Mark Bell's Power Project - Why Exercise is Destroying Your Body || MBPP Ep. 964
Episode Date: July 31, 2023In episode 964, Mark Bell, Nsima Inyang, and Andrew Zaragoza talk about how you need to focus on recovery just as much as you focus on exercise or you will not be doing that exercise for very long.  ... New Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw  Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://drinkag1.com/powerproject Receive a year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs!  ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements!  ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel!  ➢ https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off Mind Bullet!  ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box  ➢ Better Fed Beef: https://betterfedbeef.com/pages/powerproject  ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject to receive a year supply of Hostage Tape and Nose Strips for less than $1 a night!  ➢ 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://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/PowerProject to receive 10% off our Panel, Check Up Panal or any custom panel!  ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150  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)
My body is forever damaged from training jujitsu.
Yeah, I've felt like I got the shit beat out of me before from powerlifting and things like that.
One thing I've always learned is that it always passes.
There's a difference between, yeah, I want to do powerlifting versus I want to do powerlifting from now until the time I die.
Training and recovery are not two separate things.
As a martial artist, if you're not doing things in the gym, you can't expect to be able to do it for a long time.
You know, this idea and this mentality of, you know, going hard and just saying,
F it, I'm going to go in. When you're already banged up, you just have to be careful of that.
Jiu-jitsu saved my life, but destroyed my body is misleading. It's not jiu-jitsu that destroyed this man's body. It's potentially his actions. Yeah, pain is coming our way.
And you may as well live your
life like a savage. You might as well try your hardest at things, but you do have to be level
headed at the same time. Mark, you've told me many times like, hey, I dare you to take one day off
of jujitsu instead of, you know, killing yourself. And go do something else that's really hard.
With whatever physical thing that you're trying to do. If you don't upkeep your body,
you will not be in it in the next 10 years. Pepper Project family, welcome to the podcast.
We are 900 plus episodes deep. We're bringing tons of different experts in fitness, health,
nutrition, and business. And we thank you all for your support. And we're also glad to be bringing
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Thank you for your support, and enjoy the episode.
I do that a lot. I'm like exploding all over the house, burping, farting, sneezing, coughing.
The morning usually at Jiu-Jitsu doesn't start until I let out like a pretty good deep like,
and I'm like, all right, cool.
I can breathe.
Let's go.
Does it happen in jujitsu like where you start going real hard and then sometimes your throat gets burny?
Like it happens to me sometimes when I'm running.
Oh, burn?
No, I thought you meant like you got to clear your throat mid roll which i have done that because like allergies or
something and i was like fuck i can't clear it and then you already can't breathe and i'm like
sorry dude i'm just dying over here yes but not not that like burning yeah where you can taste
like pennies yeah yeah sometimes when i'm running early in the morning and if it's like a harder run
then i was just like burning i'm like what the hell food suggestion for you guys
our prior episode we had alla gilbert on the podcast she gave us all cookies
this if you haven't eaten yours it looks like a giant chocolate chip is what it looks like yeah
dude this is such a good cookie yeah now it is caloric i'm glad you ate that and not the other
thing she gave us i mean our little dick friend right here? Our little weenie. It's so cute.
But it's like 500 calories.
It has 25 grams of protein, quite a bit of fat and carbs, but at the same time, 25 grams of protein.
It's well-rounded.
Yep.
And then, Mark, what'd you mix up here?
This is banana.
Oh, yeah.
Banana cream steak shake with the chocolate hydration from within you brand.
So there you go.
I'm sorry, guys. The melding of the flavors.
So good. But glam cookies.
Go to the Instagram Dough Palace.
Send us some of these
cookies, please. I will buy some. These are so
good. It's super smart. Super smart
to just chuck some protein in there. Yeah.
You'd make this at home, too, if you
wanted to, but buy it.
And Smokey was telling us to heat them up.
Yeah, I made a mistake.
I'm too deep.
I can't heat it up.
You're too excited.
I'm trying to hold off and heat mine up.
We'll see.
Big ass cookies.
Big ass cookie.
That's what we need.
You have a little.
Oh, what you got?
Yeah, no, this is the clip that we're going to watch right now.
And guys, don't worry. We're not going gonna be talking about jujitsu the whole podcast but
this is a really interesting video that came across the feed and apparently many of you guys
have already saw it but we'll let it play this guy says pretty much the title jujitsu saved my life
but destroyed my body and that's an interesting thing to to put forward but we won't watch the
whole thing we're gonna watch parts of it you guys guys should check it out. But let's see it.
My body is forever damaged from training jujitsu. I started training 10 years ago. I'm a purple
belt. If you know anything about jujitsu, the belt ranking system is white, blue, purple, brown,
black for adults. And then they have belts beyond black. But your last name pretty much has to be
Gracie if you want a red belt or a red and white belt I'm gonna be 39 years old in a few months at this point my knees hurt all the
time neck pain which I ended up getting x-rayed at one point and I had some degeneration and
a couple discs in my neck my back hurts broken dislocated fingers and toes can you just pause this for a second um you know i i've felt
like this before like i've felt i've felt uh yeah i've i've felt like i got the shit beat out of me
before from power lifting and things like that um but one thing i've always learned is that it
always passes it's like a particular feeling for a little while so i wonder you know he is mentioning
being you know more consistent and stuff like that um i'm wondering when he did have time off
he said like you know uh covid maybe interrupted some of his training i wonder if he had a lot of
these symptoms at that point because what i've learned over the years is so many things are
not everything's reversible but so many things are reversible and the way that
you feel um oftentimes like uh you can get reactionary based off the way that you feel
that's why um rogan always talks about like these guys retiring in the ring he's like i don't know
he's like i don't think they should do that i think but it's hard because you just fought
you probably just lost and you probably just lost for the third time in a row.
And you're like, peace, I'm out, you know, because of all the pain.
But what if you had time to just step back?
What if you had an opportunity to step back and to be a little bit more patient and say, you know what?
I'm probably not going to fight for a little while.
I'm not going to completely retire, but I'm going to take about a year, collect my thoughts.
I bet you that you could make yourself feel better almost with any sport that you're doing. Yeah. And I wonder if,
like, you know, I think this would be a good video for you guys to watch in full so you can
talk because he talks about his, he's, you know, he's been doing jujitsu for 10 years,
so he's had a little bit of time off and he came back to it. But, you know, it is a contact sport
and same thing with powerlifting, not a contact sport, but you're working with a lot of heavy load.
Now, when you have something that happens, do you keep banging your head against the wall and doing the same thing?
Do you have the same daily habits in terms of the way you take care of your body?
Or are you trying to do things that will help alleviate some of this pain?
And we'll get into more things that, honestly, I think you have to do if you choose to take on any physical endeavor and
you choose to take it on for a long time because there's a difference between, yeah, I want to do
powerlifting versus I want to do powerlifting from now until the time I die. There's a different
level of self-care you must have if that's actually a goal you want to have. How often
have you practiced jujitsu or gone to practice with like a pretty good injury?
So if an injury happened, then I would typically take a few days off. Like recently I did something to my- I think that's rare.
Yeah. But- I think a lot of people don't do that.
But when I do have that injury, when I do take a few days off, I usually come into the gym and
I'll do things to get blood flow to that area. So it's not like i'll just sit down and do nothing but i will address it
so that i can get back to rolling but some people if an injury happens i'll see them in the gym
rolling the next day like ah it's not a big deal and then the injury gets worse and worse and worse
until it turns into something where they're out for months or they end up with something else
exactly exactly and he was going to mention more things, actually, I think.
Keep it rolling.
Fingers hurt because I train a lot of gi.
There's a lot of grip breaking.
Very similar to judo.
You're grabbing collars.
You're grabbing sleeves.
And it's very bad on your fingers.
A lot of old school jujitsu guys who trained a lot of gi have arthritis in their fingers.
My elbows are screwed up from being armbarred too many times.
One more
injury that I forgot about was my chest. I was born with a birth defect where I have kind of a
concave chest. And one time when I was training, I was training with a much bigger guy who's
probably closer to 300 pounds and he's a black belt now. But at the time, I think he was a brown
belt. I was just about to get my purple belt at that time, but we were training takedowns. And I
don't remember the exact toss that he caught me with, but it was some kind of judo throw hip toss and he landed on me inside control but when
i landed i was kind of on my side like that and he kind of landed on me which caused my chest and
my sternum to go like that and i felt it like right down the crack the parts of your ribs that
connect and it was the worst pain i had ever felt in my life. And to this day, this happened years ago. I can't sleep. Have either one of you guys ever had the wind
knocked out of you? I remember specifically high school soccer, this guy, he was pissed at us on
the field. He was on the opposing team. So a ball was coming and I was about to receive it with my
chest and he just decided to spear me. So he, he acted like he was going for the ball, but his head literally hit my sternum.
And I was, I was like, you can't bring,
and you're like, just, you're on the ground
and you're like, just, you're moving around
and you're like, not sure what happened.
I was on the ground for a minute.
It's terrifying.
I was watching Quarterbacks,
the show that has Kirk Cousins and Mahomes
and following a bunch of the NFL elite.
And there was a video or there was a shot to Kirk Cousins
that made him get the wind knocked out of him.
And he's just like rolling around on the ground.
And the defensive lineman that smashed him, like smacks him on the butt.
And he's like, you'll be okay.
And he's like, but i wasn't okay
and uh andy was like what happened to him and i was explaining to her i was like has that ever
happened to you and she's like no i'm like oh i just think some of this meathead stuff that's
happened to me is like just super common and that everyone's had this happen before but it's
you can't take another breath like that's what it is you the wind gets
knocked out of you you you don't know when your next breath is going to come and it takes it
seems like it takes a long time but it probably literally only takes like 10 to 30 seconds or so
or so and then you start to be able to breathe more normal but it's very terrifying for a minute
yeah every time we have a like a breathing expert or whatever you want to call them breath expert on
i want to ask them that and i always forget because like what the or whatever you want to call them breath expert on i want to ask them that
and i always forget because like what the heck are you supposed to do because if they put your arms
over your head but this doesn't do anything like and it it may be only you know 10 30 seconds or
but as a kid and you're freaking out like dude i can't get oxygen it's the worst i've actually
gotten it multiple times happened to me like slipping and falling on my back, like flat on the back.
Like back in the day, like skating and stuff.
It sucks.
I hate that feeling.
Or like, yeah, soccer, getting the ball kicked like right on the top,
like whatever that's called, like right below your ribs.
Like, oh, gosh.
Yeah.
It's brutal.
Don't like it.
Okay.
On my side, my wife makes fun of me because I sleep like Dracula.
You know, I sleep like this straight because if I don't sleep straight, I wake up with a hurt neck or a hurt back or a hurt chest.
Because if I sleep in the fetal position or on my side, I mean, it is such an excruciating pain that it wakes me up.
And then I get up and I have to like stretch and it hurts.
And I've gone to the doctor for it.
It's been x-rayed. It's cartilage damage from what they assume. I have not gotten an MRI
because my doctor was pretty much like, hey, man, it's kind of like a rib injury when it rains or
when it's about to rain or it gets a little cold out. Everything in my body starts hurting. And now
a couple of days ago, I told my wife, wife i was like i don't know if i can
keep doing this it's like this thing that i love so much would say saved my life even though it's
this corny ass saying that a lot of people used to say and they put it on t before we continue
this like i mean would it be corny for any of us to say that like lifting strength training is something that has been life-altering for me?
I'm lucky I started when I was 13, but it's been life-altering.
Just the habit and understanding what it can do for you and understanding how it can take the resilience it can give you to do everything else.
I think it's quite literally been life-altering for all of us.
Yeah, definitely.
I think that's, it's quite literally been life-altering for all of us.
Yeah, definitely.
Saved my life is an interesting term because I didn't need to be saved from anything.
I grew up with great parents and I grew up in a nice home and I didn't have an afflicted life.
But there are people that have afflicted lives that get into fighting and that get into jiu-jitsu.
And you see it quite often and and with uh fitness especially power lifting you know you see the guys
that like it like if they can't power lift it's it's not a good outcome if they can't do jujitsu
it's not a good outcome like they're it literally maybe in some cases kind of has saved some of
these people's lives or or been something that gave them the disciplines to, uh, I guess fight off other situations in life to make themselves feel better.
Yeah. I remember when I, I remember when I did start lifting, it was because I got injured from
soccer and I got depressed. So when I started lifting, that was the thing that like my,
my mom was super happy afterwards because when I got injured from soccer, I wasn't the same kid.
I wasn't chatty.
I was quiet.
I didn't like talking to my friends anymore, and I was fucking up in school.
But I got into the gym, and that outlet literally changed my trajectory.
I know 100%.
So, Andrew, you're about to say something?
Yeah.
Now, when I say that lifting saved my life, I don't necessarily, like, I don't know where I would have ended up.
But, you know, you guys heard, like, where I came from, like, being a heavy drinker, being very depressed, like, being upset.
I don't know.
I'm not saying, like, I would have committed suicide or anything like that because I just, I don't know.
But the life that people know me from the podcast, like, the people that are watching or listening to this like this life was saved with because of fitness because i was going this direction and then i started lifting and i
literally you know i met somebody through lifting or exercise fitness whatever you want to call it
that helped put me in the right position to meet mark and then you know now all this stuff has
happened yeah so like yes it absolutely saved my life like Like, no question about it. It's, yeah, it's wild.
What a different trajectory I was on before lifting.
Gotcha.
Right now, I know you're looking in the mirror.
You're getting ready for your nephew's quinceañera.
You have a long sleeve on that looks horrible and your pants don't fit right.
That's why we partnered.
I don't know why you're laughing.
That's why we partnered with Viore clothing.
You see, this is the boulevard shirt jacket.
Fits great.
Stretchy.
Feels amazing. It's the best long
sleeve in my closet. And one of
the biggest things that we love about Viore is that
they have clothes that you can wear to parties.
They have clothes that you can wear in the gym. Like I said,
your nephew's quinceanera. You can look great
wherever you go if you step your
fashion game up. Plus,
this stuff feels like baby skin on your
skin, which is kind of creepy, but at the same
time, it's kind of nice and you know it.
Andrew, where can they get it?
Yes, you guys got to head over to Viori.com slash Power Project.
That's V-U-O-R-I dot com slash Power Project to automatically receive 20% off your order.
Links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
Fucking hell.
These shirts, it was like jujitsu saved my life.
Unless you are in the middle of a fight
where someone is about to kill you and you use jujitsu to save your life jujitsu doesn't save
your life but for me at least it helped a lost 28 year old who never really stuck with anything
and never had much ambition and drive it helped me find that in me and And in a weird way, I feel like I owe a lot of my success
to the fact that I started training jujitsu because there's something about going in and
just getting beat up day in and day out and sticking with it and not seeing a lot of progress
for a while. Through that, it showed me that if I continued doing something, no matter how hard it was, and I stuck
with it, that I would eventually get better at it and that I could actually get good at it. And I
felt that I was good at jujitsu. I still feel that I'm decent. As I get older, it gets harder. And
now I train with some young guys and I can't even keep up with them. It's tough. It is a combat sport
that you can't really fake the funk on. What led me to wanting to make this video was that a lot of people have asked about it because I've mentioned jujitsu throughout a lot of my videos.
And I've, you know, gave a lot of credit to juj old and helping me understand what I know now from
having grit and sticking it out when things get tough. And that helped me learn how to code,
helped me with my YouTube channel. It helped me with a lot of things, just so many aspects of my
life that I apply that same mentality to this point. Although it helped save my life, it's
destroyed my body. And as I approach that big four, Oh and as i approach that big 4-0 as i approach that over
the hill mark i feel like i don't know if i can keep going but i'm still still doing it i'm just
one serious injury left in me before i decide to call it quits that's really interesting yeah he's
compelling if nothing else i mean like i want to listen to more of it because he's like uh i don't know making some like interesting points but you know
i think um it's really easy to adopt this idea that you're over the hill but imagine like um i
don't know what his situation is with jujitsu but imagine if he just went to a jujitsu academy
that's like all people that are like 40 plus and they all are fucking amazing.
Like it might change his outlook, right?
Everyone's 40 plus.
There's people that are 50.
There's people that are 60.
They're in great shape.
Their bodies aren't banged up.
It might kind of open up his mind and say, oh, wait a second.
Maybe.
The other thing is too with the amount of pain that he's describing um i don't
really know who this guy is um but he he might need to like look into his diet a little bit he
might need to look into getting some blood work done because um just going around uh with that
amount of pain obviously it could just be from the training and it could be from him just wanting, just really wanting to get better and wanting to show up day in and day out and kind of push through.
All those things could be factors, but he should probably kind of get some of that checked out because it sounds like he's in a lot of pain, which can be super annoying.
Mm hmm. That and, you know, if you're somebody who wants to do bodybuilding, you want to do powerlifting or jujitsu, it's great to get into those activities.
And specifically with strength training, building muscle is going to help you help your body to be more overall resilient.
But if you're doing those things over and over, you know, with all the guests that we've had on, if anything, we've learned that you need to have good hygiene for your body.
Like you can do all these activities to strengthen your body or jujitsu in terms of, you know, doing the martial art and getting better
at that. But if you're not doing things to strengthen your body as a martial artist,
if you're not doing things in the gym, you can't expect to be able to do it for a long time
because your body's not strong, your body's not resilient. And there's going to be a day where
maybe you pull something and you don't know how to handle it. Or, or, you know, you, you, you just get into
these random situations where your body's not strong enough to handle the stress of that martial
art or in lifting, you get into a situation where you're, you lack mobility in certain areas and
things start to hurt, but you keep doing the same thing over and over and over again. And if you
want to do it for a long time, you have to do the things of myofascial release. You probably want to do some stretching. You
probably don't want to be sitting all day long. You want to do a few things just so that your
body is primed to be able to do these activities for years. And building resilience through lifting,
right? You know, and building up some bone density. And I don't know if,
are you aware of this guy like lifts and stuff like that too?
Going through the video, I don't see lifting as being a big part of his routine or strength training but that's again that's another thing that you see from a lot of people who do jujitsu
or a lot of martial arts in general they not many of them take strength training seriously and then
you know it's not really a surprise if you get injured often when you're not doing things to strengthen those different body parts other than jujitsu.
You're going to be brittle.
You're physically going to be weak.
So there's no way you're going to be able to maintain that until you're much older.
Do you remember, Nsema, if you felt like more wrecked at, let's say, blue and purple belt as opposed to brown belt i know that's like
a very easy question and to say like well of course i did but i'm just i'm asking that because
i'm wondering if he and many many others treat themselves and their bodies the exact same way
as they did when they were a white belt fresh feeling no pain and they go hard and then they
get some injuries and then again at blue belt they still go hard and then they get some injuries. And then again,
at blue belt, they still go hard and they haven't quite learned how to, um, what's that term again?
Um, right. Like self-regulate their bodies and stuff.
Mm. I'm like, Oh, an auto regulator.
Auto regulator. There you go.
Yeah. Um, I know that when I started, because everything was foreign, I had the same type of
pain that every white belt has, like my ribs, I'd be super sore because all the movements were in things I'd be getting in.
I'd have little tweaks here and there because I wasn't bending like that ever until I started jiu-jitsu.
But the one thing that I did have throughout the whole time was I came from a strength training background.
And when it came to injuries,
I didn't just keep going. Like what I, I injured my meniscus from something that happened in jujitsu.
And then I ended up getting part of that meniscus removed, but you know, I rehabbed that. I came
back to jujitsu and then I, you know, when we had Ben Patrick in, started doing a lot of stuff to
help my knee range of motion. My knees used to hurt. Just like he said, he said his knees always hurt.
Well, after Ben came in and I started doing a lot of things
with my like working in deep knee bending, doing all that,
my knees don't hurt at all anymore.
So that with a lot of these things where he said his back hurts,
his fingers hurt, his whatever,
a lot of things used to hurt more years ago for me
that don't hurt at all anymore.
I used to always tweak my lower back.
My lower back feels amazing now and I never tweak it because I've been doing a lot of
things with range in my lower back.
So these aren't things, that's why like the title of the video, Jiu Jitsu Saved My Life
But Destroyed My Body, I think is misleading because it's not jujitsu that destroyed this man's body.
It's potentially his actions or lack thereof when it came to potentially injury prevention.
Sometimes, you know, you never know what's going to happen when you roll with somebody,
but you can always choose the people you roll with.
So if you don't feel comfortable rolling with someone who's much bigger, don't roll with
them, you know, tap early. I don't, I'm not saying he didn't tap early or anything, but like in many situations, jujitsu is one of those things where it's like if you don't tap, sometimes you'll get injured. Tap early.
hygiene of your body that's going to allow you to get injured. It's not powerlifting injured you or jujitsu injured you. It's a lack of awareness for what you should be doing outside of the mats
or outside of the gym. I think you kind of said the magic word like awareness. I think this is
a knowledge-based thing. There's almost always an answer to try to find whatever the thing is
that's really bothering you. You have a book right in front of you by our buddy Chris Kodowski.
We're constantly looking at books.
We're constantly trying new lifts.
We're always like buying or purchasing new things,
like whether it's for our feet or our fingers or our neck or whatever.
There's like all this stuff around us all the time
where we're always trying to explore,
and that doesn't mean that we're immune to anything
and we can still make mistakes
and we could still, you know,
doing a sport where you have to deal with,
doing a sport where you have to deal
with somebody else's energy
is a really interesting thing.
Someone could just pick up the
tempo more so than they normally do. And you could be shocked or surprised by that where you're like,
whoa, like John's not usually that explosive. And you could like tweak yourself before he even
touches you just by you moving and reacting to the way that he moved, you could hurt yourself.
And then plus you're dealing with somebody else's force and everything like that.
But this idea and this mentality of going hard and just saying F it, I'm going to go in kind of – when you're already banged up, you just have to be careful of that.
You have to be really conscious of what it is that you're doing. I have the video, the fuck your elbow video where I was talking about, you know, people at that time talked so much about the CNS and you
got to recover and, and all this. And I was just kind of mentioning that the guy that, uh, uh,
you know, said that like, you're stupid and I can't believe you're still training through these
injuries and stuff. I was just saying that he was, um, utilizing science as an excuse not to exercise,
you know, uh, trying to say that you have to recover and all these things. And I do think
there's times where you do have to sometimes put certain things aside. Like I was in the middle of
my powerlifting career at that time. And at that time I was willing to make the sacrifices. Um,
I was willing to go for it, but what ultimately ended my powerlifting career was my elbow. And my elbow still bugs me here and there. It's annoying. So you get to kind of pick and choose these things. My choice was to kind of ignore that and to plow forward. And I did some great lifts. I'm really proud of what I did in powerlifting.
forward and I did some great lifts. I'm really proud of what I did in powerlifting. But there's,
you know, I also made some sacrifices. Maybe now that's a kind of a small sacrifice because it's not like my arm is messed up or anything. It's just I get a little pain in my elbow every once
in a while. So I think a lot of people would be like, shit, I'd be able to trade that out because
I'm still able to run. I'm still able to do a lot of things. But again, I think this is a knowledge
based problem. And even what happened to me was a knowledge-based problem. I didn't have
the ability at that time to zoom out, you know, and I wish, I wish I kind of did. Because if I
just zoomed out, I could have talked to you guys and we could have said, Hey, you know, to get that
600 pound bench, why don't you just take, why don't we just take like six months?
Let's rehab your shoulders and stuff.
You know, you've torn your pec a bunch of times.
Your shoulders don't rotate well enough.
You don't have the proper mobility for you to be able to handle these huge weights.
That's why you end up tearing your pecs.
That's why a lot of pain ends up in the elbows.
Let's take an approach where we take six months to recover.
Let's get all this pain, all this junk out of your system, out of your body.
And then after those six months, let's plan a competition that's six months down the road
from there.
And let's really attack this thing with all the knowledge that we have.
Kelly Sturette, Jesse Burdick, all the great people with Matt Wenning, all the great people
that we know and have around us let's utilize all of our resources and then go try to bench 600 pounds
now what's gonna happen in that in that video though you had said something like along the
lines of like we're all gonna die anyway uh can you reiterate and explain what you were meaning
by that yeah pain's coming our way no
matter what you know and there's there's most likely you know um you go through life for a
long period of time and all of a sudden your finger doesn't move the same way as it used to
your elbow doesn't move the same way um and sema had to have part of his foot shaved off because
of soccer or whatever right i mean there's uh there's all these weird things that happen my
dad will come to
me every once in a while and he's like, look, I can't move my wrist anymore. He's like, I don't
know what's happening. Just something strange. He's like 75 or whatever. And so, yeah, pain is
coming our way and you may as well live your life like a savage. You might as well put your best
foot forward and try your hardest at things, but you do have to be level-headed at the same time.
We were mentioning Casio.
And Casio is an amazing instructor, and he's been a world champion before.
For those of you who don't know, he's the jiu-jitsu instructor at Casio Wernick in Sacramento.
And he has a little bit of trouble moving his left shoulder or whatever it is up over his head.
It's like, well, let's – he was a jiu-jitsu champion for a really long time.
And now there's other people that are his age.
I think he's around 50-something, right?
Early 50s, yeah.
Yeah, he's in his early 50s.
Other people that are in their early 50s, they can't move their arm anyway.
That weren't really participating in high level jujitsu. So, you know, again, let's back to the kind of the more the topic though,
of what this guy is experiencing. I don't think to be a purple belt in jujitsu that you have to
really destroy your body. Like this guy's kind of making it seem like a permanent thing. And it's like, well, there's been a lot of other purple belts that haven't destroyed
their body.
So what's the difference?
Was it because you were trying to do it in a certain period of time?
Is this guy's body maybe a little fragile going into it and he didn't manage it?
Like I'm just kind of imagining just by looking at the
guy and just by hearing some of his descriptions, um, I'm thinking right away, this guy kind of
has like digestive issues. Um, and maybe he has like a, maybe his bone density isn't like up to
par and some strength training along with proper nutrition. I think I'm just, I totally made that
up, but, but I've been around the block a bunch of times and i've seen that uh many many times before yeah you know it's it's really interesting because i think that
when you're choosing to go down any of these routes there are certain things that you just
have to do if you want to do jujitsu i think at this point you have to straight train like
what are the ways that are going to
help you build bone density over time? Running can help you build bone density because of the
constant hitting. You probably need to be eating enough food so that your body can create new bone,
create new muscle tissue. So you have to have your diet in check. But what's the other biggest
thing that's going to help you build bone density? Strength training, resistance training. That's
going to allow your body to be stronger.
And if you're only doing jujitsu or you're only doing grappling, you're missing out on these things that are going to help you live a longer, more productive life.
Because you know that after a certain age, people will just start to lose a little bit of muscle and a little bit of bone if they're not doing anything to upkeep it.
Like strength training or running or boxing or whatever. If you're not doing anything, you're just going to waste away.
So you can't expect to do something like jujitsu for a long time.
This physically contact sport that you're going to be doing with against other people, you can't expect to only do that for the rest of your life and have longevity.
You can't do that.
and have longevity.
You can't do that.
There's also the aspect of doing some myofascial release for different parts of your body.
That's something that's a habit we've picked up,
but that's something that if you don't do that at all,
you might not think it's very important
because a lot of people,
especially within the strength training community,
have been like,
oh, it's not important to foam roll or whatever.
But if there's anything we learned, like this guy, Chris
could ask you, they made this book. Myofascial relief helps with so many different things as
far as movement's concerned and can help you move better and feel better and get out of pain. But if
you're not doing any, any of those things to help you get out of pain, then you're missing out on a
lot. And then there's also the aspect of the feet. You know, I've had foot injuries a few times
before I started, like a few years ago, I had multiple foot injuries, um, before I started understanding
how beneficial, like just being barefoot and strengthening the feet were. And since I've
strengthened my feet, I've had no, I've had no foot and ankle injuries since because that is
dealt with. And a lot of us, our daily life puts our bodies in a situation where the body is fragile going into whatever we choose to do
If you're wearing normal shoes if you're not getting good sleep
If you're sitting most of your day and then you choose to go lift in the gym or you choose to go do jujitsu
You're taking this body that's already fragile and that's already not in the greatest spot and you're putting it into a situation where
You're doing these dynamic things you can't expect not to get injured if you if you treat yourself that way
yeah and the way he was talking about his knees it reminds me of you know power lifters with their
shoulder it's like well okay you're how many how many times a week are you benching it's like you
know whatever two three times yeah it's like maybe could we go a week or two without it
right mark they tell you all the time like no i can't do that so he's talking about his knees
and then like the clip of him doing uh looks like no gi it's like oh dude maybe throw on some knee
sleeves a couple times a week or like do something different because it's it's not working right now
right my knees were bugging me a little bit i did wear some of the slingshot knee sleeves for a
little bit just because i didn't want to go away from jujitsu like which i should have
taken some time off uh the pain started to dissipate because i got used to uh kind of
jujitsu movements he's a purple belt so he doesn't need to get used to it he's already there
but it's just a lot of dudes will just keep banging their head against the brick wall waiting for the wall to break and it's like well dude i don't know maybe try something
different what do you guys think are some non-negotiables as far as like upkeep of your
body things that you like because like there's like there's always going to be the person that
like maybe they comment you know what you guys have all this time to do all these things most
people don't have this time but But at the end of the day,
with whatever physical thing that you're trying to do,
if you don't upkeep your body,
you will not be in it in the next 10 years.
So no matter how much time you have,
you owe it to yourself to do the things to take care of yourself so you can do these things
until you're old and gray.
I hate to sound like a broken record,
but your sleep quality most likely sucks.
It's one of the biggest things
that we talk about on the podcast. So many guests have come on and talked about how sleep can help you
stick to your diet, stick to your workout plan, lose body fat, gain muscle, all the good things
that you're trying to do, but it's hard to do because you might be snoring. And if you're
snoring, that's why we've partnered with hostage tape, which is mouth tape that you can put over
your nose, your mouth when you're asleep to help you stop snoring and breathe through your nose. But if you haven't been breathing through your nose this whole time
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That's also why hostage tape has nose strips to help open up your nasal airways and make it easier
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when you're asleep because you'll be actually breathing through your nose.
Andrew, how can they get it?
Yes, that's over at hostage tape dot com slash power project,
where you guys will receive an entire year supply of nasal strips and mouth tape, all for less than a dollar a night. Again, that's a hostage tape dot com slash power project links in the description, as well as the podcast show notes.
I think the like non-negotiable stuff is just really analyze.
It's unacceptable not to analyze your body and how you feel.
So if you did a hard jujitsu session or you did a hard run or something and you go into the gym and you go to warm up and you go to do something and you're like, okay that was just a lat pull down and that really
hurt and it you know kind of hurts like your clavicle or something like man that's weird
and then you try to do like dumbbell bench pressing you're like that same spot freaking
kills and then you're like okay well i'll try back and you pull on and you're like shit it's like
well now you're just faced with you have to completely change the workout that you had in
mind maybe you were going to do pull-ups.
Maybe you were going to do like weighted pull-ups and you were going to get after it
and you were going to do some deadlifts and you had this whole thing in your head
that you were going to kill it in the gym.
Well, now you have to shift gears and you have to do something completely opposite
of what it was that you were going to do.
This is why I really strongly suggest that people stop taking pre-workout before they go to the gym and only maybe have pre-workout with them in case they actually need it.
Because if you actually start lifting, you'll find that you probably don't even need the pre-workout because you'll be excited by the lifting itself anyway.
But you're going to have to probably shift your lifting for that day into a session where you do some myofascial release.
a session where you do some myofascial release.
You're going to have to, you know,
dig out some stuff in your traps with whatever objects that you can find,
whatever way that you can do it.
We have a bunch of videos on the super training YouTube channel.
So you can check some of that out and there's,
you can just look up myofascial release for your neck and you can find a bunch
of different,
different people showing you different ways of doing it.
You can pick up Kelly's Tourette's book.
Like there's tons of information on what is it, Becoming a Supple Leopard, right?
Yeah, Becoming a Supple Leopard.
Yeah, Becoming a Supple Leopard right there.
Like we're surrounded by this stuff and we're fortunate to know some of these people and stuff too.
They had a huge impact on us.
But why have they had a huge impact on us?
They've had a huge impact on us because these things actually work. They're
really productive. So it's pretty simple. Like I would just say, don't be an idiot. You know,
if you go to do something and you're like, man, that really hurts. Um, I just know even just,
even just from being sore, if you're really sore, it compromises. If you're really sore,
if you're really sore, it compromises. If you're really sore, you did a really hard leg session.
Well, um, how do you go downstairs? How do you go down steps sideways, holding the railing? And you're like, you're, you're, you're like, am I good? You're like, fuck. Normally you just fly
right down the stairs. No problem. You know, going up the stairs, fly right up the stairs,
no issue getting up out of
a chair so now with these really sore legs you're actually going to go to jujitsu or go to football
practice or whatever it's like dude there's there's just no reason to do that like there's
not a good reason to do that like if you want to get better at something um that's not a great way
to go about doing it like Like your coordination, everything's
compromised. I know that you would say like, oh, but I got to push through. I got to push through.
Maybe, but the likelihood of you ending up with an injury or the likelihood that you're
compromising your recovery even further and you're making yourself so uncomfortable that
it's probably going to be difficult to sleep is really, really high. And you have to pay
attention to that stuff. You can't just deep water everything. You can't just
swim out and have no plan on how the fuck you're going to get back.
And one thing, not going to go too deep on it, but you cannot compromise your sleep.
If you're an athlete that wants to recover, if you want to learn things at a faster pace,
you can't be, you know, not like you have to get eight hours a night, but you can't be trying to
get four hours a night. You know what I mean? and getting up and trying to go do jujitsu and
then lift you can't be doing that shit you're just going to run yourself into a wall so you
have to be you have to have a good recovery if even if you can do it you can you're probably
only going to be able to do it for now for so long right and that's that's what sucks because
how long does it take to be a black belt?
Long time.
Takes a long time.
It's going to take a long time.
More than 10 years for most people.
To be good at anything, it takes about 10 years.
Literally takes about 10 years to be proficient at anything.
Anybody that is in business.
I mean, there's people that pick up some really good things in the first
couple years that they they're doing something but it almost always takes you know normally what
happens is you get to year 10 like by the time you get to year 10 in jiu-jitsu you're like i don't
know fucking shit oh you're already there you know what i mean like you you've you've gone to a bunch
of different spots where you're like oh this is kind of cool i know a lot and then you're like
wait a second.
I don't know anything.
And then you keep going back and forth, back and forth between those things.
And I was just telling you this morning, like I'm figuring out how to use my lats.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I know how to use them kind of for pushing, for benching, but it's always been kind of confusing for me with back exercises.
Obviously, I know how to like, you know, get the muscles to flex.
But there's some intricacies in there that are complex or complicated.
And I've been lifting for 30 years and I'm still learning shit.
I think one thing that might be a non-negotiable and it's I don't think it's abstract at all, but it's moving your body in different ways.
Not just in jujitsu, but maybe with load.
Like in the gym, we're always focused on keeping the spine neutral and keeping rigid with almost everything that you do.
But I think you do have to figure out a way to let your body bend and move in a few different ways.
Because especially if you're doing something like jujitsu, which is a bunch of dynamic movements that aren't coordinated.
Well, if all the other movements you do everywhere else are super coordinated and super rigid, and then you
try to take yourself to a place where you're moving around a lot, you're, you're not going
to fare well long-term. I think that you should figure out a way to like, just like we had Kador
on, right? Figure out a way to sit in different ways, put pressure in different parts of your feet,
your knees, your shoulders, get move. And it's all move. And again, it's like hygiene. It's like brushing your teeth or flossing your teeth.
You need to get your body in different positions and you need to learn how to be comfortable in
those positions. And I think that that's something that will help somebody be able to do things for
a very long term so that their body isn't, I don't want to use this term because we think of
muscle confusion, but their body isn't confused when it does get put into a weird position.
It's like the thing that you saw in quarterbacks.
I think you'll be able to mention it better than me, but with – what's his name?
Mahomes?
What is it that you saw in quarterbacks and the way that his coach was talking about?
Yeah, Mahomes' head.
He's able to keep his head almost like an owl.
He can like really fixate on something and move his body
in a completely different direction and then he can also he could like look at andrew and keep
his head fixated on andrew and chuck the ball to and sema while he's like running to his left he
could throw to his right while he's running to his left while he's looking at someone to his left
because he can see the whole field yeah because his uh the way his neck, the mobility of his neck is just so awesome and the mobility of his hips.
And then he was a former baseball player and he can actually swing a baseball bat.
The only discrepancy between his left side and right side when he swings a baseball bat is 3% strength loss, which normally for most people it it's like 20 or 30%. He's just like,
he's not just a mutant. He's not just a genetic anomaly. He's been training with this same guy
since fourth grade. So he's been training all these things. And then you saw all the movements
they were doing. But I think he, his coach mentioned something specifically about putting Patrick in
the positions that he's typically, most people would not be comfortable in so that when he's
on the field and if he gets tackled or put in any of these positions, it's not something foreign to
his body. So I think that's something that that coach mentioned. And when he said that, I'm like,
that makes total sense. If you're moving in just one single direction and way in the gym,
and then your body does something somewhat dynamic in life or in jujitsu, you cannot expect that that movement will not mess with you somehow.
So you somehow need to figure out ways to get your bodies in those positions and be comfortable there so that there's nothing that catches you off guard.
Andrew, it was pretty sick.
They had him going through, they had Mahomes going through these ranges of motion. As he's going through these ranges of motion and what would
be considered like sports specific movements, the guy's also having Mahomes like rub the inside of
his leg on these like rollers where you're just like, oh my God, that must hurt so bad. But he's
having him do a skillful movement while he's doing that. He's talking about how it can build up a lot of tissue resilience.
But it's like,
I think he had one thing where his hip was right here and he had Patrick
moving in these different directions and moving his head and his spine while
smashing his inner leg.
It's like,
right.
A lot going on.
But that,
that that's,
again,
that's dynamic movement and able,
you're able to control your body in so many different ways in space.
Imagine how useful that is versus only doing it one way.
Yeah, and I believe it shows when he plays
because when he plays, the plays that he makes
are similar to what we would do playing football in the street.
Like, I'm running this way.
Like, oh, just kidding.
And I throw it right over your head to my teammate or whatever.
And he practices that a lot.
And you don't see other quarterbacks doing that
because they're more on the one, two, three step throw.
They're not jumping around left and right.
So that's pretty cool.
I guess if I had some non-negotiables,
and we have at this point thousands of hours of really good habits
that are basically all non-negotiables.
But one would be to like i
guess what you were kind of saying mark um being smart but like check your ego um how many times
have people come into the gym and saying like oh you know my whatever is a little banged up i'm
gonna take it easy pre-workout hits the beat drops the next thing you know they're going for a pr
it's like dude you said you were not feeling right what are you doing see it in jujitsu like oh yeah today's gonna be a little bit light and then ding the bell rings and it's like, dude, you said you were not feeling right. What are you doing? See it in jujitsu. Like, oh, yeah, today's going to be a little bit light.
And then, ding, the bell rings and it's like, you are going 110% after you just said you were going to take it easy.
That leads to like what this guy was saying with his knees and stuff.
It's like that one injury is now, you know, it's multiplied.
You know, and then it's going to get worse and worse if you don't address this.
But what happens is once it's over, like're like, damn, that was a mistake.
I shouldn't do that again.
And then somebody challenges you or the program that your coach writes out for you is going to challenge you.
And you see that and you're like, yeah, I can do that.
Or you can take a step back and be like, no, I'm going to take the recovery instead.
Stuff that, Mark, you've told me many times.
Like, hey, I dare you to take one day off of jiu-jitsu
instead of killing yourself.
And go do something else that's really hard.
You know what I mean?
Like maybe go do something else that's,
maybe it's a cold plunge.
Like maybe you're like,
I don't want to get into fucking 37 degree temperature water,
but maybe that's the hard thing that you do for the day.
Or maybe it's like lifting
because jiu-jitsu is kind of hurting at the moment or going on a tough run or something like that.
I think that's something that we've talked about the lifting and all these different ranges of motion.
So there's just so many ways to apply that in the gym.
But something that I think is a useful tool, especially for people that lift, and some people might laugh at this, but it's the rope flow. It's the rope flow stuff that, that David Weck posts all the time,
because it may look a little bit funny, like swinging a rope around and moving around.
But the thing is that's going on with the body is the spine is rotating. It's flexing. It's
extending. The arm is going behind the back. You're building these new ranges of motion in
this new capacity to move in a circular path in a circular way like it's it's
not going to put your body in all these positions but it's going to get you in positions that you
typically don't get in the gym and if you don't do something like jujitsu you're typically not
getting it at all the rotational aspects of it i think that's a really simple thing that you can
just literally pick up a rope and learn to do it and that's something that you could do on a break
or fucking at home or you could just go outside your house in the morning and move around with the rope a little bit you're gonna notice
your shoulders your spine your hips a lot of these things feel like they've been lubricated after you
do something like a rope flow lubricate lube yeah yeah power project family we talk about eating
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goodlifeproteins.com. Links are in the description along with the podcast show notes. And then also
the follow through, right?
Because I'm guilty of this big time where it's like, oh, this does hurt.
I'm going to address it tomorrow
or whatever it may be.
Tomorrow comes and it's like,
ah, I'll get to it later or whatever.
The same amount of intensity
that I put into jujitsu,
I should be putting some of that.
It's going to be hard to put all of that
into recovery because it's not as fun.
And, you know, we don't get super fired up in the morning to go you know do some fascia release but some of
that intent and intensity should also follow through to the recovery side yeah you know because
it's you can't have one without the other that's the non-negotiable how about that um
right like they're not two different things.
Training and recovery are not two separate things.
They need to be one thing.
You can't have one without the other.
Dude, that's why I think it's, again, and it's no shade on this guy specifically, but if somebody were to tell me powerlifting ruined my body or jiu-jitsu ruined my body or whatever ruined my body, it's like, no, that's a cop-out.
You did. And don't get me wrong i know random injuries can happen at any time with almost
anything you do i mean fuck it's horrible but we just saw that influencer die squatting 400 pounds
the bar came down his neck went down and it fucking severed his cervical spine he didn't
make it he didn't so like anything can injure you. But at the same time, you got to
think about how are you doing this? Because we have proof of people doing jujitsu into their
sixties and seventies, bodybuilding into their eighties, powerlifting into their eighties.
So we see people sprinting at 90 and some people are like, I'm never going to sprint because it's,
I'm going to pull something. It's too intense. But we got to think about why can't that be us?
Is it because we're not built different?
No, it's not because you're not built different.
It's because you don't have the habits that these people have that have allowed them to do this for a long time.
You don't.
You don't have those habits.
It's not because of the sport.
It's because of you.
So you have to build those habits.
I think it's also sometimes difficult to control certain variables.
The nice thing about training is you get to control almost all variables. If I am to come
into the gym and to start to swing around a kettlebell, I can simply be like, oh, well,
kettlebell swinging ain't happening today. Like I can try to warm up and I can start with rope flow
and do all these things. And I could still go to do the kettlebell.
And it's just not in the cards for the day for whatever reason.
Maybe I did something a couple days ago and slightly tweaked something.
It's not going to work out.
But, you know, can I do some leg extensions, some leg presses, some lateral raises?
Most likely, yes.
And with strength training, you get to like brace yourself.
You know, you get to kind of like hold tight you know in jujitsu i know you guys are practicing so you can kind of uh
you can go lighter and harder but the variables are really hard really difficult especially again
like when the bell rings type thing people like get fired up get excited and they want to start
to do do things that weren't scheduled. You know,
you're like, Oh, we're supposed to kind of work on this. And now it's just turned into fucking
mayhem. And you see the same thing can happen with, uh, with exercise too. But one of the great
advantages of exercise is what I'm saying is, um, this ability to brace yourself, to get yourself
stable and rigid for a particular lift. So if my shoulder slightly hurts,
I can probably find pressing movements that don't hurt my shoulder,
as weird as that sounds.
But if my shoulder hurts and I go to jiu-jitsu,
that's going to be a lot tougher for me.
Now I've got to try to fight Andrew in a totally different way.
I've got to maybe, my right leg forward
rather than my left. And it's just a lot of compromise. And it's just something, it doesn't
mean you have to be a pussy. It doesn't mean you can't just fight through stuff for the mental
sake of fighting through stuff. Sometimes that is really beneficial. It's just be really conscious
of it and pay attention to it and say, man, there is something going on my left shoulder.
I'm still going to go to practice today because I love practice and it's going to be a lot of fun
and so-and-so is going to be there and I'm going to learn a lot, but I am going to tell the guys
like something's going on with this thing. You know, I'm going to let people know, Hey, you know,
you got to take it easy on me today. You can't beat me up as much as you normally do.
And then address it later in the day, you know, do your, you know, get a ball in there and start to dig that shit out with a lacrosse ball or something.
And that's exactly, the thing is, is like the digging out that with a lacrosse ball or using a band and getting blood to the area or any of the things that, you know, will help you rehab those things.
Those are things that you need.
Like we mentioned, you need to get Supple Leopard.
You need to get this book by chris kadowski you need to get jill miller who has the tune of fitness
balls and she's all about that myofascial release you need to seek some of these ideas out and you
need to learn them because these are the things that are going to allow you to do this for a long
time you know we had an athlete that came here i'm not going to name him but he had this hip injury
and he he was still doing his sport at a high level, actually
with the groin injury. He was still doing his sport at a high level with that injury. And I was
somewhat surprised because I'm like, how are you? That's such a simple fix. Literally do this.
Copenhagen's progresses slowly. You'll be out of the water there. And that injury probably won't
happen again. But sometimes when things happen, people just barrel through it because many people are just
used to doing things with pain and i don't think that we should i don't think we should be used to
doing things in pain like number one you want to get out of pain but you want to figure out how can
i do this pain free and that that's possible for everybody but it takes work it takes effort it
does take learning and it's it, it's, it's not something
that's going to happen overnight. I know a lot of people, we, we, everybody has jobs that people
have families, but this side of things is it's something that you have to learn how to take
care of. You have to learn how to have to learn how to have hygiene for your body. It's necessary.
And you can't, I don't think you can be worried about what other people are going to say or think,
you know, those guys, the gym, man, they're going to make fun of me. Cause I don't think you can be worried about what other people are going to say or think you know those guys the gym man they're going to make fun of me because I didn't show up on
you know international Monday bench day um you can't worry about that you have to you have to
be concerned about yourself and where you're at and it's it's not an easy thing to do because
you're you're concerned that like everyone else is going to make fun of you or talk shit or
you just might even be beating yourself up pussy and you also don't want to fall out of
rhythm with stuff you know like if you're in jiu-jitsu and you normally go three days a week
and you just got so used to that or same thing with lifting you're trying to make this commitment
and you're like man i committed myself i was going to lift every day and now
man i i shouldn't i feel sick I don't feel good. You just
shouldn't go. Just don't go. The reason why I talk this way so much is there's so many people
that are falling apart. People are in so much pain and they just try to pass it off and they're just
going into the gym and doing another deadlift session. And I'm like, that is not effective.
and doing another deadlift session.
And I'm like, that is not effective.
I've seen people work through stuff.
I've seen people work around stuff and be pretty effective.
But I've seen a much better result from those people that do take a step back and they say, let me take care of this.
Look at Lane Norton.
Lane Norton could barely walk a few years ago.
He was in a really bad spot.
His back was really jacked up and now
he's on the platform again, competing. Yeah. He, he had to learn a lot of stuff. He had to
understand, you know, there's some, some pains that you can train through and there's some that
you can. Um, and he went to some of the top people, got his back, uh, fixed, not, not surgery,
but rehabbed it. And now he's,'s uh back lifting like he was before i mean
he was uh i think he was a silver medalist in the ipf so that's unbelievable to be able to come back
from that and then also in that uh quarterbacks show kirk cousins a veteran quarterback said that
he learned from santana moss who was a receiver for the changed name team in Washington.
Commanders.
Yeah, the Commanders.
Not the Redskins, huh?
That's right.
And he learned from Santana.
That's a little bit more Mexican.
There you go.
He learned from Santana Moss that he had to spend as much time as he did on the field
and learning the plays and all that stuff with training and recovery.
And I think it was really well said, Andrew, what you said about training and recovery being like one combined thing.
And to kind of glob things even more together, your sleep and your food are part of that.
Your sleep and your food are part of the recovery.
If you're not sleeping well,
it's going to be hard to train properly. And if you're not fueled properly, it's going to be hard to get the proper training in. If your food is messed up, it could also potentially mess up your
sleep. If your training's too hard, training's too hard, I think is like almost underrated on
how much it can negatively impact your sleep.
I don't know if you guys ever been just super sore and you're like just tossing and turning,
like it's just the worst night of sleep ever. That still will happen to me sometimes on like
these longer runs that I'll go on. And I'm just like, man, I'll pay the price for the next day
or two, but I have to, in my head, I have to keep all this in mind i know i need more hydration i know i need
more food i know that in the coming days maybe on those days i can't get the same sleep and so maybe
the next day or two after that i can't train the same way but then i need to get back into that
pattern of getting to sleep in and it's fucking pain in the ass trying to figure out all this
stuff but this is how it's working for me so far even the small aspect of and it's not small actually but not breathing into your diaphragm
i mean you realize how many like and this this is why we've done so many podcasts on breathing
because there's a there's a lot of people who are very shallow breathers not only are they
mouth breathers but all their breath is coming in here so these people man they're but but what
does that do
that constantly makes you in a sympathetic or like you're you're always tense without even
realizing you're tense you might be standing around breathing up here but you don't even
realize your body's at fucking high alert because the way you're breathing is putting you in that
way and your tissues are now tighter because you're constantly breathing up here and you're
not getting that breath into your diaphragm something like that now you're doing it during it while you do jujitsu, you're breathing that way while you're lifting,
you're breathing that way while you're sleeping, and your body's on constant high alert and you're
never able to chill out even though you want to chill out. So something as simple as getting
your breathing in check, this is something that can make a big difference for people.
But you have to realize what's happening, make the effort to fix it, use mouth tape at night so you're breathing through your nose, make the effort to breathe into your diaphragm.
That will pay massive dividends in the long run if you find that you're someone who is breathing in that way.
Yeah, I didn't know how far deep into the weeds we wanted to get.
Even though it's not weeds, it's just it is a 24-7 thing.
If you want to be good at something, you know, right, you mentioned sleep.
You just mentioned diet. So it's like what good at something, you know, right. You mentioned sleep, you just
mentioned diet. So it's like, what type of fuel are you giving your body? And then like, are you
finding any deficiencies? Like, Oh, you've rolled like shit today. How much hydration did you have
yesterday? That's right. I didn't have enough. And so it's like any little thing that you can
turn the knob on to, you know, for the, on the positive side is going to help.
And it,
it can be frustrating if you're stuck and you're just like,
fuck dude,
literally like I can't take a break.
It's like,
well you can,
but it's going to slow down the process a little bit.
And that's,
that's the part that I personally have a hard time with.
Cause it's just like,
fuck,
like here we go.
It's going to be,
it wasn't one when Seema said 10 years till I'm good.
And then when I'm there,
I'm going to be like, I'm shitty. Like, Oh my gosh, I haven't even gotten down to year one yet. So it's going to be 10 years till I'm good. And then when I'm there, I'm going to be like,
I'm shitty. Like, Oh my gosh, I haven't even gotten down to year one yet.
So it's, it's a long process, but like, yeah, I do want to be good. So I'm not going to eat
some bullshit. I'm not going to drink. I'm going to try to get my sleep. And it's just,
yeah, it's kind of like a never ending thing. Do you got to say though, real quick guys, like,
even though we've mentioned all this stuff for us, these things have now just become habits. It is an all day thing, but I think most of these things at this point, it's not an all day thing because it's just what we do. It's just the habits we have, the breathing, the sleeping, all these things are just, they're input habits today. They are not stressful at all.
the stressful part is implementing it and having it become habitual so your breathing becomes habitual the way you move becomes habitual fucking being barefoot moving around moving
in different ways that just becomes habitual but once it does it's not work anymore it's something
that has a positive feedback loop because you realize that it's something that helps you continue
to feel better and better and healthier and healthier. Because you mentioned a few years ago you were in certain amounts of pain.
You're older, but now you're not.
Yeah, I'm not in any pain.
I'm in zero pain.
Exactly.
It's not this thing where you get older and you get in more pain.
You just need the right habits to get out of pain,
and you will maintain that until you're much older.
I could have a little bit of pain from like particular movements or something like that
like a little slight pain in my knee from like a lunge or like I said my elbow but it's like
again it's usually like in the gym it's usually like with a weight and it's usually just because
I'm not warmed up but other than that I got like zero pain which I think is pretty interesting
and there's there have been other people. We have other models of people.
There's people that are in their 60s. There's people that are
in their 70s that are in great shape.
We've got people like Mark Sisson
who competed at a super high level.
Look at that
penis.
Thank you, Allie. This is like my favorite thing
on the podcast right now.
This little weenie tip thing.
It kind of reminds you to interview it
hello hi how you doing
the way he has it on the mic stand right there reminds me of uh worms the video game oh yeah
hey yo the fuck you talking about man
things just gonna like dive off there and kill itself.
We're the worst.
She gave us those.
We can't be, there's no way we can be adults about it.
It's great.
It's too weird.
Anyway, I'm going to shut the fuck up.
We're done.
Strength is never weak.
This week is never strength.
Catch you guys later.
Bye.