Mark Bell's Power Project - Mindset Tools to Strengthen Your Weaknesses - Obi Vincent || MBPP Ep. 867
Episode Date: January 11, 2023In the second Podcast Episode with Obi Vincent, he, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza talk about how they've all started doing something drastically new compared to what they were used to d...oing and share how they did it. Follow Obi on IG: https://www.instagram.com/obi_vincent/ Subscribe to Obi on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ObiVincent New Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live 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://hostagetape.com/powerproject Free shipping and free bedside tin! ➢https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! ➢Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: https://youtu.be/qPG9JXjlhpM ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% 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://bubsnaturals.com Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% of your next 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://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en  Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All that CrossFit stuff just makes me so anxious.
I love those.
It just makes me want to throw up.
I don't like it.
You could even just use, if you're new to it,
you could even just use two movements rather than all four, right?
Yeah.
Then next time maybe use three movements and so on, right?
Yeah.
So with EMOMs, I always use EMOMs.
A lot of it is actually in my CrossFit program.
If you want to improve your conditioning, I use EMOMs all the time.
Oh, yeah.
All the time because you can scale the numbers.
So I am terrible with burpees, especially when I'm tired.
I just sometimes struggle with them.
So sometimes I'll have an EMOM, 10-minute EMOM burpees,
10 burpees every minute.
Same with push-ups, 10 push-ups, 15 push-ups every minute.
Kettlebell swings as well, you can do the same thing.
And it's hard enough enough but you have enough rest that you can finish the whole 10 minutes but what you
would find is the more you do that in about a few weeks you'll be like oh i can do 15 burpees now in
a minute and be fine and that's how i was actually able to improve a lot of my fitness level was
using emoms that's why i love them but i've got um do you know
uzoma uzoma obi-law yeah in vegas and we did bodybuilders crossfit and twice he threw up
so the first time he threw up halfway through the workout yeah and then the last the second
time he came back so he started doing calisthenics and he was like like, I love it. U-Z-O-M-A.
Yeah.
I'm on my computer for a second.
So he was like, oh, I've done some conditioning.
I'm ready.
I'm ready.
I was like, cool.
Let's do a workout.
We did it at James Shock Lifting Club.
And afterwards, he was like, I feel great.
I feel great.
And then he was like, one second.
And he literally ran to throw up again.
Oh, man.
And I was like, dude, i'm not even trying to make you
throw up i actually was less evil this time and it's just but you know when i talked about
sometimes i forget that my fitness level has improved yeah that was that also showed me
because i was like dude i was being nice this time it sounds kind of like jason kalipa in terms
of the way kalipa goes about things with us because jason when like he'd take us through
something he'd be us through something,
he'd be like,
all right,
yeah,
we'll do this.
And we just,
we're just one more thing.
And then we'll do that thing.
And he'd be like,
just one more thing.
It's like not understanding of like,
if you're not proficient at something,
he doesn't get it.
You guys,
you guys should be able to do this.
Yeah.
Oh man.
It's because we think you're,
you're supposed to be in shape naturally.
You're trying to be in shape naturally. We think you should be in – that's such a – you're trying to be nice about it.
You should be able to be in shape.
Oh, man.
That's that UK shade.
Yeah.
It's almost jacked.
Yeah.
He does calisthenics now.
Did you – let me ask you this. Before you started CrossFit, because you just said, I love these
EMOMs.
Yeah.
And to hear those words come out of somebody's mouth is somewhat triggering.
I wonder, did you like that before?
Or did you like start getting good at it?
Then you're like, oh shit, I like the way this feels.
No, I didn't like it when I started.
You didn't?
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Did you used to think CrossFit was stupid?
Oh, yeah. Before I did Cross Oh, no, no, no, no. Did you used to think CrossFit was stupid? Oh, yeah.
Before I did CrossFit,
I thought it was ridiculous.
I thought the whole thing,
you know, the whole butterfly,
the butterfly pull-ups,
the dolphin pull-ups,
you know, the flapping around on the bar.
The kipping pull-ups?
Yeah, kipping pull-ups,
called butterfly pull-ups.
Even the burpees.
So you see how we like flop to the floor.
And I used to just think,
it's so stupid.
What is this?
You know, and then the more I did the workouts, the more I started to just think it's so stupid what is this you know and then the more i did the
workouts the more i started to understand how it was um as you can see this one is um uh power
cleans no this is ground to overhead so as you can see the the workout was supposed to be 70 kilos
on the bar and i remember going oh this should be fine because this is standard for guys and
zoma picked up and was like are you joking he's like dude you're not serious i was like yeah this is already dying yeah and i
said to him the weight zoma had to do was the women's weight and so when people when i used to
troll crossfit and then i started to do the workouts and I saw the weight in the workouts I was like how
how is this possible yeah until I started to do more of the workouts and then I started to get
better and then I started to understand and when I train with bodybuilders it makes me realize how
fit you know crossfitters are because of certain workouts I had to scale i have to scale for for bodybuilders
so yeah it's uh i didn't enjoy it in the start no one still enjoys them you like that miccos
triangle i was talking about i didn't enjoy that at the end of it i felt great and i've done i've
done it now and i've done that same workouts again and again and again a lot of the times i even put
on my stories when i do workouts i hate them I don't enjoy it I don't
enjoy doing them but at the end I feel great and how you feel with runs mark because like you just
did a 16 mile run like did you enjoy the run or did you like afterwards you're like fuck I just
did that you know I really like the results and I love the I guess I love the process in a way you
know so um and I guess I mean I don't know I've been doing this stuff for a long time I guess I love the process in a way, you know? So, um,
and I guess,
I mean, I don't know.
I've been doing this stuff for a long time.
I guess there's some part of me that really likes the pressure of it and the
feel of like,
fuck,
my legs are burning.
And then I got to like communicate with myself in some different way to try
to lie about that and like be like,
no,
they ain't burning.
You're just getting started,
man.
Like this is just to be,
you know, so I don't know. I like the challenge of it a lot. Um,
I kind of have just learned to really love workouts and love the exercises.
And they're, they're definitely things that are in my,
I'm interested enough in them to do them.
And so I kind of think that because I'm doing them,
it does me no good to complain about them.
It does me no good to like stare at my shoes and not go and do it.
It does me no good to like stay in bed.
It's just, I love it.
I actually really like it, you know?
And so there are aspects where you're like, fuck man, something hurts in my foot today.
Like there's stuff that happens that's like that, but uh positives of it outweigh any of the negatives yeah obi also with you because like
you said he started crossfit three years ago no about four almost five years now yeah whoa yeah
yeah i would say that this shit's different though because uh the intensity of like the
running that i'm doing isn't really that high
like it can be here and there like i'll do intervals and stuff and there's stuff where
you know a little bit a little bit of that but i don't do that much of that but in crossfit you do
quite a bit of that so it's different like i i even though i hate running i do run i started
running a lot more during lockdown anyway but uh I do a lot of zone two running.
So not like dying,
but I have pushed myself.
You know,
I've done 10K quite,
I've done quite a lot of 10K runs actually.
People don't know this because I don't,
it's something,
that's why I liked when you said you keep for yourself.
I've done them.
I don't necessarily talk about them.
And I do. Yeah. I joke about not liking running, keep for yourself yeah i've done them i don't necessarily talk about them and solitude yeah i
joke about not liking running but i still do basic you know road running and i do 5ks every now and
then i actually enjoy doing them ironically but i'm just not quick but i don't let that stop me
i think that's the difference and i always say this to people especially sharing it on my story
sometimes and i say I'm not doing this
because I'm the quickest and I could easily not share my my uh times and you know lie and keep it
to myself but the reason why I feel like I want to share this is to show that just because I'm a big
guy um it doesn't mean that I can't take part in doing some running I don't want to be the fastest
that's I'll never be with this size but it's just
going out and getting it done you know so i remember surprising myself when i did 10k and i
was just like oh i've just done 10k and i kept pushing myself to go a little bit quicker with
10k i remember my first 15 oh boy that that hurt like after 10 that fight the last five oh my soul was crying
and it's an interesting thing right i'm gonna be fine i can keep this pace like when you're
doing it you're thinking like i can keep this pace for i just went two miles there's no reason
why i can't keep going but after a while you're like i don't know if I can keep going. Yeah, that was a test that I haven't repeated for...
I want to, I need to push myself again and do that.
I want to do it again.
But I'm slowly now, again, ego thing,
not trying to push too much.
So now I'm like, no, take it easy.
Sometimes I want to like push myself in my pace.
But I know you have to,
because you're the only one accountable for yourself
when you do running.
There's no one else running next to you.
It's not like having a training partner.
So yeah, you can have a running partner,
which sometimes helps.
But when you train on your own, like myself,
you need that second voice that tells you,
you need to rest longer.
You need to slow down your pacing.
You also need to watch your technique
because running something else that is quite technical,
I never thought of that until I learned that there is a technique to it yeah and you know when i was learning and the instructor was like sometimes take your headphones off turn the music
off and listen to your rhythm and listen to your breathing and i never would have thought of
something like that so it was quite interesting learning that and then applying that technique
because i remember the next time it was with vivo with ben i went to run again and it was like ah
you've been running because he was like you're far more relaxed than me because my shoulders
were up here and i was so tense i had that problem your shoulders down he's throwing up
oh yeah you know running is uh like even when you're running slow it might not seem like a
powerful movement but there's like there's some power and some strength in there for sure that i
think are huge parts of it that i think get overlooked um and i'll show you later today
like there's a bunch of stuff that we can do and i can show you where you're like wow like that
really feels a lot less stressful.
And it might not make sense today.
It might not click today.
It might click a few weeks and months down the road if you continue to run because sometimes it's hard to get something ingrained in one day.
But after a couple weeks of you trying some of the things I'm going to suggest to you, I think you're going to be like, oh, I think I get it.
Excited for that.
you i think you're gonna be like oh i think i get it oh i'm excited for that oh for you when you started doing crossfit because like when it comes to bodybuilding you're already so good and then
you go into a crossfit class and then you see that like there are women who are doing things
more intensely with better form with more load and you're a huge guy and i'm not saying that
woman can't do as well as guys but i'm saying'm saying is like you're 250 pounds. Yeah. And you got this lady that's like ripping you, right?
When a lot of people do things that are totally outside of their ballpark or totally new, like Andrew's been doing jujitsu when I started.
I was getting my ass beat by people half my size.
It causes people to be like, this isn't for me.
Somebody as big as Mark starting running and it feeling uncomfortable.
They're like, ah, this isn't for me.
So for you, what spurred you
to be like i want to continue doing this thing that i'm not good at right now even though you
were elite at bodybuilding i think it was i was very curious about what it would be like to be
able to move you know do the overhead squats um the handstand push-ups, the pistol squats.
It was just, I was curious to know how that would feel like.
And also envious because I was looking at everyone in the class
and a lot of, not everyone was good at the movements,
but looking at the people who were really good and just thinking,
I want to be able to move like that.
And also being impressed you know um seeing people do some olympic movements in a workout
in a conditioning workouts they're tired but when they get to that bar picking it up and doing some
ground to overhead or doing some snatches even some hang snatches some hang clusters and i'm
just like this is so cool i want to move like this yeah I think that was part of it I was
curious and I also wanted to know what it felt like to move that way um in a workout and I also
liked the I think one thing CrossFit gets trolled about is like the whole oh high five oh you're
doing great and I never had you don't have that in bodybuilding right you train alone
so it was so fun to like you finish the workout and everyone's like oh that was awesome a community
yeah that was so fun you all you all sit down have your shakes and talk about the workout you
how did you do how did you how did you approach the workout how did you you know and i actually
it made me break up my shell more because i've
never been to i i always say this when i first started to go to royal docks it was in um uh
it's in royal docks so royal docks crossfit in royal victoria yeah and i would go in with my
headphones on naturally because bodybuilding stuff and start to do my training and people
would just start talking to me and for me i was so used to being in a bodybuilding gym like nobody talks to you so
and after a while i was like ah you can't have your headphones on here they just wouldn't leave
me alone so i stopped having headphones on when i go to crossfit boxes i rarely have my headphones
on just because of you know people will talk to you and then some people like what's your
conditioning oh let's do it together and again it was something i wasn't used to and people
teaching you and that was the one thing actually the biggest change for me was a lot of the times
i wouldn't know how to do something and not being afraid to ask someone because they will be more
than happy to show you were you afraid initially not afraid but it almost it was an ego thing like
not wanting to ask for help because i should be able to learn this on my own don't need anyone
to show me you know so i had to learn to say to someone how do i do this and also not you know
it's funny when someone gives you advice in the bodybuilding gym and you already know what you're doing you kind of go who are you to tell me i'm already i'm already swole i'm already hench
i don't need you to give me any advice you know so for me i had to luckily take that ego away and
you know when someone half my size is going right this is how you can do the overhead squats well
they'll be watching me training and learning something and go do you want me to help you to do this better and me going yeah yeah show
me how to do this and i'm very receptive i will do something that someone shows me now back in the day
i probably was a little bit stubborn like i wouldn't if i was doing somebody in the gym
and you came and told me oh maybe try this way i'm gonna need you to tell me
what to do kind of thing you know so i became more receptive to learning and training with people
and i found that oh i don't hate training with people i actually like it i enjoy it i thought
i enjoyed the solitude you know you know i'd like being alone and don't you know we had those t-shirts
back in the day don't talk to me the bodybuilding don't talk to me shut up i'm lifting that that was a thing back then
so it being in the crossfit box where everyone was like woo high five let's go and you know
pizza wednesdays and you know hanging out together i'm like why are you hanging out together this is
this is not normal but it is why isn't it normal yeah why isn't it
nice to be with a community that you all enjoy being around each other everyone's helping each
other if you're doing a workout i think one thing i loved and it was so impressive to see is when
you do the open and crossfit everyone's doing the same workouts and people just cheering you on you
know and if you're the last person to finish everyone's everyone's stop watching you and cheering you on it's like come on we've got this let's do this yeah and for me
that was such an eye-opener and i started to even i was learning something new i started to enjoy
going into that space because there were i liked being around people who were nice and and smiling
and talking and it wasn't about what you looked like
in your aesthetics yeah and no one was taking selfies there's no mirrors that was the biggest
shock for me actually it took me a while to get used to not having mirrors you're like wait what
what yeah because i had to do bodybuilding in a crossfit box and i was just kind of like you had
to go with intuition which is a different ball game for me so for about two years i was only
training a crossfit box and it was all for about two years i was only training a
box and it was all intuition yeah so when i was filming youtube videos you can imagine we
sometimes have the mirror so we make sure that the form is good you know on youtube you don't
want to be doing anything dodgy and i'm filming a bodybuilding video and i have no idea what it
looks like until i watch the video back and i was learning to actually train without a mirror it
actually got to the point where I would go to a normal gym
and I would turn away from a mirror to do my bodybuilding training
because I didn't want to see myself anyway.
I just wanted to feel what I was doing.
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Mark, for you, did you – because Obi mentioned that ego thing, right?
Did – I mean, you've been doing running for a while, but like you've done powerlifting.
Was there ever a point where your ego ever got in your way of your progress?
Because nowadays, like I mean I don't know, but nowadays it doesn't seem like when people give you advice and people give us advice i come here we're typically pretty open
but do you remember like when you had to get past your ego for something when it comes to fitness
shit i think there's been so many things that i've been wrong about there's been so many things that
i've thought were stupid that uh hopefully i'm like learning my lesson. You know, I thought intermittent fasting was dumb.
You know, I didn't really think CrossFit was dumb.
I thought CrossFit was kind of neat.
I thought it was, yeah, I thought it was pretty cool off the bat.
But with running and just, I don't know, you got to be humble.
Like you got to learn, you got to learn, you know.
And I think, you know, through doing this podcast podcast through the process of of doing this i've learned there's so much to
be learned from other people and uh try to just be open-minded so um it can still block me though
because i you know even if i watch other runners um i'm sometimes, I guess like in an arrogant way, I'm like, they don't know what I
know. You know, like I know a lot. I know a lot about fitness, but I don't know about running.
So I shouldn't necessarily say like, oh, because I know a lot, I'm not going to listen to this
runner. That doesn't really make any sense. So I still have a block there sometimes, but
I think on a more positive note,
I think it's more like I think I have information that a lot of other people don't have.
I think I have like a recipe and I think I have some shit going on with my running that is maybe just different, you know,
through David Weck, through the guys from Gota, through functional patterns, through blending these things together.
The stuff I've learned from Kelly Sturette, the stuff I've learned from powerlifting.
I don't know.
I guess we'll see like what it's able to help me do.
But I actually think that I'll be pretty fast in the long run.
It's going to take me a while.
It might take me 10 years,
but I think I'll be able to fly through like half marathons and stuff with
pretty good proficiency.
I was just going to say like,
I've never been really good at long distance running.
And by long distance, I mean more than a mile.
That's what I would consider long distance.
But in the, like, I don't know what, like, three times I've ran with Mark, you know,
like I said, never ran more than two miles.
I'm running five miles in hills and feeling really good just by following his coaching.
And you think, like, oh, you're just shuffling your feet forward but he's like no no activate your glutes here or you know
try pulling with this muscle and like because in my opinion or in my thought process was like let
me just try to like kip the run you know let me try to use as little energy each time and make it
as efficient as possible but he's like, let's actually try activating different things.
And, you know, again, I've never researched it, but I've never heard anybody speak that way.
And just in the little bit of time I ran with him, I'm like, holy shit, I ran five miles.
Like, I've never done that.
You ran five miles the other day.
Pretty easy.
I know maybe the last mile is when we started losing you a little bit.
Because we were going up a steep hill.
It was fucking five miles.
Yeah.
So, yeah, dude, I'm excited to see where you take running just because you are coming from a different practice.
And you're probably going to ruffle a lot of feathers in the process.
In a good way, though.
No one's going to get upset.
But you're going to change quite a bit, I think.
Yeah, I think I'll be able to teach a lot of people a lot of cool things just and it's not stuff that i made
up it's stuff that i got from other people you know so being open-minded and understanding and
then just something i've learned from lifting that is true with running the biggest problem
with running is that people try to run that's the biggest problem people need to jog people need to
jog and they need to go really fucking slow people need to jog people need to jog and they need to go really
fucking slow people need to go out and literally jog as slow as they possibly can like what's the
difference between a walk and a jog okay that's your speed for the next two weeks you know that's
where you need to start i don't think you have to tell me that twice i will jog yeah you need to
fucking you need to talk so lazy i would do that yeah i'm like but that i like
that you said that because i have learned to that i needed to slow down because i was always one of
those people that oh everyone's doing you know 5k in 25 minutes and finding that easy i need to be
like that and it's learning to slow down like you said but i'm one of those people that
if you tell me i have to slow it down i'll be like don't tell me twice i will do it like easy
pace on that conditioning work oh yeah of course you can scale if you want to don't ever tell me i
can scale a workout because i would do it have you always been that way though or did it take
some hard lessons yeah hard lessons because i remember there was one time i trained
in whip fitness is this big crossfit box in the uk yeah and i was new to crossfit then it was the
first year and i was training with some people who were really good and we did the olympic lifting
portion and then it was right right time for conditioning and the workout started on the bike
and it was like three two one go and i absolutely smashed the bike quicker than
i i i didn't know but i got off the bike and i was like why am i quicker than all these guys and
they're really good yeah and i got to the pull-ups and i remember i i mean i finished last in the
workup and then gus who was one of the coaches was like i knew you were going to that will happen
because there's a reason why we slowed
down because you went balls to wall to start we we plan we strategize a session you don't just go
full out and they always know people are new you new crossfit doesn't know if you're new to a
workout to a crossfit because they would see that you would always go full throttle the first and
it's five rounds of a workout and you've just done 100 on the first round and they would know that you would always go full throttle the first and it's five rounds of a workout and
you've just done 100 on the first round and they would know who you are if you went full throttle
and were able to complete the entire thing full throttle yes exactly they would know you'd have
a reputation exactly so i remember they was even when i was rushing to the next it's next stage and
it was pull-ups and wall balls they were just like they don't call
it rest they call it recovery so from the bite of the pull-ups they walk whilst i'm like running to
get there and i was like something's not right and i remember that struggling and they were going past
me i was like right so i've done something wrong and then he he literally like explained to me what
happened and he was like as i was doing the workout i could tell that that was going to happen to you and this is why and i learned that was such a big lesson i can picture
them elbowing each other yeah but that was such a teachable moment for me and because i was i like
to be i also i learned a lesson and the old me sorry if i was the bodybuilder side of me would luckily who would
have been like oh don't tell me what to do i'm you know i'm this big guy in shape but the new
side of me was like okay i've learned that lesson now and whenever i do bodybuilders does crossfit
the bodybuilders do exactly the same thing i i have done and when we start the workout they do
the same they go balls to all and they they beat me your videos they beat me and i'm like cool that's fine
and i'm just like trotting along and then i can start seeing them dying i'm like yeah that's
exactly what happens to me but i don't tell them because sometimes i feel like sometimes people
need to learn the hard way so like you say you know people need to start jogging first before
a lot of time we
won't listen to that because we're like yeah but then if we did a run and it's like you know 10
plus miles and i'm the idiot that starts at my 90 and then you're like you know it's like the
rabbit and the tortoise right that's the best analogy you can use for running actually. You know, and it's CrossFit.
It's the same.
CrossFit condition is the same.
It's not how fast you start,
but some people are freaks.
They would just go,
you know,
and that's rare,
you know,
but you can see the pros would always take their time.
And then when it comes to it,
that last one,
that last round,
they will just smash it. It was just it, that last one, that last round,
they will just smash it.
It was just like,
how,
how is that possible?
I've worked out with a handful of CrossFit champions before.
And none of them were trying to,
they weren't trying to bury me or anything. They're trying to give me like a decent,
you know,
introduction into it.
But of course they want to make you like feel it a little bit too.
And I remember,
you know,
going through like round one and round two.
I'm like, oh, I'm behind, but I'm not that far behind.
And again, they're not going that hard.
Then as the rounds went by, you get to round four.
Now they're lapping you pretty easily.
Now you're starting to really struggle.
And your abdominals aren't working anymore for a lot of the movements that you're doing and you like uh i think it was doing
like wall balls yeah i couldn't do them right at all yeah i know so i just like fucking turned
around and started throwing them because like my stomach was like cramping as i was trying to squat
down i'm like i'll just do anything to try to finish this workout and it just got you know I just I just like keeled over I did
finish the workout but I mean they just
after a little bit they're
just kind of cruising through it they're like oh okay
that was a good job like we're going to
go through another round you know and they started
the whole thing over again and they went through it at like
their real pace and I was like oh my god
it's crazy yeah it's crazy they can do like
three workouts they'll do the first one
rest for like five minutes and be. They'll do the first one,
rest for like five minutes and be like, right, time for the next one.
And we're like, what?
I thought that's the word.
No, but also they've trained themselves
to get to that stage.
But also I think sometimes
the barrier of learning CrossFit
or doing any conditioning
with people who have come from bodybuilding
or different field know field powerlifting is because it feels hard they're
just like oh this is too much effort why i don't need to be good at this i'm already good at what
i'm doing now why would i want to start from zero you know and i feel a lot of people struggle with
that and i could have got two ways I could have
either gone yeah now I'll stick to bodybuilding and I already have the aesthetics I don't need this
or this other option which I did was you know what I'm ready to humble myself and learn and
ask for help and luckily I did because it opened my mind into such a different world and actually it made me
enjoy fitness so much more because the time i started crossfit i was bored with bodybuilding
and you know i was just bored of doing the same thing yeah and that doing that and made me enjoy
appreciate bodybuilding even more but also fitness in general because then i started to see running i was like ah i get why running is
an exercise i get why people go on the bike i get why people do different things and it made me start
to also um want to try new things so that's why i started i tried pilates because i saw it
and the old me was like oh pilates just looks like people faffing around and then i was like you
know what i'm gonna try it and then um i'll never forget it because i did it my instructor marsha
she was like right we'll go and she put me on this the reformer uh-huh and she was like yeah
now hold that for three minutes i was like what and after the session everything was sore yeah and that changed my mindset completely i was like
you have my respect because sorry go no go ahead no because i was always looking at certain ways
people train that isn't bodybuilding as less than yeah the cool thing about like the reformed
pilates crossfit running um jujitsu is that it it shows like even though
you may have all this muscle from your bodybuilding training that can't it doesn't do anything like
even if you have all this muscle because you were powerlifting when and i'm not saying that
the muscle it's it's good for your health to have muscle and over time in terms of longevity but
when you go do something that you're forced to really perform, get your heart rate up, you're useless. And it could either be feeling that level of
uselessness could either crush you like it does to many, or it could be like, I want to get good
at this. And I'm almost curious, as you've gotten better at CrossFit, have you noticed anything from
your bodybuilding background? Like Mark, you mentioned that there are aspects of your strength training that now you
bring into running you're like i can see some places where these runners have holes where you're
like i can make you a better runner if you just did this are there anything is there anything you
notice in crossfit where you're like damn they might be able to do this better if they did more
of this oh for sure what are some i think if average crossfitters did more of this? Oh, for sure. What are some of those? I think if average CrossFitters
did more bodybuilding,
they would be so much better.
So the athletes already do that.
But the athletes sometimes don't share that
because it's not sexy, right?
You mean the high-level athletes?
Yes.
They don't share the bodybuilding.
And they call it accessory work,
which is ironic.
They call bodybuilding accessory work.
I remember, I'll never forget it.
There was a CrossFit event.
CrossFitters are so cute.
I remember, I'll never forget it.
There was a CrossFit event.
CrossFitters are so cute.
With their little back squats.
No, so there was a CrossFit competition and some real top athletes around Europe came.
And I remember being in the box
and everybody throwing weights, throwing weights around.
There was this guy who was really good. I had no idea who he was, but he was in the corner and everybody, throwing weights, throwing weights around. There was this guy who's really good.
I had no idea who he was,
but he was in the corner and he was doing some body,
he was doing some chest press and dumbbell rows.
And I noticed that because I pay attention.
And then I went to talk to him.
I was like,
what,
you know,
you know what you're doing today?
He's like,
my name is there.
I'm like,
uh,
doing one of the competitions.
I had to Instagram.
I was like,
Oh shit,
he's like one of the best.
Yeah.
And he was like,
Oh,
I'm just doing some of my accessories. Why I do this all the time. I was like oh shit he's like one of the best and he was like oh I'm just doing
some of my accessories
but I do this all the time
I was like
it's really interesting
because I never thought
CrossFitters did any form
of bodybuilding
because I know
I do a lot of this
this is part of
and he was jacked
so
and he
you know
he does
strict pull-ups
a lot of them
he does bench
you know
sometimes he's like
sometimes I go to a bodybuilding gym
you know
to use the machines and if a lot of Crossfitters did that a lot of the injuries they'll be able to avoid
if i'm being honest but also they'll be stronger i i mean there was someone else said that you
shouldn't be able to you shouldn't keep your pull-ups until you can do at least eight to ten
strict pull-up yeah and that is i wish a lot of crossfitters the average
crossfitters did that that was the rule that they implemented so if they if a lot of them did
bodybuilding movements and that was also what motivated me to do uh minimal training in a
crossfit box so bodybuilding in a crossfit box just to show people that it can be done and i feel like
i wish some of the classes,
which they are starting to,
because I started to see a lot of bench pressing
in CrossFit classes.
I wish they had more.
Single arm movements.
You see a lot of Olympic weightlifters
do a lot of unilateral.
You see them, they do a lot of single arm rows.
They do a lot of,
actually now a lot of them do lat pull-downs,
a lot of pull-ups,
things like
ghd but reverse extensions things like that to to strengthen your lower back so i feel
unfortunately a class isn't enough time period to improve on on because they they want to do
the fundamentals and then get onto the conditioning yeah so i wish that that was
something that a lot of crossfitters did more of yeah seeing some of them work out is really inspiring i remember seeing
rich from it was actually pretty amazing i i don't think i had any business being in this room but i
was at rogue fitness um it was around the time of the arnold and it was like every crossfit game
champion was in there yeah it's kind of like holy fuck like what what did i i i like i said i should probably not have been in there i just uh asked the security guy i was like
i've been in here before is it cool if i go in there and work out i go in there and there's
nobody in there and then 10 minutes later all these crossfit people show up and they have these
workouts where they're uh training for the uh online the Open. Open, yes. The Open. And Matt Frazier's in there and Rich Froning and so on.
And I watch Rich Froning, you know,
I ask him how he's doing.
He's already like, you know, four-time champ and whatever.
And he's like, oh, I'm just kind of messing around.
I'm kind of banged up.
So I'm just doing this for today.
And he was doing pistol squats mixed with the uh the assault bike uh mixed with
uh pull-ups yeah and he just kept going back and forth between that and he probably did that for
i don't know like 30 minutes a couple minutes go by he's drenched in fucking sweat and he loads up
a bar and he does some bench press and he does sets of five with 275. Matt Frazier is doing one of the workouts.
I don't remember exactly what the workout was,
but he kept going between an Olympic lift.
I think he was doing a clean and he was doing kipping pull-ups in between that.
It was like one of the workouts,
2018 or something like that.
He had,
and he kept going up in weight after every set and i want to say there was like
like 150 kilos on there or something like 300 something i mean it wasn't like he was you know
just lifting like two plates i mean he's roughing around yeah yeah yeah i was like there's no aspect
of what either one of these guys did today that i could do i don't even know how to do a pistol squat and uh cleans i can kind of barely do and i don't even know how to do like a butterfly
kipping pull-up i can barely do regular pull-ups all that well so my hat goes off to those guys
i think they're and girls i think they're amazing it's an amazing sport what i find really interesting
about it is that there's a major like cross-section between training the central nervous system and training the muscular system.
And they just kind of took that and they just said, fuck it.
And they put in a blender and just fucking grinded it all up, which is rare.
Which is why I think if I show you some stuff with running, we can kind of stay on the side where we're not overtaxing the nervous system.
Yeah.
Where it's kind of just muscular.
And then it's just like, well, how do we just deal with – how do we mitigate fatigue is all it's going to be.
Yeah.
But in a CrossFit workout, it's way different because you might be on that assault bike trying to go for time and trying to burn a certain amount of calories.
And then in between that, you might try to lift lift weights which you don't really have a choice you can't only
you can only calm down so much when you have that kind of intensity yeah it is it's it's tough you
know it's also learning to um i always call it learning to uh under fatigue, lift under fatigue.
And so sometimes, like I said, I use EMOM a lot to help me with that.
So, you know, like that workout he was doing with the cleans and the pull-ups.
So if it's, I think I kind of remember, it's one of those you have to,
every round you pass, you take the weight up.
Till you can't either lift anymore or that's like
I've never seen anything like it
because I'm like
how is he doing this
like his grip
is that Matt Froning
Matt Frazier
Matt Frazier
it was crazy
I was like
I've never
and everyone just like
kind of stood around
and started watching
which a lot of times
those guys don't really care
because they're used to
seeing each other
like be such badasses but everyone at that moment stopped they were like what the fuck's going on
so matt you know sometimes with uh crossfitters they either have a gymnast background or olympic
weightlifting background matt has olympic weightlifting so for him that's like nothing
and then you do have some crossfitters who have gymnast backgrounds where some of the
movements that require gymnastic movement you're just like how you're this is like you're supposed
to be tired and they just breezing through the workouts you can always tell um when people are
proficient in certain things and obviously the best crossfitters are the all-rounders you know
so um it is it it's it's tough. And I think what sometimes the professionals do
from some of the people I've been around
is they don't always destroy themselves in the workout.
And I think that's one thing that people think
is every session is batter yourself,
like always on the floor, like dying.
And they reserve a lot of that
for when it's time to closer to competition so i learned that a lot of
pro crossfitters actually slow down a bit during off season and use advantages of emoms and it's
all about not trying to destroy the body before the time comes you know so it's just like with
running you know if you use running as the same way, you know, every Olympic,
the world record holder for marathon,
I remember watching this interview,
Kipchoge?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he was talking about,
you know,
his races,
how he runs and he trains.
He runs with a group of people,
not just by himself.
I was thinking,
oh,
he'll run by himself.
He's so quick.
He's a quick as well.
He's like,
no,
no,
no.
Sometimes in the week,
he runs with a group of people. They just a casual run around and for me that was an eye-opener because i was thinking he would be like absolutely killing it like no one would be able to
keep up with him and i started to learn that's how i learned with running that it's not always
going crazy like zone two running most of the week and for me that was hard i was
like oh because i was thinking this is a bit too relaxed but there is a reason for that and then
it's the same with crossfit workouts it's the same with conditioning it doesn't always have to mean
that you're passing out on the floor i want to throw up or once you learn to scale down and slow down i think that is
when again it's an ego thing right you don't want to slow down you don't want to you don't want to
go for a light jog when you know you can be quick so with crossfit workouts that's how now i've
started to approach my training even when i go on the road road cycling because i see other people
going really quick and I know
I'm supposed to be slightly slower that day because I'm trying to complete 50k, but I see
other people going really quick. I'm like, no, I need to keep up with them. And that screws up my
whole timing because then I get tired quicker, you know? So it is learning to get rid of that
ego side that says to you that you need to be really good or you need to
like always continuously push yourself and you need to be passed out on the floor all the time
to know that you have a good workout you know the interesting thing is like it's it's that idea of
backing off you feel that if you're not backed off or if you do back off you're not progressing
yeah and you're moving backwards and i think Andrew actually, because you've been dealing with a lot of new stuff in terms of jujitsu,
what's been going on with you?
So,
I mean,
quick update,
like I jacked my ribs up a little bit and by a little bit,
I mean a lot.
I'm just trying not to acknowledge it that much or give it the power.
But so I haven't been able to roll for the past two weeks,
you know,
so I've just been drilling and something that's happening for me right now is
like,
I'm losing focus is what I'm saying. saying um because in the mornings when i would go roll
i'd be up at 3 3 30 just i couldn't wait to go like you know um sometimes like for a workout
or something it's like oh fuck here we go for jiu-jitsu it's like i can't wait to get there
can we start an hour earlier yeah you know like it it's amazing. Now that I know I'm not going to go roll, I'm just going to go do some drills.
The energy level is not there anymore.
You know, I'm just like, all right, here we go.
So I'm trying to understand that there's so much that I can do right now.
It's just, again, it's because I'm not getting that same like stimulus.
I'm not as fired up.
And I know that's not the correct way to look at it it but that's just what i'm dealing with right now so these are some learning uh
you know growing pains that i'm going through but like overall like everything's been incredible
like you know i'm still on that honeymoon stage for sure you know and i want i want to tell people
how much i love it but then i'm like and sema's still on that honeymoon phase i think it was
jiu-jitsu yeah fuck yeah so but what i'm saying is like when i tell people oh my god do i love it but then i'm like and sema's still on that honeymoon phase i think it was jujitsu yeah fuck yeah so but what i'm saying is like when i tell people oh my god do i love it so much and
then i'm like okay but i i'm also not getting fired up to do some drills so like do i actually
love it but i'm like i actually i really do because now every free moment like we were joking this
morning it's like why am i gonna watch netflix when I can like roll out some fascia and watch some like jiu-jitsu like tutorials or something like I can't imagine
doing anything else right now yeah so like that's been like a really really cool experience and
that's something I'm going through right now though yeah that's a cool time period though
that's like that's an amazing uh amazing place to be I think you know uh for any physical endeavor that anyone's going to try to do
whether it's like they're trying to hike they're trying to mountain climb um they're trying to
boulder they're trying to do jiu-jitsu cycling running swimming any of those things um rule
number rules number one through five are don't get hurt you know like that's that's a major thing now in grappling or boxing or mma
it's like unfortunately you got somebody else to deal with so trying to mitigate getting injured
is is way more difficult like it's it's catastrophe really it's like good luck with that you know good
luck with making it through five years of jujitsu and never getting hurt like a i don't know you
would maybe have to find someone that was like wrestling a pillow rather than a real opponent, right?
But with like running and stuff like that, I think you can, if you can,
not that you can escape all injuries because some things are sometimes inevitable.
Sometimes you are trying to push the envelope and you are trying to progress.
So it's understandable, but you should be able to, uh, be smart enough to not fall into that category of just being the guy that hurt
yourself, uh, on the, you know, the, uh, gymnastics rings because you kept trying to muscle up over
and over and over again. And you're just, you're not strong enough to do them yet. And it's fine.
You'll learn it over a period of time. Maybe you have to get strong on regular dips before you can do ring dips, things like that.
There's ways to progress in some of this stuff.
Just take your time.
Don't allow yourself to get hurt.
If you are getting hurt or sore or banged up and beat up, try to hire a practitioner,
massage therapist of some kind to kind of work on you or look into some like myofascial release, stretching, try to address your injuries the best you can and
keep them at bay as long as you can and as much as you can.
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down in the description as well as the podcast show notes you know one thing though that i think
is like super cool is we we kind of started mentioning how we're all doing different things
uh outside of bodybuilding and powerlifting right but bodybuilding has helped all the things we do
oh yeah yeah like oh yeah bodybuilding like when you mentioned things we do. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
Bodybuilding.
When you mentioned CrossFitters need to do more bodybuilding, they wouldn't get injured as much.
I'm like CrossFitters and jujitsu athletes are the same fucking people.
Because in jujitsu, a lot of athletes get injured because they're really weak and their muscles are really weak.
So when they get pulled or whatever, they're like, oh, I strained this, I strained that.
And then you look at them and you're like you're frail like you just got in
the gym and you started lifting a little bit not like you don't have to do as much volume as a
bodybuilder but if you start doing some volume you'd be more resilient and durable yeah probably
the same thing with the dedicated runner and probably the same thing with the dedicated
cross yeah or even just someone new to running like maybe there's maybe they're just like oh
you know i should run because i I could really lose some weight.
I'm going to start in January or start Monday.
And then they go out for a run,
and they try to run like somebody else that they heard about
or they try to run the way that they used to run,
and they try to go on like a three-mile run.
But they maybe gained some weight since last time they ran,
and now their ankles are in a heap of trouble.
Maybe they,
their knee is banged up or they just had a bad experience.
Like they went and ran and they went like 200 yards,
300 yards and they just couldn't breathe.
And they're like,
fuck man.
Like this isn't for me.
Yeah,
I agree.
Yeah.
Did you ever,
do you still have the idea in terms of like running,
not being for you?
Cause I know you, you've mentioned like running is being for you because i know you you've mentioned
like running is a difficult thing but i know like when i started running again initially i was like
fuck this is hard i'm just too big there's this thing like oh you're just too big for running but
have you had gotten past that how do you feel about that um i i mean i slightly joke when i
say that to be fair like i still i i run on a regular basis i think i'm more lazy when
it comes to running outside because when it's cold or it's raining oh yeah no i don't want to
you know so i would run on the treadmill um more often than i would run outside um
i do enjoy running i tell you what I don't enjoy running in a workout.
When I'm tired,
I'm fatigued,
and I know that I have to run
and then I have to pick up the dumbbell
and the barbell
and then go back onto the treadmill
or run outside.
And that's when I don't enjoy it.
I still do it.
I don't like burpees.
I still do them.
You know,
I think that's the one thing also
with training. It's not always going to be enjoyable. like burpees i still do them you know it's i think that's the one thing also with with with
training it's not always going to be enjoyable and i think it's having that discipline even though i
say you have fun and with your training however some aspect isn't going to be fun but that's when
discipline comes in to play and being your own motivation you have to be able to motivate
yourself because not everyone's gonna there's you're not going to have someone standing next to you going come on you got this let's do this you're going to have
to say to yourself i know you don't want to do this but you have to do this you know so when
sometimes i'm doing i'm running a 5k on a treadmill i'm like oh my god this is so boring
but i'm like no you need to do it you need to finish sometimes i have to say to myself like
i'm looking at the running shoes i know you have to do i'm like oh but it's late i've already trained no you have to do it you have to do it so i i think
that voice that's been in my head when i was doing bodybuilding to keep going to keep pushing even
when i wasn't seeing results it's that same voice even though it makes me sound crazy that tells me
that you need to keep pushing you don't't like running, you need to program that.
Because I do my own programming.
So sometimes people are,
well, why have you programmed all these burpees
if you don't enjoy it?
I was like, because I don't enjoy it,
I have to do it more
so that I get better and more proficient at it.
I'm still not going to like it
because people ask me,
oh, do you like it now
because you're doing it more often?
No, I hate it.
But it doesn't mean because i hate
something that i don't um want to do it so running is the same for me i'm not the quickest runner
sometimes i you know if i'm running more than 5k i'm like oh gosh this is torture but i still do it
and it's not because i hate it you know when i say don't like it, or if I say I don't enjoy it,
it's an exaggeration.
It's me just playing around.
But I love exercise.
So even though I don't enjoy certain things,
I just love exercise.
I love the feeling I get from it afterwards.
So I always say to people,
CrossFit, some CrossFit conditioning is awful.
Like it's horrible.
You feel like death when you're doing some of them.
But at the end of it, you're like, oh, that felt great.
It's a weird, weird cycle that you go through
where you're like, oh, that was just horrible.
It's the same as some people who do marathon running.
They probably would do a marathon,
and throughout the run, they're hating every minute of it.
But at the end of it, they probably feel on top of the world because they finished it.
I think you can definitely get yourself to a point where you're like, I don't know if this is safe anymore.
I know I felt that in a CrossFit style workout before or conditioning workouts before where I'm like, I'm pretty sure I overdid it.
I'm not sure how or when I'm going to get my breath back.
Kind of scary.
Like you put yourself that far back.
Andrew, can you look up and see,
maybe we can find out more information on the burpee.
If you can look up who invented the burpee
because there's,
hopefully we find kind of the right,
stumble upon the right thing.
But a burpee is,
a burpee is probably like the single greatest body weight movement ever created.
Royal Huddleston Burpee.
So it was for your people in the UK?
What a great name.
Huddleston?
Huddleston.
What a great name.
It's hilarious.
What does it say about it?
Can you see that in teamwork the man responsible for the
grimace inducing exercise
is Royal Hedleston Burpee
a physiologist who was also
the executive director of the YMCA
in New York City during the course
of his doctoral research at the Columbia University
Teachers College Bob Bob Burpee decided to
create a method to evaluate a person's
physical fitness
so after further review and investigation of this movement,
people have looked at it systematically,
and they basically said that the amount of movement that you're doing,
because you're going down to the ground and then you're jumping.
Olympic lifting, there's a lot of movement, like in a clean and jerk or a snatch.
You're lifting the weight X amount of inches off the ground to overhead,
X feet off the ground, I guess you would say.
But same thing with a burpee.
When you're getting down the ground, I guess you're kind of doing like a push-up,
pushing yourself up off the ground, springing up and then jumping.
There's a lot of volume in that.
Sometimes we forget that volume is a big part of the whole thing
because there's an equation of like,
and I'm going to fuck some of this up,
but there's an equation of like how much distance
you're moving something over a period of time.
So a burpee is like, it might seem silly or weird or whatever,
but like it's a really devastating exercise
yeah and it's a great thing to blend into for some conditioning i mean you could do
some burpees in between sets of curls or something like that and just build your conditioning that
way yeah i mean it is it's a movement that is ridiculously i don't know what the word is but
it's it just hurts and it's it just looks it's, it just looks like it shouldn't.
It looks like it shouldn't.
Yeah.
It looks straightforward,
but who's amazing at them.
Little kids.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Kids can fuck burpees.
Yeah.
Cause they're light and they're already low to the ground.
They're like,
yeah,
no,
that is true.
Like it's,
um,
it's a, it's one of those of those i think burpees another one for me
is uh jump rope so we call it skipping you call it jump rope so crossfit they do double unders
and you know what's so funny i always laugh about this so you i always know people who aren't
crossfitters because they go well double unders is just the same as like normal skipping what's
the difference it doesn't look that hard.
I was like, oh, I was like, right.
I'm always like, right, let's do it.
You come and do double unders in a workout and we'll have a conversation after.
And I don't know, being heavy and doing double unders,
because I have a fitness tracker, you can see your heart rate.
I see you do it. It's impressive. see your heart rate i see you do it it's impressive
like your heart rate you could you could do a workout and if it has double unders i guarantee
if i looked at your your heart rate you know throughout the workout you know where the double
unders is because it just shoots right up and it's one of those things that when you're tired
it's the most awful movement to do in the shoulders yeah do you feel and if you don't do it
right and most people start
taking their arms way too far out yeah so you have to actually one of the ways i learned is
you just put a band around your arm and all things in means yeah all the things you use your forearms
but even then when you're tired forget it you're that's not going to stick to you you're just going
to want to get through the movement do you need a speed rope to be good at double unders or could you use
like a normal jump a speed rope does help yeah because it the way it moves so it does really
help but i actually learned using a weighted handle rope yeah i'm gonna pull my i'm gonna
pull my rope out of the car because it's slightly weighted i wonder if i can learn double unders
with that because i suck at them yeah but you know what the thing with double unders you be
just be just say to yourself i'm ready to hit myself on the legs a lot of times to learn because it's the most frustrating thing
to learn i remember at some point i threw it in the bin i literally just took the skipper and
threw it in the bin i was like i'm done though it was that's great yeah there's just no there's no
other way you just have to keep doing it over and over
and over again but you will hit yourself it's one of those exercises that i think is hilarious now
that i can do it but even when you're doing a workout you can slip up and still hit yourself
and you're it's just it's a frustrating pain because it's not a fun way to hit yourself with
with that rope so just be prepared prepared to hit yourself a lot of times
yeah if you're ready for that and if you're ready to be frustrated you will be frustrated with it
because it's one of those things that you think that should be easily achievable um because you're
just going around if you can go around once your brain is like why can't i go around twice
but there's more to its coordination yeah you know and then
if you use too much shoulders it's shoulders and remember you're jumping so like it's taxing
so it's one movement burpees and double unders i find very frustrating how long ago did you learn
up learn crossfit i it took me a year to get somewhat decent i always last like two like was this before the pandemic
yeah yeah yeah before and so was that helpful like knowing the skill set of crossfit because
you can kind of like you don't need a lot of equipment right yes so this was so funny because i
did quite well in terms of workout videos in my own training with the lockdown i was like i even
remember saying to my friend who was my flat mix i lived in a shared um house i was like i am so lucky i discovered
crossfit training before lockdown if i only did bodybuilding i would have been so frustrated
and i wasn't panicking you know everyone was like oh i need the machines i need all this
and i went and took some kettlebells and dumbbells from my gym and luckily he let us um take the rower
and i was like i'm fine and i created workouts from just using dumbbells and kettlebells and
sometimes the bike but i had a jump rope i had so i was doing in the garden so i was in some
double unders so i was absolutely fine with in terms of training because i was so used to
uh training the way i did in terms of conditioning that i
didn't yes of course you still miss the the weight and the bodybuilding and that aspect but
i didn't miss it too much because then it allowed me to actually work on the things like the hand
stand push-ups in the living room because i wasn't really good and i could get better so in a way i
was lucky that i discovered a different way to train because then i didn't
struggle so much that's the thing with this thing it just seems like when it comes to developing new
aspects of fitness it's just figuring out new problems to solve with your body right yeah like
when you've gotten really good at bodybuilding or really good at power lifting like when you
can find other things that you're not good at that's that's just a really good thing to do and it's a really exciting aspect of i think what all
of us are being able to do here yeah it's it's also fun right you you you get to train in different
ways it's not just one way anymore yeah and it just makes it more excited yeah cool yeah and having uh goals goals not uh what how do you say
it like non uh physical looking goals specific stuff yeah you're not focused on your physique
yeah sorry i totally butchered that one but that's that's been huge because like you know for me um
i don't look at any any aspect of like jujitsu like, I don't want to have to do that today or whatever. Like,
it's all really good. And then now when I do go lifting, whereas before it was like, oh, let me,
whatever, my chest needs to get bigger. I don't know. I never said that, but like I would focus
on certain muscle groups. Now it's like, I'm going to do this because I want to perform better on the
mats. And I don't even think about the physique side of things. So like for me, that's been really,
really huge.
And Nsema has been preaching that for a long time now, you know, because people get stuck in, you know, like what you were saying on the podcast,
like, oh, I had extra, I had a slice of pizza and I got to jump on the Stairmaster
because I got to burn those off.
Whereas, you know, you switch it up and you're just like, okay,
I'm going to use this energy to, you know, get better at my practice
or whatever it may be.
So that's huge.
And then so the last thing I have to say about it all is the community aspect.
I also would go to the gym by myself.
I would, you know, lift on the cable machines and headphones on and the world off, right?
That's kind of like the memes that you see on social media.
So if you are going to start something new, whether it be CrossFit, Jiu-Jitsu,
I can think of those two things right off the top of my head.
Yoga.
Getting yoga.
I mean, come to super training for the same style of community, but like getting with a good group of people will make everything so much better.
Like the guys that I roll Jiu-Jitsu with, like it's so much fun, like hanging out with them and training with them outside of Jiu-Jitsu.
with them outside of jujitsu it's like you know you're kind of you get ingrained in this new community and you can kind of like the way i look at it is like not what i can get out of it it's
like dude i actually have some value here what can i help everyone out with yeah and you start
feeling good when you start helping people and you know they say thank you for the workout or
whatever it may be and then now like you just get even more fired up every time you go so like
before jujitsu i had less, and now I have more friends.
So that's really cool.
Yeah.
So that's a really cool aspect of the community side of the new endeavors.
Yeah.
You guys have anything else?
Want to take us on out of here, Andrew?
Sure thing.
All right.
Let us know what you guys are going to start new, anything on the radar.
Let us know down in the comments.
And make sure you guys like this video and subscribe.
If you guys are not subscribed, follow the podcast at MBPowerProject on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter.
My Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter is at IamAndrewZNSima.
Where are you at?
Yeah, on one of the podcasts, there were a bunch of you guys who mentioned that you are going to or you want to start jiu-jitsu.
So for those of you who actually mentioned that, who actually managed to start and who's waiting?
And then along with that,
if you're not planning on starting jujitsu,
who's running or who's starting CrossFit?
Who's doing some different shit?
Let us know in the comments down below.
At Nsema Indian on Instagram and YouTube.
Discord is down below.
At Nsema Yin Yang on TikTok and Twitter.
Obi, where can people find you?
It's at Obi underscore Vincent for Instagram.
Obi Vincent for TikTok and YouTube youtube smelly's tip for the
day is if you're trying to get into running don't run jog uh move really fucking slow
maybe even just jog walk jog for one minute maybe uh walk for two minutes and go back and forth
between doing that and maybe do like five sets have that be your your running for two minutes and go back and forth between doing that and maybe do like five sets.
Have that be your running for the day and just progress from there.
Like take it really, really slow.
Take your time.
Anyone who starts to get an idea of like I'm going to go out and run and you start to feel good when you're running, do not sprint.
Please do not sprint.
Don't bother with trying to sprint.
Don't bother with trying to sprint. Don't bother with trying
to feel like if you're trying to
be fast, you more than likely
are going to fuck yourself up.
Rather than trying to be fast, if you
do get encouraged to move a little faster,
just try your best to be smooth.
Strength is never weakness. Weakness is
never strength. Catch you guys later. Bye.