Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 140: Reversing Metabolic Damage
Episode Date: August 31, 2015In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss how to reverse metabolic damage....
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, I can hear you.
Are you sure with those shitty headphones on?
You know what?
You know, your brand new shitty headphones?
They're skull candy, bro, they're good.
Why did you have to put the brand on?
I always think I'm addicted to that. They're always candy, bro, they're good. See, why did you have to put the bread on? I always think I'm a dick.
There was like, oh, it's go-kid.
The only people that are gonna think you're a dick
are the ones that are very think.
Yeah, it's good point.
Very good point.
And you know what, though, here's a thing.
We remember we did the stats on it, Justin.
What was it, 72.7%?
72?
Yeah, I think.
So I like you.
So I like you.
I like 25% of you.
So, Sal, this is, just goes, this is so, you know, we talked earlier at, I mean, in previous episodes
about, you know, if we were stupid, stupid rich that we would not, you know, spend money.
Sal would go and what we were going to do is start nonprofits and travel, seize, and
have all these teachers come to his house, but he wouldn't drop by a fucking Lamborghini.
So it's obvious because the guy could definitely afford a nice pair of headphones.
We do fucking record what a professional studio and everything that
but he goes out and spends $40 on a pair of fucking skull candy.
You know what though? They work all right. I can hear everything. I'm fine.
I don't need $500. I don't need $500. I'm fine man. I don't need $500 fucking headphones
just because Dr. Dre put his name on him.
You know what I'm saying?
It matters.
He's a good guy by the way.
I heard he's a good guy.
I heard he's the man.
He's only hit like four women.
Yeah, well he's a great person.
Definitely want to spend money on him.
I'm gonna apologize to all the bitches.
Yeah, I definitely want to spend money on his products. Hey bro. Don't even get me started with media. I like I like to listen to Chris Brown on my
beats head folks. Oh man. Oh, Irony. That way you can tell us your show. You can tell us go. Hey, honey, you want some beats? All right.
You have no business going off a tabloid bullshit,
especially when a sub you're like that.
You know how that is.
It's just not.
It's just fun.
We both know you are not well read and hip hop for sure.
No, no.
You totally just said, you know, Chris Brown's probably
a fucking listener.
Now he's not listening to my pump anymore.
You just totally finished. You know what, I really don't care. care actually if he doesn't listen anymore. I really don't care. No
No, I don't like his music either you don't do did you guys see the love the way he dances? Yeah, he does dance
But did you see that that press conference with the boxers fuck what's that what's the guy's name?
Mayweather? Sugar.
Oh, sugar.
Oh, sugar, sugar, sugar.
Sugar.
And was it Mayorga?
It has come back.
Okay. Did you see? Did you guys see the press conference?
What happened?
No, I didn't.
Without you even telling me, I can give you a guess just to show you that this is just
trying to promote.
Dude, he's coming out of retirement.
Oh, yeah, go ahead. Let's see if you can guess.
I guarantee they started a bunch of fucking drama and stuff like that to make it sound all
crazy. Like it's's gonna be a fight
So that's what that police is old. He's old. Bro. He's done. No, that's not what happened. What happened to me?
So show they're doing the press conference right there. They're like standing there looking at each other whatever
Sugar Shane Mosley's girlfriend is there
She this is I you can see this shit online
She bends over to like grab something because they're moving and fucking me or gas banks her in the ass dude
No way right and come on bro totally staged right in front of that's what I'm saying dude come on
I think that was stage a new level right dude you and I are gonna fight bro
You and I are gonna fight and your wife bends over in front of me. I just fucking smacks macro ass dude come on
There's no way we don't even plan that.
Hell yes they did.
Dude, I saw that and I was like, wow.
But I mean, it just goes to show how well that stuff works.
I mean, that to me,
that is like great marketing.
It's gonna get all kinds of fire and attention.
It's the one thing, to me, I love a fight,
which I think everybody does,
whether it be boxing MMA, where there is some real animosity.
But to me, I can always tell the difference between
like a real real animosity between two fighters versus
the two guys that decided let's promote this fight.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, that's what a lot of these guys do.
It is pretty brilliant.
If it's planned, it's pretty brilliant.
Yeah.
Because it did get me heated.
No, because I saw that and I was like,
oh, that's like, oh, this guy.
You know, it's the new thing to do now,
because people are real, especially with social media
and the things get shared.
It's like, you know, that, I wouldn't even watch that fight,
but now I'm interested in watching that fight.
Because you're right.
I feel like such a fucking idiot, you guys.
I fell for it.
You're not an idiot, I mean, no, it's, yeah,
it's, it's, it's why everybody needs a wizard.
Yeah, everybody needs a wizard because that, otherwise you fall for shit. Yeah, dude, it hits yeah, it's why everybody needs a wizard. Yeah, everybody needs a wizard because then
otherwise you fall for shit.
Yeah, dude, it hits that primal thing.
You're like, no, he spacked my wife.
I would kill that motherfucker.
Oh, dude, I would, I would have murdered him
right there.
I would have lost the, I wouldn't care.
And that's how you know it's cause you, let's,
I mean, if you that really did go down like that, dude.
Yeah, cause he kind of reached first, because what's his name?
Mostly kind of reached for his neck and then they pulled them off, but he didn't like
lose his shit.
He didn't like lose his mind.
Yeah, dude.
So afterwards his girlfriend's like, you better beat him, you better kick his ass.
And he's like, I will, honey, I will.
I got this, honey.
I got this.
I got it.
I got it.
You sell almost.
Oh.
Here's, I think one of the, one of the most brilliant, you guys almost. Here's I think one of the most brilliant.
You guys ever watched the 24 or seven leading up to fights?
And you know who started that Oscar De La Jolla started that.
Yeah, I remember that.
That was one of the, that saved boxing in my opinion.
I have super interesting.
I have, I have watched, I have purchased at least 10 fights
that I would never have watched.
Just because I watched it.
Basically a commercial hype it up.
It's a long commercial.
Yeah, it's a long commercial and you get so into their training and the shit talking,
going back and forth up in the training camp, you're like, I gotta see this baby.
Well, dude, I've got a chance.
Yeah, you guys remember John Jones and like DC, like when when John Jones was in the other
room, I think it was in the ESPN studio or whatever.
And like, and the mics were,
quote unquote, turned off.
And then the camera's still running,
you know, and all the stuff.
He's like, you, how fucking kill you?
And all the stuff, like back and forth,
they're just like, you know,
the best shit talking they've ever heard.
Check out this leaked video.
Yeah, and that's just it.
That's where it's going, you know, and I don't know.
It's, to me, it kind of ruins it a little bit,
but I mean, I guess if it, if it, if it pulls you
and gets you to watch the fight and you have a great time
watching the fight, then who cares, right?
Well, look, it's entertains like WWF, right?
It is. It totally is.
You know, everybody, it's kind of fun to watch
your shit talking.
You have to be emotionally connected.
Yeah, right.
Even though, even though WWE and W
and whatever, it's no longer WF, I'm calling it what I watched it when it was WF World
Wildlife Federation. No world wrestling center. I know, obviously. Of course.
Come on. That's the real name, dude. It's the original name, right? So those guys, you
know, if you're a huge fan, which people, there's fucking more wrestling fans and there
are football fans, you know, you know know it's fake, but you respect the athlete
and the entertainment value of it.
So I guess maybe it's kind of the same thing.
But then in your Rick Flair's who can talk,
awesome shit.
Oh, it's so good.
You know, though, I don't know.
I think there's a good debate in this actually.
It's maybe we're transitioning
into a mind pump talker, not even realizing it.
Is that never happened?
No, no, no.
I mean, don't you think that it kind of degrades the sport a little bit?
Because I think most fighters would even tell you too that there's a respect level.
You competed at doing judo and stuff like that.
And even though it's a physical thing that you're doing with another man that you're competing against, you don't want disrespect
or you don't want to make him feel it.
I mean, you both are giving it your A game.
Well, the very, it's like you shake hands
and you move on like there's a sportsmanship of it.
Well, here's why I like fighting sports so much
and I always have, I don't like violence
and people think that's funny when I say that
because I like fight sports so much.
But if you think about it,
there's an automatic level of respect when you agree to any set number of rules to fight someone.
You're automatically showing respect.
I'm automatically agreeing, it's honor, right?
It's the old world honor.
I'm automatically agreeing that I'm not going to
kick you in the nuts.
You're gonna buy a code instead of just screwing in.
Yeah, I'm not gonna bite you.
I'm not gonna poke you in the eyeball.
You're, we've already agreed that we're gonna try beating
the shit out of each other, but there's a set number of rules
and there's a guy in there that we have to listen to
the referee and that kind of honor in something that's
so primal to me, I find absolutely fascinating.
It's the incredible dichotomy of human behavior
where we take our primal instincts that are just, you know, because we are animals, people.
Yeah, we revisit our animal nature.
100%.
But then we apply these rules to it to make it more of an intelligent, honorable type of
thing.
When in reality, we're trying to fight each other.
We're just trying to, you know, I'm trying to hurt you, you're trying to hurt me.
Right.
But we've agreed to these rules.
So that's one of the things I find fascinating about.
And personally, for me, I enjoy watching fights when two fighters don't hate each other, but when they respect
each other and then when they're incredibly competitive against each other, you know,
when you see the fights where like, who was it? Iceman, Chuck Lidell against that Randy
Cotor. Oh, yeah, great fight. You know, they they respected each other, but hell no was neither one of them gonna let the other guy try and win. Yeah, and each guy's trying
to impose his will on his style. So it's just these two incredible people with lots of honor
and respect for each other. Going at it to me, that's more exciting than watching two guys who
hate each other. If I want to watch two guys who hate each other, you know, go to go on a fight.
Go down to the local bar. I'll go to yeah, I I'll go watch some fucking, I'll watch some shitheads go throw down and, you know, just watch Jerry Springer. Yeah, stupid.
Yeah, stupid. We should probably talk about fitness at some point.
Oh, this is a fitness show, isn't it? Yeah, it is. You know, if you're tuning in for the first
time, this is a fitness show. This is a fitness show. Welcome to Mind Pump, where we talk about nothing
for the first 10 minutes. Do, um, I think we should revisit a subject.
We've touched upon a few times,
but we get a lot of questions on in both the forum.
I get questions on Instagram.
I've seen some on yours, Adam,
in regards to metabolic damage.
Oh, you know.
Good topic.
Yeah, I think it's a great topic because I think it's.
It's one we'll probably have to revisit several times,
I imagine.
We will because it's common, it's super common.
And if you don't, if you can't identify some of the signs
of being in metabolic damage, and by the way,
metabolic damage is also known as, or you'll heal people,
heal people called adrenal fatigue,
might be another term for it.
What are some of the signs and symptoms,
and what can you do to remedy
the situation and why is it so difficult to get out of for people? Let's talk about
some of those signs and symptoms. What do you see in people? What do you guys see in people
where you say, okay, they might have some metabolic damage going on.
Well, one of the first signs I know right away is when I have a client that I take on that regardless of their weight and size, if they
are significantly under-eating and they're still struggling to lose weight. I mean, it's really
obvious when someone who's 200 pounds and they're, you know, 30, 40 pounds overweight and they're
only eating 1800 calories or less and their body is not moving. It's not, you're not losing any weight.
I mean, just based off their weight alone,
how much muscle and fat they have on their body
and how much nutrients is needed to sustain that alone.
If they are significantly underfeeding that
and still not losing weight, then more than likely,
they've completely slowed their metabolism down.
So that's a big indicator.
Yeah, just energy in general, too.
I mean, that's something I noticed.
And this passionate drive to like keep hammering away, like especially cardio is like always
a big issue that people come in and the answer is like, it goes back to that answer of cardio
is going to get me in better shape.
And I have to really be strict
and just hammer on that like completely.
And they just never really allow for that pure recovery
to happen.
They're always filling in all the gaps.
And unfortunately, it's a great,
it's great to kind of revert,
if you have like an addictive personality,
it's great to kind of divert that into something healthy,
right? That's always like the case. However, you know, addictive personality, it's great to kind of divert that into something healthy, right? That's always like the case.
However, addictive things like getting into cardiovascular, like weight training and never
allowing for proper recovery, I mean, that can be a real issue.
And this is something that we have to address.
Well, I know it.
I mean, I see it quite a bit.
Here's some of the symptoms, by the the way that you might want to identify yourself
Okay, excessive daily fatigue, okay, so you exercise a lot you eat really good
But you're freaking just exhausted no every day
And you want to take a nap and you can't figure out why you're getting eight hours of sleep
But you still you're feel tired
Lola Bito is another one
sleep, but you still, you're feel tired. Low libido is another one. If your body is not healthy, one of the first things to go to disappear is your libido, because your body does not
want to reproduce. If it thinks you're in a state that's not healthy, or you're in an
environment where you can't support a human being, you know, producing another human being. Moved swings or depressed mood as another one.
Anxiety is another one.
Cold hot temperatures.
So if you find yourself being cold when you shouldn't be,
even hot flashes are another example.
But I find cold as another one, as a big one,
where people's hands will be cold,
their feet will be cold, even though it's, you know,
80-something degrees outside.
Ain't no leakage.
That's, no, that's the other thing.
That's the other thing that you that you had.
Yeah.
You still using that cream?
Yeah.
Is it working?
Um, that's we got a cleanest.
You had them.
He was he was sounding too much like a commercial I had to throw him off.
Yeah.
You like right?
So like one of those commercials all the side effects. If you're feeling this nausea,
do you have this?
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you're exercising a lot, eating a little bit,
and your body simply is not progressing.
And by the way, we've all heard the term starvation mode
when the fitness industry tries to sell you on,
you know, eating their protein bars and powders
and don't go into starvation mode.
Here's the thing, here's what real starvation mode
looks like.
It actually looks more like metabolic damage.
The body can adapt in pretty dramatic ways
and it will hold on.
It will hold on to body fat if it feels like you're in
an uncompromised state and it, excuse me,
a compromised state in a state where you're not
an optimal health.
And so the way that people try to fix this
is they try to work out more.
They try to work out harder.
They try to reduce even more.
And I'll get clients that'll come to me
that'll say things like, you know,
I only eat 1400 calories a day.
And when I go over by a couple hundred calories,
I gain three, four pounds right away.
Or, you know, I work out every single day.
I do Pilates, I do yoga, I do lift weights,
I run four miles a week, and I just feel horrible, and I can't figure out why my body is not responding.
Your body is trying to hold on, and you're trying to fight your body.
We've said this before.
If you fight your body, if you're trying to fight your body to get loose, you will get
a fucking loose, your body is in a win, I promise you.
And eventually you'll get sick. I've even seen clients get stress fractures from constantly running, constantly pushing
themselves and running more and more and more trying to get leaner and the body just breaks
down and they'll get a stress fracture.
Well, being that exercises of stress and everything else, do you see also just the mental
stress and workload and everything else from
because a lot of the similar symptoms and effects like I noticed with people that are like
way overworked in their job. Oh yeah that's a definite yeah.
Most common for sure. Yeah so that's I mean and then that and then they try and
and feel like I have to get healthy by by hammering my body in the gym and then also restricting
my calories and it's just like, holy shit,
that's amount of stress that you're putting on your body.
You know, it's funny.
In terms of like the competitive,
people who compete and present their physics on stage
and they'll diet for 12 weeks and get really shredded,
they put themselves in metabolic damage
while they're in their pre-contest to get on stage.
But a lot of them are smart enough to know that they only do that two times a year.
Adam, how many competitors have you see compete one after another after another,
and then find that they can't come in condition anymore?
It's very common when they hit their fourth show or so in the year.
They're getting worse.
They're regressing because their body's not as responsive as it was.
And that's what, it's crazy to me when I see it happen because it's so obvious to me,
but even these pros going after it, they just don't get it.
It's like, dude, you're, you're writing the same formula for this body every single time.
It's adapted, it's figuring it out.
It's becoming efficient.
So just because you think two hours of cardio and 900 calories did it for your first show
and kind of did it for your second and kind of did for third,
it's definitely not doing it for the fourth,
it's getting adapted.
So yeah, I would say in athletes,
and in what Justin just said,
are probably at least in my experience,
90% of the people that have metabolic damage.
If you're fat and you're lazy,
you're probably just fat and lazy, you're probably just fat and lazy.
You're probably not metabolic damage.
It's probably not you.
If you sit on the couch all day
and you eat McDonald's,
if you're like, I walk 30 minutes on Mondays,
and I can't lose 30 pounds,
and I stopped eating a large french fry now,
I have a medium.
So if you're, yeah, exactly.
That's not metabolic damage.
If you're in the drive-through right now
and you're listening to us,
this is probably not you
that we're talking about right now.
So, but it is very common with competitors, If you're in the drive-through right now and you're listening to us, this is probably not you that we're talking about right now
But it is very common with at competitors like what Sal was just mentioning and what Sal and what Justin said about which is probably the average person that I get the most
is you know your your male female
CEO manager, entrepreneur, fucking seven day a week or work guy or girl, and they pretty
much, they live their life full throttle.
They work crazy hours, they're killers, they're grinders, and then they come in the gym,
and when they hit the gym, they don't mess around, they kill it in the gym too, and they
understand the whole, they get the science of law, law, thermodynamics and calories in
versus calories. That's all they focus on. Exactly., law, thermodynamics and calories in versus calories.
That's all they focus on.
Exactly.
And they know what's bad food and good food.
And that's exactly all they focus on is sticking with good food,
staying lower calories, push as hard as I can.
And that's kind of the extent of their, their expertise or knowledge
in the field, but they, unfortunately, it's not that easy.
And it's especially not that easy as we get progressing get older, because as we get older,
we deal with even other issues with hormonal levels and getting in there.
Like you said, with stress factors and release chords on the body, things like that are going
to affect somebody's metabolism already naturally.
And then on top of that, if you've been yo-yo dieting, if you're somebody goes up and
down and up and down so many times times these things can all lead to metabolic damage
and the hardest thing to do with someone like that, the biggest thing I struggle with is they hire you
and at that point they finally have thrown their hands up and they're like,
fuck it, I can't figure it out, I'm gonna go bite the bullet and pay this expensive guy, right?
Well, I see a lot of this too is because they look at it from a numbers perspective
and they look at it like you numbers perspective and they look at it.
Like you're mentioning calories in, calories out and all that makes sense to them.
Everything's very easy because it becomes a metric.
It becomes a number.
And I see that too with a lot of the metabolic damage like people that I experienced.
They're very analytical and they're breaking down.
What exercises we're doing,
how many reps we did, like everything to the T, you know,
it's very like type A.
And unfortunately, like, there really aren't a lot
of metrics for all these other exterior factors,
like, you know, how you're feeling,
your energy's gonna fluctuate on a daily basis
to begin with.
I mean, yeah, you'd like to think you have control over that just with like what you're consuming,
but you know, something will affect you that like a mood or somebody like projects something,
you know, to you that you take on that feeling, like say, you know, somebody dies or something,
and you have a whole totally different day like your body shuts down
uh... there's just all these different factors in life that that make it so it
you can't just count on those numbers well the thing is the the problem with
this with what we're talking about is there it you can't
quantify it like what just insane
a lot of this is based off of field and unfortunately I hate saying this because a lot of people with metabolic damage
have horrible perception on their own bodies.
It's so skewed that they have no idea
that they feel like shit and that they're doing too much
and eating too little.
But you have to listen to your body,
you have to feel your body, you have to be objective about it.
How do I really feel?
Because I've asked these people,
like, how do you feel?
Oh, I feel fine.
Like, oh, really?
And while I'm looking at you,
you got dark circles under your eyes
and I could tell you energy levels a little.
You have to be very objective about how you feel
and say, yeah, it is true.
Run around one o'clock in the afternoon.
I'm fucking dragging ass so hard I have to drink
an extra large coffee just to pick my ass up
and feel normal again.
And Angie drinks totally like hammer this, like that's the issue.
Right, and I'm doing everything right.
I'm doing everything right.
I'm counting all my proteins, my fats, my carbs, my calories.
I'm exercising every day.
I'm doing weights, I'm doing cardio.
And I don't know why it's so hard for me, my body to change.
It just doesn't make sense.
If you, if you can say that to yourself,
and you're honestly looking at everything,
and you can say to yourself, this doesn't make sense,
then you are spending your tires in place,
and we need to rebuild your metabolism.
We gotta get your body working with you again,
and not against you.
And so here's some of the steps.
Here's some of the first steps that I tell people. Step number one is cut your activity level dramatically. Reduce your activities.
A matter of fact, one of the first things I tell these people is, I don't want you to
do any cardio and I just want you to lift weights twice a week. That's all we're going to
do. We're just going to lift weights twice a week and cut your cardio out. And the only
kind of cardio I want you to do are, you know, maybe daily walks outside
for 20 or 30 minutes.
Or some kind of meditative practice, right?
That's it.
And when I say walk, I don't mean like I'm out hiking, trying to burn calories.
I mean, you're going for a stroll outside and join the outside weather, whatever, and
just relaxing.
And we'll start with that.
Step two, I tell them to let's keep your calories where they are because if we bump
your calories right off the bat, you'll gain a bunch of weight because again, we're dealing
with slower metabolism. So what I'll do is I'll change our macros, I'll reduce their
carbohydrates and I'll increase their fats and I'll keep their proteins pretty moderate.
Now, why do we do that? We do that because fats are protective, fats are good for nerve health, you know, neuromuscular
health, so the central nervous system, they're good for the brain, they're good for the joints,
and the right kind of fats are also anti-inflammatory.
Carbohydrates in this particular case, we're reducing number one because we've reduced your
activity level, but also because I'm trying to reduce inflammation in your body.
And that's kind of the first steps that I do.
Then the next step I do is I'll take out common food intolerances.
I'll remove sugar, sometimes I'll remove gluten and dairy, just to get the body to have some things that are really easy for the body to
assimilate and work with.
And then I start to remove their caffeine and people hate that fucking part.
I'll tell you that much right now.
When I tell them, like, okay, we're going to have you like, instead of drinking three
coffees a day, we're going to move it to one, and then I move you to green tea, and then
I move you to nothing.
People really fucking hate that.
But the reason why we do that is the caffeine, their body has become not dependent on that
caffeine to maintain a certain level of catacoloming production and to get stimulated.
And if we, we have to slowly remove that
to let the body rebuild the back to where it was.
And believe it or not, when we reintroduce caffeine
at a later date, it's much more potent at that point.
You know, they'll have one coffee and it's strong as shit
because they've let their bodies kind of rebuild.
And then we monitor, we look on a weekly basis,
how you're feeling, what's going on.
At that point, I'm not looking for weight loss,
I'm not looking for anything, all I'm looking for
is how do you feel.
And as long as your weight is staying the same
and you're feeling better, we're succeeding.
And then little by little, we might gradually increase
your activity and put you on a more sustainable type of routine.
But those are the things you need to do,
and I'll tell you, and you guys in in this room know exactly what I'm talking about.
That is the hardest fucking thing to tell someone who is obsessed with exercise to do is to tell them because they think that oh shit
I'm gonna I'm gonna gain 30 pounds in two weeks. Well, this type of person to I
I've been dealing with this with some of my clients that are super, super high in demand,
no sleep.
They're traveling different countries, you know, CEO type.
They actually have clinics that some doctor created and basically it's this weight loss
clinic, but all they do is they're basically treating metabolic damage on that
level, so they do it in an extreme way.
It's more like they completely make them eliminate all that stuff that you mentioned
like from the very beginning, which I feel is a flaw because you're taking an extreme
person and you're throwing them into an entirely other extreme that they're going to look at it as just hammering.
I'm going to hammer this out. I'm going to do this. Yeah. Like it sucks.
It's not addiction to another.
It sucks to cut out caffeine because I got all these like, you know,
conference calls and all this kind of stuff and like, you know, I'm cranky.
And then it just doesn't last. It's like a couple of weeks in and they just
are hammering to try and correct themselves,
like so hard that like, you know, it's...
No, you have to take the client and take yourself,
if you're thinking,
if you're listening to this podcast right now
and you're thinking that you have been a bulk damage,
you have to take into consideration
it's a dramatic change,
and you are less likely to adhere to any program
if it's a dramatic change right off the bat.
So that's why you want to go into stages.
And the first stage is a reduction
in the activity that you're doing.
And by the way, I forgot to say this,
and I want to make this very clear
because I've had people do this
where I tell them, don't do cardio and lift for twice a week
and so what do they do?
They go to the gym twice a week
and beat the shit to themselves.
That's why I'm saying, it's the mentality.
So I guess even step A is to dress that mentality.
You have to come in with clarity that you're healing yourself.
It's not that you're fixing something in like,
you're able to correct because that's what I'm saying.
This mentality of that type of person is very like controlling.
Yeah, no, no.
You gotta go, you gotta work out.
Lift weights, don't go to failure.
Do straight sets, no circuits, no super sets,
straight sets, go in, you lift, you rest,
you lift, you rest.
Don't go to failure, compound movements,
full body workouts, 45 minutes long, twice a week, and that's it.
It's funny, I had a client like this a while ago, and she was the poster child for metabolic
damage.
She worked her ass off in the gym.
Ran, I think like 10 miles or more a week on top of it, was watching everything she
ate.
I convinced her to scale everything back
and just focus on weights for a little bit
and do it right.
And she was shocked.
She was so shocked, she thought something was wrong
and she couldn't figure out what was going on
because all of a sudden she was getting leaner.
You know, she's looking in the mirror,
she's like, holy shit, all those areas that I had issues
with getting leaner are now getting leaner
and I'm working out with one-tenth
of the amount of time that I was before.
Like how is this possible?
You know, that was the attitude that she kind of gave me.
The funny thing is she kind of slipped back into her old habits, and now I'm working with
her again to bring her out of it.
So it's interesting, but it's easy.
It's easy to get caught in that cycle.
That cycle of constantly pounding yourself
over and over and over again in the gym
and really restricting your food intake.
But you gotta work with your body.
Yeah.
Absolutely have to work with your body.
Like I said, the carbohydrate and fat intake,
eat those recuperative fats,
those fats from your grass fed beefs,
from eggs or a good source, of course avocado, nuts,
fish, those types of foods, lots of vegetables,
things that are that are recuperative,
that are anti-inflammatory in the body.
Very low grains, you don't need a lot of grains,
especially if you've cut your activity levels drastically
because we're trying to get your body built back up.
Don't eat so many grains, first of all, you don't need them.
You're not going to be doing all that cardio and shit you were doing before, but they
can be inflammatory in people with these kind of issues.
And if you're in this situation, they're probably inflammatory on you.
I have another client who changed her diet and slowly and slowly, you know, slowly
but surely would took her out of metabolic damage.
She's so, she's now so much drastically better
than when she has a weekend out where she eats
those inflammatory foods with sugar and stuff.
She'll notice right away, she'll tell him,
she'll be like, man, my neck hurts now.
I'm stiff again in the areas I used to have pain
and I know exactly why.
It's because over the weekend, I went wine tasting,
had some bread and then had some desserts
and now I can feel the inflammation.
And she's like, and it's funny because I used to feel
like this or worse all the time.
I got so used to it, I thought that's the way I always felt,
and it wasn't a big deal.
Well, all of them too, like, I mean, you said lower
the movement activity and all that,
and I totally agree with that.
However, I would also suggest that you,
you know, could spend that time
in a more meditative state by flexibility, by yoga.
Like you're still moving, but you're doing it
in such a fluid way that it's not really,
yeah, it's restorative, it's a different mindset.
So yes, you definitely need to still, you know.
So not power yoga.
Great point. Just as I was waiting to touch, you know, so not power yoga. Great point.
Just as I was waiting to touch on the neat, the neat fact.
Yeah, yeah.
So like rest is not, yeah, go ahead, but yeah, rest is not just sitting on your ass.
Yeah, you know, so perfect, like Sal said, I would drop you down to two to three times a
week tops, but then, you know, the other way I'm going to try and counter, you know, the
reduce of your high intensity working
out because you have, you've shot ourselves in the foot, you've touched your body to be
used to that pounding in order to stay the same with those calories.
So I am concerned you'll shoot right up when I cut all that out.
The next thing I do, this is where I normally focus on step goals with my clients.
I'll assess how many steps they're taking a day and I'll give them, hey, now we're going to step three to four thousand more steps a day, which sounds like a lot,
three to four thousand, but that's literally like 25 to 30 minutes of walking consistently walking.
So focusing on the neat factor to help keep that metabolism going and then not completely slow down
their calorie expenditure.
The other thing that I want to revisit that South said that I think is such an important
point. If you're listening to this and you're somebody who has metabolic damage or going
through it, probably, you know, this would be a good video for you. I did a YouTube channel
way back when I thought it was a good idea. And then I thought it was kind of silly afterwards.
And then I regretted stopping it because it would have been neat to have kept it going all the
way through this process. But what I did do is I did record the first, I think it was 30 or
60 days of my, you know, transformation from fat to fit. And probably the number one thing that I,
you know, talked about in those videos was the want to be
a trainer, be in the athlete, be in somebody who's going from eating bad food, be in
set and Terry wanting to go balls of wall, but then making sure I don't do that.
And in fact, I wanted to lose body fat, but yet my goal was actually to increase the amount
of food that I was eating, which
sounds crazy, but I wanted to replace all the shit calories that I was getting, and I
wanted to get more nutrient-rich foods.
So I wanted to keep my calories about the same or even a little bit more, but just more
nutrient-rich foods, and then just cancel out what I'm the extra intake by, you know, activity. And, you know,
and it's hard because you get going and, you know, you've been pounding away at the way. So,
you've been consistent with your eating in two weeks, goes by, you know, and I didn't want to see
any fluctuation on the scale up or down, you know. And in fact, if I saw any fluctuation, I was
in, I wanted to see go up, even though the ultimate goal is to reduce body fat and ultimately come down.
But I knew at the very beginning that it was so important for me to fix my metabolism.
Because even though I may not have had a metabolic damage, I definitely had changed my metabolism
over the last year and a half of being sedentary because I had stopped working as a trainer where I'm
moving around all day and I went to a job where I'm sitting behind a desk
for 10 to 12 hours for six days a week.
So it completely changed.
And then I'm eating all this garbage food
every single day, even though I was still kind of working
out here and there.
But I talked to the camera a lot about this,
these feelings that I have of wanting to push
and wanted to do this.
And then, but being okay with,
hey, my first workout was 30 minutes, 45 minutes,
that's it.
And I got on the treadmill and I walked for 10 minutes
and I talked about these things that seem,
talked about being over with the silver weights
by sip curling and shoulder pressing
and doing things with like five pound, eight pound
dumbbells that are so light,
but it's like, I don't need any more than that right now.
My body's not used any of this stimulation and ultimately right but it's like, I don't need any more than that right now. My body's not used to any of this stimulation,
and ultimately right now it's about fixing the metabolism
and my body working with me versus against me.
And I've been working against my body for so long
for poisoning it and not being active.
I don't need to go to the other extreme
of so perfectly eating and so perfectly working out
super high intensity.
I want to progress myself to that.
You have to remember, you have to remind people
exercise.
If you do it right, it simply serves as a stimulus for your body to change.
And it's like anything else. It's like any other stimulus.
It's like the sun stimulates my skin to get darker.
Well, if I've been living in a basement for 10 years
and I go outside, it's not gonna take much sun exposure
to get my skin to adapt.
And if I overexpose it, which at that point might be 15 minutes.
I agree, burn.
I'm gonna get a sun burn.
So, you have people with metabolic damage
and what's happening with those individuals is they're,
they've pushed their bodies so hard for so long
with the reduced calories on top so hard for so long with the reduced calories
on top of it for so long that their bodies in a constant state of survival. It's in a constant state
of efficiency. I need to be really efficient with these little bit of calories and I need to just
worry about just keeping the body from completely breaking down. I can't even think about adapting.
I can't even think about adapting. I can't even
think about building muscle or burning body fat. I'm just trying to survive. And that's
what I mean by fighting your body. You're fighting your body. Your body just wants to survive.
And you're pushing harder to try and get it adapt, which is the opposite. The harder
you push, the more it's going to try and survive. So hopefully that makes sense to people
who are listening right now.
I used to always give this analogy that if I was taking a car and I'm driving it from
here down to LA, so for those of you who have no idea what that distance is, you know,
that's probably what a five, six hour drive right for us.
So if you're driving this car from here down to LA and you've got, you have not to put
any gas in it.
It's got the oil has been well overdue.
The timing is off of the timing belt and it has three flat tires.
Driving that shit down to LA is going to be a pain in the ass. More likely you're going to spend
a majority of your time pushing it. I mean, it's not going to actually run. If you spent more time
making sure that the car is primed and it's running well and efficient, the amount of time it's
going to take you to get to that ultimate goal or down to LA is going to be a lot faster. Even if
you're there, somebody who left first
in those three flat tires and all that stuff
that's not fixed on the car.
So the body's the same way.
If you don't take care of all the systems
and all the things that it needs,
or you'll get there and it'll be broken.
Yeah, exactly, right?
You could literally push, it gets possible.
You could push a car down to LA.
It might take you months or whatever to finally get there.
And when you do, you're probably like, fuck this. I ain't going anywhere else.
That's such a good point because, you know, if you're in metabolic damage, you feel like shit
right now. You feel frustrated. Plus you feel like shit. You literally feel like shit.
This is your body talking to you. If you don't listen to your body, here's what it does. Your
body speaks to you. It tells you you need to chill out. You need to eat a little more. You need
to reduce the intensity. If you ignore your body, it stops talking and then it starts yelling
at you and the and what ends up happening is you either you get injured or you get ill and I've
seen it a million times. The person they just won't slow down. They're forced to slow down. Boom!
Next thing you know, they're injured. Now I can't do shit. Now I just got to sit around trying to
heal whatever it is. Yeah, just got to sit around trying to heal
or whatever it is.
There's something crazy.
Yeah, like I got a cold and it turned into fucking pneumonia.
Yeah.
You know, my immune system was shot.
And so that's what happens.
You got to listen to your body.
Your body will win if you try to fight it.
We've had people now, you know, who have enrolled in our program,
you know, the MAP's Santa Ballac workout program, for example.
And the program, when you look at it from face value,
if you're the kind of person that works out all the time,
like a maniac and overdoze it all the time,
you're gonna look at the program,
and initially it's gonna say two to three, maybe three,
but usually two, maybe three, real gym workouts in the gym,
and we call those foundational workouts.
So those are the harder workouts you're actually doing where you're lifting heavy
and you're doing more of the traditional workouts.
And I'll have people write me, they'll get the program, they'll write me, they'll be like,
it's how I've been doing a six day body part split for five years
and you want me to work out twice a week.
I'm going to modify, I'm going to do this five days a week and I'll say no.
Do exactly what it says and watch what happens.
Because it sounds crazy to them, right?
Well, I've been doing it and then I'll ask them,
how much progress have you made in the last six years
since you've been doing this split?
Well, I made a little bit of progress.
I okay, why don't we try this out?
What's the worst thing that can happen?
You go back on your split and you're fine.
So let's just try it out for a second.
And every single time they do this,
literally three, four weeks, that's not that long, three, four weeks.
I'll get an email, holy shit, I'm lifting more weight
than I've ever lifted before.
Oh my God, I feel great.
I'm sleeping good, my body's changing, this is weird.
Or you're like me and you get into that
and like the athlete comes in like those trigger session days.
Like I started to use the rubber bands
like I would super heavy weights.
Oh my God!
Oh my God!
Wrecking my way through it three times a day.
And it's just like, it's counterproductive.
You know, like once I, and I voiced that to you guys
and you're like, dude calm down.
Okay, you gotta use that, like it's intended.
And then I started to do that.
And it 100% made a difference going into
my compound lifting days and you just are never going to experience that unless you can
shut that mechanism off in your brain and you listen to your body and you do exactly what
your body needs and a lot of times that's just to recover.
There's no doubt in my mind that a good hack,
because we've had people who've done that program
and have given us, you know,
have told us about just amazing results.
Pictures, especially on the forum,
people posting pictures.
There's no doubt in my mind that a large percentage of that,
a decent percentage of that success is due to the fact
that these people were overdoing it before.
I, of course, a much larger percentage has to do with the fact
with the program just being the way it's designed
and how effective it is, but there's a good chunk of that
is because they were just overdoing everything before.
They go to this program and now their body has switched
from surviving to adapting and boom.
We got a guy on there right now who's been,
what did he say on there? 15 years, Doug?
Is that what he said 15 years? He's been doing body parts splits. And this is like week number right now who's been, what did he say on there? 15 years, Doug? Is that what he said 15 years?
He's been doing body parts splits.
And this is like week number three.
And he's like, I don't think I'm ever gonna go back.
Yeah.
And this is like, this is a guy who's a,
is a personal trainer respected, knows his shit.
I've gone on his Instagram page, knows his shit.
He's a smart guy, he looks good,
but his body now is starting to respond to this
because he probably was even,
we all fall into this trap of kind of overdoing it.
But I'm telling you,
and you know, I don't know,
do you guys notice more women than men tend to get trapped
in this metabolic damage?
Yeah, I would say it's more,
that's hard to say though because I think 60 to 80% of our
clientele is female already so we're already the minority.
We definitely have to address it with the women, for sure.
Yeah, because I mean, I just noticed it from a body image, maybe perspective or like trying
to correct things with cardio and all, that's why I brought that up because a lot of times
for some reason that's fed into the to the mindset that
You know if I eat this then I have to you know run run run run run run this off
Yeah, and then it just becomes this this constant sort of hamster wheel that
It has to keep on this like super intense scale
I see I've seen it in both but I do see it more in women and it becomes more pronounced in women and
There's no science behind it yet.
And look, let's just disclaimer, okay?
Metabolic damage, adrenal fatigue,
whatever you wanna call it,
there is no science supporting it yet.
And I say yeah, because it's like gut health
or other types of emerging types of science
that are coming out now.
You will start to see more and more supporting it. But right now in the industry, It's like, you know, gut health or other types of emerging types of science that are coming out now.
You will start to see more and more supporting it.
But right now in the industry, for us trainers have been doing this for a long time, we've
seen it, we know it, we can identify it.
It's a real thing.
So, but it's just not a medically accepted terminology.
Like, if you go to your doctor and you say, hey, I have, you know, metabolic damage,
you're going to look at you like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But do they accept me?
Yeah, I dream of fatigue.
No, they won't.
No, you'll get some internal, like,
internal medicine specialists who will talk about it,
but it's still not.
The pie give you some pill for anal leakage.
Yeah.
Maybe.
But I have a theory with why I think women might suffer
from this death.
A little more.
And I think it has to do with the hormones.
I think men just have higher levels of anabolic hormones.
But I do also think that women's bodies are more sensitive
to holding on to, you know, maybe certain amount of body fats,
simply because they're the ones that have babies,
are the ones that have to have children.
So I think their bodies are a little more sensitive towards that.
And that might be why, I don't know, I personally
have seen it much more with women and men.
And in terms of correcting it, the formula is the same in terms of correcting it.
Although I do get a lot of pushback from women, I think they just freak out.
They're really scared about cutting back those workouts.
I don't want to gain 10 pounds by next Wednesday.
Yeah, it's definitely a generalization, but I feel like the worry factor tends to be a
little bit higher on the female end, like when I have clients this stuff,
like so worried, you know, constantly about,
like so many things.
And that just anxiety creates, like even more stress
and I don't know, it just tends to compound.
Well, here's how I found success with that,
with clients that I've had to work through metabolic damage.
I literally have to stay in touch with them every single day
because that's how freaked out they are
about stopping their ship.
So literally I will text them every day.
How do you feel today?
How's everything look?
You know, oh, I went on the scale.
I didn't get any weight, good.
But how do you feel?
I think I feel a little bit better.
And I have to constantly be in their ear on a daily basis
because it's so ingrained in the brain.
You gotta reiterate.
Oh my God.
And I'll get questions all day long.
Are you sure that this is the right thing to do?
And maybe I shouldn't eat as much fat
because I think I'm like getting body fat
or maybe I should, and I gotta constantly be with them
and walk them through.
But eventually it all works out.
I just gotta think.
I think it's got a big, hammered so much harder
with marketing, I think, the men.
Oh, do you know what I mean?
Like just about their body, like just constantly getting hammered.
So I feel like, you know, that has to play a factor.
Well, it's, and the opposite for each sex, right?
So if you look at your covers of magazines and some of that, it's, it's normally like this for
females, it's this skinny, borderline, anorexic, you know, tall model.
And for men, it's like this overly
stair-roaded buff dude. You know what I'm saying? So the body images that are out there for,
you know, what's the ideal for men, an ideal for women or like such polar opposites, and
one supports a lot more calories in food for the other one.
Correct. Because men are when men are marketed to, the marketed to eat a lot more, eat a lot
more protein,
lift weights, but let your body rest and grow.
No guy really likes to be told,
oh, you look lean, you look a little smaller.
Excuse me?
Yeah, smaller?
I hate that when I'm dieting and then someone will be like,
did you lose weight?
No, the word is leaner.
The word is leaner.
I don't lose weight, I'm not leaning.
You're not leaning.
Yeah, you're cut.
So if you have any more questions on this,
we'll probably end up doing more episodes
because this comes up so much.
Well, what about is our program right now, discounted still?
Our program is still discounted.
You could go to mindpumpradio.com.
The programs that we have available with the bundle
include the workout programs,
include nutrition survival guide, pretty much everything you'll need,
but they are perfect.
If you're in metabolic damage,
enroll in the program, start in the pre-phase section of the maps program,
do two foundational workouts a week.
That's perfect for people in metabolic damage.
Absolutely perfect.
It's perfect for everybody,
but if you're in metabolic damage,
enroll in it and just follow it exactly what it says and
It'll move it'll move you out and eat the eat phase one of the nutrition guide for sure
Yeah, just with your your nutrient rich foods and just balancing all our and yeah, just focus on that exactly
Oh, and don't forget before we sign off here, please rate and review us on iTunes
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Awesome.
Thanks, guys.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
For more information about this show,
and to get valuable free resources from Sal,
Adam, and Justin, visit us at www.mindpumpradio.com.
Until next time, this is Mind Pump.
Next time, this is MindPump.