of your fitness
and nutrition questions. We also gave away some goodies from our sponsors. So if you want to get on the next one, join the Discord down below because this is pre-recorded and we answered a bunch of your fitness and nutrition questions. We also gave away
some goodies from our sponsors. So if you want to get on
the next one, join the Discord below and
enjoy the show.
By the way, guys,
give us some likes on the
video if you're here because that'll help the live
reach more people. That's number one. Number two,
the people that ask questions are going to
win some stuff from some of our sponsors.
I know Hostage Tape is going to be giving out a year of tape to one lucky winner.
So one of you guys is going to win a year supply of Hostage Tape.
Oh, way, way, way.
That's not going to lie.
Another thing is one of you guys is going to win a gift card to Viva Barefoot.
So if you want some nice barefoot shoes, we talked about the barefoot boots.
They got a lot of good stuff over there and someone's going to win something
from the EORI clothing and something from,
uh,
uh,
uh,
within you.
There you go.
There you go.
I had a brain fart.
Okay.
It was cool to see the guests that came in today that he was wearing,
uh,
wide toe shoes.
Yeah.
You know,
it's nice to see that we have like an impact and he mentioned he had other, uh, wide toe box shoes and stuff know, it's nice to see that we have like an impact. And he mentioned he had other wide toe box shoes and stuff too.
But it's just cool, man.
It's cool to hear people like listen and that they're actually getting stuff from it.
This is just like a passion for us.
This is something that we have a lot of fun with.
And we have a topic for today that we're going to get into in a little bit.
We'll answer a few more questions before we jump in.
But we're going to talk about sort of what we did years ago to kind of get us to where we're at and if we would do
things differently knowing what we know now. It's a really interesting thing when you try to unpack
that sometimes because Chris Williamson made a post recently and he talked about how when you
ask someone famous or you ask someone that's successful, you ask them kind of how they got there.
They sometimes forget about the pain and they forget the beginning stages.
And so they usually talk more about what they do now.
And now they'll say, well, I'm in my cold plunge and I go outside in my underwear and I wave a towel around.
They talk about like the weird shit that they've
come up with in the last several years. And a lot of those things are, a lot of those things are
great. And a lot of those things do help you with maturity and they help you with equanimity and all
these different things. But there was a point in your life where you were unbalanced and where you
were in pain and you were probably hurting. And that was probably at some point a big, big driver and a big reason why you're successful today.
Yeah, I love that post because it reminded me of like Josh Setledge when you were like, oh, just like drive here, drive there.
And he's just like, dude, I don't know if I can even afford another tank of gas.
And you're like, don't worry, like it's worth it or whatever.
And he's like, dude, no, I literally can't afford it.
But in time, he'll I mean, hopefully he doesn't. but in time he could potentially be like, oh yeah, I just made
sure I was everywhere Mark told me to go. And somebody else might be like, well, shit, I can't
afford it right now. So it's, it's cool to see that. Like, you know, he pointed that out that
like, you know, these, these millionaires, billionaires, whoever, they're just like,
oh, I just don't take anything serious. And dah, dah, dah, dah. And it's like, fuck bro.
Like, I really hope Josh, you know,
I hope he took my advice from a few years back.
I told him,
I said,
write a book and he's like,
Oh,
I want to someday.
And I'm like,
no,
no, no.
Write one now.
Like,
right.
Start writing it now.
Cause like,
you're going to be doing something wild.
You're going to be super fucking successful.
And I want to know the story from the fucking beginning.
So I don't know if he's,
he follows through on everything.
So I imagine he's probably been working on it for a while.
He's probably like 18 chapters in.
Most of you guys know who we're talking about.
But if you don't, check out the Instagram of Joshua Settlage.
S-E-T-T-L-A-G-E.
A.K.A. Settlegate.
The BJJ strength coach.
He has a lot of great content.
He's a super intelligent dude.
And he's the most disciplined person we know probably.
Did he start the same time you did around?
Jiu-jitsu?
I think he started a little bit after me.
I started seeing him at a cast he was a little bit after.
But he's been a wrestler since he was a young kid.
So when he started jiu-jitsu, he progressed quickly because he understood grappling.
I love his mindset.
Like when he talks about like, you know, like when he lost and stuff, like it just obliterated him.
about like you know like when he lost and stuff like it just just obliterated him and it's cool to see like his maturity and then in jiu-jitsu i think uh the the cool thing it sounds like about
jiu-jitsu which sounds kind of funny is that you just get your ass kicked a lot and it doesn't
matter how good you are how strong you are you get humped like at some point you're getting humbled
all the time but i think the lessons that are learned in there are probably uh things that are real transformative for a lot of people i know we had a topic but a
lot of questions are rolling in cool keep them coming i'll keep them coming i'll keep them coming
um the next one this is a quick one uh i'm only a year into bjj and i'm already getting cauliflower
ear what gives i'm sorry i honestly you do you want cauliflower marriage? It's like a rite of passage.
I saw a good clip.
This guy does all these Instagram skits all the time where he pretends he's coming out of his home.
And he runs into his neighbor that he doesn't want to talk to.
And it's the same guy playing the same role.
Okay, cool.
He's just wearing different clothes.
But he pops out.
He's got his coffee in the morning.
He's like sipping it and uh the neighbor pops out of his his door and goes oh i can't hear you like what did you say something and he's like no he's like i'm just having coffee he's like oh
did you notice like my my ears a little ruffled up he's like you notice that yeah and he's like
yeah he's like it's probably from jujitsu you've been doing he's like oh he's like, you notice that? And he's like, yeah. He's like, it's probably from jujitsu you've been doing.
He's like, oh, he's like, I told you about it already.
He's like, yeah, like seven times.
Well, thanks for asking about it.
It's actually going great.
I've only gotten one little minor flare up and it was just because like something happened where like I, you know, whatever, I got hit in my ear and it was fine.
But then like the very next round, I got a like really bad elbow or something to it.
And it like,
it flared up and I'm like,
Oh shit,
here we go.
And then it kind of,
it faded away.
But I'm wondering if the person who asked if they do no gi,
I feel like maybe there's more opportunity for it to happen in no gi since
you're kind of more wrestling around.
I have a theory that,
uh,
the,
yeah,
the more you get into like front headlock type positions.
And I think that like over time, certain parts of your body will callous because i have a little bit of
cauliflower at the top here but i caught that early and i kind of just like didn't let people
get me in a headlock for a period of time and since then like people people try that shit on
me all the time but i think my ears have stiffened up so much that cauliflower just won't form
so with that being said try not to get yourself put
in headlock positions a crazy amount when you start jujitsu and i feel like this is just bro
fury over time your ears will kind of get a bit more used to it and then cauliflower won't be a
thing for you i never wanted it and i barely got it and i'm happy about that um but stay out of
cauliflower type of positions that'll just get a lot of fucking friction on there for a while.
And if you do get it, you know, if you don't want it to get worse, drain that motherfucker.
Put something over it.
And then if you're going to be that guy, be the guy that just puts on those ear thing.
Put on some little headgear.
Let that shit heal up so that it doesn't get worse.
Yeah, it's training, right?
Yeah.
Fuck.
Yeah.
But some people love it.
Hey, some people don't think you're a real grappler if you don't have it so fuck it improving your sleep quality is as easy
as shipping your mouth and what i mean by that is putting some tape on breathing through your nose
will increase your sleep quality it's no longer just something that only the bros do it's now
been researched and people understand that if you can breathe through your nose while you're asleep
you'll have better sleep quality and you will wake up more rested.
Hostage tape is also really awesome because I know what I used to do.
I used to use a little bit of a cheaper tape.
And every time I'd wake up in the morning, the tape would be somewhere else on the bed or on my face.
But it wouldn't be on my mouth anymore.
But hostage tape, if you have a beard or if you don't, will stay comfortably on your mouth all through the night.
And if you're someone who has a problem breathing through your nose,
Hostage also has nose strips.
So you can place those on your nose while you're asleep
or if you want to be like one of those Hermosi guys you can wear during the day.
Andrew, how can they get it?
Yes, that's over at HostageTape.com slash PowerProject
where you guys will receive an entire year's supply of mouth tape
and the nose strips for less than a dollar a night.
Again, that's over at Hostage.com slash power project links in the
description, as well as the podcast show notes.
Mark,
if I'm switching from a regular collagen protein powder to wanting to give
hardcore carnivore a try, should I be concerned with digestion issues?
I don't see any reason why I think it should, it should digest pretty good.
The feedback that we've gotten has been amazing
um the steak shake in general has been uh incredible like we sell out of it all the time
um for myself i haven't noticed any difficulties and and one of the reasons why i made the full
carnivore one was to take out allergens things that people typically have issues with, eggs, dairy, which is whey protein.
So I tried to get rid of all that stuff, gluten.
Andrew and I talked about it years ago, and he was mentioning that his wife has some gluten
issues, and he's like, there's not really much out there that tastes, that has any sort
of good flavor to it that, you know, just doesn't have certain things in it that will bug people's
stomach and i was like fuck i'll i'll work on it so here we are like maybe four years later
yeah it's uh made yeah and in our household it's it's a huge hit um my wife drinks it in the morning
and then like so she'll have it with her uh with her morning stuff and then she'll work out and
then she'll have breakfast afterwards but she's able to drink it like a full serving and then she'll work out and then she'll have breakfast afterwards but she's able to drink
it like a full serving and then and then go do like like a hard workout you know like like body
weight stuff where you're doing a lot of ups and downs and you know stuff like you're moving around
a lot that i don't want to do so like that's why i say hard stuff um and yeah she's just fine and
when i drink it same thing it's incredible i actually i think i like like it better with cashew milk than I do the regular steak shake.
But I like the regular steak shake and coffee better than I do the new one.
Keep you buying both.
Yeah.
I'm kind of screwed buying both.
AB, should I keep drinking MuscleTech, Celt Tech, Intra slash Post Workout?
Is it worthwhile?
I've never done, I've've never like drank muscle tech.
Is it just like a CarboMax type thing?
I think, yeah, you may have to look it up.
But I think if it's cell tech,
cell tech was carbohydrates and creatine.
And I believe it was, you know,
like a dextrose or something like that.
Okay.
What do you know?
A lot of people do that for workouts.
So I would say, you know, I of people do that for workouts so um i would say you know i
really appreciate that people are asking us questions but i think you know use your own
intuition a little bit too like how how do you feel you know um i know for myself years ago i
just made the decision to drink uh eaa's during workouts essential amino acids and i don't like
the flavor makes my breath smell like shit however um i do notice that
midway through the workout when i kind of don't always feel like pushing a little harder
when it is time to push a little harder i feel like i can and to be totally honest and truthful
i don't know if has anything to do with the eaas probably has more to do with hydration than
anything else but i do feel like i get some benefit from it so anything to do with the EAAs. It probably has more to do with hydration than anything else.
But I do feel like I get some benefit from it, so I've stuck with it.
Intra-workout carbohydrates, whether it is from one of those carbohydrate drinks or electrolytes during a workout, does make a difference.
I felt a difference.
I don't always do it because, honestly, sometimes I don't like carrying intra-workout carbs carbs around or having a shake around but it does make a difference so if you're someone who's like you're really focused on
getting a lot of volume in your training sessions you're pushing a lot of weight
having intra worker carbohydrates does help and it's something that will make a beneficial
difference on your workouts yeah and as we talk deeper about maybe some of the stuff that we've
done in the past i've been having having intra-workout shakes forever.
And, you know, people didn't really talk about intra-workout shakes years and years and years ago.
They talked about post-workout shakes.
So I did that for a long time.
But I was diligent with it.
I always had a scoop or two of whey protein and some sort of carbohydrate post-workout almost all the time for many, many years,
minus some times of when I was doing like a ketogenic diet.
And for those of you guys who are like asking questions,
if you actually want to get whether it's, you know,
the year supply hostage tape or your Vivo gift card or your within you gift
card or your Viori gift card,
you need to join the discord and you need to message me if you win.
If you don't, your prize will automatically go to somebody else else somebody won an eight sleep mattress a while ago quantum cloud i'm sorry but his
mattress went to somebody else because he didn't message me so that being said make sure you join
the discord and if we call your name at the end of this episode you must message me okay yeah and
there's like 78 of you watching and only 26 likes on the video take a half second to give it a quick
thumbs up please or you just hate watching us that could potentially people out there hating
jay rar how do you validate what information is accurate oh
that's uh that can be a really tough one. I would say learning some lessons from some people that have seemingly came from obscurity to like all of a sudden being on this rocket ship where you're starting to see them everywhere.
You see them a lot on IG and TikTok and YouTube and you just see them, see them, see them.
And you're like, man, where did this guy come from?
What was this person doing beforehand?
I think those are all really good questions.
And if you look back at the situation with the liver king, when people were trying to dig through his past, there really wasn't much to like find, which I think that's like suspicious, right?
Like you just couldn't find much.
People were digging and they couldn't find many pictures of him.
It's almost as if, and this is probably what happened. It's almost as if somebody went in and deleted a lot of stuff from years ago or hit it in some way.
It never pushed to any certain level.
Anyway, when it comes to trying to figure out good information, ask yourself, like, who is this source?
The source doesn't always have to matter.
It doesn't have to be a doctor necessarily or it doesn't have to be – it has to be an idea, though, that is going to survive what it is the person is talking about.
So if someone explains a certain jiu-jitsu technique and you're like, I've never heard anybody say that before, just like the guest we just had on.
He has unique ways of coaching jiu-jitsu.
If somebody like that comes along and they kind of come out of nowhere, then you have to ask yourself, OK, who else does this practice?
Oh, wait a second.
There's a bunch of other guys that do this practice and it seems to work pretty good for them. Oh, wait a second. He's a black belt. Seems to be working pretty good for him. So now you're starting to get a body of work where
you're like, maybe this, maybe this guy does have some good points. So, um, you're seeing people
like Gary Brekka and liver King and some of these, I'm not trying to compare those two necessarily.
You're seeing people that
seemingly are coming out of nowhere and they're getting very popular. And so I think that that
right there should be something where you're like, wait a second, I want to think about this more.
What is this information this person's giving me? Do I actually have a problem with methylating B
vitamins? Is that actually a concern for anyone? Have I ever heard anyone ever talk about it before?
And has he been able to actually help people before?
And then you start to dig around and, you know,
you find out that these people have had success with themselves and some other
people.
And then you're like, okay, well, maybe, maybe there is,
maybe this is a valid, that's how I kind of do it.
Usually.
Cool.
First off, I want to say that you guys are awesome.
The likes just boosted up.
You guys are fucking great.
Okay.
You did threaten them.
Why are you saying I threatened them, bro?
You're very muscular.
Huh?
Yeah.
Did I threaten them?
I think you did.
Did I threaten them?
It's the shoulders.
You know what's funny?
When it comes to validating information, I think when it comes to something like the supplement stuff, supplement stuff can be really janky because people will make wild claims about a lot of supplements.
But you could always, if you take the time, you could go to examine.com because examine.com has all of these supplements listed along with actually showing, okay, what has it been researched to do?
Like does this meet up with what everybody is saying about it?
And this is another thing like you got to realize like sometimes research hasn't caught up to what people are currently seeing.
So you can't always trust on studies.
But for supplements, it's something I think is worth the checkout.
When it comes to physical things, physical things when I'm paying attention to people, I look at, okay, have they been doing this thing for a while?
And what does their work show for themselves, right?
So it's like if I'm looking at somebody who's talking about mobility and strength, but they don't move well, right?
Then I'm like, well, do I really, am I going to pay attention to what
they're doing? Because I can't see what these results show. And this is in all the cases,
but when I'm looking to actually try to develop something, I want to see what has it actually
been, what has it done for you, right? So I think John Donahue is a great example.
John Donahue struggles to maybe do some of the movements that he's been teaching for a long time.
But then he has a pedigree of the most amazing jiu-jitsu team anyone's ever seen before.
So it's like –
John can also show it though.
Oh, yeah.
I'm sure he can fucking destroy people.
I'm sure.
It's just an interesting thing.
So I agree with what you're saying.
It's like go a couple layers deep on somebody.
And when you see like, oh, man man that guy doesn't really move the way
that i i would like to move even though he's teaching the stretching technique that's kind
of cool oh wait a second but he works with seven people that do gymnastics and they do this and they
do that now it's like okay now i see a body of work where this stuff is working for some of the
people he's working with and like paying attention to like maybe how long somebody has
been doing something right because like when it comes to when it comes to like the gym and getting
big you'll see a lot of young guys on tiktok they'll just start making stuff and some content
is good but it's like yeah they have an impressive physique but is is it because they've been doing
their chest presses in this specific way or is it just because they have great genetics for this?
That's why, like, when it comes to stuff like that, I look at who's been doing this for a while and what are their practices.
And then we come to an individual like Mike O'Hearn, who's 50-something years old and moves pretty well, has great range of motion.
People say he's been on drugs and shit, but he's one of the people who's been in the game for the longest amount of time and he still looks really good he
doesn't look unhealthy um so there's certain things you can take from what he does it doesn't mean
that you need to take everything and everything he says is being gospel but if you look at the
way the guy trains there are some trending things that you can be like okay he does these movements
that you don't see many people do he does these ranges these movements that you don't see many people do. He does these ranges of motion that you don't see many people go into.
But then he also has this really good movement ability with many of these movements that most people don't have.
I wonder why that is.
It might be because of the way he actually practices what he talks about.
We have been sharing a little bit of – on the show more recently as like a segment.
We've been talking about certain guests that we've had on or people that we admire and people that we think you should follow.
You should follow this guy.
Remember this guy?
Bill Maeda.
Follow Bill Maeda.
Yeah, check out Bill Maeda.
If you can bring up his latest clip, Andrew, of him using a kettlebell in his teeth, holding it with a towel.
This is a wild image.
This is a wild exercise that he's doing um but people like
that a friend of mine mike ryan these are people that like when you look at what they're doing
and you look at the physique and you look at the age i think bill's in his 50s right
he's in yeah mid 50s i believe and he's able to do like fucking like martial arts he's able to
sprint well he's able to do all kinds he moves well dude that what's that a 70 pounds and look how lean he is he looked like he was about to
die there at the end i like that he showed that it was like difficult you know yeah yeah yeah
but if you also pay attention to the way bill myer to lifts man like he does a lot of unconventional
things but just look at the way his body moves through these ranges in his mid-50s.
That's a crazy movement, but oddly enough, I would say he's doing it in a safe, as gentle as you can way.
You know what I mean?
Most of the movements and most of the stuff I see him do are like that.
Yeah, so, okay, that looks very dangerous.
He has to have a tremendous amount of balance.
But this isn't his first day working out.
He's been working out for a very long time.
And look at how slow and controlled he'll go.
Bill's a great example of that.
I did want to mention something interesting to you.
Jesus Christ.
And we can keep diving on Bill's stuff.
But you remember what you mentioned about Greg Sounders, the guy who we just had on?
Greg Sounders, I'll give you guys a quick summary and i'll keep this short but he's a jujitsu instructor that teaches you did two in a slightly different very different
way than many instructors many instructors will show a movement and have people do the exact
movement greg will give his students an intention like do what you can to get this person's knee to
the ground the students will figure out ways to do that, right?
And it's like they come up with a lot of creativity while doing those things.
But the interesting thing is I went to spar the next day.
I went to class the next day.
And instead of thinking in my head and just doing the things I knew how to do, I instead said, okay, my intent is to get both of this person's shoulders on the ground when I'm passing.
okay, my intent is to get both of this person's shoulders on the ground when I'm passing.
And what ended up happening is I started doing different things outside of my normal pattern of knee cut pass, do this, do this. And I've realized the way that I do things, it's what I've learned,
what I've seen, and I do. But I don't think of why am I doing this? Why am I knee cutting like
this? I'm just knee cutting currently. I'm knee cutting because I've been taught to knee cut.
I'm not knee cutting because I understand that I want to get both of their shoulders on the ground.
I want to flatten their hips and then I want to pass.
But when I thought of the intent of the movement, I started to be more creative with what I was doing.
So literally, when you change your thought process about how you do something in jujitsu and you understand why you're doing it, you then open up pathways for you to do things in a different way than
you've already been doing to achieve the same outcome.
That was mind-blowing for me.
So now I'm going back into all the things I know how to do in jiu-jitsu, like arm bar,
triangle, all these things, and setting up all these positions.
And instead, I'm not just thinking of, this is the way you do this move.
I'm thinking of, why are you doing this move?
What are you doing to their body? And that's going to open up different ways for me to achieve the same outcome. It's pretty
crazy. I love that. I mean, think about people are always thoroughly confused about training
lats, right? For some reason, that's always like a topic. Like people have a hard time
feeling their lats. It takes a long time to learn these things. But if you're to tell someone from
day one, all of the movements that you're doing that involve things but if you're to tell someone from day one all of the movements
that you're doing that involve pulling all you're really ultimately trying to do is you're trying to
tax or send a message to the back the muscles of the back all the muscles under your armpit and
all the muscles that i can't see when i see you from the front all those muscles in your upper
body those are the muscles that you're trying to get to. And so when you do a seated
row and when you do a lat pull down, when you do a pull up, it doesn't matter what movement it is,
you should be able to feel some tension. You should be able to feel some stress in those areas.
And you just leave it there and then they'll discover, they'll come back to you and say,
hey, you know what? I noticed I felt it in the back more when I held it at the top,
when I paused it. You're like, yeah, that's a pause.
That's great.
That's really cool.
Oh, when I went slower and I did full range, I felt more of a stretch.
Oh, where'd you feel it?
Oh, kind of underneath the arm and kind of like in my back.
You're like, there you go.
We got it.
We're there.
And last thing, think about something like, again, intention.
Think about something like the Jefferson curl, which many people will say is unsafe for the
back, right?
But what is our intention when
we're doing a jefferson curl it's to improve our spine's ability to round with load and come out
of that position with load right so if you think about that like you should have the ability to
round your spine down and up your spine doesn't you should bind shouldn't be super stiff you
should have the ability to create a stiff spine but then also to create a spine that can move and when you think about it that way
it doesn't seem so unsafe and you can obviously load it safely and load it slowly to progress
that movement but many people look at something like that and they're like that's bad for the back
no no it's not bad for the back i love this line of thinking i think you can kind of apply it to
just about anything but uh when i think about some of the stuff that greg was saying i can't help but think about
michael jordan kobe bryant shaquille o'neal um joe montana fucking tom brady like anytime these
guys were asked questions about very specific things they looked at it so much differently
than everybody else yeah and i don't know how they came to that or where it came from.
I don't know if they had a coach that was like Greg or if they just happened to kind of stumble upon that with some sort of intuition or gut instinct.
But thinking about what you're saying about like that movement of the spine and executing that on the Jefferson curl, I think that when I hit a squat when I was competing I think my view of it was maybe different than
what other people might think that I was trying to do
I remember particularly in the squat I would unrack it
and I was just like I'm totally safe
and I'll have a chance I'll have an opportunity to squat this weight
every single time if I simply just don't move
if I don't move my upper body if I keep my upper body in this fucking position, it's game over.
My legs are strong enough.
My lower back is strong enough.
But if I tilt forward or if there's rounding in the spine or if there's flexion or overextension, I'm fucking toast because these weights are fucking heavy.
And you successfully built that.
You successfully did that, right? right now where i can't move
i'm a little nice i'm a little bucket of concrete but you're working out you're working through it
working on it all right just one really quick last thing um is like as long as it's not too
taxing on the body if it's like a physical thing about like trying to like kind of like see if
somebody's legit or not just try it because you're gonna find somebody saying something negative about everybody and you're going to find a study that's going to counter the study that you found that's going to be positive.
So again, as long as it's not too taxing on whatever it is that you're trying to figure out, just try it for yourself and then maybe then go searching for other answers.
And if you do, you need to probably try it for a little bit of time. And also you'll
probably need to regress what you saw. Well, the reason why I say that, and we'll get to the next
question, guys. The reason why I say that is because you think of something like a seated
good morning. And I've seen, I've seen videos recently of some people getting injured doing
a seated good morning. But the thing is, is you can regress that movement. You don't have to do
some people might not be able to visualize this, but a seated good mornings when you're like
sitting on a bench, you have a barbell on your back and you're going down to the bench and you're
coming up. Right. Um, but if you are working on an incline bench and you just bring the incline
bench up and you limit the range of motion that you go down, you can work safely through that
range. And then over time you can get lower and lower and lower. Like one of the reasons why a lot of these movements don't work for a lot of people
is because we bite off the end first. We go to the hardest version of it first, our bodies can't do
it or we're too weak. And then we're like, this probably isn't good for me, or this probably
isn't safe, or I'm probably not made to do this. Whereas there's always a regressive aspect of
something that you can do to progress to what
that harder movement looks like yeah i think that we just think inherently that if things don't feel
sketchy that they're not going to work great but they shouldn't really feel sketchy especially if
they're new they shouldn't feel sketchy at all yeah power project family foot health is something
that we talked about all the time on the podcast and that's's why we love Vivo barefoot shoes, but we love them not just because they are flat, flexible and wide, but also they don't look bad. They look actually really,
really good. These are the new boots. These are their Modus trainers for in the gym. These are
some of their casual shoes. But when you look at a lot of barefoot shoes, some people get turned off
because they don't want to wear those shoes outside. And that's understandable. That's very
understandable. But's very understandable.
But with Vivo, these shoes look so good, and they're so good for your feet that they're almost a no-brainer.
So, well, they are a no-brainer.
Andrew, how can they get some of these kicks?
Yes, you guys got to head over to VivoBarefoot.com slash Power Project, and you guys will receive 15% off your order.
Again, VivoBarefoot.com slash Power Project.
Links in the description as well as the podcast show notes all right jordan broadhead i can't help but think of like a
dickhead when i hear that name it's because we're all a little gay right uh how do you guys find a
balance between just going for it and training a little what do you broadhead broadhead we're not
gonna be able to get past that honestly Yeah, it's tough, man.
It's tough.
Is that your name, Doc?
Because honestly, it's a good name.
Well, someone saw his dick and they're like, Broadhead.
That was like the family name since the 1600s?
Yeah.
We dubbed thee Broadhead.
Yeah.
And then everybody else was like, yup.
Yeah.
All right, Jordan, Broadhead.
Yeah, because they wouldn't want to be Narrowhead.
Yeah, that's a different family.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or Pencilhead.
Right?
That's not great.
Nah, it's not Broadhead.
It's a strong last name.
Garthy.
How do you guys find a balance between just going for it and training really sports specific
and also wanting to feel like a healthy human who's pretty athletic and can do other things as well.
Wow.
That's a broad question.
From a broad headed motherfucker.
Broadly stated. of, you know, again, going back to some of the stuff that Greg said, like if you put stuff in into, you don't want to like box yourself in and be closed off to like being
able to have a lot of creativity.
However, if you box up an idea and give yourself at least an intent, I think that you can end
up with really great results.
So if you are, you want to have a good workout, you want to feel a little bit like a bro,
you want to feel strong, but you also want to feel athletic. Maybe you, um, you know, pick one of your
favorite exercise. Maybe you love deadlifting. And so the workout starts out with some deadlifting,
hit some deadlifting, maybe after the deadlift, maybe you do some box jumps. Maybe after that,
um, you want to do a little cardiovascular stuff. So you hit some sprints on the Aerodyne bike and then you throw some med balls around and like that's a great workout.
And you can push yourself really hard on that.
Like if the safest place to push yourself the hardest would probably be on the Aerodyne bike.
You could hurt yourself doing just about anything.
But that's an area where I've seen a lot of people do sprints on there.
I've seen way more people hurt themselves going outside and doing a sprint.
I've seen way more people hurt themselves by trying a heavy deadlift than I've seen on like the Aerodyne bike.
So if you pick the appropriate tool, the appropriate exercise, you can get a fuck ton out of it.
And you can really balance that line of where you're working really hard.
For myself and my own workouts, that's the way a lot of them are structured.
If I'm going to work harder
or have a pretty good or strong intensity on something,
it might be a bodybuilding movement,
but aside from bodybuilding
and just getting blood to an area,
it's going to be probably on the sled
because I'm not going to hurt myself on the sled.
I'm going to get great movement from it.
It's really good for the cardiovascular.
It helps with my running.
I think it also is just helping me with movement pattern and my gait and stuff in general too.
Yeah.
You know, you mentioned going for it and training really sport specific.
Obviously, it depends on what your sport is.
Like, for example, Mark, when you were a powerlifter, you just mentioned your intent when squatting is to not let that back move right
right so if you were doing a lot of like the the stuff we're doing now like maybe maybe you could
have done some loaded you probably already did you you did some loaded road like rotation i was
still doing the sled and stuff like that i was doing some stuff like that but not a lot of
rotational stuff not a lot of not a lot of things that would encourage more mobility than what was needed for powerlifting at the time. But I could have done it.
You can do some things that use your spine so it has the ability to move.
But one thing I think is like we talk about it a lot is the idea of microdosing things.
And there's a jujitsu program that I'm putting out that the idea of microdosing is baked into the program.
So, for example, I want people to sit on the floor daily.
Whether they're doing a little bit of work or they're at home chilling, just find a way to sit on the floor.
Because when you sit on the floor, naturally, your body's going to move into different positions.
And if you're not grappling every single day and the only times you get into those grappling positions is when you get on the mat, then your body could be missing out on some ability to
get better at accessing those ranges. So you can passively sit on the floor while doing other
things. The same thing with like jumping and jumping rope. Instead of having jumping as part of your direct workout, maybe grab a jump rope and each day maybe just try to jump for one to two or three minutes.
the ability to jump is going to go a long way, but it doesn't need to be a big part of your workout.
So the thing is, is like, can you figure out ways to like have small bouts of these other things that these other abilities that you want to have? Can you, can you add that into small parts of your
day outside of your workout in the gym? You probably can. And those little micro doses
will add up over time into having the ability to jump, having the ability to be a little bit more mobile and flexible, even potentially having the ability to like hop into a jog or a light
sprint because that doesn't have to be a big workout.
It could just be something that you do once or twice a day randomly here and there.
But then your body now has the ability to do it and it's not something that you have
to structure into your training routine in a very rigid fashion.
Yeah, throughout your day, there's definitely places where you can kind of microdose exercise
into your life. But even within exercise itself, you can microdose stuff in. So there's really no
reason why in between doing some sets of like bench press and some pull-ups, why you wouldn't
be able to do some like tib work or why you wouldn't be able to do some neck work.
There's no reason why if you're on a walk that you can't occasionally just jog or pick up the pace or stretch on a bench or just, you know, get some extra movement in than you just then rather than you just walking.
When I'm running, I when I'm feeling good on a run, I love to move around a lot. Like I'm like, okay, well, I'm just jogging,
you know, forward aimlessly forever. Let me just cut this way and let me run, you know,
I'm going to run towards that tree for a few minutes. I'm going to run that way.
I'll jump up on curbs. I'll jump up on benches. I just, it's a little bit of like smelly parkour
and it feels good and it's a lot of fun. I'll also run backwards. I'll run sideways. I'll
It feels good and it's a lot of fun.
I'll also run backwards.
I'll run sideways.
I'll do the movement you do in football where you're trying to do butt kicks and you're doing high knees.
Just mix it all up during the run.
Some people that run, I think they're scared to do stuff like that because it takes them off of their workout.
But I'm not trying to do anything real crazy with running.
So I just I want to have fun with it.
I want to be able to do it for a long time. And I love the fitness of it.
I love the mental side of it.
Nice.
All right.
Now, this is a strength question from Chris Q.
Remember, guys, if you want to win, make sure if we pull your name out, you got to be part of the discord.
You got to message me on Discord, okay?
So Chris Q, what kind of set should I be doing to build strength towards my PRs?
I PR'd at a 235-pound one rep max squat, but it was tough.
Should I just be doing five sets of five at 225 squat or should I go even lower?
You answered your question bro yeah sounds it sounds heavy compared to uh the weight that you handle for one rep max
yeah yeah uh sometimes though people have uh when people are newer with lifting they have something
that's called like a neurological inefficiency and so sometimes those numbers are a lot closer
to each other your You're one rep max
in regards to something that you can do for three reps or for five reps. So for example,
someone that squats 500 pounds, it'd be very hard for them to move 490 around for five reps.
It would probably feel like it's going to kill them. So I would definitely suggest using lighter weight because you can get better form.
5-3-1 I think is a great program, Jim Wendler.
And he talks in the book so much over and over again.
He keeps mentioning he wants you to use even less weight than what he suggests in the book.
But I don't know if anyone ever really got that message.
But he wants your five reps to look flawless.
If you can remember this, this is a good guide and good gauge for you to have basically forever with your lifting.
Your last rep should look a lot like your first rep.
The last repetition of your last set should look like the first repetition of your first set.
Within reason, you know.
Okay, yeah, you can go for a little bit.
There can be a little shimmer or shake.
You can have a little bit of dysfunction in there, but that's kind of the goal.
And remember before we were talking about intent.
That's your intent.
When someone says do three sets of 10, the intent isn't to just annihilate the muscle.
The intent isn't just to get blood to the muscles.
The intent isn't just the pump.
isn't just the pump. The intent is, can you execute three sets of 10 with one minute rest in between and have all 30 reps from rep one all the way through rep 29 and rep 30 be as clean as possible?
So with strength training, that's something that people tend to forget. In this guy's case,
I would suggest that maybe do like sets of six for a little while and just forget about your one rep
max for for a little while and um i would say use 185 pounds you know without seeing you lift i
would say use approximately 185 pounds move that around a bunch week one do four do like three sets
of six week two add another set week three add another set get yourself to be able to handle
like four or five sets of six reps that would be a really awesome start from there you can start to
lower the repetitions and you can start to do uh sets of five one week and then the next week you
can lower it to four the next week you can lower to three and next week you can lower to two and
then you can uh maybe try you know, a new one rep max.
But at that point, your one rep max will probably be like a good 15, 20 pounds stronger.
That and the way at which you lift these weights.
One thing I notice with a lot of new strength athletes is speed is the goal.
So, you know, you see experienced lifters squat down and their squat looks so fast and quick.
And then you try to emulate a fast and quick squat.
And the squat looks so fast and quick.
And then you try to emulate a fast and quick squat.
But you don't have the mechanics to be able to control every aspect of that squat with speed.
So you might think, well, if I want to train speed, why don't I just train like go fast?
But if you want to get better at controlling that load through space and also figuring out the parts of the movement where you might be weak, it's a good idea to slow the movement down.
So this might be a good place where you can implement a little bit of tempo.
So it could be that you go three seconds down, you hold that bottom,
and then you even control the tempo up rather than blasting out of the bottom of that squat.
And what you're going to notice is you'll see like, oh shit, when I get to this phase of my squat, there's a little bit of weakness there for some reason.
Now when you're working that pace, you can get better at working through that range of motion. And you'll find,
you got to, if you slow it down, you might have to lighten the load, but doing that over time will
help you become much stronger. That's been something that helps me get through multiple
strength plateaus. Get a lot stronger. You'll get stronger faster and with lighter weight and with less risk of injury.
Mm-hmm.
All right.
Quick question from Hernan Martinez.
And right now we're at 60 likes.
We got 85 people in here.
Could we get it up to like 80 since there's 85 people in here? I mean, that would be kind of cool, right?
So we'll keep answering your questions.
We'll keep helping you all out.
But maybe help us out.
Thank you.
All right, Hernan,
thoughts on milk.
So many kinds,
but no one ever talks about it.
I like that question.
I like that too.
Yeah,
their store has like so much milk.
There's regular milk.
There's fucking goat milk.
There's low fat skim milk.
There's almond milk.
A2 milk.
You know what I'm getting from Sprouts?
They have this like strawberry milk and they have this chocolate milk i'm gonna love those
chocolate are they like are they super thick too are they super thick i gotta look at the
brand because the brand has cow on it so it's healthy healthy it's got a healthy little cow
on there yeah yeah i gotta find the brand though ch Yeah, I think I would say most of the people that you follow or watch on social media platforms that have physiques that you're probably – you might have a goal to acquire.
Most of those people don't drink a lot of milk.
It doesn't mean you can't have some milk.
I'd say probably a lot of those people might use milk in stuff here and there, like in a coffee
and stuff like that. Might use it in a protein shake, things of that nature. But like you start
to talk about like aesthetic athletes, people that are getting on a stage, it's very rare
for any of those people to have milk. That doesn't mean you can't have milk, but if that's kind of where the question is coming from, if you're trying to lose body fat and you really have struggled with it, I would try to limit milk.
I would try to limit dairy in general, milk and cheese and stuff.
It's just so easy to overeat it.
And it makes overeating other stuff even more fun.
So I would just have some caution towards it.
But I think milk's fucking awesome. On the other end, if you're trying to get big and strong,
I think milk is absolutely unbelievable. And keep in mind that milk is the only food source that
you'll find in nature that has fat, carbs, and protein, has fat and carbs together.
And you think about it from the perspective of like when you're a baby,
you know, that's the perfect thing to fatten you up is milk.
Mama's milk.
Just be thoughtful about it.
There was a guy, this client I used to train when I was younger,
his name was Dylan.
I ain't going to put his last name out there,
but we started working together.
And in our first thing, he was like, yeah, I drink a gallon of milk every day.
And then I was like, wait, what?
You drink what?
He's like, yeah, I drink a gallon of milk a day.
I'm like, how?
Because this wasn't just like your 2%. This man drank a gallon of full, fat, whole milk.
He's like, that's something I did from a kid.
And like, it's just i i feel like i feel like
i feel like white people love milk like i feel like it's a thing like because i met a lot of i
met a lot of white guys white things no i'm not i met a lot of white guys who like the gallon of
milk thing a day is a thing and i'm like wow like that is and even like milk at just a glass of milk just straight milk at breakfast
yeah it's so interesting breakfast yeah breakfast is a little bit more common but i remember
in junior high like when i started like having like friends that i'd go to like to their house
for dinner and stuff yeah it threw me off that it was like uh like something savory like i'll
just say like fried chicken or something and milk and they served me a glass of milk and i'm like this is weird it's different yeah and they were a white
family i just i had never experienced that before me neither and we're not roasting y'all it's just
like it's just an interesting cultural difference it's weird um but a hack for the milk thing dude
is i just like using some milk and protein shake. So I'll buy this strawberry milk and this chocolate milk, and I'll use some of it when I make my protein along with water, along with the two scoops of protein.
Because it adds a little shbang, and it's not crazy on the calories, but it gives me a little bit of oomph to my protein shake.
Yeah, I'm a huge fan of cashew milk from the Silk brand.
It doesn't have really anything weird in it.
Like if you look at like oat milk or whatever, has like a just a freaking laundry list of ingredients cashew milk it just has like
fake cashews maybe i don't know if they're real or not but it's 25 calories per eight ounce serving
and uh it's it's really thick so it makes your protein shakes really thick it makes it really
delicious yeah thickens them up a little bit yeah yeah? Thickies. Yeah. Yeah. If you're real, you know, if you are way into the seed oils and all that stuff and way into,
you know, stuff having like a bunch of other crap in it, then most of those milks don't,
most of those milks suck.
Yeah.
You know, but that's only if you care about that shit.
I don't, I don't think it's a big deal.
Yeah.
And then if you look at like a, like an almond milk carton, it'll say like it has like three almonds.
So you're like, wait, what the fuck?
How did you make this then?
You're like, what else is in here?
Yeah.
From Jorge or George Emery.
If I don't sweat, should I limit my salt intake?
I'm low carb and mainly carbs come from fruit.
He doesn't sweat.
You don't sweat.
So, I mean, I'm assuming maybe he doesn't even sweat during vigorous exercise.
I mean, what do you—
I go by feel.
Like if you feel drained and tired from workouts or you get headaches and stuff, then I think it's pretty obvious you might need more electrolytes.
But if you feel good, then I wouldn't sweat it too much.
Try an electrolyte supplement with your workout and see if you feel better because electrolytes are one of those things that you feel the difference.
That's why we don't forget to take electrolytes because like we noticeably feel better and more hydrated when we use them, right?
But if you take your electrolytes and then you go and you do your exercise and you do it for a few days and you feel literally no difference, right?
Then maybe it's not – maybe it's just not that necessary for you and
you're just not expelling but maybe one thing you might find out is you start taking electrolytes
and you start sweating more this is a good thing because that happens to some people sometimes
so something to take into account you want to hop into our topic or do you think we should just keep
cruising on this a lot of questions yeah yeah We'll save it for a rainy day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
This is a good one.
Joshua Samuel.
Over time, my T levels tanked with IF.
I have went back and forth with the intermittent fasting along with blood work over the years to confirm this is my issue.
Do you guys do IF?
Heard of this issue with IF?
firm, this is my issue. Do you guys do IF? Heard of this issue with IF?
I think that when people are in a caloric deficit for long periods of time,
that is definitely something that can happen. If people aren't paying attention to how much fat they're consuming, it can really wreak havoc on the hormones. So those would be two things I would
really have some concern over. Dietary cholesterol is important.
It's a building block of testosterone.
So if someone does intermittent fasting and they don't have a huge appetite and they eat like once or twice a day and they're not really getting much cholesterol in there and they're not getting much fat, in particular saturated fat, your testosterone levels are probably going to just completely tank. Yeah. You, you, you killed that pretty much. Um, one thing to think about is think about your
habits when you fast, like, like, cause like you said, if you start doing intermittent fasting and
then you also start eating just such a slow, low amount of food, that's not going to be good for
your, for your hormones. That's why like we've – I still utilize fasting.
But when I eat, I fucking eat.
I eat the amount of food that I need to eat to be able to perform.
So my T levels are still great.
And there have been times where we took fasting too far where it's like we – I literally felt super fatigued.
And it was because I would fast for like 16 hours or 20 hours. But then I wouldn't eat as much as I needed to. And I'd feel
it the next day. So I was like, okay, I can still fast for that amount of time, but just assure
that when I eat, I eat enough. And the fats, like you said, are huge. If you limit those fats and
you're eating a low amount of fat, especially as a dude, that'll fuck up your test. Or that won't,
I won't say fuck up your test. It will, your test will be lower. So make sure you get in enough fat
because that makes a big difference. Your diet can definitely have a huge negative impact on your hormones
just like somebody that's
eating haphazardly
and they're not on a nutritional protocol.
They could end up with
higher estrogen levels and
higher cortisol levels and so on.
Cool.
We're almost at 80 likes. I think we can
just get to 100. If you're here,
give us a quick thumbs up.
It takes literally less than a second.
And also, if you're here, we're going to get to the next question.
On the audio side of things, don't leave here.
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And the podcast has been growing.
But if you listen on audio and you can leave us a quick review, hey, we love you, but we'll love you forever and we'll still love you forever.
But just, hey, it helps the pod.
So if you can on audio or on Apple or Spotify, give us a rating.
It helps.
Giovanni.
Hey, guys, I keep hurting my fingers during jujitsu.
Seems to be more in the gi.
They get caught with grips.
Any advice?
with grips any advice um my suggestion would be and this is another microdose that i have programmed in for people but see if you can get yourself like these finger extensors on amazon
get yourself these finger extensors on amazon this is another microdose that that
helps the hands get stronger over time without having to program in grip work
but the finger extensors are going to be helpful.
And then if you can also get yourself just some grippers because I keep these kinds of
things in my little –
Man bag.
My little – yeah.
It's my man purse.
It's my man purse.
It's my murse.
I keep these things.
This is called Pro Hands.
It's from – also from Amazon.
But this, I can literally literally press down with my fingers.
I can squeeze it with my hands.
And this is super helpful at helping the hands get stronger over time.
And it's something that, like, if you're sitting at an office desk and you're doing some stuff, you can pull it out.
You can pull out your finger extensors.
And if you're reading, if you're chilling in front of the TV, you can literally just be doing this type of stuff.
chill in front of the TV.
You can literally just be doing this type of stuff.
But over time, the little bit of this stuff each day adds up to the hands becoming stronger
and more durable and more resilient
because especially in grappling
and especially in the gi,
you're doing so much grabbing of that fabric
that if you're someone who only does it three times a week
and then the only time you do grabbing
or you use your hands in that way
is those three times a week, shit.
You shouldn't be surprised
that you end up getting all these hand injuries. But if you can just have something that you do each day for your hands in that way is those three times a week, shit. You shouldn't be surprised that you end up getting all these hand injuries.
But if you can just have something that you do each day for your hands,
get into extension, grip, you know, do that, your hands,
my hands have become way more durable over time.
I haven't had, because actually I tore the tendon in this pinky years ago.
But I haven't, like, this stuff has really helped.
And I do it a little bit every single day.
So that would be my suggestion. A combination of, like, this stuff has really helped. And I do it a little bit every single day. So that would be my suggestion.
Combination of, like, squeezing, right?
Like if you just, if someone who doesn't usually squeeze much, if you just squeeze your hands real hard and push on your fingernails real hard, that might be uncomfortable for some people.
And if you're someone that does jujitsu, you probably don't feel that pain anymore because you're probably used to grabbing like that.
So it's weird.
It's a combination, right, of you pressing your own nails into your own skin, your own
tissue, and then you're also grabbing something that is meant to be grabbed.
And then there's also the raking effect of like the back of the knuckles, right, that
you guys have to deal with.
And then on top of that, you're trying to grab someone that doesn't want you to grab them. And so they're twisting or turning a certain way.
So now your fingers are getting all, you know, twisted and turned around, right?
Yes. And let me add in a technique for you. And this is something that I,
something that I started doing over time. I started doing this years ago. But one thing,
when you're playing with the gi and you're doing gi jujitsu, when you start rolling with more
experienced people, you're going to notice that they break grips, right?
So there's going to come a time where you start to anticipate that. And the thing is, if you're
death gripping something and someone goes to break the grip and you death grip and they break the
grip against your fingers, that can hurt. So anticipate the grip break. So grip, grip, make
them waste their energy. They go for the grip break, let go and grab another grip. Right once they grip break, let it go.
Because they're wasting their energy to break that grip and you're just kind of letting it go and then grabbing something else.
And your hands aren't getting that level of stress from the constant grip breaking going on.
So your grip, grab their lapel, pull around, they grip break, let it go and grab another grip.
So now your fingers aren't getting all beat up and they're wasting their energy breaking all these grips so something to think about especially
if you're a beginner yeah and that goes along the lines of what i was going to say is just you'll
become more efficient at it i don't know how long he's been doing it but i just know when i first
started a grip that had like a no i wasn't in danger of losing the grip uh the other person
wasn't in danger because of my grip but i still death gripped everything just because I'm like, oh, I got something.
Let me, you know.
And now I've learned that, like, you don't have to do that all the time.
So, like, that really, really helps.
Yeah.
Look into my eyes.
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links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes okay so thomas fair my leg
day program is always back squats followed by front squats by the time i get to front squats
i'm shaking in the knees am i just being a bitch and need to build up the capacity?
There's some things that are hard to build yourself up for or to, and sometimes there's not a good reason to worry about it.
So as an example, it was very, very difficult for me to deadlift and squat in the same training session. And I tried it a bunch of different ways. And the only thing I could ever manage was
I was able to deadlift after I squatted,
but only light and only for accessory work.
But if I deadlifted first,
I couldn't figure out how to squat.
It just like literally hurt,
which is weird because neither one of those lifts
hurt individually.
But if I deadlifted first and went to squat, I'd feel my knees.
I'd feel my back.
My core felt weird.
It just wiped me out.
So I don't know if there's a reason to really worry too much about building up a tolerance
so that I would just maybe switch the order of the exercises.
Yeah.
And it's an interesting thing because you mentioned like deadlifts would be fatiguing
for you.
But for me, deadlifts were not fatiguing at all like I could do.
Maybe it's because I'm a bitch and did sumo.
But I could sumo deadlift three times a week, right?
So when it came to hard workouts and if I had to do two lifts, you know, I would do these – I would like do my harder thing first, right?
So if it was going to be like a bench and squat or squat and deadlift, I would squat first because I knew I can handle the strain from deadlifts it's not going to kill me right so that's something to think about
too and yeah that's something yeah maybe put your front squats first if you want to prioritize them
or just pick a week where you're mainly focused on front squats and then the next week you're
mainly focused on your back squat yeah reminds me of like when I first started working out, I would have something like RDLs, deadlifts, bent over rows, 45 degree back raises.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, all my lifts are getting so much weaker.
And it's like, oh, well, because you're just fucking annihilating your back and all these muscles in the same time.
So nowadays I just like doing a non-opposing muscle groups in a workout.
So I'll do literally a push pull, like I'll work chest and then i'll work back like you know simultaneously so that way you don't get too fatigued doing the
same thing over and over and over and questioning like he is like dude my knees are shaking like
that sucks so it's like imagine if you had you know everything in your reserve for those front
squats versus you know being shot and this is the last thing i'll mention on this if you do choose
to do
back squats and front squats on the same day and you're noticing a lot of fatigue
maybe and i don't know this is your case but whatever your first squat is that should be
the harder squat and then you're if you do front squats second you'll lower the intensity
and you you just go through the range of motion for the movement but it's not it shouldn't be
killing you you should still be able to have pretty much perfect form on that movement. That's the way you're going to be able
to progress it well, rather than potentially if you're going way too heavy and way too intense
and the front squat form is shitty and it's just killing you. So that's something to think about
there too. Mark. Oh, go ahead. I was just thinking about some of the questions that we get just from
an injury perspective. And it reminded me, me because of what Andrew said sometimes when people have like elbow issues and like elbow wrist bicep
issues shoulder issues we just forget how much especially when it comes to like the elbow we
just forget how much the elbow is involved with the act of lifting weights in any capacity, whether you're rowing or pulling
or doing a push-up or trying to do a pull-up.
Your hand, you know, is like your hand moves the weight usually in almost in so many exercises.
There's exceptions when you have the weight on your back and stuff like that.
But your elbows are even involved and your biceps are even involved in a deadlift.
And it's involved in like just about everything.
So if you can, for anyone that has elbow issues, you got to try to think about how do I reduce
the overall amount of work that this area is doing, at least for a little while until
it's not so inflamed.
So you might have to take two or three weeks just to kind of just think in your head of,
you know, what are these workouts going to look like now?
This is where it might be good to change your training up a little bit.
Maybe you used to like to do a lot of sets and a lot of reps.
Maybe you do less sets, less reps for anything that involves the elbow.
And maybe you went from, I don't know, doing 100 sets per month that involve the elbow joint. And now maybe you cut it in half. And if you cut it in half, it's like,
holy fuck, you should, you should be able to get better and you should be able to get rid of some of that pain. Yep. Okay. Mark from a big man on campus. Now I tore my pec back in July and had
the surgery three months ago. I know Mark has torn his pec three
and a half times. Does he have any advice on returning to chest exercises? I'm finishing PT
this month for it. I do my chest work all the time. I did some this morning and Enzima felt
my pecs. I think it was yesterday. I felt your pecs yesterday. They're nice, thick and juicy.
Yeah. So, you know, you'll be able to get you know, you'll be able to get back to doing a lot of the exercises you love, especially the fact that you had a surgery.
You're just going to have to take your time.
That's the main thing.
You're going to have to take your time.
I don't know if you have a slingshot, but a slingshot might be a good idea to help you kind of handle some of those eccentrics and to kind of help you as you rehab.
But take your time.
Take it easy.
I found that eccentric work was really, really helpful. It's going to help you as you rehab. But take your time. Take it easy.
I found that eccentric work was really, really helpful.
So start with the bar.
Start with really, really super-duper light weights.
And just maybe take six to eight seconds on the way down with a lot of your lifts in the beginning.
I wouldn't worry too much about concentric. You know, maybe you can have somebody assist you with the lift here and there so that that way you can really just mainly concentrate on some eccentric work. But eccentric work and isometric work was really, really
important in helping me to rehab those areas. Do you think there's anything important about
like range of motion for like his pressing or push-ups and stuff that would that be helpful or um yeah i mean you got to just
take it fucking slow oh yeah you know after a surgery you know they they did they did cut you
open they cut into some you know areas in your body and so uh just don't do any ranges of motion
that aren't available don't don't do anything that of motion that aren't available.
Don't do anything that's not available.
And at some point you might have to work on, you know,
pushing through some of that pain, but certainly not in the beginning.
So, and give yourself, you know,
think about like a timeframe of when you want to start to be able to actually press again and have it be, you know, reasonable. Say, Hey, you know what?
About a year from now, I'd like to be able to it be, you know, reasonable. Say, hey, you know what, about a year from now,
I'd like to be able to, I don't know, say your best bench is 315
and you want to get back to being, you know, within a year from now,
I want to be able to bench 225 again.
Something like that.
Something really reasonable.
It sucks, but that's just where you're at.
It's just a blip in time, and over time, you should be able to come back
hopefully just as strong and maybe even stronger.
Nice.
All right.
Question from – this is interesting.
Wegener – Wegener?
Interesting.
What do you guys like to eat before you go to a strength and a conditioning session to fuel up?
Some strength conditioning sessions I do fast.
If I know it's going to be a hard session, I'll have some like, you know, those Bibigo white rice things.
Some of that maybe with a little bit of eggs or whatever I have at home.
Sometimes I will like have one of those lollipops with it for some extra little bit of carbs if I know it's going to be
a hard session and yeah, I'll just have a bit of carbs beforehand.
Yeah. I'd say I'm about the same way. I, uh, have some carbs, you know,
sometimes before and after workouts, um,
like coming, coming from here today and then heading home,
kind of depending on the time and everything.
Sometimes I'll have like my carnivore crisps.
I'll eat some of those.
I'll eat something light, and then I'll go like hit my run.
But for lifting sessions, it's almost always the same thing.
I just always have the super smelly shake in the morning, which is just coffee.
And then I put ice in it so i make it an iced coffee and i put the carnivore full carnivore steak shake in there and i throw some
creatine in there and i throw some chocolate electrolytes in there and bam that's my super
smelly shake and then about an hour later or so I'll probably lift and then like today
I lifted and then I had some EAAs and some carbs uh during the training session and I've been doing
stuff like that for a long time and that's what feels good for me I do agree with Encima though
like you know if it's going to be like a harder session or if it's like at a certain time of day, I would rather have like lean,
some source of lean meat or lean protein
and some carbohydrates.
All right.
Now, I'm sorry if I skipped a few questions
because I went to the bottom.
There's a lot of fucking questions, guys.
I don't know if we'll be able to get to all of them,
but we're going to try to get to a lot of these.
So, Regunde.
Regunde.
Is five days a week too much for a beginner?
I understand it may depend on goals, but I hear some channels like Renaissance Periodization Strength arguing to lift as little as possible if you're getting sore versus Jeff Nippert.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
It's an interesting thing because, you know,
you can do whatever the fuck you want, really,
and get some really amazing and great results.
You know, the answer I give you today would be different
than the answer I give you tomorrow and so on
just because this topic changes for me quite a bit. But I would say you should be able to get great results out
of lifting weights three to four times a week. I would also say that most people that enjoy
lifting weights, they like it a lot and they want to lift more. I'd also say that you can lift every
day. I've done that before. I did that for like probably a few years where I just literally lifted every day in some capacity. Now, like, you know, sometimes it was
cheap. I would just go in and do like one movement for one, uh, one body part or something. But
I did, I did, uh, you know, get some sort of lift in there. I would say, look, if you're not making
good progress and you, um, are looking for something new and something different
than, and you've been lifting frequently for a long time, try to cut back to three or four times
a week. You'll be shocked at how well it will work for you just because you haven't done it.
Not because it's necessarily better, but for a lot of people, it might be refreshing. It might
be new. And then again, you know, the, on the other side of this is always, most people are trying to lose body fat and everyone's out there chasing like body fat
percentages. A lot of people are trying to lose weight and your energy, you know, you can't make
something out of nothing. And so you're trying to bundle up this energy to work out five, six days
a week. And it's just not really there. The conclusion I came to more
recently was that no matter how good somebody is at something, it's really rare for someone to
have workouts that are awesome three or four times a week. So even at six times a week and
seven times a week that you work out, maybe only half of those are going to be a good workout or a workout that you consider
to be good or awesome or whatever the words are that we'd use with it. So my challenge to you
would be see if you can increase your accuracy with that. So Ray Gundo, you're following a
program, which is dope. And another strategy here there, another strategy here is this. The thing
is, is you got to think like you have a, some people like to work out more times a week cause
maybe there's not other things that you're doing. Right. So on those other days, maybe you don't
have any other thing that you'd like to do physically and you want to hit the gym. And
with that being said, you got to realize that you got a battery dog, right? So if, if like,
you know, three of those days you're able to go super hard but you notice that your energy on the other days of your workouts, those other two days feel like crap, maybe what you got to do is you maybe need to taper off a little bit of the volume on a little bit of each day of your workouts, right?
So that every day ends up being – you can push pretty hard every single day.
pretty hard every single day. Another thing that you could do is if you wanted to have three days where you're training pretty hard or four days where you're training pretty hard, you could have
your other day where you go into the gym be a day where it's like you're going in and you're getting
a pump, right? Not everything is super close to failure because the thing is, is if we're trying
to grow, then we do need to be training close to and sometimes to failure, but not every single day.
We don't have the energy to do that every single day of the week.
That means that certain sessions can be, I'm just trying to get a pump.
I'm trying to work through different ranges of motion.
I'm trying to develop movement ability, and I'm not going to failure.
Maybe I'm going even four to five reps shy of failure since I'm going through the motions because this is the thing.
When you train like that, those days can actually aid in recovery because you're getting blood flow to those tissues that you worked out right so if you did a hard leg
day at the beginning of the week maybe on the other leg day that you do is just you go in and
you go through full ranges of motion you take it slow but the blood you're driving to those tissues
will help you have a much better harder session next week right so that's another way to think
about this you like mark said you can work out every single day but you got to be smart about what that workout looks like every single day because not every single day is going to be a super hard workout, but it can still be productive.
Yeah, having an intent I think is critical because if you have the intent, then you can check the box for that you had a good workout. Yeah. Okay. From Josh Brewer, uh, what are some habits? And again, remember
guys, one of you guys is going to win hostage tape. One of you guys is going to win viewer.
One of you guys is going to win within you. And one of you guys is going to win something from
Vivo barefoot shoes. Uh, and also for everybody in here, I don't know if today's the 20th, but
our, usually our code for Vivo is 15% off. Um, it's 20% off until November 20th but our usually our code for vivo is 15 off um it's 20 off until
november 20th so if you want a little bit of an extra discount 20 off your shoes instead of 50
percent off your shoes you can get that with our code from vivo up to november 20th that's it and
then it goes back to 15 yeah vivo barefoot.com slash power project and if you're hearing this
uh after the live session apologies that. That's just what happens.
And so more reason to jump on these lives when they do show up.
Josh Beruer, what are some habits slash resources y'all have for lifelong learning?
I'm studying exercise science and enjoy all the course content.
But in lectures with 250 people, I want to supplement with other things.
Yeah.
Shit, he's doing it right now.
Yeah.
No.
And the thing is, is we have we've had so many guests on who have like given us so many other resources that we can look into that, to be perfectly honest, comes down to your interest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You have to be interested in it because if you if you're not interested in it, then you're going to just be fucking bored to death.
So for myself, I consume a bunch of different content and I have stuff that is like queued up to listen to and it kind of just depends on the mood.
And what I'll do is if I put something on and I just don't really enjoy it that much, I will, I'll shut
it down and I'll turn on the other thing. And if that ain't working, then I'll just
probably listen to music. Cause I found for myself that it's not good for me to try to
force myself to learn something. And if I'm not concentrating on something and I'm just
like, wait, what the fuck did they say? And I keep rewinding it and I'm like, I want to
hear that again. And then I try to listen to it again and I miss it again somehow.
Oh, that's the worst. Yeah. I know that, uh, that's not a good time for me. Again,
that's would be like forced learning. And so, um, you know, follow, follow your interests,
but occasionally you might have to consume information that you don't really,
that at first glance, maybe you don't think that you're going to like it.
Maybe the first time that you click on somebody's information or the first time you open up somebody's book, maybe you don't love
everything they're saying, but you got to have the ability to give it a chance. So with some of
that content that I don't like right off the bat, I will sometimes I'll push it off to a different
time. I'll listen to it again. I might try one more time and hopefully by trying two or three
times that I actually start to consume that content, what I found is sometimes I like that person's content
so much, I start looking at other stuff from them. And that's huge. And that's where I end up.
I feel like I end up having breakthroughs because I found that when I'm resistant to the information
at first, that usually that's this medicine that I need. You know, usually that's the,
you know, when you're a kid and you take the medicine and it's fucking gross, it's like sometimes you need that gross medicine to get you into a new spot. So that's kind of how I do it.
And something else that you could do is you might have people that you're very interested in
the way they understand certain things or the way they explain certain aspects of what they do.
So obviously listening to podcasts off of people that you're interested in is helpful.
But then if you don't hear on that podcast some resources from that individual, DM them and ask them,
hey, instead of asking them just a specific question, which is what most people do, ask them for book recommendations.
Ask them for text recommendations.
Like we just had Greg Sounders on, and he gave us a bunch of really amazing recommendations to learn about the ecological approach to training in general because it's not – what he does with training isn't – is something that is understand the way to think about it. So then you can use this ecological approach that he's putting into jujitsu with almost anything you're interested in.
And that's powerful versus – Andrew, what's up?
I'm just – so I'm giggling on two different things.
Real quick, it's Souders, not Sounders.
Souders.
I thought it was Sounders.
But no, just like when he was talking about like this ecological approach, in my head when we before we got into that conversation, it was like, oh, this is this thing for jujitsu.
And so jujitsu thing only.
But then he was like, no, this actually came from somewhere else.
And then so like once I learned that, I was just like, I want to use this approach for literally everything in my life now, like for learning, for teaching teaching for all of the above and it's just like it's so silly that
like you know we're over a thousand episodes in and we hear something like this that's like
wait a second this might actually change everything it's like it's just exciting that's
why i'm giggling back here because it's it's so fun that's part of it right i'm interested in this
and it just becomes fun to learn more stuff about it it's not like the textbook that i have to read in order to
take a memory test later you know like it's fun it's something you're interested in you're probably
going to end up reading the textbook to understand aspects of it right but the thing is you're
interested in it yeah yeah right absolutely so that's one of those things like instead of asking
the person tell me this just ask them where they learned it from, right?
Because then instead of just having access to this one little piece of knowledge and the answer to your question, you're going to have access to the way that they think about things, which will help inform your ability to understand things at that level.
You're probably already doing this since you're in lectures and shit, but that's just kind of how I think about it.
Yeah, asking people how they came to their conclusion.
How did you get that answer?
Mm-hmm.
Okay, let's see.
How are you guys feeling right now?
Good.
Feeling great.
Yeah? Good?
Okay, cool.
Now we have a question.
Oh, it's not even a question.
It's a statement.
Big A Armory.
I like listening to this channel because I feel like I'm just sitting around in the gym grabbing food afterwards bullshitting with friends.
So you're saying that we're bullshitting.
That's all I took from that statement.
I wonder what kind of food.
I wonder what's he eating.
Is he eating during his workout?
I mean, shit, he's a powerlifter probably.
If he's taking it serious.
Taking it seriously, baby.
Okay.
Let's see.
Hello, Power Project. Nice shirt nice shirt mark my question is cold
plunge before bjj session um i'll usually i like to cold plunge after jujitsu but like for example
in the morning i like to cold plunge too so i'm going to jujitsu tonight and i cold plunged in
the morning because because it's like it's so good it's like you said it's better than a cup
like a cup of coffee and it truly is it's unbelievable good it's like you said it's better than a cup like a cup of coffee and it
truly is it's unbelievable yeah it's you man yeah and i don't always use my cold plunge i sometimes
just i'll do the same thing in the shower and the shower for some reason like it i think it's the
noise of the like of the thing going from hot to cold that really like scares me i'm like oh fuck
it's like and then it's not instantly
cold it takes a moment so like that whole thing is uh like a painful process but um this morning
you know i've been taking my daughter to school in the morning and so i don't have the same
time that i have in the morning and so i've been just doing it in the shower and it feels fucking
great just run it for a minute or so it got me cold enough that I was cold when I was trying to dry off and shit like that.
And so, I don't know, it just, it gives me some good energy.
But I would imagine before jujitsu, it would probably feel amazing.
I've never tried it.
It does.
Like right before even like a lifting session, I haven't had an opportunity to do it that way.
Before a lifting session, it would be tough because you're trying to get warm. You know what I mean?
After you get out of the cold plunge, you're like,
yeah, get yourself warm again.
Shaking, trying to put the plates on.
Pronimal Mike asked, when are you
guys bringing Sam Sulek to the show? It's a great
way to kick off 2024. I personally
don't know. My question to you guys
is, what do you like about Sam Sulek? And I'm
not saying this in a way, because I know Sam Sulek,
he's cool, he's interesting. But what is it that you like about Sam Sulik? And I'm not saying this in a way, because I know Sam Sulik, he's cool, he's interesting.
But what is it that you like about him?
That's my question.
So hit the chat and let us know,
because he's an interesting cat.
He's crushing it.
I think he's unique,
and he just kind of walked into something,
and he's doing a great job of it.
To find someone that young and that big and jacked, I mean, there's some.
We got one here.
We got our boy Kenny.
He's pretty goddamn big too.
But I think there's definitely a skill set.
There's a skill set in there somewhere.
It's hard to identify.
But I think Sam Sulek talks to the camera the way he would talk to like a person,
a person that is the way that you would talk to a fan is the way he talks to you the whole time.
And it's super interesting because I watched a bunch of the videos because I found it pretty
intriguing. And I'm like, this is, this is super interesting. What I find really interesting
slash awkward though, is like, he'll be like flexing.
Right.
And he's like in a bathroom.
And the moment hits me, I'm like, he's by himself.
You know, like it's just him and a camera.
And he's like, wow.
He's like, look at that pump.
He's like, that looks pretty sick.
He's like, oh, shit.
We haven't even started the cut yet.
You know, and he's doing all.
And I'm thinking, like, imagine you walk in you're like oh sorry bro and he's there like boom flexing his
triceps and stuff so it's just it's an interesting thing but he must have a lot of confidence to go
and like i don't know randomly do that shit he's a huge set of balls but one thing that i just
realized after you said that is he approaches it in a way of like it's like someone right there.
It's not like he's talking to a camera.
It's like his homie's right there and he's like, ha, yeah.
Yeah, see that, bro?
The camera's a person to him.
And that's why you feel like you're right there because he's talking to you like you're right there.
Right.
That's – good job, Sam.
He's got it down.
Good job, Sam.
We're working on getting them here, by the way.
We'll figure it out. Yeah. Okay. Wow. down. Good job, Sam. We're working on getting them here, by the way. We'll figure it out.
Yeah.
Okay.
Wow.
Okay.
A lot of questions.
I'm just going to go to the bottom real quick of this question sheet, and we're going to kind of work our way up.
Zach Morris, how do you keep up with running during the winter?
It's dark outside when I leave for work and I get home.
I would love to keep up with running while mitigating the danger of running in the dark.
Are you a man, Zach?
No, that's kind of smart, dude.
He wants to live.
I don't like running in the dark.
You know, first of all, we live in California.
So the weather's always nice here.
Like it gets cold, but it's cold. The morning,
the morning gets kind of cold, you know, but this is not New York. This is not fucking Michigan.
You know, this is not the East coast. So we don't have to deal with like snow and other things, but
yeah, it gets dark. Getting a head, a headlight is great. You can just get a flashlight that you wear on your head.
Those work awesome.
Uh, using your phone.
I would say that it's important that if you are going to run at night, I mean, people
get hit by cars way more than you would ever even fucking imagine.
So don't get hit by a motherfucking car.
Did you mention wearing the little light things?
Yeah.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
Wearing, wearing some reflectors is a good idea, but what I was going to mention is if you don't have a light on and it's kind of dark out, you're like, oh, I'm fine.
I can see.
It's not about you.
It's about the people on the road that are driving.
They need to be able to see you, so make sure that they can see you.
And even if you don't want to, fucking turn your phone light on and have that on so you can kind of shine it appropriately wherever you need to, not just so you can see, but so that they can see you.
And it's even important with bikes and stuff.
You can get fucked up by a bike.
So like when I'm running, sometimes I'll hold my phone down to the side because I've been running at a weird time.
I've been running like as it's getting dark.
But I'll hold my phone down to the side where the light is actually shining backwards.
And that's for the bikes that are coming up because the people on bikes are riding them like maniacs. So I want to make sure that they see me too.
But I find it encouraging and I find it kind of fun to run in the dark.
Having said that, I would find areas that are like well lit.
in the dark. Having said that, I would find areas that are like well lit. So recently I've been running, I usually run like the Arboretum in Davis. I love running in that area. Do you run
in there dark? I do sometimes run in there when it's dark, but there's, there's some lights there.
There's some lights here and there. But then also I found that, so just alongside that path,
the whole thing is lit up.
There's just lights everywhere.
And then there's also UC Davis is right there.
So I can kind of run like a long campus.
And then the other day I got kind of lost in the campus.
The campus is huge.
And I found the football stadium.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to see if I can run over there.
And it's wide open.
It's open.
So I ran around the – I'm not allowed to run on the field or anything.
I think there was people down there doing the cross or something like that. But I was able to run around
the outside perimeter, which was super cool. And there was a lot of other people working out there.
People were like running stadiums and stuff. So it was, uh, like invigorating, gave me like more
energy. And there's something weird or something cool about it being dark outside and it being cool
outside and seeing a lot of other people exercising so you might find that to be
motivating or find it to be cool but you're gonna have to find find somewhere where there's some
where there's some lights there's more street lights and shit around than than you would think
so keep searching for it yeah it's pretty cool there's a there's a group of people that run
when i'm on my way to jiu-jitsu.
They're like a pack running.
And I can tell like how early or late I am if they're on this side.
If they're on this side, that means I'm late.
But like they're all lit up.
It's like it's too much, but like they have like almost like glow sticks.
A lot of run clubs do that, yeah.
So they look like stick figures running in the dark.
That's kind of cool.
You'll be dying out here, bro.
It's like it's smart.
Yeah.
Kevin Reagan, if your muscles are sore, is there a higher chance of tearing something? in the dark that's kind of cool you'll be dying out here bro it's like it's smart yeah kevin reagan
if your muscles are sore is there a higher chance of tearing something was bench pressing today and
sore from a workout two days ago i bitched out on a couple of reps because i was i wasn't feeling it
first off kevin you didn't bitch out you were being smart um it's it i think it's some people
don't pay attention to the feeling of
when something's sketchy and they're just like i'm gonna just do a few more or let me just work
through it and it's like if you can work through it slowly and with light load and see how sketchy
it feels okay cool but really pay attention to that because i've been seeing videos of people
where i'm just like how did you not realize that things were getting sketchy?
Right?
You got to pay attention to the signals your body sends you, especially if you're really fatigued.
Because when you're really fatigued, like you just mentioned, Kevin, when you're really fatigued and you're really sore, yes, there is a higher chance of you getting injured.
So that's smart that you kind of left the session on that day because many people don't.
But pay attention to that.
If you're feeling beat up, if you're feeling sore, take things slow.
Take things light.
And if you can work through it, cool.
But if it just keeps feeling not good, walk away or just do some body weight shit.
Get some blood.
That's it.
Yeah.
I think when it comes to exercise, rules number one through five are don't get hurt.
Don't get hurt.
Don't get injured.
That's going to happen to you anyway. You're going to get tweaked. Something's going to happen. You're going to reach for a dumbbell one day and it's going to be 20 pounds
and you tweak, you get a little tweak here and there. It just happens. Um, so you don't need
anything extra, uh, to, uh, to magnify that. So when you are banged up and not feeling great,
sometimes the best thing you can do is, is, and the most powerful thing you do is sometimes take weight off the bar.
And the other most powerful thing you do is leave the goddamn gym.
Get the hell out of there.
Oh.
I'm not going to burp on the mic.
Moose, what are your favorite pairs of Vivos for everyday casual wear?
I dig the Motuses as a casual shield um i also dig their boots they have these new gobi
boots which are uh really slick um those primus lights are also nice for casual wear oh that's
all i was gonna say is just primus lights for everything all day every day the main ones i like
are the ones that have the strong grip on them but but I don't know what those are called. The Modus? They're like light pink, and then there's another one that's kind of like...
Those are Primus knits.
Wait, you said they're light pink?
Yeah, there's ones that are light pink.
Yeah, the Novus.
Yeah, I think that's what it is.
Yeah, those are the Novus.
Oh, pink.
Got it.
I thought you meant like the ones that are white and pink.
Yeah, those are fucking badass.
Those are cool too, yeah.
The Novus are sick, man.
Like, if you guys go to their website, type in... They got a little extra oomph to them. Yeah, those are fucking badass. Those are cool too, yeah. The Novus are sick, man. Like if you guys go to their website, type in a...
They got a little extra oomph to them.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, and they're wide and they're comfortable and they can fucking bend and shit.
They're great.
They're fucking great.
From Tat to Trav.
Also, I want you guys to let me know what you guys think of this.
Yo, is it true about semen retention?
I think we got this during the last live too by the way i heard arnold and tyson
ronnie and many other practice this and i hear others saying it's game changing
how do you feel about this did you ever do semen retention before power lifting i don't think i've
ever practiced it nothing all the time yeah yeah i don't have the uh the
strength to figure that out i don't think yeah i mentioned i'm gonna release that pressure
yo it gets frustrating and maybe that's the thing because you get this pent up like fucking oh
that like when when you have like extra energy yeah when you haven't nutted in a while you just
feel like fuck i gotta let i gotta i gotta let all this out not even just that you just gotta
let it out no you gotta fight bigger gotta fight to like earn it yeah like didn't mike's
wasn't didn't mike tyson have a video where he was like oh fuck you didn't he say that to somebody
and he probably just really wanted to fuck him.
I'll fuck you in that ring.
Yeah.
He was crazy sometimes.
I think he told the guy, yeah, he was going to fuck him in the ass.
Wow.
Andrew, you didn't say that?
No.
So with that being said, I think there is a valid thing.
If it's been a long time since you haven't nutted hold that shit for a while see what happens yeah
you like hey hey hold that shit just get to work and when you feel like i'm gonna beat my shit just
don't beat it how long you gotta wait for hey go try to go two weeks could you go two weeks without
nutting that's a nice little test can you and then you'll see like oh shit i'm kind of i'm virile as
fuck dog like i'm serious you will you will kind of, I'm virile as fuck, dog. I'm serious.
You will kind of feel like that.
I don't know, guys.
It's not good for the old prostate.
Well, that's because y'all are fucking 50.
That's right.
I know.
I'll be due for mine soon.
Oh, your re-zip?
No, the exam.
Oh, shit.
They stick their fingers up there, right?
I hope so. That's why I can't wait. All stick their fingers up there, right? I hope so.
That's why I can't wait.
All right.
So what are we getting?
Okay.
No Nut November.
PMS is SRS, sperm retention syndrome.
Oh, Spencer Embry.
He's 16 days into his semen retention.
All right.
Well, tell us how that is for you right now.
Oh, dude.
It's been a long time since I've done No Nut November.
Do you remember Destroy Dick December?
No.
So that one, so it's like the follow-up to No Nut November.
So December 1st, beat off once, or at least nut once.
December 2nd, two nuts, three nuts, four nuts.
And as the month goes on, you just keep adding an extra nut every day.
So you get up to 30 or so?
Yeah.
Well, yeah, every day. Like every day you multiple or whatever the fuck the number is. All right get up to 30 or so? Yeah. Well, yeah, every day.
Like every day you multiple or whatever the fuck the number is.
All right.
Sounds like a bad idea.
Yeah.
Before we get to the next question, what do you guys think is the most amount of nuts
you had in a day?
And let's go back to as far as you remember.
Most amount.
Oh, man.
I was beating it a lot.
What do you think?
What do you think is like your highest day?
I bet you I got you beat.
It's got to be like, I don't know. I mean, i'm just making it up kind of but i would say i don't know
15 or something oh then you beat me i'll spell i just remember the 12 day dude yeah but i would
say it's like 17 i would say it's somewhere in that range probably you know dude i have team
probably man this is i don't know oh i'm dude it, man. Like there was one time it was like.
Mine has an asterisk next to it.
So does mine.
I need more proof.
Mine kind of was like unlimited.
It was like the weirdest thing that I can never, ever retain back.
And I wish I didn't waste it on myself.
But I would not.
And then the refractory period was just gone.
I could just keep going.
How old were you?
I don't do like brand new to doing this. So that's, I was't i wasn't like it's always the best when you're new i was like
i remember thinking about this day quite often actually and i'll just like
fuck like how do i get that back like that'd be sick so yeah i just it just kept going in the
zone yeah it was awesome you're like jordan that one day where he's like this. You're like that. You're like. Yeah.
You got a picture of you like this.
It's cool because it's possible.
I just, I don't know.
I was gifted.
I peaked too early.
Well, let's think about the context.
You were new.
You didn't know for a while.
What were we just saying?
Maybe you just don't know for a little bit and maybe it comes comes back no i was definitely nutty i just at that time you know i mean it's uh it's probably good there wasn't like a participant yeah you know what i mean they might they might
have come back from that yeah dog yo man good old days sometimes oh it's fucked up but you hear about like these uh
these these young boys who it's like their teacher like had sex with them
it's awful it's awful if i was 15 teacher. Yeah.
Joey Diaz is a whole like thing on that.
And he's like,
those teachers were brilliant.
He's like,
they realize that those young men,
their dicks are so hard.
He's like,
and it's not going down.
It's going to stay hard forever. Like,
God damn.
Oh,
horrible teachers.
But as a student,
Hey,
you're in heaven.
Pepper,
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uh nathan wagster hi pp i hear a lot of people in the community mention kratom i'm trying to
cut down on my weekend drinking but it's difficult because my circle all drink we are 22 23 oh
is kratom a good alternative hey now your circle i'll drink though man 22 23 is
a hard age it seems like uh when people try to cut back on drinking it doesn't seem like it works
great it seems like people have better success when they like cut it out i'm not sure why i don't
understand the addictive mechanisms of like alcohol, but just something I observed. It's rare for someone to
be like, oh, I'm just going to like do it less. And they don't seem to really do it less. I think
there's, you know, if their circle is drinking, it's hard to, that peer pressure or even just
the pressure you put yourself under, I think that you feel that you need to do it to like fit in.
And it's a weird, it's a weird thing.
If you can get past that discomfort,
being someone that rarely drinks,
the discomfort is only for a few minutes, you know,
like you're at a party or you go to some sort of a family get together or
something like that.
And everybody else is drinking and they say, Hey, you want to drink?
And you say, no, then maybe one more person asks you one more time.
And then that's usually it.
And then the party is going and people are drinking and you're like deciding not to.
It's usually like, if you can kind of hang in there for like 10 or 20 minutes, you're
going to be totally fine.
And everyone else is going to be totally relaxed because they're drinking.
So I know it's a weird stance on this, but I've said this before.
Like everybody else is intoxicated and you are not.
And so you don't have to be intoxicated with them in order to have fun.
Your guard should be able to be let down just as if you were drinking since their judgment is different than normal anyway.
So that's kind of the way I've always looked at it.
And if you can kind of weather the storm of those first few minutes of feeling a little
awkward, you should be okay.
I do think it's a good idea to look into alternatives.
I think Kratom is an amazing alternative to a lot of different things people get into.
For myself, I always liked Kratom in terms of like mood, in terms of creativity.
I really enjoy it before a run, sometimes before workouts.
But it is something you do need to be careful with.
It is, Kratom is an opioid.
It is something that is addictive.
It can be addictive for some people.
It can, for some people, it seems like they just want to like blast it all day long. For myself,
I use very small amounts of it and it does what it needs to do. And I, it puts me into a good spot
and I really enjoy it for that. Also keeping in mind that you're only 23,
enjoy it for that. Also keeping in mind that you're only 23,
I would say that Kratom is, I'd say that Kratom is like almost too good. So I would, I would recommend and suggest that if you can, if you can get away without doing it, then I would suggest
that you try to go that route just because it's like i think with i haven't really smoked weed to know
too much about it but at least with thc and like mushrooms for me anyway there's not like a real
attachment to those things i can take them and the experience is a little different every time
it's not the same it's not like with with Kratom, my experience again, I get pushed into
this amazing like zone because it's just almost like a little shot of like dopamine. And it almost
makes me feel very similar to the way a runner's high feels or the way you feel when you're in the
middle of a workout and your workout feels really good. You feel energized. You don't have pain.
So for me,
it, it does a lot of those things. It like almost liberates more energy out of me because I don't
have, um, I feel warmed up. I feel like revved up. Um, and so it does all those things for me, but,
uh, being 23 years old is like a fucking confusing thing. And, uh, I would just,
if you could, I would try to wait until you're a little older.
fusing thing. And, uh, I would just, if you could, I would try to wait until you're a little older.
Dude. Yeah. Uh, I agree with that because I did create them. Um, but some people find themselves overusing it and then they, they can't stop because it feels great. So I like it, but I'm
mindful about how I use it and I'm mindful about how much I use it because I know it's so good.
Um, so that's one thing, be careful with that. And if you're someone who chooses to
try weed or something,
be careful. First off,
stay away from the fucking pens, because
we've been having so much shit come about
how pens fuck up people's lungs
and fuck up people's health. And I know a lot
of dudes that be using that shit these days, and
at the end of the day, I'm just like, dog,
dog, it's at this point,
just smoke something else.
Get some like actual, if you're going to smoke weed, get some actual leaf, right?
Those pens aren't good because they end up being like a little fucking binky for people.
They need to take a hit.
First off, it's super convenient.
They have their pen on them and they're just taking hits all day long.
But that adds up and it's fucking you up and you're not realizing it these gummies are pretty wild too the amount of milligrams that
you're receiving of just straight thc to your face is a lot that's true but you know at least it's
not at least you're not inhaling because like this is the thing smoking anything isn't good for your
lungs but the guys that be smoking pens they're not taking one hit of the pen and they're chilling
they're taking multiple hits of a pen all day long and that's gonna that so don't be careful with that because a lot of people are
talking about weed being cool these days and it's i smoke weed every now and then i dig it um but
the thing is is i'm also mindful about the way i use weed because it's like it feels good and it
can allow you to be more creative i'll sometimes smoke weed before jujitsu and stuff and it's it's
good for that.
But then because it feels so good,
you can get into the habit of,
okay, I'll just do it today and then I'll do it tomorrow
and then it's an everyday thing
and then you start doing it in the morning
and then you're high all day long.
Like that's what it turns into.
So these things are awesome,
but you gotta be mindful about the way you use them
because people are talking mad shit on Kratom,
but I dig it.
The thing is, is like, for example, I just took that fucking respawn thing from gorilla mind it's cool but
it doesn't feel as good as kratom does even when it comes to like focus clarity and even creativity
it doesn't feel as good as kratom does but the thing is is like if i overuse kratom that's also
not good so you just got to be smart with this shit and on the alcohol side of things like
i used to drink a bit when i was younger too because a lot of my friends did. But that shit wasn't good for me. I knew it wasn't good for me. And those friends that were drinking, still they do that. I'm not friends with them anymore and that's cool. Like there was a shift. There had to be a shift out of that circle.
shift there has to be a shift out of that circle so some people will will tell you like maybe maybe you need to find a different circle and maybe that's the case but maybe like mark said maybe
you just don't drink and see if you can handle that because i fully applaud you about trying to
get off of alcohol there's really nothing great about it you know yeah and just again kind of
because he said like to substitute with uh kratom uh depending on how he um like how much he's
drinking like it could be really bad if you're trying to find a substitute for drinking to get
drunk right like you're you're not going to find that in a better option anywhere else and even
that you know doing that's really bad but yeah i mean in my early 20s i think that's all that's
all i lived for you for was just drinking.
And if I could go back, yeah, I would just – I don't know.
Yeah, it would be impossible to convince me to not drink, but I would do whatever I could to try to convince my young self to just not drink.
And like you were saying, you turn it down once or twice, people call you a bitch, whatever it may be.
But eventually they get the hint, and then they go back to being selfish and just drinking beer for themselves.
And then you do that a couple times at a couple different events.
And then you just become the person that always says no.
So then they stop asking you.
That's what happens to me at family functions now.
Nobody asks me to drink and there's always beer around.
But just, yeah, I kind of laugh if they do offer me now.
It's kind of the tables have turned where it's like, really? Like you're going to offer me beer? Like you're
silly, you know, instead of like them being like, well, that's weird. You don't drink. I'm like,
well, that's weird. You offered me a beer. Like, really? Don't you know me, son? It makes people
feel really awkward if you're not drinking, you know, they, they kind of get mad or they were
just like, oh, come on, just have fun. You know, like I'm fine.
I'm fine.
Like I'm having my own fun.
It's just a, I don't know, it's a societal thing.
It's everywhere.
It's acceptable to do it and it's like unacceptable not to do it for some reason.
Right.
But I think if you're young and you're trying to like really improve your life and you're
trying to get on a good path. Um, I don't think that
alcohol needs to be removed from every single person's life. And I don't think that everyone
has to completely abstain from it, but there definitely are some people that it just doesn't
mesh well with. And, uh, I think there is a problem too, with, um, getting used to like you do something with friends and it's like you're stacking,
you're stacking like dopamine, you're stacking this behavioral pattern of like I'm watching
football and I'm drinking and I'm eating wings and I'm, you know, dipping in a ranch dressing
and like all these other things that you're doing like all simultaneously.
It's like that's a lot going on. Like now you're distracting away from some of your fitness goals
and you're getting drunk. Like it's just, and I think that's what makes it tough to pull away
from certain things. So the, the addictive side of it is, is, uh, is super dangerous. But again,
I like to drink here and there. I have some drinks with my wife here and there.
I have some drinks with some family members
and friends.
But it's like, here's
what I've kind of, this is a conclusion I came
to with the whole thing.
I don't really give a fuck about alcohol that much. I don't
care about it that much. However,
if I didn't eat
anything for the day and I have a little
bit of alcohol, it makes me feel awesome.
It makes me feel really good.
I get a high or whatever the fuck you want to call it.
I get drunk from it.
That's like a special spot to be in, and that feels really good.
And it lasts for like 20 minutes.
And maybe if I have one more drink, maybe the whole thing lasts maybe an hour.
Boy, let me tell you.
And it's fun.
It feels good you know it
feels it feels nice but you know i i normally my day is like full of like lifting and podcasting
and doing other shit and i get home from here and normally i eat so if i eat and drink it does
nothing it like literally feels like it does nothing to me because i'd i would much rather eat
and i'd much rather eat a lot of food than I would drink alcohol.
That's one of the reasons why I love being a lightweight because every now and then I'll have alcohol and I've always been a lightweight with this shit. So like if I did, if I had a glass of wine or whatever, I'm good. I'm gone a little bit. You know, I'm still aware, but like I'm giggly. I'm, I'm feeling it, you know? And that's cause I don't drink super often.
So every time I do, it ends up being a great fun experience because like my shit just hits
me.
Like I'm, I'm, I'm done.
Yeah.
Perfect.
Yeah.
I know we've been on it for a while, but it just, it is like super important to me because
like, again, like alcohol was like a really big part of my life.
But like if you're a group of friends, like you're all in your early 20s you're
probably drinking on the weekends like why are you drinking though like you're drinking like you said
like you're stacking things on top of each other but like like what's the occasion oh it's friday
what the why why are you celebrating um i mean there's a chance he maybe started a company when
he was 13 years old and they you know sold it for 20 million dollars or whatever it is like yeah
sure go celebrate but you're still in your early 20s maybe i don't know man save these times for something
down the road when you do a hit success and then you can maybe have a couple of drinks here and
there but i just feel like i would drink to to get away from reality and you know so it's weird
to think that like oh i want to get with my buddies and drink so we can pretend that we're not all here right now almost.
So again, like why are you drinking?
Like what are you celebrating?
And then when you ask that question, you'll probably realize, actually, I'm not really celebrating or doing anything or drinking for anything.
I'm just drinking because I want to get drunk.
I've been drunk like maybe five times in my life, something like that, maybe even less.
I don't know.
I just – I feel fortunate.
I feel fortunate that I haven't fell into it in that way.
Do you think you could have?
Yeah, I think I could have.
I think just about anybody can.
I also think that different things hit people in different ways.
We all have different backgrounds.
We all are from different places. So I think when my brothers had a drink, I think it had a different
impact on them versus when I had a drink. And some people are, some people are able to deal
with it in a different way and just be like, ah, I don't really, some people just don't even like
the taste of it. I don't really like the taste of it. It still all tastes like it has alcohol in it to me.
Not even wine?
It doesn't taste good.
I mean, I have adopted a taste for some wine.
I see.
Okay, yes.
But I adopted it because it's kind of fun to do it,
and it's kind of fun to get a little buzz going from some alcohol.
But I didn't really do it.
I mean, I don't really love it.
I don't really love the flavor, but I do love some of it. I mean, I don't really love it. I don't really love, like, the flavor,
but I do love some of the effect of it,
just like anybody else.
Yeah.
All right, so.
Keep hitting that like button.
Yes.
Josh Brew, oh, no, actually, it's Josh Burger.
I lost his question.
Okay, Josh, I'm going to have it.
Here we go.
I have a whoop.
I base most of my workouts off average
heart rate over the course of my session i shoot for 150 beats per minute for an hour i use 100
meter jogs between sets to drive up heart rate is that productive damn that sounds like a fucking um oh yeah there's your your morpheus um yeah i mean that's a particular style of workout i would
say that maybe for where your heart rate is that's a little bit long in terms of uh how long you're
keeping your heart rate elevated that high but uh it also could be you could be young if you're
young then your heart rate can afford to be a little higher for a little longer.
So you can keep that intensity high.
Sounds like a pretty goddamn good workout to me.
No, it sounds great.
Especially if you want to be a more conditioned athlete.
That's a pretty solid thing to do.
Whoop is good.
I have a whoop too.
I pulled up this because my dog ate my last one but
mark grabbed me this other one it's morpheus it's from joel jameson uh it's really really solid if
you are an athlete who's looking to get more like do more conditioning workouts with specific heart
rate zones so morpheus like it'll it'll you have zones for lighter days of training you have red
zone training that you can do once or twice a week.
But it does a really good job of programming that for you.
And we've had athletes on the show and athletes we know that literally just follow the workouts from Morpheus because Joel is just a brain when it comes to conditioning.
So the cool thing about it though is that unlike Whoop where there is sadly with Whoop, there is a fucking, you have to pay yearly for this thing,
right? Now, Morpheus is like a one-time payment, but you have access to the app and all those
workouts and the HRV tracking and all those things. So for those of you who are trying to
do more conditioning type stuff and you need something to help with guidance, the Morpheus
is going to be a really, really, really good route to go. And I prefer the Morpheus for conditioning
stuff versus the Whoop. Yes, the Whoop is better at tracking jujitsu workouts and stuff. It's just
good, better for tracking things because they have a really good armband. So I like the Whoop
tracking, but when it comes to actual like workouts and sessions and stuff, I like the
Morpheus for that. Yeah, I like Morpheus as well, tracking the HRV. And I've been using it for probably like five or six months now, and I really love it.
You know, I've been able to improve my HRV quite a bit.
It's typically in the 80s.
My VO2 max has improved drastically.
It's probably gone up.
It's probably gone up maybe about eight or so points from where it was in the beginning.
So shout out to our buddy Joel.
He's incredible.
Joel Jameson, Morpheus product.
It's awesome.
Last thing I'll say on that is that, you know, some Zone 2 cardio might be really important for you to try.
Again, your age, I'm not sure of how old you are.
You could be kind of in Zone 2, but zone two is a much easier, more gentle pace.
And it doesn't feel like you're training that hard, but it's a way for you to train the heart.
It's a way for you to kind of, quote, unquote, expand the heart.
It's a way for you to increase your conditioning all while doing exercise that you are going to recover from very easily.
So lifting and jogging in between,
that can be something that you recover fine from because you could be super fit.
But for most people, most of the time, that would be a more intense workout,
and you just want to be cautious that you don't do that too much.
Okay.
So we're going to take a few more questions from oh we're at 83 likes maybe we
can get to a hundred of the people so guys just click that like button doesn't take much but we
appreciate all like guys seriously you guys had some fucking killer questions today and we're
gonna be trying to do these q a's once a week on a thursday or a friday around this time so if you
want to chime in and get your questions answered,
chill,
hang out,
whatever it is you're doing.
If you're at work and you're with us here,
fuck work dog.
Good for you.
But thanks for these questions.
Cause you guys,
you guys are helping us think more too.
This is great.
So Preston shader,
uh,
reposting my question from above.
How do you guys approach conveying new ideas to people that are stuck in their
ways?
Oh my God. Uh, uh, How do you guys approach conveying new ideas to people that are stuck in their ways?
Oh, my God.
Yeah, I think sometimes it's a good idea to just not.
Just don't.
Like, just don't.
You know, try to make suggestions or try to communicate.
And if there's nothing there, there's nothing there.
They want to continue.
Let's say it's somebody they don't want to listen to your advice on nutrition or something.
Sometimes it could be your approach.
Maybe you've been rude.
Maybe you said, hey, you're too fat.
You can't eat that.
And maybe you haven't been clear in your explanation. Instead, if it's somebody that you care about, say, hey, I really love you. I care about you a lot. You know that I'm, I love reading and listening to stuff about
nutrition. I'm here for you. I'd love to help you anytime that you want help or anytime a family,
other family member wants help. I'd love to help you. Or maybe we can just go grab some dinner
sometime and I can
show you like kind of how I eat and how, you know, my family eats or something like that.
So sometimes like the way that we word stuff could be really important, but convincing people,
it doesn't work great. You know, if you think about if you, if Nsema goes on Instagram right
now and Nsema looks fucking incredible, but if he goes on Instagram right now, Nsema looks fucking incredible.
But if he goes on Instagram right now and he's flipping around the kettlebell and he's trying to convince everybody that they have to do that because that's what works great for him, he's not going to really get anywhere.
And people aren't going to really like it.
They're going to talk shit.
But if he gets on there and says, this is what I love to do every day, this is enjoyable for me and I found something new that I really like, probably more positive response.
Other people probably look at it and go, man, that looks kind of difficult, but maybe I should try something like that.
So they'll get inspired and they'll want to do it.
And you want people to try to convince themselves, I guess is my main point in kind of bringing some of that up is that uh don't don't try to really convince anybody of anything yeah i mean think about this
man years ago when you're focused on lifting and someone told you to do some of the shit you're
doing right now you'd probably be like bitch what yeah get out of here right like again like having
to they got to explain why they had to to explain why. And this is the thing.
I think nowadays too I don't work on convincing people about things outside of like my mother or like my super close family who I'm super – like their health is as important to me as it should be.
Like I will –
But that's a longer conversation.
It's a long conversation.
You make sure you're conscious.
You're not like hurting someone's feelings or going in the wrong angle.
Yeah.
But if somebody like that I know asks me about something once and I give them that answer and they don't like that answer and I see that they haven't changed, I ain't going to even – I'm not going to bother because that's their choice.
It's up to them to make that change where they want to.
If they don't want to, they are a human with their own agency.
They don't have to make that change where they want to. Not if they don't want to, they are a human with their own agency. They don't have to make that change,
you know?
So yeah,
convincing people's tough.
I mean,
I'm not going to try to convince everybody to vote for Trump in a new
election because he's going to win anyway.
So there's really no reason to sit here and talk about what a great
president he's been in the past.
Oh,
what?
Or like, I shouldn't have to convince people that
COVID was fake I mean
it should be apparent everybody
it should be very obvious and that if you don't
I don't decide but it's your choice
but what I was going to say is just you can be
the example as silly as that sounds
because it sounds like if you're
trying to convince
someone out of their ways, it is somebody close to you.
You can inform them and then also keep doing what you're doing and then hope that over
time they ask you how you got to wherever it is that you got to.
All right.
Two more questions.
Does this sound good to you guys?
Sounds great.
Two unless we hit 100 likes and then we'll do maybe
two more. Okay. Oh my god.
Alright. Failure. Four total. Giving it
away to me. Failure undetermined.
Gained a ton of weight recovering
from a back injury. Eating at a deficit
and have lost 20
pounds. But I'm also getting
stronger. Is it
is this only possible due
to TRT? I start at 430 pounds could it be due to
so he means he is on trt so he started at 430 pounds could it be due to size so he's 410 pounds
now yeah what do you guys think um yeah Yeah. Yeah. It's a little testosterone, uh, can be helpful, but who cares where you got the help from,
you know, and, and, uh, that should be a motivator for you.
And it should be something that, uh, kind of sparks you to head in the right direction.
There's a lot of people that are using these, uh, diet drugs right now, you know, using
those Zampic and some of those things.
And some people have certain feelings and about those things.
And some people are saying, you got to do it, you know, are saying you've got to do it the real way.
You've got to do it the hard way.
Well, obesity is very complex.
I don't think out of all the smart people we talk to
and we talk to some people that are super smart,
we've never had a conversation with one person that's figured out
how to really truly help people that are obese. I mean there's ways to assist them. There really, truly help people that are obese.
I mean, there's ways to assist them.
There's ways to help people that are obese.
There's ways to help people lose weight.
But it's very complicated.
There's a lot of shit going on a lot of times.
And so, hey, whatever way you can get results, hopefully you're utilizing like a TRT clinic
or utilizing a doctor that can kind of
monitor blood pressure and check other things. But man, I would say, hey, whatever way you can
make progress, keep making progress. And I'd be proud of it regardless of whether it's because
of an intervention of some TRT. All right, cool. Ryan Hodge, I think this is kind of like, you
know, these stacks on top of each other. Just started TRT two weeks ago.
T-levels were 290.
Already feeling the effects.
Clarity, motivation.
Attaboy.
I've been training hard for three to four years.
When can I say safely blast and cruise any advice?
Oh, my God.
Does he say how old he is?
No, he doesn't.
No, he doesn't. No, he doesn't.
So, yeah, Mark Andrew.
Mark, since you've done this a lot, but also Andrew.
When can you safely blast him, Cruz?
He wants to take more shit, basically?
Yeah, he wants to know when he can safely blast him, Cruz.
Wow.
You know, he's probably already made that decision.
I would say, you know, do more research.
Look this stuff up more.
Listen to Derek from More Plates, More Dates.
Listen to Vigorous Steve.
Listen to Stan Efferding.
There have been studies
on people utilizing testosterone,
utilizing... He's 35.
Utilizing 600 milligrams of testosterone
a week.
Don't do that. Well,
I didn't finish my story. They utilize 600 milligrams of testosterone
with success and without a lot of negative side effects. But you want to look into it more. That's
one study, you know, and I don't know how many people there were and so on. But I would say that
But I would say that there's a big difference between replacement dose and a dose that would get you into like a super physiological range.
And the range that would get you into a super physiological range can feel really good.
So you have to be kind of cautious of that.
You have to think about it. It could be something that you get addicted to.
You could put on 10 pounds of muscle in a fairly short period of that. You have to think about it. It could be something that you get addicted to. You could put on 10 pounds of muscle in a fairly short period of time. There could be side effects
that you don't like. There could be the possibility that you want to have children one day.
And maybe that's not anything that you explored just yet. And in terms of your fertility,
it seems like it does come back when you do come off testosterone. But if it didn't and you weren't able to have a kid, I mean, that might really suck.
It might change and alter your life in some ways.
So there's some things to think about and consider, but it sounds like you're already there.
It sounds like you're already on the ledge and already on the edge.
And I would just say, hey, sometimes you got to just figure it out for yourself.
Chase Irons, he's in the middle of an injection right now.
Great job.
Oh, my God.
Sometimes you got to get a feel for it and just try it yourself.
And, you know, the results that you'll get from taking a little bit more is going to
be really good.
You just have to be careful that you don't get caught up in taking a little bit more again, a little bit more again.
He says he has three kids that he doesn't need anymore, meaning he doesn't care about not being fertile.
He says, fuck semen, like fuck fertility.
Yeah, I would just say that like a testosterone, even at TRT dosages, feels incredible.
even at TRT dosages, feels incredible.
So you might, I don't know, get a year or two down the road and, I don't know, might not feel like you need to really, quote, blast.
I know I haven't felt any need,
although my goals are probably way different than yours.
But I don't know, man.
You just said you have three kids.
Let's go ahead and stay around as long as possible and just stay on the TRT dose.
Anabolic Activities has been spamming the chat just saying wild shit.
I would say that if you're, you know, again, it sounds like you're already there.
So I've talked to so many people over the years.
I know when someone's already there.
Yeah, I was going to say that.
This guy's probably got it loaded up already and he's probably ready to go.
Drive that plunger home, buddy, Chase Iron says.
I would just say just try a little bit more first.
You know what I mean?
Like don't go and like double your dosage.
Just, you know, if you're taking 200 or 100 milligrams, try 125 or 150.
Try just a little bit more and see what a little bit more does first before you go jumping into doing some big acid dosages.
I guess this maybe isn't the healthiest thing to do.
But, Mark, do you remember your first, like, after you decided to jump on, like, what it was?
Was it just testosterone or did you have a nice little mixture of things?
I went on testosterone.
I went on nandrolone too deca
i took both at the same time and both like that's probably 300 milligrams of both
which uh was like each one was 300 milligrams per cc per milliliter and uh it had a fucking like
just wild wild impact on me
because I'd never taken anything before
and instantly probably threw on a good 20 pounds or so.
Over a decade of training though.
Yeah.
And this guy's three to four years in, he said.
Just a little bit more info because Ryan just keeps giving us more.
Oh, this is great.
Doing 200 milligrams a week, so yeah, we'll just bump up to 250.
Great advice.
Thank you.
And I don't plan on taking Anovar, Deca, et cetera, just bumping up TRT.
So, not a real blast.
Yeah, just see if you can just keep getting your labs done.
So, that way, I guess the estrogen doesn't go through the roof
and then maybe you can take something else to bring
that back down that's going to help the testosterone
work a little bit better.
So I think we all assume that Blast
we thought he was going to do a bunch
of shit but more
testosterone
you already decided
so best of luck and I'm sure
you're going gonna get fucking huge
yeah yes yeah uh i'm gonna answer a quick question from anabolic activities they're wondering
when i plan on bodybuilding again um probably look like you're bodybuilding right now i mean
i'm still 250 i mean i can still get up to 260 very easily um i'm probably gonna i will hit the
stage again but it's probably gonna be in my my mid-30s to early-40s.
When my competing with jiu-jitsu, those goals are like done and I have what I want there, then I'll hit the bodybuilding stage again because that's not going to be a focus for me.
You can't let your girlfriend be more jacked than you.
Yo, she's killing her prep right now.
She's destroying her prep right now.
She looks – I mean she looks great for now. She looks great for bikini.
Looks great for bikini.
Sick.
So let's see.
Yeah, we didn't hit 100 likes, so that was it.
That was the last two questions.
So yeah, how do you guys win on the giveaways Anabolic Activities asks?
That means you asked a question, we answered the question.
They're not eligible.
They're not eligible. No, they're not.
Yeah.
We love you guys either way.
But anybody who asked a question,
we're going to be giving away one year
of hostage tape to one lucky
winner, a Viore gift card,
a Vivo gift card,
and a Within You gift card.
And we're giving away this...
No, just kidding.
Is the one that your dog chewed up still like?
Did you throw it away?
His dog's HRV is 130.
Oh, actually, let's just ask this question.
I mean, let's answer this question real quick because it's for Mark.
And we did hit 100.
Mark, did you ever have any tailbone pain when sumo deadlifting?
I have not run
into that before, but
it sounds like it'd be fucking painful.
I never had it on a sumo deadlift.
I have had tailbone pain before, though.
But the only thing I can think of
is go to a chiropractor or something.
Go to a doctor. Yeah, that's
interesting. I wonder how long he's had this tailbone
pain. Okay.
Well, we'll do one more question since we hit 100 likes.
Yeah.
Okay.
I had to pee really bad.
So do I.
Yeah, go ahead.
Okay.
I'm just going to scroll, scroll, scroll, and then take the first question we see that's not like Chris.
And then you guys just talk amongst yourselves.
Okay.
All right.
Mark's going to go take a piss.
And guys, this won't take long.
I'll go pee.
Oh, Andrew's going to pee too.
So it's just going to be us hanging out.
But I'm actually kind of curious.
Since we're live right now and you guys are chilling,
how many of you guys think I lie about drug use?
And I won't take offense to any of this,
but I'm actually legitimately curious.
Can I put a poll up?
Yeah, put up a poll.
I want to see how many people think I'm lying about drug use.
I remember I used to be able to do that, but I don't know if I can anymore.
Wait, where is it at?
It's somewhere there.
Engage and start a poll.
Here we go.
I'm going to do something.
Chase Irons, I'm 6'2", currently 250 pounds.
I could get up to 255 if I have a little bit more sodium than 260.
pounds i could get up to 255 if i have a little bit more sodium in 260 um yeah i'm gonna do something vigorous steve uh where he wants me to go to like a water accredited lab i think it's
gonna be in fucking la so i have to go to la for this shit i thought it'd be easier but um yeah
yeah i'm curious and if you guys think i'm lying i don't take offense to it because i've gotten that
many a lot a lot of time now so I'm kind of used to it.
80-20, 80-
Oh, the percentage is going down.
Oh, my goodness.
The percentage is going down.
It was cool.
The first three were right away 100%.
Yep.
Yep, yep.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All right.
So let's see.
Oh, that hurt.
Jeremy Avila.
You can tell he's natty by his small wrists.
Fuck you, Jeremy.
Fuck you. Okay, let's find the by his small wrists. Fuck you, Jeremy. Fuck you.
Okay, let's find the last good question while this poll is going down.
Let's see.
Poll's still there.
Just scroll up maybe.
A bit on a – oh, I'm down to – do you guys – okay, this is actually – yeah, Dom Sornberger.
I've been on a cut for about 28 weeks.
I'm in a 300 to 500 calorie deficit per week.
I'm down 25 pounds.
Nice, consistent.
Do you think it'll be a good idea to take a diet break or just maintain it for a bit or keep digging?
Damn. I think it's time for like a little or keep digging. Damn.
I think it's time for like a little break, man.
Shit. That's a good call.
You probably just need to take a break for
very long though, huh? No.
And when we say break...
Yeah, I was going to say because Thanksgiving's
coming up so it could be
really easy to fucking
lose your shit. But what? Maybe two weeks of
some freedom?
If he says he's dieting for 28 weeks, he could go, again, be smart with it.
But if you're doing a 300, 500 calorie deficit, just bring your calories up by 500 for maybe two to four weeks.
Honestly, two to four weeks.
You're going to see the scale go up a little bit maybe.
Maybe it might go up.
He's lost 25 pounds.
Yeah, with that amount of calories, it might not go up at all.
It might not go up at all it might not go up at all and one thing that could happen and this has
happened when i when i was working with a lot of bodybuilders is the scale might go up a little
bit then the scale might start to go down a little bit more because since you're intaking a little
bit more food you have a little bit more energy you're burning a little bit more calories that
happens to people yeah your neat goes up but the thing is is you got to be diligent man because
gotta be paying attention that break for a lot of people it starts with the diet break i'm just going to go up by 500 calories and then it's like
oh one day at a thousand calories and then you're just off the wall so dom you you could take a
break but just please don't don't let it be you know a break break something i've done a couple
times before but again you know you got to be cautious with this. I would allow myself to eat whatever I wanted one time per day for like two weeks.
But that thing, what's that thing though?
Because you could have –
Yeah, you just can't go too crazy.
And then my meals and my other stuff would be like – it would be like a little bit more normal people food rather than like bodybuilder food.
Okay.
Yeah.
I might have like some ice cream at night or something like that. more normal, normal people food rather than like bodybuilder food. So, okay. Yeah.
I might have like some ice cream at night or something like that. I might have a burrito.
I might have a sandwich.
I might have like,
I don't know,
just stuff that you,
stuff that you've been eyeballing for a while when you were,
when you were dieting,
you know?
Okay.
Dom,
your name's going in the bucket.
That was a great question.
Okay.
There are some other questions, but we will hit these in the next Q&A, guys.
So join us in the next one.
This was really fun.
Did you guys like this?
I liked it.
It was great.
It was fantastic.
Yeah, we'll do it again same time next week.
I like that Jeremy Avila chimed in.
Jeremy Avila is always here.
He's always here talking shit.
Oh, next week is Thanksgiving.
Fuck.
Never mind.
Oh, yeah.
The week after Thanksgiving?
Yeah.
Okay, Mark.
We don't care about our families.
Fuck family. Yeah. Okay, Mark. Wait don't care about our families. Fuck family.
Okay, Mark.
Wait, wait, wait.
Let me do this first.
Really?
Yeah, you got to get this stuff at the bottom.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I really want this to be random.
Okay.
Put your hand in the keto pro.
Randomized controlled trials.
Okay, first person.
Whoa.
So the way this is going to work is, like I told you guys, you got four prizes.
Now, whoever gets first.
Oh, did I pick up one?
Oh, you picked up two?
Controversy.
There we go.
Okay.
So.
Oh.
Okay.
Okay.
Zach Morris.
Remember, guys, you must message me on the Discord.
Send me your email address.
But, Zach, you are our first winner.
Is that the guy from Saved by the Bell?
Zach Morris? I never watched Saved by the Bell. Me neither, you are our first winner. Is that the guy from Saved by the Bell? Zach Morris?
I never watched Saved by the Bell.
Me neither, but I know the actor.
Yeah. So, Zach,
you win the hostage shape, I think, is the
biggest prize. So, you
win that. Okay.
Who said our Discord's hard to find?
Our Discord's in the description.
I think that was a ploy.
Anabolic activities did not say we mentioned.
Thank you.
Yeah, yeah. If you want to join the Discord, click, go in our description.
Our Discord link is right there.
Kenny or Wyatt, but you guys are the shit.
Thank you, guys.
If you can find the Discord in the description, thanks for that call out.
All right.
So, Zach Morris, you are our first winner.
Message me on Discord, baby.
You will win the year of hostage tape.
The next winner, Mark.
There we go.
Okay.
You will win a gift card to, within you, Josh Brewer.
Okay.
Join that Discord.
My Discord username is Transceima.
Message me with your email.
We'll get you set up
okay all righty our third winner please be broadhead i would love if broadhead just so
that we could talk about it again let's get that broadhead come on broadhead
oh no someone's like come on big head like okay so this one's gonna be tough but eric right now
your username in the chat was eric so eric you're our third winner okay you're gonna win some
threads from viore clothing eric viore let me write that down josh within zach morris one year hostage tape and four you're
gonna win a vivo gift card whoever's the fourth good eric roys make sure to join that discord i Big A Armory. Nice. Big A Armory.
Big A Armory.
You win a Vivo gift card.
Okay.
Oh, you want one more winner?
Okay, we'll do one more winner.
We'll figure out something to give them.
Within you.
Yeah.
Oh, okay, yeah, we'll give out more within you.
Good.
Oh, you already did?
We did, but now we're going to give out more.
Hey, it's his company.
Big Man on Campus.
Oh, he's the one who asked the pet question.
Oh, there we go.
It was meant to be.
It was meant to be.
Big Man on Campus, you're going to win a gift card to within you.
Get yourself some protein or some electrolytes or some fasting gum.
They have a bunch of good shit.
So Big Man on Campus, you're going to win a gift card from within you but you must join the discord
and message me there please all right all right time to end the poll it's gonna end at
looks like 78 people say yes you are natty wow i'm surprised at that that's pretty good hey
you know my heart kind of makes me feel good y'all don't think i'm
a lying piece of shit only some people only some people think i'm a lying piece of shit
thank you guys steven granzella smoky yeah i've known that man for so many years and he still
thinks well i think he's coming to the coming to my side but yeah he still thinks i'm lying
okay all right everybody strength is never weakness weakness never strength catch you guys later bye