Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1058: Ideal Rest Time Between Sets, How to Spot a Bogus Study, Morning Neck Pain Solutions & MORE
Episode Date: June 21, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by MAPS Fitness Products (www.mapsfitnessproducts.com), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the best rest time in between sets for building muscle, w...hat to do if you wake up with a kink in your neck or sore shoulders, how to tell whether a study is BS or not, and if the NBA should implement measures to limit injuries like Kevin Durant's and Klay Thompson's at the end of the season. Mind Pump tells all! Old and current significant others beware. (4:38) Once you go Felix Gray, you can’t go back. (10:18) Summer is here, it’s grilling season! Time to stock up that Butcher Box inventory. (16:32) Justin is looking for some ‘quality meat’ for the MAPS Programs & MORE. Slide into the DM’s if you live and breathe fitness. (21:00) Calling all male physique athletes and aspiring competitors: STOP it with the supplements! (23:00) How chronic inflammation makes you less motivated. (34:23) The importance of changing the atmosphere. Updates on the guy's current fitness programming. (36:04) Scientists have developed an ingenious way to convert blood into a universal donor type. (40:45) Facebook introduces Project Libra: The future is here! (42:56) #Quah question #1 – What is the best rest time in between sets for building muscle? (46:43) #Quah question #2 – If you wake up with a kink in your neck or sore shoulders, is it ok to prime and workout through the soreness? If the soreness is turning into pain, is it better to stop? (53:21) #Quah question #3 – How can you tell whether a study is BS or not? With so many contradictory studies, how can you tell what to believe? (1:02:31) #Quah question #4 – With both Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson going down with serious injuries at about the same time at the end of the season, do you think these injuries are due to overuse and lack of recovery? Do you think the NBA could or should put measures on these things from happening such as shorter playing seasons, etc.? (1:11:49) People Mentioned 4x Mr. Olympia Physique Champ (@jeremy_buendia) Instagram Mark Bell (@marksmellybell) Instagram Scott Stevenson (@fortitude_training) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Cory Schlesinger (@schlesstrength) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS Strong ½ off!! **Code “STRONG50” at checkout** Visit Felix Gray for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Butcher Box for this month’s exclusive Mind Pump offer! Check out Mind Pump Live to get tickets for their next live event! If interested in shooting to be featured in upcoming MAPS program or product – Email Justin Andrews: justin@mindpumpmedia.com How chronic inflammation may drive down dopamine and motivation These gut enzymes could save lives by converting Type A blood to Type O
Transcript
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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 super duper awesome episode of The Mind Pump.
It's up, ass.
Look, for the first 43 minutes, we talk about random current events and fun stuff.
And then we get into the fitness portion of this episode.
Here's what we talked about.
We start out by talking about back seat drivers
and how annoying they are.
And I'm sorry, honey, I talked about some stuff
you do when we drive.
We talked about Felix Gray, blue blocking glasses.
These are our blue blockers of choice.
They don't turn everything orange and yellow.
They're clear, they look good, and yet they still block the blue light that can prevent
you from sleeping good, or from damaging your eyes or causing headaches when you work
and for a new computer.
So here's what you do.
Go to Felix Gray that's F-E-L-I-X-G-R-A-Y glasses.com, Fort slash Mind Pump,
and you'll get free shipping and free returns.
Then we talked about Justin's Karnasada.
I, I, I, I.
Sounds like a cool dance he does.
He made it with a butcher box meat,
which is grass fed, high quality meat,
sent to your door, the best quality meat that I've found,
and for the best prices.
Oh, and by the way, if you sign up for Butcher Box now,
you're gonna get bacon forever.
That's right, bacon for life, crazy promotion.
Here's what you do, go to butcherbox.com,
forward slash mind pump, sign up,
you'll get the bacon for life,
and that's basically free bacon,
every single box, for the life of your subscription. Oh, and you get $ bacon for life. And that's basically free bacon every single box
for the life of your subscription.
Oh, and you get $20 off your first box too.
I think they're losing their minds.
Then we talked about how Justin is looking for
some meat sent to him in his email.
He's actually looking for male models.
Sliding me to the hands, you know.
We need some.
Huge please.
No, we need some male models for our upcoming maps,
programs and guides.
If you're fit, functional, you got good mobility,
and you don't mind coming to the San Jose area.
And enhance them, okay, come on.
Contact Justin.
Then we talked about a,
a, a, a, a,
we talked about an unknown pro physique competitors,
insane supplement stack.
Shhh.
It's, he doesn't take all those supplements.
He doesn't even listen.
He's full of shit.
Then I talked about a study talking about chronic inflammation and motivation, how chronic
motivation reduces dopamine, which is probably why when you're inflamed.
You feel like doing nothing.
We gave our workout updates.
You want to guess who's giving the best workouts?
It's me.
Then we talked about how gut bacteria is turning blood
into typo.
This is a breakthrough, kind of crazy.
It sounds like magic.
Adam talked about new cryptocurrency from Facebook.
That's crazy.
Oh, and by the way, our live event in Denver,
which was coming up, is now sold out.
But we still have tickets available for San Francisco
and Seattle.
Just go to myimpumpalive.com to get your tickets to meet us live.
Then we get into the fitness portion of this episode. The first question, what's the best
rest time between sets for building muscle? You'll be surprised with the answer in that part of this
episode. Next question, if you wake up with a kink in your neck or your shoulders, is it okay to
prime and work out through the
soreness or should you just not move?
May have been that kinky stuff.
Next question, how can you tell whether a study is BS or not?
Like how can you find the right studies to pay attention to and how can you find the wrong
studies that you should ignore?
And the final question, this person is talking about Kevin Durant and Clay Thompson,
both going down with serious injuries. Is it the trainer's fault? Do we blame the NBA?
Like we have a nice discussion here about sports ball and all the injuries that have
been in the game. It sounds like a real like ESPN sports.
And that's amazing. In that great. Also, this month month our most effective muscle building, strength building,
metabolism boosting program, MAP strong.
This is a program designed, it's different than your traditional body building type workouts.
It's hard, but you can do it in a gym.
It is awesome.
Extremely effective.
Listen, it's 50% off.
Half off this month only.
Here's what you do to sign up.
Go to mapsstrong.com
MAPS STRLNG.com and use the code strong 50 STRLNG 50 for the discount. Make sure you do
it now. Justin and I were serenading Rachel this morning. Wow. We were. That's, uh, we
missed our third wheel. trying to get someone to quit
What's going on she said I actually had a she appreciated it fantastic. You're boss too
It's harmony yeah, it's funny. I give her a raise right after that. I don't know
I know South says your voice is to you know, it's a good thing gets recorded on the podcast and you can hear yourself and you know
I feel like it's got better though.
You know, like he is pitch, you know, it's increased.
Lessons are pain off.
Lessons are pain off.
No, I think it's funny.
I think it's some, my ex, my, I've never talked crap about her about her right now.
Not in the dressing room.
No, bro, like for actually for the first few years I was married to her, I thought that she was pretending. Yeah, you know what I mean? So she would sing a song
Yeah, and I think like oh, she's just trying to sound like you know some people make fun of voices and stuff
And I thought for sure she was pretending and I remember like a few a few years into our marriage
She was singing and I kind of laughed. Yeah, and she's like why are you laughing? I'm like, who's you know the way you're saying?
You messed around right?
That's right. I'm like the way you're singing. What do you mean you're making fun of me? I'm like, could you know the way you're saying? You mess around, right? Not the way you're saying it.
I'm like, the way you're saying,
you're saying, what do you mean?
You're making fun of me?
And I'm like, and then a dawn on me.
Oh wow, that's how terrible I am.
I'm trying hard.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the idea.
Dude, that's so funny.
That reminds me of a girlfriend had,
and thankfully Courtney's like, she could pass,
but like, this girl before that,
we drive these long drives,
because she went to Cal Poly.
And as we're driving home, I hear something on the radio,
like weezer or something like say a name, so it comes on.
And I start saying in, we're all having a good time.
And then she's saying like, hey, name so.
Like really, like just like off and all over the place.
And I was like, was that serious?
Like were you really trying there?
We should tell old girlfriend stories, dude.
I was thinking that reminds me,
I've dated this girl who,
I just, I've just thinking of like long drives.
And I remember, some of those are fun.
I remember the first time she ever drove us
somewhere this girl had dated Hemena.
And she would fucking break check.
Like, you ever been with someone who does that like?
Oh my God. Hard, like someone who could be like a half a mile in front of you
and their lights go on and they bring kill hard you're doing like 65 70 in the
fast lane and they see they see the car in front like just the lights come on
and then they break check every single time. Oh my god drive me crazy. We are on our way
to I think we went to a a Warriors game it was like in I don't know like an hour commute during what one of these weekdays
Man, I remember I'll remember thinking to after that
I was like I will never go anywhere with that girl get dry
That's the whole time like my palms are all sweating from
I've had that little they're in the passenger seat and they see things like happening, you know, 50 hundred yards away
And they're things like happening, you know, 50, 100 yards away and they're like, whoa, my God, you're gonna stab him.
Like grab my arm, like, what's going on?
I'm slowing down.
It is, okay, that's every time I drive.
Yeah.
Is that, is that, is that infuriate you?
Like it infuriates me?
Because he's like, calm down.
Here's, yeah, you're driving and then they freak out
and then it instantly causes you to get that visceral reaction.
Oh, absolutely.
And then you're like, what?
All this time.
Where the fuck up there? Hit the brakes?
Yeah.
You guys are riding the bike over there.
Everybody calm down.
Like everybody needs a relax.
Jessica does not like it that I hit my brakes
and she's gonna disagree with me when she hears this.
Appropriately.
No, no, I gotta hit the brakes.
Where the fuck before the car is gonna slow?
So she's like, don't watch the brake.
I'm like, listen,
we got way ahead of time.
Oh, she does that.
Yeah, I was crazy.
She's a backseat driver.
I guarantee she's listening right now, angry,
because she's like, no, you don't hit him.
Hey, one more time, you're riding in the trunk.
That's it.
We've got to fight over it.
Oh, I bet.
Yeah, because I'll get mad at her,
and she'll tell me I don't drive you right.
I think I can't.
I can't. I can't. I can't. I can and then she'll tell me I don't a driving right I think I already doesn't have pedals like you know
Maybe when you're in drivers ed and and then the other person like the instructor next to you had pedals
She pushes the floor dude that used to do that she stomps at one point when I was I remember I was driving on one of those
Getting my hours in and I was driving through town in capitol and there was a stop sign like happening like maybe
20 yards for me and so I've started to slowly slow down and then she stops on it.
And we stopped like 10 yards away from even where I should have stopped where the line was.
And I was like, what was that?
You weren't even paying attention.
I'm like, of course I was paying attention.
I was gradually slowing down.
And so after that, I didn't even put my foot on the brake.
I'll just wait, are you gonna brake?
I didn't pass that my foot on the break. I'll just wait, are you gonna break? I didn't pass that day.
Oh my God.
She didn't mark me off as like hours.
That's a layer of what a joke.
I wanted to keep that.
Katrina's pretty good.
She every once in a while, she'll do the, you know,
scream out loud or get freaked out
because she see something that maybe I didn't see
or I saw it, I just didn't, wasn't scared of it.
I saw it coming.
But what she does really well is that after she does that,
she knows it, because I probably have a look on my face,
like a real irritated look, wait, after she does that,
because it does, it tenses you up.
Bad.
Right, really bad.
And then I'll look over at her,
especially when it's not that big of a deal,
you know, it's like, oh, you saw some guy,
some cyclist, two blocks up, or whatever.
She normally immediately goes like, I'm sorry, sorry,
I just, Oh no, driving is a point of tension for for Jessica and I like she she'll like to put her foot up
on the dash she's real flexible right so she likes to peter and I tell her I said do you know
what would happen yeah yeah I'm like if we crashed and the airbag came out and your foot was on top
of there do you know where your foot would end up your leg you would end up with your hip would end
up with next to your ear.
Don't put your feet up and she's like,
well then don't look at your phone.
I'm like, but I'm a stoplight and then we argue.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm a day in the life right now.
Yeah.
That's all, that's all I think we all have that.
Anyway, so you know, I was at home the other day
and I couldn't find my Felix Grae's
and I had this old pair of blue blockers.
And so I put them on and it made me realize like those other blue blockers
suck.
They're fucking the orange tint that they have.
You can't see.
It just starts everything.
Watching TV is a pain in the ass in them because everything then turns orange.
Can you explain the difference that because we actually just, I just got a DM and I promised
that I would, I would look it up and I reached out to Rachel.
I actually think she sent something over to me
and I didn't get a chance to open it about that
because I've gotten messages before.
Why is it these blue blockers don't have orange lenses?
Well, the way that the less, I should say,
the less quality or the cheaper type of blue blocker glasses
work is they use like a
really heavy yellow or orange-ish tint that will block blue light.
So that's how they block the blue light.
They have this really, really heavy tint.
So you put them on the really, they're the really dorky orange looking glasses where the
whole world looks orange because you're blocking out the blue light.
But the way that Felix Gray works and the reason why they're blowing up is
they develop this proprietary lens that uses this pigment that's naturally occurring in
human eyes, and they're able to integrate them into the lens that blocks the blue light
but doesn't change the color of what you're seeing.
So Felix Gray's got two types of glasses, right?
They have the daytime ones and the nighttime ones.
The daytime ones block out a decent portion
of the blue light that you're gonna get from electronics,
but not too much.
And what I mean by that is you wanna block out
a lot of blue light when you're getting ready for bed,
but you don't wanna block out all the blue light
when you're up, because then it tells your brain to fall asleep. In fact, if you wear really,
really powerful blue blockers all day long, you'll find that you're kind of sleepy throughout the day.
So their daytime ones are designed for day use. They're designed to be able to work on a computer,
avoid eye strain, avoid headaches, avoid some of the damaging effects of blue light without
making you feel like you're going to fall asleep. The nighttime ones are the strong ones that block out more of the blue light.
Those are the ones that tell your brain that you're, you know, it's time to get ready
for bed.
Those are the ones I use mostly because I'm not on a computer every single day when I
am or the daytime ones, but at night I wear the stronger ones to tell my brain.
I've got the habit of wearing the daytime ones a lot. In fact, someone messaged on one of my Instagram posts where I wear them stronger ones to tell my brain. I've got the habit of wearing the daytime ones a lot.
In fact, someone messaged on one of my Instagram posts
because I wear them quite often now.
Anytime that we're good, too.
Yeah, well, they're stylish.
And the fact if I'm working, I'm always on my phone.
I'm like staring at, to me, that strains my eyes more.
Anything is staring at that little screen.
That's worse than even the computer or the TV I feel like.
So I try and always now, I mean, I'm not wearing them right now. We're not on computers with that, but I've
got them with me. And when we sit down and if I start doing work on my phone or the computer,
I'll put them on in the daytime and I'll wear them all day. When the sun goes down, I switch
over to my dark ones.
I got to get better at that. Yeah, because I've, you know, stopped the habit of even wearing
my glasses, like when I'm reading my phone and when I'm on the computer
and my eyes, like even just reading the screen here
in the studio, like I can't like really make it out
very well anymore either.
Well, you actually didn't you order just recently
the prescription ones didn't you?
Yeah, I'm waiting for that to come in.
I can't wait because then, you know,
I can get maybe a little bit less of the eye strain
from the blue light specifically and also like,
because I need, I need glasses, dude,
I have to like admit that I'm old and fucking my eyes are shitty.
You guys see that they're also,
they're making them for kids now.
Yes, that's so cool.
So here's the crazy thing, I remember,
see, I was like three years ago when people were talking
about, you know, wearing glasses to block blue light.
And, you know, three, four years ago,
I thought it was hokey,
like whatever, stupid, I don't know where glasses, whatever.
But then the science was coming out
and like the melatonin production alone
can be cut down by more than half
by because you're being exposed to blue light
before going to bed.
Simply wearing blue light blocking glasses
will dramatically in some cases, increase your
melatonin production by something like 90%.
Now, why is that important?
Well, melatonin is a hormone produced when you're sleep,
it's anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory,
it's essential for quality sleep, it's an essential hormone.
Now, children, I would surmise or even more susceptible
to just like they are to anything else. They're just more sensitive
And kids nowadays are on electronics all the damn bar did with so I give my kids adult
I have the adult Felix Grace didn't have the kids ones so my kids were the big ones
Whenever they're watching TV or whatever at night. That's great. So not that kids. Yeah, dude
It's important because kids are on these fucking they're only screens all the time. Yeah. And here's the thing, it's not, some people don't go to sleep. But you may be one
of these people that get, goes to sleep and wakes up and is like, I don't, I don't need
to worry about blue light. I go to sleep. You don't realize that there's a difference
between quality sleep and just regular sleep. And you don't notice the difference until
you experience quality sleep.
And then you wake up and you go,
oh, that's different.
Like, I feel way more rested, way different
than, you know, how I did before.
Just still that, like, that subtle subconscious
alertness, like, you know, you realize it's still there
like before you turn asleep.
It reminds me of, like, when I would take a client
and I'd have them clean up their diet,
and then they would go eat out with their friends
and eat shitty food or whatever
and be like, and then they'd come back and be like,
man, I felt terrible after eating that pizza.
Like, you know, why did I feel so bad eating that pizza?
I'm like, that's how you used to always feel.
You just didn't realize it
because you were always in that state.
So I think people have such,
I think we're chronically,
we have just chronic terrible sleep most people.
Even just because you knock yourself out, because you're, you know, taking a sleeping pillar
because you're so exhausted that you fall asleep, doesn't mean you have quality sleep.
There's a big difference.
And trust me, when you start experiencing the other side, way different.
And I bet you that bad sleep is probably for a lot of people, one of the major reasons
why they feel anxious or depressed.
Like, I know I do.
If I don't get good sleep, I start to notice
I'm feeling just irritable.
Oh, it bleeds into everything you're doing.
Yeah, everything.
Dude, you know I love about summer?
Grilling.
Like, I dude, outside it's finally like warm outside,
I can finally get in my element, dude.
I don't have like a real fancy one set up
like you Adam or anything.
Still, I run into little Weber. Are you using charcoal up like you Adam or anything. You know, it's still like running the little Weber.
Are you using charcoal or do you use the gas?
I charcoal.
Oh, just because the flavor though, right?
I don't know. There's something like...
Does that take a long time to set up and stuff though?
Yeah, it does. I have one of those coffee cans.
Yeah, whatever the fuck you call it.
But yeah, you put all the coals in there and then light it with the newspaper.
And I do it the old school way.
So I don't use a lot of lyre fluid or any of that kind of stuff. So what did you light it?
It's em, I'm an idiot that I don't really know what the hell is it
You light it and the whole can thing. How long does that take?
Yeah, so that probably takes maybe like five to minutes for it to you know
All the coals get nice and hot and then you put it in and they put the grill over the top and then I clean the grill and do that whole thing
That's it. Okay. Yeah, it's not bad. I'm gonna get a Weber.
It's super simple, dude.
I mean, you can take the things to the be-
Well, you should probably start with like a gas.
I do have gas.
Okay, that's what I use.
Gas is like just hit like, I don't know if you're ready.
I don't know if you're ready for the Weber.
Yeah, well, it tastes so much better.
Your hands get dirty, so that it does.
It does, it takes a little more skill though.
What you cook up.
So I got, so the flat iron steak from Butcherbox, they have-
I just ordered that dude
You know, it's great to do with that was like carne asada and I
Courtney had this idea of like
You know doing that and putting the marinade on it. So you know olive oil like garlic
Cloves like all kinds of long did you leave it in the marinade for we leave it in there for a couple hours
So she did that ahead of time and then I took it out. And so there's a few strips of it.
It wasn't like one big long.
So sometimes we'll go to the grocery store
and we'll get like a really flat,
you know, like skirt steak or something like that.
That's a big piece.
So it was nice.
It was actually there was a couple.
I had like three or four of them.
And then I took them out.
And then so what you do is you char both sides.
And it cooks pretty fast because it's a thin piece of meat.
Right, right. But dude, the flavor and everything and like it just like. What did you use it? you do is you char both sides. And it cooks pretty fast because it's a thin piece of meat.
But dude, the flavor and everything,
and it's just like, what did you use it?
I mean, did you just cut it up and eat it?
Raylor, did you mix it with anything?
Where would you?
Yeah, so when you cut it to,
you kind of cut it at a diagonal.
And then you kind of shave it off the top
and chop it down like that.
And then we just put it in tacos.
I was gonna say, yeah, so you did tacos.
Yeah, we did tacos and then did it.
You guys do this off to the heart. It's a personal question. Oh wow. Yeah.
It's a personal question. It's like 12. Yeah, I like it. I kind of like a soft and then it.
Yeah, start soft. Start soft. Yeah, I know where to record. Do you can't recover from that?
I can't. I'm sorry. I fucked myself on that one. But yeah, like I, it's, I'm trying to stay away from all flour and all that shit
with the, you know, my issues.
So yeah, we had, we had some good corn tortillas
that we put on there and-
Did you see my-
What are the macros on flank
is supposed to be one of the leanest ones, right Adam?
Uh, I don't know if it's one of the leanest.
I, no, it's not.
Fale would be, a flamin' on,
it would be one of the leanest that you're doing.
Yeah, there's some fat.
But it's, I mean, I guess it's leaner than rib eye, right?
I love flamin' on it.
It's leaner than tri-tip, but it's not like a flailene
or like a top sirloin lean.
Those are leaner cuts and that is.
I love flamin' that's when you go to,
you do like a breakfast place and they'll give you steak and eggs.
Oftentimes the steak is flank, right? Yeah, oftentimes.
I would think, yeah, dude, but I forgot all about carne asada,
like, because we ordered all the time over at Luna or something I got.
And I'm just like, dude, when you make it yourself,
totally different story. Oh,
do you guys both follow my brother-in-law, Tom?
Do you guys follow him on Instagram? Did you see what he did yesterday?
Did you see what big ass thing of meat? Yeah, eight hours.
He cooked man, he got down on the his tacos.
Is he using butcher box too?
Or is he going with the regular?
I can ask Cassie if they use butcher box.
I don't know if they do or not.
I know they have.
I don't know if that cut was from butcher box,
but I know that she's used it before.
I've gotten out of the point where I can perceive
now the quality of meat pretty dang well without knowing.
Like I ate over my parents' house for Father's Day,
my dad grilled up just a bunch of grocery store,
you know, meat or whatever, grain fed, whatever.
And you can, I can tell now.
Now I can tell, I look at it,
and now I'm starting to associate the grass fed
with just better.
So now I'm not, although grain fed meat,
it's a different taste.
It tastes good, right?
The fat, it's got more fat and and stuff. But it's, I'm starting, although grain fed meat is a different taste. It tastes good, right?
It's got more fat and and stuff.
But I'm starting to look at and realize
it's not as good the quality is as good.
Oh yeah, I've grown to appreciate it for sure.
Yeah, totally.
Total box quality.
Dude, quality meat, let me just tell you something.
Like I've been looking out, reaching out recently
for some quality meat for our maps program.
What?
What?
What? What? I need to find a guy. You know some quality meat for our maps program
I need to find a guy
I'm looking at I'm looking for some quality meat out there
No, like I've been having a hard time because I mean we have good models that have come through and helped but I
Have like some some good female models. I've used that are very consistent,
and the guys are inconsistent.
So I've been trying to slide the DMs to some views.
So we need some male models to shoot for our maps program.
Yeah, and what kind of look are we looking for right now?
Pretty much like a superhero.
Okay.
No, I don't know.
Like this is my problem.
I don't know how to articulate.
Well, athletic and functional. I'll let like you got to have good mechanics like
You got to obviously be like just live and breathing fitness. Well, that's what I feel like it's been the biggest challenge
Yeah, yeah, cuz we'll get the muscular models and have terrible mobility. Yeah, you know wait now
We're looking now we pay them so people need to know this. We're paying models.
Where are they?
Where should they contact if they're interested?
They should contact.
I'm gonna give you your cell phone number.
I know.
Hey, if you got meat, 408, five, five, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, email me just in the at Mindpoint Media.com. Okay, so and these are models for the maps. Throw in a casting angle.
Are we doing this for maps, programs,
or for the guides are all.
Yeah, all in general.
I mean, so we've been on kind of a mission
to reface everything, make it all kind of look
a little bit more presentable to the mass market out there
and compete with your beach bodies
and everything else that exists out there.
So we're trying to help our game.
And so I'm just looking for, you know,
the good fit for that.
But that's the,
so they should email you like pictures, right?
Yeah.
If I'm sliding, you guys,
the DM dude, that's all business related, okay?
Like don't get all excited.
Hey, well, speaking of beef and male models,
I guess.
Yes.
Yeah. More, let's keep going this direction.
I've got some beef for you.
Now listen to this.
This is like a, this has got to be one of my pet peeves right here.
Oh yeah, I like it when Adam's irritated.
I do, this is just, this is just like, and I always wonder like how many fucking people
like really fall for this and actually buy into this shit.
And I, for them, I don't spend very much time when I come across this
because I just don't have time to fucking hate on somebody and what they're doing.
But I did read a few of the comments to see, are people like buying into this bullshit
or what? So I'm going to read, like literally verbatim, a post, you know,
made by a men's physique champion, right?
Who is now picked up, I don't know, his second
or third, maybe the fourth since I've known him, supplement line that he's running.
And the caption is, I've been getting a handful of DMs that people ask me, what new
sub-stack is now that I'm taking, which I was probably a bunch of horseshit.
Nobody's DMing me.
Yeah, I'm rough.
Nobody asked you, bro.
Nobody asked you what you're taking, right?
Here's what a pond waking up. Listen to all this and then you guys give me feedback, right?
Upon waking up, one scoop of BCAAEAA cotton candy. One pill of one pill. Oh, no, bro, you better
hang on tight here, okay? This is just a pond waking up. Okay, so it's already good. Right. Pond waking up, one scoop of BCAAEAA cotton candy.
One pill of shredded is fuck best fat burner available.
Two pills of alpha natural testosterone booster
in estrogen blocker.
Pre workout, three quarter scooped of Amt AF,
warning very strong.
One scoop of adabolic, one scoop of pumped is fuck.
Then they're going into intro workout,
intro workout, one and a half scoops adabolic,
key for massive pumps, then it's post workout,
post workouts, two scoops away isolate,
one scoop of BCAA, and then pre-bed,
one scoop of rested as fuck grow while you sleep.
Oh my God, you know I was just keistered that.
You just gave me diarrhea, at least.
That, that, first of all, who is it?
Yeah, I don't want to just, as fuck. It's a men's physique champion. It's gotta be isn't I'm not gonna say who I'm
My my my reason of bringing this up is a champion staff. I'm sure people listening right now
I'm sure someone could be any number of them because a lot of them are idiots. So right first of all
No, dude. Just like take everything. Yeah, first of all. No, you don't take all that stuff
I like how he says testosterone booster
because he's on fucking steroids.
Why would you take it testosterone booster?
A natural testosterone.
Get the fuck out of here.
He doesn't take all that stuff.
And all that stuff, if you took all of that in one day,
you would wreck your gut.
You would wreck your gut.
Yeah, no, it's garbage.
B-C-A-A, you got the cotton candy B-C-A's.
Well, I mean, here's the thing in this, right? Like, whatever, pre-workout,
you know, to each their own, we've talked about that before, but you can't say his name, huh?
The way I don't need to. I already know how to have the people have to
read this guy's posts. Sure. I'm with Schmidt. Yeah. It's got a fucking million plus
followers. But you've got, you've got, you're taking, first of all, branch-chain amino acids.
We've covered, we've covered this before.. You know acids. We've got shmendi
We've cut we've covered this before Justin stop it. We've covered this before okay branch. You know amino acids
borderline complete waste of money unless unless you're not eating protein
Right, which we're this person's definitely not missing protein
You know saying this person not missing protein
All so and you're and you're taking it twice in a day,
that's just ridiculous.
Then the very nap, like a huge funnel,
that is just like pours it all in his face.
The very next supplement is fat burner,
which, stop.
Fat burner still exists.
They don't, yeah, they don't do shit.
Yeah, I didn't know that.
Abs, absolutely crap.
Then you take a natural test booster,
which we've discussed before, if you don't have abnormally
low testosterone, right, you are, if you don't have abnormally low, then a natural test
austro booster will do absolutely nothing for you.
So especially if you're this guy, and I know who it is now, because I found him, who is
on anabolic, a lot of anabolic steroids, taking a testosterone booster makes absolute zero sense.
Zero sense.
Nothing.
None whatsoever.
He's lying.
And then you have the pre workout, okay, whatever,
caffeine get high.
Stimulant time.
I'm fine with that.
One scoop of adabolic.
I don't know what adabolic is.
It's pre workout stuff.
Oh, I looked up to ingredients.
Adda, like ATTA. No, ADA. Yeah, I got the ingredients are, it's got
bullshit in it. Artificial sweeteners. Oh, bullshit. And promised false
dreams. Promise. It's still false dreams. Basically, you get muscle deflator.
And then it's probably a nitrogoccy, I think, is it's called pumped as
fuck. Great branding here too.
There's a lot of as fucks in there.
And then intro workout, one and a half scoops of adabolic, again, more for, I guess more
of this pump stuff.
So the scoop you took before the workout wasn't enough, you got to take it halfway through
the workout again to get more of it.
And then the post workout, two scoops of way, I mean, I can get down with some way protein. That's fine. But then another scoop of how funny is this? Two scoops of way
isolate after you've already taken your BCAs this morning. And then you're gonna run back
BCAs again after that. Like, what are you doing? Nothing. He's not doing any of that.
All he did was, and then don't forget, you're taking one scoop of rested, which I'm assuming
is your case scene protein for slopes or
it's probably got like
jinky
larganine
okay, let me guess it's got arganine and al dopa
and other things that are supposed to increase your, you know, serotonin or whatever
what you're sleeping.
It's all garbage.
Hilarious.
You know what it is?
So much.
Here's what these guys do.
Please, this is 100% what they do, okay?
And if you're one of these guys and you're like,
eh, I'm still angry, my name's stuck in shit.
Please contact me, we'll talk about this, we'll record it.
So you could try to defend yourself.
I promise you'll sound like an idiot though,
but whatever, I'm warning you,
so let's go into this.
Wow, go into this.
But 100% what they do is they try to figure out ways
to throw in as much shit as possible in one day.
And so they're like,
this is what I use throughout the day.
And it's like, they named every supplement
from this company that's sponsoring them.
And I wanna be clear that I think me sharing
that part of why I wasn't trying to roll the person,
the name under the bus is,
I wanted to use an example of somebody I know
that has millions of people that are looking up to them
because there was a day when I was one of those kids
There was a day that I was 19 years old and I was looking at somebody who had a physique that I was
Abs I admired and I and I wanted to look like and I was working my ass off in the gym
And if he told me that he was taking all those supplements
I too would think that I need to take those supplements if I one day want to look like him.
So the purpose is not to hate, the purpose is not to talk shit or throw shade on somebody
else and how they how they do business or how they make money, even though I think it's
a fucking terrible way to have to make money.
But it's really more to enlighten the kids that are following these pages, thinking that
these things really matter.
These things do not matter.
All the clients that I've ever trained
and all the results and bodies that I've sculpted
and changed over the 20 years, none of them,
none of them have ever been because of supplements
because I got my clients taking some pre, post workout,
and none of that at all.
You sound pipe dreams.
No, it's just, it's,
how would you, now imagine this,
imagine some 17 year old kid is following this moron
and is like, oh, okay, I need to take all this stuff.
And so what they do is they take exactly that.
They saved up their money.
They buy, I don't know how much that's gonna cost.
Which is exactly gonna happen.
Yeah, $500 with the supplements or whatever.
And they take it all.
Now, let me ask you guys, and be honest,
do you think they're gonna feel good
taking all those supplements every day?
Do you think their health is gonna get better
or do you think it's gonna get worse?
Yeah.
Yeah, sure, here and there, it's not a problem,
but you throw that much shit at yourself
with just a bunch of fillers and artificial sweeteners
and shit, and you do it all day long.
You're gonna fuck your gut up.
I'm speaking from personal experience.
Well, that's what I know.
And I think that the passion behind all this,
and I just wanna, I want people to understand that.
It's not, I think when, even here in you guys right now,
listening to you get all fired up,
and it's like, it's not coming at the person as much as it is.
There's passion behind that because we all
fucked ourselves up doing that,
and spent a lot of wasted money.
Yeah.
When I didn't have the money to waste, like, and that's kind of what I tell people now,
it's like, Hey, if you got fuck you money, and you want to throw away $500 and you're
not worried about your gut health and you're, and you want to try things out and, Hey,
to each their own go for it.
But do not think that you need to take any of that stuff to build an incredible physique.
You can never take any of that and, build an incredible physique. You could never take any of that and train correctly, eat correctly, and you'll build just as
good of a physique.
Now, not as good as physique as a guy who we're talking about right now because he is on
tons of antibiotics, so you would have to also take antibiotics.
But let me tell you, his diet, his discipline, and his antibiotics is the reason he looks
that way.
It's not because anything to do with any of those supplements,
you could pull all those supplements out,
keep his training the same, keep his diet the same,
and a steroids stack the same,
and he would look exactly the fucking same.
Could you imagine if you took all the money
that you spent as a kid on garbage like that,
and you invested it in like a good training coach?
You imagine if you hired a strength coach,
like someone was, or a down payment on a house.
Yeah.
Yeah.
First exactly.
You would have saved money, first of all,
because it would have been cheaper,
and you would have gotten way better results.
Or even if you just invested in a good fitness program,
or you spent it on like a really good gym
with a personal trainer or something like that,
or just quality food, like, hey, let me think,
I'm spending $200 a month on supplements.
What if I took that $200 and bought like steak?
I just can't wait until it dies that it doesn't make sense for those guys to post like
that.
Because the reason why it exists is because the consumer keeps spending the money.
Yeah, it works because somebody is using his code and buying $500 a sub months every single
month. And that's happening
to probably hundreds of people are continuing to do that.
And it's funding these people and it's making a case
for while these sub-mantig companies keep pushing it,
while these young Instagram celebrities keep using it
as a way of making money is because you all keep buying it.
Like once everybody stops buying it
and buying in the bull bullshit, it'll die.
But until we get savvy and we learn
that it has nothing to do with their results,
that stuff's gonna keep happening.
So we want to buy it, bro,
because we want the pill that does all that shit.
You want to believe so badly
that the answer to your problems is just a scoop
of, you know, a scoop away.
A cotton candy powder.
Hold the pill away. Like, you know, a scoop away. Cotton candy powder, all the way.
Just a pill away.
Like, you just snore in blow.
Like, you know what's crazy?
Like, I've been trying to work out for years
and I just can't build any muscle.
And, you know what's crazy?
I discovered the answer and the answer is
in this tasty cotton candy flavor drink on top of it.
Oh my God, you know, it's not gonna happen,
but we want to believe it.
It's just from cotton candy.
We want to believe it so bad, you know what I mean?
And the worst thing about it is people are going to spend
all their time and money thinking that's important
and not spending time and money on the things
that really are important.
And so then they end up with not just
not getting good results,
but they actually end up with health problems as a result.
Speaking of poor health, just read this fascinating article on chronic inflammation.
Trip off this, right? So, you know, when you're feeling kind of sick and inflamed, how you just want
to stay at home and you don't want to do much and don't want to move or whatever. Evolutionarily
speaking, scientists think this makes sense. Like, if you're sick, it makes sense to isolate yourself
so that you don't spread the disease to other people.
And this is why we do this.
But they're trying to figure out why.
Like what are the actual mechanisms that are happening?
And they find is that chronic motivation reduces,
dramatically reduces dopamine in the brain.
So if your health is kind of off
and you've got slightly elevated levels of inflammation because
a poor diet or lack of sleep, your dopamine levels are plummet.
And you'll find that you'll be less productive, less motivated because dopamine is what gives
you that drive to want to do things.
And you'll find that chronic inflammation just makes you less motivated.
Overall, as it too doesn't want to like expend energy in
In other directions and conserve it all to really kind of fight the the inflammation. I think internally
I think your body needs more energy to heal
Rather than giving you energy to do other things, but I mean crazy, right? So if you you know if you're somebody and you're like
Thinking yourself like I used to be such a motivated person. I used to be so driven and for whatever reason
I just don't feel like I used to
I would examine your overall health and see if things like getting better sleep getting better diet lowering your naturally lowering your
inflammation it will get that natural you know feeling of motivation and drive to go back out. This is how I felt yesterday, man. I felt, I just was, I didn't have any motivation.
I came home and ideally I've found that like it's best for me
to, before I even had home to get my workout in here,
or else it's really tough to motivate me to come back
or leave the house, right?
And so I got home last night and I told the trainer,
I'm like, man, I told myself that I wanted to start the week
off where I get a really good training session in today and I just didn't feel like it. I'm like, God, man, I told myself that I wanted to start the week off where I get a really good training session in today
and I just didn't feel like it.
I'm like, you know what, I'm gonna go,
but I'm gonna go down to golds
because I haven't gone down and lived to down there
or what's now American barbell.
And, you know, on the way there,
I've got my like rock playlist.
I'm getting my-
Doing everything.
Yeah, I've done everything.
All the things I can go back is full.
Literally, Daring.
But I mean, I think it's,
I wanted to share this with the audience just because,
I mean, I think I like to think I'm a fitness guy.
We're all fitness guys, but even to us,
there's moments like this where I just,
I wanted to just get on the couch and do nothing
and just relax and call it a day,
but I had already committed to myself
that I'm gonna have a really good week of training
and part of that having a really good week of training
is making sure I get Monday.
I could a really good lift in on Monday
to start my week off.
It just makes a big difference for me.
And so, even though I came home and I was planning,
I'm like, you know what?
And I know it's like the worst time to lift around four
or five o'clock in the evening because everybody's there.
It's like, it doesn't matter.
I'm not gonna let those excuse give my way.
And then I head to the gym.
Here's an example of a time I take a pre workout.
So I've got my pre workout, I'm drinking on the way over there.
I can't remember you just some dopamine.
Yeah, I'm trying to, right?
And I'm cranking the rock music on the way.
And I tell you what, I had a phenomenal workout last night.
And it does remind me, and this is where I think
we're all a little bit different,
because I know you guys like to train at home
or like your privacy and hearing stuff.
There's something about being in that atmosphere
and I don't know if it just,
it brings me back to being an old trainer day
or it's getting ready for a show stuff.
But when I get in that atmosphere of the gym packed
and all the meat heads walking around it,
it gets me, it gets me, I like being around meat heads.
It gets me going and it makes me,
it makes me wanna train and not store a stop,
a few shorts, a few reps short of a set.
Like I put it in the extra effort.
It's, you know, so.
How do I feel today?
I feel great today.
Yeah, I feel really good today
and I'm glad that I went and did that.
So, you know, sometimes that helps
just to change the atmosphere.
It's also part of why Katrina hates me for spending
having like 10 times.
I do, I do.
I do the same thing.
Every time she goes to the account, she questions it every time.
Why are you paying for this?
Tell me when the last time you went there.
It doesn't matter.
I might want to be able to do it.
And this is the example.
This is why I don't kid stuff.
Hey, it's worth it, bro.
It's worth it, too.
No, yesterday. Yes, should don't kid. It's guy, bro. It's worth it to you. No, yesterday.
Totally right off.
Yes, should I go home and I told Jessica I'm like,
I want a fucking hardcore workout today.
So get ready.
She's like, okay.
So I get home and I get the perfect playlist.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Say hello.
Say hello. Say hello. No, so I get home and in my, the way I like to work out And yeah
No, so I get home and in my the way I like to work out of my garage is different than like to work on the gym when I go to a gym I like to do high volume
I like to hypertrophy connect to muscle squeeze get a good pump, you know do stuff that I don't have access to when I work out my garage
It's like it's old old school caveman style.
So literally what I did was I picked
one major muscle, one major exercise per muscle group,
five sets, five reps.
Heavy, hard, plate metal.
It was hot because it's in the my garage.
So it was hot outside.
So I'm sweating and oh, fuck, I love those workouts.
Oh, I love them, dude, they're just so fucking just angry.
The problem with them though is if I train heavy too often,
it hurts my joints.
I can't do that shit all the time.
I started the what's that called Mark Bells,
the sleeve that goes over for benching.
Plank shot for benching.
Yeah, I started to really enjoy using that
because of that simple fact,
because I would use the bench and just get after it,
you know, and then after I would just be like,
oh my God, my shoulders hurt.
Dying.
And I started using that like when I would get,
you know, up and wait and I was doing like one or two reps
and that's been saving my ass, dude.
But yeah, I started getting into that mode
where I just wanna kill, kill, kill.
And then like one of my kids will come in
and start doing like,
gymnastic ring flips and things next to me.
I'm just like, ah!
Ah!
Like out of here!
That is busy!
It's dangerous.
Yeah, yeah, I don't wanna hit you with something.
It's not safe in here, right?
Yes, I might need a gym access, too.
Yeah, that's fun.
Anyway, did you guys see the other article?
Dude, here's one of the things I love about our private forum.
More than anything is, I don't have to look for articles anymore.
I sort of got at least, people ask me all the time,
where do you get your articles or where do you read your research?
Like people share them in our forum.
Somebody shared the other day a breakthrough.
Now this could very well be one of the greatest breakthroughs
of our time.
What?
Yes.
I did not see this.
Yes.
Scientists were able to use gut bacteria
to convert type A blood, type B blood,
and type AB blood into O.
What?
They were able to convert all the other types of blood
into the universal type of,
because you know, type O blood is universal.
It's the most wanted because everybody can use it.
Yeah.
Regardless of what your type O negative is at the,
I don't know, I don't know exactly.
But anyway, what they did is by using gut bacteria,
they were able to convert,
they alter it?
To alter it.
Wow.
I don't understand.
Well, so...
Spin it together or...
So blood types are just differentiated
by the kinds of sugar that's found
on the surface of the red blood cells.
Okay.
And type O has no sugars.
And so they, in the past, they were trying to use enzymes
that could remove the sugars,
they're turning them into type O.
So the bacteria's like eating it?
Yeah, but the problem is that the enzymes would destroy the blood.
They couldn't figure out how to do it.
So, they looked into the digestive tract, and they found that bacterial enzymes found in
feces strip the sugars from the lining to aid in digestion in your gut, and the same
bacteria are working on the blood.
So, is this a very effective,
now that they've discovered this,
they have to find that way to be able to do it effectively
and cheaply on mass.
But this can be able to replicate this process.
Yes, but they have yet to do it on a large scale
or be able to do it in a way where it's usable.
It's just a new way of converting blood into Typhoon.
That's huge.
It could be massive.
Yeah.
It could be easy.
Yeah, because that's always like, I mean, trying to find the right match a lot of times
is, I mean, it's paramount to just keep people alive.
Speaking of ground breaking, you guys see what Facebook announced today.
No.
That was literally today.
They revealed it's a long way to cryptocurrency plans.
Cryptocurrency plans.
Yep.
So they're calling it Project Libra.
It's a new type of digital money designed for the billions of people using its apps and
social network.
If the plan is successful users will soon be able to shop with and send stuff all through
social media platforms using this new currency.
And they've already got...
So they have their own currency.
They're not allowing the use of other cryptos?
Well, so it'll be a variety of other merchants,
like Uber, Spotify, MasterCard,
you'll be able to use their money to buy all these things.
So right now I think they have close to like
100 different companies like the Uber's,
the Spotify's, MasterCards that are on board with it,
which means that it would be able to transfer it to that also.
So if you had a master card and you also own
Libra cryptocurrency, you could pay down your master card
with your cryptocurrency.
And or buy music on iTunes and things like that.
So they've already, and by 2020,
they're hoping that they've got thousands of people
that will, or companies that will join.
So how is this gonna work?
Is this like you buy them with your normal money
and then you have their credit?
How does that work?
Yeah, it's the same way that you buy crypto right now.
So it tokens at Chuck E.G.
Kind of like kind of.
So what would be the benefit?
I get confused sometimes.
Well, I do too.
Well, it'll be, it's gonna make things so much faster
and streamless and more protected, right?
So you're more protected with it.
It'll be quicker the way you'll be able to do it.
I mean, that's what we're doing. We're just moving to this faster, more convenient way of purchasing.
I mean, you've seen it already. This transition we've made in the last five years. Don't you guys think it's
crazy? How quick? I mean, I was literally today. This is what I was doing today. Today, I bought a pair of,
you know, retro rebox. We're just? How you started? Shut up, shut up.
Okay, shut up.
That's beside the point.
I bought a stormtrooper helmet, so I can't say anything.
What?
Yeah, I did.
You guys are into some weird sex.
Well, you know what, but this is a good example
though, so I've called me out like that
because it's true.
So not the joys we're looking for.
I've made a point to not buy sneakers anymore
yet they still got me this morning
because I'm just,
you know, I'm scrolling on Instagram,
up pops in my feed, this outfit, I liked it,
clicked on it, goes to a page,
I go to the page of the brand or whatever,
and I go, I don't know, I'm scrolling through a few,
I'm like, oh, I've been wanting to get a pair
of these classic Reeboks.
I click on it, and you can, it literally
from the picture on Instagram,
it clicks, sends me right to the website,
to buy, double click on my iPhone.
It's already in my, you know,
my address and that,
it's being shipped to my house in two days.
Yeah.
Wow.
It's all snap of the finger.
Yeah, my face ID's me real quick
to authenticate the purchase.
Boom done.
It's being shipped to my house.
Wow.
I mean, so we're just,
it's just gonna get quicker and easier to wear.
I mean, I foresee us being able to triple hit something.
And are you sure you wanna buy?
I can't wait till you say yes or feeding.
I wonder if like,
like brick and mortar stores will be like that.
When you walk in, you look at stuff
and you'll pick something up,
you'll be like, I want this double tap.
It's already in your cart.
It's already been purchased.
Yeah.
And then you leave.
You have to wait lying on your eyes and all this I
mean it's the future man we're living in the future is here
here
Quake call
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It's the motherfucking qual!
Eagle is landed!
Quique-qual.
First question is from Adrian.
What is the best rest time in between sets
for building muscle?
Best rest time.
If you look at the studies,
the studies are pretty clear and they'll tell you
that yeah, 90 seconds to two and a half,
maybe even three minutes, is ideal for building muscle.
But, right, there's a big butt.
Naviat.
And that just from the muscle growth.
Not my butt.
Boom.
But anyway, here's the big, here's the butt here.
It depends on, a lot of it depends on what your body's used to.
So now if you compare head to head, rest periods,
and you compare 10 seconds, 30 seconds, 90 seconds, 120 seconds,
or whatever, and you compare them, the longer rest periods,
up to a certain point, do build more muscle.
They allow for more ATP to be replenished.
That's the muscle energy that you use when you lift.
They allow you lift heavier weights, and that tends to contribute to more muscle growth.
The problem is, if you stick to a rest period for too long, your body gets adapted to it
and gets used to it, and switching out of that oftentimes triggers
new muscle growth.
I remember experiencing this for myself,
for me too.
As a kid, I remember reading the magazines
and all the magazines said for mass,
you know, rest two to three minutes
between sets and lift heavy.
And so I did that on all sets, two to three minutes,
heavy, that's how I train.
And I remember talking to a friend of mine
who was relatively muscular, and he says,
yeah, no, I only rest about 30 seconds,
and I get better pumps.
And I remember trying it out, and my body just responded,
and I built muscle.
And it wasn't because the 30-second rest was superior,
because my body wasn't used to it.
Right.
And the same rule applies if you're somebody
who loves to like circuit train.
If you're somebody who always does the 30 second or less type of rest periods and you go
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, you're hopping around and you're doing supersets.
One of the best things that person can do are short, I mean long rest periods and these
heavy, heavy sets, right, where you just do five by five and you rest for two or three minutes.
Like that person will end up piling on a bunch of muscles just because their body is so adapted to the 30-second rest period.
So typically what I would tell somebody when someone asks me a question like this,
I before I respond, I say, what are you currently doing? And then whatever they're currently doing,
I tell them like the furthest thing from that, right? So whatever's the most...
So if someone's resting 60 seconds,
let's just say, and that's what they do consistently.
And I tell them to start resting for 90 seconds,
not gonna feel a big difference.
But I tell that person to rest three minutes,
that person will see a big difference.
Or I tell that person to only rest 15 seconds,
big difference.
And both changing that rest period to either north or south will stimulate
more muscle growth because it's a new adaptation.
I would say 90% of people have talked to you.
Like I'm usually trying to give them the rest longer.
Yeah, just because of like the prevailing idea
of how to build muscle out there is like usually
in a circuit based kind of a training situation
where there's like, you're really cutting out the rest
and you're trying to build in this cardiovascular field
to it as well and also just getting the pump
and supersetting all the time
and really cutting that time in between short.
And it's harder to rest
because if your mentality is you're in there to beast out,
resting seems counterintuitive.
Especially today, and we live in the CrossFit era.
Before that, I don't know, maybe not so much,
but it's become so popular now to do
build these little strength circuits
where you have pull-ups, dead lifts, push-ups,
and a kettlebell swing, and you do these round robin' circuits
with no rest in between exercises.
Because that shit's hard.
Oh yeah, what am I going to say?
One of my favorite things is to take an X crossfitter
and put them through like a powerlifting type of a protocol
and give them long rest periods and watch them blow up.
So yeah, yeah, yeah.
I, I even like mixing things up sometimes
because traditionally you would consider long rest periods
with really, really heavy weight.
But I like to do this sometimes too.
I'll take a heavy weight and do like a double,
so like two reps and then cut my rest periods short.
Now I'm not gonna be able to go as heavy as I could
if I did a long rest period, but I like to test myself
with shorter rest periods and heavy weight.
And that's a great combination.
So after we, and we haven't released this episode yet,
this episode is coming soon,
but after we hung out with, what's his name?
Stevenson from Fortitude Training.
And he talked about cluster sets.
Oh, right, right.
I actually started doing that,
I've been doing that since,
and I love that, and it's that concept.
It's four reps, 15 seconds in between.
And you basically, it's one long set.
And you can, what I found is I can lift pretty heavy weight.
I can lift close to anything that I would be doing
five to eight reps easily if I'm only having to do four
and that 15 seconds rest is just enough for me
to gather it back so I can do it again.
And I find myself being able to do at least,
five to 15 rounds of whatever it is that I'm doing.
I really enjoy that.
I would say for the average person,
you're probably looking to rest anywhere between 30
to 120 seconds.
That's kind of the range that you'd want to look at.
And play within that range,
the shorter rest periods, here's what you'll notice.
30 seconds, a real 30 second rest.
There's gonna be, you're gonna breathe a little bit harder,
probably gonna sweat a little more.
You're not gonna be able to lift as much weight,
you'll probably get a better pump.
The longer rest periods, you're gonna feel stronger,
you're gonna lift heavier weight.
It's not gonna feel as grueling,
but it will have a different feel to it
in terms of how it builds muscle or whatever.
So, play around with them.
Enjoy the different rest periods, get good at one,
and then once you get good at one,
get good at a different one. So, as you're gonna say, get good at one, and then once you get good at one, get good at a different one.
So I was gonna say, play around with it,
but do it with some sort of structure
so you can actually measure and see the difference.
Right, a mistake that I used to do,
because I understood that once that light ball went off,
that, oh wow, lifting this lighter weight,
lower rest periods actually ended up building more muscle
for me because I used to be the long, long rest period guy. Then it became like I would just like sporadically just throw it into all those
routines where then it becomes really hard to measure like how much gains you're getting from it
or when you should probably phase out of it. So my recommendation is, you know, if you're falling
one of our programs, it'd be great. You run a rest period for a phase, you know, for a good solid
three to four weeks and then switch the rest period in the next phase. If you're not following one of our programs,
then that's exactly what I'd say to you,
is run whatever rest period you want
for a good, solid three to five weeks
and then transition to another rest period
for a three to five weeks and be consistent
with all of your lifts and pay attention to what you see.
Next question is from junior Wilson 916.
If you wake up with a kink in your neck or sore shoulders, is it okay to prime and work
out through the soreness?
If the soreness is turning it into pain, is it better to stop?
This is a good question.
Now I want to say this with a lot of caution, because if you have a kink in your neck or
you wake up with a joint that's sore or you feel pain,
oftentimes the right kind of movement and priming
is the solution.
Oftentimes, oftentimes it's what'll solve the problem.
Maybe not immediately, but it'll solve the root of why
you're getting pain in the first place.
Now, here's the caveat.
Doing the wrong stuff will make it worse. So you gotta know what you're getting pain in the first place. Now, here's the caveat. Doing the wrong stuff will make it worse.
So you gotta know what you're doing.
Now, if I wake up with the kink in my neck,
which happens sometimes, I have neck issues
from Jiu-Jitsu for my past Jitsu use,
I'll wake up with the kink in my neck.
I know what movements help my neck.
And so immediately what I do is rather than taking ibuprofen
and not moving and hoping
it goes away, is I get up, I drink a glass of water, once I'm up in a wake, then I'll
do my priming movements that help, that I know help my neck.
And typically I'm able to reduce the pain by a significant amount.
Justin you've been dealing with hip pain recently and you just went to Dr. Brinks.
And he didn't tell you to not move and take, no.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, take it off.
No, I've been applying all those specific mobility drills
in positions religiously.
And like, it's a frequency issue.
So it's a frequency issue.
For me, not having access to certain ranges of motion
and not actively trying to
You know connect with that that part of my body And so that's been a real conscious thing for me to whenever I can get into 90 90 really work on the internal rotation
Prime myself ahead of time before any kind of squatting or any kind of movement
But I have not stopped moving and it has been a little more recuperative type movement
I haven't been adding a lot of
intensity to my workouts, like I was there for a minute, except for my upper body for the most part,
but it's already starting to pay off. And it's been like a week, basically, of just like real
conscious effort to where I know it's going to be months of just consciously always doing this and
making it part of a ritual and a routine.
So it might be something like that. It might just be that you slept wrong and you got a
kink and you just need to regain alignment and get movement and movement heals.
It's always hard to troubleshoot something like this over a podcast without being able
to see the person move
or know exactly what's happened to him.
But what I will say is that in my experience
with clients that deal with pain and joint pain,
more often than not.
So 80 to 90% of the time, it's not like an acute injury.
It's normally either lack of mobility or movement
with muscles that then causes a lot of stress on the joints.
Because, and that's kind of how Maps Prime Pro is designed. So that I would instead of priming or looking at the Maps Prime program as your answer, this is where having Prime Pro comes in really handy
because we went through every major joint and then we addressed all these mobility and
and there's all the way up to the neck. So there's neck exercise and pros and women with any neck. Yeah, yeah, so there's there's neck exercise and so what ends up happening a lot of times is
you've got this major this a major joint on the body right whether we're talking about the knees the ankles whatever right shoulders one of these majorers, one of these major joints, and then you have all these surrounding muscles.
Now, those surrounding muscles are responsible for taking that joint through its fullest range
of motion in all directions that it's capable of.
And what ends up happening over time is that we stop using it all those directions.
When we are kids, we played in like all of it, we rolled, we tumbled, we climbed on monkey
bars, we do a really good job without even realizing
it, of exercising and moving these joints through their fullest range of motion and staying
connected to them.
And as we age, and this is like totally speaking from experience now, like I've felt this
happen to myself, where we become more sedentary and we sit at desk and we drive in cars and
we sit in offices and at computers all day long. And we're not playing and rolling around.
And what happens is the body goes,
hey, if you don't use it, you'll lose it.
It starts to say, if Adam's not gonna put his hands
all the way above his head, we don't need to activate
the muscles that are responsible to do that.
But now here's the problem.
Every once in a while, you have to put something
above a shelf or you have to do something.
And then what ends up happening is the joint takes the stress instead of the muscles
because you're no longer training the muscles that were supposed to assist the joint and
doing that movement.
You just start moving wrong.
It's no different than, like, you know, when I was a kid at home, I spoke Sicilian because
when I, before I went to school, that's what I spoke at home to my mom and my dad.
And I became very fluent in Sicilian.
As I started going to school,
I spoke less than less of it.
To the point now where I speak it occasionally.
Now what's ended up happening?
I've lost my fluency.
It's no different.
Your body loses its movement fluency
if you don't practice it and use it,
and when you lose that fluency,
your body's more apt to move in ways that are not optimal,
and your joints are moving ways that are not optimal.
You know, your knee can move in a way
that'll minimize any potential damage
and give it a long shelf life,
or you can move your knee in a way
where it's gonna cause a lot of wear and tear,
and you're gonna cause a lot of pain
and problems in a very short period of time.
So that's what priming is all about.
And that's why, you know what Adam said,
like most clients with pain, it's not because,
like when someone comes to me,
he says, oh, I have this shoulder pain,
it's okay, what did you heard it?
Well, I don't know, five years ago I heard it.
It's okay, so it's healed, but it still hurts.
Now we're talking about a chronic
issue that has to do with just poor recruitment patterns and poor mobility. So once you figure out what your movement pattern issue is and your mobility issue is, the path to fixing that pain
is to fix those things. That's what's going to take care of the pain. It's not getting rid of the
symptoms by taking anti-inflammatories. It's not, I mean,
I remember when I was younger, if I hurt something or something hurt, the answer was to not use
it anymore. Like, okay, just leave it alone. Don't move it anymore. No, the answer oftentimes
is not that. The answer oftentimes is to use it, but use it in a way that gets it to move
better.
Well, I'm too, to throw a little more caution out there. For me, my tendency when I have pain or I feel like I have the answer for it is to
overdo it.
And so I was doing a lot of mobility exercises and I was really trying to push through
the pain, which was not eating in any of my recovery.
You're just a fucking bulldog.
Well, I know there's other people out there that like that.
They're like, well, okay, so if it's it's a neck thing I'm just gonna scratch it. You know like and
So you I mean you have to be conscious of the threshold there like when your body's speaking back to you like
loudly like that's when you stop I also think that we're seeing more and more neck and shoulder stuff because of
The phones and the computers like this is this is, it's not a new issue per se,
because you know, it's just natural as we age,
the body's closing up and we're rounding,
and we're rounding over.
Everyone's seen the seven year old grandma
or grandpa that's walking around the walkers.
It's not new, but I think it's accelerated
more than we've ever seen in history before
because we now have these devices
that we can't stop at a stop sign,
we can't stop at a walking down the street
and we can't be in a grocery store line,
we can't do anything anymore of just standing there upright.
We are right away we default to looking down on our phone
and that just exaggerates the problem.
I mean, you had now you have forward head even more.
We already are forward. And so when you have forward head even more. We already are forward.
And so when you have forward head
and you got these rounded shoulders
and it doesn't take much sleeping the wrong way
or moving the wrong way to get this pain or your body,
bothering you, this is why too,
when people go to like chiropractors
and chiropractors pop them or realign them
in the neutral spine,
why it feels so amazing. Oh, so great.
What feels so amazing isn't the magic that he did on you.
It's that he stacked your joints correctly.
He put you back in the anatomical position
where you're supposed to be.
And that's what feels so amazing.
Now, the problem is, you got all these muscles like that.
Yeah, the muscles that are countering it
because you're shaping the body formed over
in this round of position all day.
So, you know, one of the best things
to help somebody's neck and shoulders is to just
assess where their head and their shoulders are.
If they're in this weird awkward kind of rounded forward position, like, yeah, no shit,
your neck or your shoulder hurts because of where you're at.
Like stack them the way they should be and see if you feel that way.
And then if it's really difficult to get you in that position, that's a obvious thing
that you need to work on.
And that's where the priming comes in before every workout and addressing zone one.
Next question is from Jake Bauer 7. How can you tell whether a study is BS or not?
With so many contradictory studies, how can you tell what to believe?
Yeah, I learned this a long time ago. I used to train. If Lane shares it, it's probably BS.
If Mind Pump shares it's probably.
Yeah.
Shout out to Lane.
Now, I used to train this lady that conducted studies.
This is actually part of what she did.
She worked for, I think it was Davis University
in Davis, California.
And we would talk a lot about studies,
in nutrition studies and fitness studies. And she would talk a lot about studies and nutrition studies and fitness studies.
And she would ask me questions about the studies.
How big was the sample size?
Was it double blind placebo controlled?
Did they duplicate it?
And I remember being like, I don't know,
I don't know any of the stuff.
So she started to explain to me the things
you want to look at in studies.
For example, sample size.
This is very important because if I do a study
on five people, that may not be a sample size.
That's large enough to really give me a good answer.
I might have picked five people that all react the same way
to a particular nutrition plan or whatever.
But you could have picked 30 more
and they all didn't react that.
Right, right.
So sample size makes a big difference
You want to have a big sample size
Double blind placebo controlled is considered the gold standard now. What does that mean double blind means?
That neither the people being studied
Nor the people conducting the test
Know who is getting the studied
Ingredient or who the who the people are that are getting tested getting the studied ingredient or who the people are that
are getting tested with the, you know, whatever the control is.
Whatever the control is, whatever the, they don't know.
So for example, let's say I want to test and see if vitamin D helps with depression.
And I get, you know, 250 people.
And I give them half of them vitamin D and half of them,
I give a placebo, so it's got nothing.
Double blind placebo controlled means
that the researchers don't know who gets the vitamin D
and the people who are being studied
don't know who gets the vitamin D.
Placebo controlled means we are also taking a side
of this sample group and giving them nothing because you always want to test
against nothing to see what the difference is. So that's kind of your gold standard. Here's
the other thing too. Most nutrition studies are not controlled. They're not
double blind enough. And they're not long enough. Most nutrition studies are surveys.
So most of them are just, hey, we're gonna,
we asked a thousand people how they ate
and then we asked them three months later how they ate
and then we asked them a year later how they ate
and then we asked them five years later how they ate.
And here's what we know.
We know how flawed that is with clients
like trying to report what food that they ate,
just for a week.
And it's also, you also don't know,
there's a lot of, there's a lot of stuff sometimes
that we don't necessarily see a connection.
I'll give you, this is a great, great classic example.
So now we know today that coffee for the most part,
and what I say for the most part,
if it's appropriate for you,
so if you have good tolerance to caffeine
and you're otherwise healthy, coffee is extremely healthy by itself,
black coffee, right?
It's got full of antioxidants.
Caffeine has got health benefits in and of itself.
It's not dehydrating like, you know, we were led to believe in weird kids.
It's actually a decent source of hydration because it's got a lot of water in it.
So for all intents and purposes, studies are pretty clear
that coffee, if you're healthy,
probably pretty damn good for you.
Now, if you looked at the studies that were done 30 years ago,
20, 30 years ago, you would have read studies
that said coffee is linked to cancer.
Coffee is linked to heart.
People, bad hearts.
Elevate your heart rate.
Yeah, cortisol.
Well, not cortisol spike.
Well, not just that.
Like the studies back then were showing
like people who drank a lot of coffee
had more heart disease,
had higher rates of cancer,
and just died sooner.
And so people thought coffee probably is not a good thing.
Now here's the problem.
They didn't control for the fact that
people who drank a lot of coffee 30 years ago
also tended to smoke a lot of cigarettes.
You forget that. That was the thing. They went hand in hand. Yeah. Black coffee in a cigarette was
like the gold standard. Right. So, so again, if you look at, if you look at studies,
probably, if you look at studies that show that meat consumption, meat consumption is tied to
cancer. You got to look a little deeper.
People today who consume a lot of meat
are tend to be people who are not health conscious.
It's true.
People who consume a lot of meat today,
because we've been raised for the last 40 years
to believe that meat's bad, health conscious people,
except for people in the know, health conscious people
tend to avoid meat.
People who just eat lots of meat
are people who are not health conscious because again,
so when you break it down and you look and you see,
like, wait a minute, these guys are consuming hot dogs.
Right, Burger King, McDonald's.
Like, cut those people out.
Yeah, lunch meats and shit like that.
Like, you know what I mean?
These baloney is definitely cut out.
Yeah, and also look at the rest of their lifestyle.
Like, here's another one.
Multivitamins, studies show that people
who take a multivitamin live longer and have better health. Well, when they dive deeper,
they find that there's a little bit of a self-selection bias there where...
Right. What type of person actually takes the time to take a multivitamin?
Yeah.
...same person who probably works out and actually makes better food choices.
That's right. So this is why it's important to look at. And also look and see if it's
been duplicated. Do you know, I forgot what it was,
in the nutrition space specifically,
a majority of studies are not, they can't duplicate.
They have a hard time.
They can't.
They've heard the same thing.
Yeah, they can't replicate that same exact,
the result.
That's right.
Let me put it to you this way.
So just so you understand,
the FDA's process for reviewing a drug and approving a drug to be sold
as a pharmaceutical is, by far, the most stringent, regulated, insane process on Earth.
It costs, I don't know, how many tens of millions of dollars, and maybe even a hundred million dollars to take a drug from conception to approval
To be able to be sold as a medication, okay?
So and this is for for all drugs
This is why you see so many drugs of the same category because it's so damn expensive to come up with a new drug that they're better off
Just taking an opiate and just tweaking it a little bit because they don't have to go through all the same vigorous
whatever. But if you invent a new drug,
it's gonna cost you millions and millions and millions dollars
and about 10 years before it gets approved.
That's how rigorous it is.
And we're talking about studies on animals
and then human studies and trials and long trials
and all this stuff.
And guess what? Every single day, there
are drugs that got approved by the FDA that have to get recalled because we've discovered
that it did something else that we didn't study.
It's a side effect that was worried.
Yeah, so now I'm not saying this to freak everybody out and say don't trust studies. I'm just
saying, look at the studies, take them with a grain of salt, look at the big picture,
look at the context, and don't throw out wisdom.
Like, there's still some wisdom there.
So if you read a study that sounds kind of crazy,
like study shows that people who drink wine
are healthier than people who don't,
okay, there's a little bit of logic,
like a little wisdom that says,
wait, this kind of sounds fucked up.
Like, what do you mean, they're drinking alcohol every day?
Let's look a little deeper and see what's going on.
Or compound and chocolate, shown to do whatever.
Or this study shows that fat oxidation increases
with this substance, therefore this is a fat burning pill
you're gonna take.
Take it with a grain of salt.
Like here's what we know for sure.
Whole natural foods, probably the best,
definitely the best for you.
Don't overate, definitely true.
There's a wide variety of ways people can eat
to be healthy.
There's societies where people eat mostly plants,
there's societies where people eat lots of meat.
Those are all pretty healthy.
When it comes to exercise, some activity's better
than no activity.
Resistance training, best way to build muscle.
If you want to live in modern life,
you want to have a fashion metabolism,
you should probably build muscle,
you should probably avoid.
Getting good sleep and quality sleep,
that's probably a good thing.
Having good social connections, having good friendships,
having a life that's got stress in it,
but you manage it well, so it's got some meaning.
Like that's all stuff we kind of know.
All the other details and stuff,
I'd say take it with a grain of salt,
look and see what the study says,
look and see if there's other studies that are similar.
And again, be skeptical. I think that's the other studies that are similar. And again, be skeptical.
I think that's the best approach.
Be skeptical.
Yeah, definitely be skeptical.
I'm like very much like, I don't like to be adamant about one thing.
I just get pissed when people are like so confident in that one study.
Well, yeah, like for example, you know, people in our space like to talk about how safe
and great artificial sweeteners are
and they're perfectly fine and studies will show.
And I'm a skeptical person.
I'm like, well, we created them.
We invented artificial sweeteners.
They're synthetic.
So I'm not gonna be so skeptical, but I'm saying,
nah, it's probably not as good for me
as the whole natural foods are.
Whole natural foods have been around
since the beginning of time.
I'm going to wait it out.
Yeah, so let's just wait it out and see what's going on.
Next question is from J.M. Wardle.
With both Kevin Durant and Clay Thompson going down with serious injuries at about the
same time at the very end of the season, do you think these injuries are due to overuse
and lack of recovery?
Do you think the NBA could or should implement measures
to limit these things from happening,
such as shorter playing seasons, et cetera?
This is a cool question.
I'm so pumped that you guys picked this.
Yeah, we totally did.
The idea, because I told them on the post,
I said, listen, the boys don't want to talk about this.
I do want to talk about this,
because I think this is an interesting topic,
and this is totally the conversation
that my best friends and I would have over a beer over a beer and barbecue
weekend type of deal, right?
So you got, first of all, let me explain to you guys so you understand the two injuries
so that I know you can intelligently discuss.
Kevin Durant blew out of the Keeleys.
You told us about that.
Well, originally, they thought he had a calf strain and that's what they said he had and
he was out for about three
weeks. Now personally when I saw it, I ride away said that's a key lease for sure and what I
thought was he probably just had a partial Terry didn't have a full tear. He comes back in the
in the championship game goes hard and blows it out. blows it out completely, right? And then Clay
Clay went up for a dunk when he came down, when he landed his knee did a little
wobble and ACL went.
So he tore his ACL.
So knowing that and the question the way they're asking this question, do I think that some
of this is due to wear and tear over usage on the player?
100% idea.
Now here's the thing.
Now, Clay's was a complete freak
accident landing like that. If he could have played that whole game and not jumped like
that, and he could be totally fine. So that's partially a freak accident. I think Kevin
Durantz probably a little bit over usage. Do I think the NBA should restructure or change
things? Personally, no. I think this is why you pay these warriors. And I think the NBA should restructure or change things. Personally, no. I think this is why you pay these warriors.
And I think they get paid extremely high dollars
because they're at risk.
They put their bodies at risk.
This is gladiators.
I mean, at the end of the day,
what we're doing, we're paying to be entertained
and we're by people who are at,
you know, obviously a level that we could never achieve.
And they're throwing their entire body out there
for us on display.
And so it's tough because you want to empathize
with the athletes out there and have
make sure that they're being acknowledged
and taken care of.
But within the training and with the off season
and the strength, that all has to be really strictly managed
leading up into a really high demand type situation
like the playoffs or the finals.
I love that you compared it to gladiators of the old times
because that's what this is.
Obviously, we can't put two men in a ring
into the death anymore.
It's bad, right?
That'd be so.
But there's a reason.
It'd be like crazy.
I mean, think about that.
There is a reason through all of human history.
We've been drawn to this, right?
Why, why, why, what is it about this that we love to see?
And sports is a reflection of that.
Because we can, it's the close now to that point,
I think if there, if we continue to eliminate the risk of injury and protect
the players and protect the players, I think it'll actually start to take away from the
sport because who would have back then wanted to watch two guys get in the, you know, into
the Coliseum and play with Nerf swords. Right. You know what I'm saying? And we all sat like
when it would be super, would people be into it?
If it was like a point scoring system and they had Nerf swords.
The stakes aren't as high.
Right.
Because the stakes are so high, you don't want to put yourself in that arena or you don't
have the skill to put yourself on that basketball court.
It's so entertaining to watch these athletes who have trained their whole lives and at their
peak performance battle it out and potentially not die, but could get really hurt
in each other's own.
Plus how many times have these athletes felt a twinge or,
first of all, I would like for them to pick one athlete
that's out there competing that doesn't have something
that's hurting at the moment.
Like good luck.
Anytime I've ever competed in anything,
you know, when I was real heavy into judo or
jujitsu, at some point, something hurt always.
Something was always hurting in my body.
And so with these athletes, again, you're sacrificing your body, you're putting yourself
out there.
And time and time again, you've gone out there while you hurt and you came out victorious.
So what makes you think it's going to be different, any different this time?
And plus, that's what makes you who you are.
Now, do I think it's the trainers fault?
Do I think it's the league's fault?
At the end of the day, you know who's fault it is?
The player, they have all the responsibility,
it's their body.
Now, the coaches and the trainers,
their job is to identify these things
and to be smart council.
Like, who knows?
Maybe Kevin Durant's trainer said,
I don't think you should go out there.
I don't, and maybe Kevin Durant said,
no, I'm going out there.
I'm going out there.
Oh, I absolutely think that's what happened.
I absolutely think that he shouldn't,
which is also, and again, like all my buddies and I,
we're all talking like, man, so much admiration
and respect for that man, knowing exactly.
He had a major injury like that that he shouldn't be out there
But yet he showed like immense heart, right put himself on the line
That's part of what makes the sports so that's the drama of it. It is. There's a thing dude
That's why we pay them yeah, you know like a you don't want to admit that but they make a fuck ton of money
Right for reason because it's a short window right window. And that's tough to acknowledge that fact,
but if you go into different sports
where the stakes are even higher,
like a football or like a MMA or something like that,
you, like I'm an advocate of paying them more,
like especially in MMA,
they're way grossly underpaid.
One of the saddest things I ever saw was,
I went to a big fitness convention and there was
an old pro wrestler, they're signing autographs.
You guys remember the iron chic?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
He was there signing autographs and when I saw him, I grew up watching him wrestle and I watched
you know, WWE, about that and it was WWF and I remember he was probably 60 when he was
signing these things, maybe 60, right?
He had a cane and he could barely get up
and stand up and sign autographs.
And I remember having a conversation afterwards
and I told my dad about it and I'm like,
man, this guy was so strong and so muscular
and he goes, these guys, they sacrifice their bodies.
And then later on, I met Joe Montana.
And Joe Montana, I remember watching them walk
and being like, what's wrong with his legs?
And one of my buddies was like,
oh, he's on so much pain medicine and shit like that.
And you realize like, that's the, you know,
what do they say?
You're signing your soul to the devil?
I mean, that's true here.
You're doing, when you're going into this profession,
you're gonna have fame, money, power, glory.
What you're not gonna have is longevity, mobility.
You're not gonna have a long career.
That's why you can't equate fitness in that equation.
No. Now, it's kind of cool too, though,
is this is also what I think is just part
of the evolution of the sport.
I'm a big fan of basketball
and like have followed it and even watched like in red old history and how we got here. And it used
to be that you you had a team, but you played your like five best players the entire time like that's
just it. And then we seen like someone like Dean Smith come on the scene and start rotating through
the players all the time. So those guys could get rest and found that like, oh, if I had
a decent, I maybe I don't have all A players, but I got these B players who can come in,
give my A players a little bit of rest, put them back in, then they have more energy. So
they can pound the other team. And then we saw that was the first big movement in this
like player rotation thing. And then you have coaches like Phil Jackson and you have Popovitch
who have really revolutionized how they do it to the point where they'll actually
throughout the season. It's a very long season. They rest some of their superstars. A lot
of times you would you would see. Yeah, it's a smart coach. Right. You would see some of
our star players not start that game. It's not because he's not the best player. He's
being punished. It's because he's being smart. Like, I know we've got over 80 games that
we've got a play right now. I'm going to let my one of my best players sit this
game out and he would intentionally do that. So I just think we're, we're seeing another
evolution of that and the teams of the future and the warriors are a good example of this.
In fact, we are the tagline for the last championship warrior team was strength the numbers
because, you know, Kerr was known for
playing so many of the bench players.
And in fact, in this last championship run,
you know, I think we played like
12 or 13 players in the championship game
where I think the raptors would play seven.
Do these players have insurance?
Are they able to, like, I know you were talking about how Kevin Durant
was waiting the next contract was supposed to be
the big one.
Blue out of the killings.
Do these guys purchase insurance in case of shit like that?
No, no.
And why?
Well, you can contract, I mean,
sure is affected by that, right?
So because he's out of contract, he's fought.
If he was in contract, he's protected, right?
So in contract.
But do they have separate,
because you know how like singers and actresses
and actors can buy insurance to like,
they can insure like their voice or whatever,
like if something happens to me,
I can't see anymore.
I wonder if there is,
they've got to have something like that.
I'm sure there's some sort of,
I would do that shit.
I can't imagine that it,
I don't know, that's,
it's a good question.
I don't know.
I doubt too many insurance companies without you playing a huge premium would take much. It'd be worth it, I don't know, that's, it's your question. I doubt too many insurance companies
without you playing a huge premium would take much.
It'd be worth it, in my opinion.
Well, if it'd be worth it for the athlete, you're right.
So a painter, but I would question
what insurance company would take on a high profile athlete
that would end up costing them a ton of money
to pay them out?
No, and the risk is so high.
And the risk is so high, right?
It's the reason why if you've got all kinds, if you've got cancer and all kinds
of stuff and you go to the doctors and you try and get insurance, you're paying through
the fucking roof because you're high risk.
Right.
And athlete would be extremely high risk.
Yeah, you're a football player and you're like, I'd like to ensure my, you know, I
don't want to get hurt and like fuck.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, there's a 90% chance this guy's getting hurt.
What insurance companies are going to do that and without you having to pay like a million
dollar premium.
I think that the few, what you're seeing now in sports
and the future of sports, in my opinion,
is being able to identify when you need to take an athlete out,
when you need to focus on recovery,
when you need to train him in a particular way
to prevent injury because it's expensive to the teams
to have these injuries.
It's expensive to the league and it looks bad.
With the more injuries you have, the more sad stories you hear, it's kind of like a black
eye on the sport.
Like if a football player gets just cleaned out with a hit and he gets a concussion and
can't play anymore, it looks bad.
So I think what's smart, what they're starting to invest in is,
how do I identify?
Detection.
Yeah, like okay, we need to take you out now
and we can put you in everything.
All you're,
This is already happening.
This is also why I love sports.
We're gonna see it in professional sports
before we see it hit the general population.
Like you already,
I mean, the warriors before anybody on this podcast,
probably heard of Halo or Noony, that's, or even HRV, the warriors were already implementing it into the system.
Like they're already using stuff like that.
Part of the, they have coaches on staff that are supposed to, to track the steps of their
players in the moon.
Like, oh, Ego Doll is at, you know, he's done, you know, 75,000 steps this week and his
HRV is reading this tomorrow.
He's light day back off.
Who are we?
Who were you just?
Was it Paul?
Was it Paul that was using technology like that for his training as athletes?
Corey does.
Corey.
Corey.
Oh, yeah.
It was Corey who was talking about that.
He does that already with his at he works side by side.
He's the strength conditioning coach.
He works side by side by the practice coaches and the team coaches.
And he would tell
him like, hey, you know, take it easy on Justin today. I, you know, he's measuring here on
his HRV. We just had a hard training session. So don't don't go balls.
And we're already starting to do this. Also imagine the some this is what I think about when
I hear about like athletes like this having these major injuries or whatever. I think about
what a growth. I mean, what a challenge that you must go through.
Like, let's say you're a boxer,
I was in a boxing a lot when I was a kid
and you think about these guys who are just animals
in the ring, un-industructible,
and then they start losing,
and you've identified so strongly with the fact
that you're this amazing athlete, and now you're not.
Like, what a hard like fuck, like what do I do now?
Oh yeah, it's heartbreaking.
I can't even imagine.
No, you guys should watch on Showtime.
It's a documentary on Demarcus Cousins called Resurgence.
So they documented when he tore his Achilles.
So Demarcus Cousins is the center that's on the lawyers.
We picked him up this last year
because no team would touch him
because he just tore his Achilles.
And so they did a documentary on Showtime of his whole rehab and that the mental of like
that happening to him.
He was right.
He was on pace to have a career year with the Pelicans.
They were on pace to go to the playoffs and thought they were going to make a run at the
warriors back then.
And then he tears his Achilles goes down and like what that day.
Oh, yeah.
So it's I can't imagine.
Just like you lose your identity.
Completely.
I'm this amazing athlete.
I'm known for being this amazing athlete.
Now I'm not.
And we see this, that's definitely an example
and that's we're using a professional athlete,
but I normal average people.
I'm seeing this right now with my buddies' dads
that are retiring.
That's why you don't identify with
your body. You don't identify with these things. They spend their whole lives as a whatever
say said job and their job was to be a provider and a father and to work your ass off at this
job. And then it's like now retirements here. The press and their depressed as fuck. Who
am I? And they're trying to figure out and I'm watching it be expressed in different ways.
You know, I'm seeing, you know,
one of my, I refer to it being like a father figure to me
because he was like a father who's like going down
to like smoking cigarettes like crazy
and like just angry and bitter
and just not happy with himself and like depressed.
Like, you know, then the other ones
is like lost confused.
He's already bored of golfing.
Like, you know, so you're seeing this,
I'm watching it firsthand happen,
like, whoa, like how important it is to not get so tunnel vision,
which I know is important for success,
but to be-
Don't identify with it.
Right, right, it's a key.
Yeah, it's like you can be focused on an area,
but it's not-
It's like those Hollywood actors and actresses
are so good looking and so known for being good looking,
and identify so strongly, just can't fucking deal with aging.
They try and preserve it as much as they can with plastic surgery and everything.
Well, my dad retired.
He just, he went crazy and just fucking, I mean, did the back, I tore up the whole lawn
and made a, planted all kinds of different plants and did the front yard and just, you
know, it was like months of just figuring shit out that I needed to be able to
reorganizing everything. Yeah, it was a tough transition. Anyway with that go to
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