Mark Bell's Power Project - Mark Bell on MeatRx ft. Shawn Baker
Episode Date: March 3, 2020Mark Bell was featured on Shawn Baker's MeatRx.com for a carnivore conversation. This is a great change of pace as Shawn is interviewing Mark, giving us a different vibe than we're used to. If you wan...t to learn more, please visit the links below and tell Shawn Baker you heard his interview here. Full interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSII3e5VUlc&t=279s MeatRx: https://meatrx.com/ Shawn Baker: https://www.instagram.com/shawnbaker1967/ Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Visit our sponsors: ➢Icon Meals: http://iconmeals.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" for 10% off ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $99 ➢Perfect Keto: http://perfectketo.com/powerproject Use Code "POWERPROJECT10" at checkout for $10 off $40 or more! ➢SHOP NOW: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What up Power Project? Today we have a really cool episode for you. It's a conversation between
Mark Bell and Sean Baker over on meetrx.com. Meetrx.com is Sean Baker's platform where he
gives tons of resources and advice on the carnivore diet and he even coaches people.
Amongst many other things they actually do these live broadcasts where members can come in,
listen live, ask questions and have them answered on air, which is what happened during this conversation. If you guys want to see the whole video, you guys can find the links down below in
the show notes, the show description here on iTunes or wherever you're listening to this.
And if you do like it, please reach out to Sean Baker and let him know that you heard it here on
our platform. And he wanted to thank him for allowing us to be able to use it to,
you know, deliver to you guys. A carnivore heavy conversation. So, you know, naturally that this
episode is going to be brought to you by Icon Meals. No, just kidding. Although we do have an
Icon Meals promo code, Code Power Project for 10% off. This episode was actually brought to
you by Certified Piedmontese. If you're already in deep heavy in the carnivore diet or you're interested in dipping your toes,
the absolute best way to do it is through Certified Piedmontese beef.
It's the absolute best tasting beef on the planet.
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And if your order is $99 or more, you get free two-day shipping.
Again, huge thanks to Sean Baker and meetrx.com for allowing us to use this on our platform.
Again, if you guys like it, let everybody know. Let Mark know. Let Sean know. Let meetrx.com for allowing us to use this on our platform. Again, if you guys like it, let everybody know.
Let Mark know.
Let Sean know.
Let MeetRx.com know.
And again, for all the information, please check the show notes of this show.
And please enjoy this conversation.
Appreciate it.
Yeah, I'm excited.
You're up in, it looks like you're up in super training from the looks of things.
Yeah, we're in the podcast room here.
Kill anybody today with some of your recommendations?
I'm sure I did.
I'm sure I killed 1,000 people by telling them to eat food we've been eating for many years.
We definitely have to get you locked up in jail.
I know.
I'll see if we can get Joel Fuhrman to make a citizen's arrest.
You've been hurting a lot of people.
They've been getting rid of skin disorders and autoimmune disorders and all
kinds of stuff. Yeah. Terrible.
Yeah. A lot of these people are here. So Mark, let me, I'm going to,
let me just tell you. So we've got, you know, we'll get 30, 50, 60, 80 people.
I don't know how many people I'm showing today. We've got quite a few.
And they're all on mute, but they're going to be typing in questions.
So I'm going to, I'm going to feed, you know,
I'm going to go sort through them and, you know,
try to try to select the ones that are appropriate.
But I just want to welcome you guys.
If you guys don't know Mark, Mark is someone that I've got to know
over the last couple of years, just a wonderful, wonderful person
that's been doing some great things.
Mark has been a successful athlete.
He was a professional wrestler at one point,
and then I know he got into powerlifting where you lifted just a hell of a lot of weight
when a few people put 1,000 pounds on your back and squat it.
I've had 1,000.
I actually walked out 1,000 pounds in a rack when I used to do strongman,
and it's not a comfortable feeling at all.
Sure you did.
And it's just that I don't know if you ever –
I mean, I used to try to do rack pulls with 1,000 pounds.
I ended up a couple of times passing out.
Damn.
Yeah, brutal.
So anyway, you pushed your body hard.
You've done that.
You went from being kind of in a tight spot financially and then turned it around and became a wonderful entrepreneur and wildly successful.
And it inspired tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people.
And I've really been just really, really excited to see that you stepped into helping people with their health.
You know, as you kind of say, you go forward in your career.
So anyway, welcome, Mark Bell, guys.
uh mark bell guys uh you guys um i'm going to uh uh just uh let you guys put in your questions i know we got some people in here that are uh in the fitness space i mean mark is one of the true
experts in the world he's interacts with the top people in the world the most you know craziest
freaks of nature that you've ever seen that walk through his gym every day. And so anyway,
welcome Mark. How are you doing today? I'm doing fantastic. You know, I've been
riding out the carnivore diet for a while now. You know, you encouraged me long ago when we had
you on the show and I took up your challenge and kind of have been, you know, floating around with
meat for a while. But even before that, you know, I've been a meat
based athlete for a very, very long time. And I would say probably since I was about 15,
I've been on some sort of nutrition plan that included meat on my plate at nearly every meal,
even when I was kind of being a little bit more destructive with my health and getting my
bulk on back in the powerlifting days, almost every meal I had during the day, during the day
had meat or eggs, animal products involved. And then, you know, at night I would have like ice
cream or pizza to kind of top off the calories to try to really be, you know, big and heavy and to kind of, you know,
I competed in every weight class from 181 pounds as a kid all the way up to super heavy
weight and explored all the different weight classes and really was just trying to find
like how I can be the absolute strongest.
So back then I did eat carbohydrates and I did eat other things, but I was still being
fueled by meat.
Yeah, it's kind of like Ed Cohen, you know, as he ran up the weight classes and just decimated everybody in his sight.
You know, that's that's pretty pretty. And, when he kind of did a short trial of you know
carnivore right right go uh 20 some years ago he talks about that and then kind of went away from
that but he's discovered that particularly later in life you look at the audience here we don't
have 15 16 year old kids in here we've got you know a bunch of people that have been around for
a while and you know you see uh and as you know, I think, correct me if I'm wrong, Mark, you're like kind of early 40s right now.
You're kind of what, about 43 or something like that?
Yeah, yeah, I'm 43.
And as I was mentioning earlier, I've been kind of on a meat-based plan for a long time, a huge proponent of a ketogenic style diet as well.
So anyone that has tried the carnivore diet or has tried your challenge and maybe has stumbled or maybe has stumbled upon
some of my information or my brother's information and you tried the carnivore diet, but you're like,
man, I just can't quite get the hang of it. You might want to try keto first, just because the
options, you have a little bit more options. You can make keto treats, you can make fat bombs and
some of these different things. I don't advocate that you eat those things all the time, but it
might be an easier message for somebody to get on board with in the beginning. And whatever
way we can get you on board or whatever way we can get your direction of you losing weight and
getting better health, I think is a positive. So whatever way you got to get here is going to be
the best thing for you. Yeah, I want to, I'm just going to pick through
some of the questions. He says, Mark, what's the most unexpected benefit you've had so far while
doing a carnivore diet? Um, I would say that, you know, one of my favorite benefits of a carnivore
diet is the fact that it doesn't feel that hard, um, at the stage that I'm at. Now, it could feel very hard for somebody who's new to dieting.
But for me, it doesn't feel that difficult.
And how lean I'm able to stay on the diet is a huge bonus.
Without really a lot of cardiovascular training, you know, I run here and there and I do some different things for some cardiovascular training, but I'm not spending 45 minutes,
you know, on a treadmill or 45 minutes on a Stairmaster or anything like that. So the,
probably the best benefit of it has been, has been just that is that it's just not that difficult.
I get to eat foods I really enjoy. Sometimes I'm like, this is a diet. Like, are you kidding me?
Like I'm eating, you know, omelets with cheese and bacon and things like that.
Or, you know, eating a ribeye.
Like, I'm never upset about eating a ribeye.
You know, I'm always looking forward to it.
And so I'd say that that's probably been one of the best benefits.
Another benefit has been the change from keto to carnivore in muscle mass and just
feeling like a little harder, you know, hard to really describe, but and also a little bit more
energy. And I don't know if that has to do with the protein turning into cheesecake in my body or
what it has to do with, but I just, I feel really, really good. And a side benefit that I was never expecting was, you know, I've been walking for the last
seven years.
As soon as I started to start to take more control over my health, I've been walking
and I walk every single day.
I walk multiple times a day.
I promote 10 minute walks.
I think it's a great way for people to get started.
And I would have never thought in a million years that I would be running. So out of nowhere, I started running maybe a little bit
similar to your story where you started doing these explosive movements and now you're competing,
you know, in a world championship for rowing. It's like, it's crazy. You were a big bulky guy,
300 pounds doing Highland games, still a good athlete, still an explosive athlete.
But man, like you wouldn't
have been able to move the way you're able to move now uh and that was how long ago were you 300
pounds 15 20 years ago i was 290 300 uh i'd say i'd say when i was 44 so about nine years ago
was the last time i that's when i started I just imagine you feel crazy, like just so much better than you did in your probably
thirties and forties even now, right?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Hey, I'm just gonna, so just Lee says, you look amazing for 43, just a comment there
for you.
So to kind of, anyway, but there's a couple of questions I'm going to combine these because
there are a lot of people talking about
stamps you know vertical diet and where do you see the role of carbohydrates with regard to putting on
mass versus being lean versus performance and what kind of things might you consider
um just that's that's combining a couple questions yeah yeah stan efforting has no idea what he's
talking about let's just leave it at that now stan has been a good friend for a long time he's combining a couple of questions. Yeah. Yeah. Stan Efferding has no idea what he's talking about.
Let's just leave it at that.
Now, Stan has been a good friend for a long time.
He's got a lot of great information. And if you look at his diet, you know, he's also promoting a meat-based diet.
Every meal you got, you're going to have, you know, some sort of like hamburger meat or steak or something like that in there.
He has a tremendous diet.
He's got tremendous information.
He wants you to have foods that are going to be easy to digest.
His diet is called the vertical diet for those people that aren't aware.
And I think it's a fantastic diet for someone that's trying to get bigger and stronger.
One thing I would say that it might be a little bit difficult with,
it might have a little hard time for some people.
It might be difficult for bit difficult with. It might have a little hard time for some people.
It might be difficult for them to continue to lose weight because of just kind of the influx of carbohydrates that are in the diet.
I think that it could make it difficult for a heavier person
to control themselves with the amount of fat and carbohydrates that they eat.
I think that when people hear Stan talk about the vertical diet and they hear him talk about the monster mash and stuff like that, they skim over
the fact that he's telling you, look, man, you need to kind of regulate the amount of fat that
you're going to consume because we're eating a good amount of carbohydrates. And so somebody
could easily make that mistake. As long as they're following exactly what Stan says, they're going to
get amazing results. I love the diet diet I've used his diet many many times
I'll use it again in the future it's pretty simple there's some small amount
of fruit in there there's a little bit of veggies in there and there's meat
rice potatoes I highly recommend that you check out the vertical diet huge
proponent of Stan efforting and everything that he's got going on yeah I, I like Stan. I think he's doing a good job. And again, many people are on this diet for health
reasons. This is a question, a little shifting gear. This is Barbara Becker. She says, I lost
a lot of muscle when I was a vegan. I've been carnivore for about two months of dysregion.
What's the best way to begin building back muscle? I'm a 63-year-old woman, and I know you've got your mother-in-law doing some stuff.
So how would a woman who's lost a lot of muscle go to sort of rebuild herself up?
Yeah, you know, we just need some resistance training, you know.
We need some good old-fashioned resistance training.
So we don't need to complicate anything too much.
There's, in my opinion, there's kind of two main ways to get
the muscle to grow. One is to put it under some constant tension, you know, where you do a set
of like 10 to 12 reps in a controlled fashion. And then there's a lot of methods that can kind
of spin off of that as well. You can do, you know, drop sets and things of that nature to really
try to exhaust the muscle. But really what we're trying to do is we're trying to send a message to the body,
send a message to our muscles like, hey, man, we're tearing you apart,
and we want you to rebuild every single time we work out.
So two main ways of doing that.
One is through controlled movements, bodybuilding-type stuff.
You can even just look up bodybuilding workouts.
I think they're fantastic for hypertrophy. No one knows how to grow quite like a bodybuilder. I
mean, these guys are, and these men and women there have tremendous physiques, even those that
are natural. And then in addition to that, you might want to look into some power lifting. You
might want to look into something that is going to have some explosive movement, something that's going to have some heavy weights in there.
That's going to help increase bone density.
There's not a lot of reasons to feel that you're going to get hurt doing these movements and stuff.
It's just it's a matter of maybe finding the right coach or, um, exploring the right types of exercise and
movement.
So maybe instead of a regular bar for deadlifts, maybe you utilize a trap bar.
Maybe instead of a regular squat, you do a box squat, you know, things, things like that.
But you really want to try to get yourself, uh, over the fear of handling heavyweights.
Handling heavyweights is going to be critical and you
want to figure out a way for you to handle heavyweights and whatever that means for you
specifically. It could mean that you do like farmer's carries, you could do sled drags. I mean,
there's a lot you could push your car, you know, it sounds kind of wild or crazy, but
literally anything that you can think of that's going to feel safe or feel good for you, I'd advise you to do it.
Anything that doesn't feel good and feels like crap and you go to try to do it and you're like, man, I don't know about that.
Do not – just don't do it.
Just don't pursue it and maybe try to learn it at some other time.
But you can even pick up a heavy medicine ball.
Heavy for you could be 30 pounds.
Pick up a 30-pound med ball and walk around with it for a few minutes.
I mean, these things are going to, especially if you've never trained before, you could literally go out in your front yard and move around some rocks and gain some muscle from that.
Awesome.
So here's another one.
Michelle Meixner says, Mixer.
I'm not sure how you say your name, Michelle, but what are your thoughts on lifting to failure? Something like Fred Han slow burn style. So it's kind of a, I guess it'd be sets to full failure. What are your thoughts on that versus, you know, a more program workout? the most famous bodybuilders of all time. I think he has more titles than anybody in the history of
bodybuilding. Lee Haney, you know, was famous for saying, we're trying to stimulate, not annihilate.
So going to failure can be effective, but for how many sets are we really talking about? So
I would say that almost, almost everybody in my circle, most of the people are in agreement of
like, Hey, you know what? Like you got to kind
of get close to that in order to get hypertrophy and all in order to stimulate change. You need to
push your body to a certain limit. Going to failure I think is okay, but I personally am a
little bit more of a fan of a technical limit. A technical limit would be you're deadlifting and you're doing a set of eight.
And on set number six or rep number six, rather, your butt shoots up, your back rounds over.
And it's very difficult to kind of lock the deadlift out.
And you don't proceed any further because you're like, you know what?
I'm just going gonna quit while I'm
ahead. That was a really good set. I wanted eight reps really badly, but it's just not in the cards
for today. And then that's where you kind of want to, you know, be smart and kind of move on from
the exercise. But in general, going to failure is fantastic. And normally, under normal conditions,
under normal conditions, you're not
going to hurt yourself with it when the reps are kept high. You know, if we keep the reps kind of
high, then the percentage of weight that we're going to use is low. And also if we use controlled
movement, you're going to run out of steam a little bit faster. So that's not the standard
way, you know, of some like maybe CrossFters don't train that way, throwers and things like that, people that are trying to be real explosive, they don't really train that way.
But when you're trying to train explosively, in my opinion, that's where you might be more susceptible to injury, especially when you're not used to training.
So the safest way to work out, in, um, although I still think you should be
able to have the attributes to be able to sprint and do things explosively, but the safest way to
train, um, I believe without question is, is to utilize some bodybuilding and, uh, those forced
reps and going to failure can be really, really effective. I would just say that you only want
to go to failure just a couple of times in a workout,
you know? So if you're doing a, let's say you're doing a back workout, let's say you do three sets
of lat pulldowns where you're only going to go to failure on one set of those. Then you proceed
over to the seated row and you do another three sets. Well, you're only going to, you know, do
one set to failure. That might be all you do for the day. So you did six sets, but you did two sets to failure.
That might be just, just fine for a workout.
If you worked really hard on it.
Yeah. I think, I think Ed Cohn was a pretty famous for saying,
he'd always leave one in the tank, one rep in the tank. You know,
he never pushed himself to complete failure in training anyway. So.
Here's a question that somebody asked about, um, let me lost. I got,
so we got, we got a whole bunch of questions. Let me find it here.
So I was like, uh, Leo's asking,
do you think that eliminating plant toxins, you know,
has helped you more or was it just a reduction in carbs?
You find it some it's full carb reduction or is it certainly, you know,
plant compounds that seem to
provide benefit to you personally you know i i um i can eat you know from a from a septic tank
um so like i don't think um the elimination of really anything has done much for me other than
eliminating processed foods because I just
have a tendency to be a fat boy and I just want to eat them. So for me personally, I've always
had kind of a cast iron stomach and I can kind of eat anything and I've never noticed a negative
impact and I've never, you know, I've never like done a squat and been like, oh my God,
it must have been the broccoli I had last night that's hurting my knee.
I've never had complications like that.
However, I think that everybody's body can be different and people's bodies can be kind of complicated.
And they do. Obviously, people have autoimmune disorders and things like that.
But I don't think autoimmune disorders. I don't think I don't think they even come from that kind of stuff. I don't think they come from vegetables. I think our problems come from at a young age developing very bad habits. I think that people don't sleep enough. I think that people don't hydrate enough. cascade of a lot of issues and then people get way behind and then perhaps the vegetables are
causing inflammation on top of the things that they already have pre-existing. But in general,
I think everybody would be in agreement with this, is that America is very unhealthy. And in order
for us to fight our way out of the deficit that we're in, in terms of our health, we
have to go way the other way, which we shouldn't really have to have ever had to do a lot of
these things, in my opinion.
I think that if you lived a life where you just simply didn't consume a lot of fast food,
didn't have snacks, didn't have dessert and didn't eat fried foods and you ate
a good amount of protein, I think that you probably would have never had to be on a diet
and that you wouldn't really have to worry about managing your health. Because I'm not a believer,
at least not yet anyway, it doesn't seem like there's enough evidence that any sort of diet, whether it be veganism or keto diet or a carnivore
diet, it doesn't appear at the moment that anything's going to give us an extra 5% or 10%
life. However, it does appear that if you follow the rules and you do live a life that allows you to have full metabolic access of what
your body is supposed to be able to do, that you could have a hundred years of really, really good
living. And I think that that's amazing because I think that a lot of people are not necessarily
living longer, but I think that people are dying longer. We're just kind of hanging in there for a
longer period of time, but then we do not able to even remember our own life.
Your memory gets erased when you have dementia and Alzheimer's.
And there's,
it's just a lot of just,
it's just sucks.
You know,
it sucks that people are,
are having to suffer.
And hopefully by utilizing some of these techniques and utilizing some of the
information out there,
we can live a longer
and stronger life. Yeah, I think that's a great, great sort of way to look at things. I like that
dying longer because we do have people that sit there and they literally, I mean, 20 years are
basically slow death. Jeff is asking about health issues and depression kept me on the couch for
years. Any tips for getting off the couch and becoming an athlete?
Man. Well, so you can start in the kitchen or you can start, you know, outside with a walk. Um, but you got to start somewhere. I think that the fat and lazy thing, I think is, um,
I think it's an unfortunate perspective on people that are obese and people that are overweight.
They already know that they're not moving enough, but they don't feel good enough.
They don't feel good about it.
Maybe it would be similar to me being forced to read every day.
I suck at it.
I don't want to do it.
I'm not motivated.
It has no – It's not interesting
to me. The benefit of knowledge of reading a bunch of books certainly interests me,
but the trouble that it is for me to read, I'm like, screw that. I don't want to do that.
So I understand where a lot of people are at when it comes to, I can empathize with them and
I can understand, but you do have to figure out a way to get started. And that's probably going to
be the hardest thing. But if we try to make some sense of some stuff, like what's something that
is easy? Like how do we define easy? Well, easy would be something that you can do.
So if you weighed 400 pounds and you said,
man, I'm really in a bad way. I don't feel good about myself. My wife hates me. I hate my job.
I don't like my wife. I don't like this. I don't like that. And you don't really find a lot of
satisfaction in a lot of things. Well, I could say, hey, like, what are some things that are
going to be fairly easy for you to get done. And I want things to be so easy for people
where they're like, give me a break, dude.
Like, give me a real challenge.
Like, that sounds like a piece,
that sounds not a piece of cake.
That sounds too easy, right?
And so where I would start with most people is say,
hey man, can you get outside?
You know, can you, you have any time in your day
to where you could get outside?
You know, you got some minutes in your day where you can get outside? You know, you got some time minutes
in your day where you can get outside. Why don't you try to go for a walk, you know, try to go for
a 10 minute walk. And then you want to find things that are easy and simple because those things
should be repeatable. Maybe a 10 minute walk is like kind of hard for you at the moment, but that's
okay. As long as it's simple enough that you can repeat it, then we're going to be on the right path. Maybe through your walking and or maybe through your diet, you're going to start
to exercise more or through your exercise, you'll start to pay attention to your diet more. But
the main thing I would say is figure out what are the things that are triggering you to even be on
your couch in the first place? Is it your Netflix account?
Is it your cable?
Stop paying for it.
Stop purchasing it.
You're streaming Netflix or whatever it is.
It costs you a lot more than $9 a month or whatever it is, $8 a month.
It's costing you your life, and you're not paying attention to that. So maybe rather than
having that be such a detrimental cost, maybe you only buy like DVDs so you can watch stuff
on your own time when you really want to in your own way. And you can, you know, channel your
energy towards some more positive stuff. So that would be extreme times call for extreme measures.
And I would maybe even consider just completely throwing your couch in the fucking garbage.
Take that thing and hurl it out.
Mark, somebody asking your thoughts on blood flow restriction training.
Have you messed with that much?
And what are your thoughts on its utilization?
I think it can be great for
somebody that has um like an injury you know you basically you you uh you wrap up in uh an
injured area um let's just say it's your hamstring and you would you would wrap your leg up with say
like something like a knee wrap and you wrap it super super tight and it's pretty crazy like it
hurts it hurts really bad then what you would do from there is you'd maybe walk around a little bit and
maybe do a couple sets of leg curls. You can't have it on for very long because it's on there
tight and it's really restricting the blood. But in terms of it being like something magical for
growth, I haven't seen anything that shows that it really does a whole lot,
but it does appear. And, and from my own personal usage of the technique,
it's absolutely fantastic if you have an injury.
Okay. Somebody's asked me about your salt intake. Are you adding additional salt? Are you using
salt for training? What are your thoughts on sodium and salt?
I'm actually injecting salt right into my veins. Nowadays, I've been doing I've been doing that
quite a bit. What's hard is you know that some of the salt you know, some of the pellets of the salt
are so big that it's very lumpy. It's hard to get in there. I'm fucking with everybody, by the way.
I like salt. I use salt quite a bit. i put it in my coffee um i like utilizing it on
food a little bit better than i like to just randomly throw it in water and drinks and stuff
just because i feel like i feel like things go to go together better with food like even like
vitamins and minerals and things like that like Like I utilize some supplementation. I utilize some like magnesium
and some vitamin D and some vitamin K and stuff like that. And I always think that it's, I don't
usually take those things fasted. I normally will take them with a meal. So yeah, I add salt,
but I really don't have a good idea of how much salt that I consume. I was doing my bodybuilding show and I was talking over things
with my coach, Hani Rambad. He was like, how much salt do you think you have in a day? Because the
water manipulation is a thing in bodybuilding. And I was like, I don't know, I think I have about 10
grams a day. Because I started trying to add it up. And he was like, holy fuck. He's like,
10 grams a day. He's like, you're going to die.
I'm like, no, I actually feel really good. So anyway, what he did is he had me just reduce
the amount of salt a little bit for periods of time. And he wanted to see what I looked like when
I tried different amounts of salt. But I told him, I was like, man, my workouts are really,
they're not going anywhere. They don't feel great. And so he's like, all right, we'll bring the salt back up. So yeah, I would, if I was to guess,
I would say I'm probably somewhere between eight and 10 grams of salt almost every single day.
How about yourself? Any idea? Yeah. I mean, I, I don't really track it. I take quite a bit of salt.
You know, I, I've been messing around. Rob Wolf sent me some of that limit stuff, that element
stuff. So I've been trying that in the morning.
I do feel better from a performance standpoint.
Do you track anything?
Just performance, really.
I eat to sort of intuition.
And then I kind of track performance a little bit.
Because that's a metric I really care about, quite honestly.
There's a question here.
It's got probably an obvious question.
But Leah asked, what are your thoughts on steroid use and muscle growth?
Does it work?
That's great.
Yeah, it works.
It works tremendously.
You know, anabolics are a very interesting thing.
And I think they change a lot of what we know about nutrition, I think.
But the weird thing about steroids is that they don't, like, multiply on top of themselves.
You know, like, let's say, Dr. Baker, that you can, let's say you can squat 500 pounds on the box for
you can do like 10 reps or something like that right yeah something like that yeah yeah so you
let's just say you can do like eight reps right and if you took anabolics um you might be able
to squat 550 for 15 reps you know or you might squat 700 off the box and be like holy shit that
really did a lot for me and And you might gain 20 pounds.
But here's something to kind of think about is what if you gain 20 pounds anyway?
Like what if you gain 20 pounds naturally?
Now, you would automatically, not automatically, but you would end up being a little stronger anyway just from the weight gain.
But steroids, they don't just put body weight on you.
They're going to put muscle
mass on you but once you get that first burst you're not going to gain 20 pounds of muscle
and then four months later gain another 20 pounds of muscle and then four months later get you know
so it doesn't multiply on itself once you play the steroid card that's the card that you play
and that's and it's over with and so like myself, I've been on anabolic since I was about 25 years old.
I've been on and off of them.
But you don't go from, you know, before I took them, I did a 500-pound raw bench press.
After I took them, it took me to 578.
So it doesn't really, you know, if it multiplied on top of itself all the time, I would have benched 900 pounds, right?
So it can give you a nice boost going from 500 to 578 is a huge boost. But it doesn't do a lot
of the stuff that I think everyone just thinks it's this magical like recovery formula and that
it's going to, you know, help you gain like 80 pounds of muscle and you're going to be shredded
out of nowhere. Yeah, I mean, I've seen and you're looking at powerlifting numbers it seems like the the you
know the the guys on steroids are doing about 10 to 15 percent more over what the you know the guys
are supposedly you know not seeing it so that that's in 578 on top of 500 is about 15 so that
kind of kind of goes with that right well um somebody asked about what do you think
about arnold schwarzenegger becoming an advocate for plant-based diets you know i i don't um
i don't understand you know what you know what what his uh interest in that was but uh maybe just
you know maybe maybe he honestly believes in it. I think sometimes people are just like not informed all that well. You know, I hear people like I don't get mad about veganism because I don't know anything about it really. I haven't really even really looked into it. I don't have any interest in being a vegan.
But I don't dislike it. I've never tried it. I don't know a lot about it. But I really, with Arnold and his career and kind of how he built himself up, it was a surprise to me. I'll always be a fan of Arnold, but yeah, it was kind of a weird choice.
I was like, Oh, that's weird. You know, what's the deal with that?
Yeah, I think he, you know,
I think he's helping his friend James Cameron out a little bit, but let me,
here's a question Rick's asking about frequency of training.
How often should I train a body part?
So you notice when I stopped pushing to failure, I went for more frequency, I got better gains.
Any thoughts on frequency training?
That's outstanding.
You know, the information on frequency
has been something that is fairly new to me.
It's fairly new-ish in powerlifting.
Where it's not new is in like Olympic weightlifting,
where they've utilized like squat everyday programs
and things like that.
And when some of that started to come into powerlifting, I was like, this is insane.
No one's going to get any gains from this. Like people are just going to get hurt.
And that started kind of coming around over the last 10 years and people have gotten insanely
strong. I can't even tell you how many 900 pound deadlifts I've seen over the last several years.
And a lot of it has to do with increased frequency. There's people that are benching and squatting and the female lifters
are a great example of this because females, because females under normal circumstances
aren't as neurologically efficient as males, meaning like they can't tap into their one rep max quite as well as a male
athlete because a male athlete sometimes is more explosive. And so like a female can take a similar
weight that a guy could from a percentage standpoint, let's just say it's 90%. A girl can
do like eight reps sometimes with 90%, whereas a guy is lucky if he can do one 1.5 reps or so you know
before he kind of passes out from it and because of that females they can train more frequently
but then what have we seen with the females the improvement from the males has been great in
powerlifting but the improvement from females in powerlifting and CrossFit and Olympic lifting has skyrocketed.
Like it's just it's absolutely insane where like I'm almost embarrassed to even look at these girls lifting nowadays because I'm like I was going to post that I did this same way.
But now that 140-pound girl or 123-pound girl like Steffi Cohen posted that she did 505 for six reps on a deadlift
or something. I'm not making my post anymore, you know. So training frequency is absolutely
fantastic. And if you have a body part that you just want to like, quote unquote, bring up, you
have weak shoulders or just small shoulders or sloped shoulders, and you want them to be wider.
You want them to be stronger.
Gaining a work capacity to be able to train them more would be really advantageous.
It would be really smart.
Same thing with just wanting to improve your bench.
Work your way into being able to train your bench three or four or five times a week.
Now, that doesn't mean you're
going to train it that long forever. There's got to be kind of an end date to everything. And
you just want to build up that accumulation. And then you also need to know how to do that,
which can be kind of confusing and kind of difficult. So you would need a coach. You can go
to someone like a Chad Wesley Smith has a lot of great information on that. My friend,
Jesse Burdick has a lot of great programming on things like that. Um, but the main thing is when
it comes to training in general, no matter what you're training for, you always have to be, uh,
prepared for whatever it is you're about to do next. And I think that's a missing element in,
in training in general. So if you're going to, if you're like, Oh shit, I want to try that.
Mark said to train, you to train the same body part
four or five days a week.
It's going to be a period of time.
You're going to go from once a week
to twice a week for a few weeks,
then three times a week for a few weeks,
and then four times a week for a few weeks.
And then that five times a week,
how long are you going to be able to handle that for?
You're only going to be able to do that
for a real short period of time. Then once you spin back out of it, that's
where your strength would be through the roof because you have basically beaten the shit out
of yourself over a period of time. And that's where you'll get something like super compensation
will happen where your body will start to adapt to all the training that you did.
Yeah. One comment I'll make, and I've always been a kind of a guy that thrived on
higher volume, higher frequency, frequent body part training. I've always liked that. You know,
my body's responding well. And when I'm able to do that, I feel great. And I think performance
gets better for me. I found that the diet, certainly the carnivore diet has helped with
recovery quite a bit to where I can do that more often. Someone's asking about intermittent
fasting. And I know you, I know you, you sort of do this quite a bit. I think I even had a post
on that today showing your crazy shredded veiny arms. But I mean, do you think that intermittent
fasting in combination with carnivore will accelerate results? And I'm sure that's,
I assume that's regarding weight loss. What feeding window do you recommend?
that's, I assume that's regarding weight loss. What feeding window do you recommend?
So, you know, I think I'm not a fan of like counting or tracking anything. Like it just confuses me or annoys me. Like even with fasting, I'm like, man, how many hours is that? 10, 12,
you know, I'm sitting there and I'm like, just to hell with it. Like, I don't, I don't want to sit
there and try to figure a lot of it out. So when it comes to fasting, what I've done is I just have tried to shrink down the eating window,
but I also am always trying to be reasonable. And I think this is where people might get
messed up with their diet. You know, how, if you start getting like irrational with your diet and
you start thinking that if I eat outside of this eating
window, I'm going to get fat. You know, like we start making up ridiculous things in our head.
If I eat a carbohydrate, I'm going to get fat. If I go off the diet, I'm going to get fat. If I,
and then you think you're, you're a big failure and it just, it just perpetuates this kind of
like downward spiral. And you've got to be very, very careful with these things. So
the way I like to
view eating in general is kind of in a three to five day window. If you fasted on Monday, let's,
let's say you did a 20 hour fast on Monday and let's say you did an 18 hour fast on Tuesday.
Well, now it's Friday and you say, screw it because urges and cravings and stuff hits you
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, boom, downward spiral.
You're just eating donuts and eating pizza, having drinks with your friends and stuff.
And then you're like, okay, I got to get back to fasting.
And then you do the same thing the next week.
Well, the fasting is not working.
And I think people need to be cautious of that and pay attention to that.
If you can handle fasting, that's fine.
But what I do for myself is I usually just try to have a small eating window that is a lot less
math for me. I'm like, hey, about a two to four hour eating window would be great. If I don't
feel like I can get my calories in and if I'm like, holy shit, like I'm actually really hungry,
then I might break the fast. I might expand the eating window. I might
say screw fasting for the next couple of days. Fasting is a great weapon. It's a great thing
to utilize. But what I'd like everyone to think about when they're trying these diets is, you
know, if you start pulling everything away, then what are you left with? You're going to be left with feeling lethargic.
You're going to be left with hating Dr. Baker because you're going to be like, that meat diet doesn't work, man.
But it's because you ate so much less and you're not listening to the message enough.
You're not hearing the full story.
When you try this diet out, if you're new to this diet, don't mess with fasting.
Just eat.
Eat meat.
Eat eggs. Maybe throw in some butter, maybe throw in some bone broth.
But make sure you eat.
Make sure you're really well nourished.
Get used to the food first.
Now, if you want to mess around with some fasting, I found some great benefits with fasting.
But I just really recommend just trying to shrink down that eating window and maybe a way to work into it. As I mentioned with training earlier,
you always want a way to work yourself into these things rather than just trying them out of
nowhere. You know, maybe you first start out with just saying, you know what, I'm just going to not
eat two hours before bed and I'm going to skip breakfast. Like that would be a great, that would
be an amazing place to start for your fast. And then I think what happens on the carnivore diet and I think where a lot of people have naturally stumbled upon fasting, I think that's even more effective than actually just like trying to start fasting out of nowhere. and fasting because you're filling up your cup every single day of your protein requirement.
You're filling up your cup of your energy requirement with your fats, and then you're
filling up magnesium and zinc and B vitamins. You're filling up all these cups all day long
so you don't need anything else. You have everything that you need. It's almost like the
kind of afterglow effect of sex. If you have sex, that urge is hopefully taken care of at
least for a little bit there and you don't have to think about it as much anymore. And I think the
same thing happens with your food. You get rid of a lot of these cravings and urges because you
satisfied everything that you need. You have everything that you need for the moment and then
you can continue onward without food. And that's kind of what my brother has done. He doesn't really try to fast all that often,
but he might eat breakfast and then not eat for eight hours.
And then he'll eat again, things like that.
And I think that that's where you're at with the diet.
Is that right?
Oh, I might have lost you.
Sorry, I muted myself in the background.
But let me – I'm going to add on to this a little bit, Mark, just about –
because people often ask me this question when we talk about –
because you – I understand you do a lot of your training first thing in the morning.
I know you're up beating the sun out there in the gym at 4 or 5 o'clock in the morning
getting your training on.
How do you find that timing your meals with training –
I mean, do you do a lot of fast workouts?
Do you find you do better on certain workouts?
If you've got some food that you've eaten recently, how do you, how do you manage that?
I would say that I, I can work out a little bit better if it's like midday and I had a
little bit of food, but I don't, I think it's, I think it's more like just
the, the, the weight and the volume of the food and then it accompanying salt, you know, I think
is, is a big factor. And again, if I just chug down a big thing of salt, I don't think it would
be, um, as effective, but the, the gain in that is is is fairly minimal you know and and might sometimes
even just be uh might even sometimes be mental but i usually don't uh take anything before or
after training a lot of times let's talk i know i've heard i think i can't remember who i heard
talking with maybe you as maybe it was ed Ed Cohen talking about cramping up really bad
do you do you and that was obviously a lot of guys when their bodybuilding when they're getting
really lean they get in have a lot of cramps what has been your experience around cramping do you
get them how do you deal with them you know I have been suffering from like leg cramps for a really
really long time um and you know a lot of this stuff is just like, you know,
learning your body. I've learned that like, if I'm cold at night, then for some reason,
I'm more susceptible to cramping. I'm not sure what the correlation is. Sometimes
I might have to go to bed and I'm like, I run kind of hot anyway. So it's like kind of
uncomfortable for me, but sometimes I got to throw on like sweatpants or something to get in bed.
It depends on how much I trained my legs and things like that.
So that has been one thing that has helped.
But in addition to that, really staying ahead of the hydration.
And the other thing that's helped is just having things like you were mentioning, the electrolytes that you were taking in.
Things like that can be beneficial.
I don't have cramps really anymore.
I don't get them anymore, and I've been running and squatting and doing all kinds of stuff.
I think a lot of the weird stuff that you deal with in the beginning, like I used to kind of feel lightheaded when I first started when I first started messing around with keto and I, and, and admittedly I was just probably wasn't eating enough either,
you know? Um, but like all those, all those things have completely, they've completely subsided even
when I don't eat that much food. So I think it's just a matter of your body, you know, getting used
to it and, um, getting adjusted to it. Um. I also think that a lot of times cramps can
just happen just from your muscles as being extremely tight. So anybody that's really
dealing with that and having a tough time with that, you might want to try to just a few minutes
of stretching, you know, just two, three minutes of stretching before you go to bed, I think would
be beneficial. Somebody's asking about alcohol on the diet um do you think it has the same negative effects as
eating a high carb high fat diet i know i occasionally have a glass of wine i know i
see you out with andy at dinner sometimes i have a glass of champagne what are your thoughts on
alcohol and diet uh one more thing i want to mention about the cramping that i forgot is so
sometimes if you have alcohol and you're on a low carb diet, and if you also start to eat some
carbs, that's where I noticed a crazy amount of cramping. And that, that I would imagine has to
do with the shift of where the water is going. But man, I've gotten some crazy cramps from that.
So that might be something to be on the lookout for. If you're going to eat carbs because they
do suck up some water water you might have to drink
a lot more water in terms of uh booze you know in terms of like just living your life and uh
you know like for me people you know people got all pissy at me the other day i had a
a poke bowl and it had um it had some vegetables in it and people got all bent out of shape and
they're like i thought you're on the carnivore diet. They kind of lost their mind.
And I'm not cult.
I'm not cultish that way.
You know, if a piece of asparagus comes across my plate, I'm probably just going to eat it.
I don't really care about it that much.
I don't really enjoy it that much.
But if it's going to fill me up a little bit more and I'm hungry, then I don't feel like I have any issues with like vegetables. And then
in terms of like being social and living your life and having a good time, like I'm not afraid
to have a drink here or there, but I also, I'm not a big drinker by nature. I never really
gotten that into it. So it's not something that appealing to me. And so I have to like,
kind of want to do it. You know, we had a party the other, the other day. And, uh, those are things that I think about a few days ahead of
time. I'm like, okay, you know, I'm almost thinking I am almost like, uh, in a defensive
stance, you know, like I got my hands up. I'm like, all right, what the fuck's happening on,
on Saturday? You know, like, what do we have going on? How do I control some of the elements of,
of what's going to go on?
You know, and I'm even thinking about my food for the day.
I'm like, okay, we're going to have a party and we're going to have a lot of really good food out.
But it's our party.
So we're still going to have a lot of meat and stuff like that.
And so I'm making sure that I'm mainly eating that stuff.
But I also take care of myself beforehand and eat.
Sometimes I eat before I go out to a restaurant, you know, things like that.
But alcohol and just trying to keep your life less stressful, like just fucking have some fun.
You know, have a good time as much as you can as long as it's not too much to the detriment of some of the goals that you have. But yeah, for me, that's been a huge
thing for me is like, if we're going to go out to eat somewhere, I usually eat a little bit
beforehand because I don't know what you're going to, I don't know what I'm going to get
at the restaurant. And you only eat like two or three times a day and you only eat meat.
So you don't want to be grumpy about the meal. You know, they overcook your burger,
they overcook your meat or whatever. You don't want to be pissy about it.
And if you ate already, you don't really care that much.
Hey, Mara, I saw recently you put up a post about, you said you were able to put on some
size and strength and gain some weight on a car. A lot of people ask me about it because a lot of
people see it's very effective for weight loss, but I have a lot of people saying,
how do I, how can I put on weight? How can I put on muscle?
What has been your experience with that? How do you do it? Yeah. I don't know what the reason is or, or, you know, why, but, uh, it could just be like overall calories, I guess. But I brought in
a lot of dairy. I brought in a good amount of dairy and I brought in, um, a little bit more
butter and, uh, and eggs. I ate a little bit more eggs and that just made a huge difference.
I was able to gain like 20 pounds in a really short period of time. And even here at the gym,
everyone's like, dude, what the hell? Like you just smacked on a bunch of weight. And I did,
I gained a little fat too. I got a little puffy from it. But I was making what I was calling
krillk. I was taking cream and milk and just dumping them
in one container and shaking it up as heavy cream and milk. And I would go through one of those
about every other day. I was really just smashing it. I just kind of wanted to see. I'm going to
work on kind of experimenting a little bit more with the carnivore diet. I have a trip coming up to Mexico with my wife at the end of this week.
When I get back from that, I plan on kind of messing around with it.
I'm just really super curious about counting calories and tracking them.
I would love to see what happens.
I have some theories that I think that the calorie stuff,
I think the amount of energy that you consume, I think it does matter.
But I think that the way that we measure calories I think is pretty jacked up.
I think lighting them on fire inside of a box or whatever way they do it I don't think is equating all that well over into how it's reacting in individuals bodies and stuff like that but i would love to see if i was eat like five or six thousand calories you know on a carnivore diet
i really don't think i would gain i think i might gain weight for like a week or a couple days and
then i think it would subside so something i plan on playing with i'm sure if the amount of protein
that you take in will matter a lot so that so that was something I was going to play with and then hopefully, you know, try to show
the audience like, Hey, like, look at, look at kind of like what this does. Look at, look at
some of the results. I'm not trying to sway anybody any particular way. I just want to kind
of know for myself and then share that out with people. Yeah. I mean, there's, it's kind of
interesting, Mark. So I've looked into this and I've talked to some of these leading guys like Stuart Phillips and Jose Antonio are the pre-protein researchers. And from a muscle standing building standpoint, you know, it's basically, you know, protein, amino acids, you know, leucine resistance training, and then it's caloric surplus for the most part. And so it can come from fat it can come from carbs i know stan talks about it's easier to overeat carbs to get that that's why you know he's got he's eating reichs because
it's easier to stimulate yeah you can probably do some of that with fat and then jose antonio talks
about when you dial that protein way up you know there's a point where you just don't get any more
body fat i mean it's just it kind of tops you out when you get a protein so i think it's going to
kind of depend on you know where you get your protein. So I think it's going to kind of depend on, you know, where you get your calories from,
how much of it's protein,
how much it's fat.
You know,
if you,
you could probably eat five,
6,000 calories a day.
If it's mostly protein, you're probably going to reach a point where you gain a little,
and then you don't gain any more.
And there's still a lot of stuff that we still a lot of weird stuff that we
don't know.
You know,
like when I,
I made a post a few weeks ago about like drinking milk and,
and,
and dare and cream and stuff like that.
And a few comments were talking about the – how you don't absorb fat as well from dairy products.
So it's like I don't know.
It's all just very interesting to me.
So I'd love to just kind of put it to the test and have an N1 and just see what the results are.
Yeah, it'd be interesting to see. Dave's asking, he said, I used to lift 30 years ago back when,
back in the day, I guess. The goal then was first to lose weight, then add muscle. Do you guys feel
that still works or do we need to, you know, more about tony do we think we need to wait lose weight first and then lift uh so do you think you need to lose
weight to get leaner and then add then lift add add muscle on or just start lifting you know i
think we can over complicate stuff very easily and i think that um you know don't be fancy just
be consistent and so you can kind of chase down more than one thing at a time. You know,
I think it's a little bit of a myth that you can't chase down two things at once, but you can
chase down several things at one time. It's just that they just can't conflict with each other.
You know, it would be a mistake to try to really add a lot of size and to try to get ripped at the
same time. But you can, if, especially if you haven't really weight trained in a long time,
you can certainly lift weights and work on, um, you know, keep it as it will be advantageous to you because, you know, gaining that muscle mass will help you consume more calories, you know.
So it will be to your advantage to work on both things.
And I don't think there's one – I don't think there's a reason to like, try to lose weight before you go stepping into the gym. Yeah. I mean, I don't think, you know, particularly,
you know, unless you're already like, you know, super lean, you know, that's, it's hard to make
a difference one way or the other. You either got to pick strength, you got to pick getting leaner.
And I think for the most people, right, most people in the audience here, you can put on
muscle and lose body fat, you know, particularly if you have a lot of body fat to lose because it's, it's, it's, you know, it's not until you get to the
really edges where then you really have to do these kinds of crazy things.
Well, and you'll just, you'll even just look bigger. Like you could be, someone listening
right now could be, you know, 280 pounds and they try the carnivore diet and they lose 30 pounds,
but they've had a decent discipline in the gym with their training.
And people will say, Hey man, like what have you been doing for your shoulders?
They look crazy. Your shoulders look big, but you, you lost, you know,
50 pounds or whatever. So a lot of times,
a lot of times people can't see what you got going on under there until you
drop the body fat down.
Yeah. I, I'm, I'm just, uh, this is one thing that I see, you know, obviously I get a little
bit of the same thing probably in more so than you do, but, um, are you getting a lot
of pushback from people because you've been, you've been promoting carnivore diet?
I know we, you and I have kind of talked a little bit about guys that are all about calories,
Lane Norton and so on and so forth.
I know you said, Hey, I think there's more to it, or I think there's reason that that's not the best strategy. What are your thoughts on that?
Yeah. You know, I'm trying my best not to give a shit really, because, um, something I kind of
have recognized in myself and maybe, maybe you end up being guilty of this as well. Sometimes,
um, I really do want to help people.
And I think that in my mission to help people, I sometimes get pissed when they don't agree with me.
And I'm like, well, that doesn't really make any sense. I want to help people, but I don't want to
necessarily turn them into me. And I don't want to live in an echo chamber either. You know, I would
like to know the truth about nutrition. I would like to find out more information. So it can be hard because people can get really inflamed and
inflammatory towards you. But I'm trying my best to be more understanding. Some of the comments
sometimes they're so like over the top where it's just like they don't really warrant a response.
But sometimes I just find myself, I can't help myself.
I end up wanting to protect myself
and want to protect my beliefs.
But I've been working on it lately
to try to not to force people to believe in what I believe.
But also at the same time, like just saying, hey, look, here's the information, you know.
Here's what I've found.
Here's what works well for me.
Here's what's working well for a lot of other people.
And I think that you can enjoy the benefits.
I don't – I can't imagine, and I don't know if you've run into this at all.
I have not seen anyone try the carnivore diet and have it not work.
I've seen people fail with the carnivore diet and not have a good time with trying it, and maybe they don't love meat that much, and it just didn't fit their lifestyle, didn't fit their personality very well.
And they didn't have success with it because they weren't able to really do it. But I haven't seen anybody not end up with great results from it.
Yeah, I would say that, yeah, the vast majority of people seem to get pretty good results.
Not everybody gets exactly what they want all the time. You know, some people will struggle a
little bit with weight loss. I see that as being the biggest challenge. The vast majority of people seem to lose weight, get healthier, feel better.
And even the people that are struggling with weight loss, you ask them, why are you still doing it?
And they say it was because I feel so much better.
And I think there's obviously something there.
I mean, clearly giving up all the junk food, all the stuff that is stuff that, uh, you know, that is out there,
that tastes good and everybody wants us to eat and it's marketed to, I mean, giving that stuff
up is tough, but once you do it, um, it works, uh, you know, pretty, pretty remarkably well.
And I think that's a good statement on what's wrong with the food system overall. I think Mark, I don't want to teach too much time.
Somebody asked for you to give your thoughts on the Corona virus.
If you want to wade into that, I think the carnivore diet will fix it.
Well, it's interesting. You know, we do know that cholesterol,
LDL cholesterol in particular can protect us from infection
there's some studies out there that show that so that may be a strategy to deal with that is to not
not be weak and frail that's the best way to prevent uh you know succumbing to an illness
if you get the virus obviously not you know washing your hands right as we get so many people packed into cities and
buses and rains that's not natural um i see you're gonna be at the arnold somebody says
they hope to run into you there yeah you got it what is the art it's like it's coming up in it
pretty soon yeah i forget the date but yeah it's coming it's coming up pretty soon and um
we uh we'll be out there doing some podcasts and stuff and yeah i'm hoping to run into some fans for sure what uh what do you
what do you have what do you have coming up mark i know you got so many things going on any big
things you're you're kind of interested or excited about it's coming i know you and chris have been
doing a little carnival stuff what's what's what's new for mark bell or what's coming up
the arna classic is one of them um I know I have a seminar out there.
Andrew, do you have any idea what the date is on that?
I forget.
But we'll get that to you in a second.
But, yeah, I have a seminar out there that I'm excited about.
And going to Mexico with the wifey at the end of this week, that'll be fun.
A friend of ours is getting married.
that'll be fun a friend of ours is getting married actually it's a you know I always find it really cool like just the different friends that we have and
how resourceful you can be when you really put your mind to it and you think
about the people that you have in your corner this girl that we're going to her
wedding she helped save my brother's life because she was the one that gave
us direction towards getting my brother help,
you know, and getting him into detox and stuff like that. And it's just, it's remarkable,
you know, when you think if people stop for a second and pause and think about the people that
they have close to them that care about them, you can really find a lot of great people in your
corner that can help with a lot of things. You things. I can call you at any time and ask you questions about the diet.
My aunt has been impacted, my cousin Steven, as you know.
I mean, it's just been amazing.
But, yeah, I've got a bunch of shit I'm always looking forward to.
I just look forward to every day, really.
I have a bunch of things that are set on the schedule,
but I try not to even look at that because it's just every day is full with
a bunch of crap.
So I try not to look at it,
but I just try to,
you know,
rev up and get energy for each day.
Yeah.
So Mark will be in Columbus starting Friday,
March 6th through the 8th.
And we're actually doing a strong seminar at a CBUS gym in Columbus,
Ohio.
Cool.
Well,
Andrew,
thanks.
Thanks for chiming in.
Andrew's good to sit here and you again.
Anyway,
Mark,
thank you so much.
Uh,
Amanda,
Leah,
Mark,
I think Andrew,
they want to maybe get,
get some of the videos.
They might want to use it.
I'm not sure.
Can we make sure we get it to them after we record it and stuff and send
them a copy?
I think we,
I think we might have everything.
we're all good. Yeah.
Oh, you guys are recording too. Okay. Well, nevermind.
You guys know how to do that. Mark, thank you so much.
I don't want to be respectful for your time. We've been going an hour.
It's been wonderful. Um,
appreciate it and look forward to continued working with you and, uh, folks,
thanks for joining in. Thanks for the questions. Um, anyway, anything,
any last things to say, Mark mark and then i'll end it for
everybody no just kind of in finishing up you know um anyone that uh is struggling with the diet i
know people get on the diet get off the diet they're kind of on the fence should i do it shouldn't i do
it you should do it you should give it a shot you should give it a try and just fill yourself up with
food anytime you have cravings anytime you're like like, shit, man, I'm really hungry.
Just eat, you know, eat, you know, eat meat, eat eggs, eat bacon, whatever foods that you
really enjoy that are carnivorous.
Just do it, man.
Just smash the food.
And that's, it's helped me a ton, you know, just smash those cravings away by just stuffing
your fat face until you can't handle it anymore. And
eventually you will start over a period of time, you know, some of those cravings and stuff like
that will go down, especially when you're eating a good amount of protein. Anybody that wants to
follow along more stuff from me, you can check out Mark Bell's Power Project. In addition to that,
you can check out markbell.com, which has all the information on how I'm dieting and information on how I'm training and all that good stuff. So thank you so much for having me on the
show. I appreciate it. And most importantly, strength is never. Yeah. Strength is never
weakness. Weakness is never strength. Catch y'all later. All right. Thanks, Mark. Take care. I'm
going to end it. Bye guys. Bye. Poopcast. What up? Just checking in again. Uh, thank you to
everybody that's been rating and reviewing
the podcast. It does a
ton for this show, and we really, really
cannot thank you enough, but we'll do our absolute
best. Today, we want to give a super
duper special shout out to our man, Keto
D. Keto D, he's
somebody that's a regular
listener of the show. We recognize him right away.
We can't thank him enough. He's somebody
that's been pounding
tons of meat lately. He hopped on the carnivore diet and he actually
has quite the transformation already to show from it. But he left us a rating and a review and he
says, quote, keto descending mad love to you guys. Not even going to lie, I'm playing catch up on all
my other podcasts because this one has all my attention. Love everything about this podcast and love getting educated by the very best. Hope to make it to Cali someday
so I can work out with you fine gentlemen. P.S. Took a solid poop today. Not bad, dude.
Thank you so much, Keto. You know you're our boy. We really appreciate that, man. Thank you so much.
If you listening right now, if you would like to hear your name and your review read on air,
please head over to iTunes right now, drop us a rating, drop us a review,
and you could hear your name on air just like our boy Keto D.
We'll catch you guys on the next one. Peace.