Mark Bell's Power Project - How to FINALLY Hit Your Goals in 2023 || MBPP Ep. 863
Episode Date: January 3, 2023In this Podcast Episode, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza talk about how to improve your health. in 2023 and finally keep those new year's resolutions. New Power Project Website: https://p...owerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://hostagetape.com/powerproject Free shipping and free bedside tin! ➢https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! ➢Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: https://youtu.be/qPG9JXjlhpM ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off site wide including Within You supplements! ➢https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢https://bubsnaturals.com Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% of your next order! ➢https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! ➢https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! ➢https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off ALL LABS at Marek Health! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 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 #HowToGetInShape #PowerProject #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject
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Power Project Family, how's it going?
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automatically links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes against in sema well it breaks me on day one on day two day three day four day five
all the way to 99 and 100 i would never do that and and i cry and that's the end. If you did 100 days in a row within SEMA rolling jiu-jitsu,
you would progress faster than anybody else in their first 100 days of jiu-jitsu.
Yeah, I probably would do great because I think he would be actually really nice to me.
I'd be super nice.
But the interesting thing is I don't know how good of an instructor I am.
Even though I've been doing it for seven years, brown belt.
You'd be like, oh, you just do this.
And I'd be like, what the fuck was that?
You went so fast just now.
That's the thing I noticed, though, like with Julian, who's his black belt, right?
When he explains certain things in jujitsu to people, he'll explain certain things.
I'm like, oh, I wouldn't have known to tell them that small little detail that can make the
biggest difference.
How much coaching have you done?
Um,
probably quite a bit in class,
right?
Oh,
absolutely.
Whenever I roll with anybody,
uh,
especially like white belts or whatever,
I'll usually always try to pinpoint the,
the big things that they need to start trying to focus.
So you're already mentoring people and helping people a ton that you'd probably
don't even barely recognize.
Yeah,
that's true.
It's part of the culture, right?
Especially when you get to upper belts.
But I think I'm still just, I don't trust in my teaching skills
just because I've never been an instructor.
There's a lot of great coaches that have great information.
I remember this in pro wrestling.
One of my friends was really, really proficient.
He was incredible.
He had all the technique down, and he knew how to protect the other guy really well
and he knew how to protect himself and be safe
and he was in great shape.
And whenever you'd ask him a question,
he was like, I'm not a coach.
And he'd be like, dude, you know so much.
Come on, just help me.
And when he would help you, it was really helpful.
He just, I don't think he really went over it
in his head that much
on how he would instruct because he he was like no no i'm a student like i'm i'm i'm in the process
of learning and so i think that he didn't he didn't view himself as a as a teacher he was like
i'm still trying to figure this shit out and that's maybe some of what how you feel maybe in
some ways that is how i feel but i also think like that's been something that's been a global change, not just like with the way I feel about jujitsu, but the way I feel with all forms of like the fitness I'm currently doing.
Because when I was – I guess when I was coaching people as far as like bodybuilding and powerlifting years ago, it's so straightforward and you can get the hang of certain things that like, yeah, you still can learn more, but it's pretty – it's simple.
But as we started doing more things as far as our fitness is concerned, when we had different people like Weck in here, even Gota, et cetera, people have certain things to say about like, for example, Gota.
But there's different principles that are really, really good from them, right? right and as we've learned more i've just realized that there's a lot of
shit there there's so many different ways that somebody can attack their fitness and their health
that's like i don't know i look at myself as just an eternal student with this stuff i know you do
too both of you guys do and but the thing is is we know all of us could help people out even though
we're continuing to learn about this shit
yeah and this stuff can be as complicated as we want it to be
or it could be as simple as
hey you know what why don't you try 100 days in a row of some bodybuilding
see what it does for you
go to the gym use two machines every day
and fucking peace out after you use the two machines
for five sets of 10 reps on two different machines
do it for 100 days eat a gram of protein per pound of body weight after you use the two machines for five sets of 10 reps on two different machines.
Do it for 100 days.
Eat a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
See what the fuck happens to you.
Think less about it.
Yeah, keep it really simple.
I don't really know how to do this exercise.
I can't really feel that much.
Use all machines.
The machines help you.
They'll do some of that for you. They kind of put you in a position where if you do multiple sets with multiple reps, sets of 10 with short rest intervals, a minute every
minute on the minute you do a set, you'll be like, holy shit, my chest is lit up. You'll have no
choice. If you're on the pec fly machine and you do five sets of 10 of that, and then you do five
sets of 10 of some sort of bench press machine. Your chest will be on fire.
You'll be sore the next day.
Yo, listen up.
Right now, we're going to talk about a bunch of stuff that will help you out, especially as you're hitting your fitness in 2023.
But go and link in our description right now and go to our Discord just because there's so many people in there who have just taken stuff from the podcast and lost 30, 50, a hundred something pounds just by applying things,
no program,
whatever,
just applying different habits that we talk about all the time. Let's go to that discord.
Cause good communities over there.
And,
uh,
we're going to have some ideas for you to be able to kill your fitness in
2023 in this episode.
Yeah.
In 2023,
uh,
you know,
one of the things that's going to be going down for me is the Boston
marathon.
Woo.
How did that happen?
Cause you, you need to be invited. Rightathon. Woo! How did that happen, dog?
Because you need to be invited, right?
So how the fuck did that happen?
Yeah, I just, I told them, I said, I'm Mark Bell.
You got to make a slot for me.
And they're like, oh, shit.
They're like, oh, yeah, you are Mark Bell.
No.
You know, I think a fan reached out.
I don't remember the exact how it happened,
but as I've been running and running more and more um i thought originally i thought it was like a ridiculous proposition i think it probably happened maybe
over a year ago the guy mentioned it to me and i was like yeah i don't think there's i don't i
don't know i don't know about any of that and uh i do know that there's a qualifying total for
or qualifying uh times i don't even know. I don't even know the language.
I'm trying to get like a total to get into the box.
I did a 26-32 total.
Isn't that good enough to get in there?
Oh, man.
Someone's upset.
They've been wanting to do it forever, and it's like he fucking doesn't even know what it's called.
Yeah, many people are probably upset.
But I did a half marathon in March of last year.
And the progress I've made from that time has been unbelievable.
And that's why I keep talking about running.
That's why you see it all over my social media.
I'm really excited about it.
And I lose some followers over it and people get upset about it here and there.
But that's okay.
It's what I'm into. I don't mind, uh, you know, trying new things and, uh, messing with them. I also don't, also don't mind, uh, things being phases. You know, I did powerlifting for a long
time and I came out of powerlifting. I did some bodybuilding. Um, I will go back into bodybuilding.
I'll probably step on a stage again sometime, probably like when I'm 50 or something like
that, just as another goal, something to do.
Um, who knows where all this will take me.
And I know after the Boston marathon, I was like, it'd be cool to have another goal.
I don't really want to run any further.
And, uh, I've always liked jujitsu, always loved the UFC, uh, always had a ton of respect
for all the people that do that you know contact sports and
martial arts and I'm like you know I'm just gonna I'm gonna commit to a hundred days of jiu-jitsu
and let's see what the fuck happens you know I'll get some I'll probably get some private
sessions where I get like coddled a little bit and maybe the instructor or whomever I pick or whoever I find will understand that I'm
going to do it every day. So maybe it'll kind of help so I don't kill myself from doing it every
day. By that time, I mean, coming off the Boston Marathon, my conditioning will be really, really
good. But the conditioning of my elbows and my knees
and stuff will not be anything that would be up to par with, uh, doing jujitsu and rolling and
stuff like that. But the body is going to be pretty resilient and pretty tough. So once the,
once the marathon's over and once I kind of lick my wounds from whatever may happen during that
event, um, yeah, I'll turn it over to someone to help me.
Maybe I'll meet someone here, here and there.
Maybe I'll go to a class
or maybe I'll figure it out whatever way I can
to try to string together 100 days in a row
just because this has been so effective for me with running.
I could be totally wrong.
It could totally backfire on me
and I could just be
having you guys push me around in a wheelchair every day with my entire body in a cast every
day. And you guys be like, I told you so. But I'm interested to kind of see what will happen with
it. All right. Also people, if you're listening, if you've wanted, I want, just want to get idea
who's listening has been interested in starting jujitsu.
If you can make a comment and let us know just so we can see, that would be helpful.
But for you, Mark, what spurred the 100 days?
And Andrew, do you know if you've had 100 sessions so far yet?
And how's your body continuing to feel as you go through this?
I don't know how many i wish
i had kept track um graham's keeping track talking to graham he was like i just had my 40th class and
i'm like oh that's so cool like i i guess i could start now but no i i don't know how many days um
and as far as like classes versus like open mat i've probably had more open mat than I've had actual classes. Um, so I, yeah, I don't
know. I lost, I've lost track for sure. Um, body, um, it's feeling good everywhere. Like my hands
feel good. My toes feel good. My joints, everything feels good. It's just, I got recently like this
weird rib back thing that Graham is also experiencing and he doesn't understand really
what's going on. Um, Kelly Sturerett said it could be like a diaphragm thing.
So I've been like smashing.
And when I smash my back, my abs start twitching.
So it's definitely connected somewhere like all around,
you know, my whatever diaphragm and rib cage section, something.
It's been getting a little better though, right?
Yeah. And that's the annoying thing is that time away
is the thing that's healing it.
I keep saying that like, I wish I I could roll it out and be like,
oh, yep, I'm good to go.
And I could do something to kind of remove the sensation,
but it's actually just taking some time off.
You could actually go back and drill technique, though.
And so that's what we've been doing is I went back
and I started drilling technique.
And I was telling my buddy Robertson,
I'm just like, I've been taking drilling way too like lazy, you know, like kind of thinking about how Casio was like, don't fight back.
So like kind of going a little bit slower during the rolls.
I was still going slow during the drills, even though there's like no contact or low impact and like nothing really going on as far as like I'm not going to get hurt and I'm not going to hurt anybody else.
So I need to take the drilling way more seriously. I was being too lazy with it and i had to recognize that so now i'm
getting more excited to start doing the drills again so that's what's going on right now my idea
of this is that i'm going to pay somebody and i'm going to make them train me the way that i think
i should be trained so i'm going to tell them no fucking drills man like i don't want to i don't
want to like shrimp and do all this other stuff because i think that's the stuff that'm going to tell them no fucking drills man like I don't want to like shrimp and do all this other stuff because
I think that's the stuff that's going to kind of beat me up
and that's the stuff that's going to get me
I'd rather just kind of like
I'm going to tell them shit like that
because at least in the beginning
like I'm going to need
small dosages of this stuff
because it's going to make me tremendously sore
just like somebody coming into the gym
it's like I can make you sore I can make you pu into the gym, it's like, I can make you sore.
I can make you puke.
We can do all kinds of stuff.
I can get you really fucked up.
But if you want to try to do this and participate in it every day, we're going to have to kind of play the long game.
And we're going to have to be a little bit cautious.
So just rolling around and fucking around with some stuff on the ground where I'm not even going to know where to put my left and put my right and so on. It's all going to be very confusing to me. I think just
kind of learning some of that stuff will be super effective. And I'm sure you guys have played this
out many times over in your head on what's the most effective, you know, should someone go every
day? Should they go every other day? If someone does go every day, are they able to have quality
enough workouts to where it can really
be super impactful and really make a difference it's probably tough if you've never done it before
right so um you hear the donna her death squad they're about like trying to you know basically
go every day and people talk about multiple workouts a day but those are also guys who
you know they're they're very advanced you know who, you know, they're, they're very
advanced. You know, I don't know if they start out that way from the time they're white belts or
exactly what, but my whole point is I, it seems like no one really knows. And if you go into,
if you go into, uh, jujitsu places all around, all around the country, you'll get treated
differently in every single one of them. and you'll probably start with something slightly different in most places.
I know that there's a couple things that they're going to show you, particular things that are going to be common, but each person, each instructor probably has a slightly different way, slightly different path that they're going to start people out with.
way, slightly different path that they're going to start people out with.
You know, the interesting thing is that like if someone wanted to start running every day,
they could, because as we've talked about, you don't have to run a mile or two miles or whatever every day.
You could do a run walk because you can mitigate the amount of effort you put in.
You could run for 30 seconds and then walk for a minute or two minutes, then run for
another 30 seconds and then walk for two minutes.
And the next day you could run for 45. And then on a day, if you're feeling really beat up, you can lower that to
running for 15 minutes and then walking for two minutes and doing that for like your next 20 or
30 minutes or whatever, right? So you can gauge on how you're feeling. But when you go into jiu-jitsu,
since it's a martial art and you're usually working against somebody else, even if you have
an instructor who you're doing a private with, the private setting is actually a lot better for the beginner who wants to try to do it every
day because that instructor is probably going to be able to be like, okay, don't push so hard.
Calm your body down. Especially when you're doing something body to body, your instinct is going to
be, if Mark touches me, like the instinct is going to be like, push him away super hard. And you're
using so much energy
you know what i mean that beats you up a lot when you use all that energy as you get better you
realize you don't have to use so much effort and energy when you do things so if you do go every
day certain days you can go harder because you understand what it's like and then other days
you could soften things up and still get a really good session in right so that's why it's a little
bit different and you're right if you do have somebody who you're doing privates with, you're going to be
able to gauge your fatigue better. Um, it's also the stresses of just going into a class
environment, which is actually probably super important, but then you don't have to really
worry too much about sizing up with this guy. Oh man, this kid, this fucking guy's in college and
like, he ain't got nothing better to
do than to fuck me up you know and and there's going to be people that uh you know with my size
and stuff that will want to do that yes i'm not scared of any of that i actually welcome that
that'll be great when that happens i'll gladly get my ass kicked i i kind of like being humbled
in that way uh just not maybe too not too aggressively but it'll all check you yeah yeah yeah it'll it'll
yeah yeah it'll it'll all everything that can happen to you is gonna happen to you you know
like ed cone you know told me that with power lifting you know uh i was at a powerlifting meet
one time and a guy uh missed his opening attempt deadlift and me and ed were looking at each other
like damn and ed's like don't say anything damn. And Ed's like, don't say anything.
I was like, I didn't say anything.
He goes, look, man.
He goes, if you do this shit for long enough,
everything will happen to you.
And the guy ended up, unfortunately,
bombing out in the deadlift,
which you don't ever really see.
Sometimes people miscalculate their squat
or their bench or something like that.
You can see that.
But the deadlift, after you're already squatted, you're already benched, you're already on your way to a total. And then
you selected a weight that was way too heavy and powerlifting, you can't go back down.
But I'd imagine that just about anything that can happen to you, the different ways you can
be embarrassed in jujitsu, probably most of them, if not all of them will happen to you if you do it
for long enough. Yeah. In jujitsu, like how you had in college football, there was the, what was it,
practice All-American? Oh, yeah. So, I call them the flow roll world champion.
They'd exist, but during privates, you don't have to worry about that. But what I was going to say
is the person that you find will find fun ways to work those drills in that you think you don't
like right now. I could show you a couple that have actually really, really helped me on the
mats, but you're right. It's the, it's the, like the line drills that are, or you got to shrimp
down the whole thing. It's like, come on, man, I'd get like one or two and then we're good. Right.
But I think because if you are going to go every day, there's are going to be days where it's just
like, Hey, we're just going to work a couple of these today because yesterday we went hard.
Or tomorrow we're going to try a step up above what we've been doing.
I'm like drooling and they're like, hey, just watch this video for today.
You're not doing so good.
That's sick.
By the way, real quick, Andrew, I sent you a post from our boy DJ Webb.
DJ Webb!
DJ in the house.
He ran 365 days in a row.
He ran a lot.
In 2022.
1742 total miles, right?
So 1,742 miles.
And if you guys go to his page, his Instagram page is IamDJWebb with two Bs.
This guy's jacked.
So he's been running every single day.
He's been lifting.
I think he had a PR on the deadlift of 6.35?
6.05.
6.05.
6.05, man.
DJWebb's not messing around.
He's not messing around.
He's also in weird weather too.
So it's not like you know me doing it
every day here in california is quite different than anybody else uh in some of the other states
where there's like just mayhem going on with the weather yeah he's he's such an anomaly but like
he's out here like he's he's really a hybrid athlete he's been doing the running thing for
a long time and it just shows like if you run it doesn't mean that you're automatically going to
lose all your strength in your muscle right you just need to build a habit out of it like you're currently doing
and like dj's done and like a lot of people are doing yeah how far you know how far are you going
to run you know like i think when you start to select some of these things and you try some of
these things like how much are you going to do of it for how long are you going to do it for
i think uh people can reasonably run 10 or 20 minutes once they build a capacity for that
very safely and efficiently and effectively, probably multiple times a week and have
zero to no impact on their muscle mass, unless maybe they're a hard gainer. Maybe there's
someone that has typically been pretty thin. Then maybe it's just another one more hindrance to them
trying to be more muscular.
Absolutely.
But now I'm curious about this.
What do you think, you know, because every time I talk to Graham, right, Graham's like,
yeah, this is session 56 or this is session 57.
And when I think about that, I don't generally count those things.
I don't say, oh, this is my fifth whatever.
I just like to do it and just keep doing it because in my head sometimes when I'm counting something, I get too obsessed with, oh, I've done this for this long and this is where I'm at.
I know it just takes time of doing the thing.
So what do you guys think of like counting the sessions of how many times you
do things if you have a specific goal towards it? Yeah, I think, you know, there's Andy Frisella
talks about like 75 hard and he has that whole philosophy. And there's some studies that show
if you do stuff for like, there's a bunch of different studies on a bunch of different days,
but 66 days is supposed to be exponentially a lot better than
somebody trying to adhere to something for 30 days. So in my head, the way it works out
is just that you get over like some sort of hump, you know, if you did something for a hundred days,
which a hundred days isn't a lot. It's not like you're all of a sudden an expert in whatever it
is that you're participating in for a hundred days. but a hundred days in a row of reading, you know,
a hundred days in a row of cold plunging, um, it probably just really dampens, uh, how tough it is for you to get yourself to do that thing. And, uh, hopefully it's something that you did enough
of in those hundred days where it's actually kind of harder to live without it at that point, uh,
than it is to actually go and do it.
So that was kind of my, some of my thought process around that.
Yeah.
I think like what Graham was doing is pretty cool because like I would like to know at some point like how many actual like days or classes I've gone.
But I think the reason why I didn't even bother with that is because after, I don't know, one or two days of trying it, I was like, oh,
I just do this now. So could you imagine like keeping track of all your good meals, all your
good workouts? It's like, I don't plan on stopping. So like, I don't really feel the need to track.
Yeah.
But I would say that having the initial goal of like, for me, it was like, I'm going to go three
times a week, no matter what. That helped kind of just get me more ingrained into just the habit, building the habit of going every other day basically.
So I think for that, it was really good.
But for me, it wasn't important to count exactly how many times I've gone because I just want to do this forever.
Okay.
So I think what you just said is a huge deal.
One thing is you already knew you wanted to do it for a long time.
I think Graham also knew that too.
But if you're trying to start running every day or if you're trying to start jujitsu, it could be a good idea to say – because I think when Graham started, he's like, I'm going to do 100 days.
It'll be good to say I'm going to do 100 days of this or I'm going to do – make sure I run 60 total days.
I think that is the initial thing he was talking about yeah yeah because what that does is at the end of the day if you want to
get good at running you have to become a runner a runner it doesn't mean you have to be like a
super high level runner but you have to just become the person that runs if you want to become
good at jujitsu then you just have to become a grappler it doesn't mean you have to be the top
of the world but you just grappling needs to be something that you just do.
No matter what, you're just doing it, right?
But you need to do it enough for it to become something that you do.
So setting those goals of like,
beginning of the year, I'm going to run 100 days.
And you notch that out at a certain point though,
at the end of that 100 days,
maybe you're now just someone
who running is a part of your routine. But setting that goal for yourself has put you in that path yeah yeah
and uh you know i i was messing around with running for a little while before that and i was just
i was trying to do it i guess in ways that i thought other people did it and then i was like
why am i doing that i never did that with like lifting necessarily. I always just kind of like followed how I felt.
And I just like, I would, you know, I had a plan, I guess, of some sort in the gym,
kind of knew I was doing like lower body or upper body. Didn't exactly know exactly what I was going
to do every single time. It was just like, okay, well, today's a upper body day. So there's going to be some type of pressing movement. It might be a floor press or a board
press or a close grip bench or a incline bench or a regular flat bench or a bench against bands or
a bench against chains, like whatever it might be. And I messed around with many different versions
of that for a long time and ended up finding it to be fun,
something that I was able to do for a really long time.
And then when it came to running, you know,
I was trying to like listen to what I heard other people doing.
And then I was like, fuck it, I'll just run every day and kind of see what happens.
And then it turns out there's a lot of people that run every day.
And there's some people who run every day for 20 years.
there's a lot of people that run every day and there's some people who run every day for 20 years there's a guy on instagram who's got over like 2 000 something runs so i don't know five six years
worth of running and you know when he's running it just it looks impeccable looks amazing and i
was like this guy's out there doing it he looks great like he's in great shape um there's other
people that are doing it too.
And you just hear so many stories about people being broken and busted and you can't do it too much.
And I think when you commit to something every day, it changes the way that you're going to do it.
So if I told you guys, hey, I want you to sprint down the street out here.
First of all, you might say no.
But your first thing
might be like, well, for how far?
You know, or like you need to know
seconds or you need to know like the distance.
And if I said,
I want you to sprint
for four minutes,
you'd be like, oh.
Okay. And then you might have in your head like i'm gonna pick up a little bit of speed but i'm not gonna really run that fast because four minutes
is a long time i don't really remember the last time i did something like that so you're gonna
like pace yourself right so if you do something for 100 days um maybe it is cold plunging well
maybe how do we lower the barrier of entry so that you can actually do that 100 days, maybe it is cold plunging. Well, maybe how do we lower the barrier of entry
so that you can actually do that 100 days in a row? Well, maybe an easy way to do that to start
would just be the duration. All you got to do is get in for 90 seconds. And you know full well that
if you got in there and you started doing it and you were in there for 90 seconds, you would be
like, it's pointless for me to only be in here for 90 seconds.
I should probably stay in for another 90.
Now you're at three minutes
and that's a really good dosage of cold therapy for the day.
You can do that with the sauna.
You can do that with your food.
Imagine with your food,
you're like,
I want 80 to 85% compliance on my diet and I want to put together 100 days of that.
Saying 100%, it's going to lead to binging in most cases.
It's going to lead people to go off the rails in most cases.
So give yourself a little bit of wiggle room with something like that.
But if you were to commit to that and you're able to actually get through it,
bit of wiggle room with something like that. But if you were to commit to that and you're able to actually get through it, again, your ability to live without that once you've made it through 100
days is probably going to be harder than you actually committing to the thing. So a lot of
times I think we think that committing to something is really hard, but what you'll find is if you
commit to it for long enough and you actually get good at it, stopping yourself from doing it would be tough.
So there's some people in January or, you know, when the new year hits, they're like, I'm not going to drink.
Well, it'd be easy for all three of us not to drink.
We don't really care that much about it.
But if you said no exercise, no movement for a month, It'd be really difficult for us to adhere to. Even if
somebody came in, Andrew Huberman comes in and says, man, dude, have you guys heard about the
study where people stop lifting for a month and they stop all exercise. They don't run. They don't
do jujitsu. Their fucking brain heals. They get smarter when they go back to it. They're able to
initiate and learn. The process of learning is increased times three.
And when they start lifting again, their muscle mass increases.
Each person in the study, there was 1,000 people in the study,
each person gained six pounds in two months after they had that one-month break.
We'd be like, fuck you, Andrew Huberman, even though we love you.
We're still not going to take that advice because it's too hard for us
to stop right yeah that'd be tough it's tough right now yeah dude it's really hard right now
for me oh it's oh it is hard it is poking the death um no i like i want like it's killing me
like right now like even just waking up this morning was like all right i'm gonna get up and
i'm gonna go do drills we're versus a couple weeks back it was like let's fucking go like i would wake up
so my my my eight sleep bed goes off at four i'd be up every day at like 3 25 like fucking i'm
getting up and going right now like i like i couldn't wait now it's like ah fuck my shit's
hurting like this sucks and then as the days go i'm like damn it, I just want to get back on the mats.
Like it's killing me that I'm not doing it right now.
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shut your mouth when you sleep enjoy the show absolutely yeah but that that's i think that's
an amazing thing man especially the everyone who knows kind of all the stuff that you've been
through in terms of your back and your movement it's like you're now grappling dog you're grappling
against other people you're fighting other people and you're improving really well. Thank you. Like when I roll with you, I'm like, Ooh, I can see the different movement
now. Like that's huge. It's gigantic. Like I said, it's like, I'm becoming another person now.
And for a lot of things that we want to be able to do, it's like when we do change our habits and
we change the things we do each day and we change the things we watch, we kind of do become different people.
And if you know that you're trying to become better in some type of thing,
whether it's running,
whether it's losing weight or whatever,
there's an aspect of you that is going to have to change.
It's not going to be some 60 or 90 day transformation.
There's an aspect of you that will be different
after a month, after a few months.
And it's just going to stay different
if you want to stay improving. And you're going to want to try to find people, you know, if you're, you know,
thinking about trying something new in the new year, new year, new you type thing, which, you
know, I don't know, you can think of a million different ways to try to play out some of those
scenarios, but it's always a good idea to try to, it's always a good idea to investigate, uh, trying to be better than you were yesterday.
Um, no matter what time of year it is.
And so if you're somebody that's looking to try something new, try something different,
probably the easiest thing, like if you have a hard time with exercise, get around people
that exercise, you know, call up your uncle or your buddy or your, your friend.
That's always been like a fitness freak or nerd with this stuff.
And maybe you're intimidated or scared to like join in because you think they're going to run way too fast or you think they're going to lift way too hard.
I think you'd be surprised if you reached out to them and said, I'd really love to join with you.
If I, you know, slow you down or something like that, I understand. But if you could maybe just show me a couple things, I would really love to join with you. If I, you know, slow you down or something like that, I understand.
But if you could maybe just show me a couple things, I would really love that.
And they're probably actually going to be like, no, dude, just come with me.
Like, it'd be great.
I would love to have somebody.
When people run, when you're running, a lot of really high-level runners,
even the best of the best, will run at like a 12-minute mile pace,
which is a lot of times pretty manageable for somebody that's new.
A lot of times it's part of training is to like run a little slower.
So maybe if your friend is on a different level in something, you could still tag along.
Maybe all you do with them for the day is the warm-up that they do.
Maybe their warm-up is like a mile run or something.
You're like, oh, my God, I don't even know if I'll make it a mile.
Maybe you run a half mile with them
and then you walk back.
Like whatever way you got to figure it out.
I think that you'll find
that the people that are into this shit,
they're usually really positive.
And then same thing with the food.
Get around people that eat better.
Get around people that don't love to party and love
to drink because drinking and partying, it usually throws your diet way off.
Dude. You know, one thing when you're talking about the running is, first off, you can get
around somebody who's good and proficient. But just like we were talking about, if you don't
know anybody like that, but you know somebody who,
it's the new year.
So I know we all got friends who are like,
I want to get in shape.
Finally,
all of us got those friends.
So find that friend.
And if running's the thing you want to get kind of good at,
then y'all just do run walks.
Don't kill yourselves.
Go out and do some run walks and then like, just make it a point to try and do that each day with your homie.
Y'all suck,ie y'all suck
but y'all start to improve slowly together aren't you doing like a walk dance the other day yeah
so nah me and my girl have been like we we we try to walk together every day whatever whether it's
30 minutes or whatever we try to walk every day but the other day um sometimes we'll like randomly
skip but the other day we were put on some music and we, when I was walking, I was just like, why the fuck am I doing the static ass walk? So I just started skipping. Right. And then she started skipping. By the way, we were on the sidewalk. So there are cars passing, people seeing it know, dancing while walking to it. And then she just started dancing while walking to it.
And then for 20 to 25 minutes on our way back home, we are literally dancing on the sidewalk home.
Right.
We are literally dancing.
She's white.
So her beat was kind of off with shit.
But she was getting her shit.
And I was just like, I was like, God damn, this is so fun.
It's so fucking fun.
But that's the thing. It's like when we when we think
about all this movement stuff and walking like your walk doesn't just got to be a walk you know
your walk can be a skip and then it could be a little little jiggle a little dance you know
have fun with this shit yeah move around a bunch and you'll find you'll find things that work and
feel good for you and you'll find shit that you're like oh i shouldn't not probably move that way
that was not a good idea yeah i always like going different routes and that you're like, ooh, I should not probably move that way. That was not a good idea.
I always like going different routes and stuff,
you know, like,
because like we'll go on our walk,
like it's basically around the block.
I'm like, hey,
we're going to go this way through the park.
And like, oh, we're going to the park.
Like, nope, we're just walking through the park.
You know, then we'll go,
you know, each different direction.
But yeah, like keeping it fun,
jumping on and off the curbs and stuff.
But what I was going to say is like for,
like if somebody were to ask Mark to like, Hey, let's,
I want to get into running. Like, can we go run?
It's not Mark's goal to get this person so worked that they can't walk.
You know what I mean? Like they're going to want to,
Mark is going to want to make it feel awesome.
So that way you want to come back and do it again the next day or the
following day.
So what I'm just asking is for people that do get asked the question like make it feel make them
feel better afterwards don't like try to make them puke and shit like that you know that's that's i
mean nobody really wants to do that but what you know so that and then so like the people asking
it's like that's typically what's going to happen is like they're not going to try to kill you to
like like oh look how hard i work you can't hang with me it's like that's typically what's going to happen. It's like they're not going to try to kill you to like, oh, look how hard I work.
You can't hang with me.
It's like, no, not going to do that.
Yeah, definitely don't try to do that either.
Yeah, it just needs to be a habit.
And to build any habit, you can't have a piece of heart.
You can't do it the next day, right?
I think when it comes to like nutrition, you know, I think where some of us are at is that, you know, the diet that we have is like, it's easy enough to follow to where we don't really
have to make big changes. I don't feel like there's anything I need to do. I don't think
there's anything I need to do to like even work on getting leaner. I actually think that
if I just continue to eat the way that I'm eating, I will continue to get leaner and it might just be like a tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny amount. Uh, but that will just keep
adding up to something over time since I'm already in pretty good shape.
You know, this is the kind of boring aspect of it, but you're, you're, you're going to get to
a certain point where you don't need to keep changing things up to be in shape. Like last year you were in shape.
The year before you were in shape.
The year before you were in shape.
Right?
Here I am in 2016.
Here I am in 2019.
And I don't want to throw any shade, but, you know, everyone has different goals.
You're trying to power lift.
Maybe you gained some pounds or whatever.
But there's something to be said about the fact that
we haven't had to do any crazy transformations we haven't had to be like okay i'm gonna do this
transformation with you guys why because we all got habits that allow us to what stay in shape
and it all comes down to those habits the reason i'm saying this is like andrew when we did the
cold plunge you'd look like some of the best shape I've ever seen you in.
Fucking delts of shit were popping out.
I feel really good, yeah.
And then, oddly enough, that day I didn't eat.
And like, of course, you're going to nitpick
at every little thing.
But like my stomach,
when I do eat, it looks way better.
Like when I don't eat,
I still have kind of like some baggy fat right there.
But when I eat, it pushes it out and looks like I like deeper abs. I'm like, Ooh, that looks good. I'm like, fuck, I should have ate.
But I appreciate it guys. Thank you guys. Okay. So we've, we continue to, and I think to the day
we die, we're going to drill the sleep topic. But I think one thing that can help everybody out
in terms of really trying to stick to whatever their goals are is trying to build a good sleep routine, getting to bed around a similar time and trying to wake up.
Not set an alarm, but like having your body wake up at that same time each morning.
Because when your sleep schedule is like one night you sleep at 8.30 p.m., the other night you sleep at 1 a.m., the other night you sleep at 1 a.m and i'm not you sleep at 9 9 p.m it's like i'll like the recovery just gets kind of fucked like your body feels kind of
fucked but if you're able to just sleep at the same time and wake up whatever time that is you
will feel more energized to do the things and complete the goals that you're trying to complete
i want people that are listening to this to kind of, you know, think of us as like,
we're personally working with you in a way, because if you are here with us right now,
and let's say you're 50 pounds overweight and your back hurts and you, you've been training,
you've been dead lifting, you've been doing some of your stuff, you're pretty strong,
or at least you feel like you're pretty strong.
If you were here, we would talk to you the exact same way
as we talk on this show.
First thing I would say is take off your shoes, take off your socks.
First thing Nthima would say would be, hey, what's your sleep like?
Andrew would be like, yo, what's your diet like?
And we'd just be like, right on top of you,
right up your ass.
How much are you on your phone?
Oh, you want to be in better shape.
Okay, interesting.
It doesn't seem like you're spending that much time on that.
You're spending more time in what you told us.
You're spending a lot of time making Instagram posts
or worrying about what other people are doing on social media.
Seems like you have a
lot of obligations and responsibilities that take you away from you just playing power lifter 24-7
or you being in the best shape that you want to be in. But again, what do we talk about on the
show a lot? We talk a lot about microdosing. If you are someone that has, you know, a nine to five job or a very busy
schedule, maybe first thing in the morning, maybe you can get some time to yourself. Just talking
to our boy, John Anderson recently, John Anderson has always woken up pretty early, but he wakes up
even earlier nowadays, gets up at like 4 a.m. every day and spends 90 minutes with himself. He'll listen to something
for about a half an hour. He'll meditate for about a half an hour and he'll read for about a half an
hour. Those are all like, yeah, all three of those disciplines are things he's never done before.
And he's just finding that this is providing a lot, you know, a lot for him. And
it's also no surprise that he's in like the best shape of his life. He looks incredible. You know,
he's like a ridiculous mutant bodybuilder. Um, but, uh, just like anybody else, we all have,
uh, things in our life that, um, can manifest and can pull us away from the things that we love to
do. He has found by rooting himself in these things,
these are important overarching themes that are keeping him strong.
So while it might seem ridiculous to like look at someone's feet
because they're saying their back hurts,
that's exactly what I did this weekend
when I had a close family friend come in
who's experiencing a lot of pain in their lower back.
I looked at the feet, had them use a Nibosu ball that we talk about all the time,
rolled the feet out, worked on the shins, started working a couple other areas,
and we didn't even get to the lower back yet.
We were working on the traps.
And I said, what do you think goes through your brain and through your mind with with all like
it seems like you got a lot of pain in your body that you didn't even know about and they were like
well it's probably harder for me to like manage stress since there's so much stress bound up in
my body I was like yeah that's a huge that's a huge part of it. So how can you manage your spine?
How can you manage your, you can't manage your breathing.
You're having a hard time managing your breathing because you have a physical like injury, right?
What about the times when we don't really realize that we have like a physical injury?
What about, you know, when our toes are all smashed together, we don't really realize
what that does to our gait.
We don't recognize what that does to our gait. We don't recognize
what that does to our shin and how that pulls on our knee. And the knee starts to pull on the quad
and the quad starts to pull on the hip. And then our fucking back is messed up. And we don't know
why. It's because the body's not operating correctly. The traps, the shoulders are all
kind of screwed up because the hips are screwed up because they're thrown off because the way
you walk and the way you sit and so on and so forth. And it gets hard to go.
And we have to be taught to breathe and we got to talk about it on this podcast. We got to be
taught to sleep. We got to be taught how to walk. None of this should have to happen. We shouldn't
even have to have a show. That's it, Andrew. Pack it up. Let's cancel it. I don't want to though. Yeah, I know.
I know. I like the sound of your voice too. Oh, thanks. But you know, you kind of see my point
how so many of these things are connected and I hate to always like bash everybody with the
interest level, but if you're not taking care of your sleep, if you're not getting rid of your phone away from your bed or out of your bedroom at some point, you're not as interested in jujitsu as you think you are.
You're not as interested in powerlifting as you think you are.
You're not as interested in fucking being shredded as you think you are.
You're not as interested in being rich as you thought you were.
You just keep fucking around on your phone and you're not –'re looking at girls asses or you're looking at shit on there
beating your shit too late at night beating your shit too late at night just looking at probably
superficial things which is fine like we all you know get lost in entertainment and we all like to
fuck around but you got to get that sleep in it's a really really important overarching aspect we've
heard the studies come in.
We're not huge fans of studies, but there's like compelling scientific evidence that you will burn more calories.
You will be in better shape simply from addressing your sleep.
If you can sleep a little bit longer, if you can have better quality of sleep, you will burn calories more efficiently with the same exact diet as somebody else. Sleep is free. A lot of the stuff that we're
saying, okay, there might be a little cost to like picking up a Nibosu ball or a couple items that we
may mention, but most of the stuff that we're mentioning is free for you to go and do and
utilize, take full advantage of.
Quick things in terms of optimizing your sleep.
It'll also, but also on top of everything Mark mentioned, it's going to help your recovery from workout to workout.
So those runs and run walks you're doing that are typically fucking you up and you feel all tired, you're going to feel even better. The training in the gym where you're tearing your muscles, the recovery from your training sessions is going to be better if you have better
quality sleep.
You're sticking to your diet.
It's going to feel even easier since
everything is working better.
All your hormones are working better because
of quality sleep. Taping your mouth
shut at night, which is what we do with hostage tape.
We tape our mouth shut so we're breathing
through our nose. Why? Because breathing
through your nose is going to help you sleep better. So again, simple things. But Andrew Huberman talks
about this a lot, getting some nighttime light. So get out, take a walk when the sun's setting
or afterwards. That'll help you wind down in the morning. Try to get some sun in your eyes.
Go outside, take a walk or do a run walk in the morning. That'll help reset your circadian rhythm
so everything starts working the way it should. We use eight sleep mattresses, which are temperature
controlled, which makes sure that we sleep well. But if you don't have an eight sleep mattress or
you don't want to get an eight sleep mattress, set your thermostat at maybe 68, 69 degrees in
your room. A cooler room is going to help you sleep a little better. We use eye masks because
that helps us out a bit, easy and expensive what else like do
you do you guys do for sleep use cold therapy you know use some hot and cold therapy i don't think
it matters really when you use it i think it will i think it will automatically help with
almost everything i think it will help with your sleep i think it will help with your
interpretation of it being cold you'll find that it's 37 degrees out and you're like, yeah, it's fucking cold, but it's not as cold as my goddamn cold plunge in the morning.
And you'll also learn, like I think the key thing to learn in jujitsu or in running or in cold therapy or in the sauna is that you're okay.
Yes. You're fine. Yeah. that you're okay. Yes.
You're fine.
Yeah.
You know?
Okay.
Yeah.
My knees in your chest and you can't breathe.
You know,
uh,
you know,
a jujitsu,
as you guys were talking about the other day is like,
you're,
you're trying to like,
you know,
halfway kill each other.
And so in some play fighting to the death,
yeah.
Play,
play fighting to the death.
And there's like a signal for it to,
you know, don't kill me. Yeah. All there's like a signal for it to don't kill me
don't kill me
alright I got you
yeah don't kill me all the way
just a little bit
don't break that limb please
and I think that
you know
in everything that we're doing
especially like
you know if you're
if you're starting to run
you start to run a little faster and stuff
you can really get up in your head
about like
ooh I'm
going pretty like I'm might blow something out.
Like it's easy to have that mindset,
but you gotta fight that thought process
and you gotta think, oh wow,
like I'm moving really efficiently.
This feels really, you gotta change,
you gotta change the dialogue in your head.
Wow, this feels smooth.
Oh man, I feel elastic, I feel good.
Rather than like, oh,
I'm going to pop something here. So just learning that you're okay with the resistance of life,
with the resistance that you have in the gym, with the resistance that you might be just inducing
with cold therapy, with the resistance that you might feel from hunger because you're fasting a
little bit. These are all things that are great
to brush up against and to have a little kind of daily hygiene, I don't know, experiences with.
One thing that's been super, what you kind of touched on right there, Mark,
one thing that's huge that over time will help you with all of this is changing your interpretation of these different things.
Changing, like we do a lot of fasting, right?
But our overtime, our interpretation of hunger has changed to, okay, well, it's not that big of a deal.
I can eat later, you know, because sometimes we'll eat one meal.
Sometimes we'll eat two or three meals during the day.
But the days that we eat one or two meals, it's not like, oh, God, I have to eat.
I'm stressed out.
I can't do anything else. It's like, oh, okay, I'll go eat later at home. We're used to
that, right? When it comes to exercise, jujitsu, running or whatever, initially when you start any
of these things, since your body's going to be feeling kind of beat up, there's this feeling of
like, oh God, I got to go do jujitsu again, or I got to go take another run. But if you can start
seeing those
changes in your body, like Andrew, the changes that are going on in your body, I was like, Ooh,
my body's changing. Okay. Like I'm getting used to the stress. I know that I'm going to be stronger
after this. If all these stressors that you're picking up, if you start to change your self-talk
and the way you think about them to, after I get better at this, I will become a
stronger human being. I'll become a more resilient person. This stressor is going to help me.
Over time, it's not going to be immediate, but over time of changing the way that you perceive
those stresses, those stresses are no longer stresses. They're just benefits.
When you used to work out, you used to probably eat maybe two hours before training and you would probably have like a pre-workout.
And you mentioned times where like if you didn't have your pre-workout, you thought like –
Workout is going to be shit.
It was like not – yeah, not going to be as productive.
And nowadays, people are probably asking you.
They're like confused by your diet when you mention it because they're like, well, you probably don't go to jujitsu fasted, right?
Because you go later to jujitsu, but you're like, yeah, no, I don't. I might have a coffee
with a protein powder in it or something like that in the morning and I don't eat until after
jujitsu, right? Yeah. I'll usually have electrolytes before jujitsu or electrolytes before a training
session, some training sessions and a lot of jujitsu sessions. I won't eat beforehand. I'll
do it fasted. As long as I have electrolytes in my system and I'm hydrated jujitsu sessions. I won't eat beforehand. I'll do it fasted.
As long as I have electrolytes in my system and I'm hydrated, I'm good. And the reason for that is because typically, you know, when I do eat and it's not one meal a day, every day, it's
sometimes one meal, sometimes two meals. But when I eat, I eat enough food to sustain me.
So if I do choose to eat one meal that night before, that's a meal that could be anywhere between, it's
usually a two-parter.
So it's like anywhere between 2,500 to 3,000 calories.
It's a feast.
It's a feast.
But I eat enough to be able to fuel me to do all the things I need to do the next day.
It's literally as simple as that.
But it used to be in the past that I needed my pre-workout meal to eat two hours before
I lift or before I do anything.
I needed my pre-workout. If I didn't have that pre-workout meal, mentally, I before I lift or before I do anything. I needed my pre-workout.
If I didn't have that pre-workout meal, mentally I'd be like, oh, I didn't have my meal.
I'm not going to be able to work out.
It's like a little baby without the ba-ba, right?
It's like you need your little, you know, you need your little pacifier to make sure you feel good.
But I'm not saying it's bad if you do do that.
That's not bad.
There's also people that have a hard time getting enough calories in if they only eat once or twice a day. So it's not smart for them to do it. Exactly. It's not something
you have to do, but all the things that we've done, the fasting, all this stuff, it's helped
us become more resilient towards all the other things we do. So Mark, I know you typically
probably like, I don't know what your routine looks like now, but you probably do some runs
without eating right before 10, 15 miles or miles or whatever yeah the first four hours of every day pretty much is a double workout it's
running and lifting and uh there's some calories in there because um for the boston marathon it's
gonna be i need to i need to learn how to train while eating literally like people like they eat
if i could eat when they're running.
Which I'm like, hey, I think I'll be pretty good at that.
That's right up your alley.
But I need to get my stomach used to that.
So I am ingesting cyclic dextrins and some branched-chain amino acids
right when I get done with my run.
But for the months leading up to this,
yeah, it was zero calories.
Just coffee and some of the within
you electrolytes in the morning. And then I would go and do my run. And sometimes it runs an hour,
sometimes it runs two hours. And then I'll come here to super training and I've been lifting very
intensely and I'm getting after it. And then sometimes after that, I eat like a banana or
something. There's still no real meal. I mean we're just talking a couple hundred calories.
Maybe four or five hundred calories in the morning and then probably, I don't know, 3 p.m. to like 7 p.m. is when I just – I'll eat whatever I can at my house.
I'll eat steak or potatoes or rice or whatever.
But you guys are going to lose all your gains
if you don't eat though how many years have we all been utilizing intermittent fasting now it's been
it's been like four years now ever since i've been in shape
wait seriously andrew no i mean yes um sorry like I'm not saying I was a piece of shit and super out of shape,
but my best physiques and I've never felt this good
since I started implementing fasting.
And I don't fast every day.
I don't even fast according to the fasting gods right now.
I eat two meals a day.
They just happen to be at the beginning and the end of my day,
and I have hours in between and hours after.
So I don't think I still technically fast.
But when I started shredding, I utilized fasting.
And then I just never went away from it.
You know what's interesting about all this?
Because some people will be like, oh, you had a protein shake.
You're not fasting.
Blah, blah, blah.
The people that are all about fasting, they're very specific about this is a fast and this breaks a fast.
But the main thing that it's done for us is it's helped all of us not be food focused.
Because remember, like I know in the past, like I need to have a meal and then I need to have a snack when I feel a little hungry.
I'd have something, you know, always ready to chomp chomp on because I was a little bit hungry.
But none of us are food focused.
Like nutrition is a big fucking deal for all of this.
Don't get it twisted.
But we're not always like,
what are we going to eat for the next meal?
What's my next nutrition meal?
What am I going to eat my next meal?
We're not focused on it.
We get fired up to eat,
but yeah,
you know,
that's different.
It's not a huge deal though.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So that's where it can help.
That's where building that habit.
And it's not something you have to do every day,
but building a habit can be beneficial.
There's a couple easy things to try to follow along with, and one is to get in approximately a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
If you're somebody that is very heavy and you're trying to lose weight, then maybe you can go instead of a gram per pound of body weight, maybe it could be a gram per pound of a weight
that you want to weigh. So if you weigh 320 pounds and you want to weigh, let's say you want to get
down to like 280, that would be reasonable for you to have 280 grams of protein. Maybe you don't need
all the extra protein. But an easy way to look at it is that protein isn't a great energy source. Fat and carbohydrates are energy sources.
Carbohydrates, the word need is an interesting one.
They may be needed due to the fact that you feel like you can't eat enough if the carbohydrates aren't in your diet.
You also may feel that you get more energy when you eat carbohydrates.
So you may feel that you need them.
How many carbs do you need?
Maybe going with the one gram per pound of body weight wouldn't be a bad place to start.
If you feel you're carb sensitive for some reason, which I think there's too much made of that, but you could cut that in half. So if you're somebody that weighs 220 pounds, you have 220 grams of protein a day.
You could have an equivalent amount of carbs or you can go down to 110 grams of carbohydrates.
And then in terms of fat, you just can't cut yourself too short on fats because it will wreck your hormones.
But there's usually enough fat in most things to where you don't have to go out of your way
to eat fat so if you're having whole eggs if you eat cheese here and there red meat if you're
having red meat you should be covered if you're having you know fatty types of fish eat like
bacon or anything like that your fat requirements for the day should be covered enough to the point
where it's not going to be detrimental towards your, your hormones. I would
just say, you know, just real basic information. Don't go below like 60, like don't go below like
60 grams of fat. And if you're somebody that's exercising a lot, you might even have to bring
it up a little bit more than that. But that's like this real, real easy things to try to,
Real easy things to try to – some targets to try to hit that I think anyone can work towards getting close to some of those numbers.
Yeah.
And for those of you as far as like tracking your meals or whatever, for some people, tracking can be kind of difficult because it's a little bit arduous, having to weigh your food and make sure. It's a good way to start out the new year though maybe.
Yeah.
Like just pay attention to what it is.
Maybe write some of it down or put it in an app.
That's the big thing right there.
When we talk about food, we generally don't snack.
We're not big snackers, so we usually eat real food when we eat.
And if what you could do is you could just follow these concepts and just track the food you're eating, right?
Like if you make a steak, weigh the steak, put it into whatever app you use to track it, just track the food you eat just so you can have a ballpark of how much you're eating.
So maybe you could see, wow, I'm eating 4,000 calories.
I didn't know that I was drinking this much calories or whatever, but just track it to make sure. And then also
just as far as concepts, when it comes to your nutrition, we always talk about not really
drinking your calories, right? Because you could go crazy when drinking juice or fucking just
drinks that have calories. So try to go with calorie-free drinks. And try not to snack throughout your day.
We don't really carry snacks around.
And when we do, we usually don't have that much.
But if you're someone who snacks a lot,
you might be getting a lot of calories from those snacks.
And also when we eat, we try to eat whole foods
because that actually will make you fuller faster.
So you won't end up eating as much versus, you know, having a lot of chips or cereal or whatever other fucking snacks, processed foods
you might eat. It's not that it's necessarily bad, but it's just hard to stop eating for most people,
mooting ourselves. Yeah. Just switch the, uh, the snacks over to, um, to fruit. That's what I've
been doing. That shit's been great. Yeah. It's been awesome. What do you like fruit-wise?
So I like the bloobs, blueberries for sure.
They're super easy.
They pack well.
They last a long time too.
Bananas are very convenient because they're just already encased in their own carrying case.
So that's awesome.
I will do apples, but they're not my favorite.
I'm just not a fan of apples.
I don't know why.
I don't know why i don't know
i don't know i just i guess maybe they're a little bit harder to eat what about the pink lady
oh pink lady apples yeah okay i'm a married man okay never mind i like uh what are they called
honey Fuji honey crisp oh yeah those honey crisps are really good are they crispy they're just
delicious i don't know i mean they are they're crispy but like yeah no i mean no one's gonna eat a like a soft apple like nobody wants that's granny smith
right granny smith is the the yeah the soft one well those are the green ones but now a soft apple
is just an apple that went bad oh yeah yeah i thought there were specific apples that are like
more soft you might be right though i don't know be. But no, I like the, the blooms,
strawberries,
if they're already like prepared,
like prepared,
cold prepared.
Just cut,
you know,
I don't want to deal with that shit.
I try to make it as easy as possible.
You know about the green banana?
Yeah.
The plantain?
Well,
a green banana,
I don't know about the plantains
or whatever,
but the green banana
has hardly any sugar in it.
A green banana. It's a, it it a green banana it's a it's
a prebiotic fiber is he talking about plantain though no no no he's talking about a super ripe
banana that's like very green oh yeah they don't taste as good or not they don't have hardly any
sugar in them and even if they're slightly green there they still just have less sugar in them
i've never even tried eating those bananas. Yeah, most people don't.
In other countries, they do quite a bit,
but here in the U.S., people are like, I want a white until it's yellow.
Yeah, I don't know about you guys,
but when I eat a greener banana,
to me, it tastes more like what I used to eat
when I was a kid.
I don't know what that is.
Yeah, it could be.
Because when I eat a...
Less of GMO or some shit.
When I eat a yellow banana,
it's very sweet, which is delicious.
Don't get me wrong.
And I don't, you know, people are going to go nuts over like the ones that I did say
because bananas and blueberries both have a lot of sugar or whatever.
Not really.
Well, a banana can, but yeah, blueberries aren't.
They're good.
Yeah.
Any of the dark berries, a blueberry, blackberry, raspberry.
And you could eat like a pound of strawberries and it's like no calories.
I mean, it's like 100 calories, but like good luck getting all of that in there.
You know, you'll get full.
One thing to do when you're hungry is to eat fruit.
That's a great idea.
Another thing to do when you're hungry is to have 40 grams of protein.
Yeah.
Keep it easy.
Every time you're hungry, just be like, I got to either get through a bunch of fruit
or I got to get through 40 grams of protein. And if you're someone that digs vegetables gotta either get through a bunch of fruit or i gotta get through 40
grams of protein and if you're someone that digs vegetables i suppose you could eat those too
and get a fucking protein shake like seriously like the have happen like if you're if you're
like oh god i'm hungry have a protein shake because like if you can scoop in two scoops of
protein right and some water it'll taste pretty fucking good but then once you finish it you're
probably like i really wasn't that hungry sometimes you finish it, you're probably like,
I really wasn't that hungry.
Sometimes maybe you were,
but most of the time you weren't.
You're like, I don't need to eat like an asshole.
I could calm down a little bit.
Yeah.
How are you having people navigate World Carnivore Month?
Because every single January,
you've been telling people,
go carnivore for a month at least.
See how you feel.
But this year,
you're going about it a little bit differently.
Yeah, I just wanted to throw something out there.
I hear a lot of people saying that they find it hard to do for three weeks in a row, four weeks in a row.
A lot of people only make it halfway, and then they're disappointed.
And so I was like, well, maybe just throw out a different challenge.
I just want people to feel it.
I want people to experience the diet and see how they feel from it.
So I think three days is a good amount of time. Anyone that has, uh,
anyone that really hasn't tried to diet much before, um, and they, uh, they're heavier than
they want to be. If you eat well for three days in a row, you'll actually lose quite a bit of
weight. A lot of times you'll lose water weight. If it's your first time going low to no carbohydrate, you'll probably notice a pretty significant loss and you'll probably feel
pretty good for a couple of days. There's also the chance that you might not feel great. There's
also a chance that you feel like tired or run down. Maybe you're used to running off of carbohydrates
or maybe just the diet intervention interventions a little aggressive for you.
And so I think three days on, maybe a day off or maybe just a meal off.
The main thing is to be careful and cautious with that day off.
The day off isn't supposed to be like a day of like reckoning.
The day off would be like, hey, have some rice, have potatoes, have some fruit.
And maybe you can sidestep the Hershey squirts that you might get
from the carnivore month that a lot of other people experienced. You know, the cool thing,
though, is like that suggestion that you've made is kind of having, if somebody's been,
let's say they've had a bad diet and they eat just too much food and a lot of processed food,
and then they switch to doing this carnivore three days or carnivore-ish for three days and then one day with extra carbohydrates,
it kind of almost morphs into kind of what you do nowadays because all of our diets currently
are meat-based. But we will have some fruit here and there. We will have some potatoes. We will
have some rice. It's just those aren't where a majority of our potential calories are coming from all the time, right? So it'll help change an individual's food habits
while helping it to be something that you can do. Sticking up pure protein for 30 days for most
people is just too big of a departure from what they've been doing. It's going to be really
difficult. And what I'm seeing from a lot of people is they end up, a lot of people end up
binging, you know?
So I don't have any problem with people going like, you know, on and off their diet a little bit here and there.
But binging is a really tough one.
Like binging to me means that the diet somewhere is too restrictive.
And like if the diet is less restrictive and you have a little bit of ice cream here and there, you eat a little bit of cookies here and there, you have a little bit more freedom.
You're not afraid to try Aunt So-and-So's pasta on Christmas and you're not afraid to try someone's cookies and to have someone's fudge that they made on Christmas time.
But then you take all that shit when you're done exploring it and you fucking throw it in the garbage
or you get rid of it somehow.
You send it off to somebody
that you wish to see get fatter in the new year.
I hope you get fat this year.
This is your year to be fat.
Here you go.
It's fucking cold.
You know, someone's trying to reach a goal
but you just don't like them.
So in the mail, you send them all the treats.
Like, man, this shit's really good.
Why is this box coming to my house every day?
Well, somebody has a mouthful of some good food and they're just like, oh, fuck, Mark sent this to me.
Oh, shit.
Oh, man.
He's after me.
But yeah, I just, you know, I think that's an error, you know, when somebody fasts too much and they binge.
If somebody is trying to go no carb and then they binge, it's like, well, you're not really on a no carb diet because you ate 700 grams of carbs on Saturday.
You're just trying to make it to the weekend.
And then you ate cookies and a bunch of like a high fat diet with a lot of carbohydrates in there and just
overeating in general could be like more of a recipe for disaster than you just being on like
no diet hardly at all and just trying not to gain body fat. So anyway, I just am trying to
advise people to, I guess, have more opportunities to break things up. And if you were to do
people to, uh, I guess have more opportunities to break things up. And if you were to do eight sets of three, it works out. So if you did eight, if you did the three days in a row,
if you did it eight times during the month, you would end up with like 24 or 25 days of, uh,
carnivore ish eating hopefully. And that's, we'll get you to like 80 something percent,
probably if the numbers are right um and uh if you were to
do uh seven uh if you did seven times you'd be like 21 days that's pretty good for the 31 days
that are in january all right well i mean we've thrown a lot at you guys if you have questions
about this or anything when it comes to your fitness this new year 2023 please let us know
down below so we can hit that for you because we've been talking about this shit for a long time.
Andrew, take us on out of here, buddy.
Sure thing.
And if you guys dug this conversation, please hit that like button on the way out and make sure you guys stick around for Smelly's tip before we get out of here.
Even though you guys got a bunch of tips today, but there's got room for one more. But yeah, PowerProject.Live for everything podcast related,
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on TikTok and Twitter Mark
my tip for the day is to try to figure out a way
to incorporate some
safe sprints
those two words don't go
together that great but maybe
you can do so on like a machine or
something on like a
airdyne bike or some
version of that even like an elliptical like any
of these things will work any of the cardio equipment at the gym if you're going to go out
and do it outside what I would suggest is that you try to go for go kind of hard for about a minute
a scale of one to ten if it's your first time doing anything like that in a really long time,
just do like a five or a six,
do like a five or six,
but a minute running like that for a minute and just walking in between will be a real bitch.
Try like six or seven of them and give it a shot.
I'm noticing some big changes in my physique just by I'm implementing small
amounts of it.
And I don't even have the opportunity yet
to do it without all the other running. And I think it will have a bigger impact when I have
an opportunity to do that. I think will be something that will advance my physique even
faster. So maybe it will help you too. I'm at Mark Smelly Bell. Strength is never weakness.
Weakness never strength. Catch you guys later. Bye.