Mark Bell's Power Project - Mark Bell's Power Project EP. 247 Live - Suffering and Pushing to Your Breaking Point
Episode Date: September 12, 2019Fired up after hanging out with Brian Alsruhe and listening to him on the previous episode, Nsima and Mark talk about getting to their breaking point, pushing through it and suffering, but actively se...eking this out. Andrew asks how the common person can achieve this type of mindset. Subscribe to the Podcast on all platforms: ➢https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Visit our sponsors: ➢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 "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 15% off your order! ➢SHOP NOW: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell Follow The Power Project Podcast ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MarkBellsPowerProject Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So you guys know I've been messing around with a lot of fasting, you know, for the last two or
three years. And the way I initially started fasting, because I'm a former fat guy, was like
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And as a lot of people know,
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Yeah.
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Cool.
So you feel like good energy after you have that?
Yeah, I feel some good clarity, some good energy.
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And it's something that kind of carries me through at least midway through the day.
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I think all of us here really,
really love meat,
but the one person that loves meat more than anybody is Mark.
So how much meat have you had this week,
Mark?
I don't know.
You know,
I,
I do eat,
I do eat quite a bit of meat. Um, especially especially after I've fasted. I remember one time I came home from the gym and probably just slaughtered maybe a tomahawk ribeye. I think it was gigantic. I do smash a lot of meat in a given day.
what I like about the Piedmontese beef though is a lot
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how are they doing it over there?
it's crazy but the thing is it's so sick for people that are like having to
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I just put salt and gun, but this is actually pretty awesome.
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I'm not too bad with the grill.
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Ready?
And three, two, one.
And yeah, we're going.
We did some bench pressing today, and we tried some of those overheads.
Yeah, the overheads are not my favorite because I just feel like every time I'm done with them, my back gets a little tweaked.
The Z pressing?
No.
We didn't mess with the Z for today.
We just stayed standing up, but we did a of sets. It felt pretty good. Yeah. No, yesterday. Shoot. The breathing. I sucked at, I was having a hard time with that and it made a huge difference. Like a 50 pound difference. was super easy once uh brian was like no you got to get your breath before you even you know touch the bar and then you know be like a you know quick with it don't like take time to set up just go
and i'm like oh okay and yeah it made a huge difference yeah no he made there's something
different i did yesterday i can't pinpoint what it was but the overheads that we were doing
yesterday were much easier even on the push pressing um so there was something he showed there
i guess that's why it's a complete god's overhead pressing when you do um when you do uh jujitsu
and you're doing like your drills i know for me like when i was doing like pro wrestling like
even though sometimes you're doing a drill and you're trying not to hurt anybody else and stuff. And you're trying to go through the drill cause it's practice,
but you're really like,
once you kind of have the idea down,
once you see it,
you're really going through it.
Like you're going,
you're going hard.
Do you guys do that in jujitsu?
Do you,
do you go like once you kind of,
once everybody kind of understands what needs to be done,
you guys go in pretty hard on it.
Yeah.
Like there's a drilling and then there's a sparring part.
So when he shows us like the technique of the day and then we drill it, initially you're drilling it a little bit slow unless it's meant to be an explosive technique.
Give everyone kind of a second to understand what you're doing and everything.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So you'll drill it a little bit slow once you get the hang of it.
Yeah, you can then start speeding it up, putting on the choke a little bit harder, putting it on quicker.
Yeah. Yeah, because when we were doing the stuff with Brian today, he didn't really mention it to us as much yesterday.
But today he was like, he did say it.
He was like, you know, no pitter pattering around.
Like he didn't want you to take extra steps.
But today he put it in better terms.
He was like, you don't have a lot of time on this lift
as soon as you pick the weight up out of the rack because we're doing an overhead press
as soon as you pick that weight up out of the rack you're like losing time and you're losing
strength because you'll be losing how long you can hold your breath so before you ever load your
body up with the weight he said get yourself aggressive get that air in your body
keep your core tight take your steps back and pretend that you're in like a race yeah and he
kind of showed us like how aggressive like he would step into it i was like ah okay and it made
more sense to me because i was like that's the way i did drills when i was wrestling and that side of
me and part of the reason why i'm retired and I, I deserve to be retired is because
I don't have that same, like that same little gear in there. I can still lift heavy and I can
still go at it, but on an assistance exercise, I'm not normally thinking that. And that's like a,
like a flaw. It's like, you're like kind of missing the killer instinct. Yeah. You know,
you want yourself like up against the ropes and you do want to kind of missing the killer instinct. Yeah. You know, you want yourself like up against the ropes
and you do want to kind of kick your own ass.
You do want to kind of kill yourself in your workouts
with some, you know, you want within some reason, right?
You don't want to totally annihilate yourself.
But his point was that aggression is going to lead you to not getting hurt.
If you soften up too much,
you have the ability to tweak your back or something like that.
You know, I wonder, do you think that like, you don't have that on the overhead press because
you don't overhead press much because when we see you bench press, like even if you're about to move
heavy weight, you get ready, you move under and you're just like, you know, you move fast. Like
you don't, you don't waste time on bench pressing. So is it just because you don't do it as much?
Yeah. It could be, could be that kind of thing where I'm trying to like feel it out and I'm like
on unsure, but it's interesting, like what being I'm trying to feel it out and I'm unsure.
But it's interesting what being unsure can do to you. It can make you look like a rookie really quick because I've been lifting for 30 years.
I shouldn't look like a newbie on there, but I sure did.
So yeah, I find it to be interesting.
But having him in town was amazing.
We learned a lot from him. I was able to him in town was amazing we we learned a lot from
him i was able to share a lot with him he learned a lot from us um he shot some he shot such good
content with us the podcast was amazing a lot of the stuff he said in the podcast i think is stuff
that uh we'll remember for a really long time and a lot of the things he shared with us on
our YouTube channel
and everything like that was amazing. But the one thing that I think really kind of stuck with me
is the topic that you want to talk about today. I just found it interesting the way he looked at
suffering in his training. Yeah, no, like I was thinking about that a lot today. And I was just
wondering because it brought me back.
There was a when I started playing soccer as a kid, right?
I started like six or seven.
And when I was eight years old, I remember this really vividly.
We were doing hills on a field.
And this is the time where I was playing more competitive soccer.
So the coach was a more serious guy.
I remember his name to Brandon Cabot.
And we were doing some like sprint drills.
I wasn't
greatest at endurance like i was i was good at fast stuff but not endurance and i think i had a
little bit of asthma then too right so my breathing was a little bit what you know bad so i started
kind of whining a little bit because i was tired and brandon's like and see you need to stop being
a little prima donna and that hit home i still like I still remember how he said it. Because after that, I told my mom,
and she was like, eh, maybe you do. And I was like, dang. OK. And from there, really pushing
myself, especially physically, past comfort became something normal to me. So when he talked about
suffering beautifully, and you see all the
workouts that he does on his Instagram and you see how hard he pushes himself and it's,
it's difficult as hell. I was wondering what can people do or how, how can people get themselves
to that place? What do you need to be able to get yourself past a place where you can just continue
to push past massive discomfort. Um, because I
feel it a lot with jujitsu, like with jujitsu and sparring, I don't take breaks when I spar,
even after like, let's say we'll have nine or 10 sparring sessions after drilling. Right.
But after the sixth one, my heart's already racing, but something, something is in me or
I don't know, there's a reason, but I just continue sparring even though I'm exhausted because I know that that's going to help me to get better.
If I can do well when I'm tired, I can improve faster.
So how can people develop that?
Because I think that's powerful.
Yeah, I think there's a lot of different ways you can go about doing it.
doing it. Um, but what I like about what you're saying, what I'm intrigued about is I would imagine that jujitsu, there's some, there's probably some really awesome jujitsu practitioners,
but there's probably not a lot of guys that are your size and strength, maybe in the class,
maybe in your whole school. There's like, is there like one other guy that's,
there's a few, there's a few guys that are stronger than me that, uh, two guys,
they're actually white belts that are stronger. Neho is brown belt he's like 280 290 he doesn't lift stronger as in they
can but they can they still handle you jiu-jitsu wise they can still handle me there's the yeah
there's a few upper belts i can so i would imagine though too that you probably love the challenge of
being fatigued and trying to go up against these other guys. Yeah. Right. I think
that's probably because you're a competitive person. So I think that's probably something
ingrained in you. And I also believe this is something I thought about years and years and
years ago, but the pressure there's like, I can't describe it. And I wish I had a better way of
describing some of this stuff, but I just don't.
There's no real way to describe the pressure of like a heavy squat.
Now, maybe a heavy squat because I haven't played every sport and I haven't done enough jujitsu to know.
Maybe the bottom of a heavy squat feels like somebody getting your back and like just about to tap you
out. Like I don't, I don't really know, but there's something that you gravitate towards with that
pressure. That pressure feels really good. I've heard a couple of friends and I haven't never
done this, but they do some like deep water, deep water dives. And they, because they go down so
deep, they start to feel a lot of pressure. and like you get the same pressure kind of like behind your eyes and in your face and in your body that you get from doing like a
heavy squat i'm like oh okay that makes and we talked about you know there's different types
of sports that have a different adrenaline dump or different adrenaline rush um you know like
white water rafting is going to be way different than powerlifting, right. Or,
or, uh, snowboarding or something like that. It's going to be just drastically different.
They're not going to feel the same, but there's something, uh, interesting to me about like just
handling a heavy weight in a training session and kind of, uh, having that, uh, that pressure build up. So for me personally, like a way that I, uh, have an opportunity
to, um, to build upon myself, to, to build myself up to, um, I've been calling it for years,
suffering for the unknown. Cause you don't, you don't know what it's for, you know? And then
maybe someday you find out, like I, I was able to like turn it into a career. So maybe that's
what it's for. I don't know. We'll find'll find out like i don't really know what the story is um but you work hard you work hard you
work hard and suffer is a big word right like we're we're we're just talking about lifting yeah
we're not at war you know we're not we don't know like thankfully we're all very healthy
and so we're not when we say suffer it's just our own pussy version of us being a little sore and tired in the gym.
It's not.
That's true.
There's people that suffer horrific things.
There's people in third world countries.
We're not talking about any of that stuff because thankfully we don't have to deal with any of that.
We're talking about our own baby suffering that we have over here, which is our legs being tired, those types of things.
I just like to put that out there
and just so people just they understand you know we're not trying to sound heroic and we're not
trying to sound tough but we're trying to help you understand some ways that you can get yourself to
be better because once you get a little taste of this it is highly addictive and you start to
challenge yourself in so many
different ways. You're probably not old enough to remember when George Foreman came back into
boxing. But when George Foreman came back into boxing, he's probably older than I am right now.
I'm 42. He's probably like 45. And he came back and he fought like Evander Holyfield and stuff. And like, he did great. He won the belt back.
He was demoralized in the late seventies, I believe it was in late seventies by Muhammad
Ali and he never returned to the ring again.
Got knocked out by Muhammad Ali.
George Foreman was one of the most dominant boxers in the history of the sport.
He's one of the biggest, most athletic, most powerful men to ever walk the face of the
earth.
He was a nightmare of the earth he was
a nightmare to fight and he was mean that's people don't even understand that george foreman was
fucking mean you'd never assume that no he's so nice and happy got a big old smile right
that was uh later on because he was making so much money i think he got i think he got pretty
happy by that but he was a mean bastard and like like people that, um, that Muhammad Ali fought and had wars with Muhammad Ali fought,
um, Joe Frazier three times.
And every time it was a war and Joe Frazier broke Muhammad Ali's jaw, Joe Frazier beat,
beat, uh, Muhammad Ali, Ken Norton, Muhammad Ali had wars with Ken Norton and George Foreman.
When he fought Joe Frazier, he knocked him down three times in one round.
He kicked the shit out of everybody.
He was completely unstoppable.
He ran into Muhammad Ali and Muhammad Ali just demoralized him.
I've talked about on this podcast before where Ali said to Foreman, is that all you got?
And it was in like the eighth round and Foreman was like, that's all I got.
But when Foreman came back, because he's a veteran fighter,
he didn't waste any energy.
He didn't do a lot of extra movement.
But in between rounds, and I think as a challenge and as a, hey,
I'm going to show you young guys what's up, he didn't sit down in between rounds.
You see him right there.
He's just standing in the corner.
He wouldn't sit down in between the rounds.
Everyone else sits down on a stool.
You see it in MMA all the time.
There he is fighting Evander Holyfield.
And it's like, how can you develop a mindset that is kind of like frightening to your opponent?
Or how can you develop a mindset that makes kind of like frightening to your opponent or how can you
develop a mindset that makes you feel really good yeah and makes you want to kind of continue
to move forward we had david goggins on the podcast remember david goggins was talking about
um rocky and he was talking about some of his favorite moments from rocky how
um you know rocky just wasn't getting getting tired and Apollo was kicking the shit
out of him. And Apollo just had that look and he just threw his hands down to the side like,
I don't want to do this anymore. Like, I don't want to keep bashing your face in
because I don't have anything left anymore. And then it's like, how can you develop a similar
mindset, a similar mentality? I think one way to do it is to go to the gym.
Yeah, no, go to the gym. And,
you know, if you're just starting out, I think that's why Brian yesterday was like,
I think he mentioned that people should work into some of the stuff that he's doing,
because I think it also takes obviously a certain level of skill. I can remember when I first
started jujitsu, I would take breaks between sparring sessions. I don't remember when that kind of thing stopped.
I think it was maybe towards blue belt when I was getting the hang of things.
Then I didn't feel that I had to stop anymore.
And I like I don't stop because I've built a level of skill that I don't feel that, you know, I feel that I can keep going.
Even when I'm really exhausted, I can figure something out when I'm tired.
exhausted, I can figure something out when I'm tired. And also like for myself, like I really have a big reason why I want to get better. So whenever I'm feeling really tired, it always kind
of comes back to that. It comes back to, okay, why are you here? Okay. You're feeling like this,
you know, why you're here, you know, why you want to get better. Okay. Get back and find somebody
else to roll with. That's a really important thing. And you don't have to be someone who's
trying to compete. You don't have to be trying to get to a world level or anything. I think you just
have to have something that's important to yourself that when you're feeling like absolute dog crap,
you can go back to that and pull from that. Is your reason why kind of attached to your goals?
Like I think you've mentioned to me that you want to be a black belt kind of in a short period of time, but does it extend past that?
Yeah. I want to, I want to get my black belt quickly, which requires a lot of mat time. It
requires a lot of repetitions. Um, whenever I'm there, I need to take advantage of all the time
I have, but I also want to compete against some of the top guys in the sport that are currently
black belts. And by the time I think I might get my black belt, I know that they're probably not going
to leave the black belt ranks. So I may be able to get a shot at them. That's the goal. So if
that's the goal, that means that I can't really rest much because they're already so far ahead.
I have to try and catch up in any way that I can. And they may have been doing it since they were like 13, six, seven. Right. So, um, that's why like, I need like, they're probably training harder than I am.
Right. You know what I mean? Um, but I have certain strengths that I know that are maybe
ahead of them and they have a lot of strengths that are ahead of me. So I just need to try and
do everything I can to get there. Yeah. it's interesting when you talk about high-level sports,
supposedly the way it's supposed to work is that you're supposed to play
a lot of different sports.
You're not supposed to specialize.
However, I think when it comes to something like this,
like any sort of grappling or really anything that just requires
just so much air, I don't think you can ever be too conditioned for jujitsu or boxing or
wrestling or MMA.
Um,
you could kind of make the argument like,
look,
if someone had been doing it for,
since they're four or five,
it's like just one less thing for them to worry about.
They probably don't really,
their,
their cardio is probably so high because they just been doing it for so long, you know, and they've been getting better. They've been getting better the entire time,
but you can look at it this way too. You can say, well, they don't have the background I have.
You know, I played soccer for many years, which is a different sport. And you had an opportunity
to grow and maybe possibly be more athletic than them in some other endeavor in some ways like maybe like
obviously i think the lifting portion and the strength aspect of things plays a pretty big
role in grappling you know we talked about if people have the same level of skill um but one
person is vastly stronger than the other than the person that's stronger can beat the other person
even though they have the same level of skill so So I think that that can play a big role. Um, but yeah, I think that when it comes to this though, like having that, having
a base level of skill so that you can push yourself to those levels and you do know, I guess
where limit is, that's really important because I can, I can honestly say, I don't know where my
limit is currently in terms of my cardio output for jiu-jitsu because I haven't gone to a place where I've had to really stop.
So I think that that's really important.
But also as far as lifting is concerned or for strength athletes, yeah, it doesn't mean that you want to be doing one rep maxes every single training session.
But like we were talking about a little bit before, when you're doing some of your accessory movements, you can probably maybe add in
different movements that you've never worked with before. You can take shorter rest periods,
like, okay, so you're not going to rest 30 seconds between a one rep max squat. But if you're doing,
you know, like some Henley rows, or if you're doing overhead pressing, you can add in some
burpees, like maybe Brian Alster does. And you can add in some of these things to really push
yourself in some of those movements and see what you can do. See how that may help your
conditioning. How many, so you've been doing jujitsu for about two and a half years or so?
I think now it's going to be four years come December. Come December, it's going to be four years yeah so four years of jiu-jitsu and like how many
practices would you view as how many practices did you have that you feel were poor and I don't
mean poor just because like you couldn't figure out the execution that you worked on the prior
session because sometimes that happens right it's like sometimes stuff's not computing on how to get a certain hold or something like that
but i mean you left there and you were pretty pissed off at yourself because you just feel like
you just feel like you just didn't you didn't get enough out of it like you didn't you almost
didn't work hard enough there it would only be the practices that maybe maybe cassio wasn't there because cassio
when he's there he when we have sparring sessions he has he runs a lot of sparring sessions sometimes
when other people he's a good coach and he's going to make sure yeah like you have a intense workout
yeah even if like he knows it's important exactly like he'll he'll sometimes like this more
like this yeah this morning i think we had eight or nine sparring sessions which is a good amount
like that's eight or nine six minutes rounds but sometimes yeah yeah sometimes when another
yeah holy shit yeah yeah but um sometimes when other instructors are there sometimes they might
only have us do five rounds or six rounds those are the only times where i'm just like i wish i wish we did more like like i'm not disappointed
well i am a little bit disappointed because i don't feel that i i did enough but um it's just
like yeah those are the kind of sessions where i leave wanting to do more when cassie was there
when i leave him like could have done more but it but it was a good amount of work we did today. Yeah. You can get to a kind of diminished returns at some point if you did 20 rounds, you know?
Yeah.
But, you know, I think that there's times that we do something called King of the Hill.
And King of the Hill is just like it sounds.
Like you'll have a bunch of people that line up.
Like let's say there's 30 people or 20 people in the class and you'll have eight guys on the mat.
And people will just like literally the class and you'll have eight guys on the mat and people will
just like literally line up and go roll and what it's like is like if you get submitted you leave
the middle and you go in but if you stay in the middle people are just continuing to come at you
if you tap them you go to the next person i like those uh we haven't been able to do in a while
but i like that because it's rare like recently the last time we did it, I don't, I think I left the middle once
and it was because Casio came and kicked my ass and then I came back in. But I like that because
it pushes you to that place where you're like, okay, you're done. You tap that person. Okay.
Another person's coming. You don't get a break. Another person's coming. You don't get a break.
And I like those training sessions because I really think that with jujitsu, you need to
train in an exhausted state so you can start relying on like technique. And I like those training sessions because I really think that with jujitsu, you need to train in an exhausted state so you can start relying on like technique.
And I like the way that feels and I can really work those things.
So I think that's it's necessary to get to that place every so often.
I find it really interesting that that's like embedded into that sport where that's not really embedded into lifting.
However, it is embedded into the CrossFit community.
Yeah.
And we've seen like the progress that they've made.
And it wasn't really, I mean, I guess you could say bodybuilders,
you know, pre-exhaust.
Failure and all that.
Yeah, pre-fatigue and some of those things.
Drop sets.
A drop set would be like a king of the hill scenario.
Like how long
can you last, you know, when we, when we just continue the duration of the set, even though
you're exhausted, right. Kind of similar. It's definitely a similar principle, but like just
getting yourself super exhausted through, you know, various drills and stuff. You see that quite
a bit in CrossFit and then you kind of see the amplification of how many men and women have gotten so lean and so, so fit, you know, in a,
in a short period of time. So it makes a lot of sense. And then it's like,
I guess it can be a little bit hard sometimes to try to convert it into like weights. Cause like,
you know, what would that look like in a deadlift session?
Would you be doing burpees in between your deadlifts? You can make an argument that
maybe you'll never really get that strong if you're doing the burpees in between your deadlifts,
but you can also make the argument the other way and say, maybe this would be a new way
of your body recognizing training and maybe you just adapt to it.
Yeah. Finding that, finding where your limit is with that. Cause I think everybody
at all different skill levels has a different limit. There's going to be like the lifter who
hasn't been training so long and yeah, they'll push themselves and they'll fight. Okay. This is,
I'm getting into deep water here. I can't handle it. But then there's been, there's a lifter that
maybe they've been training a few years and they're being a little bit too conservative still. Like there's this guy I
was working with a few years back. Um, and he did a max test for a deadlift. All right. And in the
video he sent me, he did like three 85, I think for like five. And he was like, that was an RPE
nine for anybody that doesn't use those RPE terms. that means you had one rep left in the tank a 10 means you can't do anymore our nine means one more i watched the video and his last rep
was just as fast as his first rep it didn't move any slower and it didn't look that difficult i was
like that's not a nine so i was like take a week let's do this again on, I think, Saturday or something. Take 425. Do it as many as you can. He did like six. And then he was like, oh, wow. So I think that's like, I think a lot of lifters are there where they don't necessarily know what, I guess, going into that deep water feels like, getting close to that failure actually feels like. And because they're so conservative, and it is good to be conservative, but if you're
too conservative, you're not allowing yourself to reach your potential.
Yeah, you might not really grow.
And then if you take that same lifter, and what if he was to do 425 after another client
of yours who's a similar age and similar body weight did 425 for eight?
Would your guy be able to do it for eight maybe probably probably probably get it for eight and maybe even go for the ninth rep yeah
right like you might even get a ninth rep so you know sometimes having you know a training partner
or having someone that can hold you accountable how many uh like shit workouts do you think you had in that same four year span
because it sounds like in jiu-jitsu they maybe just had like a couple maybe there wasn't as many
people participating on that particular day or maybe your main coach wasn't there what about
in terms of lifting lifting i haven't i haven't had many bad workouts i can't i can't think of
a workout that i had that was bad.
Because what I'm thinking of about lifting and what I see sometimes is sometimes it can get a little difficult for somebody to get in like a rhythm with their workout.
And sometimes somebody comes in and something hurts and then they're like – are kind of unsure what to do from there.
I've had workouts like that before. Lately, I've been over the last two years or so,
I've been feeling pretty good,
but I have workouts before where I'm like,
oh my God, my shoulder, man, that's weird.
My shoulder normally doesn't hurt.
Like what's going on with this?
You know, maybe I'm trying some bench
and then I'm like, okay, well, that ain't working.
Let me try some back.
And then I'm like, oh my God,
my bicep and elbow hurt too, you know?
And then I'm super frustrated.
I'm like, you know what?
Probably just makes sense to just leave the gym, you know, and just, just to go home and,
and, and just rest. And so I think sometimes people get a little confused on, you know,
where should they push and, and where should they kind of like pull back? And I guess you would have
to figure out, you know, where's this pain coming from, right? Like what did you do the previous
weeks to kind of lead you down this road?
Yeah, I think that perspective that you mentioned there is on the money because if I looked at my lifting right now through the lens of a power lifter, I can't bench heavy right now.
And even though bench wasn't my best lift, I still liked benching and I can't bench heavy because of my AC joint.
lift, I still liked benching and I can't bench heavy because of my AC joint. So I've had to do a lot of overhead, a lot of overhead work and a lot of incline work and a lot of tempo work with
benching because I have to be careful with how fast I go. We got to pause right here just for
a second because this is awesome what you're saying. Right now, you don't have the ability
to bench press because it hurts a lot. you're smart enough to say i should not be
messing with the bench press and you're picking another exercise i think not everyone wants to
do that right like a lot of times people don't want to do that so that that takes a level of
discipline like that's a discipline right there to say that's not in my best interest. I would love to do that.
But bench pressing, it makes up, you know, I don't know, 15% of my lifting, right?
And the rest is all other stuff.
So there's plenty of other options for me to choose from.
Yeah, yeah.
And I still find as many things as I possibly can to like get my chest going.
Like even cable crossovers because i can get a
lot of chest in there um a lot of dumbbell work i can do a lot of overhead work without any type
pain so i just progress any pushing movements that i can without any pain i just do that i do wish i
could bench but like again if i was so concentrated on benching then i would say that every workout
for the past past eight or nine
months has been shit, right? Because I can't bench. But no, I haven't had bad workouts because
there's so many other things that I can do and I can progress really well that I always leave the
gym pretty happy. And you've had some knee injuries in the past. You even had a knee surgery over the
last couple of years, right? Yeah, yeah. And what did you do for that you just audible and and pick different exercises yeah that was at the i was at the old
gym so the cool thing is shoot what's his name what's the guy that worked with the pro basketball
players that he's bald he worked with uh stanford right no not stanford not stanford he he came to
the old gym he worked with the Lakers like as in terms of strength
and conditioning with one of the African guys in the Lakers I forgot his name oh no yeah yeah yeah
yeah the name I just talked to him too about his family he's with uh he does a lot of stuff with
Bart Kwan and yeah Jacob Ross yes okay cool so yeah once I got the surgery um you know the great thing about the fitness community is like you can you can put some questions up and people will come back. Jacob came back with a message and told me all the things that I should do to start getting like range of motion back. And I started doing all of that immediately. I did as much like single leg work as I could. I did a lot of upper body work too.
body work too. So, I mean, at the old gym, if I like, I just had like a chair and I would like do cable work and just anything I could, could do. And I still got a lot of great workouts in,
even though I wasn't able to, you know, squat or any like deadlift or any of that stuff at that
point. But there was a bunch of things I could do for it. So those workouts were good.
There's a lot of great ways to strengthen yourself when something's hurt. And they'll,
they'll even say because of the way the body works and because of the way the central nervous system works,
let's say you were to break your right hand and you can't train your right arm.
So you're thinking, oh, my arm is going to really atrophy.
There's a lot of science and just a lot of proof in general
that training the left side of your body will help keep the hypertrophy
in the right side of your body. I keep the hypertrophy in the right side of
your body. So I just heard about like three weeks ago. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I look, I don't pretend
to know all this stuff, but there's some information about like the, you know, the right
and left crossing over and things like that. But I've seen it. I've seen it work for people
in the past. And also to look, you break your hand. It's like, let's, let's just step back for
a second. let's think
about the stuff that we can do what what are things i can do like i hurt my wrist really bad
well uh does the gym have a safety squat bar sounds like you're still in business sounds like
you're still in the game you know uh you hurt your knee really bad like are there any lower
body exercises you can do maybe you can start training your calves a little bit because having stronger calves can help stabilize your knee better.
Maybe you can figure out, maybe you can't do a leg extension.
Maybe you can't do a squat.
Maybe you can't do a leg press.
But maybe you can do some form of a leg curl.
And now we have some range of motion.
We got some movement.
We're developing the hamstring, which could help
potentially to stabilize the knee, right? It's like, let's focus on, that's always my advice
to people whenever they get hurt. Let's focus on three to five things that you can do. And
we can't really do anything about the things that you can't work. You can't do them right now. So
let's not, let's not even dwell on them. Yeah. Like when, when I first had this shoulder
subluxating, I told you that there was like months ago, it's because I stopped doing shoulder stuff.
Right. And then the shoulder subluxation is not a full dislocation, but it means the,
the, the head of the shoulders slipping in the joint. It did that like six times in a week. And
I, so I literally couldn't use the arm. Um, before I saw one of the guys at the gym, he was rolling with one arm for a little while because he's, he was
having a shoulder issues too. So like, I just put my arm in here. The guy that my chiropractor said,
put your arm in your gi, just roll with your other hand. And I did that for a few weeks.
And when I was able to get my right hand back, my left hand grip was fucking crazy.
Like I was, I was using my left hand way more naturally
because i didn't have access to my right hand so this is now so much easier to use how's that weird
pinky thing oh yeah it's fine now oh it's this side you can tell it's a little bit yeah but can
you squeeze it yeah i can i can bring my pinky down and stuff but i found something i was able
to do with the other hand and like it benefited even
though I wasn't able to use the right one. So there's always something that you can do. There's
always something you could figure out. So the different ways you can work on some of this
mindset stuff that we're talking about, it's, it's infinite. There's so many different areas
you can work on this. Um, I try to, I try to balance things out between like what's reasonable and realistic
for me to actually do. Um, what are things that I actually like to do? I'm trying to figure some
of that out too, because I like dieting. Um, I, I, I like being lean. Um, I like being able to
handle some weight in the gym, but I'm also like, I don't want to be so deprived of everything all the time. I want to be able to enjoy myself. Um, I want to be a dad. I want to be a husband. I want to be a friend and
I want to be chill and I want to have fun, you know? So it's like, well, how do I mix all that
in with like, quote unquote, wanting to be great or like wanting to be better. And there's a lot
of ways you can challenge yourself. Something as simple, and this is might sound really stupid, but something as simple as like oxygen debt,
you know, just going into some oxygen debt, oxygen debt, get on a, get on a treadmill,
get on a bike, go for a walk and try to just hold your breath for, I'm not talking about holding
your breath till you pass out. Just a little challenge to yourself. You know, try the bore
score. Try to gently just, you know, breathe in, breathe out as you breathe out as you're walking.
See how many steps you can take when you're doing it. Maybe wait 30 seconds and try it again,
you know, and try you can. There's just so many different ways that you can test yourself.
Something I try to work on sometimes. And this is where I run into balance issues sometimes.
I will sometimes, like when I leave somewhere or when I get to somewhere, I will sometimes mess around in my car on my phone.
Now, part of the reason why I do that is I don't really want my kids to see me with my phone.
And so when I get inside the house, I put my phone away.
At the same time, I'm like, I'm losing ground. I'm like losing time. I need to like get to,
like, I want to get to where I'm going. And when I get to where I'm going, I want to get the hell
out of the car. And so I'm trying to balance those two things out between, but literally it can make
everything in your life a challenge. You can say like,
where are you losing ground in your day? Where are you spending too much time? Are you,
are you kind of finding yourself doing that? Because like maybe you're losing five, six
minutes, but maybe you're losing five or six minutes everywhere you go all the time.
And it's making you late or it's making you this or it's making you that and you could be ahead.
You could be ahead, but by cutting that one thing out, it's not cutting a corner.
It's cutting out BS that you probably don't need. Maybe there's some other way that you could look
at your phone and look at Instagram or whatever it is that you're trying to do.
Yeah. Like your diet too though, like straight up, you know, so many people,
even myself, I was like, ah, I need this many
carbs. If I'm going to be able to perform, there's no way I'm going to be able to perform if I'm
eating less than like 400 grams of carbs a day. Right. And then I just try it out. I do it and
I feel pretty damn good. I find that, oh, wow, I actually perform better. I feel better on a day
to day basis when I'm not eating that many carbs. It's, it was more so an excuse for me to keep
eating that much
because I was too scared of letting it go.
Or, you know, you have certain snacks in your house
or certain things in your house
and you're just too scared to let it go.
You're like, I'm dieting,
but I'll just have a little bit of this.
I'll just keep it here, you know, just in case.
You know what I mean?
Rather than, you know, you know you should get rid of it,
but you're too scared to take that leap
or actually do that or, you know, go to that limit and take it out of the house. So that's important in all aspects.
I think Michael Hearn is kind of the king of these challenges. He'll diet for 12 weeks,
get himself super ripped. I know we pay homage to Mike on here all the time,
but he's
just an important figure to bring up because he, no one has a better mindset when it comes to
training than Michael Hearn does. Um, he might be in this severe training, might be in this severe
caloric deficit. And he's like, I'm going to reverse grip four Oh five for a set of five.
Well, I'm dieted down while I'm the lightest I've been in 10 years. And that's the way that he challenges himself.
And you can challenge yourself the same way,
but maybe it just looks different for you.
So maybe you weigh 185 and you're down to 175
and you still want to be able to push 225 for some reps
even while you're dieted down.
You can kind of have different PRs.
Westside Barbell has utilized that
kind of principle for a long time. They got PRs for everything. They got PRs with their pinkies
on the ring. They got PRs with their index fingers on the ring. They have body weight PRs. They have
age PRs. They have a PR coming back from a rotator cuff surgery, right? Like you can, you can really set up a lot of great
challenges for yourself and your reasons why can be so strong that you don't take rest in between
your sets when you're doing jujitsu. Yeah. You can kind of, you know, you can kind of think of
it that way. You can really have a good reason to be there because you set up so many things for
yourself that it's exciting. It's now exciting to be there. And that's what we're trying to get you to do.
I think we kind of like, first off, I'm so happy that Brian brought that up yesterday.
And I saw some of the videos because thinking about this, you know, we just had that episode
where we talked about competition to fuel yourself or to fuel your workouts.
Right.
But I don't think we answered the question that episode of like outside of competition.
When the workouts get boring, what can you do to keep that
fire lit? And I think it's exactly what you're talking about right here. Figure out things or
maybe figure out new things that you can add to your workout that you can really try and get
better at to bring some fire to what you're doing into the gym or to bring some challenge to what
you're doing in the gym so that you're not going through the motions and you get super bored and
you quit because you don't like what you're doing anymore. Figure out things that you like that you can utilize to challenge yourself.
That's huge.
I never thought about that, but we're all doing that here inherently just because it's what we do.
Yeah, each thing is a challenge.
I mean, even when I got here today, you're completely naked and you got that red light on you, right? But it's like even that's a little bit of a challenge, not you getting naked, but spending time doing that, like carving out time every day to try.
I heard this is good.
I heard this is worthwhile.
I'm going to put this into practice.
And you've been messing with it for the last few weeks.
That's a discipline.
That's a challenge.
It could be sitting in a sauna for an extra
like you're in a sauna and you're dying you're like oh my god i need to get the hell out of here
and you're like no let's see what it looked like if i was in here for another two minutes yeah let
me just see what it feels like and again you're not trying to go past like any like medical limits or anything like that. You're it's just a it's just a this is uncomfortable. Let me like you're not well maybe sometimes taking it to a little not safe but not like you know too unsafe but trying to find that balance of like just not
not feeling that great because man like some people have like there's people in my life that
i've worked out with right and i see them going through it and they stop because they're like ah
this just feels a little bit uncomfortable and seeing what they did i'm like you could have done like five or six more reps but it could be
that they need more skill to feel comfortable with it or they need more time but you can do so much
more you know it's just you did not there yet or you don't feel confident enough in yourself to do
that yet but it's just i guess having people around you um that can lead you into that deep
water is also important you mentioned that like having gym partners or whatever people that can
push you in there like you push andrew all the time when he's felt like he couldn't do certain
things you're like try it out and boom he does it it's so it's so reassuring having someone else
there to to to tell you that you're gonna be fine you. You know, like in jujitsu,
if one of these guys that are at practice
are bigger and stronger than you,
they go to an event with you
and you go and face someone where you're like,
holy shit, man, this guy's big.
They could say, I went against him before.
You're going to dominate him, right?
And it changes your mindset.
You're like, oh, like, you know,
hopefully you were calm and relaxed
and confident about yourself before.
But as soon as they said that,
not that you're going to underestimate the opponent,
but they're like, you know, they said,
hey, dude, like I work with you every day.
You're a monster.
You're going to crush this guy.
You're like, oh shit.
Okay.
Now that thoughts come across my mind many times too.
But like, like at the same time too,
when we were over at Mike's gym
and I was doing that deadlift,
I tweaked a little something in my adapt back on the set before.
I was not confident in doing that very last set of pause lifts.
And you were just like, just give it a shot.
Do a few.
Yeah.
I did a few.
It was good.
But like literally if you didn't tell me that, I would have backed off.
I was going to back off from it.
Right.
But you gave me that.
You just told me those few words.
I was like, all right, let's do it. Right. Yeah. Sometimes somebody just needs that
confidence. And then we're also talking about like, you know, stuff that's, you know, you're
maybe pushing the limits on like, what's safe and what's not safe. I mean, you know, I've done diets
and stuff before where I'm in the gym and I'm like, whoa, I'll do a lift. And I'm like, man,
I, I'm kind of like
seeing stars or like some of this was a learning curve for me, you know, with the ketogenic diet,
I didn't really, I would drink water and I'm like, man, I just always feel dehydrated,
but I didn't know about salt. Um, I didn't really realize I wasn't, you know, at the time I just,
I just didn't have the knowledge. I didn't really realize I wasn't getting in enough potassium probably either. And I just didn't know how
severe that was. And so I did things right up to a point, but I think that that's good.
I think in a lot of ways it's good. And you can look at all kinds of stuff and think that it's
unsafe. I mean, if I was to, you know, load up 500 pounds and do some, uh, and do some squats,
you know, it's, it's been
a while since I've handled that weight for like a bunch of reps and there's potential for me to
get hurt on it. So I could get hurt and you can say, well, shit, man, I wasn't smart. That wasn't
very safe, but it's like, well, I I've done it before, you know? So it should be relatively
safe. Same thing. If I went to jujitsu practice and I saw you locking horns with one of the most
competitive people, uh, maybe you're going with, uh, and I saw you locking horns with one of the most competitive people.
Maybe you're going with your coach.
You're rolling with your coach.
And I would look at that and be like, these guys look like two rams on a cliff trying to knock each other off.
Like, because I don't think people understand how intense jujitsu can be.
Like, I think people just think it's like wrestling and grappling. Not that wrestling or grappling is slow and not intense,
but I think that people don't understand when people are going in Jiu-Jitsu,
it looks crazy.
I mean, it really doesn't look too much different than just a full-on fight.
They just don't happen to strike each other.
But they're trying their best to gain position
or to gain an advantage on their opponent,
and you're going to
be, when you're in the heat of the moment, you're going to, somebody else would look at it and be
like, that ain't very safe. But it's like these things that aren't safe, these things that are
uncomfortable, we're not going to get anywhere without pain. We're not going to get, we're not
going to be able to grow unless there's some pain. So things are going to be difficult. Things are
going to be hard. And when you come out the other side of that, to grow unless there's some pain. So things are going to be difficult. Things are going to be hard.
And when you come out the other side of that, that's when you have some growth.
You know, it's funny that you, first off, you mentioned the keto thing, right?
Where you're like, oh shit, I need to get some water or some sodium.
Where you were like suffering for a few days.
When I was naked in front of the red light, I watched this Thomas DeLauer video, right?
Where he literally just tried carnivore, I think for 30 days. And he was talking like the first few days,
he was trying to eat really lean meat. And he was feeling like crap. He's like four days into the
diet. He's like, ah, this carnivore diet thing isn't for me. But then he started adding some
fattier meats in and he started feeling amazing. Right. And then I think after the third week,
like his subscribers were like, start adding in some organ meat. You might feel better. So he added in liver and he's like, liver was the key. Right. And he started think after the third week, his like his subscribers were like, start adding some organ meat.
You might feel better. So he added in liver and he's like liver was the key.
Right. And he started feeling so much better with that.
But like he tried it out and he was like he was, you know, he was getting the learning curve for a little bit.
But after a while, he found like now there's a lot of things within the carnivore diet that he's going to utilize in his toolbox.
But he tried it out. So that's massive because a
lot of the things we talk about and the guests we have on the podcast, it's cool to take a lot
of what they say and try it out. Like Cole Robinson, he was the one who kicked me over
the cliff to try a 48 hour fast. And for you, that doesn't sound, you did a 72, right? Yes.
But that was my first time doing a prolonged fast. And it wasn't that bad. I didn't feel bad
like working out and doing all that stuff.
So now I know that I can try something else and see what else.
Do you feel like it's a benefit for you?
Do you think it has any place in your training and what you're kind of doing?
Will you try it here and there or you don't think so?
I think it has a time and a place.
I think especially with the amount of cardio that I do and lifting that I do, um, there has to be a benefit for me to do it. Like there are health benefits of prolonged
fasts, you know, like every few, like every few weeks or something. But personally for me, I'm
not trying to lose weight. You know, I found that first, I think the first night falling asleep was
difficult as hell. Um, so I'm not trying to drop any more weight or anything, but I think that actually, you know, if I was trying to maybe get ready for a photo shoot or
something and I wanted to like drop a little bit of body fat, um, I might use that because after
that 48 hours I was lean as shit. Yeah. I was super lean. A dry fast is wild. You'll really
like dry out quick. I could do that. Yeah, I did. i did oh dang yeah i just did a 24 hour uh
dry fast but it was really good and then cole was like oh man he's like you gotta try it you
gotta try it for 42 hours you know he's he's crazy but um it gives you more insight too though with
coaching right so it just gives you more information i mean that's all the stuff that
you're going to try to do even if you're not an, even if you're not a coach and you're, you're not even in the fitness community, it want to lose weight. They need to lose weight. And you're like, Hey, you ever try this? Like I've, I've been doing
this diet. How good is that going to make you feel? Let's make you feel great. They come back
and you know, you see them two, three weeks later or whatever. You see them every day in the office
and they, you know, they're messing around with the fasting stuff and they, they have their meals
with them. They're turning, you know, they're turning a corner, they're turning over a new leaf
and they lose 10 pounds. It's like, man, that, that's, that feels pretty damn good. And that
puts you in a nice circle of people that are super positive. And it's just, you know, it's,
it's nice to be able to have that, uh, kind of reinforcement. I always say it here. It's like amazing how
I know not everyone's like on their diet, you know, 98% of the time, you know, 100% of the time, but
in here people eat pretty healthy all the time. And I'm super proud of that. I think that that's,
that's awesome. I see people with their monster mash all the time. I see people mixing up protein
shakes and it's just cool it's like you know we
have like 15 employees and everyone's like kind of on board and everyone's trying to be better than
they were yesterday it's awesome man i'm curious i'm just curious about this back at the old gym
when you were heavier right what was what was the food like then
so this is why i talk about you know uh like do more be more and and sitting on the couch
promotes sitting on the couch well donuts promote donuts and like i i used to eat i used to eat
don't the donut thing's actually kind of weird because i don't not that i uh found a donut that
i that i don't like but uh but uh donut thing, like somebody just brought donuts in on
someone's birthday and then it became a thing because we happened to be filming that day.
And then donuts were in there all the time. And it was always me stuffing my fat face with a donut
because I thought it was funny, like on videos. And so people brought in more and more donuts all
the time, but yeah, you know, I, I would eat a fast food and different stuff like that. I think,
I think at the time, I think people thought that that's all I ever ate when really probably a good
80 to 85% of the time I ate pretty good. And when I say pretty good, I was still like overeating,
you know? Uh, but I, I ate a lot of meat and ate a lot of rice and ate a lot of potatoes and shit
like that. But I also ate a lot of ice cream. I ate a lot of pizza. I ate a lot of meat and ate a lot of rice and ate a lot of potatoes and shit like that. But I also ate a lot of ice cream.
I ate a lot of pizza.
I ate a lot of fast food.
I ate a lot of this and a lot of that.
Really wasn't towards the very end of my career when I was like, maybe we should try to clean up the diet a little bit.
Still eat food that keeps me big.
But let me see what it looks like, you know, if I have healthier foods.
And it didn't really i don't know i probably didn't do it long enough to notice much of a difference but i was my i was much the more reckless i was the stronger i was that's that's
how it worked for me yeah by the time i got i came around i remember looking at the youtube channel
and being like oh man every time they train there's donuts everywhere this is gonna be
awesome i'm going there yeah i can't wait and then i was like looking around one day like huh
like i guess they don't do that like anymore or what's going on here guys no planet fitness has
pizza fridays yeah yeah we have donuts every day every day every day we just we just one-upped
yeah uh for people that are listening they're like you know you hear a lot about like
oh like how does you know brian allsrew get this mindset or you know how does insema get this
mindset of like hitting the breaking point and then being like i want more is it as simple as
just like fine like necessarily kind of uh not necessarily breaking down or whatever but like
finding that breaking point and then pushing a little bit more today and then the next time you get there okay i did a little bit more let me try to do a little
bit more than that is it as simple as doing that or is it just like uh constantly hitting that
break point and then being like okay i survived it last time i survived it this time i'm going
to survive again tomorrow yeah man i think it like what you said is like makes a lot of sense, but I think
that that's necessary to find out where that like your limit, that limit actually is. Because
if you don't do that or if you, if you do that, you're going to sooner or later come across a
point where you're just like, fuck, I'm way too beat. Or maybe you're not recovering as well.
So, you know, okay. I mean, back off of that a little bit, but you found it so you know okay let me back off of that a little bit but you found it you know like technically some people i think uh what's his name
oh well somebody calls it maximum recoverable volume there's some guy who who who utilized
that term he's from juggernaut it's not chad it's it's the other guy you know oh uh max aida
not max aida he's he does jujitsu also he's a purple belt okay strength guy
has he has ph but maximum recoverable volume um but like if you don't push that all the time just
a little bit you can't ever come across that like and at at jujitsu right like whenever i'm i'm
rolling and i'm super beat and i feel like really tired it's just just like, I just tell myself, all right, just
find someone else or point at somebody else and have them roll with you. Just when you're feeling
like that, just try and do a little bit more, try and do an extra set or try and do a little bit
more weight. And then you'll come across that point where you're like, you know that I shouldn't do
that. You know what I mean? But if you don't ever do it, you'll never really get to that point.
You know what I mean? But if you don't ever do it, you'll never really get to that point.
Yeah, I think having a mindset, too, of that you that you've never worked hard a day in your life, I think is a good mindset for people to have.
Like you ain't done shit yet. You know, like you're not cool. You're not the best. You're you're not as good as you think you are.
You got a lot to prove. And it's kind of nice to have like a chip on your shoulder. And you also, like I don't do this kind of stuff as much anymore,
but when I was lifting, it was important to me.
And when I was in pro wrestling, when I was in pro wrestling,
we all did drills together.
There would be like 40, 50, sometimes 60 people in a class.
And you'd watch each guy go.
And some of these guys were so, and some of these girls were so athletic
but it was important to me that i developed a skill where they would go oh that was different
you know what i mean like holy shit that guy did that perfect that roll or the backward roll or the
bump that he took um you take it with a little extra intensity and maybe maybe you can't figure
out how to make it look better.
So wrestling is like theatrical kind of,
and you're like,
I'm going to figure out a way for it to look different.
And even,
uh,
even in prepping for a match and preparing for a match,
we would watch the other matches on the screen in the back.
And there's only so many different versions of a match you can do,
especially when you don't like understand the sport that well,
when you just haven't been around it that long.
And so you'd watch somebody and be like,
oh man, they're working the leg or they're working the arm.
It's kind of just part of the way that these matches go.
Well, you can do the exact same match as somebody else
and have it look completely different because your execution was so good.
So no one would ever recognize that you copied the piece of shit match that was before you if yours was better.
Like if your timing was better, if you were snapping better, if you were, you know, like if you did like a drop kick, you got really high and kick the guy in the face rather than, you know, doing some shit drop kick where you barely hit the guy in the chest.
You know, things like that.
You had to really put in, you had to really kind of go for it.
And those are a lot of things I learned through that sport. But it's like when it's time to go and do something,
you want to try to put in the best possible effort that you can.
Part of the reason why I don't do stuff the same way anymore
is because like, first of all, I'm not in a hurry to get, I'm not in a huge hurry to get like better,
you know, which might sound kind of dumb, but like, I don't mind taking my time with stuff.
And I don't mind kind of hanging out in the gym for a little bit. Secondly, like when I'm doing a
lot of stuff, I do a little bit more tempo stuff.
So I'm not trying to move like a maniac.
And one way to kind of show how fierce you are is to move like a maniac.
Um, I might do it sometimes on dumbbells.
I might grab like one fifties and kind of chuck them around and get a little angry and
do stuff like that.
But for the most part, it's like I might grab the eighties and do it with like more tempo.
The mindset is still there though. The intensity with like more tempo the mindset is still there
though the intensity is still there the intent is still there i'm still thinking about how am i
going to get the most out of this set either way it's still the same thing it just it just is going
to look a lot different but in my opinion it's kind of cool when when somebody watches you do something and they go oh fuck like kaylor
woolen with his 915 pull the other day right i didn't see that like i didn't know like it's like
i didn't know we're playing that game like shit like i i don't i don't have an answer to that
like whatever that was that was different he smashed it he absolutely smashed away he crushed
it yeah he's been doing a
lot of conventional pulling he brought up the strength of his lower back he did a 915 deadlift
and it just it just looked like nothing it was stupid sumo he did it sumo yeah sumo yeah geez
yeah he built up his conventional to like 881 i think so he built that up quite a bit and then
he just ripped this nine. I mean,
it just looked like,
like if his hands could handle it,
that he would pull a thousand pounds.
I don't know if this is a nine 15.
How much is that?
What?
There's one that looks different than that.
Maybe is that his, it says nine,
it says nine 15.
Oh,
maybe this is an older one then.
Um,
yeah,
try, uh, Yeah, try... Yeah.
Try more recent stuff.
It was just from like a day or two ago.
Because that one was fast, but he got hung up.
There you go, the red.
Oh, my bad.
Yeah, watch this.
That's actually cool because now we get to compare.
This is just dumb.
Well, his shirt's way better in this one.
Oh, the lockout was so beautiful.
He just slid right through there.
He's looking big.
He's got some good mass to him.
I know that's hard for him, so he's been working hard on that.
Oh, man.
Yeah, no, when he stands up.
Yeah.
And the lats won't go back down when he was here and i was taking pictures of him and he like threw his shirt off and stuff i'm like dude you look like a street
fighter character yeah he looks like a video game yeah it's it's scary his back is wide man but even
like after he dropped it he kind of was like whoa like huh all right well that worked he just doesn't even know what happened yeah man kaylor's
kaylor's legendary but yeah that's oh that's a beautiful pull the real like not to talk about
like sumo technique or anything but like watch his hips yeah like watch his how his hips don't
get affected by the weight like you'll see a of people, their hips will come up when they start the pool, but his hips just stick there. Oh man. Yeah. And I think that that's gotta be the
strengthening of the lower back through the conventional pulling. Yeah. But he's never
been one to lose his hip position. No, no. Yeah. He's always been, he's, he's been getting a lot
of help from, I think the guys, he mentioned the guy's name in there, but Tom Martin, I believe it is.
Tom Martin doesn't get credit as being an awesome power lifter.
He'll actually be at Slingshot Record Breakers.
We'll get to, I never met him before.
Oh, sick.
Really, really talented lifter.
I think he pulls about 400 kilos as well.
He's a conventional guy.
He's an absolute monster.
Oh, that's Kaler.
I'm not sure right maybe he pulls sumo too but he uses a lot of conventional deadlifts to uh get strong yeah
doing some block pulls it looks like yeah he's a strong guy but i think you know back to you know
what i was saying i was saying like i think it, it's good to recognize that maybe you just haven't even worked nearly as hard as you can. Yeah. You know, maybe you just have never, like all of us,
you know, put all of us on blast, right? Like, you know, maybe there's a lot of people listening to
this right now that work out every day and they don't have any idea what it's like to push
themselves as hard as possible. And I'll say that even to myself, because I don't have any idea what it's like to push themselves as hard as possible. And I'll say that even to myself because I don't,
I have trained with people that push,
push,
push,
push really,
really hard during certain types of workouts.
I don't push myself like that all the time.
I could certainly push myself harder now just,
and Andrew will attest to this.
Like when I did the bodybuilding show,
like we trained way harder at that time.
Nothing has really changed.
I didn't like turn into like a big puss.
I still love to train.
We still get after it.
There's still intensity.
But the intent and the purpose, right?
And that's I think we're trying to always find like the reason why and the purpose.
Like what's the purpose behind this?
For Andrew, it was like my boy's doing a bodybuilding show
and I'm going to support him
and I'm going to be there with him.
Then when Andrew turned around
and did the powerlifting meet,
I was like, my boy's doing a powerlifting meet.
I'm going to support him.
And we were driven towards that.
And it's something that worked.
And then sometimes you're like,
man, what are we doing now?
No joke.
When we were doing cable crossovers today,
I was going to say that,
but I didn't know how to approach you about it.
And I didn't like want to sound,
I didn't,
I didn't want to sound like a bitch and be like,
Hey Mark,
like what's next? Cause like everybody asks you that all the time.
Yeah.
But like,
I meant it kind of like,
like what,
where are we going from here now?
Like,
what are we doing?
So,
yeah,
I always have a lot of next,
but I don't have have i don't always have
them in the gym and some of that is like complacency i'll just be honest i i've done it i've
lifted it i lifted a bunch of shit already you know and uh i even sometimes get frustrated with
like even like an instagram post like i don't want to fucking post any more lifting on there
like i already squatted a thousand pounds my numbers are already on the internet they're already there like i've they're cemented
in history they're they're stuck there you know yeah i did a uh the highest total in the history
of california it's stuck there no one's beaten it since and you know it's like go reference that i
don't want to lift that shit anymore it reminds me of elliot when he was talking about like now
he's like you know he's fast and he's smaller than he was he's like i have all this strength shit on
the internet just go look at that you don't need to look at all my new stuff yeah i'm doing something
new now yeah exactly but what you what brian said yesterday in terms of um david goggins he said
when you're at 100 you're only at 40 that is exactly what you're saying right now like when
you actually think you're putting it all out you're not that messed me up that messed me up a little bit too i was thinking about that i'm like yeah exactly
it's like damn not trying at all it's really true and as hard as you're going at jujitsu
uh you know one of your other classmates or something could call you out and be like dude
let's go harder and you'd be like okay. But it only happened for that one practice.
Does it happen at the next practice?
And there's also like some, like what's reasonable?
Like can we be that way all the time?
Maybe if you're that way all the time, you miss out on some camaraderie.
Maybe you miss out on joking with somebody.
Maybe you miss out on somebody saying, hey, dude, like, you know, my girl broke up with me. Can we go hang out afterward? Like,
maybe you miss out on something that keeps you in the game for longer than if you were like,
a whole time. Right. You know what I mean? As funny as it sounds. Right. But like,
maybe maybe that's all maybe that's all part of it. I think guys like Bones Jones and guys like Michael Phelps,
those guys have kind of led the charge in showing people
they knew the right way for them to train.
Some people are like, oh, Bones doesn't show up to practice.
Well, maybe that's because that kind of goes back to what I'm talking about.
Maybe he's playing the long game.
Maybe Bones Jones doesn't go 40%, right?
Maybe he doesn't understand 40%.
Maybe Bones Jones goes 100% when he's there or 95%, you know,
and everyone else is at 40%, right?
Like maybe he goes that extra mile.
And the same would probably be said of like
a Michael Phelps where they were saying for a while he was missing a lot of
practices and he still went in the Olympics and destroyed everybody.
But maybe those people that like,
maybe those guys have found what works best for them.
And maybe when it is time to go,
maybe they're like mental and maybe they just go way harder than everybody else yeah
yeah i know kobe had that mindset kobe just wanted to like light the world on fire he wanted to
work you so he could like he just wanted to also show you all the stories you hear about him like
how he'd like stay there purposely longer after or like he'll watch people and he'll just make
sure that he doesn't leave the
building until after they leave the building just to show that he is working
harder than you,
you know,
that's,
that's something else.
And I mean,
I know Kobe wouldn't have been Kobe unless he was Kobe,
but like,
I mean,
how many more championships would they have had if he was just like a nicer
person to other people?
Right.
Like maybe,
or would they have,
or no, exactly. So I was going to say like. Right. Maybe. Or would they have... I don't know about that.
No, exactly.
I was going to say, or maybe they would have had less.
We don't know.
Yeah.
But it's still, it makes you think.
Let's say he's 5% worse as a basketball, or 10% worse.
Say he's 5% worse on offense, 5% worse on defense, but he's Shaq's homie.
Yeah.
You're right. You know what I mean?
Like, maybe, right?
Might have been six. Yeah, maybe they
win a few more. Who knows?
But, like, even Steve Kerr,
you know, with Michael Jordan, you know,
he went up and punched him.
And Steve Kerr was like, that was the best thing that's ever
happened to me. Like, what?
You know, because obviously, you know. Why the fuck did Michael Jordan punch Steve Kerr? I don't remember. Kerr was like, that was the best thing that's ever happened to me. Like, what?
Because obviously – Why the fuck did Michael Jordan punch Steve Kerr?
I don't remember.
Kerr's like 5'11".
Maybe that's why.
He's just a bully.
But no, who knows.
Kerr, you hit too many game-winning three-pointers.
Son of a bitch.
Damn, he could shoot the lights out too.
Yeah, he was good.
Yeah.
But no, he probably was just like dogging it during one practice, one play,
and he just got all pissed off and went up and punched him.
You know what's funny?
It's Michael Jordan.
He can do whatever he wants.
That's a way to keep them in line.
Yeah.
You guys heard of Smush Parker?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so funny how like even in interviews now,
like Kobe continues to dog on Smush Parker.
That's amazing.
All these years later, he's like, fuck Smush Parker.
Where is Smush right now hearing these things?
Like, damn, Kobe's still coming after me because I didn't work that hard?
I think they wasted a really high draft pick on him or something like that.
I think so.
Not as bad as Kwame Brown.
My name was almost Kwame.
Really?
Yeah.
It just means born on Tuesday, even though I wasn't. But my dad wanted to name me, and my mom was almost kwame really yeah my it just means born on tuesday even though i
wasn't but that's my dad wanted to name me and my mom was like no no let's not name him kwame
yeah and then uh the the guy that uh brian was talking about uh olu oh yeah olu yeah
that is a monster but all i could think about was that that's naz's dad's name oh
yeah but what was that what was that guy's instagram though do you remember
just type in olu you'll you'll i think it'll pop up
olu atafemi something type in olu w-a-t-a
brian was talking about it on the podcast yesterday? Yeah. Right after the podcast.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, this strong Nigerian dude that apparently broke some American squat record.
And he, yeah, like he was saying that, what's that?
Not Larry.
Yeah.
How do you spell it again?
You can just grab it.
You're fine.
It's fine.
It's not like we're live or anything anyway but yeah we
are um yeah but it's uh so interesting to me how different ethnicities have like a better propensity
towards strength you know like um like a lot of a lot of great olympic lifters are chinese
um and you know people might think some of the stuff's like racist or whatever,
but like when it comes to, uh, mobility, when, when things have a lot to do with mobility,
like figure skating, uh, there's a lot of really talented, um, Asian competitors.
And then the same thing in Olympic lifting, like Olympic lifting,
Olympic lifting requires a lot of strength, but it also requires a lot of mobility.
olympic lifting requires a lot of strength but it also requires a lot of mobility and then when it comes to strength we're seeing and even crossfit um a lot of strength and
uh a lot of amazing ability comes from uh some of the nordic countries like uh iceland you know
you see like uh what is it uh or you have uh where's hap hap thor's from uh iceland he's from iceland right
yeah there you go yeah so you have like just these kind of these massive people these massive uh bone
structures yep and your bone structure and like you know a lot of the nigerian people that you
point out to me i'm always like fuck, fuck. Yeah, their bone structure is ridiculous. It really is.
It's insane.
It's insane the way each one of us is gifted something,
but it kind of seems like sometimes we don't have an opportunity to display it
because we don't maybe try that particular sport.
We don't maybe try that particular thing.
But I think it's
i don't know i think this thing it's it's fascinating you know and people i don't really
hear people talk about it that much because i think people think it's like a touchy subject
it's yeah people yeah people think it's a touchy subject but it's it's not it's just like
everybody has advantages in certain areas you know what i mean like i mean if i never started
jujitsu i would never realize that like maybe there's something there for me.
But I like you take a shot at it. So, I mean, I think it's just for everyone just figuring out like not even just athletically, you know, some people shoot.
What are some weird professions? You know, some people start, you know, getting into math or something like that.
And they notice that they're gifted with numbers or something. For some reason that just comes really easy to
them. Everybody has that thing. It's just, you just got to figure out what it is, even if it's
not something within the gym or athletically. What's your next competition in jujitsu?
US Open. I think that's coming up in September, but I literally just found out because uh settlegate told me and joey told me
that there's a there's a slingshot thing happening then where but you bring it a bunch of people are
coming down and having some type of like daniel and bailey and a bunch of stuff like that oh yeah
yeah that's happening on the same weekend oh my god i don't want to miss that so like i'm trying
to figure out like exactly what time the matches are so I can see if I could like
I don't know hopefully it doesn't go choke some people out and leave and come back over here yeah
but that would be the next one I just got to make sure that it won't uh you know get in the way
yeah yeah that's awesome do do you see uh it's Brazilian jiu-jitsu right and do you see a lot
of Brazilians still being dominant in the sport or is it a good mix now?
Because it's been, you know, the information has been taught and it's been out there for a long time.
Like Brazilian jujitsu has really spread to a lot of other people, right?
Yeah, man.
No, there's a lot of like there's a lot of.
Is Cassio Brazilian?
Cassio is Brazilian.
Yeah, he's Brazilian.
He's from there.
He fucks all you guys up.
He fucks all of us up.
He does.
But the thing is that a lot of other people are discovering the martial art.
You're seeing a lot of like, you're seeing a lot of like Gordon, I forgot his name, but
his Instagram name is Gordon Loves Jiu Jitsu.
He's this American dude who's been doing Jiu Jitsu for like six or seven years.
He trains with Donaher.
You know who John Donaher is?
I've heard the name.
Heard the name.
And Gordon's been just wrecking everybody and the thing is gordon is
so loud mouth that like a lot of brazilians don't like him because he's like i'll kill all of you
guys let's put money down let's put 300k down and he's calling out top guys and he's actually
proving it so like jujitsu is spreading and it's like there are a lot still a lot of brazilians at
the top but there are a lot of other people that are now like inching towards that.
Right.
So, oh, yeah, this guy.
Yeah.
Even in the UFC, we still see a lot of Brazilians being dominant.
But, yeah, no, since it's spread, you're seeing a lot of like a lot of Americans are really starting to, you know, take that.
And you actually are seeing there's quite a few pro athletes like NFL guys in the lower ranks that have started and that are just like putting it down.
Like the guy who beat me at Pan Ams, Jason Shirley.
He just got his perfect belt, too.
So hopefully we'll be able to compete against each other at Worlds again sometime.
But yeah, he's killing.
What are some things in jujitsu that have really surprised you?
What are some things in jujitsu that have really surprised you?
I think the first big thing that surprised me that made me really want to stick with jujitsu is that strength matters, but it doesn't matter.
And I mean it like this.
It's still relevant.
It's relevant.
It's not.
It's maybe not an enormous factor. It's not an enormous factor if you don't have the technique to back it up.
And I realized that by getting my ass kicked by so many people that were hundreds of pounds lighter than me
initially and it's because i didn't have that technique so i was just trying to like hold their
arm but i'd hold their arm and then they use the momentum of me holding them to push me through and
lock my arm in some shit i was just like god dang martial art yeah it's like an art and there's a
skill and practice you practice of this art.
And if you don't adhere to it.
You're not going anywhere.
You're not going.
Like literally, right?
I mean, you could get me in stuff.
Obviously, you could like break my arm or you could tweak this or tweak that.
But you could get me in a position where I cannot move.
And I've been lifting and exercising my entire life.
You've moved thousands of pounds.
Yeah. People seen me bench press 578
pounds, but I could be in a position
where I literally cannot move. Yeah.
That's what got me so stuck into it.
Yeah, exactly. That's what got me so stuck into
it because... And Josh can probably, Josh weighs
170, right? Or 160. He could probably
put me in a position where I can't move.
It's embarrassing.
He has a wrestling base, right embarrassing he has a wrestling base right
he has a wrestling base just to make it official he would be fired just so he knows he'd be like
he had to be like mr bell there's no way i could hold you in this position you know you're way too
strong you're way too powerful you know what i mean you have to lie about it because uh someone
on the someone on the live chat uh known as clhH says wrestlers dominate jujitsu.
That's kind of funny because that's a joke.
And let me tell you why.
Wrestlers dominate jujitsu at the lower levels.
Wrestlers are like cats.
They don't like to be on their back.
So especially in the gi, let me say this.
In the gi, wrestlers are scared because they don't like being stopped.
They like keeping things moving so
if i grab a wrestler's gi and stop him from moving around he's mine like yeah i think it's if you're
a wrestler shoot get into jiu-jitsu because you already have a a base of like grappling but
jiu-jitsu is different because once it's taken to the ground that's not a wrestler's domain
you know he can like put people in holes and stuff but it's it's not a wrestler's domains beyond his back you know so there's strengths and weaknesses to wrestlers but they don't dominate
like you can you can beat wrestlers they're scary initially so i've been watching ufc since ufc won
so maybe i can clear up what this guy's thinking and what he's seeing wrestlers do great in MMA and they do amazing in the UFC
but the UFC is a totally different game than just jiu-jitsu or just wrestling the UFC the guys are
so skilled that you can't really even you can you can use jiu-jitsu and you could you know you see people tap quite frequently um but most people
are aware and most people are pretty darn skilled or at least skilled enough in jujitsu to where
they can block a lot of the things sometimes you don't even see jujitsu being practiced in the ufc
what you might see more of is more striking and more wrestling that's not really
because wrestling is superior or striking is a superior form of like combat or superior way to
protect yourself or to uh even inflict harm on someone else it's just the fact that a lot of
these guys know how to block these other holds and these other moves so people like it's a strategy game right like if i
already know that you know jujitsu really well i'm like i take my chances up here you know and so
and even for yourself if you've been working on your striking you might be like i don't really
care like if we end up on the ground we end up on the ground so therefore you and i could fight
for five rounds and not even end up doing any jujitsu yeah but that doesn't really mean that you know wrestling or uh you know um punching and
kicking is is superior you know normally what you see in the ufc the best guys they have a really
good wrestling background and they have a good striking background again that doesn't mean that
that they don't know anything about jujitsu thoughitsu, though. Like, you're not going to see, you don't see Bones Jones.
You might see Bones Jones choke someone out,
but it's usually after he kind of, like, beats the shit out of him first.
He beats him down first.
Yeah.
And then choking the person out is actually, like, just a byproduct of, like,
he really kicked the shit out of the guy, and the guy can't defend himself anymore.
But for the most part in the UFC, all those guys are fairly skilled
when it comes to at least defending some of it.
That's kind of what I've seen over the years.
That might be what that guy is kind of referring to.
The Daniel Cormier's and some of these guys
getting in there and smothering people.
Man, yeah, I get exactly what you're saying.
There's two sides to this.
Ben Askren was killing until he got that knee to the
face and he was like a pure wrestler too so right there's a weakness there because that guy knew he
was going to go to the ground he just smacked him in the face but then there's habib well then
there's habib and you know what's funny habib doesn't even do jujitsu he just started he's a
white belt in jujitsu right now you know what i mean mean? How terrifying is that? That is scary as shit.
Now, like, Habib is just someone who, like, he can strike and he can do all that.
But if he gets his arms around you, that's wrestling and a bunch of other grappling stuff.
But, my God, like, how do you explain that?
You know, you can strike the hell out of him.
But if he takes you, like.
Yeah, Dan Severin, who we had here on the podcast.
It's like the guy got through a whole career of 50 or 60 fights without a scratch on him and he didn't even know how to do anything
he's like jujitsu what's that he's like what are they gonna do put their arm put my arm behind
their my back he's like how bad could that hurt he's like what's the big deal yeah i think mma
is a different beast from like competition jujitsu it's a totally different beast so yeah
and and uh also having a gi have you done have you done uh i mean i guess i haven't competed in
nogi yeah i trained some nogi but i haven't competed in nogi um a huge difference between
the two right there is a huge difference i think that like competing in the gi can be good for nogi
because there's there's a lot more things you can do in a gi that you just
won't do a no gi because you don't have anything to grab on you just have your opponent so no gi
is slipperier more slippery um there's less time to like since you can't really grab on something
and keep your opponent down it like there's a lot more movement a lot more pummeling um
so so there's also there's also no gi gi jujitsu tournaments, no gi jujitsu
tournaments. There's no gi worlds. Um, yeah, like for every competition that there's a gi,
there's a competition for no gi. Oh wow. Pretty much. Yeah. So I haven't competed much in no gi
cause I don't have that many no gi training partners. Um, but it's fun. It's, it's really,
really fun. No gi also is a, a lot of people like to go for legs in Nogi.
So I'm very careful with the competitions I pick because there's a certain thing called a heel hook in Jiu-Jitsu.
And heel hooks are like probably the most dangerous submission because if someone really cranks it, they'll tear your ACL and they'll just rip your knee up.
And people have done that in competition before too.
So I stay away from any competition that has heel hooks involved
because I want to compete for a long time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, at a lot of tournaments, you'll see guys put on heel hooks,
and they're not nice about it.
Even if – like guys that I train with,
if they put on heel hooks in competition,
they'll hold it, and their opponent knows that they have it.
But there are some guys who just like they don't care,
and they have your foot, and they're just like and they end your career
so like whoops yeah it's not a whoops though it's on purpose oh yeah because it's not one of those
things you accidentally do yeah like when when we were at 10th planet i seen a chick he'll hook
another chick and like they were well so before that they were going at it for a while and yeah i mean i'm sure you've seen this you know i'm maybe not at cassio's but you've seen
people where they're like they're rolling and oh shit you stepped up okay i'm gonna step and
they yeah of course they just kept amping up and up and up and i can see the look in her face
and she got her heel hook and pop up and oh like i just heard both of them both like scream at the
same time and i was like oh you suck the same time. And I was like,
Oh,
you suck for doing that.
Yeah.
But it was like interesting.
Cause like I seen it go from like stage one to,
Oh,
you're mean for doing that one.
Cause you can tell like she did it on purpose.
Yeah,
man.
She just got a,
you,
you,
you gotta know what's dangerous.
Yeah.
Uh,
how excited are you guys for a Masvidal versus Diaz?
That's going to be awesome Dude I can't wait
I think November 1st
I love watching Diaz fight
My thing is
I'm afraid because obviously I'm a Diaz fan
He's like
Half an hour away from here right now
Stockton
He gets hit And he keeps coming at you,
but Masvidal has some serious power.
Oh, my God.
I feel like they're almost the same person, kind of.
Yeah, that's what makes it so interesting.
Yeah.
I haven't been this fired up for a fight since probably,
I don't know, maybe Diaz-McGregor.
Oh.
Yeah.
That should be pretty cool.
I think we should kind of bring this one in
and maybe kind of leave people with something that they can do.
Give them something tangible to try out.
You see people kind of put up these 30-day challenges and things like that,
and I think those kind of things can be, uh, sort of fun. And this could kind of help, uh, lead you into suffering beautifully as, as our friend,
Brian Aldrew, uh, said on our podcast. I think, you know, something that I would give people,
um, to do, you know, we talk a lot about many different things here on the podcast, but
just try, just try a couple of days.
Try let's, I'll just give you a certain amount of days. Let's just try two days
of a very, very low carbohydrate intake. Try two days of very low carbohydrate intake.
Let's say that you're somebody that kind of pays attention to the food that you're eating.
You normally eat like 200 or 300 grams. Try a day where the only like intentional carbs
that you eat is maybe the equivalent of like half of a baked potato, or maybe it's the equivalent of
maybe like a cup of rice. And throughout the day with your other food, maybe you have some veggies
and you have some meat. Just, just try it out two days. If you can make it a third day, that would be kind of cool.
See how it feels. Did it feel good? Did you sleep well? Did your workouts feel okay?
If they didn't, then maybe it's not great for you or maybe you have to make some adjustments and try to increase the amount of fat and try it for a few more days. But I think it's really worth
a try to try things out for two or three days at a time,
see how it feels and see if you can kind of continue on the path. If it, if it feels okay
for you, you might find yourself losing some water weight that you just kind of been holding
onto for a while. So that's kind of my challenge to you is, um, try low carbohydrates, try,
you know, getting under like 50 grams and give it a shot for two or three days.
Yeah, no, that's, that's, that's awesome. But, um, if you can do it for more than two,
three days and do it for more than two or three days, because like the learning curve you talked
about, maybe you didn't really get that learning curve in that, in that little bit of time. Maybe
you got to add some more things in, you know, and then it'll really work well for you. I know it
didn't work for me initially when I went low carb, I felt like shit and I almost stopped. So because you're
going low carb, maybe bump the fats up immediately, you know, have a ribeye, uh, have some whole eggs,
a couple of things like that. Salt. Yeah. Add that salt. Yeah. Keep that salt in. Yeah. And
if I'm going to leave anybody with anything, just like, I think like Andrew said, you know, if you're working out, do a little bit more the
next day. Maybe if you're doing some cardio stuff, do an extra set of burpees or, or maybe an extra
set of maybe an extra set of squats, try it out and see how you feel. Um, but just try and do a
little bit more and try to find where that is. Try to find where that place is where you're like, okay, I didn't know I could do this and I did.
Okay, let me work with this.
Figure that out.
Give it a shot.
Yeah, and I would just add to that is like whatever it is in the gym, like whether it's a machine that you look at, you pass by every day, you haven't touched in a couple months.
Or you've seen Mark Bell do burpees
one day and you haven't done a burpee in like four years, give it a try this week.
See what happens.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think that makes a lot of sense.
And it's, if you haven't done one in four years, why not try to give yourself a repetition
amount that makes sense, that represents the fact that you haven't been
doing it in four years. So let's say you're doing it in between doing some, uh, you know, one arm
dumbbell presses or something like that. Cause it's a great opportunity to do a burpee in between
a movement like that, because it's going to get your heart rate up. You're still going to be able
to be effective with the, uh, overhead press. You go back and forth between the two.
Just do like four or five reps.
Keep it really, really easy.
Maybe even go down one rep and you do four sets of the overhead press
and you do four, three, two, one with your burpees.
Just kind of ease your way into it.
Get a good feel for it.
Get a good feel for it, get a good sensation
for it. And Seema just reminded me of, there's a really good speech and it's called Just Do It.
And it's from someone I admire a ton. His name is, his name is Art Williams. Art Williams is,
has been a motivational speaker for a really long time. I was lucky enough to see him live.
I actually tried to chase him down and I got in trouble. I like went backstage and they were like, what are
you doing back here? I was like, Oh, I'm a friend of arts. They were like, get out of here. They,
they knew, they knew I didn't, I didn't know him, but, uh, Art Williams, uh, used to sell
life insurance and he ended up, he ended up selling life insurance not selling life insurance he
ended up starting a life insurance company and he ended up beating prudential and he ended up
beating some of the biggest companies in the world he later ended up selling it he's extremely
successful to the tune of like he's worth like four billion dollars or something really wild
like that and uh he did his speech in 1984.
It's called Just Do It.
And in 1985, Nike started their Just Do It campaign.
You can kind of read between the lines.
Nike claims they don't know anything about it, but I'm sure they do.
But during his speech, he talked about a little bit more.
He kept saying a little bit more, a little bit more, a little bit more.
He said, what's the $50,000 a year guy do?
Or what's the $200,000 a year guy do that the $50,000 a year guy isn't doing?
And he just said, he does this a little bit more.
He does that a little bit more.
He does this a little bit more.
So try to figure out a little bit more that you can do in your day.
Strength is never a weakness.
Weakness is never strength.
Catch you guys later.