Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 701 - Redefining Strength, Clean Out Your Closet Of Beliefs & See How Much Further You’ll Go
Episode Date: March 25, 2022Today we are talking about different feats of strength, not just the weight on the bar. By redefining and clearing our thoughts, we're able to chase new goals and improve everywhere Special perks for ...our listeners below! ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/ Code POWERPROJET for 20% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off site wide including Within You supplements! ➢https://eatlegendary.com Use Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢https://bubsnaturals.com Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% of your next order! ➢https://verticaldiet.com/ Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% off your first order! ➢https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! ➢https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! ➢https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off ALL LABS at Marek Health! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ 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 ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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not you guys have to go try these tasty pastries right now man people were commenting on graham's like speed of speech in the comment section oh
i i don't know if i i don't know if i mentioned it on the show or not but i i because i couldn't
get a word in edge but uh i think i may have said it because he told me that he listened to he
listens to podcasts at 2.5 yeah so i don't know if I brought it up on the podcast or not,
but I had it in my head forever.
Again, I don't know if I was able to say it or not.
I don't think so.
In between him catching a breath.
I was going to be like,
it's quite obvious that you listen to podcasts at 2.5
because you're spitting out knowledge at 2.5.
Man, that's so fast.
Yeah.
One of the best comments on the video is like,
Graham is like the Jack russell terrier that
runs out of your car and you can't get him back that's awesome i think we should just do a reaction
video where you and i are like yeah yeah but yeah but hey well are we going yeah we're going even so that the podcast of graham was really good it was
he he's he's very insightful he knows a lot about a lot of different things i'm really curious about
like what books he reads but i loved the tangents that he would go off on i was enjoying it the
whole time man i was so excited i was too i'm like he's on a roll i'm gonna stop him don't
stop this man this man has shit going but i thought at some point that he would like because we've had guests on before where they start that way and then they
start to fizzle down he actually started to ramp up yeah yeah even off as soon as we got off air
he's still just like we hung out and talked for another like hour and he's just putting on another
show that energy is infectious man like he. That man should never lose that energy because that got me pumped while we were like, I was so happy during that episode.
We've had some great guests on.
Yeah.
We've had some great guests recently.
Some bangers.
Yeah, Brandon was awesome.
I loved his energy.
And he and I did a tank workout.
And kettlebells.
Yep.
Yes!
Sorry for anybody listening,
but I just made that. Don't worry, you yelled much louder.
I have. Y'all are used to it at this point.
But yeah, it's great, you know, working out
with these guys and going out and
I don't know, sprinting with no shoes
on, you know, no socks on.
Kind of weird, especially like
on that field,
the field over at UC Davis. The field of needles? Yeah, it was kind of like running on uh on that field the field the over at uc davis needles yeah it
was kind of like it was kind of like running on hay how did it feel on your feet andrew so
yeah well the funny thing is like going into it i'm like god like dude the bottom of my feet are
just going to be shredded it's going to be like a cheese grater like they're going to be like
you know pieces of like meat coming out yeah but actually the bottom of my feet is like intact
it was like like i felt nothing wasn't sore nothing yeah top of my feet you know like my
toes like moving around is really sore my right achilles hates me still it's very upset with me
but on the hip flexors from sprinting was kind of a killer too. But no, dude, my feet feel good. How did it feel to run like that?
It felt incredible.
Like I text Mark, I was like, dude, I really liked that.
Like that felt so good.
I felt like a kid again.
Zero back pain.
I was just like blown away.
I was just so happy.
Yeah.
It's another form of strength.
You know, we kind of just live in this box of like deadlift squat bench press
pull-ups you know things like that but there's so many different attributes to strength and
you know it's it's just fun to get more exposure to them you know and see uh the way that graham
was able to run like he's he's able to put a lot of force into the ground and then some of the
drills that he does where he hops up off the ground from two feet onto one foot
and then he sprints.
And we were just messing around,
just pretending we were covering each other
like someone's throwing a football
and that shit was fun.
I just think there's just so much more to explore
with your strength training
and with fitness and with mobility.
Yeah, you could sit up there
and you can stretch and you can lift
and those things are great.
And I love those things.
I've lived in the gym pretty much my entire life.
However, I've always enjoyed being outside.
I've always enjoyed drills.
I used to love football as a kid.
It's just kind of funny to me as we get older how we just won't engage in play.
And I don't know what stops us.
I think that we're thinking that we're – well, I guess I do know what stops us.
We have negative feedback from playing sometimes.
Sometimes we go to play and it fucking hurts.
We play a pickup game of basketball and we roll our ankle.
We go to run and it hurts our knees.
We go to play a pickup game of football and we pop something and we're just like, well, I guess I am pretty removed from my high school days.
Maybe I should stop that shit.
No, absolutely.
And a huge aspect of that is you need to slowly change your habits because we all can go and run.
We all can go and sprint.
We all can go and play a pickup game of basketball if we ease ourselves into it.
You know, like when I was sprinting with Graham and when he comes back, I'm going to beat his ass in a sprint.
I know it.
But I was going to like 80% and I was like, nah, we ain't pulling our hamstring today.
We're going to keep it chill.
I pulled my hammy.
But, you know, the problem there was I think I did some sprints two days before just to see how am I –
and I sprinted out 100% on the thing in the gym.
I've seen good.
So I was like, okay, looks like I can probably go out and sprint.
I should have done like three or four weeks of just building up to intensity because, yeah, the off-chance thing did happen and I pulled my hammy.
But preparation was necessary.
So we're doing all these things now all
these really cool things you just ran a fucking half marathon but you didn't go and you you didn't
go and run a half marathon off the bat well i kind of did i mean you've been running though
like you've been running for how long now when do you really start running again right no i knew i
knew i could keep that pace i mean i guess first get, first of all, I think, you know, we can go back probably almost three years ago when I started messing around
with a little bit of running.
Um,
and I,
I didn't really get consistent with it until maybe just a couple months ago,
uh,
where I got,
where I was like,
you know,
I'm just going to be consistent with this and kind of see what happens.
And that,
that was all sparked,
uh,
by having Ben Patrick here because by having Ben Patrick here,
because without having Ben Patrick here, which is really weird because he says that I'm a mentor to
him, but he's helped me tremendously and now my knees feel better. So I just felt better. So it's
just like, it just called to me to move more, you know, when your diet feels good and when
everything's feeling right, you just feel like you have more energy output so i was like i feel like i need to do something else with this body other than just
lift weights so did chris henshaw coach you up at all too with some like yeah yeah yes he did
chris henshaw was a big impact you think about it we had nick bear we had zach bitter we've had a
bunch of people around us for a while that um that talk about running and that are amazing runners i mean
zach bitter had the all-time world record for a while in uh ultra marathons like 100 100 miles
he's unbelievable but he showed me how to run and then when chris henshaw came chris henshaw's like
damn he's like your running form's pretty good but that's because zach bitter showed me previously
you guys saw me how i was running before that yeah uh it was a real wreck and if you guys are missing it go to the youtube channel
because you put that up on youtube zach better and you so go watch that video so you can see
exactly what we're talking about yeah and then chris uh chris henshaw was incredible because
what i liked about him he he knows that he knows the technical side of all this stuff and he could
break stuff down he could get like really deep deep into what energy system you're using.
But he didn't use any of that language when he was here.
The only thing he talked about was, can you still have a conversation?
Can you talk?
And we did get into a little bit about nasal breathing and stuff.
And he was like, dude, you're brand new.
You're going to be hyperventilating when you're running.
You're going to be running like you're a chubby kid.
And he's like, it's fine.
Don't worry about it.
The nasal breathing stuff, he's like, that's going to be for down the road.
And during this half marathon that I did, 13 point whatever miles it is, I don't think my heart rate, according to my Garmin watch,
I don't think it even went over like 80.
It was like 85, 90.
Like it was in that range.
I felt really good the whole time.
I don't think I was nasal breathing the entire time,
but now keep in mind,
I was moving really slow.
I just got my time today.
It came back.
It was like three hours and three minutes.
So I'm not saying the world on fire.
The first place guy, he did it in one hour.
So he beat me by, that motherfucker beat me by two hours.
But I was just going at a pace that I can handle.
And it felt good.
And none of it felt hard.
I never felt like there was any reason to stop or to quit.
I was having a hard time actually like running.
And it wasn't because of the duration of how long it was is because I was sore from doing the sprinting with Graham because this
was on Sunday and I think we ran on Friday.
Yeah.
So my hips were still in my groin and stuff and I was like, oh man.
So that's why I just did like this slow waddle the entire time.
But listen, like, okay, you, you say that the slow waddle the entire time. But listen, you say that, the slow waddle, you jogged.
But even so, you did that at a consistent pace.
You were slowing down at the stops, but you did that at a pretty consistent pace for 13 and a half miles.
And that was your first time doing that, right?
miles like and that was your first time doing that right that's a big deal because uh i think it's really cool looking at where you came from 330 pounds focusing on powerlifting transition
into doing some bodybuilding getting leaner getting in shape now doing running while maintaining a
good amount of muscle and still being able to move you're it's it's funny to me because it's like
people expect that as they get older, things will feel worse.
They will break down.
They will get weaker, right?
As you're getting older, you're feeling younger.
You're probably feeling way better now than you did when you were within, you know, I mean, I don't want to say the highest level is your powerlifting career because to do that and to move those types of loads, there's a lot of wear and tear on the body.
But even before that, you're
probably feeling better now than you did then.
I think maybe in about two years, I'll
be able to do things that I just have never been
able to do before. What do you mean?
Just all kinds of stuff.
I've never really had great mobility.
And so
I think that
first of all, I think
right now, I can do almost every single thing that I did when I was in high school from an athleticism standpoint.
There are still a couple things.
We talked about jumping over the couch with JL.
But actually my knee is starting to feel a little bit better.
So now I would at least try it.
I still might kill myself because, again, I'm out of practice with stuff like that.
I still might kill myself because I'm out of practice with stuff like that.
But when I was young, I didn't mind trying all kinds of physical stuff just because I always felt good and felt athletic and felt strong.
So I'm kind of hoping to gain some access to some of those things and, I don't know, maybe be able to grab a basketball rim.
When I was young, I was able to do stuff like that.
So I don't know how far away I am from that.
I don't even know.
I'm not sure if I can even like touch the net.
I don't know like, you know,
what my jumping capabilities are currently,
but I know that I feel good and I know that I can work towards
being able to produce a lot of force.
So that's kind of the next stage
is to work on being able to just be more explosive.
And Andrew, I'm curious about your take too,
because you're probably feeling much better now than you did a few years ago and you're getting older. But for example, we have all these people come on to the podcast, Chris Henshaw, Ben Patrick,
Graham Tuttle recently, a lot of other guests too, that just give us these little nuggets,
right? Like when Graham came on and we did all the footwork you know we did all the like connecting with your feet doing the hand
and foot glove the different foot exercises and if you guys haven't seen this it will be on youtube
and we did make stuff for instagram too so that's there and you should just go to graham's page
because he has all that info but literally that night after we came after we finished that it was
the thursday i went out and I ran fucking two miles.
And the first mile I ran in 645.
I got excited.
So I sent you a voice message because I'm like, dog, I just ran a mile for the first time in a long ass time.
All nasal breathing in a 645.
And I haven't done that in forever just because like when I'd run, I just didn't feel good.
Right.
But working on my feet, that small amount, it unlocked something that I didn't like,
that I just didn't have access to.
So I felt so comfortable during that run.
I think when I ran back, it was like a 710 or 715 or something like that.
But I felt fucking amazing.
And like we're getting older, but we are increasing our capacity to do certain things.
It doesn't mean we're not lifting anymore because we still lift, but we're developing all these levels of strength that aren't just
consisting about the weight on the bar.
And I think for me,
the go to guys were,
were transformative too,
because the stuff that they were mentioning when they were here,
I was like,
Hmm,
I want to see just like everybody else that watches it.
You watch that stuff, especially the go to stuff. Um, it seems to be kind just like everybody else that watches it, you watch that stuff, especially the go-to stuff.
It seems to be kind of polarizing.
And people are like, I wonder if this is bullshit.
Which, by the way, audience, that's fucking great.
That's the way you should view everything with a little skeptical eye.
And you should think for a second about it.
You should say, I wonder what they're saying, how true it is.
But then I think it's a good idea to examine it.
And so I was like, let me just try some of this myself.
Let me put aside any emotion from it.
Let me just try some of this myself.
And the go-to guys were like, well, you know, we don't expect you to get rid of all your lifting and all that kind of stuff.
And then I was like, no, you know what?
I am going to put my lifting aside for a little while just so I can see if what you're talking about has any benefit for me. And I
remember what James Smith said. James Smith said, if you want to change your tissues, you have to
change what you do. So if we want, like, look, if you want your shoulder to feel better, you probably
need to stop bench pressing. If you want your hamstring to feel better, your quads, whatever it is, you might have
to stop powerlifting for a little bit, your knee, whatever it might be.
You're going to have to go in a different direction for at least a little while.
And for some people in my powerlifting career, sometimes that only meant like two weeks.
It wasn't a huge, which sounds like a huge deal.
Like, bro, you can't bench for two weeks.
You're like, what? You i gotta do that voice though yeah you just you like can't live without like doing your the exercises like pacify you in some way you know um but so i wanted to
really trust in what they were saying and sure enough by getting rid of some lifting for a little
while keep in mind i've never taken a break from lifting. So I probably should have examined that at some other
point probably. But by pulling back on lifting and by stretching, imagine that, and Seema's been
talking about stretching forever, my body felt lighter. I felt a little bit better. It was easier
to run. You know, don't forget that we are so attached to
the way that our body feels and the message that our body has given us. I can sit here and say,
oh yeah, I toughed it out and I woke up early and I ran. It's like, no, my body felt good enough for
me to run. Otherwise I wouldn't have ran. I would have talked myself out of it just like anybody
else. Yeah, there was days where like I was a little sore and I did have to talk myself into it, of course. And I've been a person that's been disciplined with physical stuff
for many years. So it wasn't that hard for me to do any of that. But if you don't feel good,
you're not going to be able to play the game. You're not going to be able to participate.
And you're going to drop off at some point. And most people drop off or drop out of stuff because of negative feedback.
When you used to run, it used to hurt your knee.
When I used to run, well, I, I wouldn't even think of running.
That's how far back I was.
It was like, I was like, I weigh 270.
I weigh 290.
I weigh 300.
Like, eh, there's no running, no, no running to be had here.
And even as I lost weight, um, it just didn't occur to me like that, oh, maybe I gained access back into some of these things.
Because I still didn't feel good.
My body and my tissues were still way too stiff.
And I want to mention something real quick because the Go To Guys are great.
But one thing is when I hear information and it's, it's cool.
We take on information for a lot of different people and take the things from them that
serve us and discard the things that don't, um, John Cena and Jesus are making me a little
bit uncomfortable.
I just realized that.
And I don't think that that's Haram.
Well, it's a very Haram.
It's supposed to be like a...
Type in haram on the internet.
It's supposed to be a power slam, but it's kind of turned into...
It's turning into a power slam and Jesus is doing some...
He should be more like that.
What popped up with haram?
What does that start with?
H-A-R-A-M.
Haram be?
Just haram.
h-a-r-a-m haram be just haram haram gonna forbidden or prescribed by islam what oh it's forbidden duh okay that's that's that's um anyway what i'll say is i'm not into i'm not into like
when when someone puts something forward and they're like, you know, my way is right.
And all these people are doing this wrong.
I wasn't here for the GoTo podcast because I had COVID.
But when I listened to it, I was just like, man, there's some good things here.
But y'all ain't got to do that.
It's going to be hard for people to receive your message if you're just trashing the things that other people do.
it's going to be hard for people to receive your message if you're just trashing the things that other people do.
And there's no reason that lifters cannot implement the top,
the stuff that you guys have been learning.
And I've been learning from Goda and keep doing your fucking thing because
there are aspects of things that will benefit them.
But like immediately I can understand somebody hearing that and being like,
well,
fuck you.
Like,
to be perfectly honest,
cause like,
that's why I think that's why ben's done such a great
job uh graham's done such a great job a lot of these people we've had on have done a great job
because they're like hey take a look at this this might benefit you what you're doing is great it's
cool uh take a look at this but then you know when somebody's like you know all that lifting
shit you're doing you're wasting your fucking time it It's fine. And there's aspects of lifting that are fucking people up. Oh yeah.
So that's true.
But no,
it's not something that an athlete shouldn't do.
And that's like,
it's,
I hope that people just pay attention to that stuff and implement it,
but do not get dogmatic with it.
Don't turn in,
don't,
don't ever let yourself get into that kind of mindset where this is the right way and everything else is shit.
And I think the reason for that is that you are not going to flip someone's beliefs around until you figure out a way to give them a taste of what you're talking about.
other people's job that are listening to the show that want to share this stuff with family members and friends to do so in a way that is inviting and
to say,
uh,
you know,
Hey grandpa,
I know your knees hurt.
Um,
you know,
maybe you can come to the gym with me today and pull the sled backwards
rather than telling him,
don't,
don't,
don't,
you know,
don't do this.
You sit down way too much.
You got to stand up more.
You just threw so much shit at somebody, you know, and they're, they're going to be, they don't, don't, don't, you know, don't do this. You sit down way too much. You got to stand up more. You just threw so much shit at somebody, you know, and they're going to be, they don't,
you got to keep in mind, they don't feel good.
And they have negative feedback from all the things that they try to do most of the time.
And so they're not as into it as you are.
The only way that you can get them to think a little differently is if they feel something and it feels differently.
If they go to the gym with you and they practice an exercise or they try a stretch or they try something that you recommended.
I mean, try this right now.
Just take your fucking hand and put your hand in between your toes.
It's like it's so strange on what that does for you like after insima was doing it to me the other
day i was like oh my god i feel so good we'll explain that some other time i guess but
it's incredible like your entire body feels different yeah from stuff like that so uh i think
we have to first of all to retain information and to get information,
you can't shut yourself off just because of one thing that someone says. So if somebody says
something and it turns you off, don't forget there's still something probably really valuable
you can learn from that person. And then if you're going to share that information, make sure you
don't do that same thing. And I've been guilty of it a million times
because I get frustrated with different strategies
that people use.
And I want to tell people the strategy that I use
because I'm excited about it.
But I should just present, just present shit
and then let people make their own decision.
Yeah, I like what Graham's approach.
He had a bunch of different things,
but he's not knees over toes guy.
He's not go to.
But the information that he shared, you know, like when we seen that lineman on the field and he was like, you know, get in your stance.
And he's just like, ah, he had his inside ankle bone was low and he was explaining all that.
So I think if like, let's say you did see or hear about the go to information and you just totally wrote it off.
But then you're like, oh, but I like Graham.
It's like, but they are kind of talking about the same thing.
Delivery matters.
So, but delivery, but what I'm getting at is like, don't shut yourself off because, you know, this is too dark.
Like whatever it is, this camp over here, you're just like, I don't want any of their information.
But like what Mark just said, like, but when some of those tactics or topics cross over
then you can be like oh that's what they were talking about and then yeah the delivery you
know does matter so you're just like ah now it makes even more sense i think something good to
do is because we like to bring people on that challenge the things that we do and challenge
our ideas so that's a good thing uh but one of the reasons why we like doing that is like when we hear something that is maybe
in stark contrast to what we do or what we may currently believe is right for us, if
it rubs that, right, ask yourself why.
Because it might be a good – that is probably a good thing.
Like if you have a visceral reaction to something that somebody says, instead of immediately just turning that off, listen more intently,
just like really listen more intently because it could be that that person's bringing something
to you that might end up changing your idea or changing your belief on something.
And at the end of the day, that's a good thing because we are not always right. We do not expect to be always right. We expect to come across new information that will
help us adjust our belief systems and the things that we do so we can become better.
But if we are like, what we're doing is right, everything we do is fucking right,
we're going to be stuck in a cage of our own creation and we're not going
to be able to move forward. Right. And I think we have a tendency to put ourselves in a box too. And
this is something that I said while I was running and I just wanted to record it because I was like,
oh, I'm just feeling a certain way. Like all kinds of weird shit happens to you when you run for
three hours straight. You think about all kinds of stuff. I thought about my dad being in the
hospital for 75 days straight and just all kinds of stuff.
And you're like, well, that had to be way harder than this.
So this is actually fucking easy.
But I was also just thinking about how many times I boxed myself in.
It's not even anything anybody else said about me.
It's my own thoughts about how i perceive how i perceive
people to think of me like i'm a meathead like no one's really no one really has ever just said hey
you're just a meathead like no one's really ever physically i mean they might call me a meathead
but it's like in jest you know they're just kind of like fucking around or whatever um thinking
that i was dumb when i was a kid like all these things, thinking that I was a jock.
Like, oh, you're good physically, but not so much mentally.
You're good at these things, but even something as simple as like cooking,
you could tell yourself like, oh, I don't know anything about cooking.
And it's like, well, maybe that's not true.
Maybe you cook actually kind of a decent variety of stuff that you like,
that you cook pretty well to your taste buds.
That's actually a really good start.
And just thinking like I was a power lifter and kind of being like so entrenched in that.
For me, I was lucky because I was a power lifter as a kid, and I distanced myself from it for a period of time, and then I came back to it as I was an adult.
And when I came back to it, I knew – I kind of just knew better than to get too deep into it and have it be my only thing.
Yeah.
into it and have it be my only thing.
Yeah.
Because I already went through professional wrestling, which I basically failed at, and also football.
Like, I didn't reach my dreams and hopes in football.
So I already had two things that didn't really work out the way that I was thinking they
would work out in my head.
And when it came to powerlifting, it was more like, let me just see what the fuck I can
do with this.
This would be interesting.
What if I, okay, football, I got to be honest with myself.
I don't really think that I put, I don't think I put everything into it.
I think I was too young.
I wasn't as fired up as I am nowadays, those kind of things.
Wrestling, same thing.
Wrestling wasn't my passion.
It was my brother's passion.
I kind of got into it with him and me and my brothers we loved
wrestling and so i wasn't going to be the next stone cold or the rock when it came to power
lifting i was like this is something you were good at as a kid and you've always been pretty
good at it without a without a crazy amount of extra effort you were better than most so let's
see what happens if we fucking we roll the dice and we kind of bet on this.
Let's see what's going to happen.
So that's what I wanted to do.
I wanted to put my focus there,
but I was also grounded because I had a wife.
Over a period of time, I had Jake,
and then I had Quinn.
I had Power Magazine.
Then I had Slingshot.
I had a lot of shit going on
so I wasn't just
a powerlifter, I wasn't just a meathead
I was also an inventor
I was also a dad, I was also
a husband
and so I was all these things to all these different people
but what I made the mistake of
many many times in the past was
putting myself in this box of
you're a powerlifter or you're just this over,
over a period of time as I was able to,
to achieve stuff physically.
I was like,
who the fuck knows?
I don't know.
Like maybe I'll be an author one day,
you know,
I've written two books,
you know,
maybe I'll,
who the hell knows?
Maybe one day I'll be an actor.
I don't know.
Like,
I don't know where this,
maybe I'll get into jujitsu more.
Like I, I don't, I don't know. Like, I don't know where this, maybe I'll get into jujitsu more. Like I,
I don't,
I don't really know anymore.
Now I can honestly say that whatever I get interested in,
I know that I'm going to do really well in it.
And I know that,
and I know that there's all kinds of possibilities.
I have all kinds of capabilities within anything that I get interested in as
long as I'm interested in it for a while. Yeah. Yeah. And dude, a big thing that I've done this, uh, people tend to do is if you
have people that are close to you, or if, if you've just had a belief about yourself for a long time,
because we know that your words mean a lot, the things you say about yourself mean a lot,
but then also
if somebody close to you says something about you you may take that you may start believing
that about yourself um like i had somebody in the past that told me i wasn't really that creative
i was very skilled analytically like i could just take things understand it and roll with it
right i was i was good at memorizing shit but because of that i was just
like i'm not really a creative i said that about myself that i am not a creative person um or i
have a hard time i've heard you say that yeah you did hear me say that a few years ago like i've said
that but once i started analyzing shit what what beliefs do i have about myself what makes someone
more creative than you like Just sitting down and thinking.
That's all.
Sitting down and thinking and letting things happen.
And I stopped believing that about myself.
And now I think I'm super creative.
But I believe that about myself.
So I think what you got to do is going to analyze what beliefs you have about yourself.
Do you not think you're smart?
Do you not think you're creative? Do you not think that you can speak behind a camera one thing is
like this is another belief i had what is when you guys had me come onto the podcast a few years ago
i was like well shit number one i don't know if i can talk about anything for an hour but number
two i've had you speak at seminars yeah like that too yeah exactly you had me speak at some i was
like bro what the fuck are you doing doing this to me?
Right.
But but I was also like, I'm not that funny either.
Right.
I'm just I believe that about myself.
But I'm not saying I'm funny.
But what I'm saying is I've seen comments and people have told me I'm funny.
I'm like, I guess I guess I may have a little bit of a comedic bone in me.
So this is the thing.
I set those beliefs in myself,
those beliefs that are lacking.
And I had to analyze that and be like,
no, I can be this.
No, I can be this.
And we all need to do that for ourselves
because there's no reason you need to,
you don't need to box yourself in.
I was boxing myself in.
You were boxing yourself in for certain things too.
We got to get the fuck out of that.
And those boxes are going to limit us in
terms of the things that we really want to do you won't take a step like i remember when you guys
asked me to be on the podcast intrinsically i was just like i knee jerked and said yes
but inside i was just like dog you ain't ready straight up i was like dog you ain't fucking
ready but that was my belief and it wasn't true so you got it we got to really redefine that you're
not ready you like well we're still waiting to see how it works out you brought it up
yeah but what you guys are saying is because like you also have the patience too
because that's something that you know i can be like i do want to be more creative
and then i'll try something like fuck dude i've been sitting here for like an hour trying to think of a TikTok video and I can't think of one thing.
I'm not creative the way I thought I was or I was trying to be.
But you maybe try it again tomorrow and say, oh, it took me less time to figure it out and so on and so forth.
So that was my problem in the past for sure is like I just wouldn't stick with anything.
Dog, but on that, this is the thing too, that fucks a lot of people. And I think it helped
doing jujitsu for me, helped me kind of get out of that. Getting good at something takes a long
time. And people feel like if I get into this and I don't immediately have a knack for it,
it's not me. It's not for me. And maybe there are certain things that aren't for you. I'm not
saying that you need to stick with everything you do do but when it comes to trying to learn a new skill
or trying to be a different way maybe you want to start reading more so you start reading and it's
slow initially or you you want to start doing more creative things and you start doing more
creative things and it takes you a while that is okay like not everything needs to come fast for needs to come to you although it would
help i don't put in so much work man yeah just like yeah but not everything needs to hit you
don't need to be a natural at something to stick with it and a lot of people this is from that book
mindset by carol dweck which i tell everybody to read a lot of people feel like if I don't get this quickly or if it doesn't click with me, I'm just not good at it. And that is a belief to get rid of because
everything is going to take a while to improve at. We talk a lot about interpretation and,
you know, redefining things, you know, redefine what strength means to you.
Redefine how far you want to go with your strength. Like if you really are obsessed and you really do want to deadlift 800 pounds, then maybe
for you, it's fine that you leave other things out and you don't end up sprinting barefoot
and you don't end up practicing jujitsu or learning how to box or learning other things
that are good for your health or good for your longevity, that's fine.
You set a goal and you go after it.
That's what I did and I feel great about it.
I would advise other people to go after the things that they're really interested in
and to do so with everything they got.
However, I think it's also important to redefine stuff.
When it comes to something like creativity people might not know
this but like if you're good at basketball or you're good at tennis or you're good at like
do you know how fucking hard it would be to try to build a robot to be able to hit a tennis ball
back from from even a crappy tennis player yeah there's a lot of creativity there's a lot of genius inside someone's body
to be able to hear the ball hitting a racket hear the ball hitting the ground and then saying i
think it's going to ricochet over here and then adjust yourself and then adjust how you hit it
just very specifically so it just goes over the net and like i'm i'm using tennis as an example
because tennis is fucking really difficult.
Like it's very hard to like, I mean, obviously you could be agile.
Yeah.
So you could have some skill set with some of that.
But like all three of us could go play basketball pretty easily.
And who knows, maybe we'll all be terrible, but like we can go play.
All three of us could go play volleyball.
And again, maybe we'll be horrible.
We're going to like be pretty bummed about tennis because we're gonna keep hitting it into the fucking net yeah i'm gonna get pissed and i'm
gonna hit it you know and try to hit home runs with it and that's not even gonna go as far as
i'd like you know like it's really difficult so we'll be missing the ball a lot yeah yeah
have you guys ever played tennis yes i was shit like shit. It was pretty fun, though. Not as a kid.
I did it with a friend of mine a few times, and I was bad.
I was playing at some camps and stuff when I was really young.
But we were just messing around.
At this camp, you got to pick different sports.
And we were young, and no one was trying to train you in tennis.
We didn't have a tennis coach or anything.
They just wanted you to hit the ball back and forth and then as it got explained to me of like how you're supposed to hit the ball and how it has to land in a particular spot
just for a serve i couldn't even serve it i was like this isn't this game's impossible
but to your point like you know don't give up on stuff just because you're not naturally good at it
right away.
Some things are going to take more work than others.
But also let's kind of redefine our definition of creativity.
There's so many different expressions of it.
Somebody that figures out how to dribble a basketball and get past another person to keep scoring layups all day long, That's a form of fucking creativity.
Creativity is just anything that's outside the box of traditional thought, of the way that anybody else thinks about stuff.
And creativity is created off of error correction and off of, okay, when I tried that dribble last time, it went off my foot.
I got to make sure my foot's in a different spot or I got to dribble the ball in a different spot.
Last time the guy stole the ball from me. I wonder if I push my butt towards him, if he'll be able to get to the ball.
You know, like these kinds of things.
You start to think of those things.
But I think that we don't place a lot of value on that.
We're thinking creativity means that we are an inventor, that we come up with like, or that we're like a pioneer of some kind.
And if you look at someone like Mr. Beast, who was just recently on Joe Rogan, that guy practices creativity over and over again.
It's a muscle.
It's just like anything else.
it's a muscle. It's just like anything else. If you practice it a lot and then you start to believe in yourself, other people start to say you're creative and now you're kind of, you're, you're
on, you're on your way because now you have a belief system, uh, that's wrapped up in it. But
like, you know, just work on redefining these things and you don't have to, uh, you don't have
to think that you'll never have access to it. And I want to kind of piggyback off that.
I love how you mentioned kind of redefine what creativity is because there are, if you look within your life, there are probably many things that you do and that maybe you're skilled at that does take a level of creativity that you are adding things to.
And you just don't think that's creative because that's what you do.
But there's a level of creativity in that. It like a scale it's a spectrum right but whenever people talk about
especially because of social media comparisons you know one reason why i mean when i look if i
look at myself one reason why i may have not thought i was creative was because i was like
damn they're doing this i see him doing this i see I see her doing this. That's so creative. I can't or I didn't do that. So I'm like, maybe I'm just not creative. But I've also said,
and I do think it's useful to look at other people who are doing things better than yourself
and to compare yourself to them. But when you compare yourself to them, don't look at it as
a negative thing. Like look at what they're doing creatively or look at what they are doing
physically or look at what they're doing financially and use that as like, I wonder how
they're doing that. Because comparing yourself to people can actually be something powerful.
It can be like you see somebody doing something a certain way and they're doing it in an amazing way.
The knee-jerk reaction shouldn't be like, oh, fuck them. Like it shouldn't be to try to tear that down.
It should be like,
that's fucking impressive.
I want to be able to do that.
Or I want to be able to understand how to do that or learn how to do that.
And then take that.
Even saying,
I wonder how long that person's been doing that for to get that good at that.
Exactly.
Because I would like that.
Exactly.
So can you,
cause like this whole thing is like
a lot of people will say don't compare yourself to other people maybe compare yourself to other
people but change your interpretation of that in comparison change the way you take that comparison
it shouldn't now be a negative thing on yourself or your lack of ability within a certain area or
realm it should be i'm comparing myself to them because I want to see how they got there,
what they,
how they do,
what they do,
how they learn to do that.
Maybe what books they read.
So you can get there.
That should be a comparison because comparison is good.
Yeah.
You can reverse engineer it.
Fab project family.
I hope you guys are doing well today.
I want to give you guys a quick piece of fitness equipment,
lifting history.
The hip circle that you see before you is actually the first hip circle ever. All right. There were no booty bands before the
hip circle, which is pretty interesting. That's why you see it in gyms like The Rock. We've seen
Kim K using on Instagram. It is the OG, but that's also why we have the slingshots, gangster wraps,
knee sleeves, elbow sleeves, everything that you're going to need in the gym so that you can
protect yourself before you wreck yourself. So Andrew, you tell the people how to get it.
Yes, that's over at markbellslingshot.com and at checkout, enter promo code
powerproject10 to save 10% off your entire order. Links to them down in the description,
as well as the podcast show notes. It's interesting. Like that only happens when
there's a lot of space between you and the other person, like a lot of degrees of separation. Like, for example, maybe somebody is amazing.
Again, I'll use basketball as an example.
I can be like, well, I'm not a basketball player,
but that's absolutely fascinating.
I want to ask this guy, like, how he got to be so fucking good at that.
That is incredible, you know, the way he can dribble,
the way he can shoot, the way he can dunk.
Like, that's amazing.
But if it's like another lifter or a bodybuilder, maybe I'm kind of hung up and just kind of sitting there going, that guy's way more jacked than me.
He's way stronger.
And then for some reason, like, that guards me to, like, not ask questions.
And, like, that's foolish because I should ask questions in that moment, right?
ask questions and like that's foolish because i should ask questions in that moment right when i was uh doing my run uh i had these uh older women who came up and they're like
we're having a great time running behind you you're like you're not you're not half bad to
look at and they just start but they're not gonna do that like 25 year old girls aren't gonna aren't
gonna do that same thing they might right maybe uh. And the guy that was in front of me, you know,
I mentioned that I lost a hundred pounds and he like peeled back and he
started listening to me too.
And we had like this little mini seminar as I'm going.
Wow.
So you were talking while.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're having, having some conversation.
But I think that we're,
if it's like runner versus runner, they're not going to ask each
other questions.
You know, it's like two guys that they run, they average, you know, eight minute miles
the whole time and they're competitive with each other.
I mean, first of all, they're not going to talk during the race, but they'll probably
might not even talk after the race because they're comparing themselves and they're,
they're kind of like in conflict with the other person rather than just being like receptive of the other person saying, hey, man, you did fucking awesome on that race.
Like what, you know, think about like when you competed in bodybuilding.
Yeah.
When you compete, you might ask the judges some shit, but you never talk to the other motherfucker that you competed against.
You know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Even the guy that came in second or third, if you were beat, if you were able to beat some other people,
the guy might have better legs than you.
And you're not like,
bro,
like,
Hey,
your legs look awesome,
man.
What'd you do?
You know,
you just,
as we get older,
we do that shit.
You know,
when you become like 40,
you become 50,
you don't care anymore.
It's a lot easier to do stuff like that.
But for when we're young and we're competitive,
we're like, I'm not going to ask that, but like, i don't need to know anything from that person i'm just gonna work
harder imagine if you do that stuff when you're younger though like a cool thing is like when ben
came here he was asking you a lot of questions he was asking you oh like that's that's why he
started deadlifting over there he was asking you questions about deadlifting like he's already so
far in the realm of what he does as far as ATG, full range movements, athletics.
But he's still coming over here in the realm of deadlifts and barbell strength.
And like, how is this useful?
How can I implement it?
Teach me.
We all have that mindset here where it's just like, let's fucking just learn.
We have teachable mindsets.
We have that white belt mentality.
fucking just learn. Like we have teachable mindsets. We have that white belt mentality.
And the reason why we're all getting better as we get older, but not only getting better, we're all kind of turning younger as we get older. I can specifically kind of talk about you two,
cause I mean, I don't really count here. You guys are both getting younger. You guys are both,
I think even, even in terms of a level of excitement that
i personally have about things now i'm just getting more excited day by day as i keep learning
and reading new shit like i'm i feel more excitement and for a lot of people as they get
older they get less excited they get less curious you know as a kid like you mentioned you are
curious keep that fucking curiosity fire high
keep being curious about shit yeah um like i was just thinking about it like i can't point to any
one thing specific because first off i didn't really do shit in my 20s but there's nothing
that i can't do better than i could do in my 20s you know i mean like i can do everything better
right now in my 30s than i could when I was in my 20s.
Across the board, you can, every fucking little thing you can think of athletically, mobility,
just energy, everything is way better right now in 36 than fucking my whole life, dude.
Libido is actually way higher now too.
Because you've been pumping that cock.
Dude, with that penis. I'm sorry. Getting the sensitivity up. Someone's getting the sensitivity up someone's gonna be like what the fuck getting that girth up too
hey hey y'all want to y'all want to tell them what the fuck happened in february
i mean that's up to you guys penis penis pump record sales yo okay so you know what? Yeah. We, like, so in January, we sold, like, $150,000 worth of penis pumps.
And if you guys go look at the comments in those videos, a lot of guys were talking about,
like, how it's been beneficial for them.
It's been beneficial for your boy.
In February, we sold more penis pumps.
We're going to all have penis pump cars.
We could fucking get a Bentley with like a
a dick stand
it'll be custom
a chindow
oh a chindow
custom
oh
those would be great to sell
a penis shaped steering wheel
you know the little
the little thing in the car
if I have it shaped as a dick
we'll just be like
the ambiguously gay duo
you remember those
no
that rings a bell though.
Yes, I know.
Be careful with the sound though.
No, no sound.
But I want to see what their car looks like.
Oh my gosh.
But yeah, your libido.
Is your libido better now than your year 20s?
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
Everything's up.
Comparison.
Everything's up.
I want to see if this one's a car.
Yeah, it's in here. It's in here it's a van looking up is this
where have i seen this it's saturday night live oh yeah
there's you mark look at my cape
oh my god look at their car though
that's what we'll be writing.
Oh, wow.
Ace and Gary.
They just blew up a robot.
Safety tips.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
That's what that, when you said a car, I was just like, well, maybe it'll just be a clear cylinder with some chairs inside and that'll be the penis pump mobile.
clear cylinder with some chairs inside and that'll be the penis pump mobile that mean you know like that and that's super exciting dude because you hear these things like sarcopenia is a thing
and whenever i've heard about sarcopenia i'm like i mean if you lift i wonder who like it is a thing
it is factual that as you get older you lose muscle and i even hear people within that make
youtube videos
when they're talking about older guys who are jacked and why they're probably on drugs they
always bring up well sarcopenia you know as you get older you lose muscle so there's no way you
can be this jacked but if you have within you the continuous lifting through the years and
continually trying to progress in the gym there should be no reason that you're a jacked 50-year-old.
I mean, Arnold still looks pretty good.
I know his goals aren't the same.
If he's on anything,
it's probably way less than what he used to use.
And I think he's, what, in his 70s?
I mean, there's a lot of people out there
that are still able to hold it together.
And I think that your goals just change, too,
as you get older. So you might not able to hold it together. And I think that your goals just change too as you get older.
So you might not care to be as big.
It might not be as convenient to like lug around as much body weight.
And therefore, because your goals change, you might just, I don't know,
just want to live in a slightly different body.
Like for me, over time, I'll want to be like, you know,
continue to be like less weight, I think, just because it's just easier.
It makes everything a little easier.
So that I can take all your clothes that fit me.
You'll just be a size down.
So give me all your,
give me all your Viore.
Thank you.
You got a new wardrobe.
Yeah,
absolutely.
I was just going to say like,
even like,
cause I did say mobility,
but like you guys know me as like,
well,
a couple of months ago being like super stiff
but even in my 20s i was super stiff like because all i did was sit down and then i'd get up and go
to work and i would sit down all day and like so like everything it just made me a better person
because it's like i don't know like something as simple as like taking out the trash it's like
fuck like that hurts like we'll just keep pushing it down you know like there's little stupid things
like that that just made me a better person keep sweeping under the rug yeah exactly i'll do that tomorrow
that that idea about stretching i'll mess with that tomorrow yeah just keep pushing it off
i think people just re-examining and redefining just as many things as you can think of you know
i know no one wants to clean out their closet,
but if you clean out the closet of your thoughts,
it'll launch you forward in ways that you fucking couldn't believe.
You think about, I know Encima's helped a lot of people.
I've helped a lot of people.
Andrew's helped a lot of people.
And we hear people all the time say,
oh man, that's cool that you guys do that,
but I don't have the discipline.
And you're like, I'm sorry, what do you do again?
And they're like, I work for the state.
And it's like, how long have you been doing that for?
Like 25 years?
You're like, have you ever been written up or reported for not being a good employee?
They're like, no.
Do you show up on time?
Like, yeah.
You start to find all these things, and you're like, no. Do you show up on time? They're like, yeah.
You start to find all these things,
and you're like, doesn't your kid play soccer?
They're like, yeah, my kid's been playing soccer for six years.
Who drives and practice?
I do.
Who picks your kid up from school?
I do.
It's like, hey, I think you have discipline
in a lot of areas.
What you're referring to is that you struggle
with discipline in this one particular area,
which kind of always goes back to the same fucking thing every single time,
is that that one area, they're being too restrictive.
They're asking too much of themselves for the moment.
When I started to run, the great thing about running was that I had zero expectations for it.
None.
I was just like, I'm walking one day,
and I've been walking for like 10 years,
and I was just like, I feel good enough to run.
Let me see how that feels.
I thought, sure enough,
oh, this is going to totally hurt my ankles and hurt my knees.
I was like, oh, it doesn't really feel that bad. I'm like, I'm going
to run to that stop sign over there. I ran to the stop sign and I was like, I think I can run a
little further. Like it gave me a belief in myself as I was doing the actual activity and it started
to feel better and better and better. And then I started to think back because I've been lifting
for so long that I kind of forgot what it was like in the beginning.
I don't remember the struggles with the different weights and how long it took to surpass them.
And I was just like, okay, well, just like you said with jujitsu, this is just going to be a process.
It's going to take a lot of time.
Yeah, maybe you'll be out of breath from running 200 feet.
But maybe if you do that often, maybe running 200 feet will feel really short.
Maybe once I run a mile 10 times, maybe running a mile won't feel like such a long distance.
Then maybe I can run two miles.
I mean, I remember doing this loop that's over by my old house and I was like, I'll
probably never run that whole thing because it's like four miles.
I was like, it feels good to run, walk it. I'm like, I'm happy that I can do that.
I was like, I'll probably never run the whole thing. And one day I just was like,
I don't feel like stopping. I think I'm going to keep going. I just kept going.
So a lot of the things that we don't think that we have discipline towards, a lot of things that we feel that we can't do, just really need to redefine it. We need to
clean out some of these thoughts that we've had sitting in our closet for many, many years
and just start to understand, look, we all have the capacity, use the word teachable earlier.
Who do we know that doesn't have the ability to be taught something new. Nobody. Right?
Yeah.
And from one thing you mentioned there, dude,
that I think is a big deal.
You said with running, you didn't have a goal.
Like you didn't start running with the goal of doing a full marathon or the goal of doing 100 miles.
You just were like, I just want to be able to run.
So what do people who run do?
They run.
Like it doesn't matter if they run from here to the stop sign, they run.
It doesn't matter if they run and then walk because they run.
They just, they run.
But you focused on the habit before the goal.
Like you focused on, okay, I need to just build the habit of running.
And over time as I build this habit, okay, I'll work on my knees and I'll work on my feet and I'll work on my hip mobility with go to work.
Like this is going to increase my capacity to do this habit of running.
You didn't have the goal of doing a half marathon, but here you are just doing a half marathon.
But that wasn't the goal in the beginning or the goal wasn't to lose weight.
The goal was just I want to run.
So people who like to run have the habit of running.
So the reason why we focus on habits so much on the show is because we know that you may have all these
grand goals and amazing things that you want to accomplish with a specific thing. Maybe you're
trying to get a certain total within powerlifting. Maybe you're trying to make a certain amount of
money in a job, or maybe you're trying to just become a healthier individual. But instead of
focusing on, even though the goal of losing 50 pounds is great, more so, what are the things
that somebody who's healthy does each day? They probably get enough sleep. They probably,
you know, have a habit of not eating fast food, not drinking calories, not drinking soda or
calories from that. They probably have a habit of potentially not snacking. And instead of focusing on the goal and always focusing on ways that maybe you messed up towards that goal,
maybe you focus on the key habits needed to get to that goal. And the goal is going to come
if you just keep doing the habits over time. That's it. That's why like, don't focus,
just try to key in on the habits that we talk about all the time. Because if you
add those habits into your lifestyle, just insert it and make sure that that habit stays somewhat
consistent. You'll get to that goal. If it's six months, three years, whatever, you'll get there.
But because you have the habits.
Share with our audience what you said earlier about your food like when you go out
to a restaurant if you're just going to let loose how it's different for you nowadays yeah it's when
this actually hit me oh man i think last week but um no i was eating food with my wife and i was just
talking to her i was just like man like do you remember like i'd eat like three or four plates
and like still kind of be looking around for what anybody else has she's like yeah i was like now i'm actually kind of having a hard
time just finishing my one plate you know this was at um black bear diner oh so of course you
know the plates are huge but i would still get a volcano they are i would annihilate a volcano and
then get like the big uh bob's bear hamburger so like i was eating very good but then i was thinking i was like well
i haven't really been like in a deficit in a long time like i'm not really tracking so you know i
was thinking it's not like i've ever been like in a hard deficit like a bodybuilder like getting
like show ready but i've always tracked and i've always been like nope i gotta be you know in these
allotment of calories i I always got to live here.
And then so anytime I was like, all right, cool.
I'm going to actually take a break from it.
And I went to go eat.
Dude, I just could never get full.
Now I'm just, I'm still eating good.
But like if I do try to let loose like I did, you know, at Black Bear.
Yeah.
I was like, oh, here we go.
And I'm like, damn, I'm having a hard time finishing this one plate.
I'm like, what's going on? I feel like so weak, you know, because I'm like, I used here we go. And I'm like, damn, I'm having a hard time finishing this one plate. I'm like, what's going on?
I feel like so weak, you know, because I'm like, I used to kill so much food.
But it's the fact that I'm just I'm eating enough food throughout the rest of the week.
Yeah.
That is finally caught up to where I'm like, oh, I can't really go crazy.
I was kind of upset.
Yeah.
I think it makes it really hard for people to stick to a discipline sometimes just because they, or to
even get a habit going
because they make stuff too difficult for themselves.
So find a way to make
it simple. Find a way to make it easy. I started
off with a walk-run. I think
that's a good analogy into anything else that you're doing.
Find a way to just kind of stick your
toe in it. Don't be afraid.
Don't be afraid or worried about kind of being a pussy about it.
It's okay.
This is the one time where we're like, it's okay to be a pussy, okay?
Yeah, like if you're trying to get a habit for lifting weights,
don't go in there and give yourself a bad experience.
Don't go and work out with your friend that you know is a total bro
and he's going to make you just puke when you're lifting,
just go in and try to figure out a couple exercises that you want to do.
Just try to make it as simple as you can.
That way it's repeatable.
And that way it's something that you can start to implement into your life every day
without it killing you.
And make it easy.
But if you're adding, because I'd anticipate that there are a lot of people
that are, let's say that you are powerlifting,
but now you're implementing some things
and maybe you switched your focus to something else.
It is okay if your strength on the barbell
goes down a little bit.
That's not something to worry about
because when you relate yourself so much to what you're able to do on a barbell in the gym, that again kind of stops you from being able to progress in other things.
When I started jujitsu, I was only going twice a week when I started because it just hurt so much.
My barbell strength on certain movements was going down, but I was like, this is okay because I do want to get better at this maintaining strength in gym is still going to be helpful but i don't have to
focus on that so much but for some people when they start another endeavor if you start doing
a little bit of running and now you're too sore to do things in the gym you might just quit that
because you're like well my gym stuff is suffering people get really worried about losing strength
when they're losing weight yes and uh my disappointing truth that I have to reveal to them is
you're not that strong anyway.
Listen, man, your 455 squat ain't impressing anybody
weighing 300 pounds.
So you'd be better off weighing 240, squatting 240.
Yeah.
But you know what?
That's important to understand.
squat and 240 yeah but but you know what that's important to understand like you it's important to i had to expand my ability or my my thought process of what is strength right strength does
not just come down to how much i'm able to squat bench and deadlift for me now the way i define
strength physically is what my body has the capacity to do. Right. So I want my body to
have the capacity to move well in all these different ranges. Well, produce a lot of force.
Yeah. Produce the also, yeah. Be able to produce a lot of force. I don't want to just,
you see some people that only do yoga, but then their body doesn't have any resiliency.
Right. So they're super flexible. I want to be able to be strong. I want to be able to be mobile
and flexible and have my body be able to do different things because we do know that if we have that ability, as we get older and we maintain that ability, walking upstairs, keeping up with kids, grandkids, doing things like you did when you were younger, you'll be able to do them.
You won't hurt your back stepping out of a car.
So you want to be able to have the ability to move.
stepping out of a car. So you want to be able to have the ability to move. I also want to be able to have the ability to manipulate my body well, meaning that I want to be able to
manipulate things when I'm on my hands. So that's why I'm doing a lot more calisthenics.
I want strong tendons. That's why I'm doing a lot of long range work. Strength for me is not just
how much do I SBD because there's so much more things.
I want to be able to run.
I want to be able – I think that as a human, I should be able to have some capacity as far as that's concerned because that's important.
Running is the thing that we do all the time as kids.
So it should not be foreign for us to have the ability to do that.
It doesn't mean we need to be running marathons, but the ability to just run at a decent pace for a period of time without my body feeling like shit, that's all strength.
I thought it was really cool when we had John Berardi on the show.
He still competes in 100-meter dashes.
Yeah.
And by the way, 100 meters is really far.
If you haven't sprinted before or you haven't sprinted in a long time and you try to do 100 meters, you feel like you're running forever.
It's crazy because the human body, it doesn't matter how conditioned you are.
It doesn't matter who you are.
Trying to maintain your highest force output, it doesn't last very long.
I mean, I think it lasts only a couple seconds.
I mean, try to sprint on an airdyne bike or a salt bike
and check your wattage on there
or anything that can measure your watts.
And you're going to notice that like,
man, maybe you were able to hold something
for three to five seconds.
And if you were able to do that, that's like miraculous.
Like that's a long ass time.
So 100, if you can move pretty well,
might be like 12 seconds or
something like that you know depending on how fast somebody is but that's a long ass time to try to
hold on to a certain speed what is a hundred it's like a hundred meters yeah oh just a just a stretch
on a track so like the track is 400 straight away yeah the straight away okay got it yeah i just
wanted to make sure i had that right yeah fuck that yeah is the track is 400 meters away. The straightaway. Yeah, the straightaway. So the straightaway. Okay, got it. I just wanted to make sure I had that right.
Yeah, fuck that.
Is the track 400 meters?
Yeah.
Yeah, and the straightaway is 100.
Okay.
Yeah, it's a lot of work.
It's a lot of work to get yourself through that.
But it's funny because we've talked to so many different people.
We talk about so many different things.
We've been exploring strength, and we've had people come on the. We talk about so many different things. We've been exploring strength
and we've had people come on the show
and talk about all kinds of things.
And when you think about some of the ways
that Dr. Baker trains,
to me, a lot of that makes the most sense.
Like if you're trying to live,
you're trying to live like a healthy life,
like Dr. Baker is big on like hip hinging.
He does some squatting.
He does a lot of explosive movements.
You know,
he comes here to super training and he tries to touch the medicine ball to
the top of the ceiling,
which I've seen him hit that before.
I forget.
Excuse me?
Yeah.
With one of the med balls.
It's ridiculous.
Wait,
are that ceiling in that gym?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like throw the ball up and hit the ceiling.
Yeah.
It's like three stories high.
He's a fucking animal.
But that guy can take off into a sprint.
He can deadlift 500 pounds.
He can kettlebell swing our biggest kettlebell. Yeah.
What's that?
200?
233.
Yeah.
He's just stupid.
He's completely ridiculous, but he has a lot of good points i mean
somebody that can express the ability to sprint can go off and do anything else yeah the part of
the reason why i'm running which this probably sounds kind of backwards but part of the reason
why i'm running is so i can get back into expressing some of that i want to be able to
jump i want to not only be able to jump off of two feet up onto a box,
I want to be able to jump off of one foot.
And I want that to not feel like I'm going to die.
Little hops and stuff like that that I see people do for drills,
just hopping on one leg.
I can do all those things, but they'll also, at the moment,
they'll cost me a little too much.
So I'm working my way into them slowly.
And I'm like,
well, if I run, running is just hopping back and forth between one foot and the other
for a long period of time. That's all I'm really doing. And as I build that capacity up and as I
have my fitness a little bit better, these other things will be easier. So I'm going to try to
position myself to be able to sprint more often. I don't really care about like running long distances, although that was kind of fun to do the half marathon.
Some of the shit that happens when you're in that frame of mind is kind of neat.
And the positivity of all the other people that were running and some people were running for, you know, family members that passed.
Some people were running for cancer.
It was dope.
It was really, really cool
and very emotional for some people.
But I would like to get more into like maybe trail running
and maybe doing stuff at higher speeds.
Yeah, running like, oh, dude.
But if you can sprint, you can fucking deadlift.
You know what I mean?
Like you might not be proficient at deadlifting.
You might not be that strong at it,
but I wouldn't have any problem
with working with somebody in here saying,
yeah,
man,
you can go for three 15.
Cause I mean,
as long as their form is okay,
I'm not worried that they're going to like snap something.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Because it's like,
well,
this guy sprints.
I forget what the amount of times it is your body weight,
but it's like,
I want to say,
depending on the person,
I think it's like 12 to 16 times your body weight.
When you sprint,
somebody listening will probably be like, you just butchered that.
Yeah, I think Graham was saying it was like 125% each step you take.
Right.
Yeah, he mentioned like jogging, running, sprinting, the multiplier.
Which I forgot.
It's a ton of force on your body.
Yeah.
That can't be duplicated by lifting.
Because when you lift, you're only going to lift X amount per your body is the point that can't be du that can't be duplicated by lifting because when you lift you're only going to lift x amount per your body weight two times your body weight
if you're super strong maybe three times your body weight yeah just yesterday so like i was
exporting a bunch of uh episodes from the arnold classic but um i i did my first like you know like
biomechanics workout that i've done since i started doing uh the go to stuff and so i just went straight to back because i like you know getting my lats full of full
fully uh pumped and stuff and man it felt incredible because i was able to get into
positions that didn't hurt anymore like before i would have to kind of like gingerly get into
them and then yesterday i was just like holy shit so then i could not like something funny over there sir sorry
just when you say gingerly i just picture you just like yeah no that's what it looked like
but i didn't do that with my face instead of like really like getting in there you know i would have
to like all right how we doing today all right we're good okay then go ahead and pull it in yeah
but not it was it was was dope. And it's funny
because what you're saying about your 400-pound squats, not impressing anybody at 300 pounds,
that's kind of how I feel about my body. I'll just be like, ah, no, I got to keep working out. I got
to stay on the diet. I got to keep whatever I have because I don't got much. But now it's like
I kind of have, I don't want to say given up but like I've just submitted to doing go to and stretching and stuff so much to the point
where like we only got in like one round of it today and like I feel like I need to go out there
right now we got an awesome workout though really good workout so that's where I'm kind of justifying
it but I after this I want to go out there and finish my my groundwork but like now like I can't
go without it it's become such a good But now I can't go without it.
It's become such a good habit that I just cannot.
Why are you looking at me weird again?
No, I'm just happy that you worked your tips today.
And I did tips, yeah.
I worked my tips.
I'm going to have some sexy-ass tips.
You know what's great, though, is that you're going to get to it anyway because it is an ingrained habit.
That's the thing that's great about a habit is you don't have to worry about it.
You know that that work's going to get done today.
You will do it and sema will go to jujitsu even if i'm taking four hours talking to somebody in the gym taking up everybody's time right yeah like you're not gonna
you're not gonna miss jujitsu for for a week right you're gonna fucking go at some point you're gonna
figure it out yeah take us on out of here andrew all righty thank
you everybody for checking out today's episode please drop us a comment down below make sure
you guys like today's episode and subscribe to this youtube channel if you guys have not
subscribed already and uh follow the podcast at mark bells power project on instagram at mb power
project on tiktok and twitter my instagram twitter and now tiktok as What? I got my handle back.
Yeah.
I caught somebody slipping.
They had my handle, and then I took it back.
So, at IamAndrewZ all over the place.
That's where you guys can find me.
And, Seema, where are you at?
Yeah.
Yo, guys.
I want you to let us know, like, from listening to the podcast, what's some things that you've been taking away, some things that you've been adding into your lifting, into your lifestyle,
into your habits.
I want to know how the stuff that we've been bringing, the guests that we've been taking away, some things that you've been adding into your lifting, into your lifestyle, into your habits. I want to know how the stuff that we've been bringing,
the guests that we've been bringing,
I want to know how they've been helping you guys
because they've been helping all of us massively.
But we see comments all the time from you guys adding things in
and we just want to know more.
So if you're listening on audio, come over to YouTube,
have the party in the comments.
Give us an idea.
At and see my yin yang on Instagram and YouTube.
At and see my yin yang on Ticket Talk on Twitter. Mark? Peeps. I never ran over four miles until the other. Give us an idea. Add and see my yin-yang on Instagram and YouTube. Add and see my yin-yang on Ticket Talk on Twitter.
Mark?
Peeps, I never ran over four miles until the other day.
It felt amazing.
So I just challenge you all to pick something to do.
It gives you goals, and your goals end up giving you kind of a cascade of disciplines that surround that goal.
So fucking go for it.
Even if you sign up for something like that, there's nothing that says that you can't walk some of it
so figure it out
strength is never weak, this weakness is never strength
catch you guys later, bye