Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1041: The Biggest Myths in Fitness, Beachbody Review, the Benefit of Squatting Below Parallel & MORE
Episode Date: May 29, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com/mindpump, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the benefits of squatting below parallel, the b...iggest myths in fitness, at-home fitness programs such as Beachbody, and strategies for behavior change. How the guys are finally at their ‘nostalgia’ age for marketers. (3:17) How to balance your ‘Yin/yang’ using the elixirs from Four Sigmatic. (5:19) The importance of having integrity and teaching what you are an expert in: The guys respond to the Jillian Michaels ‘kettlebell’ training video. (12:27) CrossFit takes a stand and deletes their Facebook and Instagram platforms: The need for checks and balances in the market. (19:03) #Quah question #1 – What are the benefits of squatting below parallel and it is worth it for the average gym goer to practice that? (43:30) #Quah question #2 – What are the biggest myths in fitness? For example, the anabolic window. (1:00:04) #Quah question #3 – What are your thoughts on at-home fitness programs such as those developed and marketed by Beachbody? (1:16:11) #Quah question #4 – In episode 1034 you briefly talked about the importance of influencing people to change their behavior, in regards to health and fitness, instead of just focusing on facts. Can you share some strategies for behavior change? (1:23:52) People Mentioned Jillian Michaels (@jillianmichaels) Instagram Mike Salemi (@mike.salemi) Instagram Greg Glassman (@CrossFitCEO) Twitter Eric Schmidt (@ericschmidt) Twitter Jordan Harbinger (@jordanharbinger) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned May Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off!! **Code “HIIT50” at checkout** Visit Four Sigmatic for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Jillian Michaels Kettlebell Video CrossFit Deletes Facebook and Instagram After User Group Is Deplatformed – Reason.com The Jordan Harbinger Show Ep. 201: Eric Schmidt | How a Coach Can Bring out the Best in You Gulf of Tonkin Resolution - HISTORY Reichstag Fire - HISTORY MAPS Fitness Prime | Muscle Adaptation Programming System - Mind Pump Dunphy Squat- Improve Your Squat with this Secret Exercise - YouTube Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Mind Pump Ep. 1034: Conventional Deadlifts vs. Trap Bar Deadlifts, How a Physical Job Affects Muscle Growth, the Impact of Pre-Workouts on Fat Loss & MORE Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of The Mind Pump, so we talk a lot about fitness in this episode,
but before we do, we have fun introductory conversation that lasts about 40 minutes.
Here's what we talked about.
So for the first 40 minutes, we covered the supplements Rodiola and Raci.
Now, Raci is a mushroom that aids with anxiety.
It is good, adaptogenic properties.
It helps balance out the body's stress systems.
Our favorite supplier of Raci is for Sigmatic.
For Sigmatic makes amazing mushroom based supplements.
If you go to forSigmaticF0URSIGMATIC.com.
Mind pump, you'll get 15% off your order.
Then we talked about Jillian Michaels terrible
Kettlebell swing for.
Oh my God.
Unbelievable.
Please look that up on YouTube.
CrossFit is off.
Facebook and Instagram.
What the hell is going on?
Then we had a, no, we miss you.
We had a whole conversation about privacy, big government and technology.
And then we get into the fitness part of this episode.
So the first fitness question was, what are the benefits of squatting below below parallel and is it worth it to do so for the average person? So should you squat down to 90 degrees or should
you go all the way down? I asked a grass. Next question, what are the biggest myths in fitness?
The question after that, what are our thoughts on at-home fitness programs like those made by
beach body? And the final question, we have talked about the importance
of influencing people to help change their behaviors
in particular, clients that we've trained.
This person wants us to share some of our strategies,
so we talk all about how to get people to get healthier
behaviors, especially if you are their trainer.
Also, I want to remind everybody, you have 72 hours.
That's it, three days left for the 50% off sale on Maps Hit.
And I remember, it stands for High Intensity Interval Training.
This program is super effective,
calorie burner and fat burner in the short term.
So it's great.
Right before summer, again, it's 50% off.
Here's what you got to do. Go to Maps, hit that's MAPS h i it dot com and use the code hit 54 the discount. H i it five zero and get
that discount. Make sure you do this now. Teacher time and it's t-shirt time. Oh, she know. You know,
it's my favorite time of the week. Yes, it is. You be cahay.
All right, a little light on reviews
for both iTunes and Facebook.
We have two winners for iTunes.
We have Lazard 0316 and Acabat.
Both of you are winners for Facebook.
We have Abby Patterson and Brandon Manchego.
You are both winners.
Send the name I just read to iTunes at mindpumpmedia.com
send your shirt size, your shipping address,
and include your Instagram handle,
and we'll get those shirts right out to you.
I wanna see if you guys recognize this song.
It popped in my head.
Is this like a song on cartoon or something?
It sounds like a cartoon song.
Yeah. It's when you woo woo woo woo. Doesn't that sound like a cartoon song? Adam?
That sounds like a cartoon song? Yeah, like it's like a love scene in there. I forgot that was a real song. Dude, I was dying laughing because like. Because you said you sang it without realizing it?
Yeah. Like it was just banked in my memory somewhere deep. And I was just like, it came up where somebody said,
woo, and I'm like, yeah, cause when you woo, woo, woo, woo.
What did you sing yesterday that I pulled up on Spotify?
Cause I was like, oh yeah.
Vibrant thing.
What is it?
No, what?
Oh gosh, damn it, dude.
It was another classic.
Why can't we remember?
It was.
He said something.
I'm like, I have that on my Spotify list right now.
Yeah, which is weird.
I've been watching yeah
I've been watching a lot of the Kubrick hide they throw those old 80s songs out there
And so it's like it's bringing all the shit back. We're finally at the age where because for a while there
Marketers advertised directly to us because we're at the prime
Buying age. Yeah, and then we get too old for that and so we're kind of like what the hell nobody's paying attention
But now we're at the age where it's nostalgia. Yeah, so now they market again to us with old shit that we did when we were
You know what I mean do they use songs much anymore for commercials that worked really well for me
Yeah, like it's like forever in my head like I can't get it out
I can't is it ever gonna be cool to wear Velcro shoes again?
Cause I just, when I was really young,
that was the shit man.
It's lazy.
You're hoping for that one.
Dude, Velcro, can you know who the only people
who wear shoes that are closed by Velcro are kids?
Five year olds and 80.
And really old people.
Five and 80.
That's the true, yeah.
Yeah.
That's it.
How are Velcro shoes like diapers?
Exactly.
But I would love a pair of Velcro shoes.
It's pushing it a little too far for me.
I'll push that.
I'll dance on the edge.
You're pressing that, that dad envelope though.
Yeah, but that's granddad.
The granddad, that's that.
I'm dad, I'm not granddad.
Hey, what is it, so what is it about rodeola
that makes me sleepy?
Sleepy?
Sleepy.
Keepee.
rodeola is... Because it's supposed to give you energy, right? Shouldn't that makes me sleepy sleepy sleepy sleepy TV uh... rodeola is
cause it's supposed to give you energy right shouldn't that give me energy
it's so studies show that rodeola does give people stamina and energy
but in chinese medicine they would consider rodeola a young or young
uh... herb
and if you have too much yang energy
then throwing
yang herbs on top of it can cause
the opposite effect where you feel feverish or cloudy or tired.
Yeah, it makes me sleepy.
It's the weirdest thing ever.
Like, I'll take like a, I'll take something that has it in there, and then like maybe,
I don't know about an hour or so, I just feel tired.
That's the thing about too much yang.
That's the thing. No, the same thing happens to me.
So red panics, jinsing.
So red panics, jinsing is like the jinsing,
it's the stimulating version.
You guys ever go to supplement stores
or whole food store or whole foods or whatever,
and you see those, they look like little vials
of jinsing, have you ever seen them?
So like a little glass vials and they come with a straw,
a little tiny straw and you poke the straw through
and you suck it through and it tastes like shit.
But it's very, very high dose ginseng.
And my uncle is a Chinese herbalist.
He's not Chinese, he's a tyrant,
but he's a Chinese medicine, right?
And just want to be clear.
That's confusing.
Yeah, I know.
Anyway, he used to tell, you know, give people this for energy instead of
caffeine.
And my dad would drink it and then feel like shit.
And so my uncle explained why.
And that's for me too.
I went to a Chinese herbalist at one point and I said, yeah, I, they did all
their tests on me.
So what they'll do is they'll look at your tongue,
they'll look at your face, they'll measure your pulse.
I forgot what else they do,
but there's this way that they assess you.
And what's funny now though, is the pulse thing.
Now we're finding all these relationships with HR,
with, you know, heart rate, heart rate, yeah.
So, cause I would ask them, how do you know by my heartbeat?
And they're like, well, there's lots of things
we pay attention to.
How fast your heart rate is, the strength of the heartbeat,
if it's consistent.
And so pretty weird, right, that they kind of figured some of that stuff out.
But anyway, the lady who was helping me, she said,
you have a lot of yang energy.
And so if you take yang herbs or supplements,
it's just gonna make you eventually just start to feel crappy, which is exactly what happens to me
when I have lots of red ginseng.
For me, I had to do the, what is the opposite of yang?
I can't believe I get yin.
I needed yin herbs or supplements.
So Siberian ginseng, which is not really a ginseng,
it's actually a different route than regular ginseng, but the
call Siberian ginseng has a little bit more of a yin effect. And so if I do Siberian ginseng,
I'll feel okay. Now, there are some things that seem to work for most people. And those are the
traditional balanced adaptogenic herbs that tend to give people more yang when they need it or yin when they need it
Raishi is a little bit more yin, but it seems to be
balanced in fact, it's funny. I had a on that topic. I had a message from
somebody who said hey, I listened to your podcast and you talk about Raishi for
anxiety for you, for sleep,
and that kind of stuff. And she said, I took it and I really didn't get many effects from it.
And so I said, well, what's the dose and how are you using it? And so she showed me, she sent
a picture of the bottle. And so I said, well, I said, try four-sigmatic because the reason why I like four-sigmatic so much is
the way that they extract the effective components of the mushrooms is they use a,
they both ground the mushroom and they use a water technique where they, so it's like using it,
so what you can do if you want to use these things is you either you can either get a mushroom,
make a tea out of it, or you can ground up the mushroom and
eat it, both of which have kind of different benefits.
Forsegnatic does both.
So she used forsegnatic, came back and she's like, okay, now I can see.
That interesting.
Yeah, so that's the other thing too, is that sometimes where you're getting it from and
how it's been produced will determine how you feel.
So like if you go to, again, another Chinese medicine specialist,
they may tell you to make a tea with something
or they may tell you to grind up something
or they may tell you to do both.
And for sigmatic is obviously they're making products
for the masses.
So they're just trying to make it effective as possible.
So they include both.
The ground, you know, it's a dual extraction process,
they'll call it.
So if you wanna see if adaptogenic herbs and mushrooms
and stuff like that, they really work for you,
I would go with what I consider the best brand,
which is the four-signatic.
But right, she has a good effect on me,
Chaga has a good effect on me.
Cortiseps has a performance boosting effect
that I notice,
but it's also more balanced
than other performance enhancing mushrooms and herbs.
In other words, usually performance enhancing,
traditionally performance enhancing herbs
and mushrooms are in the yang category.
They're stimulating.
Corticeps is not stimulating,
although it does improve performance.
So like, Corticeps, I'll take that, and I don't get that weird feeling that I'll get
for half too many stimulating herbs and mushrooms.
Some people love, like, Rhodiola.
A lot of people love that shit.
They take it and they're like, fuck, I feel it's better than caffeine for me.
I don't really like the Rhodiola.
Yeah, Doug responds pretty well to it.
I tried it like four or five times, and I was like, okay, consistently every time I was it four or five times and I was like,
okay, consistently every time I was using it,
I noticed that I was like sleepy afterwards.
That's it, I didn't see any other adverse effects,
but it was like the first time I did,
I was like, man, am I that tired?
That I need more than that?
Am I that tired?
By about the fourth or fifth time, I was like,
okay, this obviously affects me that way.
And then I remember saying it to you
and you're like, yeah, that happens to the exact same thing.
And this is what I love about, because you know, guys, no, I have a good time
with supplements. One thing I love about supplements that people don't realize is that there's so much
in there can be a total individual variance and how your body reacts and how you feel on particular
supplements. And I think people forget this. So they may use something and be like, it sucks. Not realizing that. No, it actually doesn't suck for me. It doesn't work well.
And also on the flip side of that, I was very hardheaded as a kid. So if I knew a supplement
was supposed to work, and it didn't, you'd still keep doing it. I would keep doing it
to the point where I would fuck with my gut or my sleep. And I'd be like, no, no.
People are like, yeah, study, say this works. I'm gonna, I gut or my sleep and I'd be like, no. No, no. No, no.
Yeah, study say this works.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna keep, like I'll get messages from people.
I, you know, Cray team gives me diarrhea.
I've been taking it for four months, should I keep taking it?
No.
Probably not a good idea.
Yeah, no.
Yeah.
You know what the biggest sign is that you shouldn't take it?
You're diarrhea.
It's right there.
That's not helping you at all.
Yeah.
Yeah, stop taking it right away.
So that's why at the end of the day you got to listen
to your body.
I don't know when you do all these things.
So, dude, what was the,
do you guys see that video of Jillian Michaels
teaching a kettlebell swing?
Or whatever she thought it was?
I don't know.
Oh my God, are you serious?
Dude, dude.
I was like brought to this attention
from one of my friends who I was just talking about
like performing a kettlebell swing
and like unfortunately, it's been tough to find models and people that can actually do like, performing a kettlebell swing and like, unfortunately,
it's been tough to find, you know, models and people that can actually do like a really
solid kettlebell swing. And, and my friend was like, well, have you seen Julian Michaels
version of a kettlebell swing? And I was like, no, I have not. I mean, I'm aware of a
lot of Julian Michaels teaching techniques. and that sparked my attention right away.
I'm like, I gotta check this out.
And she did not disappoint.
She took it to a whole new level, dude.
I've never seen like,
so was this bad as Joe Donnelly's?
Worse, was it?
Worse, way worse.
Yeah, both of them terrible,
but Joe Donnelly did a weird squat front raise,
he did his shoulder raise.
And to be fair, that's pretty typical for somebody
who's really stiff and rigid, whatever.
That's how most people in a lot of bodybuilding kind of gyms,
I'll see you doing kettlebell swings with a squat with it,
and then they'll raise their shoulders.
Yeah, and so totally is not what the intent was,
but this was like,
basically a combo of, it was kind of like a CrossFit where they go really high over the
head, American style, I guess they call this. And then she goes under and she's queuing
them to look behind them through their legs. So basically rounding their back and then
like looking behind them and have been pulled. And have been pulled and then coming out of that and whiplashing their spine.
So you know when you have exercise descriptions,
how to do this exercise?
And they're like, these are the things that you do
that you should do, here's your cues.
And then they'll have a list of whatever you do
don't do these things when you do this exercise.
It's almost as if she read that.
Well, I just don't understand. I'm sure it's an old video. I'm going to try and give her a little bit
of credit that like I know when she started she had like aphod and like one other sort of one
cert. That's her. Not even till later after she got like the audition for you know biggest loser and
all that. And so it was like very much like a Robick, you know, background, which those classes,
you see the kind of shenanigans they do in those classes to begin with, but I remember
somebody who looked like she just made that shit up.
I remember somebody who worked with her back when she, when she first started as a trainer
and they told me like that when her and Bob did the auditions for the original biggest
loser not on there, like, they were like, she wasn't even like one of the better trainers
but she was just marketable.
Of course, yeah.
They're not trying to get a good trainer, they're trying to get a good face and a good personality
that's going to sell the show.
This is where integrity comes into play for personal training.
When I mention integrity or when we talk about integrity, part of it is not teaching and
instructing things that you know you don't have expertise in,
or that you know you can't teach.
For example, I will never,
unless I take a course and really practice and learn this,
I will never teach Olympic lifts, I just won't.
I know what a good one looks like,
I know what a band would look like.
I could theoretically talk about it,
I could definitely talk about it on a podcast,
would I teach clients or teach athletes to Olympic lift? Nope, it's not a level, it's not something I have expertise in.
Right. And so I'm not going to do that. And what ended up happening is kettlebells became a trend
and became popular. And so she's like, we're going to throw kettlebells in here. And oh, here's a
kettlebell. She literally did not only to do it wrong in the video, she did all the things,
the bad things that you don't want to do.
Yeah.
Which has completely bend over,
reach between your legs or rest of pee for injury.
It was so, but it was like the worst one I've
think I've ever seen.
And you know, and I, that's the thing to your point with that.
Like I remember, you know, it's teaching,
like because I've had like courses and gone through
a lot of kettlebell training,
but even then, I was like, I'm not qualified.
I'm very hyper-critical of the kettlebell swing.
I'm doing, we brought in somebody like Mike Selemi
to break it down to the nth degree,
but it's just like, for you to just put that out
and then sell a video like that to everybody,
I was just like, I was appalled.
Dude, people don't realize how challenging it is too.
Like, here we are, we have a podcast,
a YouTube channel, a media company,
and at least monthly, sometimes weekly,
we have discussions with our marketing team
where we say, no, no, we're not gonna do that,
we're not gonna say it that way,
and we're not gonna market that way.
They're telling us what's gonna sell more,
and we're saying, that's just wrong.
Even if it's a little bit wrong,
I don't wanna put it out that way.
That's the big difference,
and that's the problem, I think,
with all the celebrity trainers.
Cause I have yet,
I, can you guys name one big mainstream trainer?
I'm not talking about like,
there's some that have like a larger following
on YouTube and on Instagram.
I'm talking about big mainstream trainers.
Can you name one that you're like, oh yeah, they're good.
Oh, wasn't, what's his name?
I want to say Chris something.
Oh, where's my phone in?
I'm looking for my phone.
Chris something.
I forgot the name.
He was on, I think Tom Bill, you actually had him come on.
And then I dove through some of his stuff.
And I'm like, okay, some of this stuff
that this guy's putting out, it's pretty solid.
I can't think of his name right now.
Was he like a big celebrity?
Yes, he's a big celebrity trainer.
He's like, all right, well that's good.
Yeah, like one.
I can't think of many.
Yeah, there's not, there's not very many.
I can't either, yeah, they don't really stick out to me.
Like the one, I just think of all the worst.
You know, like I just, like you mentioned,
all the biggest loser kind of people,
like it's just, it's nails on a chalkboard.
Yeah, I know how, so I used to train a lot of doctors,
right, and they used to get so irritated with TV,
like doctors who are actual doctors,
but on TV giving people advice, they get so irritated.
I'd be like, you would never say it that way,
or you'd never communicate to a patient that way,
or this is totally, so I can understand,
there's like, there's show biziz, and then there's like,
real.
Totally.
And yeah, and that's, I don't, I don't know.
I try not to talk a whole lot of shit,
because I get it, like I get what people actually respond
to now, especially watching, like,
you know, our YouTube and watching, you know,
what kind of content we're trying to produce
to actually gain followers and attention,
but then try and funnel them into
quality information.
Here, this is actually how you do it,
but that's the whole process.
It feels like it's a bit of a compromise every time,
but definitely not compromising our integrity.
That's the bottom line.
Yeah, hilarious.
Did you guys see the whole deal with CrossFit? I did with
there. It looked like someone hacked their Instagram and there. That's not what it was. No, Taylor
and I were looking at it yesterday when we're at lunch and that's what he was saying to
me. He's like, Oh, it looks like they hacked their their Instagram. No, they did they
deactivate first off CrossFit the organization right deactivated all
Facebook and Instagram pages indefinitely
whoa indefinitely forever
off we what yeah no they're gone
they're not coming back on Facebook and Instagram now they still have their
Twitter
they still have their obviously their website they still have uh... couple of
the places you can find them
let me see what they're off Facebook. Primarily,
is this because they don't agree with Facebook and like what was the thought? Well, first off,
look at this. So they're the CrossFit Games Instagram 2.4 million CrossFit's Instagram
2.8 million CrossFit Games Facebook 2.7 million and then their CrossFit Facebook 3.1
hold them all off completely and indefinitely forever. Wow. Whoa. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let as of May 24, 2019, as CrossFit investigates the circumstances pertaining to Facebook's
deletion of the Banting 7-Day meal plan and other well-known public complaints about
the social media company that may adversely impact the security and privacy of our global
CrossFit community.
So in a nutshell, Facebook doesn't comport with my community standards for privacy and
decency, so we're out.
So he's basically saying that what Glassman is saying
is he doesn't agree with how Facebook does things.
He doesn't agree with how they protect people's privacy.
He doesn't agree with how Facebook deletes accounts,
how they have like, you know, what's it called?
It says here, so there was a low-carb high-fat Facebook page
with 1.6 million users, and Facebook just deleted them
kind of without explaining things.
And this is a complaint that a lot of people have had.
It's like, hey, you know, why are you guys
deleting some people's pages and businesses and not others?
So this is more of a stand, you know what I mean?
It's more of a stand of like, we don't like what you guys are doing, so I'm, we're gonna be off of a stand. You know what I mean? It's more of a stand of like,
we don't like what you guys are doing.
So I'm, we're gonna be off of all this.
It's kind of a major power move, dude.
That's a big deal.
I respect it.
Yeah.
I don't know if it's good for business.
Yeah, I don't know if that's a good,
well, where are they moving, you know,
so they're just on Twitter.
That's the only platform.
Twitter.
Yeah, Twitter.
They have the website still. But they're, that's the only platform. Twitter, yeah, Twitter, they have the website still,
but that's it, they're off of those,
in those words, the biggest ones.
Those are the absolute, see it says here,
here's some of the stuff that they were talking about.
That Facebook collects and aggregates user information
and shares it with state and federal authorities
as well as security organizations from other countries,
true, and remember, Glassman is hardcore anti-big government.
Right.
He's a libertarian.
Yeah.
He also says Facebook sensors are removed user accounts based on a unknown criteria and
at the request of third parties, including government and foreign government agencies.
And Facebook collects aggregates and sells user information as a matter of business.
Its business model allows governments and businesses alike to use algorithmically conjured
advertising categories as sophisticated data mining and surveillance tools.
So it's a stand.
He's taking a big stand and he totally took.
So this is interesting to me because it's kind of like what we talked about just the other
day on the podcast when I brought up the whole cars.
They predict a $750 billion industry
for the car data.
I mean, that's, to me, that's the future
is all data mining.
I think that's what, I mean,
some of your most valuable companies are,
you, we would think, oh, they created a cool search engine,
oh, they created this, they must be,
that's why they're, they make, no,
they make so much money is because they have all this data
on us.
And then they sell to other companies. like, how do you avoid that completely?
Like it's just you're picking on Facebook and Instagram right now, but that's everything.
Everybody.
Well, I think we're going to see more of this.
I think what we're going to see is we're going to see more of this division where
some people are like, look at.
So Eric Smith talked about this.
It was kind of cool. Yeah, it was kind of, you know what I mean? First, I talked about this. It was kind of cool.
Yeah, it was kind of cool to listen to his opinion
because he actually talked about Russia, North Korea, China,
and us, and you know, being somebody who's traveled the world
and been in tech and been on, he's like,
it's really interesting to see the differences.
Like America tends to be split down the middle.
Like half of us trust it. The other half of us don't trust it at all. uh... the differences uh... america tends to be split down the middle
half of us trusted the other half of us don't trust it i don't want it
uh... some countries uh...
like russia don't trust their government whatsoever they don't want any of
that nobody is on that page
uh... and then china is the complete opposite completely
okay
trust the government to do that and they want that to make to help them make
better decisions.
Wait a minute, you're saying Russia doesn't have their government
for the controller media?
No, he says that they don't trust the government.
The people.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's talking about the people.
Like, he's talking about us,
not the government themselves,
it's about how we feel about it.
And so that was his opinion.
He goes, and he was talking about how,
because there's pros and cons to it.
You know, you talk about fighting like terrorism,
the more information that the government has on this activity,
it obviously would make it easier for them
to predict potential terrorism and things like that.
So there is a little bit of our country
that people go like, well, it's good for these things,
but I don't want them getting in these things, right?
And here's the thing, it's potentially good
for those things.
We have yet to see just quite, is it really helping
and preventing a lot of terrible acts?
And would you ever know, though?
That's exactly right.
And all we know is if we look throughout history,
the more, because remember this, there's only one legal authority
that can imprison you, execute you, impose fines on you.
In other words, steal your property,
you know, your money, your home, all that stuff.
There's only one legal entity.
There's only one entity that can do it legally.
Like if a person did that to you
or if a gang did that to you,
they would be able to do that.
But the government totally can.
They have the power to do that.
And so do you want to give the entity that has all that power?
Do you want to give them that power to do it?
And do you want to give them more power?
Do you want, and so this is always,
this is a very crucial debate and discussion
around liberty, and really, really fucking is.
Like, here's a deal.
Would we be okay with the government coming in our house, searching our stuff and looking
at our mail?
Of course not, people would be like, fuck no.
But sometimes people allow them to do that with us electronically.
It's the same thing.
It just doesn't feel as intrusive.
And so it's a very interesting debate.
And I think, because look, who is it?
Jordan Peterson and what's the other guy that he debates with?
And Sam Harris?
They left Patreon.
They were making millions of dollars on Patreon.
They left.
So it was very reason.
It's interesting because people don't really consider
to like having a Gmail or having,
you know, like a hotmail account,
or one of these free accounts,
like, they have access to your emails.
Right.
It's like you've,
you've not-
He've forfeited it.
And it's that you have to be consistent
all the way across the board.
If like this is your stand,
like you need to,
you almost need to live, you know,
somewhere where you're off the grid.
That's what I'm saying, Justin.
I'm like, Justin.
How do you avoid it in all these,
how do you avoid it with your car,
how do you avoid it with your email,
how do you avoid it with Facebook?
Well, so here's the thing.
Let's say something came out that,
when it comes to email, I think there are some protections.
And also, how much of it is all bad?
I mean, that's the part that,
it's a really good interview that Harbinger did.
You guys should listen to it.
I know Doug listen to it. I just think he it's a really good interview that Harbinger did, you guys should listen to it.
I know Doug listen to it.
I just think he brings up a really good,
makes a really good talking point in discussion
and he wasn't saying one or the other.
He doesn't, he doesn't have, he's just talking about it.
Yeah, he's talking about it and he says,
you know, I kind of feel there's a lot of pros
and there's a lot of cons to it.
It's a very, you're giving a lot of power to,
yeah, I wanna check that power.
And so that's why again, like I respect moves like this
to kind of like put that power in check
and like have people recognize.
Like yeah, we're willingly giving them all this
which is fueling their power even further.
And it's like you got to be careful.
And I fully agree and appreciate what he's doing.
Now what I mean by agree is I agree with with his method like
Some people would say we need to make laws that say that private companies
You know can't like we need to make laws and say that Facebook can't you know do this stuff with us
But here's a deal you agree to those terms
When you go on Facebook now if they're doing something that they're that if they're breaking their contract and they're liable for
lawsuit civil-wise lawsuit But if they're not if they say to you. contract, then they're liable for lawsuit, civil lawsuit.
But if they say to you, hey, by the way, anything you post on here, we own, and you still
go on there, well, that's the agreement.
Now your choice is to fucking leave.
And when I like what's happening, because this is a nice check some balances, you're having
enough big players who are starting to say, I don't like this.
I'm going to move and try and do my own thing.
What I think is gonna happen is what we're gonna start to see
is markets are gonna start gaining created
for more privacy, less censorship.
You know what I'm saying?
Will alternatives to things like Facebook and Instagram
start popping up because enough people start to leave?
Maybe will the other social media platforms fight?
Maybe Twitter has been historically more tolerant
of different voices and opinions.
Like they, usually it's Facebook and Instagram,
we'll take someone off, Twitter will be like,
okay with them, sometimes they'll take them off too.
So it's an interesting situation, but I will say this,
I respect what the guy is doing.
I mean, from a business standpoint, he may be making a point that'll cost him his business.
But sometimes if you believe in something strong enough, that's what you got to do.
Yeah, no, and I totally see that.
It'd be interesting to see if there are going to be other ones popping up more competition kind of in the mix is if this is going to be you know something that's going to cause
and stir more big accounts to be removed you know like or remove themselves from face well where do
you guys stand on it are you pro are you completely pro are you completely anti were you out with it
I I think everything that I do on social media that I agree to, I'm obviously pro.
What I want to do is I want to encourage the conversation so that people are aware, because
I think what ends up happening, what's that saying?
You put a frog in a pot of water and then you slowly turn up the heat and you just don't
realize it's getting boiled until it's too late.
I feel like that's the situation that people are so unaware and so like, because it's getting boiled until it's too late. I feel like that's the situation
that people are so unaware and so like,
because it's so easy,
you don't see somebody going through your mail,
you don't see somebody selling your shit
or being manipulative, it just happens.
And so because it's that way,
normally people would stand up and like,
wait a minute, I don't know if I like this one.
So I like the conversation.
And that's what I want to continue to happen.
And I like that some people stand up
and do their own thing.
What I think is gonna end up happening
is you're gonna end up having platforms.
It's gonna end up segregating things more.
You're gonna have platforms that have
the super controversial shit.
You'll have platforms that are family friendly.
You'll have platforms that don't share things
and are super private.
And I think that's what's gonna end up happening
because there's a market for all those things.
Yeah, I like using it.
I also like people that challenge it.
You know, I like people that point out things
that will get me thinking.
Like, oh, well, I wonder if I do agree with that.
You know, but in terms of like us all being able to
interact with people and communicate
and like them digging through whatever the fuck
I'm talking about like, you know them digging through whatever the fuck I'm talking
about like through text, like I'm not worried about that.
I'm not like, I'm a pretty open book in terms of that.
So that doesn't worry me.
What worries me is the power, the growth of power
and using that data for you to do whatever
to almost like. I'm a furious, yeah, nefarious. whatever to, like almost like.
I'm a furious, really.
Yeah, a nefarious.
Thank you.
I was looking for that word.
Yeah.
So that's what I'm concerned with.
Yeah.
Like, like, because they found, they know,
they're pretty damn good at this now,
how to manipulate people's kind of thought processes
and emotions, but this is not new.
Okay.
They've been doing this for a long time.
Media has been doing this forever, and I'm pretty sure governments have
influenced media for just as long.
The term propaganda, that's where the term propaganda came from.
This is something that they've been doing forever.
I'll give you guys a great example.
Here's a good example.
This is confirmed.
You look this up if you want.
This is a real thing actually happened.
We, there was the Gulf of Tonkin incident
that we used to motivate Americans to supporting
the Vietnam War.
Now we know for sure that it was bullshit,
that it was all false,
but that was what they used to get people to support a war
that they really wanted to get into.
Now, from the standpoint of the government,
I'm not saying that they're evil,
and they're like, we wanna make money by going to war.
Sometimes this is what I think that happens.
Sometimes I think that they're talking to each other,
and they're like, man, we got a big threat over here.
Like, communism is spreading.
Vietnam is about to lose to,
it's about to become communist.
The Soviets are moving in there quickly.
They're gonna be in Asia.
We need to go in there to counter them.
And this supporting the other side through arms
and stuff like that, just not cutting it.
We need to put our soldiers in there and make should happen.
And then they're all sitting around,
the other people are saying, no way that the America,
no way the public's gonna support that.
There's just no way and they're saying,
but we fucking need to do this.
We know if they take over, then this is gonna be very, very bad
for freedom and this and that.
And the other guy's like, well,
but the Americans aren't gonna support it.
It's like, okay, we need to come up with a way
to kind of manipulate people into supporting this
because it's the best for, so it sounds terrible.
But maybe the reason why they're doing it
is they think that they're helping who the fuck knows, you know, but it happens
And so you've got these big, you know, social media
Giants that are for sure getting influenced now. I'm pretty sure at some point
You know Mark Zuckerberg was sitting with some government officials and like here's a deal buddy
Yeah, you got to help you got to let us look at everybody shit when when we ask it. And here's, and you got to let us do certain things.
On those hearings, it was, it just revealed how removed a lot of like our government officials are from technology in general.
It's like, we have these mega businesses that pretty much have everybody's information at their disposal,
and yet our government is like completely unaware of, of even how to use this technology.
So that's what scares the shit out of me.
Yeah, and the thing I always come up with is I'm not saying that these people are bad
and these people are good and not at all.
I largely trust our elected officials in government.
I don't think they're necessarily good people.
I think they're people, right?
So it's good and there's bad.
And I pretty much, you know, I trust them for the most part,
but what I don't trust is giving people a lot of power
because people could get influenced
and people are not angels.
They're not altruistic angelic beings.
That's such a hard thing to say though,
because it's like, where do you draw the line?
Well, where you draw the line is here.
You just don't give them a shit ton of power.
Like, you don't want a president who can just say,
Hey, you know what we're going to do?
We're going to, we're going to pass all these crazy.
Like, that's why we have a constitution.
That's why we have rights and in order to infringe in those,
if you want to, you have to go through this crazy long ass process.
Yeah, but that's the same power is also capable of, you know, let's say that we have with Facebook
and we have Google with the email and some of that, you have the ability to segment 10,000
people in the last month that have talked about building a bomb, have Google search,
building a bomb belong to any hate private groups on Facebook,
and you can now categorize all those people,
and then they can be surveillance or watched,
and potentially catch somebody who's about to go
to do some school shooting, and that happens, right?
So it's like if that were to happen,
this conversation would be completely different,
because everybody like, holy fuck, we just,
we saved a school of kids that could've got shot you're right because we have this technology
We have this ability to to watch people that are having these conversations that are googling this type of information that are
And then and so you're you're 100% right Adam and but what I'm talking about is all power has two sides to it
So let me give you an example.
Nuclear fission, nuclear power.
Incredible, amazing breakthrough of science.
Has the potential to fuel the world with energy
that is relatively clean and is almost limitless.
The flip side of that, nuclear bombs, nuclear war.
Now, would you say that power should we have?
Would it have been better had we never discovered that
or would it was a better that we had discovered that?
I don't know.
It depends on what we do with this power
and all I'm saying is people are people.
Humans are, we know what human behavior is like.
It's not like we have, I mean, if I knew that the people running all that shit were fucking
just wonderful, good, altruistic, you know, angels, I don't think I'd have a problem.
I just know that there's humans behind it.
There's people.
Well, isn't the idea of a democracy, though, is it?
That's what I mean.
It's like, you know, there's checks and balances to that.
It's not like we're appointed some dictator who gets, or a king who gets, you know, born into it and we have to deal with this tyranny no matter what.
And that's what I'm saying. So to have the power to monitor everything, that's a power
that I'm not sure people would want government to have. And I mean, imagine what that would
mean. Okay, so if you're charged, let's say you're a Republican government in charge
or a Democrat government in charge.
The reason why I'm using those two is because I know it'll
get people to think or to kind of understand my thought process.
Because if you're a Democrat, you wouldn't like the opposite.
And if you're a Republican, you wouldn't like the opposite.
So just imagine Trump,
imagine Trump, who Democrats can't stand, liberals can't stand.
Imagine if he had total surveillance power and total autonomy. And he's like,
I'm doing this for the good. Imagine if you had that now, you're a liberal. Do you like that feeling?
Probably not. Why? Because you think to yourself, he might influence the way people get elected.
He made influence. Yeah, but that's the way that's again, that's the way we've structured it. So
you can't do that. So one man or one woman could not have
that much soul power by themselves.
You're right, and that's why we have courts,
and that's why we have judges.
However, we already have situations where right now,
you, me or Justin could get taken,
could get thrown in a jail forever,
indefinitely without a trial or jury without a judge.
It used to be they used to have to go to a judge.
They used to have to present information and say, hey, we have all the surveillance on
on Adam and it shows this that and the other.
And then the judge would do, okay, you guys can go in there and there is that now.
There is no more of that.
All they have to do is say he's a terrorist.
This is all part of the National Defense Authorization Act
and part of the Patriot Act.
It used to be that if they wanted to survey you,
if they wanted to listen to your phone calls
and follow you around,
they'd have to get a judge to approve it.
They'd have to bring the case back, okay,
we want to follow this person, judge would say what?
So there's checks and balances.
They don't have to do that anymore.
Well, even the reason for that is because the process
and how long could take and the reason what they didn't want.
Oh my God, we think that this guy can get there.
That's the reason they gave you.
Right.
And it's like, you know, he could be,
he could be ready to do something,
but we have to go through this whole process.
They have good intent, but on the flip side.
So you guys know the American people,
then there's that potential, like you had mentioned,
it could definitely happen that way.
It could, and historically it is what happens.
Like, you guys know Hitler was elected, right?
He didn't come to power through force.
He was elected and you know how he was able to gain
the dictator power, dictatorship power
that he ended up getting?
There, people loved him.
There's a lot of people that loved him.
That's all workers.
There were a lot of people that liked him, yes,
but there was one incident in particular,
the Reichstag thing, I hope I'm saying, right, fire,
where there was a fire,
people set fire to a government building.
And at this time, he was getting everybody up
in a frenzy about internal terrorists,
about internal threats,
and he would blame the Jews quite a bit,
and talk about these people
Communists and Jews and whatever and so there was a fire on a government building and
People died and it was a big fucking national deal and he came out and said look I
Want to stop these terrorists, but I can't stop them with all these checks and balances. I need
Power to fucking act when this should happen so I can prevent it and they gave them that power. And then he became the dictator that was able to do all that crazy shit.
But by the way, we all know now that fire was actually widely speculated that he set that fire
to gain that kind of power. I even think this happened in Star Wars. Just in I think they even showed a
part where at one point they had the big committee with all the,
yeah, it was one of the prequels where, yeah,
they basically instituted these wars and everything
from behind the scenes and then acted like
they were trying to break it all up.
Yeah, make no mistake.
The Patriot Act, National Defense Authorization Act,
were passed because of 9-11.
9-11 happened, because they would have never passed before.
It had the government come out and said,
hey, we want to be able to throw people in jail forever.
We want to be able to listen to people's phone calls
without a warrant.
We want to do what we want to infringe all these liberties.
American people would have been like, fuck no,
we're not going to let you do that.
But then we had September 11th,
everybody was scared of their mind.
And so that's how they presented it.
We need this for our safety.
And so they passed it.
And I'm not saying that they're doing anything bad with it.
But that's just how this should happen.
So the fact that people are standing up, it's kind of a good sign.
We'll see what happens.
I remember Facebook and Instagram are private organizations.
So they don't have checks and balances.
Now they can't kill people and they can't do.
Well, that's why the only power we do have is to do exactly what CrossFit just did,
which is like, yeah, well, okay,
we're gonna create our own process with this.
Do you think anybody will follow?
I don't know, man, more and more people are doing it though.
More and more people are doing it.
And this is all new, right?
It's only recent, I mean, how long has Facebook
really been around?
How long is it?
12 years, maybe 10 years, something like that.
Like a decade has hasn't been that long. Instagram even less than that.
So I think we're reaching a point now where we're going to start to see some interesting things
start to happen with all of this. And this is just kind of part of it. So,
but is it going to be good for business? And is that the truth? I don't know.
Some people are speculating CrossFit's doing it
because of their businesses.
Oh, 15 years, I don't know.
Oh, it's been a while.
Well, I mean, it wasn't really.
Still not long.
Yeah, it wasn't big until.
Yeah, 15 years and then Instagram's less than a decade there.
I don't know, man.
So it wasn't around that long.
Well, we'll see what happens, man.
I would love to talk to Greg about this on a podcast.
That would be a cool conversation.
No, I think there's a lot of things
that I think we agree with her like that
Glaspon puts out there,
just not a big fan of his program.
I mean, that's a big fan out.
I think it's a person I think we probably would like it.
I think we would like to do.
It's probably an awesome dude.
Yeah, workouts are not good.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's gonna be honest.
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First question is from Wellness with Virginia.
What are the benefits of squatting below parallel and is it worth it for the average gym
goer to practice that?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I guess we could rephrase the question.
What are the benefits of fuller ranges of motion versus shorter ranges of motion?
I guess that would be the another way of saying it. Well, here's a deal. When you're looking for
specific types of performance,
sometimes it makes sense to train in shorter ranges of motion. But if you're looking for full
muscle development, you're looking for
muscle hypertrophy, which is muscle growth, and you want to develop full ranges of strength
and control, then full ranges are better.
Not just that.
Not just that.
You got to think of overall joint health too.
You start shortening the range of motion up on muscles, especially on something like squatting
where you stop at 90, stop at 90 forever. start shortening the range of motion up on muscles, especially on something like squatting,
where you stop at 90, stop at 90 forever.
I mean, your overall hip, your overall hip health,
you're restricting a lot of your movement.
Yes.
Now, the thing that I know that I think
Sal's probably gonna head towards right now anyways,
after before I interrupted, sorry.
No problem.
Let's do it.
It happens every time. Really, I feel like it'll do it so many times. No, no No problem. Let's do it. It happens every time.
Really, I feel like it'll do it so.
No, I'm not.
We all do it.
But I wanted to point that out too though.
It's not just for development,
but also for joint health.
I think it's really important that we take
the muscles through full range of motion.
I mean, people would think it's hilarious.
If you walked around the gym
and you saw people doing these like quarter curls,
you know, all the time, like if everybody in the gym
was doing that, you'd be like, why would you do that?
The reason why it's got a bad rap is because
a lot of people can't do a full squat
without movement or mobility issues.
Right, that's why all of our certifications taught us that way.
That's it, like, here's the caveat.
You can do the fullest range of motion
that you have complete control over.
Okay. So if you're control, let's say you go down to parallel and as soon as you go down below parallel,
shit starts to break down.
Should you then train in that new range of motion? No.
You shouldn't because you don't have control over it. Now that being said, your goal should be to gain control
over fuller ranges of emotions. So you should do
things like work on mobility, go lighter, perfect your form. But at the end of the day, the
full range of motion for development purposes and just general fitness purposes is always
going to be superior studies have demonstrated this time and time again. And of course there's
always those exceptions to the rule with like particular sports and athletics,
where you're looking for very specific types of strength.
But most people training don't fall in that category.
I would say always aim.
And so, if you're in those people,
you do these quarter squats or full squats
and you're not doing, or to 90 degree squats.
And you're like, I can't do a full squat.
When I do a full squat, it hurts my back,
my form breaks down.
Your goal should be to be able to do a full squat.
So sure, still train at your 90 degrees,
but then everything else you do is teaching you
or getting your body able to train
in that fuller range of motion.
Yeah, and I think to like the warning for that
is people a lot of times their idea of
like going lowers to really start pressing, you know, getting that depth like a substantial
depth without going incremental inches along the way down and then also like taking a lot
of the load off of that because it's a these new ranges of motion are undeveloped.
Like you have to be able to establish strength there first
before pursuing incrementally down deeper as you go.
So it takes a lot of discipline and time to get down
where you actually have the same equal amount of strength
and force production from a lower depth like that.
So just take your time.
Now I want to dispel a couple myths.
So like there's one myth,
the one I used to hear all the time was,
if you go too low on squats, it's bad for the knees.
Now, if you have two squats,
if you're observing two squats
and we're observing the torque and the tension
on the joints, and both squats are done
with good control and good stability.
Okay, so both of them are good.
And one guy stops at 90 degrees and the other guy stops or goes all the way down.
Just to get to his more torque on the knee.
The short squats, right?
Because here's what happens when you stop a movement.
So if I'm lower, let's say I'm squatting with 200 pounds and I'm lowering down with 200
pounds.
The moment that I change directions, I'm actually not say I'm squatting with 200 pounds and I'm lowering down with 200 pounds. The moment that I change directions,
I'm actually not only am I squatting the 200 pounds up,
but I'm also preventing the momentum
of the downward movement of the squat,
which means I'm actually stopping more than 200 pounds.
So in other words, if you were,
if you, it's like trying to stop the momentum
is something not just the weight of it.
So if I lift the 200 pounds dead off the floor, that's different than if I lower, then if it comes down and like trying to stop the momentum is something not just the weight of it. So if I lifted 200 pounds dead off the floor,
that's different than if I lower,
then if it comes down, I have to stop it
and then reverse directions.
And when you stop at 90 degrees,
a lot of the tension goes on the knees.
When you stop at a full squat,
and again, it has to be done with good control
and good stability, more of the tension is on the hips.
Now which joint is more appropriately
designed or did we have?
Fortified with muscles around.
Yeah, which joint is better able to handle more load the hips or the knees, the hips,
always, all day long, hands down. So the reality is if you could do a full squat with good
control and good stability, it's better for your knees.
It's very, it's key that you work towards this though.
I think I know when we first came out,
we started sharing a lot about squatting deep
and doing that, and then I'd catch people tagging us
on Instagram and videos, and I'd be like,
oh God, you know, like so.
You should be squatting all the time.
You should be squatting all the time.
So it's that, you know, like if you,
most people that are either just getting into lifting or been lifting for a long time and only
squatting to nine degrees, if they decide they're going to go right into a deep squat, they're going
to have breakdown. You're going to probably your chest is probably going to fall way forward.
You might round your, your round your upper back. you might have like an excessive butt wink more than likely.
And I say that being somebody who was this, I mean, when I was training as a competitor,
not just that long ago, this has been a process over the last, I'd say now three years for
me of being somebody who squatted to about 90 degrees.
And that's it to somebody now
who can sit all the way at the bottom of squat,
but it was a very long process for me
and a lot of attention and work.
I work with a client right now.
I have one client that I deal with,
and she's in her 50s,
and she can squat all the way down in the ground,
but we have breakdown before she gets all the way there. So a lot of our sometimes will the entire session will be centered around her squat. So I'll have her come in and we get down and we do her 90 90. We do her zone one test from prime and work up on her upper cross syndrome and then we do some combat stretch. And then I'll get her in there and then I'll watch her squat
and then I'll let her go.
I wanted to go, I tell her to,
I cue her to go all the way down
and we're normally not loaded right here.
This is just body weight or real, real light weight on her.
And I'll tell her,
she goes deep as she can.
And then I'll see where she has breakdown.
And I'll be, I'll stop right there.
So I'll have her stop right there.
And then I'll go back and we'll do some more work,
some more priming, some more flexibility stuff come back
and see if I can gain an extra inch or two
of range of motion.
And it's just this kind of this process of squat,
then we get back to some mobility work, squat,
get back to some mobility work, squat,
get back to some mobility work.
And the whole session is centered around trying to get her
to have better control and strength
inside that new found range of motion.
And a lot of times I'll take them down
to the very bottom of that and then like,
create tension down in that bottom position.
So, yeah.
And fix your posture.
I'll say, okay, get down here.
Now here, get your chest up, pull the shoulder blades back,
more, sit up, open up your knees a little bit,
and I'm giving a squeeze.
Yeah, I'm getting it.
Giving all these cues down in that place, and then wanting her to feel like, this is
how your body should feel down in this position.
Think about that.
So it's a long process.
It's not like, oh, you were told one day by trainer, some trainer just only squat to
90 to also now you, you listen to my pump, they've convinced you that deep squatting deep
is better for you.
And then also, you just go the next day and you're squatting all the way, ask the grass.
Well, two things, and this is why I know like on our YouTube's long, you know,
ways back, like I was trying to demonstrate the, uh, the dumpy squat.
And what I did really did like about it is it, it helps people to understand that they could
generate this, this internal tension. And this internal tension actually gives you feedback
that your joints are supported.
And so each way as you're pushing,
so you're directing your force upwards
and you're actually dropping into the squat
as you're pushing up, which creates more tension,
which supports the joints and allows you to gain further depth.
Like if you just do that, it's eye opening to see
that, you know, once your body feels like everything is okay,
you know, that sort of depth,
you can achieve new levels.
However, for me, like if I'm doing this by myself,
I like to use, I mean, I like to use step boxes
or things where I can incrementally get feedback
where I can sit down and I, okay, I mean, I like to use step boxes or things where I can incrementally get feedback where I can sit down and I, okay, I gained,
I felt like there was no interruption in my
bracing and my support on the way to this level.
I come back up, I can generate enough force
to feel comfortable driving back out of that position as well.
Yeah, another myth that I'd like to dispel with this
is oftentimes I'll have people that tell me,
you know, hey, my buddy is a power lifter. And, you know, he obviously knows how to squat because he's a high level
competitor of power lifter, but now he's 45 and his hips or his knees are messed up. Or I knew the strength athlete that did lots of squats or whatever
other exercise. And now this person can't do these movements anymore. They have had a knee replacement or a hip replacement.
Okay, we have to understand what we're talking about here.
We are talking about people who are pushing the limit
to the extremes.
In no way are any extremes ideal for health and longevity.
I don't give a fuck what you do.
If you are an extreme performer at a high, high level,
you have now traded longevity and health for extreme performance.
Not to mention, so just because you're a power lifter and you've been doing it for long,
does it mean that you're immune to fucking poor mechanics, either?
Of course.
I've seen a lot of people and I'm going to pick on one of our good buddies, Lane, who
lives a lot of fucking weight, but it gets injured a lot of the time for that because his mechanics aren't beautiful.
He's barely just now, I'm barely just now seeing him
start to get into mobility and start to work on his depth
and his posture and his squat,
but he was squatting 500 pounds in shit
and just waiting for injury to happen.
So just because you're a power lifter
and you've been doing it for a long time,
it doesn't mean you're doing it well incorrectly.
And in fact, the way this question is worded with the average gym goer to practice,
I think it's more important for you.
It's more important for the average person because you're talking about overall health and
mobility is you should be working towards that.
Now most people listening are not going to have a good, deep,
astagrass squat bottom line, and that's completely fucking normal.
But that shouldn't, is it should not detour you from actually working towards
that. Again, this is why prime and prime pro was, was designed. And I tell you
what, I, I'm so passionate about this, this subject because I can't believe
how much better I feel today
from all of that work.
I used to have chronic low back pain all the time.
And it was because I had mobility issues.
I had poor hip mobility and I just never addressed it.
I had muscles, I looked good, I was lean.
And so I didn't see purpose in doing that.
And I remember after hanging out with Brink and him breaking me down from my feet all the way up.
I was like, fuck, I need to work on all this.
Then as I started to work on it and I started to see I felt better and better and better.
Now I'm at a place which is so rad that I can sit down completely and just chill in that
position and feel very comfortable there.
It's eliminated my low back pain.
Now back to the strength athlete,
you use the example of lane.
Here's a deal, like how important is it
that your tires and suspension are perfectly tuned
when you're driving 35 miles an hour
for a few miles down the road?
It's not that important.
How important is it for a formula one car?
It's so important.
Right for death.
Yeah, it's so important that if something's off by a little bit,
you'll crash.
So when you're lifting 600 pounds,
Yeah, the stakes go up.
Your form doesn't have to be good.
It has to be perfect.
Because over time, just one degree off of perfect
That's right. is an exponential increase in your risk of injury.
So for most people listening,
if you squatted and deadlifted like Lane,
you're probably gonna do absolutely great.
But for a guy who deadlift 600 pounds
or close to 700 pounds and squat 600 pounds,
just a one degree off of perfect
is a huge risk
comparatively speaking for entry.
This is why I do not like to use the example of,
I don't like when people say this guy
who used to squat 600 pounds and now he can barely walk.
And like, okay, you are talking about people
who train at a level where anything short
of absolute perfect mobility and control is a much higher risk.
For, look, if you're squatting 200 pounds for your workouts and your form is generally pretty
gosh damn good and it's not perfect but it's pretty good, you're fine.
You squat like that forever, you'll be okay.
You're squatting down and down.
It's funny, I said it that way.
I say everything else, right?
I don't know why, but I decided to that way. I say everything else, right?
I don't know why, but I decided to not curse right there.
Fuck, yeah.
But if you're like, if you're a fucking animal,
and you are squatting, tremendous amounts of weight
in pushing your body to the limit,
perfection is far, far, far more important.
So don't use those people as examples
of why full squatting isn't healthy.
I'm telling you this right now, if you can do it well and you have good control, a full squat on all
Pretty much all parameters is going to be superior.
Wouldn't you guys say to somebody who is chasing like overall health, just feeling better?
I mean, how much more beneficial do you think it would be to like that be like a major focus?
Like just get good at the squat.
Just take yourself from somebody who can't squat beyond.
Just practice and get to a point.
Totally.
Do all the mobility work, do all the training, everything you need to do.
Just open up a whole new world.
Right.
It's such a great overall full body movement that if you put all of your effort and energy, you're programming all the way around
just becoming the person who can't squat beyond 90 degrees
to somebody who can go ask to grass,
the benefits that you,
because I know what the amount of mobility work
you'll have to do, which is gonna burn calories,
which could burn fat if you're in a caloric deficit.
I know you're exercising, you're working on flexibility,
you're working on stability, working on stability,
you're going to build strength. Like the carryover that you're going to get from just that,
I think the average person, unless you're trying to compete on stage or do something ridiculous
like that, is going to be probably far more beneficial than just following some normal routine and then
going going the rest of life only being on squat. You know, you know what reminds me, who is that one basketball player that blew out a shoe, Zion?
Yeah.
Was that his name?
So you're talking about a, how big was that guy?
260 pounds?
Yeah.
260 pound just guys generating force that we,
you can imagine.
Exactly.
And he blew out a shoe.
Now that shoe was probably one degree off
of being constructed perfectly.
I could have worn that shoe.
For 10 years, he exploded.
Yeah, it would have never done anything.
But you're talking about a dude who's generating some serious force and stopping power, blew
out a shoe.
So that's why, again, going back to the stronger you are and the harder you push yourself,
the more perfect your form has to be.
Or you could work on a Julian Michaels kettlebell swing.
That's right.
Next question is from Nathan Teal.
What are the biggest myths in fitness?
For example, the anabolic window.
Oh, boy.
There's so many to count.
You know what my favorite, big fitness myth
that exists today, the biggest one?
That supplements make a huge difference.
So I was just gonna say, Sal,
like sometimes I think,
because even the anabolic window
is technically not a full on myth.
What I think the fitness industry has done is we've taken a little bit of science and we exaggerate the fuck at it.
That's very low in the totem pole of priorities.
That we make small things.
Oh, super important.
Yes, that to me is, there's not a lot of things, there's not a lot of things I believe that are being promoted.
I mean, just with the way information flows now and it's something that's completely false
and wrong doesn't seem to stick around very long.
It's the things that are heavily debated back and forth of truth or not true or not true
that stick around that we start to talk about as these myths. And the end of all, like, window and some of these things
aren't so much myths as they are overly exaggerated
on the real benefits of it.
Or the importance of, yeah.
Just like you're saying you're alluding to with supplements.
Like, you know, we could say here in debate all day long,
is there a place for branch channel amino acids?
Like, sure, if you're a hardcore endurance athlete
or you're training twice a day,
your protein is low, studies will show by taking this, yes, but Jesus, I mean 99.9% of the population,
it ain't going to do shit for you. It's not going to do hardly anything. And even the people
that it will do something for, it's so minimal on what effect it's going to be for your overall
aesthetics or health
or strength or anything like that.
So when I think of the myths that we talk about, sometimes the myths that we address aren't
necessarily these like, they're wrong, you'll probably find some studies somewhere that
supports that it has some sort of benefit.
The problem is that the industry has taken these things and they use it to market and sell either ideas,
programs, supplements, whatever.
Yeah, so I mean, think about it.
If you're a marketer and you're like, okay,
we know how important sleep is to fitness.
Like if you get good quality sleep,
you're going to burn more body fat,
build more muscle because your body's healthier,
so it adapts better.
You're not gonna crave as many of these terrible foods.
It's better for inflammation, it's better for heart disease.
I could go down the list, right?
Good sleep, quality, adequate sleep.
Super, super, super important.
But here I am.
I'm a supplement company or I'm a company.
I'm like, how the fuck am I going to make any money off of that?
Oh, I know.
Here's a supplement you can take that'll make that all happen for you.
No, not gonna happen.
It's way more complex.
It's not cool.
Yeah, I mean, for gains.
Yeah, I think that's one of the big,
there are some pure myths out there.
Like don't get me wrong.
There's some things that are complete bullshit.
Like, rub this gel on your legs
and it'll burn body fat off of your legs alone.
That one keeps resurfacing every 10 years or so.
They keep coming out with some new.
We just want it to work, you know?
Yeah, it keeps coming to some new shit
that you know, it's supposed to do that.
Small meals throughout the day,
make you build muscle and burn more body fat.
I mean, if it doesn't change your diet,
like if it's not, like if you eat small meals
because it helps you eat better, definitely.
But if the same diet, you know,
now it's not gonna make a difference.
But the biggest one that I think is just the importance
of supplements. Here, let me give you an example
of what I mean, okay? You have people who bulk at a gym membership
price, who will look at their gym and be like,
I'm paying 25 bucks a month, the gym down the street way
better, way less people, better equipment,
but it's $45 a month.
Nah, I'm not gonna do that.
It's another 20 bucks.
Fuck that.
Same person spends $150 on supplements.
What?
Like, you have completely,
you completely don't understand the real importance
of where you're investing your time and money.
Or the same person who's
like, I've been following the same workout for the last five years. I'm not progressing. Oh,
I know what it is. I need more supplements to make that happen. Or somebody that leans towards
the performance side of supplements, but then it's so out of whack with their micro nutrients
that they're body needs. You're lacking in vitamin D, you don't get enough
of these basic necessities in your food,
and then you go lean towards some high performance
supplement thinking that it's gonna do some,
it's like putting high octane gas in your car
that has the timing belts off,
it's got one flat tire, it's fucking no oil in it,
and you're putting high octane gas in it.
It's like fix the other parts that are far more important
for longevity and making sure that this performance stuff
is going to help you out.
You're far better off,
which you can find all of those things nutritionally in food
and or if you're going to supplement,
that's the direction that I typically would recommend
someone to get that all.
Look, early in the episode,
we were just talking about Raci,
who has adaptive genic properties,
helps with anxiety and all that.
So let me give you a scenario.
Let's say you're somebody who you're just suffering
from the effects of mismanaged stress.
You have too much stress in your life.
You're not getting enough sleep.
And so you suffer from the symptom
you have a lot of symptoms of that, a lot of consequences. You're anxious, you don't feel good, you've got weird cravings,
maybe you're moody, maybe hormones start to get out of balance as a result of this.
Is taking Raci, you're gonna fix all that. No, you gotta fix your sleep, you gotta fix your diet,
you gotta fix how you handle your management. Now if you do all that and then you add a little bit
of ratio to it, can it help the process?
Yes, it can help the process,
but it won't do shit for you if you don't handle
those other things.
Here's another example.
I'm eating too many calories.
Oh, I'm gonna go buy some fat burners,
that'll help me burn body fat.
Is it gonna help you burn body fat?
No, it's not gonna do a damn thing
to help you burn body fat.
Oh, I'm gonna take creatine
because it's gonna help me build muscle,
but I'm not even lifting weights.
Is the creatine gonna really benefit me at all?
In that department?
Nope, complete waste of time and money.
Even supplements that have an incredible effect
in comparison to other supplements, like creatine.
By far, okay, if you look at all the performance
and enhancing supplements that are out there,
creatine is supported by studies way more than anything else.
Studies show unequivocally that for most people,
not all people, but most people,
it's going to contribute to more strength,
faster muscle growth, better recovery,
all that stuff.
Even creatine, how much of a percentage you think
it'll improve your physique and performance,
a couple percent, one percent maybe, even creatine. So that for me is the biggest myth. And the reason why we don't understand that is because the vast majority of marketing coming from the fitness
space is to try to convince us of the importance of supplements, over emphasize the importance.
And the reason why they do this,
because that's what they can sell.
They can't sell to you better behavior patterns
unless they're putting a course or a class together
or whatever.
Look, here's the deal, we sell fitness programs.
I've 100% know that selling fitness programs
is not the easiest and best way to make money in fitness.
For sure, mine pump would be, I don't know,
how much bigger do you think our revenue would be
if we didn't sell fitness programs
and we sold supplements?
10 million a year.
Yeah.
No problem.
We'd be blowing the doors also.
Exactly what it is.
Yeah, what we're currently doing.
Yeah.
So I would say that has to be for me,
when I look at it,
that has to be one of the biggest fitness methods.
It's really unfortunate.
It is.
I mean, this morning I was talking to somebody
who listens to the show and they wanted to send over
their pre-workout and branch hand.
I mean, I said that they're creating.
And he's like, you know, I just really like to hear
your opinion on it.
This and that, you can check it out.
And he's like, I know you guys have stands on the show,
but I'd like you to look at it.
And I'm thinking, I said, fuck, man, it's crazy.
People that listen to the show, know what we talk about, still people out there create, because they know
that's where all the money is, dude. But it's like, I would, I would so hate for that to
be tied to how our success is, like, our success depends on people buying supplements or
buying product. And that was one of the things that was always really important to us, even
with the companies that we work with, like the four sigvatics, like the organifies.
It's like, dude, we will not change our message to push the product.
Hunter percent.
We're going to talk about really how it's used, it's real importance.
The irony of that is, we convert for those companies so well.
And I think part of it is, I think people appreciate honesty finally.
You know what I mean?
I think the industry's been around for so long that people now are like, okay, yeah, I can I know that
There's a lot of bullshit out there like oh these guys are telling the truth
I still like look I still take supplements like don't get me wrong
I'm just saying that I'm not fooling myself with how important they are yeah for sure
It's like if like my workout my sleep sleep, and my nutrition are 99% of my sleep.
Well, that's what always got to me was, and I think I said this a long time ago on the show,
it's like, hey, if you got money and a big deal to you, you've got money to spend and blow
and two, three hundred dollars a month, they'd shit to you, then why not?
Then why not have all these cool supplements that you're disposal that you could, oh man,
I didn't get very much rest last night.
I'm gonna take my Raci tonight.
Oh, I skipped some of my greens today.
Make sure I get my green juice this.
Oh, I'm getting ready to get into my workout.
I need an extra kick, so I'm gonna take my pre-work.
And you got all this money, like, okay, whatever.
But that's not the people that I'm worried.
It's like, I think of myself as a kid when I was first getting
into this space.
And, you know, I think I made like my first job when I was
making, you know, $45 an hour.
I think like, I was making like $600 a month, you know?
And 200 and something that was going towards supplements.
Yeah.
Like, that's a big fucking deal, you know, because I wanted
to gain muscles so bad
that I was doing whatever I thought. All these guys that were at that next level were doing that I
needed to do. And that was the missing piece. Imagine had you invested that $200 a month in
anything in a personal trainer, right? Or in a good fitness workout program. That was really, really good. Like a max. Or if you're a fan of course.
Or education or anything else.
Or anything else.
You know what I'm saying?
It was just a, it was such a waste of money.
When I, as I got older, when I learned more and understood,
I realized like, oh wow, like,
and when I think of all the clients, you know,
the hundreds and hundreds of people that I have fundamentally changed
their lives forever, for the good.
Much healthier, much better position for whatever reasons.
I look at what I did for them.
I can't say a single one of them had anything to do with the supplement recommendation to
them.
By the way, a lot of the myths that are not that are like training and nutrition myths
Have the roots in the same myth that we're talking about right now
So for example the anabolic window
Right after you work out you got to consume protein and carbs because it really speeds up the recovering a build muscle and if you if you don't
Eat or feed yourself within that anabolic window. You're missing out on all these gains
Why do you think they push that so hard?
Because right after your workout,
the easiest, most convenient way to get protein and carbs
is to have a shake.
Yeah.
That's why.
Not only that, but they'll sell the window so hard
that then it becomes the faster you could absorb.
Right.
That's also the same hysteria that caused people
to think that they're just going to lose muscle right away from fasting. Yes hysteria that caused people to like think that they're
just going to lose muscle right away from fasting.
Yes, you know, it's like, like how do you make money out of fasting?
Oh my God, yeah, exactly.
And they found ways like, oh, do BCAs while you fast?
Right.
Shit.
And it's like, what are we doing here?
You know, we're just trying to sell you some shit.
With the small, the, the small meals throughout throughout the day Part of that is in that some bodybuilders eight six thousand calories a day good luck doing that in just three meals right
But a big part of it a large part of the reason why it was pushed on everybody is if I'm telling the I used to do this
As a trainer I said teach my clients this because I thought this was true. Oh, yeah
You tell the average person who's consuming
1800 or 2500 calories You tell the average person who's consuming 1,800 or 2,500 calories or less, especially
less, hey, you need to eat six small meals throughout the day and they have a job, a family,
they work out three days a week.
Yes, but three of those meals are going to consist of a bar or a shake.
Of course they push that because it's sold more supplements, it's sold more of that stuff.
Pre-workout. Pre-workout, okay?
Pre-workout was a category that did not exist.
That shit didn't exist when I was lifting.
Nobody fucking talked about how important it was
to have special amino acids and things before your workout.
Some of us had coffee before we worked out.
That's what we did.
It's funny you point to coffee
because I think that part of the creation of it
was the rise of Starbucks.
The rise of Starbucks and coffee becoming something
that are ritual that everybody in the world does now.
It wasn't like that before.
Not everybody drank coffee,
like everybody drinks coffee today.
Only like really angry old men.
Right, and so when that also,
now when the whole world
is used to having 70 to 150 milligrams of caffeine every single day and then you got to go to a
workout four or five six hours later in your day and your energy levels aren't quite there anymore
because you're constantly fucking hammering your system with cash. And you know how you can affect
your body to get you on a high again. Right. It's like, ooh, well, it has what I like from this.
It has more of it in here.
Well, what they did was is they ritualized the supplement.
Like, if you could ritualize the supplement
and make it a part of someone's ritual,
so they, okay, here's a thing,
what do we know to be true of all people that work out?
Okay, based on the statement that I just said,
so the sentence I just said was,
what do you know to be true of everybody that works out? They all work out. They work out. So if I want to sell a supplement
to everybody that works out. It's got a tiny new workout. Let me ritualize it to the workout.
Oh, I know. We've already we've already sold everybody on the post workout window. So that's gone.
Bro, some of us are so let's come up with the pre workout. Bro, some of us are so gangster.
They've seen before I go to bed. And Intra and a post now, dude, cuz they ritualized
It's exactly you know works. Oh, they're done. You should see all my bodybuilder buddies
It fucking work care like care in their big duffel bagway than there's like their hour to half workout
There's like three stopping periods of taking your pre taking your intro and taking your posts
It's like oh my god. Are you kidding me? It was brilliant, it's brilliant marketing, but yeah, a lot of the myths that you get kind
of come from that.
And here's the bottom line, and this has always been true.
This will always be true.
If you eat right according to your body and your goals, if you exercise properly, that's
a big one, by the way, For some reason, the last 10 years,
we've completely negated the effects
of a good properly programmed workout.
All of a sudden it became just fucking,
just workout really doesn't matter,
it's all about the supplement.
No, no, no, no, the workout makes a big, big difference
into the half of the equation.
And you have good sleep.
That's like everything.
If you focus all your energy on those three things,
you're gonna get phenomenal results.
Phenomenal results.
Well, and also too, from the training perspective,
I'm always, I could point out that's a myth,
but just because the claims that are attached
to one style of training or one equipment,
piece of advice, like a device that they're trying
to sell you on an infomercial,
they're trying to tell you, it infomercial, they're trying to tell you it does everything, you know,
and all that's pure bullshit.
You know what, can you Justin make a note here to do this?
I actually would love to do this
because on this topic, have Shannon design a pie chart.
Of the importance of everything.
And let's do, let's put it on the nutrition program.
I know, and let's create a nice graphic like that
that we can post on the main page
and then we'll stir up some shit.
We can get it.
Get some good conversation around that.
All right, next question is from Sokali Jets Girl.
What are your thoughts on at home fitness programs such as those developed and marketed by
Beach Body?
You know, it's cool.
We're just going to roast everybody here.
Did you bake these salads? It's almost're just gonna roast everybody. Well, here.
Did you bake these salad?
It's almost a bit in a mood this morning, dude.
He's like, let's fuck some shit up today.
Yeah.
You guys can turn it over.
Actually, I would say, I think that beach body
is our direct competitor.
So, and I think quietly, we've always thought about this
from the day we started.
When we, when we, when this thing actually got legs, it started to turn into a real business.
And we looked at our space and thought, you know, who, who can we do this better than
that's doing it currently right now and making a lot of money.
And I think of beach body right away.
Like, I don't think of all these other small fish in the sea that are other trainers
that are trying to sell good programs.
I don't look at them as competitors.
I see beach body owning a massive part of the pie
in at home programming and programs in general
that are completely designed around the person
and their marketing, which is the same thing
bodybuilding.com did.
So I look at bodybuilding.com and beachody as our closest direct competitors of what we did.
And that's what we knew we had a lot of opportunity because those companies are making millions
and millions of dollars.
They're marketing behemoths.
And the thing is they've figured out the formulas that really people respond to the most.
And they play off of all those different insecurities, like to the T.
And most of their instructors, I mean, in my opinion,
it feels a lot more like group X instructors, like an aerobic type based programming
for all the way across the board, even some of their body building type programming
that they throw out there.
So if you know, prove me wrong,
but for me, it's always seen that they cater
to people love like inexperience
and they wanna be able to feel things
like a burn and a sweat.
And so they wanna cater to that.
And so they're giving the consumer what they want,
not what they need.
It's the same thing that Sal talks about with processed foods.
All the energy and effort put into the product, right?
Put into beach body is all around the look, the smell, the taste.
You know, that is everything about it.
And the actual substance of it is shit.
It's the processed food of programming.
No, it's exactly what it is.
It's exact, and they've done an incredible job.
It's sliced American cheese.
Yeah.
Easy cheese.
Easy cheese.
You know what?
It's not good.
Yeah, it's a cheese.
It's not good.
It's a cheese.
It's not good.
It's not good.
It's a cheese.
Okay, the question is, what do we think about those programs?
Here's what we think about those programs.
We literally looked at it and said, oh shit, here's an opportunity.
Yeah, oh yeah.
Yeah.
They're so, let's do this.
They're so terribly, terribly programmed.
Like a personal trainer who just started at a big box gym
will put together oftentimes a workout that's better
than the ones that are on.
These are all the workouts are, are make your sweat,
make it fun, make your sore, we're done.
Oh, it's got to look cool.
We're gonna have a cool person.
We're gonna have a rip person teaching you
Yeah, and that's pretty much it. Good looking instructor hype music around it. Totally
All-barred and the problem is it's like you'll see a lot of people getting benefit and result because they weren't doing anything before that
You know, it's like at the end of the day a shitty program that you're gonna do consistently is better than not doing something
You're moving. Yeah, but like you'll see a lot of testimonials, results,
things like that, and it may be,
but they don't know any different.
No.
You know what, here's a deal.
You want to save your money.
Let's say you're like, hey, you know, it's still moving.
I'm still moving, but you want to save some money.
Here's what you do.
Keep your TV off and just do jumping jacks for 45 minutes.
Same exact.
You're going to get the same results.
It's terrible exercise programming,
designed to attract the consumer
who wants something that looks cool and looks fun.
And so they'll theme them like,
this is cowboy fitness and this is urban fitness
and this is military style fitness.
And then they throw in some exercises
nobody's seen before and here do this weird thing
that looks like.
Hula hoop girl workout.
Who should we select to do this program?
And they'll have a lineup of trainers
like that guy looks the best.
He's hot.
He's ripped.
Let's put him in there.
That's gonna totally work.
And guess what?
It does for my marketing standpoint.
They sell you a lot, but no, this is 100, it's funny.
When we first met, when we started, mine pump,
this is one of the topics that we had,
one of the topics of conversation, we sat down
and we were all like, the programs that are out there,
that people are, but you know what,
good programs are out there?
I'll tell you what, there are good fitness programs out there,
but here's what they are.
They're all designed for power lifters and strength,
like hardcore strength, that would be.
We're the West side, we're the best.
Yeah, those are the only power,
the programs that I look at.
And I go, oh yeah, that's because they're literally the money
and time goes into designing the program.
Well, it's the only one that has like real measurables
that you can look back and go like it worked or it didn't work.
That's right.
Because if you take somebody, everybody that's listening right now,
has shoulders, has biceps, has chest, has abs, has legs, and a lot of us have layers of body fat over that.
If I put them on a calorie restricted diet, make them move for 45 minutes.
Indiscriminately, by the way.
Yes. Any movement.
Any movement.
Flail your arms around, and I make you do that for three to five times a week.
Okay, and we look at you before and after six months later,
you will look lean and you'll look muscular
because you got rid of all the body fat
that was covering all the muscles you already had.
So it's not hard, it's not hard to fool people
in a thinking that it's a great program.
But if you're a power lifter
and you've never power lifte before
and you've got your first meat in six months and you buy said program.
You buy, yeah, you buy freaking P90X.
Yeah, I'm gonna go compete with you.
Right, right.
And you buy one of these shit programs.
Oh, I love this.
And you follow it for six months
and then you show up
and you get your ass handed to you.
You're like, when I first started,
I used to be able to squat 200 no.
Nice one.
I'm 218.
Yeah, I squat 180 now.
That's exactly what I'm doing.
So you're right. So I mean, those are be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. Yeah, I'm just going to be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. Yeah, I'm just going to be one of those.
Yeah, I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those.
I'm just going to be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. I'm just going to be one of those. We can actually create just really good programs for the average consumer. The average gym goer that wants to feel better, look better, move better, we can create
programs for them and actually just create really solid programs.
There's a great example in BeachbodyBodyBilling.com for us because these companies are making millions
of millions of dollars off of all these people that don't know better.
If we can come in with a better, smarter message and we can find a way to capture a large enough audience,
we can provide a product that's 10 times more superior than that.
Yeah, and a big part of the problem of this is what they're known as the unseen. And so what the
unseen is, hey, I followed Beachbody's workouts and I ate less calories.
And I look way better than I used to.
The problem is they don't know,
they don't have anything they can compare it to
because what they don't know is what they would
look like had they did it right and how they would have felt.
And the longevity of the progress that they're getting.
They don't know what they're comparing it to.
They're just comparing it to,
before when I did nothing and ate too much food,
which yeah, it's better than that.
But barely makes me want to create a mountain body program, you know what I mean?
Next question is from Zenia Rador.
In episode 1034, you briefly talked about the importance of influencing people to change
their behavior in regards to health and fitness instead of just focusing on facts.
Can you share some
strategies for behavior change?
No, the first thing that comes to mind is, and I thought we talked about this in that
episode, I don't remember if we did or not.
But when it comes to behavioral change in people, a lot of times when you're addicted to
something or you have bad behaviors, you are connecting the dots to one thing.
This makes me feel good, therefore I do it all the time.
This makes me look to certain ways, therefore I do it all the time.
We can talk about anything.
It's not just fitness and nutrition.
You can talk about drugs the same way.
When you get high, you feel good.
All I think about is the high.
I don't think about what's going on inside of my body?
Or how am I going to feel tomorrow?
And how's my heart because of that?
Like, my friendships, I'm early.
Yeah, right.
There's so many other thing, variables that are being affected
that you don't.
And so when you have a bad behavior or you have an addiction
or something, you've normally attached yourself
to one variable only.
And that's what you live. So one of the keys to changing behavior in clients is teaching them to
connect to all the other variables that are so important for their success. And when you talk about
health and longevity, you talk about the things like hair and stool and relationships and energy and sleep and
strength and skin.
There's so many other things that nutrition and exercise, joint health, mobility, these
things are all affected by the way we exercise the way we eat.
If we can find ways to help our clients make those connections when they do whatever it
is they do, whether it's a food
choice or an exercise or the lack of exercise choice.
If you can help to start to connect those dots for them and have them to focus on it,
reframe the way they look at it, they think about it and they feel about it, then it's
much easier to help them make the behavioral change.
You're helping them become more aware or bring more awareness around the activity.
Here's another, here's two big things.
One is if you're trying to help someone positively
with a behavior that they're having a challenge over,
start out by being vulnerable, okay?
People are far more likely to accept
or listen to the advice or feedback
from someone they relate to versus someone
they don't relate to.
And oftentimes as a trainer, this client views you
as this super rare.
Flalas.
Yeah, flawless fitness, adonis or God.
Like you're just a special type of person
and this is why.
They're not wrong.
It's easy for you.
This is why it's easy for you to eat right.
This is why it's easy for you to eat right. This is why it's easy for you to exercise
because you're totally different from me.
So you have to be vulnerable to this person
and talk about your own challenges
with all of these things and other things.
That makes a huge, that took me a long time to learn that.
I used to think I had to present myself
like as like this super fitness being.
And I realized later on like if I was just honest with people
and presented my vulnerability,
they would relate to me better,
and then they would be more vulnerable
and then open the door.
Here's the second thing.
Be start out by being empathetic to the challenges
that these people have.
Just because their behavior is so simple and easy
for you to identify and to fix, doesn't mean it's easy for them.
And I learned this later on.
I had a client who was a super, super successful entrepreneur.
I trained him when I was, I don't know,
I think it was like 23 or 24.
And this guy was worth, I don't know, hundreds of millions
of dollars.
And I remember I used to love training him
because I would ask him about business.
And of course, I was his trainer, so I would help him with with fitness and nutrition and he had these 30 pounds that he had to lose
And you wanted to get stronger and it was a tough thing for him like I trained him for a long time
And it was a tough thing and one day we're having this conversation and I'm like, you know, I told him I said John
I said
What are this just give me the steps to becoming as successful as you.
And he says, Sally goes, I've already told you the steps.
He goes, they are very simple.
If you literally just follow those steps,
the odds that you'll be far more successful
monetarily than you are now are super, super high.
And at that moment when I heard that, I started laughing.
And he's like, why are you laughing?
And I said, it's funny because five minutes ago,
you asked me the same question about nutrition and fitness.
And I've been training for a year, and it's been very difficult.
And I just realized that it's the same thing.
The difference is fitness and health comes easy to me.
And to me, it seems so simple.
To you, it's a difficult, difficult challenge.
Becoming extremely successful monetarily
is like fitness for me, it's very easy for you.
But for me, it looks like this insurmountable challenge.
Crazy algorithm.
And I just realized that it's no different.
All I gotta do is follow the steps and apply myself.
And just like you, if you follow the steps
and apply yourself, we'll get much more fit
and lose the 30 pounds and get much more healthy.
If I apply the same steps that you told me,
I will probably be far more successful
than I am now, monetarily.
And so it really got me to, you know,
just to feel empathy for people like, okay.
Cause you get frustrated as a trainer,
like you tell your client, don't drink soda,
and the fuck are drink soda.
And you're like, just fucking listen to me, man,
it's super easy. You gotta empathize with that. It seems so simple. Yeah, and the fuck are drink soda. And you're like, just fucking listen to me, man, it's super easy.
You gotta empathize with that.
It seems so simple.
Yeah, and here's the thing too.
I mean, you definitely wanna keep to, in terms of having that objective truth, like having
that still there, and I've had conversations, but you want them to bring that to you. Like, in terms of like, like even taking objective information,
like, you know, weight and body fat and these types of things
where, you know, we could, we could talk about the behaviors
that led into this, but it's like, I'm still
gonna present you with the facts.
Like, you know, you're, you have, you being at this body fat
percentage is not a healthy range.
And I have to be able to convey that information to you.
It'd be a more ideal if we were to work in this direction.
And I know it's a tough path to get there,
but the behavior is really where we're going to stress.
That's what we need to change in order to get you there.
I think that a lot of times we're,
I know going through that, you try and avoid
like sometimes being like, yeah, you're unhealthy,
you're fat, like as a trainer,
like you don't wanna like tell your clients,
like you always wanna bring the positives into the mix,
but sometimes it's worth a conversation
to just be real honest and be like, yeah,
like we're still in this range, we got work to do,
but let's talk
about it. Let's talk about the behaviors that are happening, leading in this direction.
Yeah, here's the other thing too. I made this mistake early on too. Sometimes constantly
pushing someone in a direction makes it take longer for them to finally move in that direction.
Something I learned later on is I had to make them think it was their idea.
So I used to, the way I used to train people, they come in, I want to lose 30 pounds,
I want it, whatever, and I'd fucking give them, okay, here's what you're gonna do.
You're gonna eat this way, you're gonna work out, you're gonna buy it, and I do,
I give them everything. And then I'd hammer them to do what I told them,
and if they didn't do it at Hammerhammore, and if they did it great job,
and the success rate was low, sure I had people lose weight and get better shape, but nobody stayed that way.
Later on, what I would do is I would start real slow. People come in, okay, I want to lose 30 pounds,
like, tell me exactly what to eat. Oh, hold on a second. Here's what we're gonna do. I'm gonna help you with exercise,
and then I train them, and I talk them out of it. And then what would end up happening is they come up to me,
be like, hey, I'm cutting sugar out of my diet.
I'm like, oh, that's awesome.
It's, what else can I do?
And I'm like, well, try this one thing.
Once they started to come to me for some of the stuff,
it became permanent.
It became permanent change.
Now, here's the deal.
You have to know this as a trainer.
Sometimes it takes a long ass time.
I had clients that I trained for 10 years,
who wanted to lose, you know, 30 pounds, for example.
I had one guy I trained for,
I ended up training this guy for 10 years.
Do you know how long I took him to lose 30 pounds?
Three years.
Took him three years to lose it.
Now, to be quite honest, it actually took him
less than six months to lose it,
but it was the last six months of the three years.
It finally clicked.
And I didn't ham room the whole time.
He knew what he was at.
He knew where I stood.
I'd given the information, no problem.
But we worked on all these small things.
And then finally, it was his idea.
Okay, that's it, Sal.
I'm ready now.
I'm ready to do this.
And he started making these changes because we had discussed them and talked about them.
And he just planted seeds constantly.
And it became permanent.
Some of the things you have to do too, to that point, sell your making,
I think is really good, is when I would give clients,
like, for example, like one of the things
I'm just talking to somebody about the other day
about trying to help improve or sleep,
she has anxiety, she doesn't sleep very well.
And, you know, so I've told her to,
you know, pull off the electronics at least two hours
before she goes to bed,
if not put on some sort of blue blocker classes, if she's to be on her computer or watching TV. And then when they do it,
so it's one thing to get them to do a small behavioral change like that. The next thing that I have
to keep doing is like, hey, asking about the sleep and asking about their energy today and how they
felt when they went to bed and like when they woke up and you got to kind of keep prodding at the
other things that relate to it.
Remember, this person's ultimate goal is to lose 10 pounds of body fat.
Here I am addressing something that there isn't their primary goal.
When people have a goal like that and they're looking at something like the scale, like losing
10 pounds, and they're trying things like wearing blue blocker glasses or turning off their electronics before they go to bed
so they can get better sleep,
so they then can maybe bounce out their hormones better.
They're all they're looking at is the scale,
and if it's not responding the way they want to,
they automatically will dismiss some things
not realizing what's going on,
and so that helps too,
as you implement these small behavioral changes,
is you gotta keep reinforcing the other things that you want them to focus on and look at. that helps too is as you implement the small behavioral changes,
is you gotta keep reinforcing the other things
that you want them to focus on and look at.
It's a big picture.
Yeah, other than just the one main goal
of losing body fat or building muscle,
is constantly paying attention to energy level,
skin, hair, sleep, stool, all these other things.
And obviously, stool is not really so much affected
with the electronics things, but whatever it is
that you're telling them as far as a new behavior,
pay attention to those other things
that that should be affecting,
and make sure that you're helping connect those dots.
You keep reinforcing that,
before long they should go,
hey, you know what, you're right, I noticed that.
You know why?
Because I forgot, and I was on my computer last night,
really late, it was the first time I had done that in two two weeks and it was the worst sleep I got all night. And they
start going, now they start to notice it themselves because you've helped make that connection.
So you do got to kind of have to do that a lot.
And that's when the weight loss becomes the side effect of all those amazing things.
You almost have to have a checklist of all these different things that you just constantly
are bringing up and finding out. Like that's part of the conversation. That's part of training is really just listening,
you know, listening to what they're doing, like outside of training and all the lifestyle,
like things are involved with that will, like contribute towards either their success or what's holding
them back. Exactly. Look, go to mindpumpfree.com and download our guides. They're all absolutely free.
Also, you can find us all on Instagram.
Justin is on Mind Pump.
Justin, I'm at Mind Pump Sal.
And Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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