Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1075: Dr. Stefanie Cohen - From Venezuelan National Soccer Team to 4X Bodyweight Deadlift & 22 World Records
Episode Date: July 15, 2019Dr. Stefanie Cohen Her humble beginnings and how she came to the US. (3:33) How in some degree we are forced to rise to the occasion: Her journey to what she is currently doing. (6:27) When did the s...witch from soccer to powerlifting happen? (10:30) Did she find her body responded very quickly early on? How strength is a LONG-TERM adaptation. (14:09) When did she decide to compete in powerlifting? (19:13) Was her goal to be the first female to pull 500 lbs.? What did it take to get there and what bumps in the road did she experience? (25:04) The general steps you can do to alleviate pain TODAY. (32:50) Did she change her approach to her workouts after her back injury? (39:04) The differences between flexibility and mobility. (41:55) How should someone PRIME their body before a physical event? (45:05) What does her priming session look like? (47:21) The value of unilateral movements to powerlifters. (48:05) The benefits of unconventional training to powerlifting. (50:48) What information annoys her the most about the strength/fitness camps? (53:39) The story of ‘6 blind men who have never encountered an elephant’ and how people are so fast to draw absolute truths based on one single subjective experience. (56:10) What are her strength goals moving forward? (57:28) Featured Guest/People Mentioned Dr. Stefanie Cohen, DPT (@steficohen) Instagram Website Noah Ohlsen (@nohlsen) Instagram Professor Stuart McGill (@backfitpro) Instagram Greg Lehman (@GregLehman) Twitter Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned July Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off!! **Code “ANYWHERE50” at checkout** Stefanie Cohen breaks two all-time world records in raw powerlifting history Stuart McGill - Amazon.com Pain Science Workbooks — Greg Lehman Mind Pump Ep 955: John Brenkus- 6x Emmy-Award Winning Creator, Host, & Producer of Sport Science Blind Men and the Elephant - Philosophy
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Stephanie Cohen, yeah.
One of the strongest, if not the, well definitely the strongest female in her way class.
One of the strongest girls I've ever even met.
One of the strongest women in the world ever.
And you know, she's this tiny thing.
She's like barely five feet tall,
120 something pounds.
This girl has lifted weights that were thought
to be impossible.
Four times her body weight.
Yeah, 530 pound deadlift squats with 400 pounds
on her Instagram page.
She's also very smart.
She's a doctor of physical therapy.
So she understands movement and correctional exercise
at a much higher level, the most strength athlete.
So in this episode, we talk a little bit about past,
and then things get really technical.
So if you're into the technical aspect of lifting,
if you're into learning how to prevent your body from getting injured,
how to utilize mobility training, flexibility training to improve your performance.
We talk about some of the difference between mobility and flexibility and just some of the
nuances of that. And so you can kind of peer into that a little bit in this episode.
That's right. She's a 22 time world record holder. And her website is hybridperformancemethod.com.
And then her Instagram page is awesome,
because you can see here, lift weights that,
I swear you'd think they're fake,
but she competes in competition, so you know,
she's a strong edge, she says she is.
Her Instagram page is at Steffi Cohen,
that's STEFICOHEN.
And before we get into the episode, Steffi Cohen that's STEFICOHEN.
And before we get into the episode, I wanna let everybody know that maps anywhere,
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So without any further ado,
here we are talking to the incredibly strong,
Dr. Stephanie Cohen.
I think the first time I heard about you
was somebody tagged me on you deadlifting.
I don't know what it was, it was like 400 pounds
and you were doing reps with it.
Probably 500.
Maybe, yeah, so you make it feel worse.
And you're tiny, you're like five foot tall.
How much do you weigh 120 pounds?
On a rib.
Yeah, around there.
On a good day.
On a bad day about 125, 128.
Fine.
You're way as fine.
You're way as fine.
The laws of gravity.
It's impressive as hell.
Yeah, you weigh as much as a dumbbell
in one of the gyms, tiny.
But you're incredibly insanely strong.
If I'm not mistaken, you're the only,
I think you're the first female to deadlift
three times for body weight.
If I'm not mistaken.
Four times.
Four times, sorry, four times.
He's like undercutting.
I know.
I think it's given her real props.
I think it's my ego trying to make me feel good.
Yeah, I know, right?
Me too.
I mean, that is beyond impressive.
It's an incredible feat of strength.
So when I saw the on Instagram,
then I instantly started going through your videos
and I couldn't believe some of the stuff you were doing.
But I'd like to kind of go back and take it back
to kind of where this all started.
Now you're originally from Venezuela, correct?
How old were you when you came here?
I was 17.
Oh, okay, so you spent a lot of your life
living in Minnesota.
What brought you guys to the US?
You know, it's interesting.
My mom really had a vision and just kind of knew or felt
that the situation of Venezuela politically economically
wasn't gonna improve.
So she wasn't one that really pushed me to pursue,
at that time I was playing soccer.
I played for the national team back in Venezuela.
And yeah, and she wasn't one that kind of pushed me pursue at that time I was playing soccer. I played for the national team back in Venezuela. Oh, okay.
And yeah, and she wasn't one that kind of pushed me to try to get a
soccer scholarship here in the States.
And obviously, you know,
pursue a higher level of education.
And so initially I got a soccer scholarship to play in
San Diego State and that was kind of the first place
that I moved when I came here.
Oh, and now did the whole family come with you
at that point?
No, no, I came alone.
Okay, are your parents still over there?
My dad is still there, they're divorced,
and my mom eventually moved to Chicago.
Okay.
And so did my sister.
Wow, what your mom was on point
because the situation over there is,
from what I've read is very difficult.
Yeah, I was so lucky.
Like I moved at the right time, for sure.
And so you still have a lot of family over there.
Is everybody okay with the whole,
or are you able to be in contact with them
and see what's going on?
Being in contact is really difficult
because now they started shutting down
the internet and communication networks.
So, you know, sometimes I'll go a couple days
without really hearing from my dad
or without him being able to communicate.
So it's difficult.
And it's gone to a point my dad used to have a business there.
He used to manufacture sunscreen and shampoo
and different cosmetics like that.
And now he can't even find the materials to make them.
And obviously even if he did, so he had a set amount of products
that they were already finished, but he can't even sell them
because people don't have money.
So it's gone to a point where there's really no
where else to go.
Is this situation as bad as I've read
where people are, those people starving
and having difficult time just finding food and whatnot?
Yeah, absolutely.
Everything you've seen on the news
probably amplify that times five.
Wow, now coming here to obviously
a completely different,
now we're dysfunction our own ways, but to a country that is obviously has a polar opposite
approach when it comes to economics and politics and all that stuff. Does it make you see things
and value things a little bit differently? Absolutely. I mean, things that you would take for granted,
like just being able to leave your house and not being
scared of whether someone got inside of your house or being able to get inside of your house
without being scared that someone followed you in or walking down the streets or being able to get
your driver's license in a day or having a passport, you know, they're not even giving away
passports anymore, or being able to go to the grocery store and find your favorite olive oil.
Just simple things like that.
Well, now you obviously have a tremendous work ethic. You're very young, you're in your
mid to late 20s, and you have incredible accomplishments. Did some of that drive come from the fact
that you came from a place where things were not as accessible, not as much opportunity
coming here, and did some of your work ethic come from the fact that like,
I'm taking advantage of these opportunities?
Yeah, I think to a certain degree, you're forced to rise up to the,
to the occasion. When you grow up and, when you grow up and stay in the
same place where you, where you were born, it is easier in the sense that, you
know, probably your parents already have a lot of connections.
It's a more sense of security, essentially,
where you almost feel like you don't have to put
that much work in order to succeed.
Whereas like when you move alone by yourself
to a new country or a new city,
then you're kind of forced to making your own path, essentially.
That's how I felt at least moving to a different country.
I just felt like I was a race against the clock,
just a constant hustle, just trying to figure out
what I'm good at, what I could, what I had,
maybe like what were some of my talents,
just trying to figure out different things
that I thought could one make me happy,
but two, I could also be good at.
So you come here for soccer.
Did you immediately also enter into,
because you have a, your PhD in physical therapy?
Yes, a doctorate.
Doctorate, sorry.
Did you, was that where you went initially?
You're like, I'm gonna learn physical therapy
and stay in that field or was it something different?
No, to be honest, I really had no idea what I wanted to do.
I started at an architecture major in college
and quickly realized that's not what I wanted
to do.
And I switched majors about five different times.
After that, I switched to engineering, I switched to marketing, business, nursing, pre-med,
and eventually exercise physiology.
So it took me five years to graduate.
I took classes every single summer.
So I never had a summer off because I was always behind.
Right?
Because I was switching majors almost every year.
Until I finally landed in exercise physiology,
which from a standpoint of my genuine interest
was the perfect thing to do.
But from a career standpoint,
maybe not so much because I don't know,
anyone who studied exercise physiology
knows that there's not a big market for us after you graduate college. So maybe not the best business move to
do because after I graduated college, I realized there's the only option I had was probably
being a fitness manager at a gym facility or working at a hospital conducting exercise
fitness tests, you know, VO2 max and cardio tests and educating people
about nutrition, but that's kind of as far as the scope extends for an exercise physiologist.
But you had a passion for it, which is probably why you got it.
I loved it, yeah, I loved it, but I also love making money.
I'm ambitious.
Of course.
So, you know, that was a, it was tough.
So that's when the idea of going to physical therapy came up.
I wasn't sure where I wanted to take my career and
Physical therapy at least had the had the other portion of what I was looking for which was I
don't want to say validation, but
Maybe personally I wanted to do something more for myself
I wanted to achieve the highest level of education for the field that I wanted to be in. And in my opinion, that was physical therapy.
If I wanted to be a strength coach,
if I wanted to be a personal trainer,
I wanted to know the most that a personal trainer could know,
the most that a fitness professional could know.
Could know.
Yeah, I've worked with quite a few physical therapists
and some are obviously better than others,
but I'm always, almost, always impressed
at the level of just the understanding of human function,
and especially with the application of correctional exercise.
And you have videos on YouTube and on your Instagram page where you're talking about mobility
and whatnot, and the way you present it, you can tell you have a very deep understanding
of just movement of the human body.
And I really appreciate it, especially from someone
who's at your level in the field that you compete in,
which I wanna get into, how did you switch from soccer
to powerlifting?
They seem like they're not connected at all.
Did it happen while you were training through that process?
You know, when you were training for soccer,
did you really enjoy that process versus actually playing?
Cause I know for me, playing football,
I attended to enjoy the offseason a little bit more
just because of the process of, you know,
battering myself in the weight room.
Is that a something that you experienced as well?
It's funny because when I say that I played soccer
for the National Team in Venezuela,
you're probably picturing something really prestigious,
but we had a corner in the kind of like that it was the
military training field where we trained at.
So we would post up, you know, a goalie that was not permanent and we would have just
a corner in their military field and that's where 95% of our training would take place.
The other 5% would be our condition or 10% let's say 90 and
10% would take place on the beach. That would be our conditioning session where we would
play soccer just on the sand. And that's it. We didn't have access to a fitness room.
We didn't have access to weights. We just played soccer. We just refined the skill. We
were really good. We were actually the first female soccer Venezuelan soccer team that ever happened.
Oh, cool.
So we kind of like found here that we had nothing.
So to answer your question, I didn't know.
I didn't lift weights until I was 21.
And that was just basically our result of when
I stopped playing soccer.
I was just similar story to college
when I was just trying to figure out something that I
could, was good at, that I also enjoyed.
Same thing happened with sports.
I stopped playing soccer and I immediately started looking for different things.
I did have marathons for a while.
I did eight in one year, just trying to see if I can improve myself.
Yeah.
And not being that, not too bad.
I think my best time was like 135.
Oh, that's fast.
Yeah. So that's really fast. So you're one of those annoying Oh, that's fast. Yeah, so it was good.
So you're one of those annoying people that's born athlete.
Yeah, you're good at all the physical stuff.
I'm not. I'm not. I just stick to the things that I'm really good at
and dump the ones that I'm not.
Okay.
You just get hyper focused.
Yeah, but but I know in a quit.
So if I tried, say, skateboarding, which I did,
I quickly realized that I was afraid of falling.
And that's just a fear that I was never going to be able to get over.
I see.
You know, so I tried it for a couple of weeks and then quit.
I even bought my own skateboard and I was criticized by my parents,
by my boyfriend at a time, that I was a quitter.
But in my head, I was in.
I was just a realist.
Hey, you know, I'm going to try this.
I don't have the skills that are necessary or I'm not good fit.
It's not a good fit for me. Yeah, so I'm just not gonna do it. I'm gonna go look for something that I'm good at.
So you started lifting weights and you felt right away like this is for me.
So I started doing CrossFit. That was kind of my first exposure to it. You know, Noah Olson.
He's a CrossFitter. He's a CrossFitter in Miami. He went to school with me in the same program
and he trained at a gym that was a couple miles away from school And he was the one that said hey, maybe you know, you'll enjoy doing this
So I went there and obviously there's like nine different disciplines
Well, however many different disciplines that you need to be good at in order to be a good cross-fitter
The one that I was the worst at was weights so Olympic weightlifting and obviously anything related to strength because I had never done it before
So I said you know, maybe I need to just focus
all of my energy into first mastering these two,
getting stronger and getting better Olympic lifting,
and then I'll be able to be a better cross-fitter.
But obviously I never went back to CrossFit.
I just kind of started doing Olympic weight lifting.
I found a coach that used to coach at the national level
in Cuba and Venezuela, and he kind of just took me
under his wing, and that was my segue into lifting weights. Now, did your body respond? Did you find yourself
responding very quick? I mean, obviously you're an athlete, so you're probably genetically speaking
obviously at the level you're right now. This goes without saying, but you've got really,
really good genes. I would assume that your body responded very quickly early on. Like, were you,
were right away where people like
Well, you're really strong size. Yes. Yes
Well, and what did that feel like to you and this is important to communicate because I think a lot of women sometimes are afraid
Of lifting weights, but I don't think they realize how empowering it can feel to get strong. Yeah
What was your initial impression? I mean that pursuing that and like the real strength aspect of that was that appealing to you initially?
Oh absolutely.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say that I was extremely,
it was extremely empowering.
Just as a girl, just to do things that girls aren't supposed to do,
be able to step to the other side of the gym where the weights are at,
you know, where there's no girls at all,
and you just go in and grab the heaviest stumble
or just start cranking squats with two plates,
and all the guys
are just looking at you and all.
You can't even believe it.
That's empowering on its own.
So while you're doing this, are you also noticing that your body's developing muscle fast
or are you one of those people that you were just strong and muscle came on a little slower?
So mentally, obviously, that was one of the other appeals about lifting weights as a female that I found to be incredible was that, and I think most girls are like that.
You're working out because you want to look a certain way.
Yeah, most guys and girls, everybody, I'd say.
Yeah, kind of like that.
And it's common just body dysmorphia in the fitness industry in general is a real thing.
So it was nice for me to be able to switch my mind from,
hey, what can I do to look this way,
to what can I look, what can I do to lift this much?
So just that kind of switch and mentality was liberating.
I'm so happy you said that because,
well, that was a strategy that I used with clients.
More often than not female clients, because I just think generally speaking, they tend
to have more issues with body image.
And that's a whole separate discussion about society and advertising a lot of stuff.
But when they would come to me with these body image issues, one of the best strategies
I had at helping them get out of it or improve was to shift their focus from how they looked
to how they performed.
And the place I would push their focus would be strength.
And it worked very, very well.
And you're saying that it did that for you too.
That's awesome.
Because also it's strength is a long-term adaptation, right?
You don't get strong from lifting weights for two weeks.
And for some reason, that's a lot easier to accept
than I want to look good and I want that now.
Great point.
That's a great point.
How did you do power lifting from here?
So from there, I did Olympic weight lifting for three years.
I even have the Olympic ranks that half of them tattooed in my arm.
I took that very seriously.
I wanted to go to the Olympics.
I was very good.
Then I got into grad school.
I mean, I don't know if you know what competitive
Olympic weightlifting entails, but in order to be really, really good, you have to train
a lot. So I'm talking about nine training sessions a week. And you need to be supervised
by a coach because it's so highly skilled. The movements that you need to have someone
looking at you and being like, Hey, that snatch was one inch forward. You need to pull more.
You need to be more explosive. Hey, your mind is not into it today.
You have to come back in the afternoon.
You need to have someone looking at you
and pushing you because it's stowed just so mentally demanding.
Steph, I want to stop you there because that's
a very important point that you made.
The Olympic lifts as effective and awesome
as they are are easily the most complex, technical,
barbell movements that you could possibly do.
One of our biggest criticisms of CrossFit
is that they include Olympic lifts in fatigue-based training,
which, you know, form breaks down
and they tend to be, you know, really dangerous.
Did you identify this as you were doing Olympic training
and saying, oh, this is not,
we probably shouldn't be doing this in a circuit.
Yeah, I mean, yes and no.
I like to believe that there's really no bad movements, just people who aren't prepared
for movements.
That's kind of like the ideology that I subscribe to.
So I think the main issue there is people are unprepared and they're throwing them into
these classes without having adequate shoulder overhead mobility, without having enough
thoracic extension, without having sufficient lumbopelic
control, and they're being thrown into these dynamic movements that require a lot of skill,
and they don't have the prerequisite mobility requirements, and they don't have the prerequisite
skill to be doing that in that setting.
It takes a long time.
It takes a long time.
It takes a long time.
And which is why I took a step back from CrossFit, and I said, hey, and I didn't know much.
I just said, hey, it doesn't make much sense for me
to be doing this movement 60 times
that I don't know how to do.
So I'm just gonna not do it.
And every time that I snatch or a clean and jerk
would come up in a work and a wad,
I would just substitute for something else.
And then I would spend a lot of time trying
to develop the skill of snatching clean and jerk.
Incredible intuition on your part,
probably saved your body, lots of injuries, especially
with your competitive nature.
A lot of people fall into that trap.
So Olympic lifting, because it's so technical, you're just doing a lot of frequency, a lot
of training, a lot of coaching, and you're saying that you shied away from that because
you had so much school.
Oh, yes.
So then I got into grad school.
And obviously that was the first time in my life where I had to accept that I was no longer
an athlete first.
I was a professional student at that time.
So my school had their requirement that you had to go there for you had to attend some
was a hundred percent mandatory.
So I had to be there for eight hours a day, which obviously made it extremely difficult
for me to be able to do two training sessions a day, right?
Initially, I tried to make it happen.
So I moved in with a roommate from undergrad who did the same exercise physiology program
as me.
And I walked in the first day, she was already living there.
I walked in and I see the living room and I'm like, hey, her name is Maryl.
Hey, Maryl, what do you think if we get rid of all the furniture in the living room,
you know, the couch, the TV, the table, everything, we get rid of all of that.
And we put a squat wrecking a platform.
Yeah.
Right?
We didn't really know how to do that.
She was all about it.
Really?
Yeah, she said, oh, yeah, that'd be awesome.
So we turned our living room into a training space in a second floor of a really tiny and old apartment complex.
And initially, that's what was allowing me
to do my two training sessions.
So I would do one in the morning, either before class,
six in the morning, or I would come back
during lunchtime, I would do my first training session then,
and then in the afternoon I would go to a gym,
or during midterms or finals week,
that's where I would do all my training.
So my training session would last six hours
because I would go do three squats and then sit down and study
or you know for 10 minutes to like whatever I had to do. What were the conversations like when you guys would invite people over like you're on a date
They haven't seen your apartment yet. They walk in they see weights. We both thought we were insane
Yeah, especially people under us. Oh
Yeah, yeah, how are you doing?
So how did you switch to powerlifting, which is, you know,
obviously less technical, but also very grueling?
I feel like I give going around that.
Yeah, no problem.
So, yeah, eventually it got really hard for me to be able
to maintain the level of training that I needed in order to keep improving.
And most of my sessions became, most of my training sessions became bad ones.
From a mental standpoint, I was just tired.
I was not there.
From a focus standpoint, and I wasn't enjoying it anymore really.
I would leave most of my training sessions I would leave before finishing, because I just
felt like I wasn't going anywhere.
So that's when I met Hayden, and Hayden suggested, hey, maybe kind of similar to what happened
with CrossFit.
Maybe just try to get stronger
and that will get your Olympic weight lifting better.
And I said, okay, so instead of snatching,
cleaning, jerking, nine times per week,
I started doing it two times per week or three times per week.
And the rest of the sessions were just strength-related.
It's a lot easier to grind through a heavy squad
or a heavy deadlift session than it is heavy snatch session.
If you're not there, that snatch isn't,
if 50% of us, you're a snatch isn't going anywhere,
that's staying in the ground.
Whereas a squat, you can grind.
And so as you're doing these lifts,
your strength is going up, up, up.
And I'm feeling better.
I don't have to spend that much time in the gym.
I'm getting stronger, I'm looking better,
because I'm focusing more on hypertrophy and on strength.
It doesn't require that much mental concentration,
so I'm just feeling better all around.
When did you do your first power lifting competition,
and when did you realize like, okay,
I'm gonna, I think I'm gonna be one of the best.
So a couple, a couple months after I made the switch,
I tried sumo deadlifting, and I was able to pull 315 the first time I did it.
When my conventional debt lift was like 250 maybe.
That's ridiculous.
I mean, 120 pound or whatever, and your first debt lift, 315.
So that's in raging.
So that's when I decided to compete.
I had a fun time, I think, the contrast between the Olympic weightlifting community and the powerlifting community was interesting to see as well.
Like what, like what are the contrast to the battle?
I didn't know about that.
I mean, I don't, I don't know if battles are right word, but they're just different in
their own ways.
I mean, Olympic weightlifting is a lot more formal.
When you go to compete in an Olympic weightlifting meet, it's not that fun.
Like people take it really seriously like too seriously.
Hey, it's a local meat, you know?
Just relax.
That's all I have fun, you know?
Don't lean more far.
So it's way more fun by.
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So it's way more fun by. So it's way more fun by. So it's way more fun by. So it's way more fun by. So it's way more fun by. So it's way more fun by. up room, they help load your bar, they make you feel like you're a part of something, and that all was very appealing to me.
Oh, that's awesome.
Now, meanwhile, you're going to school learning, you know, biomechanics, learning how the body
moves, and are you applying what you're learning to, you're training to improve your performance
or prevent injury at this point?
That was, it was a little bit difficult because, and I could be wrong.
I don't know what's being taught in other schools, but I felt like in my program, the beliefs
were a little bit antiquated, as far as what lifting dust your body.
Oh, you mean at school, it was antiquated.
What were they saying that was, that was antiquated?
I mean, I had a spine professor that that kept telling me that I was
going to break my back from that lifting. Oh, wow. Yeah. Yeah. That it's obviously it's not true, but
he was a he's a professor. So obviously I I was holding it him to a certain standard. I thought
that I was believing what he was saying to a certain degree, but obviously that wasn't gonna make me stop deadlifting
But it was a it was a tough point for sure because on one hand
I
Obviously wanted to keep our lifting on the other hand. I had these people with a lot of authority telling me
That I wasn't the best or that it was dangerous that I shouldn't be doing it. I shouldn't be advertising it. I shouldn't be promoting it
So so let's move fast forward to the point where you were able to pull over 500 pounds
off the floor.
Was that your goal?
Was your goal to be the first person to pull four times body weight, where you were female?
Were you, what did your training and diet look like to get to that point, to be able to
do that just insane feed of strength.
No, I don't think it was a goal that I set for myself when I first started.
I never thought it was possible.
It was an all-time world record, so it was in fact not possible until I did it.
But what did it look like?
I'm trying to think.
It looked like a lot of ups and downs.
The first time I pulled 500 was coming back
from an awful low back injury.
I think I spent three months rehabbing it
and then two more months until I got back to that 500 pound
after being stuck in a plateau at like four,
I don't know, I wanna say four 60,
around four 60 for a long time.
So it looked like a lot of ups and downs,
a lot of frustration, a lot of failing.
Do you think the back injury,
let's talk about that for a second,
do you think the back injury
gave you a different perspective
that allowed you to get stronger afterwards?
Was that part of, do you think that was part of
why you were able to break through your plateaus?
Yes, that was the first injury that I personally had that
required me to take time off, dedicated time off. And the reason why it required
that versus people that are able to just work around that injury and keep
going on the gym and doing other things was because I was so stubborn. I thought
that I was indestructible, I thought that I could, even though I was hurt, I
thought that I could keep showing up to the gym and that I was indestructible. I thought that I could, even though I was hurt, I thought that I could keep showing up to the gym
and that it was gonna resolve on its own.
So just be having that injury taught me that,
sometimes you need to take a step back
and you need to identify what the cause of the issue actually is
and you need to take the steps required to fix it.
Essentially.
Now, how did you navigate around that?
Were you looking outside to see who's like a back
specialist or somebody's information out there besides you're obviously going to school for this?
Was there anybody out there too that had really good information that you're trying to get to help
you through this process? Yeah, so the first person that I got exposed to was toward my gale.
He's kind of a lead researcher in low back pain.
And so I bought all of his books
and didn't read them from start to finish,
but took snippets here and there,
listened to a bunch of his podcasts
and a bunch of his YouTube videos,
looked at what other people were doing,
were saying, looked on social media
to see what kind of advice was being given
about low back pain and then try
to make it fit or try to make it work for me essentially.
In a nutshell, would you be able to kind of talk about what his philosophy is around?
Look, I hear his name all the time when it comes to low back pain.
I know, he's the first thing that pops up all the time.
Yeah, our friend Lane Norton went to him for his back problems and in a nutshell, I have
kind of an idea of how he talks about pacpain.
A lot of it comes across as don't deviate from a particular type of posture and move
in this way all the time.
Which to me sounds, I could see some of the benefit of it, but I can also see some of the
detriment being a personal trainer knowing that that's just not life.
Your body moves in all kinds of different directions and ways.
How would you, how could you characterize kind of his philosophy around back pain?
Like what is some of the things he communicates?
I think most of his views are mechanistic in nature.
So he believes that the main cause of someone's low back pain has to be able to be identified
following a thorough evaluation.
So that's why his e-vals are so long lengthy.
Take so much time because he really believes
that if you sit down and do a bunch of provocation tests
that you should be able, that anyone should be able
to identify what the actual source of someone's low back pain is.
Okay. And once he identifies it through his testing, then is his approach different than,
or does he have a unique approach to correcting these issues?
Yeah, so then that's where the Miguel Big Three came up. So he's all about increasing stiffness and stability
through the Miguel Big Three and other different exercises that are essentially
isometric exercises to increase stiffness
or stability in the low back or in the segment that's unstable.
Okay.
And then do you have any differing opinions with his approach or do you agree with it?
Because it seems like his research kind of dominates that field.
I don't know of too many other people that you look to when it comes to low back research.
Yeah. Have you heard of Greg Lehman?
Greg Lehman is a
Dr. and Carpacar practice. He also has a master's in biomechanics and I think he also went to physical therapy school. Okay. This guy's like on another level
Okay. Is it different than McGill's approach? Yes, so I
Do want to add something about my Gill's approach that I think I agree with.
So part of his evaluation is identifying what the, what the, what the cause of pain, what
the movement that's causing pain is and essentially trying to avoid that movement and trying to
do more of the movements that don't, don't cause pain.
So you call someone either flexion, intolerant or extension intolerant.
So if you're someone that bending over causes you pain,
then you're said to be flexion intolerant.
If you're someone that bending backwards
causes you pain, then you're extension intolerant.
And essentially he just tells you,
hey, okay, don't maybe avoid.
It's an avoidance sort of mentality.
Yes, avoid forward bending for, I don't know,
an arbitrary amount of time that he determines.
And let's do more of prone press ups,
let's do more superman's, ironman's,
how we wanna call it, let's do more bird dogs
and extension, that kind of stuff.
And just avoid this movement for X amount of time.
And it almost makes it seem how he explains this as,
it's a little bit, or to me, it's a little bit of fear mongering
on his part to just deem this particular movement as bad and this other one as good.
So I think you just have to be careful about how you present that information to people
because we know that what you tell people can definitely exacerbate their pain just based
on how you're presenting that information. Yeah and and it reminds me of, you know, when I would train people and they'd come see me and they'd say,
Dr. told me not to squat anymore and I said, well, you know, how come?
Oh, it hurts my knee, so I'm not going to squat anymore.
And I'd think to myself, like squatting is, that's a basic human function.
I think the idea is for us to figure out a way to get you to be able to squat again without paying
because that's a, you know, that decreases your quality of life not being able to squat.
And that's why sometimes I shy away from that.
Like don't do that because it hurts.
It's like, okay, well, what if that is a basic human function or the things that can do
to move towards being able to get back into that position again without hurting.
This other researcher you mentioned, Lehman, I think,
is him.
How is his approach different?
So he talks about, first of all, giving a definition
about what stability actually is.
And kind of challenges the idea of how can you actually
determine whether or not there's a non-stable segment.
And why does that segment have to be unstable?
That's the, that's his whole premise.
Now, how do you know that someone has an instability in the low back?
Why do you think you need to fix it? And what makes you think that,
that the pain is arising from that?
That's, I like that because referred pain is a real thing.
And oftentimes the pain comes
from areas you might not even anticipate or expect.
You were mentioning before we went on air that there are these general steps that most
people can take to alleviate pain, although there's an individual application, I'm interested
in hearing what your general steps are for pain.
Okay, yeah. And I haven't been here written down because I didn't want to miss anything.
No problem.
So obviously the first one is stop doing what hurts.
Mm-hmm.
And this one is super obvious, but a lot of people miss it.
You know, they don't want to stop doing what's hurt, what hurts, especially fitness people.
They don't want to stop snatching, drinking, squat, benching, and deadlift because they
think they're going to lose their gains.
But it's absolutely necessary. You need to stop doing whatever movement is aggravating
for at first or in period of time in order to let that tissue heal if there's an actual
tissue damage or just in order to calm down the pain in that particular area. So that's your first
one. Then obviously understanding that tissue adaptation takes time. In order for tissues to get stronger, essentially they need to be exposed to stress.
So think about for example, people that get a total knee replacement or a total hip replacement.
What is the first thing that they do when they wake up?
They walk.
They walk.
Or someone that has something in their heart.
You have to stress.
You have to stress the heart in order for that
heart, for the vessels and the heart to essentially produce or go
around your genesis, which is the process of creating new vessels that go into
the heart and for the heart to get stronger as well.
Right, so it's appropriate stress.
Appropriate stress. And also in that process, it's important to understand that everyone responds to it differently
and everyone has a different amount of time that it takes them to heal.
So it's common for people to just go online and say, oh, what's the healing time for a hamstring
strain?
And it says six weeks.
And then maybe your hamstring strain takes eight weeks.
And at six weeks, you show up to the gym and you tried deadlifting. It's just understanding, hey, healing time is
different for everyone. Don't go based on something that you see online. Just go based on how you feel
and what your pain tolerance is and trying not to exceed that at that particular point in time.
Yeah, that's got to be one of the biggest ones. It's like, listen to your body. I can't tell,
I can't tell you how many times people come to me with, oh, I've been doing the keto diet for three months and I'm constipated and I feel terrible. How long am I supposed
to feel bad? I'm like, it's probably not for you. Maybe try something different. And that one
piece of advice right there, listen to your body, I think applies to, I mean, all aspects of life,
but especially when it comes to your workouts and your nutrition. Exactly. Yeah, because people are
always always try to get the answer from something external, whether that's your
therapist or the internet, and they wholeheartedly believe on what those people are saying and
ignore everything that's on their insight.
How are they feeling?
Can they actually prepare to this particular movement based on their pain tolerance and so
on?
Then the third one is educating them about pain.
So we know that pain doesn't always indicate
that there's tissue damage.
You can have a lot of pain and very little tissue damage.
You can have, it varies.
They're not directly correlated.
Yeah, I know.
A lot of times, I used to train a lot of surgeons and doctors.
And I trained one surgeon who did a lot of
back surgeries, and he'd say it's remarkable how many times people have bulging discs or
issues, and they're asymptomatic.
They have no pain.
And other times when people have all this excruciating pain, and they cannot find anything
wrong with them, pain can also be entirely psychological.
People who are depressed experience pain differently than people who are happy or feeling
good.
Stimulants can impact how you feel about pain.
That's an important one to communicate, I think, because pain is such a subjective thing.
Yeah, absolutely.
I have a cool analogy here to kind of try to explain it.
There's a big, I don't want to say fat or craze, but there's a big push, especially from
physical therapists now, about the biopsychosocial model of pain, and they're trying to push that
into their patients, just trying to explain to them how pain works and that pain starts in your brain.
And I feel like it's a hard message to get across when people are in pain because, you know,
you're knee hurt. It's real to them, right? It's real to them. Exactly. So how do you actually
convey that message without making them feel like they're crazy or that their pain is not there,
or that it's less than what they're perceiving, right?
This analogy came from actually one of Greg Lehmann's book that pain is like an alarm
An alarm like a smoke detector
It doesn't really tell you whether or not there's actually a fire and it doesn't tell you how much smoke there is
sometimes that alarm can
for some reason is more sensitive to
Stuff that's in the air and it can go off for no reason pain is similar to that and it's very much so
Emotion context dependent
Obviously pain is something that's there to tell you
Do something about this, but it doesn't always indicate tell you exactly what that is
Is there a way that you describe to your patients like how to identify
what type of pain it is or like what kind of signal your body is telling you like because I know
it varies so much right? Yeah, I don't know, not that I know of. Not that I know of but we just know
that in the in the take home messages pain doesn't always indicate tissue damage and so. It means
it just means something. Yeah. It just means something. Yeah, it means hey take action
Mm-hmm. Maybe don't move this way or try to avoid this position or maybe take it down a notch
Don't squat seven times a week. Yeah, and especially for athletes
we learn to
Ignore pain to a certain extent because some pain is okay like when you're working out hard
When you're getting sore when you're feeling, and then of course the competitive aspect of it.
And so when you combine those two, sometimes you get to create the perfect storm of just
ignoring pain, just keep going, push through it, which is a disaster for a lot of people.
Absolutely.
Is that what happened to you when your back started hurting, where you're just kind of like,
I'm going to keep going, see what happens.
I was just totally ignoring it.
Wow.
What exactly happened to your back?
You don't know.
Okay. I got, look, I went to four different therapists and got four different diagnosis. I was just totally ignoring it. Wow. What exactly happened here back? You don't know.
I got, look, I went to four different therapists and got four different diagnosis.
Interesting.
Wow.
Did you notice any compensations as a result of it, like going back into, you know, doing
your workouts?
No, like as far as how my movement looked.
Yeah.
No, not really.
I was just really stiff.
Mm-hmm.
I was having a lot of trouble bending forward.
Did you change?
I know it in my back.
Did you change anything afterwards?
Do you have like a different warm up or priming session
that you do now that you didn't do before because of it?
Yeah, there's several things that I changed.
Would you mind going into what they are
or what the things that you do now?
Yeah, absolutely.
One thing was just monitoring the load better.
Before I was just go, go, go all the time.
I would, it doesn't matter whether I did a heavy squat
or a heavy deadlift, I would go again
for a heavy squat at the end of the week
without really paying attention
to how that was actually affecting my body.
You know, we know that for example,
bone remodeling takes a certain amount of time
from, say that you load your back. And there's
your bones need to recover from that for a certain amount of time before you're able to load them
again safely. That's just one example. Obviously, all tissues respond to load in that same way. So
muscles, intendants, and ligaments also need time to recover after you've put them through
something strenuous, like lifting a ton of weight.
So I've just gotten better at understanding how much weight I can do in a certain week
before I start getting those aches and pains before I start getting, before that margin
of safety starts getting really, really small.
And I start exposing myself to more injuries.
Now, is this based off of feel or do you now look at it and write it out and say, okay, no matter what, you know, I lift, I do heavy deadlift or heavy squat this time of
week, and no matter what, the next session is going to be lighter and easier and maybe
focused more on form. Did you do it that way or do you still just go off of feel?
Accommodation. So understanding how much work I'm doing every week, and if I have to obviously,
in order for you to get
stronger there needs to be a certain amount of progressive overload every week.
So just making sure that you account you you're aware of how much work you're
doing in a specific week and that it has a logical progression that's not too
steep or too aggressive from week to week. And then accepting that even though
you might be planning for everything,
your body might not be on the same page as you.
Sure.
It's just that combination.
And the irony of this is, and some of us take a long time to learn this, I did. You actually
progress faster. So it's like the idea, you know, the problem with always training hard
before is you think that's what's going to make you progress faster. But but the reality is when you do what you're saying now you actually get faster results
It's like you're working with your body versus against it absolutely every single time. So
Here there's a there's a lot of confusion in our space around the difference between like flexibility and
mobility for example
Would you mind going into the differences between
like what does it mean to be flexible?
To find the two because I know.
And what is mobile is confusing.
Right.
Well, we know that flexibility doesn't necessarily pertain to the length that a muscle can change
to in order to allow you to do a specific movement,
but it's more so central nervous system dependent.
So your brain essentially is controlling how much tension that muscle is going to have
at a particular point in time.
And that's what you can train yourself to be able to tolerate more stretch or less stretch,
but there's not a real change in muscle length or muscle fibers at that
particular point in time. Whereas mobility, I think there's many definitions, but I'm
more so interpreted as related to joints. Can you access different or a full range of
motion in a particular joint?
Now, for athletes who require flexibility, is it just flexibility, or is it the ability
to be able to connect to different ranges of motion?
In other words, should it just get flexible,
or should I be able to own that range of motion
through that even a good idea to get flexible?
Yeah, a lot of times.
It depends on the sport.
So there's a couple of examples that I usually draw from.
For example, sprinters.
Sprinters need to have really tight
calves in order to be able to generate the most amount of power when they touch the ground every
stride. So would it be a good idea for them to be stretching out their calves? Their calf muscles
probably not because those muscles need to be tightly wound in order for them to be able to produce
the most amount of force into the ground. Another example is basketball players.
We know that the hamstrings that attach to the back of your leg bone, the back of your
tibia, and so they actually are protective against one of the major injuries that that
basketball players suffer from, which is ACL injuries.
And so it would be a good idea for basketball players to stretch their hamstrings aggressively before a game
Or do you want those suckers to be taught and to be able to resist against
Translational translational forces when they switch directions. You in other words and correct me if I'm wrong
As the hamstrings lengthen you want them to have a certain amount of tension to provide that support
If you do lots of static stretching before the game, static stretching being,
I'm sitting there, it's a classic stretching, right, that what you did in PE,
where I'm sitting there holding the stretch of my hamstring.
Now I've told my central nervous system not to hold so much tension in this stretch position,
that's going to provide me with less stability and potentially increase my risk of injury.
Yeah, and less ability for those muscles to generate force. that's going to provide me with less stability and potentially increase my risk of injury.
Yeah, and less ability for those muscles
to generate force.
Imagine if a muscle's like a rubber band,
how would that rubber band be able to generate
the most tension when you leave it,
when you stretch it out for the entire night
and then you go grab it, it's all loose,
or if it's tight.
So how should somebody then before an athletic event, before powerlifting competition, before
basketball or any sport, how should they get their bodies ready then?
It doesn't, it sounds like we probably shouldn't do a lot of static stretching.
Right.
What would you recommend?
So first, it depends on the demands of their particular sport.
So let's talk about Olympic weightlifting, for example.
Obviously, those athletes are going to have to be able to put a barbell over their head. and some of the demands of their particular sport. So let's talk about Olympic weightlifting, for example.
Obviously those athletes are gonna have to be able
to put a barbell over their head.
So it would be necessary for them to do the drills
that they need to do in order for that barbell
to be able to land in the position they needed to land on.
And that most likely is gonna require some amount
of static stretching.
Good point.
So you need to be able to access the range of motion
that you need for your particular sport.
That's the first thing.
So why are you stretching is the first question
you need to ask yourself.
Are you stretching because there's a range of motion
that you need to access for your particular sport?
Are you stretching because it feels good?
Are you stretching because you feel like there's a restriction
or what's the reason why you're stretching?
Okay.
For me, the most valid one is I need to access it
for whatever
activity I'm doing. Now, are you more likely to do static stretches personally or like a
kin stretch from FRC, something like that? So, in FRC, there is actually a portion of it
that suggests for you to do static stretching. So, I think it's like a three step process
where the first one is a two minute long static stretch
and then you do some PNF style contractions
to access even more range.
So you gain the range of motion,
but now you have to access it.
So there's like two parts of that.
Exactly, and then you do the cars,
bailed in rails, where you strengthen
the range of motion that you found.
Now you take it through its's full. Yeah range now
I know I know
Individuals can vary dramatically, but do you have a general like pre squat
Pre deadlift pre bench press those are the three big power lifts
Like priming session that you like to recommend to people is there like a general one that you like to recommend?
No, I like to recommend for people to find whatever they need to do
personally for their squad bench and deadlift.
It doesn't why would you ask me what I do?
Because my mobility restrictions or my requirements are probably completely
different to yours.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about that a little bit because I think that you see that
a lot like on YouTube and Instagram and you'll see people talk about it, what work really well for them and that becomes what
they're providing everybody in a sense.
Yeah, what are some of the ones that you do for yourself?
Not much, to be honest with you.
When I'm pretty comfortable with squatting, there's no particular mobility move that I need
to do in order to get in a better position. Same for bench.
And for that lift, maybe if we're soon a little bit to open up my hips, I do some hip 90-90s.
I do some co-sack squats side to side to open up my hips a little bit more. Maybe some bulgur and
split squats with a reach for my QL. Because those are areas that you've identified for me that
I feel like it restricts me in my movement. How do you feel about split stance in unilateral type exercises
for power lifters who obviously they're lifting
both legs together, whether you're deadlifting or squatting,
how often would you program?
Yeah, what are the value in doing a lunge
or a Bulgarian split stance squat
for somebody who just wants to get a better squat
and deadlift?
Is this someone who just started powerlifting
or is this an experienced powerlifter?
Let's talk about both.
Let's talk about both.
Let's say someone just started.
Okay.
So, I like to think about people who just...
So, powerlifting is an extremely specific sport.
Obviously, there's only three movements that you're being tested at and they are only
in one plane.
So, I think the mistake that a lot of beginner powerlifters make is they specialize too early
and they completely ignore any other plane of motion, any other movement. So I think the mistake that a lot of beginner power lifters make is they specialize too early,
and they completely ignore any other plane of motion, any other movement, any other skill,
any other thing that might benefit them that is not directly resembling that movement.
So I don't really have a name for it, but I like to think about it as kind of broad-based
training or GPP however you want to call it, where when someone's getting into a specific sport, I think it would be beneficial for them to master
a wider way of movements and be comfortable with jumping, maybe some snatching, maybe
some cleaning, sprinting, moving side to side, jumping side to side, just for them to be
able to understand their body, how it works, how it moves, and be more coordinated, have
better proprioception, better awareness.
So when they go into a more specific movement, they're just more athletic, and they are able
to refine that skill even better.
So start general.
This is actually, we had a coach on a while ago who worked with kids, and he said the same
thing when they first start out,
it's far better to give them general performance,
you know, improvements.
And then as they got older,
or more, then it becomes more specialized.
That's the honing in on that.
Yeah, and it sounds like it's the same advice
that you give.
Absolutely.
And it's a great question because a lot of times
I get asked on podcast story or interviews
what my training looks like today.
And I get asked that question by other aspiring
ask power lifters as well.
And I think they're asking the wrong question.
Because what I'm doing today is not what got me here
in the first place.
I mean, I told you, right?
I started lifting weights eight years ago.
I started with CrossFit.
And when I was doing Olympic weight lifting,
I was training nine times per week.
That is a lot of squats.
Yeah.
I was squatting nine times per week.
So that's a lot of reps. That's, that was a lot of opportunity for I was squatting nine times per week.
So that's a lot of reps.
That was a lot of opportunity for me to refine one specific skill or a group of specific
skills.
And while I was doing that at the same time, I was always doing strongman exercises,
carrying stones or carrying sandbags and doing yoga, and sprinting and doing all sorts
of different movements that allow me to become the athlete I am today.
Yeah.
So, and I read that you do some unconventional stuff
for your training.
And I say unconventional in the context of powerlifting,
like circuits and athletic type of, you know,
training things that you typically don't see powerlifters
typically do not do circuits.
They typically don't rest less than, you know, a minute. That would be their fancy. I don't think power lifters typically do not do circuits. They typically don't rest less than a minute.
It would be their fancy.
I don't think anything cardiovascular with powerlifting.
But you do that as part of your training.
Why?
Mostly, I don't do it all year round.
That's the most important piece of the answer.
I think that the delineation of on and off seasons is particularly important for power
lifters and only big way of lifters too.
We don't have, at least in powerlifting,
we don't really have kind of like a main event
that everyone's training for,
everyone in powerlifting trains for.
Like, for example, crossfiters have the Crossfit Games.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
So then they'll have a season where they focus on strength,
a season where they focus on endurance,
a season where they're focused on improving
their, refining their skills, et cetera.
But for us, we're not all training for the same needs.
We're, everyone trains for whatever
meat is more convenient for them in terms of maybe
the location and the time of the year, right?
But what happens with, what are these people doing
the rest of the year?
Are they taking time off?
Are they taking enough time?
Or are they doing some cardio to improve their cardiovascular
system and improve their work capacity and endurance? What are they doing the rest of the year? And that's what
I'm trying to get at is that these circuits, these unconventional training that I
do doesn't happen year round. It happens based on just the season. So if I'm, let's
say three months out of a meet, you'll likely not see me do a lot
of those things.
But if I'm six months out of a meet, then most of my training is actually going to be
circuit based, just trying to have fun in the gym, trying to get out of the, or further
from the powerlifting mentality of coming to the gym and having to hit a specific number,
just coming in, having fun, moving in different ways, improving my cardio, being healthier, et cetera.
Now, some people I think would think, oh, if I change my training, even though in the
off season, I'm going to lose my progress for my specific sport, which may be powerlifting.
And so I don't want to move away from that because I'm not going to get the same strength
gains.
Do you think your approach is leading to better performances or do you
think it's holding you back in terms of extreme performance and powerlifting?
I mean, my performance speaks for itself.
I've been able to improve every year, but I don't 100% neglect powerlifting movements
when I'm in the off season.
Say, well, right now I'm only squatting twice a week in prep for my next competition,
but if I'm in the off season, maybe I'll squat once every 10 days, you know, that would once every every two weeks. I'll keep doing
those movements just not at the same frequency as I would if I was preparing for a competition.
And then the closer you get to the competition, the more you do those and the less you do
of the other alternative. Now, you're in a unique situation. There's very few people
like you in the sense that you don't see a whole lot of extremely high-performing strength athletes that also have the
educational background that you have. It's actually quite rare. One of our good
friends, Jordan Chalow is one of those people, strength athlete, but also very
very educated. Yeah, late Norden. Yeah, Lane Norton, another guy.
But you're like at the top of your game,
and you have that education.
What are, I have to imagine, because in our space,
there's a lot of annoying information that comes out.
Like we see things like, gosh, that is just not correct.
That's not accurate.
Are there things that you see that just,
because of your background in education,
where you shake your head and go,
like that's not right.
Are the things that just annoy the hell out of you?
One of the things that annoy the most about strength and building muscle and all the information
that we get through the fitness industry.
I mean, I want to fire any shots at anyone.
I don't know.
There's a lot.
There's a lot.
I can't think of a particular example, but it's a big problem just with everyone being
in control of what they post and they're being absolutely no regulations as far as what
anyone can say and what your credentials have to be in order for you to be able to put
that information out there.
I think it's become a real problem.
What about when women say, I don't want to squat or deadlift because I heard it's going
to make my waist big. I'm
going to get a big block. Are we still talking about that? Do
you think? Yeah. Believe it or not. Yes. I still hear that
all the time. You don't hear that anymore. Maybe a little
bit. When you're talking about the general public, I know it's
hard because we get a lot of times in our own bubble and even
the podcasting bubble in general, we think everybody is, you
know, privy to all this stuff, but it's still out there.
Yeah.
How do you reply to that?
Is it true that it grows your...
Do I think it's true?
No, no, not at all.
That's why I picked that one,
because I think it's so frustrating and annoying.
Maybe you don't hear it as much,
but we hear it all the time, where people are like,
I don't want a squat, I heard it gets my waist big.
I don't want to keep a small way.
Now I'm getting, I know it happens.
I actually made a video, a two minute long video about it.
Oh, did you?
Oh, you did.
Yeah, where I think it was titled,
Just Lifting Make Me Bulky.
And it got like maybe 5,000 shares on this area.
Oh, wow.
Wow, yeah.
So yeah.
And people tagging other sea told you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, totally.
It's such an absolutely frustrated one.
There was an example you want to bring up in regards to.
I think it was research.
It was, I never heard of this.
We have it written up there.
Six blind men and an elephant.
What was it that you wanted to bring up about that?
There was something you want to say about how people view research.
And it was fascinating, but then we stopped, and then we started to apologize.
Yeah.
I heard this analogy before, but go ahead.
I can't remember exactly where it originated from, but basically it's a story about six
blind men that have never encountered an elephant in their life.
They've never seen it.
They've never been in contact with it.
You don't know what it looks like or what it feels like.
And so they go to a room and they each are told to touch a different part of the elephant,
just one part.
So one person say touches the belly, one person touches the trunk, one person touches a
tail, and they each have to say what they think it is.
And they say it with absolute confidence.
This is a wall, this is a snake, this is a broom, this is, I don't know what else. And it just, I think that that's one of the things that happens with research or, and
let's just stick to a topic of fitness in general, how people are so fast to draw absolute
truths based on one single subjective experience.
Hmm.
Yeah, that is a good analogy because they are all right, but they're all wrong at the same time. Hmm. That is a good analogy because they are all right but they're all wrong at the same time.
Exactly.
So looking forward, what's in store for you?
You've done some amazing things already.
Do you have any goals that you could err on the podcast and things that you're training
towards that you think you'd like to accomplish moving forward?
I want to, at some point, drop down a weight class and compete in the 114 class.
Hopefully take some records in that class as well.
I also wanna bump up a weight class
and just see how strong I can get without being
a color restricted state, which I am most of the time.
So I'd be interested to see just how strong I can get
and eating as much as I can and how heavy I can get to.
That sounds exciting as well.
So you have the record in the current weight class?
Well, I have the deadlift record.
The deadlift record, which was 501?
Uh, 530.
530.
What is the record at the lower weight class that you want to try and get down to in
the break?
It's like 405.
405?
Oh.
And then I also have the deadlift in the heavier weight class too.
Oh, you do?
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
I feel like you'd be able to do that then.
No problem. That's a pretty big damn difference. If I can cut down and not lose. Oh, you do. Okay. Oh yeah, I feel like you'd be able to do that than no problem.
That's a pretty big damn difference.
If I can cut down and not lose any strength,
which is a challenge.
How would you approach that and try not to lose strength
to get as lean as possible,
and try and shed body fat?
Yeah, a long cut.
So say I'm starting around 128, 129,
cut to about, if I can get myself down to one, one, twenty one, then I just do a
water cut to one, fourteen. That doesn't sound too bad.
Yeah, I think you would own that at that way.
You think that it's hard because the leaner that you are, the hardest it is to lose any
sort of obviously body fat and water as well.
Yeah, and you're lean. You don't walk around heavy or whatever every every time you post a picture or whatever. I'm looking at you now
I'm lean all the time. What do you walk around that body fat percentage wise?
I don't know. I've never should really I should yeah, you're in the teens
You're pretty damn lean all the time. It's yeah, so well, I tell you what
We really appreciate what you're doing because the information you're presenting is accurate
And you're somebody that is performing at a very, very high level
and that's good because you're reaching more people with
the right information. So we really appreciate that. That's why we
invited you on the show and thanks for coming on. Thank you for having me. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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