Mark Bell's Power Project - What's The BEST CARDIO For WEIGHT LOSS - Discord Q&A || MBPP Ep. 922
Episode Date: April 21, 2023In this Podcast Episode, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza answer viewer submitted questions from our discord members! Join The Power Project Discord Here!: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN... What's The BEST CARDIO For WEIGHT LOSS - Viewer Q&A || MBPP Ep. 921 0:00 Trailer 0:34 Start of Episode 5:26 Coming Back From An Injury 13:52 The Pressure To Improve 25:17 Best Forms of Cardio For Weight Loss 37:57 How To Deal With Gym Fatigue 46:19 Power Project Content For Kids 53:19 Should You Wear Zero Drop Shoes? 1:02:15 What We Use While Podcasting To Stay Acive 1:14:32 Do Mike Mentzer’s Philosophies Work? New Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Better Fed Beef: https://betterfedbeef.com/pages/powerproject ➢https://hostagetape.com/powerproject Free shipping and free bedside tin! ➢https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!! ➢Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: https://youtu.be/qPG9JXjlhpM ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off site wide including Within You supplements! ➢https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢https://bubsnaturals.com Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% of your next order! ➢https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! ➢https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! ➢https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off ALL LABS at Marek Health! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What are the controllable variables?
And I think one of the biggest ones is just your diet.
How do you deal with the pressure of improvement
while having a variety of practices?
Are you better at jujitsu than day one
when you first started?
Of course you are.
You're gonna be progressing little by little
at certain things, and it's a very important thing
to try to pay attention to small wins.
What are the best bang for your buck forms of cardiovascular exercise?
You can pair with a weekly lifting schedule.
Looking conditioned means you want to lose weight and being conditioned means you want to increase your capacity.
You know it's real when you're like, you know, with your spouse or your significant other and you just lay one out or they lay one out and you don't lose any type of attraction for them.
If anything, you're like, I want to get in there.
Like this is even better, yeah.
It's like, I love you that much.
That's beautiful, man.
It's rough, though, when you have a rough day,
when you really are just letting off
and it's just one nasty-ass fart after another.
You're like, I do not know what happened to my stomach today,
but it ain't good.
I apologize.
Not only do they want to go in a different room
but you want to be in a different room than yourself too by the way guys we're gonna get
to your discord questions because we're doing a discord q a today y'all asked a lot of questions
in there and if you want to get in on the next discord q a go join the discord in the description
um but i know what you mean man the the creamy, right? I made some ice cream with whole milk.
You got to be careful out there.
It was probably like 140, 150 grams of protein.
Oh, I thought you were going to say 140 degrees.
It's like, it probably did come out pretty hot.
But straight up, no, I did lift up the blanket multiple times last night, and it was disgusting.
I don't know if that's's helpful it's hard to tell
what to do sometimes you're like we keep it muffled like this because it doesn't go away
yeah it's just there jesse burdick bought me some shorts years ago that had charcoal in them
i never tried i never actually tried them but the shorts have charcoal right where the butthole is
and it's supposed to like filter it out kind of genius i'm surprised
lulu or viore doesn't uh yeah bring that on board that's actually a great idea i we we i would just
a little bit you know what i mean but i also have this hard to help i think that healthier men and
women do pass gas a little bit more you know i think that's the thing well it happens here and
there and i think if you find foods that agree with you then that should like you that shouldn't be crazy but i think when
you are a healthier individual when you do go off plan that's when your butthole starts to light up
like a trumpet yeah i'm just making excuses for myself i guess but yeah i was like no i don't
think oh yeah that was just total bullshit because i mean if i if i eat like meat and rice and things
like that i don't go off plan and i'm okay you know my wife's gonna be like you're still fucking
disgusting he's a liar that's what she would say if she was here but i've noticed personally that
i think it's lessened a lot when i eat that way but if i have ice cream or cookies which i eat
a lot of different things here and there i go off plan pizza it's on again
no just like if you're around somebody that does not really necessarily stay on plan
and it's like whoa what was that yeah yeah and it's oh yeah that's bad buy a ninja creamy though
like honestly we'll talk more about it on another day though. But you can make – it's ice cream, man.
You told us about it after you made your ice cream.
But it's ice cream.
It's fucking crazy.
It does take a while and you got to like freeze it and there's like a little bit of a process.
But all I can say is like just get one.
You still need a blender, which is kind of fucked.
You need a blender.
You need to blend shit up.
And then you need to put it in the creamy thing. And then you put it in the freezer.
So there is a process, but I think it's worth it.
Yeah.
Get a Ninja Blender because luckily we already had a Ninja Blender.
Just make your favorite protein shake.
I put two scoops of This Is The Way.
And then I put two scoops of one of these steak shakes.
I think it was a chocolate.
No.
Two scoops of Keto Pro.
Two scoops of a steak shake.
And it was with all the milk. Yeah.
It was probably a 140, 150 gram protein bomb of ice cream.
With like 200 grams of fat.
Shut up.
And I also put like a scoop of collagen.
Shut up.
It wasn't 200 grams of fat.
I made it at home.
It's healthy.
I still woke up at 249.
There you go.
That's all that matters.
Hey, it looks like we're good
yeah you're fine yeah yeah i wouldn't worry about it the malted milk it takes some it takes some
work to try to figure out how to like have it be manageable calories but you can figure it out
calories it's all about the protein guys all right y'all ready for the first question yes i'm ready
all right this is a good one. This is from Marisol.
Yeah, it's the Boulevard shirt jacket from Viore.
Very soft, isn't it?
Yeah.
And this is the Optimus.
Oh, but underneath it feels pretty hard.
Wow.
Yeah.
You hard all over like that?
Pretty much.
Only soft in one spot.
All the time.
Is it warm too?
Warm?
Warm and soft?
What are you getting at?
Oh, nothing. No, what are you getting at? Oh, nothing.
No, what are you getting at?
I thought you were putting the vibe out there.
Sorry.
I thought he was talking about his pecs.
Yeah.
Of course.
Mm-hmm.
Wink, wink.
No?
I don't know.
Yeah, it's, I don't know.
Creamy, soft.
I have no idea.
But from Marty Zoll.
Anyway, actually, yeah.
Boulevard shirt jacket from Viore.
This is like, I think, one of my favorite long sleeves.
I have this in all their colors.
It's very nice.
Question.
How to recover mental and emotionally from an injury.
So how to recover mentally and emotionally from an injury.
Thanks in advance.
Your answer will help cheer up my boyfriend.
Love you guys.
Greetings from Mexico.
That's a really sad question.
He's like, oh, he's all bummed, you know.
That's great that someone's looking out for somebody like that.
I guess I would say that
if you can start to list out maybe a couple things that you can do,
maybe that will get you from,
maybe that will keep you from crying like a little kid when you start to cry
hysterically and you've got the, and you're doing all that
and you've got the snot and everything going and then someone,
an adult says something to you that calms you down and your face starts to go a little bit more normal rather than you crying so hard.
I think if you can start to think about, okay, you know, it sucks.
I really twisted my ankle really bad.
And, you know, it's bad.
Like it's, you know, it's going to be messed up for a few weeks.
Maybe even you need a cast
or something or maybe you have to put your arm in a sling or something like that but if you can
start to gravitate towards what are the three to five things i can still do right now then that
might be give you some uh that might make you happy and excited and you're like shit now i just
get to shift my focus and work on something different that um that's why we always talk about having a lot of different options of things you can do.
Like, Mark, you've picked up running.
You have bodybuilding.
You have powerlifting.
So let's say you injure yourself deadlifting and getting ready for a powerlifting meet.
You can still do some bodybuilding work.
You have a lot of different body parts you can work on.
And depending on the injury, you can figure out other things that you can do.
But one thing that I think is really important to do, and I was watching this documentary on this jujitsu athlete. His name is Boucher. He's one
of the greatest athletes ever. And he had this horrible injury in one of his tournaments where
he went on the mat and on that mat, like he, someone torqued his knee. He tore his ACL. That
was the year he was supposed to, he was supposed to kill it. Right. But he made sure he, he asked
the promoter right after his injury, like when, when he
was able to fully heal up, he did worlds the next year.
He's like, I want to compete on that same mat.
Right.
Because in his head, it was like, that was a, that was a dragon.
He had to beat, he had to go on that mat.
He had to get through that match on that mat.
So he wasn't stuck in his head.
I think that's how we can kind of look at injuries.
If you do something to your back, your ankle, do your thing, rehab.
we can kind of look at injuries. If you do something to your back, your ankle, do your thing,
rehab. But when you're healed, maybe it might not be a bad idea not to run away from what got you injured initially. Maybe see if like, if it was a movement, see if you can do it without pain,
right? So that you can set that mental image to, I can run without pain. I can deadlift without
pain. I can do this without hurting myself. So it's not always something that you're completely afraid of. I think that's a big deal. When I got hurt
with a big squat, that was the thing. I was like, I need to figure out how can I squat again,
you know, and how do I not be scared of it? So the first thing, the first order of business was like,
let me, let me work on when the time's right. Let me work on just doing some body weight squats
and then maybe
I'll figure out ways of adding weight. But it took, it took a while. One thing I think
that's important about an injury is that I don't think you should really try to do much
of anything about it in terms of like trying to really focus in on the point. There are
some things and we can kind of go over those things of what you can do. Yeah. But sometimes
like messing with something, like if you really hurt something pretty bad,
it basically just needs time to heal.
That is true.
If you tweak something
and now you got like some weird sciatic pain
and you can mess with like myofascial release,
there's the voodoo floss bands you could use
if you tweaked an elbow or an ankle.
But if you got like seriously injured,
you were in an accident or something,
or you got hurt playing a sport where someone collided into you, a lot of times these things, they just need some time.
So that can be annoying.
But again, hone in and focus in on what are some things that you can do?
What are the controllable variables?
And I think one of the biggest ones is just your diet.
One of the biggest ones is just your diet.
Like you can, you know, let's say you're like if you're a power lifter, you can now shift and say, hey, this is a good opportunity for me to actually lose a little bit of weight.
Maybe I'll maybe I'll knock off like 20 pounds and I'll kind of reassess after I do that. So and then just again, if it's something that you did to your ankle or your knee, your body is going to thank you if you weigh a little bit less as that area is injured.
your body's going to thank you if you weigh a little bit less as that area is injured.
It's not going to be as laborious for you to move around with that part of your body hurting while you're 20 pounds heavier.
It's really hard when you are prepping for something and then an injury occurs.
But, you know, that sucks.
But saying like, hey, this is just part of the journey, you know, like the whole process is getting hurt.
It's coming back from that it's learning but um outside of that i would say just like understanding that like it's just going to
take time like period like no matter what like if you're trying to get better at squatting like
it's just going to take more time so uh understanding that you may be hurt right now but you're not
going to be hurt forever you're going to be hurt for a little bit and then you'll be fine and then
you'll get back
to what you were doing.
Exacto mundo.
Let's just give a couple examples.
And Sima, I know that your like foot slash ankle has been bugging you a little bit.
I see you like jump roping all the time and you're doing lots of things to like get that
area moving more.
It's almost like you're trying to work an area and you're just trying to make that area
stronger.
Is that about right?
That's exactly it, actually.
That's exactly it.
It happened maybe eight weeks ago now at a takedown.
Someone did a takedown on me and I landed on my ankle weird.
It swelled up a lot and I really couldn't put much weight on it.
Tell me who it is.
I'll yell at them.
His name is – what was his name?
I'll say something really mean too.
Tell him he can't read good.
I remember his name.
If I knew how to fight, I'd kick your ass.
His name's Yepi.
I won't yell that.
That doesn't sound good.
He was one of the training guys at San Jose.
But his name's Yepi, and he's a really cool dude.
It was an accident, but I landed on my ankle weird.
Swolled up.
I couldn't really put much weight on it for the rest of the practice and the week after.
But what I just tried to do was I just, over time, I just tried to get more
blood to the area. So I did some voodoo floss, like you mentioned, I elevated voodoo flossing
every single day. When I was able to, I started putting more weight on that leg and I started
jump roping a little bit more, doing both, like getting, just getting that ankle moving. And then
I'd do more single hops, just trying to do all I can to bolster the foot. Yeah, now you're just
randomly jumping up and down. Absolutely.
Because I think that's one thing that's going to, like we talked about,
jumping is something that as you maybe stray away from sports that has to do with jumping,
you just don't do as much.
And that's definitely going to help just the ability for this area to handle impact.
So that's why I jump a lot now.
And my ankle's feeling pretty damn good. And then you're also messing with the tib bar too.
Not just the tib bar, but I'm glad you mentioned, um, we're probably gonna talk about smashing real quick,
but the day, remember that day when I, you said that helped a lot, right? Yeah. This was something
really interesting. And for all of you, maybe have some ankle issues, et cetera. This might
be something I was using the Kelly Sturette supernova and I smashed the fuck out of my tib.
So I was on a bench and I was smashing my tibialis on that and then i got up
and then i started jumping on my ankle and i was like why don't i feel anything in my ankle right
now it felt a little bit stiff but once i smashed my tibialis into that that uh that ball was a
little bit painful to do but when i got up my ankle felt free so that's part of the reason why we talk
so much about smashing yourself people if you want to learn some shit, go on the Functional Patterns website.
They have a 10-week program.
You don't even have to do the 10-week program.
You don't have to be into the exercises.
But they give you, in my opinion, one of the most comprehensive vantage points on myofascial release that there is.
It shows you every angle, how to hit every body part.
It's just insanely valuable.
And I want to say it's like a hundred something bucks,
but whatever the price is, it's totally worth it.
I recommend it to everybody because we all get banged up
and then we don't know what to do about the particular area.
But in this case, if this guy is kind of bummed out about the situation,
there are a handful of things he can do about it.
There are sometimes some precautions, like if you broke something
or did something real major, again, you might have to just give that area of time to rest
and then think of the things that you can do, but some myofascial release can go a long way.
In our episode of Chris Kodowski, I forgot the episode number, but there's a lot of really good
information on how smashing and pressure, how that is just so good for you. So if you haven't
checked out that episode, check it out.
I think we nailed that.
We got another question?
We do have another question.
It is from Wishing Troll.
That's nice.
That's like wishing well.
Wishing Troll asks, how do you deal with the pressure of improvement while having a variety of practices?
When your interest is being pulled by so many things, does it feel like you're not getting
better if you're not just focused on one thing this is a great question thank you for asking that because i'm currently going through
that shit right now what do you mean no well i'm trying to get better at jujitsu because i you know
competing a little bit and i want to still lift i still want to get jacked i'm interested in running
more and i think like with um with trying to get my endurance up, I think I should be mixing in some running right now anyways.
But it's like, okay, I think I'm going to bump up jujitsu to four days a week from three days a week.
Okay, that takes one, quote, lifting day away in the middle of the week.
It's like, okay, well, then how much more or less do I put towards jujitsu in prep for this competition?
I think improvement and consistency are, they're a little ugly by nature.
They, you don't like, you know, you hear people say like, just improve 1% every day.
And yeah, that's a goal and that's a reasonable, that's a reasonable goal.
And if you look at the year, that actually might make some sense that you're trending where you're
improving incrementally, slowly, but you'll have days that really feel like a setback.
You'll have days where you'll cry over poor performances or just like being super frustrated.
Like I've been working on this. Haven't I been, wait a second, this doesn't make any sense.
Haven't I been actually working on this? I have been, right? I've been going to class every day and it's not working.
Like, why isn't it fucking working?
And sometimes it doesn't,
John Cena has a great speech about this that he did in the ring
and he got all fired up and started yelling it.
It was really cool when he talked about sometimes things just don't go your way.
It doesn't matter how hard you work.
Sometimes it's just not in the cards for that particular day, but that's what improvement looks like because we, you're not
going to get the answers that you're looking for until, until you're butted up against things that,
uh, you're not going to have the answers that you're looking for until you keep butting up
against new questions all the time. You keep, you keep searching and searching and searching. You're trying to get better and better,
but then you're like, well, fuck, what about this? Now, what about that? You keep trying to figure
things out. And over a period of time, that's how you end up gaining knowledge to become better and
better. But whether it be consistency or improvement, it's going to blip up and down a
lot. It's not going to, you might go to the gym Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
and then next week go Monday, Tuesday, and then miss the rest of the week,
and then go Monday the next week, and then the next week Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and then repeat that whole cycle over and over again,
and you might say, fuck, man, I'm not being consistent with the gym.
But what were you doing previously? That's the important thing to look at. You weren't going to
the gym at all, probably. Maybe you weren't doing jujitsu at all, probably. So are you better at
jujitsu than day one when you first started? Of course you are. And of course you want to get
better every day. But at some point it just doesn't make sense. We don't always have the
capacity to just like trend upward all the time. And then also that would mean if you felt that way,
that might, might mean that the people that you're going against are like decreasing slightly,
which isn't good. You actually want them to beat your ass probably a lot and probably not as often
as, as you want. But the more that they kick your ass, probably the better you're going to be in the
long run. I think Andrew's got something perfect something perfect right like we were just talking about this
what remember what what are you dealing with jujitsu right now uh the best way i can put it
is like i'm kind of in like a funk uh-huh um i feel like i'm moving slower i feel like
like basic things that i i know that i can kind of do naturally without thinking, they're not there. It's not clicking.
It's like, what's going on?
Like last week around this time, I was like, oh, dude,
things are finally clicking.
This week, it's like a deer in headlights where I'm like,
oh, he's passing my guard.
I forgot what am I supposed to – am I supposed to Gramby roll?
Am I supposed to set my frames right now?
Like, oh, damn, he's on top of me now.
And I just got tapped.
Like, oh, it's so frustrating right now.
But the thing is, is like, I think one of the reasons why maybe on the strength side of things,
we think progress should be so linear is because maybe at the beginning,
when you first started lifting and you first started gaining strength,
every week or every two weeks, you got a little bit more on the bar.
You got a little bit more in terms of your dumbbells or your chest press.
That's a good point.
And a lot of it has to do with your hormones, your testosterone and things like that.
But even if you started jujitsu at a young age, you wouldn't have the same gains that
would match your lifting when you're 17 to 25 or whatever.
Even when coaches talk about lifting,
they're like your volume should be consistently increasing and you should be,
you know,
increasing your volume from training cycle to training cycle.
So there's this always big hierarchy of increase.
But like you just mentioned,
progressing,
especially if you're trying to do multiple things,
like maybe this guy is,
so maybe you're trying to run and do some lifting or do whatever.
You're going to be progressing little by little at certain things.
And it's a very important thing to try to pay attention to small wins rather than like, you know, trying to get better super fast.
You should be like, oh, wow, this movement felt a little bit easier this time or I got one more set in or in jujitsu.
Ah, that submission didn't work on me today. It usually works really well, or I got a little one more set in or in jujitsu. Ah, that submission
didn't work on me today. It usually works really well, but I managed to actually escape. That's a
win. It's really important to do that. And then it's also important to realize this. A lot of
people mention, we were kind of talking about this once before, but a lot of people like to say, oh,
if you want to get bigger and stronger, you definitely shouldn't run. That's not true though.
It's like is the only thing you're trying to do get bigger and stronger?
If that's your goal, okay.
If that's your only goal, that's fine.
But you can get bigger and stronger while doing some running, right, while doing some jiu-jitsu.
But the thing is you need to be patient with your progress at all of these practices.
You need to understand like, okay, my focus is in different areas.
I'm going to be making different levels of progress in this over time.
Maybe if I only focused on one and it was the only thing I did,
I could progress faster.
But just because I'm doing these two or these three,
that doesn't mean I won't progress.
It's just going to be a bit slower and you got to be okay with that.
Got to be okay with a lot of losing, right?
You're going to lose a lot.
Think about some of the great people in our history.
If you look at the Heinz bottle, the ketchup bottle, I think it has a 57 on it.
The 57 is because there's 57 different recipes that led to that one.
Oh, wow.
And they say like, I don't know if people know this little hack with ketchup, but when you're a fat guy, you learn these things.
If you chop it on the 57, the ketchup comes flowing out a lot easier.
I knew that.
Yeah.
Well, say that again.
So like the glass bottles, you know how it's like impossible to get the ketchup out?
Okay.
If you give it a little karate chop on the 57 where there's a little 57 number.
It's a target.
It ends up coming flying out.
Really?
Mm-hmm.
What a cool fat guy hack.
Yeah, that's right.
There's a lot of things like that through our history,
you know, like discovering electricity
and these different things.
There's people that have, you know,
it's taken hundreds and hundreds of times
for someone to do something to mess up.
And not only mess up,
but you think about like our medical history,
how many people had to die
for us to come to these different
things where we have like more modern day conveniences. We have more modern day surgeries
or medicines that can really be helpful. But somebody had to start somewhere. Somebody said,
OK, let's give him this drug. And it's like, oh, shit, that one didn't work. There's a high cost
to all these things. But luckily for us, when we're just trying to improve and get better,
it's on a much smaller scale.
But it's going to look disastrous sometimes.
You're not always going to get – I still go out on runs sometimes and I just can't breathe.
Like I just don't – not breathing well for the day.
I'm like this is – I'm not even going fast or nothing.
This is a nightmare.
What's going on today?
My legs are tired.
Everything's jacked up.
It's amazing to be like that.
You'll have days that just for whatever
reason they feel backwards and i think they'll always be there they'll just be there to like
different degrees that does yeah that's that's one thing that's not a problem though like it's
part of it yeah it feels like a problem on the day but that's not how it's going to be forever
it's just like that that's the thing it's not linear you're going to have days where just shit
feels shitty and that's cool get it done out, and go to your next day.
You'll be fine.
100%.
Just one more thing on just improving and all those things.
Just try to figure out, like, try to make sure
that you're actually recovering from the things that you're doing
because the inputs are important.
They really are going to turn you into the person
that you're trying to be.
But if you're not able to recover from any of this, then you're always going to be chasing your tail.
So if you're improving and then you're hitting these slumps, sometimes maybe you're like trying too hard.
You're doing too much.
Not all the time, but sometimes that's something to kind of keep an eye on and to pay attention to.
Maybe you're overtraining or under eating or some combination thereof.
There's one last thing I'll mention on this too from what you just mentioned right there, Mark.
some combination thereof.
There's one last thing I'll mention on this too,
from what you just mentioned right there,
Mark.
And it's important.
It's important thing to understand if you're someone who's trying to get good at different things at the same time,
you were doing lifting,
right?
And then you introduced running.
And initially running was something that cost you a lot.
After a day of running,
you'd probably come to the gym the next day and be like,
fuck,
I'm actually kind of beat.
I just stopped lifting for a while.
So that's pretty, not, not completely, but almost kind of beat. I just stopped lifting for a while.
So that's pretty.
Not completely, but almost completely.
Yeah.
You lowered the intensity of your lifts.
Maybe you do some things and get a pump, but you needed to do that so that you can improve at running to a certain point that your body was OK with it enough where you can now start lifting more again.
This is the same thing that happened when I started jujitsu.
It beat up my body so much where like I came to the gym and I felt like a useless piece of shit.
So I was still lifting, but I backed off of my training volume so that my body could get used to the stresses of jujitsu. Andrew, you have a lot of experience with the different things that were happening with your ribs and your back.
It's just soreness that you've never felt anywhere.
But even though you do feel some of that right now, six months in, it's definitely not as bad as it was on month one.
Oh, absolutely. It's totally different.
I did the same thing when I first started.
I couldn't lift.
I said, I was like, oh, I'm not going to let my body get unfamiliar with lifting,
so I'm just going to do both.
Man, I ran into a wall so fast.
So I got rid of lifting completely.
I brought it back.
I got sick.
Coincidental, whatever, my body was beat down pretty bad.
So I slowly started bringing it back.
And then now I was doing a pretty good one-to-one, like one day on, one day on the other.
And then so now, again, kind of going back to all of this, it's like I think I'm going to ramp up the jiu-jitsu training more.
And so, therefore, the lifting might take a slightly step down but even
with that though it's like that slightly step down it's still going to be very effective in the long
run i will say this try to like it sometimes it's good to totally stop but sometimes it's good to
try to figure out what that minimum effective dose is there you go yeah like try to figure out
what's the how maybe i can just get a pump can i get a fucking leg and arm and upper body pump without killing myself in the gym just to get some stimulus and then still go do jujitsu
or still go run absolutely try to get the minimum dose of it and then over time you'll be able to
increase as you get used to all these different modalities what's up pad project family it's time
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This is from Pay the Man. Okay. What are the best bang for your buck forms of cardiovascular
exercise you can pair with a weekly lifting schedule that will help you lose weight every
week, raise working capacity, as well as look and be conditioned.
It's a lot of – you want a lot.
What else do you fucking want, bro?
That's a lot of things at one time.
I think sometimes with a question like this, I think sometimes people have to try to probably find more unconventional ways to like lose body weight or lose body fat.
Although, you know, figuring out ways to make better food choices and things like that are really important.
I would say if I was to start at a hierarchy with, I don't know this individual.
I don't know how much weight they're trying to lose and those kinds of things.
But I'm imagining they probably have more than like 20 pounds of body fat to lose. And they'd probably like to just, you know,
knock off at least half of that in a fairly short period of time. My heart hierarchy would be much
different than it would have looked like many years ago. I would say the first thing that you
need to start to try to gain a little bit better habit with is your sleep. Just because if your sleep is compromised and messed up, it makes all your other decision
making harder. It's just going to make your diet harder. It's going to make your training harder.
It's going to make your resting heart rate different. It's going to make everything
different. It'll make everything worse. And fatigue makes cowards of us all. And it makes
the decision making skills a little bit harder. So
sleep would be the first thing I would work on. Do your best to try to at least lay down every night
for seven to eight hours, something like that. Try to maybe start to get yourself to bed a little
bit earlier than what you used to, maybe about a half an hour earlier, maybe an hour earlier.
Put your phone away a little earlier. get away from blue light a little earlier. I recommend, you know, trying to get some sunlight in the morning. I think that really helps
with your circadian rhythm. I've also been going outside at night and just going outside for just
a few minutes every night. And that seems to relax me when it's dark outside. I think some of those
things will really be helpful. And then in terms of trying to lose
weight week in and week out, I would say weigh yourself, weigh yourself like once a week. Um,
I would make, you know, try to do your best with a protein leveraging, eating, you know,
eating good amounts of protein every day, and then picking an energy source. Like,
like, do you want to mainly utilize carbohydrate
or do you want to mainly utilize fat pick one or the other or if you're going to pick carbs you
got to keep the fats lower if you're going to pick fats then you got to keep the carbs lower
just so you're not overeating you're not overdoing it and i think that would be a good a good place
to start and in terms of cardiovascular exercises,
I think you can get a lot of bang for your buck with something like an assault bike.
It seems like that's just a lot of energy
you can expend on that damn assault bike.
So those would be some of my recommendations.
Sleep is huge.
So like Mark mentioned there,
all those things,
that'll make everything else easier.
When you need to stick to your diet so that you don't overeat, if you haven't gotten enough sleep,
all of that's going to be worse. So just really try to make sure you have that down.
Now, you mentioned multiple things. You mentioned that you want to lose weight and you want to raise
work capacity. And then I combined both. You said you want to look and be conditioned. Look good,
looking conditioned means you want to lose weight and being conditioned means you want to look and be conditioned. Look good, look conditioned, it means you want to lose weight and being conditioned means
you want to increase your capacity.
So take your weight once a week
and also don't be focused on losing weight
every single week.
Because some weeks you might be a little bit more stressed,
some weeks you might have been overdoing it
for the past six weeks.
And because of all that stress,
you might be holding on to water
or your body's just like stuck
and your weight might be stuck
or it might go up a little bit. So yeah, weigh yourself once a week, but it's a really
good idea to take measurements of yourself. Take measurements of your waist, take measurements of
your hips, take measurements of your chest area because some of these areas, especially the areas
that you hold more fat, might be decreasing even on the weeks that your weight stays the same.
That happens a lot. When I was working with competitors,
there'd be three weeks where their weight didn't move,
but their waist measurement went down consistently and their glute measurement continues to go down
because that's the place where they held more fat.
That shows you that you're still making progress
despite not seeing the scale go down.
Another thing to remember
is if you're looking for the scale to go down
every single week all the time,
sometimes you might be losing weight too fast.
You might be doing too much.
You might be losing muscle, which is going to fuck with your, it's going to fuck with your
performance, right? You're, you're not going to be able to put out the type of, you want to increase
your work capacity. Well, if you're not able to put out the, uh, uh, put out what you need to do
to increase work capacity, those workouts are going to be useless. So you need to eat enough
to do that. Right. I love what you said about the assault bike. Cause I use my assault bike like three times a week. Um, I'll legit just
do like a 15 minute or some this morning. It was like a, this morning it was 12 minutes, but I'll
do, um, circuits on it. So I'll do 30 hard seconds, a minute, 10, you know, slow 30 hard seconds.
And I try to keep it nasal the whole time. Um. And then when I really output, maybe the last two, maybe my mouth will open a little bit,
but like my work capacity has been increasing so much just from that 12 to 15, some days when I
want to go a little bit harder, 20 minutes of doing those intervals on that assault bike.
I've noticed the difference in jujitsu. I've noticed the difference in how I can have higher
work capacity with a lot of these things. That assault bike's fucking killer.
I think the assault bike is amazing because you can recover from it.
So if Encima was going to a track and sprinting, that would be great exercise.
It would be great work.
And maybe we'd see some improvements.
Maybe you would even get like leaner than normal.
But the impact on the body would be pretty rough.
So that's why a machine can sometimes be better.
And if the person that we're communicating with,
if you're 250 plus pounds or you're 300 pounds
or you're an older person,
you might even just want to start out on like an elliptical.
I know people tend to think those things are silly or whatever,
but you can work your ass off on those things.
So just go to whatever level you need to go to to be able to get a great workout, have tons of output, but not have any damage.
Yes.
So going and sprinting would be fucking awesome.
And we know how jacked and ripped sprinters are.
It's kind of hard.
You'll be you'd have a hard time finding someone that does like under, you know, someone that does 400 meters or under at a high level.
That's over 10% body fat.
It's just you very rarely see it.
So we know that sprinting is amazing.
However, it can have a lot of negative impact on the body.
So probably pick some sort of machine to do some of your sprinting on.
Yeah.
One other thing I think might be a good idea if you're, you know, if you're trying to get into running because obviously you've been running a lot.
So there's a lot of people that are trying to get into running right um
something that my girlfriend will do and i'll do it with her sometimes is we'll go on walks
and walking is super important in general right but like sometimes she'll just be okay let's let's
let's do a jog for like a minute and we'll just go on a little jog we'll run a little bit for like
a minute and then we'll walk again so depending depending on where you're starting with your skill of running, run walks are a great introduction to being able to get yourself to be able to run a good distance.
We've talked about that a bit.
But that's easy.
It's something that won't cause too much fatigue but it will move you in the right direction.
Something like a run walk is amazing for multiple reasons because you can conserve energy when you're walking and you can actually put more into the running. And again, if you're choosing to run and not
necessarily jog, then you can go a lesser distance. You don't have to go as far.
And then if you're also choosing to run instead of sprint, then you can end up with a good,
a good speed. You can actually look at your speed. You can, you know, get one of these apps and you
can look at your, uh, mile time and you can be excited.
You can be like, dude, this is kind of cool. I'm keeping like a six minute mile pace or seven minute mile pace for 30 seconds.
It's kind of fun to do it. And then when you walk, you'll see it like track back up and it might be that you're at like a 15 or 16 minute mile pace.
And you can kind of leverage that excitement and utilize that to get yourself through some good workouts i would say if you are going to run see this guy mentioned being like
like having good conditioning and things like that wants good yeah running is great to help
build out uh an aerobic capacity so so jogging here and there so if we had to kind of break it
all down hit some sprints on the assault bike maybe go out and do maybe over a period of time get yourself
to be able to do a longer run that's that's a nice easy jog like 20 minutes and you might want
to start out with like a jog walk at first so you can keep most of it in the nasal breathing
category and i would like to see people eventually go from like 20 minutes being able to go to like
40 45 a lot of the i'm not a huge fan go to like 40, 45. A lot of the,
I'm not a huge fan of like just studies, but there is a lot of research that kind of points to the
fact that if you can get yourself towards an hour of zone two cardio every week, that it has a lot
of great health benefits. So that would be a good, a good thing for this guy to aim for over time.
He could do it all in one chunk or he can break it out into two separate workouts over time. So sprint on the assault bike, get, you know, start to work your
way into figuring out how to get about an hour of, of a jog in there somewhere. And then even
in addition to that, you can do some, uh, some walks and some, uh, running in between.
And a very small tip with the assault bike that I really dig about assault bikes is that it has
that thing that you can see your wattage.
So when I do my sprints, I pay attention.
Like I think when I was starting out on the Assault Bike, for those 30 seconds, it would be really hard for me to maintain a wattage of like 600.
Right?
I was like, ooh, okay.
But after a few workouts, now my goal is do not let your wattage go below 700 when you're in your sprint.
Right?
So you'll feel that lactic acid buildup.
So you'll know like what's reasonable for your sprint.
Maybe your wattage is 500 and that's when you're like, oh, okay.
So I'm just not going to allow myself to go under a 500 wattage.
And then you can slowly, like you'll be able to literally see how your work capacity increases
by gauging the wattage on your sprint sessions.
So then at a certain point you're fucking
you know you're just not letting it go under 700 for that 30 second period and you are that you
have you can it's a measurable difference in your work capacity it's fucking awesome
then there's some like more a little bit tougher stuff you can uh work on if you really want to
challenge yourself you can work in like a three to eight minute range and you can really like really make it tough like it is yeah like like a tabata type thing could be really good
um or you can do because what that'll do is that'll help push up your um that'll help with
your vo2 max and so some vo2 max training can be really good i know we're giving you like a lot of
shit to do but these aren't things that all have to be done in the context of like one week. You can spread them out throughout the
month periodically. But basically, if you just work as hard as you can within reason and do
multiple sets of, let's just say, three to four sets of three to four minutes on something like an assault bike, you'll get a lot
of reward from that. I actually think that that type of exercise will help people with so many
things. I think it will help with their sleep. I think it will help with people are hypoxic,
like they're not getting enough oxygen when they're sleeping. And so I think by breathing
hard, if you kind of think about it, by breathing really hard, you know, they talk about heart rate variability.
But I think we need some breathing variability.
Some people don't have the ability to, like, some people, if you got them, if you pushed them really, really hard on something, they would be going,
they, like, wouldn't be able to catch their breath really good.
But somebody that's in really good shape would just be like a couple times, and they would be able to start to calm down from it.
So you want a nice uh variety
with your ability to breathe so a little bit of vo2 max training would be kind of dope too
cool what else we got good uh so from dkb any tips slash suggestions on how to deal with
gym fatigue gym fatigue this is an easy one.
Yeah, I think the simplicity in this one is just to try to find something slightly different.
How long have you been at this gymming thing?
How long have you been lifting for?
And are you doing the same old thing?
Are you in the same old gym?
So one thing you could do is maybe find another gym.
Another thing you could do is find a different type of exercise. Maybe you've been bodybuilding forever and maybe you want to switch it up.
Maybe throw some athletic maneuvers in there.
Some med ball stuff, some sled ball or sled carry or sled walks.
Some farmer's carries, you know, have some nice variations in there and start to look into some different forms of exercise and some different movements and maybe just have some different goals.
Yeah.
Like I think so many people, they just want to be like shredded, which is cool.
But if you just perpetually want to be like lean, you're like abs, abs, abs, abs.
I just want abs.
I just want to be lean.
Then I think that that chase for what you want that you currently don't have is kind of the
definition of suffering. And you need to try to get yourself out of that mode for a little bit.
So one of the best things you can do is switch your program up a little bit, maybe switch over
to a power program, switch over to something that's maybe a little bit more performance-based
rather than just the aesthetics look. Yeah. and another thing you could do you just also
literally find another form of activity that maybe you can do with people i know we talk about jujitsu
so much so i'm not going to go down that fucking rabbit hole but there are adult sports leagues
right like we have this thing called zolk so here in sacramento or zolko or whatever it's downtown
people have like adult soccer adult basketball fucking pickleball. There's like table tennis.
Like there are these different things that –
Community shit.
Community stuff, which number one, you're meeting new people, which is always fun.
You're actually getting to engage with other people.
But you're building a good sweat in.
Like you're expending yourself like you typically would in the gym.
Now, maybe it's not with weights, but it's something, right?
And afterwards, you feel good.
You feel beat.
You can go home, have a good meal, and go to sleep.
That's awesome.
So that's why we talk so much about jujitsu because it is a community thing and it is a new skill that allows us to learn new things.
But there's other things that you can do that can allow that.
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Running is very cultish.
What do you mean?
You go into like a running store, you go into like Fleet Feet or some of these running places.
It is.
And they're like,
are you going to join our run club?
Join a run club.
And you're like,
I'm sorry,
I didn't know you guys had,
that's great.
You have a run club.
And they're like,
are you going to join it?
And you're like,
when do you guys,
you know,
you're trying to like just to bullshit with them so you
kind of get out of it like when tell you about jesus christ like what happens on these runs
this is crazy but again it's a communal thing you'll uh you'll probably get around people that
are better than you at whatever it is that you're trying to do and you probably have like tons of
fun with it so i think uh i think like gym fatigue and not being super pumped about maybe deadlifting or bench pressing or something like that.
I think it's really normal to just be like, fuck that, man.
I don't want to listen to another Ronnie Coleman video and get all hyped up and do that shit anymore.
Or maybe you just got a little older and you just like want to move on and do something slightly different.
But if that's what's calling to you to do something different then go ahead and do something different
what about um like telling somebody just like okay you're you got gym fatigue take a week off
um one thoughts on that but then two if they do decide to do that how do they come back with like
a little bit more motivation because i just i'm thinking like oh if i if i take a week off man
what if like i never come back how do you make sure they circle back around yeah taking time off
can be huge you know a week asking a young person to take a week off of exercise is like a tough
tough thing but maybe they could do something different for a little while you know like take
a week off just go on some walks and maybe, you know, if they're on
vacation, maybe they have opportunity to like run on a beach or something like that. They got
opportunity to do something different. When I, every time I used to go on vacation, I used to
never lift. That was kind of like my rule was to not lift, but it didn't mean I didn't exercise.
I'd always still exercise. So coming back from any sort of vacation, I was always excited to lift
usually. But I think that's a really good recommendation is to actually just take a little bit of time off get some reprieve
yeah i dig that too but i find it i find it hard to take a week off of everything that's why i like
i don't think it's a good idea yeah like i mean taking a week off the gym sure but that's why
that's why i think it is really good to have other stuff like have running, have fucking pickleball, have jujitsu, have something that will allow you to use your body.
Because like I don't personally think that it's a good idea not to have a week where you do nothing with your body.
You know, you're not really like –
It's a hygiene, I think.
It's a hygiene.
Like light expenditure.
It doesn't mean you have to go hard at the gym, but you can go on a light jog. You can go play a light game of whatever, just something to get,
keep the shit moving. You know, you could always do some pushups and some lunges and whatever.
I mean, a lot of people work out in their hotel. So people travel with like bands and that's just
like a different, different style of training. But I do think, I do think a break from what it
is you're normally doing. Um, also
maybe start to question like what led to that gym fatigue? You know, are you, are you hunting down
this like three plate bench press or this four plate deadlift and you've been so obsessed with
it and you've been frustrated that you're not getting it. Um, maybe it's a time for you just
to take a little break from that. Um, maybe just just work maybe just find a training partner you know
find a training partner find someone that likes to do shit a little different maybe in your workouts
you've always started every bench workout your entire life with an actual bench press or every
chest workout always starts with a bench press uh maybe fucking start one out with some uh you know
cable crossovers or started out with some back
or something you know switch shit up a little bit differently maybe you haven't um explored some of
the stuff from uh ben patrick or maybe you haven't seen uh some of the variations of some of the
stuff that people are doing online right now it's so to me it's like it's super exciting to look at
uh our boy dre all the different shit that he does with a kettlebell.
It's like, that's imaginative.
Like, is it possible for that guy to be bored with training?
Every goddamn Dre.
Go find his page, guys.
I don't think you could be bored, right?
Nah.
You know, you look at guys like Russ Swole and some of these other people, they bounce around, they do different things.
They're not, I mean, Russ is one of the best power lifters in the world and he's going to end up being an all-time great he already is an
all-time great he's so fucking strong but like guys like that have opportunities because they
built this capacity he can go into bodybuilding he can mix things up quite a bit um jason kalipa
i always said always admired the fact that he built out such a great capacity to be able to do CrossFit.
And when Jason does CrossFit, even though he annihilates himself with it, it looks like he's kind of having fun with it.
It looks like it's fun for him.
Now he's doing jiu-jitsu.
He's got other practices.
So I think the more things that you can – maybe you get on one of those treadmills that you have to power yourself.
You do some sprints on it, and that's your workout for the day.
If you can build out some different
capacities, you now have way more
options on what it is that you're going to do for the day.
Absolutely. Ready for the next one?
You got one. I want to add more to that. Let's go.
All right. This one's Sloan's Abroad.
It's an interesting one. Question. Would you
guys ever consider putting out
Power Project concept for kids slash families?
How to integrate these concepts into family life?
Kind of like how Jocko has the way of the warrior kid.
Jocko Willink is amazing.
He is.
He's like written books and stuff for kids.
That guy's a monster.
You know, I think that's really interesting.
I think that's amazing.
I think that would be a really cool thing for us to
explore. I think if the fans would want that, then I think that would be something I would be into.
I really like, you know, it's kind of neat to impact people. We just had the guy that came in
today from the Ukraine. He just moved from his country that's going through war. And he said
85% of the city that he grew up in is destroyed.
That's really interesting to hear these stories. And he's like,
watched me.
Like,
I don't even,
I don't even understand.
I'm like,
he's got a,
it sounds like he's got a lot on his plate and he's thinking about,
you know,
rolling through Sacramento to see me.
I think that's incredible.
Um,
but I,
I just,
I think that,
um,
I forgot what I was going with that.
Oh yeah. The stuff for kids, like integrating this stuff.
The stuff for kids.
We have an impact on a lot of people and those people have a lot, that have a huge impact
on all those people that are around them.
So when people come here to the gym, sometimes some of the people that come in, they're like,
hey, next time I come in, is it okay if I bring my kid?
And their kid is usually like 17, 18.
It's not like a little kid. But even if it was a little kid? And their kid is usually like 17, 18. It's not like a little
kid. But even if it was a little kid, I would encourage them to bring them in too. But I think
that's awesome. Like this is what dad likes to do. Dad likes to lift. Maybe you come along with me
and maybe you, you know, learn some of these things. So I think having these things land
inside of a household, not just the lifting, but the nutrition, getting on point with the sleep.
I think it helps everyone.
I think it helps with so many things.
It helps with mental health.
It helps with people being healthier and stronger in general.
Cool.
Yeah, absolutely, 100%.
I've talked to so many different parents, and they're just kind of always confused.
They don't know where, like, step one is for their kids because they don't know where step one is for themselves.
You know, so there's a lot of opportunities for education,
like, you know, in this area.
And like, I have written down a bunch of different things
in regards to this topic.
But yeah, I mean, I am interested in putting together
something like this.
Absolutely.
Yeah. And, you know, you guys end up talking about, I don, I am interested in putting together something like this. Absolutely. Yeah.
And, you know, you guys end up talking about it.
But you guys talk about it so much, like in terms of like just ways.
I think it's cool how you guys talk about it because, Andrew, some of the things that you're doing with the Raelius, some people that don't necessarily pay that much attention to health stuff would be like, oh, you're overbearing on your son.
Oh, you're doing too much.
Oh, you're going to set him up for this and that because you're doing things so differently and
i find that so weird because like you're setting up your kid to be super fucking healthy and
mentally stable and you're not putting a bunch of things that might not be as beneficial in front of
them yeah no absolutely i i mean over easter had a relative uh you, you know, cause my son, he, he got like a, you know, plastic Easter egg
and it had candy in it. He was just like, whatever. And I was like, yeah, he like,
doesn't even know what candy is. And she's like, oh, I wish my kids didn't know. And you know,
like no judgment at all because like all kids know it. And so like, I just went straight to
like what Mark said about his kids and not knowing what Disneyland was when they were kids.
And I'm like, yeah, my son doesn't think he's missing out on anything because he does not know it exists.
Daddy, what's Disneyland?
I don't fucking know.
What are you talking about?
That's fake.
Smack him as hard as you can and say, don't ever talk about that shit again.
Trauma.
We don't mention that.
When I mention Disneyland, I hurt.
I feel pain.
You said it's the happiest place on earth.
It just caused me nothing but pain. My daddy slaps me every time I mention Disneyland. I hurt. I feel pain. He said it's the happiest place on earth. It just caused me nothing but pain.
My daddy slaps me every time I mention Disneyland.
I don't like Disneyland.
Yeah.
But anyway, yeah.
So like my son, he knows steak.
He knows eggs.
He knows a whole bunch about like strawberries and stuff.
Like he loves eating fruits and berries.
So like, yeah, again, it's like I can't be judgmental and be like well who the fuck gave
him candy right that's not fair yeah but at the same time i so i'm front i'm front loading all
of the frustration in my son's life as far as being a parent so like right now the first couple
years we'll say the first five years i'm getting a lot of shit from a lot of people and a lot of
people are like upset with me because my son doesn't eat candy he he doesn't even really eat many carbs oh nice shot but what i'm saying
is like i'm going through a lot of shit right now so that way we don't have to deal with so much
shit later down the road is my hope i understand life you know has a fun way of like turning and
doing things to you but at least i can do my best to set them up
right now while i have that control so maybe once he gets a little bit older it's like and you know
the like the fat cells are like done developing in the early ages then maybe sure you can have
something that's quote-unquote off plan but right now while i have basically total control over it
there's no way you're going to have, you know,
Ritz crackers and fucking processed cheese and all these other fake foods. Like, no, you're going to
have steak. You're going to have Piedmontese hot dogs. You know, like you're going to have a lot
of these good nutritious foods because I can control it right now. And again, I am making
decisions for him, but if I don't, you know, like he's going to have a harder time making those decisions for
himself down the road. And if your child has to worry about being like 40 or 50 pounds overweight
or something like that, then it just makes their options dwindle down. Like the option to play
soccer, the option to play certain sports, it might just be that much harder having that much
more body weight. So while it would be great for everyone in the household to kind of be able to eat their
entertainment most of the time, I mean, I think that's what kind of food has turned
into.
It's turned into like a form of entertainment.
And it would be cool to participate in that all the, you know, as much as possible.
But at the same time, that's not a great place to be.
But I think this guy, who is the guy again?
Oh, Sloan's Abroad.
She, her.
Oh, she.
Thank you so much for sending that in because I think it's a really cool idea because I think we can maybe just talk about like what to do in relationships and what to do in a household.
Or it doesn't have to be just people that have kids, but people that are in relationships and people that are living together and they're trying to like fitness together or lose weight together,
or how do you encourage each other? How do you communicate about it? Um, my wife was amazing
through the Boston marathon stuff. I mean, she's like rubbing my legs and shit and like,
she's doing anything and everything and other places she's doing anything and everything to
kind of keep me going, you know. And so it was amazing.
And she knows like it's only X amount of time and stuff like that too.
But at the same time, it's nice to have somebody that's super supportive with everything.
Cool.
All right.
So this question is from Zach82.
What do you think of wearing zero drop shoes slash wide toe box shoes all day for jobs that stand on their feet?
Nurses, service industry, construction.
I see a lot of these folks in hokas and whatnot.
Yeah, I think a lot of people are probably trying to address the fact that their feet hurt.
And so I think most people are thinking that they need to stack more padding under their feet.
I wouldn't say that that's necessarily wrong for everybody,
but I do think that it would be a good idea to,
like if you don't have foot pain
and you're putting yourself into shoes
that have pretty good padding and you like them,
I don't really think there's a huge problem.
But if you have foot pain
or you have some sort of foot dysfunction,
your feet bother you a lot
and you have stuffed yourself
into shoes that have a lot of padding. I think that that's only going to give you temporary
relief. I don't think that's going to work for very long. So I think your luck will most likely
run out. Hopefully it doesn't. Hopefully you can just, you know, keep, keep rocking those shoes
and be okay. Um, I don't know about like, uh, you know, if I was somebody that worked eight to 10 hours on my feet that I
would necessarily just go jump right into, like, I wouldn't want anything to negatively impact my
work, right? Like while you're at work, I don't want my feet to hurt so bad on Tuesday or Wednesday
because I tried to wear zero drop shoes on Monday, Tuesday. Like that doesn't seem like a good,
good way for me to keep my job. But maybe it's something that you can practice and mess around with. Occasionally when you go
on walks on the weekend or something like that and start to feel out your comfort level, then
you might be like, yeah, I could totally rock these during the week, strengthen my feet,
get some of the benefit from that. And that might be a good place to, I would test it out somewhere
else. It's kind of like when you go on vacation and you go on vacation, that's not normally a
great time to bring new shoes with you. Yeah. And I think something that people can do
because, you know, as we were, we started getting into all this barefoot wide toe box, zero drop
shit, maybe two or three years ago now. And like, I know that when I was transitioning, you know,
there'd be days where I'm just like, oh wow, my ankle or my fucking, I'm feeling that in my big
toe a lot. Okay. Let me wear my more padded shoes today. Or there'd be days where I'm just like, oh, wow, my ankle or my fucking, I'm feeling that in my big toe a lot. Okay, let me wear my more padded shoes today. Or there would be days where I'm just like, okay,
I'm going to wear this shoe for half the day and then I'm going to switch this shoe for the rest
of the day. And then it just got to a point where I can just wear the zero drop shoes all the time
and not have any foot pain because it just took a moderate amount of time for my feet to get strong
enough to handle the stress of being on them all day in that fashion.
So one thing, if you are working one of these jobs that you can do is you can bring two shoes to work.
You know, maybe to start your day, you have your fucking Vivos or your Vibrams or whatever zero drop shoes. And then maybe after three or four hours of walking around so much
as a nurse or whatever, because y'all get some steps in. You're like a chick with some flats
in your purse. Yeah, honestly, you got some hooker heels on and then you got the flats later on a
night exactly and then you pull out your fucking hokas or your uh your ultras or whatever to keep
your feet feeling a little bit better for the rest of the day and then but sooner or later it
probably will get to a point that your feet are so strong and they feel so good that you can wear
your zero drop shoes all day long and you don't feel foot fatigue.
It's gradual.
Yeah.
And you can get zero drop shoes that have padding on there, too.
Yes.
You know, I just think I don't think I don't think everybody needs to, like, try to, like, man up and toughen up and wear these, like, shoes that hurt all the time.
You know, I think the idea is to work yourself into the shoe to the point where you're comfortable enough.
It's not like we it's not like we wear Vivos and our feet hurt.
We wear Vivos and we like them and we're used to them because our feet have gotten stronger.
Yes.
So you're not trying to wear it to like cause more pain.
You're trying to wear it to make your feet more resilient over time.
And therefore, if you wear the correct shoes
that give your feet enough space, you'll be super comfortable. But now for us, the hard thing is for
us to go back to regular shoes because our feet don't fit in them anymore. I don't know about you
guys. My feet won't fit in a regular shoe. No, I can't do it anymore. But I have two examples. So
our boy Drew in India, he is a med student i believe but he's in you know uh hospitals and
stuff so he's he's always on his feet and he had said like oh dude i'm so like bought into what
you guys are doing barefoot shoes that i'm he got the the uh primus lights because that's he's like
which one's your favorite one and i'm like the one that has like almost nothing and he's like
you really set this guy in dude so exactly right but i'm like oh what are you gonna you know he said he's gonna wear him at you know at school or his i don't know how that works for
a med student but he's on his feet a lot and i'm like okay be careful because you know everything
we just explained here and he said that he did okay but his he noticed his calves were actually
really really sore right going from a heel down to no heel was a big adjustment but
over time you know he did the same thing he he took two different pairs of shoes and he he's now
able to wear vivos long term my sister-in-law you know again she understands and like the uh the
benefits of having a wide toe box shoe but same thing she's uh on her feet all day uh as a i'm gonna butcher
but maybe like a medical assistant or something but like she never can sit down basically so i
had recommended ultras and she ended up getting the escalantes which um from what i understand
have like the like least amount of cushion because they're like kind of like a road shoe or something
like that um yeah no those are great i think it's one of the better shoes out there yeah agreed and she's like man i kind of hate wearing other shoes now
because she's like super comfortable in a white like she's like i didn't like realize how narrow
my other shoes were so now she's loving wearing those and she like does not want to wear anything
else yeah so again those are two examples of somebody that did go pretty hardcore on the
barefoot and
kind of ease themselves into it. And then my sister-in-law who just went into the white toe
box, but a very comfortable shoe. And she does that every day. So I would say that like, if you
are going to be on your feet, go with the more cushiony side of things, but still go for the
white toe box the way ultras are. Yeah. Always go with that wider. I think people don't even
realize that a lot of people don't even realize their shoes barely
fit or don't fit at all.
Dude, you know, I have this bro theory that like certain shoes, especially like more narrow
stylish shoes cause a little bit of nerve damage where your feet get used to that feeling
because the same shit happens to me.
I can't move my right, my right pinky toe, I think because of that.
Yeah, but that's
the thing hopefully that gets better over time yeah it's moving a little bit nowadays yeah but
i still have all my old shoes like i have my uh my nike metcons i have the old vans that i was
wearing and i've put those shoes on recently and walked around with them just like this is
this fucking hurts because now since i've been wearing wide shoes my feet are used i'm used to
using my whole foot when doing things, right?
So now you go back to that sensation of being in a narrow shoe.
It sucks.
I can't do it.
I can't.
My girl is the same.
Like she wore heels recently.
She's like, these have never felt so bad.
How have I worn these before?
Because like she's used to like using her whole foot.
Now you compact it into this demon shoe.
It feels horrible. Yeah. You know? We need to make using her whole foot. Now you compact it into this demon shoe. It feels horrible.
Yeah.
You know,
we need to make wide toe box heels.
Dude,
I have an aunt and my mom was like,
would you be able to help your aunt out?
I'm like,
I don't know if she'll actually listen to me.
She's been wearing heels for years for work,
which is unfortunate because now her foot doctor or whatever told her,
you're going to have to wear these,
these shoes with all this padding pretty much forever.
Because heels have fucked her feet up so much.
So that just really does suck.
Heels suck even though they look hot.
But they shouldn't.
No, heels don't look hot.
Get that out of your mind.
They're bad for you.
But they do look hot.
I see people with Jordans and I'm always just like, oh, this guy doesn't know. That's what I think. I'm not like, oh, those are sick just like, oh, this guy doesn't know.
Yeah.
That's what I think.
I'm not like, oh, those are sick.
I'm like, this guy doesn't know.
He doesn't know what's up.
That's the same thought.
He doesn't know what's going on.
I could trip him up easy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just real quick, I don't even know if this is going to make it to the final edit,
but we went to a festival thing in Elk Grove,
just like a small little thing, bunch of vendors everywhere.
But there was like a dope,
like hype beast shoe vendor thing.
And it was just like a bunch of Jordans and a bunch of like rare shoes.
And I'm like, damn,
I am so uninterested in all of these.
And I'm just looking at the dudes,
checking them out.
And I'm like, all of your feet are all weak.
You guys are all weak.
And I am so much better than all
of you
grabbing a microphone like cutting a promo
on everybody
you're all fucking weak
it's so silly
to go to that right
my feet are better than yours
look at you guys
with your disgusting feet you can't even get your
big toe away from your other
toes this is horrific have you ever done a hat foot club that hurts doesn't it bitch
pussies we're fucking with y'all kind enough how project family how's it going now we talk about
sleep all the time on the podcast because it's one of the biggest things that helps you with
your health and fitness your recovery your muscle gain your fat loss everything that's how i've
partnered with eight sleep for such a long time now
because the technology behind the mattress allows you to track your heart rate,
the amount of times it takes you to fall asleep, your tosses and turns,
your heart rate variability.
It changes its temperature through the night based off how you sleep,
but not only yourself, but maybe your partner on the other side of the bed.
It is an amazing mattress.
Andrew, how can they learn more?
Yes, head over to eightsleep.com slash powerproject.
That's 8 spelled out, E-I-G-H-T, sleep.com slash powerproject.
Along with more information, you guys will actually save $150 off of your entire order automatically.
Links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
We got another question?
We do.
This is from Drums and Barbells.
And for the other people that ask questions that we may
not get to on this one again we can always hit it up in the next q a so hit us for next q a in the
ask pp channel and the discord from drums and barbells could you cover all the little things
you guys use during your podcast i just got a new job and switched from working from home full time to an
office just wanted to make sure that it doesn't take a toll on my body there we go i do get walks
in but anything to keep my body where it's at or just a links page or something okay yeah we got
you handled on some of the shit we use uh let's see what's under your feet right now set the timer
yeah yeah under my feet right now um i got this. Yeah. Yeah. Under my feet right now. Um, I got this, like, is it wild gym? Is that what these things are? Right. And then I
also have the Nebo suit ball. I'm moving my foot around on those things and, uh, just trying to
get my feet, uh, to feel better after doing that. Um, after doing that marathon that I just did,
the Boston marathon. Yeah. Uh. We use so many different things,
but one of the things that's been really helpful to me as a runner
and or if you're somebody that's just on your feet a lot,
if you can figure out how to fill up some sort of tub with really cold water,
I'm fortunate we have the cold plunge.
You guys can also check that out too, but it might not be in your budget.
Just getting your lower leg up to your knee submerged in some water is fucking amazing.
I can't even tell you like it feels incredible.
It feels like I got new legs every day when I put my legs in there because of all the miles of running that I've been doing.
You know, you damage like your shin.
You damage your calves and your ankles and all that stuff.
Those areas just get tight.
I also have compression boots
that I'm a huge fan of. Those work really well. I just kick back in like a recliner,
kick my feet up and have those things. Those are, I forget what the name of those things are. Do
you guys remember? Nortec. Yeah, Normatec. There you go. Normatec. And then, you know, just it's
like a long list of shit that we do. I, I have a ton of stuff.
I have a lot of options for myofascial release and I have a lot of that at my house. I have some of
that, um, near, I have some of that in my living room. I have some of that in my bedroom. I have
some of that here at the gym and I can use that wherever I need to. Um, and then obviously like,
you know, uh, the within you brand supplements, like we,
I have the steak shake. I have that twice a day. I use fasting gum. I use mind bullet, you know,
use just a really wide variety of things. When I'm training, I use a lot of the slingshot stuff,
the elbow sleeves and knee sleeves to kind of protect myself during the run or during my
lifting.
So, yeah, there's a huge, it's like probably an entire podcast, electrolytes.
I think we all use the electrolytes quite a bit.
So, yeah, what you guys got?
I would say, and I'm going to try to get a code for that soon,
but the Wild Gym, if you go to wildgym.com, you'll be able to see this, Matt.
And if we have a code by now, we'll put that in the description.
But I've really been loving this thing. And let me pull this up real quick. I don't know, Andrew, if you'll be able to see this mat and if we have a code by now we'll put that in the description but i've really been loving this thing and let me pull this up real quick i don't know andrew if you'll be able to see it oh but okay that that mark can you pick that up that one you had actually this is from
wildgym.com right it's this mat this middle section of it has a place where you can you
have like a there's this ball right there we go there's
this ball and i i'm smashing my feet on that you can interchange these mats so you could have that
rock instead of you know these ones and this one is kind of soft and the darker one the darkest one
is is really hard different fucking you know they did that shit on purpose huh they made the dark
one the hardest i wonder why it causes more pain
that's not why do we always link darkness with evil and pain and badness huh because
pain is pleasure same did we link it there or is it
fuck with you but no this thing's in the middle you can smash your foot on this i
and you can smash your foot on all the little things in here. There's a little thing where you can use your toes
to pick this up and put it in the
other magnet. Little games. Yeah, you have little foot
games. It's really amazing.
And during the podcast, I'll usually
just sometimes stand on one foot for like
30 or 40 seconds and switch feet from foot to foot.
It's been helping my balance. And these are all
passive things that we're doing during
conversation. So just think about doing
that every single day.
If you work in an office, smash your feet on this.
You're getting passive myofascial release while you're just chilling.
It could really speed that up.
And that's why I fucking, I love this thing.
I feel so like babied, you know, doing all this stuff and then like having the Piedmontese
beef and just, it's like, everything's like, I guess, really particular.
I feel pretty, I feel pretty i feel pretty
bougie about everything i would say also go on amazon get yourself a if you're in an office and
you have like obviously a desk riser so maybe you can stand for periods while you're working
but grab yourself a fucking stool because i always have my foot up on this thing so that i can
i'm i'm lengthening out my hip flexor well not my hip flexors but i'm lengthening out my hips a bit
my groin area.
Yeah, I'm pushing my knee in a little bit.
It just allows me to move around in different ways, again, while we're working.
And you can do the same thing while you're at work working.
If you want to get yourself a grip thing, I have this Captains of Crush thing that I'll use.
And what I'll do when I drive is I'll just hold it for 30 seconds in one hand and keep keep the grip gripped that'll hold it for 30 seconds in another hand and keep it gripped
and you can again you could do this while you're chilling where you just have some passive grip
work and it has made a difference with my grip right so these are just these are passive things
man that you can do even something as simple as like bringing protein powder with you like to work
like you just have it in a bag or have it in a bottle or whatever.
It can make your eating,
you know,
during the day a lot easier rather than you going and just eating some
bullshit for lunch.
Yeah.
Real quickly on my end,
because I do sit down to run the podcast,
but I use a kneeling chair.
So it's basically it,
you sit down like a chair,
but most of the weight is going to or
not most some of the weight will be pushed down to your knees so your knees are actually uh kind
of propping you up and there's no back to it so um the the biggest thing that i noticed because
when i i hurt my i guess uh hamstring whatever you want to call it a a little while ago and i
couldn't sit here because it was pretty painful
to do that because my knees are kind of you know they're close to my hamstrings and that caused
pain so I went back to a regular chair and what I noticed right away is when I sat down I leaned
back and I'm leaning on it like this and I'm like oh this is bad to like a side yeah yeah so I was
putting my my elbow on one of the armrest, but my whole body was leaning into it and
I was just slouching.
I just felt lazy and gross.
So with this, I don't have that option.
So I'm forced to be sitting upright.
And so that has helped a lot with my back.
That was one of the first things that I switched over and I switched over all the chairs at
home that I work at and that that helped a ton so I do
that I do have a wild gym like the inserts under my feet when I can get to them I can't put a lot
of weight on them because I am sitting but I will like mess with them with my feet and that sort of
thing sometimes I have those Nobosu grip things back here as well but yeah that's oh and then I
have yeah one of the balls as well like I'll get the the half of the uh neuro ball you get that on amazon by the way yeah and i'll just like i'll dig into like
a forearm or something and i'll find it and then like i'll because this has grip it'll like grip
the skin and i can twist it and it like just i don't know just it feels good to have something
just like and just like scratch and grab the shit out of you this guy's good as that sounds this
guy's question is mainly about like stuff to do like at work yeah just like passive things that
he can do at work um so a lot of things you can do with that are free too i i didn't know if he
was like just looking for gadgets and stuff but i mean yeah he was asking about the stuff we use
if you occasionally like anything that's going to encourage you i know and sema's got those like
blocks that you can do like body weight moves off of.
The base block trainers, yeah.
Yeah, things like that are great.
Like if you just have handles, it's funny because you could drop down and do push-ups anywhere.
Yes.
But if you have handles that are for push-ups, like you have like the perfect push-up or something,
or you have a slingshot or something that's going to encourage you to go and do some push-ups,
if you have that near your desk, maybe you'll do some push-ups if you have that near your desk maybe you'll hit some
push-ups here and there um obviously you can go like going on like a walk i mean you know wearing
some toe spacers like anything that's going to help you feel more comfortable while you're at
work and um i think you know i think just getting in a little bit of exercise we always talk about
getting sunlight hopefully the guy kind of already knows about some of those things.
But getting outside, we do that a lot here when we're podcasting.
We're like, oh, let's just get some sun for a few minutes because you kind of just – your energy dips.
And I think it's even better than a cup of coffee is just go outside for a walk, get some sunlight.
Oh, yeah.
And I would say a slant board as well.
Like if it doesn't take up much space and you can – whatever know, whatever, do your 10 minute or whatever amount of minutes squat you can.
It definitely promotes, you know, having a longer squat.
But yeah, getting down in that deep flexion, like after sitting down and then all or even standing, getting down into a deep squat, like feels so good.
But then also like doing it on a slant board just makes it funner and it makes it, for it makes it a lot easier that's clutch i'm happy you mentioned that guys yeah that's that's huge
got a slant board and then like if you want to if you want to be that person you got the wild
gym mat at your fucking desk you got a slant board in the corner maybe a fucking perfect push-up or
the base blocks push-up thing then maybe a light kettlebell because there's a lot of little things
like if you go on that slant board, you can, you know,
every now and then you can just do some slant board squats or you can fucking
do some Jefferson curls and lengthen out your back a bit while you're at your
office.
Most likely it's just going to get other people excited to like,
they'll be like, dude, what's that?
A couple people are going to be like, you're weird.
But a couple other people are probably going to be like, dude,
I want to get one of those.
Where'd you get that?
You might have a little culture going on.
Yeah.
And it shouldn't take up much space, but also like if you're you have your own office you can easily just put a
smith machine in there smith machine four four five because let's be honest if you're listening
to the show you are that guy you are that girl you are that person that's like gonna be over the top
so just you know go all in just get a whole gym for your office. I got to tell you this, man.
Like, for example, this mat or whatever, all this stuff that we've got, I've noticed that I fidget and I move more.
And we've kind of mentioned this before, but I think that, like, for example, having this underneath my feet, because I'm passively moving while I'm talking and whatever, my NEAT has increased.
And people love to say that you can't increase your NEAT, your non-exercise activity thermogenesis. It's the thing that
it's the way you burn calories when you're not trying to exercise, right? But I'm not trying
to exercise right now and while we're podcasting, but my feet are always constantly moving around
on this mat. I am burning more calories while standing around, even though that's not my
personal goal. So just by changing the environment,
I've managed to increase my
neat because of the things around me.
It'll have a big difference over time.
It's just encouragement to
move a little bit more. Andrew, take us out of here,
buddy. There was one last good one.
There's more
questions, which we won't hit off of, but there's one last
good one that I want you guys to
hit real quick. Okay, this is from and for the people that we didn't get remember join the discord hit up
the questions and we'll be able to get your out your questions on the next discord q a from sun
sun do any of you guys believe in the mike menser mentality of training when you're only supposed to
train like twice a week but with really intense workouts. Also, didn't Mark Bell do like 1,000 milligrams of testosterone per week
for like over a year at some point?
I didn't see that one.
That was part of the same question.
Did you?
Probably.
Yeah, I think so.
That's not that much, really.
That's on who you ask. Who's asking? Some motherfucker might not think that's true i think well 1,000
isn't that bad per week that's actually bad right mark you don't want to do that
a lot of these bad no it's not bad okay yeah it's you want to hear people do that oh yeah yeah
yeah okay i guess yeah yeah unless you said 1,000 grams, then that person's really strong.
Yeah.
So maybe it was more so.
How about the Mike Menser thing?
It's like you should be going hard for two sessions, and they should be so hard that you can't go to the gym the next day.
What do you guys think about that?
I like a lot of Mike Menser's principles and ideas.
I like a lot of Mike Mentzer's principles and ideas.
I also think that sometimes people are trying to be captivating and they're trying to have something to talk about.
So I think that he maybe sensationalized that a little bit.
I do think he did draw attention to the fact that people were doing too many sets
and working out too often.
But at some point, he just made it more and more ridiculous as time went on he he went all the way down to like saying like let's just smash like one
really hard like rep and it was like it was a rep that was done after you did something you know
really hard previously and you would do like isometric and stuff but anyway he drew a lot
of attention to this kind of heavy duty style of, and we saw Dorian Yates utilize it with a lot of success.
And I think there's other people that utilize similar training protocols with success.
I think what it draws attention to is that you don't necessarily need a ton of hours in the gym to be great or to have a really great physique.
You don't need nearly the amount of time that you would think if you go in there and you, uh, you get what you need and get out, you can be in the
gym for 45 minutes and have an awesome workout. It's just that you're going to have to think about
it a little bit more. And Menster was a guy that he didn't do four sets of four different exercises
per body part. The way you see a lot of bodybuilders do. He would do maybe
two different exercises. He would do about one to two different, one to two sets. Sometimes he
needs like a warmup set. He would do like one to two sets per each exercise that he did. And that
second set would be like, all right, here we go. We're going all in. Some of the issue with that
is like, you kind of feel like you need to be pretty
hyped for those workouts and you might start to rely on stimulants and you you might the stimulants
you might not feel them that much and when you're training you might be like oh shit i don't have
the same so i've trained that way before i like it but you can get yourself into a weird spot where
you're trying to manufacture like fake energy because the intensity of the
workout is so high or at least that was my understanding of it the intensity of the workout
is so high that it's like it's hard to push into that every single time you work out so i think
mike menser had great principles and great ideas and i still utilize some of those methods from
time to time when i want a shorter burst for a workout, or I might use it on a particular exercise. But I also don't think that you have to perpetually train that way all the time.
I think a good question to ask yourself when you hear about certain principles or certain ideas is,
why don't I just adopt some of that here and there? Like, that's a great mentality to utilize
some of that training, but that doesn't mean i have to discontinue power lifting or discontinue my crossfit workouts i could still do some other stuff that i like to do
and mix that in failure on certain sets not all of your sets right won't cause as much fatigue
i can understand if like you only have two days where you can actually train in the gym
yeah make those if you want to you can make those days as hard as you'd like right but if you can spread
it out i think that that is a better long-term approach to have multiple good workouts they
don't have to be two hours it could be again 45 minutes to an hour right um you'll be able to get
in overall more work more training volume and you'll be able to get in good training and you
won't be so won't beat you down so hard where you don't have the motivation and the ability to go and get another
good training session in.
So it's maybe good to try out here and there, maybe good to implement certain ideas into
a specific workout.
But I don't think that I wouldn't do that.
I never did that to gain my size.
So I don't think you need to.
It's putting way too much in on one day.
And I think it doesn't leave much for the other days
but I know that he's talking about like lifting twice a week. Yeah. But even just effort otherwise
like with running or anything else that you want to do it just it just can make it really difficult.
Yeah I think that style would run me personally straight into the ground because it would be a
lot of volume for just two days and then it would also make me probably not really look forward to those days.
And it might even like kind of stop me dead in my tracks to even go into the gym.
So that's, you know, again, I'm speaking for myself.
There's other people that are like, you know, like, no, like this is my life and I'm super hardcore and I actually enjoy that.
And that's great.
But I know for me personally, like that's what would happen but i i
think the answer is somewhere in the middle where it's like okay don't do you know seven days in a
row with like 30 sets of everything but i think maybe this is too far this way because i like
what hamza was saying a couple videos ago where he was saying like people just aren't working hard
enough and so he recommended like if you're doing dumbbell press go in and do one set as hard as you
can just the one set because you might be doing you might be grabbing 65 pound dumbbells and like
oh i can do you know five sets of 20 or whatever it may be and like but that's absolutely it like
i can't go any more than that but then you do one set and it's like holy shit like i actually got 40
and then it's like well i if i'm honest, I probably could have done like 45.
But at 40, I was totally gassed and like that's it.
So I think, yeah, some people maybe aren't working hard enough and that's where something like this could help.
But I think it is – it's just a little bit too violent.
It's a lot when you're doing it.
It's painful, but I think it's good in a way like i think it's
it's kind of fun in some way but at the same time like i'm saying it's uh it's maybe a little
little too much that's it all right andrew take us out of here buddy all righty thank you everybody
for checking out today's episode and sema's going to tell you how to get in on this type of q a
in the future so don't make or so make sure you don't miss out on that.
Hit that like button.
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Follow the podcast at mbpowerproject all over the place.
My Instagram is at IamAndrewZ.
And Seema, where are you at?
And tell people how to do this again.
I told you multiple times.
I ain't going to tell you again.
But if I have to tell you again, it's in the description.
The Discord's down below.
People are popping over there.
Questions are coming in.
It's a good old time.
Thoughts fired. And Seema Inyang on Instagram and YouTube.
And Seema Inyang on TikTok and Twitter, Mark. there are questions are coming in it's a good old time that's fired and see my in yang on instagram youtube and see my yin yang on tiktok and twitter mark mike menser by the way had a sick physique
can you bring up a picture of him he looked he looked incredible but again i think you know
drawing attention to you know people just like overdoing i think when you bodybuild so he's
recommending you know you go all in and you only do it like two or three times a week you
only do it for 45 minutes the opposite of that is what a lot of bodybuilders do where they go in
five to six times a week and they smash themselves i think what in sema is alluding to is that that
may not really be all that necessary for bodybuilding because in bodybuilding if you
were to do four sets of 10 of some inclined dumbbell press,
you can have an intensity that would be high, but you wouldn't have to scream. You wouldn't
have to make crazy faces. If you went every minute on the minute with your sets and you
chose weights that were challenging and you lifted with a really smooth eccentric and concentric,
you lifted with a really smooth eccentric and concentric, that would be, you know, some bodybuilding sets of incline bench that would induce some muscle hypertrophy without you
going crazy, without you throwing the hundreds down and grabbing 60s and doing another 20
reps and stuff like that.
So I agree a lot with what Nseema is saying here.
And then plus, I think if Mike Menser was still around today, I think he would probably like to adopt some of the ideas that we've been talking about here on the show a lot, which is kind of microdosing your fitness.
Because I just don't think people thought about those things in the 70s and 80s.
I don't think they had the luxury to.
There was a lot less people that were worthless losers like us that don't have regular
jobs where we can just sit around and play fitness all day. And so we can kind of periodically like
hit up some sets here and there. But anyway, I'd rather put a little more frequency into it
as well, because I think working out like twice a week is kind of unmotivating.
I'm at Mark Smelly Bell. Strength is never weakness. Weakness is never strength. Catch you guys later. Bye.