Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1303: The Best Way to Accelerate Growth in an Unresponsive Muscle, the Difference Between Stretching & Priming, the Best Minimal Equipment Hamstring Exercises & More
Episode Date: May 29, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the best way to build a lagging body part, the best hamstring hypertrophy exercises that uses minimal equipment, wh...at differentiates priming movements from stretches, and whether it more beneficial to break workouts into splits or if full-body is just as effective. Mind Pump “researches” the top porn searches for men and women. (6:38) Is Justin being wooed by a Whiskey company? (10:57) Justin’s sons have started their own business! (14:30) The Di Stefano Family Truckee Weekend. (18:24) Weird Science with Sal. (20:25) Businesses that are thriving amid the pandemic. (26:40) At what point does the song become more annoying than the crying? (29:22) Justin vs the clogged toilet, holding on to old articles of clothing & MORE (32:33) Mind Pump Recommends, Sunset Selling on Netflix. (37:32) Where does creativity come from? (40:05) #Quah question #1 – When trying to build a lagging body part do you incorporate it into your routine or do you have to change your workout to the lagging body part? (42:31) #Quah question #2 – What is the best hamstring hypertrophy exercise that uses minimal equipment? (46:22) #Quah question #3 – You've all talked about how stretching, as a form of working out, can be effective or even detrimental. But exercises, like the pigeon pose, seem kind of like a stretch. What differentiates priming movements, like these, from stretches? (49:50) #Quah question #4 – Is it more beneficial to break your workouts into splits or can a full-body be just as effective? (54:06) Related Links/Products Mentioned May Promotion: MAPS Starter ½ off! **Promo code “STARTER50” at checkout** Special Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off!! **Code “WHITE50” at checkout** The 2019 Year in Review - Pornhub Insights Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Meat and mental health: a systematic review of meat abstention and depression, anxiety, and related phenomena Tourism is tanking. So RV and camper companies found business fighting COVID-19 NICS Background Checks for April, 2020, Breaks Record for Gun Sales Selling Sunset | Netflix Official Site Nobody Knows How to Make a Pizza – Book by Julie Borowski Dual-process contributions to creativity in jazz improvisations: An SPM-EEG study MAPS Aesthetic - Mind Pump Media MAPS Prime Webinar Mind Pump Webinar Single Leg Toe Touch- Do These BEFORE You Deadlift to Build Your Glutes & Hamstrings – MInd Pump TV GROW Your GLUTES with a SINGLE LEG DEADLIFT! - Mind Pump TV MAPS Fitness Prime - Mind Pump Media MAPS Split - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Joe Rogan (@joerogan) Instagram Mark Bell (@marksmellybell) Instagram Chris Kresser M.S., L.Ac. (@chriskresser) Instagram Paul Saladino, MD (@carnivoremd) 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, MIND, with your hosts.
Saldas Defenow, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcasts,
we answer fitness and health questions asked by listeners.
Like you saw what I'm going to do, I'm going to give you a breakdown
of what happened in this podcast.
Now we open the episode with a 37 minute introductory portion.
This is where we talk about current events.
We talk about ourselves, what's happening.
We have a lot of fun.
Sometimes we mention our sponsors.
After that 37 mark, then we get into answering the question.
So here's the breakdown.
We open up the episode by talking about porn searches.
Hey, coming in hot.
I read it as an article that talked about
what women tend to look for in porn,
and Justin has a realization that maybe
his wife's watching porn when he's not around.
Oh my God.
They're blown.
Then we talk about how his sons are doing
a car washing business in the neighborhood.
That's super, super awesome to hear.
I talk about the time I had with my family
up in Truckee Tahoe area over the weekend.
We had a total blast, and my brother, of course,
used up a lot of the Organifi supplements.
His favorite was pure.
Now, pure is a Neutropic based supplements.
Good for the mind gives you mental clarity,
especially when you mix it with caffeine.
That's a great stack, by the way.
Now, Organifi is the company that makes pure.
They also make a green juice.
They also make a protein powder.
All the products are organic.
And because you listen to Mind Pump,
you get 20% off all the products.
So here's what you do.
Go to organify.com.
That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I.com.
Forward slash Mind Pump.
Use the code Mind Pump and you'll get 20% off.
Then I talked about a meta analysis of studies
on vegans and mental health.
So there might be something to that.
We talked about campers.
People are buying a lot of these RVs now.
I guess COVID is closing a lot of places.
So people are like, let me just lock myself
in a camper and go on vacation.
We talked about the clogged toilet at Justin's house.
Surprise, surprise.
I scarred them for life.
Justin brought up a show on Netflix called Sunset Selling.
He got me interested.
I think I might start watching that.
That was totally Adam, but yeah.
Oh, my bad.
Then we talked about where creativity came from or comes from.
There's a brain imaging study that shows which side of the brain contributes to creativity.
Then we got into the question.
Here's the first one.
This person wants to know, look, when you're trying to develop a lagging body part, how
do you incorporate it into routine?
We talk about targeting areas of your body that are not developing like other parts of
your body and what you can do about that.
The next question, this person wants to know, what are the best hamstring exercises that
don't require a lot of equipment. So we give some of our favorites. The next question,
this person, look, we, they want to know we've talked all about stretching. What's the difference
between stretching and priming? You know, we talk a lot about priming on the podcast. By
the way, what's the difference? By the way, if you want to learn more about priming, just
and did a webinar, it's totally free. He teaches you how to assess your body and prime your body before your workouts.
You can sign up at mapsprimewebinar.com.
And then the final question, this person wants to know what's better?
Body part split routines where I train like two or three body parts each day or full body
workouts where I train the whole body each time that I train.
Also, you've got 72 hours to take advantage
of our Memorial Day apparel sale,
all of our apparel, on sale, there's three days left,
go to maps, excuse me, mindpumpmedia.com
to check that out, oh my bad, two days left, wow Doug,
you're trying to put everybody on, hurry them up huh them up, huh? Yeah. He changed that lily.
He had done while I was talking 48 hours left for the Memorial Day apparel sale.
Also 72 hours. So here's a 72 hour one for Map Starter 50% off.
Now, Map Starter is a great beginner program into resistance training.
So if you want to reap the benefits of lifting
weights like toning and sculpting your body, building muscle and strength,
speeding up your metabolism, map starter is a perfect program to start with. It's a
great at-home program. All you need is a physio ball. That's the big ball full of
air and dumbbells. You can do the whole program with just those two pieces of
equipment. Again, the program is 50% off.
It's called map starter.
Here's how you enroll and get that discount.
Go to maps starter.com.
That's MAPS S T A R T E R.
dot com and use the code starter 50.
That's S T A R T E R five zero.
No space for the discount.
Is your lip hotter than everywhere else on your face? I think so.
Yeah, that's a little extra insulation.
Donate on my mustache just because you can't grow a full one.
It's the middle.
Why isn't the middle grown?
Somebody asked me that my questions.
Did they really?
You got the reverse Hitler?
Yeah.
What does it say?
It just says that.
It says that. Why can't Sal grow a complete mustache?
I don't know, you have to ask Sal.
That's weird, huh?
I wonder what the deal is with that.
I think it's because.
What was the other one?
It's always funny when I get,
well my Q&A's when I get questions about you guys.
I'm like, that's a Sal, right?
Just because people like and we talk shit.
I know.
Well, when you serve me up a good one
to talk shit about you, like I'm all about it.
The one that killed me the most,
because everyone's swell, each of us will do a post
and then we'll say something underneath
to fuck with each other and see how many likes we get.
Yeah.
The one time, I don't remember what I did,
there was a post and I was wearing gray sweats
and a gray shirt but it was all the same exact gray.
Yeah.
And Adam said it looked like a,
would you say it looked like a onesie?
Well, jumper.
What made it perfect was I quoted what you were saying
in the video, It just came together.
So, yeah.
You did that.
I was fell off the toilet.
That was laughing so hard.
So, I got you again on a post recently.
You did, dude.
You're like way winning.
I am winning right now.
I am winning right now.
We should keep a little tally.
And it only counts if you get like 50 or more likes.
The problem with me is I got like 130 for your snow one.
Yeah, dude, you do a good job too.
I can do a good job.
That's what I got him on was the snow one.
I got you good.
Sometime I do good, it was poet.
And so I can do okay, but the problem is,
is that if I think I gotta get you back,
then it end up getting mean.
I know.
And that's like your go to mutton.
You are the guy that goes.
Yeah, you're fat or something.
Nah, I think worse than balls.
Stupid fat.
Your mom's a bad mother.
Yeah, I hate it.
Like, whoa, guy.
Oh, whoa.
You're, you're, you're gone.
We've gone past funny.
Your mom drinks because you, mom, because you,
I don't say that.
Dude, did you guys know that porn hub puts out a,
every year they put out like a most popular porn searches?
Wow. And then they break it down by gender and age and all that stuff. Where do you, where do you come in right now? puts out a, every year they put out like a most popular porn searches.
And then they break it down by gender and age and all that stuff.
Where are you just coming right out?
Yeah, where do you see this stuff?
I love it.
Just research.
I go down rabbit holes, you know?
Photo-cute research.
You know what I said?
You can't use that word anymore.
I know.
Adam checked me on that the other day.
I did not research, okay.
It wasn't me checking, I was just repeating what I said.
I lane-lane posts.
Whatever.
Anyway, all the PhDs get upset with it. I was doing something like research checking, I was just repeating what I said. Lane post. Whatever. Anyway, all the PhDs get upset.
I was doing something like research, but I was,
so I was just.
Sexual.
This is interesting because searches that are anonymous
tell you a lot about people because when they do surveys
in the past, sex studies were surveys.
The problem with the surveys.
Yeah, no one's gonna admit their weird fetish.
And in the moment when you're like,
you wanna get one out, you might make a decision
that's a little different.
Then when you're sitting in a lab
and asking a question, you're not actually,
you're just sitting in for the novelty.
Yeah, whatever.
Anyway, so it's interesting, right?
So they showed top porn searches by men and women.
So do you wanna guess some of the top porn searches
for women?
So I don't know this, by the way,
apparently women are, females are the fastest growing,
their rate of porn consumption is like exploding
apparently.
Where is this?
I would contest that.
They hide it, they don't tell you.
Like when do they do it?
When you're here at work?
Yeah.
Oh man.
100%.
Yeah, so what do you think are some women's favorites?
Make, take some guess.
Oh, I'm not gonna guess this.
Why?
This will get me in trouble.
No, why do you get in trouble?
Dude, you're the one that told me like they watch a lot of gay porn.
Yeah, gay, okay, so two dudes.
Believe it or not, bisexual, bisexual is up there, bisexual male.
Is it, is it, I mean mean I see you're gonna be trouble here
But isn't tying up in rape fantasies like one of the high ones. You know what? It doesn't say that here
Doesn't say that but you know
Well, nobody's into that so the one, which I would have predicted is lesbian,
which is, I think that's a, that's a,
that would be a top one for women, right?
They're gonna kind of seek out like a little bit of this,
you know, whatever.
Yeah, college.
But there's like, you know, gang bang is up there.
That's one of the top ones.
That's kind of interesting.
That's interesting because I think that would be the one
that would be least admitted.
You know what I mean?
They might not admit. So that's up there. Mature is up there. Hentek. Whoa, whoa, whoa would be least admitted. You know what I mean? They might not admit.
So that's up there.
Mature is up there.
Hentek.
Whoa, what's mature me?
Mature is I think people over old silver did.
Oh, just well, I mean mature could be women or men, right?
I think it's like over 40.
Wrinkle porn.
In porn if you're over 40 you're like,
oh that's like mature, right?
That's considered mature.
Yeah, so that one's up there.
Three sum is up there.
Predictably big dick is up there.
That's a top one.
Weird.
Yeah, I know.
It's kind of interesting.
Hentai, I think I'm pronouncing it right.
Am I saying it wrong?
Hentai.
Sorry, but it knows how to say it.
Yeah, why does Doug know this?
Japanese.
This is like cartoon, oh anime.
Cartoon porn.
Isn't that weird?
Now is it like, is it blurred and everything?
No, no, no, is it like real cartoon characters
that are having, is that what it is?
No, I think it's like their own characters
that are doing this.
Just dressed up, like so, I saw that and I'm like,
that's weird, but then I looked at the guy's favorites
and Hentai.
Hentai.
Hentai, Hentai for man actually ranks a little higher.
So there you go.
I guess we're all a bunch of weirdos. Anyway.
Gangbangs, huh? Interesting, right? Yeah. I think it's more interesting, which you'd be researching. What?
Yeah, that's what's not. I think that's more interesting. Almost as interesting as Justin's shirt he's wearing. Yeah. Yeah.
Hey, you know, I thought like it'd be cool to have like a death metal casual day. But death metal. So you got flip flops at a death metal trick.
I figured we'd institute this like every Wednesday.
Oh my god.
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah, it's funny because I was like getting coffee this morning.
And I think I threw off the barista or whatever, like, that all scared.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it's a little intimidating.
Could have been the flip flops, too.
What is it saying?
Could have been that or I just shaked my head.
What does it say? So something death. is our our guys over at a liquid death
Oh, it's a liquid death sure. Yeah, yeah, they sent it to me. Oh, it's cool
It's cool, but it really is scary like my kid scares my kids. Oh, hey, did you tell me?
I thought we were in the threat. I don't know this is the best time to talk about this
But I'm curious and so I'm gonna bring it up
Whiskey company coming after you right now. Yeah. Yeah. Bush Mills. Yeah. Yeah.
What's that all about? I have no idea. I think they probably went through my thing and saw
like I was the only one that like posted pictures of me drinking. Yeah.
Like, I'm the way. But I'm still like trying to be healthy. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So like, oh, it's cool. It's a good demographic.
You know, I have no idea. But I wish whiskey. I'm all about it.
Yeah. So yeah. Have they just like just give me 20% off.
I'll mention.
I don't know the charge for that.
You know, I'm just like, I'll just give me whiskey.
You have to sense you over anything yet.
I mean, they're trying to throw a contract out there.
I'm just like, I don't know.
Like, I don't know what to charge for like
for a good reason, what not.
Oh, yeah.
I'll negotiate it for you.
Yeah, thanks.
I'll be your agent.
I know it's fun. When I was younger and to working out, my dream, what am I dream? Because I left supplements so I still kind of do,
as a kid, I was crazy.
One of my dreams was like, just to get free supplements.
Oh my god, that would be so awesome.
Now we're in this situation where companies
send us supplements all the time
and they're just all sitting in the back.
So funny, but when I was a kid,
that would have been so excited.
If you would have told me a 20 that,
I would have worked for getting paid in supplements. So when I was a kid, that would have been so excited.
Oh, you, if you would have told me a 20 that,
I would have worked for getting paid in supplements
that we'll be able to say.
I mean, there was a time when I was probably spending
no joke, probably $300 a month plus on supplements alone.
And my granted that at that time too,
like 300 bucks was a good portion of my income.
You know what I'm saying?
I know it's like, that's a lot of money to me.
So you probably could have convinced me
when I was 20, like, hey, in the future.
That was the hustle.
I mean, all these supplement companies knew that.
And so like, we'd get all these ambassadors
and influencers.
It still is, that's the big thing I see right now.
Still is, you know, so many of these young guys
and girls that are coming up in the fitness space,
as soon as they get a little bit of traction,
companies know this, man.
They call you a micro influencer,
if you have thousands of people that are following you,
and they know that everybody wants to say
they're sponsored by a company
because they sound so official.
And so they just prey on all these young entrepreneurs
that are coming up.
And I get it, right?
When you're trying to, like, if you were trying to...
You get some attention.
You feel like, oh, it's working.
Not even that.
It's just like when you're trying to build a business, right?
If you're a fitness person and you're trying to build
a social media business and you just start getting
into the thousands of people following you
and a company reaches out and they say,
hey, we want to give you 20% commission on all your sales.
Like, oh, shit, that's income, you know, so they jump all over it.
But, man.
Well, it's, I mean, it, look, it's, it's a voluntary exchange.
Obviously, they find value in it.
That's why they're agreeing to do it.
But my advice to people is hold out because you can do a lot better.
It's not really that valuable.
Not if you find it valuable, I can't, you know, I'm not gonna judge what you think is worth it or not,
but in my personal opinion,
if you hold out a little longer
and build your business a little bit smarter,
you'll get way more, you'll get way more.
Yeah, you'll get hold out.
Exactly.
It is not worth it.
You guys know the conversion rates on Instagram.
And we have a very, for as small a pages as our Instagrams
all are in comparison to companies that are...
It's not what it looks like.
No, and it doesn't generate nearly enough money.
And what they all do is they all make you sign stuff too
where you like have to post like every single week
and do like that, like, I don't wanna do that.
Cause then what ends up happening is you spend more
of your time promoting somebody else's company
while you're trying to build your own brand.
You're just not exactly.
Exactly.
You're not growing your own brand.
Exactly.
That's the big one.
Well, I'm actually excited though.
Like, my kids have taken upon themselves to start their own little business around our
neighborhood.
Oh, your kids.
I didn't know that was your kids you said that about.
Yeah.
It was like kids.
Oh, no way.
Yeah. So, they just started, our neighbor
well saw that they were washing our car and was like,
oh my God, would you guys be willing to do ours?
And so then, you know, they charged 10 bucks
for them to do theirs.
And this became a thing, the word spread out.
And so now they've done like 20 cars or two.
What, really?
Yeah, this is so crazy you're bringing this up.
I literally took a picture yesterday. Today, there's kids that are washing my truck in our neighborhood I just thought that was
so they posted signs all over the neighborhood yeah and it's $10 for cars 15 I mean it's like between
like washing cars and getting haircuts you know like you go crazy terrible times child labor going up
what's happening I know right now I think this is a switch I think that's such a great thing. It teaches them the value of money, because I think a lot of kids nowadays
don't know what the value is,
because they don't have to work for it.
Teach them that, teach them responsibility,
and they learn how to negotiate and all that stuff.
I love this.
I mean, I don't want to get back
into a deep discussion about this,
but I still get people that are tight.
That thread, Sal, that you tagged us in
and we got into with the whole Amazon thing, but I still get people that are tight.
That thread, Sal, that you tagged us in
and we got into with the whole Amazon thing.
And oh, these people don't have any other option,
but to work for Amazon.
And it's such a crock of shit.
And this is a perfect example.
You've got eighth grade kids in my neighborhood
who see an opportunity right now to go,
and you wash as many cars you want.
I mean, you could potentially make it.
Make more money than what the people at Amazon
who say they're working there is so awful.
It's like, well, you're not forced to work there.
It's voluntary and there's other ways to make money.
And that's, you just have to be creative.
Like, it'll be willing to do something.
It's also as experience, you can show
that you're being consistent somewhere,
you can work up, you can find different things to do.
And it's also, you bear the burden,
you're the responsibility of how your life turns out.
Largely is on you, and I'm not saying
there are outside things that can influence that,
but largely it's you, you're the one that controls all that.
So, you know,
you find the needs that are out there that to serve.
And that's really what it is.
And some people would say,
oh, you're only paying kids 10 bucks to wash your car,
you're taking advantage, like, what do you,
they're kids too.
I'm sure they're not washing the car as good as,
yeah, I don't expect my truck to get off.
Yeah, dogs for 50 cents.
Yeah, I get to fuck it.
Yeah.
Did you really?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I earned $500 of 50 cents.
No, you did it.
I swear it got.
Oh my god.
And then like, I would trade them in for a silver dollars.
No wonder your calves are so big.
He was walking for a piece.
He was all that dog walking.
You know what my son did?
That was, maybe it was so, one of the proudest moments
I've ever had as a father.
I don't remember how old he was.
I think he was like nine and he wanted to,
he got the idea that he wanted to sell.
Not lemonade, but like fruit drinks, right?
I remember this was a like four years ago. Oh dude. It was so, it was so smart. So he wanted to make, not lemonade, but like fruit drinks. This was a like four years ago.
Oh, dude.
It was so smart.
So he wanted to make like fruit drinks or whatever.
And so he's like, oh, can we buy different flavors?
So I'm asking him a lot of questions.
How, you know, what do you think is going to do well?
Where would you like to put your stand in front of the house
or over here?
How come?
So he decided I wanted to put it down the street, more cars.
I said, okay, cool.
What flavor?
And he said, I want to do several flavors. I said, how come? Oh, because I'll more cars. I said, okay, cool. What flavor? And he said, I want to do several flavors.
I said, how come?
Oh, because I'll sell more.
I said, that's great.
Then the big question was, well, how much should I charge?
He asked me that.
I said, well, I said, I don't know.
I said, what do you think?
And he says, I think I'm going to put free.
And I said, free.
I said, how are you going to make any money?
He goes, well, I'm going to say free,
but I'm going to accept donations from people.
So they think it did a good job.
So brilliant. And I was like, oh my gosh, so they think it did a good job. So brilliant.
And I was like, oh my gosh, that's the most brilliant thing
over in my life.
If a little kid, you buy, you get a free lemonade
and it says, I'm giving him like five bucks.
You're gonna get like five or ten bucks.
And he did.
He only sold like four drinks, you know, it was in the neighbor.
But he got like 50 bucks.
Yeah, then you have to worry about giving him changeback,
either.
Oh, it was so fun.
That's brilliant.
Anyway, dude, I had a great weekend with my family.
Oh yeah, there's the first time they all went
up to the trucky place, right?
Yeah, so how was that?
It was great.
I had my parents, my sister, and my brother were there.
And you know, so it was a small group.
We're still kind of, you know, doing that or whatever.
But we had a great time.
My dad, of course, he was so happy to be there.
He called everybody in Italy so he could show them around and talk about of course, he was so happy to be there. He called everybody in Italy, so he could show them around
and talk about that.
Now, he was out of all the people.
I was most excited to hear his response
because he's the craftsman of all of us
or anybody that's in families.
I wanted to know like when he walked in,
did he appreciate the way everything looked?
Yeah, he did very much.
And, you know, he's just a proud dad.
So he went like, again, he wanted to call family or whatever.
And my brother was there too, so around a good time. So my brother is going around looking through the house and whatever.
And then he finds the pantry, which we have well stocked full of organifi.
Right?
So there's jugs of protein, there's green juice, there's here, here.
We got to check in all the food.
There's gold in some of us.
My brother, he kind of likes supplements, but he really likes free stuff.
That's his favorite thing.
A genetic trait.
Oh yeah, so he thinks just like that.
So he's just making concoctions and drinking stuff,
but he's like, he really liked the pure.
Yeah, he did.
So he would have that in the morning with stuff.
Everybody I've turned it on to really likes it.
I don't know what it,
but I don't know if it's because it's subtle.
Like I don't feel like it gets you racy at Ray see definitely feel something. Yeah, it's a lot
I think it's the lion's mane in there and when you take it with especially if you combine it with
caffeine so he would you know have his coffee he'd sit out, you know next to the window so he could see the the trees and stuff
Yeah, and he was he had his little purer so I take a shot of that and then he'd drink his coffee and then later on
He's like I feel good man. I think I feel pretty good
Keep talking about it.
I would check the pantry and like, wow.
This guy fucking had like 15 packets of everything.
We're sitting there.
I'll do it away.
Yeah, so next time you guys go up there,
if there's like a lot of stuff going, wasn't me.
Yeah, I saw we just, we got restocked that
and the the Keon coffee just showed up to there.
So the house has got, it's pretty stocked up
with subs right now.
It is, it's all set up.
So, hey, there was a, want to share this with you guys.
They did this big,
did I talk about the Mata Analysis
on resistance training and metabolism versus cardio?
You just did it, is it?
Okay, so that was, there was that study that was real big.
And so, when some pages, when you pull up a study,
underneath they'll show you other studies
that are around things that may be interesting to you
So this is a feature on certain pages that are really really cool
So I went down the rabbit hole and I found this study on
On vegans and meat eaters. So this is gonna be this is kind of interesting
I this is not something I even looked up. It was just again. It was connected to
The study on the resistance training
boosting metabolism.
So I'm gonna read to you,
this was another made-out analysis,
meaning they study different studies.
I was gonna say you should explain to people
the difference between a made-in analysis
versus a regular study and why those are so much better.
So a study is just one study.
A made-out analysis is where they go through
a bunch of studies.
Take hundreds normally and more.
Depending, right?
Sometimes it's 15, 10, whatever, whatever's available.
And then they'll come up with a consensus.
And they'll talk about the best studies in there
and the ones that aren't that good or whatever.
So they did this particular study was on,
it was a clinical review in food and science nutrition.
And the title of the systematic review, excuse me,
was Meet and Mental Health,, systematic review, excuse me, was meat and mental health, a systematic review
of meat absentee tension and depression, anxiety, and related phenomena.
So what they did is they looked at how avoiding meat could potentially contribute to mental
health.
So would they get better or worse mental health?
And there's multiple studies around this.
Multiple studies that have been done on this, right?
Okay.
So it says here, this is in the actual study itself.
The majority of studies, and especially the higher quality studies,
showed that those who avoided meat consumption had significantly higher rates
or risks of depression, anxiety, and or self-harm behaviors.
Interesting, right?
Any connection you think to like,
creatine and stuff like that?
Well, so I was just,
I think this would be something
that's interesting to talk about
because I'm really trying to rack my brain
on what could potentially be causing that,
that repeated correlation that they've seen
in several studies.
One would be the obvious direction
would be what nutrients are they potentially lacking
that could contribute to anxiety, depression, the iron creatine, like what do I mean?
Yes, it could be, right?
I know lacking certain nutrients can cause increases, increased incidence of those things,
like B vitamins.
If you don't get enough B vitamins, you can have symptoms of anxiety or whatever vitamin
D, that's another one, creatine, maybe I did read one study once that showed
that vegans who supplemented with creatine,
not only did their cognition improve,
but they also had higher rates of feeling good,
like they felt better, they had more energy
and that kind of stuff.
So that's one way.
And then there's another way that might be,
I kind of speculate, like,
what's one of the main drivers of someone becoming vegan
or staying vegan long-term?
Like, what would be the main?
Killing animals.
Yeah, right? Like, all the vegans have ever...
It's ideology more than, yeah.
Yes, the health of it.
All the vegans I've ever worked with
who tend to stay vegan for long periods of time
and study, support this, are not people who do it
for health reasons, but rather people who do it for morality, people who feel like they don't want to hurt animals.
I wonder if the feelings of anxiety, depression, that kind of stuff correlates with the,
I also really don't want to hurt any living things, and so I'm more likely to go vegan because
those behaviors may be connected to those choices or whatever. So I don't know.
Interesting.
Yeah, really, really interesting, right?
Aren't you working on getting a vegan doctor right now?
Like, I know we're gonna do Paul,
and we're gonna do a vegan doctor.
Don't you have that you're working on?
Yeah, I wanna do an episode of Carnivore versus Plant Based
and interview two people who are smart on opposing sides.
The polar ends of the spectrum.
Yeah, cause that you're doing it different, right?
I like the way you've decided you wanted to do this.
Like it's, right now we've seen Joe Rogan do it.
We've seen Mark Bell do this where they bring these two on
and then ends up being like, they debate,
but they're really just, yeah, it's just talking.
I feel like it gets nowhere.
And it ends where you're going to control the interview
individually with each of them
and then afterwards talk about it.
Yeah, I want to do, I want to interview one of them and then interview the other one, ask them
very similar questions, challenge them. My goal is to push and challenge them to explain themselves.
I want to use the best arguments for me, their side. Yeah, you want the most compelling points
from either side. Yes, and so it'll be kind of a narrated interview where I'm narrating and then
you hear what they have to say. That's where I think it gets lost all the time when you have these debates.
Like they don't really like get out the most compelling points.
It's like nuanced little things of each study and it's so arbitrary.
People just get are like, whatever.
It just affect me.
It's tough to find two people who are both very educated and then also great at arguing.
Yeah.
Because for that to be a really good dynamic commercial or episode, you really need two people
that are super educated in their side and then also do very well in communication and
argue and that's what we saw happen with what Wilkson and what can I think it was named
right now.
Oh, oh, Cressor.
Yeah, Cressor, I mean, Cressor is just as brilliant as he is, he is not a debater at all.
Confertation throws people off their games,
like emotionally involved.
Yeah, so what I want to do is I want to find the best counters
to either side and then push that and question them
with it, right?
So what about this and what about these studies?
Like my goal as the person narrating is to try to push them to answer the most compelling
arguments that are against them.
And then you'll hear both of them and then at the end we can kind of discuss our opinions.
And I didn't want to get like two zealots.
I wanted to get two people who are smart and balanced.
And Paul Saladino is, he does a very good job of discussing his side.
He doesn't seem like a zealot.
It doesn't come across as a carnivore zealot.
I've heard some carnivore zealots
and I don't think they'll be good for
you know, that kind of a discussion.
So I don't know, man, we'll see.
We almost made it without mentioning COVID.
Yeah, I was just gonna bring it up.
Only because there's, it's interesting
because I'm always looking to see which businesses
are thriving amidst all this uncertainty
and whatnot.
I just saw that our Vs are like going like gangbusters right now.
They're up like 30%.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, because everybody's trying to travel right now.
I'm like, you know, this summer,
this is really like one of those things.
It's like, it's tough to organize.
Like I want my kids to go to these camps.
That can't happen anymore.
Like we can't do these trips.
There's not full open areas to use.
You can't use the pool, like certain areas.
So, the RV allows for a lot more freedom
in terms of like you kind of have your own setup.
You can camp alongside the road somewhere.
You go to nature.
So I think a lot of people are just, that's the move right now. I, you know, alongside the road somewhere, you go to nature. So I think a lot of people are just, you know, that's the move right now.
I, you know, one of my dreams, and I don't know if this is, you ever have a, like, an idea of something and then you do it,
you know, that's not what I thought.
Yeah.
So I've never done this before, but one of my dreams is to one day rent or maybe buy an RV and do a cross-country, like three three month tour of the whole country. Go see all the major parks and sites.
And I feel like that would be really fun.
You know, I feel like that'd be awesome.
Yeah, it's cool.
I've done quite a bit of it just from being in a bus
with a bunch of smelly football players and whatnot.
Like, so I've seen quite a bit of the Midwest in the East Coast,
but yeah, I love it, dude.
I love traveling and I love going to,
especially like national parks, like national parks.
Oh, you gotta see all of them.
We have like real beautiful areas.
Do you know what else is spiked in sales?
What?
This is in April, right?
In gun sales, statistics came out.
Oh man.
Gun sales spiked 71% in April alone.
One point, seven, nine million guns were sold in April.
Wow.
Oh man, that means we're even more armed now.
Crazy dude.
And he's like, doesn't like ammo work like kind of like the stock market too or it's like
up and down all the time like pride.
He gets like really expensive at times like this.
Dude, a buddy of mine who who he has a nine millimeter,
and he just, you know, he does it for fun.
He goes to the range or whatever.
He was trying to buy boxes of, you know,
a couple boxes of nine millimeter bullets or whatever.
Yeah.
Could not find any.
Had to drive an hour and a half away.
Yeah, bullets are hard to come by.
Just to fight.
Yeah, people are buying like crazy.
Do people flip it and sell it online?
Do you know?
I don't know if you can do that with ammo.
Can you?
I think you can with ammo.
You can't with guns, but you can't with ammo.
No, no, you can't.
You can't even with ammo?
No, I said I know you can't with guns.
I'm not sure about it.
I'm not sure about ammo, but I know it's going up.
I got something that I'm not sure about.
I want to ask you, fathers here.
So this is a new recent
dad thing for me, right? So I haven't decided which I think is worse. So did you guys,
as kids, have like a song that just like calm them down? So this is new for me, right? So I have,
you remember that video I posted probably two or three months ago on Max's page,
You remember that video I posted probably two or three months ago on Max's page the of him getting his nails
Done and he was listening to the the Lion King thing like that. That's his song It's been his song for like three months. He just loves it. He could be like crying
Just we're just and then I could turn that on and instantly yeah, stop
Thunder Thunder struck
So ever it yeah, No, it's not.
I swear my life true story.
True story. No way.
Yeah, he'd he'd sing it like I'd put him down in the crib and I'd walk away and he would
hum it and he'd go, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, Oh, that is so good. But I programmed that. Trust me. Yeah.
Every time you put it on to give him a lollipop.
It's the wind chime, you know, the baby tune version.
The lollipop, I will answer, right?
So what song from the Lions King?
It's in the jungle. Or wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo, wemo He could be crying, which he doesn't cry that often, but when he if he does like he's really like in teeth pain or something going on
And I could put that on and he stops now the only downfall that it's like a two-minute and 30-second song and then right back the crying
Yeah, so it's so funny. It's on repeat. So what I do video
I will I will so the question I have for you like at point, does the song become more annoying than listening to crying?
No problem.
Because I was the other day, I was in the,
so Katrina had to run into Target to pick something up
and I had him and then he was, he was,
and one, he was hungry, his teeth was bothering him
and it just, it was like the perfect storm
and he'd been in his car seat for a while.
He was ready to get out and he was just going crazy
and I'm driving around the parking lot.
And I was like, oh, you know what, put the song on.
Put the song on, quiet.
You know, and then I let it play one time
and then right back, you know, like, fuck, replay, re,
and so I'm driving around this parking lot
for like 15 minutes replaying the song, like over and over.
That's very normal.
I, I, I go, okay, what is worse?
I'm gonna, I'm gonna hate this song so much.
I'm gonna, I know, so I like wondering like,
what is worse is listed the kid cry a little bit
Or your kids get obsessed they'll get you'll wait till he gets a little older
He's gonna find a video or a movie or a movie and he's gonna just and literally my kids used to do my son used to do this with
Fine Pete repeat finding Nemo and
Wally yeah, it would literally as soon as it was done my kids at Wally to they love really oh yeah
As soon as it was done my kids have walley too. They love really oh yeah As soon as it was done he'd hit play again
So you know what song you see that Tim?
He's the calm down and it wasn't just the song I had to be the video the music video also. Yeah, um brela with Rihanna
What's that?
Oh my god, how different are our kids are? Oh bro. I got Lion King over here. You've got the fucking AC DC
You know how funny it was to have a winchime a A two year old, like getting all fussy and want to cry,
whatever being a brat, and I put the video on,
and there's Rihanna, hot, and whatever with the rain on her.
And he just, oh, well, at least he didn't scar your kids
for life already.
I have, like, okay.
So basically, I had the task of snaking my toilet.
This is like two days ago.
So hold on.
Okay, did you clog your toilet? Was it you? Yes, but it wasn't like how you would think. snaking my toilet. This is like two days ago. So hold on. Okay.
Did you clog your toilet?
Was it you?
Yes, but it wasn't like how you would think, right?
So I was actually, I have this,
this basically a shelf, right?
Directly over the toilet, which is a flawed itself.
Oh, it's like, yes.
So one of my coms, just,
I was reaching for something that fell as I flushed the toilet.
My comb fell simultaneously as it was flushing
and then just would, like, right in there.
I was like, no.
So I was trying to come back,
and this is right before we left to go elsewhere.
And I just came back and I was like, I'll get to it
and I get home.
I got to it and I don't wanna wear anything anything, you know, because I'm doing shit.
Yeah, so I have to like, strip down to like my boxers and whatever.
And so I'm in there just like, snake in this thing and trying to get the comb out
and having a hard time and flush in and on all this shit's coming back up and it's just disgusting.
Whatever. And so I'm sitting there, I'm just getting frustrated.
And then, I think as ever it comes in
to ask me something, he's like, oh,
and then Ethan comes in, then Courtney comes in
and they all just look horrified at me.
And I'm like, what?
What's wrong?
Well whatever.
So basically, the underwear I had is a little bit old.
Okay, and I had is a little bit old. Okay, and I had like a hole in my balls.
Just hanging out.
I was sitting there with a snake and like poop on my arms.
I was like, this image is going to be burned on their head forever.
I ruined them.
It was just balls.
It was just balls.
And then my ball, my sack was just out.
Nothing else right through this hole. No dick. No dick. There just balls. It was just balls. And then my ball, my sack was just out. Nothing else right through this hole.
No dick.
No dick.
It was just balls.
Dead, dead, blind.
You know, like, you said it's some gum.
Who is that?
It's like trying to joke it off.
I'm like, oh, enjoy the view.
You know, oh, my God.
They're horrified.
I can't get away with Holy Underwater.
Katrina, the minute it has like, at all a breakdown. That's the best thing. They're horrifying. I can't get away with Holy Underwater. I can't turn it. The minute it has like, at all a breakdown,
she's still.
Yes, me too.
Like, Pordi will come and grab and just rip them off me.
It's like, throw them away.
Oh yeah.
I don't know what it is about.
It's comfy though.
This is true.
What it is about men and old articles of clothing.
It's on the same way.
The older a t-shirt gets, the more holes it has in it,
the more I value it.
It's like, finally comfortable.
Yeah, I'm gonna say that.
The t-shirt one is like, it gets more comfortable. The more times it's been gets, the more holes it has in it, the more I value it. It's like finally comfortable. Yeah, I was gonna say that the t-shirt one is like,
it gets more comfortable.
The more times it's been washed, the softer it becomes.
Underwear for me, it's like, there's always like
the backup, as a single bachelor,
it doesn't exist for me anymore,
because Katrina will throw it away.
But the old me was like, you always have the,
three or four pair that I've got holes
and are falling apart that's at the back of the underwear
to work in case you didn't get laundry done that week in time or what that. have the three or four pair that I've got holes and are falling apart that's at the back of the underwear
to work.
In case you didn't get laundry done that week in time
or with that, it's like, at least I have some emergency
underwear, so that's kind of the theory for,
or was the theory for me as a bachelor.
But now it's like, and that was my argument when she tried,
when she started first starting on the way,
I'm like, listen, if you do that,
you gotta back it up with new stuff.
Like, can't do that to me.
You're making Costco trip.
I'm still wearing these.
It took Jessica a full year of us being together
for her to be okay with the peckini underwear
that I wear.
For the longest time she's like,
I just can't get used to you.
Oh, it's so funny.
Walking around with them.
We were vacationing with Sal and his family.
Like Courtney was doing a laundry.
Oh yeah.
She was like holding a sass underwear.
Are these Jessica's?
This is like, who's are these?
And then she found out that she was,
like drops it.
Hey, I tell you what though, they keep everything in.
The balls don't ever pass.
Nice and snug.
There's that dude yesterday.
Yes, yesterday I went, so when I was up with my family,
my sister's fiance, he, you know, he likes smoking cigars,
right?
So I haven't had a cigar in so long. And I forgot how enjoyable they were to sit down and just puff on cigars, right? So I haven't had a cigar in so long.
And I forget how enjoyable they were to sit down
and just puff on a cigar, right?
So I had a great time.
We're sitting outside with the fire, puffing on a cigar,
and I'm not gonna finish the whole cigar.
There's no way I'll puke.
So I had a whole bunch of it left.
I'm like, I'm gonna save it.
I'm gonna save it, and I'm gonna take it home,
so anyway, last night, I'm like, I'm gonna go outside
and have some of the cigar, because I got it or whatever, so I go outside
and my daughter, she's sitting there, she goes to Jessica,
she goes, what's Bupa doing?
Jessica's like, oh, he's just, you know,
he's enjoying his cigar outside, she's like,
I don't know if I'm okay with this, you know?
Just judgment, you know?
Oh yeah, I come inside, she don't want me to kiss her,
don't want me to touch her, nothing.
Cause I had a cigar.
Oh, that's great.
She's looking at me like,
I love the smell of cigars.
It's like so different.
I, you know what I don't think is so much the smell.
It was just judging the smell.
Well, the aroma it puts off,
but then you still smell like cigarette.
It does kind of, yeah, your hand or your clothes.
Your fingers and your,
and for everybody else, it doesn't smell after the fact.
When it's burning, it smells good.
It takes like three days to get out and taste that.
It's just funny.
Even my kids will do that even if they see me drink a beer or something.
What are you doing?
You shouldn't be drinking.
Yeah, I'm like, what?
So I've got this new guilty pleasure.
So I don't know if you guys have seen this show on Netflix.
It's called Selling Sunset.
It's Total Trash TV.
Oh, I've seen that.
Have you seen that?
I haven't watched all the, like the model girls.
Yes, they, yeah.
Okay.
So I'm here for the bikinis and the expensive houses.
That's what I'm there for.
So, but the funny part about it is that Katrina walks down one day
and I'm sitting there, I've got Max, right,
and him and I are watching it.
And she's like, what are you watching with him right now?
I was like, he fucking loves it, right?
So this was like a week or two ago.
And now that the episodes have been on in the afternoon
sometimes when I get home, like every time it comes on you could be playing in his in his pack and play he'll stop and he
watches it. Oh that's hilarious. Oh my god whatever let him watch the damn thing. I'm like he likes it
you know what I'm saying. It's so interesting. It's good it's good association right.
Investments yeah yeah yeah. Yeah them. She teases me too,
because I take a lot of, a lot of times,
when I come home early, I still have to take calls,
you know, as business calls,
that we gotta do in ship,
and I'll put him in the carrier,
and then I'll go walk and put my airpods on,
and I'll have these calls,
and she goes, I think you are subliminally trying
to train him, and you do that on purpose.
Take that call, and it's a different time.
She's like, you want him to hear all that business talk.
Is that 100%?
Do you hear me?
It starts now, I hate it.
They sell, you know what they sell kids books now
that teach kids basics about,
but through children's stories.
You can find some of these books,
I'll teach them like economics and stuff through.
Yeah, so there's one book, I talked about this before.
There's one book, the pizza one you said.
Yes, no one knows how to make a pizza, I think it's called Julie Barowski. I love that book
Did I get one for your son? You got the tree the giving tree. That's right. Yeah, you got you when it's
Opened it up. What the fuck selfie crack?
Racist his mom and dad are a little darker
No, the pizza ones really good because it goes through and it talks about how now
there's not a single person on earth
who knows how to make a pizza.
And what it means by that is like,
the dough was made by wheat,
which was grown by the farmer and the machines.
There was someone that made the machines
that picked up the wheat and it goes through this whole thing
to show how millions of people essentially work together
who don't know each other.
Yeah, they're attributed. Yeah. Through markets. And I thought it was an absolutely brilliant,
you know, book for a little kid. It's like a, it's a, how young, like, is it too young for him?
I imagine it's you could start reading. He's not gonna understand it now. Yeah.
But I think if you start reading it now, he'll start to get that good association. He'll like,
it's got great pictures and it's pizza. You know, what kid doesn't like pizza. Yeah. Yeah.
It's pretty cool. Dude, there was a study, a brain imaging study, Justin,
I wanna talk to you about this,
about what side of the brain really leads to creativity.
You guys have heard the whole like,
right brain, left brain, yeah.
Yeah, so like the right side of the brain
apparently is the creative side.
The left side is the logical linear thing.
Oh, that's an opposite.
No, no, and so there's been other people have said,
that's not true, the whole brain works together,
and what's going on anyway.
So the Disbig Study on Jazz Guitarist,
during while they were doing improvisation.
So while they were improving music,
which is a, that's a creative endeavor
when you're playing music.
And what they found through brain imaging
was that it was driven primarily by the right hemisphere.
Now this is mostly true in people who are in inexperienced
at improvisation.
So people who don't improv much music,
when they're asked to do it, the right brain lights up.
However, musicians who are experienced at this kind of music when they're asked to do it, the right brain lights up. However, musicians who are experienced at this kind of music,
when they're doing improv,
when they're just kind of creating as they go along,
that showed that they rely a lot on the left hemisphere.
Interesting.
Yeah, and so what they think is that the creative,
is the creativity is a right brain ability,
but when a person deals with something that's unfamiliar,
but when that creativity draws on well-learned routines,
then the left hemisphere kicks in.
So if you practice something over and over,
you practice.
You have the formula now,
so now it's just about implementing it.
Yes, but if it's totally new experience
and it's pure creativity, comes from the right side,
if it's creativity that's pulling from experience, like this is something that I've done many many times, but I'm still being creative
Yeah, then the left side kicks in and how fascinating is that yeah, I think it's start to see that. Isn't that interesting? Very interesting. Yeah, I love that
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It's the motherfucking world.
English landed.
Queer.
Qua.
First question is from M-O-T-5.
When trying to build a legume body part,
how do you incorporate it into your routine
or do you just have to change up your workout
more dedicated to the legume body part?
This person obviously does not have maps aesthetic.
Yeah, or yeah, maps aesthetic or maps prime.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I mean, maps aesthetic was literally designed with this in mind.
Like it was literally created around how I would train for a show and each time I'd train
for a show, I would focus on one or two muscle groups that were lagging body parts
that I was trying to develop and bring up and how we implement the increased volume in
a program to do that specifically, isn't it?
And it's customizable.
So, you know, the program is designed that if, you know, if yours is shoulders and somebody
else's butt and hamstring, that you just kind of plug and play and we teach you how
to build
that volume in.
Yeah.
So essentially, what the traditional advice, which is good advice, is what Adams talk about,
which is you do more volume, you do more sets for that lagging body part.
You actually put more work in for that specific lagging body part.
And the way we do it in Maps aesthetic, and this is something you can do even on your
own, is on the days that you're not supposed to work that body part, you throw in a few extra moderate
intensity sets to increase the volume.
But here's the deal.
If you have a lagging body part
because you don't connect well to that muscle group,
which is common, okay?
It's oftentimes like, let's say glutes are your weak body part
and you're thinking, okay, I'm gonna do do more of the glute exercises squats and deadlifts and single leg deadlifts, not
stuff. If you don't connect well to the glutes, you're still going to have trouble because
all that extra volume might actually develop surrounding still going to go into the
quads. Yeah, and it's exactly might go into other body parts. So what you might want to
do is rather than just adding more work is focus on how you connect to that new body part, how you can feel that new body part
through squeezing more, through slowing down the reps, really focus on feeling that muscle
to the work rather than just going through the motions of the exercise. Now that can be
done with really, really good proper mobility work. I'm not talking about flexibility. I'm
talking about connecting to those muscle groups.
90, 90 for example, if done properly, will help you connect to your glutes. You can do this with almost
any body part. You can go through a mobility workout for these areas and connect to these muscle
groups. Then when you go workout, you'll feel them more. So maps prime, believe it or not, I know it's
a priming workout helps you connect to the exercise
I said it's also phenomenal for bringing up lagging body parts because oftentimes what you'll find when you do your
Assessments is oh, I'm not moving right and oftentimes that's because I'm not connecting well almost always it's
Yeah, almost always the the root reason why a muscle group is not developing if you're working it out right so if you're
Evenly working it out with all the other muscles,
there's, and people are like, it doesn't make sense.
I train my butt as much or more than I train legs
and all these other muscle groups.
And yet it's not developing at the same rate.
It's always a connection issue.
It's always, you're not connecting to it very well.
So that's where priming, I mean, priming is static.
Like if you don't have those,
that's an incredible investment. And at bare minimum Like if you don't have those, that's an incredible investment
and bare minimum, if you don't do either one of those,
then at least go to Justin and the webinar that I did.
So those two webinars that are free, go through that
and utilize that and apply some of those tools
if you don't want to invest in anything.
Yeah, and that's the MAP's prime webinar, I believe.
And there's assessments in there.
He actually teaches you how to do this
and what priming looks like.
But really, the focus is, if you have a lagging body part, feel that muscle when you do
exercises.
Get to a point where you can really feel it doing the exercise.
And then when you add volume, the extra volume is going to go to the body part that you're
trying to target.
Next question is from Jamilia 144.
What is the best hamstring hypertrophy exercise
that uses minimal equipment?
So hypertrophy means building.
So what's the best hamstring building exercise
that uses minimal equipment?
Now I love working hamstrings, especially in women.
I think when women develop nice hamstrings,
they tend to be very happy with the way that their legs look.
Hamstrings also tend to get neglected by a lot of people
and really strong hamstrings really give you
good stability in your squats.
Definitely in your dead left, there's a lot of hamstring.
And movement looks a lot better too.
Definitely.
Now, to be honest with you, the best hamstring exercises,
the ones that you don't use much equipment,
like when you go to the gym and you're thinking, I'm going to work my hamstrings, where do you typically go?
Yeah, lying leg curls.
Leg curls.
All the leg curls, seated leg curls, lying leg curls, one legid leg curls, it's like a bunch of leg curls.
That does work the hamstrings, but it focuses mainly on a part of the hamstring called the bisip
formores. It's the part of the hamstring that flexes the knee. Nothing wrong with that, but
the hamstrings, one of their main functions is flexes the knee. Nothing wrong with that, but the hamstrings,
one of their main functions is stabilizing the hips
and helping you with what's called hip hinging.
And the best exercises developed
the whole hamstring much better,
and those are like single leg deadlifts, stiff leg deadlifts.
Good mornings.
Exercises that work that hip, you know, hinging.
Those exercises really develop the hamstring as well.
My hamstrings at one point were really well developed. I would get lots of compliments
on them. And I did almost no hamstring curls. I did mostly those kinds of exercises. And
you don't need a lot of, in fact, if you did a good hip-hing single leg toe touch without
any weight, that'll really work the hamstrings.
I love single leg dead lifts.
I think they're super underrated and it's something that just the stability of it to like
really puts that muscle to work.
And on top of that too, like Romanian dead lifts, good mornings, like these are all barbell,
like all you need is a barbell and weights, but I mean you really can build and develop hamstrings
just by those very specific exercises. like all you need is a barbell and weights, but I mean, you really can build and develop hamstrings
just by those very specific exercises.
Well, and if you don't have a barbell,
I mean, you can do dumbbells for single leg deadlift
with dumbbells is extremely challenging.
It does not take very much weight to challenge one leg
and deadlift.
And I think part of the reason too,
I mean, Sal makes the case for,
you're recruiting a lot more with those movements.
You can also load those movements way more.
So, I remember when, and I shared this on the show, like, I don't know, a few years ago,
but it was when I was on that kick when I was trying to chase cell with his deadlift and
I was deadlifting a lot.
I was deadlifting at least three times a week, and I completely eliminated like all my hamstring
machine exercises.
I wasn't doing any of that, and I'll never forget going back to lying leg crows
after like seven months, eight months,
or whatever it was of not doing any machines.
And I was like two X strength on the lying leg crows
that, you're talking about a machine
that I've been using for, you know, 15 plus years
in my life, I completely stopped using it.
All I focused on was getting better at my deadlift
because all I cared about was trying to chase a PR.
And then when I came back, I had 2x,
the amount of weight I was doing that I'd spent years
slowly increasing five pounds here there.
And so the development, the strength,
and my hamstrings just from deadlifting,
just trumps anything I'd ever done on a machine.
It was like the same effect of when I was doing
bicep curls trying to build my bicep versus doing pull ups.
I got a lot more muscle development doing pull-ups actually.
Next question is from GD Penna.
You've all talked about how stretching as a form of working out is ineffective or even
detrimental.
But exercises like the pigeon pose seem kind of like a stretch.
What differentiates priming movements like these from stretches?
Did we not address,
do we, I thought I addressed this maybe on the,
on the question on the webinar.
Oh, is that where, or the IG?
Is somebody, somebody said this,
I'm like, oh, you're right,
that was on the webinar, so I'm gonna pass this up.
So what make, okay, so what different,
okay, let me put it this way,
I'll give you an analogy, right?
Justin gives me five dollars,
or I take five5 from him.
What differentiates one being theft versus one being him
giving me the money, all about the intention.
Same thing with priming movements.
Pigeon stretch would be me getting into pigeon pose
and just relaxing into it and allowing the muscles
to stretch.
By the way, there's nothing wrong with static stretching
if it's done properly.
There's actually, that actually can be a part of a good mobility practice.
Well, it's programmed in the end of prime, right? So we program static stretching. It's what's been done
wrong with static stretching for so long. And the studies are conclusive on this. And we know now
that we, and we weren't doing this before yet, we still have trainers that aren't privy to this.
And that's static stretching
before you go into weight training is a bad idea.
That's not a good idea,
but that doesn't mean that static stretching is bad.
It just means that's not the place to do it.
Before you're about to go in and lift heavy weight,
the last thing you wanna do is relax
all of your muscles in a static stretch.
Used simply doing it actively,
like in a mobility move is different.
You're not relaxing, you're not relaxing
enough, so you're activating it.
It's the whole active versus passive,
parasympathetic versus sympathetic.
What state are you trying to place your body into?
And if you're going into a workout,
you wanna be able to wake everything up.
And so this priming type of stretch
is really trying to activate everything
and really get your body to be familiar with that position
but also have strength to manipulate your body
out of that position, to be firm in that position.
And so really being able to recruit muscles
while in these certain poses is everything.
Right, so if you're confused,
I'm gonna try and make it as simple as possible.
So intention is what makes something priming
versus just the static stretch, okay?
So here's what it looks like.
When you're doing pigeon pose and you're doing a static stretch,
you're just sitting there and allowing things to stretch
and you're relaxing in the pose.
What makes it priming?
You're in the same pose, here's the difference.
When you're in that pose, you pull your legs up,
like you're trying to go deeper, but you're pulling your legs up by activating the muscles,
and then you do that for five seconds,
and then you push them down,
like you're trying to push yourself out of the pose,
and you do that for five seconds,
and you can repeat that for sets.
The difference is, I'm sucking myself in the stretch,
and I'm pushing myself out of the stretch.
I'm activating something.
I'm activating the shortened muscles,
and I'm activating the lengthen muscles.
I'm literally tensing both sides for reps,
and that's the difference between priming and static.
Now, what's the difference in the way it works the body?
Priming is activating those muscles.
It's connecting my central nervous system to them
in different ranges of motion.
Static stretching is literally trying to turn off
my central nervous system, getting it to chill out so I can achieve a greater range of motion. Static stretching is literally trying to turn off my central nervous system,
getting it to chill out so I can achieve a greater range of motion. Static stretching is great
post workout. Priming is awesome before your workout. That's the big difference. And if you
prime before your workout, you have improved performance, better muscle activation. You can hit
lagging body parts better, better mobility and better stability and control.
If you do static stretching at the end of your workout,
you improve recovery, improve passive ranges of motion,
you get the CNS to calm down,
so things can recover a little faster.
So that's the big difference.
Now, if you're not educated on that
and you just see someone, they look a little different,
but if you don't know the difference, you might think,
what's the difference?
Why they look exactly the same.
It's intention.
Intention makes them very, very different how the body responds.
And both these, all of these, including foam rolling, are all included in Maps Prime,
and we program it to teach you how you should do this yourself.
That's the idea of every program that we've done is not only to take you through this step,
but also teach you how you would do this for yourself.
Apply the concepts the right way.
Next question is from Jay Herrick.
Is it more beneficial to break your workouts into splits or can a full body be just as effective?
Okay, so I know what the studies say.
And the studies.
What you talked about this in a while.
The studies show that if volume is equated and controlled,
that really it doesn't make that big of a difference
if you do up a split versus a full body workout.
So long as frequency of hitting the body parts
is kind of similar and total volume is all controlled.
And I get that, okay, I've seen the studies, yeah,
that makes sense.
Now here's where I'm gonna go,
kind of different than the studies, based off of my experience
of training lots and lots and lots of different people.
Generally speaking, for most people on a long-term basis,
full body type workouts just work better.
And here's, there's a couple of reasons why.
One full body workouts tend to promote more frequency
of training the body parts.
That's number one.
That's a huge one, parts. That's number one.
That's a huge one though.
That's a big one.
Because the thing that I wanted to add to what you're saying right now is that the thing
that none of these studies do is they don't factor in what we have got an experience in
doing which is learning about people's behaviors.
Correct.
And that is such a huge piece of this.
And after you've trained tons of people, you start to pick up on these patterns of,
oh wow, sure, in a perfect six week study
where we control the body part split, volume is exactly the same.
We're splitting hairs on which is better or not.
But when you factor in what we tend to see with people's behaviors and that's, if I have
a client or clients that are on body part splits, what tends to happen over a six week period
time or even months or longer than that is, you know, vacation happens or they get busy one day or this week they only
made three days in the gym instead of five or six, which they would need to do in order
to hit all the body parts with the same amount of volume.
Or they skip the body parts that are not necessarily big fans of, right?
It's not uncommon for a dude to follow a split with good volume on stuff.
And a leg day coming up,
I'll just do one of the leg day workouts
and I'll skip the other one.
When you do a full body routine
and you're training a whole body,
behaviorally speaking,
you tend to be more consistent with what you're doing.
Now here's the other reason.
This is more of a physiological one.
So let's say, okay fine, I'm consistent, no matter what,
what's the big difference.
This is my theory, okay?
When you train the whole body,
first off, the muscle building signals,
a lot of it is localized.
What that means is if I just work my biceps,
most of the muscle building signal goes to the biceps,
but there is this systemic muscle building signal
that kind of gets sent.
So when people just train their arms, most of the games go in their arms.
Studies show that their legs develop a little bit too.
Or if you just train one side, if I just train my right arm, it would definitely get bigger
and stronger on my left.
But we do notice in studies that the left arm gains a little bit of muscle as if the body
is trying to balance itself out.
So that tells me that there's this systemic muscle building
signal that's being sent.
I believe that train the whole body
sends a much louder overall systemic muscle building
signal than training individual body parts on a split.
I think it's a bigger, louder, more effective signal.
And by the way, this is how all body builders and strength
athletes trained
before steroids became a thing.
Before that became a thing,
everybody did full body workouts.
What you're describing,
I've actually heard it termed irradiation,
like the concept of irradiating.
More muscle fibers will be activated as a result of,
like doing an isolated movement with my arm, like I'm doing a bicep curl.
Like my shoulders are gonna be affected.
My pecs are gonna be affected.
Like I could brace and anchor my body down my core.
My legs are gonna feel a bit of tension with that.
So it does.
It spans across the body and get more bang for your buck
that way.
And this is why the total body approach to me
just has more functional application,
but it also tends to lead more towards muscle development.
Yeah, and you tend to people, here's a behavioral one.
When you're doing three full body workouts
versus a split where you're hitting different body parts,
people tend to choose the most effective exercises
with the full body, and with the splits,
they tend to do more of the pumping,
isolation, type of equipment.
And that might be okay if you're a well-developed body builder
where you need to do special focus on certain things,
but most people are not.
Most people are not, stage ready
and haven't been training for 10 years or whatever.
And so what you find when you see full body workouts is people squat more often,
people press more often, they row more often, they do more of these
effective exercises. When they do splits, you see more cable exercises and
machines and isolation exercises. Now, what does that mean in terms of
results? You're going to build more muscle and more strength with those
most more effective exercises. I actually read in article once where they interviewed several top strength building coaches,
people who work with a lot of everyday people, not specifically bodybuilding coaches,
but rather coaches who work with like us, lots of everyday people.
And the consensus was that eight out of 10 people are going to get superior results
with a full body routine over a split.
In my experience, that's 100% along the lines
of what I've experienced.
80% of the people that I've ever trained,
which is probably 80% of the people
listening to this podcast right now,
you're just gonna generally get better gains
across the board, better aesthetics, better strength
by doing
two or three full body workouts a week rather than doing a type of split.
Now, splits can also be effective, depends on the person.
We have a program that is a split, it's called MAPSplit.
So we wouldn't have created a program if we don't think for some people there's value
in that.
But if you look at all of our programs, most of them are kind of centered around this full body approach
because most of you listening
are gonna do far better that way.
And by the way, I switched to a full body workout routine
when I was already advanced.
The first, I don't know, 10 years of my training was splits.
Then I started reading old,
magazines from the 40s and articles of strong men
and John Grimick and Steve Reeves and Eugene Sandown.
I said, ah, they all did full body routines.
Let me try what happened.
I never look back.
I've never done really a split for a long period of time
because full body for me who's trained for a long time,
far superior in terms of the game.
I was the same way, but mine really was
for the consistency reason.
And I got to think that there's a large portion of the people listening right now that would
agree that they're probably falling a category more like myself than the crazy bodybuilder who
hasn't missed to work out in eight years. You know, what ends up happening is you have a week
that was great. You're in the gym five or six days a week and then another week it's three or
four times a week. And what ends up happening when you run splits is something always suffers.
Where if I'm running a full body routine,
nothing ever suffers.
If I miss a day in the gym,
I still hit everything evenly.
Where that's what's nice about, for me,
that's what I have found the most beneficial
is that I never am inconsistent with a muscle group.
Because it's inevitable,
you're gonna have weeks that you miss a day or two
in the gym here and there that's completely normal,
other thing, other priorities in your life.
And so when that happens, it's not a big deal
because that week you still hit a full body routine.
The muscles aren't being under hit.
I also found too that I'm less likely to overreach
certain body groups like where I do leg day
and I'll just blast my legs in it would,
you know, affect the whole rest of my week.
I would have like terrible workouts after that.
That's the other thing.
Absolutely, I mean, think about it this way.
Let's say today's chess day, right?
My shoulders and triceps are still getting
a little bit of work.
And then tomorrow's shoulders and triceps.
And then the next day's back,
but my not my biceps are gonna get a little extra work.
You don't have like full days of full rest
like you do with full body.
I'll say this and 100% will stand by it. For the average person, you can develop a decent physique with two full,
as long as your diet's good and your otherwise relatively active, two full body workouts a week would be phenomenal for most people.
Most people would be quite satisfied if they did a good two day full body routine.
Now for people who want to get advanced,
to get really strong, have high strength numbers,
three days a week of full body.
If you had good programming,
otherwise good nutrition, good activity,
three days a week could develop a phenomenal physique.
I do for the most part, I follow that.
Now I'm active on the other days too,
but for the most part, my lifting is three full body workouts. Now you go back in time, look these people
up, look up John Grimich, look up Steve Reeves, look up Eugene Sandow, look up some of those
old-time strength and tell me that they don't look phenomenal. And by the way, those guys
largely trained naturally, they didn't even take supplements. Crate team didn't exist
back then. Look at their physics, they worked out three days a week, maybe four days a week,
full body routines, and they looked phenomenal.
So for most people, full body is just tends
to be the most effective.
And with that, look, we record our podcasts
on video as well.
So we are audio right now.
You're probably listening to us through your phone
just in your ears, but we're also on YouTube.
We're on a channel Mind Pump Podcast where you can
listen to the podcast and watch us and I promise we're not as good looking as we
sound but it's still fun so make sure you come check us out.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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