Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1393: The Best Way to Grow Your Forearms, How to Get a Back Pump, When to Mix Up Cardio & More
Episode Date: October 2, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about good ways to phase workouts besides strength and hypertrophy, the best way to grow forearm size, tips to get a ba...ck pump, and how often to mix up cardio in order for your body not to adapt to the activity. How even Mind Pump still overtrains. (4:26) How to develop a winning mindset. (14:18) Avatar betting on themselves. (19:46) The HUGE Disney layoffs. (22:19) The gut health properties of Oli Pop soda. (26:44) Mind Pump’s beer of choice. (29:00) Sal’s social media break. (30:15) Studies with Sal and the importance of third-party testing. (37:34) Drones are delivering organs now?! (42:26) Your phone is listening. (45:33) #Quah question #1 – What are good ways to phase workouts besides strength and hypertrophy? I’m still stuck in the home gym with limited weight. (47:09) #Quah question #2 – What is the best way to grow forearm size? (50:47) #Quah question #3 – Any tips to get a back pump? (56:01) #Quah question #4 – How often would you have to mix up cardio for your body not to adapt? Or does your body consider all the same over time? (59:36) Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Fitness Products Mind Pump #1265: How To Develop A Winning Mindset Avatar 2 Has Wrapped Filming, Avatar 3 Shoot Almost Done Disney Just Announced Big Time Official Layoffs Across Parks, Experiences And Products What it's like inside the secret, members-only club hidden in Disneyland Visit Oli Pop for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout for 15% off your first order** BoxLock on ‘Shark Tank’: A Look Inside the Lock that Protects Packages The Social Dilemma | Netflix Official Site Five unapproved drugs found in cognitive enhancement supplements Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** When Drones Deliver Human Organs 5 Exercises For HUGE Forearms & A STRONGER Grip (FREE Big Arms Guide) The ONLY Forearm Workout That Matters (TRY THIS!!) | MIND PUMP Mind Pump TV - YouTube MAPS O.C.R. | Muscle Adaptation Programming System Should You do Cardio Before or After Weights? - Mind Pump Blog Cardio Sucks for Fat Loss – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Influencers In The Wild (@influencers_inthewild) Instagram Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) 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.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Welcome to the world's top ranked fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump. Now in this episode, we answer lots of fitness and health questions asked by listeners like you.
But we open it up with introductory portion when we talk
about current events, studies, and we essentially
have a lot of fun.
By the way, if you want to follow along the podcast
and skip forward to your favorite parts,
go to minepumppodcast.com.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it. Don't do it. Don't do it. Don't do it. Don't do it. to. Here's what we talked about in today's episode. I opened up by talking about my, all, my, basically my leg workout and why I felt like a shaky fool after the end of that. That
was tough. Yeah, baby draft. Then we talked about mindset and how important it is for success
and fitness and other things. We talked about avatar, two, three, four, and five, apparently
they're already all. Yeah, he blew his whole wand. It's crazy. Then we talk about Disney's layoffs, that's kind of sad.
I talked about the gut health properties of OliPop sodas.
No joke, OliPop makes sugar-free sodas with compounds
that are good for your gut health, like prebiotics
and other compounds that help heal your gut.
I love their stuff.
It tastes amazing.
My favorite flavor is the strawberry vanilla. It's incredible
But they have no root beer. They have root beer. They have cola. They have many other flavors and because you listen to mine pump
You get a huge discount. Check them out go to drinkaulipop.com that's drink
O-L-I-P-O-P dot com and then use the code mine pump for 15% off then I talk about home
I'm gonna take a break off social media
even though I enjoy trolling people on political pages.
We'll miss you so.
I'll trigger you guys all day long.
Then we talked about a study on smart supplements.
Apparently a lot of supplement companies
are putting stuff in their products.
That's not on the label.
And other companies are saying they have stuff in the bottle
that they actually don't.
You sneaky.
Crazy. Now we only work with bottle that they actually don't. You sneaky. Crazy.
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And because you listen to mine pump, you get a discount.
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That's B-Y-L-E-G-I-O-N.com forward slash mine pump.
And then use the code mine pump for 20% off or get double rewards points.
And then we talk about drones delivering organs.
Then we got into answering the questions.
Here's the first fitness question.
What are good ways to phase workouts
besides strength and muscle building?
How else should I phase my workout?
Next question, what are the best ways
to grow your forearms?
The next question, are there any tips
to help get a better back pump
and the final question? How often should you mix up your cardio? Also, we write some of the most
effective workout programs you'll find. Anyway, remember, we are trainers first, fitness influencers
second for over two decades all we did was train client
We know how to train people we know it works. We know to write workouts. It's not just flashy
Social media stuff these are workouts that actually work just go to maps fitness products
dot com that's maps
MAPS
Fitness products dot com go on there and find the workout the best suits you, find the one that's best for your goals,
the one that'll train your body the best,
based off of your experience,
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by the way, all the programs have modifications
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so you don't even have to have gym access,
but if you have gym access, we do have workouts
that include things like cables
and machines. All programs come with a 30-day money back guarantee, so you have nothing to lose.
Follow a Maps program and see what it's like to actually do an effective workout, and not just
the flashy one that your fitness influencer wrote who has no business writing workouts. Again,
that's at mapsfitnisproducts.com. Through today's the first time in maybe years, I did a dedicated leg workout.
Like just legs. Just legs. Like I haven't done like maps split style.
Now how?
Woke up this morning.
Oh, you're a bold naked.
But yeah, that's exactly why you just got out of an old Western?
I usually, I don't, I typically don't do more than
four or five sets for legs in one workout
because I did do full body and I work them out so frequently.
But this workout was, let's see, it was 12 sets for legs,
not including calves.
Oh boy.
And I knew this going into it and I said, okay,
I'm gonna keep the intensity low and the weight light because I'm not used to this whatever.
Indeed, it doesn't matter.
You know what, it looked like at the end of it?
A giraffe that was just born.
You're watch videos of that?
And they're like, yeah.
Now, are you?
That was me, dude.
Are you?
Okay, so, and this happens to me all the time, and so I'm curious of both of you guys, when
you're going through your workout, right?
Because there's a lot of times, I think most of us are like this, right?
So you know what you're gonna lift this day.
It's like, oh, it's leg day,
I'm gonna do probably 12 sets.
These are the exercises, I'm sure you formulated
the workout in your head before you got there.
Do you, are you the type of person that,
because you've already formulated it,
you committed to it, you're gonna fall
through an X-Cinematic or what?
Or will you go like, you can feel that,
I'm already gonna be really sore from these first eight sets.
So you stop.
Start backing out.
Yeah, so here's what happens with that level of awareness at him.
That doesn't kick in in the middle of the workout.
Oh, it does it for you.
Yeah, no, you know what I did is instead I tried to negotiate with my ego.
This is gonna be looking back.
Yeah, it does look like.
This is the negotiation.
Just go easier, just go lighter.
You can finish this.
Take your time.
But just take weight off the bar and go easier.
And I just kept, I finished it and then again,
I walked in just like, ah, you're right.
Like I think so.
Yeah.
It depends on what mood I'm in for the most part.
Like I'll go either way with that.
Like if I'm like hellbent and determined,
like I feel like I've been slacking,
then you know, that overrides my rational decision-making process
versus if I'm kind of in a calm state going in,
I usually, you know, we'll fuel it out more.
This is why our, you know,
for audience who are wondering
is why we are always hammering the, you know,
you know, workout because you love yourself and
don't punish yourself because we're all guilty of still doing it.
Totally.
We're still guilty of-
I love myself.
Talk about it.
Yeah.
We're going to be open and honest.
No, it's a, I think it's a, it's a true struggle and I think you'd be lying to yourself
if you don't have those moments where you go to the gym where you feel like I need to
do this because I haven't been like I feel that right.
Justin wore it's like I haven't been very consistent feel that, right? Justin wore it, I haven't been very consistent,
so I'm pushing through this workout no matter what.
Even though my trainer brain is so in tune with my body
that I can tell when I'm on X amount of sets,
and it's like, oh yeah, I'm gonna be sore tomorrow,
no matter what, and then I still keep going.
Oh, so yeah, and I walk in and just like,
what's wrong with you, I'm like,
that was, I might have done a little too much. We'll see. We'll see how I feel
tomorrow, but there's nothing worse than the feeling from a slightly too hard leg workout. I sort of
got it. I could train any body part that way. Oh, it's so uncomfortable. And it's not a big deal.
Yeah, yeah. Legs. It's, uh, it's just not and reminds me of some damn hips. Oh, bro, I remember when I was a kid,
when I would do a hard leg workout back when I,
that's what I thought you had to do.
You pretty much, you could ride off the whole day.
Like if I worked out at 10 am,
that means that that's it, and then the rest of the day,
I'm watching TV.
I'm gonna lay down.
Yeah, now are you back to,
because for quite some time now,
you have abandoned the back barbell, the barbell back squat, are you back to, because for quite some time now, you have abandoned the back barbell, the
barbell back squat. Are you back to back squatting? Are you, are you, are you
strut squatting right now? And then I'm going to start incorporating back squats back
into the work. Now, is this the longest you've been away from that before?
It is. It is the longest I've ever been away from, from doing back squats consistently,
because I'm really, I was really trying to work on the right to left
discrepancy and build some more mobility and stability
because my back is essentially,
if you look at my whole career of working out myself,
it's pretty much bulletproof.
I've done so much deadlifting and so many things.
My back almost never gets hurt.
And then all of a sudden, I started to get like,
a little bit of back pain, which never happens for me.
And I said, okay, before this becomes a big problem,
let's focus on what might be causing it,
which is mobility and maybe some right to left discrepancies.
So it has been a long time.
But now I'm gonna start incorporating it.
Now one of the things for me that I love is that my upper legs, at least not my calves,
but my upper legs tend to respond really well.
So we'll see what happens.
We'll see if I get the...
Somebody DM me that they think that's because we don't like leg curls that much.
Some trainer sent me a D-leg curls.
Yeah.
What? Yeah.
It was hard to do it.
Yeah.
Because of the gas drop getting kicked in when you do a leg
roll, when you lock out in that position to do lying
leg crows, it's getting some work in there.
And they said because we don't really
tout that exercise, or we talk actually
about the benefits of dead lifts and how lying leg crows
is almost a waste of time if you're doing like, if you're progressing your deadlifting
and so they attribute that to the lack of calf growth
that you and I have.
No.
I just wanna hit you from every angle, don't they?
Well, that was the first time anyone had ever said that
before.
I don't know if I responded to it.
So shout out to whoever I'm talking to,
don't know if he'll do it.
Who the hell they were.
There's a thing, yeah, there's a very scary thing.
I got a little chuckle out of it though, I do.
Yeah, no, it's not the late curls.
Yeah, maybe, maybe, I don't know.
Yeah, let's start, yeah, let's start doing it.
Let's start doing it.
Test it out, yeah.
That is one of those exercises that cracks me up
like people are like, I'm gonna build my hamstrings.
So they do seated late curls, lying late curls,
one-legged late curls, just all late curls.
Like cheek backs, yeah.
Yeah, and it's like, those exercises don't even come close
to your, just your stiff like a deadlift.
Hey, I'll be the first to admit I was guilty of that for many years in my lifting and training.
It wasn't until I really got on the I never have like cared about
You know increasing my deadlifting way until we met until the until the three of us all got together
And we started training together and so I was so proud of his deadlift. I wanted to knock him off his hill so bad. That's not what happened. I'm inspired. Yeah, I don't
know. I see it the other way. Definitely see this little competitive. So I definitely
wanted to knock him off his hill and that's just an all fun ride. That's a good time.
All the respect in the world for him.
And before Mind Pump even started, you know,
Sal and I were, he was getting shredded for a photo shoot
and I was getting shredded for getting on stage.
And so we used to compete like that.
So, yeah, so for me, I had never,
I had never programmed for myself, you know,
to increase my deadlift strength.
It was never a focus.
I've always been such a
bodybuilder focused mentality going into lifting that I was always chasing pumps. I never lifted
below five repetitions. Like if I ran a strength cycle, it was a very short lift and it wasn't really,
it was still, I was still heavily focused on technique and form and I prided myself on my
mechanics so much that I would
never get a little bit sloppy just to lift more weight.
So I never really programmed to get really strong and see how much I could lift.
It was then when I started deadlifting on a very regular basis, I was deadlifting at least
two times a week, sometimes three, and very consistently that I just I stopped doing all those you know
lying leg curls and seated leg curls and it was just because so when you put so much energy and focus in a powerlifting program
or getting good at a deadlifting squatting bench press the main movements
You know it takes a lot of energy and effort to prep for those lifts and to spend time on improving them and look at your sticking points and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And so when I got, when I started to really increase my deadlift,
you know, I think I started like around 300 pounds.
So to see it get over 500 some pounds
and then to come back after about a year of lifting like that
and then go on and do lying leg curls, it blew my mind. I remember you saying like you blew my mind. You were like doing the whole go on and do lying like crows, it blew my mind.
I remember you saying, you were doing the whole stack on an exercise you'd always done.
And lying like crows were hard for me.
It was like one of those exercises, I was never really, really consistent with it.
And then when I'd be consistent, I might increase five or ten pounds at a time.
And it's just an awkward kind of exercise.
That was just one of those poses that puts you in this weird,
like Hollywood photo shoot kind of thing,
or you just laying down, you're like,
hey, yeah, you know what I mean?
It's like a little cheerleader pose.
Like I was not into that.
I was not either.
And I, for the longest time, it was something
that was in the routine.
And I just like you alluded to, I did the standing donkey kickbacks,
the lying leg curls, the seated leg curls.
I mean, those were all in the routine consistently.
And then I intermittently did, you know, dead lifts
or stiff like a dead lifts, but not consistently
and not with the intent of getting strong at them.
And when I did the carryover into all those other
bullshit exercises was crazy. I mean, I'd did the carryover into all those other bullshit exercises was
crazy. I mean, I'd spent 10 plus years doing all those movements, seeing myself incrementally
move up, you know, five or 10 pounds on the stack every couple of years to all the sudden,
like, doubling my strength. And I hadn't even done any of those exercises.
Isn't it wild? Yeah. It's really really crazy if people just realized that some exercises are like worth a hundred points and other
Exercises are worth one point right and so you could do you know distribute all those points
Like you have so many more to pull from it. It's such a big it's such a big you know what I want to know
They'll back in the back in the day before
We really started the podcast and you and I
Got into this like ego war.
It was fun, right?
Where we'd trade pictures about, you know, who's more shredded or whatever.
And I could just now that I know Justin, I can only imagine what he must have been thinking.
What Adam's getting, you know, his phone goes off and he opens it up and is a picture of me and my shirt off.
I had it down.
I grew up.
I was seeking thoughts.
Yeah.
You're like, I had opinions.
You're like, what's happened to my friend? I'm happy for myself, but, you know, it was thinking thoughts. Yeah, I had opinions
Just it was team I was just I was team at it. Yeah, he was to use my guy. You don't say he was team at him bad
Yeah, but you know, you just needed not just guy with me, but Justin is not the kind of guy to send a picture of himself
Flexing to his friend
Yeah, I haven't even had friends that had done that.
This is a whole new experience.
That's what I was saying.
I don't know how to deal with that.
And I would love it, I'd laugh, because I love, you know,
one of my favorite things about competition
isn't the competition itself.
That's fun, I like that.
But I enjoy the fun around it, the shit talk
and the teasing and the back and forth.
I love that part, yeah.
That part so far.
Well, I appreciate what it brings out at me.
I have a competitive streak in me,
and I'm a good loser.
If I lose, you know, like,
and for me, it's like, I wouldn't have pushed that far
if there was no competition for it.
Just like I know, I would have never taken my body
to the level that I took it as far as
low of body fat percentage and building a physique
without knowing that I had to compete against other people.
I didn't, the level of dedication, sacrifice,
consistency that it takes to compete at that level
is just so high that there's so many other priorities
in my life that if I didn't have a serious goal about it, I wouldn't stick to it.
Well, I've noticed we've all had that in common, even if it's not sports related and we
kind of bring that within business.
It's like, we kind of just have our eye on somebody else that might be doing well or might
have something that we can squash and we do.
Yeah, because it's fun.
It's like, you've got to have a target ahead of you to shoot for.
Oh, it's fun.
You know, but you really, and I had this conversation with one of my cousins the other day,
a younger cousin, and so every once in a while we get on the phone, and I kind of do some
mentoring with him.
And I did talk to him about the difference between really loving to win and loving to grow,
you know, falling in love with growth,
because if you fall in love with growth,
you're still gonna like winning,
but when you lose, you're gonna come out better.
Rather than loving winning so much that when you lose,
it's devastating and sucks.
No, you learn from it every single time.
You totally do.
Well, I think it's even more dangerous
to be somebody who just hates to lose, right?
There's people that will admit that, right?
Like, you know, you've never been asked that question.
I hate to lose more than I'd love to win. Do you love to win more or do you hate to lose, right? There's people that will admit that, right? That, like, you know, if you ever been asked that question. I hate to lose more than I love to lose.
Right, do you love to win more,
or do you hate to lose more?
There's a lot of people that would admit they hate to lose.
And what I would say to those people is like,
that's the people that you have to really like look at.
Okay, if you hate to lose,
it's hard to also look at that as an opportunity
for growth because you hate it so much.
So I embrace that, like I've, that's part of the journey right part of the journey is losing is failing
And it's the getting back up and then it's the recovering and the learning from it that makes it so fun and makes it so great
Because you you get reminded that it's not easy. I mean, I don't like there's nothing
I've ever done that came easy that I think I really love. Like if it was... There's no meaning.
No.
You have to be challenging.
I recall moments of my life were losing,
turned me into such a better person.
I remember the first time I walked into
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu school.
It was over here in San Jose, Claudio Francet,
I could shout out to them.
And I was in my early 20s,
and probably I don't know,
215, so I was pretty big at the time,
a little bit of a background in judo.
And I knew somewhat of what Jiu-Jitsu was,
but I'd never trained in it.
And I went in there, open-minded.
And I said, you know, I have respect for martial arts.
I've trained in martial arts in the past,
so I know what technique can do.
But I have a little bit of a grappling background.
I'm a big guy. So let's just see what happens. And I remember I took the past, so I know what technique can do, but I have a little bit of a grappling background, I'm a big guy, so let's just see what happens.
And I remember I took the class,
and then I went against one of the purple belt instructors
who was not even, it wasn't even like an athletic guy.
He was this kind of skinny,
hundred and I don't know, 50 pound dude,
ended up becoming a good friend of mine.
And he's like, yeah, you can spar with me.
And I remember in five minutes just,
you know, just getting my ass kicked.
Just getting my ass kicked.
And I remember after the first time I tapped out
that I thought I said to myself, okay, now it's all,
I remember thinking, okay, that first one I gave you.
Yeah.
Is that when he's, now it's on, you're not gonna get me.
And it was like a typewriter, the whole time,
I'll step it out. And I remember leaving that. And I, well,'s on, you're not gonna get me. And it was like a typewriter, the whole time, I'll step it out.
And I remember leaving that, and I,
well, first off, I signed up right there on the spot.
Like, that is it, I wanna learn this.
And, you know, imagine if I went,
because I remember people would come in
and sign up who couldn't deal with losing,
they would come in and they'd get their asses kicked
and they'd never come back, because it couldn't,
they couldn't process the fact that they,
it could be the best immediately.
Yeah, what a terrible place to be in.
You'll never get anywhere if you always have that attitude.
So some of my best, personally, my best moments were
just losing or getting my butt kicked
or being surprised that I thought I was gonna do well
and losing and then sitting back
and being motivated by that, you know. Speaking of losing, I think in this is a weird transition but basically you know how the
Avengers like overthrowed like avatars like overall sales of all time. Oh yeah. Yeah in the box
office. So I guess like I remember reading somewhere too like there was gonna be a whole schedule of like four other follow-up movies.
So they've already shot three of them
and they're working on the next one.
But so one of them got moved,
it was supposed to be 2018 was the first launch
and they have like its schedule now
for, I think it's the 18th of December for this 2020.
For Avatar 2, then you have in 2021, you have for Avatar 2 then you have in
2021 you have Avatar 3 then you have
2024 Avatar 4 the 2025 Avatar 5 just boom boom boom boom boom boom wow
Wow, they've got that far what a bet though. Yeah, he's totally betting on it like because everything was there in place They could save on costs. They have the green screen, everything's green screens. So it's like, to have things all set in place
and not movable, it was like a very interesting
straight-up.
Wait a second, so you mean that those have all been shot already?
Yeah, oh, three of them have been shot.
Like two of them were finished, I believe,
and one of them, they're still shooting.
I hope the second one's good.
I know, otherwise, where are they gonna do with the rest?
They're screwed after that.
Did you guys like that movie?
You know, I liked it for the visual effects.
I thought the story was kinda, eh, but, you know,
that's the thing is like, he's always,
like he was, I read somewhere too,
that he was so mad when Star Wars came out
because he's like, that was my idea.
Like he had like this grandiose idea
for creating a whole, another universe and like, oh, that was my idea. Like, he had like this grandiose idea for creating a whole other universe
and like making the sci-fi movie out of it.
And so, this is sort of his answer to that.
I thought the imagination and creativity
that went into creating the planet
and then the animals and the plants, absolutely brilliant.
Yeah.
The story was a little bit annoying to me,
because I'm not gonna lie.
Yeah, I know that's very fringullary.
Yeah, I know the good guys were the avatar people
or whatever they were called and the bad guys
were the soldiers or whatever.
But part of me was like when the dudes sold out humans,
you know, I remember thinking like, man,
what a piece of shit.
I'm coming.
You just got them all killed dude.
Like, can't you go through the race?
I'm not a team human.
Yeah, you're gonna go all alien on us. Yeah, just got some, just cause you got little Sahelu, dude like to the human
alien
us
get some
little salio
action
and
in the human race
will
buting
and
they
speak to the
marvel though
disney
huge layoffs
the parks 20-20-20-20- people. I thought it was even more than that.
It was a lot, right?
I mean, yeah, I mean, you could kind of predict
that happening.
That's expected.
That's expected because they were shut down for so long.
And then when the reopening, did they reopen at all?
No.
No.
They didn't floor, I believe.
Oh yeah, maybe floor.
Yeah, but not California.
Would you now, would you guys go back if they were open?
I wouldn't right now, just because my son is so young,
it's kind of pointless for me.
Like he's not gonna remember anything at one years old,
but we talked about like his two, you know,
I will it two, you know, two or three, I will for sure.
I don't know with like no lines, you know,
like it's just like limited,
maybe it was like 20% capacity, that might be awesome.
It's very stupid mask, but you know, you do your thing.
I loved it.
With little kids, Disneyland is a blast.
It's so fun to see their expressions and what's going on.
I think it's cool, and it'd be awesome.
Especially if you drink while you're there with your kids.
You know what I mean, Red Jusset?
Yeah, right.
Look at me.
It's just like, it is, it's a good time.
I really enjoy it.
I enjoy it.
My sister did it wanted it for her 30th, right?
I think I've shared that before on the podcast that,
she said, I told her, I said,
what do you want to do for your 30th?
You know, you tell me what we do,
and then we'll do it.
And she's like, I want to do Disneyland, I want to do,
and she had a connection with somebody who,
like you have, like there's people that are like,
I forget what they're called,
but you have a membership there.
Yeah.
That you pay like,
30, third clubs.
Yeah, yeah.
And if you have access to like the all the private
underground, you know, bars that are inside there
and restaurants that nobody else has access to,
you get like a, a, of somebody who works there
that takes you to the front of the line to all the rides.
And it's like a, it's just like a golf membership
or whatever that you pay like a massive fee
and then you have a monthly amount that you have to spend.
So she had a connection with somebody she worked with for that.
And then we stayed at the, you know, we stayed at the cool rooms at the Disneyland hotel and
then did that for the day.
It was a blast, dude.
And her birthday is the 31st, so it was we were there for New Year's, right?
So we got to see the fireworks, the show.
They have the best fireworks they did.
Yeah, no, it was amazing.
And I hadn't been there.
So, okay, I'm a year older, I'm 31.
I hadn't been there since like 99.
So, back when I was like 17 years old in high school,
it was the last time I had been in Disneyland.
And I thought it was really funny
that she wanted to do that as an adult.
But, man, it's a cool part.
What I forgot and I don't remember
appreciating as a teenage boy was how well the business is ran.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, it's incredible.
And I guess the friendly everybody is,
like on staff, like that's always noticeable
because it's just like, they're just there when you need it.
It's on a whole other,
I went down a rabbit hole of like reading on,
like how they operate things, like everything from the,
you know, the trash cans have underground tunnels,
though you don't ever see anyone taking trash out,
it goes, they shoot underground and they get taken care of.
Even the parking structure, how it all,
the flow of that is so like brilliantly engineered,
so you get right onto the freeway before you,
and like there's no, like they have regular people
and street clothes that actually work for the park
that come behind and clean up behind people.
So it doesn't look like there's tons of staff
always around so that, but they're always keeping things clean.
So you'll watch somebody who'll be like,
what kid will you walk in,
like he'll spill popcorn out of his hand,
and of course the family just keeps walking or whatever.
And then like, also,
and you'll see some random person out of nowhere,
like come over and throw out the bushes.
Yeah, no, they just,
the little kids, for little kids, come over and play. I thought it was out of the bushes. Yeah, no, they just, this, this, this.
For little kids, for little kids, it's amazing.
Once they get a little older,
Universal Studios is a blast.
Like the last time we went,
we went to Disneyland and Universal,
Universal was a little bit more fun.
But when they're like under 10,
Off to try that, yeah, we're getting there.
It's a, under 10, it's a total,
when they're like three, four, five,
do you guys remember that year I took my daughter
because I messed up and messed up.
That's when we first started the podcast.
I missed the father-daughter dance and I felt so terrible
and then she goes, I said, whatever you want.
There was a reason for that though, wasn't there?
I had booked a trip to go out of the country
way before I even knew the date of the father-daughter dance.
So once it was booked, then they said,
oh, it's on this date and I was already booked to go somewhere else and I felt dance. So once it was booked, then they said, oh, it's on this date, and I was already booked
to go somewhere else, and I felt terrible.
So I told my daughter, all right, whatever you want.
You know, she was like, dizzy land.
All right, let's do this.
She knows that she wants it.
Let's do this, and it totally works.
Yeah, last time it was there was when they just came out
with that Star Wars section, which was amazing.
Yeah, love it.
Dude, I gotta give some props to our sponsor, Oli Pop.
That stuff is legit.
Besides the taste, it does taste amazing.
It is really good for my gut.
Yeah.
It really is.
Like, I feel my gut is a little bit off or whatever.
I drink that and then I feel so much better.
Yeah.
And the ingredients are legit that are in there,
but it's kind of weird that it's like a soda that tastes good, right? No sugar, whatever. It's all the same experience that
you love from soda. It just has a totally different after effect. Yeah, like a good supplement
is not usually a tasty treat, you know what I'm saying? Totally. So brilliant. I've changed
my order of my favorites, right? So I originally was Rupier Vintage Cola, but you know, R root beer is still my favorite, but I really, I'm starting like that, the vanilla strawberry.
That's my favorite. Yeah, the strawberry vanilla is definitely leapfrog the vintage
cola for me. So those are in that order for me. It's the root beer, the strawberry vanilla,
and then the vintage one. When I was a kid, root beer, I loved root beer, but I really liked those off fruit flavor sodas,
like orange, cherry coke, cherry strawberry.
Like that was me, you know what I mean?
If I could have my choice, those are the ones I never drank
soda as a kid, but every once in a while my dad would,
you know, all of a sudden feel like a being a nice guy.
And so you guys thought again, a soda,
and I'd get the one that would turn my face at some point.
Oh, I was big in the root beer floats and the sasperilla.
You know why?
Because you'd get one of those
and you could say you're drinking a beer.
You know, there's the same thing
like you said you're at parties,
like you know, and you have to hold like a bottle
or something because it's cool.
Like I felt as a kid like I was like an adult.
I'm drinking a beer.
Do you remember tasting beer for the first time
and how shocked that you were?
I was like, this is terrible.
I couldn't believe it.
I remember seeing, I know, everybody drinking beer
and I'm like, can I have some?
You know, my uncle's like, sure, all right.
Well, the funniest thing.
I thought he played a trick on me.
I'm like, this is not beer.
Yeah.
Nobody likes this garbage.
I'm like drinking it and I'm like, here.
And they're like handing it over to us
like my first party with beer.
And I took a sip and I'm like, oh, I don't really like that.
But I was just like, drink a little bit of it
and they're like, you know, like you want another one?
I'm like, oh, I'm not even really that thirsty.
No, no, no, you want it more beer.
I'm just like, oh, you have to keep drinking these.
You have to feel anything.
I'm like, oh, I had no idea.
Do you remember, what was the beer when you guys are kids?
What was the beer of choice?
Do you remember?
Well, we didn't mean like when your buddies are out drinking. Yeah, when you were getting beer, when you were, when you were are kids, what was the beer of choice? Do you remember? Well, we didn't mean like when your buddies are out drinking.
Yeah, when you were getting beer,
when you were showing on tap,
the cheapest beer.
Nadi ice, dude.
Oh, yeah.
Nadi ice.
I'm trying to think,
what thunderbird beer, some weird stuff.
What?
Do you ever do the 40s?
Like I take those mikes.
You mean Edward 40 hands?
Yeah, you duct tape your hands.
You duct tape your hands to the mikes.
What a terrible, so stupid.
First of all, it's a frat boy.
140 is enough to get you smacked.
Yeah.
You would tape one in each hand.
You might as well call the ambulance right now.
Yeah, we do that.
We take the train to go see like a baseball game
of San Francisco or something.
We drink one of those 40s and just get smacked.
Oh, yeah.
Isn't it amazing as a young kid that's your goal, right?
Your goal was to get to that level.
And then when you get older, your goal is,
can I drink and not?
And not, yeah.
And not have that feeling.
Well, the window of fun, I feel like,
without a halt, when you're younger, it's a pretty good window.
Like, you could drink all night and enjoy most of it.
But as you get older, the window gets smaller.
And there's like a,
and when people start telling you what you did.
Yeah, there's like an hour or two of fun
followed by, I need to go to bed now, I'm tired.
You know what I mean?
It's like, there's not that much time anymore,
which is kind of crappy.
Dude, I think I'm gonna unplug from media for a little while.
Oh, yeah.
It's a probably a good idea.
How you gonna do this?
Well, first of all, you know,
and I don't like look a little tired today
I don't talk too much about it now, but the debate the other night just I mean I couldn't sleep last night
Just stress me. I was a little suck. This whole thing is so damn stressful
And one of my favorite things to do right now, which is not good for me
But it's hilarious is to troll people on Instagram on political post. This is just I'll just drop a bomb in the comments
Yeah, and leave and an hour later I come back
and there's 30 comments of people fighting under what I said.
And it is fun, but it's damaging.
It's starting to damage me now.
So I think I'm gonna do like a fast or something
where I'm just off for a little while,
changing my perspective.
I started unfollowing a lot of the political type pages
and things that would show up in my feed
just because it was like getting overbearing.
Like especially right now,
because it's ramping up even more
because of the bays and like re-encoaster the election
and I'm just like, oh my god, I can't take it.
Hate, scare, hate, scare, hate, scare, hate, scare.
You know?
Nothing positive, nothing that for the American people do.
I feel like half the stuff that people post too is just is to try and stir controversy up
and then it's just shit talking back and forth.
I mean, so half, yeah.
That's being generous.
I know, I know.
That's 100%.
It's become such a toxic environment.
I don't know.
You saw you called this while back and I disagreed.
I might, I'm beginning to agree more of that.
You know, I think more and more
of at least America, I like to think, is waking up to how toxic it can be, how important
it is to detach. It may become a more trendy thing to be off of it. Right now, the last
decade, it's been so cool to be on it, right? To be an influencer on Instagram or Twitter or now TikTok.
And that was something that a lot of these kids were aspiring to be like.
And I think as they age and get older and see some of the unintended consequences from
being sucked into that world, I think more and more people are becoming aware.
And maybe we will see some of this.
Some people started to maybe,
some of the cooler kids saying like,
I'm gonna take a break from this shit.
I'm not gonna be more of these influencers
and the wild pages to kind of show people
what they look like in real life
when they're doing this dumb shit.
Can I tell you, please?
Some, I saw that I was on there and there's,
I love that picture.
Yeah, no, it's so great.
Oh, no, you guys, you showed me Adam.
There was like these two girls at the beach.
And the daughter.
And they're like dancing and strip dancing
and showing their butts off and taking pictures.
And there's like a family there.
You know what I'm saying with the little kids?
Yeah. And they're just oblivious.
They're not looking around.
Nothing, it's like we gotta get this video out.
Oh my fans need it.
Well, it's become that, it's just become so normal.
I mean, it's become so normal.
I'm actually now, it's so weird to me to think this,
how fast this transition happened, right?
I remember like clockwork, the first time I saw kids
doing like TikTok and thought,
what the fuck are those kids doing over there, right?
And then being told by somebody younger, right?
That's more hip to everything.
That's TikTok, man.
Right, right, tell me what it was.
To now, I don't think I can go anywhere in public
and not see somebody doing an Instagram story,
a TikTok video talking to the camera.
Could you imagine you'll see it in the next debates?
Yeah, I probably would.
I'd probably do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do,
who could dance better.
Yeah, he's an asshole, racist, okay, whatever.
Could you imagine going, just back into the 90s, early 2000s, could you imagine walking down the street
and seeing someone hold a disposable camera
facing it themselves? Ch-ch-ch super self-aware about that kind of stuff
and she'll totally just turn it off.
And then she's pretty cool about me doing it,
but she'll be like, hey, can you listen to that somewhere else?
It's real negative.
And so then I'll go into the room.
And then I start to realize, yeah,
why am I listening to this negative garbage all the time?
I get Katrina's.
It's rough.
Never been on any of it, dude.
It blows my mind that she's been,
she's never been on Facebook, never been on Instagram,
never been on Twitter.
She's not a hard, she's not.
She's not up to hype, huh?
Yeah, that is a guilt to do.
That's probably really what it is, right?
I don't want nobody to fight you.
She's like, just get it out of the fight by past.
I have a friend like that, I don't know.
You stay off, you stay off great.
I mean, I really believe it's what's,
is for sure saved our relationship. I mean, I really believe it's what's as for sure
saved our relationship. I mean, I can't imagine if she was as sucked into it as I have been
for the last five years, it would drive me crazy. It really would. So I'm, and because of
that, I'm very aware of, you know, the time because I have, I have someone who I can see
right next to me who isn't constantly on it.
It's a great reminder all the time for me.
Whereas I could see a couple of young couple
that's 22 years old and both of them are big
into Instagram or TikTar with that.
I mean, how often do they sit in the same room together
and just stare at their phone for an hour or two?
But that happens all the time.
Oh, dude, it's right.
That can't happen in my house.
It would be so rude or obvious
because Katrina's gonna be rude.
Yeah, so I can't even do that.
Like I have to find private time
or my a lot of time where I'm working on my phone
and it's just expected of me outside of that time,
I look abnormal in my family or my household
to be doing that.
Oh no, Jessica put a basket, she hung a basket
over the bathroom door
and that's where you're supposed to put your phone now
when you go in the bathroom.
So there's a thing on Shark Tank that got really popular and I think it so the the concept I
Forget what it was called maybe Doug can find this but it's a lock box. It's a clear to a tupperware thing that has a timer lock on
Oh, yeah, they did this for food. Yeah, that's what it was originally for but I was in that
Netflix documentary. Yes, it was. Oh was it?
Yes.
Social network.
So it's so that I know it's been used now for phones more than like anything else, but
I know originally it was like to keep you from snacking on certain food, but I think
a lot of people have transitioned into locking.
Oh yeah, like these little kitchen safe time lock things.
So I think like the number one usage for it now is like for cell phones.
Put your cell phone in there, lock it,
and then panic for an hour or whatever.
Oh yeah, no, it's.
That's gonna do something.
It's like it, I tell you what, man, it's weird.
This is, here's what it,
here's why it reminds me of a drug.
It's got similar characteristics to a drug
because here's what happens with drug abuse or alcohol abuse.
People use the drug
or the alcohol and it makes them feel terrible and yet they keep using it. You know what I mean?
If you ever met anybody that has a problem with drugs from the outside, you think to yourself,
just stop. Obviously, the alcohol is killing you, your liver is whatever, you feel like shit,
you keep drinking. Why don't you just stop?, makes you feel like shit. I feel like social media and our technology tends to do that.
Like, I know it's making me feel negative.
I know it's making me feel disconnected,
and yet I'm drawn to it.
You know?
The negatives far outweigh the positives.
I mean, I just don't see the positive aspect.
Like, it's not as glaring as it might have been going into it.
It's like, oh, I could talk to all these people
and connect with my friends.
And this is like, it's just bombarded
with negative opinions now.
Yeah, yeah.
Anyway, I read an interesting study
on supplements the other day.
Another one of those investigative kind of reports.
And this is just, you know, the supplement industry
is gonna, they're gonna push regulators to just hammer down on them.
So they did a huge test on a bunch of
neutropic smart supplement companies.
Oh, wow, they find out.
Well, what they found was a majority of them
had illegal drugs in their products.
So many of them had some of these racetem type of chemicals in them
or traces of methamphetamines.
Almost none of them had what they said they had
or the doses that they said they had.
So it's like one of the number one thing,
here's one of the most important things
you could do when you buy supplements
because this market, it is unregulated,
which I'm okay with,
but it does place more responsibility on the consumer.
And I think it's,
one of the number one things you should do
when you buy a supplement is to ensure
it doesn't have stuff in it, it doesn't say it has,
or it doesn't have illegal things in it,
doesn't have dangerous things in it,
and that the label is accurate.
I think that that is the priority number one,
because this is now what, like the fifth study
that I brought up on the podcast,
remember the one with protein powders,
where they found them?
Heavy metals.
Heavy metals, testosterone boosters with Viagra in them,
and other compounds, that was another one that I had read.
Now there's this smart one, smart drugs that have all these other,
and if you have like a heart condition,
or maybe you have, and you think,
oh, this is safe because the bottle says
it has these ingredients, you have no idea
that it's got stuff in there that might be.
That's the real concern, right?
Or you take something that you get tested for later
and then you test, you know, positive for something like that.
Now do you see this as a negative thing
on in the supplement space?
Or do you see this as a positive thing
that opens the doors for more companies like, you companies, like someone like our friend Mike, right?
So he is somebody who prides himself on the way he comes about his formula, his dosages.
Right.
And so, and then he has a podcast that support his business and he's got bool looks and
everything.
And so, I feel like we're moving away from these big massive companies that are just always
looking to figure out how to make profits.
And if it means doing things in the gray area to make sure they can make more money to
finding brands that you can identify with the owners and then and feel that they trust
who they are because you kind of feel like you know who they are.
It is worth it to invest in a company.
If you buy supplements and you use supplements on a regular basis,
it's so worth it to go with a company that has third-party testing
that's consistent that you can request that takes pride in putting
in the bottle, what they say that's in the bottle that doesn't have
harmful ingredients in them or heavy metals, which is, again,
there was a study with protein powders,
where heavy metals were through the roof
and some of these protein powders.
That's a very big deal.
Of course, it opens up the market for,
I mean, a company like you just mentioned Mike,
his company is Legion, one of our,
this is one of the reasons why we worked with them
because they made such a big deal about that.
This was like the number one priority for that company
and knowing what we know about all these reports,
which by the way, this is just,
this is how the FDA continues to make the case
that this industry needs to be regulated,
is they pull out these reports and these studies
and they say here's one that shows that all that,
80% of these products had nothing in them.
Here's another one that shows 70%.
It's like every time they do them, it's not one at a 10,
it's seven or eight at a 10.
It's the majority of the products that they end up testing.
So as a consumer, you don't want that to happen.
It's going to make all the prices skyrocket.
Not only that, but you won't get a lot of products.
You just won't.
You'll get a few products and you're not going to get
some of your favorite.
And if you look, if you take supplements,
you probably value your health more than the
average person.
I would assume.
I think that's true across the board, but generally speaking, people who take supplements
tend to place health higher on the list of priorities than people who don't take supplements.
I think that's a pretty safe, you know, opinion to have.
So if you do care about your health, then you're probably somebody that spends a pretty safe, you know, a opinion to have. So if you do care about your health,
then you probably somebody that spends
a little bit more on quality food and stuff like that,
maybe you buy grass-fed meat more often than the not.
Definitely, the number one thing on your list
of, on your check-off list with supplements
is, does this, is this clean?
Is it potent?
In other words, does it have exactly what it says it has?
Does it have any, is it been tested for stuff?
That's not good for me.
It can't I request, you know, third party testing
or can I request to see what those labs look like?
Like that should be the number one thing.
That number two is, okay, let's look and see
what cool promises they make and formulas
and you know, whatever they put together.
But that's a very, very big priority.
Which one of you guys was talking about
the drones that are flying the organs around now?
That was me.
So they're testing out drones to deliver organs
for organ transplants because.
Because like right when it happens,
I know that's like really essential
if you get it to them in time, right?
They were using commercial flights before,
but because there's been such a limit on commercial flights
because of COVID, it was becoming more difficult
to get the organ there in time.
And they delivered the first one ever by drone,
and this is a new, it looks like a new strategy.
Because it gets their faster, cheaper, you know,
and that's important. Isn't that also a very competitive industry?
Like there's like a list of people waiting for the,
like organs, like it's not like it's,
where there's a ton of like overflow.
It's like there's, you people are waiting for it.
It's highly regulated.
Right, so I feel like that would be,
that'd be difficult to hijacked, right?
It'd be like that would be something
that someone would steal, like right?
Oh, you mean like a drone?
Yeah, a drone.
You guys steal, like, or me?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
I mean, people steal a lot of people, right?
And like, when you go down,
there's like these horror stories of people stealing like.
I even think of that.
Yeah, like I would think stealing it from a drone
would be a lot easier than a human body.
Dude, how would you steal it from a drone?
Have you ever seen a drone fly above your head?
There's like a truck.
They're so high.
Yeah.
Shoot it with a net.
Come on.
What is it?
What do you know?
Or your Batman?
Like, it's not that easy. Yeah, you're grappling. Come on
It's not that easy
To my brother has a drone he bought on Amazon and he fires that thing up in the sky and you can't even see it
You know if you're another town you guys you know join it or something
What say what? Oh, yeah said pet eagle it's a Falcon that does it is a falcon Yeah, I think they trained the they trained the Falcons to do it. Don't that dude That's like a really neat. That's a Falcon that does it. Is it Falcon? It's one of those big icebergs. They trained the Falcons to do it, don't they? Yeah, dude.
That's like a really neat.
That's a real thing, right?
Don't they do it at like all the sporting events?
They did, yeah, for the Super Bowl.
I remember reading about that for the Super Bowl here
at Santa Clara.
They actually had a real problem with drones flying over
to get footage and all that
and then they sent out the Falcon Force.
Wow, so you, okay, so I would imagine you'd have to know that they're flying
and, because people fly drones all the time.
So you've got to know, oh, at this time,
they're gonna transport.
Well, did you, Morgan?
I saw the article you're talking about,
and it looks like a, it looks like a special drone
with a, like a special carrying thing on it.
It doesn't look like your typical drone,
your brother, God, from fucking Target, bro.
It looks totally different.
So it would be pretty obvious.
It's not like they all look the same.
It's like this thing is all white
and has a big basket underneath this.
I mean, I guess you're not making a bad point.
If Amazon starts delivering things by drone
and banks start using drones
and people start delivering things by drones,
maybe that there will be a bit of a black market
for shooting them down and still.
Well, I also heard too, a bit of a you know black market for shooting them down and I also heard too a lot of these like
the autonomous
Big rigs, you know that are gonna come out are also gonna have drones inside to then deliver packages from
The the big rig. I saw that so basically the the big rig drives the destination pulls over
Then it opens the top and the
Yeah, they fly.
Take it out, you know, drop it off of your porch, come back,
land back into the truck.
Insane, like this is gonna be our world before we know it.
Speaking of crazy stuff, have you guys picked up on this yet?
This is happening on my phone.
I've never noticed this before.
If you're having a conversation about something
and then you go to Google search,
before you finish typing in, it is the first thing that pops up in my search now.
Yes.
When we get off air, we'll practice this.
I'll show you guys.
I must have did it like five times the other night
with Katrina because we were blown away by it.
If I had you, just five guys,
it's just ordered me a burger.
Just gonna say that.
No way.
Yes, dude, if you are, if you're talking about something,
okay, and your phone's right next to you,
and then go to Google search it,
and tell me it's not the,
for one of the first things that pops up right away.
Dude, as a suggestion,
before you can finish typing.
Are we gonna live in a world where we feel,
where we feel like we have free will,
we feel like we're making choices,
but in reality, they're being directed,
we're being directed and pointed,
and we just don't even know it.
Yeah, I mean, I think we're all right. Why are you eating that burger?
I wanted it reality. No, there was like 15 things that they did. We know what you want
No, you can relax
I'm scared
I'm going with my appetite. Max Claw!
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It's the Bologna Claw!
An English Landish!
Quijqua.
First question is from Luke Callahan.
What are good ways to phase workouts
besides strength and hypertrophy?
I'm still stuck in the home gym with limited weight.
Oh man, some of the best ways to phase your workouts
have nothing to do with strength or hypertrophy.
I mean, I do want to be clear that training appropriately and properly, especially with
resistance, is going to contribute to strength and hypertrophy, but you can focus on different
things.
And the idea with a phase is that it's essentially a small goal, right?
So for the next three weeks or four weeks, my small goal is to maximize strength or to build
muscle through the pump or hypertrophy. And some of the best ways to phase your workouts are
like mobility, movement-based, speed, power-based, work capacity-based. Stability, isometrics,
there's a lot of different things that you can go through a phase, like to just focus on those things and say, and I know you alluded to like it,
they're not strength or hypertrophy based, but almost any pursuit is going to have some
of that carryover no matter what.
Oh, and what's great about it is, you know, most people that work out, they are usually
interested in both strength and hypertrophy. Most people want
to build muscle and like to be stronger. Most of those same people don't really think a
whole lot about improving their control, their stability, their mobility. Maybe they don't
even think too much about increasing their proprioceptive ability, which is kind of
gnawing where your body is in space. And so they don't focus on those things.
They don't really ever phase those into the workouts.
And the side effect of that is actually don't get as much strength
and hypertrophy because they all control that.
Well, are they alluding to the fact
that you could focus more on endurance
and also power as like other options, right?
So, you know, to really like use those,
that same load, but now move it quickly,
do way less wraps,
like, be composed in between.
So that's a whole other way to address your training and get fast switch response.
Yeah, one of the best ways to address kind of everything is to follow maps, programs,
or maps workout programs in succession.
So if you worked out for the whole year
and followed four or five maps programs,
you're probably gonna hit pretty much every phase
that you can think of that contributes
to athletic performance, muscle building,
strength, stability, mobility, all those things.
I mean, you can start with maps in a ball deck
and then go to maps performance,
maps aesthetic, and throw and hit, or strong,
anywhere, suspension.
Exactly.
And you're gonna work on all these different aspects
of your body.
And what that ends up producing, visually at least,
is a very balanced aesthetic physique.
You end up developing a very balanced body,
dramatically reducing your risk of injury. And then you get this kind of strength that
is not injury prone. One of the negatives of only ever focusing on strength and hypertrophy,
for example, is sometimes you tend to develop, you definitely can develop lots of strength
that way, but it can be more injury prone. You see this a lot in strength athletes where they push their bodies with strength constantly,
and then they get one injury and it's a repeating injury.
My back tends to get hurt quite often on my hip now is producing problems for me.
That's because they don't really dedicate a three or four or five week period of time
on something other than strength
and hypertrophy.
Next question is from Servo 777.
What is the best way to grow forearm size?
Oh, yeah.
Justin tell me how you did it.
Yeah.
Just my right arm, that was.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
You know, it's funny.
So, I don't know, maybe two years ago, two, three years ago.
So back when we used to be on the, on the YouTube channel, on the Mind Pump YouTube, because
we're not really on there that often anymore, but in the beginning it was only...
Back on the YouTuber.
Yeah.
Yeah, we would say, hey, we would say, hey, YouTuber, YouTubers.
Hey, what's up out there.
Welcome.
Mind your host.
I don't know.
I don't know what I'm saying.
No, it was Adam Justin and myself were on there
all the time, we were the only people on there.
And I kept saying I wanted to do a video on training forums
and everybody's laughing at me.
No, a forum, nobody cares about forum.
I'm like, yes dude, they are.
And I know I've seen like, I've read, actually read surveys
and a lot of people are very interested in forum training.
Anyway, it happens to be one of our more popular videos
because I think a lot of people are interested
in developing
strong.
Is it around about what?
It's about what?
It's a exam, right?
Yeah, it's just an example.
Just another example.
Everybody else is surprised.
That was a surprise.
But there's all the doubters sitting next to me.
No, your forearms represent all the muscles that have to do with your gripping and strengthening
your wrist stability.
And honestly, every upper body exercise you do
involves your hands in some way.
And if your hands and your wrists are weak,
then you're limited.
And oftentimes nowadays that tends to be the weakest link
where someone can't row as much as they can
or they can't press because they're wrists are weak.
And yeah, and before you give all your advice, because you did a really good video about can't row as much as they can or they can't press because they're wrists a week.
And yeah, and before you give all your advice,
because you did a really good video about,
you know, all the different techniques you can do,
we did have a lot of ideas for this
in our map, social, our program.
And where we actually had,
this is where we got to get a little creative
because it was so dependent on grip strength
and also like barbell or hanging and doing like climbing
and all kinds of stuff because it's obstacle courses.
We had some fun with that.
So we added things like the rice bucket.
We added some towels in there to grip to do pull ups and did hanging for time and all
kinds of stuff like that that are really good for building up forearm strength.
There's some other things that I mean,
when I look back at like,
cause I remember being a young kid
that was focused on this and doing a lot of like,
like forearm exercises, like direct exercises.
And I did not see as much gains in my forearm
as I did when I was just doing like heavy loaded things,
like heavy carries or heavy deadlifts or pull ups.
Like those exercise put so much demand on grip strength
that your forearms just, they have to build
as you progress in that.
If you progress in your deadlift
and you can get, you see that weight go up.
Naturally, the forearms just come up with that.
The same thing when your pull ups,
if you get to a point where you can start to load weight
on your body and pull your body weight up,
the forms just naturally grow with that.
Last just always been my argument of why I try,
my best to avoid wrist wraps and things that are aids
and holding things, because you do wanna be able
to build the muscle up in your back and in your biceps,
but you also want to be able to develop other muscles
that are supporting cast at the same time
and, you know, to really, to add like wrist wraps
and things like that a lot of times
you create dysfunctions as a result.
Yeah, and if you look at the, like different muscles
in the body, it starts to become a little clear
that some muscles are more suited to stabilize and hold or hold tension, whereas
other muscles are more suited to flexing and extending, okay.
So like biceps, pretty good at extending and flexing.
The muscles of the forearms, they do that too, but they're really good at static type of
stuff.
I mean, Adam, you talked about how much, how much you developed your forums by doing lots of heavy holds.
I mean, the forum muscles, especially the gripping ones, they're really well suited to do that. So like farmer carries
excellent exercise for the forums, but also consider this train different static ranges of motion when you're training your hands. For example,
holding a barbell, you may be getting
strong in that particular diameter of barbell. Try getting a fatter barbell wrapping a towel around
the barbell, pinching and holding a flat plate. That's a great one where you walk with plates,
with your fingers in this kind of pinched flat position. That strengthens them differently.
Then you could do traditional forearm building exercises like wrist curls.
One of my favorite exercises is I put a barbell behind my back,
my hands close together, and they're kind of,
the back of my hands are resting on my glutes,
and then I curl up as far as I can
to get the front of the forearm.
And then for the other side of the forearm,
I like to do reverse curls.
One of the best exercises I've ever done
for the like a brachio-radiallis and the top of the forearms, and they will develop.
They build like any other muscle.
You just have to place a little bit of focus on them.
And if you're trying to figure out where to put forearm training in your workouts, I like
to do them after back or biceps.
They seem to pair pretty well with those two areas.
Next question is from Janki Garage Gym.
Any tips to get a back pump?
I have this thing that I used to do that.
I find like really wanting to get my back like pumped.
That works like a charm every time I do this.
And that's, I'll go do four or five sets of heavy deadlifts.
So I like to do this where I'm working either triples or a five by five type of a routine.
And then right after I'm done with my dead lifts, I go over to a lap pull down.
And I do about four sets of lap pull down.
If you go do that and get back to me, I promise you it'll be one of the most massive back
pumps you've ever had in your life.
I've paired tons of different exercises together and try them in different orders. Nothing seems to give me as big of a back pump as doing heavy dead lifts,
fall by lap pull down right afterwards, gives me a massive pump.
You know, the back is probably one of the more difficult areas to get a pump for people,
but I think it's because they don't connect well.
They don't see the muscle squeezing and they do a back exercise and they end up
working, feeling it more in their biceps.
Anytime you have an issue with a muscle getting a pump,
in my experience, it tends to be more of an issue
with connecting to that muscle.
So, slow your reps down, focus on the squeeze.
The squeeze is where you'll start to connect.
So, if you're doing a row,
go lighter than you normally would
when you bring the bar to your midsection or the dumbbell up in a row or a cable row, squeeze back and
really squeeze those back muscles and hold that squeeze for about three to five seconds
and then go to the next rep. That can really help. Another thing you do is do a pre-exhaust
superset where you do an isolation movement before a compound movement. So one of my favorites is a dumbbell pullover
to a pullup or a pulldown.
And I do that one after another.
So I go pullover, I do my reps,
I go straight to the pulldown of the pullup,
and then I rest.
That's a great way to start to feel those muscles
connecting and get that pump.
Yeah, a lot of times going back to your connection point,
I would find with my clients too,
that wouldn't be able to feel in their back.
It is pretty tricky, especially if you don't have
good shoulder mobility and connectivity there,
even to the shoulder blade.
And so for me, to go through some like scapular circles
and really start to train them how to set,
you know, their posture correctly in order to even allow
for, you know, your posture correctly in order to even allow for, you know, your
lats or your rhombies to get more involved in each one of those movements is crucial.
And you know, to go into some like a lap pull down where I'm now driving my chest up,
I have to be able to have like a nice, expansive open chest from even to have the opportunity
of feeling it in my back.
This is why I love the heavy deadlift is for the exact occasion.
It turns on the whole back.
It turns on the entire back.
So if you're somebody who has a hard time
feeling your back muscles,
but you have good form deadlift.
If you could deadlift with good form,
that requires that you keep a stable spine
through the movement in order to stabilize a spine
and pull 100, 200, 300 plus pounds off the ground,
it wakes up every entire muscle in the
entire back. So that's why I like that is it wakes it up. You can't help but already start to feel
every muscle in your back by doing heavy deadlifts. And then you go over to an isolation type of
exercise like a lap pull down. And that and because the deadlift targets a little bit more the
lower back like the erector spinae, then you go over to the lap pull down. And that, and because the deadlift targets a little bit more, the lower back, like the erector spinae,
then you go over to the lap pull down.
You just get this whole full massive pump
that just fell on the pump.
That's always been one of my favorite combos.
Deadlifts to pull ups.
Love that.
I've done it for a long time.
Next question is from Jilly Bean 390.
How often would you have to mix up cardio
for your body not to adapt?
Or does your body consider it all the same over time?
You know, my answer to this depends on whether or not
you only do cardio or you do resistance training
as the foundation of your workout, okay?
Because if you just do cardio,
then it is important to switch different cardio modalities
to avoid overuse injuries or imbalances
because each form of cardiovascular activity involves some kind of repetitive motion over
and over again that looks the same, right?
So if you're biking, you're in a biking position and your legs are moving the same after every
single time you do a cycle on your bike or or if you're running, or you're doing a stair master,
or a row, or the form looks the same,
and you're doing thousands and thousands of reps
building endurance.
And that can develop, or it can lead to the development
of imbalances and overuse injuries.
And so whenever they've done studies on athletes,
on endurance athletes, cross training helps prevent that.
Cause then what happens is you're still training stamina,
but you're training different movement patterns.
So if you go from like running to rowing,
you're using different recruitment patterns
for each movement and you're less likely
to develop, you know, imbalances.
If the cornerstone of your workout is resistance training,
cause remember resistance training,
if you do it right, you're training the whole body.
You're training all movements, you're making the whole body strong. It doesn't really matter.
Now it doesn't really matter. Now your form of cardio, you can choose whatever it is, keep doing it.
As far as adapting is concerned in terms of calorie burn, you can make an argument,
but I think we're splitting hairs when we get there.
Well, there's actually studies around this that I remember reading long time ago,
but it was very interesting
to me.
And if I recall, it was like the average person adapts to whatever cardio modality they're
doing within about two weeks.
It doesn't take very long for the body to get very adapted.
Adapt doesn't mean also you stop burning calories.
It just means it gets very efficient at whatever you're doing.
Changing up the type like from running to stairmaster to swimming,
to rowing, to rope type exercises, will help,
but overall your cardio endurance is going to improve
in all of those and therefore the body will adapt
and get good at it.
So, this is another reason why I always make for the case
for cardio to be the last thing that we start to add
into a routine, if we're using it to lose body fat.
If you're doing it for heart health,
like it doesn't matter, right?
Well, you want to adapt, you want to be good at it,
you want to have a strong heart,
you want to be good at doing cardio.
But if you're doing it for fat loss reasons,
the body gets used to it and becomes very efficient
at it really quick.
And so if you're designing a weight loss
or a fat loss program for yourself or for somebody,
cardio is something, is the last place that I want to go.
I want to manipulate my training routine and my food first and use all the tools in my
tool belt to get this person to change their physique.
And then at the very end of their, you know, where we're peaking, when we're almost to like their, their ultimate physique or to their goal. I throw in cardio the last two
to four weeks tops because of this reason because the body will get so efficient at it. And then
the only place to go is to just keep adding more time. And that's just an unrealistic place
for most people to keep going. Like, if you've been doing it, if you started a fat loss routine
For most people to keep going like if you've been doing it if you started a fat loss routine
For eight weeks, let's say and you ride away introduce cardio one hour a day that first two weeks or so You're gonna see the initial results from that and then the other six weeks
You're not gonna see much movement from that cardio and even if you're switching up all the different modalities
You're not gonna see it move the needle very much Then the only thing that you can do in that world
to really start to see the movement is to add more time.
And then you're at an hour and a half and two hours.
And that's just ridiculous for most people
to maintain that for the rest of their life.
Yeah, I've been trying to think of like
from an athletic perspective,
like I would take some athletes and we would experiment
and go through phases of different types of cardio.
And you know, one, we would focus more on elevations We would experiment and go through phases of different types of cardio.
One, we would focus more on elevation, so we'd do hills,
brints, for instance, versus on a level playing field.
Then sometimes we'd do for timed bouts where we try and simulate
the time and the length of the game play that would actually occur.
So just to get them up in terms of being able to have a durability and endurance to compete
at the highest level in their respective sports.
There's ways to manipulate cardio and make them applicable towards a specific goal you have if it's sports
related for sure.
In terms of fat loss and all that, what the guys said, the guys have already said is pretty
much on point.
Yeah.
When Adam refers to efficiency, your body also aims at getting efficient when you lift weights.
It just becomes efficient at getting stronger, the side effect of which is burning more calories.
When your body gets efficient with cardio,
it actually learns to burn less calories
because your body getting better at cardio means,
it doesn't need much strength because it's endurance-based,
and it's trying to conserve the amount of calories
you burn while you're doing,
because cardio is such a calorie intensive endeavor.
With resistance training, the main signal you're sending is to get stronger.
So your body still gets efficient. It's just the efficiency is, let's get these muscles to be
able to lift us weight better and easier. AKA get stronger, a side effect of which being more
calorie burned. But yeah, if all you do is cardio and you're an endurance athlete, well, number one,
I'd say you should probably do some resistance training to offset some of the overuse
stuff that you're doing.
But if you don't want to do that,
and you just want to do cardio,
yeah, mixing it up will help prevent some of that.
It'll help you prevent your risk of injury
and help you maintain your training intensity.
If the cornerstone of your routine
is resistance training, there really isn't that big
of a need to mix up your cardio.
Look, my pump is recorded on YouTube as well,
so you can come watch the podcast if you want to see what we look like.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can check out Doug at MindPumpDoug.
You can find Justin at MindPump Justin, me at MindPumpSal and Adam at MindPumpAdum.
Thank you for listening to MindPump.
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