Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1316: How to Avoid Fat Gain When Reducing Cardio, Ways to Evaluate the Best Supplements to Buy, Tips for Becoming a Great Communicator & More
Episode Date: June 17, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about what to look for when buying supplements such as creatine or protein powder, transitioning from a lot of high-inten...sity workouts to more traditional resistance training, switching into a career of personal training from something else, and the top trait of a great communicator. A Kodak moment at the Di Stefano House. (5:23) 24 Hour Fitness closing 130 gyms. Strategy or a sign of bad times ahead? (8:50) The Greg Glassman saga continues. (12:27) Drone technology is scary. (17:40) The Di Stefano Family are Organifi lovers. (23:00) Mind Pump Recommends, (23:40) Mind Pump on the craziness of the Stock Market. (24:36) Why fitness is empowering. (25:38) Is Justin having a mid-life crisis? (31:02) Maximus is growing like a weed. (35:53) #Quah question #1 - When buying supplements, such as creatine or protein powder, what ingredients or value should I look for to know if I am getting the biggest bang for my buck? (38:05) #Quah question #2 – Is there an ideal way to transition from a lot of high-intensity workouts to more traditional resistance training? How can I avoid gaining a ton of fat while transitioning off of cardio or HIIT? (45:45) #Quah question #3 – When trying to switch into a career of personal training from something else, what’s more important? Getting a degree in a certain field? Working on certifications? Or just getting started coaching for free to gain experience? (50:49) #Quah question #4 - What is your best advice for someone who wants to become a great communicator? What would you say is a top trait of a great communicator? (57:40) Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off! **Promo code “HIIT50” at checkout** 24 Hour Fitness files for bankruptcy, closing 130 gyms Full Auto Friday - Round 5 - YouTube The Air Force Wants To Use Falcons To Punch Drones Out Of The Sky Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Quicken Loans IPO may open up sector, say executives Hertz Stock Rallies 230% Despite Bankruptcy, and Two More Numbers to Know Join the Revolution in Nutrition Coaching – NCI Certifications x Mind Pump Pros and Cons of Creatine – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1227: The 5 Most Important Supplements To Take Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Are Any Supplements Worth The Cost? - Mind Pump Blog NASM CPPS Coaches Chek Institute Verbal Judo: The Gentle Art of Persuasion – Book by George J. Thompson Sway: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior – Book by Ori Brafman The Biology of Human Communication – Book by Kory Floyd Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Greg Glassman (@CrossFitCEO) Twitter Jason Phillips (@jasonphillipsisnutrition) 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 Pump, the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast. J-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j-j We answer fitness and health questions asked by listeners just like you.
Now the way we open the episode is with our introductory conversation portions.
This is where we talk about current events, our lives.
We have a lot of fun. Sometimes we mention our sponsors.
So what I'm going to do is give you a breakdown of what happened in this episode.
So the first 33 minutes is the intro portion.
We open up by talking about me washing dishes with my brother this weekend
and surprising my mom.
So much, she actually filmed us.
Pretty far almost fainted.
Then we talked about 24 hour fitness going bankrupt
and closing locations.
It's kind of sad for us.
We talked about how great glassmen came under fire again,
but not for the same thing.
Something totally different.
More shitty stuff, kind of crazy.
I talked about drone technology,
got to fly one this week and can't believe
how crazy those things are.
Justin and Adam talked about vigilantrix.
This was on the-
The limit list, drug.
There you go.
Then we talked about how my family is a huge fan
of organized pure supplements.
So pure is a natural,
neutropic type supplements,
supposed to improve gut health and cognitive function.
My entire family keeps wanting free pure for me.
What's wrong with you guys?
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There are companies that makes organic supplements,
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So, if you're a mind
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slash mind pump. Use the code mind pump and you'll get 20% off all the products. Then we
talked about quick and loans going public. This might be the biggest IPO of the year. We
also talked about Hertz rental car. They had some problems
with their shares in stock, insert dad joke. Then we talked about why fitness is empowering.
I talked about as a kid how I learned that I'm never going to look like Arnold Schwarzenegger,
but that's okay. I focused on the things that I could control, which led us to talk about
one of our favorite online coach certifications NCI.
It's a company we work with.
They do excellent online coaching
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Now right now, for MindPup listeners,
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It's a free webinar normally they charge a lot for this,
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Here's what you do if you want to take this webinar go to NCI
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And then we talked about just in building a bike ramp because he's having a
midlife crisis.
You guys called me out.
Then we got into the questions.
Here's the first one that we answered.
This person says,
hey, when I'm buying supplements like creatine or protein powder,
what should I look for?
Like, what are the things I should look for
to find good products?
The next question, this person says,
how do I transition for a bunch of high intensity training,
a bunch of calorie burning type training,
into more traditional resistance training? How do I do that without gaining a bunch of calorie burning type training into more traditional resistance training.
How do I do that without gaining a bunch of body fat?
The next question, this person is going to switch their careers and become personal trainers.
They want to know where they should start.
Get a degree, get a certification, or just start coaching and gain experience.
The final question, this person wants to know what our advice is for somebody who wants
to become a better communicator
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Dude, I got to tell you guys a story about this weekend you guys are in love.
What'd you do?
For a solo cholo this weekend?
Well, a solo cholo.
I was just a solo mountain cholo.
Yeah, no, cause the kids at Jessica was out of town.
Yeah, yeah, I was just me and the kids.
And so during the week, my dad, I told you guys,
was working in the backyard and doing some stuff
and asked my son to come up.
So kids, my kids were there.
My mom's like, of course, if they're there,
my mom's like, eat over, eat over, eat over.
And then over the weekend, she invited my brother
and his girlfriend, lovely young lady,
for dinner, so my mom's like, eat over again.
So we could all hang out.
So I'm like, all right.
This your brother's new girlfriend.
Dude, it makes it easy.
He's going there for a while.
Yeah, it does.
And of course, the food, I can't turn down,
like amazing, the best food of all time.
Are you still getting husky or what?
Well, I mean, you guys have eyes.
Yeah.
I just have the shirts are getting smaller.
No, thick daddy.
No, no, no.
Some of us are calling you thick daddy.
The shirts are the same.
I'm getting thicker.
Yeah.
With a bunch of seas.
Yeah, yeah. But anyway, so after dinner, we're eating
or whatever. And you know, there's certain things that you don't notice because they're
just a part of your family or whatever certain things that always happen, right? After dinner,
99.9% of the time, it's my mom and then she'll pull one of my sisters to clean up.
And I just take that, I don't even think about it, right?
I don't even think about it.
It's just, wait, we do it.
So we're sitting there and we had dinner one night with my brother and his girl and his
girl gets up and she's helping my mom and I become aware and I'm like, well, that's
nice.
Like she's getting up to help.
And I'm like, when's the last time I did it with my brother?
And when's the last of my brother did it?
Yeah.
You know, never, right?
So the next time we ate over, my brother was there,
my sister was there this time with her husband,
and we're all hanging out.
So as we're finishing or whatever,
I look at my brother,
because his girl, my dad at Comet was talking to my brother's
girlfriend, and he's like, you look tired,
she's like, yeah, you know, I've had it a long day,
and I'm a little tired, and that made me think like, I don't want her to get up and have to clean, it's tired. So I looked at my brother, and I'm like, you look tired, she's like, yeah, you know, I've had it a long day and I'm a little tired and that made me think like I don't want her to get up and have to clean. It's tired. So I looked at my brother and I'm like, hey when we're done
Let's get up and let's let's do all the stuff and so my brother kind of looks at me like okay, whatever
See what you talking about. He's like, yeah
Yeah, yeah, he's trying to ruin you. Yeah, so but you know, but he's like whatever, right? He's had a good thing going
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's good. It's good gonna uproot everything. But he's a good guy.
He lived on his own for a long time.
He knows how to do that kind of stuff, right?
So we finished dinner whatever.
So I get up and I start, you know,
his girl tries to get up, my mom tries to clean them,
like put the stuff down, we're gonna do it.
You guys relax, let us take care of it, whatever.
So I start getting up and then I tell my brother,
come help me.
So my mom and my sister make the biggest deal of all time. Oh my gosh. Get the camera.
Oh, this is my mom's like, Oh, I love you guys so much for clean. Then of course my sister
gets upset. She's like, you never say that to me when I, when I clean or do anything. Why
are you so happy that you're, you know, and then she comes over and she had, you know, whatever.
She's like, wow, I'm so happy to see my boys do this. I'm like, yeah, it only took me 40 years,
Mom, to figure this out.
I have, it took me 40 years in a divorce
to figure out that this is something I should
total Kodak moment.
Yeah, so we're sitting there clean.
So then my brother feels good.
Enjoy, this will never happen again.
He feels conflicted, you know?
I'm like, why do you feel weird?
He's like, cause they're filmin' us.
I'm like, so, you know, so what? I'm like, let's just do it. it because they're filmin' us? I'm like, so what? You know, it's so what?
I'm like, let's just do it.
Let's just be, you know, be good.
Dude, did you hear the news about, so 24 closes down
a hundred locations.
I know.
And they filed for bankruptcy.
Yeah, oh, did they?
They filed for bankruptcy.
Oh, absolutely did.
Boom, strategy though.
Well, right.
Pearl, a hundred locations is one fourth of their clubs almost right?
They had over 400 clubs just over 400 clubs. Yeah, yeah.
One fourth permanently shut down. Yeah.
And I'm the ones in the Bay Area. One in particular, capital McKee,
that's the location on capital McKee here in San Jose.
That is one of the old flagship locations.
So I was going through the list, right?
Three months.
Oh yeah, I was going through the list.
Now what?
And I was trying to speculate on why those locations,
because the thing that's weird is like capital K was
one of the most profitable gyms that they had.
It had one of the largest EFT bases that overhead on it,
the lease agreement was so good. It's like a 200 something thousand dues base. I'm guessing hillsdale and sand
threes are not. Yeah, they're fine. So what do you think is the reason why? I have my theories,
but what do you why those clubs? In my opinion, I think that what they're trying to do, and this
is a guess, but I think they're trying to strategize and see because yes, it does have a big
dues base, but a lot of those people either are
allowed to transfer or they already have an all club membership.
So they're probably thinking if we close this one down, what's the damage versus if we
close these other ones?
So it looked to me like it was mostly all the old ones.
Oh, that's not a bad point.
Right.
And just because it probably the maintenance on it to keep them up, they get the most
complaints probably remember how many complaints that like, yeah, because it probably the maintenance on it to keep them up, they get the most complaints,
probably remember how many complaints that like,
yeah, you kind of need a clean club to start with.
Right, and so if you've already deemed,
like so I'm sure they sat down in a boardroom and said,
listen, this is how much we're losing,
this is the only way we're gonna survive,
we're gonna have to cut a quarter of our clubs,
you know, we're just gonna have to close them down
and let's start putting together a list of which ones.
And I'm sure the list of the ones that popped up on there had a lot to do with how old they were.
That was my theory because if you just did it straight numbers, I know that Capital
McKee is one of the more profitable gyms of all their gyms, right?
So most of them are profitable.
Some of the greatest general managers, fitness managers, trainers in the Bay Area started in that club.
That's yours.
That was your home club.
You know what's funny is that I was brought up in that culture.
So were you Adam and Justin too, we started our careers.
We were brought up there and I learned some of the greatest lessons I ever learned in fitness and business
In the early years of my career at 24th. I had some great mentors
You know it was started by one of the greatest fitness leaders if not the greatest fitness leader in the gym industry ever mark
Master off and you know they did a lot of changes. I left the company a long time ago and I had I thought I had completely
Cut and severed the feelings
towards that company, like I don't really care, whatever. But I'm not going to lie, dude.
A piece of me was sad to see some of those clubs shut down. No, no, of course. It's just
interesting to me to watch the different CEOs right now, how they maneuver this way through
this and who will come out at the other end. I mean, you obviously take a whole different approach, right?
We're not going to shut down any of the places.
We're going to just increase the rates and then try and provide more service.
So it's going to be really interesting to see in the next six months to a year,
like how this all washes out and what was a better strategy.
I feel like what they've been doing is slowly destroying the brand.
You know, the name.
Oh, no.
Well, they got a lot of, they've been getting piled up,
speaking of getting piled just until me,
you listen to the podcast that, that's
south sent over and sharing a forum about glassmen.
Yes, I did.
Yeah, I, oh, yeah, that was holy shit.
That was at a left field.
I did not, I almost didn't listen to it.
I'm like, whatever, I'm like over the drama news and stuff like that.
All new, yeah, information it was and stuff like that. All new information and truth.
I see that.
So the culture and behind the scenes and cross-bite.
So first he gets hammered because of his insensitive comments
regarding the George Floyd and all that stuff.
Steps down, so he's already beaten, right?
He's already beaten down.
Then this dude comes out with a podcast.
I can't remember the guy's name,
we should probably get his name so we could do it. yeah, I'll look it up while you're talking.
But he worked closely for Glassman, does a podcast and basically it's like a tell-all.
And in it, nothing to do with racism, nothing to do with George Floyd, nothing with that.
It was nothing to do. It was basically all about how glassman talks about women
in disparaging terrible ways, his attitudes towards his
female staff and basically made him sound like it just
a general.
He just alludes to a lot more information.
He knows that he's going to reveal a bit later.
Yeah.
In the podcast, he's really vague.
Like he's intentionally. Intentionally. Right. Because the podcast, he's really vague. Like he's intentionally, right?
Cause he's not trying to drag it away.
But at towards the end of it,
he straight up says,
if you think that I'm being vague
because I don't have specifics, you're fucking dead.
Well, that's the thing.
I mean, he's really like putting himself out there.
Cause like, like he mentions how litigious,
like that's like their thing.
Like they go after people like constantly.
Full auto Friday. That's the name of his they go after people like constantly full auto Friday
Mm-hmm. That's the name of the his podcast full auto Friday
Uh, it was shared in our forums if you're in our forum. You've seen it already But and when I watched it it had only had like 40,000 views. Yeah, what's it? I know
191,000 yeah, of course. Yeah, it's flying
It's flying right now. So you can go to YouTube and go to full auto Friday
Dash round five It's fine right now. So you can go to YouTube and go to full auto Friday, Dash, Round Five, and he's cleared hot podcast.
Sorry, that's the name of the podcast.
It's called cleared hot podcast.
He does a thing called full auto Friday.
But I mean, I mean, ripped.
Terrible.
And it's like you're kicking someone when they're down.
Now, of course, it's his word at this point.
Well, I don't know if there's anybody.
He was his private pilot for like six, seven years.
You know, so the stuff that he says was like,
he said was directly said in front of him or to him.
So this is gonna get really, really interesting.
Have you heard of anybody?
He's not back and now anytime soon,
the way that he was talking towards him.
He's like, I'm gonna come out with this.
Now, have you guys heard anything,
anybody else coming out to basically confirm
some of those stories or so far have you just heard,
because I haven't heard anything.
No, I haven't.
I never even heard about any of this.
No, well, the case he makes is that just they,
everyone add a fear, right?
I mean, that's what he's saying is,
it just add a fear that they,
because of how litigious they are,
that it would come after them immediately
if they tried to say so.
Isn't it interesting when you have someone like that,
start to fall, that people then start to come out?
And I think it's because they're not afraid anymore.
Yeah, start to come out.
Yeah, I think they still look as an opportunity
to kind of make, you know,
like amends for some things like
where they wanted to jump in and say something,
but they didn't, because yeah, they were afraid.
I thought it was a curveball,
because you listen to the first half of it,
and he's pretty much defending him that he doesn't believe he's a racist.
You know, mind you, he says what he said was insensitive
and probably not the smartest thing for him to say.
He's like, however, there's this other stuff.
Yeah, that's what.
Yeah, I was like,
errr, dude.
And now he's not the super record skip.
And I've seen top crossfit representatives,
like these are people who are well-known,
million followers plus
Posts about glassman after he stepped down and basically say he stepped down
But he still owns the company so we're not satisfied. Oh, yeah, holy cow
He also said I'm gonna kill the guy the whoever I forget the name of the guy that's now stepped into the role of CEO
And the the concern that this guy is saying is that he was complicit to all this stuff.
So he knows fully aware of these conversations, the culture, and so even though a new CEO
is coming in, unless some serious house cleaning is done or some reckoning that he doesn't
foresee things really changing and in order for them to survive and keep going, they will
mean in a whole new regime. Is this going to, I mean, they've already,
the brand CrossFit has already been getting hit.
And then him, you know, stepping down, that was bad.
Now this, and it's hard to separate him from the brand,
right, because he's, it's like,
yeah, he owns, is he like all owning,
yeah, he's still a CrossFit-ing.
Well, not just that, it's just, it's hard to separate.
Even if he sold it, like, it's like Steve Jobs in Apple
or Elon Musk and, you know, you could sell it,
but you're still people connecting, right?
Yeah.
Like, could this be the, just the last straw
that destroys the brand completely?
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, it would be interesting to see like how
a lot of these other CrossFit boxes
will sort of re-brand and create something
maybe completely new.
I don't know, like, I don't know if they have the force,
I don't know what's gonna happen with all that.
It'll be interesting to watch.
They're crazy.
Anyway, so my brother, speaking to my brother earlier,
he got a drone, just regular drone off the internet.
I've never used any of these,
I've never seen them or whatever.
Cost them about a thousand bucks, not a lot of money.
Dude, the technology in these things is scary.
Yeah, I'm bad at it.
Have you guys used these?
Yeah.
Does he have the one where it actually follows you?
Bro, they track.
Oh bro, it's got a little controller.
The thing is, my kids were flying it around,
with no worries about crashing anything.
Hook your phone up to it.
Yeah, hook your phone up to it.
Wow, they've come a long way.
You can fly six miles away.
Six miles away.
Bro, we were at my parents house
and we were going six miles in other directions.
That's crazy.
You're flying, you control it.
It'll not hit things because it's got its own sensors.
You can lock on to targets with the camera
It's 4k. Yeah thing goes up a thousand almost a thousand feet into the sky. Dude a thousand bucks. Yeah, this is insane
I'm investing in a drone attacking Falcons. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Have you seen those? I haven't seen it
So like dude, we're gonna have these flying all around our backyard and like monitoring
and did.
No.
They actually have falcons that they trained to trick them.
I've heard that, but I haven't seen it yet.
I have.
You can watch videos.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
They're rad.
Oh, really?
They're so rad.
Yeah, so, I mean, we were, you know, my daughter and I were on like one of those electric scooters
and so he locked on to me and it just followed us.
Yeah.
And it made like the sickest, like, I like I felt like a music video when I watched it
Say
Please tell me you're not picturing that right now a rap video
With a roll and it was a lecture skews
Listen, I'd be bad. I tried my the hip hop. You said I fell hell up to half.
I looked back up, like zoom in,
let me look back.
No, those things are crazy, thousand bucks.
You know how much I think would it cost 10 years ago?
Oh, I know.
I mean, all the ones that we've tried,
like before that,
like literally just crashed all of them
in just some smithereens.
Dude.
So to have it like like, I'm like,
I'm like, that is another level.
It's turning into quite the career opportunity too,
for people to like pursue that as like a job.
Really?
Oh yeah, when Katrina was working for J.J. Albany's,
I think they had like, and I forget what they call them,
they call them pylates.
Yeah, they're pilots, and they have to get like all certified
and everything to do this, but they,
I remember they paid them good money to that.
So they, yeah, they like ate employees on staff
for that company that did that.
And they go and they fly all these job sites.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, so there's definitely.
I couldn't believe the clarity of the video.
And then there's, you could follow,
like to say you're flying six miles away,
you can't figure out your way to get back.
You just click on home and it comes back and lands itself.
I'm like, this is silly.
Why would you need a pilot? That's the thing I'm wondering. Because I can, itself. I'm like, this is silly. Why would you need a pilot?
That's the thing I'm wondering,
because my kids were operating this thing perfectly.
Yeah, but you still have things that,
so the pilot people have to be able to,
it's just like pilots today.
I mean, flying and landing,
landing a plane and taking off
is like the only parts that pilots really do.
Yeah, but people are on the plane.
This is so sweet.
Yeah, it's still, I mean, it's still a couple thousand dollars
for a nice piece of equipment like that.
You're still flying around where there are people.
I imagine if you're doing like construction sites too,
you've got a maneuver down and through the building
and things like that.
Well, I think in the Air Force, they have a whole drone
of like, I think they still call pilots.
Like they're flying these drones and everything.
Dude.
Have you guys seen the videos of people with drones
that they hook up a little flame thrower
to get rid of like wasps and stuff on their property? Have you guys seen the videos of people with drones that they hook up a little flame thrower to get rid of like wasps nest and stuff on their property?
Have you guys seen this?
No, I have.
So I thought that was just a one-off kind of thing.
No, so like, you know, to get rid of like a wall,
like that's pretty hardcore.
You gotta go get rid of a wasp nest.
Like, what do you do, right?
So these guys will put a little flame thrower on the drone,
fly up to it and just, and then the wasp will attack the drone,
but the police will kill it.
Oh my, that'd be like my favorite job in the world
Dude come on like I got so much
Justin leaves mind pump for wasperning
I would get so much pleasure at the wasp hunter
Die bastard you got stung by a bunch of
Yeah, I used to step in like because they have nests on the ground.
I used to go through all these different forests and stuff
and build forts, and I was very much
outdoors doing stuff, and I would,
every now and then I'd step in one of their nests,
and I had one time where I had hundreds of these fucking things
just biting me, and I just ripped my pants off
and running down the neighborhood without pants on,
just screaming. So what's the strategy with the
pants off? Because they're all up in my pant legs. Oh, okay. Yeah.
I was like, you gotta get them off you. It sounded at first like a terrible
strategy. Yeah, just peeing on it. Quick to die. Terrible protective clothing.
Yeah. Maybe I can run faster. I should. I showed you, did I show you guys my,
it was like my fourth grade picture for school.
I got stung, once I walked past this puddle
and like two of them came up and stung me right in the eye.
Like, right underneath my eye.
And so the next day it was super swollen.
I couldn't even open it.
It was like a picture.
Yeah, so I was like sideways.
You know, I had to do a profile pic for my,
for my fucking, my school pic.
Yeah, it was the saddest, but most hilarious looking thing.
They said social workers to your house.
I'm sure that was a sting just.
And dude, it looked like that,
like I'm asking.
That's hilarious.
Dude, my whole family is,
they're fanatics of pure, the organifi peer.
Oh, all of them. Yeah, dude. They fight over it. So when I get thereatics of pure, the organifi pure. All of them, they fight over it.
So when I get there, of course, and this is just,
I don't know what this is, I don't know if this is my parents'
Sicilian culture or whatever, but it's all about
getting connections in hookups, right?
So always, it's always about connections.
So they're like, you're a deal in pure on the sole.
No, no, so they, hey, do you have any more of that up here?
You know, like, yeah, yeah, use our discount code.
Yeah, but, you know, don't you get some?
You know, I'm like, just buy it.
Support my, you know, support.
It's just putting water in the store.
Support the company, no, but they all like it.
They all love that.
That reminds me of the, the billions episode last night.
Did you watch it?
Oh, you saw it.
Yes.
What do they call that?
Visualantrix?
Yes, something like something crazy.
Like one of those limitless pills.
Oh, yeah.
It was crazy.
It was so great because remember when we were talking about
like Adderall, how you thought you were like really productive
and doing awesome stuff as you're doing it,
but you realize later it's just like your ego.
You're just really doing cool.
You just feel like you're better.
You feel like you're better.
They told it was the same thing.
Like he's like making all these like connections
and thought he had like, you know, everything figured out where he's gonna make all his money off of gold and all these connections and thought he had, everything figured out
where he's gonna make all his money off of gold, all these minerals and everything, and
then he realizes, oh shit, I'm just gonna totally tank this market. Pull back.
It's like, when you ever get when you're a kid, you get high with your friends, smoke
a bunch of weed, and then you come up with this brilliant idea and you write it out.
And then the next day you look at it when you're sober,
and you're like, you know, like, what the hell was I thinking?
Yeah, yeah.
Surtrily pure doesn't do that.
Serial sandwiches?
This is a stupid idea.
Why did I think this was so sweet?
This is dumb.
Hey, speaking of stocks.
Hey, speaking of stocks, so a couple of things
of stock news right now.
Quick and loans is looking to go public.
We'll open up as the biggest IPO of the year.
Wow. And then the other IPO of the year. Wow.
And then the other thing that start we're going to so weird right now.
I cannot figure it out.
No, yeah.
It doesn't reflect the way we're listening to this hurts hurts.
Announces K bankruptcy stock tanks about that hurts.
Right.
Yeah.
Don't start right.
Stock drops all the way down to like five cents or 50 cents a share. Like just plummets, but then rallies back for five something,
five, 50 a share or something.
After saying bankrupt, dude, how does that make even sense?
Probably because a bunch of people got out,
which lowered the price, people,
it's gonna come back.
Yeah, it's gonna come back.
And then you're gonna see go back down as people
try to realize their gains or whatever.
Weird, right?
Yeah, the market's very interesting.
Like it doesn't seem to be connected to reality.
Yeah.
Exactly.
How it keeps going up?
When monopoly money right now.
When shits go in kind of crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Dude, this weekend I was writing an article for, you know, for our website or whatever.
And I remembered an old store, like an old memory or story that I don't think I've ever
told in the podcast.
Pretty interesting.
So the article was about Arnold and our team wanted me
to write about, you know, if Arnold was a skinny guy,
if he had those kind of genetics,
and obviously we know that Arnold had amazing
muscle-building genetics, obviously.
And it reminded me of the first time I realized
how big of a role like your genetics play and how much me of the first time I realized how big of a
role like your genetics play and how much muscle you could build. So when I was I
started working out at 14 and when I was first started working out I was very
idealistic and I think a lot of people especially if you start working out
when you're as a kid this is how you start out. So I you know look at pictures
of bodybuilders or I bought Arnold's encyclopedia and I 100% thought to myself,
if I just work hard enough and I'm consistent enough,
take enough supplements, I'm gonna look like this one day.
Like there's nothing's gonna stop me formula.
Yeah, and I'm sure, like when kids play basketball, right?
Oh, for sure I'm gonna be in NBA play.
Same thing, right?
So I for sure was sold on it
and I was sold on that for like a year and a half or two years.
So a year and a half, two years of consistent working out,
still thinking, oh yeah, four or five more years,
I'm gonna be a pro bodybuilder.
It's not gonna be an issue.
And I had this friend, this neighborhood friend,
who I would talk, I was obsessed
because I have that kind of personality.
So I talk about working out all the time.
And he wanted to come work out with me.
He was like, dude, can you take me through some workouts?
And this kid was one of those naturally kind of built dudes,
you know, I was not like this.
I was obviously naturally an ectomorph.
So I'm like, sure, I'll take you.
Now, of course, you know, 15, 16 years old,
you know, you can only, actually,
I didn't even have to give you an age.
If you're a guy and you work out with another guy,
it's gonna turn into a competition.
But especially when you're that age, right?
To testosterone, flowing or whatever.
And I just couldn't wait to show him
how much stronger than him I was, right?
So we're working out.
In this fucker, I remember it was so,
I was so shocked, I was barely strong with him.
I could outlift him by like one or two reps,
and he never worked out.
And then he kept coming to train with me,
and he like blew past me.
Just packing muscle on his body, strength,
and I remember thinking like, he's on steroids,
there's no way, what's going on here?
And then I met his parents.
His parents stopped by.
They, I remember we were outside,
we just finished our workout, parents pull up,
dad walks out, and he was like,
one of the most muscular dudes I've ever seen his life
in my life.
His mom comes out and she was also a freak of nature.
And I remember thinking like, what the hell?
I'm like, dude, your parents lift weights?
He's like, no.
He's like, my dad played college ball, but now he just works on a computer all day.
And my mom, I think she ran track in high school, but now she's a teacher.
And then that was the first realization I had that plays a big role.
I'm good.
Yeah, I'm never going to look like Arnold, Emma.
But it did, of course, it didn't stop me.
And I kept going.
And I think that's when I started to become empowered through fitness and started to
realize that there are definitely things you can't control.
I'm only going to focus on what I can't control.
So I might not have his genetics, but whatever I have, I'm gonna work with, and I'm gonna
apply training and consistency, and it just drove me to be a better person.
But I totally forgot about that.
Yeah, it's interesting.
I think back, like, some of the, like, I was attracted a lot to, like, female athletes.
I think a part of that was trying to, like, create, you know, little, my own little super
athletes.
I had this idea in my head, I was just like so into it.
I was like, you know, and I would like find a girl
that was cute or whatever, but was really good at their sport
and it was so attractive.
Your first date, you're like so,
how much can you squat?
Yeah.
Show me.
Can I see your muscle bellies? Can we see how long your muscle bellies are?
That's a little weird.
Well, I mean, it really does remind me of how why fitness is such a powerful tool for
empowerment.
If you stay with it long enough and you start and you do it for the right reasons, I think
what it encourages or strengthens in you is exactly that.
That you, there are certain things you can control.
There are a lot of things that you can't, but consistently go into the gym or consistently
working out, consistently trying to improve yourself, you feel empowered because you,
you know, maybe you're big-boned or you're not as tall as your friend or you're not going
to ever look like a supermodel, whatever. But if you stick with it long enough, you start to say tall as your friend, or you're not gonna ever look like a super model, whatever.
But if you stick with it long,
and if you start to say to yourself, whatever,
I don't care, I'm gonna focus on what I can.
And I think this is why you see the correlation
between successful people in lots of aspects of their life.
And usually a higher percentage of them
is also consistent with fitness, almost every single time.
Well, speaking of fitness and success, did you see what our buddy Jason and NCI put together?
No.
Yeah, they put together a cool free webinar for our audience, for like building a six-figure
business.
You know, speaking of empowerment, that's one that's one the reason why I like them so much
is they focus a lot on that aspect of of coaching.
Yeah. Like how to get people to change behaviors
and really feel a certain way,
which as we know as trainers is the most successful,
that's the most successful approach.
Yeah, it's a no brainer ticket.
If you're thinking about getting in the fitness space
or already currently in the fitness space,
definitely take advantage of that.
I mean, it's free, so you'd be silly not to.
Dude, we guys up to this weekend,
I didn't see you guys.
Dude, I took it upon myself,
and I knew I was gonna have like a just me and the boys
kind of weekend, Courtney took off
for the weekend, went up with her girlfriends
to hang out and stuff, and so I was like,
I wanna do something fun with the kids,
and I've been in this weird like nostalgic
kind of train of thought as of late.
I kind of showed you guys, I was looking at getting
like a old 80s kind of BMX bike
and like was gonna do an old rad style.
And so I've been looking at that.
And cause my kids are getting really into bike,
you know, whatever, like just using their bikes
and jumping and doing all this stuff.
That's pretty stuff.
They have like pump tracks and everything in my area.
So I got sick of just like watching them doing all this stuff, you know, I'm like,
why am I not doing this shit with them? So I just decided I was a 40 year old man.
Why? You know, like, like, I mean, it's just podcast. Justin leaves mind pumped to burn
wasp and ride his DMX bike. Like, everything I wanted to do is a kid like I want to like make a midlife crisis hit you a little. 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, hitting you a little Little higher life. Oh, no, no, no
interventionally they buy a nice car
Yeah, no, that's for so backwards
You start playing video games through it. Oh, like I'm gonna get a Corvette and all that. That's bullshit
Yeah, that's BMX all the fucking small dick guys
Anyway, yeah, so I basically I was like dude. I want to build ramp and so I just like
You know, so they can do this like in my driveway and like have dude, I want to build a ramp. And so I just like, you know, so they could do this,
like in my driveway and like have fun.
And I could, you know, I could hit it with them
once I get my bike.
So I was doing that and I was like, why am I so sore?
And like I was like so sore doing all this work.
And I'm realizing that man, the way I work,
I don't like, I'm not like on my knees
and like going on stuff
to screw things in, I'm like always in a really low squat
for the entire time and I'm fixing and doing things
and cutting and it's just like,
I was out there for maybe four or five hours straight,
just like working in a squatted position.
And it was just like, I was so fried, dude.
Do the video you sent of the ramp,
the ramp is quality.
You've got some skills.
Oh, it's just, it's not like,
if I have time, if I made a ramp,
it would be a piece of plywood on like some two by four.
I mean, you know, like you,
his is like, it's got curve to it and it's all smooth.
Did you see the video?
No, I didn't see it.
Bro, I went, I went.
It's a legit, it's like smooth. Did you see the video? No, I didn't see it. Yeah, I went. It's a legit rant.
It's like a professional, nice looking rant.
I took, well, I mean, I watched some videos
and just kind of took ideas and-
I could watch videos of God bless YouTube these days.
I know, it helps, man.
Now, did you jump it?
Yeah, but it was like, oh, one of their bikes,
I was both their bike dude.
So I was like, I gotta stop.
Cause like, all I have right now is a beach cruiser
and it's just totally fine for that.
Not for that.
Justin's big old cake.
So I'm gonna look at that.
No, I need it.
Yeah, I need to get freestyle and like do it all,
like rad styles.
Wow.
So are you gonna, are you still thinking about getting
it like a legit 90, like old 90?
Yeah, like a Mongoose or like one is,
yeah, like a GT.
Yeah, yeah.
So you had a Mongoose. I forget which one I had found that was mine it was a GT something
that got splined or it was something like that and I'm like cousin had a
horror yeah I wanted you had you had a I had the knockoff member I told you guys
I was the puppy yeah I started with the hoffy so I can't say that I think out of
all of us I was probably the most in love
with freestyle and BMX racing and stuff,
so but I was the kid who couldn't definitely not afford it.
You put the pegs in the front and the back.
No, my bike didn't even have the out option, dude.
I was the kid who just had the bike there.
Kids, oh, do you remember riding with your friends
and your friends sits on the handlebars?
Yeah.
And ride like that.
I had this in that scene, like the most dangerous thing in the world, the baseball card in my spokes, you And you ride like that. I had this. I had that dangerous thing in the world.
The baseball card in my spokes, you know, sounds so makes the sound.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You did it.
You said I did.
Bro, that's the equivalent of the big loud exhaust on the four cylinder.
Yeah.
The coffee can.
Listen to the sound that my car makes.
Wow.
Dude, so are you, so you're gonna get a bike like that
and then you're gonna try and pull tricks for real.
Yeah, yeah, like, you know, start small
and get in the field of it,
do some jumps and then start kind of progressing.
Can you wait until we finally sign
and fill out the insurance that we're gonna do here
from the company?
We got good health insurance, I'm fine.
No, no, I mean the other kind,
where if something happens to you, you can't podcast, you know, we get covered because so we're jumping at 40 years old.
Whatever, as long as I can still talk, I'm fine.
You got a weird over it.
So I went over to Apptoss in Santa Cruz area this weekend.
That's where it could train an idea with Max.
And I must have seen at least three of those parks.
They got him everywhere over there.
Oh really?
They had one that had like a, had like a complete like concrete skate park.
And then right next to it was a dirt park that was all for the pump tracks.
Yeah, awesome.
It was rad.
Wow.
Yeah.
Your son is, is he just getting super tall right now?
Well, we just started the growth hormone the other day.
I heard that.
He's got a mustache with that.
Yeah, I'm on a mission to pick him into it at least.
He looks like he's getting super tall.
Yeah, he's growing fast right now.
I told you he's been in 18 month old clothes
and he is 11 months right now.
So he started crawling what, maybe a month ago or so,
maybe two months ago.
Is he everywhere now? You fucked him now?
No, he doesn't crawl. He crawls to you to let him stand him up so he can walk.
Oh, he wants the walk.
Oh, it's all he wants to do. He doesn't want to crawl. He gets pissed. He doesn't like to crawl at all.
He's just gonna just jump right past.
He crawls right to you just so he can climb up your legs and then grab your hands
and then he wants you to walk him.
Wow.
So it's like, and you know know, I'm six, three,
so leaning open, oh, yeah, yeah, and I'm trying to,
I'm trying to train him to do like,
I saw this, people using like these Hulu hoops, right?
So I could hold the Hulu hoop at the top
and then he holds at the bottom to walk,
but he ain't having it.
He wants to hold it.
Now, is this hair getting lighter too?
Picture look like his hair was a little lighter.
He's got, you know, Katrina had a really light hair
when she was you.
So my hair was a lot darker, hers was a lot lighter,
and then got darker as she got older.
So we'll see if it thickens up and gets darker,
but yeah, his features are really light.
He is, hair is light, and his eyes are like a light brown
hazel right now.
So we'll see, but yeah, no, he's growing like a weed right now.
That's good, dude.
That's cool.
Well, if I have a daughter, you know,
we got a little hook up. Oh, make sure they get married. It's growing like a weed right now. That's good dude. That's cool. I have a daughter You know, we got a little hook up
Make sure they get married. It's a matchmaker over here. We'll be in laws
How annoying would that be more of you?
How annoying would that be
Hey, yay
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Alright, first question is from Rebel Hammond.
When buying supplements such as creatine or protein powder,
what ingredients or value should I look for
to know if I'm getting the best bang for my buck?
Oh yeah, that's a good question.
So let's start with creatine.
Creatine is by far the most,
one of the most studied and supported by studies,
ergotogenic supplements ever,
ergotogenic meaning performance enhancing.
The vast majority of these studies that show
that Crayotein is safe and effective for muscle growth
and recovery and strength,
and now they're showing it's got heart health benefits
and brain cognitive boosting benefits, it's got benefits, health benefits and brain, cognitive boosting benefits.
It's got benefits for older populations, all that stuff.
All those studies, almost all of them use
creatine monohydrate, pure creatine monohydrate.
All these other versions of creatine that you see,
it's like spin offs.
It's all, they're all trying to capitalize
on the fact that creatine is effective
and trying to find a way to sell it for more money.
That's what it feels like to me.
It's just like a marketing way to sell
like other versions thinking that
there's some other benefits you get.
It's like casing is to like way-protein.
Yeah, it's the same thing.
It's like the little bit of that.
It's like your splitting hairs and the difference of it.
It's like if I would get whatever is cheaper,
pure and cleaner.
I think third party testing is something that you want to look at.
This made me think about, like,
because you know how it's all coming out,
with it's being more of a wellness type of a product,
like how they're going to like repackage it and market it,
like what are the terms they might use with creatine?
Yeah, with the wellness market,
what you'll probably see is creatine combined with like four
or five other ingredients
that are supposed to be good for wellness.
And I think that's more of a marketing strategy
because the wellness space,
most people know Crating is like build muscle,
bodybuilder, right?
So if you're trying to sell it to wellness people,
no, it'll be focus, energy, you know?
Yeah, might of conjure health, you know,
might say something like that.
I don't know if it'll say that, but.
Well, I mean, do people read that. I don't know if it'll say that
People read that I don't know that is but I think it's good for me. Like I you're your marketing
Always down
The bio hacking space is all about mitochondrial health. It's all they talk about
Trust me. They're also aware I think I think's three of us. I think it's the average person. Yes, the average person.
I think it's going to be more like clear, focus, energy.
It'll be something like that.
Maybe that's what I would think.
But I would look for, like you said, Adam, third party testing, purity.
If you want the benefits of creating, just take it by itself in powder form.
That's where you're going to get the best value.
If you want it to be augmented, I know Legion sells it with Elkharnitine
tartrate, which helps with recovery, so that's not a bad product, but really you could just
buy it on its own, get a good pure source, and I think you're totally fine. You don't
need to get it all crazy with everything.
Well, and that's similar to protein. Now protein, there was a major moment for me where
this like
light ball went off and I don't remember at what point in my career, but I started like flipping
around the label and like breaking down because there was this huge discrepancy. I mean, you back
then you could get like a bottle of designer way protein for like 20 something bucks and then you
could pay as high as like 70 bucks. So there was this huge range of like these protein powders.
And aside from like the third party testing,
because I think that's a must is looking at so you know,
and you're better off going with bigger names,
name brands that are more credible for those reasons.
But besides that, the number one thing with protein is actually just
mathematically figuring out how much protein is in the entire
joke based off the dollar amount.
Because there's a lot of tricks that they use on labels where it's like, you know, it's
a great deal, but then it takes two scoops of protein powder just to get it up.
Yeah, look at the servings.
Right.
It takes two scoops just to get it to 24 grams or 30 grams of protein, and then there's
only 20 servings inside there.
And then you can buy another one that has 70 servings in it, but then it's a lot, so you've got to really,
you're really paying for the protein, right?
Protein's expensive.
So, you know, what labels tend to do is they manipulate
the serving size to try and make you think
it's a better deal that you're getting.
So the best thing that you could do with protein
once you've figured out, okay, this is a credible source,
it's third party tested or it's a big name,
is to flip it around, mathematically figure out how many total grams of protein
is in the entire jug,
divide that by how much the total jug cost,
and then start going down.
And you'd be surprised how actually close they are in pricing.
They're not that as wide of a gap.
The margins are small.
They are.
And protein, it's such a competitive market
that like Adam said, if they're literally similar, the
price is probably going to be very similar.
Now for way, there's a few different types that you can get.
There's concentrate, which is probably the least expensive version.
Concentrate has got a little bit of carbs in it and some other stuff, and by weight,
it's the lowest percentage of protein, but it's not bad at all.
Then you have isolate.
Isolate is what they take everything out, except's the lowest percentage of protein, but it's not bad at all. Then you have isolate. Isolate is, you know, where they take everything out
except for the protein.
So you're just getting protein.
And the difference you're looking at
between concentrate and isolate is like, you know,
five, seven grams of carbs.
Not a big deal for the average person.
If you're like measuring and weighing everything,
maybe it can make a big deal.
And then there's hydrolyseate, which is where they,
they predigest it.
So it's, you know, quote unquote, easier to digest for the body.
We are literally splitting hairs with all those things.
It's not that big of a deal to go from one.
Yeah, I would get a price.
To me, if it's if they're all all things,
purity and price.
Yeah.
And that is what is the deciding and then a taste, you know,
if they're all equal as far as the quality,
the next thing I want is one that actually tastes or mix really well. Yeah, but now if you're going
with plant proteins, then there's something some other stuff you want to look for. Plant proteins
on their own typically do not have the same usability, bioavailability, or they'll score protein by their amino acids, how available
the protein is to the body.
For lack of a better explanation, it's essentially how much of that protein is going to be used
for muscle and all that kind of stuff.
So which one is more effective for the body?
Animal sources on their own versus plant sources on their own.
The animal sources just, they crush them. So with plant sources of protein, you know, one that's
a variety. Yeah, you want combinations that complement each other. So organifies protein
does this right? Organifies proteins got several different plant pro, it's not just, you
know, you know, pee or hemp or whatever. It's a combination of different things so that it gets closer to the bioavailable
biodevailability. Thank you. Easy for you to say.
Of way or animal. Yeah, back to the creatine now. Is there so I was actually curious about this
because of vegans and how we know like it it definitely has a lot of benefit for them cognitively.
we know, it definitely has a lot of benefit for them cognitively. Is there actually synthetic versions or is this like, does this come from animal products in the power?
No, you can get vegan, you can get creating that's vegan sources.
Yeah, you can. Vegans don't eat it, right? Because creatine's only found in animal sources.
Right. But the body makes its own creating
by using amino acids to synthesize it.
So you're not gonna necessarily be at a deficiency.
However, consistently, vegans do supplement with
creating get a cognitive boost.
More than anybody else, which tells me that
if you're a vegan, you probably should
supplement with creating. Next question is from dumbbell. Is there an ideal way to transition from a lot of high intensity
workouts to more traditional resistance training? How can I avoid gaining a ton of fat while
transitioning off of cardio or hit? This is such a common fear. Yeah. That people have.
This would keep people from training this way.
If it is stay in the same regime, because of this.
And it's actually, it just, it doesn't work this way.
Like even though you're burning less calories,
if you're used to high intensity like hit training
and you're super setting a lot,
you're doing all this volume
and you're burning a lot of calories,
and then also you switch to like a strength base program.
You, even if your calorie stayed the same,
you are sending such a different signal to the body
by switching that, that most all those additional calories
will get partitioned to building muscles.
That's right.
That's right.
And most of what we fear is that is that,
you're not sweating as much.
I don't feel like I'm burning as many calories.
Maybe you start to put on muscles
so you fill out your pants or you fill out your shirts
a little more so you think you're getting fat.
But more than likely, it's one of the best things
that you can do and I love to take somebody
that's been training this way and transition them
to straight sets and strength training
and not manipulating the calories at all.
Yeah, this is such a big fear.
It prevents a lot of people from training properly
for their body.
Women are more susceptible to this fear, I think, is there, you know, condition to be
a more afraid of gaining any weight or size?
I remember years ago I had a client, Jennifer, who she was a fanatic.
She did.
She ran, I think she ran close to 20 miles a week.
She, on top of that, did Pilates and cardio based group classes. Then she lifted weights
with circuit training. So she had always had a problem with weight, discovered fitness,
and went the opposite direction, became obsessed. So when she came to hire me, she was working
out like a maniac all the time, and her calories were like 1,700 calories or 16 or calories a
day.
And she's like, well, how do I get leaner?
I can't work out anymore.
I don't want to cut my calories anymore.
And this is what I convinced her to do.
I said, here's what we're going to do.
We're going to move you towards building strength
and building a metabolism.
And it took me a while to convince her to do this.
But the funny thing is when she finally did it,
exactly what you explained happened at them.
She gained some muscle.
Her metabolism went to the roof.
She got to the point where she lifted weights with me
three days a week, maybe four days a week max.
She went down to doing cardio two or three days a week,
and it was like a walk.
It wasn't this crazy running and crazy,
whatever.
And her caloric intake went up to like 2,200 calories a day
and she was leaner.
And remember, it blew her mind so much,
she became a personal trainer.
Yeah, when you replace your body mass with more lean muscle,
you get rid of the body fat.
I mean, it's just hard, it's a hard concept to digest,
but I think this old sort of idea that if you sweat,
you're burning fat.
Like there's this weird like root of it.
Like I've talked to a lot of my clients
that have this sort of mentality
that if they're not sweating,
like, you know, I'm not gonna be shedding body fat.
So there's no way that this can work.
And you have to, like, take your time
to really explain, like, this whole process.
It's definitely something that people, like, still have.
Now, there's a lot of science zealots
that will say things like, you know,
two or three or four pounds of muscle won't burn that
and I just talked about somebody who went from like 16-year calories to 22-hundred calories, right?
She didn't gain 15 pounds of muscle, she gained like five pounds, which is a lot,
but it ain't gonna make you bigger, just made her feel more sculpted and tighter, all that.
And they'll say something like, well, five pounds of muscle is not gonna turn into
that many more calories you're wrong. And that's true.
However, there's other stuff that's going on.
Simply changing the signal, telling your body that you're consuming more and that you're
building reduces calorie efficiency.
Your body learns to actually burn more calories through generating heat.
It doesn't clamp down and become as efficient as possible.
You can lose no muscle and slow your metabolism down.
You can also not gaining any muscle
and speed your metabolism up by changing the signal.
So it's not just pounds of muscle gain,
it's also the signal that you're sending.
It's not just that either.
It's also that most people that gravitate
towards these types of modalities,
high intensity, circuit base, hit, trip,
and training have been doing it for a long time.
Very few of them are like, oh, I just started this
and I hear it, so switch over.
It's like, I've been training this way for years.
And if you've been training that way for so long,
switching over to something so different,
like, strength training is gonna be such a loud signal,
different from somebody who cycles through their types
of modalities every couple of months,
but like the story you shared, so that's what's most common
for me is that these people that would hire me,
and I'd ask them how they train,
and then how long they've been training that way,
most of them training that way for well beyond six months,
years are all their life, they always gravitate
to that way of training.
So just simply changing that to such a different signal
by strength training, that's enough to get the body to really move and change just by itself.
Totally.
Next question is from Eric Loonholm.
When trying to switch into a career of personal training from something else, what's more important?
Getting a degree in a related field, working on certifications, or just getting started coaching for free to gain experience?
Okay, I'll add one right there. The most valuable thing you could do is,
well, besides that is getting a mentor.
There, I can't think of anything that will give you more
bang for your buck in terms of becoming a good trainer.
If you're becoming a new trainer and you can find
an experienced coach or trainer,
who will let you follow them around
and maybe
in trade for doing their paperwork or putting away their weights or, you know,
confirming their appointments or whatever, just follow them around, watch what they do,
hear how they talk, you know, let somebody experience mentor you.
That's more valuable than all those things, you know, that we listed.
But of those things that you listed, you listed, I would say certified and then start to get experience
because a degree, it's expensive and it's long.
Not saying it's not valuable, but geez, for the time and the money that you spend, I
don't know if it's, I can't see it being more valuable than certifications plus experience.
Well, to kind of piggyback on that, I think that there's a way to do that too.
If you don't know like somebody that's like a really good mentor or like personal trainer,
but there's a gym where you know a really like awesome personal trainer that you respect
and you know hire them, hire them, spend your money, you know, having them take you
through programming and explain it and you know and go through that process to see how
the inner workings of the whole thing
and see if they're comfortable with doing that.
I'm sure they would be.
They'd be happy to get your business for that.
That'd be a good start for at least kind of getting a feel
for what it requires by doing it that way.
Well, you need a minimum of A certification
or degree to become one, right?
So you have to have at least one to get going, right?
One national certification or a degree in the field
to at least get started.
But then after that, I would actually say
that the experience trumps everything.
Yeah, I mean, this is my experience at least.
I didn't have a lot coming into it.
I had a certification, that certification, I got one certification
to get started.
And then just got in, got into it, the trade started doing it.
And then as I would run into thing,
and here's the mistake I think some trainers make
is they're so afraid because they don't have
a lot of experience and knowledge yet.
So they're timid to go take on a client,
but that's okay, I'd be okay with saying,
hey, I don't know, but I'll find out for you.
And so most of my career, I spent the first five to six years,
at least, saying that a lot,
and then go back and do my research.
So I run into a situation of never,
and here's the thing too,
you can have all the certifications
and all these degrees in the world,
and it still will not prepare you for every situation
you're gonna run into in real life.
There's just so many variables and we're so unique
and we're also different that you're gonna have to handle
it case by case.
So as you, I think nothing is gonna trump
that getting into the trade, like other trades too.
I mean, that's very similar to almost anything else.
Yeah, you get degrees and certifications,
but until you get in there and start working with those people,
you have no idea what you're going to run into.
And when you do, you go home, and that's why I'd go home after that.
And then next thing you know, I'd be reading books and trying to learn more about whatever
I was dealing with.
And then I'd play it.
And then before you know it, after you've been doing that for years, you're going to
have gone through a lot of the similar type of situations.
And if you've done your due diligence every time you cross that path or cross that scenario
and you go and you learn and you read about it,
to me that's one of the,
and then why that's so important
is because the part that isn't listed on here
that I shot it out, which is communication.
And it's just gonna get you that practice
on how to communicate that information.
Another thing that I had a lot is I would,
remember when I first started hiring trainers
and I would look for the degrees and all the certifications. Oh, this trainer's got you know a master's a master's
They've got you know for national certifications are gonna be so awesome
And then I get them and they're like terrible because they have no experience on taking all that information and then
Communicating that to an average person and then getting the results that they need so you know that part is so important to
Becoming a good trainer that I'd want to get started and as soon as I can and then I'll results that they need. So, you know, that part is so important to becoming a good trainer
that I'd wanna get started in it as soon as I can
and then I'll learn along the way.
Yeah, the most I ever learned, I'm gonna be totally honest,
that I ever learned as a personal trainer
aside from my own experience,
was from other trainers, other health practitioners.
By far, I had acupuncturists that I worked next to
and I would observe and listen to the way they talked and
communicated about their expertise, massage therapists, and I would do the same thing,
physical therapists, other trainers, and then other practitioners that my clients would go to. So if I had a client that
raved about their chiropractor or about their doctor or about their therapist, let's say I worked with someone with body image issues
and they also worked with therapists.
I would make sure to contact their practitioner
both to be able to service my client better,
but also to ask them questions and listen
because you're in your own bubble.
You're a fitness person.
You don't think you can learn from an acupuncturist
about Chinese medicine and meridians.
Of course, you're not gonna communicate it the way they are,
but you're gonna hear and listen and learn.
And that's where I learned most of the most valuable stuff
that I ever learned as a trainer.
Yeah, I think too that there's a lot of different personalities
that want to get into this industry.
And I know myself even included in terms of like me being
a little bit different than you guys.
My weakness was something I worked on constantly, so I do agree with Adam. It's about getting in there
and working on things that might make you uncomfortable. If that's communication thing,
small talk and approaching people, if you're scared of that, then you definitely need to find yourself an environment where you can work on that. But at the same time, it does help to have the education.
So I'm not discounting the fact that
like going the certification route
and getting a degree isn't gonna help.
It's gonna help at least have that basis of knowledge
to then convey.
So when that comes up,
you can relay the information you've learned
to these clients and look like a genius.
But at the same time, you really need to get out there.
It's really important that you put yourself
in the environment that makes you uncomfortable,
makes you work on all these things
because it really is a one-to-one communication.
You have to have really good communication.
Just because I know people are gonna message us afterwards
about what are good certifications.
NESM, good general one, CPS, excellent,
very, very good one.
My favorite.
The check, health practitioner, level one.
That's a good wellness certification.
So those are ones that I would recommend
that are great places to look.
Next question is from Lean Queen.
What's your best advice for someone
who wants to become a better communicator?
What would you say is a top trait of a great communicator?
Great follow up question.
I, one of my first mentors and fitness, my friend Don,
he was an excellent at selling and communicating fitness
and the benefits of health.
And I remember when he would talk to potential members
or clients, he was just very effective.
Now I was a young kid when I started working with him.
I was 18 years old, full of piss and vinegar.
I love to talk back then, just like I love to talk now.
And I remember talking to somebody about fitness
and he sat in and I did,
what I did well as I presented and I talked and I motivated
and inspired and used my charisma and all this other stuff.
And I remember that at that point,
I was trying to show off from front of him, right?
Because he's watching me, so I'm like,
I want to do a really good job.
And the person, they kind of liked what I had to say,
but they were struggling with it.
And I remember they laughed and they ended up not getting started
in fitness or whatever.
And I was really disappointed. And, you know, the guy,
the person laughed and then dawn sat me down. And he goes, I was just like you when I first
gotten to fitness. He goes, I'm going to teach you one of the most important lessons in
communication. He said, use your ears and your mouth in proportion. I'm like, huh? He
goes, listen twice as much as you talk. He said, I think a lot of people think communication is talking, more of it has to do with listening.
So I would say the top trait of a great communicator
is listening.
Number one, it gives the person,
they know that you're hearing them,
so that already opens them up to anything
you're gonna have to say.
And number two, you don't know what to communicate
unless you listen.
Yeah.
You know, you really don't, you have no idea.
You know, I've seen trainers make this mistake
where I remember I had this lady that one time,
you know, was thinking about working out.
She was in her 50s.
And the trainer kept talking to her about
how she's gonna get her body and bikini shape
and she's gonna look fit and she's gonna look so hot.
And she completely failed to hear the woman say
that her problem was that she had osteophenia.
She didn't give a shit about that.
So her communication was terrible.
Well, it's just communication.
We've talked about this before, right?
So people get so turned off by talking about sales
or closing, but really that's all that is
is effective communication.
So I'll give you a couple books or three books
that come to mind that I think are not traditional
in the sales world that I haven't been recommended before,
but I really enjoyed reading verbal judo, sway,
and biology.
All three really good books and effective communication
and sales.
And the other thing I used to always tell my trainers
is I used to ask them, I said,
what is the difference between a good closer
and a great closer?
And a good closer learns to overcome objections
and can push people and they know their product really well
and they can push people into a cell.
A great closer can pull somebody into a cell
by asking the right questions.
And so that kind of goes in line with what you're saying,
Sal, I was just learning to listen more than you talk.
So learning to really hear the client
or the person across from you
and then learn to ask the questions
to leave them in the direction that you want to go.
That strategy is far more powerful than trying to push
or convince somebody to do something.
Yeah, I think too one thing that I struggled with and I know, you know,
some of the trainers probably out there when they're going through the process of trying
to get to the clothes, right?
Like, you're anticipating the clothes, you're presenting, you know, what that looks like
for the client, but now there's this uncomfortable silence where they're trying to think it over.
And it's like, you get this tendency of like, okay, to think it over and it's like you get
this tendency of like, okay, it's silent, so that's bad. So now I have to jump in and say,
well, you could also do this and you just literally like cut your feet out from under
you. Like they they had, you need to give them ample time to think about it and just
wait, just wait, don't say anything. Let them present their ideas to you. And so that's just something I had to work on personally.
I know that I got better at as I got more confident in my skills
in terms of trying to convey the best plan for them.
But it's just like, it's a process of reps,
just like anything else.
If you're in the gym, you need the reps.
You need the people in front of you.
You need to be able to see what went wrong,
how I can improve, and for me,
and specifically, that was everything.
I had to just keep placing appointments
and keep booking them and keep talking to people randomly
in the gym, because I hated it.
It's just like, you just have to do it.
Yeah, one of the big, I'd say, most common mistakes
that, we'll stick with trainers, that trainers make
when it comes to communication, is that they talk,
without realizing it, they talk people out of getting
started in fitness.
And you probably hear what I'm saying
and you're thinking, how is that possible?
Why would a trainer talk someone out of fitness?
Well, they don't mean to, but that's exactly
what they end up doing.
I'll give you a very simple example.
If somebody is talking to you
and you wanna talk to them about fitness
and you're trying to get them started
and they say, you know, I don't have a lot of time.
I just don't have a lot of time to work out.
I've got kids, I've got a job.
And the reason why I haven't done this
is I just, I don't have a lot of time to get started.
Well, the trainer that's not really paying attention
is gonna start the whole motivation talk.
Well, you know, everybody's got 24 hours in a day
and we have to prioritize our time.
And by the way, if you prioritize fitness,
you're gonna be healthier, which is gonna give you more energy,
then you're gonna be more productive,
you're gonna have more time for your kids,
you're gonna be a better parent, all true.
None of that is false, it's all totally true.
But what you failed to do was listen to the person,
empathize, and work with them.
And believe it or not, less words would have been
a million times more effective,
because what you just did by that
is you literally talked them out of it.
You literally just proved to them
that you don't understand them,
you don't know what they're talking about.
And that it's, yeah, you're gonna have to make
a lot of crazy changes around the gates
to do this fitness thing.
When all you had to say, this is all you had to say was,
oh, you know what, it makes a lot of sense.
How much time do you think you can devote
to fitness realistically?
Whatever answer they give you is the right answer.
It doesn't matter, one day a week.
No problem.
It's better than no days a week. I'm gonna construct the best routine I possibly can matter. One day a week. No problem. It's better than no days a week.
I'm going to construct the best routine I possibly can with that one day a week. We can totally
start there and it's much better than doing nothing at all, which is also all completely true.
So this is one of, and by the way, communication skills are the most important skills you can learn
in life. Ever. I don't care what job you do. Look at the relationships
that you're in. You always have to ask yourself what your goal is, like what is the goal
with this communication that I'm doing with this person? Is it to prove them wrong and prove
myself right? Or is it to get them to understand what I'm saying and maybe sway them a little
bit, maybe persuade them to do what I know
to be the right thing.
When you think of it that way,
you tend to communicate more effectively,
you tend to not be so zealot,
such a zealot about what you're saying.
It's a little softer because here's a deal.
Okay, here's the reality.
If I tell the person who just told me they have no time
and I say to them, well, how much time do you realistically have,
and they say one day a week,
here's what I know about fitness.
I know this for a fact.
They come in because now I've listened to them,
and they honestly believe they only have one day a week,
no problem.
Nine out of 10 times, the person shows up one day a week,
they do it a long enough time,
they feel, see the benefits, guess what they do.
They make more time.
All on their own, just like magic.
I used to love watching this.
It would take two months, three months, sometimes a year.
And inevitably the client would come up
to me like, you know what, tell?
I'd like to work out one more day a week.
What do you think I should do?
Just like magic.
And these are, they would end up sticking with fitness.
So communication has a lot to do with learning
and a lot to do with understanding
what your desired result is.
It's very little to do with winning an argument
or a conversation.
And with that look, we record these podcasts on video
as well as audio.
So if you'd like to watch and listen to the podcast,
go check us out on YouTube.
It's Mind Pump Podcast. Also, you go check us out on YouTube it's mind pump podcast also you
can find us all on Instagram you can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin you can find me at
Mind Pump Sal Adam at Mind Pump Adam and Doug he has an Instagram page too it's Mind Pump
Doug.
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