Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1363: The Truth About Muscle Confusion & Muscle Growth, How to Adjust Training When Pregnant, the Benefit of Wearing a Weighted Vest During Cardio & More
Episode Date: August 21, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about whether wearing a weighted vest or a hoodie during cardio makes a difference in the amount of calories burned, diff...erence between introducing new exercises for the sake of stimulating versus confusing, whether pregnant women need to change the way they lift, and the first thing they will do when the pandemic is finally over. Mind Pump’s goal for the world. (4:33) The healthy supplement trends. (22:55) Mind Pump’s conflicted feelings surrounding Magic Spoon cereal. (24:52) Mind Pump Recommends, (Un)Well on Netflix. (28:50) Adam’s sauna prank on Justin. (36:25) Cardi B interviews Joe Biden. What world are we living in?! (39:45) California is burning. (44:43) Google can now predict earthquakes. (45:25) #Quah question #1 – Does wearing a weighted vest or a hoodie during cardio really make a difference in the number of calories burned? Or is it like the oxygen restriction masks and just to perceive difficulty? (48:52) #Quah question #2 – In a recent episode you talked about the importance of introducing new exercises to elicit a new stimulus and to work muscles in a novel way. In previous episodes, you have mentioned that there is no need to confuse muscles and that progressive overload is the principle that will stimulate muscle growth. Can you elaborate and clarify the difference between introducing new exercises for the sake of stimulating versus confusing? (53:33) #Quah question #3 – Do pregnant women need to change the way they lift? (59:30 #Quah question #4 – When the pandemic is finally over, what will be the first thing that you will do that you haven’t been able to do? (1:10:15) Related Links/Products Mentioned August Promotion: MAPS Performance ½ off!! **Promo code “GREEN50” at checkout** Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! (Un)Well | Netflix Official Site Visit Clear Light Infrared Sauna for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! WATCH: Video of Ben Shapiro Reading ‘WAP’ Lyrics Goes Viral Cardi B Interviews Democratic Candidate Joe Biden Google Is Launching a Global Earthquake-Detection Network Mind Pump #1354: Alternatives for Squats, Bench Press & Deadlifts, Best Way to Work Out Over 50 & More How Should You Workout Before and During Pregnancy? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump TV - YouTube MAPS Starter | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Jessica Di Stefano (@thetraininghour) 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.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcast,
essentially the best podcast you'll hear anywhere.
Ever.
In this episode, we answer questions that are asked from our audience
and questions that
come from viewers just like you out on YouTube.
And we do that in the back half of this episode.
In the first half of this episode, about 44 minutes long, we talk about current events
and we tell stories, we bring up studies, we mention our sponsors.
By the way, if you want to know where every category or every topic that we talk about
happens in this episode, you want to fast forward to your favorite part.
Go to MindPumpPodcast.com. Everything's time stamped. But if you want to have the most fun, start from the beginning.
Let me give you a rundown. So we open up by talking about the MindPump goal for the world.
It's a little lofty. It's a big goal. It gets a little esoteric, but it's from our hearts.
Yeah. Then we talk about healthy supplements and how markets have moved and changed and now where people want things that are not artificially sweetened, for example, that led us to mention
our sponsor, Legion.
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And because you listen to Mind Pump, you get a cool hook up.
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And if you're a returning customer, you get double rewards points.
Then we talked about our conflicted feelings
around magic spoon cereal.
This is the cereal that has no sugar,
is high in protein, it's got way protein in it.
The ingredients are not crazy chemicals or toxic,
it's good stuff.
What's gonna stop you from eating all of it?
But it's also delicious and you end up eating four boxes.
Yeah.
So we're a little conflicted about it.
Anyhow, magic spoon is one of our sponsors.
If you want to try out a box, use our discount.
Go to magicspoon.com forward slash mind pump,
get an automatic discount, or just use the code, mind pump.
Then we talk about the documentary on Netflix called
Unthe Health, and there's a partner
about a body builder drinking breast milk.
Yeah, it's a muscle building one.
Yeah, bro.
Then we talk about the sauna prank
we played on Justin the other day.
We talk about Cardi B.
Looks like she's moving up in the world
and interviewing candidates for president.
What the hell is the world coming to?
You're up in smash hits.
We talk about California burning.
Crazy fires going on here.
Then we talk about the earthquake detectors at Google.
And then we get into the questions,
this is when we start answering fitness questions.
First one, does wearing a weighted vest or a hoodie
help you burn more calories when you do cardio?
The next question, this person says,
look, you guys talk about introducing new exercises
to get your body to respond.
Then you also talk about practicing the same exercises to get good at them.
And that's a great way to build muscle.
Which one is true?
What do we believe?
The next question, this person says, do pregnant women need to change the way they lift?
And the final question, this person just wants to know what's the first thing we're all
going to do when the pandemic is over.
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So one of the questions I get all the time,
whenever I'm being interviewed on another health
or fitness podcast, I was wondering if you guys
get this question too, it's like,
what is the overarching, I guess, goal
or purpose behind mind-pump?
Like, why do you guys do what you do?
Do you guys get that question a lot?
I do, not as much as I get to how the hell the four of you
have not, like, tore each other's faces off.
Like, choke each other out.
That's the one I get.
Yeah, I get all the time.
I get that one all the more.
This is work.
Yeah, it's possible.
Now, you're all four equal owners.
And you still like each other? Yeah. Yeah, we did the, we signed an agreement early on. that one up. How does this work? How is it possible? You're all four equal owners.
You still like each other?
Yeah.
We signed an agreement early on.
It was about mutual destruction, which was essentially if you ever got a fight, we all have
to have guns.
Yeah.
And so we're like, it's not worth it.
It's like what happened.
But I do get that too.
I get that one too, though.
Yeah, that's a common question.
And this last time I got interviewed, I really thought about it a lot because I know we all had similar goals as trainers
Which essentially was, and this is for most trainers I think, which is to really help the people that you're working with to help them achieve a
lifelong relationship with good health, you know, through exercise,
nutrition, and of course later on as you get more
experience through other means,
sleep and your relationships and that kind of stuff.
But then when I think about Mind Pump, it's still that,
that's still a goal.
But because of the broad reach, I really
thought about it this time.
I said, you know, it's also a little bit different
because as a trainer, I was communicating
to one client at a different because as a trainer, I was communicating to one client at a time
and as a manager,
at the most, aside from when I would host the big meetings
or whatever, my whole staff was what, 40, 50 people.
So that would be who I'd be communicating.
Well, now we're talking to so many different people.
I was like, what is really,
how can I put into words our big overarching goal?
And then I thought of it and it really is, and I'd love you guys to feedback on this.
It is to bring awareness around what real total health looks like for people.
So like to bring awareness around that because once people really become aware of that, then
their consumer habits will change the market and then change society.
So what I mean by that is once people become aware of real total health and start to develop
you know, and we'll stick to nutrition for example, that's an easy one.
Let's just stick with that.
Let's say somebody really becomes aware of the real health properties of food, not just physiological,
but how it makes you feel and the proper way to eat
and balance and all that stuff.
Then when they go shopping, they are going to place a very strong
market demand on products that will serve their total health.
And so then we'll see more of a collective effort
to produce high-quality foods
or to make foods that are maybe produce them in ways that are better for the environment or
advertising a little bit differently. You know what I'm saying? And I was thinking that
let's just on a broad spectrum and now I'm going to get a little philosophical. But I was thinking,
you know, if everybody, if every individual really, really was truly healthy
in every sense, physical, nutrition,
relationships, finances, just the way
that they viewed themselves, their own self-image,
I think that would solve a lot of problems, you know what I'm saying?
Is that too deep?
I don't think it's too much to ask.
Yeah, I don't think it's too deep. I think it's
unrealistic. But it's a good goal, I think.
Well, yeah. I think that was a very beautiful, what you said, probably better than how I
answer that question. I think it was much simpler the way I think about it, which is each
of us had our own path with training clients, but in over the course of, you know,
over a decade of training clients, we reached a place where I think we would agree that we
felt good that we were adding a tremendous value to any life that we impacted or touched.
And because of what has happened in the last decade with digital media, I think we saw the opportunity
to provide that same type of experience that we gave individuals to the masses.
And when I think about what we do, it really is exactly that.
Now it's through a different medium and channel, and so we've had to kind of learn the art
of podcasting and evolve with all of that and video stuff, things that we were unfamiliar,
but why it's been successful is because the message
was the same and true since the beginning,
even though we've refined it and maybe practiced it
and got better at it, whatever,
it was the same thing that we were teaching
these individuals that we train one-on-one
for an hour every single day that we are just now
getting at you.
And so that's what's so cool about it.
Like maybe my entire career, we talk all the time,
like, oh, we've impacted about a thousand lives
or whatever and people challenge that.
Oh, that would mathematically,
you probably didn't do that many.
Okay, so hundreds to a thousand or so people,
I fundamentally impacted over the course of two decades
where now, let's say we exaggerate and say it's 2000,
which is definitely more, right?
I mean, the show, right now there's somewhere
between 70 and 100,000 people listening to this conversation,
even if a very small fraction of those people,
something one of us says resonates with them
the same way it would
with a client that you were helping out or potentially changing their life. I mean, the impact
is incredible. So it's very similar to me. Yeah, I mean, it's been an evolution, like you said,
from what we were doing previous to this. And I think it's just, to me, I look at it as like we're
trying to filter all the misinformation out there in terms of our background in health and fitness
And that's where we started and that's the the root and the the base of you know what we're we're trying to kind of build off of and
We kind of go a little bit left a little bit right in terms of like other things out there that we're trying to understand
We're trying to like sift through all this misinformation
just like the rest of the population.
And I do see now because of planting these seeds
of, you know, somewhat of generalized truths
or things that we've found to be repeatable,
I've seen changes in consumer habits.
I've seen products, you know, come that, you know that we've talked about. Sometimes it may seem
like we're sort of no-strudomist or predicting these trends or things like that, but really,
we are one small part of impacting people's decision process for their home. So I do feel responsible for that now, especially as our voice gets louder,
as the show gets bigger,
I take responsibility for that,
and I think we all do.
I think we all want that to,
we want people to find their way
towards better practices in their own household.
Yeah, because it brings me back to this,
and I know what you guys both mean,
and I know what you meant about Adam when you said,
it's a real big, obvious, let's the goal, right?
The goal is to think about that.
Our reach is, you know, maybe big in our eyes,
but it's very small, impact wise
when you think of all the people around there.
But you know, it reminds me, I remember when I was a kid,
and this is my first start of working out,
and we were driving to Disneyland of working out and we were driving
to Disneyland.
I think it was like 15 and we were going through this neighborhood and I remember seeing
like this liquor store on this corner and then we drive a little, there's another one
and there's another one and I'm just getting into fitness and health at this point.
So I'm like, liquor, why are there so many liquor stores and so few health food stores
in gyms?
Yeah. And I did, I said that out loud.
I'm like, man, they just want us to drink alcohol
and be unhealthy, so I said out loud, right?
And my mom goes, well, if people wouldn't be there,
and I remember at 15 years old,
I sat there quiet for the next hour, thinking about that.
And I thought, oh my gosh,
if the market really just follows consumer demand.
Like imagine if all the stuff that wasn't good for us,
right, whatever you want to,
whatever you think isn't good for us,
a cigarette, alcohol, whatever.
Imagine if all the collective efforts of the market
to bring you the best, you know, tastiest, crappy food
or the best alcohol or the best way to get high
or the best way to distract yourself.
Imagine if all those collective efforts
were geared towards healthy things,
not because the producer thought we need to do this,
but rather because the consumer said,
that's what I want.
I want all this healthy stuff.
So you're gonna have to use all your capital and vest
and this kind of stuff.
So really the key is like, our society's ever only gonna be
as good as what the consumer wants.
That's it.
And if what we want is good, because we're healthy,
because you can't possibly, we know this
through nutrition, right?
If you have an unhealthy relationship with your body,
maybe you're ignorant to the potential health effects
of food so you're just not informed.
Or maybe you just don't care about yourself in that way or you hate yourself or you want to
distract yourself, your choices that you make are going to be based off that. So you're going to
choose foods based off of your relationship with you. That's just how it works. So if people were
healthy, imagine the innovation, imagine the products,
imagine the way the world would kind of start to move
and shape, and I mean, look at it this way, okay.
Cell phones 30 years ago,
that's not that long, by the way,
30 years is a blink of the eye, okay.
Cell phones work,
expensive as hell, and almost nobody had them.
Just 30 years ago, almost nobody had them.
In 30 years, because the demand by consumers was so strong,
so everybody was like, I want the cell phone.
And by the way, now we have smartphones
that have technology in them that is more powerful
than all the technology that is the moon.
Yeah, in one phone, right?
In 30 years, we went from phones that, in those dollars,
and not even adjusting for inflation,
and those dollars were thousands of dollars.
It was like a thousand bucks or more to get a crappy cell phone 30 years ago that barely
ever worked.
To 30 years later, they're so available that poor people have them, homeless people have
them.
Third world countries, the penetration now is reaching incredible levels. And there was no decree, there was no king,
there was no leader that said everybody should have a cell phone.
It was all meeting that super crazy demand.
So imagine if the demand was based off of our health.
No, I want a good relationship with food.
And I like to be active, I like to take care of myself.
I like to help other people.
I love my family, I want to be a good father, I have a good financial relationship so I buy things
that I need that really being value but not ways to distract myself and imagine if that happened,
what things would look like and so I know I'm getting like super Ezaltaric and stuff out there
and I tend to do that a little bit. But that was where my mind was.
And I think that's an important thing.
I think fitness and health, as narrow as sometimes we think it is, which is like build
muscle, burn body fat, look good.
Really, it's a wonderful entry point into all of that.
It's easy, right?
Because I can talk about fitness to anybody.
Where I didn't care what you believe in, what your religion is, what you believe in any category,
most people are interested in like, you know, looking better.
Or whatever.
So I can start that way.
The trunk, the base of the tree, you know,
it's where you start to improve yourself
and then the way that you think in the decisions that you make,
you know, as a result of, you know,
what you've sort of built upon.
And so I do see how that all relates all the time.
It's crazy how many parallels there are.
Once you focus in on yourself and on health
and how that spawns out until the decisions from there.
Yeah, it's crazy.
I feel very optimistic,
even in these weird times, right?
It's kind of a pessimistic time right now, right?
I know.
I'm trying to remove myself from that.
Right.
So down with negative bullshit.
It was just, God, was it 20, 21 or so years ago
when I started work on a dairy.
And at that time, we were one of only five
of all organic derries in California.
And at that time, that was my first introduction
to what organic was.
Like I didn't even, at that point in my life,
I had no, you know, over 20 years ago, 25 years ago,
I didn't know what the hell organic anything was, right?
As far in relation to food.
And so that was my first introduction to it.
And, you know, I thought it was interesting,
but I didn't see the need for it,
or I think it was that important.
I thought it was interesting that we charged
a lot more for it,
and that there was supposedly this growing demand.
But look, we're at today.
I mean, we just talked about that new railies
that surround the corner for us up north
where it's a completely branded,
I mean, they're trying to keep up with whole foods because whole foods exploded so much.
But there was a time when-
You couldn't find organic anywhere.
No.
You'd have to go to a local farmer that you knew that was doing that and you had a little
community of people that were sharing and look what it's grown into already.
Do they have organic sections in every grocery store?
Yeah.
Even the cheapest grocery store has an, idle, just to compete.
Okay, grass-fed meat, here's a great one.
You know that grass-fed meat used to be the standard?
That's how meat was.
My uncle, I remember this, this was probably,
I started talking about grass-fed meat
maybe 10 years ago, okay, so,
you know, because I've always been in the wellness space,
or not always, but about 10 years ago, I really started, you know, because I've always been in the wellness space, or not always, but about 10 years ago,
I really started getting in more into the wellness space,
which at that time was very different from the fitness space.
The fitness space 10 years ago was proteins, carbs, fats,
get lean, build muscle, performance.
The wellness side was hippies and people who didn't, you know,
wear deodorant and they talked to the smelly ones.
Organic and, you know, what's best for the animal and that kind of, so they were, they were very separate.
Which by the way, cannot interrupt you, but I mean, that, you know, going back to your original
way we started this conversation, that was a lot of, I think, all of our goal to merge them.
Yeah, it was to merge those. Absolutely. There was a lot of division just five, ten years ago in that.
If you went to a wellness convention ten years ago. If you went to a wellness convention 10 years ago
and then you went to a fitness convention 10 years ago,
two different planets.
And in fact, if you brought someone from a wellness convention
to the fitness convention of vice versa,
it would have been like rival gangs almost.
Oh yeah, each of them would scoff at what they see.
Totally.
Today, they still look different,
but they look way more similar than they look different.
Today, one might be like, high protein, you know,
bar, but it'll be organic, you know, well sourced.
And then the wellness side might be like,
organic, well sourced, high protein.
You know, that never happened, you know, before.
So you're starting to see that crossover,
I forgot where I was going with that.
But anyway, it's definitely merged,
but back then it was, oh, here it is, grass fed.
So I remember when I got into grass fed,
my, I was talking to my uncle about it.
And I'm like, we were at the grocery store,
we're buying food for a barbecue.
And I'm like, oh man, I'm like,
I wish we could find grass fed meat.
And you know, my uncle's older than I am, right?
Different generation. He starts laughing, he's like, why would you want grass fed meat. And you know, my uncle's older than I am, right? Different generation.
He starts laughing.
He's like, why would you want grass fed?
I'm like, well, it's got better fed.
He asked it profile.
It's better for the environment.
It's better for the animal.
And he's laughing.
And he goes, do you know that when I was younger
and I first came to this country,
when you would go to the grocery store,
it was all grass fed.
And you would look for corn fed.
That's what you wanted. and I'm like, why?
They say, well, because corn fed, it's more marble
than it tastes better.
And so you know what ended up happening?
Everything went grass fed to corn fed.
It went in that direction, the whole market
moved in that direction.
Corn fed became cheaper and mass produced.
Grass fed started to disappear.
Now what we're seeing is you're starting to see market demand
for grass fed. So now when you go to the grocery store what we're seeing is you're starting to see market demand for Grass Fed.
So now when you go to the grocery store,
most grocery stores, you'll see,
and it's a small section,
but I guarantee it'll be bigger in the next five years,
you'll see a section that says Grass Fed.
You'll be able to pick Grass Fed meats.
Well, I remember when we started talking about this early,
on when the show first started,
like the supplement, look at the supplement industry,
how much that's changed.
Huge. Remember the big argument off air that we got with Joe Donnelly when Joe Donnelly wanted us to push his
his supplements how wrong was he by the way I know right and we went back and forth with him and he wanted us to promote his supplements and I literally said we can't you have
artificial sweeteners just doesn't work with with our philosophy and he made this huge Armed Bullshit. The market will never go in that direction.
That's belonging.
The consumers always want something that tastes better.
Yeah, that's his bullet.
And you know, it's funny.
The trends are moving out of the direction.
Oh, well, look at all the biggest brands.
Even if they do have some stuff that has artificial sweeteners,
they also have now a line that offers not,
which is just to show that it's moving that direction.
It's just like grocery stores first starting off
with accepting, oh shit, we're gonna have to have
an organic aisle and now you see like the railies
having an actual store dedicated to looking
like a whole foods.
So pretty soon here, you're gonna see that,
I think in the supplement space where everyone
will move into that.
That's what I mean.
So if people just worked on making themselves,
I was talking to my God's son about this.
And he's in his early 20s,
and he's going through with a lot of young men
and that age kind of go through where
what used to make you happy before,
you find doesn't make you happy anymore.
And I talked to him and I said,
you know, it's because you're a young man
and you now feel an instinctual need
for a sense of purpose and meaning.
When you're in your teens,
you know, you're playing video games all day long
and hang out with your buddies, not a big deal.
Once you get your 20s, I remember the feeling too.
Once you hit a certain age, I need something more,
in my life.
And so I talked about this to him and I said,
you know, if you just get yourself healthy
in all aspects, fitness, nutrition, spiritually healthy,
whatever that means for you, how you are with your family,
then you'll start to find that the things you seek out will start to match that.
So really, instead of trying to find outside sources, just kind of work on yourself and then
kind of watch, you know, what that happens.
But back to the supplement conversation, here's a great example, our partner, Legion.
They're a hardcore performance enhancement supplement company, you know, I would say Legion
supports performance.
Yeah, it's not like a wellness brand, right?
It's not like our, it's not like our
our organifi line.
That's what we have to separate, right?
Right, they're more like build muscle, burn, body fat.
Get stronger, right?
All of us products are not artificially sweetened.
You didn't have any artificial sweeteners
and any of us products.
And that's his, and he's going after the people
who really have hardcore goals with fitness.
Never was like that before.
All the hardcore fitness stuff,
it was all as per tamer sucalose.
Yeah, and people involved in sports now,
they're realizing like they can do it a different way.
It's not like by any means necessary,
get to that peak performance,
because they also have to think about their longevity
and their career
and also, you know, if what they're consuming
is also affecting them in adverse ways
that they have really like a pay attention to before.
Well, I always thought it was really interesting
when we were arguing with Joe about that stuff
because, you know, especially the sports performance community,
I mean, they do care.
And much of the sports performance world
is always looking for
the new cutting edge science. And we had already seen all the research that was coming out around
artificial sweeteners. And it's like sooner or later, you know, supplement lines will start to
make these same performance supplements minus the artificial sweeteners because of the negative
stuff that's coming out from them. And then it's going to perform better. Like why, and then
and as a performance athlete, most of those people
don't buy those things because of the taste of it
or they care about that.
They care about the performance from it.
I want it to be effective and I want it
if I can get those little things matter.
Right, if I can get the healthiest thing
that gives me as good or better performance
than this other product, I'm gonna go that direction
and to not see that writing on the wall,
you know, to me that just goes to show
like how green you are in this space,
because it was obvious to us for a very long time
that it was moving in this direction.
Oh, and along those lines,
because the demand for non-artificial sweetened products
became so big, the products themselves, because of that,
there's more capital that goes in,
more research and development, and now the flavor that a product that There's more capital that goes in, more research and development.
And now the flavor that a product that is non artificially sweetened, let's say with
Stavia, for example, or Monkfruit versus something with Asperger Tamer-Sucalose, it's starting
to rival the taste now. Because now they've had enough money.
Yeah, to science into it. Yeah, making sure it has those same kind of flavors and the palette and everything.
Well, look at the evolution of magic spoon. I mean, that's been, I mean, just in the short.
That doesn't make any sense to me. Just a short period of time that we've been working with.
By the way, when, I'm the first time I ever even tried it over a year ago when Max Lugovier
introduced it to us, I thought it was phenomenal. But at each time they've re-engineered and re-engineered and it's like,
it's just to keep iterating. It's crazy to see these new formulas that come out and it's like,
wow, this tastes even more like what we used to eat when we were kids.
Dude, I'm conflicted about it. It's so incredible and the flavor, not my son. Finally,
my kids so much like me, right? If I tell him to do something, just like me, if someone tells me to do something, resists, right?
Like, don't shit in the downstairs bathroom.
Yeah, I'm gonna do this.
Yeah, that's my, that's your only bathroom.
I shit enough.
I got you.
So finally, we were up at the house,
and you know, he had to take care of himself.
I think we were working or whatever.
So he grabbed it and ate it.
Love's it, right?
But now here's why I'm conflicted.
It's all he wants to eat now.
So here's the confliction.
I'm like, okay, he's getting good protein.
It's got good ingredients.
So, okay, that's good.
But now it's like, he doesn't want to eat regular foods.
You know what I mean?
Oh, can I just have a bowl of?
I'm glad you brought up the treat.
I'm glad you brought up that you're conflicted about that.
Because I mean, my last Q&A somebody was made a comment
about, I thought you guys are not pro process foods.
And that, one of the things that I think that we've,
I hope that we've made clear on the shows
that no matter what, and this goes for every supplement,
every anything that you consume that we've ever talked about,
we would always recommend whole natural foods first.
There's no substance here for that.
Yeah, there is none.
And that is the most ideal way to go.
And why I think you say you were conflicted is,
because I know you would always encourage your son
to go eat whole natural foods first
and not make his entire diet magic spoon.
Regardless of what the science says that he'll be okay and it won't hurt him.
It's still not the ideal way.
No sugar high protein.
Therefore, no, it's really healthy alternative to, you know, something that, again,
like we got to be realistic.
You know, I think we talk a lot.
Like we don't want to be zealots about health and just always like pound people's
head in with, you know, the whole foods only. No, because it doesn't work. No, it's not sustainable. I know people.
It's not authentic. I would be lying if I said that.
I know a lot of people in fitness and health space, some of them are big influencers that
you might have heard of, not kind of name names, who are so dogmatic about what they eat
that they're unhealthy.
They're unhealthy over it.
They can't navigate the real world.
Because everything to them is in this box,
and it has to be live in a bubble.
And it produces stress for them,
and if they go off their macros,
or they go off their plan,
ah, I can't travel, I can't eat out.
I'm anxious about it.
I can only be friends with other zealots
and other dogmatic people. So you have to be able to navigate the real world
So okay, serial exists in the real world to taste these serial exists in the real world
Am I gonna tell my kids never because he's will happen if you do that you'll go to college
That's all you'll eat because that's what kids do when they go to college. I'm not under my dad's roof
Now I can do all the stuff that I could so instead instead, it's like, yeah, you can have some cereal.
Try this one.
It's a little better for you.
And it still tastes good.
Dude, speaking of Zalettes and earlier in the conversation,
we're talking about trying to filter
through all the misinformation out there.
So if you guys seen unhealth on Netflix yet,
this new series, I haven't seen it.
I watched like three quarters
of the breast milk episode.
That was actually my favorite one so far.
Yeah, so it's, so it was, it sounds bad.
What I thought was interesting,
and I don't want to steal your platform here just here,
but what I found interesting about that,
because I watched it too, was one of the first people
they highlight in that is a workout guy,
a guy who's trying to be a bodybuilder,
amateur bodybuilder,
and he's buying breast milk.
So remember when we talked about it on the show?
I talked about that on the show.
I said it was a thing.
If I was a marketer,
I could sell the shit at a breast milk.
Better than anything else, think about it.
And here's what you have to do.
The protein you get from it, I mean, it's not.
No, no, I know that.
I know that.
I know you mean it.
I'm not saying that it is the best.
I'm just saying it's easy to sell.
It's easy to sell.
You could literally put up, I would put up a chart in an ad,
and I'd be like, only one food on earth increases body weight
by 200%.
A few weeks.
Yeah.
You know, only one, you know, form of food is made for a body
that's growing at the fastest rate in a lever group,
which is an infant.
You know, only one.
And I would market it that way to people
that want to build muscle.
Yeah, so then you see that. And then like market it that way to people who want to build muscle. Yeah, so then you see that.
And then like immediately after that,
they place somebody that's been working
at these breast milk banks.
And then how incredibly difficult it is
for them to acquire breast milk to get to these preemies
and to, you know, the nick use.
And so then you feel immediately bad
if your bodybuilder trying to buy this like,
you know, anyways, you'll see,
like, they want, like, their goal is to get
like eight million something, like, gallons of the stuff.
Like, I don't know if it's gallons or if I'm like,
way off with that, but they're only like six.
And so, like, they're not even close to their goal
of like being able to service like all these,
like, little babies.
So, it's like, the bodybuilder is using it
as fucking, like, ridiculous. So So that's my point with that. But what was interesting about that
episode for me like because it was just it was just interesting to see how many different
like people were kind of trying to to to use it. They had like this one guy actually
who had prostate cancer who's actually from Palo Alto, and they highlighted,
it was crazy, all the stuff was like in our backyard,
and the bank was in San Jose.
He had prostate cancer, was doing his research,
there was somebody else, I don't know,
somewhere in Europe, I wanna say Sweden, but maybe not,
but found that basically there was a cancer-fighting element
to it.
To breast milk?
To breast milk.
And basically.
How's the administering it to his prostate?
Or does he just eat it?
He's just drinking it.
Okay.
Yeah, I know.
I was like this is getting, I don't know.
I'm gonna get a correction.
Yeah, but so he didn't like the fact
that there was all these horrendous side effects
to treatment, right?
So that like incontinence and you know, like it's, you can't have sex, like, all these types of things,
right?
And so, he's trying to look at alternatives and found the study and contacted the scientist
who actually performed the study and they went back and forth and basically, like, he just
decided, I'm just going to try it.
And so, had somebody like a friend of his
that had a newborn and was able to get some of their milk
and started to put it in shakes
and start drinking it.
And so he had like, he'd go in to his doctor to see
how much growth, if it's gotten larger and whatnot.
And so he actually saw right away an immediate decrease.
What?
Yeah.
And then the longer he was on it,
the further decrease happened.
And then it spiked back up when, you know,
his source like was no more.
And so he was like, what do I do now?
Because you, I mean, if you're an adult,
like these, these breast milk banks,
they're not gonna allow you to,
to get these things.
Because they need those for the babies.
Because Jessica's pregnant, right?
So I'm reading a lot about things around that nature,
breast milk in particular.
That stuff is amazing.
I know.
So individually, I went through the same thing
when Katrina was pregnant.
Up into that point, I had, I don't know,
like very surface level knowledge of it,
and then of course, when we got pregnant, it was something. Up into that point, I had, I don't know, like very surface level knowledge of it. And then of course, when we got pregnant,
it was something that I started to read more on
and became fascinated with how complex it is.
Not only that, it's funny you bring this conversation up
because randomly last night, Katrina and I
probably talked for an hour about this exact topic
about women and breastfeeding.
It started, I think we're talking about Jessica.
You think Jessica will make a whole year? I mean, I mean, I think because before Katrina, I never, and I don't know if it's because people
are careful of, they don't want to make other women
feel guilty or shamed because they didn't make it that long
because there's so many things that could come into play
that can make it very challenging.
It's a lot of work.
Oh, it's, no, it is beyond, it is, it's so much work
that I think that it's a lot of be, it's a lot of work. Oh, it's, no, it is beyond, it is, it's so much work
that I think that it's not, it's not talked about enough
and the women that do make it that can breastfeed
for that long of a period of time consistently
are superheroes.
When I watched what Katrina went through,
and she's disciplined, she's organized.
She was on top of reading everything.
She was eating foods to make sure
that she or her milk was coming in right.
And to watch all the hurdles that she had to overcome,
while also trying to manage work life,
and being consistent, I mean, that woman was literally,
I think four hours a day is what we factored in,
like was dedicated to pumping,
you know, and having milk ready to feed the baby.
Well, it's crazy is when you learn about,
like what we know now about breast milk,
in which we still don't know a lot.
We're still a lot we haven't learned.
But I thought before I really dived in,
that was just, oh, it was breast milk.
It's designed for humans,
it's good for babies, it's probably the ultimate,
it's definitely the ultimate food, in my opinion, for infants.
I did not realize just how individualized and tailored
it becomes for your baby, not just for your baby,
but for your baby right now.
So what I mean by that is, it's different in the morning,
than it is in the evening.
Your baby saliva signals your body to produce specific antibodies or specific nutrients or
ratios of nutrients that your baby needs.
In other words, you want to, and again, this is difficult.
I want to caveat, this is very difficult and many times impossible for women to do in
modern societies because so many women work
and it's just challenging, you have other kids
and all that stuff.
But literally, ideally, you want the baby
to get the breast milk at that moment,
not frozen or not given,
because at that moment, your body receives a signal
from the baby saliva and then it starts to produce
exactly what the baby needs right now.
Which is crazy.
Oh, it's a trip, but it's like if you get really sick,
so like I say, my mom gets really sick.
Now normally in a normal circumstances,
you get really sick, you gotta keep your kid away.
I don't wanna give you the virus or whatever I got,
I don't want you to get sick.
It's the opposite.
But the baby.
The milk changes to protect the baby.
Yeah, you don't want to keep your baby.
Yeah, it's the first vaccine that you're exposed to.
It's insane how individualized it gets and how crazy.
We knew nothing about it and so funny that decades ago,
companies that made formulas would literally advertise
and say this is better than breast milk.
And they would tell women,
that's preposterous.
Give this to your baby, it's better than breast milk.
So they're like soy protein. Speaking of breast, I have a story for you guys. Oh, yeah.
Oh, good. Or actually, I have a story for the audience. You guys are obviously privy to
this story. I feel like I have to share with you. The audience would happen yesterday.
So let me set the table for this story. In the studio, we have a recording area in the gym area
where we're constantly shooting content in there.
We have the recording studio where we're recording our audio
show and stuff like that, the green screen.
So there's kind of like stuff going on all the time.
And so, you know, many times Justin, Sal, or myself
have calls that are not related to stuff
that's being created right now.
And so-
This is great.
And I don't know if I was the first one to piece this together,
but I know I've been doing this for a while
and I saw Justin do it yesterday is I found that we have two
SONAS in our studio.
So shout out to Clearlight SONAS.
And I've found that if there's a lot of stuff going on in the studio
that this is a quiet area.
That I know he's gonna harass me. Yeah, exactly. In this little cube. that like if there's a lot of stuff going on in the studio that this is a quiet area.
That I know is gonna harass me.
Yeah, exactly.
In this little cube.
Right, it doesn't matter how loud anybody gets
in the rest of the building and stuff,
I can have a private meeting in there, right?
So Justin's doing this yesterday, and I see him.
He goes in like, he's obviously having a very serious call.
I don't even know what it's regarding.
I can tell it's important because it's serious.
Yeah, he's got a note pad.
He's got notes. Yeah, he's got a note pad. He's got a note pad.
He's got his glasses.
He's got his, he's got his,
erypods in, like so I can tell,
and he was in there for like, I think almost an hour.
Right.
And about 45 minutes or so in, I come in to say something to
sauce that, hey, you gotta go record this.
I'm gonna fuck with Justin right now.
And he's like, what are you gonna do?
He's like, don't, don't know him.
He's in a meeting right now.
I'm like, no, it'll be fun, it'll be relaxed.
So one of the things I like about this clear light sauna
is that the inside of it has a Bluetooth capability.
So it's so great.
When I go to my sauna after my workout,
my phone automatically connects right to the Bluetooth
inside the clear light sauna.
And so I know this.
And I know that Justin's in there
on a very important phone call.
Yeah. And so I decide that it would be really funny if Sal records the Justin inside the
sauna where he can't see, and then I quietly pull up on my phone, porn hub, and then I link the
Bluetooth to the sun, which was, dude, so I started to hear this, right?
Okay, and so quick, by the way.
Just background.
Yeah, so like it is a serious conversation.
I'm taking notes, like I'm really trying to,
like so my wife and I are like going through counseling
and stuff and like trying to like work on like real serious.
Wow, what a great time.
Yeah, I'm thinking so that all of a sudden I go,
oh, oh, yeah, oh, oh, oh, oh. a sudden I go, oh, yeah, oh
I love this like oh my god, dude, I like because I knew immediately
I'm like dude somebody has to be mess with me and I just like busted out of there like it's like of course, dude
Of course, what is it gonna do?
How the hell dude?
The counselor's like okay, I feel a little bad because I thought it was business related
The counselor's like okay, Justin. So your wife is a little concerned with your pornography. Yeah, yeah exactly
Well, no, I actually don't really walk
Oh, I don't
Yeah, yeah, yeah, oh shit. Yeah, you can't even have a 30 minute call without watching this
Yeah, oh my god turn my laptop off. Sorry of which did you guys okay?
So did you guys watch the the music video with Cardi B, WAP?
I didn't watch that.
Okay, so I heard the song.
So the only reason why I heard about it
is because there was this viral video of Ben Shapiro
talking about this music video breaking it down, right?
But the way he broke it down,
like somebody who's never said that.
So WAP stands for Wet Ass Pussy. That's what it stands for.
But Ben Shapiro kept talking about it
and would say Wet Ass P word, P word, P word,
throughout this whole conversation
because he's like, you know, that's Ben Shapiro.
And it was just hilarious.
I'm like, what is this P word?
What is he talking about?
And I'm thinking, is it that?
And then I looked it up, Cardi B, and I watched the video.
Oh wow.
I remember in the 90s thinking,
there's no way they can get worse. Like there's no way music videos will get worse. Oh, I remember in the 90s thinking, there's no way they can get worse.
Like, there's no way music videos will get worse.
Oh, I remember when I cast.
Dude, it was the worst thing for me.
I was grounded and my parents broke the knock-in boots cassette tape that I had.
And so that's like good old wholesome music now.
Yeah, well, I'm telling you.
And I remember years went by after that, right?
And going back as an adult and going like,
oh, I remember that.
Totally was one of those moments in your childhood
that like it was stood out because I got totally scolded
for it.
They broke the tape in front of me.
I was not allowed to listen and I was grounded
for like a week or whatever.
Totally in trouble, right?
And I went back and listened to it as an adult.
And I went, are you kidding me?
Like, this is what I got in trouble for.
Like, there's like, it's like just insinuating
that the people in it had sex.
Like, they don't even say the word sex.
Like, they refer to sex as knocking boots.
Yeah.
And the song is not that bad.
All of like, oh my god, we're on today.
Bro, the Cardi B video is like, I can't believe it.
Which brings me the next thing.
She's apparently moving up in the world.
You guys know that she interviewed Joe Biden.
I saw it in the hell.
She interviewed him, dude.
Bro, this?
This?
Probably because Kanye West with the White House.
So they're like, what can we do on our side?
Oh, let's get this.
What does pussy girl over?
This has to be, I hope, I hope, I hope, I hope.
I hope Netflix picks it up. I hope I hope I hope I hope I hope uh netflix picks it up I hope
somebody does some sort of a you know docu series of this whole election year this is going to
make for great television you know five years from now when we look back at this this last
fucking year of just all the shenanigans that went down leading up to this presidential debate and election, I think is.
It's just, I hope it's a time piece,
and it's not something that's gonna be repeated
the next election cycle, because it's just like so terrible
out there, they've just created such a shit storm.
Oh, dude, it's gonna get worse.
Obviously, they don't care about the actual person,
all they care about is how many people follow the person.
Yeah.
Because literally, Cardi B, literally, this is 100% true.
Well, no, actually, bragged.
She bragged about drugging men and taking their money.
Remember, she was a stripper back in the day.
Of course, she's the creator of the masterpiece
Wet As Pussy, music video.
She's interviewing, she's interviewing
the Democratic nominee for president.
Now, before that, the craziest thing was Kanye West
going to the White House.
We're gonna out crazy, you're crazy.
Yeah, when that happens, I can't even believe Kanye West
and then he ran for president,
oh my God, did you imagine Kim Kardashian
being the first lady in the room?
Or Wade took Cardi B puts her name in the head. Dude, my mind as well dude. It's just getting crazier and crazier. It's gonna keep getting worse
I don't know what is more painful. I don't know if it's more painful listening to Kanye West try and talk politics or listening to Cardi B
Try and ask Joe Biden questions like I don't know
Did you listen to that interview?
Yes, I know
She did that interview? Yes, I did. Oh, man. She did that at the interview. She did not.
Yes, she did.
She did.
Right away.
The best thing ever.
I had to call, I wanted to call a sal right after,
because I know he makes it.
No.
Right, right, because I, okay, you know,
for the audience, so they understand this.
Like, so out of the three of us,
I still listen to like current rap, right?
So I believe there are some decent rappers
that are still out there that are.
Skis, skis, skis.
Right, and so these guys always talk shit to me if I have it playing in my car because they
think just all rap today is trash and I disagree.
Yeah, I like this one from the nine years.
But one of their favorite thing to do is to always make a good tune.
What are you talking about?
The rap today is,
and I'm like, she did it in the interview, and I went, oh my God.
Oh my God.
That's so poetic.
Yeah, please tell, God help us. It was the greatest moment in political history oh my God. That's so poetic. Please, God help us.
It was the greatest moment in political history.
My opinion, when I was watching it and she did that,
I fell off the toilet.
Yeah, I was watching it while I was in my bathroom.
I couldn't believe that this person
was interviewing a nominee for president.
It just goes a show.
We're the weirdest year of all time.
We are, I believe that we are now at level,
I don't know, 12 of the, of Jumanji.
So let's see what, let's see what level 13 brings.
Yeah.
You know, you should shake the shit out of the board.
And you know, it's the craziest thing that election, this is just how they work, right?
They get crazier, the closer you get to the actual.
That's what's nuts.
We're not even nuts over yet.
We're not even there yet.
Dude, I mean, we're on fire.
Our whole states on fire, I might be like having to evacuate my house.
Like, it's like natural disasters are like,
hey, did you forget about us?
Oh.
Hey, do that.
I want to ask you about that because I woke up this morning
went outside to work out.
You're next at the walk.
I'm gonna go all over your car.
All over my car.
Yeah, my mind too.
I mean, obviously, but yeah, it was like,
we had to close all our windows
because we couldn't even like breathe.
It's like unbearable, the smoke that's coming through.
But it's, thankfully, it's up kind of on the skyline,
but it's starting to creep in real close
to our community.
So we're on standby.
It's like any moment we'll probably have to evacuate,
but it's scary stuff, but it's just, I mean, it's just more.
You know, it's like, what else?
What else?
It's just so much stuff. Well, speaking of natural disasters, did mean, it's just more. You know, it's like, what else? What else? Like, it's just so much stuff.
Well, speaking of natural disasters, did you see what Google's doing with the whole,
like, predicting earthquakes or whatever?
I did.
What?
Yeah.
Yeah.
How are they doing that?
I basically, you know, if I read it right, it was like something about like how it actually,
like, vibrates and moves, like, it's something that people's other cell phones.
Yeah. vibrates and moves like they saw other other cell phones. Yeah, so they're they're kind of like
Like taking that data from everybody cell phones and then putting it together and seeing patterns with that in terms of like how like
vibrates and wow
Yeah, we haven't had a good a big one in a while, but I remember you guys were here
We guys in California for the yeah, yeah, I remember that because I you know you hear it before it hit
Which is really frightening? I saw it before it actually came to me. Yeah, did you really were you out there?
Yeah, cuz I was outside playing soccer and you actually saw like it heard like a Mac truck was coming at us
But then you actually saw like the the ground start to roll and then a couple windows broke and then it caught us with the roll
And then it literally like almost threw me
on the ground off balance.
It was crazy.
That was the massive, massive one.
But we had one not that long ago, maybe 10 years ago,
I wanna say that was, I mean, I think it was,
because that one was like a seven point something, right?
It was like a seven point.
And we had like a six something, not that,
I mean, like a decade or so ago,
because I remember being in,
LA?
No, no, I remember being in 24-A Finis in San Jose,
or maybe San Jose felt the six of it.
I don't know if it was L.A.
Where's where the, I don't remember where that.
Yeah, because I don't think we had a six-one
that was here.
We've had a big one here, not that long ago.
It might not be six-one.
It might have been five.
I don't remember the exact number of it.
But what I do remember was I remember sitting down
at my desk in the gym, and you know,
San and Teresa has all those windows and
What you're talking about you could see them flex. Yeah, they flex and boom and yeah, I was weird. That was so bad
They just explode that was so weird to watch them. They look like waves. Yeah, the windows did and I remember tripping out
Sitting there watching that happened that was scary. Yeah, well, I was sitting on the I was actually on the couch
Believe it or not you guys need to you know, I don sitting on the, I was actually on the couch, believe it or not,
you guys need to, you know,
I don't know if you guys believe me,
watching the World Series.
I had this World Series on TV.
What?
Yeah, I was watching it.
And because remember it was filmed on the,
Well, I went to the World Series
for the game previous to that.
Oh, did you?
Yeah.
And we were supposed to go the,
the data, you know, the earthquake happened
up in the nosebleeds. Oh, wow. Thank God, I didn't do that. Well, if you're gonna be off the data, you know, the earthquake happened up in the nosebleeds.
Oh, wow.
Thank God, didn't do that.
Well, they threw me off the couch.
I'm watching TV and I flew off the couch and I just went back on the couch and just sat
there and waited.
Yeah, I was in the shower.
I fell in the shower.
I was in the shower.
Yeah, I was in the, so I lived in, when the 89 one.
Let's see, how old were you in 89?
I was 10, so you were 8?
Yeah, and I was in the shower in in Modesto
So I know it was worse here in the Bay Area
That's the Valley it's about an hour and a half but it was enough to you know literally throw me a I bounced off one side
Inside and then I remember that as a kid. Yes downtown Sanca's got decimated. It was really bad. Yeah back then Wee-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e So what is you waiting for? Go to mypermedia.com and get started today!
It's the motherfucking world!
An eagle is landed!
Quikwa.
First question is from Shrumpf F836.
Does wearing a weighted vest or a hoodie during cardio really make a difference in the amount
of calories burned?
Or is it like the oxygen restriction masks
and just to perceive difficulty?
It doesn't, but it does make you look way more serious than anybody else that you're
running next to.
And that counts.
Yeah, I do.
Okay, so theoretically, weighted vest would make you burn more calories because there's
resistance and it's harder, but it's not worth the trade off.
And what I mean by that is a weighted vest,
weighting your body down, doing cardio,
changes your movement patterns,
if you're not used to moving that way,
injury is much higher.
If you wanna use weight, use weight
for what it's used best for, which is resistance training.
A hoodie is not going to improve your calorie burn.
In fact, it may reduce your performance to the point
where you actually burn less calories. But wearing a hoodie may help improve your calorie burn. In fact, it may reduce your performance to the point where you actually burn less calories.
But wearing a hoodie may help improve
your ability to tolerate heat.
So if you're trying to train yourself to be able to,
let's say you're gonna go hiking and it's gonna get hot
and you want to get better with heat tolerance,
that may be one way to help yourself out
is to do cardio in a hot environment.
Either heat up the room, do it outside when it's really hot or wear clothing that makes
you really hot.
In which case you're training that aspect of your body, but as far as calorie burn goes,
you're going to do the best in the best state, meaning the best performance with the best
form and the best state, meaning the best performance, with the best form and the best technique.
Yeah, unless you're like a soldier,
or unless you're like, you know,
even for football and some degree,
you had weighted equipment.
And so I would consider certain things like that
with the style of training is very like specified.
So if I'm doing sprints or doing anything,
I'm trying to emulate the amount of time I would
be doing that in the game and the amount of weight I'd be carrying around my body.
And so, you know, there's ways to kind of do that creatively and the weight vest might
make sense in certain instances like that.
But in terms of your everyday average person that's just trying to burn calories or get
stronger, you got to evaluate these things.
They don't really have a lot worse than that, direct. I'm glad you said that because this is where I was
going to go with that. This only makes sense to me if you are doing something where you
are going to have some weight on your shoulders while you're performing an exercise or a sport.
Other than that, it's a classic example of how silly fitness humans think that the ultimate
goal is just to make everything harder, and that therefore it ends up being more results.
That's just how we, so many people train this way, it's always intensity.
If it's difficult, it's hard, more results, and it's not true at all.
It's a much finer dance than that.
When you talk about the potential thermogenic effects
because you're heating up faster
and your body is trying to cool down,
like maybe getting more calories,
that's all splitting hair bullshit.
So anybody that tries to sell you on the idea
that the vest or being all hooded out
is a better way for you to,
or a faster way for you to get in shape
or lean out or lose body fat is just a bunch of bullshit.
And the tradeoff for like to Salis Point earlier
is it's just not worth it.
And it's splitting hairs.
Unless to Justin's point, you are doing a sport
where you would put on something that's weighted
like shoulder pads.
Or do some of the obstacle course races
have them do that?
I'm not sure.
What's rucking?
Is it rucking?
Yeah, there you go. Rucking does that. Yes, so sure. What's rucking? Is it rucking? There you go.
Rucking does that.
Yes.
So if you were doing like a go-ruck race or something where you would have to have that
or in CrossFit, you train, I think there's certain ones where I think the murph, like
you have to wear a vest in or some shit like that.
So if you're training for something specific to get better at doing whatever it is you're
doing with a vest on, that makes sense for all other reasons.
Yeah, for all other reasons, yeah, not silly.
It reminds me of the app workouts you see on Instagram
that are posted where the dude is doing like leg raise
or sit up and someone's there like punching them
in the stomach, or kicking them
or throwing a medicine ball at their abs
and they're like, oh man, you gotta try this.
You really feel it more.
You really feel it more in your abs.
They totally got that from boxers.
And boxers do that because in boxing,
you get punched in the stomach.
You actually get punched.
Yeah, there's a real learn.
Yes, there's a real application for that.
Yeah, but for everybody else,
you're just hurting, you're bruising your body.
It's not helping you build your abs more.
Yeah, wearing a weighted vest is not going to help your cardio or the burn.
Necessarily more calories, not worth the trade.
Unless that's what you want to get good at, which is cardio with weights.
Next question is from more life, JoJo.
In a recent episode, you talked about the importance of introducing new exercises to elicit
a new stimulus and to work muscles in a novel way.
In previous episodes, you have mentioned that there is no need to confuse muscles and
that progressive overload is the principle that will stimulate muscle growth.
Can you elaborate and clarify the difference between introducing new exercises for the
sake of stimulating versus confusing.
This question is Sal's fault because he says everything was so much conviction.
No.
It seems like the only thing we're confusing is the listeners.
That's the thing.
You say it was so much conviction.
You say it was so much conviction that they're like, wait a second, is that the truth?
No, it's both, but first off, okay. The term confusing muscles is a marketing term.
Muscles don't get confused.
I don't think they think that way.
Like huh?
Yeah, not what's going on.
Okay, so there's a novel stimulus
with changing exercises.
But one thing you have to understand
is there's this, there's value that you get
from exercises from learning to do the exercises well.
And then the results and the benefits you get from them
actually increase as you're able to do them
really, really well.
So we'll use a complex exercise like a squat.
When you start to learn how to do a squat,
you do get some benefit.
You learn how to squat better.
You're getting your muscles to fire in better unison
and better connection so that you can do the position better.
Once you're comfortable with the actual movement
of the squat, then you can add weight,
then you can really build muscle,
then you can really push yourself
and get those great results.
So there is a dance between,
or a balance between new exercises,
and then getting to the point where you get good at them
so you could push the intensity and challenge
the weight that you lift with those exercises.
Those are both very important.
If you just stick in one or the other, you're missing out.
If all you ever do is switch up exercises all the time,
you're gonna miss out on all those amazing benefits
you get from getting good at an exercise
and really pushing yourself.
If you only ever do the same exercises,
and you never add any novelty, risk of injury goes up,
you can plateau, and you can really get your body
to stop progressing because you're not introducing
new movements.
I think I remember when we actually recently talked
about this, and I think what this person's
alluding to is when we were referring to squats,
deadlift, overhead press, and there's not much need
to move those out of your routine.
And the reason for that is because those movements like that there's not much need to move those out of your routine. Right.
And the reason for that is because those movements are so novel and so complex in themselves
that you could spend the next four years squatting every other day.
You're not perfecting that.
Exactly.
Squatting every other day for the next four years and still not have a perfect squat.
That is why that may, you know, this question comes from, I think,
that statement that we made in regards to that. And so, you know, if you are just, you
just squatted for two weeks and you're like, oh, you know, I, you know, I hear muscle confusion
or we should do some other novel lectures and you eliminate squats and then you go put
leg press or leg extension in there instead. That's not it. Yeah, you're missing out.
I like to look at those staple exercises you just mentioned
as sort of the benchmark.
Like this is where I assess how my body is reacting.
And so like these little, you know, micro compensations
and things that are happening in my body
is what's providing me feedback
to then create opportunities for new novel stimulus to seek.
So if my body tends to rotate just a little bit,
that's something I need to work on,
core control and stabilizing more properly
and getting, making sure I'm anti-rotating.
And so what are those exercises that I can incorporate
in the program to now address,
to then apply back to these foundational staple exercises
that sort of are my legend.
This is how I read my map.
Yeah, short term, you want to stick to the same exercises.
Long term is when you start to introduce novelty with different exercises.
Here's a good example.
If you were to compare two types of workouts, both three months long, one focusing on the
same 10 exercises, the other one always mixing it up with a hundred different varieties
of different exercises.
The one that's stuck to just the 10, you'll get better results.
Now, if we stretch this out over the course of a year or two years, and then we compare
a workout that only uses 10 exercises to another one that uses let's say 30 exercises and throws in and changes things every few months or every four months
or so.
Then the one that's adding the novelty will start to get better results.
It is a balance, but the important things to focus on are get good at the complex movements,
do those ones often.
All the other movements, I think you have a little bit more freedom to change up.
If you have some or most of our programs,
this is how they're written.
Perfect.
You'll see that there is a, you know,
we introduce lots of different exercises
and novel stimulus and different planes
and like Justin's talking about rotational stuff
that all gets introduced,
but you'll also see, through all of them,
there is a common theme that we never abandon squats.
We never abandon overhead presses.
We never abandon some of these fundamental movements
that kind of belong in every single program,
but there's still lots of room in a workout,
so still add novel stimulus and different exercises
for the, you know, quote unquote, muscle confusion idea for you to do that,
but still not stray away from the things that are giving you
the greatest bang for your butt.
Yeah, if you were to follow like our RGB bundle,
for example, which is has three maps programs,
and you go from one to the other to the other,
that's about nine months of workout programming.
And it's got the, it introduces new exercises
at the right time, and it changes the focus just enough at the right time.
And so your body progresses through that whole long period of nine months.
Next question is from Sammy Spear.
Do pregnant women need to change the way they lift?
Yeah, this is a good question.
Obviously now Jessica's in her third trimester.
And so we're modifying her workouts accordingly.
And I've trained a lot of pregnant women,
I'm sure you guys have too.
And really the key, first of all,
I wanna talk about the most important,
best thing you can do to maintain strength and health
during pregnancy is to set yourself up
before you become pregnant.
I think that's every, it reminds me of talking to people
that wanna get into competing, right?
And they would try and hire me like,
hey, I want to do a show in 12 weeks.
Can I hire you to get me ready?
And I'm like, the real work is done
before you go into show prep.
I think pregnancy the same way.
Like the real good work,
if you want to come out the other end,
feeling great still and rebound well,
is to put in the work before you actually get pregnant.
Yeah, because what you don't want to do is you don't want to get caught in the mindset and
strategy of getting in shape while also being pregnant. The key is to maintain fitness while pregnant
and then to modify the workout to meet your particular needs, your special needs as your body is
changing. Now, let's just pretend we're talking about someone
who is in a complete beginner.
We'll do that too, but let's start with someone
who's not a complete beginner.
They're relatively consistent with their workouts
and they get pregnant.
Okay, aside from energy levels and that kind of stuff,
which in the first trimester can vary wildly,
I've trained women who felt absolutely terrible in the first trimester can vary wildly. I've trained women who felt absolutely terrible
in the first trimester.
And I've trained women who in the first trimester
didn't notice too much.
Now Jessica, she was in the first category.
Energy was bad, she was nauseous,
severely nauseous throughout the whole first trimester.
But a lot of women also go into it.
They're mostly okay.
First trimester, nothing really needs to change
aside from considering your energy levels
and how you feel, your body isn't physically changing
that much.
Same thing for the most part, for the second trimester.
When you start to need to consider changes is when your belly
really starts to grow and change
because that will change muscle recruitment patterns.
That will change body positioning.
When the belly gets really big, split stance movements are almost always out of the question.
Putting a one leg in front, now your belly is in the way, you can't do them.
Traditional squats are usually fine. Your legs are apart.
The belly goes in between the legs. Traditional deadlifts, usually not a good idea,
although for some it is,
sumo deadlifts, probably a better idea.
Core exercises.
First and second trimester,
totally fine, as the belly grows,
you're gonna stop doing, you know,
flexion and extension of the spine.
You're not gonna be doing crunches,
and that kind of stuff.
But you can do rotation,
and you can do some mild stabilization.
So like a plank is a great exercise for a pregnant woman,
but even then I would caution you against doing planks
towards the third trimester when the belly's getting really big
because when you have it, when things are stretching out,
you start to lose connection to some of the muscles
of your core, so if you do planks,
what you're doing is you're really working the hip flexors.
So I would modify it.
I would modify it and say, okay, we're gonna go
and we're gonna put your elbows up on a really high bench
or maybe an extended plank on a bar
and just brace your core just to keep things activated.
I like less direct stuff for core.
I mean, I'd say I agree with you on everything.
I did a couple of different things.
Though even first trimester,
I kind of modified all the, because the continues are used running all the maps programs and and most map maps programs are
perfectly fine but I modified it a little bit more by adding more like pelvic floor focus so more
like floor bridges we did look little things like I would do like these long strided lunges with
her and then have her come up to a stabilization and Actually took her tailbone so I she would lunge big long strides
Balance so you get the kind of stability part so I would incorporate stability into other movements versus like direct core
Exercises like a plank. I just found more value in that for her versus trying to do something and especially as you start to get bigger with the belly
Like you're saying towards two and third trimester, doing planks like that,
I just think you could just incorporate stabilization
into other movements.
I did do a lot of sumo dead lifts,
goblet type squats with her,
and a lot of hip thrust stuff.
And then most everything else is like following
like a maps program.
And then the other thing that I would always remind her is that, you know, and you alluded
to it already, so I was like, you know, we're not trying to make any gains during this time.
It's literally, we just want to maintain your health, maintain your strength, work on
those pelvic floor muscles, and stay healthy, and stay active.
So, you know, sometimes it was walking in a mobility day.
You know, I just wanna make sure
that we're staying active, that we're staying mobile.
But if your energy levels weren't there,
I wanna make sure you're getting good rest.
I wanna make sure that you feel good from your workouts.
We're not trying to stress you anymore.
So, you know, I just reminded Katrina,
I took load off a lot of times, I would just tell her,
is like, you know, if she didn't feel great
from the day before, like Jessica, her first trimester
was, she was really tired.
Really, I remember her falling asleep
on the couch next to me at like five, six p.m. at night,
never seen her do that before.
And so if she was coming into a workout
and I knew she was fatigued or tired,
I would just modify, say, hey, this is a day,
let's go work technique.
Let's go real, real light.
Like 30, 40% of the load for you.
And you really gotta listen to your body.
Yeah.
And a similar case with Courtney and the first trimester,
very tired.
And both pregnancies were different too.
And so produce the different type of energy
that she was coming in with.
And really the biggest key was to just keep moving and stay active and do things that were
similar to what she was already doing previous to that.
The third trimester was really the one that was the difficult one to make sure that because
it's uncomfortable, the load is different.
Now we're accounting for all these different recruitment patterns like Sal was mentioning.
So what I would do is hit bridging. I'd use the stability ball a lot for that as well.
Just for movement and rotation around with the hips and being able to basically balance and stabilize, it was big.
And so I'd also have a lot of the carries.
And so instead of doing a lot of very specific lunging squatting, which we would do as well,
but just a lot of carries to try and account for how to,
how to basically stabilize the body
when it's in a different load situation.
I also had her doing a lot of Turkish get ups.
That was another thing I remember that I added a lot into her.
So more than any of the maps programs that we have included,
that was kind of a staple move that,
her just practicing getting up off the ground
and stabilizing something overhead.
I mean, you get pelvic floor muscles involved in that,
you get stability involved in that,
you get her hip hinge in that.
There's so many great things that you get from that movement.
So just practicing the Turkish kid up
was a great exercise.
By far the best thing you could do
before, during and after pregnancy,
is strength training
because it's going to give you a solid base from which you can lose strength from.
Because here's what happens after pregnancy, you're not going to be moving much after you
have your baby.
You shouldn't, in fact, in fact, you should lay around, allow things to heal.
You don't want to develop any issues.
And of course, when you do that, things start to atrophy.
Well, if you go into that situation with strength and muscle,
you're going to come out of it much better.
Like I said, I've trained lots of pregnant women,
and it's remarkable to see the difference
in how quickly they rebound versus people
that don't do that kind of training.
Now, what's the best program to follow while you're pregnant?
Well, it depends.
If you're very consistent now, any of our maths programs
for the most part are OK so long as they match
your current fitness level.
If you're unsure and you kind of want to be safe,
map starter is excellent.
Map starter is excellent post baby.
That is the best program after you've had your baby.
The emphasis on map starter is perfect for the pregnant woman.
It's absolutely perfect.
Here's something else to consider.
When a woman is pregnant and going through that process, there's a hormone or chemical
release called relaxant.
And this loosens up your tissues and causes increased flexibility.
Now for obvious reasons, your body needs to do this.
You're gonna have a baby and you do wanna be more flexible.
But there is a potential dark side to this.
If you don't have strength to support this increased flexibility,
you actually can get some instability.
And this is why sometimes pregnant women will get hip pain.
And weird joint pain that they normally wouldn't get
is because they're looser without more strength.
This is where mobility, real, proper mobility
can make a huge difference.
The ability to continue to connect to muscles
and to create greater ranges of motion with strength
will really benefit you during pregnancy.
This is why I included what I said first, which is the long strided lunges with the tucking
the tailbone of the top and stabilizing, and there was a lot of emphasis on every stride
when she come up to a balance, tuck the tailbone, stabilize for a second, then go into the
next lunge.
And so we're working that deep full range emotion that she's probably finding a new new
there but have control and then stability in it. And that that was something we should do. Now I want to add something else
I know you didn't ask about nutrition, but I think this is important. Couple foods you want to look at egg yolks, extremely
beneficial typically for pregnant women. High levels of co-ling, the cholesterol in the egg yolks is phenomenal for
brain and neural development.
Organ meats also look into organ meats.
I know first try and master everything's disgusting,
so might not be the best time to try,
but if you can, organ meats very high in nutrients
and pregnant women tend to lean towards things like anemia,
and the iron that you get from organ meats
is very absorbable, far less likely to cause constipation,
which also tends to be a problem with pregnant women.
So rather than taking an iron pill
that can cause constipation, which can cause other issues,
eat something like chicken liver,
and then gauge that depending on what your blood tests
will say, which you'll probably get,
because you'll the doctor and they'll tell you
iron is here and here's where your levels are so maybe you can eat this much
liver or that much liver. Those two nutritional foods that I recommended I think are important
for most pregnant women.
Next question is from Kim Getty's. When the pandemic is finally over what will be the
first thing each of you do that you haven't been able to do? Fine dining.
Really?
Yeah, nice like a white tablecloth, expensive dinner,
where we're sitting in a nice restaurant,
candle lit type of deal.
I haven't had something like that on that or a movie.
We want a concert.
Yeah.
I had like so many lined up this year too.
It was like really frustrating.
Yeah, that might be right there with you too on that
because we do a lot of concerts in live, like I haven't, live sporting event too. I miss the city of that. Yeah, that might be right there with you too on that because we do a lot of concerts in live sporting event too.
I miss this idea.
Yeah, live sporting.
That totally, all this stuff made me appreciate sports
even more now.
I've been drawn back just because I can't have it.
It's made even more of a bummer now that we're not
seeing that as much anymore.
Yeah, I've just to help myself mentally with the whole thing.
I've accepted that it won't.
Not on the mean that the pandemic won't be over,
but that our life will probably never be like it was before.
So I think that moving ahead five years
from now, 10 years from now,
you're just gonna see people wearing masks.
It's gonna become a normal thing.
It's gonna feel, you already feel the social shame
if you don't wear a mask.
Even if you're out in an open field, I'll buy yourself.
You can feel people looking at you.
Like, what are you doing?
What are you feeling the most?
Because Justin says concerts, I say supporting events,
fine dining, I feel like you don't really do
any of those things.
Oh, I love fine dining, movies.
Wow, okay.
I love going to the movies, man.
In fact, that was the idea.
So is that what you feel the most?
I think so, dude.
I think I would like to go to the movies,
but I don't know.
I don't know what it's going to look like.
You know what I'm out?
I don't know what things are going to look like,
but movies I miss.
I love sitting in the theater with the sound
and just the whole experience
and anticipating a good movie.
Fine dining is fun.
I enjoy doing that.
We do that every, I don't know.
I'd say every few months, we'll go to a really nice restaurant
and just have that whole experience. Don't like concerts, could care less about
sporting events, not that big of a deal. Maybe go to a busy park or beach. I feel like it's
so weird. Yeah, have you guys gone to the, done something outdoor like that and see people
around you mass is such a strange.
Oh, yeah, it's, well, yeah, because the beach is open and it's I mean everybody's pretty much keeping to themselves in terms of distance
But you'll see some beaches where they're just like everybody's clustered together and it's like that makes me super anxious
You know it's like walking through that you know, and I love working out my garage
But I have to say now that I think about it. I think I could workout and a big, you know, like iron dungeon gym
without people.
I missed that a little bit.
Yeah, I missed a gym a little bit.
Like I've gotten really used to training from home
and training from our studio in the last year or so.
And I think I was one of vocalized, liking,
working in the gym more, but it's been nice having
our own place, but I do miss that.
And I feel the difference.
Like I definitely get an extra level of motivation
training in a place where there's lots of other people
training.
No, I missed Disneyland.
That was a thing.
It was almost on once a year, kind of a schedule
at this point.
We've been going to the last three years, I think, once.
And that was something that the kids, of course,
always look forward to. And then you something that like the kids, of course, always look
fortunate. And then you see them experience it in a different way each time as they're older.
And so you get to kind of like, because, you know, my youngest will now get to go on the
crazier ride and then, you know, and then see their faces. They're like, I like, oh,
I shouldn't have done the house too early. I did that a few times. It was like, you know, yeah, their face just ghost white.
You know, it was awesome.
I'm not even like, ow!
You know what's really weird to me is that,
so the way that I was raised in our culture
and also the culture of my family,
when you see family members,
when you first see them and you greet them
or when you say goodbye, we kiss each other.
That is really weird to me.
Now, if I see family members, we all say hi,
but nobody does the kiss anymore,
and that's really strange.
It's a very, very weird thing.
I almost feel like we're not connected.
No, that's a weird thing for me.
I'm like a...
I'm a hugger.
Yeah, I'm a touchy-filly person in general.
You have friends, family, every year.
Yeah, I'm like, it's just weird when you have, like if you haven't seen anybody, like let's say, we just run into Aaron. We hadn't seen Aaron, you have friends, fan, rubb, every years right now? Yeah, I'm not. It's just weird when you,
like if you haven't seen anybody,
like let's say, we, we just,
we've been to Aaron, we hadn't seen Aaron,
and you know, I don't know, maybe half a year or whatever.
So it's weird when you see someone who you haven't seen a while,
and that the natural thing you always would do
is give them a big hug or a handshake
or you know, or kiss on the cheek, whatever,
like there's always this weird moment
when we get, when you get,
what do we do?
Yeah, it's like, hey, hey, yeah, you can, you walk towards each other then you stop when you feel like it's about six feet
Then you're like a fist bump. Yeah, we're just gonna air high five
Like what are we doing here? That's awkward look my pump is recorded on video as well as audio come check us out on YouTube
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You can find Doug at Mind Pump Doug,
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