Mark Bell's Power Project - The Power Project's Best Moments Of 2023!
Episode Date: December 21, 2023In this Supercut, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza go over their best moments of 2023. Official Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://...discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! The Athletic/Casual Clothes we're wearing! 🕺 ➢ https://vuori.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! 💤 The Best Cooling Mattress in the GAME! 🛌 ➢ https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! 🥩 HIGH QUALITY PROTEIN! 🍖 ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Best STYLISH Barefoot Casual/Training Shoes! 👟 ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! 🩸 Get your BLOODWORK Done! 🩸 ➢ https://marekhealth.com/PowerProject to receive 10% off our Panel, Check Up Panel or any custom panel! Best 5 Finger Barefoot Shoes! 👟 ➢ https://Peluva.com/PowerProject Code POWERPROJECT15 to save 15% off Peluva Shoes! Sleep Better and TAPE YOUR MOUTH (Comfortable Mouth Tape) 🤐 ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject to receive a year supply of Hostage Tape and Nose Strips for less than $1 a night! 🥶 The Best Cold Plunge Money Can Buy 🥶 ➢ https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! Self Explanatory 🍆 ➢ Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: You Need Greens in your Life 🥦 ➢https://drinkag1.com/powerproject Receive a year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs! ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements! ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel! 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)
The most successful guys, they're all in really good shape.
Those things are connected.
If I really was living the way I was,
I wouldn't be able to complete a tour like I did.
Or if your belief is that the only way
that you can raise men up is by putting women down,
that doesn't sound like a very noble, masculine thing to do.
Like, how are you gonna call yourself a real man
by standing on the shoulders of women
that you've mistreated?
So, I mean, I was on anabolic steroids
and ran cycles for nine years.
I tried a pretty big cycle. It was the biggest cycle of my life going into that meet. So, one and a half was on anabolic steroids and ran cycles for nine years. I tried a pretty big cycle.
It was the biggest cycle of my life going into that meet.
So one and a half grams of test, right?
You are a fighter that probably gets some of the most steroid accusations
because you're built like a bodybuilder.
This is the sus stuff that you were warning me about before we got started.
This is why people on the internet believe that you and Seema have a closet that you
need to come out of.
If you're a guy, it's not attractive to be emotionally volatile and it's not safe as
we've learned from Dana White and other people.
So we don't really have a weight loss issue here in the United States because they did
do it.
They showed that they could do it, but then it was hard to maintain because people have
the wrong idea about nutrition and probably about fitness. Tom Segura. What do you do about like,
you know, your former fat guy self? Like, what do you do about like cravings and how have you
navigated that? It does seem like you still enjoy a lot of stuff. Seems like you enjoy
stuff with your family. It seems like you enjoy stuff on the road because you are traveling to some places that
maybe other people don't get an opportunity to go to yeah and it sounds like you're a little bit
like me in the sense of like i'm going to travel somewhere and they're known for something i'm
going to fucking eat that thing yeah i mean i think it's like i'm i'm like careful of like how I say this to people. It's like, I don't think it's a good idea to start off,
uh,
with like the,
like if you're like just beginning,
like I,
I need to get healthy and you lose weight to give yourself a bunch of
permissions.
Yeah.
No great,
no gray zones,
no gray.
Yeah.
To like allow yourself to indulge in all these things.
If you're like,
I've been unhealthy. I'm trying to, you to you know i mean so it's like you i feel like i've been like
kind of in the like going after this now for a minute for a little while so basically what i do
is i just i've learned a lot of little things like i've learned that one of the things that is fully possible is like if you have some crazy dessert
that like i can try it like have a bite and be like that was good that's crazy isn't it
yeah but i never thought like that i never thought like that i i really didn't i always
thought that like well i have to eat this entire fucking thing like i just it feels crazy to say but like a lot of things i just go
like oh yeah like and then guess what like that's not going to ruin your physique or your mind right
like but it's really hard i think when you're at the beginning of that to be like yeah i just try
by like people who are not used to that it it's hard to do. It's hard to go
have one
when someone's used to having
seven.
I think we actually talked
about this a couple
years ago where it was
like, just don't
do that. Don't
allow yourself this great...
Don't be a baby. I said that, by the way, on a podcast. I was like, oh, Mark Bell yourself this this great yeah don't be a baby yeah and i
mean i said that by the way on a pocket i was like oh mark bell said this thing and people were like
the fuck are you talking about like i was because mark was like you know who doesn't like who needs
snacks like children and so i told people that and people flooded me was like i have snacks what the
fuck are you talking about like like we're allowed to snack. And I was like, but here's the thing. I know what you meant.
I know what you meant.
And people who understood it,
you know what I mean?
It's the,
you know what I mean?
It's people,
people will always hear what they want to hear,
see what they want to see.
You know,
the call always comes from inside the house.
So it's like,
you can say something to somebody,
they spin it.
And you're just like,
enjoy yourself.
I don't,
I'm not going to fucking debate you on this whole thing. Like what you're saying is like, you don't have to indulge every
time you feel like I need something to eat right now. Okay. So somebody who can't wrap their head
around that concept, I'm not going to spend time explaining it to, you know, you're not going to
DM them back forever. Snacks are hard though, dude. Because like I, even me, like I used to
just have food around all the time. And then when I doing that i got mad yeah yeah you get a little cranky
when you don't have a little snacky poo man yeah you do yeah yeah it's tough it's a change it's a
it's a but i mean look i think you end up finding things that like i don't know like i i remember
i remember seeing this on like a show one time and being like, this fucking Momo.
Talking about this guy was like, yogurt and blueberries.
This was like 10 years ago.
He's like, yogurt and blueberries, you fucking tool.
It's like, I eat it every day.
And I love a yogurt.
I do.
I fucking love it. Yeah, you have like a palate for it now.
I do.
And it's like, this one yogurt, it's like 17, 18 grams of protein.
Blueberries have this really great, it's like 17, 18 grams of protein. Blueberries have this really great,
it's like a super food, whatever.
It balances out the palate from the kind of the yogurt taste.
It adds a little bit of, it's not too sweet,
but I have it all the time.
I have it all the time.
I like it.
Figuring out those little things.
And then yeah, I'll have an indulgence
had that amazing burger that I told you guys to go to but it's like you know I had it and uh
I don't know I'm not gonna have it for a while you know I mean like the the real
slippery slope for people I think like myself included is if I'm like that was going that was
great I'm gonna take you guys right now and And then tomorrow I'm going to take my, like you start like just overdoing stuff, which is like, that's pretty much the definition of being overweight is that you are overeating.
You know, you're calorically in a surplus.
So you, I think you, once you learn to like navigate the path, you go like, all right, I'm going to have this indulgence, but I'm not going to do this all the time.
I'm going to do it this week, and maybe I'll do it again next month.
That is something you can do.
But like we originally talked about, I don't think it's a good place to start at if you're like, I'm really struggling with food.
Yeah, we had a guy on the show years ago or not too
long ago that said uh you can only break the rules when you know them you know i mean it's a great
point and then same thing with comedy right chapelle can go up there and just like do whatever
because he understands the rules so well he's fucking unbelievable dude he can do things that
i've never seen i remember he went up at this arena and like arenas are just so different like you
know you're used to seeing comedy performed in clubs and that's really how it's designed for
it's an intimate art form he can do like quiet soft-spoken storytelling like he's telling you like it's you three at the table and then you
look up and there's like 18 000 people and he was doing this with like his special had just
come out so he had no new material most people like when you have no new material you go keep
me in the small clubs to figure stuff out so that i can take it to the big room it's the natural way he was
like no just do the arena so he worked out stuff with 18 000 people and i was like and like and
the thing is like he's so just gifted as a orator like somebody that can just talk that
they were just like that was incredible and you're yeah, that's the first time he's said that. Like, that wasn't even, it's just, yeah.
Another thing I think in terms of food,
what I think could be important for a lot of people,
and it sounds like such a, I don't know,
it sounds like a little over-the-top fitness advice,
but just go to fucking bed.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like, you're done with your set, go to your room. If you need i mean like yeah you're done with your set
go to your room if you need to eat something because you're actually hungry like maybe it's
something that's healthy but go this has happened to me countless this was the other night because
i mean i don't want it to sound like i'm not coming for saying any of this stuff from like
i have this all figured out this is like always a work in progress thing but it was just like the other night i got
home on the not golden tiger night and uh it was like you know everyone was asleep i was like ah
it's like i don't know it was like 11 30 or something i'm gonna get something to eat i
started like walking to the kitchen and i kind of like i just kind of stopped like literally in like the middle
of the hallway and i was like i'm not hungry like i just stopped i go i'm not i'm not hungry right
now i just want to taste something you know i mean like i was it's not gonna be good i go it's not i
mean i didn't think i was gonna go for like something even crazy indulgent but i was just
like why eat
anything right now I was like can I go to bed right now without eating and I
literally had like the conversation in my head standing in the hall and then I
was like yeah just turn around go to you know it was like it was like a waste it
was gonna be just wasteful eating it was there was no purpose to it other than
like spending time doing it I I was like, just go.
Like if my stomach was groaning, I would have been like, oh, you're really hungry. You know,
like there's hunger pain. But I was like, just go to bed. If no one else is awake and no one sees
it, the calories don't count. That's true. Yeah. They don't count again. The other one,
and this is super obvious, but I mean, I've told so many friends this. Like, you'd be surprised.
You'd be really surprised that you will not eat what you don't have in the house.
Like, if you're like, man, I keep eating these fucking, like, you know, chocolate bars.
You're like, yeah, you know, it's crazy.
Because if you don't buy them, you won't eat them.
People are like, well, my kids.
And it's like, oh, your seven-year-old kid drives to the store and buys granola bars. Well, yeah, because the funny thing is with my kids are snack hounds,
you know, they're just monsters. Yeah, you'll see how it goes. What happens is they go,
I want the granola. And you're like, we don't have it. And they're like, all right,
what else do we have? Like, they just go right to the next thing. They'll eat what is available.
Yeah. With all the habits that you've changed so far at this point
because like something that we've mentioned before is a lot of people almost become they
they feel like they become different people yeah as they change and as they change their habits but
like you've always you've been a successful comedian for a very long time you've been doing
business at a very high level for a long time and recently maybe past three or four years you
really changed your shape like you look younger now than you did
10 years ago crazy so i'm curious like did your skill and other things the way you do business
the way you do comedy did that change at all or is it just like you're in better shape and that's
the big deal um i do think it all has like a you know like a domino effect like thing like
i mean i've heard people say they're like that discipline in one facet of your life
will bleed in to other parts of your life. But you were already super disciplined
in comedy. I was. I was disciplined in that.
I do feel like it kind of connects things more.
You kind of develop
more skills. you become more focused um because you're
you're not allowing because it was basically like do these things and then let this thing slide by
so now you're like don't let that slide by and what happens is you go i'm not gonna let that
slide by and it makes you look around at anything else so you start being a little more you tighten
everything else you know up and it like yeah i think you do become like sharper at your business
stuff because i mean you know when you look at i've talked about this even before i was even
doing anything to take care of myself health-wise it's like the most successful guys in like
entertainment let's say like movies they're all in really good shape.
And I don't mean that they're in good shape because their bodies need it.
But Kevin Hart, he's a fitness lunatic.
Mark Wahlberg, same thing.
The Rock, same thing.
Cruz, he's in great shape.
same thing the rock same thing cruise he's in great shape all those guys are like very disciplined with their health and then they are also like really on top of all their business
stuff like they all have multiple businesses that they work with you know they have like
different whether it's like car stuff gym stuff uh they work with banks and shoe sponsors.
Like, they have all these other things going on.
And, like, their physical health is a huge priority.
So I think those things are connected.
It's not just, oh, you know, this is randomly happening.
It's like, I think it's all tied together.
So, yeah, I think it's like you're doing what I do.
Also, like, the truth is like if i really
was living the way i was physically 10 years ago i wouldn't be able to complete a tour like i did
you you literally cannot complete how many dates was it we did um 303 shows in uh 171 cities
in one year and in how long? 21 months.
But I mean, there's a lot of movement, you know?
A lot of movement.
There was a few times where we did, I think it was on average, what, there's 30 days a month,
where we did like 24 to 26 shows in a month.
And that was on average, you you know a city every other day so you think about like
the amount of travel if you're really like i don't lift i don't eat well and i don't move
i mean i got sick still i got sick on that tour probably six seven times and that was like
that was with being on top of stuff and like i told you like
not really drinking not still because your your body is like breaking down from like all and then
the stress of performing and then you do two shows in a night sometimes so you're like you know you're
you're wrapping up at like 1 a.m and you're on a bus and you sleep like shit on the bus and you
get to the next city it's five in the morning checking like so that wear and tear if you're not taking care of yourself at all
i mean you just completely fall apart chris williamson as you've gotten older what i've
found is that i've been able to become more vulnerable with my friendships with these two
and with other male friends i have in my life because i know that in my mid-20s let's say i
was in a relationship or something and shit would be going down. Shit would be horrible. Buddy asked, Hey man, how's shit going
with things are good. Right. And I've found that like over time, I don't know why I've become more
comfortable being vulnerable. Maybe it's talking with y'all, but that has been so beneficial to my
friendships, to my life overall. Um, and I just wish, I wish I was able to, I was comfortable enough being more vulnerable in
my twenties or mid twenties.
When do you think, or what do you think has allowed you to become more vulnerable as a
individual with your audience and also your friends and people in your life?
Self-confidence, I think, and the belief that I'm not inherently flawed as a person, lots of people, right? So the difference between your
experience of yourself and your experience of everybody else is like a million to one in terms
of resolution. Okay. So all that I know about you, even though we've spent the last day pretty
much together and trained and been to sauna and all the rest of it all that i've got to see is what
you've done in terms of body language and what you've said right and all that that is is a squeezed
rough resolution version of what you meant to say and all that that is is a selection of the things
that you thought that you could have said right but what you've got to experience is a million
times a second all of the different vacillations between the promise you
made yourself about breakfast this morning that you broke and that idea that you could have said,
but you didn't say accurately. And the thought that you've forgotten about all everything.
And because of that, it leads us to believe that we are inherently more flawed than everybody else,
because from the outside looking in, everybody else looks like they've got it together
because they don't vacillate in the same sort of a way it's like no no no everybody is failing forward permanently everybody is
chronically uncertain about the decisions that they make and all the rest of it and it takes
time to realize i think that that's the way that people are designed and if you get more comfortable
over time you can start to open up um i also think that the sort of machismo, men don't have problems thing falls away pretty quickly
because you're like, fuck, dude, who are you kidding?
And we've got great role models,
people like Cam Haines, Goggins,
who open up about brutal abuse
and frankly, pretty embarrassing things.
Goggins brought in the audio version of Never
Finished he brings his mum on for 45 minutes to hear her speak about how she was going to take
her own life when he was 10 or 11 years old and the only reason that she didn't is because she
knew that she would leave David and Trunas Jr. with this tyrant of a father and he sits and
listens to his mother talk about this and partway through he says mom do
you want to have a break and she says no i'm going to keep going i was like fuck that's some goggins
genetics in that you can see that she's got a dog in her as well and um you know if you have a role
model like that like who the fuck am i to say that i shouldn't be able to open up about being bullied as a kid in school you know like I wasn't locked in a furnace and whipped with a belt like Goggins dad was like
you know it's not it's it gives me bravery to go out and talk about stuff like that so I think
that's part of it and just growing up man and realizing that life is richer when you open up
to people and I don't I fundamentally disagree with people that say,
if you're vulnerable to those around you,
they'll use it against you.
How about opening up to a woman?
How do you feel about that?
Just because the reason why I ask you that is,
you know, red pill ideology,
men who are talking about opening up to women
on that end of things,
they believe that if you do that,
well, your woman will see you as a weak
and she'll leave you.
Never show your vulnerability to a woman is one of the rules.
So I think that it's very dependent on the sort of woman that you get with.
And I think that if you are hypothetically living in a city, let's say like Miami, where there are lots of supercars and lots of tequila and everybody wears red bottom lubes and they're all, everyone's got a hundred grand Rolex
or whatever. The kind of values that the women who are around those sorts of men will be looking for
will not be conducive to you opening up. Conversely, relationships that are a little
bit more balanced with a woman who is sufficiently growth-minded that she doesn't see vulnerability
as a weakness but as a strength can be perceived in a different way. This is not for me to say that
maybe it's even more than 50% of women get turned off by vulnerability but it's not like 90% of
women. There is a huge cohort of women out there who want to be able to support a strong competent
man in times when he is no longer able to be able to support a strong, competent man in times
when he is no longer able to be strong and competent. Think about it this way. Why is it
that the high-powered lawyer CEO guy wants to be tied up and choked and spanked by his
missus on a nighttime? The reason is that when you have polarity in a relationship, the push and
pull, there's something exciting about that. The wife typically, or else no one would do it for
more than two times and the relationship would break down, doesn't look at the husband and think
that he's less of a man because that's something that he wants. What she sees is an additional
level of commitment from him. This isn't me like advocating it. This isn't my secret bite. This
isn't me like revealing my sexual preference here um the reason that it happens
or you could reverse it like the boss bitch high-powered ceo woman wanting that to be a sub
when it comes to the bedroom the reason for that is because the polarity is exciting and interesting
and i think that the same thing goes for you know i mean fucking goggins if david goggins
widely regarded as one of the hardest men on the planet, can open up about all of the stuff that's happened to him and yet still go out and crush whatever challenge he's put in front of him, you go, okay, is he less of a man or more of a man for doing that?
to the wrong woman, they will not be able to accept, they will see it as some sort of a flaw or a weakness. But, you know, some men don't have that either access to vulnerability, or maybe some
of them simply aren't vulnerable. You know, there are absolute just straight up testosterone fueled
mammoths out there who don't stop, who don't have that introspection, who don't have that self
concern. Dude, I've got a group of perfect women for you. And most of them might
seem to be in Miami, but I don't know. I think if you are the kind of guy that is going to work
incredibly hard and then have periods where you go, fuck, like, I really don't know if this is
worth it. Like this is today was hard. hard today was tough you need to find a partner
that's going to accept that if you don't have a partner like the girl that i'm with if i have a
bad day or if i have a concern she is happy to lean into that and be like beyond supportive like
she will ask me questions she will give me prompts she will be and i i'm pretty sure that it's like i'm
probably as attractive if not more attractive in those moments than i am when i'm out like
crushing it on a podcast how would somebody know if they're with the wrong person do you think
oh god i mean that's a big one yeah what are some red flags that maybe you've experienced
or seen because i'm sure you get a lot of questions on relationships and stuff like that yeah so um i think that you need to have fundamental value alignment you know uh for
instance if you and your partner fundamentally disagree on how to raise children or even to
have a kid or i mean fucking hell yeah i mean that's very very dangerous um it's other other things as well though like not to get political but like your view of the
world is actually pretty informed by your politics right like if your partner is super pro-life and
you're super pro-choice if you are incredibly pro-immigration and your partner is anti if
you're very pro-free speech and they're not if if they're pro-gun and you're not, like there's going to be some conflict in there because it's not just about that one
issue. It's about what feeds into that belief, right? This isn't for me to say, oh, you need to
have a sortative mating where you only date within your own political party, but you need to have
some shit in common, right? You need to have some common interests. You need to be able to go and
train together. If you like training, get a partner that you can train with because then you can actually enjoy the thing that you enjoy with
them. Like that's, that's a pretty good idea in terms of red flags. I think the most important
things to get right are, and this is for both guys and girls, is your partner psychologically
stable. And what that means is after any incident that takes them off center in terms of their
And what that means is after any incident that takes them off center in terms of their mood,
how quickly do they return to baseline? And you want it to be within six to 12 hours at most.
You want them to be able to deal with some stress, some disagreement, some argument or whatever it is. And within a not forever amount of time, get back to baseline. I have some friends for whom
them and their partners will have an argument and they're both blocked on every social media and every messaging app for like two weeks.
And they're like having to email each other or do whatever it is.
And you go, dude, that is not in my current relationship.
Babe, I love you.
So that would be one.
Having a growth mindset would be another one.
So somebody that is prepared to grow and can believe in change both for you for themselves and in the relationship as well we were talking in the sauna last night
about the michelangelo effect so this is an effect whereby people in a relationship begin to form
themselves into a more and more optimized idealized version of what their partner wants so you could
imagine become more and more attractive correct yes. Yes. Or open or appropriate for them, right? You, if you are committed, will begin to
forge yourself into some sort of amalgamation of who you are truly and who your partner wants you
to be. And if your partner is well balanced and has a great perspective in the world, they want
you to be a better version of you. They don't want you to be less you. They want you to be a better version of you they don't want you to be less you they want you to be more you and they can direct you in that way so having the growth
mindset is super important the reason is that if you do encounter challenges so at the moment my
relationship is long distance like we've been able to get past that because both of us believe that
there are solutions that we can work around like that's important right um the final one that i would probably say would be conscientiousness and that is because
all of this whether it be the um growth mindset whether it be the psychological stability
being conscientious allows you to sort of deploy grind and grit and motivation in an effective
manner and it seems that this bears out in the data as well seth stevens davidowitz wrote a
great book called don't Trust Your Gut.
And he's a data scientist that applied it to,
he used big data to answer like 12 of life's biggest questions.
What's the most attractive way for me to look?
Who should I marry?
What job should I take if I want to become a millionaire the quickest?
How do I become more lucky?
How do I raise a child to have good outcomes in life?
All the way down.
And the interesting shit to do with dating was psychological stability,
growth,
mindset,
conscientiousness.
You have those big three,
pretty much everything else will get sorted out.
Mark.
I'm kind of curious about this from you.
And it's kind of within this,
um,
as far as like you in your relationship,
as it's been a long time,
you haven't been dating for,
for a minute,
but have you went on a date last night with your wife? She has, you guys have been in a relationship as it's been a long time you haven't been dating for for a minute but have you went on a date last night with your wife she has you guys been in relationship for
what more than two decades now yeah have you always been comfortable being vulnerable with yeah I think so um yeah I think um you know there was uh
yeah I mean I you know I I don't know I was like fully exposed like when we met you know I didn't
have anything so there was like uh I didn't have really a lot to be proud of other than like my, I guess like lifting and
stuff like that. So I just, I didn't have a license. I didn't have a bank account. I didn't
have a car. I just didn't have anything. So there were, there was like a, I couldn't even like not
be vulnerable. I needed a motherfucking ride. You know what I mean? Like, so yeah, I was, uh,
I was just the way that I was. I, there wasn't like, uh, I couldn't sugarcoat or hide anything.
I just, I didn't have, I didn't have much of my shit together.
So that's a powerful foundation to build upon though, right?
Because you've already preselected for the sort of woman that's going to be prepared
to grow with you.
You know, like if you were to think, how much do you have to beat the odds by to go
from that guy to this guy? Right. You know, every single day beating the odds financially,
developmentally, psychologically, spiritually. And that is one of the beautiful things about
relationships that last for a long time. And that's one of the things that you don't get if
you do have transient transactional relationships that you cycle in and out of every couple of weeks if you're a guy that's
just blowing through goals you're never going to actually be able to grow with any one goal
you're never going to be able to find someone that can make you better again the red pill ideology
would be why the fuck would you want to be friends with a girl right like that they don't basically
bring anything to your life and you know you know, there are some things. They're not really that funny.
I'm glad that we got the racism in early, but ahead of the sexism.
I really wanted to get that done first. Here we go.
If you, there are certain things that women are very competent at that men aren't, right?
Their psychological insight, their ability to use emotions is way, way, way better than men's.
Now, they can't throw for shit. Like Like they are really, really bad at throwing. Um, however,
I don't need them to throw. I need them to use their emotional insight, right? Like that,
they are really, really good at that. Maybe you can find your boys and stitch them together in a
good enough group where they can be a solution to that but i know i think
that there's something beautiful about being able to grow with someone and again everything is up
for grabs now you know the grand narratives that held previous relationships together everything
is up for debate should you stick together in a relationship forever or should you just be this
sort of polygynous super turbo chad man that you know just dominates miami's nightlife scene like
you know pick your route western man yeah you know, just dominates Miami's nightlife scene. Like, you know,
pick your route, Western man. Yeah. You know, when paying attention to your content,
we were talking a little bit about this yesterday. Um, a lot of your content is reaching men,
young men, and it seems that your content is helping men to become better, but it is not,
uh, at the expense of women. It is not making all women look a certain way. And I've gone down the
red pill rabbit hole just to learn about it. And as we've mentioned, it's, it says women are like
this and this is why, it's why you can't trust them. This is why you need to be careful. This
is why you need to play the game. Like you mentioned, it's adversarial. So what do you,
what do you think that men should be focusing on if their goal is to be in a good monogamous relationship? Because one thing I do notice is that a lot of the focus of this red pill ideology is on the lack of good from women and like the – where they're falling short as, as far as relationships are concerned.
It's very easy in the world of dating dynamics to point the finger at women.
And the reason for that is that hypergamy, which is this tendency that women have to date up and
across women on average want to date a man who is taller, better educated and wealthier than they
are. Right. Or at least as on all of those men don't
have that the same they'll date what's called across and down women will date across and up
now the thing is it's very easy to point at the preferences of women and say see like this you
you have no do you remember kevin samuels remember that guy yes yeah so kevin samuels sadly passed
away halfway through last year and say what you about him, the guy was a great communicator and he really did have style.
He basically made a career out of live streaming with girls
and telling them that their perception of mate value was skewed.
It's like, what would you want from your partner?
They would say, I want him to be six foot one,
earn 200 grand a year and do this sort of a thing.
You'd go, okay, like, can you
cook? Can you clean? What's your dress size? Like, how many guys have you been with? Et cetera,
et cetera, et cetera. And you'd say, look, you're skewed. Your hypergamy is showing, basically.
And it's very easy to point that out. No one ever turns the finger around at men within the
manosphere space and says, okay, so women's preference is for men that are better
resourced more statusful than they are men's preference is for women that are younger than
they are no one ever turns it around and goes guys have you ever considered dating older
well no like that's you know young fertile women like you use them and use them and lose them like
that's the way that you go okay so what you're saying is that women need to readjust their biologically predisposed preference for men that have greater
status and resources than them but your biological predisposition for women that are younger and more
fertile than you that's locked in that shouldn't be changed but theirs should like that's that's
an asymmetry and it's the exact same fucking conversation. So talking to men and teaching them that women are the enemy
is not going to make for a good society as far as I'm concerned.
And if the only way that you can raise men up,
or if your belief is that the only way that you can raise men up
is by putting women down,
that doesn't sound like a very noble masculine thing to do.
Like how are you going to call yourself a real man by standing on the shoulders of women that you've
mistreated that's not a particularly virtuous approach to life for me and this is why if you
look at the conversations i have on the show about evolutionary psychology at least 50 of the
researchers are women tons and tons and tons of the women in this space are
fantastic researchers and they can give insights around women's mating preferences that men can't
have. And for every single person on the internet that says, don't ask a fish about how to fish,
fuck off. Like you are not doing any of the research that these girls are, right? These are
highly trained PhD and above that level researchers
doing cutting edge evolutionary psychology,
anthropology, social sciences research.
And they are finding out stuff
to do with mating preferences,
wrapping that in and folding it
into an ancestral lifestyle
and coming out with really,
really fucking interesting insights.
For some red pill bro on the internet to go,
oh, don't ask a fish about how to fish man
like dude you cool cool there is a corner of the internet for you and i'm glad that you stay there
basically yo are those woman sandals hold on these sandals are rooted in millennia of masculinity
pretty much all the ancient Greek warriors wore them.
Also, the ancient Aztec warriors used to wear them into battle.
They're called cacti.
The Zulu warriors would march hundreds of miles in battle.
And so did the Romans.
They conquered a bit of land themselves.
That's great to know.
Is that the new Victoria's Secret dress?
Grab your Flex Sandal now at powerproject.live.
Louisa Nicola.
What do we see with diet?
We've scraped up upon it a little bit, but what about something like a ketogenic diet and its effects on Alzheimer's, dementia, damage of the brain?
Do we see any extra benefit with something like that or is it kind of more just a calorie control thing?
So such a controversial field.
For some reason, like nutrition, people just start attacking you on Instagram.
I'm not sure why.
What you say here.
Now, the most widely studied diet for brain health in terms of Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment is the MIND diet.
So that is the Mediterranean, it's like the Mediterranean diet. So it involves
all the food groups. Mainly the bulk of it is green leafy vegetables, vegetables,
all different types of vegetables, fish, olive oil, and a little bit of red meat.
And what they found was if you just adjusted for nutrition
when it comes to Alzheimer's disease, you can lower your risk by 53% just from adjusting one
area, which is nutrition. Now, I don't subscribe to any diet. I eat everything. I eat red meat.
I love it. I don't think that there is a problem to it the only
time that that becomes a problem is when your saturated fat is tipping over to the point of
where your ldl is uh higher than 70 so if you get an ldl higher than 70 then you're quote unquote
in that atherosclerotic state and we know that that's bad because what does that end up doing? It ends up forming these plaques against the arteries of the wall,
which stops the blood flow narrowing. And so we don't want that. So I was talking about this with
Max Lugavere and he's like, but Louisa, it's good for you. And I'm like, just the dose makes the
poison. So you can have, in my opinion, saturated fat is only a problem if you're
exceeding the recommended daily intake, which don't ask me what that is because it's different
for everybody.
So we really need to be monitoring that.
We know that green leafy vegetables are fantastic for the brain.
Nuts, olive oil is great.
Fish. Oh my gosh, fish is wonderful.
People think of fish as EPA, DHA, omega-3 fatty acids, and they're absolutely amazing. I always
say that if you should have any two supplements, you should be having creatine and omega-3 fatty
acids, in my opinion, your athletics gold standard. But if you put a telescope and shine it on a
salmon you know you look at it it's not just epa dha you've also got b vitamins in there
b vitamins b12 b6 these are amazing for the brain and for mild cognitive impairment patients
so just stay away from the bad things really what would you say the bad things are sugar okay yeah excessive
amounts processed foods okay just things that we know of to be bad um there are certain individuals
who are like it's only plant-based only plant-based and i'm like okay but whatever you need you do you
um i i generally stay away from the things like i said the worst things you can
do for your brain is eat high saturated fats is i even there's a huge argument with seed oils
yeah oh seed oils are bad have you had um paul saladino yeah yeah we've talked to everybody
about seed oils before and what's your take on it? They're in processed food
and I don't really eat processed food.
So I don't have anything to worry about.
Yeah.
No, but if you go and eat a packet of chips
or whatever you just once,
it's not going to kill you.
And there's seed oils in there.
So like I said,
the dose makes the poison.
Yeah.
But if you want a high performing brain,
then you generally stay away
from these refined sugars,
highly processed foods,
eating whole grains, whole vegetables. Do you eat meat? I eat tons of meat. You know, I think
one of the hard things about the seed oil thing, I call it restaurant oil. So it's a little easier
for people to understand. It's like, I don't even know if I eat seed oil. Well, it's like canola oil
and it's in packaged food, but you get it in heavy dosages,
probably in the heaviest dosage at a restaurant because they don't even know how to prepare or cook your meat without dumping a bunch of oil on it. And a lot of times here in the United States,
the oil that they use, it's allowed to still be called olive oil, but it's like 50-50. So it has
both in there, but I don't really know or care a ton about that. I
think just trying to manage your body weight, I think is like an easier thing to do. And in terms
of sugar and all the different things, I think, yeah, you should be mindful of like what it is
you're consuming. Like try to go for quality as much as possible. But you also want your life and your day to be feeling, at least
feeling like rich and feeling like you're doing some of the things that you want to do rather than
just always forcing yourself to maybe do some of the things you don't want to do.
Yeah. And also, I think we focus a lot on what not to put in our mouths and we don't focus on
what to put in our mouths, such as omega-3. No, there's risk factors for all-cause mortality. And I think they've come
up with around 20 risk factors, smoking, et cetera. We know smoking's bad. It leads to
death eventually. One of the risk factors now is a low omega-3 index. So if you are not consuming omega-3 fatty acids, specifically EPA,
DHA, and you score and you go and get a blood test and it's called omega-3 index and your score,
I think if it's below eight, I want to say, don't quote me on that, but if it's below like six or
eight, you are on the same path of accelerated all cause mortality as a smoker. That's how
imperative EPA and DHA is. It helps with cell membrane fluidity. It helps with lowering
inflammation in the brain and central nervous system. It's just your brain is made of water
and fat. The fat is DHA. you've got to be feeding the brain so many
people like does that you know i'm feeding the brain cholesterol the cholesterol the molecule
can't pass through the blood-brain barrier i don't know what people are talking about when
they talk about that so it's we've got to be feeding the brain what it's made of yeah do you
think there's a difference between getting that from supplementation versus getting that from actual fish food? Well, nowadays, the fish that we're eating,
I don't believe is the best. I watched this documentary called Seaspiracy. You've got to
watch it. It was really scary and what it's doing to our oceans. Yeah. It's on Netflix. I watched it.
What it's doing to our oceans is crazy. our fish are swimming around in a big poisonous barrel of soup basically they're giving us and they're they're injecting it actually what they
said on this documentary they're injecting salmon with as does anthem which gives it the pink flavor
so you'll go to you'll think wow look how fresh this fish looks but it's been it's just colored
so this is why we need to adopt um epa dha um this is c-spiracy here yeah or try to get
wild caught but then we don't really know you don't know on all that is i mean wild caught
wild caught so i um i spent time in greece that's where my family is from in september and i went
there and we stayed on this little island called Castellorizo and the fishermen were literally going out that day and bringing the fish back so that was
beautiful that was EPA DHA rich how about if you like because like I usually I never cook salmon
I always get like just sushi grade fish because I like sashimi so is there a difference your face
I know I can't believe I just did that so do you understand i hope you have that shit on
camera so i have literal fights like relationships have been ended because because i don't eat sushi
and i'm i'm i'm coming out of the closet with this i do not eat sushi and i wish i did that's
a thing i wish i did wish you were fancier right yeah i just wish i i wish i liked it because it's
you can go to these different places in new york it's like five hundred dollars just to get it's Wish you were fancier, right? Just try it. And so I don't eat things that are weird. Like I don't eat custard. I don't eat cream.
Weird textures for some reason.
So I don't think you're getting more benefits from eating it raw, but you may be.
I'm not sure.
I'm just wondering because of the quality of the fish.
Like you can only get to eat a certain type of fish raw.
You know what I mean? Like you can't eat normal Costco sushi.
You can't eat that raw.
Well, the best form of DHA in its phospholipid form is in fish eggs, so caviar.
Another thing, I want to like caviar.
I see them on like little pancakes.
They're so good.
That's going to be my – I'm just going to force myself.
Have you ever tried it?
Yes.
That's how I got to this position of not liking it.
When you try something like it –
You have to have it with creme fraiche.
That's the key.
Did you have it with creme fraiche?
What is creme fraiche?
That's the cream that you have it with.
That's on the little tiny pancake thing.
There we go.
I don't eat cream because of the texture.
It will make me, it makes me sick.
Avocado?
You don't fuck with avocado?
I fuck with avocado, yeah.
Okay.
But here's the weird thing.
I don't, I don't eat the inside of tomatoes, but I'll eat the outside, like the hard pieces
of tomatoes. Again, very hard to outside, like the hard pieces of tomatoes.
Again, very hard to date me.
Very hard person.
I get that.
I have the same thing.
Like if like once the tomato is inside of like a hamburger and it's all soggy, like
I don't know.
But I'll take that first initial like crispy bite.
But that's my goal this year, to like caviar.
So then no yogurt either?
I eat yogurt, yeah.
Okay.
Good. All right. Got it. Can you have, sorry, because will the omega-3s have the DHEA or DHA in it or do you have to have that
as another supplement as well? Yeah. So omega-3s are made up of three parts, EPA, DHA, and ALA.
EPA, DHA comes from fish, often fatty fish such as mackerel, salmon, and sardines.
ALA is in its plant form. And this is where you get the vegans coming in. You can get it from
microalgae, microalgae, or you can get it from flax seeds and chia seeds. It's just that you
have to have a lot of it to meet the demands of it because it has to then translate into the DHA, EPA.
So, I mean, if you're not allergic to it, maybe just try the EPA, DHA.
And you can get different forms from different companies in terms of more DHA than EPA.
than EPA. So if we cut out and cut back on processed foods and we eat relatively healthy natural foods, that will change our profile of our omega-6 to omega-3 ratio, right?
Yeah. So maybe you don't have to worry about it too much. And if you get grass-fed beef and
things like that, we think that will augment enough or not enough. But here's the point with the omega-6 and omega-3
ratio. If you're too high in omega-6, you can't even process the omega-3s. So people could be
saying, well, I had a bad diet today full of omega-6, so I'm just going to take all of this
omega-3. But it actually, you can't, you know, it's not bioavailable if you've got too much
omega-6. So you have to really be careful with the amount of food, like you said,, you know, it's not bioavailable if you've got too much omega-6. So you have to really
be careful with the amount of food, like you said, that you're putting and you don't want to throw
off that ratio. And it's so easy to throw it off. But getting rid of processed food will help.
Oh yeah. Immensely. So just sticking to a whole food.
So you can bypass all of it potentially without having to take fish oil supplements.
Well, no, you can bypass the omega-6,
but the omega-3 fatty acids you have to supplement with because we want to get that omega-3 index up.
Can we get them from eggs?
And can we get them from beef, grass-fed beef?
You can get omega-3 fatty acids from a wide variety of foods,
like eggs, beef, et cetera.
Choline is abundant in eggs, but not to the same amount.
And the dosage that you're looking at is four
grams a day to get these effects. So I usually take two grams in the morning and two grams at
night. So that's 2000 milligrams of each. So that's a big load to get from, you know,
foods other than fatty fish. Yeah. Curious. Does, um, you said the brand was
momentous. Do they have Omega threes? I'm just curious, like in terms of other brands that you
may know that are regulated as far as the amount of Omega threes. Yeah. And so they're regulated.
They've got, um, and I know that Thorne has, um, really great, um, Omega three Thorne, T H O R N E.
Yeah. Um, and they've got a supplement, They've got a specific one that is high in DHA
So it's like advanced DHA
So you can be getting more DHA
Which generally would be given to someone who's had a concussion
Or somebody who has been
You know, who has gotten Alzheimer's disease
Or MCI, mild cognitive impairment
Which is a pre-dementia state
They should be supplementing profusely with omega-3 fatty acids.
Chris Williamson.
Why do you think there's a rise, a recent rise against porn and masturbation?
Oh, that's super easy.
The reason so many people are against porn right now is just because like the thing to
do is preach life advice.
Like that is the main thing that people are looking for.
People are more terminally online now than ever,
more isolated than ever.
They don't have real friends.
They don't have people to look up to.
So they go to like content creators online.
So come out against porn, decent advice.
I saw you asked Derek about NoFap
and he mentioned the bro science aspect of it.
Talking about bro science, what's your thoughts on NoFap?
It depends what you are doing it for.
Are you doing it because you've been told by, I don't know, some like incel forum that
this is like what you got to do?
Or are you doing it for a dopamine detox thing?
Are you doing it like in what context?
Just in general, what do I think about it?
Yeah.
And what are the contexts in which you think it's got some efficacy and which are the ones
that you think is pie in the sky.
So what are your thoughts on like nofap and young men?
What do you think about that whole genre of stuff?
I recently had a conversation with a guy called Dr. David Lay who is – he wrote a book called Porn for Dicks, an ethical use for how to fap online basically.
He is very anti-porn panic.
He's very pro-porn panic he's very pro masturbation he says that
there's no such thing as sex addiction or porn addiction and that no fap is total bollocks so
i've got a bit of availability bias here because i've recently spoken to this guy that kind of
turned my worldview upside down i would say on average it is a good idea to limit your exposure
to porn if you can i think that there is a like an escalating desire uh system that goes on where
you you constantly want ever more extreme types of porn to keep yourself stimulated if you're a
single guy you're going to not want to go out and find sex if you can satisfy yourself on your own
and if you're in a relationship you're not going to want to satisfy your partner as much if you can satisfy yourself on your own this isn't you're in a relationship, you're not going to want to satisfy your partner as much
if you can satisfy yourself on your own.
This isn't for me to say like,
don't touch your penis.
You better not touch your fucking penis.
Touch your penis.
Touch your penis.
Don't touch your penis right now.
But-
Or right now.
This is the sus stuff that you were warning me about
before we got started.
This is why people on the internet
believe that you and Seema have a closet that you need to come out of
because you are instructing people who are listening to a video that you are on
to touch their penis i just i leave it up to them to do what they want chris
that sounded like a command to me all right now
like a command to me all right now while mark is holding my phallic symbol this luminous it's hard to not touch your penis try to make it through just a couple hours seriously so limit porn use
i think is a good idea right like i just generally it would be good for you to be motivated to go and find physical
connection between you and either a new partner or you and your existing partner. Like that,
that doesn't seem like a crazy stat to go after when it comes to the levitation and the like,
women can smell the pheromones and all that sort of stuff. I think that people are getting out over
their skis. One of the things that Charlie talks about, which is super smart. I love Charlie,
by the way, most critical is fucking phenomenal. He says that people can feel super disgusted if they do break their no-fap streak. And that is something that's really dangerous. How much do you benefit from the reduction in porn use and fapping compared with how disgusted and ashamed do you feel about yourself if and when you do break it and if that does happen you go well oh god i've actually created a situation in which like you're asking yourself to do one of the two things
that you were biologically designed to do survival and reproduction okay don't do the thing that's
associated with reproduction when people mean no fat what they should really mean for the most part
is no porn but it's just people being lonely charlie, come on the podcast, man. I think most people have recognized that there are so many lonely people out there, but they've learned that those lonely people will pay for the experience of being part of a group or like feeling like a friend.
So they exploit it.
Do you see, for example, again, the red pill community has a lot of benefit, but do you see aspects of the red pill community somewhat being like that?
There was a study done where they brought people into a room and as they walked in, they tossed a coin in front of them and the coin landed heads or tails.
If you were heads, you were red team.
If you were tails, you were blue team.
It was split evenly after people had come in.
They'd go over and they'd speak to the blue team and they'd go, so what do you think about the red team?
And they'd go,
dude, they look a bit stupid, don't they?
I mean, they're definitely not as smart as us.
And like, oh, you can tell they're just not.
You go, everybody knew that this choice
was completely arbitrary
upon the moment that you walked in.
And yet humans' desire to become tribal
just appears,
just fucking manifests out of thin air as soon as you create
a them and an us people will bind together over the mutual hatred of the out group and the mutual
love of the in group yes if you have a movement people will feel like they're a part of it right
especially if it's men we were talking on the podcast that people should go and check out
that men will bind together over a shared purpose. That's what we're designed to do.
That's why relationships that you have,
friendships that you have that transcend just friends
but are also part of a business
or perhaps a larger movement
are going to be deeper even than brothers sometimes,
you know, than family members
because there is something about shared suffering
and a shared purpose.
And that's what people get.
So yeah, does it create support for people absolutely would i rather men be lost and alone or have a community
like absolutely like find find your guys's stuff but as soon as you bind together over like an
ideology or a particular movement you start to see like runaway uh extremes of that occur when you group people together that tribal
dynamic can cause whatever the original noble purpose we're going to teach men about how to
become better uh dating communicators or whatever and then the loudest most extreme voices sometimes
can take over and you've got to be careful like if you're going to be the leader of a movement
you need to make sure that it can't get hijacked by people because you can
have the most noble of intentions when it first starts. And if you're not careful with how you
discipline the movement and how you control it going forward, it can end up in some pretty
nasty places. All right. Hi guys. So my question for you is how much money do you think a guy
should make per year?'s gonna say some hype right
sometimes i wonder if if some people are just unaware of these are young how many were young
people yeah and this is arizona state university right arizona state university asu is like known
as a party school i think yeah i think so or i think a lot of hot chicks go there. Yeah. I think.
Interesting.
We'll find out.
Like fully like adult.
Someone that you would consider wanting to be with the rest of your life.
300, okay.
Three figures.
Okay.
So why is that?
Just because like that's a stable income, I'd say.
100, like 500 grand?
Is that a lot? No, that's, 500 income, I'd say. 100? 500 grand? Is that a lot?
No, 500 is... On a good day, yeah.
It depends.
A lot. We're expensive.
Mills.
Mills? Shit.
I don't really care.
I think...
She has a long word, too.
There we go.
The guy made 30k a year., too. There we go. She's chill.
The guy made $30,000 a year.
Is that something you're okay with?
Yeah, I think that would be great.
Like your husband?
Oh, shit.
Husband.
Yeah, I think I would be fine.
If it was my husband, I'd be in love with him.
So, yeah.
Let's go.
There you go.
$100,000.
$120,000.
$10,000 and maybe like $120,000. Okay. Yeah, I would say like $80,000 to $150,000. 120k. 120k and maybe like 120.
Yeah, I would say like
80 to 150.
I love the fact that there's
some periods of girls where like
one girl, there was a girl before that did 100
and the other girl was like 120.
Home girl there's like
80 to 120. She's like 80 to
150.
Low standards.
Just the nastiest little It's like, yeah, 80 to 120. She's like, 80 to 150. You have low standards. Yeah, exactly.
Just the nastiest little fucking snipe.
She's already like, my imaginary husband already makes more than your imaginary husband. You frugal bitch.
Oh, God.
What is the lowest you would go, though?
500,000.
I could have a nice, settled life with like a two
hundred thousand a year like okay normal grade yeah what's the lowest though that you would go
for um i don't think money is stopping uh maybe like a uh it has to be you just said one or two
mil i was gonna take a wild guess and say that everyone that they showed probably is from a household that makes about 200 i was about to say just a random guess
i don't have any idea how much it costs to go to school but it's probably very expensive and the
chick with the long board probably comes from a working class background that's a problem as well
though that the background and the lifestyle that you come from in terms of your family also is going
to restrict your mating
pool so like this is what we talked about for people that didn't watch the podcast go watch
the podcast we talked about this at length and it was really great the tall girl problem is what
i've deemed this ever increasing group of high-performing women competing for an ever
decreasing group of ultra high-performing men women on average earn 1111 pounds more than men
do between the ages of 21 and 29 and two women for every one man will complete a four-year US college degree by 2030.
On average, women want a man who is wealthier and better educated than them,
or at least the same.
But the problem is, as you have this ever-increasing group of women,
there is a smaller and smaller cohort of men that are as educated
or more educated or employed than them.
Everybody has the tall girlfriend, right, Who is five foot 11 without heels.
And if you want to date a man that's taller than you
and you want to wear heels,
you're looking at like professional athletes, right?
There is a very small pool of men for whom you can do this.
Now, if you already come into the situation
with a upper middle class,
I mean, 300K is like got to be upper class.
It's not even middle class, right?
If you come into it with that as your set point and then you start to earn relatively well your preferences are totally
skewed like how the fuck are you supposed to work out what it is that you want and also you can
snide your mate by saying like my imaginary husband's richer than your imaginary it's a
brutal reality that as women accumulate more status, resources and education, they limit their own dating pool and then have to compete.
Let's say that you're a 30-year-old who's worth 100 grand a year and has a PhD as a woman.
You're competing with a 20-year-old bar barista from Starbucks.
And the partner that you're trying to get doesn't see much difference between the two of you.
Honestly, guys do not care about the
partner's education level or employment that's not to say they don't care about um conscientiousness
or intelligence but the reason that most women care about them for men is that it's a proxy for
both men are just happy with the intelligence regardless of the education level the same
isn't quite so true in reverse these street interviews are ruthless man they
are really really good at making people look dumb i mean we have managed to find some grade a
candidates this is like weapons grades nuclear warhead style street interviewing one slight
concern that you do see coming out of advice on the manosphere is that it can cause men to obsess over how much money they do earn and to also kind of count themselves out of the dating market if they don't earn a particular amount.
And don't get me wrong.
Like on average, women want to – but that's on average.
I think –
This would blackpill people.
Yeah.
So the problem with this video and it's been doing the rounds for a little while, is that these girls are so young.
They haven't been whacked in the face by life all that much.
So it's a very idealized version of relationships.
If you're 18 or 19, you've had, what, one boyfriend or a couple of boyfriends perhaps at best through high school, and now you're at college, and you're being confronted by this girl who's got, this is the thing about street interviews.
You don't know the difference between what's called revealed and stated preferences, right?
So stated preferences are what you want to tell the world you want and revealed preferences
are what you actually end up wanting.
Now, for the most part, what happens is women will underplay the hypergamy when they state
it.
Like when you face the stark reality of heading to work every day while your husband stays
in the house to like play dolls with the kids, that might be a little bit different. But you also have
another like signal thing going on here, which is that the wealth of your partner as a woman is a
indicator of your status. The same thing happens in reverse for the attractiveness of your mate
as a man. So men that have more attractive partners are seen as higher status by both men and women so men don't just want an attractive partner because they're attracted to
them but because of what it says about them to the other people around them and the same is
true for women when it comes to the partner income so here you have this very like performative you'll
notice that all of the girls that were on their own said less on average i think the girls that
were in a group started to
like bid each other up because they don't want to be like do you want to be the group the girl
in the group of friends where everyone's gone 200 grand 300 grand 50 grand do you want to be the 50
grand girl like obviously not so street interviews are funny but i would take them with a mountain of
salt when it comes to indicating people's mating preferences especially
on a college campus with like children basically yes or any interview with any miami girl at all
times obie vincent how did you get big because it's one thing to be lean right but you're big
how'd you get like what was there a particular style of training or do
you think you just responded well to training was there something specific that you did
honestly it was old school way of getting it was just bulking and then training i bought that you
know the arnold m encyclopedia of bodybuilding yeah i bought that and i was just like and then
uh reading all of that and then with diet, I started to learn what bulking was.
And how heavy did you let yourself get?
Like what was your heaviest on like a bulk?
115,
116 was around my heaviest.
How much do you weigh now? Cause you still look dense.
I'm about 113.
Well,
114 after Christmas,
but one third,
one third,
one 12 is what I try and stay. and stay well 110 is what ideally i want to
be at because that is not too heavy that i can because now you're around 112 yeah we're the same
way we're what's the actual pounds 246 240 yeah yeah so the thing is what i've realized is the
heavy i start to get when i do conditioning workouts, it's just a struggle.
You know, the aerobic stuff is just a killer.
So I try not to get too heavy.
But with bulking, like old school bulking, you know, when I started to add size was just eating a lot.
And I started to learn more macros and calories.
And I was just loads of food yeah and yeah bodybuilding i used to do because when you're younger you have time
so i was at uni uh at college at uni and i will train twice a day i used to do the twice a day
training and i used to do the old school shoulders so what single body parts you know now everybody's
like no you don't need to do that anymore you can do full full body you can do push pull i didn't know i found that to be really motivating
just to pick one yeah body part because it's like really simple i'm just going to do shoulders today
i found it's easy to be consistent with that yeah so i i mean now there's so many scientific uh
research that says you can now just do push pull full body and that's optimal too but i did the old
school way you know how bodybuilders would do shoulders in the morning maybe like back in the
evening and you know biceps in the morning and you know something else in the evening i did that i
had the time and when i worked in retail i would go to the gym early in the morning and do my cardio work and then go back and do some bodybuilding.
So I did.
Don't tell us that you worked at Abercrombie.
No, no, no.
Okay.
I did, sadly.
No, I didn't work at Abercrombie.
Okay.
I worked in Selfridges and I worked for Reese and that's slightly more cooler than wait what's Selfridges
Selfridges is like a really
if you go to London
if you go to England
if you go to central London
West End
Selfridges is this big
do you know Harrods
you've heard of Harrods
surely
no
what's Harrods
Harrods is
yeah
it's one of those
what would I
you know like
Macy's in New York
yeah so Selfridges
is similar to that okay so really really expensive cool but suffrages had a mix of super expensive and cool
brands and when you were young you wanted to work either for selfridges or harrods harrods was more
luxury so that's in chelsea that's in knightsbridge so i worked in suffrages in west end and everyone's
cool and trendy so that was when i lost a lot of
weight and i was feeling myself and that's kind of why i worked in suffrages so just suffrages
the website that's all oh you can you can find pictures of what it looks like it's a big
department store but it's bougie as anything so that was um kind of for me working there made me also it's like you're trying to impress people
right so that's why i started to go to the gym more just so that i can impress people and actually
i quit that job because i became a personal i didn't know you could be a personal trainer you
know that was a job so and my parents well my mom was like well personal trainer because i went to
union and studied marketing and finance uh-huh how'd they feel about that they was like what personal trainer because i went to union studied marketing and finance
how'd they feel about that they were like what does that mean that doesn't sound like a job
you teach people how to exercise and i was yeah i didn't i was like yeah that's a that's a job
you can you can do that yeah um and i mean it's taken a while i mean even still when i started
doing this whole social media thing they were like like, okay, what do you do?
What exactly is your job title?
And I'm like, yeah, I teach people how to lift weights.
And Nigerians don't, I mean,
now they're getting better at understanding what that means.
But when I was a personal trainer,
it took a while for my mum,
especially to like realise that this is actually
an option as a job and that was when
I went full into fitness
that was when I was full into
the whole bodybuilding
I had those
you know the bags with your meals that you can put
I can't remember the name of it
yeah the Tupperware full
of your meals walking around with that
and then just having a gallon of water yeah yeah tupperware full full of your meals walking around with that and then just a gallon of
water yeah yeah yeah all right i gotta know that like um how do you handle because like one of my
aunts as i started getting bigger my aunt's one of my aunts is a nurse and she pulled me aside
one thanksgiving and she's like in sima are you taking drugs yeah so because like you got big
drugs yeah so because like you got big how like first off because people probably ask you that all the time yeah but how was that for you how do you deal with that because p you probably get that
all the time i get it all the time um i remember being trolled really badly for it um there was a
guy who does a youtube and he like trolled me for it and actually it was so bad i remember looking at um companies that
test and one of them was like we only test olympic athletes and i it was so funny because she was
like well you need to be a team and it's quite you know we don't just test individuals yeah
because i was so determined to try and find a way to prove to people and
now i kind of just let people think what they want yeah i you know you would never be able to
unless you um find someone who can officially test you properly i'm not scared of that i think a lot
of people um feel like oh if you're not if you're not um on
any form of steroids you wouldn't be you would be happy to get tested yeah but unfortunately if you
do the test yourself your your it doesn't work you can you're you're choosing that you know it
has to be uh what what do you call you know like the third party tested yeah yeah and you can't
know about it and they have to surprise you.
So I know people that have tested themselves and they've been trolled for it.
It was like,
well,
you're off cycle,
dude.
Yeah.
You're going to go when you're not taking anything.
So now I,
I kind of just let people think what they want.
Did it used to bother you though?
It did.
In the beginning yeah
that's why i went to research into how to to get tested and because when you know that you you are
not doing something people telling you and people telling you emphatically that you are and i'm just
like you can't disprove it unless again unless you go for the route of getting tested but then if you
test yourself it doesn't work because you're controlling controlling it so yeah i my family
never asked actually funny enough but you know you will get people that still say it and then
sometimes you get people that will try and pretend that they're just joking yeah where can i buy it from i know you're not taking it but you know where can i get some like okay i mean yeah it
young when i was younger it bothered me a lot now i'm just like you know and make up your own
decision whatever you know whatever you want to with lifting were
you lifting heavy in the beginning to get big or was it still it was a more straight bodybuilding
yeah it was a lot more bodybuilding like high volume super high volume yeah um i mean i think
it was even too much volume even when i've toned it down i still find that i do a lot of volume
and even people on youtube are like my god that's a lot of volume and i'm just like because i'm so used to training this way um i even think sometimes
i do a video a workout video a bodybuilding workout video and i think i've toned it down
and then people go this is not this is too much this isn't and i'm just like this is this is what i'm so used to yeah um and i did used to do heavy lifting too but not
to the extent of trying to you know do 280 kilo deadlift and things like that i was always good
quality repetition yeah and good set after set exactly i think that's also kind of what a lot
of people always say to you if they've watched my training video oh he's that guy that's always like form form like
i would use um i remember was it ben pokulski he was he said i can make a five kilo dumbbell i
don't know if you're doing pounds equivalent look and feel heavy and that always stuck with me and
kaya green also is known for just using lightweight and making it work and making, and, and it's all about form.
And I took a lot of that information to, you know, away and for me form over everything.
So every time you watch my bodybuilding videos, it's not glamorous.
I don't shout like I'm a, you know, crazy.
I'm more like, I'm so calm and people like, how, how is this workout effective?
I'm going to show you how to run yeah while you're
here yeah i mean because you can run the same way you don't have to work nearly as hard as you might
think i'll get you through a big guy i do you know what i think it's just my body when i start
running just going what is he doing what's happening this is not this is what are you doing
so running is one that's i used to just see running and oh you just
put in your shoes and go yeah but then when i learned that there's so many technicalities to it
um now i've realized there's more to running than just putting your shoes and go beef power project
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Get your glizzy goblet on.
Pete Rubish.
Huge transition to away from away from performance enhancing drugs. And did you have some sort of moment where like Jesus came down and he had a conversation with you? He's like, you need to come back to the good side. You've been on the dark side for a long time. Like what happened and what led to some of those decisions?
anabolic steroids and ran cycles for nine years, right? Started when I was 20 and then up until 29, that's when I came off. So I was actually, I just done a meet. I tried a pretty big cycle. It
was the biggest cycle of my life going into that meet. So the last two weeks, this wasn't during
the whole duration of the cycle, but the last two weeks I was doing 1500 milligrams of testosterone
and enthate. so one and a half
grams of test right very high amount would have been cool to see uh what my test levels were like
at that point and then 1200 npp so one 1.2 grams npp on natural oh yeah it's like the uh short
fast acting version of deca with less sides i think so it kicks in quicker you don't get all
the bad sides you get with deca and uh threw that in as well yeah then there's got to be some orals
right i mean it's not an official cycle unless we're on three things at one time you got to get
all the food groups in there yeah cover your bases so i was doing anovar for a while about
50 milligrams a day and i love anivar. It's my favorite.
That was.
And then at the end, I came off that and did Halo testing because I tried to combine them.
So I was trying to do Halo and Anivar at the same time, and the liver toxicity was way too much to handle.
To the point, like, you would take it, and within 30 minutes, you want to throw up.
Because I couldn't even sit up.
I'd be laying on the couch, and I'd just like i feel awful i feel like i'm gonna vomit the heart
burns nice oh it's just so much the heartburn wasn't too bad but the blood pressure too where
your your head feels like it's gonna explode about yeah it was really healthy stuff you know
let me ask you is that an exaggeration or does your head actually feel pressurized
it feels pretty pressurized you get a headache like legitimately 30 minutes after the halo testing so you get the nausea because your
liver is getting it's under serious stress and this i was taking too much i the last two weeks
i tried to go 40 milligrams of halo which is a absurd dose you want to do about 20 i mean i'm
not telling anybody to do that but if you're a, but a standard dose would be 20.
He just broke and seemed like it.
Yeah, I know.
I was like, I'm not condoning this.
Made his gorilla mind go down the wrong pipe.
I'm not giving advice here.
Fucking lost.
You do 20 milligrams, and I'm like, let's go 40 because I really want to pull 900 officially.
I've done it in training a few times.
I was like, I've got to get it knocked out in a. And in the end, did I get it done? No. So I got the,
the 904 to my knees and that was it. But that's kind of the long backstory. And then after that,
my wife was like, if we're going to have a baby, let's do it now, come off now. So, um, after the
meet, I decided to come off November and then, you know, here we are been off for two and a half
years. So it's been a wild ride
and at first when you started when you started to come off um how long did you hold on to those
gains and do you think it's possible for people to hold on to any remains of the gains that they
got from anabolic steroids the more distance they get from it I think if you come off completely
absolutely not you're going to lose like everything for the most part. That's not to say there's not some
degree of muscle memory, but within a year it was, it was all gone. I mean, I went back,
it felt like almost a square one, not entirely obviously because you've still been training a
while, but I want to say bench dip down to about 315 and it was at uh 485 at the peak in
training in a meet 463. so it went all the way back down to 315 300-ish um deadlift got down to
like six from nine um and it just it was a rapid uh you know loss of muscle and strength over the
course of months so the first couple months you're still hanging on to quite a bit even though your test levels are dipping six months or so maybe you can
kind of hold on to some stuff yeah i'd say up to eight even and then as you get closer to that year
you just it's all gone it's like if i had gone trt i think i could have maintained a lot of it
not been quite as strong but maintained quite a bit of that strength but it just uh
not been quite as strong but maintained quite a bit of that strength but it just uh my body weight dipped down to about 210 at the lowest from 250 255 so and right now i'm walking
around about 220 225 depending on how well i'm eating any uh warnings to people that are going
to go because you decided not to go the trt route i don't think you had other interventions
um a good friend of mine has said
that like, he thinks that if young people, especially are going to come off testosterone
cycles, he thinks that they should look into maybe taking medication for their mind and for their,
you know, so they don't get like depressed and stuff. Do you think that some people should look
into that or like, what was your experience? Yeah. I mean, it was really tough mentally.
I felt pretty depressed at various times because your sense of identity is gone.
Think about it.
Your whole life, not your whole life, but the last 10, 15 years, everyone's known you
as this really strong guy.
You're known for your deadlift, your strength and being jacked and all that.
And that's your whole basis of what people know you for.
And then that's kind of stripped away completely where there's no more, you know, you're not getting
the compliments. You're not getting all the attention. It fades away. It faded away fast.
And you're just another guy at that point. And that was tough. It was like a transition to where
that was probably one of the toughest things. You have to kind of come to terms with that and
redefine yourself as we talked about. But it's taken years. It's been two and a half years and just now I'm kind of becoming
comfortable with who I am now. And I still have the knowledge. I've still done what I've done,
hit the numbers I've hit, and I'm at peace with that. But now it's kind of time to pivot to a new
life. And I still coach plenty of guys in powerlifting. I'm still immersed in the industry,
but I just have to do different things myself.
So I still train some powerlifting, but it's a lot more bodybuilding.
It's a lot more running, different things like that to kind of keep me sane.
So it's mentally a lot of guys, the reason they wouldn't come off is it's just very tough.
You just, you essentially shrivel up, lose all your muscle.
You lose your strength.
You lose your identity.
And why would you do that when you can just take TRT? And I even, you know, I've considered going
back on it various times. I'm never, I'm not saying I wouldn't like, I think TRT is awesome.
You know, I think it's a good thing for a lot of guys. Um, and I have nothing against it,
but I just feel decent now. So it, you have to almost wait. You have to get through that,
that tough phase. Yeah. Before you started, uh, you said 20 to 29, you were on.
What was your history before that?
Were you an athlete?
Were you already lifting quite a bit beforehand?
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
So I was in school.
I was doing football.
I was doing basketball.
I was doing track.
And I wasn't great at any of them.
But, I mean, I started in various sports.
And come my senior year
I decided I'm just gonna lift because I did not like being in season in a sport and you lose a
lot of your strength you lose about 10 pounds of body weight from running so much and I just
enjoyed lifting more so I went all in on that when I was about 18 entering my senior year dropped all
the sports and uh I but I had that background growing up. Even baseball was mixed in.
It was just my parents had me in all different sports all the time.
Year-round, I was doing something.
Yeah, and I'm kind of curious, kind of from what Mark said,
what was the hardest part about coming off?
Because like you mentioned, you literally,
you were a different human being at the time.
It's like your shape was different.
You were still you, but I'm assuming like when you look at videos
of what you were pulling and all that, do you feel like that's you?
No.
No.
No.
I look back at that and I can't even identify with those weights.
I don't know.
I don't know because Mark's completely transitioned too to a different stage of his life. I don't know i don't like i don't know because mark's completely transitioned
to to a different stage of his life i don't know if you feel that way but like i went to a meet
um one time uh maybe like a year ago or something like that and somebody was lifting some crazy
weight and i look at my brother i go these guys are fucking out of their mind and my brother's
like you were lifting this like two years ago and you had a lot more plates on on than what they
even have now so i agree with you 100 it's like hard to even relate at a certain point yeah it
doesn't seem my mind can't comprehend like having that much uh weight on my back like on a squat
like 800 pounds around there you can't imagine it fuck it's uh 900 pound deadlifts i can't imagine
that so it's completely different now
because you're lifting a fraction of that and your mind's not there like i'm not in that you know
purely lifting as heavy as possible aggression you know kind of kill mode which is how it was
it was my whole life lifting was my entire life everything else got cast aside for many of those
years because that's what it took to get to that level i felt like you had to go all in there were a lot of sacrifices there were a lot of
disruptions relationships were more volatile but that was part of the cost to get to that level
and i don't necessarily regret it but i would have done things differently
what about somebody coming to you now you have your own gym uh there's some power lifters in
there and what about someone hitting you up online or in person and saying, yeah, man, I just I want to go for it all, man.
I'm 20.
You know, I moved out of my parents' house and I just I want to go on a cycle and I want to go all in.
Are you kind of talking them out of that or like how do you think you would handle that situation?
Yeah, I mean, guys come to me and
their decision is made up they're going to do it they're going to do it or they're not and i can
kind of lead them on a path where they do it more responsibly or where i think you'd get more out of
it this way because if we look at like a john hack the very moderate dosages um cycling off that sort
of thing he's milked his gains for more than if he were just blasting right from the beginning so i think that's a smarter approach i wish i would have done it
that way so i try to tell them like we can do this more efficiently um you don't have to go
to trend right away or something like that but i also i have guys who come to me and they're like
listen i don't have anything going for me in my life i don't have a relationship with my parents
i'm like this is all i got i'm going for and i'm like i completely respect it i get it like this is their life and that's that's it they're going for it and
who am i to tell them like no no you got to be more you know cautious when i went just as hard
it's like that's what they want that's they're going all in and i don't i don't necessarily have
a problem with that so it depends on the circumstance the the context of it but normally
yes i try to tell guys like if someone comes to me 18 years old which happens they're like i'm ready
to jump on like just just wait a little bit you haven't even optimized your training yet like
give it even two years wait till you're 20 uh things like that or just let's start out with a
very moderate test dose so i try to steer people properly rather than i can't convince someone not
to do it.
If I tell an 18 year old and he's completely convinced, it's not going to matter.
Yeah.
So I try to share my experiences and be very open.
But I feel like that almost helps people more when you're like, this is how you need to do it responsibly.
Maybe wait a little longer.
How to never procrastinate, how to up your testosterone, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah about dopamine.
I've listened to him and I'll do the seven and eight minutes. And by God, I mean, he doesn't say anything. He's really is a skill,
how he can go round and around. But when you have somebody from Stanford that does not have
the checker pass, he's going to be the guy that comes in and they're going to be the new guy
on the white horse wearing the white hat, right? He wears all black. When he is dishonest,
now it's a lie. And that's very different. You don't ever hear me call someone a liar.
Never.
When people are wrong, that's what I say.
I say that they have it wrong.
And there's a massive difference in lying as opposed to having it wrong.
As opposed to you misspoke.
Massive.
I don't like that he's a liar.
He's a liar.
I don't like that.
But this gentleman that isn't like the rest of us, he's much more polished to come in
and say the things that he's saying.
He would, of course, know the difference. And I got to go online. Look, I never looked it up.
In all fairness, I never looked it up. When I was a little boy, my mother told me what it meant.
That it's not a matter of saying something that isn't true. It's a matter of saying something
isn't true when you intend to deceive. The example she gave me, if today is Tuesday and somebody
says, what day is it? And you tell them it's Wednesday, but you actually think it's Wednesday.
You then have not lied. You're just wrong.
So when I watch Huberman go on and tell people how they can up their testosterone fourfold
or their growth hormone fourfold,
that is not only not true,
somebody in his position would know it's not true.
So by my mother's definition, he lies.
I don't like that he's doing that.
I don't know why he's doing that.
And it's the biggest problem within our space.
It's the biggest.
Just here's briefly my
thoughts on this is that i think huberman is normally like citing studies that he sees
maybe occasionally it's somebody that he knows or has seen something from i don't think he's
like pulling these things out of thin air however However, where I would agree, this is where things get kind
of things get kind of cloudy and blurry a little bit when somebody when somebody says that someone
increased their testosterone fourfold. But they're also talking about maybe their own usage of TRT
or they're talking about other people that they know that use performance enhancing drugs when it's in the same podcast or in the similar like paragraph, it's kind of making
you think, oh, my God, that thing's going to increase my testosterone fourfold the same
way that performance enhancing drugs are going to do.
Not saying that Andrew Huberman's ever said that.
I've never heard him say that.
But I do think that that people are making comparisons there.
And they're like, I'm going to go buy that supplement.
I'm sure when he recommended Fidozia and some of the other things that it probably sold like fucking crazy on the internet.
When he talked about it on Rogan and things like that.
Talked about it on ours too.
Yeah, on our show as well.
I think he was on our show at the beginning of the pandemic and stuff like that but and talking about the powers of sleep and
growth hormone being produced from the sauna and maybe even the cold plunge and things like that
yeah it does i mean working out will increase your growth hormone levels
will it be the same as running four IUs of growth hormone
every day for, you know, three years?
You know, I don't know.
But again, I haven't heard Huberman say that specifically, but I think that is an area
that can get cloudy from time to time.
I think on two bears, when he was on two bears, when he talked about the Vidoge on ToneCot,
and also maybe it was when he was on our show too he has said he has seen in some people their testosterone increased by up to three
to four hundred points so that could be someone going from 300 to 600 or 700 um but that's not
and again i i'm very curious like if somebody can comment below and let us know where maybe this fourfold thing is
when we look at like how low testosterone is in some men these days because of their lifestyle
factors, because they're not eating good foods, because maybe they're not in shape, because maybe
they're not exercising. They're not getting the type of sleep that they need to get. A lot of
young guys have low test and they think they're just destined to have low test.
Once they start getting their, you know, their hormones in check, once they start getting their sleep, their habits, I meant to say habits, not hormones, things can increase.
And then let's say then they do start to supplement some other things. When we had Adam Hotchkiss on the show the other day, and he mentioned how he's run into
some people where they fix their thyroid and their testosterone came up, boom, like came
up 300, 400, 500 points, not by addressing their test, by addressing their thyroid.
These are things that people don't really think about.
They mainly think, oh, I need more tests.
I need TRT.
That's usually the immediate place that guys go because TRT is so popular.
But a lot of these other ancillary things can actually be that thing to get you the increase that you're looking for, to get you to
decent levels and even above average levels, right? So again, the fourfold thing, because he
uses such colorful words all the time, I'm not even sure if I can believe that the fourfold thing
is true. I have it at the 300, 400 points because of a Doge on Tonkat. But again, maybe that has worked for some people in that way. Cause I remember hearing him say that,
but he didn't say research said, he said that I have seen it work in certain people like that.
That's not a crazy claim. I'd also say that a little bit unfair in my opinion of Shale Sonnen
to say that he's not like the rest of us. I found my experience with Andrew Huberman to be different.
Andrew Huberman came here to Super Training Gym.
He did work out with us.
He did some deadlifts and stuff with us.
You taught him how to bench.
Yeah, I taught him how to bench,
which all of that was a little bit of a surprise for me
because you don't know how each person is going to be when we invite them here.
But he was down.
He hung out.
He's in good shape. he's uh he's got a big neck i mean that's admirable when someone's got yeah when someone's got a neck right it's like you gotta kind of be like yo bro like yeah yeah
hat goes off to you congratulations right um he looks like he's in great shape uh he hung out in
my house and stuff and he was super nice and just he spent some time.
So I kind of disagree with that statement a little bit.
I do think that's actually what surprised me about him is he was more like the rest of us than I expected.
What you got, Andrew?
I just I'm thinking again, going back to like stuff working and not working, because because in SEMA, you've had your labs done after taking, I forgot how many weeks of...
Fidojian, I did like eight weeks of it.
And it worked.
My luteinizing hormone went up quite a bit.
I don't think my test went up that much, though, but that's because I already had great lifestyle habits.
I already take care of myself.
But my LH went up a lot.
Yeah, and then I'm just thinking again like what what
works what works like what if somebody starts taking this stuff and all of a sudden they're
just like well shit i'm on basically i'm on a test booster my testosterone is going to be high
and therefore their workouts are better therefore their habits are now in check and i understand
that that has nothing to do with what the supplement claims to to be able to help you with
but again did it work yes it worked so it's
just i don't know it's strange and then yeah him kind of going after the uh i guess personality or
whatever or like integrity of andrew huberman without knowing him yeah that that's just it's
just kind of a bummer it's a tactic though we talked about this tactic before oh yeah what did
he say he's not like the rest of us. What does that do? Separates him and me.
Us versus them.
Yeah.
And then, of course, the fourfold thing's interesting.
And then what Mark was mentioning, like, again, when people have their arguments back and forth or their debates, they'll bunch things together.
So it seems like X supplement does da-da-da-da.
Remember Jay Cutler when he did this. So now
you kind of associate this supplement with Jay Cutler and it's just like a weird tactic and that
that's for debates. And that's why I like debating suck sometimes. Anthony Chaffee.
Let me ask you this. Like before you went full carnivore, because now there are some people who
like, for example, Paul Saladino, he went carnivore. He was pure carnivore a few years ago. Now he has honey and fruits, et cetera. Um, what do you remember? Like
what was in your diet that was actually giving you issues at the time? Uh, let me ask that first.
Well, that's the thing. I didn't, I didn't even think of it in that way. I didn't even realize
how much of an impact that dropping the plants had on me. I, I, I equated it to the alcohol
because that made such a big difference, you equated it to the alcohol because that made
such a big difference.
Yeah, it does.
And so I always thought that that's what it was.
I'm like, my God, I'm just feeling amazing.
But it coincided with that.
I didn't see at the time how big of a difference it made.
Looking back, how I could tell was when I was in England playing rugby, five years later,
How I could tell was when I was in England playing rugby, five years later, I was like 25 at the time.
It was harder to get the same kind of meat that I was getting before.
And it was – I don't know why, but I just – it just wasn't – yeah, well, it just didn't cook right.
I don't know what the hell it is with the meat over there.
But like I tried to cook a steak and it would just like – it would just gray.
I could never get it to brown.
And like so it would be like cooked well done and just gray on both sides and sweaty looking.
I'm like, oh, that's horrible.
So it wasn't a very appealing.
And so some of the – my workaround was getting like precooked meats.
But half the time it was like breaded.
So they had like breadcrumbs or something like that on like the chicken i was like it isn't that big a deal you know you know dose makes the poison all that sort of stuff so it was like maybe just a little bit and so you
know you can convince yourself of anything and so i convinced myself of that and i remember just like
a couple months in to playing over in england i was like you know why don't i feel as just super
human amazing as i normally do? Am I
not pushing myself? Am I not working as hard? I'm 25 now. I'm just over the hump. Am I dying now?
And I just like thought, oh, so my body's just breaking down. I didn't know. But I was getting
like these, you know, these little injuries and just nagging injuries and like pulled muscles
and just sort of, I was just like, this is not like me. This is not normal. Like normally I was just like this is not like me this is not normal like normally I was I just you know just felt literally superhuman all the time and now I wasn't and so that was that was
the point that I started reincorporating just whole food plants I wasn't eating junk you know
but but that little slip off of just like well isn't that big a deal having breaded meat was that sort of the crack in the dam where now I wasn't just like, I'm not eating any plants.
Absolutely not.
It was, well, it's not that big a deal.
And then there's a big plant-based push after that.
Dr. I think it was Joel Fuhrman came out with the GOMES diet.
Did you ever go down that rabbit hole for yourself?
Like did you ever go plant-based for a while?
Oh, no, God, no.
But my brother was really into that.
And at first, Furman wasn't saying,
oh, don't eat meat at all,
but just make salad the focus, right?
Now, but it was a front
for just the whole raw food vegan sort of thing,
which is what he espouses now from the sounds of it.
But my brother got really into that and he read his book and he's like, wow, this guy
makes a lot of sense.
And, you know, he's talking about his anti-VEGF in mushrooms and this is good against cancer.
And I remember thinking, I was like, yeah, but mushrooms have carcinogens in them.
You know, so it has this thing that's good against cancer, but it has things that can
cause cancer.
So like, you know, on balance, you know, is it a benefit?
And then, you know, also, you know, it has anti-VEGF, which is something that we use to treat cancer and certain cancers in certain situations.
But it's chemo.
And like chemo, other chemo, like you don't take it unless you have cancer, right?
So it's like, oh, well, have these mushrooms.
They're good at fighting cancer.
It's like, right.
Do you have cancer?
Then why are you taking chemo?
And so, you know, that sort of felt a bit weird for me at the time.
But, you know, you just get inundated with, you know, from all sides about these things.
So I was like, okay, well, I guess I'll, you know, have a bit of mushrooms.
I guess I'll have some spinach and all that sort of stuff.
But it was all whole foods and I was still predominantly eating meat.
spinach and all that sort of stuff. But it was all whole foods and I was still predominantly eating meat. And then sort of, what is it, five years ago now, six years ago now, that Dr. Sean
Baker was on Joe Rogan's podcast talking about carnivore diet. And my brother saw that and he was
really excited by it. And he said, you know, hey, there's this American doctor and he played
professional rugby and he's talking about how you can get all your nutrients from eating just meat.
And instantly you just sort of pull back from that and say, oh, how can that be?
That can't be possible.
But then the voice of reason in the back of my head just said, well, I mean I basically did that for five years in my early 20s and that was the period of my life I've never felt better.
So like, well, give it a try and watch it.
And as soon as I watched it, I was like, this guy is bang on.
I mean, there's just like – and it added into the different things that I knew
because there was new research coming out that –
showing that saturated fat and cholesterol were absolutely not the problem
that we blamed them on, blamed them for.
And the fructose had come out with Dr. Robert Lustig's work from UCSF
showing that fructose was quite damaging metabolically
and likely a contributor or causative factor
for a lot of the diseases and problems that we were blaming fat cholesterol for.
And the whole plants are trying to kill you thing.
So I was like, right, I knew it.
I knew plants were trying to kill me, get rid of these stupid things.
And I just went back full into it.
And then I started really digging into the research and trying to say, okay, what do we know?
What can we prove?
And what do we still need to find out?
And asking questions and trying to check in the literature, like, okay, you know, if, you know, meat's really good for you, you should see a difference between vegan and other populations.
I was thinking maybe sugar, fructose was contributory to maybe possibly autism, looking at the rates of autism.
And they all went up at the same time.
All these other chronic diseases went up.
Because when we stopped eating meat and fat and things like that and started switching over to more plant-based. In the 80s, since the USDA declaration in 1977 saying that cholesterol
causes heart disease, so stop it, we listened.
We reduced red meat by over 33% since the 1970s,
reduced our cholesterol and saturated fat intake roughly the same amount.
We replaced a lot of that with chicken.
A lot of people ate more lean chicken and things like that,
but red meat came down significantly.
And we increased the amount of fruits and vegetables we ate, increased the seed oils,
increased the high fructose corn syrup, things like that.
And the results were I think quite telling because the obesity rate tripled, heart disease
tripled, stroke rates tripled, cancer rates tripled, type 2 diabetes, autoimmune disorders,
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and even neurodevelopmental delays such as autism all increased exponentially.
They almost didn't exist before then.
Now they're like the only thing we treat.
And people say, well, we probably had the same rates of autism.
We just didn't notice it because just everyone was stupid in the 70s.
Just no one got it.
I'm like, come on.
They weren't testing for it.
They didn't have a name for it.
Yeah, sure.
Whatever they want to say.
And that's fine.
Maybe.
Maybe that's true.
Maybe we're calling things autism that we just call like, wow, they're just special.
They go on the short bus or something like that and it's just they don't have a name for it.
But now we have a name for it.
Now we have diagnoses and it's still going up.
It's going up decade after decade.
Autism rates are going up.
So, I mean, we've been paying attention for the last 30 years.
So why are those rates going up?
So it's not just that this is a stable state, nothing to see here.
I don't believe that.
But quick question about that because there's a bunch of things here.
Like when we're looking at, for example, rates of obesity, autism, and other things that you're mentioning it's not just obviously
because like increase in vegetables and stuff like that it's like there's the standard american diet
has a lot of just like processed foods and a lot of over consumption there's a lot of things going
on oh there's some studies where people will reference and they'll say red meat is a problem
but it's like there's a lot of other factors along with it.
So when we're talking about this,
it's not just because of the reduction of red meat, right?
No, no, no.
Yeah, 100%.
So yeah, there's many, many things that go involved in that.
The point I'm making with that is that
you can't say that red meat causes obesity
and heart disease and diabetes
if you reduce the amount of red meat we're eating
and all those things increase dramatically.
That's the point I'm making.
Maybe – look, an argument could be made that maybe red meat does contribute to that
sort of thing, but these other things contributed more and all that sort of stuff as well.
But I don't think it's a one-to-one.
But that's what people blame it on.
They blame saturated fat, cholesterol, red meat.
This is the problem.
Nothing else to see here.
Kind of the thing we saw like on TV time and time again and the thing you always kind of heard growing up is that dad loves steak.
But he shouldn't eat steak because it's not good for his heart.
Yes. heart yes and i think it wasn't so much necessarily the steak but it was the steak along with probably
other things that they were eating along with just uh not a great lifestyle because you know
in the 70s and 80s it was really popular to smoke um you watch a show like mad men and the guys are
always drinking they always have like whiskey and i'm not saying that every household was doing all
those things but uh usually when we think of dad we think of somebody who's a little bit overweight
and they're eating an enormous steak.
And so they're eating a large portion of food.
Maybe they don't have that much movement in their life.
And maybe the steak is part of the cause
because it has so many calories,
but it's also along with their lifestyle,
what else they're eating
and the lack of movement probably.
Oh, absolutely.
And I think that that's exactly it.
It's the potatoes and other things were more of a problem.
Smoking, obviously.
You can't eat a potato without some butter on there.
Let's get some sour cream on there.
You never seem to salt them quite enough either, right?
Some bacon would be perfect.
And a little bit of cheese would make it pretty
good actually that'd be a fucking hell of a potato and then you would need more stuff on there still
i think all of that without the potato sounds great
along galani you are a fighter that probably gets some of the most steroid accusations because
you're built like a body always but it used to bother me it used to bother me and i used to fight
this accusation i used to always say why would you say that to me it used to bother me. It used to bother me. And I used to fight this accusation.
I used to always say, why would you say that to me?
I used to take all my time to defend myself.
Why would you say that to me?
You never ever meet me.
I never did something.
I never did because, you know, I never needed to.
You know, I never needed to.
So I never did that.
You know, you should see my family.
Oh, it's impossible for you to be this big, you know, naturally.
It's impossible.
Impossible to be this big naturally.
First, it's impossible to be this big naturally.
I'm like, but look at my brothers.
They're all the same.
We're all the same, right?
So all of them are just the same.
And one of my brother, he's not even into martial art, right?
He's not into martial art.
He went to university in England. And after university, he's not into martial art, right? He's not into martial art. He went to university in England.
And after university, he got cancer.
And he's been struggling with cancer for all this year.
But look at him, right?
He come out of the hospital after his treatment.
And he's doing maybe two months of treatment.
And I said, send me a picture.
And he sent me a picture. And he sent me a picture,
and he looked like he just came out of the gym.
He has like...
He got shredded.
He's totally shredded.
And I'm like, what have you been doing?
He said, no, I just was at the beach,
and I did a little bit of push-up.
And I think I'm starting to feel a bit better.
But if you look at him, I mean, he's amazing.
I mean, he looked like an athlete.
Someone who just came out of the gym. He's been's amazing. I mean, he looked like an athlete.
Someone who just came out of the gym.
He's been spending the last three, four years in the gym.
And we're talking about someone who has cancer and who's been in the hospital, under treatment and so on.
You see, so I just thought we are, you know, this is just an heritage that we are very lucky to have.
But of course, you know, also hard work and education.
I train every day.
I'm very disciplined.
So people should not take that away from me.
You know, I'm always the hardest worker in the room.
And people who know me, people who knows me or who are close to me, they know that.
You fought a lot of different disciplines.
Is it sometimes hard to remember, like, what the heck you're doing like kickboxing versus mma like you just all of a sudden like want to go and take someone down or something
actually no i never felt like that i'm just thinking like man we must be confusing in
there sometimes when you're in trouble yeah when you're in trouble yeah you just throw everything
at them crap for anything right when you're in trouble yeah perhaps with bob stapp was that kickboxing or
was that just mma or uh your bob said he was kickboxing kickboxing yeah have you ever fought
andrew tate he's a kickboxer right he was i think he was different weight class probably
uh no i didn't.
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Another thing too, is to make sure that you're really compatible with the person that you're
with.
So, um, you know, if, uh, if you love to have sex every day and you feel like you literally
need that every day. Um,
and the other person doesn't care about it that much.
They're like,
maybe like more like a once a week kind of thing that might not work great.
Like those are,
these are all things that you got to kind of like work through and think about like,
cause that matters a lot.
Um,
and I,
I hear,
I,
I've heard more people talk about it more recently. Like, um,
there's people that are kind of sensitive to the fact that like, it really matters for men. Like
we're hardwired this way. This is, uh, this is our, this is what we're working with. You know,
we have testosterone levels that are high and, um, it just kind of controls the ship a little
bit. Not that we're not in control of our actions, but we want to fuck pretty often, or at least a lot of men do, right?
And there's probably a lot of women.
So anyway, the main point there is just to make sure that you kind of line up at least a little bit with sex.
And one thing that I think would be pretty interesting, though, along with as a guy yeah sex is like always on our minds like yeah sex is always on our minds
but if you're not a guy who's active like and you're not a person who's utilizing energy like
like sex in itself is an is an energetic act like it takes. But if you're not doing shit,
like if you're not going out,
working out,
like you do jujitsu,
you run,
we all lift,
we still have a good sex drive,
but there are some guys who let's say you're not doing anything. And you're like,
I want sex all the time.
Doug,
go fucking work out,
go use your body a bit.
And you understand like,
yeah,
you still want to have sex,
but it's not something that is like your primary mode of being and you're not getting it every single day.
So now you're angry.
There are some people who are like that.
But I mean, use your body more because then it might even out that libido of yours or that what you think is your libido might just be you not using your body as much as you should be.
I agree.
Yeah.
And it could be energy.
Yeah.
Yeah, and then if you have the opposite of like a low libido, like if the urges aren't there within the couple, it could be because you're just not as healthy as you should be. Because a pretty good marker of health, in my opinion, is like, yeah, your libido should be a little bit higher.
Well, not higher.
It should be high enough to where you do want to have sex with your mate.
And if it's not, then maybe you might just be a little bit unhealthy.
You know what I mean?
Like there, maybe there's something a little bit off to where your body's like, Hey, you
got to address this before we even start getting horny over here.
Like, you know what I mean?
Sleep.
We talk about that all the time.
But why am I going to get deep into that right now?
We got tons of podcasts on sleep, so just search sleep on the channel.
Yeah.
sleep on the channel. Yeah. I think, uh, you know, I think, uh, a big, a big thing is to, um, figure out ways to stay attractive to your significant other. So, um, keeping yourself
physically fit is obviously a big part of it. Um, having like an even mind and being able to,
uh, withstand some of the stressors of life and being able to be someone who's strong,
not just for yourself, but strong for your partner.
You're somebody that they can relate to, they can communicate with,
and you're not getting all depressed and and and uh anxious and shit when they when someone gives
you news you know um these are all things that i think are kind of side things from like actual
sex but i think that uh you know if you're slouchy and like when you hear bad news or you get news
that you interpret as bad um that that that can i don't know that can just lead them to
maybe not be as attracted to you as maybe they once were one thing to like maybe do a little bit
of a deep dive on um is just the idea of a bit of stoic philosophy i hate to be that guy but like
it's not about um not feeling anything or whatever because we will feel everything but it's also just
purely not reacting to everything in a volatile way. You brought up anger, right? There are many things that I've talked about with my
girl or even exes that have maybe brought up a bit of anger, but I'm not someone who acts on anger.
I can feel it there, but then a conversation can happen because it's no use of showing how angry
you are. That doesn't show strength that
actually shows quite a bit of weakness in most situations you know being outwardly angry so i
mean there's who's that author who you love uh which one there's a couple uh the one that was
just here no no no no he he wrote the book um the daily stoic oh ryan holiday he was on a podcast
ryan on our podcast i mean yeah yeah yeah so he has
multiple books on understanding that but if if you're a guy it's not attractive to be emotionally
volatile yeah and it's not safe as we've learned from dana white and other people it's not a good
idea to be emotionally volatile not have control over your emotions the thing is you can feel all
those emotions it's it's healthy to understand those
emotions because there are some people on the internet who are like, men cannot show emotion
and all that shit. That's bullshit. It's okay to feel those things, but you do not always need to
act based off of how you feel. I think that's one of the differences between most men and some women
is that when it comes to our emotions, we can feel them and we can maybe
express them, but we need to be careful with how we express them. We can't yell and scream and do
that. That's not the way we need to be operating. And that is more attractive to a woman than being
the emotionally volatile man that maybe gets way too sad or way too anxious or way too angry.
Got to learn how to control that shit.
Yeah.
Since we were talking about like,
like becoming more attractive to our partner kind of along those lines,
but it's,
it,
it definitely fits is you know,
people are on their phones a lot.
They're on their phones too much.
And on pretty much every app you can find some version of like soft core porn, basically.
So guarding your inputs on what you are seeing, because right, like if we open up Instagram,
especially like the explore page or something, we're going to see ass a lot and a lot of
modified, you know, we got the AI shit now, uh, stuff's going to be Photoshopped.
But what you're seeing is, I'm not going to say it's not real because i mean you know they they are actual people but you know and then there's that and then
there is porn there's a lot of things that are gonna um and see me you can talk more about this
but they're gonna mess with what we assume is actually attractive even you know and so that
way if you're living there where you're seeing um i don't want to use
a rating system but let's just say tens every time you swipe and then you see a real person
real person that you did fall in love with but now you're all of a sudden being like oh well
there's these tens over here and now you might not find your mate as attractive on something
that's not even real yeah so guarding your inputs and cleaning up your feed can definitely help you out
because if not, it's going to fuck everything up.
Because especially if it's porn, right?
If you're watching a lot of porn and you're jerking off to that,
now you're not going to really be as ambitious about having sex.
The phone is a huge factor.
A lot of times you just sit down and you go to even try to watch something as a couple.
And then one of you starts like scrolling through your phone, you know, it's really easy. And
just, it's just kind of a dumb thing. Like you're already sitting in front of a screen,
you know, but if you're agreeing to try to sit there and watch a movie with somebody,
try to, the easiest thing is just to kind of put your phone away, like put it out of reach,
you know, hopefully you're not going to get up and like still want to get on it.
But there's little things like that I think they add up a lot where – or even if the person goes to talk to you and you're just like on your – you're like trying to communicate with you.
But every time they kind of turn around, you're always on your phone.
So whatever way you got to figure out how to negotiate that, um, even though I do use my phone quite a bit, I try to use it when
I'm really not around my wife. Yeah, no, I agree with you guys on the phone thing. And Andrew,
dude, uh, the, the, the porn and the feed thing, I think is, I think it's a, it's a silent, um,
it's, it's like a silent influencer.
It's a silent influencer on the mind of men especially.
I can speak for myself and a few homies that we've had this conversation with because we're millennials.
But as a millennial, when you are used to, first off, watching a lot of porn, beating your shit to a lot of different women, right?
a lot of different women, right? There's this thing within this whole red pill community where they believe that men are wired to have more than one mate and it's not natural for men to be
monogamous. I can understand the idea that it may not be natural, like, because if I'm being
perfectly honest, there is an innate want to fuck somebody else. That doesn't necessarily mean that
I need to act on that want or that want cannot be satiated
by my partner. So within these red pill spheres, guys are like, oh yeah, you know, it's, it doesn't
make sense for a guy to be with one, a woman that wants a guy that's going to be with one,
one woman is dreaming, is delusional. Right. But no, I think what's partially happening is
young men are too used to novelty.
Novelty that comes from avid porn use because you're beating your meat to all these different women.
So when you try to be in a monogamous relationship, you get bored quickly because your novelty isn't satiated.
And now you're like, you can't be with one woman.
Monogamy isn't for everyone.
I'm not saying that everyone needs to subscribe to monogamy but i do think there are a lot of things that are fucking up a man's ability to be monogamous outside of the genetic need to fuck a different woman which i think is honestly overstated within that community and just comes down to a lack of self sexual self-control upon
the man do um the people that subscribe to the red pill stuff do what do they talk about with
as far as kids do they talk about having a lot of kids or no? So when it comes to the red pill, when it comes to having kids, the big thing about the red pill is they think that marriage is kind of a scam.
And it's a scam in the way that the government gets involved because in some ways, there are a lot of ways men can be fucked when it comes to a bad marriage.
If they have kids and she just decides to leave out of the blue, kind of fucked as a guy.
So there's a lot of really good education there.
But when it does come to having kids, they do believe that if a high value man, which is a man that is, you know, he makes good money, but he's also wanted by many women.
If he does choose to have kids with one woman, well, they can have that family.
But he also should be able to have different partners to that.
He could just fuck because just because you're fucking somebody doesn't mean you love them.
You've had children and a life with this woman.
You love her, but she should be okay with you fucking outside because men don't put – in their eyes, men do not put emotion into sex.
Women put emotion into sex, which is why, again, in their eyes, it is not okay for a woman to fuck a guy outside because she doesn't actually want to do that.
She only does that when she's in love with somebody else.
She can't separate emotion from sex.
And for the red pill, men can separate emotion from sex.
So they should be able to exercise their sexual options even within a relationship with a woman with children.
That's how they look at it.
In my eyes, I just think that's a lack of self-control. I mean, it's on the surface. It sounds very, very good for a man
that wants to just fucking, but also still have a family and like, and it sounds like a headache,
but you know, like, it sounds terrible. I think it's a cope, but yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
That sounds terrible.
I think it's a cope, but yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, so I mean, that side.
Sorry.
Yeah.
No.
So I guess moving on something else.
It's good.
It's kind of fucked up, but like if you're, if this will definitely kill sex, 100% is if you're just not good at it.
Um, if, if, you know, you finally do get in the bedroom and you know you're either
you're busting quick or you're not paying attention to her needs she's not busting at all
like you're probably not going to get invited back to the party you know what i mean
what are you shooting me because you're hitting the nail on the head brother
he's giving you points like okay got it okay cool sounds good um you know it's you know guys like
we i mean build up a lot of anxiety for that thing and then finally when it happens you blow it um
thankfully our homegirl susan bratton is here to help we had an amazing episode with sex sexpert
susan bratton um she talks about a thrust in time technique that i use that works
incredible and that's just like how to last like basically you can last forever in bed
um but yeah dude i mean doing a little bit of research and i'm not talking about like porn
i'm talking like actually seeking out a sexpert like susan bratton on how to like actually
make a woman come like that shit's very very important because if you want to get more of
that be good at it keep them coming back literally here's here's one thing here's a secret oh you see
what i'm using to speak into the mic uh your mouth use it more use it more like a juicy oh yeah use it use this use this more dog this this this is yeah this is why i'm
this is why i have a great sex life this right here yep this use your mouth more fucking eat
right not like dj khaled i don't eat box eat other things you don't eat box bro it's a box of pizza
susan talks about that too.
Like, hey, it makes a big difference because your mouth can do way more things than your dick can.
Your dick isn't the only weapon you have.
You got a mouth.
Yeah, you got to let them catch up to you.
Yeah.
I think it's, yeah, it's important to like be able to take some cues and to real, like sometimes Sometimes things you're doing aren't working great.
Dan Garner.
And by the way, when it does come to tempo runs,
is that like a six or seven for the whole duration of the run?
Or there aren't any periods where you increase speed or slow down, right?
It's that speed for the whole run.
Yeah.
So there is different ways to do this.
Different coaches.
So you can actually have tempo intervals.
Okay.
Yeah.
They're aerobic intervals. It's a weird kind of's a weird kind i know it sounds a little bit weird people are
used to intervals just being high intensity interval training um and very anaerobic but
when you control the intensity you can actually control and do tempo based intervals it's
something i've done a lot for actual athletes um the past in multidisciplinary sports to where you need speed, agility, conditioning, strength, hypertrophy all at the same time like hockey players, fighters, those kinds of people.
I've done intervals for tempos in the past more so for a recovery workout.
That's basically how I've structured my training for my athletes to where we'll do intervals, tempo intervals,
more as active recovery, but something that's going to produce more fatigue is like what I'm
doing for Mark, which is that constant tempo pace. You're going to rock and roll with that thing for
30 minutes up to like a max of 45 at the absolute most. Because, um, once you are moving at that
clip for that long a period of time it's it's
just you're you're simply gonna start losing the fatigue management battle
gotcha yeah tempo run is just kind of annoying like it's just you like running
at like kind of a normal whatever like a normal good pace would be and then you
just ticking it up just a notch or two above that comfortably uncomfortable and
you're like mmm yes like it's that starts to nag at you yeah I know because you either want to slow down or speed up And you're like, hmm, this is like, it starts to nag at you,
you know, you're like, all right. I know. Cause you either want to slow down or speed up,
but you're just comfortably. And that's what it should feel like. Like that's actually,
you're at the threshold. Like you're right there. That's not very comfortable place to be.
Your mind either wants to back off or it wants to actually get after it. But when you're working
that clearance, um, you're doing a lot of things that are going to help you on race day.
What are some of your favorite things to do just on like an Aerodyne bike or like a rower? Because
a lot of people have access to those things. What are some of your favorite protocols on some of
those things for conditioning? Yeah. So I really like to incorporate cross training just to move
around the stress. If you've got a ton of localized trauma from just only doing running, then that
can break down the tissues and create inflammation. It can do things that we don't necessarily need
in order to continue to drive your systemic work capacity. Maybe your feet are getting beat up and
your calves and stuff. Right. Now you can just get off your feet and get on a bike or something.
Especially if they're not doing your myofascial stuff, like your, your, your ability to work with the myofascial and improve your recovery, get things released,
get them mobile again. A lot of people don't have those tools, let alone have the knowledge
to implement those tools. You've put a bunch of stuff out there which can help people,
but some people will just still not do it. You know, myself included, by the way,
I tried some of this stuff, by the way, the listeners, this is the sentence that I got at
Mark's house the other day.
Hey, come into my bedroom for a second.
I want to show you some tools.
Nice.
That was the sentence that I got.
And you left happy and you left tired.
You were spent.
I left happy.
I left tired.
And I said, okay, let's go.
You went back to your hotel room and slept like a baby.
There we go.
Tired him out.
Good job, Mark. Boom. Done. let's go back to your hotel room and slept like a baby yeah tired him out good job mark
done and right before this podcast uh this email also goes hey drink this
and it's an unmarked just to loosen you up yeah that's all jesus yeah so this is what i gotta
deal with here what was the question i don't even know we're just talking about uh getting on like
an aerodyne bike. Oh, cross training.
Right, right, right.
Okay, cross training.
I like to actually move around the stress just to eliminate any kind of buildup, that kind of trauma, that localized area.
Because you can keep driving systemic work capacity.
We're still aerobic.
We're still improving the vascular networks.
We're still increasing the conditioning of the heart.
Like you can, the heart is a muscle that needs to be conditioned.
We can do that with the rower.
That's way more joint friendly than running.
Like, especially if you're starting this thing out, you guys, like if you're inspired by what Mark's doing right now, and this is brand new to you, then like we opened this podcast
up with like, this can be tough on your joints.
But when you have a stationary bike, or if you have an elliptical, this can be tough on your joints, but when
you have a stationary bike or if you have an elliptical or if you have a rower or if
you have a pool, um, these are all things that are so joint friendly that you can do
to work all of the same systems that we're talking about.
So cross training, I actually like to do it either for the purposes of recovery.
So you're just, you're doing it at like a three out of 10. You're just on there, uh, for lack of a better phrase to get a flushing
effect. You're, you're getting loosened up. You're just feeling better from it. Right. Um, so you can
run it that way. Or if you feel a little bit beat up, but, uh, you beat up, you feel a little bit
beat up from a joint perspective, but you actually feel okay systemically, then I would use cross
training as a version or vehicle of tempo training. So if you, if you, if you want to use it as a
recovery tool, that's great. But if you actually feel internally recovered, but your joints are a
little beat up, use the tempo method for them, because I want you to still increase the specificity
of your training, uh, with your actual time that you get running. And that's, what's going to be our fart lick and our long and slow runs.
I was wondering about this, like, for example, Andrew's doing a lot of grappling and he has
friends that are getting ready for competitions too. And I've done some fart lick runs too. Um,
but what an interesting thing I've found is that exactly what you're saying, going on like an airdyne bike and doing intervals, let's say 30 seconds at an eight out of 10 or whatever,
eight or nine out of 10, maybe trying to keep everything nasal and then rest periods of around
90 seconds, doing that 10 to 12 times, even though during that workout, I will get fatigued.
Afterwards, I can come off of that and I'm not beat up to, like, I'm not
nearly beat up so I can actually go and train the next day. So is something like using those types
of tools something that could really be beneficial for grapplers or athletes who are trying to
increase conditioning without building up too much joint fatigue? Yeah, I think for sure. Like,
nasal breathing is something that's really blown up on the scene in the past, what, three to five years or so. It's got so many
benefits to it that we're still continuing to learn about. Like our nose actually filters the
air. It helps us maintain glycogen and be more efficient with utilizing fat as a fuel source.
It's keeping our body in a parasympathetic state for longer than it otherwise
would have been because mouth breathing is associated with activating that sympathetic
state, which is very fatiguing over time. Nose breathing also helps keep our heart rate lower,
and an increased heart rate is associated with exercise-induced fatigue. We've all felt that
and then you're going to be fatigued when that's happening. Nasal breathing stops or slows down all of that from taking place.
So we're able to get a major benefit out of it.
We're improving our ability to deliver and absorb oxygen because it's coming through a network where we need to be a lot more efficient with it.
But I do actually like it for my combat sports athletes too because it helps keep them calmer.
I think every athlete needs to be calmer like a
hockey player if he can get to the bench in between shifts and nasal breathe and calm down
because nobody performs worth than an worse than an athlete who's not patient when you're very
sympathetic you might actually be exploding in the octagon or in the ring or going for a submission
that's not there you weren't patient enough you didn't get the right position or in in hockey you
might give away a suicide pass you You're just giving away the puck.
These are all very, very sympathetic things. So in combination to the physiological benefits of
nasal breathing, I also just like the psychological component of I'm in control of this thing.
I can actually bring back strategy and not act so erratically to this sympathetic response.
And I think that thinking about it almost like you're getting on a horse is a cool tool to use.
It's something that I learned from the crew over at XPT.
And they actually taught me it when I was getting in the ice baths.
I've done a lot of cold plunges with them.
And the way in which they put it in my mind is like the ice is an absolute stressor,
but it's a stressor that you're not going to be able to stop. You will get out of the ice bath
if you panic. So the way in which you have to think about it is a horse is sprinting and you
have to see that horse coming and get on the horse and just control it and understand that it's going to be a crazy situation.
But you're on it and you're getting control.
You're on the horse until you can calm, calm, calm down.
That would actually help me a ton in the ice bath because the people who get out are the ones who panic.
They don't understand that that's coming.
They don't get on the horse at the right time.
They don't meet their breath where coming. They don't get on the horse at the right time. They don't meet their breath
where it's ready to be met.
And they end up panicking and getting
out. And I think that happens a lot in sports
in terms of patience.
Maddie Forberg. Oh, those weirdos. It makes me so uncomfortable. Feral, feral, feral, feral.
Like, fucking feral.
Alright, so he's looking.
He's watching.
Five as five pounds.
Is it a tenner?
Tenner.
Hmm.
Excuse me?
You don't have to do that. It's no no it's okay i got it thank you though
see what i mean all right here we go have you seen that video before no yeah so she saw him
like looking at her he came over to help with some weights um and it seemed like it just really did
bother her a lot of people have been talking about that specific clip and she actually ended up
apologizing for it but it doesn't seem like a normal response you know what i mean like it
seems like she has maybe dealt with something before and maybe she's taking his looks to mean
more than what they actually are i don't like these videos where they just zoom in on the people around them because they could be looking at anything.
Now, if somebody is like squatting and they're right behind me, just like staring at my butt crack or something, that's a totally different story.
I do think it's annoying, but not harassment that he like put the weight on because so many people have done that for me where they're like,
Oh,
let me grab that.
And I'm like,
I'm going to add like three more plates on here.
Like,
you know,
I'm not incapable of doing this.
Yes.
And while I,
you know,
there's two sides of that,
like,
Oh,
they're just trying to help.
But also like,
I'm not this damsel in distress with this plate.
That to me is like,
it does seem kind of like she's being a bit dramatic because he like glanced over there a couple of times.
He could be looking at anything.
It's not like he's, I don't know, being weird in my opinion.
I've seen a lot worse where people are like just straight up kind of like stalking like prey kind of thing where –
Circling.
Yeah, and that one seemed a bit mild to me.
Not that it's ever appropriate
to like stare at somebody, but that didn't look like that in my opinion. I would say, uh, isn't
this how we meet people? You know, like you're probably thinking as a guy, like you heard about
how your dad met your mom or something. And you're like, here's my chance. Like I should go figure
out a way to get close to this girl to say hello or something. And that's a tricky one because
people will ask me like, Oh, how do I shoot my shot in the gym? And I always kind of want to be like, well, maybe the gym's not the
place for that. But that's where I met my partner. Like that's not fair for me to say, don't go and
try and meet somebody at the gym. I would just be respectful. Like don't, if somebody seems like
they're uncomfortable or they don't want to talk to you or they're in the middle of a set or
something, now's not the time to talk.
But if I'm going to the water fountain or something, or I'm waiting in between exercises,
I feel like that's an appropriate time to come up to somebody if you're really trying to shoot your shot.
But also, don't just totally disrupt somebody's training session.
For any ladies that are watching this, I'm actually curious what you do think about men approaching in the gym.
Because it is a social
space it's a social space where there's a common interest in whether it's getting jacked or getting
healthier y'all have the same mindset the men and women there but how do you ladies feel about
getting approached do you think it's because i've seen comments of women saying everyone's in the
gym to work out don't approach in the gym but that just seems too i mean i met't approach in the gym. But that just seems too, I mean, I met my girl in the gym,
right? You met your husband in a gym. It just seems like it's odd that that's just not the place.
I agree. And especially if you really prioritize training, you'd probably want to meet somebody
who at least cares about it. So if you're somebody who's training a lot, you're probably not somebody
who's going to the bars all the time or going to clubs and like you know other places where you'd meet somebody yeah so it's again like the time
and the place do should a guy come up to me while i'm in the middle of like a rep like absolutely
not or if i'm about to like set up or whatever like don't talk to me then but in like the in
between times i feel like that's appropriate and, it's on me to be like,
hey, look, I'm just not really interested. You know, like it's really easy to say that.
I know some women kind of feel like they need to like be nice about something, but I think more
women need to be direct, be mean. Like if you're not interested, tell that, like don't entertain
the conversation. Tell that guy, hey, listen, I'm not trying to meet somebody at the gym. I'm just
trying to train. Like nice to meet you, but. I'm not trying to meet somebody at the gym i'm just trying to train like nice to meet you but i'm not really interested in you turn
around it's chris hemsworth like uh hold on a second i meant like uh is that your celebrity
crush yeah maybe is that your free pass it's chris hemsworth for you michael b jordan for me
yeah i like it i like it. Giancarlo Badoni.
How much time does it take to really see good progress in jiu-jitsu?
Are we talking about three times a week?
Consistency is the most important thing.
So at least as long as you're going, if you can only make it three times a week, that's what your life allows you.
You're going to see results as long as you stay consistent three times a week.
It's not like you're on for six weeks and then you're off for three weeks. Then obviously you're going to see results as long as you stay consistent three times a week. It's not like you're on for like six weeks and then you're off for three weeks.
Then obviously you're going to backtrack.
But so consistency is the most important thing.
More time on the mat is better overall.
But it also depends on the individual because somebody who –
I teach beginners all the time.
And so I get beginners that, you
know, have been training for three months, but the kid's 16 years old and he's played sports all his
life. This kid goes, gets good fast. Whereas, you know, I have, you know, a 38 year old dad who,
you know, sits all day on a nine to five and he only gets to train four days a week.
Even if the 16 year old also trains four days a week, you're going to tend to see for the most part that the progression is a little faster.
The younger that they are, they tend to respond quicker to movements.
And I tend to relate that to one, like how active they are and how active the 30 –
They've been, yeah.
Yeah, they've been their whole life.
life. But also, you know, how many movements have you actually learned in your 16 years of life as opposed to your 38 years of life? And how many, how much of that movement have you accommodated
your body to? Is it your body just used to doing? You know, with your personal progress,
and everyone should probably check out the documentary Becoming Dangerous, that Flow made. It was fucking awesome. But Gordon, in a segment, he said that the one year that you guys trained together
when you came and started training with Donaher,
that he thinks you progressed more in that one year than your whole span of training.
Do you know what he meant by that?
And do you feel that just because of that training setting,
it just vastly improved your jiu-jitsu?
Because you already had really good jiu-jitsu at that point yeah i've been training jiu-jitsu a
long time i think there's a couple of uh factors to that there's one is that i was fully immersed
in nogi whereas up until that point i would say 80 to 90 percent of what i did was gi so like when
i started training jiu-jitsu we only had had one no-gi class a week in my academy.
And the rest of the other days, I was only training in the gi.
And then in the last couple of years, I've been trying to focus more on no-gi, competing more.
More so when I was a black belt, I started to transition a little more to no-gi.
How many years do you think that's been?
a little more to nogi um how many years do you think that that's been um so i've been a black belt for two and a half three years i think okay i can't remember exactly when i i feel like that
should be like a date that i remember but yeah but uh um so i feel like you know the last couple
of years i think it might have been just just because the way that the sport was progressing.
There was a lot more of – it seemed like no-gi was just trending a lot more and it just seemed like there was more opportunities in that area.
And for whatever reason, even when I was training mostly gi, I would seemingly do a little bit better in no-gi tournaments.
I don't know if I just put less pressure on myself.
I was training it less, so I was like, whatever, let's just see what happens.
But for whatever reason, even as a brown and early black belt, I medaled or performed better at Nogi tournaments.
And then once there was this big uproar in Nogi and ADCC was starting to get a lot of hype behind it, I put in my mind that I was going to do the trials and that was what I was going to focus on.
And so at that time, I was training by myself.
I was teaching in Massachusetts at Bernardo Faria School.
And so what I would do was I would teach in the evenings and I would get a small
group of my students and we would go upstairs.
There was like an upstairs mat area and we would just, I would take like seven or eight
guys and I would teach them and then I would grapple with them.
And that was like my training camp for, you know, however many months prior to the trials.
And then three weeks before the trials is when I finally actually like moved to Austin.
So I was able to kind of like put the finishing touches on, you know, tactics and stuff like that.
And then, you know, I was able to like win the trials.
But in terms of like that year, I think that because I had fully immersed myself into Nogi, I was learning a lot of new skills and a lot of holes in my game that I had because I hadn't come from that no gi
Background even though I trained no gi here and there it wasn't like you know
Once you're fully immersed in it you do realize that they are different sports. It's like wrestling and judo, you know, so
There is a tons of similarities to them. It's still jujitsu at the end of the day
it's another facet of jujitsu, but like a lot of like the things that you can do in the gi in terms of takedowns in terms of you know
submissions like the whole leg lock game changes everything the whole wrestling aspect um there's
submissions that you just can't do in the in no gi that you can do in geese you have to specialize
in certain you know moves things like that um friction versus less friction sweat there's so
many different things that change the way that you approach the game that i was really able to hone in on like that specific
facet of my jiu-jitsu which made me go from a good nogi submission grappler to like a great
nogi submission grappler where i was able to really just like fill in all those gaps and just round
out my game and i'm still you know round there's
still a bunch of different skills that i personally want to improve upon yeah and that i still feel
that i'm not as good at you know that i can be um and so um yeah that's kind of what i think
you know played a factor and also you know i was a student full-time i was just a full-time student
like i was showing up to class every day. I wasn't teaching. I was just taking classes from the best coach that you could ask for.
So it's all those pieces of the puzzle make it relevant.
Did the black belt not matter to you that much?
Is that partly why you don't remember?
And did you also go to practice like the next day, the day after you may have gotten your belt?
Yeah, yeah.
Just like the next day, the day after you may have gotten your belt.
Yeah, yeah.
So for whatever – so I spent like quite a while at my Purple Belt because I was moving.
So I moved from my home gym to a different state and I had moved around for like about two years to a couple different places.
And so I never got belted at Purple Belt. purple belt um and that was kind of the beginning of where i started to to decide that i wanted to
be a full-time competitor even with like everybody's goal is like okay i want to be a world
champion but like what does that really mean you know like what does that entail and i was still
figuring that out but i knew i wanted to be you know i wanted to pursue jitsu competitively at
that point and so um trained at a couple different places and then I ultimately ended up in North Carolina where that's where I ended up getting my black belt under Lucas Lepre.
And for whatever reason, when I was coming up through the ranks, like a black belt was very important.
I was like, OK, I'm going to get my black belt.
Like that was important to me.
I'm going to get my black belt.
Like that was important to me.
And as time went on and I spent like a few years like not getting belted, I just stopped worrying about like the belt that's like on my waist.
I just felt like it was irrelevant. competitor or when I was, you know, starting to pursue competitive jujitsu, that the belt was
important to me. It was because I wanted to compete at a black belt level against the guys
that I was watching, you know? So that was the only reason. Entry into going against the very
best. Correct. Yeah, exactly. So I would watch, you know, a world championship or an ADCC. ADCC
doesn't have belts, but like worlds at the time when I was, you know, training in the gi, um,
you know, uh, and I would see those guys and I'm like, Hey, one day I'm going to compete, you know, on that, on that level with those guys.
And, um, but really like the skill that the belt is not, you know, a good, uh, marker for where
your skills are at. And so for me now, and in that time, I started to drift less towards the belt and more towards how good am I actually.
And so that's why I think like when I got my black belt, it was a little bit more cold than any of the other belts.
Like every other belt, I was like, yeah, I got my belt.
Like that means like something.
But you're no different than you were five seconds before you got the belt.
Like so that's kind of like how I started to approach it.
And I, and I try to like, um,
emphasize that toward to my students that yes,
you are going to get belted at some point, but that shouldn't be your goal.
You should, your goal should be your own personal development.
You mentioned watching a lot of athletes,
like the guys that you wanted to compete against.
How did you, how did you make that
transition into becoming that person because that was another big part of that documentary that
your belief in yourself as an athlete knowing that you had those skills to compete against those
people when do you think you started to recognize that you are also at that level and you can
compete at that level these guys that you may have been watching for years they're not your idols anymore they're your competition yeah yeah um i think when i
started competing as a black belt my first ever black belt tournament was pan ams um that was
when i had my first match against hulk and um you know we we started kind of that rivalry yeah um
and i would compete against i mean this is kind of like the story throughout a lot of my career.
But particularly at Black Belt, like I would compete against guys that were, you know, good or had been Black Belts for a while.
Or, you know, Hulk at that time had already won Worlds and done all these things.
And like I always had these like narrow matches.
And I was like every time I would walk off the mat, I'd be like, okay, I lost that match by like two points.
Nothing.
He didn't really do anything to me.
And I would always question myself and I'd be like, man, if I would have just like opened up more and like tried something like he wasn't going to, he wouldn't have been able to, like I would have been able to win that match.
So I always felt like it was on me.
It wasn't on the other guy.
And so that started to shift the way that I trained and the way that I, you approached you know training and competing how I would just make my so previously I
started to think about like I would go into tournaments with the intention of
just winning like I was okay I need to go out there and I need to win I need to
come home with a gold medal but what happens from the first second that you step on the mat and to the gold medal,
there's a whole lot that happens in between.
And so what I started to realize and my coach who at the time who gave me my brown and black belt,
Lucas Lepre, he helped me understand this and John also helped me understand this as well,
which was what matters isn't winning.
Winning is just a byproduct of how you perform.
And so if your goal, if your focus is – everything is about what you focus on.
So if you're focused on winning and more specifically if you're focused on not losing, that's another way – another thing that's important.
I was worried about losing to a guy and then I was okay let me think about winning but it shouldn't be the result that
you're focused on or that you're focused on you should focus on the performance and if you perform
well and you perform the way that you know that you can um and that you train for and the way
that you do every day in the gym then the the result will almost certainly be a byproduct by
product of that performance.
And that's kind of like how I started to shift my focus in tournaments.
And it's always going to be a battle.
You know, your mind is never your friend, especially in moments like that.
And so for me, I just try to put my focus on the things that I do every single day in the gym
and just try to replicate those things in the tournament independent of the stage that I do every single day in the gym and just try to replicate those things in the tournament
independent of the stage that I'm on or who I'm competing against or whatever it is. Ultimately,
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order automatically again vivo barefoot.com slash power project links to them down in the description
as well as the podcast show notes nick rodriguez aka nicky rod do you do any outside conditioning
for jujitsu or do you just train more jujitsu and train harder i mean yeah definitely the best cardio for grappling is doing the jiu-jitsu um but i'll do things you know like i was telling
you guys earlier i like i'm a fan of the emoms from crossfit um so things like that definitely
boost your cardio but i'm a fan of just working different things so like whatever i don't use on
the mat i'll do like kind of in the gym you know so like if i'm not like maybe i use a lot of legs in practice
i'll do leg workouts or like um um one of my favorite imams is i'll do like uh
a five mental or five barbell rows power cleans um what squats and i'll toss like something else
in there to make like 20 reps i'll do like a like a 10 minute imam of that so like that's
that's pretty good cardio you know and muscular endurance whatnot so i'm a fan of
stuff like that cool how's it been now to like owning your own gym i don't know how long have
how long has b team jujitsu been a thing so it's gonna it's gonna be two years in the summer and
yeah it's fun i mean we get to make our own schedule pretty much all of our students are
you know they're our friends and it's a good time our gym is full of people that just want to get better and they train
consistently like most of my people in my gym train once a day and some of them a lot of them
twice a day so uh you know like uh we have a few different sessions we have 8 a.m 12 p.m and 7 p.m
the 12 p.m is usually typically the comp class, and all the classes are more hobbyist.
But yeah, we have a lot of people that compete, and our guys are good.
And our goal specifically with the B team initially was to just create practice partners
that were giving us problems in practice.
So we have tough roles.
And now we have a year and some change before the next ADCC,
so we can help develop our guys to make it even harder come ADCC time. WhatCC time. What spurred the name B-Team Jiu-Jitsu? Well, that's Craig Jones. He's a,
he is a, he's a meme artist when it comes to taking second place, right? He took in second
place in all of the world-class competitions. So he's like, all right, let's just, you know,
instead of calling ourselves the best, because everybody says they're the best or tries to be,
you know, he's like, all right, let's uh be the second best that way nobody can cop us you
know so so we kind of uh we kind of memed it and it hurts my feelings a little bit but you know i
i get it i like it i support it yeah you know i'd rather be a team or or for me b team is best
beast for best better yeah makes sense what do you think you have to do because you're right there with
some of the best in the world what do you think you have to do to be clear-cut the best in the
world yeah i think uh i think once i be gordon i'll be considered the best in the best pound
for pound um you know i i think right now i am the best pound for pound especially if you're
talking like uh not using any fucking like bodily enhancements like i'm by far the pound for pound especially if you're talking like uh not using any fucking like bodily enhancements like
i'm by far the pound for pound best i mean if you take because some of the guys that do steroids in
the sport they literally couldn't compete at all if they weren't you think so i i i know so because
you're taking guys that are like naturally 175 180 pounds and then in nine months they're 230 pounds it's it's fucking insane it's like
it takes a super long time to build up anything like and you you can do that you know but it's
it's harder doing it when you do uh building that muscle when you're doing an hour plus
cardio every day and uh it just takes much longer so i'm very confident that a lot of
these guys couldn't compete if they if they were were natty. So I call myself the natty King.
Yeah. You can't beat them. Join them. Right. Maybe, uh, maybe you should consider.
Consider. Yeah. I mean, I don't like the, uh, I hear too much about the side effects and I,
you know what the real thing is, I don't know enough, right. It would say I wouldn't have to
use some brain energy to do a ton of research before i ever like you know considered it and i'm doing great
now i mean the best the best guys you know gordon ryan currently and i just broke his foot so we're
getting closer every time yeah this is something that's actually kind of interesting because like
you you are natural you haven't taken anything you are one of the bigger grapplers in the game
though and i wonder it's like it's not that you need more muscle necessarily, but one thing
that could probably help somebody who trains as much as you is something that can help
with your recovery.
Not necessarily something that packs on more size because you don't necessarily need more
size to be a better grappler.
But every workout is like 2 or 3% better because you're a little bit more recovered
or something.
And my curiosity is, again, because in Ngi jiu-jitsu they don't care would you be open to finding
something that could help with your athletic recovery or is it just like the principle of
staying without any type of above everything right what makes me better than all these guys is that I am super consistent every day with my meals, with my sleep, with my daylight exposure, and with my training.
I think those things are super important.
And that's why I say – because a lot of these guys don't do the right thing.
But they do gear, so it kind of makes up for the five hours of sleep a a night the only getting half your meals in shit like that so for me recovery is nutrition sleep and keep training right like even if you
have injuries like train around the injury try not to you know um try to create bad habits but
maybe do some rounds where you know it's not taxing that specific point of your body so training every
day but being consistent in the diet and the sleep. I agree with you. Like staying ahead of it and continuing to move is pivotal. Have you ever
found that some days it's just dumb and it doesn't make any sense? Like, have you been
at practice where you're like, I'm in on this everyday thing, but today's, today's a rough
goal of it. I mean, I, I, uh, I definitely i definitely have days where you know are not as good not like
my peak days like personally my peak days are like i mean every day it's pretty fucking great
but my best days are like tuesday wednesday thursday usually my best training sessions
for whatever reason my whole life of training it's always been like that's those are my days
i do best and come competition i have the ability to like peak later on in in the week so you know come the weekend i
can compete um what was your question specifically um just like some days going and just i don't know
you have an injury or you're sick and you're like yeah it's fucking it would be actually nice if i
just broke the streak and feel like a little bitch yeah didn't didn't uh come today yeah i mean i'll
take a day off like occasionally like maybe maybe i've done my uh you
know monday wednesday friday train twice and then every other day just train once and i've done that
for like a few months and i need a sunday to take to take a rest day like sometimes i'll do that
but i find when i take that rest day on sunday uh it's a bit harder to get going on monday i'm like
fuck it's so easy to just not go to practice like it's it's very it's very comfortable to just sit at home and you know chill but um i i enjoy practice honestly i
look forward to going to going to it especially if i know i got a visitor coming in or somebody
like because i'm in an interesting spot where like b team is a like a travel destination so i
anytime we got 40 guys from around the world, different countries coming in
to not only learn, but to try to test us. Like every day I have somebody from a different country
or somebody that's pretty high level trying to submit me. So I have to be sharp every single
day. Sandra Khan. So this is actually interesting. I think probably people that are listening can
kind of start thinking if you are just walking around or you're chilling or even you're listening
to the podcast and your tongue is at the bottom of your mouth, that's not necessarily the proper
oral resting posture you're supposed to have, correct? Yes. This is something anybody listening
could do, which is put your teeth together and then swallow. We call it the invisible swallow.
Then that means that you swallow without making any faces.
And you can do it if you're driving.
You're not going to look in the mirror.
But if you're at home, just look in the mirror.
Put your teeth lightly together and then swallow, thinking about putting the back of your tongue up.
And then hold that.
After you swallow, usually we tell the protocol is to swallow three times really hard.
And then you feel kind of all the tissues glue together.
And we say they consolidate in front of the roof of the mouth.
So that opens your airway.
And you can teach yourself to hold that.
It's hard to hold it if you don't have enough room.
And most of us don't have enough room.
If you have enough room, you can teach yourself
and it will just naturally go park itself up there. But most of us don't have enough room. If you have enough room, you can teach yourself and it will just naturally go park itself up there.
But most of us don't have enough room.
So we have to use something to help us recognize it and, you know, hold it at night like our lip lockers that you can use.
Or, you know, like you guys are talking about tape.
That can be an adjunct that can help you while you learn that position.
And this is the lip locker.
Yes.
What's the negative impact of this?
Like what have you seen?
Like what's the epidemic?
Well, the epidemic, we have enough research on the fact that if you are not breathing
well and you're not resting well, you're not recovering well,
you will have side effects that can be, you know, they can go anywhere from just being tired to being, you know, having your cells being under stress.
And stress is a cause of so many diseases, especially what we call Western diseases,
you know.
So if you have, you know have a predisposition for disease
and your cells are not protecting you,
then you're going to get to have that disease earlier in life.
And we can't really say if you don't have a good jaw,
you will develop Alzheimer's.
That's not a result that can be –
It's not scientific, yeah.
Yeah, but we know that there's the resting mode and then there's the active mode.
We have the sympathetic and the parasympathetic.
And we've done work in Stanford with Dr. Sapolsky who's an expert in stress.
in Stanford with Dr. Sapolsky, who's an expert in stress. And he basically knows that the more stress, the more you're going to break down your cells. So we want to be in parasympathetic,
which is the rest and repair mode, as opposed to in the sympathetic, which is the fight and flight.
Fight and flight is useful, but it should be very short and we should get out of it.
But as humans, we're carrying on this stress because we're always thinking we're being in danger.
That's what stress is.
So our cells are vulnerable.
If we are in parasympathetic mode, our cells are not vulnerable.
So we want to be as long as possible in this parasympathetic rest and repair,
digest. These are the longer times. So when we're asleep, we want to be only in parasympathetic.
If our mouth is open and we're struggling to breathe or if we have sleep apnea, we are going to be the same as if a tiger was attacking us in the middle of the night. So we're going to put all our energy into fighting that stress
and we're going to leave ourselves vulnerable to disease.
So these are all theories that we're looking into,
but definitely having good sleep, good rest, good breathing
will make us healthier.
And the other thing is we look better.
us healthier. And the other thing is we look better. The health, this is something that's in JAWS, in our appearance chapter. If you look better, you're probably going to be healthier
because we are designed to be attracted to the mates that are going to have the best possibility
to have healthier offsprings. So a nice jaw will look good because it's a healthy jaw,
not because we just want to, you know,
we think it's an opinion that we look better.
We're going to be healthier if we have wider jaws
with the possibility to breathe better.
Good.
I was just going to add to that.
You know, there's such huge problems with people's sleep.
And when it comes to nutrition, when it comes to exercise, people can overdo their food.
They can underdo their exercise.
People can overdo their exercise, right?
You can kind of have this wide variety of things.
And what I usually say is as long as it doesn't negatively impact your sleep, as far as you, maybe somebody is trying to diet for a bodybuilding show, but once they get down
to those last couple of weeks, that better just be a temporary position that you're in. Cause it's
going to be very difficult to sleep as you get leaner and more calorie deprived. On the other
end of it, you have people that are eating probably too much food before they go to bed.
Maybe they traditionally overeat
and they're heavy and they're having a hard time going to sleep simply because they may have like
sleep apnea, which I would imagine would be related to your body weight, but maybe it's
more related to some of the airways. But that's one of the main reasons why we're talking to you
today is because so much of this has to do with the way that we breathe. And for people to, you know, sometimes people hear these kind of rabbit holes that we go down
and they think it's outrageous or crazy, but I don't think it's crazy or outrageous for us to try to examine
how can we breathe better.
You know, breathing is definitely the one action that is most important.
Of everything that we do, breathing is most important.
And there's something my ENT was talking about us, about it when we were writing the new book,
Nose. He says, breathing is the only function that has two organs that we can use for the same.
Like we have organs that we have two organs doing one thing, like two eyes, two ears.
But we only have one function that has two organs.
So you can breathe through your nose and your mouth
because breathing is so important.
And we have to make sure that we optimize the breathing
based on whatever we want to achieve.
So breathing is not, okay, breathe through your nose all the time.
No. As humans, we can breathe through our mouth and that has helped us be the dominant animal
in the planet. We can cool ourselves off. We can breathe through our mouth. If we have an accident
with our nose, we can compensate and breathe through our mouth and we can have that extra air when we
need to get away from, you know, from danger. So breathing through our mouth is not bad,
but we have to determine what are we breathing for. And when you're, you know, in athletics and,
you know, that's not necessarily my field, nutrition and bodybuilding and lifting weights and all that.
But I am involved in trying to get every sport has different demands of oxygen.
You're not going to breathe the same if you're a swimmer than if you're a boxer.
A boxer has a device in their mouth so they cannot mouth breathe when they're doing their
sport.
And then they stop and they have to recover really fast and they have to get back into the sport. Whereas a swimmer
will swim and then they're done and they mouth read. So it's adequate for a swimmer to mouth
read. And it's fantastic that we can do it because we can go into the pool and swim. A lot of animals
cannot, they cannot put their head in the water or whatever.
So we have to decide what the function is. And then we have, we actually have different types
of breathing. We have mixed breathing, we have nasal breathing, we have mouth breathing,
we have, you know, different positions that we can keep our jaw depending on what we're trying to do.
We can keep our jaw depending on what we're trying to do.
And in that sense, you want to guide people to breathe the most efficient way for what they're doing and then try to get as fast as possible into your recovery breathing.
Recovery breathing, we call it oblock breathing
because that's the breathing where you have a little bubble of space, not air, but space in the roof of the mouth.
And that bubble actually holds the tongue away from the airway.
So that we call it uplock, like a plane that's flying.
The uplock is the wheels that go up.
But they stay up without active energy.
that go up, but they stay up without active energy. So you want your athlete or the person to go back into that mode as soon as possible because that's when we regenerate better.
And we should spend more time in that position. And that's when we are looking in athletes and
we're trying to do studies to see if their pulse goes back faster to the resting pulse when they're in this position,
if their lactic acid is, you know, being used more efficiently when they're in this position.
So we got to bring the athlete back into recovery because that's the key.
And I know you guys are, you know, you get neurologists
and you show too, and we talk about recovery and you want to regenerate your cells and you want to
have protection from disease. So going to that mode of recovery faster is better. And I like to
talk about the extremes because that gives us a clear picture of where we're at.
And if we look at the extreme in life, when people are dying, they usually have a mouth open.
If you go to a hospice situation, you will see that people are struggling to get air.
And they open their mouth to get more volume because the respiration in the cell is
inefficient. The wall is not allowing the oxygen to go in. So we want more volume. That's why we
open the mouth. When in the other extreme, newborns should only breathe through their nose.
They can't even breathe through their mouth. A baby cannot breathe through their mouth, a newborn.
So those are the two extremes. We know the baby everything is new right like you get a new car
everything functions well everything is you know great and that's the baby it's parts are new so
we're breathing through our nose when everything is falling apart we're breathing through our
mouth so what do we want in the middle? To try to stay in the nasal
recovery breathing as much as possible, because that's when we are going to have things work
better. And if our cell is efficient and the respiration inside the cell is happening properly,
then we don't need a lot of volume. When we need that volume is when we're not getting what we need. Our
mitochondria are not getting the energy that they need to function inside the cell because the lungs
might not be getting enough air. And that can be because our nose is inefficient or because our jaw
is too small. And we have things that are in the path of that air, and we have to get more volume because we're not getting that efficiency.
So in that sense, for athletes that are working on different programs that you advise, you need to figure out what they're doing and then make sure the recovery is the best possible recovery.
Sleep, obviously, is important.
If they're doing something short-term, it's fine.
But for the long-term health maintenance,
you want them to have good sleep.
And without good breathing,
there's no possibility of good recovery and good sleep.
Is it possible, because we've had a few people
that have come on to the show,
and we've asked them about snoring,
and some of them have said,
snoring's not a big deal,
but is it possible to be able to breathe through your mouth at night and not
have it be a problem for your health?
Or is that a problem that you need to figure out?
Look, we have a tendency to, to compensate.
And everything, not only humans, every being in the planet can compensate.
And the question is who can compensate better and when do you get to the breakdown?
If you are snoring a little bit, but you are getting good sleep, your stress is low,
you have good body mass index, and there's other things that are good,
then snoring might not be a huge problem.
If you start gaining weight and you have a very stressful life and you live in a polluted place
and you add more things, then you won't be able to compensate.
So every individual is different.
So every individual is different, but the need for oxygen and for nose breathing is the same for everyone.
But some of us can compensate better than others, and we can try to thrive.
I love the wellness community because the wellness community is not necessarily a sick community. It's actually healthy, but they want to make sure they continue to be healthy.
And some comedians say they're greedy because they're already healthy,
but they want more.
And yeah, we are greedy.
I consider myself healthy, but I don't want to be sick.
My ex-husband always says if Sandra is in pain, the whole world is in pain.
So we have to make sure that she's not suffering.
So I don't like to be in pain.
I don't like to suffer.
I like to be healthy.
I don't want to have, you know, things that don't work well in my body.
That's why I do the work it takes.
In any case, we want to be well.
We want to make sure we focus on the things that can help anybody be better.
Basically, how many times to eat is a question of how do I control my hunger?
How do you control your hunger?
How do you control your cravings?
Why do people stop their diet?
They stop their diet because they're probably hungry and they stop their diet because of cravings. Those are two things that are like distinctly different. Being hungry might be that you're just kind of like underfed. You might be
pretty satisfied from the foods that you're eating, but you're not eating. You're just not eating quite enough. The things that can happen from not eating quite enough
are very, very detrimental.
Like they're disastrous.
They're more disastrous than we can even really measure
or see a lot of times.
A lot of times when someone gets to be in a caloric deficit,
if it's for a little while,
or they're simply just not used to it, they're going to notice some fatigue.
Their workouts aren't going to be good.
For some people that we know, their workout is kind of everything.
Their workout is like the most important part of the day.
You know this with jujitsu.
There's some guys that they live for those hour or two hour sessions, uh, on the mats. Like that's,
that's like their day, you know, they fucking love that. Well, if I give somebody a jujitsu guy,
uh, a diet and they start performing bad, they're gonna, they're not going to last very long doing
the diet. Cause they're going to be like, man, I just, as soon as they start to have bad workouts, well, these workouts mean so much to me. I don't want to have shit workouts.
And that's where you start to get in like a lot of conversation where you're like, okay,
we've got to talk about this a lot more. Oh, I didn't. Okay. You need to not count your calories
for a while. You need to eat every time you're hungry. Go full blast, go full bore with these
whole foods. Do that for two or three weeks. And then let's kind of see where you're hungry. Go full blast, go full bore with these whole foods. Do that for
two or three weeks. And then let's kind of see where you're at. No one wants to do that because
it kind of takes, you know, too long. But again, how much, how easy is it to be better than you
were three years ago versus than you were yesterday? So if we're like, listen, I got to inform you of something.
If you want to be good at jujitsu, we have to talk about the next couple of years.
If you want to look like anything, because you're starting at a gym for the first time,
you're starting your fitness journey. Well, if you're starting your fitness journey,
I got news for you. It's going to take you two or three or probably maybe about five years before other people start to recognize that you lift regularly. That's a long time, but
so maybe the news is sad, but maybe the news is good. The good side is we don't have to really try to go fast because we're kind of bro out and you don't really push, you
don't get grunty and you don't get all crazy, you're still going to make insane progress,
especially if you never lifted before. So these are the things to kind of keep in mind when you
go on a, when you go on a diet, there really isn't a diet. It's a lifestyle forever, especially if you are fat. If you are fat, there's no way out. There's, there's
no, there's, there's not an end to it because once you lose the body fat, then you have to maintain
that weight loss. And we know here in the United States, there's been study after study.
There's been tons of research done showing how many people have lost 40 pounds 50 pounds even
70 pounds only to gain it right back so we don't really have a weight loss issue here in the united
states that's not necessarily even a lack of willpower because they did do it they showed
that they could do it but then it was hard to maintain because people have the wrong idea about nutrition and
probably about fitness. Yeah. And that is tough when you explain to somebody like,
because, oh, I want to do this 30 day challenge. I want to do this work thing, whatever it may be.
But you're just like, no, this is just what you do now. It took me a long time to really,
like I was already doing it, but to understand what it even meant to say, like, this is just what you do now. Um, it took me a long time to really, like I was already doing it,
but to understand what it even meant to say, like, this is a lifestyle. I thought it was just
something you can kind of adopt for a little bit as silly as that sounds is now that I understand,
but it, it, so you're right. It sucks because it's like, wait, I got to do this forever.
Well, do I look the same as when I competed in bodybuilding
does Nsema look the same when he competed in bodybuilding
and do you look the same as when you did your photo
shoot like none of us are
that lean we're not going to stay that
those are like more extreme examples
but you get the
idea like it doesn't matter how skilled
you are at this we're all skilled we all
understand what to do
but to try to hold on to
that takes a lot more work. And it's not like we abandoned our diets. We actually just switched our
diet to be a little looser because we made a compromise. And that's what people will have
to figure out for themselves. They'll have to figure out what do I want my lifestyle to look
like? Like, am I going to be the person that carries around the Tupperware and carries around the gallon of water?
Am I going to have Tupperware, you know, at a wedding?
Am I going to, you know, only eat from or only drink from glass?
Things that have, you know, things that are in glass rather than plastics.
I'm like, you know, you can take this as far as you want.
It's kind of up to you.
You're allowed to make that up yourself and you're allowed to make room.
What if you're 21 and you want to have drinks on the weekend and stuff?
Do you have to completely stop that stuff?
I don't think so.
You might have to reevaluate how you go about doing that.
And you might have to be thoughtful, which could be hard
to do when you're super young, but you might have to think, why do I like to go drink with my
friends? Well, I kind of like getting a buzz and I like to get like a little bit drunk, but I don't
love not being able to go to the gym the next morning. And I don't like this about it. I don't like that about it.
When you start to kind of add that up,
you're like, okay, well,
maybe I can drink something that gets me to a buzz,
but doesn't get me too far beyond that.
There are ways to handle it.
There's ways to do it.
Yeah, I actually did have a question about alcohol.
But what I was getting at about like understanding
that this is the long game is i looking at it now believe that it relieves a lot of pressure because it's no
longer the sprint of the 30-day challenge it's like oh shit in 30 days as long as i don't gain
weight then we're kind of we're doing good you know and understanding that like yeah in five
years is when maybe somebody else will notice so like you said we don't have to sprint um but it was funny it actually happened this morning um
one of the younger guys at jujitsu he he just got back from a bachelor party it was like one of
those like long like week-long ones i'm like oof so he told somebody else, he was just like, dude, if I, like, I might just tap and go throw up. And then, so as we, we started like talking and everybody had the same, the same idea,
which was like, man, it's not even worth it anymore. So I was going to ask you about alcohol,
but since we're already in it, I believe that once you do start developing a lot of these habits,
the alcohol stuff will kind of settle itself.
And if that makes sense,
then like you can kind of keep going on that unless you have other like
tactics and stuff when it comes to alcohol,
because that usually comes up,
right?
Somebody asks about diet like,
Oh,
but what about alcohol?
Yeah.
Usually,
usually a lot of good habits that you have over time and you keep filling
your plate up with that.
A lot of times
those things will dissipate. They might not completely disappear, but you'll get yourself
to a point, and it may take a while, to where doing the practice of the thing feels so much
better than not doing it. When you don't do it, sometimes at first when you don't do it sometimes at first when you don't do something
that you want to do or that you're supposed to do sometimes you feel bad and you feel like shame
and you're like everyone knows i didn't show up and like you then you kind of just frustrated
with yourself but as time goes on you don't really get that same way anymore but you still are
breaking yourself up out of a pattern that is that is really important you can't really get that same way anymore, but you still are breaking yourself up out of a
pattern that is really important. And you can't lie to yourself. The human body keeps score,
it keeps track. And so I think one of the more important things here is to continually,
like, let's not even really talk a ton about the negative. Let's just try to
focus in on what are the things that we can do positively because the things that we're going
to do positively are going to be the things that are going to move us forward. I shouldn't really
have to give you a speech about alcohol and how it's not really helpful towards your goals. I
think that most people probably, they should recognize that and they should know that,
especially if they've been listening to this podcast for a while.
I also shouldn't have to give you a speech that if you want to be a world champion in anything, if you want to be a world champion in something like jujitsu, maybe only eating pizza is not going to be a great way to get there.
Maybe only eating pizza is not going to be a great way to get there, especially if you feel like you're not super talented and things like that.
You may have to push into it with every single thing that you have. If you enjoyed this episode, which I know you did because you got this far, then click this one right here because you'll enjoy this one just as much.
And if you're choosing to still listen to me currently, as I'm telling you to
go over here and watch this video, well, Hey, that just means you like the sound of my voice
and well, I'll just keep seducing you right here.