Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 718 - David Weck & Chris Chamberlin: Tools & Strategies To Improve Your Movement Mechanics
Episode Date: April 19, 2022David Weck is a biomechanist and inventor who specializes in the study of human movement and locomotion. He created a training and performance system called the WeckMethod and is the CEO and Founder o...f BOSU Fitness. David has invented the BOSU Balance Trainer, the new WeckMethod BOSU Elite, and the RMT Club. Today he is accompanied by the Program Director at WeckMethod, Chris Chamberlin For more info on WeckMethod and David's products visit: https://www.weckmethod.com/ use code WMBELL20 to save 20% Follow David on IG: https://www.instagram.com/thedavidweck/ Follow Chris on IG: https://www.instagram.com/_christopher.chamberlin_/ Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off site wide including Within You supplements! ➢https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢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 #WeckMethod #DavidWeck #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Power Project family, how's it going?
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to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes but it's weird they just feel good yeah my brother is um not into exercise at all okay yeah let's get into it
he's a year and a half younger than me and it's like good stuff's coming yeah you keep rambling
and so he's really simple right and he when he felt the soul steps for the first time, he's like, David, I like these.
Chris, can you start a clock?
I get the honors?
Yeah, yeah.
The shot clock.
Yeah, that's just real.
Bing.
Real stuff.
All right.
How long is that clock?
It goes for an hour.
Four hours.
Once it's done, we'll flip it because this will go on for about four hours.
There you go.
What time is our flight?
Let's keep that in mind.
That's slightly important.
How fast can you guys drive?
I think he said it's 8 p.m., so the airport's really close to here.
Yeah.
Good.
Let's go.
We'll test that out a little bit.
We should be all good.
David, how did you come to some of these conclusions?
Because you have some really interesting techniques,
and thank you so much for bringing Chris here because we needed somebody to kind of like funnel everything in
because you're like a tornado coming through here with a lot of your information but a lot of stuff
you shared with us today was uh unique a lot of it was stuff that we've been around i think for a
little bit yeah right uh you showed us a lot of stuff that we weren't expecting.
And I know you created and invented the Bosu ball,
but how did you get into, I don't know, I guess researching and finding all this other stuff that you showed us today?
Well, I'm going to go back.
First the earth cooled, then the dinosaurs.
No, I think what – for me –
You know about that?
Write that down.
Okay.
Got it.
I think for me, I love efficiency and I love strength.
And because I'm not gifted with a tremendous amount of strength, I had to find super efficiency.
I guess it's how we define strength because I saw you demonstrate a lot of strength today in a lot of different things.
Yeah, hand fighting.
You killed me.
Well, I think – and that's – I want to be able to compete with the best that I possibly can.
I fell asleep standing up when I was six years old.
And I don't remember it, but I'm told about it.
But I think my body –
Have you heard this before?
No, never. I've never heard a David Weck story. don't remember it but i'm told about it but i think have you heard this before no no never i've
never heard a david weck story i may get i may get this whole tale every single day when i go
fell asleep standing up at six years old changing life forever well i think what happened was i
think that made a tremendous imprint on that feeling of effortless power where it's like
no effort but i'm functioning right and i also fell in love with
rollerblading when i lived in manhattan because it's manhattan island is a roller rink and you
can grab onto the back of a taxi cab and fly uptown um and the efficiency so i think i've
always been on the hunt for how can i get more for less, invest heavily in the acquisition of skills and capacity to do more with less, and I'm compensating for my own athletic inadequacy.
So if I played by the rules and did the training that was presented to me, well, then I'm going to lose to the better man. So it was understanding principles and then the discovery of the modalities in particular, a staff and a rope were the things that gave me the ability to say, oh my gosh, I can organize my body to be 100 percent integrated and I have the ultimate training partner in the modality.
And I'm not interested in the modality.
I could care less about it.
I'm agnostic.
It's just like I want the special sauce and I want the ability that I can program and download from the manipulation of these tools.
And it was just the recognition and then the measurement.
Can you run faster?
Can you lift up something heavier?
It has to be empirically provable and measurable. Otherwise, you could be kidding yourself is sort of the idea.
And the hand fighting stuff is – that's what I really enjoy doing. I love playing and being competitive.
So it gave me an outlet to see, OK, well, I'm getting faster. I'm getting stronger, and I have more prowess.
Like a bigger guy, like,
he ain't necessarily going to be able to push me
around. It gives you...
Mark posted you
kicking my ass at hat fighting.
This is incredible.
I was trying to show
off your hamstrings is really what I was trying to do.
You got smoked.
It's so funny. No, you know what?
I think
when you boil down a lot of sports, you boil down football, you boil down basketball, you boil them down to their finest points, there's individual fights going on.
There's individual war going on.
There's like a little battle, right?
People are battling for space.
The center and the nose guard in football,
they're battling for that space.
The offensive line, the defensive line,
the receiver and the
cornerback, they're jockeying
for position, whether it be soccer or
any of these sports.
People are getting in close
quarters with each other, doing what's
supposed to be kind of within the rules.
And they're like boxing each other out or pushing on each other in some fashion.
But you can go to, you know, a sporting event and with millions, you know,
each guy is making millions of dollars.
These are professionals.
But when the fight breaks out in the crowd, everyone's attention turns to these two amateurs. Fighting is a primal thing. It's been around for a long time. And I think it's
awesome that you can demonstrate, at least in a playful, fun way, because it's like, you don't
want to really, you know, fucking throw down with somebody out of nowhere. But I think it's actually
speaks to what you're doing. You know, you've been doing this stuff for a long time.
You mentioned many injuries and surgeries and stuff.
So you're not some 25-year-old guy coming in here saying,
hey, I think I found out what's going to get everybody out of pain.
This is valuable stuff, and you're wrestling around with Encima,
which on paper seems crazy.
Who wants to wrestle this guy?
I weigh 60 pounds more than you, and you're moving me around. which on paper seems crazy. Like who wants to wrestle this guy?
I weigh 60 pounds more than you and you're moving me around.
It's the receptive and the yin energy so that you're able to be sensitive and you're able to discern the subtle distinctions in force
and then be just agnostic into which way you want to go.
I'm going to go the other way.
It's like a crossover in basketball.
Like you're not trying to fight it.
What I'm trying to do is I'm trying to maintain control over my center in a manner that allows
me to, whatever's coming at me, I can yield to it, I can neutralize it, and then it's
my turn to issue it.
Understand it.
Yeah.
To understand it and react to it better, right?
Yes.
And feeling.
And there's little songs or sort of things that you say in Tai Chi where it's basically stick or join stick, follow, don't resist, don't insist.
So join stick, meaning, okay, once we we're in i want to feel you because you can
fake me out here you can flinch and i'm gonna no but here you can't fake me out right so i want to
join stick follow and then i don't want to resist and i don't want to insist so whichever way you
want to go all right you go that way and then i'll just change and i'll take the other you know
whatever presents itself and it's that little game that we created basically that push hands is again no damage is
the key because in the striking arts for example it's very hard to get good because you're going
to take damage when it gets up and when you ratchet it up but jujitsu and this little game
we play you could play till you're both you both drenched in sweat and exhausted and nobody got hurt.
No one's hurt.
And that's where Chris – Chris's capacity to understand and interpret my work to make himself physically better is sort of – if I were as athletic as Chris or as athletic as you, like, you know,
I would choose to be that.
But since I'm not, if I can inform the athletes
who are better than me, then that to me is the true proof
that I've got something valuable.
And it doesn't just work for me,
but it works for other people.
If you guys are listening on audio or YouTube right now,
you should pull up Chris's Instagram
because you'll see a lot of the movements that he does there.
And it's like it's you can see the athleticism behind everything, including with the weights that you're moving.
There's always intent with every single movement that you're doing.
And I also want to mention one thing, because as we continue this conversation, you're going to bring up a lot of things from like Eastern medicine or Eastern martial arts, et cetera.
Eastern medicine or Eastern martial arts, et cetera.
And when a lot of American individuals in exercise science or they've studied here,
they look down on a lot of that.
But there's a lot of, there's so much benefit there that most people here just discount.
And it leaves a lot of holes in what they're learning.
Because you showed us a lot of things today that I'm like, since I've done jujitsu,
a lot of things I'm like,
God damn, I can see why this makes so much sense.
This clicks, right?
But if I was just focusing on powerlifting and focusing on everything being sagittal and just everything forward, I'd just be like, why is this important?
So just if you're listening, just listen and just pay attention to what he's talking about
because there's a lot of good shit we're going to get into
I think it's also like Mark said
if the fight breaks out all eyes go to the fight
and I like having prowess
so it's fun
I can actually compete with you in a game
where everybody would put bets on you
and I've had a lot more experience at the game
and all things being equal you'll eventually be able to beat me just because you're the better man.
But unless you know the game, you won't beat me because I'm not overpowering you.
Because at some point in your life cycle, at some point you're going to crest in your physical prowess. And then it's a downhill road from there and how gracefully can you navigate that decline and keep yourself spry and moving real well.
What I like about what we did today is I was kind of messing around with pushing the tank around and you guys walked in and then we just kind of like – we just started training.
Yeah, we did.
That was awesome.
Chris is like – he's like this is not normally how we, because you guys wanted to come in and coach and inform.
But then you started showing us some kind of high-level stuff that would be maybe a couple days down the road.
But I like that because we had a guest on yesterday, and he said, you work on what you can work on, and you fix what you can fix.
So, yes, do the stuff you're capable of now.
Right now you squat and your proficiency at squatting is not great, but you love to squat.
It's like, okay, keep squatting, but also do the stuff that you need to do to correct
your feet or your hips or your knees because it can get to be kind of ridiculous.
We don't want to like, we don't want to discourage people from doing things.
Sometimes somebody does have to take a step way back every once in a while.
Right.
But we don't want to discourage people from going to jujitsu or people from
deadlifting.
We want to be able to say,
Hey,
you know what?
The way that you've been doing that,
maybe we got to correct some things.
We got to fix some stuff,
but eventually that person's going to want to lift again. And a i was a professional wrestler for several years and when i was doing
that we would talk about certain wrestlers and say and we'd say we ask our coach we say hey what
whatever happened that guy and our coach would say well eventually the bell has to ring and just
meant the guy didn't have it like it did you know nathan jones who was
a um he was uh in the movie troy he's the giant that gets killed by brad pitt he was a professional
wrestler and he had the look he had everything he didn't have the skill set when the bell rang
and so what i liked about you guys is is when it came to like battle you know which is just us
training basically you guys were up for it and
you guys were showing us stuff and you guys are hopping around the gym and moving super explosively
and fast and i'm like holy shit like i want to move like that so you guys caught my attention with
not what you were saying i mean i i enjoy what you're saying and i'm i'm trying to follow along
the best i can but i'm like this is probably some inroads to be able to move this way because these guys probably didn't used to move that way.
I certainly did not.
So that's a huge –
Well, tell your story about how we came to work together from his perspective.
Yeah, I mean I was a big kettlebell guy.
That's been my thing my whole life.
And I was lifting a lot and I really cared about overhead pressing.
Like that's the biggest thing in the kettlebell world is getting a heavy bell over your head and uh i was
doing a lot of gymnastics and i was fit i'm under 30 i was feeling like strong but like on the
inside wasn't feeling as awesome as i should be like for all the effort i was putting in
and i just happened to stumble upon this guy in san diego and telling everybody they're going to
move better and feel better if they experience this stuff.
And I got to come down to the lab from a good friend of ours
that invited me over to see you.
Chris Daly, he's a dear friend of ours
who passed away this year in a tragic accident.
So God rest his soul.
He's a big reason we met.
He put us in touch, and literally I come into this place
with the mad sign, it's the tornado.
I actually got to go into his lair, and he showed me something.
He showed me the coil.
We use that term a lot today.
We were playing around with it.
I got to feel something in the early stages of it and experience something,
and it was so profound on me.
I think that was going around a lot today, that feeling in that lower extremities of the lap.
I felt that and literally went to the gym right after the let you.
And I was pressing – I was bent pressing 115 pounds over my head at that time,
which is pretty heavy.
And literally just from feeling that, went back to the gym,
and I put up the 68 kg, which is 150-pound bent press.
Bent press is when you put it up over your head,
but then you lean away to the side.
Yeah, Arthur Saxon said so you're pressing on it.
Jeez.
Yeah, yeah.
And I was about 75 at that time.
That puts you in that same position, right?
It kind of puts you in that same.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
So it just literally gave me a little edge on something I didn't understand how to connect to
and something I was proficient at.
So this was that I was chasing bent presses.
I was going after it.
I loved it.
I'm not going to stop doing it.
But I just got a little bit of technical stuff and something else I wasn't exploring.
Like, what if I tried this type thing?
That's a big motto we use, right?
And I explored that, lift heavy.
And then all eyes or all my ears, everything just went right to that.
This thing's supposed to make me run better.
And I was excited.
Like, I can get stronger.
I can lift heavier.
And I get to run better and just move better and explore.
And creativity is a big piece of what i like to do so to be able to tap into a whole new way of moving uh and being able to just explore it in all avenues and you actually do run like i
think you mentioned earlier i used to run a lot i used to do like i think at one point i qualified
for some like world's tough mudder or something like that way back in the day but i used to do
a lot of trail running so i do like running and i was a pretty good sprinter i didn't do it collegiately or
anything like that but yeah but i do enjoy well and i would i would also say that um
anybody who was curious about my work i feed them right you know like i love to teach and i love to
share because again and we're gonna get into, like the greater purpose of this whole meeting and collaboration and enhancing physical education all over the world.
And I think that this is an epicenter, a tipping point where we can share what's true and scrutinize everything, right?
And empirical results is always the bellwether, right?
Always the bellwether, right?
But I view this as like we want to encourage a unity within our fitness industry as opposed to all these factions fighting against each other all the time, right? And let's get to sort of a best idea wins mentality where it's a collaborative effort because ultimately when you boil it down, we all have the same objective, which is to help people.
But what Chris did was he took to like, okay, whatever, 40-pound PR that fast, and then he came in and I'm just like, okay, well, I'm going to teach you the ropes.
he got the reps in and programmed his body was like, holy shit,
I've never seen someone so rabidly hungry for this work and progressing so fast in this work that it wasn't too long after that
that we just sort of like, okay.
This is it.
Yeah, like this is like – and my intention with Chris is that
we work together for the rest of our lives.
Yeah.
Right?
And I never stumble.
I mean I've been training since I was 18.
I didn't go – I didn't even want to go to school.
I went to school to be like a – I was a hospitality management.
I was going to be a wedding planner.
You know what I mean?
Like I was a totally different thought process in my head.
And like I always kind of danced around sort of these factions you're talking about in the industry because I kind of felt like like it was it was sticking me to something I couldn't like express myself and explore things
if I was diving into the faction and it just didn't feel right on me and it always just drove
me nuts so I sort of learned myself from them I picked things up myself I learned that way anyways
but when I met you man just that mission like it was true it's like we just we want to combine all
that we want to get under everybody and we want to help all the factions grow and find carryover between each other and
yeah that was really and and that's the other thing is that what i have products that i invent
right so instantly i'm suspect and i'm a guy with a gadget right you know okay he's trying to screw
people with the you know thing that makes you weaker and all that nonsense but you're a sissy
yeah exactly i got it painted on my back david and i we've been messing around about him being with the thing that makes you weaker and all that nonsense. You're a sissy. Yeah, exactly.
I got it painted on my back.
David and I, we've been messing around about him being a big sissy because he created the Bosu ball.
He's like, I'm just cornered into this.
Like I'm painted with this scarlet letter.
Balance on one foot holding a five-pound dumbbell.
I'll do it longer than you.
You're growing in SEMA.
But you think about the wild aspect of people continuing
or people joking about the BOSU ball
when that thing is an amazing tool for balance,
proprioception of the feet, the ankles.
It's an amazing tool if you use it well.
But if you don't use it well and you hop on some lady
that's working 40 hours a week that never stands
and you have her do a BOSU ball squat
when she doesn't even know how to do anything like that with like weight on her back with weight on
her back okay there's our problem but it's an amazing tool right the pendulum swings right so
and so i'm a product inventor but when chris came on and we were boiling down okay what is weck
method right for me it's just a relentless pursuit of better defined by balance,
master polarities, and have
all the space in between.
But Chris has an integrity
and ice runs through his veins.
Like, I mean, all he cares...
Looks like ice runs through his veins.
Just thinking about how he's
going to kill all of us.
Come on, guys.
And so, and what it was
when we were farming
these triangles, right?
So, okay, you know, we have locomotion, we have
swinging, we have throwing and
catching. Like, that's a functional
trinity that got us started in the beginning.
So what we did was we made sure
that the fundamentals
were not based in product.
Right? So it's sticks, stones, ropes. And a stick and a stone The fundamentals were not based in product, right?
So it's sticks, stones, ropes.
And a stick and a stone don't have to be fashioned.
You can find them in nature.
So the innovation, which is how you utilize the stick and the stone, that creates the leverage.
And once you get the cordage and the rope, that ties everything together.
Now you got leverage.
And those are the first three tools that got us started speaking of leverage you were you showed me a video where you had some dumbbells
in your hands and you did like a broad jump oh yeah yeah yeah so basically what i'm trying to
do is i'm trying to simplify my work and normalize my work right so i figured dumbbells everybody
associates with a dumbbell right and so if i can just get you to feel how that weight in your hands can be used to – as like counterbalancing so that you can hit certain positions where it's actually easier because you have the weight in your hands.
And physics is a big thing.
First principle is physics.
And the idea that you're going to – oh, yeah, look.
There I am, right?
Trying to just teach simple, simple stuff.
And this one, like it actually works if you can associate and feel it.
And I think I'm trying to make it so that, okay, get it now so you can feel it.
I think you were mentioning that people could like jump maybe further or feel a good swing.
Maybe not the highest level people, but your average person.
Okay, so if you're going to look from a biomechanchanist standpoint right you're a biomechanist right now the idea
that i'm going to add weight to the system in the distal extremities no less and then perform a task
better that's counterintuitive and in the ancient greek olympics they had an event called – it was the standing broad jump.
And they used halters, which were these weights made of stone.
And because there's no time coefficient in that event, it's just a distance measurement.
I have plenty of time to wind up with that extra weight in the distal, create this momentum and inertia that now I jump and now i pull my body an extra eight inches in distance
having held the weights so you're actually traveling greater distance on an event with
weights in your hands it's counterintuitive wait a minute you got to move more mass it's in the
distance you guys ever just tested this on your own you ever just try it and you jump you happen
to jump further yeah you can feel a distinct like yeah it's propulsion well what it is is you have this and now i have a
feedback to pull and displace my center of mass further in space and with the propulsors they're
a shifting weight that literally going up a hill or upstairs, you will perform it faster and easier with the weight in your hands because the shifting weight eliminates the inertia.
For people who don't know what the propulsors are, can you explain them?
It's like a little canister.
It's like a little canister that has metal beads in it that basically allows you to shift the weight.
Maybe you can ask Owen to grab them or something, Andrew.
Maybe you can text him.
Oh, what are they called?
I can actually go grab them real quick.
I can pull it up.
Sorry, I was looking for the broad jump, but I have it right here.
Oh, yeah, that's the halters.
Yeah, so that's a propulsor right there.
So it's a handheld weight that has a shifting load inside it that essentially allows you to activate the body's connective tissue recoil mechanism.
So you can see the weight shifting.
There is so much more to movement that is like,
there's still so much more to discover.
Oh,
you know,
there's still so much more to discover.
I just listened to Andy Galpin the other day and he was talking about
proprioception and like kinesthetic awareness.
Yes.
And he was talking about a lifting belt.
And this is something that was taught to me by Louie Simmons as well.
Louie's like, a lifting belt's not for your lower back.
He's like, it's for your stomach.
He's like, it's for your abdomen, to brace your stomach.
And to wear a lifting belt properly, you don't sense that thing down all the way.
You leave it open a little bit.
You should be able to get your fingers in there and then breathe into the belt.
Fill it in.
And fill it in.
He's like, it's more of a support system for your stomach.
And what Dr. Andy Galpin said with a lot of research to back it up is that your abdomen will actually get stronger from wearing a belt where people think that it wouldn't get stronger.
And so in the case of something like my product, the Slingshot, you can get stronger by actually wearing it because you are bringing awareness to these muscles and things that you're using.
You can make an argument for an elbow sleeve or knee sleeve where people are like, hey, that's cheating.
It's allowing me to do more weight.
Maybe that's so, but it's also adding a lot to your training.
adding a lot to your training.
And what you guys, what you created here with this propulsion,
I think is really an interesting thing because you have weight,
and it would sound like it would be something that would slow you down,
but it's like 12 ounces per hand, right?
Yep, 12 ounces per hand.
So it's the size of your average soda or Budweiser in terms of weight.
And that shift is the key because when the weight shifts, we've effectively eliminated the inertia out of the momentum inertia physics equation.
So if you have a mass and that mass is moving, it has a momentum, and to slow it down is hard because it has an inertia based on that momentum.
So you're putting on the brakes, but there's a lot of weight to slow down.
So it takes a long time.
This shifts.
So when you stop going down,
the weight's at the top
because you're faster than gravity on the way down.
And now you're stopping a piece of plastic
that weighs next to nothing.
So there's no restriction on how fast you can stop it.
And the instant,
we're talking fractional seconds here the
instant you stop it it comes down and hits with a load we're trying to calculate it we believe that
the load from 12 ounces for a microsecond it's like it's it's in it's in excess of 40 pounds
of spike load and then it disappears as fast as it showed up and so it's literally like you know
the difference is if you if we're the cameras but if I take my finger and I do that versus I take my finger and I do that, right?
Oh, there's the pulser.
Boom, boom, boom, as opposed to mm, mm, mm, right?
And so that's what it does.
And if you – when I –
I like what you're saying here because you gave me an analogy earlier about if you were trying to lift a piano.
Yes.
And if a fly was to land on the piano, like, it wouldn't register in your mind.
Right.
But if even 40 or 50 pounds went on the piano, you would notice it.
But if it only went on there for a split second, you might not even recognize it as well.
Like, if it's not on there for that long, you might not pick it up.
And it might – if it didn't cause
you to fail, it might actually cause you to
bump the piano up. Because you felt
the strength of it. Yeah, so your body
reacted to that strength.
I've never heard this one.
When I discovered
that corpus, the skeletal
alignment. Yeah, we gotta get into that one too.
But when I discovered that,
and it was may 1st
2010 shane mosley fighting mayweather he hit mayweather in the second round i jumped up went
like that and later that night it went like that and i was like and i felt it i was like oh my god
and as soon as i felt this i was like holy shit like when i run i can strike down and i can create
this jolt that pops me off by punching down.
And as soon as I felt that, I saw it in my mind's eye, Deion Sanders.
Deion Sanders.
That's how he runs.
Remember the football, right?
It's the most beautiful thing in the world watching Deion Sanders run.
It's fucking amazing.
It's poetry in motion.
And it's just boom, boom, boom.
And then you come to look at Randy Moss.
You look at Daryl Green.
You look at Eric Dickerson.
You look at Lawrence Taylor.
Even Usain Bolt has that action where the arm coming forward is increasing the vertical spike of force.
And Bolt does it with his elbow.
Deion does it with his hand.
Randy has like a ringing action with his.
This is so good.
Yes.
So good.
Whoop him.
So boom.
Now what?
Look, look.
You see the football? You see the football?
Yeah.
You ain't catching him.
Deion Sanders.
Oh, man.
He was so much fun to watch.
He's always dancing on the field.
Probably the most explosive, game-changing, big playmaker in the NFL.
You see the football?
You see the way he brings it down?
He's creating a greater ground force.
That suit was so good.
Prime time. Neon
Dion. That was back when he was neon.
And the punt returns and kickoff
returns and stuff. But you'll see
yeah. Now watch.
He just waited for that first guy. His arms. Watch
his arms. Watch his elbows too, man.
Boom.
Boom. Boom.
And the arm is kind of close to you in front of you, right?
It's not far – it doesn't get far away from you really, right?
You don't – yeah, what you want is you want an acute flexion angle on this phase here.
Because if I'm here, it's more distance and I'm not as strong here.
I'm here.
I'm real strong.
It's my distance, and I'm not as strong here. I'm here. I'm real strong. It's my body weight.
And so if the arm comes up here, I can bring it down, hit the hammer.
It pops back up.
And then the key is to harness the forward action with an explosive move that gives you the jolt.
And you can see the way he does it.
I notice some people running that way when I'm out running, and I see someone real poppy.
They jump around like a kangaroo, and I'm always like, man, I got to figure that out.
What is it?
I think they're just kind of doing it naturally because they feel good.
Yes.
Your body's craving it.
And when you watch someone jog, right, even a mediocre athlete, you're going to see their
head go side to side a little bit, right?
And it looks like they're hitting cymbals because I'm bouncing.
I'm bouncing. I'm bouncing.
I'm not using the muscles.
I'm using the connective tissue.
You go to the doctor, he hits you in the knee with the kneecap, bing, right?
You didn't do that.
It was a bing and it took you no effort to move very, very explosively, very far, very fast because you hit the connective tissue.
And this is essentially the – I knew since 2010 the pulse, right?
The double down pulse.
I could do it.
I could teach it to someone who was highly, highly, highly motivated
because they didn't have a tool to do it.
It took me seven years to come up with it.
I went to the swap meet, which I do every weekend.
It's like a box of chocolates.
You never know what you're going to get.
And I found these weights on a table.
They're little two-pound weights, and they were 50 cents, and there were four of them.
So I will take all four, and you will hold these two, and I will return to pick them up.
And I ran around the swap meet with the two-pound weights, and I was just boom.
Holy shit, boom.
My arms got so sore from all the inertia.
So I came home and I'm like the RMT Club.
What's it got?
It's got shifting weight.
Let me take – I'm a slob.
So there's 50 vitamin pills in bottles like sitting in the kitchen all empty.
And so I put some in and I was like – I was like holy shit.
I was like holy shit.
This is my greatest invention ever.
And I wrote a patent for it.
And this, you know something about patents.
Yeah, I do.
So I've written, I don't know how many patents now, eight, nine or whatever.
And this patent cost me four times more than any other patent.
I worked harder on this patent and I got an issue on the patent for no rejection.
And normally that's a mistake.
It means you didn't ask for enough, right?
But because it's just – if this was known before, we'd all be doing it.
It's basically how I think it works.
And if I didn't invent the Bosu ball, I think it would have a greater ease to onboard it because if I walk into certain environments,
I'm persona non grata because I invented the BOSU ball, right?
Oh, that little sissy, that little punk, whatever, right?
And there's a huge proportion of the highly educated first earner trainers,
the guy who pays to turn on the lights.
It's like you're sitting around
with a team and the team's like hey what do you got next because you got to invent more stuff
because we got to make more money that's what people kind of think right yeah yeah people and
you see what happens is we're all we all have the burden of of establishing our unique selling
proposition in the industry right and if i'm a science guy well then i use science to throw my weight around right and you
know i try to show you something well where's the science what research do you have on it it's like
really dude really like is that your excuse for not wanting to do it and i think that there's a
new standard especially from ben patrick you got to practice with proficiency what you teach moving forward I don't care you
went to some powerpoint
presentation now you're gonna come out and tell me
that 19 soccer players did this for 6 weeks
and now we're gonna all do that
really? no no no
I wanna see I wanna learn
what you actually can teach me
not tell me
when he keeps saying dat
that's east Coast just so.
Oh, I didn't even recognize.
I didn't even recognize.
I'm a Jersey.
I have Jersey in me.
Dat, D-A-T, means that.
Helping everybody out.
Yeah, you can take the kid out of Jersey,
but you ain't going to take the Jersey out the kid.
So anyway, getting back to the integrity of this man, we were able to put together – he took Weck Method and he filled it in with a cohesive sort of – okay, we have a lexicon.
It's super simple.
We master one side, a coil.
We master the other side, a coil.
We understand how to harness the power of bilateral torsion.
So we're less thinking flexion extension than global rotation and spiraling that creates a torsional effect.
And then we put it all together with rotational movement training where it's any and all combinations of those things.
And if you establish this base, literally everything gets better.
And so we could take anybody and we can say, all right, well, do these things and now measure what
you do. Yeah. Right. Measure what you do. Because in order for me to squat the most, right, I need
to learn how to pack everything in, pack and pack it in, that pressure but if i only pack bilaterally well i'm
missing out on those millimeters that matter if i can go unilateral here like that and then get it
on that oh now i got just that little bit more yeah and that little bit more makes all the
difference can you guys explain the concept of coiling because like you talked about how beneficial
that was for you on day one of understanding it and like you talked about how beneficial that was for
you on day one of understanding it and when you taught that to me today and even mark like got
into that position i was like fuck like there's i was cramping up because i've never been in those
positions before but one thing is as people do the things that we'll have on video soon they're
gonna have the same reaction like they'll cramp up they'll be like oh this isn't a good place for me
to be but over time when you get used to those positions, they are not as – they don't feel as trippy.
They don't feel as crampy.
So can you explain that concept to us so we can understand what coiling is and does?
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, so the idea in simple terms, it's this idea of like a proximal side bend.
So if I cut my arms and my legs off, we're looking at the shoulder and the hip.
I'm trying to close the gap or I I'll show here, like right shoulder to right hip.
And if I can maintain that and maintain that proximal side bend, that's the coil.
And it's not just a side bend like this.
And then the thing that makes it honed a little more and where you start getting that more advanced feeling that most people probably won't actually feel if they're going to watch something and just try it out for themselves.
They're not going to find it. don't have that hands-on yet
is that we start having the external cues what are we trying to direct all of this intent to
and that's where things start shifting the eyes start going in certain positions and then i start
to get a deeper feeling or sensation in that side bend right and and and what i would say for for
the geeky for the geeky people out there like myself who likes geeky stuff, you have a man named Grackovetsky who basically defined a spinal engine.
So if we're going to look at the evolution of movement for the vertebrae animals, right, the vertebrates, right?
So it starts Piscean.
You're in fluid.
You're a fish, and all you do is side bend right that's
all you do now soon as you come out of that buoyant medium and you're an amphibian or a reptile you
gotta prop yourself up and the the amphibian reptile has that lateralization they're not
sagittal like a mammal so they're here and now i'm still operating on this, but because I have to prop myself up, now there becomes this figure eight where the coil is the shoulder come down and back commensurate with the hip coming up and forward with a central axis that doesn't change.
So it's this Marshall principle of move without moving so that I'm most economical because in nature, economy means you pass on your
genes, right?
Non-economy means you don't.
If you can envision like a pitcher or something like that, that's exactly what you're talking
about, right?
Correct.
They're raising one side, lowering the other side, driving in, internally rotating the
hip and putting their entire body weight and then it's all the way through to like a follow
through.
Yes, exactly, exactly.
And we say that the basic underlying functions that underlie everything
is the locomotive function, the swinging function,
the throwing and catching function,
because that's most necessary for survival
if we're just going to go back to the most basic things.
I want to get into that.
So he's talking like spinal engine theory, this idea of going side to side. And a lot of what we're doing in the gym now,
the training environment, there's so much center, so much bilateral in our language, right?
That we're not getting the frequency side to side anymore. And we're trying to rely on things like
walking or running in order to get that frequency of cycling. And we're not exposing ourselves to
the range that it actually has access to.
So that idea, our foundation or coiling core, it's teaching us to create like isometric holds
here to develop a position or posture and understand that that's a safe place to be
and develop an awareness of it. So that now when I go for my 30 minute jog,
I'm tapping a little more range and I'm getting better and better reps every time.
So that's the big thing we're doing is we're creating frequency in a new range of motion. We're just exposing a range of
motion. We're giving an external intent so that it's driven to something and now we can get volume
in it and then it's just normalized. It's the same thing. And it's the fundamental of balance. A
balanced system is right now ready and you don't have hot spots in a balanced system right everything is
operating in proportion as it should as it must to optimize if you have the balance i mean you're
ready to go at all times pretty much you're deon sanders cheated on stretch right yeah you know
he supposedly showed up to the nfl combine which i think was different back then but
supposedly he was in a track suit and they're like, you're up. And he's like, okay.
And he just did it. 4-1 something.
And he just walked out the door.
Yeah, that's the
legend right there. Actually, this morning,
we had just come in and we all sort of
started going ham on everything. But you kind of,
there was a moment you mentioned something and then I think we kind of got
separated before we got there, but you were talking about
warming up or prep or I think something like that.
You may ask a question on that. Oh yeah, you said stiffness. Yeah, up or prep or I think something like that. You may ask a question on that.
Oh yeah, you said stiffness.
We started talking about something like that, right?
A lot of people my age,
they go to get up and even
some family members and some people that are
even a little older
than me, but they'll kind of get up
and it takes them a second to kind of get out
of that kind of stuck position. They're kind of
bent forward and then they're okay and then they can kind of move around but even uh stan
efferding who we had here a while back he was kind of in awe of dr sean baker who we had here oh yeah
and he was like yeah sean like you know because they're the same age they're both like 53 he's
like sean you're not like stiff after sitting down for a while? Because we trained, and then we sat, and we did a podcast type thing.
He's like, no, man, I feel great.
I just started thinking about it more because I've had that stiffness before,
and I'm starting to get further and further away from it.
That's what I was saying was when I first met him,
I kind of was doing all that stuff in the center.
I was working one torsion line.
I was doing a lot of gymnastics, a lot of kettlebell, a lot of lifting.
And it really amplifies one side of it.
And I wasn't practicing this side bending.
All right.
And it was I was just starting to kind of get that little bit of stiffness.
And I'm not even 30 yet.
So I'm going, what is this thing?
Right.
Something's not right.
Right.
But what happens now is that this position, understanding this, getting this feeling,
it sort of gives you this ability to body scan really quickly. So we do this all the time this is something i know you do all the
time and it's like i'm in the grocery store line and i'm just chilling and i'm standing here a
little longer and i want to stand on a hard surface and i can just do a quick like oh like
i'm here i could if something happened right now i could get up and go i know it's funny i could do
airport karate yeah but i'm just saying like i can do a quick check-in and go, like, everything's all right, and I'm capable right now.
I don't got to warm up and stretch and do all this stuff that's not realistic in a real situation, and I'm capable.
You know what I mean?
If I'm going to go for whatever, I might prep for it a different way.
Or if I do the body scan and it's telling me I'm not ready, then I'm not ready.
You know what I mean? ready you know i mean and i think that giving people some ownership over their own bodies and
like giving them tools to actually like feel something in themselves to like like say hey i'm
good and not say you have to do this all the time we're big fans of exactly what you're talking
about like you know we're in the fitness industry and it's like you shouldn't need six weeks to pop
your shirt off you know you should be kind you should be okay with it now. Like, don't tell me that you need to like go on some special diet or whatever.
Sure.
And then same thing with exhibiting your strength that, you know, hey man, give me a 12 week
block and then I'll be able to squat that or I'll be able to lift that.
It's like, let's see, like, let's keep some capacities.
Obviously they can change, obviously, and you can have different goals and do power
lifting meets and stuff, but let's keep these capacities high high let's keep them going at all times yeah that's great
always ready right and having tools within yourself that's very individualized i think too
it's having something that you do for yourself to kind of put that back and forth when you weigh it
on so i just i just love the idea that like i'm ready right now i really enjoy that and then the importance of just walking
with balance yeah okay so and i think simplicity is of the essence right because especially in
this day and age where the attention spans are short like who the hell is ever going to play
the clarinet these days right you know i'm gonna press a button and i'm playing the damn thing
they have a huge following that plays the clarinet probably.
I play the clarinet actually.
But the simplest thing that you can do is you walk placing your head over your next step, your head over your foot, your head over your foot.
And it incorporates a coiling action that is just natural.
It's an underhand figure eight. It's what you're going to do naturally.
If you're exhausted and you're climbing up a mountain,
up to the top when you're really tired,
you're sort of forced into that body mechanics.
When you're going uphill.
Yeah, when you're going up a hill because you have to be there.
Otherwise, you won't be too tired.
You won't be able to take the next step.
And if you can walk with balance you are relieving the burden of one tiny drop of
of water slash compensatory tension in your lower back because if you're not in balance the opposite
side like a cantilever of the lower back has to light up just a tiny bit right you don't feel it
now you don't feel it tomorrow but you stack them feel it tomorrow, but you stack them and you stack
them and you stack them. Now you're getting a little bit stiffer and suddenly, you know, you
sweep the porch and your back goes out, right? And now you, and that leads to all other compensation.
So now your foot hurts and then you got a toothache and you just like, that came from,
that came from the injury in your toe. You got TMj now right and then you go to the tmj doctor
he's like all right well i'm going to take out the otolith in your ear whatever the hell i'm
going to do right so systemically the way in which we move if we can move with the grace
of a of a of a of a predatory animal yeah who's going to eat tonight i was telling mark you know
i was like you know he was pushing the sled i'm like who's gonna eat tonight right because if you boil it down to like am i gonna eat or not
things get very very focused very very quickly and the the prey is that peripheral like okay
my heart's beating 300 i'm eating but the but the the predator is the one that's like, oh, our eyes are here.
Our eyes aren't here.
So we have to focus and focus on the task at hand and that efficiency allows us to succeed and keep succeeding and keep succeeding.
And we come from the winners.
And it was the wielding of these very basic tools in the very beginning that informed us.
And people say like, oh, humans are so pathetic and so weak and like, okay, blah, blah, blah.
But I've never seen an animal jump a motorcycle 50 feet in the air and do triple flips.
I've never seen like an animal do Cirque du Soleil performance.
So I think the human capacity is far more than we give ourselves credit for.
And I think that with humanity, it is simply a matter of will.
If the human will is determined to get it done, it gets done.
And in the beginning, you have no idea how the hell you're going to do it, but you're going to do it.
And so that – if you give me somebody with the guts and the will to say, OK, I will succeed, I'm going to put my money on that person even more than talent.
You know, I want to go to the walking aspect real quick because it's great that we're talking about this.
We had Squat University on yesterday and we were talking about shoes and how they kind of fuck people.
And he was mentioning how when most people switch to barefoot shoes, like we're wearing Vivos, you're wearing some interesting kicks.
Stylish.
Very stylish.
But when people put their feet into these shoes, they're not used to them.
Their feet may start to hurt because like I was walking with my girlfriend yesterday and we were just walking, but I was listening to her footsteps and she was in some Vivos and they were heavy.
And then I was listening to my footsteps.
I couldn't hear my footsteps.
And then I was like, how do you usually,
like what are you doing right now when you're walking?
And she was stepping with her heel,
but then all her weight went on her whole front foot
and then she would just, she would keep making steps.
But then if she went heel, fourth and fifth metatarsal,
big toe, thing starts quiet down.
And she's like, I don't usually walk like this,
but it feels better, right?
So that's one thing that it's like people,
like we need a weight shift,
but it's even the way that your foot
hits the ground over time.
Because if you're used to wearing big padded shoes
and you're used to hitting the ground,
once you shift to this shit that we're wearing right now,
you will hurt because you're used to all those forces coming up.
So how do you teach people how to walk from the foot up?
You're standing on it.
Well, right.
Yeah, right, right.
He creates gadgets.
We create tools, but they're not just gadgets.
They're tools that have a purpose.
There's something that's supposed to help you
without having to think about it.
We're talking about walking right now.
It's something we all have a right to do.
It's something we all get a ton of frequency on,
whether we're fit or not or active or not.
You can put the pedometer on,
and you're going to see that you get like 5,000 steps every day at least.
You know what I mean?
So you're putting in frequency on something,
and something like that that you can stay in here all day,
you're learning to meet the ground a little better.
And also what I would say is that it's semantics perhaps,
but it's always load to explode.
So when someone says it comes from the ground up,
there is an antecedent effect where it goes down to the ground first.
So in that sense,
and what I say is the upper body has to be correct in order
for the feet to even have a chance because if the upper body's not right i don't care what you do
with your foot it won't work right and it doesn't come from the foot it comes from the gravitational
action then reaction so it is this boom boom it certainly comes higher up you know if you are trying to focus on
having your feet straight uh you you kind of need to do that from the hip but i've noticed you know
you mentioning say hey you know don't worry a ton about any of that just you know kind of rock the
head back and forth and and see how that feels and then i was i looked down at my feet and they were
straighter i was like like, oh, okay.
It gets solved by just kind of moving your head back. Right.
What I would say is that first of all, I would say that feet take a lot of time.
Yeah.
So if you've been trapped in your shoes for 30 years,
well, don't expect to be running around barefoot tomorrow, right?
Yeah.
And I would also say that barefoot shoes, think of like a condom, okay?
You know how thin a condom is?
And I don't like them anyway, right?
Now think about a barefoot sole and how that deadens the proprioception and the sensitivity of the foot.
the sensitivity of the foot.
So what I would say is that find a very safe environment and actually go barefoot because now you're getting that instant to instant feedback where you will do it better than
you will in a barefoot shoe.
And so now you sort of strategically, phasically say, all right, I'm going to do it barefoot
here.
Now I'm going to put on the shoes and try to replicate that same feeling.
I do things extreme.
So when I went on my barefoot journey, I got a pair of five fingers and I went 100 days straight.
No matter how much hell or high water, I'm wearing these.
And I was in New York City.
And I remember just walking and walking and walking on that perpetual flat cement.
and walking on that perpetual flat cement.
And just my feet were killing me because I hadn't figured out the exact sequence yet.
And I remember the best relief that I had was on the corner with those yellow dots.
Like, oh, God.
Because there was a little differentiation.
The world is – the earth is round, but the ground is flat because the wheels of commerce must roll and we need to pave so we can get slingshots from here to there.
Can you tell us about the sequence though?
Because like you talk a lot about the big toe.
Can you tell us about the sequence of what the foot should be doing when you're walking?
Because I think that's a foreign thing for a lot of people. OK.
So basically with the foot, I want to first say this.
So we're going to go back to sort of the embryology, right?
So when the foot comes out of the body as a limb bud on the Wolfian Ridge for all these –
there's a center line on the side that's called the Wolfian Ridge,
and that's what emanates the feet and the hands.
They sprout out.
You don't have a leg.
You got a foot.
And so basically the foot comes out like this.
And so it comes out and then it rotates like that.
So the bottom of your foot is really the front of your body.
And the top of your foot is really the back of your body if you go back to origin.
Oh.
Okay?
Okay.
So now if we start looking at structure, we have integrity of strength on the outer edge of the hand and the outer edge of the foot because we're tied into the substantial bones.
The fourth and fifth metatarsals, so the fourth and fifth toes, they tie directly into the calcaneus.
And the first, second, and third toe, they ride on top and they tie into the talus on top.
So we'd say it's like your first floor is the ground floor, which is the outside.
That's the fourth and the fifth.
And so what you're doing is you're receiving on the outside strong.
So that's our go.
And then we have a go to where we pass it off to the long.
And if that sequence is correct, everything moves well, right?
If the sequence is interrupted where you go too soon to the inside, now you have what
we will call like a collapse, right?
Oh, well, your inside of your foot is collapsing because the second floor wasn't buttressed
and supported by the first floor.
because the second floor wasn't buttressed and supported by the first floor.
And so your general sequence is going to be that you initiate on the outside somewhere in the back if you're walking slowly and then more in the fourth and fifth metatarsal head, the ball of the foot if you're running fast,
but it's outside and then to inside and it comes off the big toe.
You should grab a step if you don't
mind oh yeah this is the perfect if you were actually to step off your step yeah that's it
that's it literally it will take you through the same thing you stepped on it and stepped off of
it it's going to run you through it yeah this is a sole step right here and it puts you on the
outside of your foot i see what you're talking about on an angle and then it cocks the spring
it cocks the spring of the big toe and it prevents collapse because you can't collapse because the weight is going to the outside heel from the big toe.
But then the inside heel is coming to the outside ball.
So it's sort of this X of force that standing still is dynamic.
It is happening. right so you're accelerating
but we're buttressed against the ground so we're not accelerating but if i drop and you know it's
happening right now so it's standing still is a dynamic activity from the nervous system and you
have that excitation of extent of extension and you know you'll see it especially somebody's watching tv and they'll start to do that you know what i mean like that's
a reflex that your body wants to have maintain that efficient vertical orientation right and so
basically with the foot when you're on this you're sort of cocking the spring and getting it so that
when you get off your foot now understands that motion from the outside to the inside.
Picture like passing a basketball.
If I'm here and I'm passing a basketball, I go here and I follow through.
Yep.
Right?
And the foot's very similar. when you get into the anatomy because the reason why the core fist works is because i'm keeping the
last digit straight so i can triangulate the bone structure and the triangles are strong but in the
foot it's different this the muscle that the tendon attaches to that joint in the hand this one
it rounds up and it crosses your elbow so this pip the proximal interphalangeal
joints for the geeks right your second digit or whatever your second uh joint in the finger if
you're not a geek we're able to do that and can create a continuity but in the foot the second
joint in the foot only goes to the heel so it it's a very short, intrinsic foot muscle to there.
And it's the tips of the toes
that run up
into the shank,
up in the calf. And it's
cross-lateralized, meaning that the big toe
has a tendon that comes
at the tip, it supports
the inner ankle, and then it comes to the
fibula on the outside.
And then the four toes here, they come up, support the inner ankle, and they comes to the fibula on the outside and then the four toes here they
come up support the inner ankle and they start on the tibia so you have this like cross hatching
and the tip of the toe is the important finishing touch yeah right it's the tip of the toe and
then it's a modulation of the tensional balance.
So you're not applying too much force too early with the toe.
You've created the angles where you can create an advantageous connective tissue.
I call it almost like a clawing action, not pawing but clawing because you got to go back in just evolutionary theory whether you believe it or not.
Just let's tell the story and and play it out if we come from those that sort of you know lived in trees
right primates yeah you're interacting with a rounded surface whether it's the trunk of a tree
or a branch of a tree and if you look at a foot it looks a lot like it's supposed to articulate
and do that and if i were if i were god and i'm building it intelligently well give me
fucking wheels or a rocket ship or something yeah why do i have all these tiny little joints that
cause all these problems right and if you look at the actual mechanics of somebody running like
elliud kipchoge the greatest marathoner of all time never injured all you know the best times
yeah if you look at his feet and you just got out of your little biomechanics
kinesiology course, you're going to tell him that he should never run another step
because he's collapsing in and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So yeah, Elliot Kipchoge.
I'm curious to see what you're talking about here.
Right?
So if you look at his feet, and slow motion is easier to see it,
but in that group of people right there, if you go slow, you're going to see more than half of them are going to look like – the biomechanist is going to look at that and say, wait a minute here.
They shouldn't do it.
They're collapsing.
But what they're doing is they're – you see – look at the shoes.
See the guy behind him?
Look at his left foot.
Boom.
Look at that. It's quote-unquote falling in, right? the shoes. Yeah. See the guy behind him? Look at his left foot. Boom. Look at that.
It's quote unquote falling in, right?
Yeah, it is.
But what we're doing is we are doing the best we can with the structure that came before us, right?
If you look at the – look, look.
Boom.
You see his right foot?
Yeah.
His foot is – as he's pushing his foot forward his foot is pointing
outward a bit yes yes his foot is pointing outward and that gives him this acceleration
angle off the inside the best people are just intuitive he how much thought has he put behind
that probably fuck probably very little and right it's only through injury and pain that motivates
you to seek solutions.
Yeah.
But look at his left foot.
Look at his left foot.
You see that right there?
Boom.
Boom.
Most people who are in the exercise game would be like, oh, he needs.
Look at that left hand, by the way.
Yeah, there you go.
That pulse.
See his double down pulse?
Boom.
You see it specifically in that left.
So we call that sided.
He has an emphasis on like a certain little.
He's left foot.
He's a left foot runner.
Usain Bolt is a right foot power.
Tyson Gay is a left foot power.
Most people have a left foot power because you're right handed and you jump up with your left foot.
You got to also keep in mind, like he's in very specific shoes.
This is, this is, you know.
Those are the Nikes.
This is him hauling ass going full blast.
You know what I mean?
Who knows
how he normally trains, but that
one foot does look like
how does he not have pain there
from that thing getting so much
torque? The heel keeps going in.
But he is toe striking too, right?
He's hitting that toe first, right?
No, no, no. Look at it real quick.
Because I've looked at it super slow.
You see how, you see that?
It's that outside.
Oh, he's like middle foot maybe.
I understand.
Is it the outside of the foot?
Yeah, it's the outside.
I want that shoe.
I want to feel what that shoe feels like because I don't think I can even understand what's happening.
I've tried it on.
It's a very propulsive shoe.
It's a very fast shoe.
And you probably, as you hit, you don't feel those shocks up the system.
Well, also what's happening is he's yielding at the precise time that by the time he's there in that position, his weight is off it.
So he's not collapsing.
He's actually more forward in it and is creating an acceleration angle that facilitates that forward motion.
There's also another possibility that he has looked at that and like maybe him and his
coaches decided, hey, it's not worth it.
You know, I had a guy here that we were working on his bench press and we were trying to get
him to bench 900 pounds.
And he benched very crooked.
He had a hard time locking out his one side.
He tore a tricep at one point.
a hard time locking out his one side. He tore a tricep at one point. And I was like, hey, let's see if we can have you bench crooked on purpose. So we just took his hands and we shifted them way
off to the left where it looked like it totally wouldn't work. And it totally did work. But a
mistake that I made was I was trying to correct his body on the bench too because I noticed I'm like he's really off center.
When I looked down at him when I was about to hand the weights out to him, he was always like halfway off the side of the bench.
He never even realized it.
But we tried to make some corrections in training and he actually got hurt a couple times and he was like, I don't know.
I'm like I think I fucked up as your coach.
I'm trying to help you to straighten out, but I don't think we should even mess with it.
So maybe in this guy's case, maybe it's the same thing.
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So can I say something real quick?
Yeah, please.
Because something with that shot that's really cool too
is we keep talking about the feet
and this all started with us talking about walking.
And actually it came back to something else you said earlier
I wanted to say is that you were talking about like,
it's okay to keep doing the thing if you're going to keep
like yeah and just to work on stuff while you and don't stop what you love doing right right and
like you wouldn't told your girlfriend to stop walking right then and there would you know oh
well you're heavy-footed right now i picture i picture in semen laying down on the pavement
like listening yeah yeah i just told her to just pay attention to it like yeah but you see what
i'm saying is like she can work on something that she doesn't have to think about
just staying on that based on what we said about those slow stages.
That's something that can help bring that up, though.
Like, babe, you need to work on your heel striking.
Yeah, right.
Careful there.
Flapping around like an animal.
Something that was really cool with that is
we were talking about those pulses earlier,
and his hands might be telling his feet to hit that way
right then and there at that time, right?
The hands integrate the feet. Boom. That's our big thing, and that way right then and there at that time, right? The hands integrate the feet.
Boom.
That's our big thing.
And that may be perfect for him at that time.
I got to just also say, I'm a fucking chump, too.
So, like, I would never try to criticize.
I don't know anything about running.
But he's got beautiful pulse.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah.
His hands are telling.
He's meeting the ground how he needs to meet the ground at that time.
Yes.
And historically, this guy has incredible longevity.
So he's not injured.
He's killing everybody.
Yes, and look at, if you go back to Ricky Henderson,
Ricky Henderson had tremendous leg strength,
tremendous hamstring strength.
Hammies.
Unbelievable.
The rumor was that he could sit in a dugout,
put a quarter on his thigh, flex it,
and pop it up and catch it.
I wouldn't doubt it.
You kidding me?
Like, bing.
You can bring up some Ricky Henderson.
He's fucking jacked.
It's hard to find good footage because back then they had video that wasn't as precise.
Stealing bases like a motherfucker.
Stealing bases.
But you see, when Ricky Henderson runs, he almost heel strikes because he has such strong hamstrings that he could pull himself.
It's like a little ball of muscle.
But it was the angle that he was able to get to that acceleration angle despite the fact that for all intents and purposes, his heel was hitting first.
You mentioned to me, you said jog like you just hit a home run.
Yes.
That's an interesting way. Yeah like you just hit a home run. Yes. For an athlete.
That's an interesting way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of the trainers who we like a lot, his name is Greg Coppins, and he basically taught a bunch of kids.
He's like, you just hit a home run.
Now run with the pulsars.
Boom, boom, boom.
Because for an athlete, running is punishment.
Right?
Oh, you stop screwing around. Put your glove, run around the running is punishment. Right? Oh, you stopped screwing around.
Put your glove, run around the field four times, right?
But a home run, running is a reward.
Yeah.
So if it's a reward that you're going to enjoy and savor,
well, now you're more apt to do it with that greater joy.
You got that chest up, too.
You're happy.
You know what I mean?
It just encourages, gets ahead of those eyes that we were talking about, right?
It just does that.
I mean, it just gets ahead of those eyes that we were talking about, right?
It just does that.
But there's certain sort of broad stroke realities where the tendency is going to be a certain way, but there are not hard and fast rules applicable to everyone.
Because some people are just fundamentally different proportion, different hip.
Depends on your ancestry.
Like I can't deep squat.
My hips are not made to deep squat, so I'm not going to chase the deep squat because I'm working against my structure, the skeleton.
Even before your hip probably –
Yeah, even before.
Okay. Like the Maasai warriors, you don't see them sitting down weaving a basket the way that the little Asian guy will do and sit there for 10 hours and he's resting.
The Maasai will actually pull up a log and sit on it elevated, and what are they good at doing?
Jumping, right?
And if I'm jumping, I don't want the long femur head coming with so much room that I can squat to forever.
I want less of an angle so I get more translation into the vertical force.
So if you're from that ancestry, odds are you won't squat as well.
Michael Jordan, LeBron James, they're not doing deep squats.
They couldn't get into position.
And people roast LeBron for that all the time.
It's still on the internet.
People post that up for some reason.
That people understand.
And this is something I thought about over the last several years of doing this podcast and trying to bring people together and trying to get certain people here and just trying to, I don't know, be somebody in the industry and get to know different people.
I kind of started to think just don't chase people that don't want
to be caught.
But I also think that you shouldn't chase things that you can't catch anyway.
Like, I don't want to say that you can't catch it and you can't do any better because you
could certainly squat lower, but you may have some restriction in squatting as deep as somebody
else.
And I think that, I think that's healthy.
I don't think there's anything wrong with saying that's not really me.
I can work on that.
I can improve on that.
And who knows where it will go because you don't want to put limitations on it.
But I also don't think it's a great idea to try to catch –
it's going to be very difficult to catch everything.
So you've got to be a little cautious on what you're trying to go after.
Yes, absolutely.
You don't need to chase something you don't care about.
Well, and a square peg does that too.
Yeah, don't waste the energy.
Well, a square peg through the round hole.
Just because somebody told you to, if you don't actually care about it,
why are we putting time into it, right?
I remember when it was sort of several years back, that 2012, 13, 14-ish,
like the deep squat, like you're a substandard human being
you can't sit down in your deep squat right oh okay well better i better do that i better do that
right well if you're working up against buttress against structure bone structure it's going to
take a long time and i'm probably doing damage if i'm improving my range of motion just because my skeleton doesn't like to do it.
Right?
And it makes you better at certain other things perhaps.
Right?
So there's always the give and the take.
And some people are so naturally gifted that they can do it all.
I'm going to throw Ben a bone too, Ben Patrick, because ever since you've kind of been like exploring ATG and all that.
By the way, I love Ben Patrick.
I got a man crush on Ben.
He doesn't shit talk people either.
He continues to take things in from everybody.
Well, there's other people that will...
Anyway.
But Dave, he squats with a slant board now
and he squats deep. So he's sitting
there talking about how he doesn't squat deep.
The other day, I'm sitting at my desk in the lab
and I just hear, I've never squat this low.
I've never squat like this, and I love it.
So you know what I mean?
And it was a positive, that mentality behind it was positive.
And I got something good.
Well, and I got something to say, too, about this.
Because I remember I was at JFK Airport.
It was late at night, and I was waiting for a taxi.
There was no such thing as Uber back then.
Actually, I think I was waiting for the subway because i was so cheap
frugal and there was a cement like uh sidewalk and then a cement slant and i remember standing
on that slant this is so many years ago and i was standing on that slant and i was squatting down i
was like holy shit this feels really good but then i was too much of a wussy to you're gonna put something under your
heel and you squat you sissy that was absolutely forbidden in the weight room like what you're
gonna elevate your heels you little pussy like you know with the 10 pound plates yeah yeah i
mean that was literally if you did that where i came up you get the hell out of here yeah get
the hell out of here no Get the hell out of here.
No, no.
You got to have them on the ground.
This comes back to that idea of regression, creating an environment that feels safe and comfortable for somebody.
That's what Ben's genius is.
Yeah, making it accessible to people and let's just change the mindset and all that.
People will be so uncomfortable trying certain things that they'll be very distracted.
Yeah.
You guys were showing me some stretches and some movements.
I can sometimes
just be a little bit of a slow learner on certain things. You guys saw some of it.
That was my history growing up as a student. Maybe I'm stuck there somehow in my own memory
or mind or whatever. It usually does take me a little bit to pick up certain things.
But if you go to show me a certain stretch,
you're like, hey, come over here and try this on the ground.
Immediately I'm thinking, the ground even kind of hurts.
It kind of hurts my butt, kind of hurts my hip.
So I'm still at a stage where I still have to kind of be
almost like a cat, like when a cat is about to lay down
where they keep circling.
I've got to kind of circle and kind of feel things out a
bit before i go and do the thing that i'm about to do sure you gotta get comfortable body scan
that's that body you know your body that's your little scan like yeah this is not right right now
and either you can put value in it and find a regression to go after it or wait on it well
let's go back to what you said about the squat too is uh we have to reframe you know we have to
reframe our brain because you were saying that like you uh uh we have to reframe you know we have to reframe our brain
because you were saying that like you uh you know have so much trouble with a squat
but you're thinking of the typical squat you're thinking of the way that everybody else squats
yep and you can do your own version of a squat i do my own version i show i show it in sema the
the sort of that float where i say you know the pinky line and how i can just I can literally just go like that and I don't need my heels when I do it.
And it's interesting too because everybody is riddled with some level of imbalance and your organ system is just accord with whatever the tensegrity balance, tensional
balance of the rest of the body, I by de facto almost zero out the asymmetry because it makes
an adjustment.
But if the heel is pressed into the ground, well, now there is no leeway.
So wherever the imbalance is becomes the hot spot.
So I'm a both sides utilized guy.
So I don't want to say, oh, never do that one or never do this one. I would say,
seek to optimize the polarities the best you can. And that gives you the biggest expanse in the
middle is what we want. And let me also say, one of the reasons why I love Ben Patrick so much
is because he can practice with proficiency
what he teaches.
And vertical jump is like the most precious athletic thing
that like you come to me
and you want to gain five inches of vertical,
that's going to be quite a mountain to climb, right?
Are you 13 and you're going to get it by the time you're 17?
Well, that's going to be easy.
But to be a grown man at 22 years old can't grab the rim.
To slamming it down with an authority that is – I mean it may be the greatest
athletic transformation that I have ever been aware of is Ben Patrick himself.
And so, okay, i want to learn everything
that you have to teach now because you're doing something so extraordinary and he's like the
bosu ball that guy gets attacked by snipers all day long right you know constantly people crapping
on him and it's like i doesn't even register in my brain like how the hell could you crap on he could jump over you right i don't care what you're saying yeah by definition i want
to add something to what you're saying there because like i mean uh we had him on but before
he came on the first time last year i was already doing some of the stuff because like i had surgery
in one of my knees because of soccer and my knees were in pain i started doing a lot of that stuff
my knees weren't in pain anymore and had a lot of that stuff. My knees weren't in pain
anymore and had deeper ranges of motion. But in what you were talking about, as far as people,
like for example, attacking his methodologies, um, I've been getting a lot of comments and seeing a
lot of comments from individuals from functional patterns. And they're saying, Oh, these bros are
going to get knee replacements in five years. And I just see those comments. I'm like, why are you
guys trying to make people afraid of this? Because the only way someone's going to get a knee replacement is if they overdose this shit if
they load it heavy and they're doing it like in a dangerous fashion they'll fuck themselves up but
that's why this dude makes regressions and that's why he doesn't talk about overloading these things
like it's like other groups are making people afraid of trying training methods.
And that's what kind of pisses me off.
It's because like, okay, cool.
You believe so much in what you're doing.
And that's great because there are aspects of what you're doing.
That's fucking awesome.
But then why must you then take what you're doing and make people that are like, I just
want to feel better and I just want to move better.
You make them afraid of trying things.
Why do you do that?
Well, that's sort of clawing your way up to the top, crabs in a bucket.
You know what I'm saying?
Like what's my USP?
This guy, he's blowing up.
He's on Joe Rogan.
I'm jealous.
I mean, come on.
That's really what's underneath it.
And I look at it like – I go to prowess, fight and flight, right?
And I've had personal experience with some of these other – we get lumped into the alt-fit category.
We're side-by-side by these names.
We're like, hey, side-by-side.
I'm underneath you, motherfucker.
I'll lift you up. You do my shit my shit and make your shit better exactly and and i can relate to being attacked and having a chip on my shoulder with the
bosu ball because i was i was just furious and i held my tongue for for more than a decade because
i knew it would just be putting fuel on a fire yeah right because they're just gonna shit i mean
if i try to defend it i'll just get shat on some more and just more awareness to getting
shat on.
Right?
And so when I really started making these profound discoveries, I was like, okay, I'm
going to ram it down your throat because, you know, function results rule.
But that doesn't work either.
Right?
Because people, we, our bodies, our brains are geared so that the intellect serves the limbic system.
The limbic system is what matters, and you will rationalize anything to be okay emotionally, right?
So you will have people with unreasonable, irreconcilable differences, right?
Christian and a Muslim, they're going to different heavens. Oh, yeah. Okay? So there's no convincing either differences, right? Christian and a Muslim, they're going to different heavens.
Oh, yeah.
Okay?
So there's no convincing either one, right?
So with the body, it's – there's certain truths that this logo here,
I created this logo to represent.
This is gravity.
That's the constant.
It's when and where.
So where is this, but it's also when.
It's a rate of acceleration of that mass to the center of this planet.
And so this gives us the fundamental timing and the fundamental position.
Everything stems from this.
And then it's rotation.
So it's up, down, all around.
And if I'm good at moving up and down and i have the sides
well then boom i've got something that's underneath and the people who conceptualize something where
it's like oh i need to train rotation i need to train rotation and i have three planes and this
is frontal coronal like but your mind even does a hitch just to remember what the fuck to say abductor
adductor like i remember i used to have to have little mnemonic tricks add in okay yeah it's my
adductor right stalactite stalagmite oh crap got me there i don't remember anymore which one's
coming up which one's going down well and I think it's also stalactite.
I know.
I'm way off.
Right?
So what I'm interested in is I'm interested in that like tear down the walls between your workout and your life, right?
So don't just segment off an hour when you're going to move well.
Let's move well all the time.
Yes.
And a little self-care a la kelly stirrette
where let's check the computer and sit on the floor give it a shot right change your position
if it's uncomfortable i saw a guy yesterday uh come out of the bathroom at phil's coffee and
there's like a washing your hands like station it's not in the bathroom it's like a shared thing
and i saw the guy like fixing his hair and and then he kind
of walked away he was a heavier guy and he didn't look very fit so i was thinking to myself i was
like man imagine if he like he wanted to look better you know so he took a second he looked
in the mirror he made himself look more presentable and i was just thinking man like imagine if he i
don't know if he has that care or not to his fitness. I got no idea. But it made me just – made me just think.
Like imagine if people viewed their fitness a little bit like they do with their hygiene.
You recognize your deodorant is wore off.
You recognize your breath is weird.
You recognize whatever it is that you have to recognize.
I mean if you have a hip that's bothering you or you have mobility stuff to work on or strength stuff to work on, why not view
it like you're brushing your teeth?
Do it twice a day, a couple times a day.
And why not set up a situation where maybe you could have something in your car that
you can just wedge into and get a little myofascial release while you're doing something else?
Yeah.
Right?
Why is it restricted to like –
Work your grip while you're driving.
Yeah, exactly. This comes back to you're driving. Yeah, exactly.
And this comes back to every step stronger.
Yeah, every step stronger.
Every step is a rep in what we do.
And our training, whatever passion you have, powerlifting, whatever it be, kettlebells,
I want to do gymnastics, I like dance, whatever it is, it all comes back to the same foundation
of each of those steps is a rep.
And everybody's training every second.
And we can accumulate repetition.
And maybe I don't have to put more time into the gym we kind of like block those things out like they
have to be these things i think i heard you guys talking about like doses of uh yeah microdose
microdose right you guys are joking around microdosing right and it's just like that's
what walking is it's a microdose right and if every one of those reps is more proficient and
then i can spend 15 minutes in the gym and work on mobility or whatever I think that is
and I can steer it towards something I know
I'm going to be doing every day anyways, that walking.
We can get back on
getting that rhythm and feeling great.
Well, and you got over there, Andrew,
because we are deep in
a conversation over here and leaving you out in the cold.
Sorry about that. I'm trying to thank you for
flipping the shot clock in.
I mean, Kristen and Seema, if they started a a podcast it'd be the best sounding podcast you're both your
guys voice is incredible there it is that's true let's do this yeah deeper make an andrew wet
i know it's like the uh the howard the howard stern thing you know when he gets his voice
real deep on the speaker yeah no i'm trying to pick up the pieces because like i missed everything
out i missed out on everything this morning so i'm kind of bummed but um real quick with like
the soul steps and everything that's what we have a promo code for right you have a promo code for
everything like method okay we'll let everyone know at the end of the episode what that code is
but just so everybody knows that 20 off code of all the stuff that we're talking about uh will be
available soon.
But yeah, no, for myself, I'm not sure how familiar you guys are with me, but like I've been dealing with some low back issues for a while. I've been doing a lot of go to stuff.
So I'm working with Gary Scheffler, which I know you're familiar with.
We won't, we won't go like into that cause I don't think it's very productive, but
I would agree. Yeah. But so for myself, like i'm just focusing on like exclusively groundwork
right now is what we call it's you know the stretching some of the stuff i'm sure you're
familiar with as well um because like when you were talking about like um the like uh connect
like that that bend i can do just fine on this side this side i have a shit ton of pain so like
where is square one when it comes to the weck method for, I know it's going to be person dependent.
I have low back issues.
What's like kind of like 101,
like what's step one when it comes to trying to like, I guess,
it's going to be evaluate, but once you're evaluated,
where does somebody go?
Well, what I would say about the lower back,
like one side you have issue to get there, begin by doing this.
Create as much length as you can on this.
So it hurts when you bend to this direction.
Correct.
Focus on the length that you can create on the other side.
So that length is going to open up the possibilities of everything on the restricted side.
So it's two ways, right?
Absolutely.
That already helped.
Already helped.
Exactly.
So what we want to do to enhance our ability to rotate is we want to verticalize.
So if I can verticalize, and this is – and Seema, you know this just inherently from the jujitsu and those type of things.
I can turn a corner if I verticalize.
And we stem from our original means of locomotion was the brachiation where you're hanging.
I was about to talk about that because that's what I was about to tell you.
You mentioned ground work.
Right, right.
So what we have to understand is that if I can take this – the gates that are the shoulders and I can create greater length, now I've got much more play to work with to find what feels good on the other side.
But if I just come here and I just try to bend down, I'm not getting the concomitant assist from where we actually even came from, right?
You're way up here.
And the whole trick to hanging is that there's no muscular shortening whatsoever.
It's connective tissue continuity so that the orangutan is not sitting there flexing a muscle.
He's just hanging from structure.
And that gives him the ability to tap the proximal connected to the distal.
So even when you're closing down the shoulder to the hip,
you're still not pulling
because it feels like if you were to lock in your lats,
it's going to be pulling down on it, right?
Or am I wrong?
You have to have the other side up.
The other side comes up.
Think of hanging from a bar, single arm, monkey bars.
A great opportunity of it.
That's locomoting in the air, right?
That's the most way we do it.
We learn it as kids.
We go across the monkey bars, right?
Of course.
And that's what I would say.
A lot of these people
that are in these factions
of functional or alt fitness
and stuff like that,
a lot of it comes from analysis
of ground movement
as we all do it.
And it's something that
that's where the big bucks are too
in sports and things like that.
So there's a lot of research
and thought around that.
But aerials are something
that's huge to take and analyze it and you
say aerials what do you mean think like uh so like me and my wife own pole dancing studio so i'm i'm
in i'm in that world my girl likes to do pole dancing i love doing like aerial silks i used
to do that and there's a there's a lot to that and um what's an aerial silk so it's it's literally
like think circus ola they have these huge fabrics fabrics and you tie yourself up in them and you can support yourself and do stuff like that.
We have a pole and a Lyra in my home.
I own two poles for you.
That's why I have a ton of poles.
I have more poles than you.
But again, just this idea of taking all the information I'm learning from the groundwork
and can I apply it to an aerial athlete now?
And if I'm like, oh, man, that doesn't work,
then am I really rooting in something that maybe is actually fundamental?
Or I work with the swimmers and can I put this same information into a fluid
where they're reacting to something around them at all times?
They're not just thinking about that ground force.
And their shoulders are always moving that way.
Yeah, absolutely.
So if you could think of that stuff,
then you can always sort of come up with the other side of it,
and you'll start recognizing that.
Long creates short, and short creates long.
It's both sides all the time.
And a really interesting thing about some of this
is when you train your lats, if you do kind of pull down,
even if you do a single arm, not just a pull down.
Obviously, it works great on the pull down down even if you do a single arm like not just a pull down like obviously it works great on the pull down but if you do like a single arm row if you just twist to
that side and pull down towards your hip oh yeah your latches goes yeah it's all fired up i want
to throw one more thing at you too and it's we were talking about this was that external cueing
it's like i'm watching you over there and you did a little side bend to try to feel it you're like
it kind of feels weird but it's like you're internalizing over there, and you did a little side bend to try to feel it, and you're like, ah, it kind of feels weird.
But it's like you're internalizing.
Your eyes are going in.
Everything's about this thing, not the thing you're supposed to be pulling that to to project it towards something.
We're creatures of motion. We need to be putting force into things or moving.
And that idea of having that external is really going to help you make sure you're getting as much as you should be getting.
Make sure you're getting as much as you should be getting. Having a goal, some goal that now your body is going to start to organize better because it's for a purpose as opposed to like, what am I supposed to feel?
Like that type of a –
Makes sense.
And it's both sides.
I mean you do want the internal scrutiny of it, but if you give somebody a task, now they can focus on that.
And one of the cues that I give to Mark today is just don't think and the body will naturally sink.
And because thought is too slow for real-time movement.
So if I'm thinking I'm behind it and I'm not in it, and so I need to take my mind off of it to actually do it. And if you want to have a chance at actually incorporating that which you're training, you have to have the subconscious competence to actually use it.
So if what I'm being instructed to do requires conscious concentration on it, and then it doesn't relate to the pattern, which we don't need to get into. But I will never be able to execute it no matter how many reps I do because I have to think about it to do it.
And then real time, that's way too slow.
And it is the both sides that I think is very important in terms of understanding how you're going to optimize the balance of the system.
optimize the balance of the system. So if I forbid you from going to certain places that you're going to actually go to, well, now I'm not preparing you for that, which is actually
going to happen. And you don't get the counterbalance effects of assisting the other
side. And one of the things that we do is we do non-dominant side training. And what we do is we
use a compare and contrast principle. So today we had you doing a race and
chase with the right hand on top right that feels better for a righty than the left hand on top
the one on top is racing and the one on bottom is chasing and the way we do it is we compare
and contrast so if you were going to do equal amount of reps you're not doing 12 here and then
12 here you're doing three or four here to feel. Why does that feel good?
Now go over here.
Okay, let me go back.
Let me find it.
What is the dominant side actually doing?
And a lot of the times how you enhance the non-dominant proficiency is you teach the
dominant side how to be the non-dominant side.
Throwing is a great example.
Righty is going to throw and just do it,
and then when they go to do lefty,
they don't know to do that,
so they go like that.
Because the dominant doesn't...
Come on.
You want to be non-dominant?
I don't want to be non-dominant.
It's like, what is that doing for your brain, too?
It's got to be going nuts.
You've got to have a lot of growth during that time.
Well, yes, and I think there's also...
Like, there's... Alan Alda was on this – he hosted this TV show called like Scientific Frontiers. And he went and he met this golf performance coach named Deborah Cruz at Arizona State University, and I went out and met her because I was all into this brain balance.
went out and met her because I was all into this brain balance. And what she did was she would take a cap with all these electrodes on it that measured your brain waves. And then what she
determined was that if you can get into some form of flow, alternating bilateral patterning,
crossing midline, the motor and sensory cortices of the brain will sync naturally because you have
to from a motor sensory standpoint and that resonance can
now spread throughout the brain globally to create a harmonic state and if you're doing things like
measuring the proficiency of a golf putt or a free throw or throwing darts and you get yourself
into that state which can be achieved by organizing the movement or finding a balanced challenge that you can
meet.
It's not too easy.
It's not too hard.
And both of those phenomenon will enhance the harmony of your global brainwaves so that
now you are in the zone and you will shoot eight out of ten as opposed to six out of
ten, for example.
And she has the data that correlates that, okay, when the brain is in that harmonic state, you are always performing better than when it's acortic and not in that harmony.
It wouldn't surprise me one bit if that could assist with helping somebody be more quote-unquote book smart.
Oh, I think so.
See, I've gone to places that i think you know living on the royalty right
so you know what day is it today it don't matter
and so and and i'm you know very intense so i would do i went through a phase where years of
i work and i would take a hundred post-it notes all you know marked with numbers and i would take 100 post-it notes all marked with numbers and I would just randomly assign them all over the bedroom,
the ceilings, the walls, the fan, even on the fan.
And then I would lie down, close my eyes, and I would start a timer.
I'd open up my eyes and then I'd have to find the numbers.
And to get it on the fan, you got to almost like,
you know, you got to strobe it to find it.
And I would calculate how fast I could do this and i was very disciplined about it and i coupled that with
practicing speed reading and i reached a level of proficiency where i had i open a book and i could
go holy fuck I never read that.
I fucking feel like Rain Man.
No, but it was a feeling of like, you know,
this like Nietzschean Superman, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I could never sort of get back
to that level of proficiency.
You know, Kim Peek, Rain Man,
he'll tell you all these things,
but he can't button his shirt.
So if you want to go and direct it all to that activity
you get real good at it but you can do nothing else right so i could never quite get to that
you know i learned how to read fast so i can assimilate information quickly right learn how
to learn right so that's that's the principle but your eyes they say that your eyes are actually
your brain exposed to atmosphere yeah literally they say it your eyes are actually your brain exposed to atmosphere.
Yeah, literally.
They say it's outside portion of your brain.
Yeah, it's the outside portion of your brain, and you have a whole island.
It's Australia back there, right?
But sensory motor, the left side controls the right, and the right side controls the left and if i can harmonize the the spiral dynamic of that
by definition i have the motor cortices running a you know a pattern that is resonance and it
does make you more able to focus intellectually as well more smarter this is this is cool because
this is why i think the ropes this is really our foundation and what we're doing the ropes because
we actually i didn't even talk to you guys about it much, but early on, you talked a little bit about my rabid, wanting it.
It was because I was getting some stimulation I had not been getting, and my body was craving.
I just wanted to learn.
And then I want to be a teacher.
I want to give information to people.
So to figure out ways to get that information to people was really big for me.
But seriously, that's one of the foundations of us because you can put so much frequency and so many repetitions in and not have to be perfect.
But you're going to get all that harmonization.
You're going to build up a layer that is going to set you up for skill acquisition.
It puts you on the path to perfect by definition because the rope is true.
The rope doesn't lie.
If the rope is true,
so are you, right?
If it sounds right
with the pulsars,
it is right with the pulsars.
It utilizes the non-dominant
and the dominant
at the same time
and there's patterns
that switch that constantly
so you constantly
are getting the stimulation
and you honestly feel smarter.
There were points
that I was waking up
and I learned something
and I woke up
in the middle of the night
and I had to go out
in my garage gym
and do the thing because it just came to me after a long day
of filming ropes for something we were doing you know i mean i also want i also want to bring up
this that like and sammy you talked a little bit about sort of you know the eastern and the mystery
and sort of like i dismissed that i don't want to know from that. But there's a lot of, I don't know, just mystery in things.
And we have theories about why certain things work and perhaps why they don't.
Just sort of lost my train of thought here for a moment.
Let me think what I was going to say.
You were talking about weapon.
No.
I'll think of it. the meantime and semo what was
it like with uh the ropes no you know rope when i when i saw this uh on your instagram chris i was
just like because of jujitsu and the the movement that's in and i'm like there's something really
flowy here that makes a lot of sense because when like in jujitsu when you start to understand the
movements and you start to flow you don't think and then you just start doing movements that you're just like this feels right
like everything just goes and then i say when i saw you on your instagram doing those ropes number
one i could tell this guy's not thinking about shit what he's doing he's just moving he's just
flowing and it's it's a physical activity that you're able to do that with i've seen you also
do that with kettlebells.
That's why I've been starting to just fuck around with literally throwing kettlebells around and see what my body does with it.
And it feels fucking good.
So this is like this is a simple, simple thing that anybody can purchase and add to their repertoire so they can start to feel what that's like. And you can make your own.
Yeah.
You can make your own yeah you can make
your own yeah we want people to move it it's so beneficial for you just yeah yeah so simple i
remember what i was going to say okay so basically this coiling energy right so i'm going to preface
this by saying i've lost my mind four times okay i've gone to places where it's like i i spun out
you know you mentioned that you're bipolar. Bipolar.
You've been diagnosed.
With an extreme rampant.
And THC for me was the thing that gave me sensitivity and energy.
The stuff that would knock somebody out was like.
You know, I would get that like.
And when I discovered the coil, remember walking the circle for like four hours?
Seriously, I ain't joking.
And so what happens is – so what happens is when I tapped into that coil and I would feel that spiral dynamic, it was the kundalini, right?
This yogic thing, right? right the serpent within and it would like rise up and you would feel this incredible sense of like
like prowess and like oh my god like i'm tapping into it and early on with dj and several of these
people i don't know if you felt it but when you tap into the coil people start having weird dreams
like there was did you wait i told you i don't even honestly i can't even remember having dreams
from like 20 to like 28 when I met you.
And then we started doing all this stuff and then lighting up back here, and I just started like having like wild fucking dreams.
And I don't smoke or – I'm pretty clean cut on all that.
Dude, I'm just remembering my dreams and they're wild and like super vivid.
Because again, like the DNA is a spiral, right?
And we come from the winners, right?
The winners.
And the only way to truly win is to cheat.
And like if I want to – I could set up and I could look like – put a cloak on me and I look like I'm hobbling and crippled, right?
Snow White.
Look at the apple, right?
But I'm so sprung right now and I'm just ready because – Sprung and ready. Look at the apple. Yeah. Right? But I'm so sprung right now, and I'm just ready because –
Sprung and ready.
Sprung and ready.
And the thing about – like in the art of strategy or the art of war, the most sophisticated form of warfare is to – your opponent doesn't even know that they're in a fight.
Right?
So it's that craftiness because once you present
your hand,
all right, well now I know what I'm up against.
But if I'm not guarded because I don't
even know that you have a hand,
that's how we got to where we got to.
I think.
One of the things that I've used
to understand
what I understand is my imagination.
So I go back to, okay, when it was just sticks and stones.
That's it, right?
Well, what if I took my left hand and I had the weapon behind me and I'm going to shake hands and make nice-nice with bigger man, right, who's here to eat me and take my women and my things, right?
And what if I'm able to, boom, he'll fool you.
I will be your servant.
I'll do everything for you. Okay, well, bap, right? Well, now I win. Now, I also, I'm going to go into a
little bit of this language stuff. So I play this game with phonetics and the sounds of words,
right? So this idea of, I call it the ing, the ing leash, because my most vital thing is my air
and blood to my brain.
Air and blood to the brain, that's the definition of you're alive, okay?
Now, if I make certain postures where I make the glottal stop of the ing –
oops.
Oh, no.
Can't really hurt it that way.
I discovered that.
I was laying in bed, and my son, before he could walk, was holding on to the banister of the bed.
And I'm asleep, and he stepped on my throat.
And suddenly I went like that, and it didn't hurt.
So, oh, okay.
And if I want to weaponize myself, well, then these are horns.
And I'm going to be in here, and I'm not going to be able to choke out.
And if I'm here and I put a smile in, I breathe even better through my nose.
And so I sort of say, okay, well, this is the ing leash, and who do we come from?
The winners, right? There used to be like 20 or more different hominid species.
And what if the Neanderthal was really the eat and hurt all?
Oh, really?
Right?
And what if we're going to bed tonight and we've heard stories about the boogeyman?
Sometimes at night they come and they eat us.
Oh, shit.
I'm going to prepare for that.
You ain't going to eat me.
Right? What am'm going to prepare for that. You ain't going to eat me, right?
What am I going to do?
Now, what if I can harness the wolf, turn him into my best friend?
Now I have the dogs of war.
Now that little fire that protected you from the wolves, well, we're going to send in the dogs, right?
Because they're going to find you, ferret you out, and I'm weaker.
right because they're going to find you ferret you out and i'm weaker but if i can communicate and i can have guile and and cunning and all those things then maybe i can beat that monster
do you know that the neanderthal their skulls were like twice our size their eyes weren't in
the middle their eyes were up here and their eyes were twice as big so they can see at night
this thing is like he's like a mike Mike Tyson plus 100 pounds. Thicker bones.
Shaquille O'Neal be up here. Neanderthal be here. And the Neanderthal
just tear through them. So you have to use that cunning
and that guile to get, to
procreate the seed.
I mean, what does the lion do? right? The lion comes in and the young
lion kicks the big, you know, the old king out. First thing he does is he kills all the cubs.
That's a different line. You won't take mine now. He gets three, four years in the king's seat and
then he gets chased out by another one, right? So it's this procreation and just the playing the game of life
and we're so layered humanity is so complex and there's so many layers and in the beginning was
the word and the word was with god and the word was god oh really matthew mark luke and john math Oh, really? Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
Math.
You mark, look, and join.
The new test.
Amen.
And that's it.
I can see the play on words there jesus there's
he's right there he's right there he's like what are you guys talking about g is us so there's a
destructive criticism and there's constructive criticism which you can build off of right yeah
yeah in seeing some of the things that you've seen that are out there from GODA,
from functional patterns,
what are some of the things that you've seen that you guys might have in common
that you guys feel that there's maybe some synergy there
that some folks are talking about?
And what are the things where are some of the areas of contention where you disagree can i start with this yeah please yeah so first off i want to say that we haven't actually
studied with them so i don't exactly know what they're saying so i want to start there yeah i
just put that on the table okay and you're not familiar with all their stuff yeah you know what
i mean i see what they put out and i would say the commonalities is i think there's a layer of
commonality in regards to locomotion on the ground, for sure,
and thought process there and fascial lines and things like that, 100%.
And then the other thing I would say is you should absolutely go and learn from everybody.
I would encourage that 100%.
And this is that thing with factions.
I'm not going to beat any of them up.
Go learn stuff.
A bunch of coaches I taught, they went over there and they learned stuff from them as they should because if they're interested in something that we taught them and
it's another route to learn from it why wouldn't we go learn it exactly you know what i mean and
then that all comes back to like empowering yourself and learning something and applying
it yourself and seeing what works best for you as an individual and stuff like that so we can we can
toot our own horn all day we want we say it's the best thing in the world, but we got to learn things.
We got to be underneath everybody, and everybody's got to be in agreeance with that, and everybody
has to go explore things and feel that for themselves if that's what the truth is.
So that's where I would start with all that.
Well, and what I would add on to it is there are egos involved.
I have a very big ego.
You know, there are egos involved.
I have a very big ego.
I've been humbled in my life so that, you know, the ego has been in check, but I still have a desire to be the best.
Right.
And I'm not going to pretend that that's not real.
I'm going to honor the fact that, you know, I need to be the best.
Otherwise, I'm not happy.
Right. So Steve Cotter said, you're not the best at anything in the world
so you created
your own little niche
to be the best at.
Right?
And I would say
that that's probably accurate.
And I think,
you know,
the functional patterns
and Naughty Aguilar,
what I have in common
with him
is sort of
a messianic complex
where like,
I'm here to save the world
and, you know,
I'm the greatest thing ever
and, you know what I mean?
Like, so,
okay, you know, and there can only be one. So it gets competitive. I'm here to save the world and I'm the greatest thing ever. You know what I mean? Like so, okay.
And there can only be one.
So it gets competitive, right?
And what I would say just in terms of what I know about what he does, what I would say is that my biggest critique would be too much transversy and not enough 3D, right?
And this is a funny story.
So 3D would be like incorporating both side bending and diagonal patterns, I guess.
Right.
It's the figure eight and the head over the foot
because like I know these people
and I've had relationships that started out as good
and then they went sour, right?
And that's just a fact.
And I remember one night I was like, I'm going to F with Naudi.
So I sent him a message.
I took a picture of him running on his treadmill, right?
I did a freeze frame with the head in the middle on the left and on a freeze frame with the head in the middle on the right.
Hey, how you doing?
Just wanted to give you a little tip.
You know, it's going to make everything you do better head over foot i hit send and then three dots fuck you get my lawyers he didn't want the pictures to
go out so in that sense i preserve my standing as like i'm the guy who told you to do this and now
you do this okay who's your daddy right no but i'm just being real
yeah i'm just being real because you're real right and then with the go to guys
gil came to me studied with me and we had a great relationship but then it turned into
they used to talk about gil gary to me all the time i liked them a. I liked them a lot. But then it turned into
a money thing.
I want to invest in, Dave, I'm here for the money.
I want to invest in what you're doing.
Well, we don't take investment.
Okay, well then I got an invention.
I want you to license it.
What's the invention? It's a slant board.
Oh, okay.
It's not an invention.
That's the first thing. right? He'd tell people
to use it. I just go stand on top of my roof if I want to do that. I'm just, you know, putting in
a little jabs. I'm being real. So that went south when I think he had too much to drink one day and
he sent me a text message across the line. And I don't think you get sloppy with that text if you
ain't, you you know nipping at
the thing at 11 a.m all right that's and i'm just saying what i think i don't know that but i know
what i got and i know that you failed the foxhole test my friend and therefore that's it we will
never ever be that because you don't betray my trust you just don't do it regardless of that what are they doing
well and what are they doing that you're like nah i don't really think because you you mentioned in
both cases you had good relationships with both yes so when in terms of go to like what have you
seen where you're like oh i think that's that has some good utility or you know what have you seen
that where you're like nah i don't think that's the way it works? What I would say is that in order to truly understand movement, you have to use as many tools as possible.
So cadaver science is useful.
I'm not going to throw it out.
I want to know that the tendon attaches here and not there.
It's been instrumental in my understanding of movement is that I know the anatomy and I understand the kinesiology.
So those are very important things.
And they say to throw that out pretty much.
Yeah, which is nuts.
Which is nuts.
Why would you –
Don't remove tools.
Use tools.
Use the tool.
Bruce Lee, absorb what is useful and discard the rest.
It's a very simple formula, right?
And so I would say that to not avail yourself of that knowledge and information is a mistake, and it will lead to perhaps less understanding and then less utility.
And then what I would say is that personally, if I'm going to learn from you, you have to practice with proficiency what it is you teach.
And neither Gil nor Gary can move worth a damn, okay?
You got to flick your heel out.
Otherwise, you're the worst of all time.
Well, he doesn't flick his heel out.
His heel goes in.
Well, how's this coding going if you can't even do it yourself, right?
So that's one.
And then fundamental misunderstanding that it's not just how fast, how far, how long.
It's can you even get there in the face of opposition.
It's fight and flight.
It's not just flight, all flight. It's not just flight.
It's not just forward locomotion.
The ability to turn is actually more valuable than the ability to just go straight.
And when you do a drill
where I call it
stamp the cigarette out,
stomp the cigarette out.
So if I lunge forward
and then I pivot my back foot
and I think that that's helping me pattern locomotion.
It's actually a fight application because when I pivot the back foot like that, my center of mass winds in on itself.
It's going backwards, going in the wrong direction.
And if you look at the gait mechanics, when the ground hits, it's not a pivot point.
It's a reception point and a departure point for the rest of the foot.
So I'm not landing and doing that.
And it's impossible to do, right?
So you can do it till you're blue in the face.
And it might have some benefits that now, hey, you're focused on not falling into the middle
and you're focused on harnessing the outside edge using the green dot.
That's the one I coined that phrase, green dot, right?
And so you're the strongest gym in the West.
You didn't come out here and say, I'm better than fucking Westside, right?
They have a board with more points on it.
Okay, and you put points on it.
I didn't like it the fact that what Gil did was he turned on me and suddenly everything that I do is fundamentally
wrong. I stole his invention, but he
shits on soul steps. Well, how do I steal your invention
when I got this complex slope that's patently distinct and
you got a slant board? How did I steal? Right? And I take
these accusations like, and the toxicity.
Like I acted like a real jerk on the internet for a couple years in just fighting back against the Bosu bashing.
It drove me nuts, and there's thousands of people out there who shit on it all the time.
Oh, yeah.
Okay?
And these are the people – this is not the trainer who you know she trains two people in the
afternoon and goes to lulu and has a starbucks no these are people who turn on the lights they get
there early they're the last to leave they go to these conferences they learn they have their cscs
and everything's science-based and the bosu ball makes you weaker they're fucking college professors
in grad school one of them dave barth told me this. I don't know if you know Dave Barth, but he's
big into strength. He went to
Kutztown, or I forgot what it was, but it was some college, a graduate
program, and a professor comes in and he says, when the Bosu
inventor found out that his invention doesn't work, he lost his
mind. He's like, that's not why I lost my mind.
I lost my mind for other reasons.
It was not that.
And this is a guy who's teaching the next generation of the people who want the best information.
And so to tell me that my BOSU ball is a piece of crap, it just got me so angry.
It got me so angry. It got me so angry. And I realize now and thank God that he was tolerant because he hates when I went to this place, right?
I mean he didn't like it.
I absolutely hated it more than anything on the planet.
Right, right.
I don't like negativity.
Language is so key.
Right, right.
So – and thank you for your patience because now I'm not so much in that place.
I mean I'll still – I'll tell the truth and I'll throw some jabs when necessary.
But what I want this to be is I want it to be like, all right, I'm throwing my last punch, boom, and then it's over.
It's just over.
Let's move forward and I can forgive, but I can't forget, and I'm going to move forward,
and eventually this will just take care of itself.
Meaning, let the cream rise to the top, and you got your boat,
and I got mine, and let's go.
Right?
You think you would be here if it wasn't for Chris?
Here?
Just in general, in life.
Oh.
Because it sounds like you hit some rough spots and you got the
worst and i went through a lot of different well let's put it this way i have other people in my
in my life who've been with me longer yeah who have been of that valuable invaluable assistance
so without them i wouldn't be where i am i say that chris is new in my life but we have a
we have we have a a special bond that beyond words, and there's an inherent trust and mutual respect.
So what Chris has done is he has made WEC method scalable, and we have the principles drilled down because he enjoys training much more than me.
So I like to work easy.
Like, I don't like to work hard.
I mean, he'll tell you.
You like martial arts a lot, but you don't love lifting.
Well, here's what I like.
Here's what I like.
Here's what I like.
If there's a 203-pound kettlebell, I'm going to lift that thing 17, 20 times,
swinging it until my grip fails.
Right?
We got a Bulgarian bag challenge.
Give it to me.
I'm doing 300 freaking reps, right?
He's ready.
You see that?
Like he doesn't train.
He's ready.
Or he trains, but it's to do things like that.
He's just ready.
He wants to do something, so he does it.
When we had that Bulgarian bag challenge, I just picked up the bag,
and I'm like, all right, let's go.
Time it.
I got the coil, right? You kicked my ass in it, too, which surprised me. Because I'm really good with a Bulgarian bag. I'm like, alright, let's go. Time it. I got the coil, right?
You kicked my ass in it too, which surprised me because I'm really
good with a Bulgarian bag. I was like, what
just happened? He tried it
four times in a row trying to get to my number,
right? But it's
the skill with which,
and I worked so hard when I
was in high school and college.
Football was everything to me.
And I, you know, family go on vacation to me and i you know families go on
vacation to grand canyon i can't go i can't miss two leg workouts you kidding me i gotta gain weight
you know if football was everything to me and so i know that commitment i know that fire like
i watched bigger stronger faster again right then I watched the prescription thugs for the first time.
Then I'm going to watch everything else that Chris has done because the Bell family, you're special.
You have this like – I love the fact that you're honest.
You're just God's honest, and that to me is – that's the rarefied – like, okay, that's a foxhole guy. That's a guy who will stand there and say, you know what?
I'm going to take this thing because I have a certain objective, and that's what it's going to take.
And okay, that's what it is.
You're not bullshitting.
And I view you as sort of a voice of reason, and you don't have any dog in the fight.
And you even said to me, like, if somebody calls somebody else an asshole that does not color
his view as to what good can i learn from that individual because you're a west side barbell
how many assholes got together right and they all sort of you know competitively cooperatively
competed to to ratchet each other up that's good so that – and I view this as like this is the beginning of a relationship.
And again, physical education is fundamental education.
And the better we can physically educate the populace, the stronger we can all be and the
more honest we can be that if the king ain't wearing clothes, perhaps you'll have the
strength to stand up and say, I don't see the clothes.
Because right now it seems like the world is, oh, he's wearing clothes.
Okay, yes, he's wearing clothes.
Yes, oh, yeah, he's got my mask on.
I'm wearing clothes.
It's like, come on now.
This world is going to hell in a handbasket if we're not careful, right?
And there is just so much corruption and so much nonsense and so much bullshit that it's like exercise or physical function is the one thing that can not be denied.
You cannot lie to me.
How many pushups can you do?
And I think that that is so important.
And competition and cooperation, those are the two things. When I played against you on a Tuesday practice and we're face-to-face and we're hitting, right?
It is all-out war with mutual respect.
I'm going to beat you or you're going to beat me.
We're going to find out who is the better man so that on Saturday we're both better.
But if we had held back on Tuesday and, oh, well, you know, then you ain't going to be any good on Saturday.
Right?
And so it's a balance of cooperation and competition that gets the most out of your human being.
You don't want to play jujitsu against somebody that you can beat with one hand
tied behind your back.
That's not fun.
It's very boring.
Right?
And you don't want to get in there with a monster who's going to, you know,
you better tap, otherwise he's going to rip very boring. Right? And you don't want to get in there with a monster who's going to you know, you better tap, otherwise he's going to
rip you apart. Right?
You got to find that balance and
then get up to the point where that monster
is, you know, you can play with the
monster. Yeah. But you
want to, Jordan Peterson says, you got to
become a monster inside and
then be cool.
Because if you're not a monster
inside, then you get walked over.
You don't got no choice.
It's better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it.
Strength is never a weakness, and weakness is never strength.
These are things that you can live your life by.
If you just had a book of phrases like that and you just said them all the time, life would be easier.
And I just – I get up every day, every step stronger, every step stronger.
And I'm not disciplined in the sense that I would have been had I not had a royalty.
My internet presence is all over the fucking place.
You see some stuff.
It's just completely confusing.
I don't optimize because I've just been gestating in this world where I haven't had to do it.
And now I guess I'm finally seeing the sense in doing it.
But still, I want the work to speak for itself.
And I just want to pass it on so that people are more empowered because I want strong people.
That's what I want in this world.
Tell us about this fist thing that you blew our minds with earlier today.
Oh, okay.
So basically yin and yang, right?
I prioritize the bones as number one because without the bones,
I'm a blob and I got no leverage to do nothing, right?
So the bones are a number one and then it's the fascia,
which has the direct tie-in to the nervous system.
And the fascia, for lack of a better
definition is just basically that which surrounds and separates everything so every little actin
and myosin filament within the sarcomere is enveloped in a layer of fascia connective tissue
and the innervation of the fascia is far more dense than the muscles themselves, right?
And it's connective.
And I believe that fascia has its own mechanical intelligence, meaning if I touch something hot, it's got to go to the spine and come back or it's got to go to the brain and come
back.
It takes time, right, for that signal to register.
Fascia, I think it's mechanical.
I think it's innately intelligent.
And if you hit it, it sets up.
So it's there for you now.
You don't even have to send a signal.
It's independently intelligent.
That's the way I think of it.
And with the hands, I was in Chinese medical school, and what I did – when I go to learn something, I go and I do it on my terms.
So I went to Chinese medical school.
I had an amazing class with the founder of the school, and I was like, can I work at your clinic?
I will do anything you ask me to do.
I will not be paid.
I just want to be in your presence.
So that's what I did, and he was very laissez-faire.
So I did a lot of stuff before it would be sanctioned in terms of – the only thing I didn't do was stick the needles in,
in terms of that.
But I want to learn and learn and learn.
And then the meridian system is actually this map that is in – if you know the meridians and you can track the sort of direction of it,
it makes perfect Western biomechanical sense.
And it's complete gobbledygook until you can get to that understanding.
Is there something that he can pull up for like an imagery of what you mean as far as the meridians?
Yeah, you could type in like Chinese acupuncture meridians, the 12 meridian system.
And it will give you like this map.
You're just going to see a bunch of dots and a bunch of lines all over, right?
And it looks completely – when I showed up at Williams College
in freshman year and I got the playbook on the defense,
I would fall asleep because I was just like, this is complete Greek.
Sky, cloud, cover three, three cheated, five, two, one.
Like what?
I couldn't make any sense of it until sophomore year
when I got thrust into starting job.
I had to like study like it was a course because football is a game of the mind more so now than ever before.
Yeah.
Right?
So the meridians, when I first saw them, I couldn't make any sense of it.
But as I gestated in it and I was practicing the martial art, I was starting to say, oh, okay, I get it.
It's yin and yang and there's like – yeah, see that – you can't make sense out of
that.
You know what I mean?
It starts with the lung and it's a very complex system but there are apps on the phone
that show you the meridian and then shows you like a tracking.
That's cool.
So you can literally like if you're patient
enough you can like sort of all right the lung okay boom it comes out my thumb the large intestine
comes back in the stomach comes down the spleen comes up heart small intestine bladder kidney
pericardium triple warmer gallbladder liver to lung. And you can follow that sequence and it gives you these like bilateral torsions and the different stuff if you're playing.
Is that kind of like Tai Chi or something like that?
Very much like Tai Chi.
Tai Chi means supreme ultimate fist.
And basically here – I had one guy – I've had a lot of teachers, a lot of teachers who give me invaluable little nuggets. And one of them was a friend of mine who said, the three Chinese internal martial arts are Xinyi, Bagua, and Tai Chi.
And the way that you understand them is with relation to a circle.
Xinyi cuts the circle.
Bagua circles the circle.
Tai Chi is the center of the circle.
And when people are listening.
And all things come to tai chi yes
cct btt yeah yeah it really is and this is the thing like i'm listening to this and like i'm
i'm trying to make sense of it in my mind i'm being open to it but when people have heard
especially like joe rogan or individuals talk about these martial arts like that's bullshit
because when an individual that does this tries to fight
somebody who's a boxer or an mma fighter it's a little good but this is different from just pure
fighting well yes well here's what it is okay there's a lot of people pretending okay and
unless you can defeat the hard you got no right going soft right soft we can overcome the hard
because it's receptive to jiu-jitsu is ultimately going to win if it Soft we can overcome the hard because it's receptive.
Jiu-jitsu is ultimately going to win if it's one-on-one and there's all the time in the world.
Jiu-jitsu wins, okay?
Not so practical in a street fight if you're going to be laying on the ground and a buddy is going to be kicking you, right?
But everything has its strength and its weakness, right?
So this stuff is – and I know I take it on a tangent, but if we're talking about the structure of the hand, I got to it from this spiraling movement, moving the distal extremity with the least amount of effort, fastest that I possibly can.
And it's basically this, and it naturally winds up to this.
And there's different meridians.
Like if you do it enough like i did it then you come here and
then floyd mayweather gets hit and you go here right and what it does is it triangulates and
creates a bone circuit through a triangle and if you think about in geometry the triangle is the
strongest shape because each angle buttresses the other angles And so when I can triangulate the bone structure, I can put massive force through the longitudinal axis of a bone. Think about what your femur has
endured with a thousand pounds on your back, right? And now put yourself horizontal and put
the weight on your femur that way. It's the longitudinal, the bone's going to hold up a house.
And so you put it that way, it's going to snap easy, right?
And so when I make a ball up fist like this, grab onto mommy.
Hold onto the tool.
This is a necessary thing, but it's for the purposes of holding something.
It's not for the purposes of going to extreme tension here because here I don't have the balance between the flexors and the extensors because the
flexors cave in upon themselves and they create a structure that does not have integrity each
metacarpal is disintegrated from the others that when I triangulate it like this it sharpens it
it integrates it I don't break these things you could put you You can put hundreds of pounds of force into that, and it's strong inherently.
And then what it allows us to do is it allows us to be soft and fluid because the bone is already hard.
And in terms of like the Tai Chi guy that gets his ass kicked by the second-year MMA guy, that's what happens.
But see, I'm not interested in that kind of Tai Chi. I'm interested in can I clear
space? So I don't even think about fighting. I think
of Lawrence Taylor and Mike Tyson. Not just Mike
Tyson. So Lawrence Taylor is going to displace
and replace your mass with my own. Whereas Mike Tyson
is going to sit there and hit you.
Lawrence Taylor's going to plow right through you.
And so I like that idea that I'm going to come
and I'm just going to present something to you
that's going to force you to react or get hit.
And then from that reaction,
I'm going to be invisible for the next transition
by not letting you read what ideas that we're in contact with.
And when we're playing that push hands game, that's why I'm good at it.
Because when you get me, I'm like, oh, he thinks he has me, right?
So I'm just going to do that much of a yield.
Oh, you're off the line and now I can – now I have an easy path, right and so you have to earn you have to earn the right to be able to use this eastern
stuff and not pretend right yeah to pretend tai chi is the forms right the forms and then it's
the push hands that's the whole thing about it and you have to be able to deal with hard
otherwise you're just pretending and everybody knows that right
except for the people who get hypnotized and you know george dillman gives them a no touch
knockout right and joe rogan laughs as he should because it's ridiculous right yeah but you know
if you want to set up the bag and the meter and you want to see who can put more force into the
bag i want to play right let's see how much can you put in and i'm 60 pounds less all
right let's see if i can do as much yeah yeah right and this has allowed me to to train it to
the point where i have legitimate physical skills i wish there was a video we could pull up of like
you like you had your um i don't know what they're called oh the punching pads yeah those punching
pads these things yeah we're literally punching the fuck out of a wall.
Well, that's just to demonstrate that this has a lot of protection for how thin it is.
But even without that, you could punch the wall with no problem because of what you created.
You just can't punch it like full blast without –
Yeah, I can't punch it full blast.
What this does on a wall – I just do it as a demo.
I will actually use hard surfaces to bone up.
Like I'll actually do that, but it's gentle.
So I'm boning it up.
I don't want to create the damage.
But if I punch the wall hard, I'm going to cut myself and then it's harder to train the next day.
But the way you're making it.
Oh, go ahead.
TIE fighters that like kick bamboo trees and they just kick so so that they can build that calcium up in their shin and just –
Well, listen to this theory, okay?
So again, we're going to get a little geeky.
I believe the bone structure is a chrysaline matrix that creates a piezoelectric jolt of electricity upon compression or percussion or pressure change.
So a chrysalis structure, if you hit it or bend it,
will create this piezoelectricity.
So I think that your skeleton could actually be an antenna
at which your soul resonates into your bones.
Jesus couldn't have any broken bones, they pierced him but they did not break
him right so and you're you're i think it could be that your bones are an antenna and the hairs
that's an antenna too think about why do some whales have vestigial hip bones and like what
the fuck there's a whale and it's you know this right there's there's vestigial
thigh bones within some whales huh it's a mammal yeah right that means it probably was out of the
water and then went back in the water why'd it go in the water maybe if i have this hair that's a
route in for certain electrical signals right your hair can stand on end right you get frightened or
whatever yeah spooky airy fairy so scary right You get under the water. Well, short circuit's all that
bullshit. Now you can't scare me that way, motherfucker, right? So, and this, I'm just
letting it go wild, right? And it's just because this is the, this is my thought process. So what
I do is I have no filter or concern about what I'm willing to entertain, and I simply say what if dot, dot, dot, and I play out scenarios.
I love that.
And I'm not married to some conclusion or preconceived notion, and I'm not afraid to ask a stupid question.
That's like an inventor mindset.
Yeah.
What if?
If you were to ask, especially like a little kid, say, hey, what do you think the worst idea would be for an invention in the gym?
They actually would probably – once they went through five or six things, they would probably give you something amazing.
You'd be like, that actually makes a lot of sense.
As opposed to, no, that's a stupid idea.
Go sit down.
Right.
Okay.
Now you just cut the well off for inspiration.
It's like a good business thing to mess with, too. And it's fun. If you go around a table
and you've got a think tank, say, hey, what's the worst idea you can come up with for our business?
And what will happen is people will start to think, they're going to say, that is
really dumb. And they're going to go through their brain and they're going to say, why
doesn't it match up with their beliefs? And they're going to say, hey, you know what?
Actually, that was not that bad of an idea really because we could do this instead.
And then the whole room gets talking.
It's the catalyst.
It's the catalyst for like, oh, like –
It allowed –
It can start a fire.
It allowed somebody to reach out and to do something weird.
My invention process is this.
When we strategically sit down to create an invention, which we're doing now.
So some of mine have been sort of flash of inspiration.
Bosu ball, what if I cut the ball in half?
Holy shit, what if I cut the ball in half, right?
I mean I recognize that opportunity big time.
Which martial art was that going through the middle?
Oh, that's Shin-Yi.
Shin-Yi.
Shin-Yi just cuts the center, right?
Shin-yi.
Shin-yi.
Shin-yi.
Shin-yi just cuts the center, right?
Yes.
But other inventions like these things, this is like thousands of hours of perspiration and not – yeah.
I mean I do look sort of like a bookish, wimpy guy.
Can you walk us through what you're doing with your hand just for the people that are just listening that can't see?
Yeah. with your hand just for the people that are just listening that can't see? Yeah, so basically my middle finger,
if I snap my middle finger and I use my thumb to snap my middle finger,
that's going to land my middle finger
where I want it to land for the fist
that I'm going to hit with.
It's not the internal one that I showed you guys.
This is for the purposes of using it
to wring the wrist and to strike.
So the middle finger snaps and it stays straight.
The last digit, that can't bend.
If it bends, you short circuit it and you can't triangulate.
Then the index finger folds down, same thing.
The last digit has to stay straight and it overlaps.
So the mnemonic is snap, overlap, and then the thumb wrap. So it's snap, overlap, wrap
is what sets you up to have it. And then what you do is I like to train this, I call it the A-OK.
It's my peace sign right here where fourth and fifth go and it looks like a peace sign.
When I showed this to my son in the very beginning of this discovery, he goes like this.
He saw that and he interpreted that because it looks very similar.
And so basically here when I do that and then I just fold the fourth finger to come and nexus with the index finger.
And so I have the connection of the thumb and the fourth finger.
That's the path that gives me the longest, strongest and the most compressed coil.
I would love for some people out there, if anyone is listening that does any sort of
MMA, I think that this could be a revolution of sorts.
If people try this and this is something that they find utility in right away, it's a simple,
easy tip that might –
Well, what I would say and then that this
again is why i was so excited to come up here is because again i view you as the gladwellian
tipping point a voice of reason who has the respect of strong people right because when we
were younger what we cared about was strength okay i don I don't care. You wanted to be stronger.
I know you did, right?
I know you did.
He was stronger than you, and you wanted to be stronger than him.
I laughed, man.
A mad scientist laughed.
But what I'm saying is that's as real as real gets.
And you find out where you are in the pecking order very quickly, right?
And the measure of strength, as you were saying, can be different.
But in our coming up, the measure was Monday is bench day and how much do you bench?
And in New Jersey, there's no such thing as a squat, okay?
You have pencil legs and you bench 500, right?
So the strength and the prowess comes from sort of the skillful usage of the body.
And what I would say is that this – it's not if it gives you super results fast.
It's get the skill and measure the result.
Don't shortchange yourself by saying, i didn't get it what the hell are you talking about right you're gonna learn a g chord
some guy's gonna be able to do it first and some guy's gonna take three days but the guy who takes
three days could be a better guitar player because he took the time to learn it yeah versus you know
the tortoise and the hare right the? The tortoise won the goddamn race.
The rabbit was faster, right?
And so both sides utilize.
Make yourself as fast as a rabbit and then run the damn race, right?
Like train movements and muscles.
But if we're going to ask, like, what movements should we train?
Well, then I'm going to propose to the industry,
and I want positive peer pressure to be applied with a lot of pressure and positive because we're
all going to move in the right direction.
It's positive peer pressure.
What I'm going to say is that I believe that the most valuable athletic skill that you
can have is to have the ability to have true balance, meaning you could shift your weight and be balanced on one foot, balanced on the other foot with no disturbing the balance.
And if I have that skill to move with balance and continuity because balance is 100% or you don't have balance.
Because if you're not 100% with balance, you can't move right now.
Right now, you got to set up. Right? And so my proposal is that head over foot is the simplest, most effective strategy
to balance your walk. Right? And I think that just
the skill set of manipulating the rope back and forth. Right?
Learning how to coil each side. Learning how to
use the spiral dynamic to your advantage as
opposed to more linear three planes of motion.
No, it's all happening.
So when I do this transverse exercise, you're still in the sagittal plane, right?
You're still in the other plane.
So you want to conduct your whole self like that and it's so simple but it's elusive if you don't have the paradigm of understanding of
it when i was 18 years old i would not have understood myself now and i may have walked
away from that guy going out that guy's nuts right and i would have puffed my chest down said oh yeah
oh yeah right how much do i bench And at 16 years old, I stopped
benching. I was like second strongest kid on my team as a freshman with the bench press. And the
guy who was stronger than me outweighed me by 40, 50 pounds, right? I had a powerful bench because
I got a big chest, right? And then that went away. Literally you go from, okay, we're knocking on the
door at 300 and now you got zero.
That's a blow.
And for me, I was always so body conscious and so socially nervous and anxious.
I would like roll the one sleeve up and I'd have to flex all the time.
You know what I mean?
And like I was always embarrassed how small my arms were and like you know it was just a mess there was so much just internal turmoil with the dissatisfaction i used to sit there and look in the mirror when i was 15
i would curse my parents i was like my mom gave me freckles and my dad gave me skinny legs like
what the hell you know what i mean so what i would propose is that we – as an industry, we focus on function.
Relate to gate is the most logical thing to relate to because it's the – you walk to the bench.
You walk to the swimming pool, right?
You walk over there, over here.
That's how we sort of – that's the baseline.
And if you can relate to that, it requires that you figure eight and you use the spiral dynamic. And it is so simple.
And see, what I see is this coalescence of Kelly Starrett. Very few people have the capacity to
break things down and simplify them and articulate them so well, right? And now I have a relationship
building with Kelly Starrett, right? And he loves the rope.
He believes that it's super scalable and super effective, and he's contributing to the art by saying – he did a post the other day.
He's like, put the rope here and just do shoulder mobility, right?
And by proxy, you're getting the coil.
You're getting the rotation, right? you're getting the coil you're getting the rotation
right you're getting the coordination and he just made it super super simple and so he snuck it in
right because we do a rope flow when you see me do all this weird shit now you're like ah that's
fucking bullshit i don't want to do that but kelly stirrett tells you hey we're gonna loosen up your
shoulder and we got a feedback of the rope that's's how we win is we, we, we,
we put a little sugar in with the medicine and make it easy and palatable.
But just the fact that you're talking about this and even entertaining a
conversation with this alt fit, crazy mad scientist, you know,
guy with a gadget trying to fool everybody and make money. Right.
So there's suddenly credence and a lot of people are going to be exposed to me,
to Chris, to Weck Method that would have never been exposed
or even had the inclination to be exposed, right?
It would be no interest.
Like what has that sissy got to offer me, right?
I want to help people get out of pain because I think that pain and or fear
is a big thing that is keeping people on the couch.
You know, there's so many people that,
you know, unfortunately,
there's a lot of people that are very overweight
and they have to figure out a way
to try to control their diet.
But I also am aware that they do have some pain.
They do have some ailments.
They have tried to walk to the mailbox,
and maybe they haven't tried to walk enough.
But getting that negative feedback from your first time in the gym
that your ankle hurts or your elbows hurt or whatever it is,
I would like to really strip everyone away from as many excuses as possible.
It's not an easy thing to do.
We talk a lot about mindset on the show. We try to
present as much stuff as we can. But I'm a big believer that you can't fix the mind with the
mind. And I'm a big believer that you can't fix the body with the body. They have to work together.
It's body, mind, spirit. And this stuff that you hold on to from when you're a kid is part of what's kind of bleeding into your system today,
leaving you reserved about your shoulder or your hip or your this or your that. And so
it's very hard. These things have been sitting there for a really long time, these injuries or
these mental things that you went through, whether you were abused or neglected or not hugged enough or
not loved enough or whatever, or your interpretation of the way you grew up, you felt gypped compared
to your brother or your sister. We all have all this like crap, you know, that that's happening.
And so, you know, I've looked to like a rehabilitation type of things, you know,
that that's kind of what I would view a lot of this movement stuff being like a
recoding, a rehabilitation, like let's get you back to gaining some access to the way
that you used to feel.
Because when you were seven, you weren't like, I wonder if I should get off the couch right
now because my friend just knocked on the door and he wants to go do something.
Like you're like fucking running out the door, fired up,
like hoping that your buddy's at the park.
Like you're riding your bike around, you don't see him.
And then maybe you see somebody else and you ride towards them.
You're like, is there anybody out here?
Like fucking throw a ball around with me or whatever.
And so I would like to get adults to that place
where they feel like they have that energy and they feel good about themselves so they can go do whatever it is that they want to do.
Gain access back to what they used to be able to do, what they used to love.
I love this.
And honestly, we've been talking about the rope a little bit on this.
And again, that being that tool for us, that really is super accessible to everybody.
And we kind of talk about mobility and stiffness and all this stuff. That tool is
really exceptional at meeting somebody where they're
at, whoever they are.
You can find ways to regress
it and make it super easy for something. There's a
whole lot of aspirational stuff it can lead to.
It's a great place for somebody to develop
skill set to get a global
understanding of how they themselves
actually move in space, not how somebody else
wants them to. They can deal with it and then there's things that can make them move better in it great whatever but
but there's no there's no negativity for even like just starting with one of the patterns and
just getting it right you know and and just building um uh where am i sorry uh but yeah
just like building on that and developing that skill set is just going to help with this person
globally get more mobile and that's it, man.
I love some of the stuff we've been exposed to recently just because of the amount of reps.
And Seem and I were talking one day and I was like, you know, if he and I was setting up a workout for somebody and we're like, hey, you got to do 10,000 reps of legs today.
You'd be like, oh my God.
You're like, where do I, I don't even know.
But if I said, hey, we're going to go outside,
we're going to push around the tank, or we're going to pull a sled,
and we're going to go down and back 200 yards,
you go, I go, back and forth,
and we're going to do it for like 40 minutes.
We might have accomplished that amount of reps.
So I like ideas that are like that, where it's like, let's
move this rope around. Let's punch a bag. Let's do these skills and these disciplines where there's
so many reps going on and there's so much movement, even just punching a bag. If you learn how to
throw your kind of your hips into it and things like that, you'll be expressing a lot of the stuff
that you guys are sharing. So I just would really love to see people. I know that people have a lot of the stuff that you guys are sharing. Exactly. I just would really love to see people.
I know that people have a lot of determination, and I know that people have a lot more discipline
than they give themselves credit for.
They have discipline with their children.
They have discipline as a fireman.
They have discipline as a mother.
They have discipline as a sister or a friend or whatever.
They're always there.
They're super reliable, but they're not there for themselves.
And that's what I want to see change.
That's why I don't mind
inviting. I had no idea there was all
this infighting in this world.
I kind of walked in the room
and I was like, hey, that guy's cool.
That guy's cool. Let's see if we can bring
everybody together. I was like, oh, shit.
They all hate each other.
I don't care about any of that.
I just want to present the information to people, and then your explanatory knowledge of what you guys know is going to be the stuff that floats to the top.
If it's explained well and if it's stuff that people are like, damn it, like I don't – that goes against some of my former beliefs, but I should give that shit a try.
The empirical measurement is ultimately what matters in the reality, right?
Because otherwise, okay, if it doesn't empirically make me better, okay, it could make me feel better, and that might be motivation for many.
But we are competitive, and that's why there is drugs in sports.
It's just because we're competitive, and if I believe you is drugs in sports. It's just because we're competitive.
And if I believe you're doing it and you believe I'm doing it, well, we both have no choice but to do it.
Now, my journey on this depth began with pain, back pain.
I rollerbladed for six years.
That's all I did.
My feet got so weak, I picked up my motorcycle, strained my back.
It gave out on me, and I was in pain.
And if I knew now, it would have been a couple days.
You know what I mean?
Like a couple days, I'd be better.
I was in pain for a year where I was squirming and I just wanted it to go away.
So I took little Aleve pills and I didn't read that you're only supposed to do two weeks and you're only supposed to take two months and months of taking six and i just eviscerated my digestion
i gave myself a leaky gut you know got the candidiasis and you know all sorts of problems
from it and it was when i discovered the stability ball that that is what tuned me into this. If your body is in pain,
there's a certain bracing protective tension
from these little spinal muscles
that are trying to save you
and the job is done.
It's like swelling, right?
It's like we can all go home now, right?
The trauma's over.
Let's play ball again.
And so my back was seized
and it was always protecting itself
in that sort of way. My feet were weak, so I back was seized and it was always protecting itself in that sort of way
my feet were weak so i really couldn't get it but there's also a phenomenon of if you have a
reflexive writing adjustment it's almost like a nerve a neural reset you know what i mean so if
like if suddenly you have to react and react you're moving much faster than thought and it's a jolt that leads to an
immediate sense of relaxation after you've had those jolts right so it's oh i'm cool because
it's a panic right i slipped on the banana peel nothing else in the world matters for that moment
that may not bust in my ass right or breaking my wrist or doing whatever i'm going to do
so the stability ball gave me that.
And then I saw Paul Cech standing on the ball, squatting 135 pounds.
And that put the idea in my head like, shit, I'm going to try to stand on it.
I didn't lift weights on it, but I stood on it.
I remember I got a pull-up bar.
Okay.
Stood on it.
Okay.
Let go a little.
Let go more.
Okay. And then I got to the point where And I stood on it. Okay. Let go a little. Let go more. Okay.
And then I got to the point where I could like jump onto it.
I could literally like squeeze it and lift it and jump.
And I could jump from one to another.
And I took several falls.
But when you're doing that active stuff, you're prepared to fall.
So you're ready for it. But then I went to the other direction, the Feldenkrais stuff.
And I'm watching the New York Kn knicks lose to uh spurs or something i remember the game i was
watching i was on a 75 centimeter ball that's big it's not just a normal one it's a bigger one
and i'm standing on it and i do this felding christ thing where i close my eyes and i go like
that and boom i fell My butt hit the ball.
I did a backflip and I landed.
I was in a 200 square foot studio.
I landed in the kitchen from the living room.
And the first thing I did when I fell was I kicked my feet to make sure that I could still do that.
Because I was terrified in my brain that like I just might have broke my neck.
And it was that night that I was like, I'm just not going to take these risks anymore.
I'm just not going to do it.
And I was laying in bed like, well, I'm getting better.
Like how do I continue?
I was like, geez, like what if I cut the ball?
What if I cut the ball?
Because that was like the dot com and everybody was – I quit my landscaping business.
I'm a day trader.
Yeah, and you make more money but not for long, right?
And so that idea of like winning the lottery, right, having some invention that makes you financially secure.
I was a starving actor for almost 10 years where I grab extra napkins at the burrito store so i don't gotta buy toilet paper like you
know what i'm saying like frugal right so the the i saw the opportunity to bosu ball and i just knew
i was like this thing has so much utility for so many different people for so many different things
and if i can patent it and be first out in the market well then this might be it this might be
my ticket to being able to have a family and support them
without having to log the hours.
Work real hard.
Life is a marathon and not a sprint.
But there are times when you better sprint your ass off
because if you've got to catch the bus at 11, you get there at 11.01,
well, guess what?
If I got there at 11, I'm sitting and moving.
And if I got there at 11.01, I can move and I ain't going nowhere.
So that's the business.
It's a marathon.
You'll be in a long haul.
But there are moments of emergency where you better sprint your ass off.
And I'll bet you have a whole bunch of war stories of how you climbed the ladder to be successful the way you are.
I got so many war stories of being at conferences.
got so many war stories of you know being at conferences and you know the the other guy who's teaching his class with the stability balls he he he sent the compressor back before i got to use it
because he's like fuck you right oh okay so i have to blow up with 350 bosu balls with a hand pump
okay this sucks right but i gotta do it, right? You got to carry that water.
Power Project Family, how's it going?
Now on this podcast,
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Yeah, I totally got my thought back on when I was talking about the rope with you guys.
I wanted to talk about the mindset of that and the winning mindset.
You were talking about just somebody sitting on the couch and even thinking about getting up to answer the door of their buddy
or maybe going out because it may not even feel good type thing, right?
And I think what people need to, they're like just getting started out or
something like that like we do the rope because we feel like it's something that's super accessible
but you need to find something that's accessible for you to find little wins it doesn't have to
be this huge grandiose thing where i'm setting like a pr record or something like that and or
you can put the mindset of everything new you do that you accomplish is a record and a pr in your
life and i think finding sort of those like those little wins starting out can turn into really big things. And if you can put it around
something like a tool, like learning to use a kettlebell was sort of my first wins. I had a lot
of really bad experiences in the gym working with barbells, like coaches were throwing weights on
me and it didn't feel right. And nobody was coaching me right or whatever, never felt good.
And I sort of had to find my way back into the gym and kettlebells happened to be that way i kind of got back to the iron and i kept i got wins from it
because there was a moment to stop and think about the tool and to work on myself and to develop a
skill set and it just like it's it's uh it's addicting in a sense like it like just feeling
good right the movement and the mindset the double the the
combination there and that's what i said is that that rope for us i was trying to lead back to that
idea that that that one allows you to get like such a high frequency of wins even if you don't
know you're winning you're winning you know what i mean and then if it doesn't feel like a win
stop it doesn't matter it's like it literally doesn't matter but if you took a couple steps
and you won a couple times today great you know i mean and if that you can build on that
understanding of stuff then then you'll crave new skills and you'll want to learn more we were
talking about bookmarks like i was roping and it made me want to go learn more look up more things
and explore things in a different way and think outside the box a little bit and it can like it's
just a starting place for us that you can really start getting down
that rabbit hole, especially if you have nowhere to start type thing, right?
So that's where I was going with that.
I want to make sure I got that.
And then also the concept that we sort of hit on before is what I like to say, if I
sort of take the 40,000 foot view into things, I one set infinite reps so if i just it's life is happening
this is not a rehearsal this is it that's one set what if every step is a rep and i'm going for that
infinite number of reps and then i bring it it into, okay, five sets of five, whatever you want.
But if you always look at it as like, okay, I want to carry over to not being in pain and feeling like if I want to do something, I can.
So simple.
So simple.
Right?
So simple.
So simple, right?
So simple.
And I think that strength – we talked a little bit about this on the phone in the text where I – when we came up, it was like a bully culture.
The strong picked on the weak.
There was a certain hazing that was ritualistic.
In my high school, a senior would come up and piss on the sophomore in the shower.
That was just – okay, you won't take this shit and that's it.
I always had that energy about me where I'll bite you.
You're not going to do that to me.
Bite that dick off.
No, I ain't going to do that.
No, no, no.
Sorry. We're giving you a few more.
Was that John Wayne Bobbitt?
No, no, no.
I shouldn't have followed it with that.
All good.
But it was sort of a culture of the weak being preyed upon by the strong.
It's no match anyway.
Why are you getting your jollies, picking on the weak kid?
And kids are mean. Why are you getting your jollies, picking on the weak kid? And kids are mean.
Kids are mean.
And today it's even more complicated because now they can ostracize you.
3,000 people get to see that bad picture and video you doing something, and share with the younger generation that, look, you're not proving anything by being mean and being a bully, right?
And that's that positive peer pressure because you get enough of that kind of behavior and then it's cool to be the other way.
and then it's cool to be the other way.
And I think that that's – again, and there's a certain amount of just starstruck that I have because like you don't understand.
Like for my world, strength was everything and you have legendary accomplishments and a will.
And I remember seeing the movie After Knowing and like there's people who –
like it's really cool to meet certain people.
And again, I was just so excited to have this opportunity because again, its legacy and its contribution, and if we can literally help physical education so that people can make every step stronger think about the world in 50 years
i don't want some technocratic dystopic like we're all going to sit in our buildings and
drones are going to say is you know resist the urge for your soul's desire for freedom
oh really shoot me now you know what i'm saying that's – it seems like that's where we're going right now.
It's insane.
But I think what I look at as I listen to people and I sort of borrow from certain good ideas, I think the idea that this whole past couple years has really exposed and taken out of the shadows that which has always been corrupt. It's just reached a – it's reached a proportion where it's flowing out of the buckets now and we can all see it.
And if you're deeply honest, like you know that it's all – you know that certain things aren't right.
Something is rotten in Denmark.
And now that it's been exposed, every one of those motherfuckers are going to die in the next 20, 30 years anyway.
They got to be replaced anyway, right?
Let's fill it in with the next generation that just has a different motivation.
Elon Musk is doing things that theoretically could make the means of production so efficient that a human being does not have to do a menial job ever again.
There would be the means of production.
You could live with opulence and now you could flourish with the arts and the creativity and the sports and the things that are truly engaging where it's you're not being beaten down and having to go drive the UPS truck.
And it's like, well, won won't people lack a sense of purpose?
Well, is your purpose to sweep up the street?
Or could a robot do that?
And now you could play a game with your kid instead.
So I think the potential for humanity to sort of come out
into a whole new world order that is about the quality of life, the quality
of the life.
And it's all relationships.
That is the number one thing in life is relationships.
For me, it's my family and my friends.
That's all that matters to me and my work.
Those are the two things.
I lived a very exciting life in my 20s in Manhattan.
And I saw a doctor and I got rid of it.
I like putting it a little – but – and I don't want to be too Pollyanna here.
But that is literally what I want to accomplish is that people have better information so that they can move better because that's actual.
People have better information so that they can move better because that's actual.
And then the mindset can grow within that strength.
And confidence is everything.
I don't know if you guys remember the actor Jack Palance who would do the one-arm push-ups at the Oscars, you know?
And he had that commercial about confidence is sexy.
He was ugly as hell, but he was sexy because he was confident, right?
So anyway. ugly as hell but he was sexy because he was confident right so anyway i was wondering can you explain because like we we talked about the propulsors um the ropes can
you explain the rmt clubs uh or i think there's one right there and how i'm curious like that
but then also you know a lot of lifters have been listening to this episode and we've been talking about a lot of things but after this i'm really curious how like
a power lifter a bodybuilder can take this stuff and take certain aspects of it and apply it to
them so that they can move better because again if people look at your instagram you're doing all
kinds of wild shit with all kinds of wild weight you're just throwing weight around and the types
of movements that you're doing the spirals and coils that you're getting into it's like that can be applied
to a lifter so that they can lift better so yeah this and then i'm curious about yeah so this i
mean this i'm i kind of mentioned this to you guys earlier too like i've been working with like maces
clubs that kind of environment like the weighted ones probably it's gotta be like 15 years now or something i was making them in my backyard with steel pipes and stuff yeah um and a big thing that
immediately with that kind of world if you're sort of familiar i know on it's really kind of
made that kind of big now like you're seeing that there that's a pretty big name with that
um but that that steel club it has some uh some issues sometimes it hits you it clips you so like
it can be a little
uncomfortable i mean i was a kid and tough and i didn't care and i wanted to learn something i
thought there was benefit behind it so i'd chase it and i'd knock myself sometimes so this guy that
david and i wasn't even around actually when this came around but that that idea that there's a soft
implement that can really tap me into some of these swinging uh modalities similar to our rope
but in some cases it's easier to learn
with a little more load so like we're putting this in mark's hand earlier it actually helped
them feel the patterns a little better um that idea of having a tool that's going to give me
that that uh security that mindset myself that i can explore a new movement a new pattern right
that's the number one thing the second thing similar to that steel shot we were talking about
with the ProPulse Speed Trainers, it's got that shift in there.
And what that does for us, it can create a feedback element,
but more importantly, it kind of can act like a coach.
So it gives you this ability to hear something.
You get an audible feedback, which I think we get in a lot of things,
but I don't know if we're thinking of it as something we're looking for.
Yeah, the other day we were doing some barefootfoot stuff and we were saying the ground is your coach.
You know, you try to run like on a field.
The ground will be your instructor because you're going to run into certain pain and you're going to land certain ways.
And like that wasn't a good idea.
Yeah.
You see, you're using the ground as a tool.
You're learning.
You're using it for feedback.
You're trying to learn from it.
And for us, we're like tool wielders. We are tool wielders right we're gonna pick something up we're gonna
try to apply something to it we're gonna figure things out with it we're gonna hone it we're
gonna get better this guy because of that that shifting that sound we can use some specific
cues to sort of get to places we want people to get quicker so like i can remove the sound from
it when i'm doing like big circular motions and just working. Many people would just say like mobility, doing like an arm circle or
something like that, just trying to get traction and space in the shoulder. I could do that. And
I'm going to try to remove sound from the implement and it's going to make sure that I'm
actually slacked out and I'm getting the most range that I need. And it's not even, I could
look at you do it. I could look at him, do it, him, do it and me do it. And all of us might
actually look different while we're doing it, but the tool is quiet, and it's meeting us where we're at.
And I'm learning from the tool, not from coach telling me how to use the tool.
And that can be helpful, and we can always correct.
But we're going to learn things ourselves the best, right?
And we're going to learn from the things that we're holding, in my mind.
I believe that.
So that's the
thing there and then when we want to take advantage of the shift just like the propulsors we can
create those events or those moments to create like a feedback a spike in force so i get like
work i can make four pounds feel like 40 or whatever but it also creates a moment to rebound
and i talked to you guys about this a little bit where like when you're working with the swinging
implement it typically sort of like as you get momentum going it sort of has the path
it's on and if you want to change the path something has to stop and you have to use inertia
to stop it right like if it's a mass right yeah with this i can create that shift or almost that
ricochet or pulse and that can change directions so it opens up opportunities for like some really
unique movement and creating sort of
that AB speed type stuff I was talking about.
I'm going to get to this position and this position.
Everything in between is going to be free and easy.
And then I'm going to punctuate those positions, create more force and create more understanding
of those positions, right?
And strengthen them.
Well, I was a collector of the Indian clubs and I had a lot of experience wielding the club because it's a fundamental tool.
I mean if you think about it, a club goes back to 2001 Space Odyssey.
Give me a thigh bone and let me go beat up a bigger guy, right?
So I had a whole bunch all the way from little one-pounders all the way up to – I think I had a 50-pound or something, like a steel one.
Yeah, with that 45-pound.
Yeah, 45-pound one.
I had wooden ones that weighed 25 pounds.
They're huge.
And yeah, so you can see the speed with which –
Complex coordination.
The speed with which Chris is moving, you can't –
no other club is going to give you that amount of leeway
to create that speed and dynamic and then the
ricochet action where the connective tissue gets engaged.
So you're learning how to do it, but you're also developing the tissue to do it.
And now let's talk about a bodybuilder.
There may not be some direct carryover to the bodybuilder for doing that in terms of
bodybuilding.
Yeah.
But it may be worth their while to play with it a little bit to give themselves a little bit more of that dangerous capacity
that gives them a little bit more confidence on the stage because half that game is posing, right?
And a lot of bodybuilders don't move well.
What's that?
A lot of bodybuilders don't move well.
And some of them move great. Yeah, some do were moved. Great. Some of them were great. And, and what, what you could do,
if you're one of the ones who can't move as well, you're losing points in the competition.
Cause you're not, you're not like captivating. It's a, it's a, you know, it used to be about
sex appeal, Arnold Schwarzenegger, right? Now it's about bigger muscles because it's not sexy to get that big probably.
But I think if you looked at it as, okay, if I can enhance my underlying capacity to be dangerous, right, to do better in a street fight, as J.L. Holder says.
He's like, if my training doesn't make me better in a street fight, well, what am I doing with my training to some extent?
And this thing is just a – it's a mousetrap that didn't exist that I made so that I could move it really fast.
And I can have more fun with it too.
So I can have a ton of fun with a tool because – and like I have same song-itis.
So like when I find a song like
you you don't allow headphones in your gym they make me wear headphones in the gym
because i drive them all nuts so i can find those repetitive patterns and i can like grease the
groove as it were to get it more and more and i can have more and more fun with it yeah i'll i'll
speak on that too again like longevity in a a career, whatever that be, right?
People get hurt.
That's one of the things I actually listen to when I talk to people like great lifters
or people that are great at whatever they did in the physical world at least.
It's like, what did you do in your off time or what you call accessory work
or what you thought about this stuff, and it typically is cyclical.
It has some moment.
I walked with a sled. I dragged something. something i carried things i handed off kettlebells like
whatever b i i just played with the rope whatever it is yeah it's these things that were repetitive
in nature that alternated which come back to that idea of walking that idea of shifting weight
things like that and what i find a lot of times is something just needs to inspire you because
you're gonna if you're gonna be doing that It's usually pretty efficient
Pattern and it's something you're gonna put some time into I'm gonna go for a 10-minute walk if that's the thing that inspires you great
Some people if it's raining and that doesn't make sense and I don't like walking on a treadmill
I'm not inspired by that
But I just watched Marvel and I like like something that looks like a hammer and Thor was awesome or something like that
I want to swing something around you're inspired by something like that. That's cool.
Whatever that inspires you.
So the idea is like find tools if you need it to be weighted, if you like it light like a rope or a club or whatever it is.
You can play around with the cyclical type stuff.
Or again, if you're just after like fast type things like videos like this, I can just work on change of directions and develop.
Well, and there's also a rationale in our training of what he's doing.
So he's working on the way he's steering the elbow.
So when it comes down in him, that's a near steer.
And then it's a far steer when it comes up.
So that's specifically done for the carry over that it will give him in the capacity
when he puts the tool down.
Yeah.
Because the tool is a bridge and bruce lee like it's the boat that got me across the river now i don't need the boat
because i'm climbing the mountain you know that type of thing we like to say put people on the
path to independence so that you know you don't go into the gym and wait for your trainer to come
get you right you know no we want to put you on a path to independence and make you more and more capable of self-direction, self-correction, and evolution.
And that's a big part of just the mandate of why we train the way we do.
I want to mention it because you kind of mentioned my Instagram sometimes.
And I do some – like I'll move some wild things or do do some things I'll do some things that look outside the box a little
bit and that's fine and and what I um what I'm actually showcasing there like if somebody was
involved in my program like how do you program how you train and all this stuff what's really
interesting I'm like I'm not like if I'm doing something like that that may be almost looks
choreographed like oh this guy practices this He's just trying to show off type thing.
Most of the time I'm sitting at my desk in the lab and I feel inspired to get up and get my micro dose of movement.
And it happens just to be that pattern for whatever reason.
And I wasn't choreographing like, oh, I got an Instagram post today.
I'm going to do something.
I got inspired to try a pattern.
It seemed like it was in my head.
I wanted to do it.
And I'm able to move through it because I'm rooting it to all of of our movement patterns and our philosophies so you could just be inspired by a
tool and like start moving you could be inspired by our movement practice and our tools and get
after it but oh that's an old video that's old that's also this is like not even quite at with
uh with david yet look what he's doing with this kettlebell this is probably a 68 or do a couple
different ones in this but that's the thing it's like doing this
like when i was working on that kettlebell the other day after i saw you do some shit i ended
up doing some weird jumping shit with the kettlebell too it's like and all of these things
what it does is it inspires an individual to play because most things that happen in the gym it's
like it's like all these systems like just straight movements it was play at one point but it's no longer it's exactly
because you know but like these types of these types of uh equipment they they inspire you to
move in different ways and you end up playing with these pieces of equipment yeah and that wasn't
like i was just fucking around it wasn't interesting interesting there because that's
the opposite of the coil what you're doing. So you're going long here like this.
And so what you're – both Chris and I, when we were on the plane, we were like, I want to see Nsema organized.
Like you controlling the four quadrants that we talk about, and that's going to be something fun to watch.
Yeah.
Because you already have an incredible prowess, right?
And all we're doing is we're just saying, okay, we're going to optimize a couple key
positions and then you take care of the transitions and now you have more control over the whole
thing.
So he's even stronger in certain positions, right?
Yes, yes, yes.
And you'll be able to direct your training so that you can use those quadrants more strategically and then have the ace in the hole at all times because your body will naturally just go there, right?
And then the transition to the next thing, and like I said, like God smiled when he made you.
But it's wild because like the stuff we did, please don't get forget your thought,
but this is still on for me right now.
Like, it's, like, usually when I'm standing around,
like, I'm, you know, I'm braced.
But, like, this, it's still on.
And it's not like we did anything too crazy, you know?
So it's just, it's going to be very fun.
We just developed into positions right now.
I want to touch on that word play a little bit.
I think that's becoming a little more mainstream now.
I know movement culture type people, we've kind of been talking about playing
and we'll juggle and we'll do things.
What's interesting about that is I don't –
it's kind of in that world of function too.
It doesn't have to be something that has to be light either.
Yes.
And like you said, like lifting, it was like circus guys
and people that are playing in the yards and just wanted to
show showmanship and do things and it was an enjoyable event training doesn't have to be
not enjoyable and i think that's a big piece of people's like first step into things is they're
like i'm gonna lot set amount of time to do something microdose or not big it's like god
like i don't even know if i'm gonna enjoy. But if you can find something you enjoy and just ride it and that's so play doesn't have to be this.
Yeah.
But is your training ever painful?
No.
See, I feel really great.
This is the thing.
That's the thing.
Yeah.
And I think that mindset of play, if we just want to use that as the term, like it controls the intensity.
So I never go like all out.
So like I can train every day. I'm always ready. I always
feel fresh and it's at a pretty high level. So I don't feel like I have to lose anything. And I
don't, if I really want to ham it, I'll go hard. And then I usually, I want to rest more days and
then I'm not as happy because I should be moving every day. You know what I mean? Like I got a
little kid. I want to get up and run around with him and play and show him how to move and do all that stuff i don't want to feel like i have to sit down and i'm not
excited to go out with a family and do something tonight because i'm stiff like that's not a
feeling i even want so i don't even go there all right so well and and i'm glad that you brought
up the fact that we can introduce some load here because the biggest criticism for functional
training is that you become a weakling
yeah right okay great i did this movement i did this movement and then he's like oh okay yeah
that didn't work right so it and and i'm i like to be able to be like okay i i can't compete with
him on a lot of that stuff and i can't do anything with this so that cuts me out from a lot of that stuff and I can't do anything with this. So that cuts me out from a lot of stuff. But I could pick up several hundred pounds and run it over there, right?
And if I had to carry you up the stairs, I could carry you up the stairs.
So this is something I'm really big into right now.
I've been using the hyper sort of as like an ability to get me forward intent.
And realistically, like get rid of this whole gym setting and I'm picking up a hand cart
and I'm moving it. Okay.
I'm hauling something.
This is not some wild thing.
This is a hand wagon that I'm pulling in a sense.
So, but the fact that I can train and I can do something repetitive and I can use the environment of a gym and build on that.
That's really cool.
Like, and I feel great.
And I've had a lot of success with a lot of athletes that when they're deadlifting, they feel stiff or like, again, feel.
I'm going to talk field athletes,
so not somebody that's specific in the world of powerlifting
that needs to get better at that.
A field athlete that the gym is like a secondary.
They're supposed to be going there, and they should be getting carryover.
And if they're going there, and they're feeling sore,
and they're unable to perform their job on a field,
what the heck am I doing with this guy?
So a lot of people come to us, and then they work with me.
They're like, this is totally different different but i can do things that are familiar
and still get them big and still get strong and still move weight and we're there so yeah i i
think stronger is better you know all things equal stronger is better yeah and i and you know
the idea again like i would if somebody likes to deadlift, God bless you. Deadlift, right?
So it is –
Yeah.
You know, Mark, what is the thing you mentioned as far as the mind affecting the body and the – you can't do –
Can't fix with the mind, with the mind.
Yeah, yeah.
You need to all work in harmony.
Okay, so –
Body, mind, spirit.
Yeah, and when we were doing certain movements today you were
making sure that i was going forward you just mentioned forward intent and you can think of
what this is going to do to the mind of an individual who's generally very reserved and very
you know you know if you get them opening up and moving forward and creating that in every well not
every single movement but a lot of movements that they do in the gym it's like you i feel like i
want to run run through a wall i feel very offensive i feel like i'm not playing defense
you know what i mean it gets an individual out of that mindset of uh and more into the let's
fucking go and i mean that that will like doing that with your body will change the way you act
that's a really sick thing so i mean i i'm fortunate enough to be like an educator of
coaches too and I've had
experience working with people for many years of my life and people were always fearful of movement
and that mindset and that like I kind of I get it because there's pain and like there's that stuff
but just like like we're humans like we're supposed to be capable of so much stuff and if we can
believe in that a little bit and we can expose ourselves to that like we can just be freaking
awesome and if we can get through that, and honestly,
I'm so happy I get to work with coaches now because
I can start instilling a new thought
process with a coach on how they're going to communicate
with that person
for the first time. So they're setting that person
up for success for whatever coaches they're going to have
in their life and any movement practice they're going to
develop in their life. That's such
a huge thing, just having
that. And what was it? Graham was saying he's such a, that's such a huge thing. Like just having that. And, um,
what was it?
Graham was saying,
he's not a violent person,
right?
You've seen that run through a wall and that might be intimidated somebody at
first,
but it's like,
we got to be able to fight in flight.
Dave says,
right?
Like,
even though you don't have to be violent,
like,
but it's part of our nature to have that ability to defend ourselves.
And if we don't,
then we're missing out on something.
I think so.
I'm not a violent person either.
That's the last thing I want to do.
But martial arts and that type of stuff has helped me be able to at least have that capacity.
Yeah, and that whole art itself is all about respect of that and respecting the art of it.
Like you're learning something that's dangerous and you should respect it.
Like, yeah, for sure.
And generally the tendency is the better the martial artist, the cooler and calm and collected the person in general.
The more dangerous someone is, the more kind they are, the more like okay they are because they're not trying to prove it.
And a fight, you have to respect the fight because you can lose a fight as the better fighter.
So opportunity, there's no standing eight count, right, in the MMA, right?
So one small error and you lost your fight.
And, you know, you didn't lose a game, you lost a fight.
Ooh, right.
You know, how does your ego handle that?
Right? right you know how does your ego handle that right yeah how do you guys coach somebody to
tap into that like i'll say that primal like instinct i guess so uh i'm asking because
graham when he's working with me in the gym you know we'll be using the clubs and we'll be using
various tools and he's just like dude you have this crazy amount of aggression in you but your
body is just so tied up because of my back. Your body's trying to protect itself and you're not letting go.
He's like,
you know,
think less.
You need to let go.
He's like,
you have this inside you.
And I'm like,
dude,
I'm fucking going as hard as I can.
He's like,
no,
you have way more aggression inside of you.
And so like,
basically what he's telling me is like,
I'm not able to tap into that primal side.
So again,
somebody that's experienced pain in the past,
how can I start tapping into that side?
So this is what I was kind of mentioning earlier,
that thought I had on that rope before.
It's winning, whatever that means.
And then low-level winning.
It doesn't have to be anything.
I'm not going to tell you you're not primal
because that might be a loss in your head right there.
You know what I mean?
Because you said, I'm giving it everything I have.
And it might be everything you have.
You know?
So it's that idea
that I gave it everything I had
and you just won today.
So congratulations.
You're going to come back tomorrow
and you're going to be more primal probably
because you won.
Because that's a satisfying feeling.
And you can put it in anything you do, right?
You're going to edit something.
Like whatever it is,
like you can win with everything.
I try to win with anything.
Like everything I can
in little
ways well and i think also the the most reality in terms of primal is efficiency okay because
there was no room for inefficiency way back okay so the most primal thing you could do is go smooth
and slow to get fast because you're smooth, right?
So slow is smooth, smooth is fast.
And locomotion and fight and flight, two sides of the same coin.
So if you start to learn to move with that grace and that poise
where you're sustainable, you're poised and ready to pounce, right,
because you're learning how to control
and move the body in that way.
That is primal.
I got one more I'm going to give you too,
just because it's something I did most of my life
and I think I take it for granted a little bit.
And it is actually like violent,
but not towards anybody, right?
It's literally hitting a tire with a sledgehammer.
I grew up hammering things
and it had a direct purpose, hit the nail in. It's going to have a perturbation to it it's going to give me a new experience every
time i hit i'm going to get a shock to my system it felt very relieved everything was integrated
so i could get the job done and it was like popping somebody in the face like it's like that
that level of getting that out that tool wielding that didn't have to be destructive it was
constructive right i can build upon it so
something like that that's again that's things like having all these little shifts we do with
like the pulsars in the club too they are that event but i can create that event in a lot of
unique ways so i get exposed to it so i'm not limited to this hit the tire right hit the wall
like i'm not limited to that or punch the bag like like all that stuff there. We'll let you be primal and put everything you had into it and integrate it perfectly.
And it's a little different every time. So that's a great way. And the other thing is like,
the best way that I describe when I punch, like hit a bag or something is satisfaction,
right? Cause I've developed a position or posture where I can go 100% without fear of damage.
And I remember when I first tried to study boxing, I had this amazing coach, amazing martial artist, knows so much stuff, taught me fundamental things.
And I remember I would have to wrap up my wrists.
Every time that I'd go hit the bag, I'd have to wrap up my wrists. Every time that I go hit the bag, I'd have to wrap them really tight because if I went with full force and just abandoned, I would invariably think and I would hurt myself.
And then it's like two weeks.
I can't fucking do it now.
Come on.
satisfaction of just getting like just a cleanest most powerful punch it's just it it makes you less aggressive because you're getting satisfaction from the aggressive behavior and you're not hurting
anybody including yourself i'll tell you one more thing you said fear of damage and i think you were
referencing yourself oh yeah it's interesting i don't like striking i absolutely hate it but i
kind of like i love grappling i love getting a hold of somebody and i feel like there's less i don't want to and it's i think honestly because i don't want to
damage someone like i feel like if i can get a hold of you if that's what's happening maybe i
can resolve this situation at least if i'm happen to be better at it you know what i mean yeah yeah
yeah but it's like it's like there's i have control i'm
getting a feedback that maybe i can control the situation where these are going up like there's
a good chance somebody's getting nicked or cut or hurt or broken you know i mean myself or you and
i don't want to hurt somebody yeah that's honestly like you pick up and leave is the guy the idea
you don't want to fight if you're not supposed to fight. But if we're going, I'd rather grapple
because we can hopefully resolve it.
We can fatigue each other so we're not
going to damage each other type thing. Andrew,
take us on out of here.
We'll go another three hours.
Absolutely, yeah. I know I had other questions
but I'm like, nope, this is a whole other podcast.
Thank you everybody for checking out today's episode.
Please make sure you guys do us a huge favor
and hit that like button. Subscribe if you guys are not subscribed already and follow the podcast at MB Power Project on TikTok, Instagram, Twitter. My Instagram, TikTok and Twitter is at IamAndrewZ. And make sure you guys drop comments down below. We gave you tons, tons of stuff to talk about. So we want to hear you guys sound off in the comment section. And then before I forget, so it's at weckmethod.com.
So W-E-C-K method.com.
Some of the stuff that we talked about, the soul steps, what are they called?
The propulsors.
Propulsors.
That big old.
Armchair club.
I want to get that for my son as his rattle.
He's only one years old, so that'd be sick.
All that stuff at weckmethod.com can be yours for 20% off.
The promo code is W-M-B-E-L-L-2-0.
So W-M-B-E-L-L-2-0 at checkout.
And so you're going to save 20% off your entire order.
So yeah, hit them up.
Links to them down in the description,
as well as the podcast show notes and see where can people find you.
And quick question, where can coaches like learn about these practices?
Do you guys have something online that coaches can learn through?
What I would say is this, the rotational movement training specialist course.
So we've gotten a lot better at teaching in this process.
And Chris has put together a rotational movement training specialist course,
which involves the ropes, elastic bands, and propulsors.
But it teaches you our foundation.
And he's done such a great job that the remote learning over the internet, the submissions
that the coaches are giving us are better than when we were doing it in person a couple
years ago, right?
So he has refined it down to we're going to respect your time, right?
I don't respect your time because I'm going to tell you 10,000 stories, but he does.
You know what I mean?
Like we're a great complement to one another because our skill sets are similar, but the differences complement one another.
but the differences complement one another.
And so I would say that anybody who's in the industry,
if you want a game-changing, life-changing,
you're going to set yourself on a whole new trajectory,
it's the RMTS, Rotational Movement Specialist Training Course,
and it's remote. And we do them live as well.
We do them remote or live.
We do them live, but you can do it.
You don't have to pay a lot of money to have it in your own home, right?
Got it.
And I would say that that's – the people who have taken it have said this was –
it's been life-changing because what we want to do is we want to come underneath it all.
I can't recommend the live events enough.
I did go to school to become a wedding planner, event planner.
So I kind of had that thought process.
I want to cater to people when they come.
It's an experience.
It's not just like an education.
I went to a bunch of educations where I just didn't feel like it was for me.
I mean, everything that I do on that day, it's about you,
and it's about learning and about being catered to
because we take care of people, and we need to be valued for that.
And he's a forever coach as am I. So if you come and learn, you always have access.
Yeah, yeah. Nice.
Well, cool.
Adam Tima ending on Instagram and you too, Adam Tima, Yin Yang on TikTok and Twitter.
Chris and David, where can people find you guys?
The David Weck on Instagram.
There'll be plenty of information there.
And then weckmethod.com.
Yep.
And then I'm at underscore Christopher.Chamberlain underscore at Instagram.
That's the name.
I just want to say thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
Thank you guys for your time.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much. This was incredible to just to meet you guys and to embark.
I learned a fuck ton.
I'm at Mark Smiley Bell.
Strength is never weakness.
Weakness never strength.
Catch you guys later.
Bye.