Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1179: The Importance of Sleep for Fat Loss, the Benefits of Low Rep Ranges on Major Lifts, Favorite Body Parts to Train & MORE
Episode Date: December 7, 2019In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the benefits of very low rep ranges on major lifts like the bench, squat, and deadlift, how sleep affects fat loss,... their favorite body part to develop, and how they vote with their dollars. Who is most likely to be in celebrity rehab out of the Mind Pump crew? (4:20) The difficulty of seeing your child sick. (8:05) The different segments of the fitness industry and the good/bad information that has come from each. (14:22) What test should I do and how often should I test myself? (32:33) Mind Pump’s stand on targeted ad videos and their influence on the consumer. (36:40) How science by nature has no morality. Mind Pump touches the third rail. (42:27) The world’s first artificial neurons have been developed to fight chronic diseases. (46:28) Is Peloton stirring up controversy for financial gain? (47:37) #Quah question #1 – What are the benefits of very low rep ranges on major lifts like the bench, squat, and deadlift? (50:34) #Quah question #2 – How does sleep affect fat loss? Can inadequate sleep hinder fat loss even if macros are correct? (58:31) #Quah question #3 – Besides calves, what is your favorite body part to develop and how do you go about training it? (1:06:34) #Quah question #4 – How do you each vote with your dollars? (1:13:45) Related Links/Products Mentioned December Promotion: MAPS Aesthetic ½ off! **Code “BLACK50” at checkout** Intervention Full Episodes, Video & More | A&E Mind Pump 1160: Bret Contreras- The Glute Guru Visit Everly Well for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** YouTube Plans to End Targeted Ads on Videos Aimed at Kids Visit Skinny Dipped for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** There Is No NASA 'Cloud Machine' - Here's The Real Explanation Of That Viral Video World-first Artificial Neurons Created To Fight Chronic Diseases Peloton stands by ad despite accusations of sexism I Tried to Expose Russia’s Media Manipulation Playbook in 2012 and Nobody Listened – Ryan Holiday Dinosaur Training: Lost Secrets of Strength and Development – Book by Brooks D Kubik Which Is Better: Low Reps Or High Reps? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Bret “Glute Guy” Contreras PhD (@bretcontreras1) Instagram Ryan Holiday (@ryanholiday) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we answer questions asked by listeners like you,
they go to our Instagram page, Mind Pump Media, they post the question underneath the quaw meme,
and then we pick the best ones and answer them.
But before we do that, we talk about studies,
we talk about our lives, what's on our minds,
sometimes it gets real random, it's a lot of fun.
That's the introductory portion.
It's the best one we get.
Of this episode, here's what we talked about
in this episode of Mind Pump.
So we started by talking about rehab and interventions.
I was talking about this show called intervention on TV.
Really hard to watch.
Super depressing.
Really powerful.
Then we talked about sick kids and how that can be
really difficult.
Adam's boy is sick right now and so he got no sleep.
Then we got into a great discussion about the fitness
industry.
You've all heard us talk about the industry of fitness,
but we actually broke it down into different segments
and talked about the value and the detriment
of each of the segments within the fitness industry.
Then we talked about quarterly testing
of your hormones, the potential value,
when it can go too far.
I recommend, for example, that men
test their testosterone at home
by a company called Everly Well,
about every quarter,
this way you can monitor how your workout, diet, sleep, and lifestyle are affecting one of your most important hormones.
And these tests are very inexpensive.
And again, you can do them at home.
Here's what you do if you want to get one of these tests.
And by the way, we have a discount for you.
Go to EverlyWell.com, use the code MindPump, and you'll get 25% off of all tests throughout
the end of this month.
We talked about YouTube changing their child advertisement policy.
A lot of these very, very popular pages on YouTube stand to lose a lot of money.
This is kind of crazy.
Then we talked about skinny dipped almonds.
Actually, by the way, this right now, they've released the dark chocolate peppermint, skinny
dipped almonds.
These are phenomenal stocking stuffers.
Now what are they?
It's an almond with just the right amount of chocolate, so the macros stay good.
You're not eating an almond.
That's just tons of sugar and crap.
It's just enough chocolate to give it great flavor.
It's just sprinkled on there.
And it's a great snack.
And we have a discount for you.
If you go to skinnydipped.com,
forward slash mind pump and enter the code,
mind pump, we will give you a full 20% off your purchase
of these amazing all-
Prairie before I eat them all.
Then we talked about the NASA Rain Machine.
This is a bit of a conspiracy theory.
We mentioned artificial neurons,
scientists for the first time have created,
this is crazy, neurons in the lab.
And then we talked about all the controversy
around the Peloton commercial,
or everybody's freaking out.
Oh man.
Then we got in the fitness portion of this episode.
This is where we answered the questions.
Here's the first question.
What are the benefits of very low rep ranges
for major lifts, like the bench press squat and deadlift?
So most of you should probably train in these rep ranges,
but we talk about the appropriate way to do so,
and the benefits.
The next question, how does sleep affect fat loss,
and how does it affect fat loss,
even if your macros and calories are correct?
The third question.
How much sleep all the fat off?
This person wants to know what our favorite body parts
are to train and develop,
and how do we go about training them?
And the final question of this episode,
how do each of us vote with our own dollars?
Also this month, our bodybuilding,
body sculpting focused workout programs,
actually one of the most popular programs,
Maps aesthetic is 50% off.
So when you enroll in this program,
what you get is a full workout broken up into phases.
The whole program lasts just over three months.
Enders exercise demos where we teach you how to do the exercises.
We tell you how many reps to do, how many sets, all the guesswork is taken out.
This program is designed for those who are aesthetic minded.
So if you want to sculpt and shape your body, how you see fit.
If that's the main motivation for you to work out
This is the best program. Here's how you get the 50% off go to maps black
calm and use the code black 50 B L a C K 5 0 no space for the discount
Are we over caffeinated? I think so not in no we didn't take our not enough
Dude you were slipping with the yesterday. I was I was jittery
For some I've been jittery in a while dude. I was like hey, hey, hey, hey, you had too much yesterday
I did I didn't know it was possible still you know he did
Because after we were done
Podcasting yesterday just and looks at me goes this is like first time I ever got like shaky
Yeah, he's I had to like maintain myself through the podcast.
What did you do, a bunch of cold brew?
Yeah, I did like three cold brews
and then I had like a rock star.
And then I had that shady gel.
I forgot we did that rock star yesterday.
Bro, hold on a second.
Three cold brew nitro drinks.
Yeah, a rock star.
Typical.
And a row.
Yeah, bang, bang, bang. So I think bang,
who's most likely to be in celebrity rehab one day? Oh, Justin for sure. No, no, no, no,
really? What say me? Yeah. No way. Don't introduce me to cocaine. I have my drug habits
under control. Yeah. That's so far. Keep that, keep that bitch at bay. Keep her at bay.
Every addict's last words.
Oh my gosh.
Does anybody ever go to, like, I guess so.
I guess everybody goes to rehab.
It's like self like they're like, oh, I got to go.
No, I have, dude, I have a really cool story
with one of my family members who checked themselves
in and completely turned their life around.
It was really, it was cool to watch
because it was a really rough time in our family
seeing that this was years and years ago,
but watching him check himself in
and then to see what he's done with his life.
So, you know, it's cool when you see that.
Because a lot of people, I don't know what the success rate of.
It's not good.
It's low, right?
It's not.
The chances are you're getting to basically doing that
your whole life in and out, in and out, in and out.
And, you know, he went really really hard to a point where you know was still in his parents checks and writing himself checks to pay for drug habits
And doing all kinds of stuff crazy how it changes people isn't it?
I wonder if the odds are better if you're the one that's your idea going into yeah versus yeah
Yes being like now like confronted about it. Yeah, the odds are, I've looked this up,
the odds are much higher.
What's crazy to me is,
do you guys ever watch, it's a called intervention?
Yeah.
Oh, I know.
You wanna watch something now that your father
is the down-world spiral.
Watch it, actually don't.
You won't sleep at all.
Is it a movie or is it a show?
No, it's a show.
It's a series and what they do is they show people
who their family has decided
that they need to do an intervention.
But the shitty part about it,
and it fucked me up as a parent,
is they show, first they'll show the person
in full addiction mode, you know,
doing math, living, you know,
pulling tricks.
Stricted with mom.
Yeah, doing, you know, selling their bodies
or just terrible stuff.
And you're watching this like, wow, that sucks.
But then it gets really fucked up
when they interview the family members
and the family members talk about them when they were kids.
And they show pictures of when they were kids.
And how do you do the kid they were?
Yeah, and then there were some kind of trauma.
Like yeah, and then we got divorced
and their father left the,
and then he got into drugs and that point.
Usually, yeah, it was a traumatic experience
that was the catalyst.
So hard.
And then you watch the intervention and the parents
and the family members and the friends who are saying,
cause what they advise them to do is to say,
here's the ways that you've hurt me.
And then you also have to tell them
what you're gonna take away, but you have to mean it.
Like if you don't stop doing this,
you'll never see my kids again or something like that.
And these family members are crying.
It's brutal.
Oh, it gives me the chills, dude. Damn, what a day. Courtney, I was like, dude, I members are crying. It's brutal. Oh, it gives me chills, dude.
Damn, what a day.
Courtney, I was like, dude, I don't know.
It's too heavy for me.
Yeah, I don't know.
I just want to like watch, you know,
you use a butt head or something.
Yeah, that's a little bit lighter.
Like, let's chill out here.
I don't laugh a little.
You want to watch 16 and pregnant?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Turn off this depression.
Yeah, yeah.
It's my sick show and I don't feel good.
I haven't been sick in a long time.
Knock on wood.
Actually, Max is sick right now.
Oh, what is he got?
I don't know.
He's got something.
It sounds like it's in his throat a little bit
because it sounds like he's congested,
but he's not, is nasal pathway is fine.
Like we can't, or we, he's there.
So it's like in his throat and you can hear it.
Like the post nasal drip, maybe? Yeah, yeah. And he was up all night. We were up all night
last night with him and you know, Katrina's with him right now. I don't know what she's do because
I know she was supposed to go into work today. So I don't know what she's doing. Now is that hard
for you to to when your kid is sick that you start to I don't know what when I happen when I
would see my kids sick, it's really difficult to deal with. Yeah, well, I mean, I was telling her,
so she's, I'm more, I'm harder, I'm more, you know,
let him cry, you know, I'm that one, she's,
you know, she's the mom, she's definitely the,
you know, coddle nature.
Yeah, the nurture, right?
So I think we fall into the roles or whatever.
She is normally the one quick to do that stuff. Well, when he's
sick like this, I always the one who was like, Hey, you know, I know we're really stringing
on his bath time in bed, do all stuff of that, but he's not feeling well, you and I are
sitting by the fire. Like, let's hold him. Let's just hold him. Yeah. So like, you know,
it's because, and that's just it as much as I'm hard on all those things like it's because I know it's important that we
Established structure for him so I don't want my you know two-year-old or four-year-old
You know screaming at nine o'clock at night wanting to play still and do stuff like we're training him now
We're sleep training him and he's he's actually really good like you bath him and then you get give him his last feeding
And then he's out
by 7.30 for us and sleeps all night.
But, you know, there's exceptions to that rule.
Like he feels terrible right now and I can hear him when he's crying the way he's crying.
It's different.
Yeah, it's different.
So, you know, when stuff like that, that's where I feel like that's where you are flexible.
If he's crying, just to be crying and give me out of bed. That's where I'm more like, no, let him cry.
He's got a learning.
This is bad.
Yeah, but the kid's sick.
I'm definitely got that nurturing characteristic.
And it's funny because my kids, they, obviously,
they have the time at my house,
the other half the time at their mom's house.
But when they're sick, even if they're at their mom's house,
they call me and they want me to come over.
So my daughter, she was sick a few weeks ago
and she called me up and she's like,
buh-bah, and I can hear her voice.
Oh, how you feeling, honey?
Can you come over?
I'm like, sure, absolutely, I'll come over
and so I'll come over, I'll bring elderberry,
you know, I'll put the blanket on her
and I'll lay with her and whatever. So it's interesting to see how my kids they
want. They reach out to me for that because that's, you know, what I do. Yeah, it usually
takes like, so I vividly remember my, my all of his, like the, the first time he got
like really sick, it was like, you know, stomach flu or whatever. And we were in Tahoe at
the time with some other ones of my friends and like these other kids and like, stomach, flu, whatever. And we were in Tahoe at the time with some other,
ones of my friends and like these other kids
and like he, it was his birthday.
So we're all celebrating his birthday, he eats a cake
and all this and then he just like,
turns like pale white and he's like puking and stuff.
And then I was like, oh man,
I guess I didn't, you know, settle right or whatever,
but then the whole night he was just like,
you could tell, like it was like a bug, you know,
that he had.
And so I was like, that was the first time
he'd even been like puking or anything.
And it was like,
paying pneumonia, and my friend was laughing at me
because he's like,
oh, it was the first time he got like really sick.
I'm like, yeah dude, like what do I do?
You know, I'm like, sleep in, you know,
on the floor next to him the whole night.
Like we didn't get any sleep, but it's like, you know,
it's one of those things that kind of throws you, you know,
you feed out from under you.
Dude, is there anything worse you haven't experienced this atom,
but you will, everybody does.
Is there anything worse than when your kid wakes you up in the middle
of the night because they puked all over the place?
That has to be the word.
Actually, there's one.
Usually it's all shit.
It's dude. it's something.
Make things out of it.
Kid thrown it.
You'll hear it, you'll see them like they'll knock on the door
or you'll hear them, and then you'll know like, oh, fuck.
And you'll go, and it's like two o'clock in the morning,
puke on the floor on the bed,
so you have to clean the kid, they're crying.
You gotta clean their fucking bed, spread,
you gotta clean the floor. It's a Yeah, you got to clean their fucking bed spread you got to clean the floor
It's a freaking hour and a half or deal the worst story I hear and and I've had friends tell me
Oh, this is coming so get ready and I'm like I fucking hope Max doesn't do this
I'm gonna hang him by his toes if he does but they they're like oh they'll come a time when he is walking around and stuff
And he shits his diaper and he just sticks his hand down his crab's it and starts grabbing his shit and throwing it and stuff.
And I'm like, yeah, what?
Yeah, they do that.
Yeah, I don't remember that raising my brother and sister.
I don't remember that he does.
So I'm hoping that it's just their curious man.
Yeah, I'm like, oh, I sure shit hope that's not my son.
Dude, I'm like, they just sneering on the wall.
That, that happened with you?
No. Okay, good. So there's hope. There's dude. I'm just sneering on the wall. That happened with you? No.
Okay, good.
So there's hope.
There's hope, but just insane.
Two boys did, you know, the odds.
But maybe the one boy thing, I don't know, you might get lucky.
But it's those leftover chimpanzees, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, look at that.
Well, you know, I've shared before that, you know, I played obviously a big role in my
two youngest brother and sister with raising them.
So I spent a lot of time in their early years and changing diapers and I don't ever remember
anything like that.
But I've had friends who are like, oh yeah, you just wait till he does that, man.
You're going to love that.
I'm like, what?
Yeah, he just did, I think, because we left him too long downstairs in his crib.
And he was like sitting in it and he just like reached down there and just started smearing everywhere.
And the whole like oh my god it was it was like a murder scene of shit everywhere because
he at that point he learned how to climb out too.
So we had this problem of him like when we'd leave him there for too long he'd just like
climb out and like walk around and like grab things. And that's another thing where he like ended up like putting a marbone in his mouth
swallowing.
I took him to the ER for that too.
It was like, it was my youngest.
It's like, man, like I'm probably going to like be white.
Like my hair's going to be white, you know, because of him.
Yeah.
That's so funny.
Yeah.
Anyway, dude, so this morning I was doing my social media, whatever.
And you know, there's this trend that I feel like we were kind of a part of that now I
think has kind of become a little bit out of control.
You know, when we first started the podcast, we would talk a lot about the fitness industry,
right?
We refer to fitness industrial complex. Yeah, the industry of fitness, and we would talk about the negatives industry, right? We refer to fitness industrial complex.
Yeah, the industry of fitness,
and we would talk about the negatives
and some of the stuff that it does,
and what to look out for and that kind of stuff.
And this is a very powerful technique in politics.
In politics, it's a very powerful technique
to create a clear enemy, put yourself on the other side,
because it's easy to understand for people
to hear.
It also tends to strengthen your position.
And I see now people in our space taking advantage of that power and using it kind of the
wrong way.
So I'm referring to like, I see these fitness model influencers who, you know, as usual,
they just don't, they don't provide great information at all.
Most of the information that provide is terrible.
Now they're referring to the evil fitness industry
and I'm against it.
And they're using this tactic in a way
that I think is very negative.
And the truth is when you examine the fitness industry,
I mean, that covers just a huge umbrella.
But I think if we break it up into segments,
I think it's a little bit more accurate.
I wanna do this so that people,
when they're hearing some of these arguments
that are very powerful,
that can be very, very powerful,
that they're privy, and they know,
like, oh, wait a minute, who am I listening to?
And they're using this tool that's been used
in politics for so long.
Oh, you feel that way.
I also think that another thing that, we were talking about early on was the authentic thing. Oh, you feel that way. I also think that another thing that we were talking about
early on was the authentic thing.
Yeah.
You know, and that's been completely abused now.
If the opposite is what's happening is, you know,
people that, you know, think that being authentic
is something that you practice or you try to do
are presenting it on Instagram.
You have to show your authenticity.
Yeah, hold on.
Take it a shit.
Yeah.
So, brush your teeth with messy hair.
I feel like in the last five years, we have,
and I'm interesting where you're gonna take this conversation
because I don't know where I stand on this, right?
Because there's a part of me that goes,
hey, you know, I'm proud that we put that out there,
you know, years ago and I feel like, I mean, I'm proud that we put that out there, you know, years ago, and
I feel like, I mean, I just made this statement on the forum. I was thinking the forum for
them being with us for as long as they have and that they're a big part of the success
that mine pumps had. And I really feel like for the first time that we have a real voice
in the space. Like I feel, we were building towards that
and we acted as if we did way back
when we had just a few thousand people listening,
but I do feel like now we have a real voice in it.
And I have to think that a lot of what you're talking
or alluding to, it's probably coming
because it's spread from what we've been saying.
It looks like a formula.
And what I'm saying is that where I,
I don't know where you're going with this,
but I don't know where I stand yet on it,
because I want to believe that because of that message,
it's done more good than harm, but I don't know,
where are you taking this?
I think it has done more good,
but like any powerful tool, it can be wielded
in a lot of different directions
and it can be used to manipulate people or to sell a crappy product or to do all the
bad stuff that we talk about on the show all the time.
And here's the thing about ideas, because that's an idea, right, to talk about like, here's
what the industry does, here's what you need to pay attention to.
Ideas are very powerful and they spread.
And when they're powerful and they're effective, they spread very, very quickly. So the idea
of demonizing or talking about or collectivizing the fitness industry, you know, it started
and it's exploded. And again, I see a lot of people using it negatively. So I'm going
to break it down into subcategories. So people have an easier time discerning, you know, good from bad
besides the message itself.
So I went in and I thought about this from,
I thought, okay, the fitness industry has done some
very good things.
Obviously it's brought us, exercise, it's brought us,
nutrition, it's brought us good behaviors,
it's brought us motivation.
But a lot of that has come from, if we really think
about it, it's come from one segment, which is the fitness trainer industry,
the segment of the fitness industry that is made up of trainers,
coaches, and people whose ultimate passion and job is to help other people.
Like, you know, when you're a personal trainer, for example,
it's of course not true for all trainers, but if you've been a personal trainer,
especially for a long time,
the reason why you did that is probably because your main passion
is helping people and your secondary passion is fitness.
You love both of those things because if you didn't,
you wouldn't last longer than three years.
I can't imagine somebody lasting as a personal trainer
longer than three years who didn't have a deep passion
for those things because it's a hard job to make a lot of money.
You're taking on a lot of people's stress. It is not your typical nine to five job. it's a hard job to make a lot of money. You're taking on a lot of people's stress.
It is not your typical nine to five job.
It's a difficult job to do,
but if you're passionate about it,
you find meaning in it, then it's extremely worthwhile.
So that's where I think a lot of the good is coming from,
but there's different segments that I think,
the majority of the bad shit that we get is coming from.
So one of them being the fitness modeling industry.
Now these are people who look hot, they're sexy,
they look phenomenal, they're muscular,
they have nice asses and nice arms and great legs
and whatever.
And they're part of the fitness modeling industry,
but because they have so many eyes on them,
they pivot and turn that into,
if they can't make money directly off of modeling,
which is very difficult, then they'll try to make money, they'll pivot off that, and
then turn that into, hey, everybody looking at me because I look good, here's some good
advice, they're not trainers.
Oh, by the way, I have skinny teeth.
Yeah, that's right.
They're not trainers, they did not enter to them.
And they're not always promoting bad shit either, I think.
I think they're just not experienced.
We have friends that are like this that have,
you know, they've made a name for themselves
because they've been, they did an incredible job
of getting themselves in really good shape.
They have the look, they've competed,
they've been on covers of magazines.
And so they've drawn a lot of attention in eyes
and the natural progression of that,
especially right now in a trend where online coaching is exploding,
it's the natural pivot.
Now the unfortunate part,
well this is also what we saw this.
We saw, oh this was the worst.
We saw the opportunity to come into this space
because the majority of the money that was being made
was being made by these people.
That's right.
They were the one, and it was very easy, I think, for each of
us. And this was even before we got together, we were already observing this. It was very
easy for us to go like, Oh, wow. Like a lot of this information that they're presenting
is, it's not up to par with like what you would want to be coaching or talking to a client.
And I don't think it comes from a bad
place, I think is just more naive.
If you just come from the wrong place, because think about the past, I just talked about
the fitness trainer industry and their motivations, their passions are help people and then the
passion is fitness. The fitness modeling industry, what is their passion? Their passion is body
obsession and looking perfect. that's their passion.
So the information that they provide
is through that lens.
So they're gonna give the information
that is going to encourage body image issues,
encourage body obsession, it's going to pray on insecurities.
However, indirectly, it's just the lens
that it's coming through and a lot of the shitty information
that we get in the fitness industry
is coming from the fitness modeling industry.
There's another segment of the fitness industry
that also provides terrible information
and this is the fitness entertainment industry.
These are the ones that make the fitness programs
that are really designed to razzle and dazzle you
and entertain the shit at you.
So these are your boot camp and your fucking,
your Western hip hop dance workout videos
and whatever you wanna call them.
And when you watch them, they're exciting,
they're motivating, they're fun to watch,
terrible workouts, terrible programming.
Their passion is not to help people
and their passion is not fitness,
their passion is to entertain and to sell lots of programs.
They are driven by those two things.
And so the information that they provide is also terrible.
This is with all the stuff that we battled as trainers
when clients would come in, but I thought I was supposed
to do 10 exercises back to back.
And I thought I was supposed to, you know,
do tons of cards.
This isn't as fun, you know, like you get that a lot of times too,
because you get those classes that are just like,
there's lights, there's music, there's energy,
there's all this stuff.
And remember the flood of biggest loser people
that came in with that show?
I mean, I remember just kicking us.
The entertainment industry.
Yeah, right.
I mean, and having to, that was such a challenge
as a trainer getting those clients, it was great.
It was driving clients to the gym,
but then the challenge as a trainer was, they wanted that.
You know, I wanna be yelled at and made me run like crazy.
Like it's like, no, you don't understand.
It's gonna be like a piece of shit.
This is not sustainable.
There's a reason why 80 plus percent of those people
put all that weight on is it's not realistic.
No, and every good trainer knows that.
Every good trainer knows to not rest upon or focus on
or make this the pillar of your training
where I'm trying to entertain the shit
and motivate the shit out of my clients.
Does it's impossible for that to last forever?
It just doesn't work.
We are not, we didn't evolve to always be motivated.
Being motivated is a feeling,
just like being happy, sad, or whatever.
You can't possibly go.
So if you're, if that's what you're resting on
and that's what you're focused on is on motivation,
excitement, energy, what you'll end up creating is,
first off, there's no real good exercise programming.
So the workouts are not good.
They're not meant to be good.
They're meant to be fun and exciting.
And you're gonna create a situation
where people work out and then stop working out,
and then work out and then stop,
which is exactly what we see a lot of.
And then there's a third piece of the fitness industry
that I also see causing a problem.
Now this one has more value,
but I also see this causing a lot of problems.
And this is the fitness academia industry.
Now this industry, these are the researchers,
these are the PhDs of the people
that study, exercise, study nutrition.
Their passion is to learn the science
of fitness and nutrition.
And their value really is to present to trainers.
Their value is not to present.
Not to your everyday, not at all.
In fact, as most personal trainers
start the way that they train people in this space. When at all. In fact, as most personal trainers start the way
that they train people in this space,
when you first become a trainer,
this is how you communicate information to clients.
It's through science.
And you think, I used to do this all,
this is, geez, this is the first five years of training,
client would come to me,
they'd want to lose 30 pounds or whatever,
and I'd give them all the information.
He's great to crev cycle down to it.
Oh yeah.
He's great to crev cycle down to it.
They're just looking at you like, oh my god. I'd give them all the information. He's breaking the crem cycle down to it. Oh yeah. They're just looking at you like, oh my god.
I give them all the facts and everything.
And I've been doing it so wrong.
Terrible, right?
I mean, how effective was that?
No, it's exactly what I used to do that.
I used to break the crem cycle down.
That was like, that was part of my presentation.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And so it's not good.
It's not a great, that part of the industry is not awesome
to take information and communicate it to the average person
because they're the ones that tell people,
it's all about calories, it's all about macros.
I mean, here's the thing,
this is why that part of the industry is so difficult
is because what they're saying is not false.
The fitness modeling and fitness entertain ministry,
they're wrong, pure bullshit.
Fitness academia industry, they are presenting correct
information.
It's just not the context matters.
You're not communicating that the right way.
So it's so nuanced that the average consumer gets lost
in the weeds.
Totally.
And because there's so many studies too that
contradict each other, it just becomes super confusing.
And then a lot of them are they end up being in camps
and they drive stakes.
And this is what the science says.
No, this is what the science says.
And then we're debating over things that honestly,
and when it took me at least a decade of training clients
to realize, well, wait a second,
all the science that I've learned over this last decade
definitely has helped me become a better trainer
in understanding human physiology, kinesiology. But at the end of the day, what really fucking
matters is the psychological piece, sort of behavioral piece. And that's something that you just
don't hear a lot of people communicating when in reality, well, because they want to be right.
You know, and that's the basis of, you know, where they're coming from. They have to be right, like the facts, the facts,
but what's the unintended consequence of that
for the person on the outside looking in,
you know, that's just trying to, you know,
understand like where to start,
like how do I get going?
100% because a good trainer who's been training for a long time,
whose passion is helping people and also fitness,
eventually reaches this conclusion.
It takes time because you learn it
through client after client after client.
Eventually you reach this conclusion right here.
My goal is not to be right
or to give this person tons of information.
My goal is to help this person achieve permanent success
to achieve a good relationship with exercise and nutrition
within the frame of their life,
their how individual they are,
and to give them permanent success.
And this is why the trainer, the fitness trainer,
or dare I say guide part of the fitness industry,
the reason why that's the good part is because they take
all that stuff, they call all the segments
of the fitness industry, and they they like a filter
You know, it all pours into them and what comes out purified water. They're giving you
Exactly what you need they're guiding you and they're coaching you to take you to the right place
So you know, and I wanted to make that that discernment because again
I'm seeing a lot of the fitness modeling industry. I'm seeing the fitness academia industry, the fitness entertain industry,
all acting like they're opposing the evil fitness industry.
When in reality, you're a part of exactly what we're talking about.
So I feel like if I break it down a little more,
it'll make it harder for them to do it.
Is this what you're gonna talk about on Friday?
No, you should.
Maybe.
Absolutely thinking should.
That's such a great place to have this discussion.
We're gonna be talking to other future leaders
and business and entrepreneurs in this space.
I think that's a, and I'm going a different direction.
I know my talk is more related to our business
and scaling a company and what that looks like.
So I think that would complement it.
Well, I think it's tough because you do see traction
being really divisive.
You know, and being able to like lead people
into just one train of thought.
Like that's why these camps exist.
That's why they're so deeply rooted because it benefits them financially in ways that
they don't really see outside of that, the bigger picture of it where they could help
a lot more people by adopting and incorporating all these modalities.
Yeah, and that's why when we,'d love talking to trainers and coaches so much because
they're the good soldiers in the fight against poor health and chronic disease and
helping people in real, you know, ways and long-term ways. And I know how hard that is. I know
how long it takes. I know it's the long game. This is not, you cannot help change someone
I know it's the long game, this is not, you cannot help change someone in a, you know, 15-minute motivational speech or a great article or all this information.
It takes time, you know, and I would train the client, it would take years for them to
really get to the place where, you know, or I could look at them and say, you know what,
this person has been changed positively, permanently.
I feel confident that this person now has created the behaviors,
has created a relationship with themselves,
exercise nutrition to where, you know,
they don't need me anymore.
They have a deep understanding that was planted there.
Do you think if you're like a consumer or a listener right now
and you're trying to discern whether this is the person
I'm listening to is giving you,
do you think there's like signs or red flags that you, you notice or common things like for example, I think that
like one of the things that you see when you when you separated all these segments and and the place that they're coming from they all seem to or a majority of them I should say
seem to default to the motivational angle. I think that's such it's an ease.
It's a low hanging fruit because it feels good.
Even myself, there's still pages that I follow on Instagram
because it feels good to watch.
The hype gives me a rush and makes me excited
to go to the workout.
And because I get a physiological
response from it, it keeps people coming back. And so I wonder if the average person can
discern from that and go like, oh, am I really getting that good? Or is this person just
feeding that rush that I like and I want? And that's why I think I really like them.
Because when I look at their page, they feel motivational, inspiring, and I like and I want, and that's why I think I really like them, because when I look at their page,
they feel motivational, inspiring, and I like it.
Is you think that?
I think that's a big one.
I think another big one is when you're listening
to the advice of a fitness person,
or you're asking them a question,
if it doesn't take strongly,
take into account individual variance and context, then you know
you're dealing with someone who has very little experience.
Well, good example when we had that great interview just recently with Brett Contreras, you
know, a good example of a real...
Oh, he's been training people for a long time.
Oh, really good fucking trainer.
You can tell.
Even we took him in all different directions and, you know, no matter what we were challenging
or asking, it's always, well, depends.
And then this scenario, this, and in this scenario,
that like, to me, I can always tell,
okay, this guy is definitely trained,
not only does he understand the science,
but he's also trained a lot of people
to answer questions like that.
Totally, totally.
So anyway, I wanted to bring that up
because I was up this morning.
I think that's a great Friday talk.
I don't know if you've decided what you're gonna
see tomorrow.
Yeah, I have some stuff I think I want to tell you. I I think that's a great Friday talk. I don't know if you've decided what you're gonna see before Friday. Yeah, I have some stuff I think I want to throw.
I really think that would be a great direction.
I could definitely throw it in if I go a little short
or whatever.
Anyway, another thing I want to bring up is I got,
you know, since we've been working with, you know,
the third one, what we believe to be one of the better,
third party, hormone testing companies,
every well, I get lots of questions now
where people ask me,
what test should I do or how often should I test myself?
Yeah.
And, you know, I think, here's a thing,
first off, over testing yourself,
probably not a good idea if it causes you a lot of stress
and anxiety, that being said, if you're healthy,
and okay, because there are people who become,
you know, and I totally can identify.
I know exactly what that feels like.
I can turn into the scale for somebody, right?
Yes.
I can turn into becoming a slave to it
and freaking out over every single thing.
Totally.
I look at it kind of like, you know, body fat testing.
You need to give it a little bit of time.
You don't want to be testing so regularly that it's like
one week, and then you're noticing up or down
and you're freaking out and you're redirecting your plans
or your programming or your nutrition.
Like, you know, I think you need to give yourself
at least a month to a few months.
And I've come to adapt to whatever.
And to have some consistency of whatever it is.
So you implement something, you say, okay,
I'm gonna follow whatever said diet,
I'm following this program now,
or I'm addressing my sleep now, or you decide, and this is how
I use it, is, you know, I, it's basically quarterly for me.
I'm probably once every three to four months.
I would agree.
I test, and me more so than anything, I use, I use a lot of them, but the hormone one is
the one I'm most consistent with, because obviously what I've discussed with my hormone
levels, and I do,
I implement one or two things and that's it is the change.
I add, okay, I'm gonna do the red light therapy three times
a week for at least 10, 20 minutes and that's,
I'm committed to that.
So with that, right, I'm gonna increase my carbohydrates.
These are the two things I'm gonna be doing.
I'm gonna stick to that, everything else pretty much the same.
And the test.
I agree, because I think at number one,
if you have symptoms, that's a good idea
when you want to test.
The thing I like about the at home test
is that there's a bit of a barrier when you go to the doctor.
If you were going to go to the doctor and say,
hey, I'd like to test my hormones every quarter,
they're going to probably say no.
They're going to walk at it.
It's expensive, it's difficult.
So what I recommend to people, like for men,
I think a quarterly test, austro test is probably great.
And then depending on what those tests say,
then you would go to see your doctor.
So if you see these tests come back every quarter
and you see this big discrepancy,
then go to the doctor and say,
hey, I took this at home test,
what do you think what's the deal
and then take it from there.
But really the value of those tests, you know, you don't want to turn into a, where you
freak out and become a hypokondra.
The value of them is really is just to really confirm potential symptoms that you may have
or see what you're training and diet are doing.
And then of course, make sure you go to a doctor.
It's the same way.
I mean, I love these things.
And I know there's people out there that love to shit on stuff like this.
And again, you're talking about the science people, right?
They're trying to pick a part.
Oh, this could be by 2%.
This could be off.
Right, right, right.
You know, the Fitbit tool,
oh, that's been shown to be 15% inaccurate on this.
And it's like, you know, it's crazy.
If you've been doing this for as long as I have,
like, I don't have any of those fucking tools.
And I was trying to help people.
You know what I'm saying?
I was trying to help people with their hormones. I was trying to help people. You know what I'm saying? I was trying to help people with their hormones,
I was trying to help people with their vitamin D deficiencies.
I was trying to help people with their fucking,
with their steps and terrible handwritten,
like their calories burn and you know what I had back then.
It's very accurate.
Tell me how you're feeling or the scale.
Like that's all I had.
So the fact that we have all these research.
Remember the nutrition book that we used to use to give people macros?
Yes.
Get the carry this around with you everywhere.
All right, calorieking.com.
And use the, yeah, no.
You actually measure all the food and everything.
Yeah, that's it.
So for me, and I guess, absolutely,
I can find the holes and the place,
nothing is 100% accurate, right?
There's nothing out there,
there's such an individual variance there,
but, man, if you can give me a tool
that gives me some
insight, some specific insight on something that I'm monitoring. Well, a lot of this consistent,
right? Like if you can see trends based off of like, you know, the consistency of it, I mean,
there's a ton of value. Yes, totally 100%. By the way, did you guys see, I want to bring this up,
just guys see YouTube's policy, their child advertising
or whatever policy change.
They changed that because of the ways around it,
all these pedophile people are talking
where they were using the data to market, right?
That's, yeah, so I didn't read all of it, what it was.
So there was a law that says that you cannot capture
anybody under the age of 13's information or data from the internet.
You're not allowed to capture it and then use it to market to kids.
So there's a law.
And the US government now used that law,
which is an old law.
It's been around for a while,
to against YouTube and Google,
and they just find them $170 million
with a warning, you need to stop doing this.
Now, why is this a big deal?
There are channels on YouTube,
some of the highest money making channels on YouTube.
Kids focused on kids.
The little kids, like opening up presents
or playing with toys.
So what they can't do now is they can't,
there's two types of commercials you can do on YouTube.
You can do context-based commercials.
So like because you're on my channel, the commercials will matchbased commercials. So like, because you're on my channel,
the commercials will match the channel.
So like, you know, we have a fitness channel.
So fitness commercials will pop up.
Then there's the way more powerful behavioral-based
commercials where they know the things that you watch
and what you do based off your data.
And then they target you specifically with a commercial.
Which is what makes internet marketing so powerful.
So what they've basically done is said, you can't use the most powerful thing about the
internet anymore against anybody in the other 13.
So all the channels are losing tons of money.
Interesting.
Isn't that crazy?
Now, where do you guys stand on all that?
Because it's kids, I have, I have, you know, one thought.
Like, I don't, I, I think the people that freak out
about everybody using, I mean, at the end of the day,
all this surveillance data, it's to make companies
more money.
That's why they want it.
They don't want it to spy on your fucking family
and watch your naked in your living room.
They don't give a shit about your buying habits
because they want to sell you out to somebody
or the government.
Like they want it so they could sell you products better.
And for that, I don't care.
Like it's if they if they're for it for the majority,
most people will appreciate, you know, being advertised things that I'm more
interested in than things that I'm not interested in.
I get annoyed by getting hit with advertisement on something that I have no desire.
But if it's if I'm constantly being fed things that I'm interested in,
I like that as a consumer.
I'm with you, 100% with that,
but they also have proven that the governments
used to that data too.
So, you know, it's like,
if you want to be real like tin foil about it,
like in your that kind of paranoid person,
you know, then you would be valid in your concerns,
but like for me, it's, again,
it's making the consumer
experience more specific. So I get things that I want to actually see, and I appreciate
the way that they can not just put random shit in front of me that I don't care about.
I can actually straddle this issue in play both sides, and I can sometimes I feel one more than the other.
Like, for example, R is advertising influential.
Does it have power to influence behaviors, feelings, and stuff like that?
Well, yeah, obviously, otherwise it wouldn't be a trillion dollar industry.
So they're doing this to little kids.
Is that different than when they would do it to adults?
I can definitely make an argument for that.
Now, here's where I go on the other side.
Is government regulating that?
Really gonna help.
We're gonna give the worst people,
the keys to regulating that,
because what it sounds to me like,
is they're trying to keep mainstream media
more competitive by fucking with new media.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Because it's basically TV commercials now.
Well, as you're gonna say, not only that,
how is it any different than when I was seven years old
watching fucking duck tails and the commercials
and the commercials that came up were GI Joe's
and were boy toys, things that I would want.
How was that any, they made cereal just,
they make cartoons specifically to sell cereal.
Right, so I mean, it's different because that's a contextual
commercial meaning they're gonna put a commercial based off
of the content that's on the channel.
Okay.
Behavioral advertising is they have all your data,
they follow your own.
I mean, they would have done that back in TV days
if they could have.
Of course, yeah.
It's just we have.
Of course, we have.
We have the ability now with with computers it to to capture this data
And then refine the way that they market and advertise. I don't know how much I'm anti that well
Here's the irony of it and I've seen I've read articles on this they could follow parents around
Get their information, which is perfectly legal and with incredible scary accuracy predict kids
Well, of course.
In fact, I read an article that showed that.
To school from school, Starbucks, this, that.
Yes, I read an article that showed that
if you were never on the internet,
let's say you have never been online, you've never done anything,
but they follow three people that are social.
They can triangulate exactly where we're at.
They predict everything about you.
Oh, that's great, yeah.
So even if you're not on,
that's pretty cool, actually.
You're fine.
Yeah, I still have a couple of friends like that.
They're not on any social media.
They think that they're like, you know,
yeah, I'm totally off the grid dude.
Like no, no, no, no, you're still texting.
You're texting us.
You're texting us.
They know you're connected to me.
Yeah, I'm right next to you.
So you're talking.
What I always think is weird is when you,
this happened to be the other day actually.
I mentioned skinny dipped, one of the sponsors
that we work with.
How does this happen?
Does it ever happen?
Do you get ads popping up on Facebook?
Yeah, I do it all the time on Facebook.
Yeah.
And the ad pops up.
Because they hacked the microphone.
Like, they key in on words.
Like, and I think Amazon actually got in trouble
with Alexa because it was doing that.
That's just like, that's fucked up.
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
It's funny.
I actually got turned on to a new kind of conspiracy.
I don't know how new it is.
It's probably old in the conspiracy world,
but it had one that was actually based in some reality.
So just with the Jeffrey Epstein one,
like we brought up was interesting.
This one was like the cloud seeding
and then also NASA has this machine
that actually can produce these huge clouds.
And then can make these rain clouds, basically.
It was a trip.
I showed you guys, it's like this tower where they're quote unquote testing these engines
for their shuttles or space shuttles, but the amount of condensation and stuff that's
coming out of it, like billows out, it creases huge fucking clouds.
It's so the rain.
Yeah, they're thinking that they're able to manipulate
the weather with pretty accurate.
This reminds me of the,
it's Sal just did a really good interview
with the word on fire guys
and I was listening to it yesterday
and you made a statement,
which I've heard you talk about before
and I agree 100% with is we are in a time now it's getting crazy right I mean we're talking
just a month ago I brought up the glowing mice and you know science has come so far they've grown
but they've grown ears on mice have you seen? You know, so, you know, and one of the things
that science doesn't do, science always says,
can we, right?
They don't ever say, should we?
Of course, yeah.
And, you know, here's a situation where, you know,
we think we know everything about the fucking,
you know, environment that we're gonna now manipulate
our weather and not, you know, we still,
every decade we go back and forth, right?
It's about every decade or two decades, I'd say,
you know, we're global warming, we're global cooling,
we're global, we go back and forth arguing,
and there's two, there's...
Actually, you bring up a very good point.
The consensus is that what we're doing
is impact in the climate.
Now, here's where the science is not conclusive,
is because they predicted this several times, they predicted that, you know, these's where the science is not conclusive, because they've predicted this several times.
They've predicted that these parts of the world
will be covered in water.
That they haven't been, they've predicted.
We're going to be in an ice age.
That was in the 70s that hadn't happened.
There's a lot of science that we don't know yet,
but we come a very arrogant.
But you do make a good point about the morality
of science.
Science by nature has no morality.
It's not supposed to, if you wanted to work,
it needs to be amoral.
It needs to be, you know, hypothesis test result,
and that's it.
You don't want morality,
you don't want science to be based on morality
because then it's not gonna work,
but you do need to have the people using science
to have some kind of moral code.
Because then it becomes again, can we,
oh, can we resurrect dinosaurs?
Let's try.
Can we make humans that can jump 100 feet in the air?
Let's try.
And then it gets weird, man.
Well, a lot of times it starts out with good intention
and then it turns sour because the technology
that exists because of it, right?
And I guess even with the cloud seating thing, like it's happening all over the world now,
they're trying to, like one way they do it is with planes too, where they put like these
flares on the planes to create this kind of like these particles to for all like the moisture
to kind of collect too.
And then that creates the rain to fall.
Trying to do it.
Well, it's trying to do it. Yeah, but they were like trying to weaponize it.
No, okay, so here we go.
Yeah.
Who do you think has the greatest interest in controlling the weather?
Yeah.
Right?
Military.
So NASA, here's a conspiracy for you.
NASA was a way for the US government to create a new military arm, but to make it look
like it was just, oh,, what's Spakesport exploration, but in reality,
their research is used to, you know, for our military.
Right. So when you see guys, oh no, we were trying to figure out how to fix the climate
and do this kind of stuff. Yeah, that's why NASA's halotop secret.
No, I've trained clients that are like,
I'm like, you're NASA, why could you talk to me about that?
Okay. Space force. Yeah. Space force.
Yeah. Yeah. Crazy. So. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Anyway.
Crazy.
So here's another cool article I was reading the other day.
They have for the first time ever created artificial neurons.
What?
Yes, they've created artificial neurons.
So I'm going to read you a little excerpt from this article.
So these artificial neurons are on silicon chips that behave just like the real thing.
This is the first ever.
They've never been able to do this before.
And so this could potentially, in the future, be used to solve chronic diseases like heart
failure, Alzheimer's, other diseases of neurological degeneration.
For example, in heart failure, the neurons at the base of the brain don't respond properly
to nervous system feedback.
So then they don't send the right signals to the heart. So it doesn't pump as hard or whatever it should,
but creating these artificial neurons to correct that problem, could totally fix it. Or let's say you get a spinal injury or you have an injury.
The body accepts it. Like have they like proven that with animals?
I don't think so. I think that they've just created the artificial neuron, but no, that's like it like imitates it. Yeah
That's the next step though, which is this is phenomenal. You know, I mean we could tell that is yeah, that's totally breaks
Yeah, that's like Star Wars. Yeah, come on handoff
You're cyborgs. Yeah, I
What was that you you were showing Salis morning? I wasn't paying attention
But you were showing them something about Peloton and you were saying there was controversy around this
You know, it's interesting about that like Like Courtney actually was, was turning me onto it
and was like, I'm like, what's the,
what's the problem with it?
Like show me, show me the commercials.
Was she kind of played the commercial for me
and then I'm like, okay.
And what are people saying about it?
Like what, it was like the most straightforward.
Like, hey, like I'm gonna, like better myself for a year and like my husband bought me this
Peloton and I'm going through this and she's like documenting herself going through the process of it
They're watching it on TV, which is kind of weird like who does that, you know
Anyway, but they're sitting there and like and then and she's like thanks like this this really helped to change me or something like that
And it was like a pretty straightforward message, but then you see all this negative backlash of like,
this is so sexist and all this,
because the husband like,
the husband got this board,
he got this board to get her in shape.
She's even really changed.
You skinny already.
Like why is she even doing this?
This is fat, shaming people,
or she's got a, you know,
it was creepy like a black mirror episode
where she'd been forced to do this and again.
What?
They were just like reading into something
that was not even there.
You know what I think, dude?
Yeah, you wanna know what I think?
I think Peloton's people went out
and created this false outrage.
Like forums without rage?
Yes, because now look, like Gillette did.
I think.
Now I don't remember what, yeah,
but they went like completely offensive.
No, no, no, no.
What I mean is I think Peloton made a real commercial
that nobody would ever problem with.
Yes.
Then they put out fake people saying, oh my God,
this is sexist.
Super easy to stir that up.
Now everybody's sharing, everybody's watching the commercial.
Yeah, just like my Russian bot.
And the commercial's not a pro.
They're not a pro.
They're not a pro.
This is a very effective technique.
What's the name wrote about it?
Ryan Holiday.
That's right.
We create false out fake outrage about you or yourself.
Then it brings people to you, then they look at it and say,
yeah, that's just actually pretty good.
So annoying.
It just brings out the ridiculous people.
Because there is a ridiculous amount of people
that jump on board with that.
It's so funny.
I wonder how many of them are actually being told or paid to do that.
And then how many people are actually going like, yeah, yeah, I agree.
You could get people outraged for anything easy.
I could do it for, pick something and I'll come up with a reason to do this.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it.
I saw it. I saw it. I saw it. I saw it. I saw it. I saw it. Yes
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It's the motherfucking vlog
Eagerness landed
Quee-qua
Our first question is from Jake Parker Health and Wellness
What are the benefits of very low rep ranges on major lifts like bench squat and deadlift? Oh, man
Yeah, you know for for a lot of people who work out, they, less so now, but for a long time,
people avoided the really low rep ranges.
That's me forever for most of my career.
Yeah, most, and the funny thing is that they're really, it's not funny, it's just the truth.
They're missing out on a lot of the gains that you can get from training in the low
rep ranges. Low rep ranges build muscle get from training in the low rep ranges.
Low rep ranges build muscle, just like moderate or higher rep ranges.
They all build muscle.
They really build muscle and are effective when they're new.
It's a new stimulus.
That's why I think it's one of the, I mean, again, I've shared this on the show many times
that part of the most compelling things when I first met Sal and red maps in a ball,
was that he chose to start people in that phase, in phase one of maps in a ball.
And the brilliance that I thought was in that was that I, at that time in my career,
I was just coming to realize this of training so many people going like, you know what?
How many people are just like me where they've been told that the best rep range
to build muscles eight to 12.
If you want to burn fat, you want to do 15, 20,
superset, circuit type stuff.
Very few people that want to change their physique, right?
To look better or lose body fat were being told,
lift five times.
That was only the power lifter guys.
Like if you want to be,
if all you cared about maybe it was strong,
so maybe if you were a football player or you cared about your bench press and squat,
you did those type of repetitions. Otherwise, the message to the majority was if you want
to lose fat or you want to build muscle, these are the best rep ranges for that.
Staying in them right.
And, too, it was very intimidating, you know, for a lot of people to jump into that, you
know, style because you really had to know what you're doing. Like, you need to know the mechanics. Like,
you have to go through, you know, like, the process of learning those exercises to where,
you know, you're not going to have that little bit of discrepancy that could, you know,
like, get, lead you to energy, energy, injury. I'm all tripping on my body. I don't, I actually think that,
I think there is a portion of people I had to have,
but I think that a majority were probably,
even like, were more like me,
where I wasn't afraid.
Just that it was worthless.
Yeah, I'm not that valuable.
Yeah, I just didn't think it was that valuable.
I didn't, the risk versus reward to me wasn't there.
It was, yeah, if I go really, really heavy,
I could potentially hurt myself, and I go really, really heavy, I could potentially
hurt myself. And I'm probably, it's not the best place to build muscle. It's not the
best place to build body fat or burn body fat. So it's not for me. I don't identify with
it as a power lifter. So I neglected it for many, many years. And when you finally,
remember when you finally really started to implement, I mean, I really attribute that strength training
and in that rep range to the way my physique
looked like at the amateur level to the professional level,
to me, was really that big.
I mean, it really packed on more muscle on my body
than I had in the last 15 years consistently lifting.
And it was something that I missed out.
Now, that comes with some risks, like to Justin's point, like, I mean, I do notice that
my joints were more achy and I did notice those things.
But I also know that I fell into the same pattern that I coach and talk to clients about
is don't get stuck in something because it starts to show you the results.
Yeah.
What happened?
I introduced, you know, strength training more than I'd ever done in my life.
I saw all the benefits.
I became addicted to the benefits.
I kept training in that range.
And then here comes the achy hips, the achy joints.
And what are the people's sides at too?
I think the actual benefit to a lot of people that don't do it.
Don't know your capacity.
You can increase your capacity to produce more force.
And that's a big part of strength.
And to have more strength at your fingertips
when you want it, right away,
is such an advantage then going into any other Moda.
Right, it carries so much into that.
And that's the thing that I think I missed big time
was realizing, oh shit, like even if I don't
wanna be a powerlifter and I don't wanna strengthen
all time, just at least running a block
or a phase of that, how much that contributed
over into my hypertrophy training.
Oh yeah, being able to summon your strength
for a heavy load is a skill.
And it's a very important skill that has carry over to
all the other physical skills,
or especially all the skills related to strength.
Now, you have to do it appropriately,
just like any other rep range,
or any other training modality,
it's gotta be done appropriately.
So one thing that we owe,
and I learned this later on.
So when I was younger, my low rep training was improper.
It was maxing out. That's improper.
Yeah, like every time. Yeah, low-repar, this is actually a big
misconception. People think training a low-repar
range is means maxing out. That's actually not training.
That's maxing out. That's something totally separate. Low-rep
training done appropriately is practicing lifting heavy loads
for low reps, but you're not maxing out. So what I mean by that is,
let's say I'm doing sets of squats for three reps.
That's the weight that I pick is a weight that I can max out for six reps or five reps.
That's the proper way to do three reps with a heavy weight.
I'm not doing three reps with a weight that I can only do three reps with.
I'm not maxing out.
You almost fail on three.
That's a terrible way to do.
And I learned this later on.
I remember reading about
the old time strong man and old time bodybuilders
and how they trained.
And then it led me to a book called Dinosaur Training,
which I've actually referred to before on the podcast.
And there's some interesting,
there's some valuable information in that book.
And what the guy writes about is practicing your lifts.
You go out there, you pick up a heavy weight
that you could probably do three or four reps with.
You just pick it up once, it's still heavy.
You still gotta get used to lifting something heavy.
You still have to sum in a lot of strength.
Well, to that point right there
is something else to this question,
why do it and what is it contributing to that?
Again, I was neglecting is the central nervous system.
That was a piece when, and I love,
and we've talked on the show so many times
about your analogy of it as the amplifier to your muscles or your speakers.
And I was putting so much investment in my speakers and having great speakers, bigger
speakers, better looking speakers, but I was putting very little energy into improving
the amplifier that actually puts out all that energy into the speakers.
And so think of it like that when you're training
that those singles like you're talking about
or those low rep ranges is you're investing
in getting a better amplifier, a better CNS
that is going to then contribute to all the other pursuits.
And it also makes you practicing training in this way
appropriately, makes you more comfortable handling heavyweight
and it makes you more comfortable ex heavy weight, and it makes you more comfortable
exerting yourself at that level.
Now, I would experience this oftentimes with clients.
More often than not, it was my female clients
where they were afraid to exert the effort
that was required to lift heavy weights.
Now, again, I'm not maxing them out,
but they just were afraid of pushing themselves that way
because they just had never been used to it.
Once we would train in these low-reparangers,
they felt more confident and functional with their strength because they understand how to control it,
they understand what they're capable of.
So there's a lot of value in training in very low-reparangers and all of this contributes to a better physique.
Now if you get stuck in this phase, just like if you get stuck in any of the phase of training,
your body will stop responding.
But if you never train in low-reparanges,
try doing it for three to five weeks.
Just watch what happened.
Here's my prediction.
If you've never done that before,
over the next three to five weeks,
you'll get significantly stronger every single week.
Every single week, you'll get stronger
in some of these core lifts.
What do you think that's gonna do to the way your body looks? Obviously,
going to be reflected in your aesthetics.
Next question is from Mo Daywood. How does sleep affect fat loss? Can inadequate sleep
hinder fat loss, even if macros are correct?
Fuck yeah, cortisol. Definitely. Yeah. So, so, so here's the main
ways that lack of sleep affects fat loss. The main
way to fix fat losses, it changes your eating patterns and behaviors and your activity levels. Okay,
because you're obviously tired. Your body perceives it as stress. So, you know, the way we evolved
was if you didn't have good sleep, your body's perceiving that as you need to be alert and awake.
Like why would you in nature be up most of the night
or not sleeping?
Probably because you're not in a safe environment.
So your body's perceiving a stress.
Now stressed out body wants to a store more body fat
because that's an insurance.
More often than not, the stress that we were under
was either predators or lack of food.
So I want more, so what it's gonna do,
it's gonna make you eat more food as a result.
So they've done this in studies
and shown that people's appetites tend to increase.
It also tends to make you crave foods
that give you more of a psychological well-being,
like feeling of well-being, like this temporary,
feel-good effect.
And this is any time you feel like shit.
The second thing is your body will lose muscle.
And if stressed out situation,
your muscle starts to deteriorate
because muscle's expensive, it's expensive tissue.
And your body's trying to become
to luxury.
More efficient.
So lack of activity or ultra-dactivity patterns,
more food intake or worse food intake,
that's the main way it makes you gain body fat.
But the second part of the question was,
what if the macros are good?
Can it still hinder fat loss?
Yes, I definitely think so.
I think there's this, your body can lose weight
and gain weight in different ways.
It's not always gonna be body fat.
So what may then have happening is you may end up
weighing the same, but you're less muscle and more body fat.
So overall weight stays the same, but your body composition.
What about how cortisol is affected and your thyroid and things like that?
That can be affected.
That's what I'm referring to.
So, let's say your calories are the same, but your cortisol is totally impacted.
The way you store body fat is going to change, and you may store more body fat and lose
muscle.
I mean, calories in versus calories out starts to still obey,
but, you know, and here's the other part, Adam,
you're absolutely right.
Can hormonal changes alter how many calories your body burns
at rest?
Absolutely.
Oh yeah, you give a man testosterone,
don't change his activity levels,
and he'll just naturally get a little leaner
and build more muscle.
Just from the changes in hormones.
So I've noticed, I tell you what,
if my sleep is good.
This is an example of where I get frustrated
with the academics.
So you know, when we talked about with the science,
when you talk about calories in versus calories out
and then they try and bash like,
oh, they talk about make insulin a demon,
they make cortisol sound like a demon.
Those things are all good.
Well, no, it's not a demon, it's all part of the body.
But absolutely, you affect sleep.
That changes your hormone profile.
Your hormone profile now changes your metabolism,
which the law, the thermodynamics still applies,
but it's now changed for you.
It's now different.
You know, your calorie maintenance,
which let's say, you know, for hypothetical reasons
and for this argument, say your calorie maintenance
was 2,500.
That's what your body burns at rest all day long.
And then all of a sudden, you have two, three days in a row of poor sleep.
Your calorie maintenance is no longer 2,500.
Your body is perceiving it as under stress.
It slows down to conserve energy and save body and produce or save body of fat for energy.
And so then your calorie maintenance now becomes 2200 or 2000.
And so, a lot of throwing at them is still applies.
And yeah, if you're macros, but your macros
are gonna have to have been changed.
You can't stay the same as what it was
when you were getting great sleep because now you're...
It's a good point because I think a lot of times people,
they assume that your calorie burn aside from activity,
because they don't assume it for activity,
but if everything stays the same,
but you change your stress,
well, your calorie burn is a fixed number.
No, it's not.
A lot of stuff affects your calorie.
It's very, this whole idea that we are stuck
with a metabolism is hilarious.
Your metabolism can shift daily. You find your calorie maintenance out one day.
I mean, in four weeks, it could be completely different. If you add a couple pounds of muscle
and lose body fat, you reduce stress, you could see a huge difference. And then you used to measure
that with the body gym. Was that called? I breathe into it. And I remember being excited about that
device because I was like being excited about that device
because I was like, wow, you can actually find out
like where they're at with their metabolism currently
right now.
And then, you know, you do it the next day,
you do it the next week, you're getting
completely different numbers based off of their stress.
Yeah, I've had this happen now.
I had this happen to me several times with clients
where I would have a, I'll give you an example
of one client in particular.
She was type A, go, go, go, like just the classic
overdue, everything type of person.
She'll go and this was early on in my career.
So this actually learned, initially learned this
through training her.
So I was all about calories in versus calories out,
how much you're burning, whatever.
I'd have her trucker food.
She'd show me her calories.
Oh, you want to get leaner.
We're just going to increase your activity level.
And I would push that for a while. And we got stuck. We got stuck for a little while. And, you want to get leaner. We're just going to increase your activity level. And I would push that for a while.
And we got stuck.
We got stuck for a little while.
And I remember thinking to myself, like, OK,
if I'm going to push her any harder,
I got to give her some time to rest and recoup.
So my idea wasn't, it would make her leaner.
I thought I needed her to get some rest
so we could go after it again later on.
So I'm going to say, OK, for the next couple of months,
here's what I want you to do, rather than running,
I forgot what days it were, but it's just for argument's sake.
Rather than running on Saturday and Wednesday,
like you always do, where you do all your intervals
and your long distance runs, what I want you to do
is I want you to go take a relaxing meditation class
and I want you to really focus on your sleep.
And so she was like, what about my calories
and what about, I'm not gonna burn as much calories
and say, look, I know we're not burning as many calories.
I said, don't worry about it.
We'll make up for it later on.
Once I feel like your body's more recovered.
Well, here's the crazy part.
She did that, not only did she not gain weight.
She lost weight.
She started to get leaner.
I remember seeing the exact same thing.
And it blew me away.
I was like, how's this possible?
It's much, she must be lying to me.
She's counted.
And then I started to put it piece together. Like, oh, her body's working better. She's just healthier. And so, and I was like, how's this possible? It's much, it must be lying to me. She's counting, and then I started to put it piece together like, oh, her body's working
better.
She's just healthier.
And so, and that would happen.
That's happened over a dozen.
I had this conversation last night with my mom's husband right now.
We were talking about stress and I was trying to explain to him that, you know, your
body doesn't know the difference between a horn being honked, you lifting weights in
the gym, the argument you had
with your wife when you got home from work,
your boss screaming at you, it's all stress.
It's all stress, and if you're getting it from all ends,
all going to the gym and hammering your body,
even though you, and this is what was hard to communicate to him,
because he's like, I feel good.
Yes, he goes, yeah, no, I love to go workout.
And I had, and it's like, exactly.
And that's the worst thing you could do in that state.
I said, in fact, you get in a big argument with my mom
or you have something, you get in a fight at work
with somebody like that.
And you don't want to go hammer the weights out.
If you're gonna go to the weights,
it should be more recuperative.
Or maybe that's the day you decide to meditate
or spend time walking.
And then the day that you feel rested,
no stress, everything, that's the day that you feel rested, no stress, everything.
That's the day you get after.
The reason why it's hard to understand for people is because it does feel good, because cortisol feels good.
Here's the thing that people need to understand. We hear all the time about elevated cortisol,
and too much of it's not good, or whatever. And by the way, cortisol has very fundamental
roles in the human body. You don't want to slam cortisol down because that'll not make you healthy either.
But here's a deal with cortisol.
It feels good.
If I give you injections of cortisol,
you'd have energy, you'd be hyped,
you'd be, it's your stress hormones,
it's supposed to do that.
So when you're super stressed,
I live off that in the morning.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it gets me out of bed.
So if you're feeling shitty or whatever,
and you go to the gym and beat the crap at yourself,
you give yourself under the spike of cortisol,
all of a sudden you feel better,
well, now because you're becoming a cortisol junkie,
but eventually, like we can become insulin resistant,
our body stopped utilizing cortisol very effectively,
and we need more and more of it,
then we start to develop problems.
Next question is from Jeremiah Johnson.
Besides calves, what is your favorite body part to develop,
and how do you go about training?
So there must be talking to you guys.
Yeah, it's like a slight jab there.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, some of my favorite body parts to train
are my favorites because they were,
when I was younger, they were areas
that were difficult to develop.
So like when I first started working out,
there were a few things that I was very,
I was obviously body image issues.
I would talk about this often on the podcast. It's what motivated me. There were a particular things that I was very, I was obviously body image issues. I would talk about this often on the podcast.
It's what motivated me.
There were a particular parts of my body that I was really concerned with.
One of them was my shoulders.
I'm not a wide person structurally.
I don't have a wide bone structure.
So I had no muscle, plus I was narrowed to begin with.
And I didn't like the way I looked in t-shirts.
I felt like I looked like a coat hanger.
So I made a special emphasis on training my shoulders.
Now I did a good job with my technique
and my program and what are my shoulders ended up
becoming a strong suit.
Until this day, I really love the feeling of training.
My shoulders, I love the way they look when they're pumped.
It's a fun body part to train.
Same thing for my back.
I had the same problem on my back.
It was skinny, I wasn't wide.
And I remember, I remember like it was yesterday,
the first time I got a lap pump.
And it was when I'd been working out my back
for a little while, couldn't feel my back working.
I think a lot of people have this issue
when they first start working out.
It's like I just feel it my biceps.
I'm like, am I really working my back?
And I read this article on supersets,
and I did a pre-exhaust SuperSet
where I did dumbbell pullovers,
which is more of an isolation movement.
And I went straight to pullups.
And I remember getting down off those pullups
and standing there and being like,
what?
I have a pump in my, that feels weird.
Oh my, I was so excited about it.
And I love those two parts.
Still my favorites.
I'm here, I'm here prototypical like Monday Chester guy.
Yeah, I chest day guy.
I am that guy.
I've always loved building and developing the chest.
It was just something that, again,
this is kind of playing into your strengths.
It was one of those things I found
that I could compete with somebody
that was a good 50, 60 pounds heavier than me.
I could hang with people in that lift
specifically and then also, you know,
with my triceps as well.
So it's kind of that combo of the chest triceps
where, you know, I was like dips or bench press.
If I couldn't think of anything in the gym,
it's like I'm doing one or the other
because for some, it just gave me this good feeling.
It just felt strong and capable.
And I didn't hurt that I beat the record for like dips
at my school at the time.
So I was like,
for reinforcing it.
Was it for total dips or weight strapped?
No, it was total dips.
What was the total number?
900 and something.
No, I don't even remember to be honest.
Typical Justin, he's so humble. I know he's like, I would know that number. I was like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm 100 and something. No, I don't even remember it to be honest. Typical Justin, he's so humble.
I know he's like, I would know that number.
I was like, I remember it's in the past.
Really?
Adam and I would have a tattoo of it.
I would know it for sure.
I mean, he's definitely over 100.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Oh shit.
You know what's actually funny about this question
is that as a kid, 100% it was arms
because I think for the first three years
of lifting weights all I did was arms.
And then after that, I actually have always,
just still to this day, fall in in love
with training the body part that is the weakest
or most underdeveloped.
And what a great mental strategy.
Right, I've learned to do that.
Yeah, so, and being completely transparent on
is probably my least favorite of those,
because there was lots of underdeveloped parts,
is calves and forearms,
because they're probably the least contributors
to almost everything else going on with the body.
Like it's like, yeah, if you got strong arms,
having weaker forearms, whatever, you know what I'm saying?
It's like they're responsible for very little,
your calves, if my legs are fucking jacked and cool,
if I get whatever, so I think that those ones
have always probably, I would say those are my least
two favorite to work and develop on
because I think they're just as far as contributing
to your overall strength, your overall physique.
I feel like they play the least amount of role, plus,
I think they have the greatest difference,
genetic wise, you either have great big forearms,
you have great calves, not that you can't develop those two
because I have done that in both areas.
It's just less fun in comparison to what else.
Everything else, like I've loved going to the gym.
I mean, currently right now, it's quad and squats for me.
Like I'm all into that, I'm in powerlifting,
it makes sense to be kind of in that focus.
And so, I'm really enjoying developing my legs right now.
And I've been here before where that's a focus.
I can test to sound shoulders.
I never, I've shared the story when one of my female
trainer clients that used to compete told me that I asked her
to assess my physique because she was a competitor.
And she said, I had weak shoulders. I remember that I would like hurt my feelings.
And that actually kind of started that.
We said no delts to me.
Yeah, cool.
Yeah, it's said that.
Yeah, it's said that to me.
And that set me down the path of developing shoulders and my shoulders became one of my
strengths.
And that probably is what lit the fire of like looking at my physique
and going like, oh, my chest is weak, oh, my back is weak,
oh, my quads are weak, oh, my hamstrings are weak.
And then programming to address that.
And what's needed when you understand,
when you've been lifting for a really long time,
that chasing after the areas that you're weak in
gives you that sense, almost that novel T thing thing again where your body is going to respond best.
If I go and let's say my biceps for example is a major strength in my because of all the
work I did early on and still continue to that for many years, it's kind of boring to train
them because I'm not going to squeeze very much out of them even when my arms are at
their biggest.
I can get back to my biggest arms ever with very little effort because I've already put all the work.
It's just not challenging.
It's not challenging, it's easy.
I'm like that with clogs.
Right, so if it's an area that it's easy for me to develop,
I'm less interested in, I'm more interested in the areas
where like, oh man, if I put some work in,
I could see a difference and change.
So at one point, they've all, I mean, shoulders at one time
was that, I mean, back when I was doing the deadlift thing
with Sal and I was competing because your back is like,
for sure, one of the biggest difference
makers in Minsvizik having an impressive back.
So I got a kick out of developing that,
my shoulders, my arms, my chest, for sure,
there was a point where I had an uneven chest.
My left pec was significantly larger than my right.
And so addressing the imbalances there,
then catching it up,
and then getting actually a really good, strong bench
and a pretty good chest.
I've enjoyed all of it.
I really reframe how I look at my physique
when I look at weak points and go,
oh cool, I have something that I can improve upon
and program around,
and I will see a difference if I follow and execute.
And I try and give this tip to a lot of clients when they're focusing in the gym.
If you're, especially if you're a static driven, pick something that is a weak area, and
that you'll see the most improvement there than you will.
Paul love with training it, and you're going to train it.
You're not going to skip it.
That's a great mental strategy. Next question is from Freeman Axtel. How do you
each vote with your dollars? Oh great. What a good question because I think people forget
how much power we have in free societies to change and mold., the things around us in society.
So many things are driven by the market, obviously,
and the market responds to our money and our dollars.
And if we give our money to something,
because we like it, more of that thing will be produced.
And if something gets no money,
then less of it will be produced.
And so this is a great question because people forget,
they think that we're powerless,
but it's like every day,
you make so many choices and decisions
that really make an impact,
and we can change the tide of things.
I love this too,
because I can't wait to hear your answer
because I feel like you don't vote on anything.
Yeah, well, or very little.
Well, so here's what I thought a lot about this.
I remember when I first understood this concept as a kid,
I thought to myself, like, I'm going to give money to the companies that have the best
ideals and morals and that kind of stuff.
That's how I think.
And then as I got older, I started to realize that what I need to do is,
and this is what we kind of do this naturally a little bit,
with more self awareness, I think we can be more effective,
though, by the stuff that is best.
Just that's it.
Like, you want a car, buy the best car according to your values,
and be aware of that.
If you want to buy food, buy the food that you value the most, but be a little bit self-aware,
so I go, okay, I value this for, it's nutrition, I value it for it.
If I talk a lot about grass-fed meat, for example, I want to make sure I go and buy it
so that there's more signals to that market to produce more organic, for example.
Organic, for sure.
Organic was a lot more expensive 10 years ago.
Ship 15 years ago, you couldn't find organic.
It still is, but that's a good example of why I still vote by putting my money there.
Yes, I know I could save on the chicken breasts that are non-organic by $2 every single time,
which ends up adding up, but I'm spending that extra money because I want to see that industry grow.
Yep, yep.
Well, that was a thing too.
I mean, like, with farmers markets
and then being able to do these, I forget what you call them,
but I get a whole basket of vegetables
and things that are locally grown.
And so, my mentality had shifted over the years
of how much can I give back to my local community?
And so I'll go down to like, down to Felton
and I'll go down to Santa Cruz.
And I'm constantly trying to use my dollar
to kind of benefit the local businesses in the area as well.
Yeah, you know, and again, I think what we want,
what we really want in society is what we want.
In a American truck.
We want the best people producing our products.
What I mean by that is we want the people
who can produce them with the best quality
for the cheapest price.
Now, why is that important?
Why is cheap price important?
Because price is a signal that shows us efficiency
and money represents resources.
And the reason why free markets produce so much wealth
and why we have so much food and so much shelter
and why we've solved a lot of problems
is because the way that we allocate resources
is determined by price.
If something is expensive, what that means is
that there's a low supply of that particular thing
and the demand may be high.
So as the demand is high, more supply goes to that
and the price starts to drop.
And so I want the best people doing those things.
So I, when I, sometimes, I think sometimes we get cut up
on what people say.
So like you have a CEO's like, I, you know,
this is what I stand for and people are like,
oh, I don't want to buy this product totally fine,
totally up to you to make that decision.
But for me, I don't care so much about what they say.
I care a lot more about what they do and make.
You know what I'm saying?
So I'm the way I judge a company is by their products.
More so than their personal value.
Yeah, like I'll look at their products and be like,
this person is making the best shoes.
These shoes are amazing, they're great, they're cheap,
they're, they're, they last a long time.
So, I think they should get,
even though this person may sound like an asshole,
I don't care because they're making the best thing.
That's what's gonna benefit us.
It's, you know, I 100% agree, and I find it funny when I hear people
that talk shit about Jeff Bezos or Bill Gates
or Steve Jobs, and then I look at him like,
you fucking asshole.
You're using all their products.
You're using all their products,
and you talk shit about the person, either one,
that shouldn't matter to you because you support them,
because they're
creating superior products for you or two if you really don't like them that much then you shouldn't buy
as fucking products right so I think it's really funny when people do that and I it's hypocritical.
This is also how I've always justified the some of the things that other people might think that I
spend excessively on like I have a expensive TV. I drive an expensive
car. I have an expensive bed. But these are areas that I value a ton on innovation. I love
the where we are with television today versus where I was with a kid.
Fuckin' A. You can hang it. It looks like it's as light as a picture frame now. It fits
on your wall. It's clear. It's mine says light is a picture frame now. It fits on your wall. It's clear
It's mine is a picture. You feel like you're watching the people in person. It is and I'm a movie
I don't know how heavy TV people you're listening if you're like under the age of 35 you have no idea how heavy TV's
The tube yes, you know what you're French I get you to move it down three flights
No, so I get we had a 30 the last, you know, heavy TV like that.
I had, you know, I'm going off you.
We, yeah, even before that, the heavy, heavy tube ones, the back then, the biggest you
could get was a 36, a 36 tube TV was a 300 pound.
Way more than that and awkward and big.
We actually, we lived and we lived on the third floor.
We gave it away.
Whoever would pick it up. That was a deal. We were moving. I was like, man, I could try sellers
for a few hundred bucks. Fuck that. I'm like, I don't want to take it to anybody. So
the deal was, if you came and got it out of the house, you could have the fucking thing
because it weighed so much. So I'm so in the stone.
But these are things that, you know, and I think of, as a kid, I grew up in a hand me down
bed and had terrible sleep. And, you know, I remember when I first started making a little bit of money and invested
in my first, like, $5,000 mattress, which was a huge deal to me, holy shit, it changed my
life.
It changed the way I slept.
And so, innovation in that area, if we can continue to make better beds that are better,
more support and give me better sleep, I am all for spending money there.
Same thing with the TV.
Same thing for the way I am about my car.
And here's the best thing.
Here's the best thing.
Because we could definitely try to be self-aware
and okay, where am I spending my money and all that stuff.
And that's important.
But really at the end of the day, if people are healthy,
and I mean that in the full sense, the whole sense,
we're healthy physically, mentally, spiritually,
we have a sense of meaning,
then the choices that we're gonna make
are gonna be the best.
They're gonna be the best choices.
We're gonna see less of the stuff that we tend to see
that we get mad at, like,
why are the social media stars so popular?
Why are they making,
why is there a liquor store on every corner or whatever?
If people are healthy, if we just take care of ourselves
and the trueest sense,
the choices that we're gonna make
are gonna reflect at, the money is gonna go to the things
that are gonna benefit humanity the most,
and it's gonna cause the greatest change
in the most positive way.
So really, be a healthy person, and then your choices
will reflect that, and you'll vote in the best way
with your dollars, my opinion.
And with that, go to mindpumpfree.com and download
all of our resources.
We have a lot of free guides and books on there.
You can go download.
Also, check us all out 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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