Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1423: The Benefit of Practicing Vs. Performing Exercises, How to Introduce Strength Training to Older Family Members, When to Turn to Supplements & Medication When Diet, Sleep & Exercise Seem Insufficient & More
Episode Date: November 13, 2020In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the the difference between practicing a squat vs. performing a squat, how to introduce a fragile 65 year old to str...ength training, where to draw the line between deciding to improve health naturally through diet, exercise, and sleep or using more unnatural methods like supplements and medication, and whether it is ever a good idea to listen to your appetite when it comes to nutrition. How the Caldera Labs face serum is making Adam look 5 years younger. (5:24) Mind Pump Techniques: All about deadlifts. (9:20) Sal’s long night explained. (15:01) Funny Stories with Justin. (19:00) The media versus reality: 2020 Election. (21:56) Sleep deprivation effects, men versus women. (29:39) Why the Organifi green juice trumps the competition. (32:11) Growing pains with Maximus. (34:00) Studies with Sal. (37:50) #Quah question #1 – What's the difference between practicing a squat vs. performing a squat? How does that contribute to overall better physique, mobility, and longevity? (41:50) #Quah question #2 – I have a 65-year-old dad who has never strength trained in his life and is fragile. How would you start introducing him to strength training? (48:19) #Quah question #3 - Where do you draw the line between deciding to improve your health naturally through diet, exercise, and sleep or using more unnatural methods like supplements and medication? How do you strike a balance between these two methods? (53:38) #Quah question #4 - Is it ever a good idea to listen to your appetite when it comes to nutrition? I feel like as long as we eat healthily and don’t completely overdo it, our appetite should be a good indicator of how much food our body really needs. (58:57) Related Links/Products Mentioned November Promotion: MAPS Ultimate At-Home Workout Bundle for Only $99.99 Visit Caldera Labs for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout for the discount** MAPS Split Fact check: Political news website never called Pennsylvania for Joe Biden Politics and Unhappiness – Art of Happiness Podcast The Impact of Sleep Deprivation on Men vs. Women Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Positive outlook predicts less memory decline Stop Working Out And Start Practicing - Mind Pump Media MAPS Prime Webinar MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Mind Pump #1385: How To Start Your Fitness & Fat Loss Journey MAPS Starter | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Media Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Why We Engage in Unhealthy Habits – Mind Pump Blog How to Stay on Track With Your Diet During Quarantine – Mind Pump Blog The Ultimate Goal to Intuitive Eating – Mind Pump Blog Intuitive Nutrition Guide | MAPS Fitness Products Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You are listening to Mind Pump the World's top ranked most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast.
We're number one.
Alright, so in this episode, we answer fitness and health questions that are asked by our audience.
Listeners just like you,
but we open the episode with this introductory portions.
So we talk about current events, we tell funny stories,
we talk about our sponsors.
Today's intro was 37 minutes long,
after that we get into the fitness questions.
So let me give you a whole rundown of today's episode.
We open up by talking about Adam's face.
Oh yeah, looking very nice and charitable.
Youthful and pretty.
And more youthful.
And that's because he's using Caldera.
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Then I talk about doing deadlifts at the end of my back workout.
Oh my God, it's crazy.
No for reals.
Normally you do deadlifts at the beginning,
do them at the end.
It's another way to work out, find out
in that part of the episode why.
Then we talk about the late night feedings.
Last night I got not that much sleep.
My wife got even less because my baby son,
Aralius is a party animal at night
little shit. Oh yeah. That's right. Then I talk about how breast milk probably has drugs
in it because as soon as he drinks it he's out like a light. Justin talks about his dad
said a bad word. Oh my gosh. That's a naughty word. Then we talk about how real clear politics
just took Pennsylvania away from Biden. That's right, you thought he won,
but maybe he has it.
Oh, wait, there's more.
We haven't had a civil war yet, let's keep going.
Yeah, let's keep going gasoline right.
Then we talk about the sleep deprivation effects
on men versus women.
Looks like women win on that one, everybody.
Then we talk about why Organifies Green Juice
kicks the crap out of all the other green juices out there.
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And then finally, I bring up a study on how people
who have a positive outlook on life
tend to have less memory loss later on.
So that's kind of cool.
Then we got into the questions.
Here's the first one.
There's personal wants to know,
what's the difference between practicing a squat
and performing a squat? Believe it or not, there is a difference. The next question, this person wants to know what's the difference between practicing a squat and performing a squat
Believe or not there is a difference the next question This person wants to know how you would start working out if you're old and fragile
There's 65-year-old dad wants to start working out. How should they start strength training?
Next question this person says where do you draw the line between
Doing all the natural stuff to improve your health and throwing in things like supplements and medications.
And then the final question, this person says, look, is it a good idea just to listen to
your appetite for nutrition?
Also, right now, we're doing a huge holiday at home bundle sale with some of our most
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So what we did is we took our at home workout programs, the ones that are the most popular, put them together, and cut the price down to almost a third. So
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Now, normally, if you got all three programs, that would be $291.
Let me tell you, it's worth every single penny,
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One of the biggest sales we've done all year long,
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Again, that's maps,
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Go get it.
I need your help, Sal, and this.
So I need your nerdy brain.
So I am convinced, okay, white nerdy.
And I'm probably biased, but I feel like the Caldera face
serum is making me look at least five years younger.
Yeah.
And I'm getting this, dude.
I swear, I swear on my life.
To the point where Katrina is trying it now,
because people have made it.
Because she saw your face looking good?
Not only looking that way,
but other people saying stuff in front of her.
So I feel convinced, but now,
is that because I've got people that are saying that
because maybe I'm going bald and they feel sorry for me,
and so they want me to feel better about myself.
That's true, that probably takes me
from the positive side.
I'm a dad now, and so they also want to be kind to me now.
That's probably 50% of it.
Right.
Or because maybe we're on this big podcast.
And so they want to be connected to me.
So they want to be closer to me.
Like, me, am I being lied to?
I'm a lot of factor.
Am I being lied to right now?
Or do I look younger from it?
Is it really notice Crow's feet before?
What do they call it?
All those little lines and things?
Rinkle, they call wrinkles.
What a name in them weird things.
I'm just saying, I'm spitting out, you know,
what I read in these gossip.
I want to see Justin use it on his,
as a little shank.
Dude, it's gotten worse for me
because it's like I've spent time so in trucking
and I was just in the desert.
Now my skin is just like a fucking,
like a lizard.
Like a hot mask.
Yeah, I'm like shit, I'm gonna have like that exoskeleton
just of myself in the corner over there.
You know what he's sat in your chair, right?
Like what is it?
Who's been eating baby powder?
I'm just a plume or a desk.
I know, I can't believe I have that.
You do, you do, you know what?
I noticed it on you for sure.
I don't feel like it is because I feel like
I would have sold Justin by now.
I think you're... Justin doesn't give feel like I would have sold Justin by now. I think he was,
Justin doesn't give a shit.
Yeah, that's the problem.
He does not, he's the most confident person there is.
Period, end of story.
To my fault.
He doesn't care, which is also why people tell me things
and give me signs and I'm just saying,
I don't listen.
Yeah, he's not surprised my problem.
And, but that's also, overpowers everything else.
This confidence is attractive.
Yeah, I mean, you and I have talked about this
a lot of the leads when Justin wasn't around.
When it's a lazy, so attractive.
Yeah, yeah.
But is it, can we bottle this?
We have meetings about it.
No, what it is is, so Caldera, the ingredients,
there's a lot of plant extracts that are anti-inflammatory.
So they bring swelling down in the skin,
simultaneously increase,
what's it called, visible, not moistness,
but makes your skin look more plump.
I love how you're saying this with little pinchers.
I don't know why I'm doing that on my face.
If you could, if you could, yeah.
Yeah, if you could, milking something.
Well, you brought out the inflammation,
I thought maybe my fat face is something to do
with that's inflamed all the time
And now it's less inflamed could it could be
Yes, I do
Cheeks very round
Very round. It's just it's just a size your face
Supposedly gonna benefit me when I'm 90
I'm looking I'm excited about that. Bro, look at me
I got a real beard otherwise you can see my whole job
Yeah, you look God for sure when you're when you when you're, when you hit like 65, you're
going to look almost bad. You got a full like gnome beard. Yeah.
I'm going to go to all point it. Well, like several bags and like, oh, look at that. Hey,
take off your Halloween costume. Do look like a skeleton. I don't know. There's some youthfulness
there, though. I'll agree with that on some level. Yeah. No, it works. I notice, I notice
it does a good job for you. So now Katrina wants to use it. Yeah.
That's always a sign.
When your wife wants to use your skin care products,
that means it works.
Yeah, that is.
Right?
Shout out to something there, right?
Yeah, right.
Because if you like going, like,
like, you're going to just the shower,
I'm sure he has like dish soap.
This, I remember a shampoo.
No, I have a really bad, I can't,
my squash soap.
I'm good. He's a don in there. Watch his body. It's like, I have a red hat. I kept my squash saw. I'm good.
He's a don in there.
Wash his body.
It used to be that.
He's like, pull them all off.
It's nice through the skin.
That was a case study for like everything.
You know, they just throw something else at him.
Clean the dishes, your car, your hair, and your skin.
Yeah.
All of one, what I do is.
Gasoline.
Anyway.
Dude, I had a decent workout.
All things considered this morning and I did something
You know the way we write programs sometimes I think to myself brilliant. Yeah, so
We're just complementing the shit out of ourselves today
Ten minutes in already just talking about how I handsome. I have a brilliant you are though
So there's so many paths in my face. There's something that we did in maps split where we
in one of the phases, where we
start workouts for a body part out with an isolation exercise and then move to a compound
lift.
And I don't do this often enough.
There's definitely some value to it.
So today I want to have a little bit of fun in my back workout.
And so what I did was I, 99% of time, I started back workout out
with deadlift. If I'm in a deadlift, I do it at the beginning. Why? It's a heavy compound
lift. Mm-hmm. You need lots of strength, lots of stability. And it just makes a lot of
sense to do that. But every once in a while, try deadlifting at the end after you've done
your rows and your pull downs or pull ups
and you've got a crazy back pump.
Dude, that's mean.
Yeah, so what I did is I went light,
so just to give people an example
what that means, right?
Cause it's individual.
If I did lift at the beginning of the workout,
I'm going at least four, 50, 500 pounds.
At the end of the workout, 300 pounds, a way lighter.
But what I did is when I came up to the top,
I squeezed my lats almost like I'm doing a straight arm pulldown,
came back down.
I had probably one of the best back pumps I've had in a long time.
You ever done that?
It's a more of a feel approach.
It's like I'm doing a body builder deadlift.
Right, does that make sense?
Do you remember, do you guys remember the cue
that was the biggest game changer for you for deadlifting? Do like what like really helped you get better at your deadlift? Yeah
Like what cue was it like I read an article that said
Rather than pulling the bar off the floor imagine you're pushing your feet through the floor
Yeah, that was a big one for me and also like just bending bending the bar out so I could engage in my lats
Bending the bar was a big one for me.
Was it?
Yeah, yeah.
Bending the bar was a big one.
Because before that, I think I let my shoulders roll
all the way forward.
And I wasn't engaging my lats very much.
And so I felt more in my low back.
When I learned to really engage the lats,
I felt like it came out of my low back.
It went back into my glutes and hamstrings.
That was a big one for me, Joseph.
I'm sitting back on your heels. Yeah, no, That was a big one for me, Joseph. It was not sitting back on your heels.
Yeah, no, that was a big one for me too.
I remember that, like, it's like when you grab the bar,
you automatically engage your lats, your rhomboid,
stay tight there, and then push your legs through.
This is a big one.
When I would teach this to clients,
every single time they would do this,
they'd be like, oh my God, that felt,
so rather than trying to lift the bar,
which I think encourages like a low back lift,
you're kind of squatting down and pushing your legs
through your stand up and encourage,
first off, it discourages that two-phase deadlift
you see when people are doing it wrong,
where their hips come up first and then they stiff
like a deadlift on the way up.
Totally.
So it kind of discourages that.
It also discourages the back rounding
because you're pushing through with your legs
and it makes you want to stay more upright
and you get, you know,
you get a nice,
better, a little bar path as well.
Yeah.
But Adam, when I know,
because you competed,
so you trained bodybuilder-ish for a long time.
Did you ever do that?
Did it last at the end?
Have you tried that?
I, you know, I have.
I actually have done that more now
than I did that competing days.
And I don't know why.
It was just something that,
when I think when I was competing
around that time, it's also around the same time
that I was trying to catch you on how heavy I was going.
Yeah, I was a tough.
Tough to fill the climb.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
When they say she for the moon.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I was chasing increasing strength. So I really wanted to. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So really heavy and I want to be all technique. It doesn't matter, it doesn't need to be the front of my workout, I don't need.
The only time I want it at the front of the workout
is when I'm going after weight.
Exactly.
You know, I want all the energy, I want to be fresh as I can.
But if it's like, okay, a technique,
one of the best things that I can do is put it
at the middle or the end of my workout
because I already know like, okay,
I'm already gonna be a little gas burner or anything else.
So this isn't gonna be a PR day,
this is gonna be my, so it helps encourage me to stay,
does that make sense?
Like to stay in that mindset because I know,
I don't know if at the end anyway.
Yeah, we're, even if I tell myself,
like today's gonna be a light day,
but if I start with dead lives, and I get going,
yeah, I was like, let's put another plate on.
Let's put another plate on.
And before you know it,
I'll sudden a light technique day turns into a heavy day.
Versus if I say, I'm gonna train with,
train other exercises first
and deadlifts gonna be in the middle of the end,
I don't have a tendency to do that.
I also like going lighter with deadlifts like that
when then putting the rubber bands over the bar.
Well, you only really can go light with deadlifts, huh?
It's not real, it's a battle.
Boom.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Light guy.
I mean, I feel like it's,
sounds picking on me.
It's okay, yeah, that's right.
I'm gonna pick on you on the day. You don't need to. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If I got me on dead mean, I feel like it's, sounds picking on me. It's okay, yeah, I'm gonna pick on you.
You don't need to.
Yeah, I'm gonna pick on you.
I got me on the left foot.
Nothing else.
So that's a good one to shine a light on.
With the three-lift total?
Yeah, exactly.
But no, do you put, do you ever do them with speed with the bands?
I do with speed with the bands too,
but I also like to just pull and then you get the added resistance
that's like gradual.
I just like that are chains, you know, as I don't know, there's just something like a novel about it and it's just fun to do.
Yeah, I know. I enjoy it. I sometimes attach the bands away from me so that it encouraged me to pull back.
Yeah. Does that make sense?
So, yeah, so you were gonna technique a bit more to you.
Totally. I'm trying to improve that.
Dude, I had a long night last night. You said to Adam, you said you weren't sleeping. Did you sleep good, Justin?
I slept like a baby, dude.
I had a long night, dude.
So the baby, so you're not like a having baby.
Well, so what it is is, so you know,
when your baby's born, they weigh them, right?
And then they weigh them again later to see how much,
because babies lose weight in the first,
you know, what, four days or three days of life.
And based upon how much weight they lose, and they'll tell you, make sure you increase your feedings or
or do whatever. Now, a couple of things to consider when Jessica was on the
epidural, they were pumping her full of saline or whatever, the IV. So she was
kind of swelling up and holding water. And the midwife said that it'll
happen to the baby too.
The baby will actually hold the little water too.
So his weight at birth might have been a little heavy due to that.
Nonetheless, a few days later they weigh the baby, he's lost weight.
So the doctor's like, okay, feed the baby every two to three hours, wake them up if you
have to, make sure he feeds 15 minutes on each boob.
You're doing this whole thing.
So now as a parent, you're a little bit concerned
and worried, or whatever.
So now Jessica's stressed and she needs to feed him
every two or three hours.
But here's the problem.
He'll get on the boob and five or 10 minutes in,
out, asleep.
Totally, he's out.
And then to wake him up, we have to take his clothes off.
I have to take off his diaper. He hates to be naked so then he gets like he starts to wake up and get pissed off
But it's this game every
Five or ten minutes and so last night she was struggling because he just wants it
But I forgot like did you did you guys have to do any of this with all?
Yeah, of course max was a premium so he was underway to start, you know
So that was a major concern so we actually
After if I recall, I know
for sure at night, because I did the nights always, but I'm pretty sure almost every feeding
we also syringe afterwards. Yeah, we're doing that.
Because there's also the other side too, that she's not like fully let down or producing
like her max amount of milk, either. So they're, I forget what it's called when that,
that first bit that's lost from. Yeah, she's got a lot of that at first, and you need
to make sure he's getting all of that
and hopefully some milk.
And so we would have to syringe feed afterwards,
which as the dad, I actually really like this
because the beginning, they're not bottle feeding at all, right?
So you don't want to confuse the baby with,
but you're called nipple confusion?
Yeah, so you don't want to enter,
if you can, right?
If you can avoid having the, having the newborn
use a bottle, you do.
And so, you know, and I was actually looking forward
to that as a dad.
I can't wait till I can bottle feed him
and hold him and rock him to sleep
and realize that I wouldn't be doing that for several months.
And so, but they did want us to syringe,
feed him if his weight was, you know, not increasing.
So I got to syringe feed him.
Have you seen, it's like a beach body version of breastfeeding?
Yeah, no confusion.
Oh, it's about the confusion.
Yeah, I'm just saying.
Have you seen the they make these I don't know if they're real.
I saw it on the internet one for men.
Oh, it's they're fake boobs.
Yeah, I was thinking that too.
It's their bottles and a guy puts them on.
Yeah, that's a real thing.
Press feeds his kid.
Like does that meet the fuckers or whatever?
Where he puts on, what's that actor's name?
But he puts on with those fake boobs and that,
that's a different kind of nipple computer.
Yeah, I don't know if I'm here.
I'm really confused.
I don't know if I'm on a good, that part.
Yeah, you're good.
No, but yeah, so we were doing that all night
or she was doing most of it all night.
She wanted to let me sleep
because I know today we had a, you know, kind of a big day
or whatever.
But you know, and here's the other thing.
Breast milk is, I know that there's cannabinoids
in breast milk.
I know they found, they know that you have your own
endocannabinoids you produce, they're in milk.
And they say this is one of the reasons why,
like if you watch a baby breastfeed,
though eat, eat, eat, shit themselves out.
It's like they just party, like they're,
and then oh, they're totally, totally out.
Thanksgiving every day.
Yeah, so he's out and so it's, whatever,
trying to wake him up.
Yeah, that's pretty, that's pretty.
Oh my God, that's pretty.
I've been trying to kind of avoid politics and stuff,
like we've been bringing up a little bit,
but this is a really funny story that just happened recently.
So, you know, Facebook is like one of the greatest places for just little moments like this
to kind of pop up with my family and whatnot.
And I've been avoiding Facebook, haven't been contributing, not, you know, engaging at all.
And I looked, I get a text actually from my dad and I was like on vacation with my family
and I saw things like, okay, so I just gotta let you know
I kinda did this, I feel guilty about it
like when I just had had enough.
Like, so like my brother and him have been at odds
in terms of like their political choices,
their candidates, what not, you know,
ones buying ones, Trump, you know, this, that.
And so I'm sort of like, you know, playing moderator
half the time when we're all hanging out. And my brother's been kind of hard on
him about, you know, his backing of, of the president and this and that and the other.
And so it's been really awkward. And so like, what am I cousin, like posts about, to buy
it in and, and says something about it. And my dad contributes to it. I don't trust
the thing, you know, that snake says or whatever.
And so like, and my brother gets on there
and he's like, who do you mean Trump or this, that, we're like,
and then, and then my dad, like, he's like, I don't know if,
and so he decides to write, and he tags my brother, right?
So he's got his name, it's like tagged in there,
you know, brand in this, and he says, suck rocks.
What?
And I'm like, dad, we gotta work on your insults.
Yeah, suck rocks.
You know, because he's like,
like he's very good serve.
He's very like, you know, he doesn't swear.
He's like, but you could tell you to have enough.
And that's the best he'd come up with.
Right.
You know, and I just, I was dying that he wrote that publicly.
You know, and I was just, oh that he like wrote that publicly, you know, and I was just oh my god
Me and Courtney were going out. I would say this is that I've never seen of families divided as much as I have. Yes
Right, not worth it everybody. It's totally I'm walking everyone in my family half a cliff like I'm pulling them all back together
Like let's all like relax. Yeah. Yeah, I always just say everybody sucks, and that tends to hurt the warm,
because I have family members on both sides too.
Like everybody, look, the truth is,
they all kind of suck, don't they?
Well, that's what I think is really,
what's really funny is that we always see,
like it turns into this whole character thing, right?
Like whoever, in my opinion, whoever wins,
is whoever did a better job of destroying
the other guy's character, right?
So that's whoever sucked the least.
Yeah, and and and I go, you know, to get to get to the level of
the of even running for president.
Can you imagine how many lies and people you manipulated and how many
backdoor fucking deals you had to do to get there?
Oh, yeah, I don't care how hostily.
Yeah, so I don't care which side you're on.
None of them are trustworthy.
Like change my mind.
Change my mind that that person didn't do some...
And what kind of person seeks out that kind of life
to get that kind of power?
Come on, really.
Stop it.
Did you guys see that real, clear politics rescinded Pennsylvania?
No.
Took it away from Biden?
What?
Yeah, so this is my biggest fear.
So here's my biggest fear.
And I said in my story the other day,
like somebody, because of course I have a bunch of people
on both sides that are like are so curious about how I feel.
And I'm like, listen, if Biden is our president now,
I'm team Biden.
I don't care, even if I, even if I wasn't a fan of his policies,
if he's the president, I'm a fucking fan.
Right.
I mean, I think this is America.
Yeah, I think it's fucking crazy not to now here's what i'm worried about is
if that's where we know we've been told it's announced on the on on all the news
networks that he's the president right and and will be in there in january
now even though i don't think that that uh... trump can win and i don't think
that it's gonna go that way i don't believe that
but if it does i'm more worried about that than ever.
Like I'm so worried about.
Well, so here's the thing that this is a big one now.
The first off, there's a few states
that are actually getting closer Arizona
as of the recording this podcast is getting so close
that some news networks are saying,
ooh, we shouldn't have called that.
That was all too soon.
See, now I don't know what to trust
because then I've also read things that say that even all the lawsuits that are happening that he's doing right now are worthless because the amount of fraud that is potential.
I agree with that. It's such a small number that it won't sway one way.
I agree with that, but here's the thing that people need to understand and this is...
But why call it until they count everything?
Well, so this is what the media does.
Give it a try.
The media projects. The media projects the winner.
They don't announce.
People want answers.
They don't announce the winner.
The winner is not announced by the media.
That's not how it works.
So when is it officially announced?
December, I think, is when it's officially announced
and then it's not really, really official
until they're sworn in.
Yes, sworn in.
Yeah, but the media never does.
They always project.
They always say, this is the projected winner.
And if it's contested, I mean, in 2000, Al Gore,
the media projected him to win the presidency.
Bush won 45 days later through the Supreme Court
because there was issues in Florida.
And so it was a close call.
This is a close, anyway, slice it.
It's a pretty damn close election.
And I don't think it's gonna swing back to Trump.
I don't think that they're gonna prove voter fraud
was so widespread.
But, but.
Because they would have,
you would have to win several of those states, right?
Yeah, but a lot of them are close.
I mean, there's a chance, it's a tiny chance,
but there's a chance,
but the media doesn't declare the winner.
So it's not like the,
and this is the problem,
people are so ignorant to the way our government works that they're going to, everybody celebrating,
but that never, that didn't really meant that he was the president alas.
It's not definitive.
It's not definitive.
And so then if they go back like it happened in 2000, now that country was different in
the year 2000, people protested and were pissed off.
A lot of Al Gore fans were protesting, but it's not going to be that way.
See, my thoughts is that it's not as close as we think it is.
And them actually saying that it's Biden early is just another way to create more controversy
on the other side.
And that just makes for great news.
It makes for great for Fox and CNN.
It's like Pepsi and Coke with both winning here.
It could be.
That's the way I look at it.
They are in the business of keeping our attention.
And if we all, if it was the election was over,
we all agreed so and so was the winner.
And we are all on the same page and we agree.
Then what do you think happens to Fox and CNN?
For the next two to three weeks, no one gives a fuck.
Oh, they're rating, you know, Fox's ratings crashed.
All right, it's because conservatives like jump ship on them. Yeah.
I'll tell you what, dude, when Trump's out,
which I think is what's gonna happen,
media companies, he's gonna start media companies.
It's gonna be funny.
And he's been setting it up for four years, right?
Yeah.
The fake news and this and that.
He's gonna start.
Real news, fake news.
Yeah.
Was that a completely clear.
What's going on?
The real news that were you.
Isn't that exact, isn't that the same thing
that was being this campaigned on though?
And it first came out, I mean, that was like the same thing.
Fair and balanced.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what it was.
Fair and balanced, but it was a sweet and low.
So I, like, intentionally, so I mean, I,
I have, this is the most I've cared about any of this stuff.
I've never, ever paid attention, any of this shit
until like now, right?
And so I, I really enjoy for the paid attention any of this shit until like now, right? So I really enjoy for the comedy
of like for every one of the debates that I watched,
I intentionally toggled back and forth
between Fox and CNN.
Oh, it's the greatest thing ever.
It is so revealing.
It's hilarious.
And I think everybody should at least do that a few times
to like really help you like get better perspective on
what's going on.
Like it's they couldn't be so opposite of what they're telling
and what do you're selling it.
It's like they took all the story writers from Hollywood,
you know, because they're out of the job
and then they just like, okay,
what story can we create for this thing that just happened?
Yeah, you should see that they did this poll.
So there was a poll in 2016 where they asked the people
who vote Democrat, do you trust the election process?
And a majority of them said no, of course,
because Trump won.
They asked them again now,
and now a majority of them trust the election process.
And it's the flip with Republicans.
Yeah, isn't it?
Oh, I hate that.
Again, the media, that's why I think
none of this is gonna get swayed or changed.
I think Trump and Biden are smoking weed fucking at home together
You know I'm saying I really do I think I think Trump genuinely dislikes everybody. I don't know
I feel like he's just I don't think I know I you know my buddy who's the my my buddy who's a hard left is just like that's part of the that's all part of his
His scheme this whole this whole the fake news and like a calling what was gonna happen beforehand
That was just that's all how he's been campaigning. That's all part of the part of the
and you see it exactly on the other side too. Yeah, definitely. I think they're boys.
Well, at the very end, at the very end, I mean, once he's out, he's still a billionaire businessman.
Right. Who needs to be part-bet friends with, you know, bureaucrats.
And that's it. So the one thing that my buddies,
so I tell you guys we're on a thread
that we're all like different, right?
The one thing that we all agree on is that at the end
of all this, like, when it comes to politics,
like, there's gonna, there's,
and that's why I think there's such a close even divide
because some, but there's gonna be a large group of people
that greatly benefit from whoever this next man is in an office
and there's gonna be a bunch of people who don't.
And that's how most people vote is like looking at that going like, hey, when he's in office, this is good for me.
When this other guy's in office, this is better for my friend.
And so that's what creates this crazy division.
At the end of the day, they're trying to line their own pockets behind the closed doors.
And they were, you know what I'm saying? And then they're all, I think, shaking hands and pushing it together.
I just can't wait for things giving. So when it goes around, they'll be like, you know what I'm saying? And then they're all, I think shaking hands and pushing it together. I just can't wait for Thanksgiving.
So when it goes around, they'll be like,
I'm thankful for not sucking rocks.
You know, you know,
I make it real hot.
You know, I'm so cross.
I didn't even think about Thanksgiving coming up
in the next couple of weeks.
I sure hope that we have more clarity on who won
because that's gonna create shitty ass dinner talk.
It's a great way to whittle away and kind of clean out
who you're gonna buy gifts for and who's gonna get them
for you.
Just talk politics at the dinner table.
Save yourself a lot of money.
Yeah, I didn't even think about that.
I really hope that we're further along
in the next week than we are right now.
So I listened to a podcast with Arthur Brooks
on people who talk politics and worry about,
and they've done studies on this and they show that people who
talk a lot of politics generally no one likes them including people who agree
with their politics. I love that. You're an annoying you're an annoying person.
It's even if people agree with you people don't want to hang out with you because
you talk politics all time. It's like he said in this podcast is like you're just
an annoying person to be around. It's focused on us. It's sports for nerds, dude.
It's just like, if you're a person who's not into sports
and hearing a guy, two guys battle back and forth over the,
if the 49ers of the Cowboys are better,
it is the most annoying thing.
And I like sports.
For a year, it's been forced on us, you know?
It's like, get out of here, dude.
Get out of here with it.
Hey, I looked up some studies,
some interesting studies on sleep deprivation.
I just do funny transition, but because Jessica's up so much with the baby,
you know, generally speaking,
women do better with sleep deprivation,
which makes sense when you consider
that they are, you know,
illusionarily, I would be an advantage for sure.
Feed babies and stuff like that.
So, I mean, I saw it firsthand with Katrina.
Because I couldn't do it.
Oh yeah, I couldn't do it.
I mean, one night I'm like a fucking bear dude.
One night of not getting good sleep,
she was running a week's sleep.
I feel like babies would not survive.
If it was men, who are the ones staying up all night?
At some point, but like, I'm not having it.
Yeah, just leave it.
I mean, are you going through?
I mean, obviously you had two kids before,
so maybe you remember this,
but maybe it's more obvious now, right?
Cause you're going through this again.
But I remember after that first few months
of seeing Katrina, everything from, you know,
the pregnancy to the birth to all the effort
into breastfeeding and everything and taking care
of our son, those first few months.
Man, I tell you, like, there's not enough love
or conversation around single mothers.
Oh, I don't know how.
We have a friend who I just have such a different respect
for all of them on another level now.
I could imagine like, we have a friend who's got,
you know what, fucking target should have a parking spot
for them.
Single mom.
Yeah, single mom parking.
Yeah, fuck all those pregnancy ones.
Just hell of pregnancy ones.
That's your single mom should get like a fuck.
I know, but they might feel bad parking there though. Yeah, fuck all those pregnancy ones. Just hell of pregnancy ones. Is that she's single mom should get like a fucking fight row.
They might feel bad parking there though.
Yeah, I mean, like, everybody knows.
I mean, I just think, I just, I just,
it blows my mind on how hard it is to do a good job
raising a child with a great partnership.
Oh, it's hard.
Oh, I mean, I'm doing it by yourself is just unbelievable.
I'm looking at Jessica and I already respected her before, but now I'm just in awe.
You know, I mean, just in awe of the effort to love the sacrifice. It's a tremendous sacrifice.
You literally are sacrificing your own mental health to care for this, you know, this little baby.
But yeah, I don't know how single parents in general do it.
It's I couldn't imagine juggling a job, a baby,
you know, your own health, your own life.
Like how, and you know, I get it,
if you're wealthy, maybe you can hire help and stuff.
But if you're most people or single parents are not wealthy,
holy Toledo.
Yeah.
Like that's just, suck rocks, holy Toledo.
I was on that on that same,
I know, I love it.
I'm gonna use it for all kinds of things.
Yeah.
Have you guys tried other green juices out there?
There's like so many of them now.
I was like in the market and one of my friends had introduced me
to another one here on another podcast.
And it like tastes like wheat grass.
Yes, most of them are.
Yeah.
It was like the general consensus.
That's why Organifies is such a, they sell so much.
Did you guys know that so Organify,
it's become a huge company,
mainly through word of mouth initially,
and their green juices are top seller.
Did you guys know they're only six years old?
Yeah, you just hit their anniversary.
Really?
Dude, I didn't know that.
They're just a little older than we are.
Yeah, yeah.
I remember we were close because remember that just this last year, we were talking about
and COVID changed all that.
We were going to do a party together at the same time.
Their growth has been crazy.
Oh, crazy.
Oh, and then they did list in their green juice how much ashwaganda is in the green juice
because it says proprietary blend.
Would you say that's the most valuable or the most expensive part of green juice?
Well, Ashwaganda is a very valuable herb.
Very, it's the only herb that will consistently
raise testosterone in men.
It's got proven adaptogenic quality,
so it helps regulate cortisol insulin.
For me, it's the most consistent supplement
in terms of if I take something and I feel it,
and I just feel better.
Right now I'm taking a lot of it
because my lack of sleep and stress are really, really high,
and that's what it helps with.
And there's 600 milligrams of it in the green juice.
It's a good amount.
That's a great dose.
That's a, it's not, it's PC dose.
It blows my mind how good it tastes.
You know that they did like 52 trials on it before they finally narrowed
They're like nailed down the actual flavor and taste it. Oh really. Yeah, yeah, that's a lot
Yeah, it makes sense. I mean they they mastered it like to where it's like it gets that nice aftertaste of that mint and it's like
I don't know how they did it. Mm-hmm dude. I was telling Jessica your story about Max when he threatens Katrina
Like I'm waiting for that episode to drop. We were dying. Katrina's not going to
like that. I know that we were dying about it.
They're being so courty that yeah. So what's the
strategy? Have you guys come up with a strategy to get
him to stop? Well, you could just kind of let him do it.
Like so last night he was yeah last night he, um, yeah, the
last night was probably the longest we'd ever let him
cry. Like we Katrina Katrina has this, like,
I don't know what book she was reading,
but there's like a 10 minute strategy.
I don't know if Jessica's on board with this or not.
We haven't gotten there yet.
Yeah, so, you know, how long will you let him cry for?
So she has a 10 minute role.
So, you know, let him cry up to 10 minutes.
And it actually, for the most part,
has worked really, really well.
Like, I don't know how many times, countless times,
he falls asleep at about eight minutes or nine minutes.
And many times, if he goes beyond 10,
something's wrong with him.
Either he's not feeling well or he's teething
or he pooped his diaper or something like that.
If he cries beyond 10, there's something else going on.
So it's kind of like, per role.
But now we're beyond these times now. And now it's like, okay, we're trying to get to a place where we,
we're training him to like, okay, it's time for bed, putting him down awake,
and not having to like, put him to sleep, right?
So we're in that phase.
And then now we're also trying to get rid of this habit that he's created
of threatening his mom with sticking his finger in his mouth.
So last night, you know screaming crying for a good 45 minutes
and then about minute 45 or so,
he made himself throw up.
And Katrina's watching all this.
She's laying in bed next to me.
I can see the glow from the phone
of her watching the whole thing and then I hear,
he's just threw up.
And I know inside of her, she wants to go in there so bad,
but she didn't, she resisted and she knows that like,
we're gonna have to go through this phase now.
You know, that's what I love about her and herself awareness.
Like, there was a little bit of a struggle
between her and I and disagreement on that
when it first started happening,
but quickly she realized like, oh shit, he did get me.
You know, and so now she knows that she's got a standard ground
as hard as it is to let them sit there and cry and then throw up in his bed and then leave them kind of in it.
She's like, oh my god, you could tell it's painful for her to do it.
But it's the only way to break him of doing that.
Otherwise, if she goes running in there and grabs him, just reinforce her.
Right. So yeah, we're in the early phases of unwinding.
Yeah, and there's something called a symptom eruption where and and this is what adults do, we'll do this,
but kids, they do something that always works.
When it doesn't work, they do more of it at first.
So it's not like they get the hand,
like, oh, it's not working.
Now I'm gonna do it more and more and more and more.
Exactly.
And then finally, they figure out
this is not working anymore.
So I would expect he's probably gonna try.
Yeah, yeah, I plan, I'm planning for it to be a little rough
for probably a couple of weeks,
but I think that we could nip it in the butt pretty quick.
I don't think anybody wants to sleep around throw up,
and I think at once you realize that he's not gonna get saved.
He's uncomfortable.
He saved from that, I think.
Well, he picked one that was really good though.
Yeah, I never really,
because that takes you gotta clean after work. I mean, I've been around kids for a long time, I've never seen that or even heard of that. Well, he picked one that was really good though. Yeah, I never really. Because that takes you got to clean afterwards.
I mean, I've been around kids for a long time,
and I've never seen that or even heard of that.
It's your son, dude.
He's pretty smart from my level, dude.
His negotiating skills are very good.
Yeah, that's the opportunity with that.
Yeah, no.
It was like scream louder.
It's like, oh, wait, but if I throw up, they got a clean stuff.
Yeah, and that was really her argument to me was,
like she kind of put it back on me when I was like,
don't go, don't do this.
She's like, well, then you clean it up in the morning
and I'm like, oh, fuck, can you got me there?
And I'm still like, I don't want to do that.
You know what I'm saying?
So, okay, so I kind of like gave in,
like go get him or what about that.
But then now she's like, okay, this is getting ridiculous.
It's a big, great story.
You can tell his girlfriend,
you know what she brings the first one home.
Hey, you know what he used to do?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm gonna get himself thrown up. Yeah, just so you can get his way. Crazy brings the first one home. You know what he used to do? Yeah, make it self-grow up.
Just so you can get his way.
Crazy, never ever.
Little turkey.
Yeah, anyway.
Science daily, it's a great site.
People always ask me where to go to read new studies.
Science daily, there's all kinds of,
the post like new studies.
Anyway, there was a new one on there.
It was pretty interesting.
They've connected a positive outlook on life
with less memory loss in older adults.
So people who tend to be more positive
with the way they see things, positive way of life,
also later on suffers from less dementia memory loss.
So it's not just that they're enjoying their life more,
but it's also there may be some positive health effects,
actual measurable health effects for having a good-
That's interesting because, you know,
if you, anybody that's had any sort of rough upbringing
or trauma in their life, you tend to block it out.
And you're probably promoting those things, right?
So if you intentionally are blocking out members,
it's probably not ideal for you to be able to help you
with remembering things.
So I imagine somebody who's been through a bunch of shit
or that is negative about a time in their life
and have intentionally blocked out,
I'm sure that's probably,
that's probably not good for me.
There's a lot of my childhood that is like a black blur
for me.
Really?
Oh yeah, what do you think back and you don't remember?
Yeah, no, I have very, you know, there's,
and it's taking me a long time. So, too, to realize that I've
done this, right? So, no, there's no doubt in my mind that even as rough as my childhood
might have been, there, it wasn't all bad. You know, we had good days and there was happiness
in our life. But as a kid, when, when you have these really scary moments or bad times in there,
they become like the highlight of your memory.
They stick out.
Yeah, they stick out.
And so I know for young adulthood,
I had this bias of like, oh, it was all bad and all negative.
And it's like, no, it isn't that way.
That just stands out to me.
And so then the next phase of that too
is like to suppress it, you know,
to suppress it and not think about it.
Like, because you tend to relive it every time you think about it.
Yeah, right. And then what ends up happening from that is you actually start to it, you know, to suppress it, not think about it like that. Because you tend to relive it every time you do that. Yeah, right.
So then you kind of, and then what ends up happening from that
is you actually start to forget, you know,
and so there's a lot of this like,
I have a lot of blotchy memories.
I can remember like certain great, certain moments
that had happened, but they, as far as like the day
that happened in that, I've lost a lot of that stuff.
So that's interesting.
Yeah, I'll tell stories, I think my, my, my mom
and my dad will sometimes forget
to do for my for my childhood because I'll remind them, you know, like my
that's not really. Oh, that's great. Yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. So like my when my son was real
little, my dad was holding him and he might not my son was probably like four. And he
hit my dad in the face and my dad laughs or whatever. I'm like, wow, that's weird.
Yeah. Because that would have never happened if I did that to you.
Do you guys remember the time you threw the extension cord?
What do you mean, it's the only time I never did that?
Hey, mom, remember when you threw the shoe at me
and the groceries?
I never took my shoe off at the grocery store.
Yeah, I reminded my dad when we used to drive
to go camping and stuff like my brother and I,
in the back of the pickup right next to the gasoline.
And then you'd be huffing gasoline fumes for miles.
You know, and I would just have headaches.
And he's like, wow, I don't remember that.
Yeah, that's it.
Oh, that's gonna be it.
I used to sit in the middle of my dad's work,
but when we go to work and he made me a rope, seep out.
Yeah.
Because I was like, I'm like a milk crate, right?
Yeah, I'm so gangster back there.
A bungee cord, a bungee cord and a milk cart.
Oh, yeah, I would put one side was like bolt into the side, the other side we'd tie a knot
to another nail.
That was the other side.
Yeah, it works.
It works.
Oh, that'll save you.
If we get into crash, not really dead.
It's not gonna happen.
No, it's not gonna happen.
Not gonna happen. E-claw! E-claw has landed. Max-claw! Today's Claw is brought to you by Max and Obolic.
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Quikwa.
First question is from Bear Bowen.
What's the difference between practicing a squat
versus performing a squat?
And how does that contribute to overall better physique,
better mobility, and longevity?
Okay, so I'm assuming that what he means is
practicing the squat versus performing in the sense that
you're doing the squat to feel it in your legs,
get a good workout, burn your legs out.
So one of them, you're practicing the technique
in the form, like it's a skill.
The other one, you're aiming for a really hard leg workout.
It's mostly mindset.
What's the difference?
Yeah, I would say like a maxing out is he referring to that. Or like you're going for a really hard leg workout. It's mostly mindset. What's the difference? Yeah, I would say like a maxing out is a free workout.
Or like you're going for a workout versus I'm just gonna make sure
I do this well and practice the skill.
Both of them have their value.
The one that has the most value long term is practicing
the skill of squatting, of just going to the gym,
getting into the bar, and you're not necessarily aiming
for any type of intensity
or burn or feel, but rather, how can I keep making this a better and better and better
squat?
I feel like that's got such incredible long-term benefits and potential.
Yeah.
And it, too, it helps to kind of reinforce like your body's comfortable in that movement.
It's very versed in that movement.
So any sort of inconsistency or something that's
going to throw you in a different direction, like you know how to react and respond appropriately,
before you then really add more of the intensity, more of the load to it. So it's very important to
do more of the practicing portion of it and then intermittently throw in the really intense times.
Well, when I think of performing this squad, I think of somebody who is following a program
that is either they've structured it or a program structured progressive overload and
last week they squatted X amount of weight.
And so this week they're going to add five pounds to the bar or they did X amount of
reps last week.
And so this week they're going to do this many more reps this week
And so they're progressively overloading over time in their program to me. That's performing a squat practicing a squat
That those are all arbitrary number none of that matters. Doesn't matter how many reps you do
It doesn't matter to wait the load on it
You're going in there with the idea that I just want to get great at the movement
And so what that means most of the time is
Is reducing the load dramatically? It's not most of the time is reducing the load
dramatically.
It's not kind of, like,
because sometimes people think like,
you know, when you go to practice a squat, like,
okay, you don't, obviously you don't want to be doing
a max load while you're trying to practice.
So you back off the weight a little bit,
but you're still really pushing.
No, like, when I practice a squat,
I'm like 50% or less of the weight.
It's a lot less.
I mean, it's such a lightweight that I could pause
at portions of the squad.
I can hold at the bottom for a long time
and think about the position of my feet,
and my knees, and my chest, and my shoulders.
It's such a lightweight that I can break up the squad.
I can break, while I'm doing it, right?
I'm getting ready to do 10 reps,
but I can make 10 reps, take me five minutes
because I'm stopping at certain portions.
There's more flexibility there.
Yeah, in the practice mode versus,
yeah, coming in with a very rigid,
I'm gonna get through these amount of reps in this many sets
and I'm gonna do it at this weight
and it's like very much like,
this is what I have to do today.
Yeah, practicing it also allows you,
or gives you the ability to unlock the total value
and power of the squat or other exercises for that matter.
So for example, let's imagine you've never thrown a baseball before.
So you have no experience throwing a baseball, and I hand you a baseball, and I say just
throw it as hard as you can, right?
You would be able to throw it farther by throwing it as hard as you can. Initially, then if you practice technique and skill at first, but not for long.
If you continue to practice skill and technique over time, then you'll be able to
far surpass your hardest throw before because you've unlocked the maximum potential
of the technique of the throw.
The same thing is true for a squat, practicing the squat, especially when you're
new to lifting or even intermediate, practicing it allows you to unlock all of its total value
for when you do push it. Because if you push it too early and you don't have good technique
and skill, you're only going to go so far.
Well, another example where I think squatting for performance versus practice looks like
this. So if I'm performing and I'm following a routine, it's like, okay, today I have four sets of squats
at 80% intensity with rest periods of 90 seconds
between.
I've already done all my priming or warming up
and I get right into the sets
and I'm watching my time between the sets
and I'm going through and I'm adding weight,
whatever and I'm done.
That's what performing looks like.
Practice may look like this sometimes for me. I get into a set and I'm not having weight, whatever, and I'm done. That's what performing looks like. Practice may look like this sometimes for me.
I get into a set and I do one set
and then I notice that my shoulders
aren't being peeled back very well.
So then I go over and I do zone one
and I'm priming for another five or 10 minutes
and then I go back to the set
and then I do the squat again and I evaluate,
was I able to keep my shoulders back?
Oh, I notice now that my feet are pronating a little bit.
So then I go in the next set, between the next set I'm getting down keep my shoulders back. Oh, I notice now that my feet are pronating a little bit. So then I go in the next set,
between the next set I'm getting down
and doing combat stretch and maybe some foot exercises
in between and then I get back and do a squat again.
So when I'm practicing a set of squats
may take a half hour, 45 minutes.
I'm going in there with the intention
to improve the movement of the squat.
And so I will break it down like that.
I'll do a set and I'm watching myself in the mirror
or maybe even videoing sometimes,
there's great apps for this too, by the way,
to kind of like break down to show
if you have a excessive forward lean
or looking at my feet to see if there's any breakdown there,
see if there's any breakdown in my knees collapsing.
And I'm assessing it and then I'm going back
and I'm doing priming movements to improve it.
And then I'm doing it again and then paying attention.
So that, to me, is another example
of what practice versus performance.
The difference between me as an early trainer
versus a later trainer training clients.
I initially, when I had to get a client,
it was all about the sweat, the hardness of the workout,
the burn.
Later on, it was about practice.
People would show up and we'd practice movements, practice movements and get better at them, get better at them. of the workout, the burn, later on it was about practice.
People would show up and we'd practice movements, practice movements and get better at them,
get better at them.
The results they got were far better with the second option.
They still moved, they still got good workout, they still built some muscle, but their form
continued to get better, and then over time we were able to push the workouts, minimize
risk of injury, and just maximize the results that they got out of those exercises. So in my opinion, practicing, especially if you're new to intermediate,
should be where you spend a lot of your time.
Later on, when your form is great and you can get in the bar and do a great squat,
no problem, then it's okay to push performance more than anything.
Next question is from Jeff Carrillo, 23.
I have a 65-year-old dad who's who's never strength trained in his life and is fragile.
How would you start introducing him to strength training?
You know, the beauty of strength training
or resistance training, the main reason why,
aside from the rate, it changes the body
and how it gets the body to adapt,
what makes it so unique is it's the most
modifiable individualized form of exercise
that exists on the planet.
Okay, so when you go to physical therapy
with any injury at all,
I mean, you could go there after you could paralyze,
you could have a shoulder that doesn't work anymore,
you could have extremely limited mobility,
the way that they improve your mobility,
the strength in your body,
is with different forms of resistance training.
Okay, resistance training, very individualizable.
You take someone like this, who's 65, fragile, like you said,
resistance training is anything that is slightly outside
of his everyday life, adding resistance to easy movements.
You know, I would take somebody like this,
and if they could sit down with
control, so if I could have them just put their hands out in front of them and
slowly sit down with control so they don't plop down on a chair, then that would
be an exercise. I'd have them slowly sit down, sit at the bottom, and then stand
back up. And I'd keep the intensity very low. We'll do five of those and then we'll
rest. I could take somebody like that and I could have them try and straighten
their arm up above their head but they can't because they don't have the strength and mobility.
Okay, so what we're going to do is for 10 seconds, I want you to try and get your arm straight as
you possibly can over your head. So the resistance is just their own body, their own body not
allowing them to do it and they're pushing against it and that would be a version of an overhead
press. Really, you just take them where they're at, meet them there, and then slowly advance them forward
and modify exercises for their body.
It's really up.
And this is where I would look specifically
at their stability and how they can control their body.
And if they have that much established
and then I can sort of gradually add to that,
that's what I'm gonna look at.
And it's gonna be something as simple
as reinforcing their posture
and getting them to understand how to tighten their body,
where they need to tighten it
to be able to ground themselves
and to be able to manage a weight.
So really it's about being able to manage weight
before you even start moving it
and doing crazy things with it
You know for me like I like to take a lot of these types of clients
You know through walking patterns and do stuff like it looks like farmer carries
But it's just real gradual amounts of weight that I could see how their body
reacts to because as you move now you have to compensate for
to because as you move now you have to compensate for this load differently. And so how are they going to be able to maintain control?
Are they going to stay tight in their core?
Are they going to be able to keep this upright position?
And then or stuff on the ground.
How can we get up from the ground and use strength and coordinate their limbs and their muscles
and contract properly even
to pull this off.
Well, we have a lot of great free assets for this person, and then we have stuff that we
have programs, right?
So I would definitely take advantage of the maps prime webinar dot com, and then the prime
pro webinar dot com for him right away, because that's something that he absolutely should
be incorporating.
Now that's not resistance training, it's mobility work and like an assessment with them with
like his movement like Justin was alluding to, but that's a place that I would start him at.
I would start him there and then I would also start him with map starter. So many of the exercises
that are in there are designed for somebody in this case, right?
Somebody who is advanced age,
hasn't really ever resistance trained
or maybe hasn't resistance trained in decades.
This is a perfect place for most people to start.
Using that and incorporating that with those two webinars,
I think would be incredible tools
and a great place for him to start.
And you literally could start as little as, you know, the webinar, have him follow it along,
you know, follow my prime pro webinar for one of the days and then take one of the days
at a map starter and start him right there.
Two days out of the week, one day's heavily focused on mobility stuff.
The other day is focused on real basic strength training movements to get him going and then
build upon that. Yeah, but what's true for the 65-year-old,
whose fragile is also true for the fit in strong 20-year-old,
when you train yourself, all you're doing
is you're challenging yourself above your current capacity.
So wherever that is, I mean, I'll give you a story.
I trained a guy named Frank years ago,
was in his 80s, and he was on a walker.
See, I had a very hunched over, posh, on a walker. So he had a very hunched over, posh on a walker.
And the very first day I trained him, the exercise was, I'd have him hold his walker, and
then I'd have him let go of his walker and just try and stand up as straight as he possibly
could, maintain his balance, we'd hold that for five to ten seconds, then he'd go back
down and grab his walker.
That was one rep, and we would do that, we did that for the first few times we worked
out.
Eventually it was easy for him to kind of stand up
against strong.
And then I had to have him take a couple steps
without the war.
It's just challenging yourself a little bit above
your current capacity.
And that's true for anybody, not just this person
we're talking about.
You gotta meet people where they're at.
Next question is from Trey Thayer.
Where do you draw the line between deciding to improve
your health naturally through diet, exercise, and sleep, or using more unnatural methods like supplements and medication?
How do you strike a balance between these two methods?
Good question. Okay, so here's a good rule of thumb. Focus on diet, exercise, sleep, and lifestyle, and focused entirely on those and if those are not great, don't waste your time
with supplements of medication. Now there is a caveat. There is a caveat. If the supplements of
medication are needed to help you with your sleep, to help you with exercise, then those can sometimes
be of great value. So let's say you have anxiety issues that are really,
really bad and you're anxiety is so bad that it's hard
for you to even focus on eating a good diet.
It's hard for you to work out because you're at a breath
because of the anxiety.
You definitely can't sleep.
In that case, natural supplements might help
like a organifies.
Gold juice can help with something like that
or Ned's hemp oil can help with something like that,
and they'll help you enough so that you can get
the good sleep or good exercise.
But the rule of thumb really is
focus on the diet, exercise, sleep, and lifestyle
first, because those are the things that cover
95% of everything anyway,
throwing supplements or medication on top of that,
it's not going to do a whole lot.
I mean, the truth is, and I think this is,
and this is something that I feel like I've had to have
this conversation more with somebody who maybe has listened
to us since the very beginning, and then they're still
around right now, and we have all these different partners
of things like Juve and Felix Gray and, you know,
Organifi, and all the great companies that we have partnered
with, but our messaging
is still never changed.
Ideally, you do not want to have to use any of that stuff, and that's what I think we
should all be searching for.
I mean, in a perfect world, I've got a great sleep routine.
I don't need any assistance.
I do a good job of turning my electronics off at an early enough time that my brain can settle down at night.
I don't need any of these tools.
I'm eating correctly enough whole foods and hitting my macro targets that I don't need a protein powder.
These are all tools to help.
And I think that if you find yourself dependent on supplements or medication,
you're just kind of putting your finger in the hole.
You know what I'm saying?
Like there's still a hole in the boat
and you need to patch it and fix it.
I don't think it's a good idea to just accept
that oh, this is how I need this to go to sleep
every single night or I need this in order to hit my
protein intake.
I'm always striving to get my protein
and take through whole foods, but it doesn't mean
that I don't have like five jugs of protein powder above my refrigerator.
I do.
But they last me quite a while because I use them intermittently.
I use them as needed.
I don't use them like, oh, this is just part of my routine.
I have two protein shakes every day to make sure I hit my targets.
No, my goal always is to make sure that or try to make sure that I get my
protein and take through whole foods. But the reality is a lot of times it doesn't happen.
And so when it doesn't, I use these things. And the same thing goes for like you mentioned
the net and the, and I mentioned Felix Gray and all these partners we work with in
jive. Like, I mean, my goal is to get out in the sun for an hour to two hours every day
and get it on my body. Like let Like let the natural sunlight give me all the benefits
that it provides.
Now, when it doesn't, I discipline myself
to make sure I spend 20 minutes in front of my juice.
So, but what I don't do is go like,
oh, I've got the juice light, so now I never need the sun.
Like that's not, I don't think that's the right mindset.
These are interventions.
These are things that I would hope like are used as a catalyst to
then promote more healthier behaviors and really seek those out. And I have this conversation quite a
bit with my family members because it's always like what's the new thing? What's the thing that's
going to help me sleep better? What's the thing that's going to help my performance in the gym? And
it's always the same answer for me, but they wanna go to the supplement,
they wanna go to that, the bio-device,
something that they didn't know about.
And it's nothing unique or new really
that's gonna get you there,
other than what works is the good sleep,
the good diet, the good regimented training program,
and consistency, and that's always gonna be the answer,
and how can we find our way back there
is really what the conversation should be about.
Yeah, you know what's funny is they do studies
on people who take supplements,
and they find that people who take health supplements
have much better health, so you think,
oh, it's the supplements.
No.
No, when they go deeper, it's because people who tend
to take the time to buy health supplements
and take them consistently consistently care about the health
That's right. So they also have better diets. They also exercise and when they control for that
That's where you see all the all the I mean I have all of these things right?
So and just you know back to the juice the feelings great all these awesome things and I use them all right
But I also don't go. Oh, I'm not gonna, you know, try and be good about you know the sun or sun or try and be good about turning my, like that's always the main goal.
The reality is I know that that doesn't always happen.
And so this is where I find value in owning or having these things at your disposal, but
you don't ever want to become dependent on it.
Next question is from Jay M. Key.
Is it ever a good idea to listen to your appetite when it comes to nutrition?
I feel like as long as we eat healthy
and don't completely overdo it,
our appetite should be a good indicator
of how much food our body really needs.
Oh yeah, I'm gonna give you an answer,
but there's a strong disclaimer here.
So yes, your appetite is the best indicator of how much you should eat.
Here's the disclaimer.
Yeah, maybe for 5% of you.
Yeah, most, yeah, you have to have a healthy appetite,
healthy meaning, not like when I say healthy appetite,
some people think, oh, it means you have a big appetite.
No, that's not what I mean.
I mean, a balanced appetite, you also have to understand
how to read your body's signals
and have a good relationship to food
and your body and your emotions.
Yeah, if you understand cravings versus real hunger too.
That's it. If you don't have that understanding, if you grew up in a way like most people
where you valued food mainly for its flavor and its hedonistic value,
if you've learned to eat food to make you feel better when you're stressed or anxious or depressed.
If you have a body image where you don't like the way you look
and so you manipulated your food to change it
in a way that's unhealthy, if you're like most people,
your appetite is a terrible, initially is a terrible way
to judge what you should eat because then people say,
well, I'm hungry all the time, like right now,
I could eat a donut, right now,
I could eat pizza, right?
I just ate four slices of pizza,
I'm still hungry for ice cream.
They don't understand what real appetite means
and they don't have a good connection.
So it's like, it's almost like trying to read a map.
It's like, is a map a real great way to navigate?
It is if you know how to read a map.
If you don't have to read a map, it's just a piece of paper.
It's not gonna tell you anything.
I don't know how to ordinate it myself.
I don't know where North is, South is.
This map is more valuable to me to burn it and to fire,
to keep me warm than it is to help me navigate.
Your appetite, if you don't know how to read it
and you don't have a good relationship
with yourself and with food, it's not gonna help.
Yeah, I think this is a dangerous place for most people.
I just really do.
I just don't think there's a lot of people at this level.
I think in order to be,
not only would you have had to really pay attention
to all these markers of like how my skin is,
how my sleep is, how my energy is, how my hair, my stool,
not only have the tees, all that stuff out
to really get an indicator on like how your body
is responding to the foods that you're eating,
you also probably have to be eating a 99% whole food diet too.
Yeah.
Because the process foods are engineered for you to make you want to eat more in their
calorie dense.
So if you're relying on...
Basically, they're appetite drugs.
Right.
Yeah, so if those are in your diet, and this includes healthy products too, by the way,
you know, protein bars.
I mean, that was one of the things I remember telling you guys
when I was competing, I noticed that I did some shows
where I allowed protein bars into my diet
and then I had other ones where I did none at all.
And this was just for personal.
I was curious if it would change how difficult it was to diet,
if it would change the way my body looked on stage.
And it was very minimal for the average person.
But what I noticed was the cravings of those things.
Like, I would go from not having any protein bars,
whatsoever, then I'd have one, and like,
oh my God, it would stimulate me wanting another one.
Before you knew it, I was,
and because they're balanced macro wise,
I could get up to eating four protein bars in a diet,
still diet for a show and getting good shape and look good.
But what I noticed was the way it would promote me
to want to eat more and more of those, which made it more difficult for me to restrict
and calorie. So it really depends on how your current diet is, how much work you've put
into really learning your body's natural signals of hunger or you being satisfied. So to
me, there's a very, very small percentage of people that, I mean, this is true in two to eating, right?
Like, this is the, the pinnacle that I think most of us are trying to get to.
I mean, I'm in this over 20 years now, and still don't think I've mastered this.
I think I have a good, a good idea and a good control, but I don't think I've mastered it.
Yeah, and two, you could just eat potatoes and be satisfied, but you could be malnourished,
you know, at the same time.
And so you have to put some thought and effort
in what you're consuming still, always.
And that's just something that, you know,
you don't wanna just fly by one indicator alone.
No, no, and in the past, I mean, it was what was available
to you, and whether or not you hunted something
and killed it, and then your body would tell you
when to stop eating it,
so you don't,
because you could hurt yourself by over-eating,
but that wasn't hard to do,
because it wasn't heavily processed.
I mean, heavily processed foods,
which include supplements,
many cases,
like protein bars and shakes and that kind of stuff.
They're number one goal is to make them
as palatable as possible,
which essentially means overcoming your natural
satiety signals, that's what it means.
In fact, I don't care what food category there is.
I don't care if it's health food, junk food,
dessert breakfast, lunch and dinner.
If you want to guarantee yourself a number one
selling food item, it has to be the one
that is the most palatable.
It doesn't matter, even health foods.
Go through all the health food categories
and pick the number one selling protein powder,
the number one selling.
So that's one of the tastes of that.
It's the one that's the most palatable.
It's not the one that is deemed the healthiest at all.
So that's something you want to pay attention to.
Now, and again, Adam talks about it being a pinnacle.
It's not, I wouldn't even say it's a pinnacle,
it's not a destination, it's still, it's always a process.
It's just a process of awareness,
it's a process of deconditioning yourself
from how you've always ate before
and learning how to eat, definitely, moving forward.
But once you start to get the hang of it a little bit,
you do start to read your hunger a little better.
Now, I mean, years ago I got to a point
where I would eat a meal
and I was able to identify
when I was satisfied. Before that, I wasn't satisfied
until I was way over full. Like I would eat, you know,
at a family dinner and I'd eat, eat, eat, eat,
and then I'd eat, eat, dessert, and then at the end of the night,
I'm like, I'm laying in bed and I'm like, oh my God,
I can't, I feel terrible. Like what have I done?
Why do I always do this to myself?
And then I'd repeat it again the next time around.
I got to the point where I would eat a dinner
and then I'd be like, I'm actually satisfied.
I'm reading my appetite, I'm reading my satiety
a little bit better, whereas in the past,
this may be because the way I was raised
or the way we enjoy or celebrate food,
it was like how much can you possibly fit
in your mental competition?
Yeah, and in fact, you know,
this is a saying in my family, they'd say,
do you have room for more?
Like, well, can you possibly squeeze your food?
Let me think about it.
Yeah, you know.
So you can make.
So look, my pump is on YouTube as well as the podcast apps.
So if you want to watch the podcast,
go to YouTube, my pump podcast.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So search for us.
Mind Pump, Justin is where you'll find Justin.
Mind Pump, Salas for me.
Mind Pump, Adam is for Adam.
And Doug the producer, you find him at Mind Pump, Doug.
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