Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1527: The 3 Step Solution to the Obesity Epidemic
Episode Date: April 8, 2021In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover the origins, challenges and solutions of the obesity epidemic. Interesting statistics that highlight the obesity epidemic. (2:11) The clinical definition of o...besity. (3:00) Why fix the obesity epidemic? (5:38) The importance of having an honest conversation. (8:35) How being obese affects your mental health. (10:32) Self-image versus body image. (12:15) You have to change your approach. (14:54) What caused this problem? (20:38) The 3 Step Solution to the Obesity Epidemic. #1 – Dramatically reduce heavily processed foods from your diet. (35:06) #2 – Build strength and muscle. (38:42) #3 – Increase awareness around being distracted while consuming food. (46:40) Related Links/Products Mentioned April Specials: MAPS Anabolic or Shredded Summer Bundle 50% off! **Promo code “APRILSPECIAL” at checkout** Visit ChiliPad for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Obesity One of the Biggest Risk Factors in COVID-19 Hospitalizations, Study Suggests Defining Adult Overweight and Obesity Healthy lifestyle and life expectancy free of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes: prospective cohort study The Key to Fitness Success is Self-Love – Mind Pump Blog Workout Because You Love Yourself Not Because You Hate Yourself – Mind Pump Blog NIH study finds heavily processed foods cause overeating and weight gain Processed foods make up 70 percent of the U.S. diet Processed: Food Science and the Modern Meal How Portion Sizes Have Changed Throughout History We Burn as Many Calories as Hunter-Gatherers, So What Makes Us Fat? Why Resistance Training is the Best Form of Exercise – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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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.
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This is Mind Pump.
Alright, in today's episode, we talk about the obesity epidemic.
We are in an epidemic, which has been around now for a few decades.
It's causing some real problems. And in this episode, we actually give you the solution.
No joke. The three things that we think could solve this problem. We know you're going
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You know, a couple of interesting statistics,
kind of recent that came out,
which kind of highlight a problem,
which is interesting, this problem we're about to talk about,
because it's almost become, like one of those topics
that you can't bring up, which is strange,
but anyhow,
two statistics. One,
70, roughly 70% of Americans are now considered overweight. 45%
obese, okay, so almost half of us clinically obese. And then the other statistic which is more timely is that the number one risk factor for severe COVID symptoms is obesity. I think something like 87% of people in hospitals with COVID were
obese. What's what's the clinical definition of obesity now? Is it is it 30 pounds of weight you do
not body fat that you should not have in your body?
Because obviously our bodies, we need fat.
People didn't understand that.
Your body needs fat.
You have to have a certain amount of body fat.
But is it the clinical definition?
I believe it, I at least I thought it was.
Are we going off that or still off of BMI?
No, it's BMI.
Yeah, it's off BMI.
Now, of course BMI has its problems, right?
BMI is body mass index and it's just your total weight.
And obviously, I'm probably overweight or obese because I have more muscle, right?
But generally speaking, so it's BMI greater than,
what is that?
What's the number that it gives us?
Greater than 30 kilograms per meter squared.
Yeah, that's the number.
It's down to the...
I have no idea. Click on the chart up at the top there.
I think it's important that we define this
because here's the thing that I ran into a lot.
And I think you guys did run into this a lot as a trend too.
Many people that are obese don't think they're obese.
I don't know how many times that I did a body fat test. And I actually,
I remember learning that I would have to set the table before I did it to let people know that,
hey, it's not about what we find out today. It's about that this is a starting point and where
we go from here, because I remember as a young trainer, not knowing any better, just take a body
fat test and be like, oh, you're obese. Yeah, so people carry it differently.
Oh, and people cry and get all broken down from it
because they up into that point,
they just thought they were a little overweight.
I would bet that, so the BMI is over 30, right?
So if you're over 30 in terms of,
so I knew the 30 was in there, so.
Yeah, that's considered obese.
Now, I would bet more people than we think are obese
because there's a lot of people who are very low muscle mass
have high body fat percentage that would be considered obese.
Now, of course, there's definitely those athletes
and stuff that carry a lot of muscle,
but that's a very small percentage.
I'll never forget the first time that I told this ex-model
that she was obese, and she didn't look at all that way.
She was actually really pretty lean relatively lean
You mean lean or skinny. Yeah, what you said she was obese, but she was skinny. Yeah, skinny. Yeah, yeah
Skinny and what we call skinny fat, right? So she had so little muscle and her diet was like the you know
She did the extreme you know live off of celery and carrots which you get ready for a shoot never really strength trained
What so ever and yeah? She felt like she had put on a few pounds and that's why she was hiring me you know, live off a celery and carrots which you get ready for a shoot, never really strength trained whatsoever.
And yeah, she felt like she had put on a few pounds
and that's why she was hiring me,
but she by no means looked obese,
but then when you actually measured her body fat percentage,
she would fall in that category.
Yeah, so and we need to tell people
why this isn't even important.
Why we should even try to solve this problem.
Like why fix the obesity epidemic?
And it is an epidemic.
I know that they named it officially an epidemic
in the late 90s, but obesity had been climbing
for a couple decades before that.
It was only really in the 90s that they said,
okay, this is an epidemic, and it's growing,
it's been growing ever since.
So why even solve it?
Why even look at this issue and say, what are the things we can
do to fix this problem? Well, there's some big reasons. Number one, the health risks associated
with obesity alone are tremendous. It dramatically increases your risk of all cause mortality. So
being obese means that you're much more likely to die of any
reason at all. But to be more specific, your risk of type 2 diabetes goes to the roof. Heart disease
goes to the roof. Stroke goes to the roof. Gal bladder disease goes to the roof. Osteoarthritis goes
up quite a bit. Cancer, you know, some recent studies attribute can literally say that you could just by
not being obese, you could reduce the risk of like 75% of cancers.
Okay, so just being obese increases your risk of cancer.
Sleep apnea is another one.
So there's some big problems.
Now a lot of people might say, well, that's personal, right?
If you're obese, then it's your, you know, your own issue.
And I get part of that, but here's the truth.
It literally, no joke.
If you look at obesity and you look at all the things
that are connected to obesity, it threatens to bankrupt
modern societies.
Well, and it's reversible.
You know, as much as, As much as we want to love ourselves and kind of meet our,
like find out where we are in terms of where we stand,
we also have to do a very good job of a better job
of really assessing what's best for me
and what's best for my body and where I can strive to be.
And so I think the first initial, the first initial movement towards,
you know, this movement towards like loving yourself and accepting yourself for
who you are, you know, is a great mental space to be.
But we have to get back to reality and face the fact that when we are obese,
it does increase the chances of all these other diseases from being
exaggerated and taking us closer to death.
Well, what about COVID? You shared that stat the other day.
Absolutely. Right? All illness, in fact. Obesity increases your risk of severe illness no matter what you get.
It causes a pro-inflammatory state. Remember, fat is a...
It's not an inactive tissue, and having a lot of it does increase your body's total inflammation
and the way your body clots blood. This is why they think, by the way, it causes problems
with COVID because of how it affects circulation.
Now you brought that up the other day on the podcast and you actually got a long message
and I put you on the spot right now because I don't think you were ready for me to bring
this up. But I think you should share it or at least summarize it because I don't think you were ready for me to bring this up. But I think you should share it or at least summarize it
because I also think that it's important that when we talk
about this message that we come from a place of empathy too.
Yes.
This isn't a place of shaming or trying.
Because you got an interesting message the other day
when we talked about that staff.
Yeah, and I can't remember.
I think the person saying, I can't remember specifically
what they said, but they said essentially that they feel anxious when they hear us talk about obesity and its effects because they
are themselves or obese and they're trying to lose weight.
I want to be very clear.
All of us built our careers around helping people through largely through obesity.
Personal training is not a career you get into
to make a lot of money, it just isn't.
You ask any trainer, what are the top five reasons
why he became a personal trainer?
I guarantee you, none of those reasons
will be to make a ton of money.
I guarantee you, one of them, if not the top one,
especially for people who've been trainers for a long time,
was to help people.
So I sincerely at my deepest level want to help people, but
we can't if we don't have an honest conversation around this. And right now, there seems to
be this message that we can't talk about it because we're shaming people. Now, if I'm
talking to someone, by the way, this is very different talking generally on a podcast
versus talking specifically.
If I had a person sitting in front of me
that I'm looking eye to eye with and they're saying,
hey, I'd like to hire you or whatever,
how can you help me?
I wouldn't sit here and say,
hey, did you know because you're obese?
I know, you're gonna,
you have 75% more chance of dying.
Yeah, and you're gonna do it never.
Of course I wouldn't do that, right?
That's not gonna help them.
It's gonna make them feel terrible.
So, this is different.
We're talking generally, and we're talking about a topic and
We do need to be honest about you know, there's one silent issue that nobody really talks about that obesity effects
Which is your mental state and I don't mean just because you don't like the way you look or whatever forget that it literally will affect your
chances of getting depression and anxiety and just the way you view and see things.
You know, inflammation alone is connected to depression and being obese increases inflammation.
Being obese increases, like I said, the risk of depression and anxiety.
So here you are, right?
Let's say you've fallen this category of obesity and You are and because of it now your filter with the way you see the world is through
It's not in a healthy space that means that you're less likely to view things positively more likely to view things negatively
You're less productive less innovative
You're more sick more often
It's this is a is a world problem.
It's not just an issue just for yourself.
Now the way you fix it is by focusing on yourself.
So I'm not gonna advocate for like big programs
to solve this issue.
But it is a big problem that we need to look at.
In fact, if we look at all the problems
that are that modern society's face
that can literally destroy us.
Okay.
Obesity is near the top.
It really is.
It again, I mentioned this earlier, it threatens to bankrupt us.
It's in 2008, obesity related illness and whatever costs a hundred and
forty seven billion dollars in medical cost.
That doesn't even count the productivity loss that we get from some of that stuff.
If we continue down this path, we're gonna have some big problems.
So this is an issue that needs to be talked about and you know, Justin, you mentioned
you know, acceptance and stuff like that and loving yourself. I am not only my for that. That's what we push that all the time.
But when we push it, we're talking about real love for yourself.
With honesty.
Correct.
And I think that's one of those things that's been removed from a lot of conversations
as of late, which is so unfortunate because there's people out there really trying to
improve and to live a better life.
And the information that they're getting
is just like so fear driven.
And it's so, you know, hide and cover yourself
and stay away from all of the, you know,
potential dangers out there.
And you can live your life in such a different way.
And you can be active.
And you can face these things by, you know,
putting the training in place to build your body up
to be more resilient towards these things.
Self-image and body image are separate, right?
You can look at yourself in the mirror and be objective and say, this is a result of
me not taking care of myself and still love yourself.
Absolutely.
You can still love who you are as a person and understand that that's your self image.
And then you could also look at your body image and recognize that it is a reflection
of your behaviors.
And there's something there to be addressed.
Yeah.
And we're all, all of us are flawed.
Nobody is perfect.
You know, in the words of, you know, one of the most popular religions in the world,
right, we're all centers, right?
So I understand the challenge of obesity
because it's visible, like, you can't look at someone
and tell see that they have a sex addiction
or an addiction to gambling or bad relationships.
You can't right away see that, right?
But if someone's obese, it's very obvious.
So, and that makes it much more challenging.
People can see your challenges,
and your challenge happens to be with food
or how you treat your body.
So I have all the empathy in the world for that.
But again, we need to be honest,
and it is a problem, and it will cause problems.
And it is a result of you not really loving yourself
in the best way.
Now, again, nobody's perfect.
So I'm not saying that I'm love myself necessarily better than somebody else. I could be, I
could have terrible ways I love myself or care for myself in other ways, maybe not so
visibly. Nonetheless, this episode is about obesity and its challenges. And if you are
obese, you are not really taking care of yourself in the honest way, but what you said,
Adam is 100%. In fact, when people really love themselves and accept themselves in a true way,
they start to lose weight because they start to care for themselves that way.
There's other hurdles too, though, right? Like, I do have a lot of empathy and compassion
for this topic because there's definitely somebody who's listening right now who actually feels
like they do try and have busted their ass trying to get there and then and then continue
to fail.
And that has a lot to do with I think some of the messaging that that's out in our space
information.
Right.
And and the their approach is not the ideal approach.
And because of that because what I used to get a lot of is a client that would look at me and say,
you know what, I'm honestly like,
I'd rather be the little overweight and fat
or even considered obese,
but then enjoying my life and doing all these things
because when I try and lose weight
and I do all these things, I'm miserable.
I have headaches, I'm tired, I'm achy,
I'm in the gym all the time,
I have to make all this sacrifice and I feel miserable while I'm tired, I'm achy, I'm in the gym all the time, I have to make all of this sacrifice,
and I feel miserable while I'm doing it.
And so they have this really bad experience
in the pursuit of what they think is trying to be healthier
for themselves, and they fail a lot,
and they just go, they throw their hands up,
they go fuck it, I'd rather just be obese.
Well, one of the biggest fallacies I see a lot
from the messaging out there is that they have to tackle
all these things at once.
And if they're gonna really step into this journey
of weight loss, they're gonna have to take all the food
out of their cupboards and they're gonna have to
completely start this five, six day a week training plan
and be consistent.
If you don't be consistent, you're gonna fail.
And it's like all these, you know, like really,
like extreme sort of, you know, parameters for them
to be able to buy into.
And it really doesn't have to be like that.
It could be one very small thing
that just sparks this momentum.
And this is something that we try so hard to convey.
It doesn't need to be this difficult,
doesn't need to be this complicated. It doesn't need to be this complicated.
It can be one very simple thing that you just build slowly. You build upon that and before
you know it, your body starts transforming and things start moving in a very positive
direction.
No, no, no, you're 100% right. Look, if you do this the wrong way, you're going to feel
like what Adam said. You're going to feel terrible. It's going to feel like torture. You're
going to hate yourself through the process.
And at some point, you'll get sick of hating yourself
and then you'll say to yourself,
I'm done with this.
I just wanna love my, you know, live my life.
I just wanna enjoy my life.
I'm done doing all that.
Now that's because your approach was all wrong.
And you know, maybe it's because you followed the approach
of popular fitness media, which is 99% of the time wrong
or just trying to sell you a product.
The truth is, if you do this the right way,
it's still gonna be challenging, don't get me wrong.
There's nothing easy about change.
Change is always challenging,
fundamental change is always challenging.
But you will feel like you're enjoying your life more.
You will feel like you're loving life more.
You will feel a better connection to yourself. The enjoyment you'll get from it will be better than the enjoyment you got
from not doing it. Now, it's again, it's challenging just like any change is challenging. So no matter
what you do with this process, and even if you do it the right way, the way that we will explain,
you're still going to get challenged by it, but you'll feel good through the process.
You will not feel like, I hate myself,
I hate life, this all sucks.
So if you feel that way, your approach is wrong,
and it won't last.
We gotta change the way you approach it.
You have to share the story.
You've shared it on the podcast several times before,
but for somebody who's listening in for the first time,
you have to share the story that you talk about
when you were sitting at the dinner table
and there was a lady who was kind of mocking you,
making decisions on what you were eating
and what you said to you.
Yeah, so no, what it was was it was like a Christmas dinner.
So it was with my ex-wife and they had like a company,
I think it was a Christmas dinner or whatever.
And so like the whole, all the staff was there,
a big company, a tech company, right?
So we're all sitting at this big table,
and there's people around.
And you're the fitness guy.
I'm the fitness guy, right?
Because people are like, hey, what do you do?
And I'm like, oh, I'm a trainer.
And like, immediately when you say that sometimes,
depending on the circles you're in,
any trainer who's listening knows,
you immediately get looked at,
and then people start to become self-conscious
of the food that they're eating in front of you or and they'll make comments like oh, you know
I'm gonna get a piece of cake, you know, sorry mr. Trainer or whatever so and I'm used to it's not a big deal
So we're at the table, you know, I'd ask me what I do. I tell them a trainer and
You know, we start talking a little bit and I'm passing up on the bread and passing up on a certain a couple things and one of the ladies
Pipes up and she goes why aren't you you know? why aren't you eating the bread or why aren't you,
and I say, oh, it bothers my gut.
I don't respond very well to it.
And it's not a big deal.
I really don't want any.
And she says, you know, I had a friend once who was so
indefinite and nutrition.
She was like fanatical about it.
And then she got cancer.
And she was, I don't know how she was young.
She's like 50 something years old.
She got cancer.
And then she died.
And you know, after that happened, I said to myself, I'm't know how she was young. She's like 50 something years old. She got cancer and then she died.
And you know, after that happened, I said to myself,
I'm just gonna enjoy life.
I'm just gonna eat whatever I want, drink wine,
and just enjoy my life because it's not worth it.
And I said, well, I said, you know, exercising
and you know, having a good relationship
with exercise and eating right,
isn't necessarily about living longer.
Oftentimes it does result in longer life, most times, but it's not about living longer, it's about living longer. Oftentimes it does result in longer life, most times,
but it's not about living longer, it's about living better.
So although your friend might have died
at some 50-something years old,
I'm sure she up until the point she got sick,
she probably had a better quality of life
because she was more fit and because she was more healthy.
And that's really what it's about.
It's not about the you know, the long life
or it's not even about losing the weight necessarily.
It's really about improving the overall quality of our life
and that's the approach that we need to have.
Now what I wanna talk about in this episode
is really how to solve it broadly.
Like why do we have an obesity epidemic to begin with
why is it's a problem in modern western societies
and you know i this is something that i've done a lot of reading on in the past
and i did some more actually last night preparation
for this episode
and it's really interesting you know um...
you will talk about america america is probably attributed
we probably get the credit for the obesity epidemic, where the worst, aren't we?
In Western society, we are the worst.
Other countries are catching up.
We're still, America's still number one,
but you're still seeing,
you're our seeing countries really start to catch up to us.
Europe took a little while.
I know the UK, obesity growing, Mexico,
which the last decade or two, all of a sudden,
it's become, a couple of decades become a big problem.
So, we got to look, what's caused this?
What the hell happened?
Now, the old paradigm was,
oh, it's because we're eating too much fat.
I remember this was the message we all learned in school.
Like, all of us are, we were all born in the,
you know, or the young kids in the 80s,
and, you know, we were teenagers in the 90s.
It was butter and steak.
Yeah, bacon and butter.
Don't eat that, it's the fat that's making everybody fat.
And we were told that this is the problem.
And so people started cutting fat.
And yet obesity continued to climb at a very fast rate.
Then it became carbs, right?
Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I remember when that happened, right?
That was, Actions came out with his book and it flipped everything, 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, no, no, no, And this is very clear now, and there were some studies that were done over the past couple of years that highlight just how big of a problem this is.
And we've referenced these studies many times in the podcast, but they've taken, they've
taken study, taken groups of people, controlled it, put them in laboratories or whatever,
and given them just full access to food, the only difference is one group has heavily
processed food, the other group has
whole natural foods.
And they actually match the macros, believe it or not.
They actually have the macros relatively the same.
So, the whole natural foods have this much proteins,
fats and carbs and same thing with the processed foods.
Then they'll have them stay in that room for a week
or whatever, and then they'll switch the groups.
So, it's a crossover study or whatever.
And here's what they'll switch the groups. So, you know, it's a crossover study or whatever.
And here's what they find in these studies,
just by having access to heavily processed foods
or just by eating heavily processed foods,
the average person will eat five around 500 more calories
every single day.
That's roughly a pound of body fat,
excuse me, that you'll gain in a week.
That's a lot.
Now, if you look at when obesity started
to become a problem in the US, very interesting.
Go look at processed food.
Processed food really didn't start making its way
into our diets.
It started to come in in the 50s and 60s,
as a promise to liberate housewives,
is how they advertised these foods.
It was the TV dinner. This was the thing, right a promise to liberate housewives, is how they advertised these foods. It was the TV dinner.
This was the thing, right?
That's right.
And it was like, oh, you know,
this is how they would advertise it.
Like, poor housewife, you're slaving over this dinner,
making this home, whatever.
Here's an easy way.
It's a, you know, Sal's very steak or,
I don't know why.
We revolved around microwaves at some point.
Yeah, right.
Well, this is even before.
It was just, it was like a tray, right?
And then you put it and you warm it up, it was frozen, and then here's your dinner, and
you eat it in front of the TV, and it saves all this time, and now, you know, it was
liberating housewives or whatever.
We'll slowly over time, and then faster, heavily processed foods started to dominate the
market.
Today, heavily processed foods make up roughly 70% of the average person's calories.
So that's so amazing that just you know at 50, 60-year-old notes, now 70 years ago, it
was just non-existent to where now it's more than a majority of what we consume.
Absolutely.
And here's the thing, this is the beauty and then the downside of markets, right?
So America is a very market-driven country.
And so that means that companies are relatively free
to meet the demand of the consumer
and innovate and spend money and invest
and figure out what they want.
I'll do it better than you and they compete, right?
And they spent a lot of money, engineering food,
to make it so desirable that you, they spent a lot of money, engineering food,
to make it so desirable that you,
literally they'll do FMRI studies
and show that the brain lights up with some of these foods.
Like you're taking drugs,
it almost has a drug-like effect on the body, right?
So effective that it makes you overeat.
So you go past the point of feeling full
and you eat more, you eat faster.
You know studies will show that people eat something
like 50% faster when they're eating
heavily processed.
You just got to get it in your face.
And the truth is the health space is just as guilty of this.
If you bring this point up all the time on the show that if you look at the products that
are bought the most, even in the health space, it's the ones that taste the best.
Of course.
So even in that space, we're guilty of this.
Absolutely.
And so they've spent a lot of money, a lot of research,
a lot of development on how to make these foods
so incredibly irresistible that you'll keep buying it
and eating more.
Now, of course, these companies are trying to sell a product.
Nonetheless, this is what happened.
So, and by the way, if you do a little bit of research online,
it'll blow you away.
The science that goes into these foods
is incredible.
Literally, they have studied the amount of residue
that a chip will leave on your fingers.
They'll calculate that, what makes it more palatable.
The color, they have it down to the perfect color.
They'll go into the packaging, how you open it,
the entire aroma that fills your face,
like all that stuff.
Every, the crunch, like the amount of crunch that it has,
and all of this creates this experience of palatability.
And all of it is a part of that.
Now we think it just tastes, tasted the big part of it,
but it's everything.
For example, they've done these funny studies
where they'll give people ice cream,
but they'll serve it in like a plunger or like a toilet,
like a brand new toilet, right?
But they'll give them ice cream.
And they'll say, you know, eat as much as you want.
And people eat way less just because of the association
rest out.
Just to show you, or they'll give people a big plate
versus a small plate or bright lights,
versus low lights, or on all these things affect
how much you eat.
And these scientists who design these foods,
because if you go like Doritos, for example,
what percentage of the research and development
do you think goes into making it nutritious,
and what percentage goes into making it
as palatable as possible?
By the way, it's such a big deal that they patent,
they will patent their formulas.
They will literally have a patent on the formula
for their product.
You cannot copy it.
That's how, we hit the magic.
This is the magic sweet spot.
This is why our product is so.
And so what ended up happening is,
these processed foods started to dominate,
little by little, how much we ate,
and little by little, we ate more fat, little we ate more fat and we ate more carbs
We also ate more everything. Yeah, and we just end up
overeating as a result. Well, have you guys ever seen the have you ever seen that I think there's a dog
maybe could pull this up the
showing like French fries and soda drinks the size of them over just like the last
Their portion sizes started to blow up like crazy. Yeah, like just I mean if you've just looked at I think 50 50 60 years ago if you looked at what a large was considered back then is if it's
I don't even I think it's smaller than what a small is today. So we've just we've just slowly increased that and same thing with like portion size and you brought the point up of like plates.
Like they they've grown all that so when you look at your plate and your plate isn't as full
anymore, you're eating as much,
but the reality is you're eating twice as much as you were
just 50 years ago.
They're meeting consumer demand.
And I know this is kind of a crazy example
when I compare to drugs.
Yes, I know food isn't like drugs.
However, I will say that food kills way more people
than drugs do, by far, but nonetheless.
It's also something that people use to Medicaid.
They, of course, people are addicted to food and they use it to, you know, eat their
feelings or to Medicaid themselves, but let's compare this to drugs for a second, okay?
When you do drugs, you start to build a tolerance and you need more and more.
So people don't start out as heroin addicts or, you know, addicted to cocaine or addicted
to drugs.
They start out by using some
and then gradually they need more
and then gradually they need more.
This is exactly how the behaviors are
around heavily processed foods.
When people have some, they start to know,
in fact, if you rarely eat heavily processed foods,
it might not even taste that good,
it might be overwhelming.
In fact, I know, for example,
with my kids, they never drink soda.
We just didn't have it, and I'm not a big soda drinker.
And I know when we'd go to birthday parties,
I'd let them have some.
And I would see them leave most of the soda.
And I said, why don't you finish your soda?
Oh, it's too much, just do whatever.
But then the kids who have it all the time,
they're pounding it like crazy.
They've built up a tolerance over time.
There was that one documentary,
well, it's kind of documentary
that what was it that supersized me?
Where the guy started out by eating McDonald's
every single day and you're supersizing it.
And you see the process of him at first being like,
oh, I can't eat all this.
And then towards the middle of it, he's like,
he's like, he's dead to it.
His body started to start to adapt.
And this is what ends up happening with these foods.
One of the most interesting examples of that for myself
was when I was competing, I did this for a couple shows.
A couple shows where I allowed,
it was all whole foods, right?
Everything was other than maybe the occasional protein shake.
And then I did another one where I allowed
like processed foods where I just followed my macros
and hit my macros and I allowed things like quest bars
and things like that that taste really good
that are quote-unquote
Healthy for you in the diet and I remember coming off of a show where I did all Whole Foods and then the first time I bit into the bar
And I remember going like God, I don't remember them. I thought I had a bad box
Oh, well, and I remember like getting another box and I'm like, oh, it doesn't it doesn't taste right
But I still I said and I was testing something with myself to see watch my own behaviors with these bars.
At first, I didn't really like the taste,
but if I needed the macros of the day, I'd have one
and have one every other day.
Then eventually I started eating them every day.
Then I started to like the taste again.
Then it got to a point where not only did I like the taste,
but then I was eating two or three of these bars
so long as it fitted my macros.
It was really interesting to watch my relationship
with this even healthy quote unquote process food,
the how much I didn't really like it that much at first.
Then I was like, okay, kept going in my diet.
Then I started to like it.
Then I started to crave it.
And then it was actually really hard for me
to not have three or four in a day.
And then when I decided to go away from it,
it took a lot of discipline
to kind of get it, you know, ween off of it and stop eating them. And this is why if you're diet,
if you're like most people average person and your diet is comprised of a lot of heavily processed
foods, when you move off and you eat whole natural foods, they will taste bland. They will legit
taste bland to you. Fruit will not taste sweet to somebody who eats candy on a regular basis.
A steak will taste bland to somebody who eats pizza and burgers or processed foods all the time.
It's just true. Now your body starts to adapt in each direction, but it's just to highlight the
power of these heavily processed foods. There's one more thing that goes along with heavily processed foods.
They tend to be eaten in states of unawareness, okay?
In fact, the original processed foods
that I talked about, those TV dinners,
they literally, they call it a TV dinner.
It was advertised to go along with this new thing
everybody has in their house called a TV.
Eat this in front of this distracting device
known as a television.
If you think about the foods that you eat
when you're on social media,
when you're watching a movie
or when you're distracted with something.
Convenience foods, right?
So if you go to the gas station
and you go to the convenience store,
because you're going in there to get all the packaged chips
and bars and everything else for the road or for while you're going in there to get all the packaged chips and bars and everything else for the road or for you know
While you're super distracted. Yeah, absolutely and so that goes along with it as well and we're very distracted nowadays
Nowadays, you know, we have a phone that can
You know, it could distract the hell out of us. It could it could entertain us at any moment
And so we were eating these foods that that studies show we faster we eat more of and
were disconnected from our body because we're also watching things while we're doing it. And this
is a recipe. This is a recipe for obesity. You are going to overeat when you're bought. And this
and I like to communicate this because you know it's, it's like telling an alcoholic, you know,
listen, it's not a big deal.
You can live in the bar and drink alcohol every day, just don't over drink.
And it's like, man, that is a failing proposition.
You know, we're telling people, watch your calories, don't overeat, but we're not telling
people to avoid eating the foods that make it almost impossible.
I'm going to tell you something right now. I'm a fitness fanatic. I've been in the space for
decades. Obviously, we host one of the top fitness podcasts, right, in the world. I don't
have these foods in my house because I know what I do when I have them. I know when I have
these foods in my house, it's like a fight, it is like a discipline
fight.
Am I, you know, and eventually I'll end up losing that one.
Well, you remember we stirred up those that have been listening for a long time.
We came out and stirred up a lot of controversy in our space about the IIFYM movement for
this exact reason, not because if you follow your macros and you fall in that category
and you still eat pop tarts and it all fits, can you not lose weight and build muscle?
Absolutely.
You can do those things.
But from our experience of training normal people and realizing what these types of foods
do as far as behaviors long-term on people, it's why we came out so strongly opposing
that message of if it fits your macros.
It's okay.
Because we know what inevitably happens to these people
is you justify saying, okay, it fits my macros in one comes in.
And then when you're not for some reason,
weighing and measuring and falling your diet,
you've now allowed all these processed foods
into your diet on a regular basis
and it makes you extremely difficult for somebody,
especially if you lack self-awareness, to control that.
Oh, totally.
You know, it's fun.
It took me a while to figure this out,
but at some point, it's always hard to get clients
to eat properly or whatever, right?
And I remember when this light bulb went off for a minute,
I said, whoa, it's about the processed foods.
What if I just tell people one thing,
what if I just say, let's mostly eliminate
heavily processed foods at your diet
and then just eat as much as you want.
My clients looked at me like,
what do you mean you as much?
Eat until you're satisfied.
Make sure you're balanced,
so I don't want you just to eat like one food or whatever,
but eat as much as you want
and just don't eat heavily processed foods
and let's see what happens.
Every single person, loss weight. Every single person lost weight.
Every single person lost weight
because naturally they ate appropriately for their bodies.
They were not, no, they were no longer.
They were satiated.
That's it.
Because your satiety level, which is supposed to be here,
which is natural, keeps you here
because your body doesn't want to be overweight.
It doesn't.
I know the mentality is, oh, we evolved as hunter-gatherers,
and if you just put food in us in front of us,
we'll eat until we die.
That's not true.
It was just as bad to kill a buffalo,
and they need the shit out of it all at once
and make yourself sick back then as it would be.
Now, we still have these natural systems of satiety
that told us, okay, that's enough.
Now, you're full.
We've all felt that before, right?
That's a natural, but it evolved without heavily
processed foods, which we engineered to hijack that
to the tune of five to 600 calories every single day.
So when I eliminate those processed foods,
everybody naturally ate less.
Everybody naturally lost weight.
I remember my clients coming to me being like,
this is what they would say to me.
They thought there was something magical
about the processed food and the whole foods
in the sense that like whole foods burn fat
and processed foods in.
They come to me and be like,
this is weird, Sal.
I'm like full all day, but I'm losing weight.
What is it in the processed food that makes me gain fat?
And I'm like, you just need more of it without realizing it.
I noticed the same thing with my clients doing that.
And also because before that, it was like,
well, maybe we'll just have one day
where they can indulge a little bit
and they can make that like their weekend day
where they sort of quote unquote cheat day.
And we explored that somewhat,
but what I found with that was it was just such a powerful
response that they get after eating these things that, you
know, inevitably it would just slowly creep its way back in the diet throughout the week
and it was one of those things where it was just a craving that it was a constant tug
of war of this craving.
So the entire week, all they could think and obsess about is getting back to that state.
Well, not only that, I mean, that message promotes the whole bench restrict mentality.
Exactly.
I mean, that's why, again, we came out opposed on that too.
It was another thing that we shook up early on in the space was these cheat days that
everybody was promoting in the space at the time.
It was very popular too.
Hey, if you follow your macros six days a week, you can have this day where you kind of go bananas.
And you know, can you get in shape doing that?
Yeah, sure, you can get in shape that way.
But the behaviors and the relationship that you build with food by doing that does not
set you up for long-term success.
And this is the problem that's going on in our space.
And this is why you get those clients that we would get that are just heartbroken
because they try.
You know, I try to do all these things
and I fail all the time and I always end up back here.
It's because they hear this stuff from these,
you know, fitness leaders that are putting this information
out that are really setting these people up for failure.
Yeah, now here's the other side of the coin
with the obesity epidemic. This is the other side of
Of where we've really messed up
We've been selling the wrong paradigm around fitness to people who to the average person is trying to lose weight
The way that it's been sold forever is like this
You need to move more exercise more so you can burn more calories if you burn more calories
move more, exercise more so you can burn more calories. If you burn more calories,
then if you burn more calories
that you take in, you'll lose weight.
And so that's how that's why working out is so important.
You just need to go and burn more calories.
This is wrong.
This approach fails every single time.
If you approach exercise through it,
I'm gonna burn calories approach,
and that's your weight loss approach.
You'll fail.
You'll fail.
90% of you fail studies prove it.
Again, in my experience, I know you're as a spirit,
it fails almost every single time.
And it fails for the following reasons.
Exercise, although it does burn calories,
if that's all you value it for,
then you'll end up picking the forms of exercise
that burn the most calories,
and you'll stop paying attention to the adaptations
that those forms of exercise cause in the body.
And over time, your body actually has,
it does a great job of bringing you back down
to homeostasis.
It will actually slow your metabolism down.
So you're not burning a ton more extra calories.
And again, there's studies that are remarkable
on this when they study modern hunter-gatherers.
And they find that these people who move like crazy
don't burn that many more calories in the average person.
And it makes sense, right?
It doesn't make sense for your body to burn
6,000 calories a day
because you're moving all the time
and when we evolve without that much food,
the paradigm that we need to promote
is the following, forget the calorie burn from exercise.
What is the adaptation that this form of exercise
is promoting?
And is that adaptation that this form of exercise is promoting? And is that adaptation going to benefit you in modern society?
When you look at it that way, it becomes very clear what you want to do is build strength and build muscle.
Yeah, well, we need to promote ways to build muscle.
And we need to get those ratios back.
Like to our beginning of this conversation of what people know, what people don't realize is what your body
consists of completely.
And if you're gonna be honest with yourself,
if you're not lifting weights or weight training at all,
you know, you may be slimming down,
but what are you consisting of?
Is it mostly fat?
Or are you balancing that out with a healthy amount
of muscle to bring that percentage down?
It's also important that you know where to start
with this too though, right?
So even if we cut out, okay, this person's not gonna just
try and burn a ton of calories and run
or do a lot of cardiovascular activity,
and they're hearing the message, okay,
I need to start strain training.
That doesn't mean you go and you
strain train five to seven days a week.
If you got somebody who is obese and lives
a pretty sedentary lifestyle and is never really
weight-trained much, knowing to start them off slow
on a few things and build upon that is really important too.
Yes, because again, if you look at exercises
a way to elicit adaptation, then you don't need much
to get the body to change.
In fact, if you do too much, what ends up happening
is your body gets, it prioritizes healing, right?
If you overdo resistance training, your body is just going to heal,
you're not going to build strength, you're not going to build muscle,
you're just going to be sore all the time.
The appropriate dose is what gets you the best results.
And for most people, that appropriate dose isn't much.
In fact, most people could get pretty good results, resistance training a couple days
a week.
When I say most people, I mean the average person who just generally wants to be fit and
healthy.
Now what would that couple days a week of resistance training do?
Over time, it starts to build strength, build muscle, speed up the metabolism.
So now you burn more calories all the time, whether you exercise or not, but also muscle
is very protective. It's protects your health, especially in the context of modern life,
which is sedative as hell. When you have more muscle, your body is more sensitive to insulin.
It's less likely to develop issues like Alzheimer's and dementia.
It balances out hormone. So in men, it'll increase testosterone. Resisted training is a pro tissue form of exercise. Other forms of exercise tend to be anti-tissue.
So with resistance training, the main adaptation is build muscle. Other forms of exercise, the adaptation may be build endurance and stamina, but as a result
pare down muscle, maybe lose some body fat.
So we're looking with resistance training is build muscle, the side effect of which being
facematabalism and a leaner body.
And here's the best part.
This is why I promote it so much.
You don't need to do it as much.
And I know that the average person is not going to work out every single day consistently.
So why don't we give them a form of exercise that they could do a couple days a week that
will give them the most bang for their butt?
The goal is to do the least amount possible to elicit the most amount of change.
What does that look like?
It means you just got to do a little bit more what you were doing the week before.
If you're talking to somebody who's doing less than 2,000 steps a day, is sedentary on
the couch, not doing any cardio, not doing any strength training,
literally that person doing a couple sets of body weight squats is already
going to set that person in the right direction.
Their body will start to change.
And you've got to remember, this is for the rest of your life.
You got plenty of time to scale up and add more.
If you're trying to make this a behavioral change, this is something you want to take slow and slowly build just a little bit every single week.
And it's probably the number one mistake that I see this person make when they're all
motivated and hyped, whether it's a New Year's resolution or their doctor just told
and they had to. And so they go from being this sedentary and then all of a sudden, I've
got to make this change. And the part that is, it can be very misleading
is that the results will happen in the first couple of weeks
because you're doing so much.
So if you take somebody that sedentary
and also they go from two thousand steps a day,
they're doing 10,000 steps a day,
they're exercising five days a week,
then yeah, you'll see a lot of change in that first month.
You'll even see more change doing that
than what we're trying to tell you right now.
But it's not about just 30 days.
This is about changing your life forever.
And if you wanna change your life forever,
the goal is to do as little as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
Yeah, so what it looks like is if you do it like that,
where you just burn as many calories as possible
and start restricting your, you know,
I mean, eat little calories and just,
you'll initially have this real fast response
and then you'll have this hard plateau
that doesn't go away.
If you do it the way we're talking about, it's a snowball.
It starts off slow, but it starts to speed up
and then over time, it starts to feel like
your body's working for you.
It starts to feel like, this is my body,
my body's working for me,
versus what I hear from people who do it the wrong way,
which is when they say,
I feel like I'm fighting my body.
Yeah.
I feel like it's not cooperating.
And really, it's the best way to find your individual dose,
let that right dose.
And this is something that a lot of people don't realize
as a major factor when you're going to train.
You want to train to be able to adapt and to be able
to get all the desired attributes that you're going for
and not overdo it, not underdo it, you want to find that sweet spot.
And the only way to find that sweet spot is to really just gradually sort of go through it
and find out what's working the best.
Yeah, you know, it's funny.
Literally, this is no joke.
I know there's a lot of books written on the obesity epidemic and how to solve it,
and they're like, oh, all these complicated.
Literally, this is it right here.
If people just reduce their heavily processed food
and take down to about 10% of their diet,
so 10% of your diet or less heavily processed food,
that's it.
Eat like you want to, enjoy your food,
eat until you're satisfied,
and also do resistance training twice a week,
because that, like I said, that fortifies your body.
It makes your body resilient to illness,
to chronic illness, and improves your health.
Just do those two things, that's it.
Which, yes, I know they're big things,
but they're much easier and simpler
than all the other stuff that people try to do.
If you just did those two things,
we would solve the obesity epidemic.
The other thing that I would add to that,
and I find myself having this conversation more today than I
did in the previous 10 years as a trainer. And that is, is increase awareness around what
you're doing by not being distracted when you're consuming food.
Totally. We're in a whole, we have a whole different monster today than we just did 20
years ago. When you talk about cell phones and television and Netflix
and streaming stuff, I mean, it's so easy to become
distracted while you're doing this.
And so I've had a lot, you talk about having a lot of success
just telling people to eat whole food,
say eat whatever you want and they lose weight.
I've had a lot of success just telling people,
don't eat in front of the TV or your phone.
Just literally don't do that.
And that in itself makes you more aware,
more present of what you're doing.
And most people know what Benjing looks like
or overeating looks like.
And if you're just paying attention to it,
a lot of times that will kick in right there
and you'll stop that behavior.
But if you're mindlessly eating because you're sucked
into Netflix or you're on your phone and you're scrolling,
it's very easy
to get distracted and they over-consume.
This is one of the strategies that I would teach clients
was to just create barriers that would encourage awareness.
So like an example would be,
I have a client who says,
yeah, I know heavily processed foods,
but I really like Lays potato chips.
I use an example.
I love potato chips, one of my favorite things.
So does that mean I can never eat potato chips? I say, well, no. You can eat potato chips. I use an example. I love potato chips. One of my favorite things. So does that mean I can never eat potato chips? I say well, no
You can eat potato chips and the reason why I would say that by the way is I know if you do a hard restriction
You just people tend to go in the other direction. So I'd say here's a deal if you really want potato chips
Drive to the store and buy yourself a single serving. So don't say to yourself. I can't have them
Say to yourself that they're not in the house
But if I really want them then I'll drive to the store
and buy myself a single serving
of a small bag of potato chips.
Now, what this usually resulted in was people
more often than not, not eating the potato chips,
but sometimes they would get in the car, drive there
and get it and enjoy it.
But what it did is it created a barrier, right?
Cause what happens with heavily processed foods
is they're instantly available.
Of course, they overcome your systems of satiety.
You're distracted in front of the TV.
It's right there.
So it becomes an impulse.
Impulse, grab, impulse, grab.
But if you create a barrier that says,
gotta drive the store, now you stop,
you think about it, do I really want it?
I know I'm, okay, I'm grabbing it.
Maybe I shouldn't, you know what, let me eat this,
let me eat this apple.
It's the awareness.
Exactly.
You're wearing this part of it.
It forces you to do that.
You're driving for 10 minutes of the store,
you're thinking about what you're about to do.
A lot of people wake up in that time.
You're right.
And you know, it's good.
Yeah, any method that you can apply that will slow
the entire process down is gonna be a lot more effective.
So even just, you know even just focusing on you chewing your food and just slowing your heart right down
and just being in a place where you are observing exactly what you're doing, it's all about
being present with that.
Well, do you remember that moment that we had that Sal talked to, he hasn't talked about
a long time, but he used to talk about all the time after it happened with Paul Chek.
Remember when he used to bow his head and close his eyes,
yet we knew that he wasn't Christian
and he didn't really pray or anything like that.
And so you were like, what are you doing right now?
Like I knew this guy's not praying.
So and he was literally just taking a moment
before he consumed the food to basically ask himself,
am I nourishing my body?
Am I doing something that's going to help my body?
And that moment right there is enough
to help that person be present and realize what they're doing.
It's a moment of awareness.
If you think back to the last time you binge ate something,
you, if you really think back to it,
what you'll find is that you weren't even concentrating
on the food in your mouth.
You're chewing it while you're reaching for the other mouth.
So yeah, it's a rush to get it in.
Get it in as fast as possible, because I don't care about the one that's in my mouth,
even though that's the only one I can taste.
I care about the next one that's coming.
It's a very unaware, impulsive process.
Funny, they do studies on having people use their non-dominant hand.
So silly.
Like if you're right-handed,
eat with your left hand,
or they'll do studies that say,
in between bites, put your fork down,
or don't drink fluids while you're eating.
And people eat less calories.
When they do that,
because why, they're just more aware.
They're just focused.
They're just more aware.
There was a viral diet way back when that happened
with the chewing.
I can't remember what it was titled or what it was called,
but it was just forcing people to chew like 50-
Sometimes.
Yeah, the fact that you had to count why you chew,
like made you think about it,
become president in that moment,
cause you to eat way less.
Isn't that funny?
It's a very, very interesting thing
that awareness brings.
Now here's something that's interesting.
If this is you, if you're thinking yourself,
like I'm gonna try this,
it's not as easy as it sounds
because here's what you may actually find.
You may actually find yourself,
and I've seen this with clients,
fighting yourself to not be aware
because bringing awareness makes you realize,
this is what I'm doing.
I actually would have clients that would tell me,
I know you told me before I eat to write down how I feel,
because what I would tell clients, it's okay.
When one strategy was, before you eat anything, write in a journal down how I feel, because without teleclients, it's okay. When one strategy was, before you eat anything,
write in a journal how you feel
and what you're gonna, what you're gonna eat.
And really it wasn't to have them write,
it was just to have them slow down and pay attention.
But then they'd come to me and be like,
oh, I ate four, five Oreo cookies yesterday,
I'll just leave a cookie yesterday or whatever,
and say, well, did you write in your journal
to be like, now, how come?
I didn't want to.
They didn't want to become aware of what they were about to do.
So keep that in mind.
If this is something you're going to practice,
you may actually find yourself purposely
avoiding those barriers or avoiding ways
of bringing awareness because you don't want
to deal with the fact that you may be doing that.
Well, the truth is, and we've talked about this many times,
is that you really should consider,
like if this is somebody listening right now, You know, we've talked about this many times is that you really should consider
like if this is somebody listening right now
and this is you, consider actually having a therapist
to talk to while you're also going through this journey
because many times you want to be distracted.
You don't want to be present.
You don't want to be self-aware
and you're meditating with the food.
And so asking someone to do these things
when they still haven't addressed the root cause
of what's going on in their life,
I think, I don't know, I don't know if I've ever...
Maybe trauma, there may be pain there,
that, you know, that...
Totally, all wrapped into it.
And so I think that's a great advice
is to really, you know, bring somebody in
that can help you through that.
I don't think I've ever trained anybody that was obese.
And it wasn't because they just didn't know about food, they didn't know about exercise.
It's almost always, if not always.
It was their drug.
Yeah, there was something else that was going on that's totally not related to exercise and
die and stuff going on in their life or has been going on in their life since they were a child
that they haven't addressed,
and it was their way of meditating.
And because food is accepted as good, right?
It's very easy to fall into that trap
of meditating with it like a drug.
No, you're right, because when you eat,
especially when you eat something that's hyper-palatable,
it brings you pleasure.
Yep.
So if you're stressed out or tired or anxious or angry
or whatever, eating that food brings you
that temporary feeling or distraction of pleasure.
And so this becomes a really easy way
to distract yourself.
And so when you become more aware, when you stop yourself,
what you've done is you've taken away your favorite way
to medicate yourself, that doesn't take away the feelings of why you were doing it in the
first place.
And so this is why sometimes it's challenging.
It's like, you know, I did bring awareness to my eating and now I have to deal with my
anxiety or now I have to deal with whatever.
And that's okay.
That's okay.
That's the challenging part, but here's the deal.
Imagine you find better ways to deal with how you feel, right?
How's that going to feel? It's going to feel good. It's going to feel like you're taking care of yourself
and that's kind of how we talk. That's what we said earlier on this podcast. So there's your ways to solve
this obesity epidemic. Number one,
dramatically reduce your heavily processed food consumption, number two, lift weights,
and number three, try to bring awareness around
what you're doing.
Just do those three things right there,
and I can guarantee you the vast majority of people
listening and watching this podcast
will solve their obesity problem.
Look, if you like this podcast and you like our information,
go to mindpumpfree.com, go check out all of our guides.
We've got a lot of great written information.
You can also find all of us on Instagram,
you can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin,
you can find me at Mind Pump Sal,
and Adam at Mind Pump Adder.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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you