Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1308: How to Increase Your Squat, the Pros & Cons of False Grip vs. Standard Grip, Ways to Improve Gut Health & More
Episode Date: June 5, 2020Who would have thought Tiger King was the most normal thing in 2020. (4:11) Mind Pump are BIG bird guys. (5:55) Mind Pump Workouts. (8:18) The Stock Market doesn’t make sense. (10:05) Gun sales are... through the roof amid the coronavirus pandemic. (11:54) Pregnancy and parenting. (16:13) Magic Spoon’s new formulation. (28:32) THC, terpenes, and pain management. (30:40) Good vs bad people. (37:35) #Quah question #1 – Why do I struggle to put weight on my squat? I am a long, lanky build and I have tried many stances and cannot break 300. (43:17) #Quah question #2 – As someone who has gone to a big-box gym for years, I have struggled during this quarantine. I am used to doing way too many isolation movements, but at present only have a barbell, weights, and a squat rack. Can I solely use this equipment and still make progress by focusing just on compound movements? (48:42) #Quah question #3 – What is your opinion on false grip vs standard grip while overhead pressing or barbell benching. I feel as though I have more strength using a false grip. (54:43) #Quah question #4 – What are your best tips for gut health? (58:46) Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off! **Promo code “HIIT50” at checkout** Carol Baskin Wins Joe Exotic's Tiger King Zoo in New Court Ruling RETAILERS REPORT THAT 40% OF THEIR CUSTOMERS ARE FIRST-TIME GUN OWNERS DURING COVID-19 Gun sales surge 80% in May, says research firm What Representing Men in Divorce Taught Me About Fatherhood | Marilyn York | TEDxUniversityofNevada Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Researcher receives $3.9 million grant to study how cannabis chemicals can help with pain Mind Pump #780: Delivering Health & Happiness With Dosist Visit PRx Performance for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** What is Gut Health – Mind Pump Blog Intuitive Nutrition Guide ½ off! **Code “FOOD50” at checkout** Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's Top, Fitness, Health, and Entertainment podcast,
we answer fitness and health questions asked by listeners just like you, okay?
But the way we open this episode is with our introductory portion where we talk about
our lives, we mentioned studies, we talk about what's going on in the world, sometimes
we talk about our sponsors.
So let me give you a rundown of this entire episode.
We start out by talking about the workout we had together.
We don't do this very often, but it's real enjoyable.
Doug consistently beats us up in the workout. He often, but it's real enjoyable. Doug consistently beats
this up in the workout. He gets angry. It's pretty annoying. Then we talked about the stock
market. It doesn't make sense. Why is it keep going up when everything's going crazy?
No idea. Gunsails are through the roof, shocking. That's not making sense. That's happening.
Then we talked about pregnancy and parenting. As many of you know, I am expecting a baby coming along, so that's exciting,
so I got to talk about that.
And we talked about parenting, because we all value being fathers really well.
We're not the best fathers, we mess up all the time, but we try to do our best.
Then we talked about magic spoon cereal.
They made some changes to make it tasty even better.
Now magic spoon cereal is high in protein and it has no sugar. I know that sounds
crazy, but it's totally true. It's way protein, too. It's not even crappy protein. It's way
protein. Now, we work with this company, so we have a hook-out hook-up, excuse me, for
you. We're going to hook up. Yeah. Just go to Magic Spoon.com,
forward slash mind pump. You automatically get a discount, or you can go to the normal website and use the
code MindPump.
Check out the fruity flavor one and blueberry.
Those are the ones that Justin eats all the time.
Yeah, watch out Chris Jericho.
Then I talked about how UCLA is getting funding to study terpenes.
These are the things in cannabis and other fruits and vegetables that give them their smell.
They actually have effects in the body, which is kind of interesting. Then I talked about how a meme meant to inflame emotion
actually tricked me.
And we talked about good versus bad people.
And this is something that I think is very important
to talk about with today's,
or these days events that are going on right now.
Then we got into the question.
So here's what we answered today.
The first person says,
I struggle to put weight on my squat.
I'm long, lanky.
I'm at 300 pounds, can't go up, what can I do?
So we talk all about getting squat numbers to improve.
The next question,
this person's used to working out
with lots of the machines and cables and stuff like that,
but because the gyms are all closed or they're not open the way they used to, now they're stuck with
a squat rack barbell and dumbbells and want to know if that's good enough.
Well, here's a short answer, not only is it good enough, it's better, but we break it
down in that part of the episode.
The next question, this person wants to know what the difference is between a false grip
or a standard grip while bench pressing or overhead pressing.
So one of them, your thumb is under the bar,
the other one, the thumb is over the bar,
and yes, there are benefits to each.
And the final question, this person wants false.
This person wants to know what our best tips are
for gut health.
So we talk all about that.
Also, this month,
one of our most popular fat burning programs ever, Maps Hit, is 50% off.
Now, Hit stands for High Intensity Interval Training.
This program is designed specifically
to produce fast results in a shorter period of time.
It's a short program.
It's about six weeks long.
It's intense.
The workouts are short, but it does burn a ton of calories.
It is a phenomenal fat burning program.
It's very popular.
You don't need a lot of equipment.
In fact, most people with basic home gym equipment,
we will do the whole program.
No problem.
Again, it's 50% off.
Here's how you get the discount.
Go to mapshit.com.
That's MAPS H-I-I-T.com.
And then use the code hit50.
That's H-I-I-T h it 5 0 there is no space do that for the discount.
I got something for you. Oh for me.
I just like got excited. Salah so excited. He's one of my voice. I just hijacked you on that one.
So uh, Oklahoma judge awards Carol Baskin with with Joe Exotic's zoo.
Oh, that bitch.
That bitch, Carol Baskin wins again.
He's never gonna survive financially after this.
Never gonna recover financially from this.
Did you see the never?
Did you see the meme going around?
What did it say?
It said, who would have thought Tiger King was the most
normal thing in 2020?
Oh my God.
Yeah, right?
Oh, that's so perfect.
I learned a lot of things from watching that.
For example, all it takes is meth to turn a straight man gay apparently.
Yeah.
It takes a kid to do it.
Math and tigers.
No, no, and tigers.
Yeah, forget the biggest.
I'm just loan it.
Math and tigers and your tigers may be more
alluring than the meth dude.
Okay, so there was another thing too about this, right?
So the sheriff from whatever county it was that she's from
was talking about like the will, how it was obviously
of like totally, what's the word for that?
Not forged, but fabricated.
Fabricated.
Yeah, like, so they're looking into that as well.
Meanwhile, she just got that awarded to her.
What a sting.
What a salt on the wounds for jokes.
She won a bunch of money from him and he couldn't pay her, right?
So that's probably what happened.
That's the last thing he wanted to happen was his zoo go to her.
I didn't understand it either.
Like he has tigers and captivity.
And she has tigers. Yeah, and captivity.
Yeah, there's literally no difference.
How is she saving her?
Yeah.
I mean, he played with the little tiger cubs.
That was a different thing.
Speaking of animals, you go to,
you guys have been parks, right?
Parks and neighborhoods or whatever.
No, I avoid them like crazy.
Good.
Ever since they passed that law against you.
Yeah, just a lot. Two miles apart.
We won't talk about that.
Or schools.
This guy.
Okay.
Legally, I'm not allowed to talk about it either.
Yeah, okay.
No, but the most aggressive animal by far at a park is a geese.
Oh.
Oh, yeah, geese.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, my God.
Man, dude, they are territorial.
Dude, one of them tried to, yeah yeah bite one of my kids when I was at
Rory can the bar still video the old white guy that was walking some geese. Yeah, I know it was just flying
It makes across the street. They're frightening. So for me. This is how I listen
I wouldn't actually do this okay, but I'm when I'm at the park and we go to the like the lake area and then the geese comes up and
Stars posturing I'm just thinking in my head like, come on bro. Yeah, I dare you.
Yeah, bring it.
I did, I did you jitsu and you're pretty much all neck.
I'm pretty sure I can choke you pretty easily.
Hey, turkeys do that too, man.
Like we've had, we have a lot, a big turkey flock
or whatever the fuck you call it.
But I don't know, I don't know what the term is.
A murder is a, it's called a gobble.
It's a murder of fucking turkeys.
No, no, it's a gobble.
A gobble.
No, I just made that up.
No, I didn't believe you at all.
They're flocks, aren't they?
But yeah, anyways, they're flocks.
They won't get out of the road.
They try and like, they hiss.
Like, what is this?
I'm a bit too,
I'm a bit too,
it's a weird, gross sound.
It's a dragon, yeah.
I'm like, listen, you're like Thanksgiving dinner.
Get the fuck outta here. Yeah, dude. You know, like, with'm like, listen, you're like Thanksgiving dinner. Get the fuck outta here.
You know, like with the balls of these things.
Bro, I was driving with my son.
I was taking my son home from school.
And I don't know where.
Like, we're just cruising.
I'm not even going fast.
I'm going like 35 maybe, cruising.
And a bird just flies down and it hits my bumper
and bounces off and flies away just for no reason.
It's like, flew from up here. Don't fly that boom and goes up and my son looks at me like,
what the fuck just happened? You know, he didn't say that because I would.
Oh, that happens all the time. You have like a really big window like birds just like to his side.
But this is like car and I'm driving and so I'm like my son and I are coming up with reasons for it.
And he says he says I wonder if he was showing off to his friends.
I wonder if him and the birds are there.
I dare you to go down.
I'll do it, bro.
I don't care.
I dare you.
I need to like fly.
You triple dog dare me.
Yeah, everybody's like, yeah.
Yeah, you're a badass.
Anyway, it's probably happened.
It's probably happened.
Had another great workout with you.
We haven't done enough workouts together.
It was really good.
Yeah, that means probably number five at this point.
It was. You know what I keep learning though from these workouts we do together. It was really good. Yeah, I mean, it's probably number five at this point. It was. You know what I keep learning though, from these workouts we do together. Now that
we've done at least five of them. Yes. Doug by far applies the highest intensity. Yeah.
By far. All of us seem like we're trying to beat. He has a lot of rage still in there.
Yeah. You know, Seth. I feel like he's going to get something to prove. You know what I'm
saying? But your trainer buddies, you know what I'm saying? He's got to be like, you can't go into the workout weeks.
It's been proven, Doug.
You see, he slams those weights.
You don't have to do anymore.
Hey, I'm just serious about what I did.
No, but I always look at him.
Hey, that's serious, guy.
Yeah.
That's serious.
This is like a vacation workout for me.
All of us are like, you know, each one of us is like,
every day is serious.
My knee, my hip a little bit, I got a headache, you know,
and don't do anything. I don't headache, you know, and don't stop.
I don't, you know,
like, that's enough.
Yeah, that's enough.
It's kind of his neck.
That's why he looks the best.
I know.
I'm still at it.
Doug, you do look like you've put on
a little bit of lean masto.
That's good news.
No, is it,
are you, what do you do?
Are you flirting with Doug right now?
No, no, no, no, this is not.
What am I doing?
Yeah, what's different?
Consistency, really, for me, is just going regularly
on my workouts.
I've been doing MAPSANabolic.
I'm in phase two now.
You love that program.
I love it.
You always circle back to that one.
Like I said, in one of my posts, I've done it probably
over 15 times.
Doug's one of the first people to follow MAPSANabolic.
He was one of the testers.
I'd like to think I was the first person.
Yeah, well, I am maps on a ball.
Yes.
That's pretty much the same.
That's pretty much my idea.
That's how I named it, by the way.
I was like, I liked maps.
I came up with the acronym, right?
Muscular adaptation programming system.
I was like, this is perfect.
I need something else.
Doug obviously looks anabolic.
So I put the anabolic at the end.
Hey, I wanted to ask you, since you're the guy
who follows the stock all the time,
what do you think is going on right now
with this stock market?
Doesn't make any sense.
Isn't it weird?
It's still up, huh?
You got, it's like hitting record hot.
You got in the hell.
You got coronavirus, then you have record unemployment,
business to shut down, then you get all
this other craziness that's going on.
Writing and yeah, hell on earth.
And the market is just being, being, being,
keeping it weird.
I don't get it.
Weird.
So I have a lot of family and friends
that are, this is what they do for living, right?
They do investments.
And they're all like, dude, take your money out.
This is weird, doesn't make any sense.
Something's gonna happen, the bottom's gonna fall out.
And they're even saying this.
Well, wasn't it you who, I think you said this
on the podcast that Warren Buffett is like,
it's 45% liquid right now. Yeah. That's the most I've ever heard him liquid before.
Yeah. So that means he thinks that the market's going to, going to take a crap. So he take
out, you know, took out a lot of his money. He has it cash. So who's, who's getting the
most like spikes as of late? Like what, what industry? Well, well, of course, zoom crutch.
You know what else crushed recently? Gun manufacturers exploding. Oh, everything is though
That makes all freaking you name it Johnson and Johnson like any sort of like
Shampoos and sobs and canned foods like all that stuff all tech like zoom through the zoom I think recorded like
100 and 100 and something million over their quarterly projections.
Like the thing is though, and even the article I was reading
was like, they just know that they can't keep up,
keep that pace up.
So I mean, it's got to come back down.
Every, the stock price right now is based off
of what they're doing and they're not going to keep
that rate going.
I don't know, man.
I know that the Fed keeps pumping money into the market.
And so I feel like a lot of it is fake.
Do you know what I mean?
It's like temporary.
Yeah, like there's going to be a bubble.
That's going to burst, but some of the stuff makes sense.
Like I said, the gun companies, record sales of guns since COVID, and now of course, you
know, what other stuff that's going on.
Yeah, the stat you gave the other day was what?
40% are first time buyers.
So that's a lot.
Yeah, current, so the statistics I've read so far are that 40, so first off, gun sales have exploded.
These are some of the highest rates we've seen a long time.
In this makes sense.
Anytime there's uncertainty, gun sales go up
or if a Democrat gets elected, that actually drives up
gun sales too, because people are afraid they're going
to take them away.
Yeah, or something like that, right?
So, gun sales exploding, obviously,
there's a lot of uncertainty going on.
But the statistics
I saw show that 40% as much as 40% are new first time gun owners and 40% of those owners, so
of the new gun owners, 40% are women. Oh wow. So women are buying guns at record levels that they
haven't seen in a long time. Yeah, so...
Do either one of your guys' wives have guns?
No, I've taken her to the range once, but that's...
No, she's not have a gun.
No, no, no, but we've gone shooting and we passed the test
and we're probably gonna end up getting her a firearm.
Her dad likes to go and practice,
and so it'd be something fun for them to do together.
I also think if you own a gun, you need to be very, very well versed. It makes no sense to have one and then not train on a regular basis,
but something that she enjoyed a lot, and I'm like, this sounds like a fun hobby.
I mean, it's a, for anybody who's never done it before, it really is a lot of fun.
It's a lot of fun to, you fun to aim at a target, hit it,
and work on your aim and operate the thing.
It's whether you believe in self-defense with it
or not, it's actually a pretty fun thing.
I went bow target shooting, did you guys ever done that?
I've been getting into that a lot, actually.
It was a compound bow.
Yeah, I just ordered a compound bow.
I've been doing that with my kids,
because we have a target kind of set up in our backyard.
And this is a, it's the whole COVID thing.
It's like I'm trying to find like physical things
to get, you know, in my backyard
that it's not, it doesn't take up a lot of space.
And so we have like a section of our yard
that's just devoted to like BB gun targets
and bone arrow type targets.
So I love it because it it because I like that even more
because it takes a bit of skill
and it also it feels zen.
Like you really have to like focus completely
on the target and your breath and your body
and you're really present in that moment
and it's just like, I don't know man,
it's quite an experience.
I've never done it before.
So this was my first, I mean, I've shot him here and there,
but I've never gone to a target place or whatever.
And we went to an outdoor range.
And my father-in-law has, he loves doing it.
So he had an extra bow.
And one thing he said to me was like,
get really good at firing the exact same way every time.
Yeah. Stance, position, and that'll give you accuracy. I have a hard time
seeing you shooting a bow. Why? I don't know. It's an athletic thing. Really? Yeah.
Sure. Oh, I hit targets really well. What do you talk about? It's an athletic
thing. Bro, listen, I beat both you guys at horror. If his hands only have to go in the
T-Rex position here and then forward, he's like a genius. He's like an amazing, anything.
First of all, I don't do stuff like that.
This to this.
What are you doing, David?
That's it.
Anything that requires the lower and the upper.
That's what I've said.
I've got a shoot-up basketball.
Throw a dart, arm wrestling.
I'll give you all the guys at horse.
It's all the carnival shit.
I want a car off of Adam.
It's just you, because you're...
Okay.
He was hiking.
Hey, look at that.
I get in trouble that all the time.
We're not rich enough.
That was the most amazing thing ever.
He was so confident, dude.
He's like, I'll buy you a car.
Still to this day, you could do anything.
I mean, you could become present, whatever, dude.
But you making that shot was the most impressive
ever seen, dude.
Dude, how do you prevent, do you see my armor here?
Do you notice a little bit of this coloration?
How do you prevent the string from hitting your forearm?
Oh yeah, it's just technique.
That does happen though.
Dude, I think I'm like, yeah, I know.
They have like this leather thing
you can wear in your arm.
That would be funny if you did.
You're a little girl about it.
Yeah, I take this thing and see what me pads on
and everything, leather straps. Just lining it up better, you know? Well, I mean, I have a big I take the, see what me pads on and everything, whether it's trash.
Just lining it up better, you know?
Well, I mean, I have a big forearm, it gets in the way.
Wow.
Big, big, big.
That's how it is, yeah.
Dude, you know what?
You know where I went the other day?
So I've never done this before.
So you know, I have two kids already, right?
My youngest is 10.
I never did the full anatomy scan, ultrasound.
Oh, that's a little weird to me.
What did you think?
Did you, you're such a soft yet,
feel like you would get all mushy with it.
Oh, so when we went there,
I was weirded.
Oh Jessica got so emotional afterwards
because this is her first baby.
And apparently this is a common fear
that some women will have,
or before they feel the baby,
they'll be like, is there even a baby in there?
Oh my gosh, what's going on?
So we did the full anatomy scan and then after when she saw the baby and they'll be like, is there even a baby in there? Oh my gosh, what's going on? Of course.
So we did the full anatomy scan,
and then after when she saw the baby
and they're moving, you can see the arms and legs
and everything.
Oh, it makes it way more.
Oh, dude, she cried and I hugged her.
It was so awesome.
But seeing my kid in the womb, moving around,
and then they did this 3D picture of the baby's face
kind of from the side,
and it kind of looked like me a little bit.
I saw a little bit of my features, you know what I mean?
That's what was weird to me.
Really?
Yeah, it's a little too alien looking.
You know, like the, I mean,
it's cool that we have the technology
to actually do that.
So did you tell them ahead of time
that you didn't want it to the sex?
Because at what point, you'd have to be like,
okay, now you gotta look away, right?
No, so I did. I said, you know, we both said that. We don't want another sex, so, you know,
avoid telling us or avoid showing us. Yeah.
He went through, did the whole thing. I couldn't tell if it was a boy or a girl.
Now, was that a thing that you both agreed on and wanted to do, or one more than the other,
or you both are like adamant about? I don't want to. So I originally would want to,
would have wanted to know. I did it with both, right?
I knew with both my kids, but she said,
I think it would be more fun to wait for that,
plus we're trying to do,
we're having the baby with a midwife.
And so that whole process, and she's like,
you know, going through all that,
I think it'll make it, it'll drive me more knowing I get to see the sex of the baby. So after she said all that, I was like, you know, going through all that, I think it'll make it, it'll drive me more knowing I get to see the
Sex of the baby. So after she said all that, I was like, you know what? I like that. I like the waiting
I think that's gonna be such an exciting, you know, you know, can we throw you the gender reveal party?
And then I'll just like get a can in and blast off
Smoke, but I'll tell you what the experience this time around is different for me because I already have two kids.
Again, like my youngest is 10.
And, you know, the infant baby toddler stay,
actually all the stages, but I remember these stages
because my kids are still kids,
but they're out of those stages.
It went by so fast that now I feel like
I'm gonna cherish it and be way more present.
It's kind of funny because that's what, you know, I talked to my parents gonna cherish it and be way more present. It's kind of funny,
because that's what,
you know, I talked to my parents about that same fact, right?
Because they get to be grandparents through,
they watch, you know, the kids,
they appreciate every minute of their time with them
at like certain stages.
And they keep trying to like tell me about that
as I was going through it.
And it's, I could totally see that
if it was later on now where, you you know I had another one. Oh, yeah
I think a lot of that's just being older and why is it right? Yeah, that's part of it because I went in I went into this
Being like that like that that's important to me to be a part of every milestone and I've been video and a log and everything
That he's doing because and I know it goes I mean everyone says it goes so fast
Well, don't you see pay like your son now is he's getting close to one right? Yeah. Do you look at pictures of your son
when he was like two months old and go,
whoa!
Oh yeah, no, he looks totally different.
I mean, his Instagram page is,
and I've done it like really systematically
so you can really see like a consistent progression.
So I do about six to seven videos and pictures of him
between each one of his month checkups.
So basically once to twice a week,
I'm posting something of that time frame of his life.
And then I do the eight month, the nine month,
the 10 month photo of him.
So when you go through his page,
it's like a perfect timeline of that.
So it's wild to go back and already do that.
So, but I think that's so neat though,
that we, I mean, that's so cool that he's gonna have that
when he gets older that he can go back
and kind of like scroll through all that.
It'll be wild to see yourself like that.
And I hate to admit this, but it is true.
I'm probably gonna be a better father this time around.
I'm not saying I was a bad father before.
I was just young.
Now that I'm older and I went through it,
I know I'm way more patient, that's for sure.
And I know how to control
the insecurity urges that I think a lot of dads get, right?
When you get a baby, your instinct is like work all the time,
need to provide, need to be fine,
and as I'm older, I'm realizing, okay,
I also need to prioritize time spent with the family.
Well, you're a lot more established too.
Now, you're so self-aware, so are you know, are there specific things and your kids both
turned out amazing. Like, you obviously hit a home run with both of them. So, even though
you're picking yourself apart that you'll be a better father, are there even actionable
things that you can think of right now that you're like, you know, I could have done this
better with my son or I could have done this better with my daughter. I'm going to make
sure I do that. Can you even think of anything?
Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Number one., so in my early days as a father,
I valued being there for moments.
They're doing a play or they're playing a game
or they get in the ward at school.
I was at every single one of those,
but I was not super present on the day-to-day
making lunch and breakfast and helping them with homework and that kind of stuff.
I just worked a lot, right?
Now that, especially after I got divorced and my kids were with me half time, I do a lot
more of that now.
And I realize how important those things that you don't think are a big deal are because
you're actually a part of their life.
You're really a part of the life when you do all that.
So I'm going gonna be way more involved
in everything versus how I was with my kids.
The other one is temper.
I was way less patient as a younger father,
more likely to lose my temper and get frustrated.
And now it's just, and it's funny, I see it with my parents.
Like I see, especially when my kids were little
and my parents would babysit them,
they would do shit to my,
they would say shit to my dad or my mom.
And I think to myself, like,
I would not be here today if I said that to my parents.
How do they get so patient?
You know what I'm saying?
I can't even believe it.
I mean, one time I think my son threw his food at my dad's face
and my dad laughed.
I was like, whoa, who's this man?
If I did that, this would have been great.
Backhand, crush.
Yeah, Justin, are you, so you and Courtney, do you think that there's certain things that
she just kind of owns with the kids and then certain things that you kind of, because
that's one of the things I'm going through right now is obviously Max is still really
young and I'm starting to pick up on things that I take the lead more on or she takes
some more lead.
Are there very distinct things in your relationship
that she kind of handles all the time
and then you always handle?
Yeah, and I think we've learned that together,
like what are strengths and weaknesses might be
and where to step in and where to help.
And like I'm always just looking at where I could be most
effective and help in terms of like helping them to develop to be more
better behaved and more examples of better humans than I can.
But mainly it's kind of almost like 50s-esque typical kind of stuff where she doesn't like
a lot of the disciplining. She'll do it, but like has a different way of doing it.
And then I lean a little bit harder on me to be a little more stern
and to have them experience things themselves
and really teach themselves more than intervening.
So we kind of go back and forth with that, but she,
she knows that her,
she has more of a propensity to kind of intervene
and get involved in trying help.
Yeah, she's a big helper.
I mean, she's a nurse, so it's like,
she just oozes empathy.
It's just like, you know, something I love about her,
but also it's like, I try to use moments as teaching moments when they occur.
And I try to make examples and then try, and then it's taken a while to build the kind
of relationship where we know, like, okay, if I'm taking this lead and I'm going in this
direction, that you're going to back and support me in this and there's no division in it
and so we've you know we've kind of worked all that out I
Teach them you know how to be more helpful to help her and like to contribute and clean and do
You know all these things around the house and be an active member of the family
and so like responsibilities and You and self-sufficiency.
And so I mean, that's a lot of what I'm kind of
implementing with my kids.
Did you have to, did that take years to iron out for you guys?
Because I feel like that's going to be one of the challenges
that Katrina and I have, like Courtney, Katrina,
bleeds empathy. And again, like you said, you know, bleed empathy and you know it and again like you said
I love that about her like I can rely on her to be the I'm like almost emotionless you know I'm terrible when it comes to that so we make a great balance on a team
But because of that I'm probably the one who's gonna be more likely to push him
Make him you know allow him to fail and get up on his own,
you know, where she would be more to swoop in
and help or rescue.
Was there, you know, a rough patch at the beginning
with you guys and then you eventually kind of saw
eye to eye on that?
Or yeah, there was moments where I would have a tone
and that she didn't like the tone of voice
that I would use with the kids and always felt like I was
a little bit too
you know, commanding and and to authoritative
and so I had in that was hard for me because I
in my opinion in my
experience that's how I
Responded well, you know to my parents and I needed that
sometimes to shake my train of thought and to her it was like oh I can't
believe you're so hard on them all the time and so we'd fight back and
forth well I'm doing it for a reason and they need to be tougher about this
and so I've learned to listen more
when she subtly points it out now
to where I really do listen
when my voice starts to get to a level
where I've been just constantly barking at
orgas out there.
So I've learned how to calm that down
and she knows how to weave through that
without getting me upset.
Or I know now how to check them without getting her upset.
It's taking time.
Dude, the mom and dad roles are both super important.
I watched a TED talk.
There was this woman lawyer who was talking about how fathers
are so poorly represented in like child custody
battles and stuff like that.
And she said that some of the questions that they'll ask the fathers to test how much
you know about your kids whenever they're going to because she said nine to ten times
if they fight over custody the dad's going to end up with every other weekend, you know
type of thing.
If the mom really pushes it or whatever.
And she said, one of the things that they do
is they'll ask the father questions like,
what's the kid's teacher's name?
At what time is there a doctor appointment?
What's their doctor's name, stuff like that?
And the dad's would be like,
fail.
Yeah, I don't know.
And she said, and so the way I would defend them
is I'd get up there and then I'd ask him questions
like this, if your kid could have any superpower
What would it be?
What is your kid most afraid of at night when they're scared?
And she said their fathers and mothers typically know different things about their kids and when she would ask those kinds of questions
The dads knew right away. Oh, I know what they're scared of. What an awesome experiment. Bro, I watched this Ted Talk.
That's great.
The Ted Talk made me emotional watching the beginning
because she's really talking about the value of a father.
And I think a lot of times, as dads were told that we're not,
sometimes we're told we're not as important.
And I get where some of that comes from, a lot of it.
There's a lot of men that just don't are involved.
But for those of us that are involved,
it could be a little hurtful,
because I mean, we are very important as well.
It was a really powerful, really, really powerful video.
Anyway, did you guys see that Magic Spoon
changed their formulation a little bit?
Again?
No, so there was a little bit of confusion around,
they changed some of the fats that are in their product.
And I asked Max Lugavir about this.
Max is the dude is, I love the guy, I love how he,
well it's also who introduced the brand to us.
Yeah, and I love how he talks about nutrition, whatever.
So they went with a type of oil,
I think it was sunflower oil,
and a lot of people were upset about that.
And so I told him, I said, isn't that a bad oil?
And he says, no, they use high oleic oil,
which is healthy for you.
It's got lots of monoinsaturated fats.
It's very chemically stable.
And they also said, he said, it makes it taste better,
which is why they did this.
So they're constantly changing the formulation,
keeping it healthy, but trying to always improve its taste,
because I can only imagine how difficult it is
to make a cereal that on its own has.
So I'm amazed as to what they've done.
And I have tasted the difference every time
they roll out a new formulation,
and it has been improved substantially.
Each one of the flavors has improved dramatically. It's funny, because I saw something. I don't remember where I saw this, but I guess
You know, we always talk about blueberries being the you know the best flavor and I'm like always trying to make sure that we're stocked up with the blueberry and all this and I guess
There's a other podcast out there with Chris Jericho remember the old
wrestler. Yeah, yeah Chris Jericho. Remember the old wrestler? Yeah, Chris Jericho.
Yeah, that's right.
He's trying to say that he's gonna buy out all the blueberries so he could stockpile
it himself.
Oh, no, no, get out of the world.
Yeah, dude, no, I'm coming for a Chris Jericho.
Yeah, don't challenge Justin too much.
I'll be able to eat you out of the house.
Yeah, I'm glad you finished that sentence.
Yeah.
I will eat some. Oh my God. Yeah. Oh. I will eat some.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
I could have gone horribly wrong.
Bro, I'm a, Mr. Jericho, you don't want a channel
is just into a serial competition.
Yeah, that's the last thing you want.
You're going to lose.
Yeah.
You're not going to win that at all.
Yeah.
I'll put you in a position.
Dude, so UCLA just got a ton of funding to study
terpenes and their effects on the body.
You guys know what terpenes are?
Yeah, part of the weed.
Yeah, it makes it taste a certain way.
So terpenes are found in lots of different plants, right?
Terpenes, like one is called limonel, I think it's called.
You find that in lemons.
So it gives it that lemony, smell, or whatever.
Pine has a particular type of terpene that gives that pine smell.
It's just the oils that the plant releases, right?
And what they, what they're finding,
because they got, again, they got funding for this,
I forgot how much money they got,
but they got it quite a bit.
What they're trying to find is why,
because now study is showing that terpene's
incombination with cannabinoids,
or even by themselves, have effects on the body.
In fact, it read the article and it said that,
because there's always a speculation
in terms of cannabis, right?
There's like sativas and indicas and oh,
sativas give you more energy.
Indicas relax your little bore.
A little more sativas might make you more anxious.
But then if you have a sativa and an indica
that are identical in their cannabinoid profile,
sometimes you still will get
like these reports of different effects.
And they're saying now,
probably might have more to do with the terpings
that are in there.
Well, I remember when we were doing work with Dosis
and we interviewed, I forget his name,
but the CEO, right?
Who was Dosis?
Wait, I mean, this was a while ago, a few years ago.
And they were the first company that I know
and that were really manipulating all that
because they were starting to connect the dots
that it actually had more to do with how we felt
afterwards than what everyone else had said before.
It's up at that point.
It's always been about CBD, THC,
what are the percentages and the levels?
Is it more endocazamorstiva?
Is it a hybrid?
And that was all we really talked about,
but it sounds like there's more and more research
coming out
that the terpenes have a major impact on that.
Yeah, so we may find either medicines or treatments
in the future that may be just terpenes.
You know what I mean?
Were you inhale a vape or?
Which makes sense to someone like me
who's been smoking weed for quite some time.
And you know, you have these moments where,
you know, and I'm sure anybody who has,
that can relate is sometimes you get a strain
and like wow, that just felt amazing.
And you just love it.
And then you tie it to the name.
And like, oh, it must be that purple-cush was so amazing.
And it's like, probably is a lot more going on
that you just got this perfect combination
and it paired really well
with your bucket. Yeah, sometimes you're super paranoid or like your app, they're a little
sleepy. The names, dude, stoners are flying away with a name. I just play, you know, the
girl-scal cookies, you know, through loops. Are there any strange, chronic? Yeah, did
you ever, was there any strains in particular that you found that just didn't work for you at them
Like as our strain and like you know like I don't like that one well some some really heavy per perpoles
I don't do really well with because they'll just make me really tired and I mean it'd be it's great if I was trying to
Have it before bed, but you know for the most part
Everything works pretty damn well with me. I'm saying I like I'm all for all the different reasons, because there's certain things that open up this creativity
side of me, there's certain strains that give me energy
and I could almost go, even though I don't like working out
on it, but I could, because I get energy actually from it.
There's other ones that kind of make me in a,
laughy kind of giggly and joy watching a Netflix show
or like you knuckleheads watching cartoons,
like, you know, that type of stuff.
Like, so there's never been a strain that I've had
and I was like, like, I know you have,
it's white widow for you, right?
So you remember that.
Yeah, yeah, I do remember that.
Cause I actually like whites.
I like white Rhino, white widow, I like those strains.
But I remember the first time that you shared that
that you had.
And you know, I would challenge you
that it might have been just a bad experience
and so you're like, written it off. No, I've had, that it might have been just a bad experience. And so you're like written it off.
No, I've had, so I've had white widow, um, three times in each time it's giving me, now
I don't know if it's because the first time was so bad that I'm anticipating.
Right, right.
What's going on?
But I told you guys, I literally, this has never happened to me on cannabis.
I thought that the FBI was outside of my place and that they were trapping the sewer.
Those choppers.
So I couldn't flush my weed down the toilet
and I thought for sure, and they were on the roof,
I thought they're on the roof,
I could hear 30 something years old.
Oh, I was an adult.
I was like 30 years old.
Totally, totally freaking out.
You're the only two weed nerds I've ever met
that can like explain differences between strains
and all that, like all my friends would just do to smoke a bowl
That was the extent of my knowledge
Well for me that I mean that's really the the listeners that don't go all the way back to beginning
It's actually well, I mean if it wasn't for that mine pump may have never happened because what originally connected Sal and I
Was I had never met a fitness person,
someone who is really passionate about health and fitness,
and then also well versed in marijuana.
Just at that time, it wasn't popular,
and we're talking six, seven years ago,
and I was in the midst of, you know,
running the cannabis club,
so I was in the thick of it,
and then going into it, I knew nothing.
So I remember the first day that I took the opportunity
to run these facilities.
I went straight down to Barnes and Noble,
bought a stack of books and started reading
and became fascinated.
I started to learn all the parallels that the plant had
with the human body and the way it's fed.
And I'm like, I just started, I geeked out
and just started going deeper and deeper into it.
And I remember when Sal and I first started talking
on Facebook, most of what we first shared
before we shared any fitness information
was strains that we liked or what we had tried.
So that was really what connected us originally.
And I was like, I was like so enthralled
that I was like, oh my God, there's another fitness dork
that is also a weed dork.
I didn't even know that existed.
It's so funny.
It reminds me of when I talk to people
that are really into wine, you know,
the Somaliye kind of a thing.
I wonder if there's like a job for a person like that
in the weed direction.
Oh, there is.
You know, absolutely.
I mean, they bud tenders and I forget
what the more formal name is for them,
but it's a lot like that.
It's very similar to that.
And there's a lot of companies now, in fact, I have a friend, a friend of a friend, Ryan, who is actually
has created one of these companies where they actually do food and wine pairing with the
different strains. So you'll have a strain, you'll take like two puffs of it, and you'll
eat something, and then you'll go to the next course, and then you'll have that. And
so, yeah, no, there's definitely people that,
you know, have, or broke it down to that level
where they pair it with certain experiences.
There's one strain has a special place for me,
Jack Herrera, it's a considered an heirloom strain, right?
It's one of the first, like strains that started,
that they started, you know, breeding with those strains.
That one has a special place for me
because that's the one that I had
when I came up and created
a map center ball at the first time. I was up until four o'clock in the morning creating this
program and I was on. So that one's always got a special place for me. Dude, I gotta tell you guys,
I have to make an admission. I got bamboozled recently. What? Yeah. You got hoodwinks. It's not
like an ant powder. No, no, no, no, no, not a sun. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no So I saw there was a tweet that's been shared by people. They screen shot it and sent it to each other.
And in the tweet, it's like Antifa.
And it says like, we're gonna be, I'm gonna paraphrase,
but we're gonna be going into suburban neighborhoods next
and robbing suburban homes or whatever.
So forse everybody freaked out.
Like if you're reading that and you're,
Oh, that one got me too.
Oh yeah, and it did for me too.
I got heightened up because I'm thinking,
you're going to, you're going to,
oh wait a minute.
You're going to neighborhoods,
this is becoming crazy, right?
So I got a little heated, I got emotional,
I started to feel myself, get a little bit, whatever.
And so when I calmed down, I did some research,
and it turns out that that tweet was put out
by a far right white supremacist group.
And what they're trying to do is they're trying to use fear
to manipulate the other side.
And then I read an article,
and this has been happening for a long time,
and it's important that we communicate this
because this, by the way,
this has been happening since the Cold War, right?
Since the Cold War, countries have messed with each other and tried to cause unrest and
division.
America has even done, RCIA has done it many, many times, right?
But today we have social media, which is just accessible to many, many individuals, almost
impossible to control.
Ever since social media became popular, it's been ramped up.
We know that the Russians were investigated for how they affected the election. And it turns out, you know, Trump wasn't working
with them, but they still were trying to affect the election.
Just look at all the siops protocol. Yes, just look into that. Is all I have to say about
that. And it's very interesting to see that. And again, you're right. It's been like every country has this type of division
where they manage that.
They try to create this civil unrest amongst
one of their competing countries or enemy countries.
That's how you weaken them, right?
So how do you go to, how do you weaken a country
without going to war with them, which is expensive and deadly,
and if both countries have nukes, nobody wins.
So they do this psychological warfare, and it's well documented.
This isn't me making something up.
And so be aware, because a lot of the tweet, all the really scary tweets and memes and shit
that you're like, well, I can't believe this is happening.
Many times those are other countries or nefarious organizations whose goals are not to get one side to win or another side to win.
Their goals are simply and purely to create unrest and division.
And I want to make this statement, and I want to make it very clear, it's the vast majority of Americans are good people.
Most of us, most of us are good people. Most of us want the same things.
We want safety, we want freedom.
We want to take care of our kids.
We want to have opportunities.
We want to be friends with people.
We don't want to be afraid.
That's most people.
And it doesn't matter what color you are.
It doesn't matter if you're a police or whatever.
And there's more of us than there are of bad people.
But a lot of this stuff that's coming through social media.
And by the way, one of the most powerful methods
of manipulation, and again, you can read how they do this.
This is, again, this is not, I'm not making this up,
is to take a real issue and inflame it.
So they're not gonna make up an issue.
They're gonna take a real issue
that people are already like angry about,
and then they'll fuel the shit out of it. And so what we're seeing take a real issue that people are already like angry about and then they'll
fuel the shit out of it. And so I what we're seeing is a lot of that and you're seeing that a lot
and so you have a lot of anger and then they come in and then they put it just to fight for
violence and to create and then yeah and then it gets used in other directions which hijacked.
Yes, yeah, it's just oh my god, it's so frustrating. It gets totally hijacked. I've seen videos now where there's protesters
and they're angry and they're chanting.
And then some random people show up and start the riot.
They'll throw the match or they'll break a window
and then they'll disappear and get people kind of,
they've used movie clips, you know,
and some that I've seen in terms of like,
or where they've shown riots and the different things from like other
instances or movies, like and and use that to fuel more enragement amongst everybody.
Yeah, we need to, we need to all just, you know, uh, there are definitely ways to change things
by working together through peace and remember, there are more good people than bad and,
and we just need to remember
that stick together and try to control because when your emotions are running high and you
feel hate and you feel fear, you are the easiest to manipulate.
That's rule number one.
You want to manipulate someone, make them feel scared and angry and then you can twist them
and get them to do kind of whatever you want. Shhh!
Shhh!
Quick call!
There you go, I have my everything.
Max-Claw!
Today's clause brought to you by Max and Obolic.
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It's the motherfucking vlog!
Eagerness landed!
Quique-quique.
First question is from Mrs. Lift to Hunt.
Why do I struggle to put weight on my squat?
I am a long, lanky build and have tried different
stances and cannot break 300.
That's a really good question.
There's a lot of reasons why it's not fair.
There's tall people out there.
Yeah, he did too.
That's true.
There's a lot of work harder.
Potential reasons why your weight might not be going up.
So I'm going to talk about the most common ones.
One of them is your workout programming might need to change.
You might be doing the same stuff over and over again.
It's not working.
Maybe you're doing too much or too little.
Maybe you're stuck in a rep range.
So move things around a little bit.
The second most common reason is believe it or not,
lack of stability and mobility.
That will oftentimes prevent you,
especially if you're lifting decent weight,
you're squatting 300 pounds. So I know that you at least know something about squatting. I mean, that's
not nothing. 300 pounds squat is pretty significant. So that tells me you know how to squat,
you've been pushing yourself. What might be preventing you from moving up is that your
body doesn't, your body senses instability, it senses a senses lack of mobility and it just won't allow you to get stronger. I mean, I'll I'll give you a I'll tell you a story
I had a client once that hired me who was experienced the dude was pretty built
We would have conversations with the gym
I must have impressed him because he decided to hire me and I was at the time
I was a younger trainer. I remember thinking like well well, this big dude is going to hire me.
That's pretty cool.
And his main goal was to get his bench press hire.
Now, his bench press was, I don't remember what number it was stuck at, but it was significant.
It was like 350 or 360 pounds, something like that.
And so I remember talking with one of my other trainers who was really experienced.
And I said, what should I do?
And we talked about programming.
And he said, try working on his shoulder stability.
Oftentimes that's the problem.
He came in saw me and I did very basic shoulder mobility movements, rotator cuff exercises
and shoulder mobility stuff.
Within a couple of weeks he added five or ten pounds to his bench press that he'd been
stuck at forever.
It was all because his body was more stable so he was able to exert
more force.
So if you're not doing regular mobility work, that could make a huge difference.
There was also the possibility nutritionally.
This happens to me a lot when you get back and when you get into training, especially
if you're dieting, to lean out or lose body fat, and when you get into training, and especially if you're dieting,
to lean out or lose body fat, and then you're also wanting to increase your squat strength,
that's hard to do.
You know, at one point, your body adapts
and gets as strong as it's gonna get
for the amount of muscle that you have on your body.
You've got to a point where you're generating
as much output as you can for that,
and you literally need to build more muscle to get stronger.
And if you're not feeding the body enough nutrients
to build more muscle, it's really tough.
And that's not to say that somebody can't be
in a calorie deficit or following maintenance calories
and see strength gains.
And I would always go to my programming first.
But if you've done a really good job,
let's say you work and cycle through the maps programming,
which we know what that looks like,
and you're still struggling with putting on weight
on the bar for your squat.
The other thing I'd ask you is to look towards your nutrition,
and have you gone on like a mini bulk
and actually tried to increase calories?
And this is very common for a lot of my female clients.
It's always really difficult for me to get a client
that was female to, hey, let's increase calories
and put some weight on.
Most of them come to me and be like,
Adam, I wanna lean out, I wanna lose weight.
And they're always eating around 1500 calories.
And I'm like, hey, let's boost you up to 2000
and really push the strength component.
So I would actually look there too.
So if you haven't looked at the programming,
I'd look there first, then the next place I would look
is actually my nutrition and actually try putting yourself
on like a two week calorie surplus
and watch what happens to your squat.
Now Justin, you have a really good squat.
Are there complimentary exercises that you have found
that contribute to your squat more than other nutrition like cheese.
Yeah, I think too, for me, it's changing up the protocol and changing up the
cute variables. So a lot of times, if I'm not as connected in my squat, I'll do
pod squats. If the problem for me is digging myself out of the hole, so if I'm at the bottom part of
my squat and I'm having a hard time digging my way back up, that's going to be a focus
of mine.
And so sometimes I break it up, almost like a power lifter where I'm looking at the different
parts of the lift and where I can improve those specific parts of the lift.
So that would be a pause squat to be one of them for me, but also just
taking the time to then change it up and focus on unilateral training. That's something
that I tend to do when I have, when I'm in a rut, in terms of like progressing in my
squat, I take that as an opportunity to then do what you mentioned in terms of mobility
wise, but also apply exercises in that direction where I'm in a split stance, I'm doing lunges, I'm doing Bulgarian split squats,
I'm doing lateral type exercises to then really regain that stability to then go up and
apply to my back squats.
Next question is from Cure Steve, O7, as someone who has gone to a big box gym for years,
I have struggled during this quarantine. I am probably used to doing way too many
isolation movements, but at present, only have a barbell, weights, and a squat rack.
Can I solely use this equipment and still make progress by focusing just on compound movements?
You'll probably make more progress if you do that.
I mean, I remember that was one of the greatest shifts
in my own personal physique is when I stopped training all the...
I mean, I was notorious for coming to the gym
and doing two or three machine exercises to warm me up.
You know, I was like, like, extensions, leg press,
you know, chest fly, peckdack, like I would do all these machine stuff.
In fact, there would be many workouts where I may not even
hit dumbbells or barbells.
And one of the single best things I ever did was switch
over to purely barbell training, and with a little bit
of dumbbell training to compliment that.
And one of the cool things about once you commit to that and you make that switch and what
I love about that now is I do way less to keep the physique that I used to bust my ass
in the gym for an hour and a half doing 15 to 20 different exercises.
I can go in the gym now and literally do four or five exercise, maintain the physique
that I like to maintain
and with half the effort because of the choice of exercises that I'm doing.
So, man, I think it will greatly benefit you if you discipline yourself.
Free weights are superior.
Now, I'm not saying you shouldn't do machines, I'm not saying.
But if you had to pick free weights, crush machines for a few different reasons.
Number one, when you get into machine,
your body has to follow the machine.
You have to follow the range of motion, the machine,
the path of movement, you have to follow the machine itself.
Free weights always follow your body.
Doesn't matter if you're tall, short,
how you, it doesn't matter, the free weights follow your body.
The second thing is that the variety with free weights
is insane.
It's absolutely insane.
I can do, I can train my entire body
with more exercises than I can use,
with just a pair of dumbbells, a barbell, a squat rack,
and adjustable bench.
I worked out, by the way,
this is how I've worked out for the last, I don't know, 15 years almost exclusively.
And I've made the best progress and strength gains
and muscle gains in that period of time.
This is how bodybuilders trained for the most part
until probably the 80s.
You know, one of the first fitness books I ever got
was Arnold Schwarzenegger's Encyclopedia Bodybuilding
and the vast majority of exercises per body part in that
And I had the original one which is the older one where all these
Dumbbell and barbell movements that you could do for the body and that's just how I learned now when I trained clients
I found it to be the same way when I got clients to be do really well with free weights it would trump
You know 12 machines combined in terms of progress.
So you're actually in a far better position.
In fact, the fact that you're forced to rely on free weights is a blessing in disguise.
Right now you may be thinking yourself, oh, I don't have so much machines in this might
suck.
Watch what happens to your body.
Yeah, the new stimulus that now your body is going to respond to, just watch what that
does to your muscle development.
It's just changing something up like that.
If you're used to just moving only in a track and using these machines to really place
you in position without stabilizing, without actively controlling your body and bracing,
it's a completely different experience and your body's gonna respond accordingly
which may be amazing for you.
Well, this is also part of the reason why
CrossFit exploded.
Yeah.
Well, they had the best exercises.
They did.
Yeah.
That's what they did a great job of.
And so, you know, and a lot of people got results
and that's what turned other people onto it was,
you know, we grew up in a time, you know,
20 years ago when I first got into fitness,
barbell training had fallen out of favor. Deadlifting and squatting was very foreign. Yeah, you saw some
people doing, uh, been over rows every once in a while, but you never saw the squat rack busy.
You never saw someone deadlifting, uh, in a 24 hour fitness. Ever, ever, Yeah, never, never, never, never. So, you know, it was literally, I mean, even as a trainer,
I made the mistake of like categorizing those exercises
as like a power lifter.
You know, I'm not a power lifter.
I don't train those exercises.
So, it wasn't until CrossFit did that become very popular.
So, it was something they did really, really good was,
they implemented some of the best movements in their training.
Now luckily for me, I learned these movements from, again, these old muscle building books and, you know,
there was a group of powerlifters that had a strong influence on me when I was a kid.
And no joke, I was a general manager of a gym after having been a trainer and train clients.
And I would deadlift in the gym and almost, almost every time,
a member would come up to me and say,
oh, what are you doing?
You're gonna hurt yourself.
Yeah, you shouldn't lift it that way.
And I'm like, I'm doing a deadlift and they're like,
what?
Like, nobody did it.
In fact, nobody did let deadlift so often
that the plates that the gyms had were the hexagonal plates,
which you know are terrible for deadlift.
Yeah, because it misplaced the, you know,
to put the bar down at shifts or whatever,
because nobody ever did them.
I'd manage 30, 40,000 square foot gyms
and you'd have one squat rack, maybe.
Maybe you'd have one squat rack.
Now fast forward, people are now squatting
and deadlifting and overhead pressing,
way more than they ever did.
Why? Because it just crushes everything else in terms of of results.
So I firmly believe most people's routines should be over 90% free weights and then maybe
10, 5 or 10% machines or less.
Well, now we have squat racks.
We can easily fold out from your wall.
Where's your excuse now?
Exactly.
Next question is from Harry the K32. What is your opinion
on false grip versus standard grip while overhead pressing or barbell benching? I feel as though I
have more strength using a false grip. Yeah, so the false grip is when your thumb is not around the
bar, right? It's on the same side as your fingers, what do they call it? Monkey grip or whatever. Okay, and it is true that if you, especially if you practice that way,
you're going to feel more stable while you're pressing. So you might want to ask yourself,
why? Why do I feel more more stable? It's because you're the placement of the bar on your palm,
actually shortens the lever a little bit. If you take a full grip, the bar tends to be a little bit
further, just a little bit further away from the wrist,
it feels like a longer lever,
so it feels a little bit less stable.
So I can see why people like to press this way.
You're also resting on the joint
and not having to stabilize it the forearm.
Yeah, now here's the problem with that.
It's way more dangerous.
I've seen too many people drop a bar on their bodies that way
and you're also strengthening a strange recruitment pattern
by holding that up.
That's my biggest problem with it.
Cause now I go to use that grip in everyday life
and pick things out like you're using your thumb
for all those things.
Why wouldn't I train and reinforce that same grip
with what I'm doing in the gym?
You know, this is useless to me outside the gym.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
I believe the same way.
So I used to press that way for a long time.
And because I see pictures of bodybuilders doing it.
And occasionally I'll even do it now just for fun, but I retrain myself to feel
stable and comfortable with the full grip because it's more functional, more stable.
And like Justin said, you want to strut your thumb is a very, very important part of
your grip.
And so you want to strengthen that as well.
If you want to have strong hands, strong wrists, if you look at your thumb, there's that
meaty part of your palm, that's a muscle.
If you want to get that strong, that's important to keep strong.
It helps stabilize your wrist, of course, gives you a better grip, and can prevent things
like carpal tunnel and stuff like that.
Fall scripts change also a little bit,
it's splitting hairs, but it's interesting.
Fall scripts also change the recruitment patterns
up in the shoulder, they found,
just like wearing wrist straps.
You start to change that recruitment pattern.
Now why is that important?
Again, like Justin said, in everyday life,
you're not gonna use a fall script
as much as you're gonna use a full grip.
So it's better off training with the full grip.
So I would say it's putting hairs.
I do both.
It just kind of depends on the mood.
I think I tend to default to the false grip
when I'm really trying to move some big way
because it does feel more stable and easy for me.
But I also still, I mean, we were doing a heavy bench today,
and I had a full grip.
So I go back and forth between the, between the two of them. It's, I think it's,
it's kind of a splitting the hair thing. Like if you feel comfortable doing it,
you don't have any shoulder issues, it doesn't bother you anything, making a big deal about that.
And, and, and, you know, saying that you're going to hurt yourself or it's bad.
There's a lot of other things that I'm probably gonna pick apart in your routine
before I pick apart your false grip.
You ever seen someone lose a bar in a bench press
because of a false grip?
Yeah, and you also got a keep in consideration too
that the false grip is gonna help a lot of people
that don't have quite the thoracic mobility
or the scapula mobility
and the ability to pull their shoulder blades back. So like when you do I can overhead press
in order for you to keep your wrist in a neutral position, you have to really be able to
get that bar back. Definitely.
And so the ability to kind of break the wrist and get the elbows underneath is, you know,
it's cheating a little bit. And you see that even, my wrist, or I have a false grip when I squat.
When I squat, I've got an open,
open or false grip when I squat,
because I don't have the wrist and shoulder mobility
like I'd like to be able to get back there.
So, yeah, it's an area that I can improve
and would be better.
And I agree with both of you,
but it's definitely not at the top of the pyramid
for me of things that I'm gonna pick apart
on somebody as a routine. Next question is from It's definitely not at the top of the pyramid for me of things that I'm gonna pick apart on somebody as a routine.
Next question is from its lane.
What are your best tips for gut health?
Rule number one, maintain good motility.
Okay, what that means is you want to have at least one full bowel movement a day,
if not, you know, two bowel movements a day.
Now I know a lot of people listening,
don't have a bowel movement every day.
And in fact, even Western medicine,
doctors will tell you it's perfectly normal
to, you know, only poop every other day
or once every three days.
But yeah, yes they will.
And the reason why they say that
is because so many people are like that,
that they're like, oh, it's perfectly normal. Now here's why it's important when you're not getting rid of waste on a regular basis
That can cause a situation where bacteria starts to back up and build in your small intestines and you'll get something called
Cebo, which is small intestinal bacterial
Overgrowth now we didn't know much about this not that long ago,
but today we find that a majority of irritable bowel syndrome
issues is due to Cibo.
So when they test people,
say irritable bowel syndrome used to be this catch all phrase
where doctors and note that was going on.
So like, oh, you got stomach problems.
We did, we know, we did an endoscopy.
We did a colonoscopy.
Everything looks healthy.
Can't figure out what's going on.
Irritable bowel syndrome, just means you ever,
it really, there's no cure.
It's just your problem.
You have a sensitive gut.
But now when they go in and they test people with IBS
or IBD or whatever, what they find now
is that a majority of them have this bacterial overgrowth
in their small intestines and what helps prevent that from happening is good motility.
So I would say number one, eat in a way that promotes that and if you find foods that reduce
that, then maybe stay away from those.
And by the way, if you're prone to diarrhea, that doesn't necessarily mean you have good
motility.
This is something else I learned.
Oftentimes, diarrhea is also a sign of constipation because the body is getting rid of fluid,
but the real waste is kind of sticking in things stuck there. Now, how do you get good motility?
Individually, there's going to be foods that my father used to stay away from those. You'll
probably know what they are. Diversity. Eat lots of well-cooked vegetables. This is important.
If you want to improve your motility, vegetables can help, but cook them well.
That makes it work even more.
If you just eat a bunch of raw vegetables or not that much cooked vegetables, you might
actually find more gas and, you know, distension and bloat.
But if you boil them or cook them really well, they actually breaks them down enough to
where you can need a large amount
and you have better motility.
I think one of the keys to gut health is to first figure out what is potentially invading, right?
So that normally if someone has, you know, irritable bowel syndrome or gut issues or SIBO,
it's like there is something that is affecting that that you're consistently eating.
And more often than not, it's the things that you gravitate towards the most.
In fact, Doug, is the intuitive guide still,
are we still half off on that?
Yes.
Okay, so the intuitive guide,
this is, I mean, I recommend everybody does this.
Even if you don't have gut issues,
but to eliminate most of the things that are most commonly
problems for most people that have gut issues, we show
you how to kind of eliminate that and then how to also slowly introduce and then what
signs that you're looking for, what am I trying to pay to, and, you know, I think the first
step to having a healthy gut is becoming aware of how your body can express it and understanding
that we're all very individualized, right? So's say Justin and I both, let's just say,
Avocado's irritate both of our guts,
but he may express it through headaches,
and I might have my psoriasis flare up.
So, you can't just pair a food or pair an issue
with somebody else's symptom that they see.
You've got to
know all the different things that you could be looking for and then pay an attention
to when you introduce these foods into your diet, are they affecting you in any of these
ways?
Right.
I wanted to ask you, so based off of all this, like you mentioned about seabode, does that
mean I may be full of shit?
Yeah, I know you are.
Okay. No, seaboe comes back too.
So if you're somebody that's had it before
and then you get better and then your symptoms come back,
you may have to treat the seaboe before.
By the way, there are antimicrobial herbs
that are over the counter that study show
are just as effective as antibiotic medications
for treating seaboe.
So you don't have to take antibiotics
if you think you have seabull issues. But yeah, good motility, stay away from foods that irritate
your gut, drink, be, stay hydrated. That's actually, believe it or not, the number one reason why
people have motility issues, they don't drink enough water, sometimes it's increasing your water
intake, we'll have you poop in or whatever more often.
Artificial sweeteners often, in my experience,
cause problems for people.
If they start to consume lots of sucralose or aspera tame,
so you might wanna stay away from those things as well.
And in the common offenders that Adam is referring to
are gluten, dairy, soy, nuts, and egg whites.
Those are the, and legumes.
I mean, I know it sounds like a lot, but those are the common offenders with gluten, dairy,
and nuts, and soy being the most out of that category.
So, you can just cut them out.
When I say cut them out, they have to be completely out.
Completely out of your diet.
Not even have a little bit.
Do that for 30 days,
and then introduce one by itself for a week,
see how you feel, if you feel good,
introduce the next one for a way, it's a tedious process,
but up until now there's nothing that is come close
to being able to identify food intolerances
quite as effectively.
Check this out, mine pump is recorded on video as well as audio.
So if you love listening to the podcast,
you wanna see what we look like,
you wanna check out the studio.
Check out my nice white legs.
Or if you want to be able to have
an easily shareable version of the podcast,
YouTube makes it really, really easy to send a link
and for other people to experience our podcast,
go to Mind Pump Podcast.
Also, we break down the questions individually,
so you don't have to listen to the whole podcast.
If you want to revisit one specific question,
we've broke it all down for you.
Again, that's Mind Pump Podcast.
You can also reach out to us individually on Instagram.
So you can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin,
you can find me at Mind Pump Salon,
Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
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