Mark Bell's Power Project - Power Project EP. 117 - Pain into Power
Episode Date: September 24, 2018Can you turn a negative experience into a positive? Today Mark Bell is giving you examples of a few people that have, as well as our own experiences. Mark references videos during the conversation and... urges you to watch them. Kevin Durant MVP Speech: https://youtu.be/NmRJgKbibB8 Pete Rubish Motivation: https://youtu.be/fOE5LPfHPMo Rewatch this episode live: https://youtu.be/fJjWFrM6KJ4 ➢SHOP NOW: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots ➢Subscribe Rate & Review on iTunes at: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/mark-bells-power-project/id1341346059?mt=2 ➢Listen on Stitcher Here: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/mark-bells-power-project?refid=stpr ➢Listen on Google Play here: https://play.google.com/music/m/Izf6a3gudzyn66kf364qx34cctq?t=Mark_Bells_Power_Project ➢Listen on SoundCloud Here: https://soundcloud.com/markbellspowerproject FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell Follow The Power Project Podcast ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MarkBellsPowerProject Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Some days I can't get up that high.
Oh, yeah, on Sundays?
See, I can't quite get up there right now.
Did I go too...
I went too high, didn't I?
Now I'm way up here.
I think you're fine.
Did we start yet?
We started. Okay. start yet? We started.
Okay.
Bear with me, everybody.
Alright, so here we go.
Just adjusting my microphone
check one, two.
I'm going to go live on Instagram
here. Boing!
I guess I'll go off
of this cup, even though I'm actually going to be using that cup.
So that's where I was having a hard time.
I was going to set it up on the other microphone.
I'll set it up on this cup.
Anyway, we're live on Instagram.
We're live on Facebook.
You can check us out live on YouTube.
And these bitches go up on other places too.
What, Google Play?
Google Play, iTunes, Stitcher.
Yeah, like, dude, we're all over the place
mark bell's power project pod bean sends me stuff all the time about being on there i've never even
heard of them but thank you for them oh there you go um so andrew and i got in some good
conversation yesterday had a great podcast as always as usual and uh today
was a busy day did a lot of a lot of meetings andrew's been over here oh nick platinum what's
up nick platinum how it be homie um you know andrew and i had a busy day today he was plugging
away uploading stuff messing with pictures and doing all the andrew things that he does
being the swiss army knife that he is.
The utility back.
He's good for first down, second down, third down, fourth down.
Special teams.
Could be third and 13.
It could be fourth and one.
You don't really know.
Andrew could be in the game.
Speaking of.
Like Marcus Allen from back in the day.
So, I played Tech Mobile last night.
No way.
And it was Niners
versus LA Raiders.
The Niners are hard to stop. Yeah.
But, I just throw it to Rice every time
and he catches it. Rice is
pretty amazing.
But Bo Jackson is really hard to stop.
He's basically impossible.
Derek Tuck says what's up. You gotta be
careful with a name like that.
Say it too fast, you might screw it up. You got to be careful with a name like that. Say it too fast. Might screw it up.
But anyway, yeah, Tecmo Bowl, you know, if you, so the Giants, I think were the hardest team to stop.
Because Mark Bavaro would do a little button hook, you know, catch from Phil Sims.
And like, you just couldn't stop it.
Even when you pick the other guy's play, you know, you pick the other guy's play and it's all out blitz.
How about just kind of peering over
at the other guy's controller?
That was always a good move.
That's a sin.
That was so good.
I remember, ah, shoot.
So cheap.
Some guy in the neighborhood, he called it a paddle.
Don't be looking over at my paddle.
Oh, man.
What's a paddle?
Oh, you mean a control.
Hey, you know what, dude?
I am hard up for friends to come over and
play me in tech mobile but why don't you just get the fuck out of my house calling it a paddle
that would be yeah that would be the best paddle yeah don't call it a paddle
yeah that's that's weird that's weak yeah so i was gonna bring it in today but i forgot
but yeah they're like releasing some of these older games for like switch and stuff too right
you're saying so they released 20 yesterday.
What are we going to do?
So I don't know.
We're going to be low on time.
Do you ever?
Don't tell me about worms.
They're not releasing worms, are they?
They have worms on.
You had it coming.
Best game ever.
I'll get you.
I'll get you.
And you can walk up to the other worm and just poke him.
Flick him off into the water.
They had the mad cow attack.
The sheep.
You can throw a sheep.
You can throw an exploding sheep at somebody.
And then the other one, you can press the button again.
The sheep gets a cape, and you can control where it flies.
Oh, yeah, super sheep.
Yeah.
Super sheep, yeah.
Oh, dude.
Kamikaze.
Man, I played that game so much.
We played it in junior high.
I remember I looked at the game, and it was on sale.
I was like, dude, this looks sick.
And we got home, and we played it.
It was a buddy of mine.
And I was like, what the fuck?
This is stupid.
And then...
It does seem kind of dumb, but it's an amazing strategy game.
Like 28 hours straight later, we can't stop playing it.
That game was fun.
Don't worry, we're going to talk about some useful information in a little bit.
Nah, fuck that. Let's talk about video games.
Yesterday, we were touching upon some stuff,
and just, I don't know, midway through the podcast,
I mentioned about turning pain into power,
and that resonated with a few people that watched the podcast yesterday,
and they wrote about it in the subject line below. They were responding to the podcast and I was
like, shit, that's a great topic. That's a great thing to talk about. I've used, uh, pain and I've
used, uh, that fuel to, uh, fire me up before. And sometimes it's great. And sometimes it's not a great thing to do. Um, most of the
time for me, uh, I've had my best workouts, um, when I'm calm and when I'm happy and when the,
when, when the workout's not a reach, you know, I'm not reaching for anything. I'm not actually
like, uh, sometimes if you're actually in pain, sometimes it can be a reach. So like your elbow hurts or
your knee hurts or something is just really, really in a lot of pain and it can distract you
and it could pull you away from your workout. So we're not really talking about like trying to
battle through like injury. This is not really the topic that we're talking about for today.
Today, we're more talking about battling through the pain that you may have from doing or from just having certain things happen to you.
Maybe you were abused as a kid.
Maybe you were neglected by your parents.
Maybe you were overlooked when you played football.
Maybe you were just treated poorly by people.
Maybe people just thought you would never turn into anything.
And maybe people said kind of rude things to you over the years.
And I've definitely been
on the receiving end of a lot of that. And I like to utilize that as fuel to, you know, help me
get past certain challenges. Now, one thing that's great about lifting weights and something that
I've always done with lifting is I've always looked at the weights as the resistance of the
weights themselves are going to be things that build me and where i think a lot of people can
benefit is when they start to really realize that you can take the resistance of life and you can
put that on your shoulders and the resistance of life over a period of time is going to make you
stronger as well so we all have our bad days. We all have our challenges.
We all have the days where we're just sad.
We're sad, we're mad, we're just not happy.
And sometimes you don't want to be.
Like sometimes you don't, somebody tries to pull you out of it.
Somebody says something funny and you're like, you don't, you don't care.
Somebody says, hey, your favorite TV show's on or, you know, they're trying to cheer you up. Hey, I made you a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. I'm like, nothing
snaps you out of it. Right. You're just like, eh, just kind of grumpy. And so a lot of times,
you know, just sometimes that's just the waves that we go through, but we can utilize, uh,
a lot of the resistance and a lot of the pain from working out from exercising from, uh, sprinting
from going on a really hard run,
from running a hill, from doing a high rep set of squats.
Come in the gym pissed off one day.
Maybe something really is eating you up.
If it's a real tragedy, that's a different story.
That's going to require some actual like real healing.
But if you're just pissy because you're pissy and,
your head's kind of tied and not go in the gym and do three sets of 20 squats,
that shit will be gone quick.
That shit will be gone really fast.
And if you have the guts and you have the courage to push yourself through it,
um,
when you come out the other end,
you're going to,
you're going to feel a lot better.
I know it's hard to realize that because you're like,
I don't have to feel like shit.
I'm already grumpy. I don't want to do that, but it's going to make you feel a lot better i know it's hard to realize that because you're like i don't feel like shit i'm already grumpy i don't want to do that but it's gonna
make you feel a lot better and there's nothing more rewarding than being than starting a set
and telling like your buddy or your coach or training partner or whatever hey man you know
i want to do a set of 12 and you do a set of six and you're like, wow, that was a big mistake to tell the dude I was
going to do 12. Cause I am, I maybe got one more rep if I'm lucky that there comes seven, eight,
nine, maybe you need a little spot. Cause with the training I'm doing now, we can,
we can cheat a little bit and get some spotting power thing. We don't really do that as much,
but you're trying to, um, you're trying to not only build muscle and trying to not only to build
strength, but you're trying to build character. You're trying to build willpower. Willpower is
something that you can build. Um, I think a lot of times when somebody watches their kid do
something, you're like, why isn't my kid more aggressive? Why doesn't my kid get up there and
get in that batter's box and stand in a position like they
really mean it like they're going to really hit the ball that's like well because they're a little
kid man like they're scared like they don't they haven't really built up that confidence yet in
that way and they haven't really um they're going to have to have most kids not every kid but most
people in general are going to have to have success. The success will breed success and it will build confidence.
It will build that willpower over a period of time.
And so these things, they take time.
And I think sometimes we think, oh, we're just in the gym and we're just building muscle.
We're just doing these reps because a long time ago, Joe Weider said so.
And Arnold followed.
And Arnold got jacked. and that's what we're
doing.
We're doing three sets of 10 or three sets of 15, and we think that that's just the way
that it goes, but no, you're in there, and you're building and working towards something
much different than just that.
Let me try some of my protein.
Are you still having protein every single meal?
Every single meal, throwing down a scoop
yep trying to be jacked um now there's there's some other forms of this too
as you dive into it deeper i mean just think about your challenges in your everyday life
and how they can turn into triumph think about how you can turn them into victory you talked
yesterday about a bunch of different ways that you can win.
And it doesn't have to be that you do something great.
A win doesn't have to be a 315 deadlift.
A win does not have to be that you lost 10 pounds.
A win could be that you went for a 10 minute walk.
A win can be that you set out to go shopping for the day and you need to buy clothes
because the season's changing and you went and you did it you set out you you had a goal you had
an objective you had something on your to-do list and you went and did it it's a small victory it's
not going to really turn into meaning a whole lot to anybody else but it's one extra thing that you
got off your plate that's not making your head uh turn into knots you know and it's one extra thing that you got off your plate. That's not making your head,
uh, turn into knots, you know, and it's not giving you that kind of frustration that you get. Maybe
you meal prepped because so meal prep can definitely be a big victory because you told
yourself you were going to do certain things with your body. You told yourself you're going to do
certain things with your strength. And now here you are, uh, serving yourself the best way you can and and making some healthy
meals for yourself you're trying to uh set yourself up uh for success rather than the opposite which
is you know setting yourself up for failure they say if you don't plan ahead then you plan to fail
last night i had the predicament of being up a little bit too late, but trying to meal prep for today.
So I kind of like weighed positives, negatives of each. And I was like, I could either go to bed
right now and try to wake up early and do it. But I just, I knew that wasn't going to happen. So I
just stayed up a little bit later to make sure I had enough food for today. Yeah. You know, it's
about that turnaround time, you know, from one day to the next and, uh, you know, tomorrow we're
going to lift in the morning. So usually starting on like Tuesday or Wednesday, I start thinking about
that Friday workout, as long as we can make it, we're not always able to make it, uh, due to just
different schedules and stuff. But if we're going to make that Friday workout, it sounds kind of
funny. I start thinking about that thing on Tuesday or Wednesday. Cause I'm like, well,
I'm going to need to get to bed a little earlier.
You know, I know tonight that I'm going to, we're going to have to get out of here at a certain time.
Yeah.
We'll have to get done with this podcast.
We'll have to get our chest workout in and then we'll have to get home, eat, recover and be prepared tomorrow.
The one thing that's nice about Friday is we normally don't have as much stuff to do, so we don't have to be tied down to being here as long.
So that's kind of a nice thing.
But yeah, you got to really pay attention because otherwise you're going to fall behind.
And you start to fall behind, and those are the things that lead you into being like everybody else.
Anyway, as we were talking about this pain in the power thing i just started
thinking about all the athletes i mean there's thousands and thousands of athletes actors
actresses and uh people that have uh overcome all kinds of stuff in some cases it's people
overcoming uh things that are way more serious than others like for example example, JK Rawlings, who, uh, is, is, uh, the creative
Harry Potter. I'm a huge Harry Potter fan. Um, she, you know, she's not, she's not going through
some of these other things of some of the other people have listed here of like child abuse and
some of these, uh, horrific things that happen to people, but she really was up against it.
She really had a really hard time getting getting the
book made she went to like 11 or 12 different uh publishers it just kept getting shut down time and
time and time and time again until finally she had to call herself jk so that people didn't know
uh it was a female because at the time that wasn't a thing. That wasn't, the females weren't getting books published the way that a lot of the males were, uh, that had a good idea, I guess.
And so she was like, screw it.
I'm going to try to change the name.
She changed the name and eventually it broke through and eventually it turned into, uh, what it's turned into.
But now she is, um, she's probably one of the more successful females to ever walk the face of the earth.
I mean, she could put her in the category right there with like Oprah and stuff like that.
And it's just, it's unbelievable, but you know, to, to stick to it and to have so many people
tell you that it's a bad idea. So many people are just thinking, well, this is, this is too
different. This is too weird. Like who who cares about this magician school or whatever?
Now you look back at it and you're like, why wouldn't everybody think that that's cool?
That does sound awesome.
Yeah.
But like if she didn't get all those years of no's, does she come out with so many and so many great ones?
No, she comes out with nothing.
You know, probably.
You know, she probably comes out with, you know, an idea. And, you know, a lot you know, she probably comes out with, um,
you know, an idea. And, and, you know, a lot of times, like I say this all the time, a lot of times you're
not ready either.
You know, the, uh, the, the world will beat you up enough and it'll make you ready for
when, for, for these things.
Um, you know, I think back to, um, you know, when I was trying to be a pro wrestler, if somebody at a certain time would have just called me up and put me into pro wrestling, I would have got chewed up and spit out.
Who knows what would have happened?
Who knows?
I may have fall victim to, you know, being hooked on drugs or, you know, I may have been kind of caught up in the life of a wrestler and maybe I wouldn't have the family that I have. You know, it's crazy to kind of think up in the, in the life of a wrestler. And maybe, uh, I wouldn't have the
family that I have, you know, it's, it's crazy to kind of think about these, these situations.
And so even though you are getting beat up along the way, you do have to take your lumps. It's,
it's kind of going to happen. Some of these things are just out of your hands and we don't get to
kind of always pick and choose, uh, what happens to us. Yeah. Had I met you like a year or two prior to when we did,
I would not have been ready.
Right.
This place would have chewed me up and spit me out so fast.
It just wasn't there.
Yeah.
And maybe,
and maybe I wouldn't have tolerated it.
You know,
maybe we would have worked out and I would have been like,
oh man,
this guy's just not,
I don't know,
man.
Like he worked out really hard that one day and then now I don't know if he's sore or what his deal is but i don't have time to think about it
he's not picking up the slack on this day and i'm trying to have a good workout so i don't have time
you know for whatever's going on in his life i gotta keep moving on i'll find another
another training partner and that's actually a really good point and that's why
people that work out really hard go through so many training partners.
Or, you know, you sometimes look and you're like, hmm, that's Mark Bell.
Like a lot of people know who he is in the fitness industry.
Wouldn't there be like a line around the door of people that want to work out with him?
It's like, well, you know, you do a couple workouts with me and you'll kind of find out why there's only one guy hanging around, you know?
And it ain't easy.
And same thing with O'Hearn, right?
O'Hearn has, O'Hearn doesn't have other like big bodybuilding people with him or anything.
He's got a couple of guys that are able to hang in there.
They're able to hang on that are mentally tough, uh, that want to handle those, that
kind of abuse, uh, that early in the morning and get through those workouts.
Right.
And one of them is going to be here next week.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Our boy Gavin.
Yeah.
Gavin Murphy coming with that pecan,
pecan butter.
That stuff's insane.
So good.
Beardy boy.
Yeah.
But going back.
So I remember I got a buddy of mine.
He's a Sony artisan.
So people on the camera will know that as it's,
he's like a, like a, not necessarily
a sponsored photographer from Sony, but he gets basically the best of the best of whatever they
have to offer. And I was talking to him on the phone and I remember I was talking to him about
another photographer that I knew who was not even a fraction as good as I am or was at the time.
And he ended up getting like a really cool gig.
And I remember being like, dude, why is that not happening to me?
And he's like, look, that guy's going to, he might be lucky,
whatever you want to call it,
but eventually everyone's going to see him for what he is
and he's going to burn out and no one's going to care for him anymore.
The reason why you haven't gotten that offer yet is because you're not ready. He's like, when you're ready, that's when that's going to care for him anymore the reason why you haven't gotten that offer yet is because you're not ready like when you're ready that's when that's going to show up yeah and then i end
up meeting you like i think probably six months after he had that conversation with me which is
crazy i always think about you're like preparing for the unknown i feel like i've been doing that
my whole life just preparing for stuff and then like i don't know i get led into something else
and then someone else is like you're oh shit man you're really fortunate you're really lucky and i think
oh yeah i guess i am kind of fortunate and lucky and then i'm like well wait a second i guess not
really like i i'm not any more fortunate or lucky than anybody else i don't have like a rabbit's foot
hanging out of my ass or anything you know or or a lucky just, uh, I think that I just ended up being prepared for
stuff. Um, but I think about these things a lot too. I think about like, I, you know, if I watch
TV or something and I see, uh, a friend who's on, uh, you know, to the today show or something like
that showing a fitness exercises, then I sit there and think to myself, well, how should I wonder how
I would do with that? And so like, how do I prep for that? I can't, I can't really just all of a sudden pretend to be on the Today Show necessarily, but I can do stuff like this. I get in front of a camera and start to talk and I can start to become better at speaking in front of people, better at speaking in front of a camera.
speaking in front of a camera.
I can learn some kind of do's and don'ts and I can, you know, practice things that they do on TV, even something like just cussing less.
It's something that I've worked on.
My kids, they kind of pointed it out to me that I cuss a lot.
So I try to, I tried to cuss less, which is kind of funny that they say that.
Cause I don't, well, I guess they observe what they observe, right?
I can't say that I don't, but I, I don't
cuss that much around the house. At least I don't feel like I do unless they're, uh, unless they're
just referring to the stuff I say, I say on camera, but anyway, you, you work on these different
things to get prepped for whatever's coming next. If you're, um, doing a certain style of photography
and you're starting to wonder oh I wonder what it
would be like to you know work for that company or work for these guys over here well then maybe
you start to practice that style maybe maybe maybe the company does all black and white
or maybe they do all sunsets or maybe they do all whatever it is and you start to kind of
you're like oh I wonder what that would look like if I was doing that, how it would look and how I can make changes to it, how I can improve it, how I can make it better.
We were talking about some different athletes that we've seen, you know, go through some hard times.
And you think about, obviously, like nowadays, Mike Tyson is not, you know, held up on a pedestal the way the way that he was uh you know years and years
ago but uh mike tyson was abused a lot as a kid um his mother was a drug addict his mother was a
was a hooker as well his dad um the only only uh adult male figures that he really knew uh were
people that would abuse him it beat the hell out of. And he didn't really even know his real dad.
So he went through some really, really rough times.
And as you can imagine, that's going to make, that's going to make a really like hardened
person, right?
That's going to make a person really tough.
That's going to turn somebody into either turn somebody into being really, really timid
and not being able to handle themselves with much of anything, or it's going to turn somebody
into Mike Tyson and turn somebody into a savage and a lot of the pain and when it
you know when it comes to boxing and when it comes to like doing a drill or something go back and
watch mike tyson hit a heavy bag watch mike tyson hit some mitts i mean he went he would tear that
shit apart it was unbelievable uh you know they they used to say bad intentions they'd say
hey let's see let's see you throw some punches and do this combo and they say bad intentions
mike and he would you know he would throw some bombs and it was so fast and so powerful and so
explosive uh nobody's ever really seen anything like that before but where does that aggression
come from the aggression comes from the pain and experience that he has a kid
growing up without money and growing up being made fun of for having a speech impediment having that
lisp that really soft voice i mean come on can you imagine how bad he's getting made fun of when he's
13 14 years old and he's this big kid i mean he always looked like he worked out he always looked
like he worked out and uh everyone's probably expecting him to have this deep baritone voice because he's
so much more mature looking than everybody else um but i've seen the same thing myself when i was
coaching when i was coaching kids and uh you know some observations i made if you had an inner city
kid uh when i was coaching football he had an inner city kid, uh,
when I was coaching football, he had an inner city kid and you had them square off and you
had them, uh, you know, doing some hitting drills, man, you know, a bunch of kids would
go and a lot of these kids didn't have any fire.
They didn't have any like heart.
They didn't have any like determination because they're young and they're scared and they
don't know what they're doing, but dad wanted them to play football.
And so there they are.
And so you can have them do these tackling drills and they hit into each other in super slow motion, right?
You get that kid that his parents are divorced or he doesn't know his dad or he's from the inner city or whatever it might be.
And wham, you see a hell of a collision, right?
You're like, holy crap.
And automatically that kid that has that aggression like that,
that kid that's willing to stick his nose in there,
and he's not, he doesn't even care what's going to happen to him.
He just knows that he needs to kill whoever has the ball.
A lot of times, you know, that ends up being the better ball player.
And, I mean, you've seen this in so many situations.
Bo Jackson, Bo Jackson grew up very poor.
And while we're watching some footage of Tyson knocking people out, it's really pretty intense and pretty wild.
But Bo Jackson came from poor beginnings as well.
He just laid the guy out and the guy's legs are all stiff.
And you can tell the guy's legs are all stiff and the guy legs you can tell the guy's legs are all numb but going through this pain and going through these experiences is
is going to be uh some of the things that get you to the next level now you don't have to suffer in
the same way like you don't have to be somebody that was abused as a kid you can kind of have
your own form of suffering but you're still going to have to have some suffering if you remember when we had jay cutler on the podcast jay cutler was a really good example
by the way jay cutler is the man he was one of the coolest people that we've ever had here at
super training gym he's one of the coolest people ever yeah he was uh he was amazing oh there's more
people popping in here what's it it just it blew my mind we're at the uh san jose fit expo
and jay cutler has you know the the longest line there it was like him and cast martin were
competing with like the longest lines but um i'm just walking around checking out the floor
and then i look over like oh shit there's jay cutler cool and he flags me down like in a crowd
of you know the entire place.
And I'm like, I'm literally nobody, right?
Like, and he's like, oh, what's up, dude?
So how's our boy doing?
You know, this was during your show prep.
Right.
And we were just going back and forth, and he's just a great guy.
He has everything you hope he would be.
If some of you guys that are listening here on, uh,
Instagram want to be able to hear the whole podcast and be able to hear Andrew better than,
uh, just pop over to the YouTube feed or to the Facebook feed and you'll be able to hear
everything. But if you're comfortable where you're at, that's fine too. But yeah, Jay Cutler is
awesome. And, uh, and Jay, um, you know, he shared a lot of great things with us, but he shared as a kid, he had this very, very tough upbringing.
His in his family, you were going to you were going to have a manual labor job.
You were going to work for the family business.
And I think they had what a concrete business.
Right.
And I don't remember.
Yeah, I think that's what it was.
But anyway, you were going to do this manual labor shit and you had no choice.
Construction, it was, as it was anyway, so it doesn't really matter.
But some form of construction in any way.
He was basically kind of almost, he mentioned he hated it so much that he would wish that he was somebody else.
And he'd wish that he'd wake up just in a different house. And that he would wish that he was somebody else. And he'd wish that he'd wake up like just in a different house and that he would, you know, wish that he could escape some of it.
But he couldn't.
It was like him, his brothers, his dad.
He did this work all the time.
I think it was Monday through Saturday.
I think Sunday was a day maybe where he just had a little bit less to do, but I think he still worked even on Sunday.
And he was just
getting crushed by it and he just hated it. And he was almost like in this prison, but
finding out about his career as a bodybuilder, he delivered his own form of torture to himself
as a bodybuilder. And then we kind of mentioned to him, we're like, that's weird. Like you got,
you got out of jail, you got away from the parents, basically you got away from, uh, you know,
all that manual labor.
And then you stuffed yourself in a gym and you stuffed your, and you stayed at home and you had this really strict eating regimen.
And you, you were like in your own form of a prison.
And there he was, you know, beating the hell out of himself.
But it's because that you need this resistance from, you need this resistance in order to build yourself up.
And that's what he was doing.
He was kind of creating his own version of pain.
Because the pain can be something that can really try to fuel you.
And there's so many different ways you can do it.
You can kind of have pain like during each set.
You can have pain and sorrow from mean shit, rude things that people have said to you over the years.
You guys know my story.
You know that I've struggled in school and I was always told I was too dumb or too this or too that.
You know, again, I want to make sure that people understand, too.
It's important to point out that all this stuff about being too dumb or too short or too fat these are all things that are
also created by yourself too that's really important to understand because you need to
realize that most people don't actually really care that much you know it wasn't like somebody
sat me down and they're like okay you know based off this like iq test uh we're gonna see like
your earning potential in life you know no one ever really it wasn't really like that you know
to see like your earning potential in life you know no one ever really it wasn't really like that you know because no one really cares but like i i struggled in school uh i got made fun of and
teased for it um i never took like another language never messed with like an instrument
i didn't take a lot of these other classes because they were like well he struggles so hard in this
other stuff it doesn't make sense for him to even bother to try anything else why add more to the
plate that he already can't finish yeah exactly and so like you know a lot of that stuff just
it made me very insecure and then it and then it developed uh me thinking other things that people
probably didn't even think or say right it's just like i don't know you just kind of think these
certain things and then i was also um uh i was
like because of that i was like with different people it was really weird because like in high
school you know these cliques develop you know there's like there's jocks and there's these
people over here and these people over there i didn't really hang out with anybody because i was
like i i don't like the way a lot of my quote-unquote friends act where the people that I should hang
out with act so I'm not hanging with them because they're a bunch of assholes because they're mean
to a lot of the kids that I'm in classes with the quote-unquote retard class right
like that's my class so I actually defended a lot of those kids and got no fights over stuff like
that because um some of the people that i knew that like on the
football team or uh these other jocks and stuff would like mess with those kids and i i always
just thought that was like i first of all i thought that was bullshit anyway but the fact
that i was in the classes with those kids uh made me have made me have uh you know i was more
attached to those kids so i was like i'm not standing for this like i'm not letting somebody
pick on these kids that can't they can't even defend themselves you know these are kids that have um some real
problems and they don't don't even understand what you're even trying to do like they make fun of
them and the kids like didn't even know they were like the brunt of a joke i'm like this is so lame
you know and so i'd get into fights and get in trouble over it and stuff like that. Um, but a lot of that stuff of, you know, people
saying I'm slow or people saying I'm retarded or people saying whatever they wanted to say,
a lot of that was fuel for, um, you know, me turning myself into something in the gym,
me turning myself into something out of the gym. And then it still fuels a lot of the stuff that
I do today. i have this crazy desire
to continue to learn and educate myself as much as possible now the reading side of things i still
it's still hard for me so i still choose not to mess with reading and the word reason i say choose
is because i don't want to say the word can't um i can read, I can read just fine, but I read very slow. I tend to process it very
slowly and I tend to not be able to digest it very well. And so I do better with audio. I learned
that about myself. And so, you know, my favorite thing to do is to listen to some audio stuff,
whether it's a YouTube video or an audio book, and I'll sit down with a pen and paper and I'll take notes on a lot of these
things, just like I'm in class,
which doesn't actually make any sense because I hated school.
So why would I put myself back in class again?
And it's back to the Jay Cutler thing of him putting himself back into prison,
almost checking back in because you have to have some form of discipline and you have to have a way
of building your strength. Like how else are you going to build it? You're going to build it by
sitting there on the couch watching a football game. No, that's not really enough. That's not
really going to cut it. We do need entertainment. We do need to relax, but we also need to really
work on ourselves and work on being stronger. I was going to ask you, did you like, I know you had a, um,
you said like a learning disability, but did you just hate the idea of school?
Like, let's just say like it was, uh,
I still hate the idea of school. It's way too long, um,
in so many different ways. Um, and I'm also kind of a believer though, too.
Like if you don't have a solution, you can't really bitch about it too much.
So I don't really have a great solution, but i do think that school is way too long i think
from when school starts to when it ends in terms of your age is way too long of a time period
how many hours you spend in school is is excessive it i mean it's it's extremely
excessive it's five days a week and
you're in school for like six or seven hours, uh, at a clip. And it's just, it just seems like an,
seems like an enormous amount of time. And now, you know, also let's backtrack a little bit and
let's think about why it was set up that way. It was set up that way. So mom or dad, uh, preferably
it was only one person would go to work from nine to five. So you drop your kid off at school, your kid get picked up by the bus. They'd go to school. They'd have lunch. Everybody meet back up for dinner at 6 p.m. or so. And the day was over with. Right. And then, you know, rinse and repeat. And you keep you kind of keep doing that. And everyone has has off on the weekend and Sundays are kind of like a family day for some people. It's like a church day.
Saturday was like an in-between day. Kids can kind of do their thing with their friends. Friday
nights, mom and dad can have some people over the house and have a little party or whatever it is
they want to do. And that's just the way things have always been but things are so different now both parents usually work uh less and less people have to go to an office all the time um and so things are
just so different now i i don't think it makes any sense to send uh kids off to school for so long
homework never made any sense to me because i'm like hey man we're really inefficient we're
spending all this time in school and now you're giving me more shit to do at home?
I hated homework when I was in school.
It's insane.
It does make sense, though.
It does make sense to kind of hold you accountable, to give you some stuff to do.
But a lot of times, I mean, even my son, you know, he's working on stuff for like, I don't know, he's working on homework for like two or three hours or something.
I'm like, this is insane.
And his stuff is impossible. The stuff he's doing is impossible i'm like i don't i don't understand
what the hell they have you yeah working on but this is like ridiculous jazz is only in fifth
grade and i have to google her homework all the time yeah i feel so dumb but i'm like i don't know
what this means yeah and yeah but uh my nephew he he was he started kind of having a hard time
with school about the same time i did like in junior high and i'm like look dude you're not
gonna learn anything that's gonna be real life-changing i'm like but you have to finish
it because if you don't finish school you ain't gonna finish shit for the rest of your life
that's true and his eyes kind of lit up because nobody nobody to him like that. I'm the youngest of all my siblings, and he's the oldest of all my nephews.
So we're not really close.
We're still, I don't even know exactly.
I mean, what, like 12, 15 years, whatever it is.
No longer than that.
But still, I can look at him and be like, yeah, school is kind of bullshit.
Like, trust me, you're not going to use any of it.
Like, but if you quit now, you're going to quit everything.
And he's like, okay.
So he's doing better now.
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah.
Something I always, you know, we talk about in podcasts.
I mentioned it yesterday.
Even, you know, what education does is it can force you to do the things that you don't want to do when you don't normally want to do them.
And that is one of the more important things in life to try to figure out how to get ahead.
When you're tired and it's 7 p.m. and you know that you should probably cook a meal or two for the next day,
if you didn't get a chance to get ahead and get some other meals cooked up,
there's a wonderful opportunity for you to fall behind.
And there's a wonderful opportunity for you to be less than what you want to be.
Right.
And so doing the things that you don't want to do and you don't normally want to do them is a really, really critical thing.
And it's a good thing to pause on every once in a while.
It's a good thing to sit there and ask yourself, like, am I being a bitch right now? Like, do I really need to rest?
Or should I, should I be doing the stuff that, that makes me better? Um, is this,
is this legitimate downtime? Do I actually need downtime? Cause sometimes you do.
If you're sitting there and you're watching uh tv with your daughter then the answer is yeah
sit there and watch tv with her if you're watching a program together now like if she's on her phone
and you're not really paying attention you got your laptop in front of you and you're like editing
then who you know who really cares yeah go cook up the other meals that you need for the next day
or go for a walk or see if you can do something together.
And if you can't, uh, then, you know, um, figure out how to get yourself kind of prepped for the next day.
But yeah, sometimes we do need that downtime. Sometimes we, we definitely need family time.
We definitely need time with friends. We definitely need time to, uh, kind of hang out and kick it. Right. But, you know, I think when it comes to school,
the, the amount of years that you're in school is way too long. The amount of hours that you're
in school is way too long. Um, however, what else are you going to do? So like, you know,
18 is not very developed. 17, 18, 19 years old is not very developed. But if you think about your life,
you go from, you go to school from when you're five until you're basically like 16, 17,
I guess some, I guess sometimes you're 18 by the time you get out of high school, right?
So you go to school from the time you're five until you're about 18 years old.
And then normally people want you to go to more school. So usually you try to go to more school,
which could be two years, three years, four years, five years, depending on what you're doing.
Uh, it could be a little longer if you're trying to be a doctor or something like that, or, um,
you're trying to learn a trade or something, even after school, get a master's degree or any of
those things. Uh, you're in school for a really, really crazy amount of time, 20 years. You know, you might be in school until you're 23, 24, 25 years old.
That's a really long time.
People usually don't figure out much of anything until they're about 30.
And then if you're lucky enough to figure out shit by the time you're 30 you usually uh aren't getting ahead until you're
about 35 right so it's like all this shit is like you know flashing before your very eyes
during all this whole process by the way you're supposed to try to find a significant other
you're supposed to have somebody else along for the ride with you right and um it just really
sucks the way things are set up um luckily for myself i was able to
because only because of andy like without andy i you know i wouldn't be sitting here
uh talking to you guys in this way i wouldn't be sharing uh some success stories with you guys
because i just didn't have direction as i mentioned yesterday i wasn't a loser she might
disagree with that but but, um,
I just didn't have direction. I didn't, I didn't have, and without direction, you don't really
have purpose because you don't really know what or why you're trying to do things.
If we could somehow get you right before Andy met you and bring that person to 2018,
would that Mark Bell have entrepreneur in his instagram
profile um i always was excited by the idea of not having a job so yes
and that's what entrepreneur means to me today because most of the other people that use that
title uh kind of fall in that category of people that use that title, uh, kind of fall
in that category of people that just don't have a job. Yeah. Yeah. That's what I was like.
I wonder if that Mark Bell's hosting a seminar anytime soon. Yeah, no. Um, no, I mean, everything,
everything came together, uh, the right way, but just kind of back a little bit more about school.
You know, I, I do wish, you know, some more practical stuff was taught in school. You hear people complain about this
all the time. And again, I don't have all the solutions. And, um, if I want to see change,
then I should get involved politically and I should try to figure out ways of making change.
And maybe at some point I will actually do that, but these kids need to know about this cloud thing,
don't they, Andrew?rew i mean nobody knows what's
going on with this cloud so one of the guys on the team john uh he's been referred to as the poor
man's filipino thunder oh yeah he said he could help us out oh my god i asked him yesterday to
come in today to help us out but uh so we'll see but if yeah if we can teach these kids to fix my iphone they'll be tight
and uh but we need to know about this i don't even know what's going on and then school starting way
too early i know you said it's because of like it just it fits in line with everyone's schedule
but it's man dude kids circadian rhythm is way later than an adult's. Oh, yeah.
So, like, they start being able to function.
And I say they, I mean just, like, younger adolescent.
Yeah.
You know, like, somewhere around, like, 1 p.m.
So, like, at the end of school, that's when they're actually fully awake.
Right.
And then they send them off.
Right, right.
You know, so it's really hard.
And I don't have the answer.
I know with Jasmine, she's homeschooled now.
So she sleeps in a lot more than she used to.
Like she used to have to be up at like 4 or 5 in the morning
just to get to school on time, which is crazy.
But now that she's starting later,
she's able to concentrate a little bit better.
At least it seems like it right now.
When the kids are in like preschool, you know, I started, I remember, like, you know, they would do some of these activities, and then they would eat, and then they would, like, take a nap, right?
Mm-hmm.
And I was, like, one time I was just kind of, like, looking at, like, the foods that they were eating.
And I was trying not to be too wild and crazy about it, but I was just thinking about it. I'm like, man, like, okay, they do all this stuff
and we send them to this thing. And, and I'm like, oh my God, it's like, it's almost like you,
you send your kids somewhere because you're trying to have them have activity.
You don't really send your kids somewhere because you're trying to have them take a nap,
you don't really send your kids somewhere because you're trying to have them take a nap,
you know, and you send your kids off to, and I understand, like, I get it. I know why they do it because some of these kids are going to be grouchy if they don't get their nap. I, I understand how
it works, but if you look at what they do with these kids, they'll have them do some activities
and they, you know, learn their numbers and abcs and
stuff like that but then they feed them and when they feed them they give them a lot of carbs
right the carbs are going to kind of slow everything down after they had some recess
chocolate milk maybe like a muffin or something like that graham crackers and purple punch yeah
and but what do they do in prison they do like the same shit in prison yeah they they
kind of have the same schedule almost like when you're in prison they feed these guys a lot of
these uh carbohydrate rich foods to slow everybody down a little bit bring everybody's temper down a
little bit bring everybody's aggression down a little bit um bring everybody's you know mood
up a little bit maybe with some dessert right And then everyone's groggy and tired.
And it's just like, man, this is not, this is not a platform for education by any means.
Like this is a kind of a platform for snoozing and kind of a platform for them just, uh,
getting a little bit of exercise in maybe in the morning, which is good.
But yeah, I wish school was a little bit more practical too.
I wish people would, uh, teach people about how valuable it is to like own a home um how important it is to own a home and that that
should be it really depends on what you want to do with your life if you want to be a loner and
you want to be like an artist or something like that then maybe it doesn't matter as much but
if if uh if you want to have a family then you you kind of need assets. And one way to have an asset for a lot of people is to own a home.
Teach people to buy stuff outright and not have to owe shit.
Teach people to not use credit cards.
Teach people to not take student loans.
Man, student loans are ridiculous.
I mean, you're trading a lot of you're trading a lot of
time you don't you don't need an education a lot of times to get a job uh the job here i've we've
never looked at anyone's education one time i don't even really know who has what or who's done
what uh i know chris griffin's pretty smart and that's about it yeah i guess a genius but i don't don't really know or care all that much about the you know everyone else's uh education and and um educate i'm not saying
education is bad i'm just saying that um definitely if you're going to take like student loans and
stuff you have to really be aware of these things i think that i don't know for some reason credit
cards and these things like it's almost i know that everybody knows you have to pay them back and everybody understands that you do have to pay them at some point.
But I just don't think people understand how heavy it really is to really owe.
Yeah.
And you shouldn't have to owe much of anything.
Yeah, I know.
And I used to think this way, but I just know a lot of people think like, oh, I need a car, so I'm going to have a car payment.
That's just a part of life, and I'm okay with that.
No one should have a car payment.
Let's just say that to everybody right now.
Oh, shit.
No one should have a car payment.
There's not a lot of good reasons to have a car payment.
All right?
We got that clear?
No car payments.
Pay for what you can get.
Do you have any school loans?
What's your school loans looking like?
Just curious.
Throw a number out.
We're getting some info from...
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, sorry.
I was just asking Jessica Smith
what her...
Because I know she went to school
and she's all smart and stuff,
but yeah, she has $15,000 right now in debt.
That's tough, man.
It's just a lot of money.
It's not that it can't be paid back,
and she's doing the responsible thing by paying into it.
You keep paying into it and paying into it and paying into it,
and you get over it.
But I think a lot of us have also seen our parents,
and our parents are stupid too.
you know, a lot of us have also seen our parents and our parents are, are stupid too. You know,
they're, I mean, you know, my, my parents, you know, my, my dad is, you know, he's pretty sharp when it comes to like, my mom is too, sorry, mom. Uh, they're both, uh, they're both very, uh,
they're both very crafty when it comes to finances. But I think a lot of us have seen our parents,
um, talk about like mortgages and these
different things which i still don't know anything about i i don't really know how much the house
cost that we bought i've said this before i don't i don't know how much this place costs i i don't
know i don't know uh i don't know much of anything when it comes to that kind of stuff i don't really
understand a lot of it but i wish i learned it in school i guess is part of my point um but i was
smart enough to understand like i don't want to owe a bunch of shit so i wish i learned it in school i guess is part of my point um but i was smart enough to
understand like i don't want to owe a bunch of shit so i want to figure out ways of being able
to kind of buy things outright i realize that not everybody always has that choice with everything
and so sometimes you have to uh you know kind of make make certain decisions kind of based off of
where you're at but the problem is is people will make a decision and they'll get a car for like 600 bucks a month
or 900 bucks a month and it's like man you know you're riding that fine line why are you putting
so much pressure on yourself now you have to um you have to just work that much harder to to kind
of ease some of the pain of some of that and that that's uh a really tough thing to to have
weighing over your head
all the time yeah and people do that shit with like the new iphone yeah they'll like finance it
or lease it and uh man i mean i got really lucky with mine but uh that i i was looking at them
because they're getting expensive i'm just like there's a new new new one coming new new new one yeah it's not out yet no not yet it's just for pre-order but it starts at 10.99 and it goes up to
i think 1500 shit oh my oh okay yeah yeah it was funny when i went to get the one for the gym i
think i went to get like the one for the gym and my other new phone kind of at the same time. And it was like, I don't know, just some ridiculous amounts, like 1100 bucks or something.
And then it wasn't that much longer that another new one came out or something weird like that.
And I was like, geez, this is getting to be pretty, pretty, uh, pretty crazy.
But, uh, I will say that there's no single, uh, thing that you own in your life that's probably more
important than your car and your phone right i mean those two things are pretty damn important
um your house it's kind of a different thing and it's different lifestyle for different people
different people are into different things but yeah your phone's pretty damn important yeah uh
being on it and wasting a bunch of time's not not not
great but there's just a lot you can do with it you know it really enhances it elon musk you know
talked about how we are already cybernetic organisms i thought that was pretty crazy i
watched 60 minutes last night i know how old am i right Watching 60 minutes So you know you're about ready to die
Probably right
But there was this technology
This kid was wearing this piece
In his ear and it kind of ran along
His jaw and went towards his mouth
And the
Guy who was interviewing him said
All these kids by the way they were from
Like MIT
And just super super brilliant kids I think they were from like MIT and just super, super brilliant kids.
I think they only accept like 50 students at a time or so.
Just, I don't know.
It's just wild.
These kids are geniuses.
But this kid, he had this thing on his head.
He's probably only like 19 years old.
The interviewer asked him, he's like, hey, what's 4,975, you know, times know times whatever now the kid didn't even say anything
the machine that was attached to his head didn't didn't listen it doesn't hear anything
it only reads your thoughts so the kid thought about the question that was asked to him he
repeated it back in his head without speaking it to this computer thing
that's hooked up to his to his ear and then he uh repeated the answer back to the guy that's so bad
what if a chick walks in yeah well i mean you gotta keep it to yourself i guess um they somehow
were and i don't know if this was just for purposes of showing you how the thing was working but the words were popping up on the
screen of um of how this process was basically google downloading in his head and i kind of
almost wonder if that's what elon musk was talking about on the joe rogan podcast
but um just i mean there's some crazy things coming out that are
that are really going to lead but and that's like, I guess, you know, back to the school thing.
I mean, I, I, I'd like to see, um, as I was seeing all this stuff with like MIT, I was
like, man, it'd be amazing if a school like this existed for nutrition and for health
and, and they were really studying.
And now there's just not as much, well, there's money to be made, but there's also money to be lost. And so I think that, uh, if we made everybody healthy, that we'd be, we might be in a lot of trouble, but they had some crazy robots and some crazy things. And I can run up and down the stairs for sure with these prosthetics. It was pretty crazy.
I'll beat that guy's ass.
That guy hasn't seen me going up and down stairs.
Lived in a house with stairs the majority of my life.
I'm pretty good with the steps.
I can go down them pretty fast.
In regards to the new, well, I guess the new iPhone, but the new iOS update,
I was telling you about,
when it comes to limiting how much time you're on your phone.
Oh, yeah.
I know Android users are probably like, oh, welcome to 93.
We've had this on our phone forever.
But you can actually set limits on how much screen time you have on certain apps.
Those Android people, they're really hanging on, aren't they?
It's amazing how mad everybody gets. They're going to they're really hanging on, aren't they? It's amazing how mad
everybody gets. They're going to come light this podcast
on fire.
They get so
angry.
Anyway, as we were talking about
a lot of this, there were some other people that we just
had in mind, and I was talking about
the speech from Kevin Durant.
We'll attach that to this podcast.
Kevin Durant, when he attach that to this podcast. Kevin Durant, you know, he, when he
got the MVP for the NBA about two years ago, he went up and gave this great speech and he talked
about his mom and he talked about how she was so critical to everything that he ever did and how
she always made sure they had food and all this stuff. But he said he remembers they moved into an apartment
and it was him, his mom, and maybe like another family member.
And they just sat on the couch and they just cried
because they were like, this is so wonderful to be in this apartment
with this cool couch.
Like they were so happy.
They were so like overcome with joy that they cried.
He really like enjoyed that moment
with his uh mom and it kind of you know it's a story of like here's a guy and and his mom who
didn't have a whole lot he grew up with nothing so there's definitely a lot of pain associated with
even though he had a loving mom which is amazing and that helped guide him through everything
um they had a lot of pain when it came to finances, which is a pain for a lot of people.
A lot of marriages, they still say that, you know,
more marriages are destroyed by the pain of finances
than they are about, you know, people cheating on each other
and stuff like that.
So it was just a really cool speech too.
He's talking about his mom, you know,
or at least I think he was talking about his mom,
waking him up and making him run yeah and uh you know making sure he was well fed too to be strong
to play basketball and stuff like that yeah when he's talking about the apartment i thought it was
great because he was like we got our apartment and he's like man we thought we made it yeah i was
like shit yeah yeah yeah and then now he's making $100 million a year or something, something, uh, something really crazy like that. You know, we think about, uh, some of these other people that we've kind of run into over the years, a guy like Pete Rubish, you know, Pete Rubish. Um, you know, he's a guy that like would gut out these crazy, crazy sets of deadlifts.
shut out these crazy, crazy sets of deadlifts.
And there's a video that Andrew and I were watching,
an old video from Super Training that was edited by our boy Kevin Sampson.
And he's the fuck your elbow guy.
Shout out to him.
Kevin put together this great video about how you use this fuel, you use these negative things that people say and you use it as ammo and you turn it
into uh you turn it into a weapon and you use it against people because people will say shit to you
they're going to tell you that you're never going to make it they're going to tell you you're never
going to amount to anything they're going to tell you you're too short you're too tall you're too
fat you're too this you're too that and they don't understand none of it makes any sense because
these people they don't know your heart they don't know who you are that. And they don't understand. None of it makes any sense because these people,
they don't know your heart. They don't know who you are deep down inside. They don't understand
your mindset. They can't look inside your body and understand how bad you want to actually do
these things. And so you can't ever absorb those things. It doesn't make any sense to really
absorb them. But what you can do is you can take note of it and you can say, Hey, thank you very much. This is going to come back at you tenfold. And I'm going to make you
eat these words that you just said, because now you got a point to prove somebody just told you
that you can't do it. And now you got to show people that you can. And I think people ended
up liking somebody like Pete Rubish so much, because I think they felt that way when they watched him lift. I
think everybody kind of almost, it's almost like a, it's almost like a superhero. You're kind of
drawn into it because you kind of feel like, like this is the underdog, like the superhero is the
underdog until, until the superpowers come out. And what does that kind of tell you? It's kind
of the same scenario, right? That I just said, these people don't really know you,
right? Like if you're to mess with Clark Kent, you don't really know what you're getting into.
You think you're messing with a nerd and now you're about to get jacked up, right? Because
Superman's got these crazy powers because he's an alien basically, right? And a lot of us have
these powers within us. A lot of us have this strength within us and we have this determination within us that other people can't see. And it's your job every day to show people what that
actually looks like. That's what we're trying to do when we're in the gym. That's what we're
trying to do when we're working really hard. That's what we're trying to do for our children.
When you wake up in the morning and we go to work every day, we're trying to set that example. We're
trying to show people like what's on the inside. It's really easy for everybody to kind of see what's on the
outside. They might see that you're smiling. They might see that you're nice to other people and all
those things are really important too. But you want people to see what's on the inside. You want
people to, and I've said this before too, you don't want people to identify you as a certain thing like oh mark bell he's a powerlifter mark
bell he's a bodybuilder no they say mark bell that's a hard-working son of a bitch whether
they like me or not right they say you know what man like that guy seems to be everywhere like
seems like he works his ass off that's what you want people to say you want people to know you
for that work ethic and again you're you can use a lot of fuel
that you've heard over the years a lot of things that you were told um andrew and i were discussing
this before the podcast and i was saying here's andrew you know 10 15 years later from you know
his dad making a comment about him uh when i think you're wearing a tank top or something right i was
actually shirtless yeah we had just went swimming even worse yes yeah we went swimming at collins lake we still go there a lot
but yeah i was walking next to two of my cousins and my dad was just pointing out like at their
physique i mean we were i was probably 10 so they would have been 12 and like 13 and he's just like
pointing out like you know they look like they were in shape or whatever.
And he looks at me and he's like, oh, look at ours.
Ours sucks.
Yeah.
Brutal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's brutal.
And it's like, but, but anyway, you know, you, you know, it's, uh, you know, 20 something years later and here you are meal prepping, training, right?
Like, and it, it leads to these things and it doesn't have to always necessarily be
negative i mean sometimes we say things that we don't really realize how hard it's going to cut
somebody i'm sure your dad didn't like you know mean to have it be like something that would sting
so hard i mean maybe he was even just kind of kidding around or maybe he just didn't think
you were here you could hear it yeah i don't think he could he knew that i could hear him yeah because
like you know most of the time you don't want someone to hear when you're saying something
like that you're trying to say something kind of dumb um but the impact that it can have and what
it can do and how it can fuel you um well then you know then you're kind of burdened with carrying
that on forever you're like 10 or 11 years old you don't even really know what any of that really
means but yeah you do kind of look around you're like those guys are kind of like bigger than me
and as you get older and realize like shit man maybe i am kind of skinny like maybe i should do
something about it and you get more and more fired up and you keep trying and trying and trying some
people just go the opposite way some people like you know i'm not into any of that because i've
been burned with that whole situation.
I've had nothing but negative feedback from it, and I don't want anything to do with it.
Yeah, it's safe to say that's what happened to me because then it was like,
you know, once I got old enough to play football, it's like, well, your cousins are doing it.
I'm just like, well, yeah, they're bigger than me.
Yeah, I don't look like them.
Yeah, that's what it was.
Yeah, I don't look like them.
Yeah.
Yeah, you don't look like them, and you don't feel as confident as they do right maybe but um yeah the
good thing is you can kind of take you can kind of take some of that uh mindset some of that attitude
and you can use it for you know you can use it for good things and you can take uh think other
things that people said about you and you can turn it into something
turn that shit into fuel we dropped off there off ig because it lets you do it for only so long but
um you know steve johnson is another guy you know we've seen steve johnson do that deadlift
challenge we've talked about that before those two guys going back and forth so much that you
know one dude ends up or they both ended up in the hospital, I think, from that epic deadlift battle they had in the animal cage years ago.
And even like, I mean, even, you know, watch my favorite movie of all time is, well, I guess two of my favorite movies.
There's a lot of like pain in, in both of
them, but like, you looked at something like Rocky, Rocky was the underdog.
He was never given a shot.
Rocky thought so poorly of himself that when the idea of him fighting Apollo Creed for
the championship, he didn't even know that they, that that's what was going to happen.
Like they're telling him, you know, Hey hey you get this chance to fight the champ and he was like hey listen you know um i just want to let you guys
know that i'm not going to take any cheap shots in uh in sparring and stuff like that and i'll
be a good you know i'll be a really good sparring partner for apollo and they're like no no you're
not here to spar him you're here to fight him but he he didn't understand he didn't comprehend that because he didn't feel like he was on that level and then of course obviously like what
happened happened obviously it's just a movie but um you know the same thing with uh you know
braveheart you know braveheart they they kill his wife right and then he gets revenge on everybody
and that's what ends up making that movie so exciting is like, he, not only does he get to like, uh, have revenge on everybody.
It's like, and then some, you know, he gets to like get revenge and then he just gets to kill all these people and just, uh, take out all this, uh, aggression.
I didn't even really think about it, but probably my favorite movie is a major league.
And that's your leagues.
Awesome.
Dude.
I love that.
Wesley Snipes, Charlie Sheen, way back.
But same thing.
The team was built to lose on purpose.
Right.
And then once they found out,
they're like, what the fuck?
And they ended up winning the pennant.
Spoiler alert.
Yeah.
Yeah, that is an amazing movie.
I love that movie.
Damn, that's a good movie.
But as you're going through these workouts and as you're just going through life,
just think about the resistance and some of the things that you're getting hit with every single day.
Pain is temporary.
It's not going to last forever, but you can utilize that pain to build you up.
You can utilize that pain.
You can utilize that resistance to build to, um, to build up your
muscle, to build up your mind, to callous your mind so that things, when, when things happen
again and again and again, um, they'll just hurt less. You'll be more prepared for them. You know,
um, there's going to be, uh, tragedies. There's gonna be all kinds of things that happen to you
in your life that, uh, you don't have any control over. But what you do have control over is your own actions.
You have control over building yourself up mentally, physically.
You have control over being positive.
You have control over changing a lot of these shitty things that happen, these challenges.
You have the ability to turn those things into triumphs and you can turn
your pain into power bitch i said i said me i was like i said me you really said that you really
said that i swear to god i looked her in the eye and i told her, I look into her soul and I've told her, I said,
that's gotta be my favorite skit.
It's hard to follow up that.
Not of all time though.
I don't think, I don't know.
It's hard to have a favorite.
I mean, you know, favorites, favorite skit of all time for Saturday Night Live.
How, what do you got?
Um, when, uh, Will Ferrell comes out born full bearded. Oh man. favorite skit of all time for saturday night live how what do you got um when uh will ferrell
comes out born full bearded oh man oh it's hot in there he's all wet
that's good i don't know how that happens but we refer to that all the time right i don't know why
but we talked about that so good need more cowbell's, yeah. But what's funny is because, like, I had, that was already a staple, like, in the, like, best of, like, for me before I ever walked into this gym.
But I get here and it's like, boy, it was hot in there.
Like, I know what you're talking about.
Yeah, that was awesome.
Of course, I always love, like, the old In Living Color stuff.
That was pretty ridiculous. Yeah, a lot of good ones In Living Color stuff. It's pretty ridiculous.
Yeah, a lot of good ones.
Fire Marshal Bill.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Just chopping his thumb off and lighting himself on fire.
Yeah, Jim Carrey.
Jim Carrey is amazing.
Yeah.
The homeless guy.
I don't know what he does.
Oh, with the pickle in the jar, like the little poop in the jar?
Yep, yep.
He's like, what's your sign?
We'll work for food.
Yeah.
That was a great show.
That was a great time.
Comedy was, like, such a big thing then, you know?
And you don't really see it.
It kind of, I don't know, it'll come and go here and there,
but you don't really see it, you know,
surging as hard as it was back then.
And then there was, like, more skits and stuff on TV.
Uh,
there was kids in the hall,
kids in the hall.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Matt TV was good too.
I remember just being a kid staying up and then like switching back and forth.
And then eventually like kind of started getting weird and not funny anymore for me,
at least kids in the hall.
It's actually really weird.
And it's always really gay, and they're always dressed up.
The men are dressed up as women.
It's really crazy over the top, but it's funny as hell.
There was one skit.
One of my favorite ones from Kids in the Hall is the flying pig one.
You ever see that?
Mm-mm.
It's so random, but the flying pig that, uh,
like people will be like waiting in line and,
uh,
you know, they're just like,
I don't know.
They're getting agitated.
They're getting frustrated,
like waiting in line for food or they're waiting in line at the bank.
And then the flying pig comes and cheers everybody up.
And then it's as if they weren't waiting at all.
And the flying pig just leaves.
There it is.
The flying pig.
Look how excited everybody is. They're so pumped. And the guy like doesn't get it is the flying pig look how excited everybody is so pumped
and the guy like doesn't get it he's like what is this um so yeah they had a lot of they had a lot
of a lot of great skits um siren live wise i mean you got to love some of the chris farley stuff
uh the motivational speaker has got to be you know, one of the, one of the greatest
skits of all time because he's making everybody else in the room die laughing and they can't
hold back.
Everybody else starts dying laughing while he's doing his thing and it's live, you know?
Um, his name is Matt Foley.
I'm Matt Foley and I'm a motivational speaker.
Yeah.
It's a living in a van down by the river.
Skip.
Yep.
There it is.
Yeah.
He's, he was, he was amazing.
Tommy Boyle was a great one, but black, black sheep was amazing.
Yeah.
Black sheep is good.
He was in a lot of good. He was in a lot of good,
he was in a lot of good stuff.
I'm trying to think of,
I mean,
he was in,
well,
the one with the Chicago Bears,
that's another good one
that he did.
The Bears.
Yeah.
What was the other skit
I was thinking of
the other day?
Ah,
shit.
Hot shit,
I lost it.
I was thinking of the other day.
Ah, shit.
Hot shit.
I lost it.
It's a black sheep when they're in the cop car that has NOS,
and it starts leaking, and then Chris Farley looks back,
and he's like, oh, my God, we're stoned.
I was watching Chris Farley the other day.
It was Tommy Boy.
And there was that whole scene with the car door.
And we were talking about that the other day.
What did you do?
Yeah.
He's ridiculous.
Oh, the other skit that's really good with Chris Farley is,
and it's kind of sad because they said they think that this was like,
depicted him the best, was the one where he was all nervous.
Do you remember that skit?
And he would like meet like, uh,
Tom Cruise and he'd be like,
Hey,
remember,
remember that time?
You remember that time?
Remember that time?
And he's like all nervous and he's like rubbing his hands on his,
uh,
pants.
And he,
he just like having a really hard time getting it out.
And he's like,
Hey,
remember that time?
Like,
uh,
shit.
He's like,
yo,
Oh,
Oh God,
God. Uh, you were in that, you were in that you're in that movie uh top gun remember that remember that and like somebody like tom gun or tom cruise
would be like yeah yeah i remember that he'd be like that was awesome that was awesome and then
like he had nothing to say but he was just like a mega fan he was all excited and he said that
in the uh documentary on uh chris farley they said that's the way he really was he was all excited and they said that in the documentary on uh chris farley they said that's
the way he really was he was like actually really apprehensive and really like super uh like nervous
and scared of the world period and uh that they thought that that's why he was able to uh to pull
that sketch off so well you know because he because he acted so... He acted like...
He just did a good job of acting like
the way a fan acts sometimes when
they meet somebody who's famous.
Anyway, we got some
benching to do.
Right? Dude, I'm excited. Yeah. We gotta work
these pecs!
These pecs ain't gonna work themselves. Are we gonna
bench first or are we going to do other stuff?
I don't know.
It's been a little bit since we just started off with the bench, hasn't it?
We definitely stay healthier.
Not that we've gotten hurt, but, you know, it'd be kind of nice to hit that bench up first.
It'd be kind of nice to hit that bench up first.
Yeah, it's nice to stay a little healthier when we do other stuff first before we get injured.
Before we start out with the main kind of compound movement.
We did that yesterday or two days ago with deadlift.
And we did deadlift at the end of the workout.
And it ended up working out pretty good for you. You ended up lifting pretty damn good at the end of the workout and uh ended up working out pretty good for uh for you you ended up lifting pretty damn good at the end of the workout yeah 285 for a triple yeah and it was
uh off the floor which was great um yeah that was that was awesome yeah you had the uh you had the
55 pound you get the bumper plates on there and you had some tens on there right yeah i i didn't
know what it was i looked
over i didn't see him i'm like hey uh how much weight was that and then him and jason were like
oh it's 240 240 245 and i'm like are you sure and he's like no no no wait we'll be like no 285 i was
like okay cool yeah that's that's a big a big improvement and i i think that's the most weight
you ever picked up off the ground period. Yeah. Yeah.
Cause we did a lot, we did a lot of lat work.
I know.
That's why I was really confused.
Cause like I was kind of tired that day.
Then we did everything on the cables and all the other work.
And then all of a sudden it's like, Whoa, my deadlift feels good today.
A lot of people need a lot of warmup for deadlift.
I think maybe like if you're more experienced and it might hurt a little bit to have too much going on. But, um, my experience and what we've seen in the gym is like,
you can do quite a bit of like speed work. We used to do a lot of speed deadlifts and then,
um, you'd be six or eight sets into your speed deadlifts. And then sometimes we would just work
up and people would hit like near maxes all the time with with ease because it's like your nervous system's
finally like okay yep i'm ready to go it takes a lot it takes a while it takes a while for your
body to really and that's there's some days where you just feel it there's some days you pick it up
yeah and it just feels like nothing for me it was a little harder because like the week before
i kind of went all in on that, that wagon wheel deadlift.
And the week before that, I kind of did higher reps from the floor.
And so it was probably too many weeks of, uh, trying to pull the heavier weights off the ground.
So it probably wasn't smart.
So this next week I'll have to go back a little bit and, uh, you know, maybe not even deadlift, which is, which is always the hard thing to do.
You know, I'll probably just, uh, do some like bent over roads, real heavier, real hard
and, uh, get into some other movements, but it's, um, it's a difficult thing to understand,
but if you can pull back a little bit, then you can propel forward that much better.
And, you know, something that we share here on the power project a lot is about, you know,
your performance is crucial and, and the way that you train is crucial and if it's if that's impeded by anything
if it's impeded by your own training then it's a problem if it's impeded by doing too much work
then it's a huge problem if it's impeded by not sleeping enough that's a problem if it's impeded
by not not um getting enough hydration in like
these are all major issues and you have to figure out ways of of solving it and um i see too many
people just following their program like oh it's my programming right and it's like hey you know
what that's dumb you're doing that uh your program isn't dumb and your coach isn't dumb it's dumb
that you're following it to a t because your coach isn't right there on top of you all the time to see everything.
Or you're not communicating with them enough.
You have to communicate a lot back to whoever's helping you in order for them to actually truly help you.
You have to say, hey, you know what?
I think we're running out of luck here.
We've been pushing the deadlift heavy for three weeks in a row.
And I think, uh, it might be good to just pull back a tiny bit or maybe get rid of an
assistance exercise.
Like I'm working really hard.
I'm doing everything you say, but I'm starting to really feel grizzled.
You know?
Yeah.
And I've been feeling a little tired.
So I'm, I'm glad that I pulled 285 and I'll be totally 100% content with going back down and doing whatever the hell we got going on next week.
You run out of room too.
Like you run out of space to continue.
You can't just get stronger every single time that you go to lift.
It just doesn't work that way.
It takes time.
And I think for today, I would love to start out with bench, but I'm also worried that I'm going to be too excited and want to go bonkers.
You know, um, you know what we could do?
We could slingshot her up and, uh, handle something heavy and then we can go wrong or some regular bench.
That might be a good idea.
Okay.
Slingshot!
There's some sort of code, right, to get slingshots, like 15% off?
15% any and all slingshots at markbellslingshot.com
with the promo code POWERPROJECT.
That's crazy.
Are you serious?
What's the website?
markbellslingshot.com
Oh, my God.
They just got to type in POWERPROJECT?
Yeah, check out, enter code POWERPROJECT, Slingshot.com. Oh, my God. They just got to type in Power Project? Yeah.
Check out.
Enter code Power Project.
You're going to get 15% off.
Everything is in the description and or iTunes show notes.
Strength is never weakness.
Weakness is never strength.
Catch you guys later.