Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1494: What to Do If You Neglect Training Important Body Parts, How to Build Strength When You Only Have Dumbbells, Pre & Post Birth Workout Strategies & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: February 20, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions via Zoom. Breaking down Adam’s nocturnal admissions. (3:28) Why hip thrusts are stupid. (13:00) The guys share th...eir thoughts on the recent Framing Britney documentary, celebrity, and the golden age of paparazzi. (16:29) The myth around Nintendo debunked. (23:57) The rave reviews of LMNT and how you may be under-consuming sodium. (26:11) How your muscles fire best in pairs. (30:27) A new drug that can dramatically reduce the weight of people with obesity. (33:33) Why Sal is a fan of Paleo Valley’s Neuro Effect product. (40:36) #Quah question #1 – How should I program and maximize strength gains pre/post-baby? (43:00) #Quah question #2 – How do I get past the mental hurdle of getting ‘too bulky’ in my upper body as a female? (50:29) #Quah question #3 – How can I build strength and muscle with only access to dumbbells? (1:03:36) #Quah question #4 – Any advice on how to mix my passion for running with building muscle? (1:10:00) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump Live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com February Promotion: Phase II Bundle How To Do A Barbell Hip Thrust The RIGHT Way! (FIX THIS!!!) - Mind Pump TV "The New York Times Presents" Framing Britney Spears Myth debunked: Blowing in your Nintendo games never actually fixed anything Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #1475: Eating Meat Is Good For The Climate With Robb Wolf How to Perform a PROPER Dumbbell Pullover (Target Chest of Lats) | MIND PUMP New drug that controls your appetite shows promising results in the fight against obesity Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “Mindpump15” at checkout for 15% discount** MAPS Aesthetic | Muscle Adaptation Programming System MAPS Powerlift | Muscular Adaptation Programming System MAPS Fitness Performance | Muscle Adaptation Programming System Mind Pump Unilateral Training Workout Mod The BEST Single Leg Exercise You Are Not Doing! (TWO VARIATIONS) – Mind Pump TV MAPS Fitness Prime - Mind Pump Media Resistance Training for Endurance Athletes – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Bret “Glute Guy” Contreras PhD (@bretcontreras1) Instagram Robb Wolf (@dasrobbwolf) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You are listening to the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Now, today's episode, we answered live questions.
So people actually called in, asked us questions about their fitness, and we got to coach them live on the podcast.
By the way, if you want to be able to ask a question live, email live at mindpumpmedia.com.
Email them now, the first ones that get in tend to get preferable treatment.
So email and ask us your question, and maybe you'll appear on the show.
Alright, so in today's episode, we did the questions of the back half, the front half,
was the intro portion, which lasted 40 minutes.
Here's the rundown of today's podcast.
We opened up by talking about Adam's dream.
He's been having some weird dreams lately.
Yeah.
We tried to interpret it.
Yeah, nocturnal emissions, I think, the turn they use.
Then we talked about how hip thrusts are stupid.
You guys bragging about how much you hip thrust? That's not that cool. Yeah, what are we doing? Yeah, then we talked about how hip thrusts are stupid. You guys bragging about how much you hip thrust?
That's not that cool.
Yeah, what are we doing?
Yeah, then we talked about the show
or documentary Framing Brittany, Adam Lovedit,
Justin didn't like it so much.
I talked about the myth around Nintendo.
So all of you guys who had a Nintendo back in the early 90s
and who blew in your cartridge in order to make it work,
doesn't really work.
Forget you scientists.
Then we talked about one of our sponsors, Element.
Element makes electrolyte drinks that are high in sodium
like they're supposed to be.
Now what I've noticed from drinking element
is better pumps and energy in my workout,
the stuff tastes great, and it actually works phenomenally.
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forward slash Mind Pump and you can actually get a free element sample pack.
All you got to do is pay for shipping.
Then we talked about muscles, firing in pairs and how to mix that up to change up your
workout programming.
Then we talked about a new drug that is a weight loss drug breakthrough.
This one's actually kind of crazy.
Whoa.
And then we talked about another one of our sponsors, Paleo Valley, and one of the products
called NeuroEffect.
This stuff's pretty good.
It's a neutropic based supplement.
I like to take it with caffeine before my workouts.
Mind pump has a 15% off discount.
Go check them out.
Go to PaleoV valley.com forward slash mind
pump use the code mind pump 15. That's mind pump one five for 15% off. After that, we got
into the live questions. We talked to Spencer from Oklahoma, Jacqueline from Washington, Emma
Louise from the UK, and then Mike from the UK as well. it was a really, really great time.
And one more thing, we are still running our phase two
bundle promotion.
So we took two of our most popular workout programs,
Maps Performance, which is an athletic minded workout program,
and Maps Esthetic, which is Bodybuilder-Minded,
we put them together for a wonderful blend of the two.
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What's your guys' thoughts on dreams?
Like, are dreams, like, do you think that they mean something?
They have, like, this deeper meaning, or anything,
just a random shit that is, like, flown through your brain in the last week?
Do you have another dream where you did some weird stuff?
I had a really weird dream last night.
Oh, my gosh. Yeah
Depends on what you're doing exactly. Yeah, we could play like Freud here
Well, well, you know Katrina's family. I mean we have like a dream book at the house and like she believes like all these
These dreams yeah have meaning as well. I don't hold nothing back. I don't buy into that shit either
I'm just like so I I feel like I should set the table for Justin and I will break it down for you
Oh, yeah, we know what's going on here. Yeah, well, so I feel like I should set the table for. Justin and I will break it down for you. Oh yeah.
Yeah, we know what's going on here.
Well, so I had this dream that I was sending, and this, I mean, I think I should tell like
what has happened in my life the last three days.
Those are gerbals, right?
That led to this, right?
So that really happened.
Katrina's mom's over last night, and Katrina's mom, I have a thing I've shared before,
like they're open, like her and her mom, I walk in the kitchen,
they're having a discussion about our sex life,
which used to be, used to be,
used to be, no, not at all, not at all.
Is it her cornflakes?
Yeah, no, no.
So anyways, we were talking about,
that was the conversation last night was like sex stuff
and flirty and being playful and just how much more
of it we have when she's pregnant
and like her mom's, we we're all everyone's laughing about it
Right, so that was that okay the day before that I'm packing up stuff in my garage
I come across this old ass photo that I have I have a picture of me in like this cowboy hat and I'm in a towel
And like I'm flexing right I'm like 20 years old or something. Oh my god. So listen
We go can you please share that?
Absolutely not Oh my god. So let's do we go. Can you please share that? So I have this absolutely not.
Oh, I'll not share that one. So I have this dream that I am, I'm, uh,
uh, sending these, these pictures to Katrina, right? I send her this like naked cowboy hat,
like photo and Max is at this age right now. So this also happened. Okay. So we're,
I was just talking to Katrina's mom when she was over,
she was watching Max, and she's like, oh my God,
he can like control the iPad already, and do something like,
yeah, it's so fascinating how smart these kids are already
with these tools that we didn't have when we were kids.
And so that was also a conversation.
So the dream was that I was sending this back and forth,
Max got in my phone, and he posted that photo on Instagram.
And then it was like a new feature on Instagram
and I didn't know how to get it off.
So I'm scrambling to try and get it off Instagram
and I'm watching the views pile in like crazy
and I'm freaking out.
Exactly, I'm gonna pair something.
So I wake up, like looking for my,
it was like one of those dreams that were so vivid and real
that like that could be a possibility,
that could have possibly happened to me,
that I'm like scrambling for my phone to get to it
to make sure I don't have a photo,
like posted on a funny Instagram like that.
That's like the new like waking or like dreaming that you're
in class and all of a sudden you don't have clothes on
and then they ask you a question.
And you have to stand up and be like,
ah, those are supposed to mean something.
Yeah, so the theory is with stuff like that.
But now this is social media.
Yeah, so the theory is with stuff like that
is that you have a feeling, right?
So whether it be anxiety or fear or insecurity,
for example, a common dream that people have is where they're
falling.
Where their teeth are falling out.
The looking in the mirror and their teeth
is falling out, their hair is falling out, something like that,
right? Like it's just, oh my God, what's happening?
They say that that's connected to feelings of insecurity.
So what the theory is, is that the brain
tries to make sense of the feelings
by creating a narrative.
So you feel scared, so you can have a dream,
then because your brain's trying
to create a narrative around that.
So that's that.
And that's the theory, right?
So I don't know if I subscribe to them.
My dreams are always like what I just said.
There's a series of things that just happened
to me in the last three days,
all of which got all put into like one dream.
Max is a ability,
because they're instantly after the dream after I've
realized it's a dream and I get over
and I'm not sweating anymore.
I go, okay.
Well, I actually were sweating over that.
Which is unlike you.
That's actually unlike you.
Because if I know you as well as I do,
if you accidentally did that within 10,
you have to own it.
Yeah, five minutes, whatever.
Yeah, I probably just roll with that.
Everybody saw a picture of me in my,
you know, here it is.
I ran myself.
I mean, it was a very graphic.
It was like a, like a,
where you held on, where you hold on,
I was like, hanging out.
Hold on, where you hold on,
I was making it.
Were you holding the towel in the hand?
Yeah, no, there's no towel.
There's no towel, there's a cowboy hat.
Oh, you're naked, man. Yeah, yeah, it was a picture I was sitting in. So, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,. Well, when she's pregnant, for some reason, I just, my sex drive goes to the roof.
And so it's me always trying to get at her.
So I'm sending her stuff to try and get her all wound up.
You're one of those guys.
Right.
So that was the conversation I had with her mom.
So it was me sending like nudes to Katrina
to get her all hot and bothered.
And it went up on Instagram.
Yeah, it goes up on Instagram because my son gets a hold
of my phone and then is able to do that.
That's interesting. So your son being involved makes me think that the embarrassment factor would be even higher for you, right? I went up on Instagram. Yeah, it goes up on Instagram because my son gets a hold of my phone and then is able to do that.
That's interesting.
So your son being involved makes me think that the embarrassment factor would be even
higher for you, right?
Like, oh, my son saw this.
So now he's, or was that not even something to do?
No, I think in the dream I was just, I was more frantic that, that, that, okay, and again,
the, the, the, you know, how, I mean, a, a new feature on Instagram was a good new thing.
You know, when Reels came out.
So, so it was a feature, a function that I couldn't,
I didn't know how to work on Instagram,
which that's very real for all of us.
I just put it together.
Okay, let's hear.
I just put it together.
Your fear of technology advancing faster
than you cause you're old.
And so you're like, oh, I don't know,
I don't know how to operate this, you know,
VCR or whatever.
What's happening?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm not a user of a sudden, now you're just exposed. I'm a media guy. I don't know how to use social media. Ah! Does that make sense? Yeah, yeah. I'm not a user. Now you're just exposed. I'm a media guy.
I don't know how to use social media.
Ah!
Does that make sense?
Yeah, no that does.
That makes sense.
Really?
Yeah, no.
That's hilarious.
Yeah, it was less about my son in there.
It was obviously, it was that was the way it got up on social media.
It was more about I couldn't get it off.
I didn't know how to delete it fast enough.
Like it happened.
He was playing with my own.
The world's advancing too fast. Too fast for me. I don't know how to do it. enough like it happened. He was playing with my world advancing too fast
Yeah, yeah, I don't know I can only imagine a lot of these influencers like having dreams like that that just like did
There only fans and then and then figured out that like oh my god my kids are gonna see this one day. Yes
You know have you guys thought of that by the way? I have speed of only fans. I hate to interrupt you
But I just saw that someone posted it that was so funny that everybody thought they were gonna be.
Oh, the meme, that was a meme at post.
Yeah, they get rich over the only fans and then realize it would,
it's like being a local rapper.
Yeah.
I read about that.
I actually read an article that there were girls when the clock down happened.
They were like, okay, I'm gonna make some money posting nudes and people are gonna pay to
see me naked.
And I have 5,000 followers, so the 500 of them sign up for I'm gonna make all this money and so all these girls did this. Yeah, no
It's just a three creepy guys that have been created. They've been stuck in you and they made like you know 200 bucks
And now their naked pictures are out. Oh you could have cut out the middle man and just you know
Like asked for money through your DMs. Yeah, right? Oh, yeah
Just been mommy. Yeah, just been mommy. Oh my god. Yeah dreams right? Yeah, that one. Just Vennmomi. Yeah, just Vennmomi. Oh my God.
Yeah, dreams over it.
I hate it when you have a dream and then you wake up.
You ever have it like a bad dream and you wake up
and it takes you like 15 seconds to figure out
that it was a dream.
Never happening.
Yeah, well that was just last night.
Yeah, that's what you woke up.
Yeah, no, I went looking for my like right away.
I woke up and my initial reaction was searching for my phone
on my dresser to grab it and double check it.
Are you taking anything different?
Because that's happened to me sometimes when I have
a different like supplement or something
and I'm like messing around.
We're like, it really deep sleep and it's like a vivid dream.
So this happens to me when I,
so I smoke most nights before I go to bed
and so I normally don't dream.
But every once in a while, like last night I didn't smoke.
So I didn't smoke last night.
I don't smoke last night.
And then I dream and I dream these very vivid dreams. And I think because I don't dream. But every once in a while, like last night I didn't smoke. So I didn't smoke last night. And then I dream, and I dream these very vivid dreams.
And I think because I don't do it very often,
they're like even more vivid.
Have you ever had a lucid dream?
What do you mean?
So lucid dreaming is when you can control it.
You know your dream.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
And then you can control.
No, I learned that.
I think I learned how to do that when I was at,
when you were a kid and used to get nightmares.
Same here, this what happened to me.
Yeah, finally, and I don't remember if a parent
or somebody told me like, son, you know you can control that
or make sure it doesn't happen.
And then I just remember the next time I was in a scary situation,
I was like, oh, I have a gun now.
You know, or, oh, I'm fine.
Someone's here, the lights go on or like whatever.
Like, you know, I figured out how to control those.
So, yeah, no, definitely.
I figured out as a kid how to wake myself up.
So I'd be in a scary dream
and then I wake myself up out of the dream.
Until this day, I could still do that
as long as I know I'm dreaming.
If I don't know I'm dreaming,
then I mean, I am totally at the mercy of it.
Yeah, I had a funny one,
which was like, is super ridiculous
because I've been startled sometimes.
My little weener dog, like like will bark it's like so loud
I know it's like
And like I like like startled me you know like he's he's louder even then my whimer ainer and
So I had this dream where I was like petty game and everything and then he looks up at me and he's like
Ruh, I turn to this like demon dog and like I literally like jumped like in my bed out of sleep and I woke up
And I was like this is so stupid. Dan of like scared my
winners. Yeah, Jessica. Hey somebody needs to please, who's a listener right now.
He's to take that 30 second. My little winner. He says little
winner stroking himself and then he says what did you just say that last
bit? I mean, yeah, you could just cut that up right there.
Yes, please. Jessica's had dreams where I was like flirting
with a girl or whatever and she'll realize
as a dream, but she's still mad at me.
Like the feelings are still there, I could tell.
Like you're still mad at me because of that dream,
aren't you?
Yeah, right.
I really have to.
You get that, Sothe.
You were messing around on me.
Well, okay, I'm gonna make a statement
that I'm gonna stand behind, okay?
Hip thrust or stupid?
Bottom line. Not the exercise itself, I'm gonna stand behind, okay? Hip thrust or stupid? Bottom line.
Not the exercise itself, I think they're valuable, okay?
But I think it's really stupid
when people post their hip thrust PRs.
And here's why.
I literally never happen.
Who do you guys fall?
Oh, dude, people do it all the time.
Oh my God.
It reminds you of a leg press.
I think it's because you can add a lot of weight to it,
looks impressive.
So you wanna show everybody how much you can hip thrust.
I never hip thrust.
And today I was doing five plates on it,
like whatever, if I wanted to, I could've gone probably higher.
It's one of those exercises.
I don't understand why people brag about it.
You know, they wanna post their lift.
It's not a squat deadlift or bench or overhead press.
I don't know if it's really that impressive.
Yeah, be great if like,
because you used to see that with leg press a lot.
The guys would like just like sit on top of it. And then yeah, that's hilarious if they did
that on your lap. Yeah. Yeah.
I can't wait. Yeah. Hey, and just for a power. Come on over. Look at how a little strong I am.
Justin, you sit on my hips, Adam. You sit on Justin's hips. I'll do six reps.
Oh, yeah. Real fast drinks. How we know when you're done?
You'll know.
You'll know.
I was listening to actually,
Brett Contreras just had someone interviewed him
and he was talking about,
he did an experiment where he,
no squatting, no dead lifting,
and all he did was hip thrust and like other auxiliary work
and was able to grow his glutes
and actually even increases strength in his squat.
Okay, now yeah, all just interesting.
All jokes are very interesting.
Very interesting.
Very interesting.
The carryover, just I'll speak to deadlift, right?
The carryover of squats and hip thrust to deadlifts
is dramatic, that's true.
My deadlift will go up if my squat or my hip thrust goes up.
That's not true with other exercises necessarily.
So there is a huge carryover.
I haven't yet seen if the hip thrust influences my squat.
I'm assuming it does, but to deadlift for sure.
If I add just a little bit to my squat,
and like I said, I just started messing around
with hip thrust, I can feel it in my deadlift.
I can, in fact, yesterday I pulled a weight,
I hadn't pulled a long time, it felt very easy.
And it's because I feel like it's
because of the squat and the hip thrust.
Well, mechanically, the hip thrust and the deadlift
are actually more similar than you would think.
Yes.
I mean, it's very what you're loading
and then the power of driving the hips forward,
that's one of the biggest or the easiest like critiques
that I can help somebody when I watch someone deadlift,
is they're lifting the weight up
versus thrusting the hips forward
and using it like a lever.
I mean, how often do you see that?
When you teach a deadlift at the beginning,
it's natural to think you're picking the bar.
Right, right, right.
And so you kind of like squat the bar up and down.
Push your feet through the floor.
Yeah, exactly, versus getting yourself with all that tension
and then thrusting the hips forward,
you'll get so much more weight up,
which that's your directly training that
when you're in the hip thrust.
I mean, that's what you're working on.
Yeah, I can't wait till,
and I know we got that platform coming, and I don't know when
it's going to get here, but I can't wait till we get it. This one, you can put bands
on the sides. And then do bat band dead lifts, banded dead lifts where you have a heavy weight
and you add a band. Oh, it's, it chains are great too, but chains just feel rougher on
the body. Bands, I feel like I could do them all the time. Well, chains suck for deadlifting
because when you come down with the plates,
you hit the chains.
I did that yesterday.
Yeah, that's annoying.
That's why I never do that.
I've done it a handful times.
No, I think it's because the chains are too heavy for it.
Oh, so it's just a little too much.
I usually think chains, that's why.
Yeah, that is shit.
These little doggleys chains.
No, I used to, I used to,
I used to, I used to,
I used to, I used to,
I used to, I used to,
I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, I used to, He's a necklace like three hours. He just come in with them on. Yeah.
What are you doing today?
Yeah, but I'm out of it.
Dude, I'll tell you guys something though.
There's an hour of my life, I'll never get back.
I try to do a little bit of research
because Adam's really good about finding trends
and things people are watching and doing
and all this nonsense and so I'm like, all right,
I'll do this, I'll do the work for us here, right?
So I watched that like, was it called,
not free Britney, but it's called something like that.
Is it the documentary on Britney Spears?
Yes, that's the one Adam loved.
I watched it.
It was terrible, dude.
It was not terrible.
Adam loved Britney.
He was raving about that.
What?
Seriously, like what value did you get from that?
David Frieder, sorry for her.
Didn't you hear what happened? Didn't you hear what happened in the fear? They even say, sorry for her. Didn't you hear what happened?
Didn't you hear what happened in the news?
Yeah, well they freed her from, okay, so.
It worked.
Wait, hold on a second.
Can you guys tell me the backstory?
Okay, from what?
Was she in jail?
No, no, her dad has it.
What's it called, Doug?
What's it called when your parents have control
of all your finances?
And they normally do it for somebody who's got what?
The server to your ship.
The server to your ship.
Okay, so her dad has all control of her stuff.
Right.
And has had that forever.
And the idea, you're supposed to do that when someone isn't like,
when they're not 18.
No, you're not mentally fit.
Yeah, when they're not mentally fit to make their own financial decisions
or they're under 18 years old.
Obviously, she's neither, and not in either one of those situations,
but still he's been able to keep.
I don't know, they're mentally fit parts a little questionable though.
Well, come on, how much do you really follow Brittany
and you know that?
The girls been producing music and stuff like that.
Yeah, at this point, I mean, I think she had a mental breakdown.
My point is though, because of the documentary,
it went so viral that she got enough support
and they, they, so did this, this happened after,
because I don't, I don't remember that part in the documentary.
No, it's, I'm saying it, yeah.
The documentary happened, this just happened,
that was the cause of the fact.
This just happened like a week ago.
Okay.
So that's interesting.
The documentary itself was not interesting.
Oh yeah, it was okay documentary.
It was a long time.
It was just like whatever.
You're going through like,
and I get it because you know,
Princess Diana, all that stuff,
like where you're getting followed by paparazzi.
Like she was just getting bombarded like constantly.
And it's like, of course course that's gonna make anybody,
you know, a little bit mental.
Oh my God, that would suck.
Well, no, as a kid too.
So I was a big fan of her as a kid, right?
And the reason why I like the documentaries
because a lot of people don't realize how much she got trashed,
dude, like they just, that poor girl, dude,
when she got, and that's a poor Brittany,
she's rich, like dude, not worth it. She was a goody good that poor girl, dude, when she got and that's a poor Britney. She's rich like dude. Not what she was a goody goody little girl
Virgin girl coming off Disney gets all this fame and everybody just wanted a rip girl. They were all shit on her. Oh, yeah
That would never you would never see that today today. I mean the social justice police would just just tear up anybody that treated her the way
They did but it made headlines and so and they her popularity was so big that what's the, what's the famous magazine
that inquirer and also, oh, man, they were just making month, they made more money off
of Britney Spears and that like, that's what it was.
There was a massive industry there where they're like, oh my god, like we could sell just
by following around and pestering her and destroying her name.
Did you have you guys heard that there's a strategy that people are doing now
when they're getting followed by paparazzi to prevent videos from getting posted
where they're getting videotaped, they'll play a popular song,
real loud, loud enough for the cameras to pick it up.
They can't post it now on YouTube or whatever because of copyright.
That's smart. Have you guys heard this?
No, I have no.
Yeah, so like you're getting film right now.
And you're like, ah, fuck, I don't want to see.
You just play real loud a very popular song.
And they can't post it now because the song is on
in the background.
Bro, that's brilliant.
Is that true?
Yeah, or the whole, definitely.
We'll have to post it on mute because they can't post
the sound because of that.
Yeah, I guess that's the only thing though.
Like if you're getting film from a distance from
like paparazzi, is it really what you're saying
that they're really capturing and putting on there?
Is it more like what you're doing that they're getting?
Normally those things, like so they don't really destroy,
like they take a photo, they don't even need video,
they take a photo of you, and then they draw
their own conclusion with a rock.
It's not even still an industry, is my question.
Well, it is.
Oh, right.
Like, can you be, are they falling around now
that has any relevance?
You know, because that used to be a big thing
was like following the A-list stars
and like getting them when they're fat.
Well, and you know what though,
you might have a point there Justin,
because now a lot of the celebrities
are posting insignificant.
I'm not just that.
They're posting, I'm talking about like celebrities today, right?
You, they're all new media.
Yeah.
YouTube, Instagram, whatever.
They're posting stuff so often that how valuable yeah how valuable is a paparazzi going to be filming you doing something
that you just posted on Instagram. Yeah well no they catch the stuff that you don't post. That's what
makes it go viral is that they catch you like that vegan that one vegan influencer. Yeah they catch
they catch somebody who post these pretty pictures themselves all time. They catch them coming out
of you know like some a doctor appointment and their bellies hanging over there.
I mean, that's so gross.
That's what they're famous for is and they,
and that documentary highlights,
and I don't know anybody personally.
I don't know anybody who they did that to worst
in Britney Spears.
Yeah, Michael Jackson got a lot of love there.
He got, I mean, since he was a kid,
yeah, he got destroyed. It's, I mean, since he was a kid, he got destroyed.
It's, I wouldn't wish that upon anybody.
These paparazzi have these crazy cameras.
They, you know, these celebrities go on vacation.
And they'll be across the, you know, miles away.
Look at the size of that camera.
Miles away, zooming in on you,
and you're in your private balcony or whatever,
and they're taking pictures.
Oh, look at the title of the article,
is the golden years of paparazzi have mostly gone.
See, I agree with that because people post themselves
so much that there's not so much value, right?
And like there was before.
See, I don't agree with that.
I think that there's still a huge market
to take somebody like Kim Kardashian
who posts all these perfect photos of herself
is to catch her when she's not and then to post it on
Inquire out of the plastic surgery. Yes. Yes. Or that right or like buss and her out saying like oh she's not exercising
She's just getting lipo every other week, you know, what does that say Doug?
You can you can you give us a synopsis of why it thinks it's over?
I can't have read the article. Okay. Well, what I mean, which seems like what you said,
you know, it's becoming more difficult to get these shots
when everybody else is posting them by themselves.
Yeah, see, that's what I'll figure.
Look at this, at the at the gold rush peak
an exclusive picture would typically fetch five to 15,000 dollars.
I bet you it's in the hundreds now.
I bet you make nothing compared to what you used to make before.
Yeah, I mean, I and plus like you said the the celebrities that are different now, you know,
I'm saying like less people care about Britney Spears, some pop star right now and they care more about some famous YouTube
Yeah, well then the YouTube ones what they do is they stage all these like you know crazy events and things just to get views
You know, and it's like do you did you really catch them or did they stage the whole thing just to get views. You know, and it's like, did you really catch them
or did they stage the whole thing just to get clicks?
I would guess too.
Part of that is just, I mean, these guys,
the paparazzi have not evolved their business.
I think there'd still be big business
in people going exposing all these Instagram people
that have millions of followers
and they put a facade on of looking
and doing a certain thing.
And do they have just like the example?
Yeah, that'd be interesting.
Yeah, it's just, the business is different now.
Now it's not about Tom Cruise, you know,
out on the beach with some other girl besides his wife
and she like that, that's not as popular anymore,
but find somebody who is a fitness celebrity
who's got four million followers.
Smoke and cigarettes.
Smoke and cigarettes are catching them at Burger King
or something like that.
I guarantee that would get attention.
Again, I remember the vegan.
There was a vegan influence.
Yeah.
You got caught eating meat and it just blew up.
Right, right.
So the business still exists.
I think it's just evolved and changed.
It's different.
Hey, I read something yesterday, blew my mind.
Something that I believed to be true since I was a kid that apparently they've tested
and is false.
So I'm gonna ask you guys, I'm gonna ask you guys a question.
I know what you're gonna say.
Back in the day when the Nintendo first came out,
the NES, right?
The original Nintendo.
You put in the game cartridge, you hit power,
it's not working properly, what did you do?
You take it out, you blow on it, you take an eraser,
you know, you clean it, then you blow it again.
Yeah, you wedged it a bunch of times.
None of that works.
So they did a study.
No, that's bullshit.
Hell yes, it works.
No, they did a study and they said for me,
they said just pulling it out and putting it in
without blowing on it gives you the same or better odds
of it working than blowing in it.
So they said blowing in it was just,
that's what we know.
No way, no way. That's what they said. No, I call it was just, that's what we know. No, we're all the dumb, no way.
That's what they said.
It's just like, I call bullshit.
That's what they said, dude.
No way.
Yes, because if you pull it out and put it in,
they're saying, they did the studies on these games
and they said pulling it out, putting it back in
gives you the same or better odds than blowing it.
Why are you gonna do the study?
Huh?
Why would they do the study?
Why ruin my childhood?
That was wrong with you.
Yeah, like why? My, my theory is my theory is cuz I don't remember how you guys
But we had a tons of like little Nintendo games and they would be laying out on the carpet and sitting there
So I would think that it's cuz it would collect all this dust on the on the little ship
Yeah, it was logical and then you blew on it. It's funny to just instead the eraser
I remember when everybody thought that to do that
I never I never did the eraser. Well, I felt like there was part of it
like turned color a little bit
and like the eraser kind of brought it back
to like a shiny form, which was totally just,
who knows, like some broad size work for us was that
you blow in it and then you actually don't put it
all the way in, you smash and wedge it in.
Oh yeah.
So that would always get it to work.
Yeah, you just gonna push it and you send it.
So you know what's funny about this?
This is before the internet.
How the hell did that spread worldwide?
Everybody knows that.
Every kid in school.
Nobody read that anywhere.
Every kid in school.
Isn't that strange?
I don't read any of that stuff, but that's what we talked about.
Yeah, and we talked about all the little secret things
you'd find or like how to warp to different levels.
Like you didn't even know,
like you had to talk and figure that out.
You did, man.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, that's a funny thing.
So any responses on our new sponsor element,
because I'm getting tons and tons of DMs on that stuff,
and I have some personal experience.
Yeah, it's interesting too,
because I posted and I put like some of the chocolate salt
in with coffee and like, oh wow, this is a thing.
This is amazing.
And I look and they have examples of a ton of people doing this.
This is really is like it turned into a thing.
Well, it's bomb.
Yeah.
So now I'm on, I've done it for at least over a week now.
Yeah.
So are you noticing a difference in your performance?
I do.
You know what I actually noticed?
I noticed my energy.
Yep.
I noticed energy going into the workout.
It gives me a similar feeling,
it's similar as in the energy towards a workout
as a pre workout without that caffeinated,
like, you know, a jeery.
Yeah, I mean, Rob Wolf explained it well
and our podcast is if you don't eat,
first of all, if you exercise your sodium requirements
are much higher than someone else's.
And then if you don't eat a lot of heavily processed foods,
you need to probably add sodium to your diet.
I used to do this with my endurance clients.
When I would have endurance clients
who would do lots of running and cycling,
I used to have them add Himalayan salt to their water
and they would notice improvements in performance.
So it makes perfect sense.
Of course, I told, I was the first one to use it
and I noticed I had a better pump when I worked out. And then Jessica, remember, remember we did on
podcast and he said that for breastfeeding women will make more milk. They could drink
tons of water and sometimes still not produce more milk because they don't have the right
balance of electrolytes and it's usually sodium that they need, right? So I've been giving
it to Jessica and she's been drinking it daily. Definitely increased her milk production.
And she's has a tendency to go get lightheaded a little bit, like have low blood pressure.
So if she's like down on the floor, she stands up real quick, sometimes she'll get a little
dizzy.
And it's not a emergency, like, you know, bad thing, but it's definitely something that she
feels since she's been drinking an element.
No, not nearly as much as before.
And it was getting bad because of the breastfeeding, I feel like it.
What's, what I find fascinating about that is that
they reached out quite some time ago.
And we were all like, nah.
I was like, I'll let you know.
I don't really know how to pitch this.
Nah, yeah, all of us were totally not about it at all.
No, it was sitting in here for weeks,
maybe a month or longer.
Oh, it was longer than that.
And I remember I was gonna work out and I said,
and it's, you know, this is, what was it?
It was like, you know, pink lemonade flavor or something like that.
I'll just add it to my water while I work out.
And I had a great workout.
And I was like, this is interesting.
And then I looked a little deeper.
I'm like, oh, this is got a thousand milligrams of sodium.
I don't know any electrolyte supplement
that has a thousand milligrams of sodium in it.
It's usually, it's off.
And it worked.
And then, you know, talking to Rob Wolf makes perfect sense.
Yeah, I mean, after that interview you do with Rob Wolf,
that sold me on at least trying it.
And then I did, you know, and the first couple,
I didn't want to speak about it until I've done it for a while.
And yeah, it's been pretty consistent.
I noticed I feel pretty workout.
And so now, what's your thoughts?
Is that mean for someone like me?
Is that because I'm potentially under-consuming that much?
Because you know what?
What I thought about too is like back when I was,
before I was competing and just trying to get big, right?
As a young 25 year old kid,
I mean, I was eating a lot of fast food in my diet.
So I was probably getting.
Your sodium was fine.
So I was probably getting a lot more sodium back then
than what I do now.
I eat way cleaner today than when I did back then.
Now I salt and season all my foods,
but that is what I know is that's nothing in comparison
to one fast food meal.
One fast food meal is equivalent to like five,
like the whole foods that have been salted like crazy.
Correct.
And back then when I was in my 20s,
I was eating fast food every day.
Every day I was eating out somewhere.
And the lesser carbs are the more sodium you probably need.
In fact, the keto-
That's the other thing, much lower on carbs.
Yeah, like, oh, I feel crappy because I'm on keto
and you have low carb.
A lot of times, like, bump your sodium
and then see how you feel.
So, it's one of those things.
Here's the other thing, too, because of the way it's made,
and has a nice mouth feel.
I don't know if you guys noticed.
You know what you drink Gatorade,
and it's got that like soft mouth feel?
Element does that.
Have you guys noticed that when you drink it,
it gives you that kind of soft mouth feel.
It's a nice, it's a, it's a,
it's a, they knocked it out of the park.
And again, this was not a product that I thought
we would work with.
No, no, we were, I think we were against it at first.
I was not a fan at all.
Yeah, I'm so, no, they, they totally we were against it at first. I was not a fan at all. It's all, no, they totally killed it.
Hey, one more thing I want to bring up that I think
is an interesting thing to talk to the audience about
in terms of fitness is, you know, oftentimes
when we think about programming our workouts,
we don't think about the common muscles
that tend to work together or the common pairs
that work together and maybe switch that up a little.
So I'll give you an example, right? When you work out your chest, you more often than not, that tend to work together or the common pairs that work together and maybe switch that up a little.
So I'll give you an example, right?
When you work out your chest, you more often than not also tend to activate your triceps,
right?
It's involved in all the pressing movements for your chest and in shoulders.
So those are the pairs that you tend to work out quite a bit when you do chest.
When you do a fly, now you're doing bicep paired with chest.
And so it's an interesting thing to think about,
can I pair different muscle groups together
to hit this target area,
and is that gonna affect my body differently?
And I believe that that's true.
And then if we go to back, back is usually with biceps.
Pull over is with triceps.
Absolutely, a dumbbell pullover is tricep and back,
which most back exercises are bicep and back.
So just something else to think about
when you're putting your words,
you can always think about this.
I don't know, I mean,
and I don't know when I started to,
like, I don't know,
put a lot of energy around changing my exercises
based off of this, but that's a lot of times
what will dictate what chest exercise I decide to do.
So for example, if I did arms the day before, two days before,
or whatever, and my biceps are totally sore, that might did arms the day before, two days before, whatever, and
my biceps are totally sore, that might not be a day that I do fly stuff.
Oh, I see.
So I might not do it because there are already fatigued from that, and I might do more pressing
things that incorporate more trisub work. And the same thing goes for on back day. If
back day, I've got my biceps are really sore, but my triceps are not, then that's where
I might include pullovers in there. So I always try and pay attention to all my secondary muscles
are sore from training maybe a workout before,
two workouts before, and then altering
what exercises I choose to do in the workout
that would incorporate the opposing way.
Yeah, speaking of pullovers,
I think that's still one of the most underrated exercises
I really do.
It's such a valuable exercise that a lot of people
simply don't do, and there's not too many movements that move in that particular point of motion.
Very unique. And it's great for shoulder mobility. It's a bodybuilding movement that's phenomenal
for shoulder mobility and a great lat developer. Especially if you get good at it and you get
strong at it. And if you mess around like a barbell version, you're going to develop your lats as an isolation movement, almost like a compound movement. I found pullovers are
more like a compound movement in terms of the development than they are like an isolation.
It was a staple movement for me with clients. All clients, no matter what your goal is,
just because of the benefits for shoulder mobility. Because that, one of the first things you see
that goes with age is the client's ability to lift their arms all the way above their head. So by doing an
exercise like that that promotes that beyond that and keeping them doing that as
they age I think is such it should be a staple exercise in most people's
routines given you have the ability to do that right I mean obviously if I'm
dealing with someone who has an injury in their shoulder and they can't do the
movement then we want to work towards it
But if you have healthy enough shoulders to do a pullover, I think it's an exercise that you should always remain in your routine.
Totally. Have you guys heard of this? Have you guys got any DMs about this weight loss drug study that came out that showed the most effective weight loss drug ever?
Is that? What's that guy that you've gone back and forth with a couple times on Instagram,
blonde doctor, doctor, starts with an N, you know who he is.
He, you jabbed him like years ago, two or three years ago.
He's a good guy, right?
Like, I have nothing bad to say about him.
Most his content, I think we agree with
and like what he puts out there.
He's got mutual friends with Lane and buddies of all.
Oh, I know, timeout.
Dr. Nidals, Nidals, Nidals, Nidals.
Something like that.
Something like that.
Something like that.
Nice guy.
Good guy.
Yeah.
He just promoted it.
He's promoting some fat loss supplement right now.
This is not a supplement.
This is a drug.
So it's not something that you can buy over the counter.
But it is fascinating.
So what are the mechanisms?
Well, the drug is called semaglutides, S-E-M-A-G-L-U-T-I-D-E. And when they did this study,
they found that people who used this drug,
who they gave this drug to,
35% of them who took the drug
lost more than one fifth of their total body weight.
Now, everybody else who took it,
maybe didn't lose that much, but also lost weight.
What it would sound, say the name again.
Some agglutides.
This is it. He wrote a whole post on it. Okay, but it's not a supplement. You can't. No, out, say the name again? Some agglutide. This is it.
He did a whole post on it.
Okay, but it's not a supplement.
You can't.
No, no, it's a drug.
You're right.
When I looked at it, it said it's a drug.
Yeah.
So he did.
He just posts about it.
So the way it works is it changes people's behavior.
So it makes them not eat nearly as much.
So it's very, very interesting substance.
More like an appetite suppressor.
Some what?
Some what? Some what?
And I know that it mimics, I can't remember what hormone or how it works.
It hijacks, this is what, this is according to science daily.
It hijacks the body's own appetite regulating system in the brain, leading to reduced hunger
and caloric intake or calorie intake.
So for all intents and purposes, you know, and I don't know what the potential side effects
are or what can happen to somebody. So for all intents and purposes, you know, and I don't know what the potential side effects are,
what can happen to somebody,
but this would be a very effective drug
because you just don't have to do anything.
You give it to someone and then they eat less
as a result of it and people are apparently
what you're doing.
It was internally, like they're,
they're just a mindset towards it is different.
Yep, my concern with that would be,
what happens afterwards?
I'm sure, right back, you're right back. Right. I mean, so you use this drug to get you to not be hungry all
time. And then you go, we get off because you get your goal. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Then what happens?
And you're- Does this affect your hormones? Yeah. Well, okay. So it mim- it's a- it's a- the
compound is structurally similar. And mimics the human gluc- glucajon like peptide one. So GLP one hormone, which is released into the blood
from the gut after meals, right?
So it basically could be tricking the body
or the brain into thinking you just ate.
You see what I'm saying?
So your appetite now is reduced.
So you're satisfied more.
Very interesting, right?
Now of course, okay, you might eat less,
but does that mean you're going to still make better choices?
Are you still choosing the right macros?
Well, and then the thing that we always talk about, you just had, we had a conversation with somebody who lost what, a 50 or a hundred pounds on our, our live Q&A the other day.
And, you know, are you dealing with the root cause?
Right. That got you there.
Right. And that's a very good point, because I've worked with gastric bypass people. And when you get gastric bypass surgery, you know, they, they, they, you can't eat a
bunch there. Yeah, they make your stomach the size of a thumb, right? So you're, you're forced,
it's physically really hard. And it cram it in there. And if you look at the studies on people with
gastric bypass, the drug abuse rate, the, you know, the abuse rate of other substances goes through the roof.
Why?
Because their favorite drug of choice
has been taken from-
No, longer available.
Right, so like if you take an alcoholic
and you just snapped your fingers
and now alcohol didn't exist in the world.
Or no, or better yet, made alcohol toxic to him
and he hates it and it's poison.
So they would likely, many of them would find something else
to self-remedicate with.
That's a very good point.
So like, oh, I lost weight, but now I smoke cigarettes
or I gamble or the behaviors
would that look like going into it?
You aren't still depressed or whatever.
So very, very interesting.
Yeah, no, I mean, that's the problem I have with all these,
these all these things that are coming out is that,
and here's where I understand, right?
And I've had these clients, like if it's life or death,
I've got somebody who's 300 and something,
pushing 400 pounds, doctors like you got less than five years
to live if you don't get 100 to 200 pounds of this off of you,
doing interventions like that to save that person's life,
I 100% agree with it.
That's more important, like at this moment,
this is extreme, we gotta do this,
we're gonna take drastic measures in that one. Yeah, yeah, and then. Like at this moment, this is extreme. Let's, we gotta do this. We're gonna take drastic measures.
Yeah, yeah, and then honestly, at this point,
we don't have time to do the therapy,
years of therapy that's probably gonna take
to get to the root cause of what got you here.
But let's save your life right now.
And then then let's go talk about how we can do that.
So I understand it for those cases,
but that's a much smaller percentage than the majority
of people that will reach out and try and use a drug like this in my opinion.
I had a client once,
this was so frustrating, heartbreaking as a trainer
because you can only help someone
who wants to help themselves.
No matter how good you are, what your information is,
how good your intentions are, how passionate you are,
if the person doesn't wanna help themselves,
there's not a damn thing you can do.
And I remember I had a client once who hired me because the doctor said they had to lose
60 pounds in order to qualify for gastric bypass surgery.
So I thought, well, I'm going to get this person to lose 60 pounds and I'm going to show
them that they could do this on their own and we're going to work on all these behaviors.
And they're never, and then they're going to decide not to get out of my goal.
They're going to decide they don't need the gastric bypass because we're going to do
it the right way.
Not what happened, they lost the weight with me,
they did bad stuff with the diet that I couldn't control,
got the gastric bypass, and then the next thing I heard,
years later, is they gained a lot of the weight back
because they actually were able to stretch out
the small little stomach that the doctor had created.
Well, I've told you guys stories of people
that would try and hire me to add weight
so they could qualify.
That one's even crazier.
That blew my mind.
They weren't heavy enough.
Yes, because we were right across the street from the Kaiser, Sanitrisso over there.
They do have a gastric problem.
Yeah, they do.
They have one of the bigger ones in the state right there.
So I'd get a lot of them that would come through.
And then I'd get somebody who's like at 200 pounds.
And they're like, oh, I need to be at least 250 in order to qualify for that.
And then can you help me gain weight
to qualify for the catch?
I would also worry too.
To with a drug like this of, yeah, the abuse of it.
Like somebody that's like not really that obese or,
you know, and they're just like finding a way
to get access to this drug and just keep,
you know, like reiterating, you know,
a problem that they have and like take it to a degree that's like, you know what like, reiterating, you know, a problem that they have
and like, take it to a degree that's like, you know what?
I wonder if it's already like circulating.
Models and the bodybuilding.
Bodybuilding, I wonder if it's already circulating the body,
they're always the first to experiment
with crazy new cutting edge drugs.
Absolutely.
I bet you, if you searched on some of the forums
that it might be a tool that they're using for cutting, right?
Yeah, my, oh, what's part of your 12 week prep?
Well, I take this steroid, I take this growth hormone,
I take some of this insulin,
and then I take this drug that makes me not eat.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
Wow.
I could see that.
Yeah, wow, interesting.
Okay, so we talked about element.
You guys tried that.
I got another supplement I want you guys to try
from one of our other partners.
So I'm gonna start giving it to you guys
before your workouts.
It's Paleo Valley's Neuro effect.
So I'm gonna give you guys that because
you guys typically do caffeine before your workout, right? So coffee or pre-workout or
whatever. Take this in conjunction with it. I've been experiments in one of their newer
products. One of their products we haven't talked too much about. I've been experimenting
with it and I've been taking it along with caffeine before my workout and I can definitely
tell the times I take it versus the times what is in it that you like. So I'm going to
read, I'll read some of the ingredients
just for the audience so they can kind of,
so lion's mane is in there, quarter steps is in there.
Okay, this is stuff you've talked about before.
Yes, Ray Shee, there's turkey tail, so it should talk you.
So when I take this, and then there's neurofactor in there,
which is this whole fruit extract from coffee
that's got this, something in that raises
with called BDNF
in the brain, brain derived, no tropic factor.
It's like this, it's like miracle grow for the brain, it's how they, what they've called
it.
So I'll take four of these capsules with my caffeine pre-workout and I've been alternating
workouts with it and without it just to see if I notice a difference.
What I notice is a smoother, more consistent kind of stimul stimulant effect, and I don't get the crash afterwards.
It reminds me of when I added theinein
to caffeine for the first time.
So you've been talking about these mushrooms
for a long time, and you've used them,
and I've just just the one who didn't like the powdery taste.
So the fact that they have this in pill form.
This is capsule form.
I can get down with that.
Yeah, so you take four of these,
take it in the morning before you work out.
Hour, half hour, hour.
So you say, same time you take your caffeine.
Or if you guys don't time you take your caffeine. Okay.
Or if you guys don't like the crash of caffeine,
wait till you start to come down,
then take this and then see if you notice anything.
Oh, interesting.
But they won me over.
It's actually a pretty damn good product.
No crash from it or anything?
No.
And it's not stimulant.
So if you take it by itself,
you're not gonna feel like you had.
Just more focused in your workouts.
You just, exactly.
It's a great combination with in your workouts. Exactly.
It's a great combination with caffeine so far.
And I did it again this morning and it's legit.
They did a good job.
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Alright, our first color is Spencer from Oklahoma.
Hey, what's up Spencer?
How can we help you?
Hey, what's up guys, how can we help you?
Hey, what's up guys, how are y'all doing?
Good, good man.
I was like, I guess I kind of have a three stage question
regarding programming for workouts.
So I'm currently running anabolic performance in aesthetic
and I have about two weeks left of aesthetic.
And when I finish aesthetic, I'm gonna be about eight weeks away from our babies due date.
So we're having our first baby in eight weeks.
So my question, my three-stage question is,
the first stage is, how should I maximize
those eight weeks of where the baby comes
those hardest strength gains?
And then how can I transition from post-baby
and up to jumping in the paralytic
because I really wanted to do power lift,
I wanna finish the aesthetic,
but I would hate to start it
and then no eight weeks later the baby comes
and it all just kinda gets interrupted.
This first baby?
First baby.
Okay.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
Yeah, so a couple of things, first off, so you've already been working out for a little while following the maps programs. By the way, how how have you what's your experience been? How have your results been?
Always been fantastic. My weight itself has not changed a lot, but I can definitely tell that it's kind of moving into more, no, my muscles are definitely gotten bigger and stronger.
Awesome. Good body composition change. That's one of the best things to accomplish with a good workout program. No, my muscles are definitely gotten bigger and stronger. Awesome. Good body composition change. That's that's one of the best things to
accomplish with a good workout program. Okay. So here's the deal. So your first
kid, you have no idea what to expect. So we're all dads so we can kind of clue
you in a little bit. I think it's a good idea to start power lift when you're
done with aesthetic and go ahead and follow that program to your baby's
born. After that, it's all up in the air, right? So it's very unpredictable. You're probably going to
lose a lot of sleep, depending on the baby, it can be challenging, whatever. At that point, really,
the best advice I can give you is to treat exercise as a way to improve your health and quality of
life. Now, what does that mean? Well, it could mean that you only work out a couple days a week, or if things are easy,
it could mean that you're not really skipping a beat.
But really, there is no set and stone strategy
because it can be quite unpredictable with a newborn.
So really, it's gonna be about your attitude going into it.
Don't worry about losing your gains and all that stuff
because if stuff gets crazy, you're losing sleep. Of course, you're going to take a few steps back with your fitness.
But when things normalize, you'll get back very, very quickly. But really the best thing
to do, use your workouts as a way to improve your health during that period of time, which
again, may mean that you're not working out that much.
Yeah. Get all your heavy lifting in now, man. That's my suggestion.
I honestly, I think that,
I think you could stay the course as far as like
what your plan was, which is, you know,
moving on to power lift after this.
I personally, the first few weeks for me,
it got harder later on.
I don't know if you remember,
South, for you, because you just went through
at the most recent,
but I was actually still pretty consistent
the first couple of weeks.
It was more like around weeks four or five years.
Because all I do is sleep the first time.
Yeah, at the beginning, they were just attached to mom so much and sleeping constantly.
There's not much dad gets to do to really help and support that much.
It really started kicking about a month later.
So actually, even the good first three, four weeks, I felt like I had kept my rhythm that
I had going into it.
It was after that where it got a little crazy.
And my recommendation would be to, again, follow Power Lift as it just right afterwards
as plan.
Maybe you get a little bit further than you expect on it.
And even if you don't, then the transition for me would be down to a program more like
Anabalc, where Anabalc is programmed to where you only need to lift two to three times
a week to kind of maintain the programming
in there and be fine, it's full body.
So if you miss one day of the week, it's not a big deal.
You're still touching all the body parts.
If you have a really bad night's sleep in the next day,
you're lifting, you can just scale back on the intensity
and don't go really heavy.
So I find anabolic is one of the best programs to run
when your schedule is kind of up in the air like that because I think you'll suffer the lease by missing a day or
two running that type of a program. So that would be my suggestion. Although there's, you
know, we have no idea what it's going to look like for you because everybody it's different
experience.
Yeah. You're in for the most amazing and challenging ride of your life. So it's hard
to explain. Once you go through it, you'll know what I'm talking about. One more thing I'd like to add is you may want to,
and this isn't gonna be a huge game changer,
but if you're diet's good,
and you're doing a good job by modifying your workouts
based on maybe lack of sleep or whatever,
you can also look into adaptogenic supplements
that can help your body deal with increases in stress.
A good one is ashwaganda.
It's a great supplement to take
when maybe sleep isn't great
when you're a little stressed out
because there's a bunch of new stuff happening.
So that might be another thing
that you can add to your strategy.
Again, it's not gonna fix everything by itself.
It's not as impactful as diet, sleep,
and proper, you know, properly applied exercises.
But if those things are good,
throwing some ashwagandha into the mix
might help your body deal with the lack of sleep
and the increased stress.
Okay.
All right, there you go, man.
Hey, congratulations, brother.
Yeah, enjoy.
Thank you, guys.
Awesome.
You can hear the, the like, you know, in his voice.
I don't know what's gonna happen. What's hear the, the like, you know, in his voice, I don't know what's going to happen.
What's going to happen, guys?
And it's so hard to give someone that advice right now.
We have eight weeks till it happens and every household's different.
Like, I have no idea how much of the responsibility will fall on him.
I know all of our experiences have been different.
So, you know, I know people that have maintained their work.
That's their way they keep their sanity is being able to check out for an hour and go work out
and they don't miss anything work out wise. And then I know other people that are trashed from
no sleep and they're lucky to train one day a week. So, you know, you have no idea what it's going
to be like. And then also, what kind of baby you have? Some people are just are blessed to get a baby
who sleeps really early on and they don't get crushed
like some other people, then you have the opposite.
You got a colloquy baby that's constantly screaming
and crying and you never know what this person's gonna get.
So it's really tough to try and predict that
and then coach you now eight weeks early.
Yeah, my kids are party animal, kid.
Doesn't want to sleep.
It just wants to be awake all the time.
Yeah, I mean, I would say that, but the majority speaking,
they're not gonna get as much sleep as they did before.
It's just not gonna happen.
They're gonna be stressed out because of like,
you know, putting fires out of, you know,
whatever they have to do to try and help out,
it's just gonna come to the forefront,
so your priorities are gonna shift.
Yeah, exactly.
I was just gonna say, like, it's also very difficult
to predict how it changes his view of things.
I've known people who were, with their workouts,
where everything.
And then they had a baby.
And now you have this human that you need to take care of.
And it's just not important anymore
to be so fanatical about your workouts
when you've got this thing that you love more
than anything in the world.
So it does change a lot.
And again, it's this first kid, when it's your first kid.
And I remember this was my first kid.
And I also, I saw this with Jessica with her first kid,
which is my third, is it's so new that
the unexpected plays a huge role.
It's like I remember with my first,
you're in the hospital, baby's born,
that first couple days, the nurse helps you,
does the thing, whatever.
And then they're like, you know, you leave.
All right, see you later.
I'm on my own now with the human, you know?
And that is a big shock to the system
when it's your first time.
Our next caller is Jacqueline from Washington.
Hey Jacqueline, how can we help you?
Hi, real quick.
I just wanna say thank you so much
to all of you just for providing
such incredible content.
You all have just deeply impacted my health
and wellness more than you can imagine. So thank you.
Oh, thank you for your attention.
My question is, so I've been training consistently for about four or five years, except for some part of COVID.
But when I say consistently, I mean that I've been training my legs consistently because that's where I have a harder time.
Just gaining muscle mass on my lower body.
And so I definitely prioritize my leg days.
I take my upper body maybe once or twice a month
and actually feel really happy.
That's a weird part.
Like I feel really happy with the amount of muscle mass
that I have on my upper body,
but less happy with my strength.
So I know I need to be more consistent
with my upper body training,
but because I know how easily I gain mass on my upper body,
I feel like I have a better word intimidated because I don't want to get too bulky and I hate thored bulky.
But so have you ever helped anybody kind of get past that mental hurdle?
And if you have what helped?
Yeah, no, it's actually super common.
It is, that's a great question. So with women, you'll see, I don't want to work out my shoulders,
I don't want to work out my back or my chest with guys,
you'll see I don't want to work out my legs because I don't care.
I'm going to ask you a question, Jacqueline.
So I'd like you to be totally honest.
What is the number one motivation for you working out?
Is it just the way you look?
Because I hear you talking about bulk and the way you look and the muscle.
Is that the primary motivation for you?
I think my overall motivation is that I just want to be confident. I want to be confident overall.
Yes, so it's how I look, but overall the strength, I think that a lot of confidence does come with how much I can lift.
Okay. I think that a lot of confidence does come with how much I can lift. When that was at my peak before.
Okay, Jacqueline.
Again, I'm going to ask you again because if strength and confidence were your number one
motivators, I don't think we'd be having this conversation because obviously working out
provides a lot of different things.
Most people, I don't want you to feel that most people
Work out because they want to change how they look and that kind of dictates what they do in the gym
Strength if your goal was just strength then you know the comments wouldn't be I'm afraid of getting bulky or I don't work out my upper body
Is this resonating with you?
Yes, somewhat okay, so so a of things that can help you, all right?
Number one, the road of focusing on how you look,
there's nothing necessarily wrong with starting that way,
but if you stay on that road, it will lead you
in directions that eventually we'll start to take away
how you look.
And what I mean by that is the decisions that we make
that tend to be driven by appearance oftentimes.
And right now you're pretty young, I think,
I think you told us you've been working out for a little while,
you look like you're in your 20s.
In 26.
26, if you continue down that path,
eventually you'll start to hit some roadblocks
and you'll start to actually lose
the way you look. You see this in both men and women. So that's number one. Focusing on
your whole body will actually contribute to your appearance, especially in the long term
in a good way, but you can't go at it by just appearance. You have to focus on the mobility,
the strength, the performance, and the health. And then the second part is that the body really has
these interesting mechanisms, these safety mechanisms,
where it will only allow parts of your body
to get so strong and developed in relationship
to other parts of your body.
It actually tries to maintain at least some semblance
of balance, select for guys who never work out their legs
and they just wanna get bigger arms,
sometimes what they need to do to get bigger arms is to work out their legs and vice versa
If you're having issues developing muscles in your legs, but your upper body strength is very low
Believe it or not your body may actually
Prevent you from reaching your full potential because it senses this big imbalance between your upper and lower body
Well, you'll lean out more for sure a hundred percent you'll lean out more by starting to build imbalance between your upper and lower body? Well, you'll lean out more.
For sure.
A hundred percent, you'll lean out more by starting to build muscle in your upper body,
because you never do that.
You train your legs so frequently that they're probably adapted to a lot of the training
that you do.
So when you actually switch over to doing more upper body, you're going to see the benefits
of getting leaner in addition to building some muscle.
Now there's also this part too. I mean, I've trained clients that, very similar.
Our legs is the area that we needed the most work on
and her upper body looked pretty phenomenal already.
Great shoulders, great arms.
And so the frequency of upper body training was a lot less.
I'm just training her legs two, three times a week.
Upper body we just did one time per week,
just to kind of maintain
because she was very happy with where Fiseka is.
So, this is a back and forth between you and I.
I have to, hopefully I'm able to convince you
that okay, doing it one time a week,
we're gonna see some great benefits from it.
We're not gonna over train it
to where you're gonna see this crazy development.
It's hard to build tons of muscle as it is.
One time a week is not gonna do that to your upper body.
A lot of times you see yourself different
than other people.
So that's the other thing I would challenge too,
is, you know, are you the one who thinks
that you are looking bulky when you lift a body
or are other people saying that to you?
And have you ever asked somebody else
who you trust their opinion and they go,
and actually you look really good, that would be the other thing that I would challenge.
But there's nothing wrong with having a body part that you feel is dominant already on your body
in your case, upper body, and doing less frequency than the rest.
I mean, it's your body if you like the way you look and feel.
But then if you say to Sal, okay, I want to be stronger in its confidence,
and it's not really so much about my aesthetics and how I look.
Well, then I would challenge you back again and say, then, okay, then why aren't we training
this once a week?
Yeah.
And, you know, that's a great point, Adam.
I mean, you don't need to train it as much as your lower body, but you should do something
for it, just to maintain strength, mobility, and function.
And you don't need to attack it hard in the gym, like you might do your lower body,
but at the very least, train it so that it's stable and strong.
Otherwise, you know, like I said,
that imbalance will get worse and worse,
even if you don't look in balance,
a huge strength in balance can cause some serious problems.
Well, part also, like so, the client that I'm thinking
about a very specific client who had trained for a long time,
and she didn't like the way that her legs look,
like they, you know, she wanted to change the way
the legs looked so much and she wasn't doing much upper body.
And what I explained to her too is that,
listen, you get to understand that if your body
is so adapted all this lower body training
and you haven't done any upper body training,
as soon as we start putting some focus there,
you're gonna build a little bit of muscle,
that's gonna speed your metabolism,
that'll help you lean out the legs and the legs will look even better than you.
And I bet it did. Yeah, absolutely. So there's that to consider too.
All right. Is that help you a little bit?
It does. It does. I guess it kind of gives me that motivation with all of your
eyes. His background and experience with working with different kinds of people
and just like I know I need to do it, right?
But it's just that mental like hurdle
of like getting past it.
Well, are you driven more towards, you know,
working your lower body
because you don't like the way your lower body looks so much
or are you avoiding the upper body
because you feel like you're,
I mean, what is it that's really keeping you in that direction?
I feel like we're kind of going back and forth on what is it that's driving?
I don't feel like the truth has fully came out yet.
And maybe it's something that I'm also kind of thinking about too.
I think that with my legs, it just makes me feel confident that I can be strong, but
of course there's that part of me that absolutely wants to develop them even more
Right now I train them maybe three three and a half times a week just depending when I can get into the gym
But with my upper body I just I see like just how
much
Like I just already feel like I don't want to add more mass on my upper body
with the couple of upper body training days that I do already do.
So that's where I'm a little confused.
Well, keep in mind what I'm telling you is that because you don't train it that often,
the minute you start training it, you will build muscle, which will then hopefully speed your metabolism
up, help you lean out.
Which body fat takes up a lot more space than muscle does.
So, if you gained a pound, even a, I mean,
two pounds of muscle in your upper body would be a lot for a female.
And you can't even tell.
But if you lost two pounds of body fat from your upper body,
gain two pounds of muscle, you'd be smaller on your upper body.
Because fat takes up so much more space.
And then back to your strength comment.
Look, if somebody is strong in their upper body,
but weak in their lower body or the reverse,
somebody's strong in the lower body
and weak in their upper body,
guess what they are, they're weak.
They don't have good strength.
Your strength doesn't translate into the real world.
So it doesn't matter if you're a man
and you don't work out your legs
and you got a big back and chest and shoulders
and you can, you have bench press and row a lot. In In the real world when you go move a couch or go do something
your week and the same is true for you you may have strong legs but if your everybody's not strong
then you're not really strong. Well I wanted to ask you have you done any kind of functional
strength training? No I don't think I have. I just, I feel like there's just way too much,
in terms of like being fixated on your body parts
and what's going up, what's going down.
Have you ever just like thrown all of that out
and just tried to master movements and work on skills
and go in that direction?
I think that'd be a healthy practice for you.
Yeah, I definitely have tried or wanted to just because I
know that I've noticed a lot of tightness in certain areas of my
body too.
If we were to give you maps performance, would you follow it for us?
Yeah.
Oh, absolutely.
You guys are like my bigger brothers.
OK, then this is what we're going to do.
And we're going to ask you to check back in with us.
So we're gonna set you up with Maths Performance,
Doug will hook you up for free.
And then I want you to follow that program,
follow it to a T, and then follow back up
with us afterwards with your experience.
Yeah, let's know how it all went.
Okay, I will.
All right, perfect, thank you, Jacqueline.
You're so much.
Yeah, it's a tough conversation when you're talking,
and this is again, super common.
I don't want to put on the spot maker feel bad.
This is most people I would work with
in the first six months I trained them.
They don't, it's all about appearance
and it's very hard to transition their state of mind
or their motivation or what's driving them.
But it is important to do that.
You get stuck on that and you can hear when she's talking.
She wants to believe that strength
and confidence are just a driver.
But the truth is it's not.
The truth is it's about how she looks.
Well, yeah, because there's this fear that
start touching weights in the upper body,
and it's gonna bulk her up.
You know?
And I challenge that all day long.
I know.
You never almost never see that.
And sometimes it's just part of the process, right?
I mean, if you go and you get a bunch of blood
and fluid rushing those muscles,
it's gonna fill up and it's gonna tighten your shirts up.
And so it's that initial feeling and illusion
that's created when you first do it.
And that's enough.
I mean, it's the same issue that we've talked about
and shared with our own issues of,
I used to freak out if I didn't eat
and a pound went down on the scale,
just getting kid.
It's like, but really I was not getting skinny.
I wasn't losing muscle, but in my head I was
because I got on the scale and the next day
I was down two or three pounds and that was the driver
on what made the decisions both nutritionally
and how I exercise took me a long time to
break through that.
This is the same thing.
It's just the opposite.
It's her upper body and she doesn't want to get big from lifting her upper body.
She just may need like this psychological shift, you know, something to kind of release
her of the challenge.
Well, I loved your suggestion of, I mean, that would be perfect.
And performance is great because performance has got a lot of great lower body stuff that's
going to challenge her. Totally different. Right. But at at the same time too it'll also challenge her upper body
She touched on mobility, so I thought that was a great recommend right and I'll say this for the vast majority of people
I mean 90 something percent of people if you trained in a way that was good for your body
You trained the whole body you are relatively lean and healthy, you would look in proportion.
It's very rare for somebody to do that for a while and to still look out of proportion.
It's not common.
A healthy body to somebody else, when you look at them, you would say, wow, that person
looks very balanced.
Sometimes to ourselves though, I'm happy you said that, Adam, to her when you said, do
you really think you see yourself objectively to ourselves, We may, these glaring, you know, problems in our body, but the reality is, look pretty
damn good.
Right.
I mean, that's what I would challenge to.
I bet you she starts lifting her body.
She gets compliments.
Oh, yeah.
Sure.
Our next color is Emma Louise from the UK.
Hey, Emma, how can we help you?
Hey, so I'm from the UK, like I'm from Beijing, but I'm living now in the UK and so all the gym are closed right now
And so I'm into pristine and my question is how can I still go straight and gain muscle mass?
We don't like no gym and only with a few dumbbells. How heavy are dumbbells do we have?
Only 25 pounds.
Okay, so great question.
All right, there's a couple of things here.
Number one, especially when you're talking about powerlifting, because strength is also
so much of a skill, you're not able to practice your barbell squat, your bench press,
your deadlift, no matter what, you're going to lose some strength in those lifts,
but that's okay because it does come back very quickly.
Now, I have spoken to a few power lifters
who are in a similar situation here in the States
when their gym shut down,
and I was able to convince them to focus entirely
on mobility while they were unable to go to a gym.
And here's what happened, well here's what happened to them,
okay, when they got back to the gym, and. And here's what happened, well here's what happened to them, okay?
When they got back to the gym, and it was about,
it was about eight weeks or so, six to eight weeks,
that they focused primarily on mobility,
and they did some body weight exercises as well.
When they went back to the gym, as expected,
they did lose some strength.
However, the strength came back very quickly,
and because they were more stable and had better mobility, they
surpassed their previous personal best lifts in a relatively short period of time.
So it actually was a blessing in disguise.
In fact, one of them actually said that to me.
So this was a blessing in disguise and he compared it to pulling an arrow back and then launching.
He's like, I had to take a few steps back, but now I'm further than I would have been,
had I not focused on mobility during this time when I had no access to
To a gym not only that you have the opportunity to do a lot of single-leg unilateral work right here
I mean this 25 pound dumbbells do some you know single-leg squats or deadlifts with that and those will be really really challenging
So there's some a bookarian split stance
and those will be really, really challenging. So there's some Bulgarian split stance.
There's a lot of things that you can still do
to build strength even with a pair of 25 pound dumbbells.
That's 50 pounds plus your body weight,
doing one leg, one leg at exercises,
I think would do you really well.
Adding that with what Sal saying with mobility,
I think you could actually come back to the gym,
not losing much strength at all.
I think you could actually come back to the gym, not losing much strength at all.
Okay, so like using those 25 dumbbells
to like still try to gain
other like mobility and stuff like that.
Yeah, so you could do single leg dead lifts,
you can do a lot of stuff like Adam was mentioned,
unilateral work.
So, you know, lateral work. So,
you know, you're going to find discrepancies between one side versus the other, and usually
that's just a lack of stability. And this is something that a lot of power lifters
don't address because you get into the, I'm trying to gain strength and trying to add
load consistently and progressively get stronger and stronger. Meanwhile, that puts a lot more stress on the joints and the joints.
The body recognizes whether or not you have any kind of weakness or instability, and so
you have a threshold.
So you're only going to get so far.
This is an opportunity like they mentioned to really hone in, laser in, and address these
things by just purely focusing on that for a bit.
And you can slow down your reps,
so go very, very slow to increase the intensity
of the exercise, make it feel more difficult.
You can do one arm, one leg exercises,
and then mobility, I'm gonna stress that, really do,
you know, two, three times a day,
15, 10 to 15 minutes work on mobility exercises.
Emma, do you have access
to Maps Prime Pro because I feel like that would help you the most?
No, because like no, I don't really have like enough money to break now because my job
closed because of the COVID. Okay. Okay, we're going to give you Maps Prime Pro for free.
So you're going to have access to it.
As soon as we get off the phone here, Doug will send that over to you shortly afterwards.
Go in Maps Prime Pro and do about 10 to 15 minutes of mobility exercises for your,
for different parts of your body, maybe a couple times a day,
and focus on that for now.
When you go back to the gym in a short period of time, you'll gain your strength back,
but then you'll notice that you'll probably surpass
where you were before.
That's amazing.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
No problem, Emma.
Just, can I just like to say,
give, because I have a YouTube channel,
like do a quick,
public,
for my YouTube channel. Yeah, you can.
It's like just a much challenges on YouTube and it will really help me out a much challenges
on YouTube.
But thank you very much for your time.
It's amazing and I really love your podcast.
Amazing.
Thank you Emma.
Good luck with the YouTube channel.
Thank you very much and thank you for your time.
You know, you would be surprised how strong you could get
with a pair of 25 pounds.
That's 50 pounds.
Hey, 50 pounds, 50 pounds even for a dude
is a good amount of weight to build some strength with.
If you're doing everything one legate.
One legate deadlifts, one pistol squats, Bulgarian split stance
squats, there's a lot of movements that you can do to still get strong.
It just depends on how far along somebody is in powerlifting. If they're pretty competitive,
just not practicing the specific exercise, you'll notice a decrease in strength, but that
doesn't mean you're not strong. It just means you lost some of this,
because you have to practice the skill of a lift
over and over again to get really good at it.
But what you're saying is very true.
You get strong at these single leg exercises.
She'll go back to her squat and she may notice
that it's not where it was because she hasn't squatted
in a while with a barbell,
but then she'll find that she'll surpass it.
Well, even, and I didn't bring this up,
but like moving in different planes, so a lot of times you get very fixated on the sagittal plane in front and behind without
Any rotation and you side to side movement. Yeah, you know, that's something that too
You could fill a lot of gaps
By really focusing in on that while you have the time our next color is Mike from the UK. Hey Mike. How can we help you?
Hi there guys, first of all thanks for showing real, real fun
to information and challenging as well. I don't agree with everything you say, but it's
a fantastic show to listen to.
So distance runner, I mean distance runner, I've been running distance for
10, 15 years. I'm not getting any, any younger.
Want to get a bit stronger. Frankly, want to get a bit stronger,
frankly, want to look a little bit better, nobody's ever looked at a long distance running
and gone, God, they look good.
So, um, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've,
I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've,
I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've,
I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've, I've first is performance in anabolic, but I'm almost a little bit nervous to start. I still enjoy
running. I don't want to stop it completely, but just want to structure it right when I get into
it. Now everything's shut over here. Jim's a completely locked down. So just beginning to
plan for when they reopen, just a bit of advice on how to mix a bit of running with performance
in anabolic.
Mike, how much are you currently running right now per week?
What are you doing about?
Yeah, it's 20 to 25 miles.
Five, five, six runs a week.
Are you trying to, are you trying to keep that high of a frequency up
while also programming?
Are you asking what we think is a good suggestion
if you want to still run a little bit
but also run one of the programs?
Yeah, yeah, a good suggestion actually.
I'm willing to pair it back
because I want to make sure I'm doing
the program justice.
So personally, I would love to see you run
maps performance and then run on your mobility day.
So you would do mobility work
and then go take off for your run on the mobility days and So you would do mobility work and then go take off
for your run on the mobility days.
And you could do that three days a week.
So you could lift three days a week on the foundational
workouts and then three days of mobility work before you go
off on a run.
If you were my client and I was trying to compromise
how much you like to run but then also trying
program well for you, that's what it would look like for me.
I'll get a little bit more specific even.
I would go, if you're going to run 10 miles
a week, then I would do two days of resistance training, the foundational workouts and performance.
If you're going to go 15 miles or more a week, then I would break it down to one.
When you throw in a lot of resistance training, two, three days a week, plus 15 plus miles
of running, for most people, it just becomes way too much and you end up getting negative returns.
But if you're doing about 10 miles a week, which is less than half what you're doing, and
you include two days a week of resistance training, you may actually find that you get
a little faster.
And I've actually experienced this with some of the distance runners that I've trained.
Again, if you go up to 15 miles or more,
then one day a week of resistance training will be plenty
and you'll still get some benefit
from the resistance training.
Oh, no, that's fantastic.
And kind of getting back into it,
I've got starter as well.
Would that be a good one to just get back into it
as the gyms have been shut for bloody months now?
Would it be worth kind of launch straight into performance
or just kind of get into it with
map starter? No, great. I'm glad you
did that because you haven't done any
resistance training. Start with
map starter. That's fantastic. Brilliant.
No, really appreciate that guys.
Thank you. No, no problem. Great question.
It's Sal who you mostly disagree with,
right? I've got to say we've've had a few spiky conversations on Instagram, but you know,
if I agreed with everything, it'd be a boring show to listen to.
Yeah, no, yeah.
I don't agree with half a shitty set, so don't worry.
It's so normal.
And the best bit, it's Wushsessier sauce.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Finally, that's been correct.
Thank you.
At least you got that amazing accent.
Don't worry about looking like a long distance runner.
Oh, absolutely.
You guys look good.
I sound good, but we'll keep it at that.
Thanks a lot, Mike.
Thank you.
Cheers, guys.
Thank you very much.
I fucking love everybody in the UK.
I swear to God.
There are some of our favorite listeners.
Yeah, they do have a good sense of humor.
I feel like the people in the US,
I think we're so goddamn sensitive.
You're right.
You're right.
You're totally right.
We're like overly sensitive over there.
Then you can talk shit to them and they give it right back.
One of my best friends was from the UK Bav
and he would just, we would rip each other
and it was just a good time.
I love that.
It was a good time.
I love his question because if you do run a lot,
first off, resistance training is tremendous benefit
for any athletic endeavor.
It's going to provide more stability, of course, strength is the foundational physical
pursuit, meaning if you increase your strength, you're going to get better at pretty much everything
else, right?
So if you improve your strength, your endurance is going to go up, your stamina is going
to go up, your stability is going to go up, your balance is going to go up, but there's
always the problem of how much can I include
along with my training because at some point you overdo it.
When you're running a lot,
I've trained quite a few marathon runners and triathletes,
I have them resistive strain usually once a week.
That's it.
And we're doing very basic stuff
and we're not overdoing it.
It's to support, you know, their priorities.
And that's really what you have to identify
from the beginning is like, what is the real goal? If you want to use resistance training to beef up and support the strength
that goes into the running, because that's where you want to be the most, that's what we have to
structure. You have to be very realistic with your goals too. I mean, you have to understand that
if you want to start to build muscle and change the way your body looks, you are going to get
worse at running. That's just coming. You have to accept that. And it's just how much are you
willing to give up of that for the look that you're trying to obtain? Or I really don't care
that much about the look. I just want to get stronger to complement my running, totally different.
Totally. If you're telling me that, oh, and that's where I think what you suggested was great,
so one day a week, because you're still, your main focus is running.
I want to be a good runner, but I also see the benefits of strength training, but you're
not going to change your, if you're running 20 plus miles a week and you're only strength
to, you're not going to change your body radically. You're not going to be all sudden this buff
runner. You're going to be mobile, more mobile, you're going to be stronger, but you're
running still going gonna be great.
So you have to understand what your actual goal is
and what you really want to accomplish from it,
and then be okay with, there's a give and take.
It's funny, too.
I had one client who was a marathon runner,
and her goal was to qualify for the New York marathon,
one of the bigger ones, and I forgot what time
she had to get in another marathoner to qualify.
So, and she was running a lot every single week. We actually reduced her running down. You know, one of the bigger ones and I forgot what time she had to get in another marathon order to qualify.
So and she was running a lot every single week.
We actually reduced her running down.
I think she was running even leading up to the marathon 15 miles.
I believe was a max so that we could make a time for strength training and she got faster.
Mm-hmm.
And a lot of marathon runners make the mistake of just running more and more and more and
more to get better at a marathon.
When oftentimes it's too much. They bring it down just a little bit,
strengthen their body and they actually see an improvement in performance.
Look, Mind Pump is recorded on videos as well as audio,
come find us on YouTube, Mind Pump Podcast.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump.
Justin, me at Mind Pump Sal, and Adam at Mind Pump at...
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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