Mark Bell's Power Project - Mark Bell's Saturday School EP. 2 - How To Get Out Of A Rut?
Episode Date: May 30, 2020Welcome back to Mark Bell's Saturday School, we hope you had a fantastic week! Today's class will cover the topic of getting out of a rut. People are blaming the lockdown for the reason their fitness ...has deteriorated, claiming they're in a rut. Truth is, it doesn't matter what's going on in the world, people have struggled with consistency for years. Mark Bell is going to teach us how to get out of a rut today. Get your note pads out and get ready, class is now in session. #SaturdaySchool Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Support the show by visiting our sponsors! ➢Perfect Keto: http://perfectketo.com/power25 Use Code "POWERPROJECT" for 25% off and free shipping on orders of $29! ➢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 ➢Icon Meals: http://iconmeals.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" for 10% off ➢Sling Shot: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz #PowerProject #MarkBell
Transcript
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Hey, everybody. Thank you so much for joining in on Smelly Saturday School.
This episode, we're just getting rolling with these and appreciate you guys as patients in listening to this.
This episode is sponsored by our people over at Perfect Keto.
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$29 or more. We got all that stuff out of the way and it's time to get rolling here on smelly
Saturday school. We're, we're working on naming it and you guys can actually probably help us if
you want to, you know, maybe vibe with something along the lines of the people's coach or I, I,
Andrew came up with the idea of Saturday school. I'm digging that. But it's a
new format that we're trying out. And I'm basically going to answer a question. We're going to go five
to seven minutes or so and just kind of give you like a little something a little different. So
here we go. Andrew's going to kick it off with the first question here.
Yeah, buddy. I know times are a little bit different right now with the shelter in place, the lockdown, gyms being shut down and stuff. But the unpopular truth is people have kind of
always been struggling. They've always been in a rut, right? You hear about it all the time.
I'm guilty of saying that as well. So regardless of everyone's current situation,
Mark, how does somebody get out of a rut when it comes to their
fitness? Man, life is a battle. You know, you have a lot of ups and downs and it can be very
difficult to turn your life into being mechanical. It can be very difficult to turn your life into
being factual, but I have found it to be super helpful. And let me explain
what I found to be helpful exactly. So first of all, there's no job that's too great when it's
broken down into smaller parts. I believe Henry Ford is famous for saying something along those
lines. Or maybe it was Harrison Ford and maybe it was in The Fugitive.
I don't remember.
But anyway, somebody said that quote, and I always really liked it a lot
because we could sit here and we could think about the Power Project,
and man, we got a lot of work to do and stuff.
But then I can break it down into facts, and I can say,
I got my boy Andrew.
He's handling all the audio. He's handling all the audio.
He's handling all the visual.
He handles all the tech stuff.
And that's not really a major concern of mine.
So I don't really need to worry myself with that.
I'm a big fan of not really worrying about anything. But here's how you get yourself to this point.
And then here's how it frees up time to not get into a rut.
So I will get to my point.
to this point. And then here's how it frees up time to not get into a rut. So I will get to my point. And then I also know like, you know, we're going to do a podcast and we're going to have some
really smart people on here. We're going to have people that are going to talk over my head and
that can be intimidating. But again, I know I got my boy Andrew here. I know I got Nsema here.
I have people that have different perspectives. I have people that
have different life experiences. And so if I'm, you know, if I'm kind of stuck, I know that I
have other people to rely on. So you can bring down your levels of anxiety. You can really
actually, you know, they talk about like flattening the curve. You could smash the ever living crap out of your anxiety by bringing in facts. Sometimes the facts can be scary because sometimes,
you know, sometimes you could be really dealing with something that is, is really brutal,
but just a little bit on anxiety. Anxiety is fear of something that hasn't happened.
anxiety is fear of something that hasn't happened.
So you kind of think about that.
Anxiety is fear over something that hasn't happened.
Fear is something that is learned.
Being scared of stuff is something that is learned.
We do have in our DNA, we do have the ability to notice danger and notice when things are dangerous.
And that's kind of a different thing. Like the tiger over there, that tiger is dangerous.
You know, I'm not going near that tiger.
But normally our fears in today's society are, I would say, 95% psychological. And most of the struggle of today's world is psychological.
Every once in a while, you could have something that's physiological. So,
you get a diagnosis and you have cancer, right? Now, who deals really, really poorly with cancer? Most of the time,
it's the family members that struggle with it. And sometimes it's the person, right? Obviously,
the person's going to struggle with as well. But normally, the people that are impacted the worst
or that are hurt the worst, they're like, man, why'd that have to happen to him? Normally,
the cancer patient isn't thinking, why did this have to happen to me? Now, they do get into that
situation for periods of time. They kind of come in and out of that because they get really sick.
It's a brutal, you know, the therapy for it is brutal. They throw up a lot. I've been around a
lot of people that have had it before, and it is just a nightmare. But I would say that it's even though the even though the other people aren't going through it, the family members probably think about it in the worst way.
But again, if we're trying to if we're trying to apply facts to stuff, then we would have to say, OK, well, if I got cancer, what kind of cancer is it? Okay,
it's this kind of cancer. Okay, well, there's X amount of treatments for it. My good friend,
Jason Kalipa, his daughter went through leukemia and they got really sad. They were super upset.
They cried a lot. They cried a lot in the hospital. The wife said, Ashley, she came to Jason and she came to the rest of the family and said, nope, we're not crying. And everybody's like, what?
How do we not cry? Our eight-year-old daughter, maybe seven-year-old daughter, Ava,
has leukemia. How are we not going to cry? And what she said was, we're not crying right here. You know, once once you walk through the doors of this hospital, we are not crying. Somebody needs to cry. You go and you cry by yourself somewhere else. But she was talking about banding together. She was talking about being strong.
she talked about this is this comes from epistemology, which I don't think maybe she doesn't is unaware. But epistemology is just like what can be knowable? What's knowable about this
topic? What's knowable about leukemia? What's the survival rate? Because let's just say the
survival rate, let's say the survival rate is 10 percent. Let's say it's really low, which it's not
that low. Right. But let's just say it's 10%. Well, you can say, I'm going to be part of that 10%. And I want to figure out
what are the facts? What's the information? How do we learn a lot about this? Who's an expert?
Where's a book I can read? Point me to it. Point me to somebody who's read all these books.
Where are the best doctors? Where are the best people that know about this? Who,
Where are the best doctors? Where are the best people that know about this?
Who somebody somewhere knows about this? Somebody else had leukemia. My mom's sister died of leukemia when she was nine years old.
My mom used to watch watch her every day. It was like it was like her.
It was like her own daughter slash best friend slash baby sister, you know, and it was it was very hard.
slash best friend, slash baby sister, you know, and it was, it was very hard. But that was 40 years ago, 50 years ago, times have changed, we have new technology, we have new treatments,
we have hope. And so when you start to think about, I realize this is like a lot of different
things I'm talking about all at one time, right? But for those of you that are stuck in a rut,
one time, right? But for those of you that are stuck in a rut, start to think about what's knowable about the situation that I'm in. Who else gets into a rut? Well, professional basketball
players get into a rut. Professional baseball players, professional baseball players can only
hit the ball 30% of the time. And those are some of the best guys. Those are the guys that go to the all-star game. You know, if you, if you bat, you know, 300 or 350 or something for your career,
then you're, you're a monster. So what's knowable about the situation? Well, a lot of people get
into a rut. Well, why did they get into a rut? Um, there's a great quote that I love and it says, he, um, he who stops is overwhelmed,
distanced and crushed, right? So you should never be overwhelmed. There's no reason to be
overwhelmed because, because now you can be overwhelmed for like a moment. That's okay.
Like we're all human. You're going to slip up. We're going to get behind and you might feel that,
oh my God, I'm overwhelmed. Okay. But if you're prepared, you should never really be overwhelmed. I know we all have that
friend where everything's like on point, everything you're and you always look at them and you're like,
how is this possible? How does this guy do this? Well, it's not because he's better than you at
anything. It's just that he's prepared. He learned somewhere along the way the importance of being prepared. And you've heard people say this before. If you're not prepared,
you're preparing to fail, right? So you always want to try to figure out how can I be a step
ahead? You do not need to be smart to be a step ahead. You don't need to be fast to be a step
ahead. You don't need to be quick. You don't need to be strong. You don't really need to be anything. You don't need anything from a genetic standpoint to be a step ahead.
for the next thing that you're getting into. So you just need to be prepared. It's about preparedness. So back to the original question of how do you get out of a slump?
You get out of a slump by being prepared. And the way that you're prepared is
that you have a skill set that can prevent you from ever even thinking about a slump in the first place.
A skill set that would prevent you from getting into a slump,
let's say that you are a triathlete, but you also have learned how to lift,
you know how to do squats, you know how to do bench, you know how to do deadlift.
And let's say you live in New York, like my uncle. So my uncle gets in a little rut.
He's not running as much as he used to. Maybe he hurt his ankle. Maybe it's the winter and maybe that same drive that was calling him years ago to wake up at four and to be hitting the pavement at five when it's 20 degrees out and it's wet and snowing. Maybe that's gone. Like maybe some of that died
off. Maybe he just doesn't have that anymore. However, he learned how to lift. He learned how
to bench. He learned how to squat. He learned how to deadlift. So can he flip his mind over to that?
so can he flip his mind over to that like hey man hey you wake up it's snowing outside you know you're like i should really go run and then your wife makes you like a hot cocoa and
then like there you are like everything unravels and you're watching football all day uh sitting
on your sofa with the fireplace on which sounds sounds way better, right? And we all have those moments where we've talked ourselves out of doing one thing and kind of went the complete
opposite route. But our ladies know what's best for us. We need to calm the hell down every once
in a while. But, you know, back to that scenario. Well, if my uncle hadn't learned how to lift,
he wouldn't be able to flip to something different. So for me in times of quarantine, luckily, you know, I was looking on my phone the other day,
like some stuff popped up from my iCloud. I have kind of figured out the iCloud by the way,
which is a whole nother podcast for a whole nother day because no one's ever figured it
out in the history of the world. I don't think. But I saw some like older videos and stuff. And
it was like July of, I think, 20, 2018, which isn't that long ago, but I was running on the
treadmill. And it says, you know, it's like one of those kind of Gary Vee looking IG clips. And it
says, you know, Mark Bell, like in this, in this black print on a
white background says Mark Bell running question mark. And it's me running to the
half natty anthem that we have that music that you guys always hear playing in the background.
Had I not started doing that two years ago, I would not be prepared for what's going on today. When the quarantine hit,
we decided to shut down Super Training Gym for everybody. And I thought it would be a dick move
if I was in there training while everybody else was kind of feeling not so great and not being
able to have access to gyms. And, you know, I thought mainly about my own crew and mainly about my own staff and my team at super training gym. And I just thought,
you know, that kind of seems like a dick move. We're a team. We do stuff as a team. We do stuff
together and I'm not going to go in there and, and, uh, flaunt that I'm in there, uh, training
every day and talk about my training split and so on, you know? So I decided to, uh, come up here
to Bodega Bay and enjoy the beach and enjoy the weather up here,
but there's a lot of hills, and there's just a lot of exercise to get in, so I'm like, well,
at the very least, I'll walk, but because I've been prepared and because I've been messing with
this for a while, I started to run. I started to run some stairs. I started to do some of this
with a 40-pound weight vest. I did eight sprints of this with a 40 pound weight vest. Um, I did eight
sprints up that brutal Hill. That's a, that's kind of down the road from me here. It's probably
about 150 yards, uh, worth of sprinting. And I did eight of them and I probably did in about 25
minutes or so felt like I was going to puke my guts out all over the place. It was, it was a
very, very difficult, but I shifted gears and I don't even care. I don't care.
I don't care about when we're opening back up. I do love to lift. So as the second that we open
up the doors to super training, I'll be super pumped to get in there and do all those things.
But the best way to get out of a slump is number one, to be prepared. Number two is to not try to make things so difficult
all the time. So let's say that you're not prepared. Let's say that you don't have a
secondary skillset. You know, I've learned a lot of this from seeing good friends, again,
like someone like Jason Kalipa, who knows how to do all these different CrossFit movements.
And it's like, well, if you know how to do a burpee or you know how to do like a thruster, like what kind of weight do
you need for a thruster to have a good workout? It's like go back and forth between doing pushups
and thrusters or burpees and curls. I mean, like curls with a band or something, right? Like
you can have these murderous workouts, but you wouldn't be able to do that unless you had a skill set.
Have you really messed around or practiced like a box jump before?
Have you done mountain climbers before?
Do you have knowledge?
Again, what's knowable?
Do you have knowledge?
Maybe for, let's say, like our parents' generation or maybe for our aunts or uncles generation. They don't have that knowledge.
So what do they do in time of quarantine when they can't get to the gym and use their elliptical?
They do nothing because they don't.
If they have something at their house, maybe they decided to audible and do something there.
But you see how attached everyone gets to stuff.
So the second thing that's super important, and they're not even really necessarily
in order, but the second thing that's important to avoid a slump, again, is to really try to push
off the ability to even get into one. And kind of like a cheat meal, you just don't ever really,
I think that a cheat meal, I think it's a fun term to use, so I still utilize it, but
I think that a cheat meal is part of your diet.
I think that a slump, being in a slump is part of life. And there's really no reason to like
draw attention to it. So you could potentially be thinking about I'm in a slump from lifting.
Or you can think about it, you know what, I'm really kicking a lot of ass on these walks.
Because you could have taken a little break, you know, rather than a slump,
maybe think about it as a little bit of a break. You know, you want to be honest with yourself too. Like, are you
being a wimp? Are you being kind of a puss about it? Those are, those are logical things to be
concerned about. But in my opinion, a lot of times people make exercise out to be way too hard. They
make it out to be way too difficult. And that's how the slump happens in the first place. They do the same thing with their nutrition. They make their nutrition
so hard and they use a lot of, um, forceful techniques, um, of, um, like coercion. Like they,
they will, um, if I don't do this, then, you know, I better do this or else, you know, if I, if I
don't, if I don't get this kind of training in, then Monday I'm going no carbs for like seven days.
Like I'm going all in. And then what happens when that doesn't happen?
So you have to make sure that these are things that you want to do and kind of lean towards that,
find the things that you find interesting and start to go in that direction.
And so, as I said, you know, earlier, you know, maybe you just shift gears and you try to do something a little bit different.
If you feel like like if you just don't if you don't feel like doing something, then you also need to question your interest level a little bit of like, let's say that you started a diet and you wanted to lose like 30 pounds. Okay.
And you lost 10, but now you keep screwing up, gained back five, you're unmotivated, you're on the couch and you're at that tipping point where you can go back and gain the weight
back and have not made any progress. or you can kind of continue fighting for this
idea that you want to lose 30 pounds.
If you're fighting with that too much, people that try to fight through drug addiction don't
make it because it can't be a fight.
It can't be a struggle.
It has to be something that you really want to do.
Therefore, you're not fighting with yourself for it.
Therefore, it's not an internal battle.
Somebody who lost 100 pounds, when you ask them in retrospect, how hard was that?
They say, actually, you want to know what?
It wasn't that bad.
And the reason why they're able to say that is because their interest level was so high
that they were like, I'm more interested in weighing less than I am waking up in the middle
of the night and going through my pantry. I'm more interested in getting up off the couch and
going for a walk a couple of times a day than I am in doing anything else. So if your interest
level is wavering, that's okay. That's totally fine. But you might have to kind of redefine what
you're doing. And that might be a good time to say, you know what?
I'm not going to worry too much about losing any more weight.
I'm just going to focus on really not gaining any weight and I'm going to keep my exercise
going.
And then maybe in a couple of weeks when a desire comes back and it hits you again, maybe
you start kind of heading in that direction again. So
that would be some of my advice. You know, again, what I like to say here is like,
you want things to be an underhand pitch, you know? So throw yourself those underhand pitches.
What do you really love to do? You know, don't be so hard on yourself all the time.
Don't make things out to be so difficult all the time.
Find some things that are simple.
The things that are simple are going to be repeatable.
The things that are simple and repeatable are going to be nearly impossible to get into
a slump for.
Like if somebody said, you know, when was the last time you went a week without a 10
minute walk?
You'd be like, I don't know.
It's like I've been doing them for the last two, three years, you know, because maybe you've gone a day
just because like, you didn't have an opportunity to get one in or whatever. You're not like real
rigorous about it. But when things are kind of simple and when things are boiled down into their
simplest form, again, no job is too great when it's boiled down into kind of smaller parts.
again, no job is too great when it's boiled down into kind of smaller parts.
Then you're like, you know, I also refer to it as chump change. You know, it's chump change like that. It's easy. Like, dude, do do 20 pushups every day. Kidding me? Like someone said,
hey, man, you know, do 20 pushups every day for the year. Like when you first wake up,
do 20 pushups. Is that difficult to do?
for the year. Like when you first wake up, do 20 pushups. Is that difficult to do?
There might be some days where you're like, oh, my wrist kind of hurts. I don't feel like getting on the ground. My back hurts. Like, you know, you can talk yourself out of it, but is there
anything that's actually difficult about that? I've heard other people say, you know, they pop
some pushups every time they use the restroom for the day. And they do 10 or 20 or something like that. So try to instill some disciplines that actually make sense that aren't going to
impede on the rest of your life that aren't going to be these giant mountains to climb.
Because if it feels like it's too hard, it probably is. And those are going to be the
things that you're going to get in a slump for. Boom. Hopefully you had this question burning
deep inside you. And hopefully you can use this
to help get yourself out of a rut. If this isn't your question, we are easily accessible. This is
a super open platform. This is your best way to get in touch with Mark Bell. Hit us up at
Mark Bell's Power Project on Instagram, at MB Power Project on Twitter. Hit us up like Mark
said in the first episode, at us saturday school or hashtag
saturday school do whatever it takes to get our attention um like i said we're super easily you
know accessible uh you have no more excuses you can't say uh i wish i could do this or i could
do that if only i could talk to mark this is your opportunity please take advantage of it
for uh any information on our
sponsors, if you want to support them, because they support us, all links and everything will
be down in the description. And again, please hit us up at Mark Bell's Power Project at MB
Power Project. Mark Bell, where are you at? How many of you are guilty of making things
way too hard for yourselves? Give yourself that underhand pitch. You know, like think about the way that you would pitch to your six-year-old son, the way you would pitch him a ball. Underhand
pitch, you show him the ball, you hold the ball up and you say like, hey, see the ball, keep your
eye on the ball, keep your elbow up high. Okay, here it comes. And you throw him an underhand
pitch and you get some air under it so the ball stays up in the air for a while so they can smash the hell out of it.
So do the same thing for yourself.
Serve yourself up those underhand pitches
and knock them out of the freaking park with keeping things super simple.
I'm at Mark Smelly Bell, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube.
Strength is never a weakness.
Weakness is never a strength.
Catch you all later.