Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 604 - The ATG Mentor Keegan Smith
Episode Date: October 6, 2021We are going to extreme range of motion with today's guest Keegan Smith, aka The ATG Mentor! Keegan the coach for the ATG Group and coached the World Championship Rugby Team the Sydney Roosters in 201...3 which included Sonny Bill Williams (the world’s highest paid rugby player). Today he shares his success going knees over toes and how he's been able to gain size and strength while keeping the fat off. Follow Keegan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkaSejlbGLa4OGq32bCbXFA/videos And on Instragram: https://www.instagram.com/theatgmentor/ Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Magic Spoon Cereal: https://www.magicspoon.com/powerproject to automatically save $5 off a variety pack! ➢8 Sleep: Visit https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro! ➢Marek Health: https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT15 for 15% off ALL LABS! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: http://drinklmnt.com/powerproject ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Subscribe to the Power Project Newsletter! ➢ https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb 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 ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This man's how you're doing the splits.
Splits.
You know, for reals, I didn't know what ATG stood for for a very long time.
It means to get down low, I think, right?
Yeah.
Ass to grass.
Ass to grass.
I wasn't sure, though.
After we had Ben Patrick on and, you know, the whole ATG.
So you missed the whole episode.
But I just, it just didn't click
I hate that I hate when you don't
know like you don't want to ask because
everyone's already talking about it
ATG squats or ATG split
ATG I love it yeah it's great
everyone's doing it
honestly my favorite show on Netflix
ATG changed
my life have you guys heard of Squid
Game though I've heard of it I have no idea what it is it reminds me of ATG changed my life have you guys heard of Squid Game though?
I've heard of it I have no idea what it is
it reminds me of ATG
no I have not heard of Squid Game
go watch Squid Game it's this Korean
are we on air?
it's this Korean series
and it's really fucking good
is it dubbed?
it's subbed and dubbed
you can watch the dubbed in English or you can watch the Korean with subtitles.
Don't want to ruin it, but let's just say it's about people have these debts.
And the way for them to pay these debts is by playing a game where if they lose the game, they die.
Oh, that's right.
I watched the first 30 seconds of the first episode.
And you stopped because you just...
Because I didn't know what was going on and I wasn't paying attention.
More so, we should say, you don't have a good attention span.
Yeah.
30 seconds, bro? Like, 30
seconds. You couldn't even give it three minutes.
Because the voiceovers were really bad
and I was just like... They watched in Korean.
I know, I should. I would be more
into that than the English.
You guys ever get into Game of Thrones?
I finished that. Never once. The ending was horrible ending was horrible nope yeah it wasn't very good the ending but uh there's a new uh
new version of it coming out so it's like uh supposed to be like i don't know before
they ever got to some of the stuff that they got to i guess prequel it goes into the uh
who the fuck were the dragon something dragon the um what was their last name
not the targaryens it was the whatever their last name i didn't watch a lot of dragons every time i
tried to watch some of it there was always uh homosexual activity what did that turn you on
yeah i was like i cannot sit here with this raging boner like this.
And he's like,
Mark,
what's going on?
Yeah.
It's like,
Oh my goodness.
Don't bother me when I watch him.
Like every time I went to watch it,
I was like,
does this,
is this all that happens in this show?
I think that was,
and Andy's like,
no,
she's like,
it doesn't.
And then it's like,
it's like,
no,
there's great dialogue.
And then there's like a bunch of incest and stuff.
And I'm like,
I don't understand what's going on. So I really got way into it but my wife watched a lot so
i would watch it here and there with her that was the first show that i saw so much dude butt on tv
because in a lot of other shows before that time period i think it was like 2014-15 game of thrones
came up and i was like why is a lot of dude butt and then it just started becoming a thing where
you just see dude button every episode i'm just like okay well i guess it's fair but i see a lot of dude but and then it just started becoming a thing where you just see dude button every episode i'm just like okay well i guess it's fair but i see a lot of female button other
shows i should see a lot of dude but and then i started seeing sorry scene two movement yeah i
know there's a lot of dude but i can go back and check it out that's quite a bit of dick you know
like you see some dick here and there i'm just like oh maybe i should go back and watch yeah
what's great is like now that it's it's all already, like I don't I can binge watch, you know, as much as I want.
Like I have to wait for the next episode.
It's going to be a hard series to binge.
It's a good series.
It's going to be hard to binge watch.
Are the episodes long?
I'm already out.
Nope.
My man with his three minute attention span.
Yeah.
Well, we got into Brooklyn Nine-Nine like recently and my my daughter was like oh no it's the last uh last
episode or whatever and i was like what like is there another season and she's like yeah there's
like eight i was like oh sick so we finished the first season is that the shit with terry cruz yeah
and andy sandberg that shit is hilarious terry cruz is just doing some of Joel Seidman's workouts. Yeah, right. That's right.
And Terry Crews is jacked.
Yes.
He's fucking jacked.
Yeah.
His character on Brooklyn Nine-Nine is great, too.
He has two little daughters.
He's 50-something.
We should have Terry Crews on the show.
He just keeps getting more jacked.
Yeah, I wonder if he has an eight-sleep mattress.
He should.
Yeah, maybe we can make that happen.
That's how we can make the connection.
But were we talking on the air when we were mentioning how this is over October and not drinking caffeine?
All of our sleep has...
Why are you saying it like that?
Be positive.
I am being positive.
It's just there's something in my throat.
My sleep score was pretty freaking good these past few nights without the caffeine.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
I've been falling asleep a lot easier.
So that's been helpful.
Within the first three days, it's pretty cool.
My mattress sends me text messages every now and again.
It'll send me notifications.
And it was like, you slept like a rock.
I was like, damn, I never got that.
And then last night, my sleep score was 99.
And I've gotten in the 90s, but never over 92.
So that was pretty interesting.
Yeah, mine last night was 96%.
I usually don't get anywhere at 96%.
You need to get this goddamn thing to rate your boners.
Like, hey, man, great job.
You penetrated the mattress.
You were at a 10.
You couldn't sleep on your stomach.
It'll send you notifications.
Start thinking of names because we are pregnant.
Oh my God.
But no,
the mattress is super cool.
Like it goes all the way down to 55 degrees Fahrenheit.
Um,
and all the way up to like,
I think 105 degrees,
but I always put it at like negative 10 is around where negative 55 degrees is.
And it feels amazing.
Feels great.
I wonder how that would be just like crank it up just to like lay on it just to like a sauna.
Like relax or something.
That'd be interesting.
It would probably feel great.
Yeah, nice and warm, nice and cozy.
Yeah, in the mornings it gets pretty warm.
I have mine pretty hot to wake me up in the morning.
It gets pretty toasty.
Are you and Stephaniehanie's uh sides
set differently yeah oh absolutely yeah she said because you know she holds my son a lot so she
says when her like shoulder or elbow is a little sore from the day that she'll put her arm on my
side because it's way colder yeah so she feels like she's cooling like you know has a ice pack
on her her arm or something there's nothing sweatier than a little kid sleeping on you.
Like, they make you so hot.
They're like just little balls of heat.
Especially him.
He gets pretty sweaty.
I mean, I don't know if all babies get sweaty, but, man, he runs hot.
And just so you guys know, like, the Eight Sleep mattress isn't just the mattress.
The technology is in the cover.
So if you already have a mattress you really like, like Mark, you have a great mattress already,
you could just buy the cover and put it over the mattress and get the benefits of the temperature,
the temperature benefits of the eight sleep without having to purchase the mattress.
Makes a huge difference.
I set it to be pretty cold for when I'm trying to get to sleep.
And then I changed it to be a little warmer through
the night because i found that maybe like around midnight or so i'm like holy shit i'm kind of cold
so i i don't sleep i don't have much blankets on i'm kind of like i don't know i always kind of
kick them off i think i'm always getting like kind of warm that's a combination of not having
a blanket on and like you know being on that cold mattress, it was a little much.
So I had to just adjust it.
But I adjusted it like the first week I had it and just left it ever since.
And it's been great.
Yeah, it's been awesome.
And even more awesomer is that you guys can get the Pod Pro mattress or mattress cover for $150 off.
Just head over to 8sleep.com. That's
E-I-G-H-T sleep.com
slash power project.
And you guys will see on the top banner,
it'll let you know that you're going to get
$150 off at checkout.
So no code needed. Just hit the links down in the description
as well as the podcast show notes.
But again, 8sleep.com slash
power project. I can see that lack
of caffeine hitting you.
E-I-G-H.
Well, it's already tough for me to verbally spell things.
Like, it does not matter, let alone something with the I-G-H-T in it. Yeah, yeah.
I'm bugging with you.
The number 8.
So, yeah, it would have been cool if it was the number 8, but it's 8 spelled out.
I just had to make sure people, because that's my first mistake when I went to look it up.
E-I-T. What's going on with our guests today mr keegan smith he's jacked yeah as you're saying he is uh he is a disciple of poliquin and he works with ben catpatrick they they uh he his
mobility but also strength through all these different ranges like if anybody goes and looks
at his page right now literally just go look up the ATG mentor on Instagram. You'll see all the
wild stuff or they look wild, but they're actually extremely practical, but you'll see the stuff he's
doing. And it's just extremely impressive. The, the strength and mobility that he has in all these
different ranges. And that's what they do over at ATG, but it's, it's going to be a really good
podcast because a lot of the stuff can be very applicable to strength athletes and help them just be healthier, more mobile, more resilient and more so.
I think I was checking out some of the stuff he has on YouTube and, uh, some of what he says is very, very simple.
Um, maybe not easy for some people to implement right off the bat, but, um, just cause it might be drastic change for some people. But
when he was talking about nutrition, um, he just, I mean, he was speaking the way that we've been
talking about on this podcast for quite some time. He predominantly eats meat. He's a huge fan of
protein leveraging, which protein leveraging is just, you add so much protein to your life and
to your diet that it makes it kind of harder to eat other stuff.
You fill everything up with protein.
And then he was like,
after that,
he's like,
and you just pick if you think you need some energy or you earned some energy
for the day,
which I think is a good way of wording it.
Then he's like,
maybe you have some fruit,
rice or potatoes and shit,
man.
And that's the simplest form of dieting i think i've ever heard and he's
like if you want and if you like them then you can throw in some vegetables vegetables can help
fill you up and that's that's a diet and then he even talked about uh mixing in uh some days where
you do a protein sparing modified fast which is basically just in reference to going very low carbohydrate
and very low fat on a particular day, just to yield a specific result. You don't want to do that
for a long period of time because you're going to mess with your metabolism, mess with your
hormones. But maybe for a day, maybe you go about 50, 60 grams of fat, keep the protein real high,
try it for a day or two, and then go back to your normal, resume your normal diet.
But I think that is a really good strategy for people to tighten up a bit, people that are already kind of lean.
I think other folks that are, you know, have excessive amounts of weight to lose, I don't
think they have to worry about some of those kind of smaller details, but he's got great
information.
Yeah.
And he's like, when you look at him, like he's, he has all these ranges, but he's got great information. Yeah. And he's like, when you look at him,
like he's, he has all these ranges, but he's actually very lean and very muscular. Like,
you know, most guys aren't able to move this well. Like if you guys look at his page,
he's doing Jefferson curls with barbells and he's moving through all these ranges that a lot of
people would typically say, Oh, that's unsafe for the back or unsafe for the spine. But as we're
probably going to be able to get into, we're going to be able to get into why it actually is good for you
and why it can actually be something that makes you bulletproof
and more resilient, like I just mentioned.
He was talking about some stuff I saw.
He was talking about strength training.
And he actually was just like, oh, you know what?
I'm just going to show it to you.
And he just starts doing pull-ups.
He's doing pull-ups at his house.
He's got some weight around his waist.
I don't know. He speaks in a different language because he's talking about kilograms,ups at his house. He's got some weight around his waist. I don't know.
He speaks in a different language because he's talking about kilograms.
So I don't know how much weight he had around his waist.
But he had a significant amount of weight around his waist.
And he just performed 10 sets of two while he's talking to the camera.
He's going back and forth.
And he's talking about how he wants to encourage people to strength train and stuff.
But I just thought it was so interesting because I'm like, this is the simplest workout.
He's just doing every minute on the minute.
He's doing two pull-ups.
And I'm just thinking like, who can't follow something like that?
Okay, maybe pull-ups are tough for some people, but maybe there's a way to scale them.
Maybe use a band or whatever way you got to do them.
You figure out how to do them.
But I was also just thinking like, shit, man, you could do this with pushups.
You can do this with body weight squats.
You can do this with really any exercise you can think of.
And that could be your workout for the day.
That's plenty of work for the day.
I think for some reason we have it like attached in our head, in our brain forever that we have to have these workouts where we do like 20 sets for like one body part and uh that might be cool to do here and there but what kind of toll does
that have on you and what where does that place you the next day how much energy does that pull
from you the next day anyone who's ever been competitive and actually competed you know that
like it's not a great idea to do a whole lot of stuff the
next day after a competition. And it's like, why? It's because, well, it's because you fucking blew
yourself out. You know, you went after it with everything you had and your training shouldn't
really look like that. I know it's exciting to get in there and train and you feel like you need to
go 110%, but 110% leaves you the next day with less percentage to put into stuff.
And that will happen over time.
And then it will start to maybe negatively impact your sleep, maybe negatively impact
your hormones.
And then you're just perpetually kind of working against yourself.
You could be in a kind of a growth phase, but you're not allowing your body to even
do it because you're just constantly killing yourself.
It's a bodybuilding side of things though.
You know, when it comes to training, whenever people think about bodybuilding, they think
about, let's do as many sets for these body parts as we can.
Let's kill it so we can grow.
And short term, that might feel good, but long term, you got to be careful with what
you do there, you know?
And I think that a lot of the stuff that we're going to be talking about here, no matter
if you're doing bodybuilding or if you're doing powerlifting, a lot of these movements or a
lot of these concepts, as far as like short range and long range strength, these things can be
easily without messing up any type of program you're doing. They can be added to any type of
program to bring your body benefit. That's the thing. It's not like this is a whole different
style of training. That's going to overhaul your powerlifting goals or your body goals, or whatever goals you have. If anything, it's just going to amplify
what you're currently doing and allow you to, you know, allow you to do whatever you're doing
for a longer period of time because your body will be more resilient. Normally I would, so
yesterday I did some squats and then when I was done with my squats, normally I would, I would
think, okay, leg press or stiff leg deadlifts, leg curl, maybe glute ham raise.
But instead of doing any of that, all I did was I did my squats.
Probably did like six sets of squats.
Had a pretty good workout in.
Dragged the sled forward and backward a couple times.
And I did some shoulders.
times and I did, I did some shoulders. And the reason why I think that way nowadays is because this morning I got up super early and, uh, I got in a walk run. I probably ran further today than
I ever have before. So it's like, if I, if I'm going to still put up points on the scoreboard
and other areas of my life, if I just go and crush myself on this, you know, on just legs,
If I just go and crush myself on this, you know, on just legs, well, my legs would be sore right now.
They'd be sore for tomorrow.
I would probably talk myself out of running.
I'd be like, oh, dude, you should probably cool it because your legs are pretty damn sore.
You know, wait until they're recovered a little bit more to run.
But because I'm just like, let me spread the fatigue out more, but let me get in a
similar amount of work, but maybe over a little bit longer period of time, I'm able to get
the work in that I want and able to kind of satisfy, uh, multiple things that I want to
do.
Yeah.
I think, uh, one thing that I was thinking about too, along with like, honestly doing
a little bit, having the workouts be a little bit more minimal
is the ability to do body weight body weight work i think i've noticed this like a few years ago when
i was trying to do some dips and i was trying to do things like else it's i'm like why how can i
be so strong with these other movements but you know doing some dips or trying to do an l sit on
my hands or or these body weight movements are kind of difficult.
You would think that with this level of strength, I would be able to move around my body in a better way.
But I suck at this. Right.
And you'll see on his page like he can move some weight, but he has a lot of body control.
I think that's something that can be super beneficial because, I mean, as you get older, you're not walking around life, holding weights, you're walking around with
your body and the more control and the more, um, yeah, the more control you have over your
body, the less prone to just random injuries you're, you're going to be like, let's say
you fall and you have to put your hand on the ground and, and, and, and stop yourself
from falling.
But if you lack shoulder health and shoulder mobility and strength,
and you fall like that,
you could fuck yourself up.
A lot of people do that.
Um,
so I,
uh,
a lot of the stuff we're probably going to talk about here is going to be
really beneficial,
not for just like younger athletes,
but older individuals too.
Even with our,
uh,
even with Trevor,
who was on the show yesterday talking about that accident he had on the
stairs.
Yeah.
Um,
I don't know what kind of shape he was in
at that particular time but you know you're a big jacked bodybuilder walking around with lots of
muscle you slip on the stairs if that happens to uh you know uh if that happens to hannah
she's gonna she's gonna be fine like maybe she hits her head or something like maybe she gets
maybe she's like fuck man i got really jacked up from falling down the stairs i got bruises
everywhere but she's not gonna have a uh you know a fractured leg you know and so uh you know trying
to maintain some of these uh different attributes and and uh you know we all we love bodybuilding
we love powerlifting we love the discipline of. But if you're not really competitive in it, maybe it makes some sense to do some other things. And I would even say,
even if you are competitive in it, it makes some sense to take some breaks so that you're not so
stuck together. You're not only able to squat bench and deadlift. Absolutely. Even myself,
man, like I started doing a lot of this stuff February of this year, you know, doing things like laying extensions. I wasn't able to lay extension 20 or 30 pounds and now I can do the stack. Um, my knees feel better than they've ever felt. My joints feel better than they've ever felt. And I've been doing jujitsu for like almost six years. But right, right now I feel resilient. I, my body feels bulletproof for the most part, you know? Um, and even like when CT was here and I did that deadlift, I did a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know, a little, you know the most part, you know? And even like when CT was here and I did that deadlift, I did a little,
you know, a little pop, pop, you know, healed pretty quick.
Like took three or four days of some quick rehab and I was,
I was good to go.
So I think even my recovery just because I move better,
my recovery is just much better too.
Tissues are staying healthier.
I think like one of the key things there is just like, that's just knowledge.
You know, you, you only know what you know, you know, and so you weren't implementing
some of those things previously because you just weren't aware of them quite yet.
Yeah.
Or maybe they weren't, uh, you know, told to you by the right person, like particular
influences matter a lot.
We've, we've been following what ben patrick
is doing and the movement uh that he has going on and it seems like uh he's slowly taking over
the world which is awesome and amazing but sometimes like without like a strong influence
sometimes we hear something from somebody and we're like man you know it doesn't hit you that
strongly until you kind of start to hear it from multiple people.
Then you're like, Hmm, maybe they're a fuck man. Maybe there is something to that. Why am I so
stubborn? Why didn't I listen to that advice? Cause maybe that's, maybe that's something that
I should do. And you know, like deep down, you always, you always know, like you always know,
I should be messing with that. Absolutely. It's also cause we had that conversation with Joel
Seidman. So, um, I'm going to see if I can channel Joel's mind and get some of those questions answered too.
Because he said some things about working in those ranges and getting injured later.
So I'm interested to see what Keegan says about that.
I think Keegan wants you to stay here the whole time.
Yeah.
What's going to be like that? Oh, man. Oh. Oh. I think Keegan wants you to like stay here the whole time yeah those arms well it's gonna
be like that
oh man
oh
oh
there we go
that's the perfect angle
just
yep there we go
it's just totally natural
he's currently
he's joining right now
I don't know
it's taking a hot minute
there we go
well he's like
where the hell is he
where's he from
I don't know
Australia I think
lean into it there we go yeah you gotta get your head Where the hell is he? Where's he from? Australia, I think.
Lean into it.
There we go.
Yeah, you got to get your head far away from your arm.
Oh, yeah.
You got to put your head really far away from your arm.
Towards the back.
Towards the back.
Yeah.
That's that way it gets... I haven't see that shirt in a minute.
Occupy your mind.
I'm not sure what's happening.
They got no they got no Internet over there.
What's going on?
There's a couple of Keegans now joining.
Oh, God.
There's two different accounts.
There we go.
It's a little sideways.
Oh, wow.
Is it because he's from down under?
Mm-hmm.
We can do the show this way.
This is cool.
There we go. Is it working?
Yeah
How's the audio?
The headphones go to the computer
And the computer's not logging in
That's the other
It's fine
You alright?
We've heard better it's always the worst
apologies yeah i had some technical difficulties there oh not a problem at all
what do you think's going on man what what is uh like you know years ago people were into
people being big and people being jacked and people being strong.
Now, all of a sudden, people are excited about people moving better.
What do you what do you think?
You know, that would be considered some real fairy stuff back in the day.
People would be like, dude, I don't care how well you can squat.
I care how much you can squat.
What do you think the obsession is nowadays with people moving better rather than just lifting more weight?
Yeah, it's a good question.
I think it's probably a better question the other way.
You know, how did people lose track of actually wanting to move well and we human and then the secondary should be, you know, how do we compete
in this other strength sport or, you know, I think that's the fundamental
thing with sort of ATG is like we're coming at it from the angle
of like how do we enhance what the body's already meant to be able
to do rather than, you know, do some other thing for the sake
of winning a medal.
I think that's the difference in the angle.
And it can be quite addictive, I think, once you get to it.
I think you guys have experienced it as well to some extent.
Once you start to get that feeling of, okay, yeah,
I can get out of the car a little bit easier and things don't hurt as much.
That can be quite addictive as well.
I get it.
It makes a lot of sense.
So like ass to grass in comparison to carnivore, neither one of those things is new.
Like we've always had human movement.
People have forever been on diets that are primarily meat.
And these are kind of like things that are callings back to the way that we probably are meant to be, maybe.
100%.
I think that's a good lens to look at most things through.
What did our ancestors do?
How is nature designed us to be?
What do children do instinctively?
Do they go for the meat or do they want to eat that broccoli?
Those kinds of things can be a good, especially in this information age where there's, you know, all these wars about everything in information.
I think getting back to like what would happen in nature, what do we do as kids?
What did our ancestors really value?
I think that lens can sometimes be a little bit less confusing, more reliable than kind of the what's the latest research which you know you can always pit those scientists
against each other and uh they tear each other shreds right yeah you know keegan before we get
even deeper into this i want to first kind of understand because you meant you mentioned like
you know what we used to do so with you and the way you live and even the way your kids live
uh how what what do you do differently from other people like for example i don't stand i mean i
don't sit much anymore because when you think of a lot of athletes like maybe they're they have a
desk job and then they have to go try to perform in a gym or on a field and they need to like
warm up and stretch and do all these things where typically they wouldn't need to if they just did
a few different things as far as their lifestyle is concerned so what is what does your lifestyle
look like outside of the gym first so we can kind of understand some of that yeah i think uh whenever you stand with the majority it's time to analyze
your position it's like a it's a good quote i don't know whose words they are but it's a it's
a good line and yeah i mean most things i've probably tried to do in a different way at some
stage and like you guys i like to experiment with things so
i mean i've done things like sleeping on the floor i've done long fasts i've done the you
know the barefoot sort of shoes and uh you know spend a lot of time walking on stones
i'm a huge fan of you know getting full body sun you know in australia there's a huge sun phobic
movement everybody wants to you know get out of the sun and avoid skin cancer,
which obviously we don't want skin cancer,
but the solution might not be avoiding the sun always.
So, yeah, I mean, most things when you analyze them, you probably,
I mean, personally, I end up doing something different
to what the mainstream kind of approach is.
Sometimes I do stupid things that i then realize yeah you know
that's that's actually not the path or i you know it's a different but it's bad different so i'm a
huge fan of getting that personal experience and then you can really speak with more authority or
at least like be true to yourself maybe like maybe you don't have authority to others when you do that crazy stuff but at least you know like for yourself that yeah this is
this is what i've experienced this is this is real to me tell us about sleeping on the floor
that's pretty fascinating like did that uh work out at all for you or what what's the deal with it
yeah i quite like it uh katie bauman move your DNA. I don't know if you guys have come across her work,
but it's probably my favourite book in the, like, movement realm.
She's, yeah, she breaks it down in lots of different things.
Like, she talks about the squat in relation to, like, the pelvic floor
and, yeah, sleeping on a hard surface and walking on stones and bare feet.
And it really, some of the concepts I was onto,
but I think she does an amazing job of kind of breaking it down.
And yeah, if you look at it from like a carnivore perspective,
the bed wasn't that fluffy back in the day.
So if you can't sleep on something that's relatively hard,
then maybe there's something wrong with you.
And at least it's worth questioning, right?
Like why is it that I can't get comfortable on a hard floor?
And then, yeah, your body is going to adapt to that surface,
you know, all through the night.
So you can think of it in some way like the foam roller and things
where by having pressure on an area, then you kind
of desensitize it to an extent.
So maybe people become hypersensitive to pain and being poked and prodded
because they don't have that hard pressure on their body that we had
from a historical perspective for like eight hours a day.
Like it's not an insignificant thing, the surface that you sleep on.
And if you take it to the extreme of those super soft beds,
I don't know what your experiences are with that, but my back kills me if i sleep on like a really soft bed so i mean you learn a lot
at the extremes as well again this is like a good lens of testing stuff like what happens at this
extreme what happens at that extreme then decide where you want to fit in the continuum sleeping
on the floor not too bad fucking on the floor is another i was thinking like i mean your shit's gonna hurt yeah yeah
oh my god um i want to start here then because you kind of talked about the feet and the rocks
underneath the feet i saw that you've been doing a lot of stuff the feet on your page and so has
ben um and we even like we have some like these Vivo, the barefoot shoes, right?
So what, like,
how can people start there to fix their feet?
Because I've noticed
as I've started like working more on my feet
and paying attention to that
over the past few years,
not, I mean,
a lot of people have weird,
like weird, weak, fucked up feet
and that can mess with a lot of upstream stuff.
So what are some things
that people can start doing
to kind of fix some of
those issues?
And why should they even think about that?
Because most people,
like you mentioned it,
they're like,
I don't care.
I want to wear my Nikes or like,
it doesn't really matter,
but why does it matter?
Yeah.
I think it's cool to have some Nikes and,
you know,
wear whatever you want to wear sometimes.
And then you should also consider what did your ancestors do or what do you want out of
your feet um you know what are the the best athletes what are they capable with it with
their feet i think you know those kind of lenses if you can build more strength in the feet and
make them you know able to like sprinting bare feet or walking across like really rugged terrain
especially like stones are good because they don't cut and that sort of thing then that shows another level of sort of foot ability and
adaptability there's so many little bones in the feet and if they they're not getting moved around
as they could would should have in another time if they're not strong then you can leak force i
think a lot of issues that come you know at the knee and at the hip because people just aren't walking properly.
And, yeah, it's a good feeling.
I think you can really notice it.
Most people will.
I don't hear people going back to wearing normal shoes.
That's another good way to test this stuff, right?
Like I haven't heard someone say, like, yeah, I did barefoot for, like,
two years or, you know, I was wearing minimalist shoes for two years
and now I wear these big fluffy things because it's just way better.
I haven't heard anyone say that.
I have heard people say when I first went to these hard shoes
or I first tried to run barefoot that I blew up my Achilles
or I blew up the bones in my feet.
It can be a rough ride, but that also tells us that there's adaptation going to happen here, and that's probably the path to actually being robust.
powerlifting and like, I guess maybe just not paying attention to some of the things that you're talking about. And, uh, I tried to keep things in what I would consider to be full range
of motion, but I've seen on some of your videos, um, you're trying to intentionally take things to
an extreme. And when I was like learning how to lift and stuff, uh, people would consider that
an extreme, like they would say, don't move in those range of motion. So I was always kind of
shy to move into some of those range of motions, you know, doing something like a dumbbell flies or,
or movements like that, you would keep them a little tighter so that you wouldn't tweak anything.
And then again, again, we kind of go back to the same principle. You can use more weight,
you know, you could use more weight. Maybe you can feel the muscles differently, or maybe you
can argue better. And so you stay in this kind of shorter range of motion.
What are some things that you've learned by really trying to have people kind of open up, even with weight, on some of these movements like the ATG lunge or some of the other movements that you're employing?
Yeah.
I mean, I'd love to hear how it's been for you guys like what do you what do
you notice instinctively in your bodies as you've been testing this stuff out like is it is it uh
is it a bad sensation or is there something inherently like this is rewarding i think
i think an interesting thing is um for me i don't move into like deep ranges uncomfortably. It used to be that like if I had too deep knee flexion or elbow flexion or like my shoulder was in a weird position in jujitsu, I'd like, I wouldn't want to get that deep into those positions.
feeling any type of like discomfort and move in and out of them with strength. It's like,
I'm not passively getting into a really deep squat.
I'm able to get there actively and move out of it actively.
And as far as it,
as far as that transferring to athletics,
as far as jujitsu,
like that's extremely important because being twisted around like a pretzel all
the fucking time and need to be able to move well in that way.
So it makes a very big difference for me.
For me,
I just, I'm just tight, you know, so certain things are just, I don't have the same
access to, you know, maybe all the movement that somebody else might have. Kind of tight hips,
tight shoulders. I can move pretty good on some stuff and I i can still uh lift pretty well and and things of that nature but
uh especially through my upper body and like my like thoracic spine like that area is really um
it's just sort of like stuck you know but i spent 10 years trying to make it stuck
so that it was real rigid so it didn't move when i would do a squat
yeah there's yeah there's some cost yeah, there's some costs, right?
Like there's some price to pay for becoming world-class in powerlifting.
And like, that's a cool endeavor.
And if you want to do that, like full, full respect, not everybody, you know, needs to
or wants to go down that path.
And I think it's interesting to consider whether you actually need to take it as far,
you know, with specialising in what your body can and can't do.
Like if you see Steffi Cohen, like she can do the sissy squats
like really well where probably a lot of world-class males
maybe don't have that same comfort.
So, you know, that's, yeah, I think it's going to be interesting
to see how this stuff does impact that because I know one of the guys
Ben worked with got his first 1,000-pound squat, you know,
for example, like when he, after he was doing some split squats
and then he didn't have pain in his knee.
So it's not like everyone's going to squat 1,000 pounds
when they do split squats.
Like I'm definitely not, that's not the message.
But if you can have less pain and you have less inhibition
to the muscle, then it kind of makes sense that you're going to be stronger.
So like that, those feedback loops are really important.
And people are working really hard to build strength on top of dysfunction
where there is inhibition because it hurts and everything hurts all the time.
And so you have to like smash out, you know,
you have to go really hard with stimulants or whatever you're doing to get
yourself going where if there was no pain you would just have better firing of the muscles
because you don't have those inhibition groups so it's an you know it's an interesting thing of
yeah like how much can we regain without losing that specialist ability i think it's an interesting
question that you know you guys are going to solve like powerlifters are going to solve that, you know, where that all fits together.
You do see some guys who have the big archery in powerlifting, though,
who do have, you know, super mobile thoracic spine,
especially in the female side.
So there's a possibility of, you know,
still having a super big bench with that stiffness in the upper back.
But I think we need, like, i guess what i'm trying to do
is encourage looking at things from a fresh perspective and encouraging new language around
some of this so if we look at it from the perspective of we don't care what your how
your muscle reacts to this we care about how your joint reacts to this so it's not how much weight
you can lift it's how your joint is going to adapt to this movement or at least be looking at both at
the same time and then that gives us the opportunity to say okay yeah well strength wise mark can handle
you know 20 kilo flies like he's crazy strong he's keeping his elbows yeah and he can if he goes
whatever he's handling these big weights but if we decide to take it into the full range of motion two kilos is appropriate
for now because while the muscle could handle it the joint is going to flare up and you're going to
get issues with the rotator cuff issues with the surface of the joint and this is also like a key
concept to consider with the knees over toes is like maybe the muscle can handle it like maybe
you're strong enough to do it but that doesn't give you the right to do it especially to a maximal weight
because if your joint is not adapting to it or if your joint is like getting flayed up or that
but it doesn't matter that you can actually complete the movement muscle wise you don't
have the readiness to do it and so you're going to get some pain in the joint you're going to get
some you know some swelling in there you're going to get some pain in the joint. You're going to get some swelling in there.
You're going to stretch the, you know, even the ACL.
I think people are putting too much pressure sometimes on the ACL because they want to do these heavy step-ups and whatnot.
And the muscle can handle it because they're super strong.
But how many times has that ACL actually been loaded
into this movement?
You're basically repeating the mechanism of snapping the ACL under load.
So you're just doing it in a slow, controlled way with weight
so you can control that and get adaptation.
And eventually, maybe you end up being able to do what Ben can do,
which is a lot of people's vision is to get to that point.
But we need to look at it from those two perspectives, I think.
And if we look at it in that way, then we don't have any bad exercises anymore we just have exercises
where okay the joint's not ready for that and so i can't even though the muscle can handle it i'm
going to tear the joints to shreds versus the alternative you know you know i'm really happy
that you talked about that because you know when i started doing this stuff i had to start from the
freaking shittiest regressions like i was kind of pissed on myself because like when i was doing some step
ups i was i wasn't using i wasn't stepping up or down on anything i was just going on the floor
and starting there because my knees couldn't handle it but it progressed slowly and that's
that's why like my knees were able to get to where they are now but when whenever i talk about any of
these movements or i put any of these movements up, people are still saying and people are still wondering, that can't be safe for your knees or
that can't be safe for your elbows. Or moving through those ranges of motion, that's going to
cause a lot of problems, right? Can you talk to us about why a lot of these movements that are into
these deep ranges of motion, why they're actually beneficial over time? Because, and we can talk
more about this too, when we had Joel Seidman on, I don't know if you saw any of that episode. And I want
to kind of preface this and say, I think Joel Seidman is doing a lot of things that that's
pretty cool and pretty beneficial for his athletes because maybe for those athletes going into those
ranges, isn't the best thing for them at that point in time. So limiting that range of motion
could be beneficial. Okay. So I want to, I want to preface that, but he even mentioned like, you know, over time
working in these deep ranges might actually bite you in the ass, you know, that that's
what he said.
Right.
And we had a back and forth on that, but I want to, I want to get an understanding.
Why is this actually better for you in the long run?
Yeah.
I'm, I'm so happy that that conversation is being had. I'm not here
to fight against
anyone else's perspective or the way they
train. I think there is a lot of
intelligent stuff in what Joel's doing
and obviously, athletes don't
go to people who they're not
getting results from. They go for a little while
because of the hype or because of whatever,
but they're not going to keep going back.
He's been doing it for long enough that there is something there that works. It's kind of the hype or because of whatever, but they're not going to keep going back. And he's been doing it for long enough that there is something there
that works.
Now, it's kind of the opposite of what I do and what I talk about
and what I use with professional athletes that I've worked with,
but that doesn't make it wrong.
And I love the way you're describing that of like there are components
of this that could be very, you know, that are very beneficial.
Like I'm a huge fan of partial movements.
Like I think that, you know,
Louis Simmons taking that to the extreme and powerlifting,
like building on the old time knowledge and doing it with bands and chains.
It's just, you know, a next,
next level genius and it's had such a huge flow and effect to,
especially to athletes.
Like I can,
I can see the argument against that stuff for powerlifting because of
specificity, but for athletes, it's phenomenal phenomenal because it's about physics it's about force
it's about tension and it just makes so much sense to to come at it from that the angle of
you know accommodating resistance and so partial repetitions are part of that same conversation
you can't have accommodating resistance being really smart and partial repetitions being
super dumb and there's a lot of partials in ATG, especially on the knee side.
So, yeah, I mean, the full range stuff, it doesn't actually necessarily,
it doesn't even work like strength training.
Like it doesn't have to be considered like strength training.
You don't have to do it for the muscle.
You can do it for the joint. And if you do it through that lens, then you don't have to do it for the muscle. You can do it for the joint.
And if you do it through that lens, then you don't have to max it out.
It doesn't have to be like, you know, you're bursting through your left eye
with the spleen coming through the left eye, as Charles Poliquin used to talk
about for strength training.
Like, it's not that.
And I think if we can separate it, that's why I think the language is really important of like,
is this a joint dominant exercise for you?
Or is this like short range, long range, extreme long range?
Like this vocabulary probably doesn't mean anything to half your listeners,
but just that concept of, okay, like is the joint, the limiting factor here?
Like it's fairly intuitive to work out. Okay. Yeah.
I think the joint is the limiting factor in my,
in my step ups or in my flies. And so let's work intuitive to work out. Okay, yeah, I think the joint is the limiting factor in my step-ups or in my flyers.
And so let's work from the joint perspective.
And I think most coaches don't have that terminology.
I definitely didn't have it through most of my coaching career.
Like a lot of the things that I was doing with pro rugby teams,
I would look at them differently now.
And that's a good thing.
Like if you can't tell yourself five years ago that you got all this stuff wrong and you wasted five years, right?
So, yeah, the extreme long range stuff over the long run, it makes you more childlike.
It makes you more resilient.
If you look at weightlifters, if you look at, you know, gymnasts, there are a lot of examples like ballerinas.
And I think there's a lot to be learned from i gotta i gotta stop you there for a second because weightlifters and gymnastics
people are pretty ruined they can't they can't even do their sport for very long like olympic
lifting is a great example people are in and out of that sport pretty quick that's a good point and
it definitely can shred you if you depending on how you do it you will
also see some of those guys who are in their 70s 60s 70s and they're still able to jump you know so
the devil's in the details if you train six days a week and you're not on a great diet you're a
bunch of anabolics and you have to get to the olympics or you don't get to eat then that's a
whole different you know circumstance compared to someone who's using those movements in a different way.
I think the research on the knee health of weightlifters is generally
that they're getting positive adaptations in terms of thick cartilage
and healthy knees.
I love that podcast.
I don't know if you guys ever caught the Jersey,
someone who was on the Tim Ferriss podcast,
and he was talking about taking a guy when he was 60 and at 60 he was like messed up, broken.
And by 70 he had like a good snatch.
And he was, yeah.
So if you take 10 years and just focus on movement quality,
that guy at 70, if you can snatch at 70, regardless of the weight,
like you're doing pretty well.
And I think that's again,
just like how you use the tool makes a big difference. So yeah, at the,
at the top level with weightlifting and gymnastics, you're right. Like it's,
it's gonna shred some people. But yeah,
I think the,
Well having the ability,
having the ability to do those things is a wonderful thing.
I think you hit the nail on the head by saying movement quality,
and I think that that may be something that might be compromised
when somebody's maybe pushing to levels that their body's not really quite used to,
and maybe that's why we see it.
We see it with powerlifters, crossfitters.
We see it in see it with powerlifters crossfitters we see it in all all aspects of athletics whenever
somebody's pushing the envelope and they're pushing maybe a little above and beyond what
their body can really handle they they're going to fall apart but if they start to gain access to
what you're talking about they start to gain access to being able to have better quality
movements who knows how long they could do it Maybe that person can end up being like a Tom Brady playing in the NFL for 22
years and still cranking. Yeah. And that's also one of the things that Joel was mentioning. He
was like, he was talking about how like, Oh, you see what some of these athletes do over time and
they're going to end up messing up their knees. But the big thing that we were talking about,
it's like the dosage of this stuff. If you can take some concepts of what they're doing in weightlifting and gymnastics and add
that in, in a reasonable way into somebody's program, they're not doing this every single day,
but they're doing some of these movements at not a crazy high percentage in terms of intensity
every fucking day. This can be something that actually helps them be more resilient over time.
But if you're, you're a weightlifter and you're doing those movements at max intensity or close to max intensity year after year after year
that will degrade you just like any pro like a lot of pro athletes even fucking basketball players
they end up being beat up and basketball if you're playing basketball twice a week you'll be fine
all right yeah even looking at it through the lens of what did they do with soldiers? Like soldiers is a high stakes game.
How do you prepare armies?
And if you look back at the research, especially the guys who've broken down even the ancient Greek stuff that's been translated.
There was a guy in ATG for coaches actually gave a lecture on it a couple of days ago, breaking down that history.
He's a historian.
He's written a couple of books.
It was just phenomenal to hear his perspective.
And he was basically saying all the ATG stuff was there.
We think it goes back all the way to the ancient Greeks.
They were doing it with the soldiers.
You know, so these guys, it was the system,
Henry someone was the system and Henry Lind or something
like this, a Swedish guy.
And it actually became the foundation for the German
and British soldiers. And they were using these deep knee bend positions.
And if you look back at the old strength stuff,
like you'll see the deep knee bend in there everywhere.
If you look at George Hackenschmidt, you know, it's all there.
It's quite a new phenomenon to say, you know, we're going to take that out.
We're not going to go into the full squat position.
I mean, the full squat is is literally
you know what you do when you don't have checks like you go in and out of that position all day
long like if you've traveled the world you see that people will sit in that position and smoke
cigarettes or play cards and they'll be there for half an hour you know they'll have dinner in that
position like it's not negotiable because there there's no chair i heard a story about in africa
soldiers over in africa and there were, you know,
these big strong guys, and they're working together with the native soldiers. And the only
way that they were, you know, when they would stop, the guys who were from there, would get
down in deep squat and rest up. And the guys, you know, the foreign soldiers weren't able to sit in
the squat position. So they had to sit on on the floor the only problem was there were fire ants there so so they had to like try and find weird
places to rest themselves or just stand there with their you know all day kind of thing so
obviously that position is like a very human position it's just a question of how much load
you know we're meant to handle in that position. Even I spent some time in the hills of Mexico,
and the old guys would carry their wood up the hills, right?
And so they would have the wood on their back,
and they would get out of a very deep squat position,
and then they would carry that thing up the hill.
It was in the mountains or down the hill,
and the kids would sometimes have that as well.
So it's knees over toes all day there.
Like there's no choice about whether you're able to deep squat
or whether you're able to get your knees over toes in time.
I think like this is actually a key to rehabilitating people.
And, you know, I watched what the Chinese weightlifting guys are doing.
I have some friends that have worked over there with the physios
and whatnot.
I don't think they actually have the understanding that you guys have now
of like short-range work and sled work and how to bring a joint back
to health and look after them.
I've seen some of the work that they do to prepare themselves
so that they don't get injured.
And I do really think like there's been something that that has been lost
there that can help a lot so the guys who've got bench you know pain in the shoulders bench
pressing oftentimes i think the biceps is really tight and short and that plays a massive part in
shoulder dysfunction and we're rolling and we're getting arc we're doing all these different things
you know i actually saw you getting art off charles poliquin uh mr bell that was uh yeah it's good stuff but um
you know like if if that if you can take some tension out of bicep how does it impact the
shoulder mechanics yeah that's yeah there's so much to be to be considered and uh it's going
to be interesting how it kind of unfolds into different fields i think how much uh work does someone need to do um that you know in your experience i realize it's
going to matter quite a bit but just say like entry level somebody's uh i don't know just has
some like jumper's knee they got like knee tendonitis uh their knees has been bugging them
for a couple years they probably don't have a tear or something like that.
How much work does someone need to put in?
How much backward sled dragging do we need to do?
How many times a week?
What have you seen and what has been effective?
I think it's individual.
I had knee pain, like that kind of niggly pain for like 20 years.
I was good slatters and then, you know, bottom of the kneecap,
top of the kneecap.
And for me, it probably took a while because I was probably hard-headed
and still trying to lift as heavy as I could all the time
and not really like listening to how it actually works.
You know, two years ago maybe we have people say like within,
you know, a week or two that stuff that's been bugging them
for years doesn't feel the same anymore.
And it sounds unbelievable.
You know, people listen, the bullshit detectors might be going nuts.
But if you just flush with new fluid and just bring a lot
of blood flow to an area
it's it's crazy how quickly you can get pain relief and then once you get pain relief then
you can get the muscles firing a lot harder and uh yeah i think it is individual and
this is not a promise to people that are listening that it's going to disappear overnight but
we do hear those those stories a lot.
I really like walking backwards up the hills as well.
You know, sleds are great.
There's something even, you know, different about going backwards
up hills that seems to be really powerful for those kind
of niggly knees.
What's even more interesting, I think, is applying that
across the whole body.
I think that logic hasn't been applied as well as it could across the whole body. But, you know,
CT Fletcher, you had on a couple of days ago, I think he understands this better than anyone with
his 100 reps to get started, going super light. If it's tricep pushdowns, then we're talking about
short range. We're not stretching the muscle. So there's less connective tissue activation.
It's a neurological movement. It's a movement that's going to bring a lot of blood into the area without challenging
the connective tissue a lot and then later in the workout you might be doing skull crushes or you
might be doing you know french presses and and some of that stuff so i think uh when we understand
that logic and apply it across the whole body i've just seen a lot of people get over you know
that niggly tricep tendon issue,
the same as the knee issues. And it can be used at any joint really, which is, you know,
something that I wish everybody knew. No, you know, I have a friend of mine at Jiu Jitsu,
Neho. He's like six, eight, does a lot, a lot of construction work. He's been doing Taekwondo
for a lot of his life. And then he's been doing Jiu Jitsu. And one of the big things for him is
like, he couldn't get into a squat because his knees hurt too fucking much and he had to like
skip jujitsu sessions because his knees were in pain and the other day we were talking um because
we're gonna have that seminar with ben here he's like i gotta fucking make it over there because
he's like now when i'm working construction i can sit in a squat and work and he doesn't feel that
pain like he just like just bounced down into a squat it's something he hasn't been able to do in
years and he's fucking 40 something years old so that that was i think five months for him four or
five months where he has abilities now that he never used to he never used to have because of
all the stuff he did as far as sport and the stuff that he did as far as work you know so this stuff
can be this stuff can be crazy for people's joints yeah it helped me uh pretty rapidly as well like
by the time when ben was here pretty much since the time he's left, I've been keeping in some sort of knees over toes
stuff, even if it's just the, uh, backward sled dragging. Um, and I've been like running and doing
all kinds of stuff. And I did, uh, get the tweak in my knee, uh, running just cause I don't know
what I'm doing. I'm, I'm pretty new to it. And, uh, just kind of went right back to some of the
basics, uh, messed around on the slant board a little bit, did some of the I think they're like Peterson step ups.
And one thing I thought was really interesting, I'd like to get your thoughts on this.
Ben, you know, Ben is pretty brilliant.
He just mentioned stuff in passing and you're like, oh, wait, that was actually really cool.
I don't even know if he recognized that he said it, but he and I were dragging the sled backwards. Um, we were going back and forth, you know, he's got to turn
everything into like a race or a competition. Um, so he's like, all right, now we're going to,
you know, go a little faster. We started to go a little faster. Obviously you start to get a crazy
pump in your legs. And he said, the goal is to get such a pump that you can't hurt yourself.
And I, I never heard anybody say anything like that
before, but that, uh, that one like stuck with me and I'm like, holy shit. Like he's really onto
something with that. If you, somebody just, you know, that's listening right now, just picture
going into the gym, get a pump in your legs on something like a leg extension or leg press,
and then get into your normal workout. I mean, it would be, I would be completely
shocked if your knees actually still hurt or if your hips hurt after you got a really
good quad pump going.
So I think it's something for people to try.
People that have elbow pain, shoulder pain, try getting a sick pump before you start your
workout.
It may diminish the actual strength a tiny bit, but over time you'll get used to it and
you'll get in better condition.
Yeah. It's like short-term versus long-term, right? Like you want to be perfectly fresh for
your set for the day, but then your joints hurt all the time. And you know, you feel like you
haven't really warmed up and you're like tentative with the bar because you don't want to go too fast
because you know, it's going to hurt. You don't want to let the bar come down as fast as you know you need to so i think it's like long term versus short term it's it's so easy to get wrapped up and like i
need to hit my numbers for today and i've found actually that you can often hit better numbers
when you have like a longer warm-up and there's just no pain there and everything feels amazing
like i don't know like is that yeah does it. Does anyone do that in the powerlifting world?
I mean, the sled work, right?
Like, in our West Side, like, Louis will do the sled work before, you know, getting into the heavy lifts.
Absolutely.
Sled work.
I used to do a lot of curls before I'd bench press.
I would do, like, six or eight sets of curls just to get my arms and shoulders, uh, kind of ready for the workout.
Uh,
Matt winning does a lot of stuff where he does what he just calls the
winning warmup.
He might do like four sets of 10 or four sets of 25 even with various
weights.
And he'll actually like,
he'll,
uh,
use some periodization for that.
Like week one,
he'll start real light,
uh,
with higher reps and then he'll bring the reps down and he'll just get stronger and stronger to the point where he's doing
you know uh four sets of 15 to 20 reps with 100 pound dumbbells before he starts his actual
workout for the day he's a really strong guy so for him that's not really that crazy but
it also brought up his general physical preparedness and i think still now to this day i
think he can still bench over 500 pounds any day of the week i mean he's just always walking around
that strong crazy strong yeah it makes so much sense and i always look for those you know
correlations as well like if you see a bunch of the strongest people in the world doing it
then the average person going to the gym probably doesn't need to be that worried about how much
it's going to take away from their you know five by five at 100 kilos or whatever it person going to the gym probably doesn't need to be that worried about how much it's going to take away from their, you know,
five by five at 100 kilos or whatever it's going to be.
You know, someone like me, I'll be looking at those people
at the top and saying, you know, what are they able to get away with?
And increasing that GPP is probably a really good goal anyway.
If you are smoked from doing, you know, four sets of 25,
then so be it.
It probably doesn't matter what you can lift for one.
And it's probably not that impressive anyway,
if you don't have the work capacity to get through that.
So, yeah, I think it's such an important thing for people to consider
because textbook training will tell you like your A series,
you have to go in fresh and just warm up, you know,
and if you're doing low reps for the day,
then you warm up with low reps as well.
And that may be fine for some super healthy young elite athletes,
but for most people most of the time, it's probably better to, you know,
take that approach that you're talking about there with a massive pump
and just, yeah, not being too concerned about what impact it has
because over time it's not going to make any difference really anyway
if it's a common thread and then you go into your competition fresh
like the chances that you're actually losing something are very very minimal can we talk
about maybe just like one or two movements for each of the main joints so for example as far
as like short range and long range for like the shoulders or the elbows or the knees so that
athletes can somewhat have a takeaway of things that maybe they
can regress and progress slowly and the big thing guys is if anything he talks about progress slowly
don't add like 50 pounds to whatever we talk about here and go do it you'll fuck yourself up and
you'll say it's this it's his fault so can you just help people like so they can visualize kind
of what movements we're talking about within short range and long range for the different joints yeah so the short range is where the connective tissue is not being stretched there's
no stretch in the muscle all the tension is going to be just muscular so in the you can't lean on
the connective tissue at all where the long range movements you can actually lean on the connective
tissue so when you're doing idls like the bottom it stops because you can't go any further like
something has to snap for you to go further so you're leaning on the connective tissue
that's what makes it a long range movement so if there's no stretch in the end position
then it's it's not long range and so for example for the triceps the tricep push down or even a
barbell tricep kickback i'm not sure if you guys are uh you're a fan of the kickbacks with the pink dumbbells and all that and the spandex but like the the barbell kickback is actually you can get a massive pump
and there's very little connective tissue um stress with that now all of these movements if
you make them heavy enough you can challenge the connective tissue like with the step ups
or the sled like if you take a super heavy sled and try and go flat out with it,
then you can still challenge an injured knee or like damage
the tendons because there's still going to be tension.
You're not getting that double tension of already being under stretch
plus the muscle contracting really hard.
So, yeah, if we go like barbell kickbacks for the tricep
or even press downs
to make it less extreme and more kind of so you won't get kicked
out of the gym, and then you could go for your French presses
for the long range where you really get that stretch
and you want to be able to get the bar or the dumbbell
as far down the back as you can.
There are a lot of subtleties with this, but I think it makes you think
freshly about strength training.
So the French press is going to tear the muscle up a lot more.
So it's going to be a lot more anabolic because you're going
to cause more damage with the stretch.
We know that the stretch is going to, you know,
cause more bleeding to the muscle.
So someone who already has, like, high systemic inflammation,
you might want to go lighter or easier on the long range stuff. You know, that person who comes to
you who looks like a heart attack risk, focus on concentric, focus on short range and just go light
with the long range stuff and just build their body into it so they can get into the positions,
but you're not using that for hypertrophy and tearing things up. But if you really want to
like grow a muscle, then the short range stuff is going to be
nowhere near as effective you can get a lot of pump but it's not going to just shred the thing
so that you bleed a lot and get swelling after and all those sorts of things where so you're
going to get more of that out of the french press than you would out of the kickbacks and that's why
people shit on the kickbacks but it's just because they didn't know about short range and so they
didn't know okay actually has a part to play. If you've got sore elbows, you should really know about this.
And then you can actually, you know, go and grow some new triceps
because you're not getting that inhibition from the pain.
To try and stick with examples, I really like the lying bench curl.
It can start with like a 45 degree incline curl,
which, you know, Poliquin was a big fan of like the incline work.
Once you get the elbows behind the body, then really start to to lengthen the bicep the lying bench
curl you will actually get a lot of pec minor as well which is obviously an area that is is really
tight for for a lot of people so you can really yeah tear up the biceps and and lengthen those
pec minors if most a lot of strong guys will want
to start that with like five kilograms.
You'll be like, I can curl the 20s, I can curl the 25s, whatever.
You know, pounds conversion, it's not too complicated, 2.2.
But, you know, you've got to start with a lot of strong guys
will have to start with the light dumbbells or they feel
like the tendon is going to snap.
Okay, so we have to consider it from the joint perspective
or from the tendon perspective rather than the muscle perspective. And this is like the key differentiation that we going to snap. Okay, so we have to consider it from the joint perspective or from the tendon perspective rather than the muscle perspective.
And this is like the key differentiation that we need to have.
So gradually work into it.
If you do the short-range stuff first, then everything's nice
and warm, lubed up.
Then when you go long, then everything will be, you know,
it'll be much smoother and you won't, you know, you'll find.
It's a good thing to test.
Like anyone can experiment with this.
If you try and go in cold and do like a light long range curl
where you fly as and you're like, yeah,
everything I feel here is connective tissue.
I can't really feel the muscle.
It kind of hurts.
I have to be really slow with it.
I'm really tentative with it.
That's long range in action.
Now, if you go and do spider curls, you know,
facing down into the inclined
bench and you're contracting the muscle where it feels kind of crampy, that's really a short range
movement. It's going to be neurological. It's not going to be great for muscle growth, but it's
going to be great for switching the muscle on by connecting the nerve to the muscle. And this is
like Poliquin stuff. He outlined this for the arms, but I don't think a lot of people have
really taken on board and extrapolated it for the body.
Yeah, so you do the spider curls first, and then you can do
that long-range stuff after.
And there's nothing wrong with mid-range positions as well.
You can do like your standing bicep curl and those sorts of things.
I think a lot of the Mountain Dog workouts, you know,
he used the short, middle, and long-range really well.
And he was one of the few coaches, I think,
that seemed to have that systematically in his programs
so that you'd get the adaptation that he wanted.
I don't know every coach's programs, but that was one where I thought,
like, yeah, he's got this.
And in Charles' arms programs, you could clearly see that.
Ben was the first guy that I saw who nailed it for legs.
And I was kind of wrestling with this concept of how does this stuff all work like i know we're missing something and then i saw
what he was doing and the testimonials he was getting and the results he was getting i was like
yeah the world really needs to to kind of know about this and i mean it's part of the reason
guys like you have picked it up is because there's there's something there like there's
there's obviously something there that isn't common knowledge or wasn't common knowledge.
And you can look at it like, oh, yeah, it's just a bunch of exercises.
But if it works across every joint, then it's actually like a new language
and new system.
It's a better way of looking at strength training.
Like I think it's just better technology.
Like going from the Nokia to the iPhone, you know,
people don't want to go back to that Nokia and Snake anymore.
And I think that's what this is really going to do for a lot of coaches iPhone, people don't want to go back to that Nokia and Snake anymore.
And I think that's what this is really going to do for a lot of coaches,
but they just have a better vocabulary, more tools to overcome stuff faster where they might have been doing it instinctively before,
but now it's more systematic and clearer of making the joint stronger,
making the muscle stronger.
I don't know if you want more examples.
The shoulder is complex because there are a lot of different angles
on the shoulder.
So like the power raise for the posterior delt.
Why did Poliquin like the power raise when no one else does?
Because it's long range.
Because it tears up the posterior delt.
And because it tears up the posterior delt,
it gives you big posterior delts.
And Poliquin said if you have small posterior delts,
then you're a real strength athlete. So he had a lot of those things kind of calling everybody out
made people remember stuff it's cool but what is the power the reverse flies the power is what is
that powell uh with an l at the end oh okay okay yeah so laying sideways across the bench
so this the hardest part is going to be quite early in the movement
where it's under stretch.
So that's the magic of a lot of the polyquin stuff
where I don't think a lot of people realize
why he was so pedantic about exercise selection.
My feeling is that he understood like, yeah,
this is an anabolic exercise.
This tears up the muscle.
And so therefore we're going to do external rotation stuff like this
where everybody else is doing it in a range, short range range so you're not going to get any muscle growth so the the long
range stuff causes more damage which causes more muscle growth which makes you a long-term a much
better athlete which is why his athletes went and won shit tons of olympic gold medals like he was
the best bodybuilding coach strength training he's ever seen he put muscle on people and then
they went out and kicked the little guy's, you know, butts.
He got the body composition, right?
Even Klokoff said, like, if he knew body composition
like he does after he retired, then he would have been able
to go into competition, you know, two, three, four kilos
more muscle mass, two, three, four kilos less fat.
And, you know, in a strength sport, that's going
to make a massive difference.
You see the Chinese guys now, like, they've got phenomenal
bodybuilding physiques and i yeah i think with this uh with this understanding
of the anabolic exercises i mean that's one key concept there was a lot of stuff that charles
taught around body composition too that makes a big difference in this can you tell us about um
like increasing the central nervous system and increasing some neural drive to be able to lift more on a particular day?
I don't know if you utilize some of those practices, but I know Charles had some weird shit that he would do sometimes before people would lift to, I guess, kind of warm up their central nervous system.
Do you mess around with anything like that?
I guess kind of warm up their central nervous system.
Do you mess around with anything like that?
The PIMS and that stuff, I never got in that deep.
I think that the nervous system,
the biggest thing for me with the nervous system is getting things pain-free.
If there's no pain there, then that is the one lesson I wish,
one of the lessons at least that i wish
someone had told me you know 20 years ago i wanted to go to the olympics everything hurt when i was
a young guy trying to trying to train hard and i didn't understand why and i think that's you know
one of the key lessons is if you can understand the blood flow stuff in the short range then
maybe you get out of pain and then then you get to get stronger and then you get to get faster but yeah as far as the those instant strength techniques
i'm more of a fan of like partial partial reps and accelerated reps and eccentrics like i really
like warming up with that sort of stuff so if you make everything pain-free first then you can be
really ballistic with your warm-ups
and kind of treat it a little bit more like a shot putter
or a javelin thrower.
If those guys have absolutely phenomenal bench presses
and they can also explosively move something a long way,
which kind of gives weight to Louis Simmons' approach
to powerlifting, but if you take it away from powerlifting
and say athletics and human ability to move
and to be a powerful human, then they're coming at it
from similar angles.
So, yeah, I really like the fast stuff in terms of switching
on the CNS, but you can't do that when you have the niggles
or you don't want to.
You just want to go nice and slow and just get to your top set and get out of
there.
You know, I'm really curious. What,
what kind of work did you do when you were younger?
Because I look at a lot of your content, right.
And you have really good body weight skill.
Like I was talking to Mark or we were talking before the show.
And when I was younger, you know, doing things like dips,
even though I, I had good strength with barbells, right. Doing things like dips would be fairly
difficult for me. L sits, et cetera. Like other than pull-ups, maybe my body weight control.
Wasn't that great. And I've been noticing as I've been getting better body weight control
through deeper ranges, it's like, it's, it's affected my ability to actually move weight more effectively so what's the potential correlation there if any
yeah i think it's a good thing to be able to control your body move your body
through space and again it's probably like the joint dominant stuff like doesn't necessarily
mean you have to be a world-class gymnast, but most guys used to be able
to throw some kind of a handstand.
If you ask most gym girls these days to throw some kind of a handstand,
it's going to be messy.
It's going to be things flying everywhere.
So, I mean, yeah, the Hepburn, back to the Hepburn days
and the old school guys, like they were pressing massive weights overhead.
And I think it came with taking the press out of Olympic lifting, right?
Like I think that took the handstand push-ups out for a lot of people,
although you will see the Chinese weightlifters doing the handstand
push-ups.
But I didn't have any of that real ability as a kid.
I couldn't do a backflip.
I didn't do any real gymnastics.
I think I went like three
times to classes when I was four years old. And then when I was about 28, I started working with
the rugby team in France. I backpacked through most of my 20s. I was like a vagabond. When I
started working in strength again, I just wanted to learn. And I just felt like strength training was kind of one-dimensional i was working with
these rugby players and they were they could do a lot of stuff and like i really can't do a lot
of stuff and the more i train these weights the less i feel like i could go and do that stuff with
them and uh so i just started to to play around with it obviously it started to pick up some
momentum i guess youtube and instagram and all that stuff. So, yeah, I worked on an L-suit, worked on the handstand, muscle-ups.
And I guess I have a bit of – I like to try the new stuff.
And then I was a student of Ito's for a while.
I went to –
Oh, really?
Yeah, I went to Thailand for six days with him.
The day after the team I worked with won the grand final.
I flew to Thailand and had that private internship kind of deal that he did.
I went to a bunch of his workshops.
He's a genius.
I think that his contribution to strength and just challenging people
to look through a different lens, I love that.
I respect it so much what he's added. Again, a Poliquin student who took it in a different lens. I love that and I respect it so much what he's added.
And again, a Poliquin student who took it in a different direction.
And I think it's, yeah, I can't do any of the stuff that those guys can do.
I'm nowhere in that class.
But yeah, I just watched what they were doing.
I wanted to be a part of it.
I wanted to understand it to an extent.
And I did a gymnastic body stuff as well.
I went to Denver and did the internship type deal
with Coach Summer.
I've done a lot of courses over time.
And I think that broader perspective maybe eventually gives you
the opportunity to kind of link ideas together.
Like, you know, you guys are pulling a lot of stuff together
that other people haven't brought together and it's um yeah it's exciting the way you know these these things
are evolving i think that strength training is like in its infancy in my mind it's like
the stone age you know the wild west like everyone's just coming out with stuff and
doing their best and then you know maybe 10 20 years from now we'll have some good systems like
if people were building bridges and skyscrapers
like we do strength training, it would be a dangerous world to live in.
But I think we're making progress.
I just think if we can be humble enough to think
that we probably haven't got that much of it worked out yet
and we can do this stuff a lot better then we probably
will versus like trying to be right about everything and defending views obviously i'm
presenting a perspective here but i love it when people say like you know you missed this and you
missed that you know that's that's where the good stuff happens i mean i don't always love it i've
got an ego too but you know it's uh it's it's going in a good direction i think real movement is your business and uh
how are you uh like what can you maybe just explain like what it is how people can gain access to
learn more about the different things that you share and then also how are you working on
building that up because we have a lot of people that listen that uh have businesses and they want
to learn how to blow their own stuff up. Yeah, so I actually parked Real Movement.
I was working that business for seven years.
And then at some point there, like I was working with Ben
and we had a bunch of his stuff like within Real Movement
and together with some other guys.
And my vision is really to help great strength coaches
or coaches that have really good ideas to, you know,
get those ideas out.
And I really love the entrepreneurial side as well,
like, you know, like yourself.
And I love seeing coaches make a good business.
You know, like I helped a lot of gym owners.
But, yeah, now basically I have the ATG for coaches,
which is teaching people the ATG system together with Ben.
So that's my main sort of business in the coaching side.
And then I also work with people to improve their business and just, yeah, like kind of more of the getting momentum in the rest of life is what I'm really passionate about.
and getting momentum in the rest of life is what I'm really passionate about. I love seeing people open the gym, but what I like most is the guys
going from a bunch of habits that they're not really proud of,
you know, gambling addictions and alcohol or drugs or, you know,
sex addictions or whatever's going on, and then they face things,
you know, front on and, yeah, they build the business
and they become smarter coaches coaches but they also just do
less of the stuff that they're not proud of
and do more of the stuff that they
are proud of so that's probably
the part that I like most and
I hope I find more people kind of
like Ben that have
something really powerful to share
with the world and
he's got an amazing ability to
share it but yeah yeah the atg
for coaches is the coach support business and then keegan smith.blog is like where i kind of
have my you know personal stuff and more of that philosophy type stuff yeah atg for coaches is
great i'm in that there's a lot of good information in there. I dig it a lot. I dig it a lot. So anybody who's listening, I should check it out. Um, but I don't, I want, I want to kind of get your opinion on this too. Um, a lot of people still hate the Jefferson curl and you're doing a lot, like you're doing a lot of Jefferson curl on your page.
And you're doing a lot, like you're doing a lot of Jefferson curl on your page.
There's this guy who's in the ATG thing.
It's like coach Tony something.
I think, what's his name?
I think, you know what I'm talking about, right?
He's a, he looks like Pacific Islander or something.
He does heavy Jefferson curls.
Anyway, I forgot his name, but what I want to know is how have you been seeing that be of benefit for your back?
And cause people look at that movement and they
inherently think it's going to be very very dangerous that you're going to pull something
but how does one progress that and why is it something that they may actually want to add to
their routine yeah i think the important thing to know is that they're right and all these movements
when people comment on your instagram like hey that thing would tear me to shreds like they're
right yeah they should be cautious about it and it will it will tear the
body to shreds like if everybody goes and does heavy lying bicep curls like some people will
snap their biceps other people will like cause issues that last them for months and years
so they're right and that's i think a good thing to let people know, like, yeah,
you know, this needs to happen gradually.
So, yeah, the idea of being able to load the body, like,
bending forward is not really very abstract.
Like, if you wanted to build a house out of stones,
then try doing that with a flat back without any tools.
Like, it's not going to happen.
We've picked up carcasses off.
If we hunt and then we have to carry it,
it's obviously a very natural movement to round back lift.
If you look at strongman competitors, they all have to do it.
Some powerlifters do it, some don't.
Some bodybuilders round back, some don't.
I think that's the problem with strength training
is that it's been distorted by sports. You can get away with it in sports to not be able to do a bunch of stuff
but in life that situation you know may come up and it's just a question of you know progressive
load the body can adapt to to anything if it's given the opportunity to. Personally with the Jeffersons, yeah, like I felt like an old man
when all I did was flat back lift.
Like you feel old and you are old because, you know,
the Chinese proverb, like you're as young as your spine kind
of thing is a good one.
When you gradually build that ability, again,
it's like the barefoot shoes.
I don't hear anyone saying like
um i did it for a year or two you know i got to being able to handle you know a bunch of weight
and it was really comfortable and now i don't do them because like i don't i don't like it i haven't
heard a single person say that where there's a lot of people who kind of throw stones who
haven't necessarily you know use them for a period of time it's fine if people don't want
to use it but it's like if my daughter picks up a heavy kettlebell it's going to be round back
you know and i'm not scared for her like it's it's just uh it's natural so i think the trick
is to take your time with it and not treat it like a muscle movement again it's coming back to
that same concept if you treat it like a muscle movement like Again, it's coming back to that same concept. If you treat it like a muscle movement, like, oh,
I can lift 100 kilos on this, then, yes, something might pop.
You know, I really like the Zurcher version with the barbell
and the crook of the elbow standing on the slant board.
If you try and do that tomorrow with body weight,
with guys listening to this, you know,
if you want to tell yourself a new orifice, then try that.
And especially if you really want to do it, then go fast
and something will break for sure.
But if you build yourself the ability to do that,
then you might find that you're able to lift up a heavy stone
with no sensation in the back.
So it's 100% right.
It's right that we should avoid those movements
if we're not prepared
for them.
And,
you know,
with heavy weight,
with speed,
it's,
it's definitely,
you know,
but that doesn't mean that the movement is bad.
It means that that thing has been deconditioned to the point where it
doesn't work anymore.
And,
you know,
you can make the choice if you want to have it back or not.
How do you think people should eat?
Because I would imagine that eating is going to be a big part of this
when you're talking about performance and being able to move properly.
Calories are calories, right?
As long as you get your calories in.
I want to challenge this.
If someone wants to just get all their calories from high fructose corn syrup
for like a year and just prove that a calorie is a calorie then you know i'll give them a big hefty reward you name your price and
i'll uh i'll put it up uh or if you say no no no hey we need three macronutrients we need protein
we need fats we need carbs then okay you know you can have soy protein your high fructose corn syrup
and some kind of trans fat margarine, and there you go.
If a calorie is a calorie, a calorie is not a calorie if you need
to change the macronutrients, by the way, because you're saying
that the macronutrients are calories and calories as long
as you hit your protein.
Well, hey, to me, that's like you already kind of lost your argument.
But if we're saying that as long as you've got those three macronutrients,
then there we go. There's the three macronutrients like live away see how that works out for you um
yeah this this one is a big one because it's literally like life and death you know what you
eat determines how well you're going to live and what you're going to die from and so it does
bother me that these ideas are out there
and people who have amazing physiques and are obviously
very intelligent, they're pushing a message that is interpreted
to be what I've just said, like you can eat whatever you want
as long as you get calories right or you can eat whatever you want
as long as you get macros right.
That's generally not what they're actually saying.
Normally what they're saying is like eat 80% kind of pay-the-wish
and then eat 20% whatever the hell you want.
That's a very different thing to if it fits your macros,
like eat anything you want that fits your macros.
So, I mean, yeah, I've played around with a bunch of different diets.
I tried vegetarian for nine months.
I did like basically a vegan diet for a little while,
like a few months and a lot of fasting.
So I was doing like keto vegan and a bunch of fasting.
Imagine how I felt.
But I thought I was like reversing all sorts of cancer
that I didn't have and whatever.
But I like to experience and experiment with these things.
Like if there's a really strong idea, there's so many books written
that tell you, you know, all you need is like green veggies
and life's going to be good.
And, you know, I tested it.
In my experience, it was terrible.
You know, like when I did the vegetarian diet,
I couldn't put on any muscle.
I wasn't recovering from training.
I got warts, you know, for the first time in my life.
I had like warts popping up.
My immune system like really just was not good.
I fell into like, yeah, more depression.
Like at the end of that time, because it was like while I was traveling as well,
but I ended up with like chronic fatigue and just I was just a bag of shit.
So the worse you've been, I think the more you start to care about this stuff.
And I don't know if you guys have always kind of been on top and healthy because i know you you know you play around with some of the same nutritional
stuff but i think the worse you've been then the more sensitive you are the more you know
authority you have in some way to to sort of say well yeah this really makes a huge difference so
to answer the question i'm going all around the world here. Like I eat a bunch of meat, fat, connective tissue stuff.
Like the Paul Saladino type deal is really good for me.
I've done full carnivore for six months, like pretty much religiously.
And then I've played around.
Like now I still have – I've got some dairy in.
I'm in Montenegro at the moment.
They have like the most phenomenal dairy, like cheeses and stuff,
like these cream cheeses.
So far, so good.
I'm doing well.
I'm not getting any skin stuff, like acne on my back or anything like that
where I sometimes get that if I have too much milk.
But, yeah, so me, at the moment, I'm having some cheese.
I'll have some veggies if I want to.
I'm not like religiously against them. I'll have some veggies if I want to. I'm not like religiously against them.
I'll have some fruit if I want to.
That's where I'm at with it at the moment.
So it's pretty much, you know, paleo-ish with a little bit of, you know,
Neolithic comfort in there with some dairy.
But, you know, it's not a religion for me.
I'm just doing what feels best and yeah, I can recover.
I can stay lean regardless of how hard I'm training. So,
you know, everybody should do what works for them. And
you're not like, you're not weighing,
you're not weighing stuff and measuring out stuff and running around with
Tupperware and things like that?
So, yeah, no, I've never counted calories for more than a day or two.
And I don't eat high meal frequency.
At times, I've tried to get to the biggest and leanest I can be.
And I've got some reasonable you know, some reasonable results.
Like I was the skinniest kid.
I was 65 kilos, like 140 pounds when I finished high school.
And a lot of people would be like, yeah, I was around that as well.
But I trained hard for like two or three years.
And I was like trying to bust an ass to try and catch up to my friends
because they were all like 10, 15 kilos heavier than me.
And it just wasn't doing much
like i had a really tough time i was working in rugby and i weighed like 75 kilos so you know
like 160 170 pounds kind of thing um i was you know the smallest guy in the room telling all
these massive rugby players hey you got to do this to get big and strong and go and bash these other
guys and it's it's not it's not the easiest thing like a lot of strength coaches actually do it tough mentally because of that you're around these massive alpha
guys and uh you know a lot of you know i was nowhere nowhere half the man you know a lot of
those all those guys are but uh yeah you know gradually i did get some gains and you know i
would encourage people out there who feel like they have a tough time of it is to just continue to experiment, you know, put the time in.
You know, if you can build up your tolerance to training volume, people say it's 90% diet.
Those people are either already bodybuilders or they're stupid.
Like if you're training a bunch, then yeah, it's diet, right?
Like if everybody's training at a super high level for a competitive
body computer competition then the point of difference is is diet and if they can restrict
calories and whatnot to come on stage like in an unphysiological state like in a state that a human
would never naturally really be in potentially but for everybody else you know the training demand
is going to drive the physique and i think crossfit is a good example of that like when people handle a ton of training volume then you can kind of eat
whatever you want pretty shitty and have a pretty good physique like the training volume is i think
the biggest factor and if you build your tolerance to training volume and you're consistent with it
and yeah you want to get stronger but i think i was put way too much emphasis on the one to five rep range, which caused a lot of two but you know maybe something like me i consider myself to have pretty pretty average poor genetics like no one's really big buff in my family and
i don't consider myself to be either but i know that uh sometimes guys can get downhearted about
the rate of gains and uh you know feeling feeling skinny and like you're not getting anywhere is
it's not a nice feeling i think most of us kind of start that way to some degree and i'd like to give anyone who feels like that you know some some
clarity and hope that you can definitely transform yourself i looked at taking steroids when i was
in my 20s because i just thought it didn't work for me like the internet was coming around i was
on the t-nation forums and everybody seemed to be doing it and some of those guys looked looked
phenomenal so i was thinking about doing it.
If I could have got it, like if I was living in the US,
I probably would have done that in my 20s.
And I'm really glad that I never had the opportunity.
It was a lot more difficult.
I wasn't around people who do it.
And it's not a judgment call.
People who do it to win medals or because they just want
to be crazy jacked, that's fine.
But a lot can be achieved without it.
You're not going to be you know the biggest guy
i won't name names who uh you know might be somewhat not maddie and maddie but uh you're
not going to be that guy probably but um you know it's i think the cool thing is just to explore
your potential and know that you know you can i think anyone can get to a really good point where
you feel proud of your physique and that's the biggest thing whether you do it nutty or not like
yeah being on that journey is a good thing so things shifted for you when you were able to
handle more training volume and you also increased the amount of reps that you like you were able to
handle during workouts because some people doing 10-15 reps is just nightmarish for them so that shifted for you your size
yeah i i think uh the the dense strength message you know which ben's adopted into his program you
know he's got to dance there it's really like a bastardization of what a lot of crossfitters do
it's just simplifying it and systemizing it where crossfitters might a lot of those programs when i
was looking at them they were just jumping around a lot it's like one it was seven sets of two on the
minute for one week and then eight sets of five on the minute the next week and just jumped around
all over the place so dance is like you're either doing five sets or you're doing 10 sets it's flat
loading and so it just makes it really clean and clear in terms of progression your volume and it
takes the ego out of like how much weight's on the bar because if you go too heavy every set starts on the minute so you can't go
too heavy otherwise you just don't finish the set so it's like self-limiting i think it's the best
training system for the average person who goes to the gym like it came about just by looking at
people going to the gym and just being on their phones and not getting results and you know just
getting distracted where if you're
on the minute then you just don't get distracted you talk a bunch of crap but then it beeps and
you go to do your set you know so i'm a huge fan of that just to like quantify gains and i don't
see anyone who progresses on dense strength but you start by doing 10 sets of five at 60 kilos
by the time you're doing 10 sets of five at 80 kilos your physique looks better like
it's it's it's that simple like i don't see that rule uh being broken the problem is like we choose
to go too heavy and we get you know we get uh joint issues or we don't understand the short
long stuff or like the diet is way off i think so many people find that they have the energy
and the desire to train hard when they have a diet
that doesn't have a bunch of you know chemical poisonous stuff in there i know personally like
i'm pretty sensitive to that again there'll be the argument of like gluten doesn't matter and
that sort of thing but like you know no one's going to argue that you can go and take a kilo
of cocaine and it's not going to have an impact on your physiology but that's a that's a plant too right like it's processed but so you know a lot of this stuff that
we have with the white flower it's super processed i spent some time in columbia you know i know
what's going on if you're going to put a kilo of cocaine in someone's digestive system then it's
going to have a serious impact on physiology all plants come with a protection mechanism the plant
cannot run away so it's going to have a protection mechanism. The plant cannot run away.
So it's going to have a protection mechanism. Now, I'm not saying that for everyone, that
protection mechanism is going to really damage the digestive system or cause systemic inflammation.
It depends on the individual. It depends on the chemical. But to say that we shouldn't consider
it is just try the kilo of cocaine trick and see how that turns out.
Just try the kilo of cocaine trick and see how that turns out.
What's the deal with the earned carbohydrates or deserved carbs?
I've heard you talk about that.
That's Charles' thing, really.
I don't see people doing low-carb diets and not getting shredded.
I just don't see it. I know it's a controversial one and people love to hate on keto.
In my experience, you know, I can eat tons of fat and, you know,
to satiation, never count calories, not be training that hard,
and my physique stays roughly the same.
If I go and start eating a bunch of grains, I get, you know,
I get soft straight away.
Like I get fluffy and you know changes quickly so i'm actually not really that big on carbs myself like i don't do
a bunch of refeeds and things like that if i feel like a few pieces of fruit i'll do it but i'm not
hitting like tons and tons of carbs and i'm also not trying to be a bodybuilder i don't really
you know i'm not trying to to gain size anything. So for the rugby players, now, yeah, that's where it comes in.
Like, okay, some of these guys, they're going to be hitting the rice,
you know, really hard or potatoes or some of those foods.
And, yeah, they can put on some serious size by having the rice cooker.
And, you know, I think Stan Effending has set the benchmark with that.
Like I just love that clean approach to bodybuilding where the gut is actually looked after that was probably the other
biggest issue and same if we cut back to like why i was so so skinny and uh and and failing
the gut like would just blow up you know like i'd have protein drinks and then i'd have digestive
pain i you know i wouldn't want to eat for you know
take a day or two for things to settle down and all that time like obviously you know you're not
eating you're not healthy so yeah i see you giggling there what are you what are you thinking
about the guts no no i was looking at my boy andrew over here because i heard you talk about
your gut and he's like yeah i'm just i just, I'm just back here listening. Just like, yep.
I know you're talking about me. I know. I know. I just, I, I'm just like,
you know, like I like carbs. They're my, they're my friends.
They help me eat more food, but yeah. I'm just curious. How, how old are you?
38.
Okay. So you're two years older than me. Yeah, and you're...
10 years ago.
Yeah, I'm right there with you.
But you're totally downplaying your physique, man.
The pictures that we're looking at, you're in phenomenal shape.
So very inspiring over here on my end because I know I need to be dropping the carbs,
but sometimes it takes somebody like you that really needs to put the fire under me.
Somebody a bit skinnier than those two guys that you're looking at all the time.
I think that's what you're trying to say.
Well, yeah, I know.
That's the other hard thing.
I'm around these two monsters.
Who barely eat carbs.
Yeah, and who barely eat.
They just fast.
They fast 25 hours a day. And I'm over here like, no, I got to get more calories in because I do count my calories. And they're just like, nah, we don't even bother. So I'm like, all right, cool. Well, I'll figure it out someday.
Yeah. It'd be interesting, you know, what you're doing with the training and the training volume side of things as well, because I find that that's probably, people don't analyze that as much as they could and push that as much as they could sometimes. And sometimes bringing back the intensity so that you can stay fresh neurally can really help to push that side of things. It's cool to be a monster, you know, like I,
I wanted to be a monster for a long time.
I was around these rugby players. Like I worked with Sonny Williams.
I don't know if you've seen his physique.
Sonny Williams is like 110 kilos shredded.
Just, you know, the thing,
the one that everybody kind of wants to be when they're 15 years old and
thinking about how they're going to get their first girlfriend.
You look at those guys and you think, yeah, like I just need a few more kilos.
I just need a few more kilos.
I just need a few more kilos.
But it never really ends where I think once you shift the goalposts
a little bit and, you know, focus on some of the range stuff,
some of the athletic stuff, maybe the gymnastics,
then you kind of get to be a winner as well without being bigger which you know can be good for some guys and maybe i'm
being soft and giving a kind of a second prize here but uh yeah life isn't too bad for me i think
life is better for me since i gave up on trying to get bigger and actually put on like three, four kilos, you know, as soon as I stopped
worrying about how, how big I am. So yeah. We were just talking about this, how like,
um, I think it was either yesterday or the day before how like to get bigger, you need to start
focusing on your performance. You know, when you focus on your performance in the gym, moving more
training volume, getting stronger, more volume, and you stop focusing on your body, you will get bigger. But if you're continuous, you and you stop focusing on your body you will
get bigger but if you're continuously just like focusing on your body and your body and your body
it's gonna really really fuck some people up as far as when it comes to falling in love with their
training and doing what they need to do right in the gym so that that's totally right i've definitely
been fucked in the head about that stuff like if i didn't get that message across like it definitely
messed with me tough
during the teenage years early 20s and you know if anybody's feeling that hopefully the messages
here today will help you to you know just enjoy life and you know it is good to make the gains and
i'm not saying like don't put any pressure on yourself to to be better like that's important
we're in a time of meritocracy. If you're really good
at the moment, life is good. If you suck, then life is getting harder by the day. So be good
and do better. But more muscle mass isn't necessarily going to get you all the girls
and all the money and all the things that might've been promised. You might contradict me on that and similar, but.
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Let's get back to the video.
Where can people find you if they want to find out more information about you?
Probably the Instagram, the ATG Mentor is where I am most active.
I've made some lectures about some of this stuff that are on YouTube as well.
The ATG Ment mentor channel on YouTube.
I don't have that much stuff on there,
but basically I explain a lot of these concepts that I've tried to get across
today.
I think they are pretty important concepts for those that are iron lovers.
So,
you know,
make of it what you will send me your love or your hate,
whichever way.
It's going to be all love,
man.
Once people see what you're able to do, it's going to be all love man once people see what you're able to do it's going to be all love thank you so much for your time i really really appreciate
it yeah it's massive massive uh thank you to you guys for for having me on it's an honor to meet
you and uh yeah really really appreciate the chance to have a chat hope to get over there
someday soon awesome thank you later thanks. This podcast is fucking amazing.
The short range and long range strength that
Keegan was talking about makes a very big difference.
For example, the bicep curls he was mentioning on the bench
and incline.
You'll feel those.
You will feel those. That's why a lot of people
don't do them. I like the concept of doing
short range
work then doing long range
work. It makes a lot of sense. I think that could be something work it makes a lot of sense i think that could be
something that can help a lot of people out yeah it makes sense you get warmed up first you know
you do some like partial range of motion squats and then you you know hop on the slant board and
start squatting lower i mean it's like uh pretty basic stuff i would imagine you know a track
athlete that's going to sprint for the day probably going to walk a little bit before he starts sprinting or do some drills that are very slow before they start running.
That's a spider Carol.
And he's out here talking like he's not jacked.
It's going to, I think he'll get into it.
Oh, wait, no, it's just short range in this video.
But yeah, he's fucking jacked, man.
No, he's in phenomenal shape.
Yeah.
And then, um.
What was he talking about like lying
dumbbell curls that sounds like impossible lying down like you're lying down lying down like he
said on a bench oh yeah on your you're on your back the bench is on an incline 45 and you're here
you're legit like right here oh you're still on an incline. I thought he was talking about like going flat and trying to curl.
Oh my God.
So hard.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This dude's mobile and he's strong as shit.
He's big,
man.
It's fucking huge.
Who knew,
man,
being able to move.
It's a good thing.
It's an amazing thing.
Oh yeah.
He's doing,
what is he doing?
Like an overhead movement with both his hands,
like in the middle of the weights or something up a little higher.
One right there. Oh, that looks that looks really hard oh it's so small
look at that mobility look at that range that's craziness right but that's the thing man like
i think uh seaman was talking about it too but um when you think about a lot of these things, you have to dose it correctly.
A lot of this stuff, like Jefferson curls, having that ability is going to be useful until the day you die.
It's like, how much do you load it?
Are you trying to do Jefferson curls to 225 pounds?
Are you trying to continue to load that thing?
I like the concept of what he was talking about, that you don't treat these movements like you would when trying to just like get bigger biceps, bigger biceps, you're slowly
increasing the load and the amount of reps you do over time with these types of movements.
You'll take them to a point and there's a point that you don't probably need to go any further.
There's a point that you now just maintain the skill to do this range safely. Right. Um, and
that's why I think those like like Jefferson curls ATG
split squats all these deep movements are gonna be so useful and can be so
useful for people yeah I think just if you're feel like you're getting forced
into position because of the weight that you have on your back go down go down
you should work on being able to move into positions without a bunch of weight
slamming you into position.
Andrew, go down one.
That one right there in the middle.
This one?
Yeah.
Just fold it in half?
Yeah.
Oh, nice.
He's doing like a RDL type thing.
Yeah, a slant board.
Slant board Jefferson's, I think.
Look at his erectors. Oh, yeah. He's on a slant board huh yeah way crazier
is that a jefferson curl right there what he's doing
or is that actually he's doing like it looks like a jefferson curl but looks
like he's bringing his hips back like an rdl like
you said initially it didn't look his hips are
coming back because the jefferson curl is this you literally just bend
forward rdl looks like he's kind of bringing his hips back
and going down too
either way yeah
I love this stuff
yeah
just having that mobility can
really help you gain access to a lot of other
things that maybe you
otherwise weren't able to do and
you know being a better athlete is almost always a better thing.
See, I want to be able to do that.
Those are the things I want to be able to do.
We'll get there, guys.
We're all going to make it.
Andrew, take us on out of here, buddy.
Sure thing.
Thank you, everybody, for checking out today's episode.
Shout out and thank you to Eight Sleep for sponsoring today's episode.
Links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
Please follow the podcast at Mark Bell's Power Project on Instagram at MB Power Project on TikTok and Twitter.
My Instagram and Twitter is at I am Andrew Z at the Andrew Z on TikTok.
And Seema's giggling over there.
What's up?
The decaffeinated power project is
so funny to me. I think all our
voices are so, all our voices
are like two octaves lower.
100%,
yes, but also my voice still hasn't
recovered from the Niner game over a
week ago now. Oh, you just went to
a game too, right? I did, yeah. I saw him
against the Seahawks. I saw fucking
Russell Wilson go nuts. Again, he's an animal. He's so good. a game too right i did yeah i saw him against the seahawks so i fucking what russell wilson
going nuts he's an animal he's so good and uh metcalf got to see that close oh how tall is he
he's massive i think he's like six four six five the mutant he's legitimately just he just looks
human he looks so lean like from a little bit of like further away you know
but i'm as he gets closer i mean he's still lean but he just looked huge i was like holy fuck yeah
like what's this guy's deal but something pretty cool happened uh i'm standing kind of uh um you
know andrew like you were able to kind of watch the game and be like almost like literally on the
side like on the field yeah and so the
fullback for the seahawks he goes like sit down and he goes yo mark oh shit and i like i look at
him and he's like slingshot he's like slingshot he's like motioning like a bench press thing
and then he like sits down i mean my brother like totally laughed from like that's pretty awesome
you know yeah that guy gets up and he goes and like tells the coach yeah i think probably the strength coach or whatever the strength coach is all fired up
he's like slingshot and then they they scored and uh when they scored bolt like the coach
came running over he's like that's the slingshot he's like that's the power of the slingshot
we're like oh man this is too great that's fucking awesome and the people that we were with like
they're not with but the people that we were like next
to, like, they're like, we don't understand.
Like, why are these players and coaches like, you know, yelling at you guys or whatever?
It was pretty damn cool.
That's great.
At NsemaNyang on Instagram and YouTube.
At NsemaYangYang on TikTok and Twitter.
You're wearing a slingshot.
Slingshot.
Show us the slingshot.
Show us the slingshot.
If people don't know what we're talking about, we should show them. Oh yeah. Nah, fuck it. Show us the slingshot. Show us the slingshot. If people don't know
what we're talking about,
we should show them.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, no.
Fuck it.
Find out later, I guess.
Yeah, but also,
I don't want to forget
the Knees Over Toes seminar.
Oh, yeah.
October 24th.
Very good.
October 24th.
Yeah, there you go.
At the Super Training Gym.
More info and details
coming very soon.
I'm at Mark Smelly Bell.
Strength is never weak.
This week,
there's never strength.
Catch you guys later.
Bye.