Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1229: Ways to Retain Muscle Mass While Dropping Body Fat, Powerlifting for Aesthetics, Simple Steps to Improve Long-Term Health & More
Episode Date: February 15, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the best way to retain muscle mass while decreasing body fat, powerlifting for aesthetics, 3-5 things that the av...erage person can do to improve their long-term health, and the positives and negatives of being a trainer. Mind Pump ‘weird’ DM’s. (4:00) Single parents are champions! (4:52) Mind Pump Movie Reviews. (9:17) Is the era of the ‘celebrity’ over? (11:20) The importance of maintaining focus in between sets. (18:35) Subscribe to Mind Pump TV. (25:52) The latest dumb wellness/influencer trend. (29:10) Pixar is at it again! (31:33) Mind Pump Recommends A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood. (32:51) Science Alert! Mysterious radio signal from space repeating every 16 days. (34:10) Improv update with Justin. (35:37) What is more important for building muscle, tension or weight? (42:33) NCI certification at Mind Pump Media HQ. (45:47) #Quah question #1 – What is the best way to retain muscle mass while decreasing body fat? Specifically, in terms of how to alter training and how to split up my diet? (47:33) #Quah question #2 – What are your thoughts on powerlifting for aesthetics? (53:33) #Quah question #3 – What are the top 3-5 things that the average American can do to improve their long-term health? (1:00:40) #Quah question #4 – What are the positives and negatives of being a trainer? Do you have any advice that you wish you knew when you first started? (1:08:25) Related Links/Products Mentioned February Promotion: MAPS Split ½ off! **Code “SPLIT50” at checkout** Oscars Ratings Hit All-Time Low With 2020 Broadcast Inside the $148,000 Oscars Gift Bag: From a Luxurious European Cruise to Decadent THC Chocolates Mind Pump TV - YouTube Mind Pump Blog Dry Fasting: The Truth About This New Health Industry Trend Soul | Official Teaser Trailer Mysterious radio signal from space is repeating every 16 days Nonverbal Cues: How Body Language and Nonverbal Communication is Key in the Business World Are you a Mind Pump Listener? Get NCI’s Top Selling Thyroid MASTERCLASS...for free! Mind Pump 1210: How to Eat to Lose Fat & Build Muscle With Jason Phillips The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake - Mind Pump Blog The Best Form of Exercise - Mind Pump Blog MAPS Fitness Products – Mind Pump The health benefits of strong relationships - Harvard Health Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Taylor Swift (@taylorswift13) Twitter Jason Phillips (@jasonphillipsisnutrition) Instagram Dr. Michael Ruscio, DNM, DC (@drruscio) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we answer fitness and health questions asked by our audience.
We do our best.
But we also cover current events, talk about our lives, have a lot of fun.
That's the intro portion of this episode,
last about 42 minutes.
So here's what we talked about in this whole episode
of Mind Pump.
We start out by talking about single parents,
kudos to you.
We are all not single parents.
We know how tough it is.
I can't even imagine what you guys must go through.
So you guys are the champions.
Then we talked about celebrities and politics.
We just wish celebrities would shut up and act.
That's how you should do it.
It's not hard.
Then I talked about the focus that you need to have
in between your sets.
So when you're working out, oftentimes we focus on
the exercise while we're doing it in between.
We tend to lose our focus.
I think that makes a big difference.
Then we talk about our YouTube channel Mind Pump TV.
Look, if you have any questions on exercises,
exercise technique, you want to watch and see what it looks like
to do an exercise properly, give it a gander.
Go to YouTube Mind Pump TV.
We have hundreds of videos there.
Then I talked about the latest wellness influencer trend,
not drinking water.
Don't do it.
Don't follow their advice.
Water is essential to be alive.
So smart.
Justin brought out Pixar and their new movie
coming out called Soul.
I talked about the mysterious space signal
that's hitting Earth every 16 days on the dot.
Dude, they're coming.
Aliens.
Justin gave us a little update on his improv classes. I talked about tension versus weight. What is more important? The weight on the
bar or the tension you feel in your muscles. And then we mentioned March 21st and 22nd.
We have a NCI coaching specialist certification happening here at Mind Pump headquarters. Oh,
by the way, we have a hookup for you.
If you go to their website,
NCIcertifications.com forward slash MindPump,
you can get a free thyroid masterclass.
That's a $600 course for free,
only for MindPump listeners,
plus 10 winners will receive $500 in gift cards
for more certification classes through NCI.
You, the winners will be notified by tech
so make sure you enter the correct phone number
when you register.
Then we got into the fitness questions.
The first question, this person wants to know
what's the best way to retain muscle mass
while getting leader, leaner.
So we talk about strategies for that.
The next question, this person says,
hey, look, powerlifting., is it good for aesthetics?
We know powerlifting is great for getting really strong.
How does it affect the way I look?
The next question, this person says, what are the top, excuse me, five things that Americans
can do to improve the long-term health?
So we list our top things that people can do, simple things that will have massive impacts
on the health.
And the last question, this person says,
what are the positives and negatives of being a trainer?
If you're thinking about being a personal trainer,
you'll definitely don't wanna miss that part of the episode.
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You guys get some weird DMs sometimes, right?
Like a rhetorical question. Yeah. It's by weird, what do you mean?
Yeah, like how weird.
No, do you guys have a weird DM that is common?
You know, like someone will say something.
I feel like you're setting a set for a trip.
I know.
Well, I just don't want to give anything away.
Okay, because I don't want to be the only one.
Okay, so you're trying to get us to give you a material.
I get, this is weird because I know I have a
Cermity quality to my voice. I know you guys make fun of me all the time for and I know it's loud and piercing
Yeah, but I get DMs and that's all they say. I love your voice
What really what yeah, that's weird. Yeah, it's kind of weird fetishy. Yeah, is it?
Yeah, it's a little cute. Yeah, it's creepy-ish. It is.
Yeah. Yesterday, that's sometimes. So I had something I wanted it to get the creepier's a little. I had something that I wanted to talk to you guys about.
And I had this moment yesterday and it just kind of dawned on me. I'm like this magic moment.
Kind of not really like another. I tried to set you up, Justin. Well, live so close to mine.
First of all, and I don't know if I brought this up on the podcast before, but I really
believe maybe the most important humans on this earth or the most impressive are single
mothers.
Oh, single parents are, or yeah, I should champion.
I should say single parents, because being a single, most of them are like,
can we do to help?
Right, so it's insane, what they do.
Oh, and most of them are moms.
Well, we have a tremendous amount of support.
Like we have Vennani, we have her family that's close by.
She's got cousins and uncles and aunts
and her grandparents, like, and mine, even too,
that my sister comes every single moment.
We have tons of support.
So I'm extremely blessed to be in the situation
that we're in.
And Katrina does an incredible job
of carrying the rest of the load
and so I can work and do what I do.
And I see how exhausted she is.
So like a lot of times we'll lay there
and I'll look at her and I'm just like,
God, it baffles me like, you know, I see how
Exosu are. I mean, that was part of why we went to the sanctuary last week was like, I knew I needed to get her out of the house, give her some support.
I could be with her all day long and like, help with Max because she was so tired and stuff. And I'm like, how does so first of all, how does a couple do this with no family support?
That would be and no nanny and both working and both working. Because that's the most, that's common. Right, right, right. That would already be challenging as fuck.
Then imagine not having the other partner to support you
and the amount of work that you'd have to do
to carry the load to for the household financially.
And I'm going, this is insane.
And then I had a moment yesterday
when I was, I'm heading home from work,
Mondays, Mondays typically are a little bit longer day for me
just because it's Monday and getting caught up
from all the weekend stuff.
We got a busy week this week
because we could,
South traveling next week
so that we're doing a little extra work.
It's a manic Monday.
Right.
But, you know, again,
very blessed, I still get out of work by 5.30, you know,
I'm saying.
That's a late day. Yeah? That's a late day.
Yeah, that's a late day.
And I know better that like that is very lucky, right?
Most people have to work much later,
I've worked much later for most of my life.
And I'm driving home, I get home,
walking the door about 5.45 or so.
And he's already getting ready for the bath,
and that's, you know, he bath time, you know time you know feed read and then it's bedtime for him and so I really
I didn't have a chance to really spend very much time with Max at all to get any like real dad sometime and then I thought like
Wait a second like this is just one off night for me and you know I'm bummed out
I'm like what how the fuck does a dad do it who?
Work still seven or eight o'clock at night like doesn't most kids go down like around seven or eight?
Don't most parents have their kids go down early?
They don't see their kids that much except for weekends. Yeah, maybe weekends. Yeah, absolutely
And if you're a single parent, I can all I can imagine is you're probably your entire life
probably revolve around what you have to do
to
To to take care of your kids and maintain
that.
You have zero time to do anything for yourself.
Zero.
I have so much compassion.
Yeah.
And the amount of organization, could you imagine the amount of organization scheduling
that you would need to have to manage that?
It gives me nightmares just thinking about it because that's my weakness.
Like organization and time management are like my two,
like that's my Achilles heel.
Oh, and it gets, and it gets, as they get older,
it gets worse because then they have school events
and sports and other things.
So then you have to remember all that stuff.
And oh, I need you to take me to soccer.
Fear trips coming up, like permission slabs.
This and that, like, yeah, you gotta really know
what's coming ahead of you.
No, man, this and that, like yeah, you gotta really know what's coming ahead of you. No man, single parents are,
I, my hat is off to you because that is,
that is so insanely difficult and challenging.
Having a kid is challenging anyway.
That's why it's one of the,
this is sad thing to say, but statistically speaking,
there are things that cause higher divorce rates
and having a child is one of the top ones. Having a child, if you are in a relationship that isn't strong and you don't have a great friendship.
There's any crack, yeah, it'll expose.
It'll, it'll, it'll, it just, it just applies pressure.
Right.
You know, it's a difficult, difficult thing.
But anyway.
I also have a bone to pick with you, Justin.
Uh-oh.
Oh, cool.
Yeah.
Uh, you know, probably, I don't know, how long's once upon a time been out probably a year
Oh, yeah, I avoided watching once upon a time because you gave it a bad review Justin reviewed it so shitty
And I was like the the the the preview wasn't enough to like really ties me other than knowing like the cast
So obviously you liked it. I really liked it. Yeah, yeah, okay. Yeah, you shit on it hard
No, no, I can't did it win awards tons of awards it did yeah I really liked it. I really liked it. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah, you shit on it hard.
Did it win awards?
Tons of awards.
It did?
Yeah.
It won all kinds of, that was what made me kind of go down the path because I was, I saw,
by the way, I watched JoJo Rabbit, which was excellent.
Oh, tell me that wasn't amazing.
Come on.
That was, that was really good.
Did you get emotional?
Yeah, it got me a little bit.
It did, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, a little bit.
It was just a, well, very wellwritten, very gutsy way to write, too.
Not a lot of people touched that topic.
And they communicated from a satire side.
Well, not a lot of people do that.
That was well done.
Yeah, it was very much from the kids perspective,
which made it like light-hearted and everything
and like really tough subject matter
from the kids perspective.
Yeah, great.
Very intelligently written.
But yeah, I don't know, dude, maybe it was like a mood,
I was going in or the,
I don't even remember who I watched it with.
Sometimes that affects like your overall viewing
of something.
Oh yeah, if you're watching with someone
who's not into the show,
like it would definitely,
like I don't know, maybe that's it.
I'm not giving myself excuses.
I like just remembered that I was kind of like,
dozen off and then I would come back in
when there was like one action scene and then I would come back in when there's like one
Action scene and then the rest of it and I love the the actors that were in it
I thought they did a great job
I just wasn't paying attention to the overall theme of it. It just didn't capture me. Well, I'll watch it now
I wasn't gonna watch it either because you just
I'm serious you guys really listening to me
Well, yeah, well, yeah, we trust your you. Well, I usually do a good job of reviewing
So maybe that was a miss. I used to trust your opinion correct
Quintaritino is in acquired taste. You have to like why like most his movies. That's the thing. Yeah
Well, and you said they won a lot of awards. Yeah speaking of which these the slasht
Academy award whatever yeah got the lowest views and ratings that they've had in Asia.
Very long time.
I didn't even know they had one.
It broke new records in terms of lows.
Really?
Yeah, the there are articles that are coming out
talking about how the era of the celebrity is over.
And I think it's finally, yeah, I know.
And I know what I think it is.
It's funny though.
What do you want to bet?
We see the same thing emerge for social media from you. Oh, yeah, totally yeah
None of them want to and that's the thing is it actually costs them money to jump on to TV shows and to movies and like
None of like your Logan Paul's want to do that. Yeah, they make way more money. Just staying on their YouTube
You're exactly their own network. No one of the biggest gripes is is the when they go up there to accept their award and then they preached everybody but they're oh god
But there's they there's such
I mean they're and remember they're actors so they're really good at making you believe in what they're saying that they're likeable
But they are hammering us about
You know from a bubble you know that they all had gift bags that were worth over
25,000 dollars with the stuff that was inside?
Yeah, that's like a 12 day cruise on a private ship.
So it gets them to show up.
And then when they talk up there and they lecture us about whatever climate change while they
flew in on private jets or lecture us about how we need to, you know, better equality.
That's why Ricky Jervais was just so amazing.
I love that guy.
And he, yes, and I think he gave, he probably would help them.
So it's a 20% drop.
Huge dude.
So I saw something with a walking Phoenix.
Like he's been on a roll lately with lecturing
the world about things.
Yes, dude.
Just act.
You're good at acting.
Just act.
Like I don't want to go watch a baseball game that's done by the world's top tech CEOs.
Like care less about your baseball skills.
You're awesome at tech.
Why don't you stick to that.
You're an actor.
Just keep acting.
I don't like hearing your opinions.
I feel like it's like just this.
We see it even in social media.
There's examples of it of people that can get start off relatively small on
Instagram and blow up and blow up on YouTube. It seems like the natural, and I really think
it's for advertising and marketing purposes is to pivot into the political side. We see
this with like the Elliot Holeses. You see this with the Hodge twins. You see this.
Who else do we, who else do we follow and that we've talked about? Yeah, but rarely does that make somebody
who's already massively famous, more successful.
Oh, so yeah, it just hurts them.
I disagree.
You think so?
Yeah, it looks like it hurts them
because it definitely turns off a large portion of the audience,
but because they take a stand,
I mean, shit, this is what our marketing guy
is always trying to tell us.
Yeah, I wish more divisive.
Yeah, if more divisive,
and by taking a stand politically,
that's a real easy one.
You're left or right.
I mean, there's a few people that are liberal,
I mean, a libertarian,
but for the most part, you're left or right.
So taking a hard stand and drawing a line in the sand
and taking a side.
But if you're already huge,
like if you're famous like, you know,
Lady Gaga or Madonna,
and then you come out and you become divisive.
Well, look what, no,. Well, we have Taylor Swift.
You get the people that are like really on your side
and then you get the hate follows.
You know, so you still win.
Yeah, maybe Taylor Swift spent,
if you guys watch that documentary on her right now,
that's pretty good.
Come on Netflix.
Yeah, yeah, it's pretty good.
No, I don't watch that.
Very talented.
Yeah, extremely talented.
Extremely talented.
Her entire career, she avoided talking about politics
and got to a point where she couldn't take it anymore
and she tweeted.
And it was like the most viral,
I think today it's still the most viral thing
ever tweeted came from that.
So, you know, she got a lot of hate too.
You know, so she's got tons of hate now from it,
but it only blows you up in the grand scheme of like the world.
Because there's a ton of people that may not be a fan of our music,
but for sure every person is either lean more conservative
or lean more liberal.
I don't even remember what the tweet was.
It was a fucking, she was taking a stand on.
Oh, you know what, her state that she's from,
the person in office was trying to take rights,
I don't wanna say take rights,
because it's not the right words for it,
but she didn't agree with the person,
the person was hardcore conservative,
and the policies that they are trying to put in place
for as far as gay rights and as far as.
The portion I'm assuming?
Yes, okay.
Yes, a portion and something else, I abortion I'm assuming? Yes. Okay. Yes, abortion and something else.
I can't remember what it was.
Interesting.
Yeah, and so she vocalized it.
She said something.
Back in the day, celebrities were encouraged to not ever bring up things like religion or
politics, but I think now because celebrities have such a close connection to their audiences
through social media, it's becoming more and more of a thing.
And maybe you're right, Adam, maybe because they're not seeing a huge backlash
that more of more of them feel emboldened
to come out and say something.
I don't know.
It gets a more attention.
But it is true that they are getting less and less powerful.
Like their influence is becoming smaller and smaller
in terms of getting people to act in particular ways.
And these award ceremonies are a bit of a reflection of that.
That's why I think we're gonna see a chain in the regard
because I think people on Instagram and YouTube
and Facebook are gaining more power and more attention
and authority in this side of the, you know, in politics.
And the people that are famous on television
and movies are losing that because you can't connect
with them the same way.
Like I'm a big rapper, Deneer Al Pacino fan, but honestly, I don't know any of their political views really because they're so
untouchable, they're on the movie screen. Like I know they act. Like I don't know much about their personal life.
I don't follow any of them on social media because they probably either they don't do it very much or they're not into it
or I don't give a shit enough to fall in that way. But if you have somebody who you've been following
on Instagram and you've watched them go from zero
to millions of followers and you've followed
that entire journey, you have this connection
in that bond with that person, the same thing
the connection that we build with our audience.
You've put the same old game of like,
you have to say certain things because you're producers
and executive producers and everybody else up the chain
is going to fire you if you go off of the script and do things that are like, and these platforms we
have now, you can just be a human being and say what's when you're mind. And so it's a completely
different animal that's out there now and it's set free. Yeah, and you're right about the,
like it might affect their job. Sometimes I think they say what they think they're supposed
to say so that they continue to work.
100%.
If you would affect their job.
What was the name of that producer that ended up
being a total fucking scumbag,
but he was like, what's his name?
Was it Weinstein?
Weinstein.
Weinstein.
You know how many people knew about the shit
that he was doing and made jokes about it?
There's videos.
If you go on YouTube,
you can see clips of people at award celebrities
at awards ceremonies making jokes about it.
Like if Wednesday and ask you to go up to his hotel room,
make sure you don't or whatever and they laugh.
They knew that this guy was a piece of shit
and nobody called him out because the dude was so powerful
and Hollywood and doing so was basically suicide.
It would kill your career.
So he was allowed to conduct his shitty scumbaggery
for a long time because of it.
Let's been disrupting now.
Yeah, I'll thank goodness.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Anyway, dude, I had a great workout this morning
in my garage and I had some interesting thoughts
about the way that people change,
I've been changing kind of the way that they work out,
in particular, what they do in between sets.
So every once in a while, I go to a commercial gym,
I still am a member at one,
and I'll go every once in a while on average,
maybe two or three times a month.
And one thing that I always notice is most people,
or a lot of people I should say, in between sets of their exercises are doing something on their phone.
They're texting or they're on social media.
This is kind of a big thing. And it made me think, like, I wonder how important maintaining focuses throughout the whole workout.
Because that does break your focus a little bit. Like in one minute, I'm doing my rows and I'm squeezing
and I'm feeling the muscle.
And then the next minute, I'm checking Instagram
or I'm sending a text to my friends.
Wasn't like that for a long time.
For a long time, you worked out and you either had music.
There was nobody brought a book.
It was rare to see somebody bring a book
or do something weird in between sets.
It was typically, you're just like pacing around.
You're pacing around. And so I thought this and I'm guilty of it. I'm guilty of doing this in between sets, it was typically, you're just like pacing around. You're pacing around and so I thought this and I'm guilty of it, right?
I'm guilty of doing this in between sets as well.
So today with my workout, I put my phone down in between sets and I noticed that doing
so, I was way more connected and focused to the workout and I think it's understated in
terms of how much of an effect that'll have on your workout performance.
I, you know, it's kind of, it's weird
because I have two thoughts on that for me personally
because I feel the exact same way.
When I set my phone down, connect it to the Bluetooth
and just ignore it entire workout,
I for sure have a better workout.
Then there's the other side of me
that the way I work out right now
because I don't have these crazy goals to make major moves and like it's more about getting in and exercising for me.
My workouts are, you know, stretched to be an hour and a half, two hours long, very slow,
long rest periods. I'll come over, I'll sit down, I'll respond to DMs, I do email, and I know
they're not my best workouts. They're not at all. They're nowhere near the performance or what I could be getting out of them.
At the same time, I'm able to multitask and do other things.
And right now, I don't have anything
that I'm like competitively trying to make moves
in my physique.
So I think it really just depends
on where your mindset is currently and your priority.
Very fair, very, very fair thing to say.
I agree with you 100%.
But you know,
studies will show that when somebody concentrates, for example, on a muscle, that that muscle actually
activates more. I don't need a study to show this. I've been training people forever, and I've been
working out for a long time. I know that. I know I can do a barbell row, and just with my mind,
you might not even be able to tell by watching my form unless you're really, really experienced that I can make it, I can feel it more in my rhomboid or my lats or I can feel
it more in my traps or my biceps depending on how I concentrate on the exercise. So that focus
and bodybuilders have known this for a long time, they call it the mind and muscle connection. That
focus plays an integral part in how effective
your workout is on what muscles you develop
or how you develop them.
So, losing, breaking that concentration
every single set, which is what a lot of people do,
is gotta have a detrimental effect on the,
at least your performance,
and if you're really focused on your workout,
it's gonna be a lot better.
Yeah, it's interesting,
cause I've actually noticed,
and I'm trying to keep a pulse on what's out there in terms of modalities and what sort of education is being promoted
now in our space.
And I see a lot of tendencies now towards the brain and to really focus in on this cognitive
boosting ways of training and to be able to really control and focus their body in a certain
direction. And this really helps to enhance, you know,
how your brain performs as well.
And I actually know a few people that are like developing,
you know, these methods and things and kind of pitching them
and having me go through some of their content.
And it's really good.
But it is along those lines,
it's because of the distractibility that we have today.
Is such the barrier now to really get those types of benefits that we used to receive,
and we didn't really realize that that was a big component.
Yeah, see, like when I did cardio, cardio, I like to be distracted because I'm repetitively
walking, I'm not moving anywhere, I just want to do my 30 minutes.
Now if I was a competitive endurance athlete,
probably don't want to be distracted, I want to focus,
I want to make sure my running is perfect.
When I'm lifting weights, if I'm trying to build muscle,
connect to the muscle, maximize my form,
make sure it's perfect, what I do when I'm not doing the set
is important, just like it is when I'm doing the set.
Maybe not as important, of course,
you want to be most focused when you're doing it.
But because what happened is I put my phone down,
didn't look at it, and I found I had a way better workout.
I was just, I was in the, and leave the space.
My mind didn't leave the space.
It's part of why I have a hard time,
and I know like I should,
because anytime I post a video of me working out
or throw it up in my story,
like it gets by far the most views, the most attention,
and for business reasons,
I know it would behoove me to do that. But the truth is, I know it's, it fucks my workout up.
To walk over, mount the phone up, hit record, do it all, just for fucking so I can post it up.
I honestly can't stand that. It drives me crazy because it interrupts that process,
especially if I'm trying to lift heavy. especially if I'm trying to get after it,
I don't wanna hear nothing but my fucking
Metallica in the background,
and just be thinking about that bar,
good enough, that's all I wanna think about.
It's interesting, we're bringing this up,
because I mean, I just got an email today about,
these guys I've worked with before,
they're developing apps,
and one of the things that's happening
that they're developing right now
is to be able to slide back and forth between your podcast
and then music and then it like, it switches
like within your workouts.
So you have your music while you're working out
and then when you're resting,
it goes right back to your podcast.
Oh, interesting.
Thought that was an interesting concept.
I wonder, you know, in terms of like now,
I've talked to a lot of people listen to our show,
that listen to other shows, you know, that are fitness related've talked to a lot of people listen to our show, that listen to other shows
that are fitness related, actually do a lot of their
consumption of podcasts and they're bothered working out.
Oh, 100%.
I mean, okay, so that makes sense.
It's a little bit of a distraction, but you're more
in the space of working out when you're also listening
to, you're still consciously thinking about it.
And you're talking and people are teaching about
exercise and they're answering questions, especially as you're learning. thinking about it. And you're talking and people are teaching about exercise
and they're answering questions,
especially as you're learning.
Yeah.
That makes perfect sense.
It makes more sense than going on Instagram,
reading this article, texting my friend,
where I'm leaving the space of the workout,
because for me at least, because I've been doing this
for so long, and I know you guys are the same,
workouts to me are sacred.
There's something that I do,
I don't have to want to build muscle,
I don't have to want to burn body fat.
It's a very important part of my day.
It's meditative for me.
And I think respecting that,
I just get the best connection and the best.
Not the same way.
The most out of it by doing that.
But it was crazy,
because I do the same thing.
I'm in my garage and I'm, oh, I'm gonna do this post, I'm gonna do that, or whatever, and I'm like, you know what, I'm gonna put my doing that. But it was crazy, because I do the same thing. I'm in my garage and I'm,
oh, I'm gonna do this post, I'm gonna do that
or whatever, and I'm like, you know what?
I'm gonna put my phone down.
Put it down.
I'm gonna be in the workout the whole time.
You know what, you talking about your workout,
just reminding me something I wanna announce
on the podcast that you did today.
And we really haven't put a lot of energy and effort
into the YouTube.
It's kind of what's been a secondary thought for us,
business-wise, and although we continue to employ people
to put content out on that to add value to our community,
we really haven't really tried to grow it,
like aggressively, like we have other aspects of the business,
and so that's a big focus for 2020.
And one of the first things that we wanna do,
and lead this way, like we have with every other part of businesses to give
and so one of the things that we haven't done on the podcast is to tell our audience here that if you're not subscribed
to mind pump TV and turn the notifications on you're gonna want to do that because the next video that
Sal comes out with we're gonna start doing giveaways within the first hour to 24 hours of people that
get on their comment or follow whatever instruction it gives. So we're really trying to put energy
and focus and scaling that side of the business up this year. And one of the first ways that we want
to do that is by giving away people that are interacting with us on that. So look out for that.
That should become an issue. In our YouTube channel, we have so many videos because we've been posting between one to five a week
now for years that if you have an exercise question
or a body part you want to focus on.
Yes.
Free workouts, there's free workouts,
entire workouts that we videotaped.
I'm so glad we recorded and put on that.
I'm so glad you said this because this is,
one of the hardest things now is it's out of place
where I can't, it's impossible to respond to every DM.
And a lot of times the DMs are something that we've answered or we've already done, especially
on the YouTube channel.
So what I end up always saying to them is Google, mine pump TV and then what you're asking
me and you'll see it right away.
Chances are there.
Yeah, chances are that so before you reach out to us in our DMs,
and this is just, I'm asking, like, I'm pleased to do this.
It just, it helps us help more people.
So that's where I'm coming from here.
Yeah.
Because when I have 20 DMs that get flooded in there
and they're all asking questions of,
if you would have just went to Mind Pump TV
and literally typed in that,
you would have got an incredible eight to 12-minute video
giving you your answer.
And you want me to go link it for you and do that for you.
I didn't have a problem doing that
when we had very little people that were DMing us,
but it's got to a point where I can't even reach everybody
anymore.
So one of the things that you guys can do to help support us
to support our community is before you DM or before you ask one of us things that you guys can do to help support us, to support our community, is before you DM,
or before you ask one of us, the questions like that.
First, please go utilize the free resources that we've created,
and we spend money on to give value to the community,
which is the YouTube channel, the blogs.
You can subscribe to the blogs on the website,
which we've got three, we're about to just see you guys,
now you guys don't even know this.
We're about to start ramping up to nine fucking blogs a week.
Like, we're putting out tons of free content.
All you have to do is go on there and search for a topic
you want to learn about.
And we've probably spent the time and money
putting in a really good video or really good article.
It's an information battle.
It's a war and information.
And there's a lot of bad information in the fitness space.
We're trying to crowd it out with good information as much as possible.
Speaking of DMs and all that stuff, I read an article today about one of the latest wellness
influencer trends.
Just when you thought that they couldn't do...
I thought they're cracking down on the bullshit.
What's happening?
They kidding me.
The butthole of stunning was just the last one. do I thought they're cracking down on the bullshit. What's happening? No. They kidding me.
The butthole of sunning was just the last one.
Oh, bro.
Okay.
So butthole, I feel like that was a trolling move though.
I don't know.
No, it's true.
It's growing.
I mean, I brought it up a bunch of times.
I just thought it was funny.
Dude, what's his name?
Bulletproof.
What's his name?
Dave Asperg did it.
Remember?
He posted on Instagram.
He's shined his butthole to the sun.
Anyway, so, okay.
First, he did.
Okay, ridiculous, silly, stupid. Not totally dangerous. Sure you could get a sunburn on your butthole to the sun and yeah anyway, so okay, he did okay ridiculous silly stupid not totally dangerous
Sure, you could get a sunburn on your butthole
Yeah, but that's not gonna kill you
That's not gonna this next one is a terrible thing and they're actually promoting it
So there are people on social media with lots of followers right now who have sworn off you ready for this?
Water they are now no, no, swear. What? They're not drinking any water. They're
saying they get older hydration by eating their water through things like fruit. So yeah,
I don't drink any water. I just eat fruit and like stuff like watermelon and I have all
the possibly go wrong. Yeah, it's like dry fasting. They call it and it's hilarious. It's
so funny. You know, it's funny. You look at the pictures of them and you's hilarious. It's so funny, you look at the pictures of them, and you can tell.
You can start these things.
You see it just pop up,
and it's usually because at least 10 or 12 or so
like influence or people like bought into this bullshit.
This drives me crazy.
Just too much.
Just because you can does not mean you should.
Yeah, and you know what's gonna,
someone's gonna die, and then we're gonna,
and then we're not gonna hear about that they die.
And even if they don't,
even if someone doesn't die from it, again,
if it's just because we can,
just because our bodies are unbelievably resilient
and badass.
Yeah, if you get enough fluid through your food,
you might be okay,
but you ain't gonna be hydrated very well.
Yeah, it's not ideal.
Yeah, it's, you know what it is.
Here's another part of it.
A lot of times these influencers lie.
So they'll say to you like, like, oh, I'm a vegan.
This was actually a big deal for a second.
You had these vegan influencers who got caught by fans
who saw them in public eating like fish or eggs.
And they'll film it and then post it.
And then the person has to come on and apologize.
Oh, yeah.
I was hungry.
Yeah, oh, I made a mistake. I'm so sorry, please and apologize. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I was hungry.
Yeah, oh, I made a mistake.
I'm so sorry, please forgive me.
Yeah.
Massive.
Massive bullshit.
It's crazy.
It's this bullshit.
Go ahead.
Oh, I was gonna say, you guys are big fans of Pixar, like me, right?
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
So the last movie I saw that had a big impact was Inside Out.
Did any of you watch that movie?
I love this.
It was so accurate.
Like, such an audacious idea to tackle like the human emotion
and like portray it in the way they did.
Well, dude, I just saw another like trailer
so they're on it again.
Let's tackle the soul.
Let's tackle the afterlife.
Like what?
Like that's crazy.
What's it called?
It's called soul.
Oh wow.
So it's about what happens called Soul. Oh wow.
So it's about what happens to you after you die?
Yeah, this guy, I guess he falls into like a sewer and then they portray his soul as
being the sort of blue little ghostly looking thing and then it like travels to the afterlife
and that's really all we got so far.
But I'm just like so intrigued by that company in there, like how they write story and like how,
like it just reminds me of Backwind when Disney was like
all about, you know, the story of everything
and like how they could like portray like major topics
that are a better example would be Mr. Rogers,
how he would like, you know, bring up like,
like think like war and like heavy topics with kids
and like be able to show them,
like, how to deal with that.
Now, this Disney and that own Pixar?
Yeah.
Okay.
So speaking of Mr. Rogers, did you guys actually see the film that Mr.
the Mr. Rogers story?
Oh, we're talking about Hank's.
I'm coming to you.
Yes, with Tom Hanks.
I did watch it.
Oh, you did.
So you know, that's an actual story.
Yes.
That's why I said, so I didn't, I wasn't in a hurry to watch it because I already watched
both. Yeah, I loved the first one. I watched the, there's why I said so I all I didn't I wasn't in a hurry to watch it because I already watched both
Yeah, I love the first one. I watched the I was there's two documentaries out on yeah, this is an actual
It's an actual
It is really good. It's not bad because you you already know the story because you've watched the documentary
But this actually tells it from a perspective of somebody who was supposed to interview him back then a reporter
Super super cynical reporter too. Really?
Somebody who is just like, oh, this guy,
and he's like known for like writing really naked.
Was it an Esquire magazine?
I forget what magazine it was,
but the, if you,
cause like I always go down the rabbit hole after I get,
like, get into, like, is it a true story?
And who was the writer?
And he was really well known and known
for like just tearing into people.
Like ripping apart people that present themselves as these holy, holy or great people and like.
So they literally put him on this and you get to hear his whole experience with him.
It's so good. I mean Tom Hanks is amazing. Yeah. And you know that Mr. Rogers documentary.
I said was probably one of my all-time favorite documents. So good. Yes. such a powerful dog. So good. It was really good. So some cool science news
that's coming out. So there's this signal that we're receiving from space on a very consistent basis.
Maybe Doug, you can look this up. I think it's like every 16 days from the serious star. I don't
remember where it's coming from,
but it's a space signal that is extremely consistent.
It's like every, there's a lot of period of time,
it comes every time, and we know it's coming
from a galaxy that is probably extinct or long gone
because it's traveled millions of series.
A mysterious radio signal from space is repeating
every 16 days, and we have no idea where it's coming from or whatever.
And it's accurate.
Every 16 days it's coming to us.
And it's just like blips that are like continuous.
Like how does what kind of signal is it?
It's they decipher it.
It said beware.
It stopped.
No, it's just some signal.
I'm like, we're coming.
We're coming.
Pat down that.
Yeah, so it's kind of cool, right,
that we're getting this weird radio signal.
I mean, it could.
It could be in that, obviously,
it could be a natural phenomena.
Yeah.
But, the fact that it's every 16 days.
I would say they've timed it every 16 days.
Yeah, that's trippy.
Isn't that weird?
Yeah, was that signals or what signs or...
I forget what movie it was. What was their name, Jody Foster? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, totally
They were trying like forever like scientists have been hoping for something and they haven't gotten any sort of signals
This is actually a big deal. Oh, I've been meaning to ask you Justin. How was your your class? You just had one this week
Yeah, I did. Yeah, you didn't give us a yeah
I love what we miss one in between two. Yeah. Yeah, no, so it was actually kind of funny
because this time we did a pantomimeing,
which, you know, like,
Now what's pantomimeing again?
So, you know, like a mime,
like, straight, right?
Like, I'm in a box, you know,
this is a wall.
So basically, like, you have to act these things out
with your body and it's not about like how you say it, right?
So, in a sense, so we did all these like we did all these really uncomfortably weird activities together.
And that was probably one of the more alien things for me to experience,
because I was like, I just don't do, I mean, I have gestures.
Would you get, well, so basically, what what you have to do, like in one of these drills
is like you have to like have a pretend ball of clay.
And so in this ball of clay is passed to you from somebody else who created something
out of it.
So let's say like they molded something and they're like pantomiming this whole thing that
they're making.
And now you have to receive whatever they gave you.
And then like act out what it is. And then if you don't do it right now you have to receive whatever they gave you. Oh my God. And then, like, act out what it is.
And then, if you don't do it right,
they have to figure out how to make it more presentable
where you understand what they're doing.
Oh, that's interesting.
Which is really cool.
On paper, but in reality, I'm just like,
I was like, what are you doing?
Because some people are good at it.
Some people are just like, dog shit.
And it's like, I had a guy that was kind of dog shit
like right next to me, like trying to like,
come up with something.
He was, yeah, he probably is.
But it was like a corkscrew.
And so he's like trying to like,
pant the mind this whole thing.
And I'm like, I wasn't getting it.
He was trying to pant the mind like, corkscrew.
Oh my God.
I would be so tempted to do some inappropriate
stuff with some kind of a car.
I know, I would so do a deck.
Dude, that's me and then you hit it to somebody.
Here you go.
I have like ticks towards that.
You know, this haven't even like,
like not like totally focused,
but I've been called out a few times about like,
you know, trying to go for the cheap laugh
or you know, like this or that or like,
we had, okay, here's an awkward one for you guys.
So we had like a room full of people that we all have polls,
okay, and then first thing, the instructor's like, okay, it's not a stripper poll. You know, I just get that out of like a room full of people that we all have polls. Okay. And then first thing,
the instructor is like, okay, it's not a stripper poll. You know, I just get that out of
like a poll poll. Yeah. Like everybody has to have a poll. You create a poll. And this
poll is in front of you. And so like it's a specific size, you know, it's bolted into ground.
And so like you have to just, you know, visualize this. And it's basically creating like an object
that's invisible that like has its own reality. And so's basically creating an object that's invisible
that has its own reality.
And so now everybody has to buy into the fact
that this poll is this size, it's this tall,
and you have to do all this without telling anybody
what you're doing.
And now you have to grab on somebody else's poll,
which I thought was interesting.
Like, hey, sir, let me hold your poll.
I don't know, this is awkward.
He's like, it's not the first time I've ever seen.
It's like, okay, he's like, it's a big poll, dude.
They handle it yourself.
I'm like, all right, I got it.
And so you go around and you have to keep one hand
on your poll.
And then like, so anyway, you have to like be able to like agree
that this has, you know, some form of reality here,
which everybody buys into.
And by the end of the time,
you have to have the same number of poll,
and they have to be the same size that they used to be.
And so we failed three times.
There was one extra poll, there's one less poll.
I don't get it, I'll do it for sizes.
If the remember, remember, you can.
So I guess to explain it a little bit better,
like let's mind his small.
I just say let's pretend the three of us
all have these polls.
Yes, okay, and start the drill with us. So now what you're doing is you created it, right? It's mind his smallest. I was just saying, let's pretend the three of us all have these poles. Yes, okay. And start the drill with us.
So now when you use this phone,
you created it, right?
Are you definitely the one who's calling it?
Can you talk to me?
Can you tell me?
No.
Oh, you came to talk to me.
You just created this.
I'm just holding it, right?
Yeah.
And now I'm looking at you and sort of like gesturing,
okay, I'm coming for your pole.
I see where your arms are.
Oh, so, and I made my pole like this.
Yeah, of course you did.
Yeah, look at that.
Confency, yeah, yeah.
That's my pole. I get it, okay. Yeah. Okay. You got this massive poll. Okay. I'm coming in.
Okay. I'm stepping towards you. I'm holding mine still. Okay. Okay. So you're holding your poll while you reach for his poll. Exactly. Okay.
So now somebody behind me might be going from my poll to and I'm like, all right, you know, you gotta watch out from the polls from behind.
There's some people coming from my poll from behind. Okay, this is reality here, okay?
So now they're gonna put their hand on my poll.
I'm okay, you got my poll, kind of looking at them,
like okay, cool.
See, this is fun, this is fun talking about this.
Yeah, actually, because it was this ridiculous.
Okay, and now I'm walking towards Adam's poll.
I got to balance his poll and then I release.
So this person has my poll now, they know exactly
how thick it is, how tall it is, all that.
Now I'm going to yours. Now I'm holding your pull. You have to go find somebody else's. Now I'm gonna work your way around the
cell. Yeah, little pole. So I'm gonna go inside my pole.
Hey, he's pulling.
Ploded.
So you're going to his pole. You work away around the room. By the end of the time, you're with somebody else's
pole and you're standing there in your freeze. And now it's like, okay, now the instructor goes around
and counts how many poles there are based off of,
like if you're holding it or not.
Sometimes somebody can be holding two poles
because they're like stabilizing
and somebody doesn't even have one.
Yeah.
So that's where it gets pretty crazy.
Don't they?
Oh yeah.
Yeah, it is like skiing.
Oh my bad.
Anyway, so that's that that's an example of
what we're doing. Wow, I feel like the the skills you learn from practicing that are number one,
you just go with it. Don't be just shy, scared, go for it. Well, here's one right away. It's a fact,
95% of all communication is not verbal. So I 75%? No, it's 95. Is it?
Yeah, look it up.
So I just read this actually.
Really?
Two days ago.
Wow.
Yeah, so I was actually going to write something about this.
It's 95%.
Well, yes.
I've always heard 74.
What was revealing to me was the first time, I guess, I forgot to mention you could,
like, you could say certain, like, words and cues.
Like, and so the second time, no communication.
And so yeah, it was that.
It's like, you realized how much eye contact you're making.
And around it up.
Yeah, like what you're, you could totally talk
just through your body.
Well, it says that the nonverbal component,
so this was a study done by professor Mehrebein.
I don't know if it's a,
yeah, combined with the statistical,
I don't know if it's weird.
So they combined the statistical results
of two studies and came up with a now,
with a famous, 93% of communications nonverbal.
55% being body language, 38% being tone.
Right.
Wow.
Isn't that crazy?
Well, that makes sense.
Right.
So does makes sense?
So it makes sense why you would do so many drills
where you guys aren't allowed to talk to each other
that you got to learn to use body language, eye contact,
and gestures because, yeah, that only fucking 7%
is actually verbal, that should be probably
a smaller percentage of the time spent.
Wow, yeah, and if you're not real specific
in your more general and vague, people don't,
you tend to fuck it up, right?
Because you have to know specifically what it is.
This is why a robot that's monotone
and that talks like that would be terrible at communicating.
You would not be able to get all that stuff.
Ah, very interesting.
I had a question in my DMZ the other day
that reminded me of a chicken or the egg,
you know, the old question, what came first?
Chicken or the egg.
Person asked, I thought it was a very interesting thing
to bring up on the podcast.
They said, what is more important for building muscle?
Tension or weight?
In other words, the weight that's on the bar or the tension that you feel tension when
you're lifting the weight.
Tension.
And well, I mean, they both play with each other, right?
More weight adds more tension, but it's the tension.
I agree with you.
And the reason why I say that is because there, if you had heavy weight and you had
do one or the one without
the other, right?
So, you can influence tension without changing the weight by improving your form.
Exactly.
It's slowing your form.
And the importance of that, I think, exceeds the importance of load because, even, and
regardless of what the studies say in this, the risk factor of just increasing load without
having good tension is borderline dangerous. And you could still possibly do it.
We see examples of this.
Here's how somebody who tried to do a squat
that has no tension in control.
They just drop down and bounce off the joints.
They bounce off and they come back up
versus somebody who understands how to keep
really good tension and they can actually
decelerate really control.
Now that being said,
weight plays a very big role in tension, right?
It's one of the number one ways you increase tension.
And it's very hard to intrinsically create tension,
at least enough to really create muscle,
lots of muscle growth and strength.
I could create tension by slowing my rep down,
squeezing my muscles, but if I did air squats,
I could concentrate as much as I wanted,
as much as I could, I would not be able
to create the same amount of tension that way.
I geeked out on all that and that's why I was like trying to come up with a solution
for that, Edo, it's like a stick and all that.
But like, I mean, just to be able to convey, you know, how important it is to be able to
prepare your body for load.
Right.
And that's really like, in a sense, if I could put it in a nutshell, like
you need a specific amount of tension to be able to support your joints and to be able
to, you know, like safely move heavy objects or certain things in space. And the force of
that obviously communicates through the cell like so, you know, adding that external load
is going to like, your body is going to Yeah, where are those questions for our class?
That's a good question.
It is, right?
Nobody asked it in the quad.
I just got a DM, and that's why I brought it up.
I thought it was good.
Yeah, that's cool.
I like questions like that, you know,
because it's, you know, we could go back and forth.
And I bet you, if we were to like dig into the studies,
we would probably support the load side,
but I would tell you from your experience.
Well, that's just because people don't know
how to really create tension,
and they need that external load.
And this also, we, I mean, we're big advocates of
isometric training, and I think it's just falling out of
favor and it's just not cool.
So not a lot of people do it, but there's a tremendous
amount of value for it when trying to coach or teach a
client.
I mean, if I have somebody who is absolute, and obviously,
who I'm talking to matters, some clients have great control,
can create tension right away.
They have better mind muscle connection than some people,
but then we've all trained for sure that percentage,
that they have no control.
They just show a movement and they're all over the place.
They need something external to create tension.
They can't do it by tensing up their own body, right?
They just simply can't do it with terror,
because it's too hard for them to imagine.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, I wanted to ask you, Adam, we have a certification coming up here at headquarters,
right?
Another one.
Yeah, March 21st to the 22nd.
We have Jason Phillips coming in.
Oh, that's the, okay, so there you go.
Nutrition certification for coaches who want to do online nutrition coaching.
It's going gonna be here, March 21st and 22nd
at Mind Pump Head of Quarters,
and he's still giving away the thyroid masterclass,
which if you were to buy that 600 bucks,
he's giving it away for free for all Mind Pump listeners,
which is really cool, and at the beginning of the episode,
in the intro, I give you the link where you can get that.
Yeah, well, he's also doing out of those people,
like at that, 10 of those will be winners for $500 NCI gift card
that you can apply to any of the other courses.
Oh, wow.
Yes, not only do you get that for free,
but then from the people that got the masterclass for free,
thyroid masterclass for free,
they're also be thrown in a pool,
and he's gonna pick 10 of them out of that
and give them each $500 cards towards any of the other courses.
So really, really love what NCI and Jason is doing as a partnership with my impump really
hookin' up on his team.
Oh, it's great to see the response after he's even on the show, like how people like,
he just had such great information to give and he goes into even more depth than these
seminars and everything.
Totally worth your time.
Yeah.
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BEEP.
First question is from Nick Meg 4.
What's the best way to retain muscle mass
while decreasing body fat, specifically in terms
of how to alter training and how to split up my diet.
Yeah, you know, when it comes to,
I've been thinking a lot about questions like this.
And the goal with resistance training
should almost always be to try and build muscle and gain strength.
Now, why is that a goal when you're trying to cut?
Because one of the inevitable side effects
of decreasing body fat is that your body will try to reduce muscle mass
to slow down your metabolism to make up for the difference.
And one of the best ways to prevent the loss of muscle mass
is to train as if you're trying to build.
Now your diet is what will reflect the fat loss goal.
So if I eat in a calorie deficit,
then I'm going to burn body fat
and I'm going to lose the least amount of muscle
if I lift weights like I'm trying to build.
I think sometimes people think, oh I'm cutting.
Now the way I train is going to be
to burn the most amount of calories all the time.
And they lose that muscle building signal
and they end up with muscle loss along with it.
I like this question because we also get a lot of questions
around all of our programs because they're all broken up in three or four phases
and people are always asking me like,
how should I diet through this program?
Should I be on a bulk?
Should I be on a bulk?
Should I be on a cut?
I'll tell you how I like to do this with clients.
And it all depends on where the person is,
metabolism wise, how fast is it, or I'll slow is it,
on what I'm trying to do nutritionally
with them.
They're going to follow the program as planned no matter what.
Like to Salis Point, you're always training to build muscle or retain the muscle, and that's
why programs are phased away are.
Because one of the ways you can almost guarantee you're probably going to lose muscle mass is
stay on the same program, the same training regimen for six plus months straight consistently
and then go into a hardcore diet and cut, you're going to lose muscle.
I'm also building signals is lost, it's luster.
Yes.
And you're at a calorie deficit?
Oh, yeah.
So, one of my simple answer to this, I love to do is, and I'm about to do this right now,
I'm helping out a couple of close friends with diet and coaching.
They're following one of them's following strong one,
following anabolic, both are female.
I've been trying to speed up their metabolism.
One of them's about 2,200 calories.
The other one's around 2,500 calories.
The goal I'm trying to get them closer to 3,000.
And what I'll do is when I sort of cut from them
and reduce calories, I also like to time it
on a transition in the phase of the programming.
So, like right now, one of them is on phase one of strong. And, you know, technically, I could
start to cut her calories right now, but I like to do it right when I send a really different
signal to her body on a new face. Makes sense. So, you want to cut the calories when she's getting
the loudest, most effective muscle-building
signal to offset.
And in my opinion, my theory is that that not only benefits her with building muscle or
retaining muscle at least, it also promotes fat burning because she's getting this unique
signal now or different, you know, the novelty side of it because she's been in a phase for three or four weeks in phase one.
And now boom, all of a sudden she's seeing new rep ranges, new exercises, bodies going, oh wow, try and build muscle adapts.
Oh my God, we're not getting calories too. So it's burning like crazy.
So even though it's kind of a competing signal, I find a lot of that.
This is how I used to train myself for shows.
Is I always made moves in my diet
when I was also making transitions in the phases
to promote the greatest change.
That's really smart Adam.
I've never thought of doing that,
but that makes perfect sense.
I'll even also make intentionally
bump their protein a little bit.
So I'll cut calories,
but then I'll also elevate their protein,
because most of my girls I like running, you know,
you know, off like the 0.6 to 0.8 range.
When we cut, I'll normally bump them through like to the more like the one to 1.25 range
of protein, but I'm also reducing calories and changing the protein.
No, that's the second part is the other thing you can do is eat a high protein diet and push the upper limit
of what is beneficial.
Studies show what you heard Adam referring to some numbers.
Studies show about 0.6 to 1 gram of protein per pound to body weight is where you're going
to reap the benefits of a high protein diet.
Any more than that, you typically don't reap any additional benefits.
But when your calories are low, a higher protein diet is actually more important.
You actually can get away with lower protein when you're at a calorie surplus.
This is because the excess calories are protein-sparing.
So body stops reaching for protein for energy.
It's got plenty of calories from carbs and from fats.
It's not as important.
If I'm in a bulk, believe it or not, high protein is important. But if I'm in a bulk, it's less important
than if I'm in a cut.
When I'm in a cut and my calories are low,
that's when it makes the most sense
to push the upper limit of the, you know,
beneficial effects of protein.
And studies show consistently
that that preserves the most muscle.
They also show that they also help burn the most body fat,
probably through the indirect effect of
maintaining a faster metabolism.
So, whether you're trying to get cut or bulk up, resistance training should be geared around
building muscle.
It'll give you the best results either way.
Also consider this, resistance training, like any tool, is very good at what it's designed
for and is, eh, it's kind of good for other stuff, but it's very good at what it's designed for, and it's
kind of good for other stuff, but it's really good for what it's designed for.
Resistance training, can you build lots of stamina and endurance with it?
Yes.
Can you get super flexible with it?
Yes.
But it's best for building muscle.
Nothing.
There's no modality that exists.
That build's muscle is effectively resistance training.
So when you do the resistance training, do it, use it the way it's best used,
which is build muscle.
And that's regardless of whether or not
you're trying to burn body fat or gain weight.
Next question is from Taylor Dinkle.
What are your thoughts on powerlifting for aesthetics?
Oh, this is similar to a question that I had.
Someone asked me of what I thought
is a better place to start,
their bodybuilding or powerlifting.
And my response to them is I actually said,
I would lean towards powerlifting first.
As a base.
Yes, as a base, but I could also make the case
for the other way.
So this is not a, for sure, one way or the other,
I think there's value of somebody training for aesthetics
or the mind muscle connection, bodybuilding technique
of training that is extremely valuable
from that perspective and what that benefits.
Then there's a ton of value for somebody
who's to build a really solid foundation
like from powerlifting and what you get from that.
Yeah, let's say somebody is like completely brand new
to working out, like would you guys prefer them
to start in the powerlifting routine versus a bodybuilding routine?
Yeah, now you're not talking about competitive powerlifting,
right Tom?
No, no, yeah.
Just training like a powerlifting.
Here's stretching your capacity.
Here's why I would lean, believe it or not,
more towards powerlifting.
And now this is granted the person that we're working with.
Right, because I mean, three of major muscle and muscle.
And yeah, let's take all that out,
because I can challenge either way. Right, but let's say somebody's free of major muscle and muscle and muscle. Exactly, because I'm going to challenge that out. Because I can challenge either way.
Right, but let's say somebody's free of major muscle and muscle.
Because if that's the case, you have to focus on corrective exercise regardless of where
I go.
Yeah, which follows, falls in the aesthetic body.
It might be, right?
Yeah, I'm trying to go to a muscle.
I'm going to go to a muscle.
I'm going to go to a muscle.
I'm going to go to a muscle.
But let's say everything's fine and they don't have major muscle and balances.
Here's why I'll make the argument for powerlifting because powerlifting is so movement-focused.
They're more likely to learn biomechanically sound, squatting, deadlifting, and bench pressing. You know, the core lifts and movements. Later on, once they've really got good at those lifts,
and they can do them well, and they know how to maximize leverage and do it in a way to
when they don't hurt themselves, because that's what powerlifters do. They maximize leverage
in efficiency so they can lift the most weight, which means, believe
or not, reducing risk of injury.
A powerlifter benches in the safest way possible that can lift the most amount of weight.
Bodybuilders don't do this.
Bodybuilders lift to feel it in the muscle.
Now powerlifters tend to hurt themselves more, but it's not because of the way they lift
it.
It has more to do with the fact that they're always maxing out and pushing their limits.
But it'll teach sound technique and form and movement.
Then from there, when they have that base,
then I can say, okay, focus on your glutes,
focus on your quads, focus on your lats,
and do those kinds of things.
Well, not to.
If, like, say, we're taking this out,
like if nobody has these pre-existing conditions
like going into it,
otherwise I would probably lean more towards bodybuilding because now we can isolate
and get a better recruitment, like joined by joint,
but I've found in my experience in coaching people
that if I were to train the movement
like you're talking about,
taking them from there to bodybuilding
was a better transition versus the opposite.
We're now taking a body builder and trying to teach them
like overall gross motor movements.
Like was challenging because certain parts of their
like joints wanna kick in individually
and they're gonna pull like a deadlift with their biceps.
Well now imagine we have somebody
because we're also like there's so many different roads.
There's so many ways to skin a cat.
Sure, I think so. But let's There's so many ways to skin a cat. Sure.
But let's pretend we've got a listener who has got,
years of experience, three, five,
more than two years experience lifting,
so they're not brands making new.
They see all the maps programs,
they see there's a powerlifting program,
they see there's a map's aesthetics,
they say they're like, okay, where would I start?
What would I do?
Do you think that your powerlifting program's good for said?
So here's, if I had a year with you,
powerlifting for sure would make its way into that training.
Right?
So I would for sure use our maps aesthetic,
our maps split program, and our maps powerlifting program,
and probably even strong.
Like those four, I would use for this person.
If you came to me, you said,
I want to build the most aesthetic physique
you've got me for one year at them,
I'm gonna use all four of those programs
because there's gonna be massive carryover
for your overall goal.
Totally.
Now the question is about aesthetics.
Okay, now again, it depends who I'm talking to.
If I'm talking to the person
that's been powerlifting for a while,
bodybuilding is gonna give them better aesthetics.
If I'm talking to the person
who is a relative beginner,
free of imbalances, they're going to get great aesthetics
from powerlifting.
Focusing on the movement is going to give them
the most muscle mass gains, general muscle building.
Now bodybuilding, the strength of bodybuilding
is going to isolate muscles and focus and sculpt
on different parts of my body.
The strengths in powerlifting are,
I get really good at these gross motor movements
that work everything anyway.
So when it comes to aesthetics,
it really depends who I'm talking to.
It does, because here's another person, myself, okay.
Powerlifting contributed to my pro physique
more than bodybuilding training.
I train like a bodybuilder most of my life.
I always wanted aesthetics,
and so I neglected powerlifting as I just never
identified. I don't need a deadlift fucking my max. I don't need to do squatting for
my max. I never drop below five reps. It wasn't until I started powerlifting. Did I my
physique grow to the next level? So I would even say somebody who is like me, who has always
done all the cable exercises,
me machine exercises, isolation stuff,
bodybuilding type of movements for most of their life
or most of their training career.
Absolutely would benefit extremely
from powerlifting for their aesthetics.
It's what grew my back, it's what grew my legs,
it bulped my shoulders,
like those things, it put on a lot more mass onto my physique.
And then when I peeled down, it was very obvious
that that served my body.
You know, we're, you know, when powerlifting
works phenomenally for aesthetics,
and typically for me, I saw it be super effective
with my female clients who were very body focused.
The ones who were very aesthetic focused,
who'd been going to the gym for a while, and
it's all about, you know, I got to change how I look, I got to change how I look, they
watched the scale, watched the scale.
I switched them to powerlifting because I knew that it would get them to focus on performance.
I knew it would get them to focus on how strong they were.
I knew it got them to move away from the small isolation movements where I got to feel
every little muscle, and I'm like, no, no, no, no, forget all that, we're gonna get you really strong
at some of these core lifts,
and they would get these phenomenal aesthetic gains.
They'd come to me and be like, oh my God,
my butt never look bigger and better.
My hamstrings look round, I have better posture.
Then we would go back to the body sculpting bodybuilding routines,
and they would get better results.
100% if you have somebody who is,
and that's another great example, if you are a superset
chaser, 15 to 20 reps, low rest period person training, and lots of plyometric stuff, and
that's the stuff you love, and you're also trying to sculpt this aesthetic physique, switching
your mindset over to a powerlifting type routine is going to build incredible amounts of muscle on you
So this is a depends question as always
But it really it who I'm talking to would be where I would push this person, but absolutely powerlifting could
Benefit aesthetics tremendously next question is from Cameron Stewart 18
What are the top three to five things that the average
American can do to improve their long term health?
Oh, great question.
So I'll list what I think is number one.
And the reason why I think it's number one is when I think of all the things that a person
can do to positively affect their health, when I think of the average person, I think of
what will give me the most bang for buck.
What's the one step that someone can take that's going to make the biggest general impact?
Not perfect because it's only one step.
There's more bang.
There's more steps.
But what's the one thing that the average American can do that will really positively give
the biggest positive impact?
If we look at the average American and we look at the health problems, the vast
majority of our health problems, our chronic health problems are related to obesity and
the overconsumption of food. That's number one. It really is. And, you know, even high sugar,
high carb, high fat, the wrong foods, when you throw that on top of a lot of calories,
they become catastrophic. So the number one thing, and if it's because it's one thing,
it can only make it one thing.
So I'm not gonna say diet,
because that's a lot of things, right?
I'll say one thing.
Avoid heavily processed foods, that's it.
I've got three right away, and that's number one.
I've got three right away that come to mind.
Number one, 100%, I agree with you, processed foods.
Yeah, because that drops your calorie by five to six hundred calories.
It is a simple, and it's not simple in what it takes discipline-wise.
It's simple as in what it takes to follow.
Yeah, just get rid of it, like eat whole foods,
if you're hungry, eat whole foods.
Not trying to tell you to count,
not trying to pay attention to macros,
none of that shit.
Just literally eliminate processed foods.
That single thing, I think, is the best thing you do.
The second thing I would say is actually creating good habits
and behaviors around movement.
And it could be as simple as this.
Add a 10 to 20 minute walk to meals.
Every time you eat that you just make a habit
of you don't sit on your ass for the next 45 minutes,
you just, and it doesn't need to be,
it'd be great if it's 45 minutes or an hour,
but make the habit of going for 10 to 20 minute walk right after you eat.
That's called ritualizing activity.
Right. It's 100%, you're 100% right now.
You might be thinking,
God, a 10 minute walk, aren't you guys trainers? Don't you guys teach people
resistance training? You'll also say,
yes, that would be great. That's actually the best possible thing you could do.
But again, just like I said, with eliminating processed foods,
you ritualize some activity, the odds that you're consistent,
the odds that you can fit in your day,
and the impact it'll have because of that.
Remember that.
Impact doesn't necessarily mean the best thing.
Impact has to take into account what will people actually do?
How many people will this work for?
And what you just said makes perfect sense.
Ritualize a little bit of activity.
This one isn't really fitness-related.
It's more like community related.
And I think that based off that study that you had told us a while back about like relationships
and like how that plays into a factor with your long term health.
And you see this in the blue zones and you see this with, we're social creatures.
We're social animals.
And I think that we've all gone way beyond that.
And we think that we're being social by being on our phones
and talking to people through social media
and through all these things.
We don't have any meaningful interactions
with other human beings.
And I think if you weren't to like,
kind of definitely work on that
and like work on giving more of yourself
into your community, making friendships,
making relationships with people
like in terms of long-term health,
and have a massive impact.
Statistically speaking, you're 100% right, Justin.
Having good relationships is paramount.
In fact, having bad relationships is equivalent
to smoking, I think something like 15 cigarettes
ever so much.
I think of it stress it causes.
It's crazy you, I didn't even think that,
and you went to that point.
And the reason why I knew the 95% communication thing
was because what I was gonna write about
was exactly this topic is,
if the average person is claiming
that they're spending four to five hours
on social media every day,
95% of communication is nonverbal
and actually physical, right, in front of somebody,
how much are our social communication skills
degrading as Americans right now by being...
Why are you saying there's so much conflict?
So that's why we have emojis and all kinds of ways
to try to make up for the difference.
But it just doesn't, it just doesn't,
absolutely doesn't, studies will prove this.
And in regards to the relationships,
you know, it's funny, I,
Jessica and I like to walk around the neighborhood
and we'll do this like 30 minute loop.
And we ran into an old friend of mine,
the guy that I way back when I first
opened my personal training studio when I was 23, I think.
I trained this guy first, I think, great guy, one of the nicest guys I've ever met, lost
contact, but I still remembered him and thought about him, ran into him, he lives in our
neighborhood.
So we start talking, he's got kids, and we're like, after we leave, we should have them
over for dinner.
Now we didn't, now you know why we didn't?
Because why most people don't.
You think about all the time, the energy,
we gotta organize.
But you know, we talked about it,
and I said, you know what, that prevents so many of us
from not having these relationships,
but the reality is every time we do it, I've never,
I'm almost never.
You never regret it.
No, I've invited people, yes, it's a lot of work and all stuff,
but then when they leave, I'm like, you know, that was a meaningful four hour, you know
Conversation of it because I've been coaching and putting myself out there a little bit more and like interacting with other parents and kids and
You know, I just forgot how much of an impact that made you know even on myself
Not not to mention you know
Everybody else that that we're starting to connect with more.
So, I had three that came to mind right away.
One was not what you just said, Justin, but I 100% agree that if we're going three to
five, that has to be in one of those right there.
The other one that I think is extremely important and extremely overlooked is building
some sort, and I think it's getting worse, so this becomes more important, is building
some sort of night ritual the same way you have a morning ritual.
And I like saying it like that versus telling you something specific to exactly, because
everyone's going to have an individual of variance just like we have with our morning
routines.
But the one single thing you can do that will impact it is just make it a priority the
same way you do a morning routine.
The same way you are ready for your day.
You a lot yourself, a certain amount of time to shower, you a lot yourself, a certain
amount of time to brush your teeth, to have your breakfast, to make your coffee, to maybe
read, I don't know what you do in the morning.
Poop for sure, yeah, poop, whatever.
You for sure have somewhat of a routine that you start your day off with and some routines
are probably better than others, but at least having one is set you up
to have a successful day, right?
Yeah, you're right, 100%.
Cause we go to bed, we hit the pillow, we expect,
I'm gonna go to sleep, have great sleep.
Right.
And lack of quality sleep is very detrimental.
100%.
And only getting worse with the phones coming into the bedroom,
with the TVs coming into the bedroom,
with the laptops being on your lap still
and looking at in the lights, and we talk about this all time
disrupting sleep so just having some sort of discipline around
How you prepare yourself to sleep, which is one of the most important times of the day even though you're asleep
As far as your body hormonally and longevity wise and stress wise so that to me
I think if you treat that with care.
What a great list.
Think about this.
If the average American dramatically reduced,
did even count calories and they just dramatically reduced,
heavily processed food consumption,
ritualized a little bit of activity,
maybe tying it to, when I wake up or tying it to food,
like you said Adam, so all day,
now 10 minute walk after every meal, that's nothing.
They prioritize relationships a little bit.
Like, okay, I'm gonna go out of my way
to hang out with people a little bit
and talk with them.
And then the fourth one you said,
just create a ritual so you can prepare yourself for sleep.
They just did those four things.
Boy, that alone would solve a huge chunk
of the chronic health problems
that we're suffering from right now.
Totally.
Next question is from Jeremy Longprey.
What are the positives and negatives of being a trainer?
Do you have any advice that you wish you knew
when you first started?
Hard to get rich.
Yeah, I was gonna say.
It's not, if you're not a money grab.
If you're super driven by money
and you just wanna make a lot of money,
which I was.
Yeah, get into finance or investments.
You know, work with money.
That's how you make money.
I'm either that or, you know, by defense, because I am this person.
I was driven first by money before I was the passion to become a personal trainer.
But because I was so driven by money and I fell in love with personal training,
you figured out a way to do that.
Exactly. It forced me to get better and better at my craft
because just being good, being a good trainer,
you're not gonna get rich at all
and even being great probably, you're not.
So it really forced me to continue to reinvent myself,
to grow, to learn, to push, to be at a whole other level,
to get to that small percent,
that make it to that kind of revenue.
So yeah, that's, that would be a negative, right?
A negative would be it's a potentially, right?
Yeah.
If you're trying to be a trainer, if you're trying to be a trainer and you're not passion-driven
by fitness, you're going to have a tough time because that's got it.
That's what takes you through everything.
Here's another negative.
It's exhausting.
Yeah.
It's a very exhausting job.
Now you might think, well, why?
You're not doing construction.
Carry the emotions of other people.
Not just that.
That's a big part of it.
The other part of it is, let's say you work
an eight hour shift.
Yeah, you gotta split.
Yeah, very few trainers work a nine to five.
Yeah, not only that, but let me take it a step further.
Let's say you work an eight hour shift at an office.
You have, there's a lot of time in that eight hours
where you could take a break,
you don't need to talk to anybody,
you can relax, you could go on the internet,
talk to your friend.
If you're training eight clients in a day,
first off, like what Adam said, never are they back to back.
If you're training eight clients in a day,
you're there for 12 hours because there's always gaps.
But number two, you're on all eight hours.
There's no break.
Client shows up, I'm working.
There is no break in between,
and that can be really, really exhausting.
You determine the energy.
And I think that's what you get.
It is like a suck in a sense where
you gotta really amp yourself up
so you can portray the best version of yourself constantly.
Now some of the positives are,
if you make it, this is why too,
right away when I meet another trainer
and I ask him how long you've been doing it,
and if they've been doing it for beyond five years,
I know they're probably pretty good at what they do,
because it's really tough if you're not a good trainer
to have made it past five years,
because the things that we're talking about,
even if you're really good, you're gonna struggle with this.
Your schedule is gonna be tough.
You're gonna go through clients you don't like training.
You're not gonna make a lot of money. And so if you've
persevered through that, you're probably a pretty damn good trainer if you've made five years
or longer. But one of the positives are once you do establish yourself and you build a good reputation
for what you do and you're known for being a great trainer and the referrals begin to come in,
then you can start to get very picky about who you train.
And it took me a long time.
You get to hang out with cool people.
Yeah, I mean, it definitely got to a point
where towards the back half, for sure, of my, you know,
my 20 years, is I definitely got really picky
with who I train.
And then my clients got really exciting
because I couldn't wait to see them
because not only was I getting paid good,
because I also moved my rates up by that time,
but I was also gonna learn something.
I always knew I was gonna get something from them,
like that would continue to,
and that is the same thing that makes us very passionate
about the podcasting is,
you know, that's even more accelerating than what training was.
Training, I love because I've got some CEO
or I've got some author, I've got some brilliant tech person.
And I love to communicate between sets and ask questions.
And so, I get this front row seat to these brilliant minds
that I can pick whatever questions I want to ask them
because they're on each other's time.
That is extremely valuable.
And you develop a close relationship
because these people see you for one to three
undivided attention hours a week for years.
So they spend more undivided time with you
than they do with most of their family members.
So you actually develop a really close relationship
and it's great when they're successful smart people.
I mean, one of the reasons why I love training doctors,
you guys know I love science and I love medicine
and I love health, I would ask them all kinds
of insane questions and because we're friends,
they would talk to me about them
and they valued the time as well.
So it was really cool.
The other part is this is that there's a lot of jobs
that are out there where you don't really feel your value,
you don't really feel the meaning behind what you're doing
because you're either pushing buttons or you're making a small part of a big product.
And so you don't necessarily see the impact that you have in society.
When you're training people and you're doing a good job and they lose weight, get better
shape, they feel no more pain, their health improves, you see it directly.
And so you have this incredible sense of meaning.
The reward is right in front of you.
Totally.
I think that, I mean, that's initially what people get into,
I think, personal training if they're really passionate
about it, they want to impact other people's lives,
and you can do that on a one-to-one basis,
and it's literally right in front of you.
And I totally agree.
I've had some of the best conversations I've ever had
is with some of my, you know, main clients
that I see on a regular basis.
And I just can't, you're not gonna get that
from a regular job,
because you're not gonna be able to go that deep
with somebody else,
because you're on this journey together.
You become like, it's a deep bond that you share.
Well, to Salis Point about the meaning thing,
of all the professions, it's probably,
it's not the only one. There's plenty of other ones that I think doctors would say they probably
feel similar with this too, is that it reveals your purpose really quick, like if this was
what you were meant to be doing. The first time that you do something where you fundamentally
change somebody's life, like somebody came to you, they're 45 years old, they've struggled
with weight loss forever, they're obese, they've 45 years old, they've struggled with weight loss forever,
they're obese, they've tried this diet, they've done this,
and you unlock something for that person
that like fundamentally changes them forever.
Oh my, it gets me emotional just talking about it
because it reminds me of all those feelings
that I've had when I've had a client like this.
When you get that, holy shit, does that provide such a larger purpose
in what you're doing?
And if you just remember that as a trainer,
that that's your true North,
then everything that you do before that to lead to that,
will really help guide you in your career.
And that's extremely rewarding.
Yeah, to me, it's like, it's truth.
It's like, it's like, finding truth.
You know, I feel like it's like a deep like that.
Like you're on this journey to find, like answers like that.
If you have one little key for them,
that's a truth that they didn't have before.
You know, and it's like something that you can help them find
and you're like sort of this oracle.
Like you're here, here's where it is,
but you have to find it yourself.
And the reward in it is that, you know,
they understand it and then they apply it themselves.
That's the reward.
Yeah, and it's just positive.
It's always positive.
And it can be with people who are totally different from you.
You know, I've had clients that have completely differing political views and religions
and whatever, but they're there to get healthy.
I help them get healthy.
And it's incredible.
You know, some of them, I remember phone get healthy, and it's incredible.
Some of them, I remember phone calls
I would get from clients.
I've told this story before, I had an older client
who came in on her day off to tell me she was so excited.
She was 80 years old.
She had lost her independence.
Her daughter came in and hired me to train her.
And after about seven or eight months of training,
this woman regained
her independence. And she came into my gym on her off day to tell me that she was able
to go grocery shopping for the first time in two years by herself. She was able to close
the trunk of her car all by herself. And she made the trip to come into my gym, walked
in, gave me a hug and said, I'm independent again because of the training
that you've given me.
And that right there was worth,
it's worth more than money to me.
It was worth way more than money.
It's what kept me a personal train for a long time.
Believe me, I had clients offer me jobs
and wanted to pay me more.
And I was like, you know,
I need to feel like I have some meaning behind what I do.
You know, not to end this on a negative note,
but there's a positive crap.
You get, yeah, I know we were all like
getting emotional
and positive and I'm gonna crap you out for a second,
but it just reminded me of something that really bothers me
and it was something that I spoke to a lot
as a leader of trainers for many, many years
is the scarcity mindset.
And if you really understand your purpose of helping
and serving people and you've fallen in love
with personal training and you claim that you love it so much and that is your purpose and what you're
doing and you're listening, you're nodding your head and you're like, yes, that's the
feeling's amazing in your trainer.
But then you're also scared to direct your people towards information that it could be
provided a better way through them than yourself in fear of losing financial gain.
It's such a scarcity mindset and we'll put a ceiling on your cap of how great you become.
One of the things that made me very successful as a trainer is I never feared that because
I truly believe that if my true north was that my ultimate goal was to unlock that key
for this person is to provide that life-changing feeling
or moment for them or forever change their behaviors.
And if everything I was giving towards him
wasn't doing that, or even if I was doing things for them,
but I knew there was somebody else
that could provide even more value for that person.
I was okay with potentially losing them as a client
to give them the answer or to help them better.
If you've come from that place,
it always comes back to unfold.
I might have lost 100%.
I might have lost $150 an hour
because I sent her over to Dr. Ruscio
who really needs to dive into her gut.
And even though I understand that stuff really, really well
and I've read lots of stuff,
he's fucking 10 times better than I am at that.
Even though I lost the $150 an hour client,
I passed it over to somebody who I think
is really gonna change that person's life.
What ends up happening is two, three years down the road,
that person has not only talked about the great things
that Mike did, but she'll always remember
that it was me who sent her over there to help her.
I get just as much credit for that.
And it may not directly affect my pocket right then and there,
but I always end up getting three, five,
10 other people reaching out to me because of that.
And you know what's funny?
I've never lost a client because of that.
Right.
It's never happened to me.
If anything, they come to me more
because I guided them in the right direction.
As far as advice that I'd have for myself
when I first started, I wish my pump existed.
I wish because my personal training knowledge came from
certifications, bodybuilding magazines,
my own research and my own experience.
If my pump had existed back then,
I would have shaved, I mean, you can't ever replace experience,
but I would have shaved a good,
five years off the amount of time it took me
to go from sucky trainer to, not bad trainer.
And with that, go to minepumpfree.com
and download all of our guides, resources and books.
They're all totally free.
We have a personal trainer guide on there as well.
Not just exercise and fat loss guides.
We have guides for personal trainer.
So again, mindpumpfree.com.
You can also find the three of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin.
Me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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