Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1143: How to Lose 50 Pounds & Keep it Off, Building & Maintaining Muscle Mass as You Age, Seated vs. Standing Exercises & MORE
Episode Date: October 18, 2019In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about how to lose 50+ pounds, whether you lose muscle mass as you age, the difference doing seated vs standing exercises... makes, and organizing the payment side of a personal training business. Adam shares his experience visiting the ‘magical’ place that is Organifi HQ: Good vibes + excellent culture = success. (4:20) Does having a higher IQ mean you're more at risk of developing a mental illness than the rest of the population? (20:42) How Kayne West is finding himself through religion. (24:36) The importance of being the example rather than the preacher. (27:30) What has the feedback been like from the Nir Eyal episode? (32:56) Sal’s daughter is hooked on her Felix Gray glasses. (33:46) Why LeBron James is full of shit. The importance of standing behind what you are doing. (35:50) #Quah question #1 – What is your best advice for someone who wants to lose 50+ pounds? Where to start, how to stay motivated and how to transition from unhealthy to healthy habits? (43:08) #Quah question #2 – I've heard the older you get you begin to lose muscle mass. Is this true? If it’s true, can it be reversed with weight training? Is it harder to make gains the older you get? (54:52) #Quah question #3 – When it is appropriate to sit or stand for an exercise? For example, seated dumbbell curls vs standing dumbbell curls. What difference does sitting vs standing make? (1:04:53) #Quah question #4 – I recently went full-time with my training business and I’m trying to organize the payment side of the business. How do you recommend going about payments, so you can scale the business better? (1:10:40) People Mentioned Shanna Mota (@shannamota) Instagram Drew Canole (@drewcanole) Instagram Djamel Bettahar (@djamelb) Instagram Nir Eyal (@neyal99) Instagram LeBron James (@kingjames) Instagram Functional Patterns [Official] (@functionalpatterns) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned October Promotion: MAPS Anabolic ½ off!! **Code “RED50” at checkout** Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Organifi – Inc 500 Are There Heavy Metals In My Protein Powder? - Organifi High intelligence: A risk factor for psychological and physiological overexcitabilities Kanye West's ''Jesus Is King'' Song Leaks Just Keep On Coming Won't You Be My Neighbor? (2018) - Rotten Tomatoes Mind Pump 1140: Nir Eyal Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! LeBron James missed an opportunity with his comments about China Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of The Mind Pump, the Mind Pump.
So of course we talk about fitness and working out and fat loss and getting healthy,
but we also talk about current events and stuff that happened in our lives.
That's in the intro portion of this episode, which lasted 39 minutes.
Here's what we talked about.
Adam started out by talking about his trip to Organify in San Diego.
That's Organify is headquarters.
Now Organify is one of our sponsors.
They make organic plant-based supplements like protein powders, green juices,
gold juices, which are good for relaxation and sleep.
They have so many juices.
They have a product called Pure,
which is good for gut health,
and has also got some neutropic qualities.
We think you should go check them out so much
that we got a discount for you.
Here's what you do.
Go to organify.com-flour-slash-mind-pump
and use the code MindPump for 20% off.
Then I brought up a study that showed how people with high IQs have a higher tendency
to be mentally ill.
So now I feel better about it.
Then we talked about Kanye West and how he's come out publicly about his conversion to
or full conversion to Christianity. So we'll see how his marriage goes with sure we're going to hear about it. Yeah, with his full conversion to Christianity.
So we'll see how his marriage goes with her.
We're gonna hear about it.
Yeah, with his marriage to the devil.
Then we talked about how my daughter loves her Felix Gray glasses.
Those are blue blocking glasses that she wears
when we watch TV at night.
Oh, and by the way, Felix Gray is partnering
with Breast Cancer Research Foundation in October.
So when you get a limited edition pair of the Nash frame glasses in pink lemonade,
they'll give 10% of the sales to the breast cancer research foundation.
Now Felix Gray, makers of the best blue blocking glasses you'll find.
They don't tint or change the color of everything that you're looking at.
So then that orange or red glasses, they look good.
And they are one of our sponsors.
Here's how you get yourself a pair.
You're not for dorks.
Go to Felix Gray Glasses.
That's F-E-L-I-X-G-R-A-Y glasses.com forward slash mine pump.
Make sure you get yourself a pair and you'll get free shipping
and free returns.
And then we talk about LeBron James
and how he loves to comment on everything politically,
except for when it comes to China,
because we know it's gonna affect his bottom line.
That's interesting.
Then we got an affinist portion of this episode,
the first question, this person wants to know,
what's the best advice we can give someone
who wants to lose a lot of weight, like 50 or more pounds.
So we kind of break down what that looks like.
Next question, this person's
heard that the older you get, you lose muscle mass, is this true and can it be reversed with
weight training? In other words, are we inevitably just going to get weak? Next question, is
it better to sit or stand for exercises? For example, you do an overhead shoulder press,
is it better to do it standing, Is it better to do it seated?
And if there are differences,
are some of them better for certain goals,
like functional strength and other goals,
like sculpting the body.
This is the functional versus body builder war.
There you go.
And the final question,
this person's a full-time personal trainer
and wants to organize the payments side of the business
and they want advice.
So we talk about how to charge clients, the best ways to do that.
Then at the end, we talk about ways to collect the money via websites and stuff like that.
Also, this month, MAPS and a BALLIC is half off.
This is by far our most popular muscle building metabolism boosting program that we have. This is the only time
it's going to be 50% off. So you might want to act now. Dude, if you don't have it, how dare you?
Now this program comes complete with your whole workout. So there's four phases if you count
pre-phase. So that's 12 weeks of working out, exercise demos, the workouts are all laid out for you.
Follow the program as it's laid out and you'll get phenomenal results.
Here's how you get the 50% off. Go to mapsred.com, that's MAPS-R-E-D.com, and use the code red50-R-E-D50, no space for the discount.
You don't want to hear about your trip to...
...organify.
Dude, it was awesome.
The magical place.
So I forgot that they moved.
So I'm taking Uber.
Wait, is this not where we went when we went?
Yeah, yeah, this is.
Oh, that's right.
They were in the process.
Right?
Mm-hmm.
So yeah, it's still San Diego.
It's still not far.
Like I think the other place is kind of like downtown San Diego.
And I knew I was coming in like two hours early.
So I was like, okay, I'll just get something to eat, have coffee, relax until I meet up with Sean and Drew.
So I get my Uber, I just give him the address,
and you know, I mean, you, Sal and I for sure like this,
where I have no fucking clue where I'm ever going, right?
So I'm not like, I just think I'm going to the same place,
it just didn't dawn on me.
So my head's like in my phone, I'm working,
I'm not even looking where we're driving.
And so I'm like two hours early, right?
And I look up and I'm like, oh, just, you know, when we get downtown, I'll walk over and go get some crap food.
Yeah.
If I lift my head up and Uber guys like, oh, we're here.
And I'm like, oh, fuck, it's like an industrial area.
So they're anywhere to go.
They just don't where to go.
And I'm like, I'm like, I'm gonna sit out in their curb for like two hours.
Like a douchebag.
I was like, ah, do you know this area very well?
Could you take me like to the nearest Starbucks
or something?
And he's like,
yeah, I think there's one this way.
And so then they took me over there,
hung out for a while.
Then Sean calls me up,
so she's on her way.
We meet up and we walk over to this place.
And it's, I think I wanna say it was 16,000 square feet. Big. Wow. Really big. Wow. Yeah. Massive. And the place before was maybe half.
Is it like a one house or like office building? Yeah. Very similar like field to,
you know, like when we go to on it, they have like industrial area that you're
surrounded by over there. Yeah. Just offices or whatever. Just like that.
Concrete floors. You walk in,
their door mats say prepared to be hugged. So, since I walked through the door, it was true.
You know, like I hugged like three times right away. Wow. That's nice.
Got to see Shana always love hanging out and seeing Shana. She's great. Yeah, absolutely
love her best rep ever. Yeah, she's awesome. And so is Drew. I mean, Drew's a really cool guy.
As soon as we walk in, both of them were there.
And then they gave me a tour.
Now, what was really cool was,
it's been, I wanna say two years,
since we were, what was Drew wearing?
Just, let's just let me know.
I did a picture, I posted the picture here.
He's very fashionista.
Yeah, we have a different style.
Yeah.
The last time we were there,
he wore this, this like, it was like a jacket,
but it buttoned all the way over on the left side.
It was like one of those, like Sergeant Pepper.
Yeah, you know what I'm talking about?
Kinda jackets, remember that?
And then he had,
You two are not allowed to comment on fashion.
Hey, listen, I'm not saying it's good or bad.
We are, we're not allowed to.
We're not, we're not allowed to be right, but I'm not saying it's good or bad. We are. I'm just a very much allowed. We're not, we're not gonna be right,
but I'm objectively just to describe.
Actually, I'll tell you this much.
I might not know what good fashion is,
but I know what bad fashion is.
You're, you're, you're fashionally retarded.
Let's just be honest.
But anyway, yeah, he had that jacket and then he had like,
they were like gold shoes or something last time.
Was it something like that?
No, he wasn't that
Flamboyant it was he was he was dressed but he did have like a I think like a starred
Long sleeve short sleeve looking thing like how's the long answer?
Well, you know it looks like it's a short sleeve
But it looks like you have a long sleeve underneath it, but it was actually sewn together as one. Oh, okay
You know I'm saying yeah, he does have a perfect beard
You did have a really good beard perfect. Yeah, but anyways was actually sewn together as one. Oh, okay. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. He just have a perfect beard. He did have a really good beard.
Yeah, perfect.
Yeah.
But anyways, we get there.
We're groomed.
And right away, I'm totally impressed with the place.
The place is really cool.
You know, it's, you know, I'm a little jealous of this.
I hope that my pump, we grow into something to this size and that same kind of feel.
I mean, it's got ping pong tables.
It's got meditation rooms,
it's got places where you can go take naps and sleep,
it's got the video games,
it's got a gym inside of it.
Do they have working places?
Yes.
Yeah, they're so, we'll get to that, yeah.
This, this, this, this, this,
so everyone's got their dogs there, you know,
saying, like bags and stuff.
Yeah, no, all of that, right?
It's very, you know, Google Facebook-esque, you know?
So, I mean, those guys are machines.
I mean, they really are.
I have yet to walk into a facility and see,
I mean, all joking, and this was in the old place.
We walked in there and it was like a well-oiled machine.
It was a war room of sales guys.
Hands down, so we, obviously, we have a lot of friends
that sell supplements and some of them
are very successful at it. And so I've got the opportunity to hang out with a lot of these
different CEOs that have built really successful multi-million dollar companies, none of them
which I'm as impressed as I am with organized operations. I I mean, they just, they, I mean, and you guys know because I,
like, I could stare at numbers all day long. He's got, I think, a count of 12, you know, 50-inch
plasmas around the wall, all the walls as you're walking through there. And it's like all the data
analytics on the back end, like all the infusions off stuff. And you can see every influencer,
every podcaster, every YouTube, everything that they're putting
money out into advertising, what it's converting at,
what the rate, what the dollar, what the cost-pracquisition is.
It's just, it's detailed, and then they have sections
throughout the building that are like, all these are all
like our data analytic people. Here's like all of our sales call team people. Here's all of our
like design people and they have like these little, these little pods groups of like four
to 20 depending on what section.
What impressed me the most when we went the first time when we went down there, and this
is just something that I learn from managing gyms.
Like when you walk into a gym,
you can tell if it's gonna be,
or if it is a successful team,
by feeling the enthusiasm, energy,
and the brand, or whatever you wanna call it,
from every employee.
So like if you walk into a gym,
obviously you have a general manager, salespeople,
and maybe your top trainers.
But then you have like front desk people,
porters, kids club.
But when you meet those people and you can feel from them
that they're super behind what they're doing,
you know like this is a phenomenal team.
That's what I felt with Organifi.
When we went the first time, I don't care who I talked to,
they were so,
everybody's waving the flag.
Yeah, they were so behind what they were,
like so behind what they're doing.
Well, that's why they,
I mean, they're on Inc. 500 for several categories,
one of those being best place to work.
I mean, they had like, they had like water cooler things
where you could drink green juice.
And, you know, people were talking about
all aspects of health.
So it wasn't just a supplement company,
they actually, you know, when you were talking to them,
they were all, everybody there was into health and wellness
in real ways, you know what I mean?
It was like it just had sales, people get it sales.
They were really into health problems.
No, no, no.
In fact, actually what was neat too,
there was people there who have recently
in the last year got a job there
and they found out about orifi through listening to Mind Pump.
No way.
Yeah, so that was cool.
I got them employees.
I tell you what, yeah.
So I tell you it was, you're welcome.
It was a pretty cool feeling that, I don't know, I think they had 60
something employees, roughly, that were there.
And as I'm touring, the girl who, the girl actually who toured me
didn't know much about me or Mindump or anything we walked in so she got introduced and she's kind of like walking
me. She must be in the, through the, through the place. And, but we couldn't get maybe
10 feet in the place without somebody turning around and recognizing who I was from
my impump because they all listen to. Like, of all the companies that we work with and
that we've done, we've done things with. is also why I love organifies that they are there.
I think a lot of their values align with us and they treat like the whole office listens.
And I mean like listens like I every time I was walking through a section I'd get bombarded
by you know five to ten people that would come up and they want to talk to me about yesterday's
episode and what Zal said about this and what do you think about that and like all wanted to
engage in conversation about mind pumping what's going on with us.
That's awesome.
Yeah, that was really...
There's a couple standout moments for me with the company.
One was when I first met, because the way we got introduced to Organifi, I believe it's
when I first met Shana.
I don't remember what event it was at.
Do you remember the event we were at?
It was like a dinner.
Was it the Spartan dinner? Yeah, it's the first time we met Shana and I don't remember what event it was at. Do you remember the event we were at? It was like a dinner.
Was it the Spartan dinner?
Yeah, it's first time I met Shana.
That's right.
And then we met her and she's great, great vibe
or whatever.
We got introduced to the company
and then we saw what they did and we liked them.
And then the second thing that was a standout
and I talked about this recently was that whole ordeal
where I forgot what company was a third party tester
that went and tested all these organic
vegan protein powders and found high levels of heavy metals in them.
Some of them had lead.
And so immediately when we got that, when we saw that study come out, I was like,
oh hell no.
And I got on the phone right away with them and I said, I need to see tests from your
product, from your protein that yours is clean.
Otherwise, we won't work with you guys.
And they were so responsive,
they were on everything right away.
They cared, they cared a ton about what we thought
about the product.
And they also wanted to make sure that people knew
that their stuff was legit.
I thought I loved the way that they responded
and reacted to that.
It was really telling.
So when I'm taking the tour around,
we get to this section where they have
like a gym area
and this really cool kitchen area and then they have this this giant dance dance revolution game.
But you guys have seen those before. Yeah, and I saw like on your story, one of the employees
there was just like hammering away at it. Like I've never seen before. Bro, he was fifth in the world.
Okay, so his listen to his story. Wait, this is the whole thing that you can compete.
Yes. Wow.
Yeah, there's, it's like a legit thing.
Like, see, like, he trains further.
Well, you could tell, he leans back on the bars
and his feet move like he's a river dancer, whatever.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
So this dude, okay, lost 100 pounds
playing Dance Dance Revolution.
Oh, what?
That's all he did for exercise was practice Dance Dance Revolution.
What a great story.
I know.
That's why I think that's part of like hundred pounds.
He looks like a normal hundred pounds.
Wow.
Through playing Dance Dance Revolution.
I believe that's how it started.
It started as a, you know, do this for exercise.
It's a fun way to get, you know,
lose some weight, burn some calories basically.
And he got better and better and then fell in love
with the game.
And with that video I showed you,
that was like, he was a perfect score.
None of those were, he never missed.
What?
Yeah, that was a perfect score.
I've never played that game.
How does that, yeah,
because I mean, it was going so fast
and like all over the place, dude.
So if you look at the video, you see it,
all the, it just keeps saying perfect, perfect, perfect, perfect,
it just keeps popping up because he's hitting all these combos.
So you just memorize like the whole thing.
I guess.
I mean, even if you did that,
I think to accidentally not miss with your foot,
I think it would be crazy.
Have you guys ever played that game?
I've tried it like twice.
Did you really?
Did you try it down there?
No, they tried to give me, I'm like,
get the fuck out of here,
I'm not gonna go up to that guy, I guess. I said, I was pretty good at guitar hero.
I'm a white guy.
I'm like, I already have a hard time dancing.
Like, you try and put like, but buttons
I have to hit at the same time.
Like, that's why it would be good.
You know it's funny about that too,
because I was listening to,
I forget what business podcast it was back in the day,
but they're talking about Chris Soca,
like the major investor.
And so he's like ranked number two or three
in the world at Wii 10s.
Oh, wow.
It's like why?
Just cause you wanted to be the best, you know?
He's just like, oh, I'm pretty good at it.
You're already off.
I kept going crazy with it.
And is like ranked number two or three in the world.
Well, it doesn't, didn't organize,
don't they continuously get awards for,
like employee satisfaction and working there?
They're ranked in ink 500. That's a big deal.
Like because employees like working there so much.
Best place to work.
Yeah. So it's ranked.
Best place to work in ink 500.
So ink 500 has multiple like,
which I'm going to call it, that they give away their awards.
They have a lot of factors there, right?
That environment, but also like San Diego.
I mean, you got like pretty much everything you'd ask.
Yeah, now it's cool vibes.
Do they have this outdoor section too?
We can lay out in the sun.
Did they give you any hints on any new products
or anything cool coming out?
Actually, we didn't.
They talked, you know, it was more about,
I actually want to go down again
and talk to them more about business stuff.
I want to meet with, I met the CEO for the first time,
to Jamel, DJ, DJ, am he, I think it's, I got to, I think I fucked his name up,
I apologize if he's listening,
but I had never met him before.
And...
Young dude.
Real young.
I actually thought they were fucking with me
when they told me that he was the CEO
and he's in his early 30s and I know you guys met him.
How weird is that? So I met Drew and the guy you just said in 2013 and infusion soft like it was
this internet marketing seminar thing. This is back when Doug and I first created Maps and Obolic, put it all together, put all the sales stuff together, and we would go to these internet marketing conventions to learn more about how we, because you know, I wasn't, I had no social media presence that we had no, no authority.
So how are we going to get it out there that this is a good program. So we took these, we went to these seminars and stuff and they brought Drew and the gentleman you're talking about up as an example of a successful company that utilized some of these techniques.
And this was back in 2013. Was it 2013, Doug?
Yeah.
Yeah, so six years ago.
And so that's the first time I met them. How funny is that? And then we saw the video.
Yeah, his name, I heard her say Jamel, but I know he spells it D-G-A-A-M-E-L.
So D-J-A-A.
Maybe the D is silent.
I imagine that.
Or it's just Jamel.
Yeah.
Like that.
Yeah, there he is.
Yeah, so he had to be in his mid-20s when you guys...
How funny is that?
Cause then Doug was able to pull up the video
and show you guys.
Yeah.
Isn't that wild?
And we saw you guys just standing there
getting evaluated.
And I guess he has a you know a aerospace engineering
Background is smarter. Yeah, really smart guy really humble really cool. You would never guess that he's the man behind everything
In fact, I was as I'm I'm asking all kinds of like
Analytic questions and like stuff. I'm curious about in the back end and everything that. And Drew's like, I don't know, you got to talk to Jamel.
So he obviously is responsible for a lot of what's going on
behind the scenes, which makes that company super,
super strong.
Of course they have, I mean, the first step is you have
to have a good product, right?
You have a good product.
Well, if you combine good product with good marketing,
with good staff and good environment, good culture, you're staff, and good environment, good culture.
You're gonna do your odds of succeeding
in everything.
Getting on all ends, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, if one of those things is off,
you could still do okay.
I mean, I know some supplement companies that,
you know, they do well, but you go into their facilities
and you walk around and you see the culture
and you're like, oh yeah, this is a house of cards.
But they do okay because the products are good
and because they have some good exposure.
Organifies got all that.
They've got everything working for them.
Yeah.
It was pretty amazing that you guys met them.
I mean, you pulled dope with that.
We up and seen that.
I mean, that was seven years ago.
It was just six years ago.
I imagine, six years ago.
So I imagine they were maybe making a couple million dollars a year,
and I believe they're on their way to a hundred million dollars.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
That's insane.
You know what I learned from watching that video with Doug?
Man, I aged quickly.
What the fuck?
Too much wisdom we're throwing down here.
Yeah, that's what,
you said it good the other day that we're aged to get dug years.
Dude, let's tell you what,
Hey, low test osso and it fucking, and a divorce will do that to you what bro
oh man divorce will make your hair turn grayer than a fucking oh man I think I'm
almost white now I don't know dude I think you and Doug are the you you and Doug are the
champions you guys look the the same the most similar I think you and I look like we've
aged the most yeah it looks like Justin and Doug are not aging yeah I'm just
especially Doug I mainly just, especially Doug.
I mainly just haven't changed fashion.
That's my secret.
Yeah, the part of me is a little worried,
because I'm like, you know, Doug's a good guy,
but maybe he's, maybe he's drinking blood
or something, I don't know, something's going on.
He's doing some kind of secret rejuvenation, you know,
technique, he's not telling us about.
Anyway, speaking to smart people,
I read an interesting article on IQ and mental illness.
You guys know that they're connected?
Have I told you guys that before?
You have, I believe you have a higher chance
of mental illness to hire your IQ as a total line.
Which I think when you meet crazy,
I mean like way on the spectrum intelligent people,
they're always off too.
Definitely.
Yes, mental illness is different than just being weird.
Like there's being weird, which is okay.
No off, I said off, not weird.
So you can tell.
There's between off and there's different,
there's between weird, like we're weird.
I'm weird, you're weird, we're all over.
Well like all the resources are just going to that one place.
They haven't really developed the rest of the,
yeah, that's what I mean by off.
Like you need it with them and they're just,
you have these weird, you're awareness.
Well, so I read this, so I'm reading this study.
So it says that people with high IQ
or more at risk for developing mental illness
in the rest of the population.
It says that people with an IQ of over 130
found that those with high intelligence
are at significantly greater risk
for the examined psychological disorders and psychological diseases, especially things like anxiety and anxiety related disorders.
And they think that now the study suggests that that is due to the increased levels of awareness that people with really high IQs have.
So because they're much more hyper aware, they react more to stimulus from the environment,
they create a hyper brain, hyper body scenario where they display a hyperactive central nervous
system. So an example would be like tiny stimuli, like clothing tag, brushing against your
strange sound, can trigger a low level chronic stress response, which activates a hyper body
response. So they think it's just over excited ability,
hyper awareness, and really smart people.
So I guess, you know, now on the flip side,
here's the interesting thing, low IQ,
when it gets really low, is also associated
with higher mental illness.
So when you look at a chart of, you know,
mental illness or whatever,
in the middle is where
it's the lowest. So people are kind of average, you know, normal or whatever. As you get to the
really productive, really smart reverse bell curve. Yes. As you get to the, you know, low IQ stuff,
then you start to see higher rates of mental illness. It's kind of interesting to me, right?
That does actually make a lot of sense in terms of like having more awareness and like
really over analyzing everything, you know, would you stress you that out like constantly?
You're in your head too much.
Yeah, too much.
It reminds me of the also where men are on those charts.
Have I told you about this?
Where when you look at across population and you look at, okay, most people fall somewhere in the middle
in terms of intelligence and productivity,
and then less people fall over to the left,
which would be dysfunction, people committing crimes,
people who are violent, and then on the other end,
is like hyper productivity, hyper intelligence.
Men, a higher percentage of men make up the ends
than women do.
So women, women,
a lot of the extremes.
Yeah, there's more, there's more men at the extremes
than there are women.
Not a ton more, but definitely some more.
And I was reading about this and they think that,
they think the reason why that is is because men,
evolutionarily speaking are just more expendable.
Because, you know, if you have a society
and you lose a chunk of the women, the odds that that society
will be able to succeed and continue are low because women can only have one baby every
nine months, whereas you can have, where one man can impregnate many women in a nine-month
period.
So nature basically rolls the dice more with men.
And what you end up with is more crazy people, but sometimes you get like
hyper productive type of people as well. Kind of a role of the dice. Yeah, you know what I mean?
So we're just expendable. So the whole like, you know, that world, that's it.
Might as well talk about Kanye West. He had something to talk about. Because I know a lot of people
spend from people. Yeah, they think that like, I mean, he's pretty much on the level. Some people think he's a genius in terms of his ability to create.
Musically, he is.
You can't deny that.
He publicly came out as a born-again Christian.
So this is now...
I can't wait for his new album because it's kind of caused all kinds of controversy.
I just know it is.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Is it all about that?
Let's look at the title of it. Hit the... Pretty sure it's almost like of controversy. I just know it is. Oh yeah, absolutely. Is it all about that? Let's look at the title of it.
Hit the, hit the, no.
Pretty sure it's like almost like gospel music.
Yeah, no, it's the title.
Just the title.
I can't believe I can't remember it off top of my head right now.
Kanye's new album.
Now here's my question for you guys.
How do you think this is going to affect his, his marriage?
Because his wife Kim Kardashian and that whole family doesn't exactly jive with Christianity outside.
You know what those values maybe, maybe she's bought it
though, maybe he convinced her, I don't know.
That's a good question, I would be interesting to see.
Oh, it's called Yondi.
Oh, really?
That's what it says up there.
That's not what I read before.
Yeah, it says, Jesus is King album. Oh, is that the subtitled of this? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's what it says up there. That's not what I read before. Yeah, it says, Jesus is King album.
Oh, is that the subtitle to us?
Okay, yeah, that's what I read before.
Yeah, so it's not very subtle.
Yeah, no, there's nothing subtle about it whatsoever.
So you guys think that's a Christian album?
Yeah.
So it's gonna be, it will be a show.
I don't know, do you think that really matters for her?
Dude, if you're, look, the whole family does shit that is whatever.
I don't understand her at all.
But they don't, it doesn't, in fact, he commented about something.
It said something that she did something where she wore some outfit or whatever, and he
said something like her outfit, her to his soul.
So he's already commented on some of the shit that she's worn or done.
Oh, really?
Yeah, oh, there you go. It says, she wore some outfit at a Met Gala.
And he said that her sexiness is hurting his soul.
As he criticized her wardrobe, her displaying too much of her body.
Come on, dude.
Like, wasn't he the one behind her whole, breaking the internet pictures where she was
like, you know, dressed with nothing in her famous big booty was out in the open.
Yeah, champagne one.
Yeah, is that him?
He was a, I'm pretty sure he was behind the idea of that.
Well, what will be interesting because,
and we probably, you guys probably had no examples
of this in your life.
We all have a friend or somebody who finds religion
at one point in their life, and they just go,
they just started learning how to, what's the word, they just hammer they just go. They just started learning how to,
what's the word,
they just hammer you with it.
Because they're learning how to integrate it.
Yeah, they go from one extreme to the other extreme.
And you know, he's what, he's bipolar, right?
Is he?
Yeah, yeah, I believe he's bipolar.
And so,
Oh, maybe he's feeling manic right now.
Right, so it could be like one of these deals
where he goes way off deep in on that side.
So I don't know.
Nonetheless, it's going to be interesting to watch.
Well, you know, it's no different than when you first, when, when your friends first finds fitness,
it really isn't. You know, you know, that friend that all of a sudden now is like CrossFit or
working out or all of a sudden becomes like a nutrition Nazi.
And they're fucking annoying for like a year. You know, telling everybody they got to work out or all of a sudden becomes like a nutrition Nazi and they're fucking annoying for like a year.
You know, telling everybody they got to work out or whatever.
The best way I've learned about this was watching the documentary on Mr. Rogers.
Remember that documentary?
Yeah, the documentary.
Nobody knew that Mr. Rogers was such a hardcore Christian and he said he didn't want to...
He wasn't trying to preach anyway, he just wanted to be an example. And so when people would ask, why are you such a hardcore Christian and he said He didn't want to he wasn't trying to preach anyway
He just wanted to be an example and so when people would ask why are you such a nice guy?
Then he would mention oh, it's because I'm a Christian or whatever. It's no different than fitness
It's like trying I tried so hard to convince family members to work out and all it did was push him away
From fitness it pushed him away from health. That's the way to do it is to be an example being example
And eventually people will ask you.
And be humble and be cool about it
and don't judge people and do your thing.
And then yeah, you're right.
People eventually will ask you and say,
hey, you know, I'm trying to lose some weight
or hey, you know, my knee hurts, what do you think I should do?
And then, or hey, why do you have so much energy all the time?
Well, because I exercise.
And then they'll ask you more questions about it.
No, that's the only way.
No, it's a great analogy,
because we get asked that question a lot.
Like, what do I do with my mom or my spouse or my family member that they're eating terrible,
they're doing all these things, and I want to help them. They need this help, and it's like,
you can't do anything. They have to ask you. And it's the same thing if you were somebody who's
hardcore religious, you found Jesus, and it's changed your life, and you have a spouse who's hard-core religious, you found Jesus and it's changed your life and you have a spouse who's not,
or you have somebody and you feel you need to save them.
And then all it does is push them away
because you're constantly preaching to them.
It's like, you're best way to help those people
whether it be trying to and, you know,
and do it anywhere.
Yeah, or get them to eat well as to be an example.
Be an example, such a good example
that they can't help themselves, but ask,
like what are you doing?
Think about it, you're happy, you're amazing,
you're good to people, good things are happening
in your life all the time.
I don't understand this.
What is going on?
Tell me, and that's where you have an opportunity
to talk to those people about whatever it is.
Well, think about it.
If you, all of a sudden, converted to becoming
a fitness enthusiast, all of a sudden, whatever,
you're like, oh my God, exercises change in my life, eating right is changing my life.
And then you become an asshole to the people around you.
Do you think they're going to want to even...
All of a sudden, you're just berating them and hammering them and making them feel judged.
Now here's the flip.
What if you start exercising and eating right and you become more calm, you become a nicer
person. You have more enthusiasm and calm. You become a nicer person.
You have more enthusiasm and energy.
You're just in better moods all the time.
You look better, but you don't talk about how you look better.
You're just, they can see that.
And then they want to ask you what's going on
and what's happening and that's the best.
It's the most effective way.
It's the most effective way.
I went to a church service where the pastor
was actually talking about that.
And he's like, you know, he goes,
a big mistake people make is that they find something
and then they make people not wanna even look into it
because they don't become better as a result of it.
And they have the other person's eyes.
Why not just become better and allow people
to be themselves and then wait and see what happened?
It doesn't guarantee, by the way,
it's not gonna guarantee that
just because you start working out and eating right,
that the people around you're gonna start doing it,
but it's pretty much guaranteed that they won't,
if you hammer them about it,
they're definitely watching you,
which is something, even if they don't ask you questions,
they're paying attention.
No, I 100% agree with that.
To me, if they're not,
it's just it's a reminder that I must not be exemplifying that.
Right. You know what I'm saying?
Like if you're not asking, if I think
that you need health and fitness in your life
or Jesus for that matter,
and I want you to see what it's done for my life,
and you have an ask a question.
To me, that's just a reflection that I'm not.
Obviously I'm not exuding it enough.
Obviously, that's the best billboard.
Right, exactly.
So it's just more, instead of worrying about you,
I got a lot of work still to do on me.
I still gotta keep working on my shit
because obviously you live with me
or you're around me all the time
and you don't find the need to ask me anything to me.
That's the greatest example of,
oh wow, there's still a lot of work I gotta do on myself.
If I can't even get the people that are around me
that see me all the time, to ask me questions,
like, what is it about you?
What are you doing so different?
Like, tell me more.
Or think of the perception that some people,
or a lot of people in fitness have,
that we have on a lot of people in fitness.
So if I say to the average person,
the average American who doesn't work out
or whatever, and I say, hey,
what did, tell me some characteristics
about fitness fanatics and enthusiasts. You know what you're gonna hear a lot of? Oh, they, you say, hey, tell me some characteristics about fitness fanatics and enthusiasts.
You know what you're gonna hear a lot of?
Oh, they, you know, they like to flex in front of the mirror,
take selfies.
They'll make you feel bad for eating a certain way
or they'll tell you what you're doing is wrong.
And that's not the perception you wanna give off.
What if it was like this?
What if I said, hey, what do you think about
like fitness fanatics and enthusiasts?
Like, oh, God, they just seem to be really happy.
They seem to have a lot of energy.
They seem really nice to, you know,
to be a little bit more...
Yeah, they're skin looks great.
They smile all the time.
You know how many more people you would convert?
Because people, you don't have to say anything.
They just look at you and see it and they just say,
oh, wow, why is that guy so happy all the time?
Like, why are you so energetic and stuff all the time?
What's going on?
Rather than the whole like, you know,
hey, every time I eat a fucking donut, my cousin comes over
and tells me, I should not be eating this donut.
Screw you, dude, I'm gonna eat this donut even more now.
You know what I'm saying?
It's hilarious.
Did you guys listen to the near episode yet?
Oh, I haven't listened to it, but I got comments on it.
That would be, yeah, you were there, that's right.
So as I, I don't listen to our episodes
that often, every once in a while, an interview,
I enjoy so much, I go back and I listen to it again.
That's one I did.
Yeah, that was very riveting a conversation.
I feel like you guys would be cool in like with your kids
and stuff, would your kids listen to that
or would you let them listen to that?
Actually, I'm gonna, I'm gonna have a point.
Yeah, so I'm gonna listen to it with my,
with both of my kids, my son especially. In in fact his school is having them do a tech-free
Saturday. Oh wow. So the school actually told the kids
No technology on Saturday
If you do use technology then we want you to reflect on it and why you couldn't stay away from technology
And it's really cool. And so my son's totally, you know, totally under, and speaking of technology,
my daughter absolutely loves the kids' Felix Freiglasses
that she has.
Oh, now after you've tricked her,
you tricked her into using them.
Now she's hooked up.
She was like a battle like he had to like kind of
sell her on it or she'd initially like,
she likes them because they look good.
So they look kind of cute, you know,
because they're for kids or whatever.
She sees me wearing mine. So it's like something we do. So they look kind of cute, you know, because they're for kids or whatever. Yeah. She sees me wearing mine. So it's like something we do. So we'll
be sitting around, you know, we'll sit on the couch or whatever and we'll watch something
together and I'll take my glasses out and then I'll say, do you want yours? I should
say, yeah, oh, absolutely. And she puts them on and she's so personalized it with the
family because we put them all like stacked right next to the couch. And so we just, if
the TV air is ever on now, we all just go grab and put them on yet we do totally now have you guys seen the pink
ones that they're doing
no what's the pink ones for so they they have uh... press cancer awareness
month they're doing their don't anyone done could you look at up i heard about
yet Rachel said something to me last week about it
and i knew we had feel great coming up sooner or later and i wanted to
mention that i know they're doing something for press cancer awareness
on the other go there's that there's a there's a partnering with press cancer research foundation in october up sooner or later and I wanted to mention that I know they're doing something for breast cancer awareness. Oh, there you go.
There's a there's a they're partnering with breast cancer research foundation in October.
So they released a limited edition of the Nash frame and the color pink lemonade and 10%
of sales will be donated to the breast cancer research foundation for the month of October.
That's very nice.
I have the Nash ones.
That's very nice.
You have to pick one of that face. Yeah's very nice. I have the Nash ones. That's very nice. You got the pink ones on? That fits my fat face.
Yeah.
I actually, I don't.
I would think you would do a different pair
because you do have a bigger face.
I wear the Nash because it's kind of a narrow.
Actually, I give the, I take it back.
I gave those the Courtney.
Yeah, and I had to get the other ones that were bigger.
Yeah, I would think you,
because I wear the, I have a real narrow face
and the Nash is what fits me really well.
Oh, look at those.
They're actually kind of stylish.
They look really good, don't they would,
they wouldn't look bad on you, Adam.
I could see you wearing pink glasses.
With the right, with the right, he tends to push.
Yeah, no, I know.
He could get away with it.
With the right outfit, if I had like a pink tie or like a light pink shirt, I would do
something like that.
But not too Paul Schaefer, the one that was David Letterman's guy.
He was always wearing the flashy glasses.
Yeah, no, with the right outfit I would.
I don't know if I'll just call it Hollywood all the time.
Hey, did you guys see what's happening with LeBron James?
Oh, bro, you know what?
No, what's the deal?
I, you know, there's a part of me that I have empathy for him because when you become
that massively famous, people just want your opinion on everything.
Yeah, so there's a little bit of empathy I have for them,
but then I have the other side of them
where I want to just go, shut the fuck up.
Stop talking about politics.
This is, I fear this from me.
Like, people tend to ask us a lot of questions
that I know that I'm not an expert in and I don't like commenting on it. It's like, I don't know enough. I don't
know enough to have a deep intelligent political debate with you or this. I'd much rather
step aside, focus on my craft with most of all of you fell in love with me for which is
playing basketball and continue to stay doing that. And I'm just going to fucking step out of this conversation.
But we put all of this pressure on famous people to tell us what they think
because they have this platform.
And then what ends up happening in my opinion is people end up manipulating
these famous people in their direction.
And then all of a sudden they have you just like him.
Huh?
You just like LeBron.
I do.
I like he's full of shit.
I'll tell you why he's full of shit.
No, I like him as a player.
I can't stand him as somebody who's true.
You know, why he's full of shit?
I'll tell you why he's full of shit.
He's not manipulated.
He has a big mouth.
It's his own fault because he's the same guy
who's putting out tweets about, you know,
if you're silent about, you know,
injustice in the world, you're part of the problem.
Oh, you know, open your mouth.
He's talking about, you talking about calling President Trump a bum
and wearing t-shirts, black lives matter,
talking about police brutality and this and that.
Then China, then I don't remember who it is
an executive for the NBA or a t-shirt that basically said,
stand with the protesters of Hong Kong.
China is a massive market for the NBA.
LeBron James probably has a billion Chinese fans
who buy all of his shit.
So what does LeBron do?
He comes out and basically talks shit about the guy
for saying something about Hong Kong.
He doesn't know a lot about what's going on over there
and he shouldn't be tweeting anymore or whatever.
So all of a sudden Mr. Fucking Bokel.
I saw his press conference and I was just shaking my head.
Dude, what are you doing?
What are you doing getting involved? That's why I didn't like that stupid show that he just did
Yep, the one I've the fucking HBO wonder whatever it is that he's doing right now the I don't want to keep fucking the name
Well, it seems like it seems like
Unirrupted. That's what it's right and it seems like he has
Whatever I don't know what it looks like he's ready to talk and and act tough when
it ain't going to affect his bottom line. But because it's China, which is going to affect
his bottom line in a big fucking way, now he's going to act like Mr. Fucking. So this
is where I think he's manipulated, right? You've got to think he's got an agent or he's
got a PR rep that's telling him, Hey, you need to come out and say something about this
because this will affect you significantly if you don't. And instead of like thinking it all the way through
of like what am I getting involved in
and being easily manipulated and directed to say
or do things, he fucking gets out there and he says,
so it's like, bro, stop, stop.
If you're as good as he is, okay, here's a deal, right?
And I know that there's a reporter one time
that got totally lambasted for saying,
shut up and play basketball.
It's a famous quote that was said
and I got all kinds of backlash for somebody saying
a guy saying that about an athlete speaking out
about political issues.
But the truth is, if you're a superstar athlete
at his level, you gotta believe that 99% of his time
is dedicated to playing basketball
and being
graded as craft and recovering and training. It is not studying history and
politics and everything else with that. He gets a fucking snapshot of that
with and given to him from other people probably that would love to
manipulate his message. And you and you have a big ego because
everybody looks at you and you know, tells you how awesome you are and you have this huge platform and I mean,
I understand it, but here's the thing. If you're gonna have, if you're gonna stand for something,
first off, I support the fuck out of people who walk the walk. If you, if you stand for something
and your actions reflect it, man, even if I disagree with you, I respect that. Like, I respect
the fact that you're not full of shit. I don't have a problem with him speaking out.
That's his right, and he's seen like he was super
against injustice, but this now just shows that he's not.
Well, it's just inconsistent.
No integrity, no integrity, you're afraid.
Like if you're gonna be a big mouth about stuff,
that's fine.
I know I'm a big mouth, right?
But you gotta be able to stand behind what you're doing,
even if that means that they're,
that now you're money.
Well, you know, somebody,
I got a bunch of questions, people were asking.
Because China has a lot of power with us.
So Steve Kerr was asked in questions about all this,
and he just didn't want to say anything about it.
He got a ton of people who were pissed at him,
and I got a lot of people DMing me asking me my opinion.
So here's my opinion on that.
Steve Kerr is not a fucking politician.
Steve Kerr probably has the same views as I have, which is I don't know enough about this
that I'm going to make a hard stance and comment on it because I don't know. Got to do my research.
And I respect somebody who does that. I don't know why we feel that we need to hear everybody's
opinion on things if they're not educated in it.
If I'm not educated on an opinion, I'm either one going to preface it with that.
I don't know a lot about this, but what I do know, I've heard this or heard that based off
that, maybe this, like that's how you're going to talk.
I'm not going to say, come out like a LeBron James and make hard stances in areas that I just
need your response.
I just don't know enough about it.
Yeah, and so Steve Kerr opted out of commenting on something like that, which I don't, I don't have a problem with that. I think that sometimes sometimes
the best thing said is nothing at all. Totally. Yeah. Totally. 100%. But I will say this,
this is playing right into this coming election because what's happening is a lot of people
are having really negative views on China. I know you said you actually said something that I didn't even think about that I think is.
Yeah, it does make sense.
A pretty smart, you know, speculation.
Yeah, the more they blow this up, the more American fans are like,
screw you, China, for, you know, for doing this stuff or whatever.
And which only plays into Trump's hands with his whole tariff war.
Any rift is going to help his cause.
The more Americans have a negative view on China,
the better for President Trump.
I think it's all garbage, but I'm just saying politically speaking,
the better it works for him.
And this is just one of those things,
the fact that they're threatening to ban the NBA
and the fact that because of people's words,
like, again, Americans don't,
there's a lot of things we disagree on,
but one thing that we're across the board,
whether you're left or right, for the most part,
is don't tell us what we can and can't say.
And so, this will be really interesting.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Quick call.
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The Eagle is landed! Quee-cwa- Today is the motherfucking world. An English landed.
Quijo.
First question is from Papa Bear 1414. What is your best advice for someone who wants to lose 50 plus pounds?
Where to start, how to stay motivated, and how to transition from unhealthy to healthy habits?
Good question.
And one that I think a lot of people fuck up
When I look back at all the people that I've trained and
Specifically ones that had 50 to 100 or more pounds that they need to lose the if I could say that the number one mistake
that they all made is
For years obviously like whoever this person is,
I think we can all agree that you didn't wake up one day
and put 50 pounds on, right?
That took probably years of bad behaviors
or bad choices when it came to food and exercise
and things like that.
And now you're here, but now you recognize it
and you wanna make a change.
But what ends up happening is we go from hardly any movement or, you know, pretty sedentary lifestyle, not
exercising, probably not making the best food choices to, I'm going to change my life.
And I'm, and so every, I mean, you fuck and throw out everything in the kitchen and you start
all over, you buy a personal trainer in the kitchen and you start all over,
you buy a personal trainer who's in a train you three days a week than the other three
days you're coming in on your own or you're running or you're, and then you start eating
salads, you know, three times a day, you're taking all the fat loss up.
I mean, you just throw the whole kitchen sink out of it at it.
And that is such a bad way to attack a goal this size. And you are far better off
picking one or two things in your life that you know weren't serving you towards this
goal. IE, I drink fucking six so it is a day or IE, I eat out a Taco Bell every single
night. Like there's probably a lot of things
in somebody who's put 50 to 100 pounds on that they were doing that they know is probably
not ideal behaviors. And instead of trying to cut them all cold turkey and go balls to
the wall with exercise, you were better off starting off with one or two small goals and and and fucking
hammering those and hitting them home. And then if they become they become new habits
and new behaviors, and then you slowly add to that, it sounds like it's going to take
you longer to get to the 50 pounds that way, but it's that's not true. You'll actually
get to the 50 pounds faster by doing this slow and right
than you would be if you come out the gates
and you lose 20 pounds fast
because the 20 pounds typically does come off pretty fast
for somebody that's got to lose 50 to 100.
But then the hard plateau comes after that
and you're not even halfway to your goal.
And you're already doing the gym six days a week.
You're already eating three salads.
You're already doing the protein shakes.
You're already taking the fat burners.
You're already fucking biggest loser training
where you're sweating your dick off every day in the gym.
And you don't know where to go from there.
And the only place that you normally do
is go back to where you were.
And then what ends up happening is you go back
and you go back worse.
That's what I would say is the number one mistake.
Yeah, look at your, realize this,
that your body is a reflection of your total lifestyle.
So it's everything that you do, everything that you eat,
just basically how you live,
your body is a reflection of that.
And now you want to radically change the way your body looks.
So you're going to have to change your lifestyle, but it goes a little further. You're going
to have to change that lifestyle and it's got to stay that way forever, forever until your
last day on earth. Otherwise, it'll go back. You'll go back to the way you were before. So
this is in a destination that you get to and you get this accomplishment.
And then after you get to that accomplishment,
you think, okay, I'm here now cool.
Now I can stop all this crap that I've been doing.
And I can go back to what I was doing before
and the way it'll stay off.
It doesn't work that way.
And I think that's obvious.
I think a lot of people kind of understand that.
But you have to really understand it.
Now, once you really understand it,
realize and appreciate, here's a big one.
Really appreciate the, how hard it is Now once you really understand it, realize and appreciate, here's a big one, really appreciate
the how hard it is to fundamentally change your lifestyle.
It's not easy, you're changing your life.
It's probably one of the hardest things you'll ever do.
Now anytime you make a big change and a challenging change in your life, the best way to do it
is slowly, just like what Adam was saying.
You're not gonna change it overnight,
and if you do, it's not gonna stay that way permanently.
The statistics show it.
It's 100% doesn't work for most people long-term.
The only way to achieve long-term success
is a very slow and steady approach.
So what does that mean slow and steady?
Does that mean I tackle everything a little bit?
Maybe, here's a better approach.
Tackle one small thing at a time.
So maybe what you do right now is you,
if you're not eating vegetables, say,
okay, I'm gonna start eating vegetables every day.
And just do that.
Once that becomes natural,
once that becomes a part of your life, where you think yourself like this is just the way you now and it's totally
I'm not gonna this is permanent
Then add the next thing and then do that until it feels like it's permanent and then add the next thing and
Be kind to yourself if you're not exercising at all and you never have exercise or it's been a long time
Going from that to three or four days a week in the gym,
you're not being very kind to yourself.
You're not really being empathetic
to how challenging it is.
Why not go from zero to one?
I'm gonna go to the gym on Mondays, that's it.
Monday, I'm gonna go to the gym, I'm gonna spend
45 minutes in the gym doing a few things,
and I'm gonna do that for a while until it's automatic, until it becomes something
that I'm always gonna do.
And then I'm gonna add another day.
In fact, you wouldn't even have to tell yourself that.
It'll happen naturally.
When I learned this as a personal trainer,
training clients, I remember how much it blew me away.
I really had this epiphany, probably seven years
in my career.
And then I would train, you know,
when people would come to me and say,
how many days a week do I need to work out?
And so, well, what's realistic for you forever?
And once we kind of get down to the bottom line,
it was like, you know, one or two days a week.
And say, no problem, let's start with that.
There's a lot we can do with one or two days
a week in the gym in comparison to zero.
In comparison to what you're doing now, there's a lot.
There's a lot of room that I have to play
with one or two days a week.
And then we would start like that.
And what would end up happening is they come and see me play with with one or two days a week. And then we would start like that. And what would end up happening is they come and see me
one day a week or two days a week,
little by little, they start really enjoying it,
they start feeling the results, it feels good,
becomes a part of the life.
Before I'd know it, they would come to me.
They would come to me and be like,
hey, Sal, I wanna do an extra day.
What do you think I should do?
I'd be like, well, what sounds good to you?
Do you wanna do more resistance training? Do you wanna do yoga classes? And then they'd pick an extra day. What do you think I should do? I'm like, well, what sounds good to you? Do you want to do more resistance training? Do you want to do yoga classes?
And then they pick an extra day or their diet. They would start with one thing and then they come to me
Like, you know what? I think I'm going to start reducing my sugar intake. I'm like, that sounds good and over the course of
You know, 50 pounds if you do it slowly, it might take you one or two years to do it the right way, but it ain't going to come back.
You're good.
Yeah, I look at it as like, do you want to constantly be at war with yourself?
And what I mean by that is, if I'm going to take this approach, like I'm going to do everything
at once and I'm going to get to this place where I feel like I've lost the 50 pounds and
you know, I did this massive accomplishment, but I didn't do what you guys are describing
in terms of taking your time through it, so you actually learn at a level that it's almost
unconscious.
This is who I am now, this is who I'm becoming.
You're just going to keep battling this.
This is just going to be a constant thing that you have to consciously think about.
I have to get to the gym.
I have to eat better.
I have to do this.
You're always hammering yourself about
whether or not you're doing good
or you're not doing good.
And this is always gonna be a battle for you
versus taking that time to really use this as an opportunity
to now, I'm just gonna focus on this thing.
I know I can change on a level where it's just not
gonna affect me anymore like it used to.
Yeah, here's a good way of saying this.
Oftentimes I get a client that would come to me
and say they wanna lose a lot of weight
and we would talk about it.
And I'd always ask why and how do you think
that's gonna make you feel?
And what's the reason why you want to accomplish this.
And oftentimes I hear people say, well, it's going to make me happy.
Here's the irony of this.
You don't lose weight and then become happy.
You actually become happy and then you lose a weight.
It's the other way around.
It's the same thing as chasing money and rich.
You're not going to, people, they have goals of making a certain dollar amount and if
you want to get there, you think you're going to be happy.
And what everybody who's ever achieved that goal will tell you is it's not how it works.
So fat loss is the same thing too.
You think that when I lose this 50 pounds or when I become a millionaire,
I'm going to be this happy person.
It's like, no, you choose to be happy now.
And then that also teaches you to reframe how you look at the journey to the million dollars
or the journey to the 50 pounds
is you've got to learn to love the process.
And the only way you're going to learn to love the process
is if you slowly start to do one behavior to be
until you get to a point like Sal was saying where,
hey, I start off with one day of exercise
and that one day of exercise is challenging in its heart.
But then after a while, it's like, I start to like it
and I look forward to it and I enjoy it.
I look forward to it and I enjoy it so much.
I go, man, I wanna do another day a week.
And then you add two days and then you keep doing that.
And you do the same thing with like eating.
You make a couple good choices as far as good eating habits.
And you start to connect the dots of,
oh wow, my stool is better, oh wow, my sleep is better,
oh wow, my energy is better, oh wow, my sleep is better, oh wow, my energy is better,
oh wow, my digestion feels better, like,
wow, I kind of like eating healthy, this is kind of cool.
Maybe instead of only doing it a couple times a week,
I'm gonna do it every day of the week,
or maybe I'm gonna try and eat even healthier
because I'm starting to notice like, I feel better,
I like these things, like that's the goal is
to really start to fall in love with the process
of getting there, and it's hard to do that to Justin's point when you're at war with yourself all
the time. When you went from being one way completely and the whole other way, it's like this
crazy uphill battle and you're beating yourself up and you're restricting from so many things.
Life sucks. Yeah. Life sucks when you're doing that. And who to stay in that situation? Nobody's gonna wanna stay in that situation.
Here's some tangent.
This is why biggest loser, 85% of them fucking fail.
Well, I mean, that's anybody who loses a lot of weight,
majority of ass majority of them gain the weight back.
Here's some tangibles with diet.
Rather than taking things away,
start by adding things.
This is a good strategy.
So rather than looking at your diet
and say I'm gonna cut all these things out,
think what are some healthy foods that can add to my diet,
and then start adding those into your diet. It's a little easier to do that than it is to reduce.
As far as exercise is concerned, start with resistance training. Go to the gym, even if it's once
a week, and practice, okay, practice key lifts. Don't go to the gym to beat yourself up, but rather
go in there, pick four or five exercises that you're gonna practice
and get good at.
And resistance training,
the reason why I say start with the resistance training
is because that's gonna set your body up
for the long-term weight loss
because the muscle burns more calories.
You get a faster metabolism.
You'll get stronger, increase your mobility.
It's not as grueling.
It doesn't feel like you're killing yourself,
like you are when you're trying to do cardio all the time.
Just go to the gym, do a little bit of weights, start by adding healthy foods to your diet.
That's that would be where I would say we should start.
Next question is from Thunderbolt. I've heard the older you get, you begin to lose muscle mass.
Is this true? If it's true, can it be reversed with weight training? Is it harder to make gains
the older you get? Yes gains the older you get?
Yes, the older you get, you do lose muscle mass.
I hate that though.
That's based off of a study that's where we take everybody
all walks of life and we average it out.
And we average it out.
And since we know that 80% of the population
don't strength train, then yeah, of course,
over the course of 30 years of we tracked people aging
that you lose muscle mass, and that's what it looks like.
Yeah, if you maintain, you're such an outlier.
Right, so that's where this idea comes from.
That's what.
Well, aging, regardless, you will lose some muscle mass,
but here's the difference. That's not true. Somebody who's never worked out before, who is 30 years old,
I put them on a weight training program from 30 to 40, what will happen? From the whole
last second, I'm talking about, let's say you're consistent working out the whole time.
So I'm always, that's a problem. That's not everybody yet. But I'll still lose muscle. So like,
you know, 60 year old me, that's not going to have as much muscle. And even that's not everybody yet. But I'll still lose muscle. So like, you know, 60 year old me,
and that's not gonna have as much muscle.
And even that's not necessarily true.
If you are trained,
train your body, so it doesn't age.
So no, I'm not saying that.
And I'm not saying that it doesn't get more difficult
as you get older.
I'm just saying that the studies are flawed
that you're that we're using to have this discussion.
For example, okay, to your point,
which you're where you're going right now,
is if I train consistently the same way
from 17 years old to 60 years old,
yeah, of course you can.
But what if you train at 17 years old to 30 years old,
three times a week, and then from 30 to 40,
you scale to four to five days a week, would you lose muscle?
No, you wouldn't.
Maybe.
You wouldn't.
Maybe.
So here's my point what I was gonna make with this.
Age does affect the body.
It does cause muscle loss and loss of mobility.
But the difference between somebody who's active,
appropriately, and the difference
between someone who's sedentary is massive.
It's huge.
If you take a 70 year old who's been lifting weights
their whole life and you compare them to a average 70 year old who doesn't do anything
The difference between them is like it's like two different species
You have somebody who's got muscle strength full mobility and dependence and then you have someone with chronic illness
Loss of mobility and loss of independence. So yes age does affect how much muscle you can you can have on your body
But boy can you offset the shit out of that.
I don't even like saying that. I don't even like telling people that it has something to do with it,
because it can be totally the opposite. It's a general truth that we've used because we've
lumped everybody in one study. We give way too much power to it. Yes, that's what I'm saying.
That's why I don't even like to, I don't even like to fucking, you know a highlight. Yes, I don't like when clients just say that be like, no, no,
that's not true. You're hiring me today. Suzy. No, I get you. Okay. At 60 years old, you've never worked
out in your life. I'm going to give you more muscle than you've ever had in your life. Sure.
For sure. Yeah, some 50 year old who lifts weights and does it appropriately is going to have more
muscle and strength than a 30 year old who does nothing. Exactly.
And that's why I don't like to use that those studies.
But age does play objectively speaking.
Right, makes more difficult.
For multiple reasons, right?
For multiple reasons.
It's not hormones get affected, all kinds of factors.
Right.
You do, but even this, look, even if you're, even if you lift weights and you stay active,
your hormones don't get affected nearly as much.
Oh yeah.
Especially if you're a man. You're gonna stabilize them a lot. Yeah, especially for man, a man don't get affected nearly as much. Oh yeah, especially if you're a man.
You're gonna stabilize them a lot, but.
Yeah, especially for men, a man's testosterone level,
stay pretty stable for most of their life
as long as they're exercising and active.
So aging does have an effect,
but working out, especially resistance training
has a direct opposing effect to the effects of aging.
And to your point Adam, what we see with aging is this,
you're a kid, you're in your teens,
you're playing outside, you're playing sports,
now in your 20s, maybe you're more active,
you're still active in your 20s,
then you hit your 30s, you got kids,
not really being active anymore, 40s.
All you do is work, 50s, definitely all you do is worth,
60s you retire, now you don't even work anymore.
A lot of the decline in the health and muscle mass
that we see, a lot of it is lifestyle.
Is lifestyle.
Yes.
Some of it is due to age,
but not nearly as much as much as we think there is.
And to your point that the somebody,
that person who goes down that trajectory
of that's what the average quote unquote person does.
Exactly.
I think that's a great point you're making.
That same person, and if we were to look at his muscle mass
at 60 years old, if you were to compare that same guy
who decided to weight train his whole life,
boy, with the difference, if you were to measure their body,
hormonally muscle mass wise, it would be astronomically different.
No, it's insane.
Look, I just turned 40 this year.
If, when I look at my peers who are 40,
and 40 is not that old, especially nowadays,
people live to their 80s and 90s.
So I'm like halfway there.
So I'm not that old, right?
But I look at my peers who don't exercise,
who don't lift weights.
And it's like, are we even the same,
are we even the same, you know, species?
It doesn't look like it at all.
It's like the snowball going down the hill.
It gets, if you get off track,
it's really gonna compile fast as you age.
It totally, I mean, now if you're 15 years old
or 20 years old, there's a difference that ain't massive,
but as you get older, boy, does that difference,
make it huge difference.
So, in reality, here's the way I look at it.
And this is why I do not fear aging at all.
In fact, I look forward to aging.
Is as I get older, I separate myself more and more
for my peers.
You know, when I was a lifting weights and I was 20,
there was a difference between me and my peers,
but there's a lot of 20 year old dudes out there
that don't work out, that are still pretty strong
and pretty mobile and whatnot.
Not as many in their 40s. No. Not as many 40 year old dudes that don't work out, that are still pretty strong and pretty mobile and whatnot. Not as many in their 40s.
No.
Not as many 40 year old dudes that don't do anything
that also have good mobility and good strength.
And it's amazing.
So I even think like, so yesterday I was lifting
and it was a heavy lift day for me.
I've been in a phase one of anabolic type of training
and I haven't been training like this for a while.
And I'm doing weights and I'm like,
you know what, considering that I've gone through
all this stuff, formally, I'm approaching 40 years old,
like I'm looking at the weights that I'm lifting
and I'm moving.
And I would think that my volume, my frequency,
everything's extremely low compared to just where I was
five years ago.
But when I compare myself to 20 and 22,
chicken ass.
Yeah, I would fuck 22 year old me up.
And 22 year old me was training seven days a week.
So I mean, that really puts into perspective,
like when you continue to train years over years
over years, how compounding that is,
even me right now, which I would consider myself
very deconditioned in comparison
to the best version of me,
even me, D condition right now,
is way better than me training seven days a week
and on it at 22 years old.
So I mean, man, if you're weight training
and staying consistent with it,
yes, age does make it more difficult,
but I mean, to me,
there's also, if someone's stayed consistent with lifting,
there's benefits to age, you know,
the old man's strength and the
C and S training and the patterns that I've built for so many of your body. Yeah, man
I mean it doesn't take me very long to get out of that bar for a few weeks or a month and I'm already moving weights that it took me
Ten years to get up to as a young kid and here's the here's the big reason why I don't like the age
Conversation objectively speaking., our bodies all age,
yes, it has an impact on us and as we get older,
and it becomes a larger and larger impact,
but we just discussed how big of a difference
activity and diet play in offsetting that.
But here's the real reason why I hate that.
Because it's inevitable.
Why are we gonna focus on something that we can't control?
Yeah.
You know, it's like, you can't control it.
So why place all your focus on it?
Why say, oh, it's cause I'm older,
oh, I'm getting older, it sucks or whatever.
Here's a deal, make peace with reality.
Here's the reality.
Every second you're getting older.
That's reality.
You might as well make peace with it,
cause you can't change it.
And they have yet to invent something
that stops the aging process or reverses it.
So until that day comes, just make friends with it.
I'm used to rituals.
Yeah, I'm getting older.
Okay, so what, you know, I'm still active.
I work out, I have a good time, I eat right.
And again, as you get older,
you will separate yourself from your peers
to the point where it will become, I've
had clients, I've trained a lot of clients in their 60s and 70s and I've trained some
that were super consistent with working out who had been for 30 or 40 years. And man,
let me tell you, it's not even fair, it's crazy. I had a client, it was 70, the last time
I trained him, he was 72 years old and he'd been working out consistently for over 30 or 40 years
Here's a 72 year old man who could swim for two hours straight
He non-stop. I would do ab workouts with him
Okay, he actually would come in and would be my workout partner and this fucker
Not only would keep up with me, but some days he would kick my ass
He was obviously independent as shit,
he didn't need nobody.
He's got great muscle on his body,
he got his testosterone levels checked,
he was at 600, you know, for 72 year old man.
And then I compare him to like the average 77 year old
that I know, you know, like family members
or people that I know there are 70.
And I look at them and I'm like,
they're on 15 different medications. They can't get out of a couch without somebody helping them.
They can't, some of them need assistance already. They can't walk, you know, for more than,
you know, a quarter mile without having to stop and it's like, wow, what a complete,
you have an eid, Vagra. Yeah. You've put yourself in a cage. You know what
I mean, that cage is, is age and I don't know about you guys, but I'm not going to, it's going to happen to me no matter what for sure. But
age is a cage. But boy, does it make a big difference when you're, when you do the right
stuff?
Next question is from dance girl. When is it appropriate to sit or stand for an exercise?
For example, seated dumbbell curls versus standing dumbbell curls. What difference does
sitting versus standing make? Do you guys have a major dog in this fight? I just I prefer standing. That's just my preference.
You're a dork though. You're an athlete. You're athlete.
It's fucking you bodybuilding. I know. I sit a lot because of that. I'm safe. Like
we're really spitting hairs in my opinion. I can make a case though for why the division here
between us. Well, I could definitely make a case for why standing is better.
If you were to ask, if I had to defend one, one being better than the other, I think it's
obvious.
I think we would all agree standing is better.
Yeah, just overall functional ability.
Yeah.
You're going to burn more calories or standing.
You have to incorporate, because a seated dumbbell curl or a seated shoulder press, you completely take
your lower half out of the equation. So you're having to stabilize with your trunk and
core a little bit and then everything up. If you're standing, you have to do all that
plus your legs and feet have to stabilize. So there's going to be a higher caloric expenditure.
There's going to be more stabilization involved. So for those reasons, I can make the case
that it's technically better,
but we're talking about splitting hairs here.
And honestly, at the body builder in me,
when I'm trying to build,
I don't actually, I don't address,
when I lift, and when I'm building and sculpting a physique,
I'm actually not worried,
I actually don't wanna burn a bunch of extra calories.
I'm there to just focus on my
shoulders. I don't want to make the exercise the squeeze of that particular muscle. I don't want to
make the exercise more challenging than what it already is. So if I'm doing bicep curls and shoulder
press, I'm seated because I want to focus on that muscle. But for overall function and health and
and also to population. Yeah, in your direction in terms of like teaching
to I'll take a seated curl over standing
just because there's less stimulus,
there's less things that I have to queue in terms of
having them to just focus in on like what the function
is supposed to provide in terms of like
where their elbow position needs
to be, how they need to hold their body in position.
There's just a lot less factors to work on besides standing up because yes, you do have
to be able to really control your body and stabilize everything with more intensity.
Seated is good for if you want to do a really controlled movement and you really
want to feel the target muscles, then seated can be cool.
That's why bodybuilders like seated so much.
Member bodybuilders are always looking to target a specific muscle and feel it more in that
particular muscle.
There's some benefit to that.
There's some benefit for muscle growth for that, but not because it's necessarily better
at muscle growth, but sometimes connecting to a muscle, a that, but not because it's necessarily better at muscle growth,
but sometimes connecting to a muscle a little bit better can make that happen.
It negates body movement a lot, so if I'm seated and I'm doing a curl or overhead tricep
extension or shoulder press, I'm less likely to use momentum in the rest of my body to move
away.
For functional purposes, those standings the best.
No, yeah, if you're a person, and to me that's the divide here.
Who should do what?
If you're the functional guy or girl,
and that's what you're all about, you love mobility,
you're all about the total body working together,
and in general health and fitness,
I'm pushing you standing everything.
But if you're the guy who's just like,
I'm trying, I really want to build my belts,
I really want to build my bicep,
I care about sculpting my physique,
then fucking sit down.
I'm saying like it's,
and at the end of the day, both people can do both,
and be completely fine, and still be functional,
and still building incredible physiques.
There's not, it's that, that's that's small of a deal.
It's not worth really debating.
Now here's where it gets a little complicated, right?
Cause then I have people, these are the hyper-functional
trainer trainers, these are the trainers that are like,
everything needs to be super-functional.
Stand on a ball or a most ball.
Well, even before that, they'll say, okay,
a bench press is not functional because you're lying down,
you should do a standing chest press,
a cable chest press where you're...
Bracing yourself...
You're doing much more less effective exercise version of it.
Well, and now why is it less effective?
It's less effective because if I'm doing a standing chest press with cables,
that's what's his face.
What's that guy that we didn't get annoyed by every once in a while?
Longchill patterns.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So because I'm standing, I'm limited by how much weight I can use.
I can't push, or I can't row as much.
If I'm doing like a cable row and I'm standing, I'm not going to be able't row as much. If I'm doing like a cable row and I'm standing,
I'm not gonna be able to row as much
as if I'm doing a seated cable row.
So now I'm not able to exert as much force
and build as much strength and muscle.
So there are some benefits, you know,
that kind of go both ways.
Like is it more functional to do a chest press standing
versus a bench press on a bench?
Not necessarily, if I get stronger on a bench press,
that overall strength gain is gonna overpower the fact
that you're doing a chest press in your standing.
I'm gonna build more muscle and more strength.
So it's not as simple as one is,
not necessarily always more functional.
One is necessarily better for isolation or whatever.
I would say this, for most people listening right now,
mix them all up.
Mix them all up, see how they feel, enjoy.
I, many times, will do a standing circus press
or dumbbell press or standing push press
with the barbells, and then lots of times
I'll sit down in a 90-bench and do shoulder press
there, I'm very inconsistent with doing
the same thing all the time.
I think there's value to being able to push something
over your head in a to being able to push something
over your head in a seated position
to push something over your head in a standing position.
And I think it's really splitting hairs on trying
to make the argument that one is better than the other.
I just tended to go with the one that's harder.
You always picked the hard one.
Oh yeah.
Next question is from John Alva Seven.
I recently went full time with my training business
and I'm trying to organize the payment side of the business.
How do you recommend going about payments
so you can scale the business better?
So I'm gonna start this because when I first met,
you can tell him cash, so you don't claim everything.
Yeah, no, not at all.
I'm gonna throw that out.
I know, it's hell's wrong with you.
I paid everything.
No, here's, okay, so this is something
that I'd heard other trainers doing, but I didn't ever really meant someone that was doing
it effectively until I met Justin. So I up until the last day I trained people, followed
the old school model of trick clients buying packages. So I have a single session rate,
which let's just say you're single rate session rate to $100. And then if you buy 10 sessions or more,
it's $95 a session, if you buy 20 or more,
it's 90 and so on.
So people get a discount for buying a package.
And then as they show up,
they use the session out of the package,
they sign off on it and they'd leave.
And then they just use it up.
And they'd have to use it up over a certain period of time,
maybe a year or something like that.
And it's just an easy way to manage it.
It's the way that most gyms do it. It's the way that most gyms do it.
It's the way most trainers tend to do it.
But the way that Justin, the way that you did it, was interesting to me and I see it being
far superior from a business standpoint.
So maybe you can explain because I'm not going to do it just this.
Yeah, well, I just, I kind of went to a lot of these different fitness business summits
and like this was something that as an independent
trainer, you really have to figure this out and like treat it as a
business and get beyond the fact that you're going to have all these
contracts kind of keep coming on, you know, piling up on your lap.
Like you have to really, you know, be involved in the
advertisement process and, you know, all the different appointments.
And then also you have to have consistent income just to keep things going.
So I had to get more reliable income sources.
And so for the way that I understood it from a lot of other people that I was learning from
in terms of how to tackle this, they were starting to use ways to capture month to month automated type of payments.
So they would start to lower their cost per month.
And so this would be like an automated payment system to where they could have consistency
that now they could structure that month.
Here's what's coming in, and here's my expenses,
and then this could start being more reliable.
And I started to kind of use that model,
but then what I found to be more effective
in my business was, it's more personal to where,
I would charge a flat rate.
So I'd charge a flat rate per month,
and I'd give them two options.
I gave them like a full-time option,
and I gave them a, you know, part-time option.
And so that looked anything from like three to four plus,
you know, times you're gonna meet with me per week,
or we schedule it in, you know,
ahead of time, all that stuff.
So I get the commitment, or, you know,
less than that is like part-time basically.
And, you know, it's up to you,
whether or not you make the appointment,
I'm gonna put it in the schedule.
You know for a fact I'm gonna be there.
I'm gonna be as professionals I can,
I'm gonna make the experience as good as I can.
If you have things come up, I understand,
but this is kind of where I'm kind of throwing
that ball back on the client.
This is where we can kind of agree before we get started that,
you know, this is how I run my business. And, you know, you, you understand that going into
this, like, that's the parameter. So, so, so no question. So part time would be less than three days a
week. So they can go up to two days a week of training with you. Full time is three or four days
a week, or up to four days a week. Right. And then they'd pay a flat rate either way. So let's just say I'm gonna make up some numbers two thousand dollars a part time two thousand dollars a month
You're gonna see me up to two days a week
For you know three thousand five hundred dollars a month, you know give them a discount or something
You're gonna see me up to four days a week, right?
Something like that and then it's automatic every month. And you can structure however you want
You can do the price you play with the price points
Based off of like how much volume we want and me, I was like a way less volume guy. I was all about
like higher service, less volume. And so I structured my entire payment process accordingly.
And then geared and directed all my focus and my marketing to speak to that person and
what they wanted. And so I actually extended it even to like five to six times a week just because,
you know, people are at a higher price point. They really wanted access to me. And they
wanted, you know, to know that I could, I could come back again and then do stretching and
do like all these extra things. Well, which is, which is worth it when you're hitting
a price point of four to $5,000 or even $3,000 because then you only need three people.
Exactly.
And you're a six figure business already.
So that's exactly how I structure it.
Because one of the big challenges with doing the old way,
which is how I did it, and this was something
I just have to coach trainers on, is it was hard for them
to figure out what their monthly income would be.
Because you'd have, let's say, four or five
resigns this month, and then now they've all bought 40 sessions.
They're not going to resign with you for another two to four months,
depending on how much they show up.
So you have this big month, you know, maybe bring in $12,000,
then next month you bring in $2,000,
and then next month you bring in $5,000.
And you have to figure out how to track all that,
because what would end up happening with a lot of trainers,
they'd have a big month, they'd spend a bunch of money,
then the next month come around,
I'm not making money.
And I beg you not not to mention,
you have to service all those appointments.
Yeah, right.
And so that old model of having to sign off
on every session to me is dinosaur.
Because yeah, because now like, yeah,
you just closed the contract,
but you still have to get through all of them
to then re-sign them versus, you know, month to month,
I know like I give them this parameter,
but, you know, next month, I'm gonna,
I'm gonna, you know, close and I know exactly
how much money I have.
Now, did you find that when you switched
to doing it month to month, like you're saying,
that the clients were more consistent?
Yes.
Oh, they were, yep, because they knew
they're paying no matter what. They knew, and they knew that like, I was either going to fill that, you know, space or time
and they wanted to solidify, you know, that specific hour with me. It's like, it's almost
like they're buying that time, you know, at that price point.
Yeah. So far, when I, some of the most successful trainers since then have done it your way. I think the old way, you have to learn how to manage your
income better. You have to really be good about getting clients to want to come work out
because someone could buy 30 sessions. This is not unheard of. This happens to a lot of
trainers. Client will show up for 15 or 20 sessions and then kind of slowly, you know,
come in every once in a while because they're scheduled or whatever. Next to you know,
it's like eight months later
and that client's still on the same original package.
You don't know how much is coming in.
So I think that's the smart way.
Now, we know Jonathan, and I'm going towards,
going to his Instagram if I can find him real quick,
because what I'm interested in Jonathan is if you have
like a website, because here's the thing that's important.
Yeah, I don't think he does.
In fact, his link, yeah, I see an email,
but I don't see an actual website,
at least he's not advertising it.
I think, and maybe his payment question too,
has something to do with like literally what,
like a payment square,
yeah, square or one of those options.
Oh, that's so easy nowadays.
It's so it was square and a lot of stuff.
Yeah, but I mean, to me, one of the things that you need to get done, and you're probably
going to spend a pretty penny doing this, I think my first real website that I built,
I think, cost me almost 12 grand to build the first one.
But you need to have a fully automated website. You need to have a place that you can direct
people to where this is built into it. So it has a PayPal option. It has a place that
can take the credit cards. It has, I wish mine was still up. So I think I stopped paying
the domain name and so you can't access any more. But you also should have, so I created a place that generates leads and it was basically
a really detailed, like Parkview, that just asked them their goal, how many times they
want to train, all these things that I could drive to them and then I could get this information.
So I know they're full name, their age, their goal,
how consistent they want to train,
how long they've been training for,
like nutrition, what level they are there.
Just, there's a ton of questions that they had to fill out.
To, for me, and then I get, then it was designed to where,
if they hit that in my website,
it automatically got emailed to me.
So every morning I'd wake up and, you know,
hopefully have anywhere between on average,
I'd have like one to three leads in there
of people that dropped into my website
and were interested in like a free consultation
and that's how I would present it
is like a free chance to meet with me
and we could discuss whatever,
as far as a program or their goals.
And then I would call them up,
they'd have their phone number on there and I'd call them up
and then I'd say, hey, this is Adam, blah, blah, blah.
And then I would talk to them
about setting up a consultation.
You gotta have that now, in my opinion.
I mean, we live in a digital time.
Like the whole point of you building a social media
following is to be a top of the funnel or a lead generator.
You need somewhere to direct those people.
You most certainly don't wanna be like,
oh, slide in my DM and then we'll talk
and then we, then I'll meet with you
and you're scheduling it all that way.
You need to automate this process
if you're really trying to scale a business
because in a perfect world, you get to a point
where you're generating several leads every single day.
And if you're trying to manage that through email
or through DMs on your Instagram,
you're gonna get a bombardment
and you're never gonna be able to scale out of that.
So at one point, you need to buy the bullet,
invest in building a website that's robust enough
that has a place for them to purchase right away there.
So if they know they want an option like Justin is saying,
full time, this many times a week, I can just buy right there, which, you know, a very small percentage of people
will do that, but you want to have it there for the people that do because I'm sure this
doesn't even happen to Justin where, you know, occasionally you get that, that client
who is just an easy lay down, they were already looking to buy personal training, your bio
sold them or they got a, they were, you were a referral from somebody else, they look
at your website and that's all they needed to get confirmed that this is the
guy I want to work with.
And so they just purchase right then there or you have an option of a pop-up that comes
up and says, oh, if you want a free consultation with me, fill out this form and I'll email you
and book you or whatever, you need to have that.
So I would invest in getting a website built up so you have that
and then that becomes your place
that you drive your people to generate your lead.
So to me that is, from what I see,
just glancing at your Instagram right now,
unless you're not advertising your own website on there,
that's something you gotta do for sure.
Excellent advice.
And with that, go to mindpumpfree.com
and download our guides.
They're all absolutely free. So we have guides on everything from fat loss, thing you got to do for sure. Excellent advice. And with that, go to mindpumpfree.com and download our guides.
They're all absolutely free.
So we have guides on everything from fat loss to muscle building to helping you with your
exercise execution.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin.
You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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