Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1246: Cellulite Reduction Strategies, Preventing Joint Pain When Lifting Heavy, Frequency Vs. Duration When Performing Mobility Work & More
Episode Date: March 11, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about whether red light therapy actually helps reduce the appearance of cellulite, ways to prevent joint pain when liftin...g heavy, whether it is better to do small portions of mobility work throughout the week or to dedicate a full day to just mobility, and the popularity of “What I eat in a day” vlogs. Public vs Private schools. The differences, big issues, impact & MORE. (4:58) The anti-anxiety and neurological benefits of CBD. (22:57) Mind Pump on the canceling of Arnold Classic due to the coronavirus & MORE. (31:13) The coronavirus effect on the travel industry. (36:20) Recapping Mind Pump Live, the VIP dinner & MORE. (39:42) The natural ways to protect your immune system from viruses. (45:07) Fun Facts with Justin, Pringles edition. (46:40) #Quah question #1 – What's your take on red light therapy? Does it actually help reduce the appearance of cellulite? (49:35) #Quah question #2 – If I lift heavy will it cause my joints to hurt over time? If so, is there any way to prevent it? (58:42) #Quah question #3 - Is it better to do small portions of mobility work throughout the week or should you dedicate a full day to just mobility? (1:04:53) #Quah question #4 - “What I eat in a day” vlogs are very popular on social media. Why do you think we are so interested in what social influencers eat? (1:07:48) Related Links/Products Mentioned March Promotion: MAPS Powerlift ½ off! **Code “POWER50” at checkout** National Center for Education Statistics Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! The Farm Bill, hemp legalization and the status of CBD: An explainer FDA Releases Statement Regarding CBD; Industry Reacts Airlines are burning thousands of gallons of fuel flying empty 'ghost' planes so they can keep their flight slots during the coronavirus outbreak The Inventor of the Pringles Can was Buried in One Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Sal’s post on products and value to your life A Controlled Trial to Determine the Efficacy of Red and Near-Infrared Light Treatment in Patient Satisfaction, Reduction of Fine Lines, Wrinkles, Skin Roughness, and Intradermal Collagen Density Increase Adam Schafer's DEEP Squat Mobility Secrets | Behind The Scenes at Mind Pump Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) • Instagram Laurie Christine King (LCK) (@lauriechristineking) Instagram Dexter "The Blade" Jackson (@mrolympia08) Instagram
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we answer fitness and health questions that are asked by listeners like you.
But the way we open the episode is by talking about current events, things that are on our mind.
Sometimes we mention our sponsors.
That's known as the intro portion of the episode.
Today's episode was 44 minutes of intro.
The rest was fitness questions.
Here's what went on in today's episode of Mind Pump.
We open up by talking about public versus private schools.
So we had a discussion about the value of each one brings to the table.
Stay with us.
Then we talked about CBD, Cannaba Dial, its anti-anxiety effects, its neuroprotective effects,
and then we talked about some current events news around CBD.
By the way, we work with a company called Ned that makes full spectrum hemp extract, which
also contains CBD.
This is the CBD product that we recommend.
It's the one that we like the best.
The only one.
And of course, because you listen to Mind Pump,
you get a discount on their product.
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and you'll get 15% off your first purchase.
Then we talked about the canceling of the Arnold Classic
and the coronavirus.
We talked about ghost flights in Europe.
These are planes flying without people.
That was really bad.
The width.
Really weird.
Then we talked about the VIP dinner we had
with some fun guests.
These are people who came to our live event,
who paid extra to come hang out with us for dinner.
What a great time.
We talked about the coronavirus again
and how elderberry may actually prevent
the coronavirus from getting too bad.
That's my own speculation, by the way, it's not fact.
We talked about Pringles.
The guy who invented Pringles did some weird stuff.
Fun fact.
Then we got into the fitness question.
The first question, what's your take on red light therapy?
Does it actually help reduce the appearance of cellulite?
So red light therapy, you know,
it was a company we worked with called Juve
that makes a product that produces this red light.
And it's purported to help a lot of things,
reduce wrinkles, cellulite, regrow hair.
I know it sounds crazy, but believe it or not,
there's actually studies supporting it.
So we talk about those studies in that part of the episode.
And of course, because Juve is one of our sponsors,
we have a discount for you.
If you go to juve.com, that's j-o-o-v-v.com-forstash-mindpump,
you get a free Maps Prime program
with the purchase of $500 or more and free shipping.
By the way, they have finance programs.
So if you don't want to pay it outright you'd like to make payments
You could do 12 months at 0% APR financing for the Juve Go mini and solo or 18 months
That's 0% APR financing for the Juve duo max quad and elite so they do hook you up pretty much all of them
The next question if I lift heavy will it cause my joints to hurt over time?
If so, is there any way to prevent it?
So we talk all about heavy lifting, the right way to do it, the wrong way to do it, and
how your joints may actually benefit from heavy lifting if you do it the right way.
No pain all gain.
The next question, this person says, is it better to do small portions of mobility work
throughout the week, or should you dedicate a full day
to just mobility?
So which one is better, which one is more effective?
The final question is, what can I eat in a day?
These vlogs are very popular on social media.
What do we think?
Why are they so popular?
So we talk all about these, what I eat in a day vlogs
and why we think so many people are so interested
in these things.
Yeah, Justin thinks they're super boring.
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Yeah!
Teacher time! And T-shirt time!
And it's T-shirt time.
Oh shit, Doug, you know it's my favorite time of the week.
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I think it's fascinating what you brought up
the other day about the public schools.
You know, it's so weird to me.
And I wonder if this is gonna get disrupted in our time,
where what do they say, the average kid cost
a public school how much?
Well, it depends where, but I know in California,
it's around $10,000 a year.
Which a good private school you can get for 10 to 14,000.
You can get a G-Sim one, especially Catholic school.
Oh yeah, for 10,000.
Yeah, 100%.
I mean, you can almost get that in the Bay Area. You can get that other places. You know what the big problem I think is, is
that people don't have a choice. It's based on where you live. So there's a lot of people
who are stuck in whatever circumstance, trying to make ends meet. And then on top of it,
the school that they have to send their kid to is terrible. Because here's a thing, there's
definitely private schools that are better than other private schools.
But when you go to public schools,
and there's some public schools that are good too,
but if you look at the bad ones,
the bad public schools are really bad,
like really, really bad.
There's some in some areas that are just,
they're basically like drop your kid off
and it's babysitting and then you pick them up.
Now people that are in the system,
you know the way they think the answer to that
is more money infused into those, right?
That's the idea.
One of the worst things you can do
is give more money to something that's failing
without them figuring out why they're failing.
It's just bad business, bro.
It's terrible.
It's terrible.
It makes no sense.
You just incentivize bad behavior.
Dude, you know what's a good example of this?
Okay, so it's like the FDA.
FDA's an example of this.
We're not starting with all this, are we?
No, why not?
Why not?
Why aren't you talking about this? No, no, here Why not? Why aren't we going to talk about this?
No, no, here's a good example.
You can have fun.
That's fine.
There's no we're coming in hot politics.
No, it's not part of this stuff.
No, no, no, no, no.
No, this is interesting now.
These are interesting conversations for me, and now that I have a chart.
Sure, right?
So I think about this stuff.
So I'll give you an example.
Let's say the FDA, let's say something passes through the FDA, and it ends up getting people
sick. FDA, let's say something passes through the FDA and it ends up getting people sick, like
a recall on Tylenol or some spinach that has E. coli on it or something like that, right?
And that happens, let's say that happens a few times, the result of that is typically
more funding.
So the FDA fucks up, they don't catch something, and of course nobody's perfect, but they
don't catch something or they really mess up like in the case of Of certain over-accounting medications that have gone through you know, you know their their process and
What they end up doing is saying hey, we're we need more money
That's why we're messing up and they end up getting more money now with a private
Company the opposite is true if they screw up. They don't get no. The next guy who does a better job gets more money.
There's competing, there be competing agencies.
So companies like the FDA or public schools, here's a public school, failing, not doing well
at all, almost always gets put on the fact that they need more money, that they're lacking
enough funds.
That's always where it goes.
It's almost never, hey, we're doing what the money isn't good or we're not allocating
it right or not being very efficient.
It's almost always we need more funding and if you look at the charts, you could see that
that a lot of them have received more funding and haven't improved at all. So what I think should happen is I think
I think people should have a choice. I think if you have the money, you should be able to choose where you go.
So it's point to me then, how does it, okay, if the government gives the, I'm assuming
that it's an average number, right?
We'll be able to, when we throw a number around like 10,000 per kid, right?
Right.
That's California, I believe.
Okay, so these are, these numbers are arbitrary, right?
So different.
Right, so you have 10,000 will just say for arguments, say, in this conversation, the average
public school is getting per child.
And if a private school is roughly the same thing,
what is it that the private school is getting
that it allows them to produce such better results?
I can't imagine they can't pay the teachers that much more.
They don't.
So then what teachers don't make much more
in private schools or sometimes they make more?
So what is it?
Is it really because the private school has allowed to do their own curriculum?
They don't have to follow what the whatever but some extent they still have to follow
state guidelines. They're still have certain things that they have to follow. So they're still
under the you know the regulation of the state. Are they really just manage that much better?
Well think about it this way. If you if you're a kid, if you're sending your kid to a private elementary
school, right, and you don't like the way they're doing something, what do you do?
Well, I go talk to the principal. Okay, but let's say a principal or I pull my kid out and take
him somewhere and they lose their money. Right. Now, let's say you're a parent, you can't afford to pay
for an extra $10,000 year for private school. So your kid goes to public school.
Now your kid is going to this public school down the street
that your district is a part of,
where you live, this is where your kid's supposed to go.
You can't pull your kid out.
Or if you do, it's really fucking hard.
So you really think that's the difference.
Yeah.
So if that's the case, then why doesn't it makes total sense
to me that everybody in the United States should get a $10,000
voucher that they can go apply to any school that they want, because that allows all schools
charged like a private school would.
That would even allow private schools to increase their rates, because now I'm getting
right now.
They can add to it or something.
Right, right.
Like right now, you have to pay out a pocket to send your kids to private school right now.
So how nice would that be if 10,000 of that
was taken right off because the government gives you.
That's actually something.
So voucher programs have been used in some states.
Isn't that like a charter school?
Or is it different?
No, just find that.
A little bit different.
Charter schools are a little bit different.
And they do give more choice though.
And they tend to outperform regular public schools.
But it's 100, lots of politicians proposed that.
They want a voucher system where a parent,
and you know who's-
That's a lot on the ballot for you in our district.
And California used to have that.
Back in, when California had the best public schools,
a lot of our schools did that,
and then it went to this now where you can't do that.
Now, why do you think people don't want a voucher system?
Well, because now you're gonna lose money if you suck.
You're gonna lose lots of money.
And you don't wanna be beholden to that kind of competition,
you wanna be able to be like, no, no matter what,
these kids are guaranteed to go here.
Otherwise, what you'll end up seeing,
because here's what would happen if we did
a system like that nationwide,
you see a lot of schools close down,
and you'd see other schools grow.
And they don't wanna do that.
By the way, the people that support that the most
are low income individuals and to break it down even further,
single parent low income households support
voucher systems most because they're typically stuck
with the shitty public school in their poor neighborhood
and they have no choice.
When they're given the opportunity
to send their kids to other schools, oh my God,
they go crazy. And that's one of the best possible,
so I don't understand why we don't.
I think that we should have a little bit of those forces,
what do you know, what do you call market forces for public school,
so that the bad school suffer.
If you do bad job, guess what?
You lose money because kids are going to go somewhere else.
Now, are you at least set that you get a tax break for that?
For doing what?
Because I feel like at the bare minimum,
when you get no tax break,
you see, no, no, no, no, no.
So I'm paying for public schools and private schools.
That's, that just makes no sense to me.
Well, at the bare minimum,
I feel like you should be able to get that, right?
They would, see, then they would argue
and say that they would lose funding for,
because here's the thing,
in this to me, like paints the picture.
That's like the welfare system.
If you're so afraid of losing funding
because we're gonna allow people
to take a tax credit for paying for private,
then that right there tells you that
your schools aren't doing a good job.
If you're afraid that people are gonna take their money out
because they can now,
that means that you're not doing a great job.
But anyway, that's the big issue.
So I think I would agree with a voucher system.
I think why not?
Why not give parents the opportunity?
Have you ever looked into what they do
with underperforming teachers in public schools?
It is very hard to get them to be resumably there.
Or smoothly there.
Or 10 years or something like that.
10 years.
Yeah, oh, it's crazy.
How hard it is.
They shuffle them.
They just move them back and forth and do.
And if you can look into some of the some of the some stories
That you can read and you're like oh my gosh. Why hasn't this teacher been been moved or fired or whatever?
I remember when they were used to be afraid of like in the fitness space when these to be afraid to fire a trainer and they do that
You know they have shuffle them around yeah, they just shuffle them around to other clubs
And I remember being somebody like what like I remember being being somebody would call up to my district manager and say,
hey, this Justin kid is just fucking not performing.
Like I got a piece of shit.
Yeah, I gotta get rid of him.
I know he's got a lot of our clients.
I know he's been here before I got here,
but I gotta get rid of him.
I can't lead this team with him.
He's fat.
So, just to live the brand.
Yeah, so I would call my DM and before, you know,
you'd have to run by before you do a fire and stuff
and a lot of times if they've been somebody
been there a long time and, you know,
they'd be afraid to, oh my God, it's gonna shake things up
and you know, he's got this, he's already got some clients.
So let's move him over to Parkmore or let's move him over
to Capital, let's move him to another club
and I'd always think like that's such terrible leadership.
Like he's only gonna go poison another staff. I would you do that. You used to
do that all the time. Same mentality, right?
Yeah, absolutely. Well, you know, here's the good news about it because although our education
generally does poorly when you compare to other countries, our private universities crush
are super expensive with a crush, but we still innovate very,
very well.
So although we don't seem to do well on test scores and stuff like that, our innovation
still is exceptional.
And I think that's more of a result of our culture.
Exactly.
I was going to speak to the culture, but we always talk about the differences between good gyms
and bad gyms, and the same applies to the school system.
It's like you're creating and fostering this thriving culture
where everybody is stimulated
and teachers are motivated to teach these kids
that wanna be there.
It's all part, it all goes hand in hand.
It's like if you got one poison teacher in there
that you can't remove them, it's gonna affect everybody. hand and hand. It's like if you got one poison, you know, teacher in there that has,
you can't remove them, it's going to affect everybody.
Yeah, but I'm referring really to the general culture of this country where we really value
independence, independent thought, rebellious thought. There's some downsides of that, right?
It can be a little tumultuous, but the plus sides is we have a lot of innovation. We're really
encouraged to innovate, whereas in some other cultures being different
or stepping outside of what the norm is,
it's so shunned that they have good productivity
but terrible innovation as well.
Well, to the point of public schools versus private schools,
what do we look like in comparison to other countries?
Like I have no idea what it's like.
Our private schools do very well.
Our public schools do pretty bad.
And then what do other countries typically have?
Do they have a similar split,
like where they run a half public, half private,
or do a lot of other countries?
Are they completely public?
What do they look at?
That's a good question.
I know public school is publicly funded schools
are present in every developed nation I can think of.
And you know what's funny,
if you look at the investments,
the government investments, education
it tends to be one of the smarter investments.
We can show some pretty good,
typically some pretty good returns
with smart investment there,
but it's a present everywhere.
I think we have the largest private school business,
I guess you would say, in comparison to other countries,
we have a pretty thriving private school market, especially the universities, right? Our universities are not publicly funded,
and they're very expensive for other reasons. I think we've tried to make them more affordable by
giving away money so easily, which has only bloated the cost of universities, but still in comparison,
our universities are the most sought after. Now, do we have statistics to show,
what percentage of kids go on to be successful entrepreneurs
or big business men and women that came from a private school
in comparison to a public school?
Like how successful are they 10, 15, 20 years from now?
I have my theories, but I don't have statistics.
You know what's funny about that?
It's so hard to tease out other factors.
Because if,
Right.
I'm a product of a public school, right?
So there's got to be, there's got to be plenty of other versions of myself.
And I know you are too, right?
Like so, Justin, you were too.
I did both.
You did both.
Yeah, so like college was all private.
Okay.
Yeah, but yeah, I, you know, public, well, I went to a state school first for college, but
yeah, I was definitely a product of both. And mainly the public school I was in, I was actually fortunate that, you know, public, well, I went to a state school first for college, but yeah, I was definitely a product of both.
And mainly the public school I was in,
I was actually fortunate that, you know,
the culture itself and like they performed very well.
And so, you know, my experience there has been pretty good.
But I can see the points made,
especially if you're in an area where it's like,
you don't have access to, you know,
a real quality school like that,
I think there's a problem there.
And I'm definitely like one to address that.
Yeah, you know what the biggest impact is, is parent involvement, regardless of whether
I'm a good brother.
That's key.
And I think I might have spoke to that a while back, but yeah, we want to be in the decision-making
process.
So you want to be a part of the board, you want to get yourself ingrained in whatever
you can in terms
of the community aspect, because they do listen. If you're there and you're representing
your kids and you're representing everybody else, like they're going to listen to you as
a parent.
That's an interesting point, because I know that my brother-in-law has his kid right now
that's in private middle school right now. It's a Catholic school over in the Bay Area.
And the school actually forces a lot of the involvement.
Yeah.
I mean, required.
Oh, yeah, he's required to do a lot.
He's got to show up to quite a few events.
He's got to help, like, I've never, I mean, I've never seen that in a public school before,
not to that extent.
So if that's a true stat, what you're saying, Sal, that, you know, a lot of it has more
to do with parent involvement, whether it's public or private. It means it's pretty ironic to me
that the private school is knows that obviously,
and then they make that a part of the curriculum.
Well, one of the reasons why the private school does that
is because in order for them to provide their services
for their lower cost and Catholic schools
are the lowest cost private schools.
So they typically cost less.
Part of it is of course they have a tax. They don't pay taxes like other, you know, institutions. And the other part of it
is that strategy exactly right there. So what they do is they can cut costs on personnel
by requiring parents to volunteer and do other things. And they actually give you options.
So some of these schools will say, you volunteer this many hours per year or you pay this much
intuition. So then it's up to the parent to decide
if they wanna pay more or if they wanna volunteer.
But there's a bit of a self-selection bias going on too.
I think that sometimes the parent who's willing to pay extra
is also willing to-
The parent that cares more, right?
Maybe just has more time, maybe has more resources
or maybe cares more.
I'm not sure.
But I think that's the biggest-
And that's not to say that somebody who sends their kid
to public should, I think, doesn't care.
I just, obviously, if you're investing in that, you care.
You might.
Yeah, you might.
And, but again, it might have just because you have
more resources, more time, you know, the parent who
can't, doesn't have that opportunity, might just have
no time because they're working two jobs.
Yeah.
You know, or, or, you know,
it's good to give them options.
Yeah, yeah.
But parent involvement is the involvement is definitely the biggest one
and it's hard to tease out.
Because I'll tell you what, you know it has a great,
if you look up the statistics of education,
you know which one has a great success rate?
Home schooling.
Yeah.
Home school kids crush.
When you really break it down,
and this is controversial, I know some people think
it's controversial, when you really break it down,
homeschool kids tend to kick ass,
but now is it because they're not getting educated
the formal way or is it because mom and dad spent so much time
with their kid trying to educate them
and spend so, we're so involved.
I think it probably has more to do with that.
Because they're so hyper involved.
I mean, they're definitely,
yeah, they're doing well academically.
I don't know, you know, socially.
I've met quite a few homeschool kids.
Well, you know, that's a big myth.
So I had friends who were really big in the homeschool.
I was gonna say, it is it is it.
I'm with Justin on that.
I have cousins that fucking weird kids.
So my cousin Stephanie is, and you guys know who she is.
She's been down here, but she's a big fan of the show,
for sure, listening right now.
And she's raised all of her kids that way.
Now, they have things that they put in place
to make sure that doesn't have part of the curriculum
is other activities and sports and things with kids
on a, for sure, weekly, maybe even daily basis.
They, you can do that.
Yeah, I think that's gonna solve that.
Like for me, like I've met some parents
that are doing that where they have,
they're in all the different sports,
like they're in all the different
like extracurricular activities
they even like have, you know,
they show up to the school for certain things too.
So they have options for them to interact.
Yes, there's lots of options.
Yeah, there's lots of options.
Here's the reason why you may notice
that some homeschool kids are a little weird
or different or not the same socially.
It's because the times when parents tend
to take their kids out of school
is because they struggle in school
because they have certain issues.
So what you'll find among the homeschool population
is a greater percentage of kids.
There's no selection there.
Yes, you'll see a greater selection of kids who have
learning, you know, challenge it.
Well, I know I was very deep in this.
I had clients that were really deep in the homeschool,
you know, the community.
Yeah, here in California.
And did a lot of them start first in school
and then they pulled them out.
Yeah, so their kids has some challenges.
One kid I know had such severe food allergies.
That's why the parent took him out.
I know a kid who was just struggling in math and reading
and the public school system just was not doing a good job.
And the kid was smart, he was sharp.
But the way the school was handling it,
he was making him feel really bad about himself
and he started to display destructive behavior.
So the parents took him out.
Now this kid is a grown adult
and you know, is he
a little different maybe but he's super charming, great kid, super cool. Like what's the word
I want to use very adjusted, well adjusted to adults and other kids and I his parents
100% made the right decision by taking them out of that situation. I think you see that
a lot. Yeah. Is where they're you know, oh my kid is struggling because they're maybe
a little different. So I'll take him out. And so that's why I think you see that a lot. Yeah. It's where, you know, oh, my kid is struggling because they're maybe a little different.
So I'll take him out.
And so that's why I think you see.
I'm just being real, dude.
I'm so freaking weird doing this.
I had to put it out there because I know we always like, you know, try and cover our tracks.
But, you know, hey, have you guys been getting this?
I've had some messages and I'm actually not even sure how to dance around this responding
to these type of questions.
But I'm getting more and more parents that are interested
and curious about using CBD for the anxiety that some of these kids have. Have you guys heard any of that
and have you got any messages similar?
I have. As of right now, it's not approved to be given to children.
A child consumption.
Yeah, except in medical situations where they either have seizures or other approved conditions.
Like CBD got approved by the FDA for treating
a form of epilepsy that you see in kids,
that's just absolutely devastating.
Now do you think this is just because the stigma
still kind of has around it right now
because I feel like it's a much safer drug
than some of the drugs these kids are getting prescribed
for anxiety?
You could make that case 100%, you could try to make that case, but it's still a medication.
And so I would say proceed with caution.
I wouldn't recommend it unless you're recommended by a doctorate because CBD has real effects
in the body.
It's not benign.
It's like you're taking it, it doesn't do anything.
It's got real genuine effects.
In the anxiety effects are the most powerful.
I mean, it's clear, especially when you use full spectrum, right?
When you have like hemp extract
that has other cannabinoids, you can tell, you take it,
and 30 minutes later, your anxiety is greatly diminished.
You should totally tell.
What's your guys' a theory on that?
Do you think that's gonna change in our time?
Do you think it's gonna be something
that will be more widely accepted
and we'll hear about parents starting to, because we think that's gonna change in our time? Do you think it's gonna be something that will be more widely accepted and we'll hear about parents starting to...
Because we know that the rise of anxiety
and anxiousness in these kids,
that this just generation that's coming up
and we've speculated on all the reasons
why it may or may not be,
but instead of actually using a pharmaceutical for this,
do you think that we're going to see in that?
And what I'm hearing from...
And this is, of course, my own little bubble of DMs
that I get of parents that are proceeding to do it
regardless of what they are being told
they should or shouldn't do it.
And obviously I don't come in and say,
what I think I'm not a fucking doctor,
you know what I'm saying?
So I'm not telling them they should or shouldn't do that.
Personally myself though,
if I was in that situation, I don't know,
I would, I personally would want to lean
on trying that before I did some pharmaceutical.
Well, so okay, so I'm gonna proceed with caution
because I'm not an expert in this, I'm not a doctor,
but here's how I would, and I'm gonna use my fitness,
my understanding of fitness and health
through my expertise and try to apply here.
The way that I would use an EnzioLytic
or anti-anxiety drug
with a child, whether it's CBD or something else,
would be as a way to reducing anxiety enough
so I could have them do the things
that are gonna reduce anxiety long-term.
Like exercise, go outside, change diet,
hang out with other kids.
All the things that the doctor would prescribe
for them to do in your life.
All the stuff that long-term is gonna have a major,
like if they're so anxious that they can't meet up with friends,
then maybe medicating them a little bit
so that they at least can meet with friends,
and then they build the relationships
and then we take them off medication, I'm saying.
Rather than leaning on having to take something all the time
to fight this feeling, it's just really a signal
of maybe your lifestyle,
because I see a huge difference in my kids
when they're outside, when they're not on their huge difference in my kids when they're outside,
when they're not on their computers or their tablets, when they're doing a huge, a massive
master.
Right.
And it's not, again, instead of taking a try and just to mask the root cause, it's maybe
a segue into helping you get to the things that you should be doing that will really
make a long, long, long, long, long, long.
CBD, so in 2018, we passed the Farm long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, there's a little bit of gray area there, but it's still legal.
So you've seen an explosion, plus people are really finding
a lot of value, especially for anxiety.
They're finding to, so they're expecting the sales
to double in the next five years.
And then I just read a study that showed that CBD
prevents brain cell death in situations where there's situations where it could potentially happen,
where you have like a poor diet or you're not getting out of oxygen, which might be good for
like MMA fighters or you know trauma, you know, brain trauma like with maybe football players.
Neuroprotectin. Yeah, it's really, it's really, that's really, I mean, and that's really where I lean on it, you know, quite a bit, and I've been using it quite,
you know, consistently over the years,
and I know that between that and, you know,
changing up and making sure I get really good sleep
and recovery and really emphasizing that a bit more,
like it's really helped, you know, to sharpen,
you know, my mind and get me to recall information
a bit better, and it's like, it's hard to like,
of course it's anecdotal, but it's like, it's hard to like, of course,
it's anecdotal, but it's something that I've known
has really made a big impact in what I've been doing.
Well, so the whole anxiety, anxious thing,
I wonder how closely related it is to like,
how I utilized like CBD, which is for me,
you know, it's, you know, semi-frequently,
it's when we have, we just got back
from an incredible live event again.
And, you know, man, I get so hyped after those.
It's so hard for me to, like, come down.
Calm everything down.
Yeah, to calm down and go to bed.
And nothing has seemed to work the same for me.
I mean, obviously, if I don't have my CBD with me,
I'm smoking.
And that kind of does that, where it calms, settles me down.
And I don't know if that is connected more to a mental thing,
if there's something going on me central, nervous system-wise,
what it is that it helps me relax,
so I then can settle down and go to sleep.
Well, it does act on the cannabinoid system,
and it helps your body utilize, CBD helps your body utilize
its own natural endocannabinoids,
which you provide the feeling of relaxation and relief.
It's like you take a deep breath,
that's the same kind of feeling.
And it definitely does work out.
And it's, it works different than like what a drug.
Like there's things that I've taken before,
like if you were to take, like, you don't feel drugged.
Yeah, it, not like what's the,
what's the drug that helps you sleep
that everybody takes all the time?
Zanix, like a Zanix.
I would take like a Zanix.
Like a Benzo.
Yeah, I would go right to sleep also.
But it's like a, that's a heavy feeling when I take it.
Very different.
It's a total different feeling.
And you don't get withdrawal,
at least I haven't gotten withdrawal from using,
because I'll use the net consistently for a week
to pay no situation,
and I won't use it for a week or two.
And I don't have withdrawal or anything like,
Benzo's can cause nasty.
Right, right.
But I mean, I say that because I know
that I've had people that like they are,
they use benzos on a regular basis
and then they want to switch and try CBD
and they're like, oh, it's not the same.
It's like, oh, no, it's definitely not
going to make you feel like a Xanix makes you feel.
Dude, I'll say this though.
So the FDA two or three days ago released a statement
on CBD.
So if you're listening and you, you know,
you purchase, you know, like our net product,
the net product that we're sponsored by,
which is their full spectrum hemp extract,
pay attention because you may want to stock up
because the FDA might be getting to the point
where they're going to start to regulate CBD and ban it.
They made a statement a few days ago
that didn't sound very positive.
Really?
Yes. So
they may be positioning themselves to get to the to a point where they say they're trying to pat in the whole thing now and like already it all back to them. It already is a patented drug. So um
I mean of course I would imagine there'd be some battles with that before it goes all the
way even if it were to though I feel like. You're already opened up the can. I mean it was interesting
that us traveling I was like, I forgot there was states
that really like ban all these, like even like CBD,
like that's like a forbidden substance.
I know we had a crazy.
We had a smuggle the joints in cells, cells asphalted.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
To go to Ohio.
We had to wrap that with a lot of plastic.
So yeah, yeah, he actually requested that.
I don't like joints that much.
Rachel has a disgusting look on her face.
I didn't want no idea that's what she was smoking on the other night.
So that's what she was doing.
She's like, this joint.
She's a surprise.
Yeah.
Tastes weird.
Tastes like butter scotch.
Why butter scotch?
It's so sweet.
Why would it taste like butter scotch?
I'm so red.
I don't know.
You tell me.
What do you go on out there, dude?
You Jessica getting a little weird language, dude.
That's not good.
Hey, speaking of traveling, what a great live event
we had in this club.
So obviously the Arnold clad, we tried to time it.
So it was around the Arnold classic,
because we figured there'd be a lot of people there.
So we could have a live event, and they're
going to be there anyway for the Arnold
or give some two reasons to go travel there.
Right.
Arnold Classic last minute canceled.
Crazy.
Last minute canceled due to coronavirus fears.
Although Ohio has zero coronavirus cases,
the mayor literally told them, don't hold this event.
So it was canceled two days.
By the way, I feel bad for the vendors.
I don't know if they're getting a refund.
Oh, I feel, yeah, terrible.
I feel bad for them.
And there's been a lot, I know.
And the city in general,
plane went on a rant for the entire weekend
of like trash and the whole thing.
And I know a lot of people that lost a lot of money.
And I totally feel for those people
in the defense of Arnold in this.
And I know everyone's been bashing them.
And we had this off air we discuss this
and similar conversation is I'm sure a lot of people had this off air, we discussed this in a similar conversation,
as I'm sure a lot of people had like,
oh, this is such a bunch of bullshit, blah, blah, blah.
I don't know if there's anywhere in the world
that would be a potentially worse situation
for someone who could have the coronavirus
and come in and then spread it,
then the Arnold classic.
And the reason why I think that is,
I don't, at least I don't know.
And you can talk about all the biggest soccer games.
You would not have more than a quarter million people
coming to, from all over the world,
because the Arnold attracts,
you know, a small percentage of people, probably,
from the United States in comparison to everywhere else.
So it attracts people from all over the world
into this small venue that is enclosed doors
and people are running around sweating, working out
and doing strong man competition.
We're in a lot of clothes.
Wearing stringers and high-fiving and hugging each other.
I don't know if there is a place in the world
that is probably more susceptible to spreading something.
Well, the annual world swingers convention probably worse.
So what's the only one I can know?
I don't think that gets a quarter million people.
How many times have you shown up to that?
A lot of people touch them.
Yeah, I know.
But I don't think that gets even where close
to a quarter million.
You know what?
So I was going back and forth,
and then somebody DM me who is an infectious disease
specialist because I was like, ah, it's an overreaction,
this is crazy.
So what this person said is they say, look,
the general public is overreacting
by going to Costco, buying up all the toilet paper
and water and freaking out.
That's probably not a good idea.
However, the way that governments are trying to incentivize
or outright tell people cities
to not hold these big public events,
they said that's a good thing because,
and they explained to me the exponential growth
of a virus and it made perfect sense,
because once a virus gets to a certain point you're screwed,
there's nothing you can do.
So for example, in Italy,
you guys saw what happened in Northern Italy.
Oh yeah.
They quarantined 16 million people.
So literally gyms are closed.
Like no soccer games can be held.
Funerals and weddings all canceled.
Restaurants are open, but the restaurants
have to separate people by three meters.
So you're kind of isolated.
They're encouraged to not leave in self quarantinequarantine. And if they think you're
trying to get out of there, then you can actually be jailed. Now, why are they doing that?
In Italy, the case is a coronavirus, double, double, double. So you guys know how like,
you ever hear the riddle, like, would you rather have a dollar today and a double every
day, or would you rather have, you know, and a double every day for the next 60 days, or
would you rather have $5 million. And the cranked answer is,
I'd rather have the dollar that doubles
because it's exponential growth.
Growth at the end of it,
you'd end up with, you know, $1 billion.
That's what happens to the viruses.
So they're trying to do the trying to stop it
before it just goes at a hand.
Now as far as like the death rate and all that stuff,
it's hard to say.
And I was asking them about this.
They said, you know, I read somewhere that the death rate
was like one to 3% which would make it terrible.
Like, that would be a terrible, terrible thing.
And they said, yeah, but that's only including the people
that get tested.
And people typically don't go to the hospital unless they're
really sick.
We don't know about all the people who just had a cold
or had no sick.
And they don't even realize that.
Yeah, and they don't.
And they're in the 60% that fully recovered.
Yeah, and there's people that did have it. Yeah, and they don't in the 60% that fully recovered. Yeah, and there's people that that did have it.
Yeah, so again, the point is it probably is understandable
that the Arnold classic gets canceled of all the things, right?
You know, I'm saying like of all the things that,
yeah, it was a precaution that was,
looks, looks like it was necessary.
Yeah, you know what I look at too though?
Is that economic ramifications really go downstream.
And so let's say you're,
you look at a city like Columbus, Ohio,
this is by far the biggest event that happens there.
Everybody was telling us, right?
So that means it's a lot of money,
it's a lot of revenue, a lot of tax money.
There's a lot of businesses that completely depend on this.
There was a, you know, one guy said that his business
gets 30% of all of his revenue for the whole year just on the weekend of the Arnold.
That's the same.
That's devastating to a business like that.
Completely.
So now, think of all the downstream ramifications.
Is that going to cause more sickness and death
versus the potential for this virus?
Well, that's an interesting thing.
You saw it affected the airline business
with these ghost flights.
Have you heard of this?
Yeah, this is over in Europe, right?
Yeah.
So they had to actually like still to be able to keep their spot.
So they have like certain amount that they,
I guess they sign sort of slots, slots that they own.
And even though they're not getting the numbers
to even fill any of these planes up,
they still have to fly them in order to maintain
their position. So which actually put a couple of bit, one or two business out of business planes up, they still have to fly them in order to maintain their position.
So which actually put a couple of bit,
one or two business out of business.
We'll explain that.
So the airlines in Europe,
they are, you are allotted certain amount of slots.
So give me an idea.
Okay, so I'm United Airlines.
You have, here's your time slots.
Here's your time slots.
That you can fly in and out.
You're already booked for them.
Now, if you don't fly in and out, you lose it.
Yeah. So that's a great example of a stupid regulation
that they applied for.
Because what's happening now is these are now their forests
to fly just to keep their soil and do all this.
And when pollute the environment, just waste gas
with an empty plane.
Completely empty or just like low.
Completely empty.
No.
They're flying completely empty planes back and forth.
Isn't that, is that Asana?
Yeah, that's a great example of.
Meanwhile, we have this like global warming,
people freaking out over.
Thank you.
The irony, right?
We have people talking about carbon footprints
and doing all this, and you're talking about,
in one day's time, this is so funny to me
when shit like this happens because,
if this is true Justin, and I'm assuming that, it's true, more than same order. Okay, so so you're you're telling me there's got to be more than one
One plane to that's flying ghost for this to make news, right?
Yep, so I would I would speculate that the the damage
You know on the ecosystem that this one plane this are these multiple ghost planes could do is more than I could do by changing all of my behaviors and
Yep, but not only that so crazy to me not only that
But think of the inefficiency that is happening with the gas the cost of the gas the employees that that's all money
That comes out of every that's all money that's gonna make travel
It's just negative
Revenue you know what this reminds me of so farmers would do this when they would have these,
again, more central planning,
farmers would be encouraged to burn wheat
so that they keep the price of wheat at a certain level.
It's just stupid, it's so terrible,
it makes no sense.
Here's some practices you could do,
because I did a lot of reading on how I could possibly
help myself.
Obviously wash your hands, here's a big one.
Your cell phone, the surface on your cell phone,
a virus can live on there for like 10 hours.
So you touch everything and then you touch your cell phone.
So one smart thing you might want to do is...
Wipe your cell phone down.
Yeah, like two or three times a day,
use like a chlorox wipe, wipe your cell phone down,
and then wash your hands.
Well, I was happy Rachel brought some of the disinfectant wipes.
I was doing that all in the plane.
Like, you know, as you do it,
as you bring like that, that little table,
that fold out table down and everything,
I'm like, I'm touching all this stuff
that has been like, you know, sneezed on and called.
Oh, they give me a steaming cotton cloth
to wipe down all that.
Oh, yeah.
You know, you paid 200 catapetit bougie over there.
You paid 260 bucks.
Yeah.
Extra so you consider the front. Do you buy cheap ass partners, dude? Fly Bougie over there. You picked 260 bucks. Yeah. Extras, so you can sit in the front.
You might cheap ass partners, dude.
Flight coach.
Yeah, the front bro, I get champagne.
Am I, oh, did I give it?
Nobody on the flight.
They give you a hot towel to wipe down all that stuff, man.
Yeah, no, they come every hour or so.
We were doing it wrong.
We were definitely doing it wrong.
But hey, I do want to say a few words about the event
that we had.
The VIP, bro. Let me tell you that first of all, I'm not going to be completely transparent.
Whenever we do private stuff like that, I'm always a little nervous of the characters
that we're going to get. You just don't, you have no idea who you're going to get in
a room like that. And we're going gonna be hanging out with them for hours.
Like, I was just so impressed with the group
of people that had attracted.
So cool.
That I could have talked to them and hung out
with them all night long.
In fact, I hope that we stay in contact with these guys
because all of them were really, really cool.
Each one of the dudes that showed up to this event,
this one we had all guys, we've never had all guys,
we normally have a mix of couples, women in.
And for some reason it was five dudes that signed up for it.
And all from different walks, you know,
Sebastian who was the general contractor
at the 20-month-year-old
son, right, Samson, right? That's really cool. So he was a GC, right? Then we had Andrew who brought
the gifts. Yeah, that Andrew, he owns the car dealerships. Yeah, he's like 15 of them, extremely successful.
Yeah, he's actually, he actually messaged me. What a fun guy. He's going to try and hook me up with
with the car in the future. Supercar is mad at you. What a fun guy, right? And then next to him, you had a Jamal who I was talking to, a lot which opened up with the car in the future. Super carers, Matt. What a fun guy, right?
And then next to him, you had a Jamal who I was talking to,
I was opened up with talking about how he thought I wasn't gonna,
I wasn't gonna be, I had a liking because he has a group training class.
He's got three different locations.
You know, he's as old as we are.
Have you seen the dude's jazzy?
Doodies so jacked.
Yeah, super jacked.
So, I'm being feelin' secure.
Such a great time hanging out and talking to him.
And then I had Andrew, the other Andrew,
Andrew who didn't bring a gift.
He was in hospitality.
Yeah, regional, regional vice president, hospitality
for hotels.
Super winning.
Really, right out the gates.
So we know when you get to a restaurant,
they do the, you know, the guy comes over.
We're at a fancy place, we're in a private room.
And so the waiter comes over and they always read like the fancy, you know, special.
Yeah, any special is, you know, Venice and, you know, covered in elderberry this and then,
you know, you know, special, whatever. It goes on for like 10 minutes.
It goes on for like 10 minutes. I'll detail it. And then there's like this pause afterwards
and Andrew's like, oh, I made that last night.
It felt damn it. I'll get some else. He did it so good though, but I actually kind of,
I bid hook line in sinker, I was like,
real, like, oh, you fucker, you got so,
I'm saying, my people dude, this dude was so great, man.
And then what was, uh,
Glenn, dude, yeah, the grass cutter.
The grass cutter, dude, from Canada.
So I swear, I kind of figured out what kind of grass.
By the way, and we didn't say this to Glenn,
why we're there, but all of us, I have to tell Glenn
afterwards, we're like, this, we all afterwards,
afterwards were like, it was he pull shitting us?
I think he's a drug dealer and he's gonna tell us.
And so I had to tell him afterwards
because the way he said grass cutter,
like so nonchalant, like he sits around on a
riding lawnmower all day long, and that's how,
and I'm like, this dude did not afford this.
I'm like, cut some grass, but sure as shit,
I talked to him afterwards,
and I put my arm around him when I saw him
at the event the next day. And I'm like, hey bro, you could tell me now that it's just you and I like you know
Are you liking the weed business? Was that like code for like?
He starts laughing at me goes no, no, no, no bro. I really cut grass for that was get the fuck out of here
I said we really thought you were just pulling our like cool guy. Oh, man all of them
But then the crowd that we had at the event later
You know this the first time we made it out to the Midwest, right?
Where we've never gone out that far east
to have a live event.
And you know what they say about the Midwest?
It's true, the friendliness, the warmth that you feel,
but people are awesome, man.
One of the best crowds we've ever had,
everybody was so genuine and so nice and so,
so just great.
Just really, really great people. It had such great conversations with people hearing their stories.
And of course, it's always humbling. It always reminds us why we do.
I was blown away just by the show percentage. Whenever we do events, you anticipate about a 10%
follow. Especially since the Arnold's was canceled.
Yeah, exactly. You have a large group like that. Especially since the Arnold's was canceled.
Yeah, exactly.
You have a large group like that.
Just that many people plan to date that for an event,
somebody gets sick, emergency having a family.
You just attribute that 10% will probably fall off minimum
from that.
And with the coronavirus and the Arnold being canceled
and it being Ohio and thinking there's not a lot of things
out going on out there.
We really were, I mean, we were considering canceling it
because we thought, okay, be ready.
We're gonna get a flood of people wanting to refund
their money and we're obviously going to do it,
especially if we don't do the event.
And at what point do we cancel it?
Like when we get 50% cancellations.
And so we were kind of like freaking out
when the news first came out
and considering that we weren't going to do it and we literally got one message of somebody saying,
hey, we're not going to come out to Ohio. Can we refund the tickets and we absolutely packed house.
And then everybody was there man. There were so 150 some people. That was great. It was super cool. And
you know, we had Lori Christie King showed up support
a lot. She meant a lot to me but you know and I know you guys as well but it was just cool man.
I mean like we meet a lot of cool people like doing what we do and everything but it's just so
rare to see people that like just come just literally just to support. She's she's awesome. If you
don't follow her you need to find her on Instagram. I love LCK now. She's really cool. But again back
to the coronavirus thing. So I was looking up natural potential ways to strengthen your immune system. Obviously,
number one, make sure your vitamin D levels are high. Low vitamin D levels definitely your immune
system takes a hit. And here's the other one. So elderberry, which I've talked about on the podcast
a billion times, I looked up at how elderberry works exactly
to prevent viruses because studies have shown
that it works legit on the flu, it works on the cold.
So it's generally an antiviral.
And the way it works is, and I looked it up,
it inhibits the early stages of an infection
by blocking key viral proteins responsible for the viral
attachment and entry into the host cell.
So it might be a good idea during this, you know, this season.
Prophylaxically to take it.
Yeah, get yourself some elderberry, take it, you know, once a day, and it could help prevent
infection, or if you do get infected, you know, make it a much more milder.
Yeah, remind me of the way prophylaxis means
to upside down analis.
Not analis.
No, dude, that's wrong.
You guys said that's a rage holiday.
I saw the look on her face and like,
why would you use a term like that?
Prophylaxis?
Yeah, it just means you take it like,
you know, like head, you look ahead of time.
Yeah, but why would you use that term?
You said it minded.
Yeah, that's the way that's how you say it.
No, no, and there was a real way to say it.
Where do I pour it if you say that?
You know what I'm saying? That sounds like I'll do that. I knew because I live with a nurse. She, that's the way that's how you say it. No, no, and there was like, that's the real way to say it. We're the way forward if you say that.
You know what I'm saying?
That's what that sounds like.
I knew, because I live with a nurse.
She says it all.
Yeah, okay, so that's different.
Yeah, exactly.
I know you're right.
Come on guys.
She tells you to do it.
I expect that from Sal.
I expect that from Sal, not from you.
Yeah.
Well, here, here, I wanted to make, you know, a point of like,
at least bringing one like really fucking weird fact
in on these conversations.
And I wanted to see if like, like, first all, if Sal already knew it already, right?
Like this is like a little game I have in my head, right?
So, so you guys obviously know the big humongous brand Pringles and what they do in terms of
like, you know, like how they packed all those, you know, compact chips into this like a tube
and everything. And that was like their whole thing. So the inventor of that, have you heard the story
about like what he did like after he died?
No.
Yeah, so he, okay, so basically he had in his will
and everything he had, it's very specifically written out
that he wanted to have his ashes put in a Pringle can.
What?
Hmm.
Is that true?
Yes.
And then buried? Yeah, no, like, so they couldn't fit all his ashes into the Pringle can, What? Hmm. Is that true? And then buried?
Yeah, no, like, so they couldn't fit all his ashes
into the Pringle can, but he literally had his ashes
in a Pringle can at the end.
And it's like, this is my opus, this is my masterpiece.
Does some lucky customer get to buy it?
Or is it?
I don't know.
What kind of chips are put on your mantle?
I mean, if that was what, obviously,
if that's what probably fundamentally changed his life
and maybe his generations to come behind him,
I don't know how much money he made off of that.
I probably would, right?
I'd wanna be his family.
I'd wanna be his family, to all his family and everybody else.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wonder what flavor it was, my question.
You know what I mean?
Like, was he like onions, you know, chives or,
or we talking barbecue.
Sour cream.
Do you guys like Pringles?
I do. Really? Yeah. Pringles? I do.
Really?
Pringles are fake chips.
I know, but they engineered them so you like them.
You know what I mean?
It's like super engineered.
I mean, what do you mean fake chips?
What do you mean by that?
They're not carved off of a potato and fried.
They're potato flakes that they press into the shape
with other ingredients.
Smash.
And then they create these perfect,
anything they carve a potato every time and it makes a perfect chip that fits on top of each other. Oh, they create these perfect, you're eating the carver potato every time
and it makes a perfect chip that fits on top of each other.
Oh, they do, there's a lot of cool things we do.
I don't know that.
I have no idea.
I mean, shit, I just found out.
I didn't know.
I didn't know that.
I mean, how much of it is less real chip
than another chip?
Is it all kind of like that or not?
No, a real chip is fried in oil.
It's just a piece of potato fried in oil with salt.
Pringles.
And they fall that way perfectly. Everyone carves them in perfect triangles.
No, no, no, no, no. You ever open a bag of lays, all the chips you can't lay them on top of each other.
All different. But this is like potato flakes. And then they, and then they add a stuff.
What you're trying to say to me right now is that Pringles are more fake than lays.
Yeah, I don't know. Doug, I think you should factor it to one point. I don't know.
Which was more fake than lace. Yeah, I don't know, Doug, I think you should factor it to one point. Which was more fake.
Yeah.
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First question is from FundSize Nutrition. What's your take on red light therapy?
Does it actually help reduce the appearance of cellulite?
100% if you saw what Justin's ass looked like before he started using the
tube light it's yeah unbelievable how much cellulite is moved out.
Yeah a lot of dimples before a lot way less dimples now.
Yeah actually if you go to him you get any tips.
If you DM he'll he'll send you the before and after.
No it's all stuff.
Okay so you want to hear something crazy about this?
Okay, there is some truth to it, right?
Life doesn't like it when we talk about that.
This is weird now.
Red light therapy has some pretty interesting effects
on skin and the appearance of cellulite, no joke.
Now, I wanna be clear, nothing is going to reduce cellulite
as much as getting leaner.
Nothing's gonna do it like eating a good diet,
exercising, getting good sleep, all that stuff.
There's nothing that can compare to that.
Well, somebody asked this,
some more question is this to me.
They actually asked specifically about the JuveLite
and what I thought about as an investment
because I've talked about it,
I probably post the most about it
and use it the most out of all of us.
And I actually refer to the Instagram post
that Sal just posted up.
So it's the most recent post that he's done
where he's wearing the cool guy blue blocker glasses.
And I think the post is so important.
And I think it's so important that people read it
when we talk about products like this
because no matter who we partner with and
what sponsors we think have a lot of validity and value to add to people's lives and even
if we are using it and love it, we will always stand by, this is the priority first.
You have to know where it fits in the hierarchy of importance.
Absolutely.
If your diet's bad, you've got a lot of your high body fat percentage
using red light might help a little bit, but it's not going to help as much as changing
diet and exercising a lot of stuff. Now that being said, here's a deal. There's real studies
that actually show that it works. So it sounds crazy. In fact, this is how I got, I finally got convinced
to even consider partnering with a red light
therapy company like Juve, which we've done a research and they have the best products
that are out there in terms of effectiveness.
Quality of the life.
Just quality and effectiveness.
But what sold me was I read all the studies because it sounded too good to be true.
They were making claims like using red light therapy,
helps regrow hair, reduce the appearance of cellulite,
tightens up skin, resistant testosterone,
all of those sound like the biggest bullshit claims ever.
And that's all my red flags go on.
Awesome snake oil.
Yeah, when I hear that.
But when you look at the studies, it's for reals.
The appearance of cellulite, they've done several studies on this.
In fact, some beauty salons will actually have red light therapy lights there.
A lot of them do.
A lot of them do.
In fact, that was the first time I'd ever seen one was out of like a salon like that
when I'm using it.
So before we even heard of Juve, I remember the first time I saw one of those.
Now here's the problem with the ones at the salon and here's the truth. The truth is
for you to reap the benefits of using red light therapy, you have to use it consistently.
It's not like a what you it's not a one-time treatment and then you notice results.
So beauty salon, the beauty salon red light, unless you're going to the beauty salon
three to four days a week and using the red light there, it's probably not going to do anything for you if you go get your once a month facial or whatever and then use the
red light. It's not going to do much. It has to be done consistently. That's what the
studies show. The studies show that a regular use of red light therapy has all these benefits.
Now, how does it work? Well, what the red light actually does, it actually penetrates
pretty deep in the skin and
it tells the mitochondria of the cells in the body to produce more energy.
By producing more energy, you get better collagen production, you get the stimulation of
cells to produce hair.
So people who are losing their hair, red light therapy has been FDA approved to cause
hair growth.
Now it's not gonna take,
it's not gonna make you from bald to a full head of hair,
but if you're thinning,
you notice my brother noticed a huge difference.
He actually posted this pretty dramatic.
Yeah, the person that was asking was actually asking
in relation to that and they know my whole story.
And I said exactly what I said back to them is,
this is what I noticed personally.
I noticed that when I am doing it at least three times a week for a good 15-20 minute session
I feel like my hair is thicker. The minute I stop doing it, I feel like it kind of regresses and goes back. And so it's something that
you know, I just have to make part of my routine and you know, I've set it up in our spare room and it's part of my routine. It's actually
Max, I'm normally playing with Max when I have it on and I'm kind of just sitting in front of it
while I'm doing that and then I'm also answering DM stuff.
It's just, I've made it into a habit
that I constantly do it all.
Yeah, I still use my, I remember there was a study
came out about the cognitive benefits
and I've had it like shining every time I go down
in my office and I'm doing work, I have it on.
And it's like it's beaming right at my face
and right at my head.
And so just because like I know that, you know, it's not gonna's beaming right at my face and right my head. So just because like I know that it's not going to be a detriment to me, it's going to be
if anything, it's going to be a positive benefit.
So that's something that I'm just constantly trying to be conscious about like applying.
Yeah, it reduces wrinkles and fine lines through collagen production.
So again, in studies, and these are real studies, people using it on a regular basis saw that their wrinkles got
Because if you boost collagen production
You're going to have less wrinkles and less cellulite your skin's going to feel a little look a little tighter
You know a little more plump or whatever
So it actually legit works and it's crazy to say that because it sounds so crazy
But the studies go way back.
So this is, by the way, red light therapy is not new.
The good products are relatively new, but the science has been around for a long time.
And scientists, these studies, they go way back.
They go decades back where you could see that it actually has these positive effects.
Now, really high quality, here's the two drawbacks.
The one drawback is it must be used consistently.
So it's not something you could do every once in a while.
If you use it, use it weekly, probably two to three days a week is probably best.
The second thing is high quality red light therapy devices are not cheap.
They're not inexpensive.
If you go online, you'll find a lot of red light therapy lamps and lights and they're inexpensive or whatever they
process. You can paint your light bulb right? Exactly. It's not going to do the same thing. No, and it's also the the wave length.
It's is it being scattered or is it focused? The power. There's a lot of things you want to consider. It's not inexpensive
technology. So, but there are options too. Yeah, thoseis. Like, I do tend to like, you know,
that's where I'm more mobile with that.
So I'll bring that with me when I need to use it.
So they do have options for that.
They're a little less, you know, of a dent in your wallet.
Well, I look, I tell you what, you know,
this is what I said to,
because we have one at home in Jessica would use it
on her, you know, face and stuff like that.
And the way she rationalizes, she's like, look,
15 minutes, three days a week,
versus having to spend that much more time
putting my makeup on to try and cover up wrinkles
or whatever, she says it's a trade off.
I'm actually spending the same amount of time, if not less.
So I might as well just use this a few days.
Well, and you can multitask.
I mean, I know that my sister, the way she uses it, right?
She's on her computer all day long.
She just mounts it right up right next to her face.
Oh, well, she's working.
Yeah, so just blasting her in the face
while she's sitting there working. So, well she's working. Yeah, so just blasting her in the face while she's sitting there working.
So, it sounds great.
I mean, that's how I use it.
I don't do it.
Just let it blast her at the end.
Yeah, well I know.
I do other things while, and that's part of why I like the big one
because the big one illuminates my entire room, right?
So I can kind of like move around a little bit
and do things, you know, so I like to be able to multitask.
I know how compression socks work
in terms of like varicose veins and things like that.
Like is there any impact,
like you could do like compression pants
or anything like that to address like,
what do you play with?
So do you like?
No, I don't think so.
Yeah, it's just,
there's probably more beauty hustle.
Yeah, no, that's right.
I don't think so.
I know that they can wrap,
you can wrap your body with these plastic wraps and whatever, and then you'll get this temporary size shrink. Yeah, and then you know, hours later.
It's a lot of air. Yeah, hours. I don't think a Jew of light is going to burn more body fat. Although there are some interesting studies that show that it does cause a little bit of an extra calorie burn. So you could theorize that, but I think it's going to be trivial
that kind of stuff. So I wouldn't say burns fat or anything like that. Recovery, it's
been well known that red light therapy speeds up muscle recovery. I know physical therapists
have used it in the past for joint healing and wound healing wound healing is where a
lot of the science is with red light therapy where it actually helps speed up the healing of wounds.
So there's a lot of applications,
but if you're doing everything right,
it definitely works.
And oh, Doug's making, you made a note there,
that is very true because the technology's not cheap,
they do offer a payment plan.
So you can invest in red light therapy
and you don't have to pay it all upfront.
Next question is from Joel Karn's three.
If I lift heavy, will it cause my joints to hurt over time?
If so, is there any way to prevent it?
Uh, yes and no.
Okay, right.
I have to do that.
It really depends how you lift heavy,
how good your mobility is.
That being said,
and how often,
and how often you cycle out of it.
Yeah, but that being said,
if you're constantly testing your pushing your body,
even if you're constantly testing, you're pushing your body, even if you do
everything perfect, at some point, a 180 pound guy squatting, 350 pounds or 400 pounds
or deadlifting 500 pounds, that is a lot of way.
It's pasturing the hinges constantly.
Yeah, so at some point, maybe, it might cause some joint pain, but the big bulk of whether or not it does or not
has to do with your mobility and your technique.
That's really the most.
Well, I think of it like, you know,
get on your, go in your house or your front door
and then jump on the door and swing on it one time
and it probably won't rip it off the hinges,
but do that every fucking day for weeks on weeks on weeks
and see what happens eventually.
It's the same concept.
Like, you know, and I think that most people,
and we talk about this a lot, like I think we,
we all love to live heavy.
And I tend to stick in that phase longer than when I should.
And the first sign of I know I need to get out of it
is the the AQ joints.
It's like, once I start feeling, or feeling tight
all the time, right? Like losing mobility.
I know that I've stayed in that phase too long.
It's time for me to move out of it.
So I think as far as how long you can lift heavy, I think you can lift heavy for years
and year forever if you learn to cycle in and out of it and give yourself that recovery.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think you'll hear the term bulletproofing your joints
or I like to think of it as fortifying my joints.
I want to put the effort in to constantly have in my routine
a plan to make sure I maintain the mobility and the strength
around the joints to really then keep applying
that type of demand and load and pressure for my muscles to respond
to.
But, yeah, you still have to weave in and out of it because inevitably you're going to
get to a point where you're really pressing outside the limitations there.
You don't always know what that looks like, especially if you're really grinding out
like a super heavy load.
Yeah, testing your max all the time would be where I'd say,
well, we gotta be careful.
But look, I tell you what, I trained a lot of older people
for a long time.
At least for 10 years of my career,
I specialized in training people over the age of 60
and I had them do heavy phases and all of them
got better joint mobility and better movement
and felt better.
This is true.
You know, I'm talking about the guy or girl
who pushes themselves to the point where they hit
and prs and they're lifting a lot of weight on top of it.
Then you gotta be careful.
Like once you reach a certain level of strength,
then you gotta, because when I look at, here's a deal.
I take the average guy who's 180 pounds, 200 pounds,
and I have them do a strength cycle.
We might get up to, you know, 250 pound deadlifts
or something like that, right?
After years and years of training,
like if you look at me, I've been working out for a long time,
my heavy deadlifts are 500 plus pounds.
If I make one small movement wrong in my deadlift
with 500 pounds, the odds I'll hurt myself for higher
than the dude that is still lifting heavy for himself,
but it's only 250 pounds.
So that's when it starts to kind of,
you gotta be careful.
I'll use Doug as an example.
He hired me in his 40s with back pain.
It's actually the main reason why he hired me.
We did it properly, of course.
We worked on, you know,
getting his body up the right way,
but we had him deadlifting, you know,
350, close to 400 pounds.
His back pain was gone, you know?
So lifting heavy in that case actually benefited the pain
and made him feel a lot better.
You just have to be smart, listen to your body.
I think the problems from lifting heavy aside
from poor mobility, poor movement, poor technique.
The problems come from always trying to beat
your previous best.
At least that's my case.
If I ever hurt myself, it's not from lifting heavy,
it's from trying to beat what I did before.
That's when I start to get into trouble.
It's like, all right, I know what my max was before.
Let me see if I can beat this.
And heavy is very relative to where you're at currently
at that moment, right?
So like heavy debt lifting right now for me
is like in the low 400s.
Low 400s, that's really heavy for me right now.
It's just I don't have the same strength as when I was pulling 550.
So you, I can't think about the 550.
I can't go into this deadlift session.
Like if I'm going to deadlift today, I get which is on my, on my calendar,
if I go to deadlift today and I decide today is a heavy day,
well, just because I was lifting well and deep into the 400s doesn't mean that
that'll be a heavy day for me today.
So learning to adjust where you're currently at for what's heavy and I think some like it's
a good point, so I think a lot of people compare, oh this isn't that heavy for me, I've
done way more than this.
Well, it could be very heavy for you right now if you haven't gotten into sleep.
You're doing the same muscle mass as you had on back then.
So learning to adjust that is so important to also taking care of your joints.
And we just recently saw Dexter Jackson compete in the Arnold Classic.
He got second place.
He's in his 50s.
He's the most winningest bodybuilder of all time.
So he's a pro bodybuilder.
Pro bodybuilders obviously are at a different level.
They train themselves.
This guy's in his mid 50s.
No injuries.
Great movement, great mobility, but if you watch him
how he works out, he's very careful with this form and technique.
Very different from Ronnie Coleman.
Ronnie Coleman, one of the greatest bodybuilders of all time,
did crazy things, dare I say stupid things for the video
where he squatted 800 pounds or deadlifted 800 pounds,
and that poor guy is suffering quite a bit.
And you could see this down the list
of these bodybuilders, Vince Taylor, another guy,
I believe in his 60s now, that guy competed into his 50s.
He was also very careful with the way he lifted weights.
And all the people that I've ever worked out with
or had worked out in my gyms that were in their 60s, 70s
and even 80s with great fitness, they were just smart.
You know what I mean?
They weren't testing themselves all the time.
They were just very smart with how they worked out
and their form of heavy lifting,
which was smart, is what kept them away from pain,
not the other way around.
Next question is from Jamil A144.
Is it better to do small portions of mobility work
throughout the week or should you dedicate a full day
to just mobility?
I just addressed this in that last YouTube video that I did on our channel that you have
to switch your mindset of mobility.
It's different than like a workout and workout intensity the way you approach it.
It is far more beneficial that let's say, let's just take one mobility move that I think has a lot of benefits for a lot of people like the 90 90.
And spending an hour of doing all kinds of 90 90 moves for an hour like intense, doing
all kinds of, you know, on both sides and the heel lifts and knee lifts and rotation
and angling at your knee, then your calf, then your ankle, and all these variations, just hardcore mobility,
90, 90 session for a day, is less valuable than doing
five days a week for five minutes.
Five days a week for five minutes is going to give you,
and that's less time too.
So, frequency is king in this case,
and you're looking to do it.
I'd rather see a client do three, five minute sessions in a day than a you know one hour long session and they don't do it again
for the rest of the week. Yeah, totally. You have to ask yourself what is the outcome? What
am I looking to do with mobility work? Am I looking to build muscle? No, you're not. What you're
looking to do is connect to new ranges of motion and achieve better stability in those ranges of motion.
So really it's a practice thing.
It's a connect and practice.
Here's the other thing you're trying to do with mobility.
You're trying to create new movement patterns, okay?
So think about this way.
Imagine if for most of your life, your ankle was damaged,
so you had very, very poor ankle mobility.
And so as a result, you ended up learning
to walk a particular way.
You walk with the slight lean or a slight hobble
because your left ankle was damaged.
So that's just how you walk now, right?
Then all of a sudden, there's this new medical advancement
where they could actually fix your ankle
to have perfect mobility.
So you get that new treatment.
Now your ankle moves well,
but you've been walking for 10 years
a particular way.
You're not gonna automatically switch to a new way of walking.
That old way of walking is your second nature.
That is your recruitment pattern.
So what would be a better way to get a new way of walking
to just practice walking real hard for an hour once a week
or to practice throughout the whole day
every single day, right?
Which one is going to create a new recruitment pattern? Same thing with mobility.
That frequent practice throughout the day is far more beneficial than treating mobility like a
workout that you're trying to build muscle. That's not how it works. Now, you're still going to
get some benefit if you did the one day a week of mobility. It's still way better than nothing.
But if you had to pick between the two,
frequency would trump it all day long.
Next question is from Chef Katie, 1989.
What I eat in a day vlogs are very popular on social media.
Why do you think we are so interested
in what social influencers eat?
I ask myself this question all the time.
It's to this day, it baffles me.
If I were to start tracking,
and I've done this multiple times
since I've had Instagram on,
and if I post my macro breakdown
and then I share the meals throughout the day,
nothing gets more traction on my stories than that alone.
It's fascinating to me, like that people really want to see that.
And I think there's two sides to this, right?
I think we've heard the term food porn before.
So I do think there's this, people just,
I do think that there's a percentage of people
that just obsess over seeing food
and more likely the ones that probably have
relationship issues with it and that are like
famos fantasizing about all the different meals.
I think there's that percentage.
And then I think there's a percentage of people
that are just genuinely curious of,
okay, this guy talks about nutrition,
I trust the information he's providing.
I'm really curious to exactly what types of meals
he's choosing on a day-to-day basis.
It's also, I think they also see it as like a hack. It's like, this is, exactly what types of meals he's choosing on a day-to-day basis. Yeah.
It's also, I think they also see it as like a hack, you know.
It's like, this is a formula that I,
maybe I'm gonna try this formula.
Like, this is something that I can implement, you know,
to give me, you know, whatever,
like, amount of weight I need to lose.
Like, I'm gonna just do exactly what, you know,
I'm gonna look like this person.
So therefore, I'm gonna like, repeat those patterns I see.
And to me, I see that too with athletes a lot.
Like people like idolize people,
and so it's like,
I now wanna do all these crazy movements.
That's a good point.
Because that's what these athletes are doing,
and so this is the formula, obviously.
Yeah, I also think,
because it's not just fitness people,
it's also any celebrity.
If they post what they eat,
everybody's super interested.
Part of it, I'm sure,
is people wanting to be more like that person, so they think, if I see what they eat, everybody's super interested. Part of it, I'm sure, as people wanting to be more
like that person, so they think,
oh, if I see what they eat, now I can eat the same way.
And then the other part of it is this,
what you eat does kind of say a lot about you,
and it is a bit of a private thing
that is private enough to where it's really interesting,
but not so private that you're not afraid to share it.
So it's like, you get to peer into your favorite celebrities,
you know, eating habits, which is a private part of their life.
So it's like, you know, I'm a huge fan of, you know, whoever,
Tom Hanks, and oh, now I get to see what Tom Hanks eats all day long.
I get a kind of a private view of the personal, you know,
habits of this person.
A real big casserole guy.
Yeah.
Because think about it, like what you eat is a bit of,
I mean, food is so shrouded in culture and context
and, you know, all that stuff.
Like, it is kind of fascinating.
I mean, I find it fascinating as well,
not of all celebrities, but certain kind of,
I find, you know what, I found really fascinating.
I went through a whole period
where I was really interested to see
what Andre the giant was eating.
Oh, yeah, there you go.
But that's because he's such a big dude.
He's huge, right?
It was really crazy.
I know, like, one of the most red articles is Michael Phelps, what he ate in a day.
Yeah.
Like, 10,000 calories, I think, went viral when everybody was talking about that.
Yeah, it's really interesting, but it doesn't really give you any useful information.
Well, to me, that makes sense.
And I guess, I guess, in fitness, you're in this kind of performance space, whether it's for look
or for lifting weights, right?
So people are interested in what are these people eating to either look like this or perform
like this.
So there's that curiosity.
I think that people, a lot of people have your right.
I think this is to both your points here.
I think that people are looking at this person who's telling this, I'm assuming that they're
in the space, right? I'm assuming that they're in the space, right?
I'm assuming that they're a fitness person
and the people that are following you
are probably interested in either one looking like you
or two performing like you perform.
And so it is, like Justin said, kind of a hack for them.
It's like instead of me having to calculate my macros,
figure this out, like I identify with this person,
I'm kind of like them, I wanna be more like them,
I'll just, if I could see what they're eating,
I'm gonna eat the same way, so there's that curious.
Yeah, you know what's really funny about this,
is when a social media influencer celebrity
is being filmed on what they eat throughout the day,
do you really think that that's representative
of their everyday eating habits?
No, you're getting the best.
You're not gonna just put out like the regular,
you know, like I just had a lot of fun.
Well, you know, I don't know.
I wouldn't make the art,
what I think it is,
it's either one or the other really bad, right?
It's not very,
it's not a very good snapshot of what's going on.
I think either you have one side
that shares all the good they're doing,
or you have the other side that annoys me
just a bunch of cheat days.
All the cheat days.
That's what I mean, that's not represent. It's never representative of the cheat days. All the cheat days, that's what I mean.
That's not represent.
It's never representative.
It's not like an average day.
That's not the same.
That's what I mean.
It's a stream one way or the other.
Like watch how many calories I can eat in a day,
or watch my super perfect, you know, blessed food
from the, you know, whatever, Himalayan mountains,
and you know, the special fruit that, you know,
weird, you know what I'm saying.
That's what I think, I think they're doing.
So it doesn't really represent what the real person.
I mean, you imagine it's like falling
going with Paltrow and she has got frozen burrito.
You know, out of the mile, yeah, this is my lunch today.
It's a frozen burrito.
It's an interesting hack that social media people
have figured out and I wonder what it would do.
Like, imagine if like we just made it an effort like,
okay, every day when we start these podcasts,
you had to tell everybody what you did yesterday.
Food box.
Yeah.
I bet you would go crazy.
Kill me.
I really, yeah, I know, I know, I feel.
I'd be boring.
It would be for us, but I bet you a lot of people.
After four episodes, I'd be like, again.
Yeah, again.
Again.
Oh, so stupid.
What are you doing?
Anyway, go to mindpumpfree.com and download all of our guides, resources and books.
They all are totally free.
You can also find the three of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at MindPump Justin, me at MindPump Sal and Adam at MindPump Adam.
Thank you for listening to MindPump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy
and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com. to and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
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The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee and you can get it now plus
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MindPump.
This is Mindbomb.