Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1531: F45 Review, How to Minimize Fat Gain When Eating to Build Muscle, the Truth About Meal Frequency & More
Episode Date: April 14, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about bulking without gaining extra fat tissue, whether there is evidence to suggest that eating more meals more frequent...ly throughout the day is better for weight loss, the pluses and minuses of F45 training, and percentage based vs. RPE based training styles. Why does it take so long to cut Adam’s hair? (4:45) Jordan Peterson as Red Skull? (6:30) Why men are no match for women. (11:25) The power of association. (15:34) It’s ‘Butcher Box’ grilling season for the Mind Pump Crew. (17:48) Baby Aurelius and Maximus update. (20:13) Will economist Harry Dent’s prediction come to fruition? (26:36) Mind Pump Recommends, This Is a Robbery: The World's Biggest Art Heist on Netflix. (32:03) A scary statistic surrounding men’s testosterone levels. (38:07) How muscle is protective even if you are overweight. (43:25) A follow-up conversation on Tonal’s valuation. Is it overrated, underrated, or properly rated? (45:24) The importance of getting rid of plastic to help your hormones. (52:22) #Quah question #1 – How do you bulk without gaining extra fat tissue? (53:55) #Quah question #2 - Is there evidence to suggest that eating more meals more frequently throughout the day is better for weight loss than two meals with the same amount of quality calories? (1:02:54) #Quah question #3 – What is your opinion of F45 training? (1:07:35) #Quah question #4 – Which training style do you all prefer, percentage-based or RPE-based? If not either of these, what do you recommend? (1:12:07) Related Links/Products Mentioned April Specials: MAPS Anabolic or Shredded Summer Bundle 50% off! **Promo code “APRILSPECIAL” at checkout** Mikhaila Peterson’s Reaction to Jordan Peterson as Red Skull Jordan Peterson Merch (Hail Lobster) Visit Butcher Box for this month’s exclusive Mind Pump offer! Economist predicts massive money ‘bubble’ will cause ECONOMIC CRASH soon Keynesian economics - Wikipedia This Is a Robbery: The World's Biggest Art Heist | Netflix Test of the American Man A Population-Level Decline in Serum Testosterone Levels in American Men Mind Pump #1212: Seven Ways To Raise Your Testosterone Naturally In women, higher body fat may protect against heart disease death, study shows -- ScienceDaily Available for Pre-Order TODAY! – The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano Tonal, the at-home fitness company backed by Amazon, hits $1.6 billion valuation on new funding round, readies for IPO Visit MIIR for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #1230: Surviving & Thriving In A Toxic World With Max Lugavere Calorie Cycling For Bulking and Fat Loss – Mind Pump Blog The Meal Frequency Myth – Mind Pump Blog Home | F45 Training Are Group Fitness Classes Just A Trend? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1180: Joe DeFranco On What Makes A Good Trainer, The Importance Of A Structured Warm-Up, The Role Of Genetics And MORE Mind Pump Store Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Mikhaila Peterson (@mikhailapeterson) Instagram Jordan B. Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Enzo Coglitore (@enzocog) Instagram Brendon Ayanbadejo (@brendon310) Instagram Joe DeFranco (@defrancosgym) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Hey, you just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Alright, in today's episode, we answered fitness and health questions that were asked by listeners,
and viewers just like you.
But the way we opened the episodes with an intro portion,
so we're gonna talk about what's happening in our lives.
We're talking about current events, we go through the news.
What's happening?
We talk about scientific studies.
We bring up our sponsors.
Here's what went down in today's episode.
The intro portion was 48 minutes long.
We open up by talking about Adam's haircut.
Apparently it takes 45 minutes to shave his head.
Oh, that's really weird. It's something with his beard. Then we talk about Red Skull. He's the villain
in the Captain America series. And apparently now he's Jordan Peterson. Yeah, whatever.
Makes a lot of sense. Then Justin talked about ski cougars that he saw up in the mountains.
Then we talked about barbecuing. It's getting warm over here in California.
We've been barbecuing like crazy.
One of our favorite places to get high quality grass fed meat
is butcher box.
And right now with mine pump, you get hooked up fat.
You get a free essentials bundle in your first box.
That means you get three pounds of chicken breast,
two pounds of pork chops,
and two pounds of pork chops,
and two pounds of ground beef. You ready for this? Four life forever. This is pretty cool.
Oh, and an additional $10 off your first box. Use our code. Go to butcherbox.com forward slash
mind pump. Use the code. Mind pump.
Pulled up fat saturated fat. Then I talked about my baby son and how he likes to squeeze Mama's boobs, which is pretty funny. Who does it? He's like his dad.
Wow.
Oops.
Then we talked about the economist Harry Dent predicting
a huge crash in the next coming month.
Then we talked about a show on Netflix about art robbery,
which was interesting.
We talked about how testosterone is crashing,
and I read some pretty scary statistics.
Then we talk about how muscle is protective, even if you're fat, even if you're overweight
or obese, having more muscle is protective. Then we talked about tonal and their valuation.
Then we brought up getting rid of plastics to help your hormones. And that led us to talking about
mirror, who makes some pretty amazing good cups that are not plastic.
They're not going to hammer your hormone levels.
By the way, you can go to mirror.com-mindpumpstores.
M-I-I-R.com-forward-sash-mindpump-checkout-the-products.
Also, if you go to the MindPump merchandise site and use the code trainers that's T-R-A-I-N-E-R-Z at MindPumpStore.com.
So that's MindPumpStore.com. If you get yourself a pair of suspension trainers,
you'll also get a free Cup Zero Camp mug. That's a mere camp mug with your
purchase. This special ends Friday the 16th at midnight. Then we got into the
questions. Here's the first one.
This person says, how do you gain weight without gaining body fat? The next question,
this person says, look, what's the evidence on eating small meals? Is it better or should
I just eat two meals a day? The third question, this person wants to know what our opinion
is of F-45 training. And then the final question, this person wants to know what we think about percentage-based
training or RPE-based training.
Also huge promotion because it's April and it's warming up, we put a couple programs,
actually we put a program and a bundle at 50% off sale to help everybody get in shape
for summer.
So the first program that's on sale is Maps and Obolic, 50% off. Then we put the shredded summer bundle on sale at 50% off.
And the shredded bundle includes Maps aesthetic, Maps prime, Maps hit, and the
Intuitive Nutrition Guide. So both of those 50% off, huge promotion. Here's how
you get that. Go to MapsFitnessProduct.com, and then use the code April special with no space
for the discount.
T-shirt time!
And it's T-shirt time!
Oh, shit, dog! You know it's my favorite time of the week.
We've got two big winners here, one for Apple Podcasts, one for Facebook. The Apple Podcasts
winner is Maley443 and for Facebook,
it's Jordan Maley, is there any relationship there
or is it the same person?
I don't know.
Both of you or the one of you is the winner.
Send the name I just read to iTunes at minepumpmedia.com,
include your shirt size and your shipping address
and we'll get that shirt right out to you.
You guys look very nice.
Are these. Thank you.
You're here.
Here's what I want to know.
Why does it take so long to cut your hair? It's just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, no, the real question is like, which one of us took our shirt off? Yeah, this is the question.
I have a shirt under a shirt though.
I just have all these muscles.
Listen, I give him the brief. Hey, hey, hey, it takes a lot of work to make this look like the way it does
Right, yeah, you think you just wake up like this is a lot of work to be a lot of them
You really have to be a lot of work to be a five you know
You know saying so a lot of work and then then just to a minute and then south and then south any chance
Or excuse to take a shirt off, you know like I don't want to get here, I don't wanna get here, I don't wanna get here on my unicorn shirt,
you know what I'm saying?
So I can't appeal it down to the white shirt.
I have two shirts on me.
This is also a shirt.
You know what I mean?
I like I have a bare chested.
No, I don't like little hairs.
I don't like the hairs getting stuck in my collar.
Did her heart flutter a little bit or even?
She get a little nervous after you did that
or she was sweating a little.
Yeah, she was like, whoa.
I didn't know I'm working with today.
Oh, you're the buff guy at the guy.
Yeah, absolutely.
Oh, now I can see why you're in the fitness.
No, no, no, I don't like the hairs, dude.
When I get little hairs in here,
oh my God, I want to punch someone in the face.
You get to get a shower.
Yeah, so I feel, and I'm good, dude.
I mean, make you find my unicorn shirt.
My daughter got me this, dude.
It's great.
I promised I'd wear it on the podcast a couple times.
I know.
Now whenever I wear it, I send her to the YouTube
and she gets all excited.
Speaking of T-shirts, did you order
Michaela Peterson's T-shirt yet?
I did.
You did.
Yeah, I did.
So good.
Smart.
She made a T-shirt of him being red school.
Yeah, her dad.
You had to break down the video.
This is insane.
So, and I thought it was, I'm like, get out of here.
Did you pull up his quote by a chance I asked you to do this?
I didn't pull up his quote.
I wanted you to pull up.
Yeah, but I did.
Maybe Doug can get to it.
I mean, did you see the whole, okay,
so here's what happened for people out now.
Yeah, break it down.
So Marvel comics, they put out a new,
another Captain America comic.
Red Skull is one of his arch nemesis.
If people don't know, the Red Skull literally
was like a super villain Nazi. And I don't mean a magical Nazi villain. I don't mean figuratively.
I mean, literally, he was a Nazi. In fact, the original American, what's his name? Captain
America comics were during that time and he was fight Nazis. That was the original comic books
way back in the day. I used to love Captain America. Anyway, Red Skull was a snotty guy. So this new one comes out and Red Skull literally has 10
rules for life in the comic book and a good chunk of them are like right off of Jordan Peterson's
10 rules for life. And it's it was deliberate. I mean, the more you look into it, like the more
things you could totally like correlate
between what he's put out and what they...
I don't get it.
Like he's spent his entire career
talking about the terrible,
you know, how terrible totalitarianism is him,
is how bad Nazi is him is and communism is.
I mean, it's all he talks about.
And he's been called the Nazi before,
which is ridiculous,
but this is like a whole nother level, right?
They made him an actual fantasy character.
Now do you subscribe to this being political propaganda
and is that the move here?
Yeah, I think one of two things,
what else should it be?
My theory is one of two things.
One is the guy person who wrote it,
knows he'll sell a bunch by doing that, right?
So it causes an online...
That could be true.
Think about how many people are buying it just for that.
Yeah, no, that's a good point.
Well, so you got, now you have to share,
because I watched the clip.
Michaela Peterson came out,
she did a whole little like YouTube clip
on this whole thing, right?
And she even says that, you know, at first,
I just thought it was people making a big deal.
And like, you know, everyone always tries
to drop, make connections to something.
And she's like, oh no, this is boy.
Yeah, very blatant. It's my dad. So I love, absolutely love how they're handling this. So what they, what she's decided to do and she's came out and said that any time this happens.
So if you're going to continue to slander my father, instead of us getting up in arms and making a big deal about it, what we're going to do is we're going to make light of it
and we're going to make merch out of it.
Out of it.
And then we're going to, so not just,
we're not going to profit, what we're going to do is we're going to take 100%
of the proceeds and we're going to give to a good cost.
Oh, that's even better.
I love that.
And what they did with the shirt was, it was, you know,
so Hydra is like the group group that red skulls part of it
whatever yeah so they took the Hydra emblem and they made it until like
Lobsers because you know there's that whole thing about
and and and that's the and then that's the shirt so I'm like I got to support
I gotta get that so I'm gonna have to rock very smart I like that I think that's
such a smart strategy on media if someone is messing with you it, spin it, and then point it in a good direction
because it makes you, makes it very hard to attack you. Did you read, did you find the quote Doug,
I was talking about? So on the YouTube video that she did, she, it's in the YouTube notes,
I'll just absolutely butcher if I try and repeat Jordan Pierce. It's in the notes. Yeah, it's in,
if you go to the YouTube that she linked, she, right her. She writes a very top or written in the section.
It talks about a statement that her father always
says about taking evil, something evil,
and then turning like good deeds out of it,
except for obviously Peterson always uses
much bigger words than that.
But it's, he speak big words.
Yes, it's very eloquent.
So if you read it, I wanted to read it.
I wanted you to read it because I thought that was good.
Yeah, I'm gonna find it right now.
See if I can pull up the, it's in the, okay, let's see here.
Now the quote's not in the notes.
Oh, yeah, it's out of ignorance, malevolence,
and slander, we will thereby derive some palpable good.
Yeah, that's it.
That's it. Yeah, I think that's it. That's it.
Isn't that great?
Yeah, I think that's awesome.
Yeah, what a cool way to put a spin on that too.
It's an interesting time, right, with people attacking each other through media and I guess
the winner is always a smarter person, not always the angry person.
I think sometimes you come across angry.
It makes you look defensive or weak.
I do agree with Justin's theory though, I think that this could have been just a strategy
to sell more, right, on their part,
before Peterson and God is right for that.
So, yeah.
Oh, that was a thought.
Sorry.
Adam never thinks it's mine.
I will definitely take credit.
Yes.
That's on tape.
Yeah.
So, that's it.
What did it do?
What did it do?
Yeah.
Anyways, do you guys have a good weekend?
That was great.
Yeah.
You were up in the mountains.
Yeah, I was up in the mountains.
You got the poles out too, huh?
Did you go fly fishing?
Yeah, I went fly fishing, got the boys out, and we did some
practice.
Obviously, we didn't get much in terms of a nibble or any kind
of luck there, but that's okay.
It's going to take multiple trips of us getting better
and like practicing for him to get there,
but they enjoyed it, which I was really stoked on.
And then we went for our last run.
So it was like the last, I don't know if it was technically
the last day, but it was one of the last days
that the resorts were open.
And so we went and we were able to go board
in one last time.
We were sitting there and it was kind of funny.
I was, you know, people watching.
It's a great place when you're up there in the lodge and just sitting there and it was kind of funny. I was, you know, people watching. It's a great
place when you're up there in the lodge and just sitting there and kind of chilling. And I noticed
this group of ladies that were like, you know, over 40s, whatever, sort of cougar kind of category,
if you will. And these guys had walked up to them all like, you know, hey, ladies, you know, like
doing their pitch and whatever. And so they're kind of giggling and whatnot. I'm just, you know, he ladies, you know, like doing their, their pitch and whatever. And so they're kind of giggling and whatnot.
I'm just, you know, slightly paying attention because I got nothing better to do.
And they start talking and flirting and this and that.
And then they, the guys give her his number, they leave whatever immediately.
They go on to Instagram.
And they're just roasting this guy between all, all four of them.
They're just like, oh look at this
Did look this picture like I'm like, oh my god. This is a thing like this is what people do now
I didn't even realize that you know when you give a number
It's like now you have like all the visuals and everything else that you can just like start scrolling through it and just you know
If this person does this like, oh, that's weird. Wait, so did the guys think that they had,
like did the girls make it seem like the guys had a chance
when they were talking about it?
Oh, totally.
Oh, they're all like, he he he.
This one's telling out later.
Bro, we have men are no, we are no match for women.
No, no.
That was my first like, like inside.
You were blown away for watching from the side.
Yeah, I'm like, these ladies are nasty.
I'll dare you.
Well, this seems like some nice guys.
That's the game though.
Yeah, that reminds me of, remember when we had Inzo
working for us, the kid that was fresh out of high school
and he was talking about how like the way that you meet
or start talking to somebody now, it's not,
you wouldn't want, if you're at a party,
I remember asking him this, he's like,
if you're at a big party and you saw a girl
across the room that you were interested in.
She's in the room.
Yeah, she's in the room across the way.
At this big party, what do you do?
And he's like, oh, well, you get on her Facebook page
and you request, a friend request.
And then only if she accepts, you then comment to her
and then she responds, then you're so weird.
I know.
But this is like our generation
are like older than us even.
Like this is how they're doing the single thing.
Well, I mean besides that,
to me with that highlights is again,
we're no match, like the dudes probably,
I guarantee you, because I know this is what guys do.
They probably left and their conversation
probably sounded like this.
Okay, dude, she totally wants a bang ring.
Or, you know what I mean?
And the women are like, look at him in a swimsuit
or look at what an idiot is.
Or that girl's trying to be all, you know,
ha ha ha like this, and then she calls him later that night.
When friends don't know.
You think so?
Guaranteed.
When they all go home.
Yeah dude.
Do you want another drink?
Nah, I'm gonna go back.
So I was gonna sit you loser.
Hey, what are you doing?
Yeah. So I wonder how many times that happens
and you, you know, guy or girl, right?
Then you go and you look the person up
and they look like nothing with the person you just met.
Like because so many people photo shot
and you use filters and it's the best of everything
is on Instagram and stuff.
Like how many times does someone go meet somebody
and then get their information
and then go look up on their social media
and like, oh my God, this person is super hot on Instagram.
Well, especially when you're wearing a bunch of ski clothes.
Yeah, like you don't get any kind of real semblance
of what their body, what you're working with.
Right, I can see you on Instagram.
Yeah, I don't know how I would sort of,
I don't know if I'd like it the way it is now.
Like, you know, the old ways,
you just shoot a spitball at her or something
in the room, you know. Get her attention, you just shoot a spitball at her or something in the room.
Get her attention, you know, faster.
You light her hair and fly.
Yeah, I was like, good stuff like that.
School of drink.
Oh, excuse me.
What's going on?
Punch her in the arm.
Yeah, that's fine.
I like you.
I got a random DM.
I actually got a couple from that episode that we did.
Remember when I brought up the whole burger den thing, right?
Yes.
So somebody was literally, okay, listening to our show and doing their door dash new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new, new and everything and it has no resemblance of Denny's when you go there. So this makes me, I wonder how many companies are doing this.
Why not?
If DoorDash is exploding and everybody's
pouring food to their door, that's brilliant if you ask me.
Totally.
Because now you can have a kitchen,
actually if you have a restaurant.
Isn't a fresh new start.
Bro, if you have a restaurant, you have a kitchen,
so you can be like, hey, you wanna start a Chinese restaurant?
No.
You could, you, exactly.
You can literally be a burger, den, you could be a taco place,? No. You could, you, exactly. You could literally be a burger,
Dan, you could be a taco place,
and all of it can be coming from Denny's,
but you can brand it four different ways
and sell to,
Now, now here's a deal,
because part of me's like, ah, you, you know, tricksters,
but then the other part of me's like, you know what?
If they're good, they'll do well, if they're not there.
They're not, and no, I'm not against this.
They're gonna, if you order a burger from there,
even if I could say whatever, it was a burger, Dan, I could say whatever,
if I eat it and it's gross and enough people do that,
it's gonna get a bad rating, no one's gonna do that.
No, I think it's smart.
I found a fair.
I found a place on DoorDash by my house
that I've driven by many times.
I don't want to say the name,
because I'm gonna say good things,
but also bad things.
I used to drive by all the time
and they didn't look good.
The outside didn't look good, I was like,
it's not gonna be good.
I saw them on DoorDash, didn't connect it to.
I just saw the name and I ordered from them,
amazing food, amazing food.
And that is an example of a place that was,
because of DoorDash, I tried and loved,
and if there was just brick and mortar,
I would have never given them a second.
I wouldn't even look at them because the way
the building looked and everything didn't look like that.
Oh yeah, associations are so powerful.
There was a barbecue place like that.
Like it got new ownership,
but I was just so turned off by my last experience.
I went there, like I would never go there otherwise.
But if I was to see it in a different branding
and you know, they delivered it to me, I tried it
and then found out where it was from,
I was be like, whoa, okay, I'll give it a no shot.
Speaking of barbecue stuff,
do you guys, I noticed like how fast I go through my butcher box
now that this, like we're in the spring now?
Are you guys the same way?
Like when I was over the winter time,
that I have a meat freezer, right?
So, and we have everything on auto.
So the butcher box gets sent to you.
Do you get the biggest box?
Yeah, I think it's the biggest box.
I think Katrina has its organ, I think it is the butcher box gets into you get the biggest box. Yeah, I think it's the biggest box. I have to Katrina is the one that has it's organized.
I think it is the biggest box.
And in the winter time, I find that we start to kind of fill the freezer up.
Like it's like, I'll get around to cooking that or I don't play, but our right
away springtime hits, the nice weather and stuff like that.
I'm out grilling so much.
And so I go.
I get the biggest box and have add-ons and I still I use it up because I just I use it. I have it. I use master. I get the big blocks and have add-ons, and I use it up because I use it.
I have it, I use it, I love it.
I get, and now I'm to the point
where it's mostly tritips, flank steak and rib eyes.
Those are the ones that I eat the most,
and then I'll have the pork chops and that's it.
Yeah, I do all the steaks, chickens and all that,
now in the trigger and then burgers and all that kind of stuff.
I'll still do on the grill,
and sometimes I'll do it simultaneously,
so I'm like cooking it all,
because I'm trying to do it Sundays,
and we're trying to do more of a prep
where we're cooking a lot of the meat at a time.
I gotta do that.
Yeah, I just started that.
So that's, every time I've done that before,
it's helped tremendously.
I'm not doing that right now,
and when I do, my diet is always way better.
Of course, always way better.
Of course, and you save money.
Yeah.
It's way better.
You know, who is it?
Because we just, where were we just at when I was,
I wanted us, oh, when we went up the trucky last night,
I wanted us to do chicken, barbecue chicken instead.
Do you guys not eat chicken as much?
I eat a lot of chicken.
I eat probably chicken the most.
I start eating chicken because it's just
has this weird consistency.
Like when we went to grill it,
it was kind of like chewy, grizzly kind of tasting,
but once I started cooking on the trigger, it's a totally different experience.
Yeah, I do read meat most of the time. I'd say I probably eat red meat every single day,
and I'd say I probably eat chicken two or three times a week.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, so I love red meat. It just makes me feel the best, taste the best. If I do chicken,
it's thighs. I don't do breasts too often, although I did a little stint with breasts
because it was so easy to get a lot of protein through breast.
Yeah, I never eat breasts anymore.
It's dry.
Yeah, it's just, you know,
and when you look at the macros,
it's not that,
you're not like saving that many calories in the thighs.
Thighs, you can cook,
you can cook just like you're saying,
prepping on a Sunday,
and then I can reheat it two or three days later, and because of all the fat,
it's still really good.
You do chicken breast, and then you reheat chicken breast.
Yeah, so drowsy.
I want to ask you Adam, because your son,
he's still breastfeeding?
No, no more.
Oh, no, once we hit the one year, at the one year mark,
maybe about, I don't know, a month afterwards, she was done.
So when he was, because I did this at the Rayllius
as hilarious, I'll tell you a story, but when he was breastfeeding,
did you ever mess with him?
Like where he's on the boob and you go down a pretend
like you're gonna take the boob away and do that.
What would he do?
Yeah, no, he pushes his hand on my face.
Yeah, he'll push my hand like that.
And he still is like this.
That's what if I mess with him when he's eating or something like that,
he gives me the stiff arm.
Oh yeah, I went in there and I was like, I pulled him off,
like I was gonna take the milk from him,
you know, and he's like, eh, hilarious.
And then he does this thing where he's,
when he's breastfeeding, he'll take his face off
and look at her nipple or whatever.
And then he'll take his hand and he'll grab her poop
and he'll like squeeze.
We're dying.
He tried to get like, and then a little milk will come out
and then he'll do this thing and then he'll move back.
And it's just like, can you stop playing with my boots?
What's the thing?
You guys are on what?
Month five, where are we at?
Yeah, we're, I think, five and a half.
Five and a half, five and a half months.
Okay, now, how are the nights right now?
Are you guys still doing good?
And then he did a little bit of a regression
where there was some challenges.
But he seems to be going back.
But we had to do the whole all this morning.
In fact, Jessica had, this is the first time it's happened.
Now this happened to me.
This happens to every parent that I know of,
where when you're doing the sleep training thing,
you let your kid cry.
And one time, every parent's had this.
At least one time you let your kid cry.
They don't stop crying.
You let him cry.
You let him cry.
You go in there and then they poop to diapers.
You realize there was some shit that happened, right? Yeah, yeah.
And I remember the first time that happened to me
with my oldest son, where he was screaming,
crying, whatever, I'm like, now he'll go back to sleep.
Went in there, was poop everywhere, I felt so terrible.
I still feel bad about happening to Jessica this morning.
Oh.
She has let him cry, let him cry, and she goes in there,
and then there was, so I come in from the garage,
and the look on her face was like, she was gonna cry,
and she's holding him, and he's in his little towel,
because she gave him a bath, you know?
And she's like, it was pooped everywhere, you know?
Oh!
Don't worry, baby.
It's me, every now and then it happens.
You won't remember.
Mine is going through this phase right now
that I absolutely love and I want a freeze time.
I hope this lasts for a while,
but so on the weekends, I'm there for his nap, right?
So during the week I'm not there for his nap time.
Like when he goes, he naps like around noon or 11 or noon,
somewhere depending on how early he got up that morning.
And so during the week, I'm not around for nap time whatsoever.
And Katrina always says that like, you know,
sometimes it's really hard for the nanny to get him down.
And it's like he knows how to manipulate her.
I've told you guys this before, he'll get down
and want to play and then he ends up skipping it.
He uses cuteness.
Yeah, so he totally knows how to manipulate her to get out of his nap.
So, I'm never around for nap time, except for on the weekends.
And so, what our routine kind of looks like is Saturday morning, he gets up and, you know,
he kind of lays with us in bed around 6.37 and is playing around.
We watch a little bit of cartoons sometimes for about a half hour and then play in the
morning time and then around like 11 o'clock
Or so I know that he's getting kind of tired and I'll normally turn on
Music and I turn it on like YouTube videos or whatever and
With soon as I turn it on and I blare it like wow like we're dancing and stuff like that
As soon as he sees me stand up like I'm gonna dance he comes running over to me
He wants me to hold him and dance with him.
And I'll dance with him and one song in
and he'll start to nustle his head into me.
And the music I'm telling you is like full blast
and he'll completely pass out on me like rockin'.
Is that the video that you did?
You posted that?
Yeah, that was this weekend.
Oh, that was that.
Oh yeah, and then he'll sleep on me for an hour and a half,
two hours while I'm sitting there listening to like music like full blast
Now if you turn the music off does he wake up? So yeah, if I come I can turn it down a little bit
But it still needs to keep playing okay, so this is weird. This is an interesting thing
So it's the same thing with my with my son
Whatever sound or is going on when he falls asleep has to continue. Yeah from to stay asleep
So if we're having conversations and he falls asleep,
you gotta keep having conversations,
otherwise he wakes up.
So in other words, going quiet makes him wake up.
Yeah, no, he's the same way.
If we, I can take it from like blasting to like,
you know, to where, because Katrina's like,
it's so loud, she wants to leave,
and she's like, it's too loud.
I'm like, no, it's fine.
He likes it.
I like it. And so he'll fall asleep, and she's like, it's too loud. And like, no, it's fine. He likes it. I like it.
And so he'll fall asleep, and then I can,
she can bring it down a little bit.
But if she's, we've done it before,
where she goes really low, and then also,
he gets startled and he wakes up.
And like, yeah, the noise, he's fine.
He's there.
Yeah, I've heard of some parents that even like,
we'll invite people over all the time,
and they'll stop and everything,
like, and make sure that there's like lots of like noise.
I was, a lot of people recommended that to me.
They said, you know, you want to get them early on used to sleeping in that environment.
Otherwise, if you create this like perfect silent environment, always for them, good luck
maintaining that.
Yeah.
Cause then you're going to the inevitable is going to happen.
You're going to travel with them or he's going to be in an area where there's there's
light or noise or garbage truck or something.
Yeah.
Exactly. Now, I get that I understand the sentiment for that,
but the reality is, they're still not getting
as good a sleep as when it's quiet.
So, for example, I mean, I could crash out
and fall asleep in this room,
but it's not gonna be as restful
because of the bright lights.
Even though I'm sleeping, it's not the same.
So, this is the struggle that we have,
do we do that?
And but I get that sentiment because
you also don't wanna create such a situation where
they can't sleep unless everything's perfect.
And then they get no sleep.
Some sleep's better than those.
It's still ended up work because, honestly,
I lost that battle.
I was the one who was like, let it be loud,
let the light be in, everything like that.
Katrina was like, no, like our room is like,
she made me put, I don't even know,
you could get this stuff.
I think home depots where we got it.
You can put this inside your windows.
You can put blackout stuff.
Yeah, like it's like almost like a tent
that you put on there and just peels on and off really easy.
So we have that, then we have the blackout shades
and then we have curtains over.
So like his room, it could be too long
in the afternoon and you can't see shit.
Dude, when we take the baby for a walk
in it cause he falls asleep in the stroller sometimes,
we bought these little baby like headphones
that like go over his head, his ears and just muffle out sound.
So he's, it's the funniest thing, we put him on him.
If he lets us put him on him, it's very effective.
He'll stay asleep very long,
but it's funny cause they're big
and he's got this little face.
Which is, which is his cheeks.
It's literally a little DJ.
No, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, so then we finally fall asleep. He's got this little face. Which is just, it's literally a little DJ. No, so it squishes his cheeks,
so then we finally fall asleep, he's like this.
So I'll lift a finger.
Oh my God, this is hilarious.
Oh, man.
I can't wait to show this picture to you.
I'll just go for it.
Justin, did you guys, did you and Doug watch the video
that South sent over, the economist?
Did you guys watch that?
No.
Yeah, so Glenn Beck had, do you know the name of the guy? I don't know. So there's a name of a really popular economist. Did you guys watch that? No. Having yet. No. Yeah, so Glenn Beck had, what do you know the name of the guy?
I don't know.
So there's a name of a really popular economist.
Apparently he's predicted some of the, the previous crashes.
Pretty well.
I'm very, really, according to him, it was really accurate.
How well he's predicted the other crashes.
And he came on, Glenn Beck, sourced it over,
and I listened to it.
Really good conversation.
And he per-dent.
Harry Dent.
Harry Dent.
So he predicts in the next 45, 60 days
that we see this bubble burst
that Salson's been talking about for some time.
Yeah, well, all the, I mean, everything points
to the fact that it's crazy.
How much money they're pumping into everything
and everything keeps going up like crazy.
There has to be some consequence at the end of this.
That's just logic.
Yeah, absolutely.
And now he says it's gonna get real bad
because we had the stock market,
bubble pop or the dot com bubble pop.
We had the real estate bubble pop in 2008.
And he's saying that this next one
is gonna be a money bubble,
meaning that because we've just printing money
and pumping it to everything,
that that's going to affect everything.
Because if the money bubble pops, then it doesn't matter.
Now, I agree more, so Glenn Beck actually argued with him
or he challenged him.
He says, respectfully, I'd like to challenge that.
And he says, I think that if we do see it,
we're not going to see it as soon as you think we're gonna see.
He's calling 45, 60 days.
He's like this summer.
Yeah, he's saying, yeah, he's saying,
this is around the corner, we're gonna see this huge crash.
And I think what Glenn Beckett is saying,
which is, I think we're gonna see
some crazy amount of money getting printed.
I think, I agree.
I agree.
Yeah. I just see a lot of policies keep pushing it out.
You know, keep pushing it as long as they can
to, you know, try and shield everybody
from what the inevitable is.
Yeah, I heard a rumor and I don't know if this is true.
I don't know if you read this anywhere,
but I heard that Biden was trying to pass a relief bill
for the four barrens that would actually allow people
that are behind on their mortgage
to extend their mortgages to 40 years.
Yeah, remember you brought that up and I looked it up.
I couldn't find that anywhere.
Yeah, I wish I remember where.
Well, nobody wants to feel, nobody wants to be in office when the correction happens.
So the goal is to pump it until the next time.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a blame.
Yeah, a pump and blame.
Because what's going to require, if you're looking at it
and you're looking everything, you're saying, okay,
we need to fix this before it explodes.
Just like a huge shit ball.
You still have to, you're gonna have to cut stuff
and make costs and pain.
And you don't wanna be the guy or girl in charge
to do that.
You wanna be the, I am out, it wasn't my fault.
It's the next day.
Now, do you understand the logic behind like that?
So I forget the name of that economic philosophy
to just keep infusing money into the economy.
And it doesn't really exist.
I mean, it does.
Well, it does.
Keynesian economics says that they talk about.
I don't think it's Keynesian.
I think there's another name for it.
And I wish I could remember, I'll look it up
and maybe the next time on the podcast, I'll bring it up.
But I think the idea is that so long as it grows the GDP
year over year, that you can get away with it
because of how big the GDP is.
Yeah, but you know what, here's the problem with GDP.
This is a big problem with GDP.
GDP, if let's say the government says,
we're gonna spend $10 trillion on, I don't know, putting
solar panels on every single building in America or something, right?
That goes to GDP.
So it could be, it could be, they could say we're going to make, we're going to create 10
billion paper straws.
We could make, you know, we're going to make everybody's shirt red.
We could come up whatever they want.
If they spend it, it goes to GDP.
So if government spending goes up, GDP automatically goes up. So that's, it's a little bit misleading when
you look at just GDP.
So you're right, it is Keynesian. So it does say that the theory of proposed the spinning
boost of course I'm right.
I thought there was another term for that where you just keep pumping money in. So long
as it continues to increase the GDP, it's like the, and because of all the regulations
they put in to protect the bank,
so they would never fail after what we learned from OA.
Yeah, no.
If you, I mean, the two competing schools of thought
with, I guess, what you call capitalism
or free market economics would be Austrian and Kenzian.
But in the big differences, one believes in, you know, more of this kind of injection of cash or free market economics would be Austrian and Kenzian.
But in the big differences,
one believes in more of this kind of injection of cash,
whereas the other one believes more
in allowing the market to weed out bad or malinvestment.
So this guy's theory, this Harry Dent guy,
unfortunate name, Harry Dent.
I can't get past that.
Yeah, anyway, he thinks that what's gonna happen
is that the central banks,
everyone's gonna turn on the central banks.
And finally, say that this is, you know,
this is just not working and we need to get rid of them.
And obviously it's whatever.
Now, Glenn Beck, I agree with him.
He thinks what's gonna happen, he goes,
no, they're gonna level up
and they're gonna bring it on the global scale.
So the argument will be,
the reason why this happened Everybody is because we need global
Currency we need a global blank. We need global stimulus that'll fix it. Yeah, and I I agree with him
I think they'll just level up. That's what I agree. I think what he says. I don't think we see a crash in
45-year-old order. Oh man. She did just not exactly what it is dude. This talk is reminding me of something that I watched
Did you guys want it either one of you guys wants the new? You did just run out of exactly what it is. Dude. This talk is reminding me of something that I watched.
Did you guys watch it?
Either one of you guys watched the new,
it's the largest art robbery ever on Netflix.
Oh yeah, I just watched the preview for that,
but that was an excellent watch.
Really good.
Okay, so now, okay, so I forget the name of it,
what the name of the, maybe Doug can look at the documentary,
it's trending in a top 10 on Netflix right
now, it's the largest art robbery something, I don't know
what the title is, something like that.
So, one of the things I'm watching it, right?
So this is early on before I kind of disunfolds.
And I'm thinking, you know what, like, if someone steals a
rim brand or a Picasso, like, what the fuck do you do with it?
I know, who do you sell it to?
Because you can't sell it to anyone, you can't even show it
off because it's so famous
that if some but the wrong person comes in your house
and sees it.
Now, I mean, this is time factor.
Like, if say 10 years goes by 20 years,
no way, bro, no way.
No way.
So, try and guess,
because I'm gonna give you guys the answer
that blew my mind.
So, here's what I would think.
I would think that you can sell it.
There's a black market for it,
and it's much less expensive,
or you make less money,
but you'll sell to like some chic somewhere,
or some some, some,
some like party leader.
Yeah, somebody on the black market.
It's there, it's called,
it's called, this is a robbery.
The world's biggest art heist.
Wow.
So you're partially right.
Okay, so, and that was,
so I can, so what I,
well, I speculated with Katrina that that it would be used as collateral in the
blockage. So for example, so you're a big cocaine dealer and you've got, you
know, 10 kilos you, and normally when you drug deal, you can sign that to
somebody. So just let's say, just that I'm the big cocaine.
Yeah, so Justin's a big cocaine dealer. I supply him. I've got, you
obviously doesn't use it. Right. I have him. I've got, you obviously doesn't use it. Right.
I have to.
I've got 10 kilos that I'm going to give to him.
You're saying, okay?
And in order for him to get that from me since he doesn't have the money to pay all that
upfront, he would give me this piece of art as collateral.
So we could go do that.
But that's not even the number one way that this is actually used that I had no idea
about.
So because the art is such a big deal, right?
There's only one of these rim brands.
There's only one of these Picasso's.
This, I mean, this gets the FBI involved like crazy.
So with a lot of these, these like,
a lot of people that are, you know, thieves,
what they do is they steal these
and they use it as a bartering chip
to get themselves out of jail.
So you, you, you go rob one of these paintings.
You got this as like a, get out of free jail card later on.
So five years goes down the road and you get pot for doing a bank robbery.
And the cops are just like, oh, you're going in.
So it's like you could say to them, look, here's a deal.
I can find this for you.
Yes.
If you lighten my sentence,
so that's like we need pink Panther.
That's what they actually interview like a notorious like thief that had he has
stole like hundreds and hundreds of more that he got away with brilliant though you
get out of jail. I know that didn't even cross my mind because all I could think
about originally was like what the hell do you do with this?
You can't sell it online. It would you be caught right away?
You can't hang it up in your house. I know because even if you hang in your house
I was gonna believe you like bro. This is a real right
They're not believe you or they're gonna tell somebody like he's got that rim brand that's been missing
I would think that you would sell it on the same black market. Yeah, but like rhinoceros horns
Yeah, but think about this. What is that person gonna do?
Like the person who buys it is not gonna.
Well, I don't know, bro, because if you guys ever seen,
who's the major drug kingpin of,
was he Mexico, South America, Pablo Escobar?
You ever seen pictures of his house,
and his tigers and his shit that he is?
This is like real exotic random stuff.
Someone like that would put shit up like that in his house.
Have you seen the gold oozey?
Yeah, have you seen some of this old,
what is how?
Pull up, Doug, pull up,
pull up, Pobble Eskibar is like.
He like golden like assault rifles everywhere.
Well, he's also.
Yeah, a gold room.
He's like an exception to roll two.
Like the FBI is scared of that guy.
You know what I'm saying?
Like somebody at that level is totally different.
I'm saying.
Also, also,
also think about this way.
You just stole a Rembrandt and you,
you're like, I wanna sell this Pablo Escobar.
How do you do that?
Yeah, let's meet in person.
Yeah, exactly.
How do you find that guy?
You'll be like, I'll give this to you for five million
and he goes, I'll take it for five dollars.
Okay, here.
Oh yeah, here we are.
Yeah, you may have it.
See if we can see the other house behind this side.
No, yeah, do Pablo Escobar's gold room or gold,
you know, weird, he own tigers and monkeys and
He's got yeah, he's got gold. I don't know. I thought that was really fascinating because that never crossed my mind that you could use it as a
bartering chip but because it was it's so infamous right there's only so many of these paintings that I mean the FBI is involved
That's a big deal, dude. There's massive rewards out for it.
So it's like, you get caught up for some bank robbery
and it's like, hey, I know where this,
you know, that rim brand that was stolen 10 years ago
is that if I tell you where it's at
or I get it for you, will you lighten my sense or let me off?
Now, are they stealing this from museums
or people's personal collections?
You see, both actually.
So the guy that they interviewed in the documentary,
he's everything.
He's stolen from private facilities
to up to museums and stuff.
So they do this.
So I want to see how he did it.
Because don't they have crazy lasers and security?
Well, no.
So this is the biggest.
So the big, you would be blown away
by the one that the biggest art robbery,
so it was estimated at $200 million and art was stolen from this place.
Wow.
And it's not even all of it.
They just took a handful of things.
But if you saw how easy it was, it was like, they were super vulnerable.
Super vulnerable.
They just walked into it.
Yeah, the security system was, it wasn't that like-
Just it seemed too many movies.
Like after like lasers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, you got to was, it was not like- Just the scene too many movies. Like, are there like lasers?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you gotta break some kind of glass.
You know, with smoke that comes out,
that with the Sean Connery,
where it's the entrapment, or what is it?
Oh, is that the one with catharsis?
Yes, yes.
What's she like, so like does the little,
the little, the famous scene where she's in all black,
and she works through all the lasers.
Fantastic.
I distinctly remember the thing.
Speaking of things along those lines,
dude, you guys don't hear scary statistic.
You know how I've been talking about now
for a while how men's testosterone levels have been dropping.
Oh my God.
You talk about like with 40 years from now
we're all gonna be infertile.
There's that, right?
How bad fertility's getting?
So here's something to put in perspective, right?
I actually took a screenshot of this and I got a,
oh here we go.
So here we go, ready?
The, this is crazy now.
The, an average 22 year old male today,
so the average 22 year old today,
has got the testosterone levels of a 67 year old in 2000.
Oh my God.
In the year 2000, bro. So a 67 year old in the year 2000 had the testosterone
level of the average 22 year old male today. You can't tell me there's this is crazy. Look at this.
Average testosterone has fallen close to 50% in the last two decades. What? Yeah. There's this
world wide. There's this. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes okay. Yes Yes, I told you one of the one of the most random and interesting things I found with like being doing what we're doing now right being out on
Social media. That's like when I started talking about my test
Austro and use and my whole experience and the hormone therapy and everything that is the number one thing that I get
DMs I would not have guessed that I would, just because when I got involved
with using steroids back when I was in my early 20s,
it was very taboo and not a lot of people talked about it.
And you just didn't hear a lot of people even talking
about their testosterone levels.
And that is, and it's young guys.
It is.
It's guys under the age of 30 that are reaching out
to be wanting to hear my opinion on what they should do.
Whatever is causing this, and most of the theories are pointing to chemicals in the environment,
just exposure to these chemicals that affect our hormones.
Yeah.
You know, it's not just low testosterone and man, it's also how babies are developing
in the womb.
It's how testosterone is a very important hormone for male development.
It's what makes us, man, literally in the womb,
the baby is essentially the same,
whether it goes female or male,
then the injection of testosterone
is what makes the fetus turn into a male.
And that's of course triggered by chromosomes or whatever.
But, you know, so it's not just the man,
young men they're having this.
And then again, low testosterone causes all kinds of problems,
anxiety issues, low confidence, you lose intelligence,
you can actually decline, cancer risks go up.
It's really wild.
I mean, 50% in two decades, holy shit, man.
This is super alarmed.
This is crazy.
And it's actually a very big deal.
We need to figure out what the hell is going on.
And so there's something that we have in our,
there's some, there's chemicals that are causing certain things.
And they're finding a lot of these chemicals
in like babies, breast milk, and...
Do you really think it's that?
Or do you think it's just a combination
of a whole bunch of stuff?
What do you mean?
I think there's a single chemical?
No, I don't think it's just chemicals is what I'm saying.
I think it's like, I think there's more like I'm saying. I think there's more cultural stuff happening.
I think there's a lot of things that are probably
playing against the culture.
I think it's the cultural stuff that are happening
because of the low decline.
Yeah, I think it's mostly, I think it's mostly,
to see that much of a decline in not even one generation,
20 years, right?
That is a strong environmental push.
There's something coming from the environment
that's really affected.
So I would love to see then a study of like, you know,
because there's definitely people that,
even a decade ago that are raising kids
like very hippie-like, right?
All-hole food, all-no, Xeno-essergins,
like everything is like, they're very careful of all that.
It would be interesting to find a community of people
that have been consistent with that since kids birth
and see where their hormone levels are and compare them to some of the news.
I'd love to see this like whatever.
Form your lot, everything, chemicals, everything, I don't care.
I take care.
I'd like to see that too, but here's the problem.
They find these chemicals in the urine and blood of people who don't even use a lot of
these products.
It's so prevalent in everything.
It's in the rain and everything else.
Like it's just, yeah, it just, it makes its way in the environment everywhere.
But I would think though, if that's the only place you're getting it, and then you do a
good job of avoiding it all at least.
Yeah, at least some.
Yeah, you would see some.
There'd be less damage.
Because it isn't that, I mean, the in the water, because you brought out that the other
day and things like that, that has to be on the lower end, right, as far as the offenders
or the highest. I, so the ones that they're highlighting are these plastics.
Like BPA was one of them, right, these plastics that are, and look, plastics everywhere,
plastics revolutionized our lives. But a lot of these, these chemicals, they find in some of these
plastics, they think are the big, mean, offenders. Well, that's a conundrum, right? I mean, you look at
like surgery, you look at like plastic for everything in terms of medical advancements
has been crucial for all that.
But now, the unintended consequences now, those actually give us chemicals that are
artificial.
This is an existential threat, if you think about it, right?
If this continues at the in this path, we could, this could literally be the biggest problem
that mankind has ever encountered.
If we become infertile, you know what we're gonna do?
We're just clone, like how we can have kids
just start cloning each other?
Cause I don't know where you'd go from there.
This is all great science fiction movie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's great.
That's what I'm thinking right now, too,
is I've listened to this.
This is real life.
Yeah, that's happening.
Hey, since we're talking about studies,
so check this out, this is pretty cool.
So here's how protective muscle mass is in the body.
So this study was talking about how protective it was
for heart disease, men with a lot of muscle mass
and high body fat.
So guys who have a lot of fat, but also a lot of muscle
decrease the risk of heart disease by 26%.
So just having more...
Because of the muscle.
Because of the muscle.
Just having more muscle, even with high body fat.
Now, the men who were lean with more muscle
decreased their risk by 60%.
But still, it just goes to show how protective muscle is
for your...
I was having a conversation with my brother
of the weekend, I finally got to see him
in a season of place.
And he had one of the vaccines and had a really crazy
reaction to it, the second shot. He had a crazy reaction to it.
What happened?
Well, basically he got all the symptoms of COVID.
Like he might as well just got it. But yeah, it was like for three
or four days, it was just like out. And but his wife was fine.
Nothing like didn't even feel anything
And the thing about it is like my brother and I are like polar opposites like it
He used to play sports with me like he was actually like really talented at sports
But like he'd never really got into the working outside of it and like was just avoided lifting weights like nothing like
Like so he'll do some hikes and things
But he's never really like built muscle and And so I'm wondering if that has, you know, a factor in all this of, you know,
having that sort of like extra barrier of protection against, you know, these foreign sure.
Yeah, like I would think so. I was bringing that up with him, and because he's never even like
been interested, I haven't pushed it on him. I actually was getting your book for him
because he'd be like the perfect guy to understand.
He needs to know why it's so essential
that you lift weights.
Yeah, and it's good because it's coming from someone else.
I can imagine he probably doesn't want to listen
to a thing you say because you're his,
oh yeah, and he's the older brother, right?
So he's got all the answers.
I was always coming him for all the answers.
Well, speaking of talented athletes
and not wanting to listen to anything you have to say did you guys see my Instagram?
Which one that my Instagram post about the the
My god, what's the name of the tonal when I did?
Oh, everybody's the 1.6 billion value is it is it overvalued? Yeah, no, I didn't say overvalued
I said is it overrated underrated properly rated was I literally put, just trying to get a feel for it.
Yeah, so I literally wrote, I did a picture
that is on their website, I think of their product,
and I put, you know, tonal receives $1.6 billion
valuation, overrated, underrated, properly rated,
and just wanted to get a feel of my audience.
And boy did I piss off my buddy.
Oh, I saw that.
My buddy got on there.
My buddy, Brendan got on there, and now, I didn off my buddy. Oh, I saw that. My buddy got on there. My buddy, Brendan got on there and now I didn't actually
know this and obviously he's invested in it, right?
So, hearing me rag on it and talk about how I think
it's overrated is just totally, I mean, he took it,
he took offense though.
Oh man, he went back, he went so hard on me about it that
because I don't.
He kept comparing it to Instagram,
which I thought was silly.
He's like, oh, Instagram at one point,
was it making any money and that look?
You know what the problem is?
And we've seen, how many times have we seen this Adam,
where people come in to the fitness space
and they don't know fitness.
And so they view it like, I don't know, like a tech company.
And they say, oh, it's got technology,
it's got this many users.
We've seen other tech companies grow from there.
Doesn't work like an app.
No, it doesn't work that way.
That's the bottleneck.
The bottleneck people have to work out.
Keeping people working out consistently and a lot of them.
If you can figure that out, you've solved the puzzle, right?
Yeah, that was my, I mean, and that was his argument was that because I haven't actually
seen all their financials and know the quote quote, unquote, stickiness of the product.
I have, you know, I have no leg to stand on to even put my opinion in.
I was like, well, okay, dude, I don't know all those things, but I think my experience
in this space for as long as I've been doing this, I have some sort of leg to stand on
in this.
To your point, that's exactly right,
is that fitness is a different monster.
A lot of the all, not a lot,
all of the tech companies that have gone public
and made billions of dollars, yeah, the stickiness,
and they're addictive.
I mean, they suck people in
and people use them day in and day out for hours forever.
Fitness has never been that way.
Nothing has been invented.
Nothing has ever came out in the history of us working out
that has been so sticky that you become addicted to it.
It compares it to social media.
And then it dies.
Yes.
The most effective modality or whatever you want to call it
that's gotten people to stay the most consistent
is personal training.
Nothing comes close to personal training.
And even personal training,
isn't even the same universe as like social media.
People use Instagram on their toilet all the time,
they're looking at whatever.
People, this is the problem.
This is what we're trying to solve, right?
Is get people to start and stay consistent.
That's the other thing, the other point that I brought up
was that anything that is a bandaid, right,
for this, like it, or is treating the symptom
and is not the cure and is not revolutionary,
it is not going to stick around and blow up
and to be these worth billions and billions of dollars.
And a lot of these businesses,
and I know I was really going hard on them
because he's also a big investor in Orange Theory.
And it's, I said, I hate to tell you this, man,
but they aren't the answer, man.
Orange Theory is not the answer for everybody.
I'm sorry.
Are there some people that enjoy it and have success?
Well, sure, I'm not denying that,
but it's not really solving the problem.
When we talk about obesity and the things
that we talk about on this show,
that type of training is not the answer.
We saw it with curves, we saw it with CrossFit, Orange Theory, and this is a cycle.
And someone will come out with a new way to work out.
That's fun, gets people hyped and motivated, which doesn't last.
And it goes like this.
And that's part of why, part of why Orange Theory did so well.
And I remember, I remember seeing it and going, this is brilliant.
I mean, they integrated tech into the Group X type of training model very, very well.
They took a piece from the CrossFit community thing and some of the exercises and the
circumtrading and the competitiveness.
They blended new good tech and it was clean, it was very seamless.
And they created this incredible environment that built a lot of hype and energy and
motivation for people.
But that what we know, that's all fleeting.
Like eventually people get tired of that.
Eventually, achy joints come and happen.
And eventually what ends up happening
is they fall off and then the newness wears off
and then we're on to the next trend.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Cause I mean, even Fitbit,
like I had high hopes for Fitbit
because they centered it around community,
which was like one of the first tech companies really understand
that it's about bringing your friends in,
bringing your family in,
other people, it's like a support system,
but even that, the newness of it,
the excitement of it just totally just away.
Fitbit, my fitness pal, Body Bug, the Nike,
the Nike one.
They're all, they're all.
They're not tech companies, stop.
They're all cool.
Yeah, stop looking at them like they're Apple or Google
or whatever.
They're fitness companies that use tech.
And so you have to treat it that way.
It's not gonna be like a tech company.
So if the fitness isn't good,
it's just never gonna work.
You have to like somehow the unicorns
gonna be both of those together,
but I don't know what that looks like.
Okay, here's my opinion.
In my opinion, if you want the masses
to consistently exercise and has to be a cultural phenomenon,
there is no product that I'll ever do it.
And what's my evidence?
You look at cultures where, you know,
like you go to like certain parts of Asia
where people wake up in the morning and they exercise,
it's part of their culture.
In fact, some companies do this in Japan,
before they start work, they do calisthenics.
Or after dinner, it's
cultural that everybody goes for a walk. Or cities are designed in ways to where it's
less convenient to drive and more convenient to walk. That's the only time you see people
exercising. That's right.
Regularly, it has to be a part of the culture. What the products are going to do is they're
just going to trade that same 20% back and forth. Now, what we're trying to do is we're
trying to work with the deeper part, and this Now what we're trying to do is we're trying to work
with the deeper part, and this is what we're trying to do
with the podcast and what we learn through personal training.
But still, we're not gonna solve it.
It's a massive hill to come.
It's a massive hill.
It's very, very challenging.
If it's not a part of the culture,
it's gonna be a very difficult thing.
Yeah, and by the way, I'm rooting for these things,
because here's the thing, even if it just treats the symptom,
if it brings new people into searching for the cure,
I'm all for it.
You know, so I'm not like,
and I wanted to make that clear,
they're like, this is not me, I'm not coming out bashing
tonal, I'm not bashing or serious,
I'm just telling everybody who's listening,
it ain't the fucking cure.
This isn't the answer to you like long-term fitness and health.
It is not.
It's a cool thing that has got a lot of hype and energy around brilliant marketing, great
timing right now, that everybody's hyped about, but I'll tell you right now, fast forward
10 years and tell me if it's still around crush it.
The cure is within you.
You know what I mean?
That's the truth.
I'm going to circle back real quick because I know I'm gonna get DMs of people saying,
what products should I avoid?
I'm talking about the testosterone thing
that I brought up with the chemical plastic itself.
I mean, I always get DMs and I always forget
to give people like takeaways.
So here's a good takeaway.
Don't store things in plastic containers
and don't drink out of plastic water bottles.
Those have been shown to leak plastic, not only that,
but to leak chemicals, but also in the manufacturing process
of making plastic bottles, there's microscopic plastic pieces
in pretty much every single bottle.
If you have a plastic shaker cup and you store it in your car
and you wash it or whatever, it hot cold,
it little by little starts to leak these chemicals.
So you wanna use metal or glass,
I know mirror is a company we've worked with in past, they make really good containers and
they're they last and they don't leach chemicals. So it's a good place to start, right?
Well, I love a company like Meer too because every time you make a purchase, they're also giving
back and they're doing right. So you want to talk about a cool company to invest in and also take care of your health
totally.
This Quas brought to you by Organify.
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checkout
the first question is from andru can one
how do you bulk without gaining extra fat tissue when the fat cells already
existed your body
all right so i'm going to reword question. How do you bulk gain muscle without gaining
any extra body fat?
All right, it's virtually.
Yeah, well, there's a couple of things here, okay?
Number one, it doesn't take that many extra calories
to build muscle.
You're not gonna gain muscle anything faster
than a couple pounds a month.
You know, maybe faster if you're a new person,
you got crazy genetics or whatever.
But even at three pounds a month,
which would be amazing.
If you're getting three pounds of muscle
in a month that'd be phenomenal,
if you did the math on how many calories it took to produce that,
it's not much at all.
It's like an extra 50 calories a day.
So on the one hand,
you want to bulk in a way where you're eating
minimal extra calories to build muscle. By the way, you also want to have a very
strong muscle building signal along with that. So you want to have a good workout
program that's telling your body to build muscle. But here's the other side of
that because I know people listening are like, it doesn't work for me. I gotta
eat way more calories to build any muscle at all. Well, the reason behind that is because eating extra calories
also sends a muscle building signal.
Believe it or not, if you bumped your calories
by 500 calories above maintenance,
or even a thousand above maintenance,
if there's an anabolic part to it, right?
It does send a muscle building signal.
So this is where we get into this kind of gray area.
Now, I know
you said Adam, for example, that it's impossible or whatever. If the signal is strong enough,
the body will build muscle. And all I have to do is point to studies where men are given
injections of testosterone, so they're given steroids, and their body weight oftentimes
doesn't change, but they lose fat and build muscle at the same time.
Now of course they have a very loud hormonal signal,
but that just highlights that the signal
is the most important thing.
If you're really telling your body to build muscle effectively,
you're getting good sleep, obviously you're eating healthy,
and you're following a workout,
this is the most important part,
you're following a workout that is appropriately intense,
has the appropriate amount of volume, is utilizing the best exercises, you're seeing a workout that is appropriately intense, has the appropriate amount of volume,
is utilizing the best exercises you're seeing strength gains.
If that is sending a very, very good muscle building signal,
it doesn't take that many more calories to build muscle.
I think you have to be a black belt to do this, right?
Totally.
And it's really a genetic freak.
Well, it's less to, and even if you are a genetic freak,
it's still the mental
discipline that you have to have. Because you have to understand that you could very well
be building muscle at the perfect rate and not see the scale move whatsoever. And so if
you're somebody that's trying to build and you know you're eating, or you think you're
eating extra calories,
and you don't see the scale going up anyway.
It really messes with your head.
It really makes you think you don't wanna ramp it up.
Yeah, or you might even see it like the scale go down
to your point, you could lose body fat.
I mean, if you eat more calories, you speed up the metabolism,
you build some more muscle,
which speeds up the metabolism.
And so there's a chance that you could add it
a pound of muscle,
but then also maybe lost a pound and a half of fat along here two or three week journey.
And then go, oh my god, I'm definitely not doing this right. I'm losing weight.
You're right. But in reality, you could actually be just in part. So the hardest part about this
is the mental discipline to just stay the course to believe that, okay, I've figured this out.
I've got enough calories. I know I'm eating well,
I've got, I'm falling a good program,
I'm training consistently, and I'm seeing strength go up
and just staying the course.
There's no way around it, like, it's gonna,
if you were to try to really nail this down,
it's gonna take a really long time and spread out
and really managing your calories at a level
that is just barely noticeably in a surplus.
Like you just have to very much be meticulous about it.
I just don't know that a lot of people have that kind of.
No, I suck at this for years, right?
Because I was the skinny kid that wanted to gain weight.
And so the scale was so important to me.
If the scale went up, well, I'm crushing
and I'm doing a good job.
But the reality is, that doesn't always tell you everything.
So there's a few tips that I'll give you
that I think can help a lot.
And this is just based on my own experience.
Number one, are you getting stronger?
Okay, so if your strength is going up,
you're definitely not losing muscle,
or it's very unlikely that you're losing muscle,
and you're probably gaining muscle,
or at least going in that direction.
So are you getting stronger?
Number two, also use either body fat tests
or circumference measurements.
Now for me, when I gain body fat,
it's typically around my waist.
So if I measure my waist,
I can tell if I'm getting leaner or gaining body fat.
If the scale goes up and my waist doesn't go up,
it's muscle or if the scale goes up
and my waist goes down, holy cow,
I'm doing the only thing.
The only reason why I don't like that one
is because of inflammation in the gut,
water retention and a lot of thing.
Yeah, you can't take one measurement to heart.
You gotta do it like kind of friends.
I like the body fat one.
And if you follow me since the beginning,
this is actually how I built my Instagram.
So when I came out and I measured my body fat percentage
and it was at 20% body fat, which at that time of my life,
I'd never been that high before.
I was 212 pounds.
And when I showed the journey,
I actually, my goal was to stay at 212.
And that's where, so when I came all the way down
to 7%, I was 212 still. And the goal was to show at 212. And that's where, so when I came all the way down to 7%, I was 212 still.
And the goal was to show people
that I didn't need to have this huge swing one way or the other.
I didn't need to add on 20 pounds of muscle
to then lose 30 pounds total and a body fat.
It was like, I'm gonna hover right around this 212.
Now mind you, week to week, you know,
I had some 214s, the 211s.
And the goal was that kind of,
that my home base was 2-12.
The way I looked at it was if I started to creep up, I would back off calories a little
bit.
If I started to really dip down, I would increase a little bit, but I was really trying
to stay.
Because I knew I had plenty of body fat to trim off, I knew that I was consistent with
training, which I wasn't before that.
I was sitting in a signal to build muscle.
If I could keep my calories in a place that my body was kind of hovering around that
weight, I was training correctly and consistently, and I was eating good, that I'm probably having
a nice little exchange.
Yeah, and then here's the other part of it too, and this took me a long time to understand
is that building muscle is a slow ass process.
So if you're bulking, you're like, oh, hell yeah, I gained 10 pounds this month.
It's probably not all muscles.
It's actually probably mostly not muscle.
You just, nobody builds muscle that fast.
Unless it's muscle memory.
So unless you were super buffed before
and you stop working out,
lost a lot of muscle in the store,
and you're working out,
or you're like the one in a million or a billion.
But muscle building is a slow process.
So if you're inching up on the scale ever so slowly,
where every couple months you go up a couple pounds or a pound
and it sticks and you're getting stronger
and you're noticing in the mirror
that you see more definition, you're probably gaining muscle.
But boy, does it take a ridiculous amount of patience?
Because I know what your time about your journey
that you did Adam, where you did that weight transfer.
That was after years of you working out and doing it.
No way I would have been in your body for a while.
I would have never been able to do that as a kid
because I was so impatient.
Oh yeah, no, I didn't have the discipline as a kid
to do that.
I'm glad you brought that up though.
I was just gonna say you just put up.
No, no, no, no, talking about the muscle memory.
Yes.
So I get tagged on this a lot.
So this is a good time to bring this point up.
So we get tagged a lot on people that show
like these crazy transformations.
And people want me to like point out how fake it has to be.
And being truthful, they're not always that,
that some of them are fake.
A lot of people Photoshop, a lot of people do that.
But for me to come in and accuse somebody and say,
just because they showed this ridiculous transformation
in 60 to 90 days,
is fake? That's no. If you've been training for as long as we have, I can whip my, I can really
make a huge difference because of how much muscle I've built over the years. If I let myself really
go for like six months and fall out of shape, I can shred body fat and build muscle really quick
and show a major change in 60 to 90 days.
So those don't always mean that they're fake.
It might mean that somebody has been training
for a really long time.
They know their body, they know their shit,
they know what they need to do calorie wise.
They probably were inconsistent.
Yeah, and they got to tighten it up
and they tighten it up and they actually make
a massive change.
When I had soldier surgery years ago,
I remember, if you've ever had a cast on
and you take it off, it's always frightening.
Are you taking it off?
Whoa, I remember my...
Stick arm.
Yeah, like there was like nothing.
My shoulder was non-existent.
And I don't remember how it was like a couple months
when I was finally able to work out.
And I measured my arm.
I lost like two inches or two and a half inches
or more in terms of muscle.
And it didn't look like my arm at all.
And it came back so fast.
It was literally weeks where it was right back to where it was before.
So muscle memory is a real thing.
Yep.
Next question is from Jackie 18.
Is there evidence to suggest that eating more meals more frequently throughout the day
is better for weight loss than two meals with the same amount of quality calories.
There's, okay, so here's a deal with this now.
Now, we've been told for a long time in popular fitness culture that eating small meals was superior, right?
So if you eat, this was the story at least, or the narrative.
If you eat small meals, it stokes your metabolism throughout the day, It feeds your muscles amino acids throughout the day.
Therefore, it's better for burning fat, building muscle.
So, you need to eat small meals throughout the day.
Okay.
Is there evidence to support this?
Hardly any to zero.
The reality is, the thing you should pay attention to, the thing that should dictate whether
or not you eat small meals or you eat fewer and larger meals,
should be based on how you feel.
Personal preference.
That's the most important thing.
Now, the reason why this started was because bodybuilders
who eat and shit tons of calories,
and you eat in 5,000 calories a day,
you're not gonna do that in two meals.
You're gonna eat five meals, it just makes more sense.
And then supplement companies got their hands on this
and said, oh, what a great way to sell meal replacement bars and powders
because if I sell the average person that they need
to eat five meals a day, they're gonna eat breakfast,
lunch, and dinner, or maybe just lunch, and dinner.
Difficult to prep all those ahead of time.
And then so you get other companies,
you know, the suspect bags and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, but I mean, that's something that's been crammed
in almost like everybody's head in terms of like,
that's the healthiest way to approach it.
But honestly, it makes a lot more sense for a bodybuilder trying to get more
calories in because big, huge meals, you know, that's pretty difficult to digest.
Absolutely.
Well, this myth originally came from the whole thermogenic effect from the calories,
which is the same, right?
So if you eat a 4,000, two meals total up to 4,000, 2,000 calories, you get this massive thermogenic effect,
which is the same as if you take those 4,000 calories and you spread it over four meals or six meals.
Right, right. So they're just smaller thermogenic effects. The net thermic effect is the same.
It's the same. So it doesn't really matter. Where I see a lot of value in this and where I would
have clients do this all the time was actually just to teach them portion control. You do a two massive meals.
It's really hard to get an idea of what six ounces this is,
what 12 ounce of that is, is how many calories is this really?
If I had clients and I say, okay,
your total calories is 2,800 calories,
we get to eat and I divide that up over five or six meals,
they see these little small portions and get an idea of where they're meal,
what their meal size should look like.
And you just kind of teach good behaviors that way.
That I liked it for that,
or you guys bring up with the body builders,
is yeah, when I was eating 5,000 calories,
you get good luck eating that in two meals,
especially if you're eating whole foods,
just not happening.
So for those reasons, it makes sense.
At the end of the day, it's whatever you're most
consistent with. So if you do better with prepping five or six meals and that you like to just kind of
graze all day with small meals, versus because here's the thing that I also like about that too,
you never get really, really hungry. And what I have found when clients get really hungry, the craving
set in, and you're more likely to make bad choices. I mean, I don't know about you guys, but when I have a long day here, and I go like a,
you know, and I'm, you know, unintentionally intermittent fasting and it's 12 hours, I mean,
boy, everything sounds good. I'm driving home from work and I'm easily influenced in.
You know, Katrina's called me, what do we want to do for dinner? And I'm like, I have, you know,
day, I'll have whatever you want to have. First is, if I had already had three, four meals,
they were balanced and everything like that,
I'm not starving, like, I will wait,
and then I'll have another one of my meals.
So that's another reason why I like the small meals,
and that's more of the mental discipline.
Yeah, and again, I've had clients
that do far better with fewer meals.
It actually helps them eat less calories,
and they're busy, and when they're working,
it's not that big of a deal. I've had clients like what Adam's saying where they prefer to eat every few hours and have a meal
Personal preference 100% should dictate this for you. How do you look and for me for example?
I'll give you an example eating small meals throughout throughout the day
Doesn't work with my gut. It just doesn't work well with my gut health. I do far better
Having long breaks in between meals reduces, and my gut helps you with digestion.
And I just feel a lot better doing it that way.
But I know people who are the opposite.
I know people who are like, man, I can't eat one big meal.
It hurts my stomach, I'm doing better with smaller meals.
Personal preference should dictate this.
There is no real, significant advantage,
one way or the other, except for the extremes.
Like, obviously, you don't want to eat
like once every other day, or you don't want to eat like once every other day or, you know,
you don't eat 10 times in a day,
but within reason, doesn't make a big difference.
Really just follow your, works best for you.
What makes you feel the best?
Next question is from Jade Taylor Turner.
What's your opinion on F-45 training?
Oh, here we go.
Now they're kind of like orange theory,
where they do a lot of the circuits and they go from exercises to exercise. That's what that is, I wanted some of training. Oh, here we go. Now, they're, they're kind of like orange theory, right? Where they, they do a lot of the circuits and they go from exercises out. That is. I
wanted somebody because like, I know orange theory, obviously, I've even done one of their
workouts, but I've never seen F 45 very similar. So you know, most about it. Yeah, less tech,
more lifting weights. Okay. So, you know, orange theory has, they do three rotations. You have
a rowing, running, and then weight section,
and then they rotate throughout the hour.
And every, every time you do a workout,
it's a little bit different,
but for the most part, it's one third, one third, one third.
F45 is primarily like more boot camp style.
Like, you go get your weights.
Kind of, you guys remember how, like body pump was in the beginning.
Yeah.
So you have like a little station yourself
and you have the little mini barbell and weights
or dumbbells and an instructor that's teaching
like this weight training class.
So it's a little more focused on weight training
than orange theory.
No, is a traditional resistance training?
Will you rest?
No, it's still very circuit like.
Yeah, it's still very circuit like.
They're not, you know that's it's unfortunate because
You know, it wouldn't be a bad model, but they know for reasons to keep people entertaining going is to is to keep the could you imagine a group
X or a group instructor like this standing at front of and making it right okay
We're gonna rest for two minutes now. What do we do for two minutes? Yeah, and just everyone standing
They're gonna have real good stories or like,
you know anecdotes.
Yes, I mean, I remember when I was teaching Orange Theory,
I would yell this, right?
I would stop a class, like,
it turned the music off, stop the class,
and I'd yell at everybody in the way train.
Rest, stop.
If you are able to go around and around with no rest,
go heavier, you need to go heavy enough,
and I wanna look over here and see people sitting down.
I remember having a yell at people to tell people
that I wanna see you resting.
I remember you sitting too,
and I thought this was brilliant,
when you'd have those rest periods
where you'd actually educate them,
like you'd pick a topic,
you'd say something about nutrition
that you could kind of use that time to educate
instead of just wasting it and looking around aimlessly.
Yeah, the weakness with F-45 is the same weakness
you see with lots of group classes with weights.
Number one, it's not resistance training,
it's cardio with weights.
You could do cardio with anything,
and this is a cardio with weights, type of class.
Number two, it's a class.
And it's very difficult to tailor workouts
when you're dealing with that group type environment.
Now, is it smart business and marketing?
Well, yeah, it's fun, it's exciting,
it's probably exploding,
it's probably gonna, you know, at some point hit a peak and then tank,
like other fitness trends and fads do.
But as far as a workout is concerned,
you're gonna get some conditioning, some stamina,
and you'll get some cardiovascular work done.
But if you're looking for the benefits
that resistance training provides,
where you're building muscle, speedy,
and pre-metabolism, making your body more resilient
in that particular sense, then you're doing the wrong thing.
You want to do the traditional.
They have Mark Wahlberg, don't they?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, we'll go for it.
That's how Mark Wahlberg.
And save your DMs, okay, because I know we're going to get DMs of people that work there
and like, oh Adam, this and that, that, that, that, that, they're all going to say, I
mean, that's, every time we talk about something like that, like we, you know, offend anybody
that we're a Sarah Lisson, it's cool, dude, but it's not ideal.
Just group training will never be ideal for people.
There's such an individual variance for every single person that if you have a classroom
of 12 to 15 people, and here's the thing.
Group training for muscle, for building muscle and burning fat, not ideal.
Could you do yoga or a rhyming class where everybody, everybody it's a little bit different like the goals are different
And so you can get away more with that
But something that's as specific as or conditioning like on a sports team or something
Well, there's just so many more variables that that dictate whether you're going to lose fat or build muscle
Yeah, if they're if one person in that class their diet is dialed in this this way of modality of training
They haven't trained this way, a modality of training, they haven't trained
this way in a long time. Their body might respond perfect for this class. But then that
maybe that person who's right next to them doing the same thing is in a too much of a
core deficit or overconsuming that it doesn't even really matter or not resting whatsoever
and doing lightweight.
Matt, Matt, so much with traditional resistance training and how your body moves it matters so much.
And I'll look, I'll even argue against what you're saying.
Yes, you could do class in yoga.
Will it, is it far superior to have an instructor do yoga
with just you?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
So it's the same weakness you see with all classes.
But as far as resistance training is concerned,
you get like this much of the benefit of resistance training.
It's mostly cardio.
Next question is from Austin Owens Actual.
Which training style do you all prefer?
Percentage-based or RPE-based?
If not either of these, what do you recommend?
I laugh at these questions.
If people get so hung up on those.
They do and it's not the, I I mean I understand if you're competitive athlete
Bro, I like a power lifter. That's about it. Yeah, that's it
That's where I stop that's it if you're a power lifter this makes total sense and it's the only time I don't laugh at this
but I built a
competitive physique the one percent of the one percent at the professional level without ever paying attention to
I like never once I like. It's always feel for me.
It's always feel because I can have a client come in
and maybe today we're supposed to do 80% of whatever
and I ask him, hey, how do you feel?
I'm watching them as a trainer.
Oh, it looks like they're a little out of it or whatever.
We're gonna go easier.
You have to train your body for that moment,
how you feel physically and also mentally.
By the way, you can feel
great physically, feel poor mentally, and that'll have a massive effect on your performance
and how your body recovers and responds. So really it should be based off of how you
feel. Now, here's the problem with that. Is that a lot of people want objective measures.
Like, tell me number, whatever. Now know heart rate variability was promised to do that.
The problem with heart rate variability
was it's kind of a pain in the ass.
You got to be real good at measuring
and have that right technology to do it.
Now what it did-
Not always accurate either.
Not always accurate, but it was better than nothing.
It was probably the most objective way that we saw.
And then not that long ago we had DeFranco on the show.
And I thought I love what he said.
I love what he said.
Well, it's absolutely brilliant.
So I'll show what you, of course, it came from someone like you.
Somebody who we respect in the industry, one of the best trainers and coaches that's been
doing this for a really long time.
Of course, he came up with a simpler yet very effective way.
Very effective.
So I'm going to show everybody.
So if you're watching this on YouTube,
you can see I have a,
and I don't know how to say this, right,
a dynamometer.
Dynamometer.
Dynamometer.
Dynamometer.
Dynamometer.
Yeah, anyway, you, you,
you essentially you squeeze this
and it measures your grip strength.
And so here's what he said,
and I thought this was absolutely brilliant.
So these are devices that are very,
typically inexpensive.
I know we have one on our site,
so you can buy these on our site if you want to.
You essentially, what you do before your workout,
it first off, you want to set up a kind of like a control, right?
So every day before you work out, you want to calibrate.
You want to squeeze this as hard as you can with both hands
and write down the whatever number you got.
And then also at the end of your workout,
mark down how you felt,
how strong were you to do your level of energy.
After about a week or two,
you'll start to see some correlations.
Oh, on the day that great workouts,
my number was this, on the days I was,
whatever, my numbers were this.
Then you can start to use the number that you get
on your gripper test or whatever,
as a way to dictate,
for those of you that want objective numbers,
how hard you should work out.
So you squeeze it and say,
oh wow.
It's a readiness gauge.
It's testing your CNS.
Which is great.
So you kind of know what you're working with for that day and how hard you should push.
It's a more of a way to actually find a real metric out there to kind of identify how
you're feeling, but it's still fuel-based.
Yes.
Well, that's the reason why I mean our good, Craig Capurso, he built an app around this.
It was the flaw that we saw in this was like,
you can't have a computer mathematically figure this out
for you.
Propetural progress doesn't exist.
No, and it can't figure out what happened last night.
I mean, last night could have been,
you got some crazy news that was devastating with your family.
Then you stayed up all night, you got terrible sleep, and then here you are showing up to your workout.
And you can't mathematically figure that out.
And your computer has already told you what you're supposed to do that day.
Where me as a coach, if I was training you, I would ask you, how was your night last night?
And you said, oh, I just found out my grandmother passed away
and I didn't sleep very much.
Me, as an experienced coach, knows right away.
I might have had a plan today
that I was gonna push you to this RPE
or I was gonna push you at this percentage,
but now I'm calling an audible
because I know what happened last night.
Well, this is the problem too,
back to our earlier conversation about tech products.
This is what they don't understand.
There's a lot more to it than ones and zeros.
It doesn't just work out in a perfect formula
and laid out.
There's so many variables
and you have to have individual coaching to make it work.
Right, and this is why I like, and again,
it's not perfect.
You gotta base it off of how you feel
and how you perceive yourself to feel.
This is important because people tend to second guess
themselves, do I really feel good?
Do I really feel bad? Whatever you feel, you feel, and that's kind of your
truth, right? That's the truth of how your body is going to perform essentially. But the reason why I
like the dynamometer, dynamometer, I think I'm going to be right, is because it measures in real
time your CNS and how great you're squeezing. Right there. So it's like literally right before
you work out, you crush it with your hand,
and you see what your score was,
and then use that in combination with how you feel.
Like, I feel kind of crappy.
Let me check, you squeeze it, you see your number,
you're like, oh yeah, definitely,
I have a easier work on that.
And that's the trick here too, is not like,
because I'm gonna caution,
because you're gonna get people to buy this
and be like, sell, my numbers have this, what should I do?
It's like, you need to do the work,
just like I would coach somebody with new tricks.
You gotta see what your numbers are.
You need to track, yeah, you need to track for a while
to find out what a high number and a low number is for you.
That's right, yeah.
What do you squeeze?
What do you, what is the peak, like if you track,
and I like to see two weeks personally,
I like to see two weeks of every single morning,
at the same time, same everything,
you squeeze this thing, right?
And you find out over those two weeks,
okay, where's my high and where's my low?
And then that's your range.
And so then going forward, when you go to squeeze this
before you go to work out and you see where you land it.
Oh, wow, I'm on the peak.
This is like, I'm gonna get after today.
Oh, wow, I'm towards the bottom.
Oh, I'm in the middle.
So, and you adjust your intensity based off like that.
Absolutely, it's perfect.
Look, if you like Mind Pump's content, you got to head over to MindPumpFree.com.
We got tons of guides and written information, books, all free, MindPumpFree.com.
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 Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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