Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1564: The Benefit of Multiple Short Workouts Throughout the Day, How to Overcome Chronic Hip Pain, Ways to Maintain Cardio While Training for Muscle & Strength & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: May 29, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer five Pump Head questions via Zoom. Grappa, the chicken nuggets of alcohol. (4:21) Zbiotics, it's so effective it’s dangerous. (8:18) The M...ind Pump criteria for partnerships. (10:14) When a shark vomiting a human arm solves a crime mystery. (19:42) Mind Pump Debates: Faith versus science. (24:55) Mind Pump Recommends, Heaven's Gate: The Cult of Cults on HBO Max. (30:44) The creatine benefits surrounding depression and muscle preservation. (36:56) New product alert from ChiliPad! (42:03) #Quah question #1 – Are there any changes or modifications I can make to MAPS Performance to enhance my abilities in my particular sport? (45:04) #Quah question #2 – What would be a good strength training program to do after an intense stint in endurance training for a half-ironman? (57:02) #Quah question #3 – What would be your advice for someone who suffers from an autoimmune condition, to start working out again? (1:06:30) #Quah question #4 – Are there benefits of multiple short workouts throughout the day? (1:16:36) #Quah question #5 – What are some ways to overcome chronic hip pain? (1:25:40) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Mind Pump Store May Specials: MAPS Aesthetic & the Extreme Fitness Bundle 50% off! **Promo code “MAYSPECIAL” at checkout** Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Drink Like There's Tomorrow – Mind Pump x Zbiotics Behind the controversy at Basecamp - The Verge How Did a Shark in a Sydney Aquarium End Up With a Human Arm? Heaven's Gate: The Cult of Cults | HBO Max Originals Mind Pump #1560: Woke Fitness Is Making You Fat & Unhealthy Creatine For Depression & Bipolar Disorder: 5g Daily Supplementation - Mental Health Daily Tip: Take Creatine When You CAN'T Train? | T NATION Visit ChiliPad for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! MAPS Fitness Performance | Muscle Adaptation Programming System Stop Working Out And Start Practicing - Mind Pump Media MAPS Fitness Prime Pro | Muscle Adaptation Programming System MAPS Fitness Anabolic | Muscle Adaptation Programming System MAPS Prime Pro Webinar The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano MAPS Starter | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Media MAPS Fitness Prime | Muscle Adaptation Programming System MAPS Powerlift | Muscular Adaptation Programming System Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Marlon Shamell (@shamell_fitness) Instagram Justin Brink DC (@dr.justinbrink) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Right today's episode, we did live questions, so people actually called in,
and we helped them out live on air. By the way,
if you want to do that, email your question to live at minepupmedia.com. Okay, but the way we open
the episode is with the 40-minute intro. We talk about current events, bring up scientific studies,
we have a lot of fun. So the first 40 minutes is that. After that, we got to the live questions.
Also, real quick, I want to let everybody know that today we're having a Memorial Weekend special.
It's a summer bundle of at-home exercise equipment.
So you get suspension trainer,
glue band, ab wheel, a gym flag.
This is a mind pump gym flag.
Yeah, represent.
All discounted, you can find this at mindpumpstore.com.
All right, so here's how we open the episode.
We talk about Grop out, you know,
that Italian drink that burns your face.
I haven't had it.
And then we talked about our trip to Hawaii
and why we're gonna probably need to bring Z-biotics.
I'm gonna use Smash.
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Then we talk about a company that thought we really wanted to work with them
and told us why they wouldn't work with us.
And it's kind of silly.
This work fitness thing is getting a little weird range.
Then I brought up an article from 1935 about a shark that threw up a person's arm.
Yeah, real relevant article and helped them solve a murder mystery.
Then we had a debate faith versus science.
So you'll wanna listen in to that part of the episode.
I had fun moderating that one.
Then Justin brought up his number one cult of all time.
They actually had the leading score for deaths.
Heaven's Gate.
Yeah, they're number one everybody.
Really crazy.
Then I gave a talked about more creatine benefits
shown in studies, that was pretty cool. Then we talked about more creatine benefits shown in studies.
That was pretty cool.
Then we talked about a new weighted blanket from chili.
Chili, of course, makes those pads that cool or warm your bed.
Well, now you have a weighted blanket that you can plug into it.
That'll do the same thing.
So not only is the bottom of the bed cool,
you lay on, but now your blanket is as well or warm your choice.
Go check them out.
We have an exclusive offer and discount for our listeners.
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That's CHILI-S-L-E-E-P.com-forge-sache.
Mind pump, check out our exclusive offer.
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Then we got into the questions.
The first question was asked by Olivia from Canada.
She plays football and wants some advice on how to improve her performance.
The next question was Sean from California.
He just finished training and competing in half Iron Man wanted some advice on how to build
some muscle and strength and continue training.
The next question was from Kelly from Mississippi.
This person has been working out for a long time.
Then got a strange autoimmune issue.
She actually goes into detail once some advice
on how she can continue training.
The fourth question was John from Arizona.
He's a 52 year old PE teacher who wants to work out
twice a day, wants to divide up his workout into two halves.
He wants to know if he should just cut the workout in half,
do one half in the morning, one half at night,
or just do half the sets in the morning, half the sets in the evening.
So same workout, just half the sets.
Actually, I had a great discussion that part of the episode.
Then the final question was from Damien from Minnesota.
This person's actually done a lot of our programs.
Is a personal trainer, has strange hip flexor pain, wanted some advice. Also, maps aesthetic and our extreme fitness bundle
are both 50% off, so they're both on sale.
You can find them at mapsfitinistproducts.com.
Just use the code MaySpecial with no space
for that discount.
That's how they do it in Europe, right?
I mean, that's sort of the M.O. I think it is.
They do less binge drinking. They do less binge drinking, and? I mean, that's sort of the M.O. I think it is. They do less than-
They do less binge drinking,
and they think it's because kids grow up around it.
So it's not like that.
It's not novel, it's not bad, you know what I'm saying?
That's the kind of conversation behind it.
Or you could do what my grandfather did
when we would be over there for Sunday dinner or whatever.
He'd bring us downstairs,
and he'd bring my cousin and I down there,
and we were like, I don't know, 10,
and he'd go, hey, you guys could be here.
Let me show you something. And we'd go with this broom and then he closed the door,
so it's all quiet, we're like, what's going on?
Try a little bit of this.
And he'd pour like, we don't know what it was.
He's like, try this.
He shot.
He'd watch us.
And it was fucking grappa.
Like, what, like, you guys ever have grappa?
Yes. What is grappa?
Bro, it is liquid fire.
It's like pure burning alcohol.
So when you're 10, you're like,
oh, any laugh, ah, ah, ah.
Yeah, he skims some wild turkey, like 151.
Well, let's, let's crop, I've never even heard of that.
You never had crop up?
No, no, no, what is it?
What type of, is it a liquor, obviously?
It's just hella strong liquor that burns your face.
I don't know how it's-
You don't know what kind though, is dug, do you know what?
It's made from grapes.
It's made from grape skins, I think.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
But it's, and it's supposed to be really strong.
It's highly concentrated. It's hella, skins, I think. Okay. But it's, and it's supposed to be really strong.
It's highly concentrated.
It's hell-wuk, it's like, ever-
Everclear strong?
I mean, is that what we're talking about?
That's strong, but it's like vodka strong at least.
What's the other really popular Italian one,
the taste kinda like lemon?
Oh, lemon cello?
Yeah, don't let kids try that.
You'll love it.
See, that's why, yeah, I'm like,
don't let them know that like someone tastes
You gotta give him all the bad stuff like beer just like I remember it's a we forever like beer
Yeah beer and wine lemon cello you store it in the freezer
Yeah, and you store the glasses in the freezer. No, that's just like candy. Do you guys ever have?
It's called what's called for net for net bronca, I think it's called. It's like this after dinner,
they call it a digestive.
You ever have those with it,
it helps you digest or whatever?
No.
Have you heard of these?
No, no, no.
So it's got like, it's definitely an alcohol,
but then it's got certain plants in there
that are supposed to help you digest.
And you know what, dammit, it fucking works.
It's really weird.
I had someone my cousin's house over the weekend. He gave me a little shot of it afterwards and I, maybe it's it fucking works. It's really weird. Like I had some of my cousins house over the weekend.
He gave me a little shot of it afterwards,
and maybe it's just because it's strong
and I get a little buzz.
Well, I feel that about them.
No, I feel that about the,
the Moscow meal, I feel like makes my gut feel better.
People, the touting, it's got to be what it is, right?
It's having that quality forever.
Like a shot of gin a day is supposed to be really good
for your gut according to Jim Manif,
or gin a fashion. Yeah, this is good for your gut according to Jim many, or Jim has some interest.
So the Gropba, what it is,
is a blend of grape seed, stalks, and stems
left over from wine making.
And it contains 37.5 to 60% alcohol by volume.
It's like the chicken nuggets out of a hole.
What do you mean?
Yeah, kind of like that.
Chicken nuggets.
Gropba.
The chicken nuggets.
So it's very strong. So it would hire me for advertising.
I mean, like, what is that?
120 proofs?
Is that what they do?
You get all left over.
That is, I'm so.
I'm so.
60%.
It's freaking hot.
That's how that works.
Yeah, and the first time he gave it to us,
he thought it was hilarious.
The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, tenth time, right?
Because we go over there.
He'd make us.
No, no, no, you have something right now.
Like, come on, no, no, burns my face. That's okay.
Well, my grandpa would take me to this pool hall and, you know, they'd all give me one of
these like huge stogies to smoke. And I was only like 10 or something. Yeah.
With a different generation. Oh my God. I would turn green. Like I was just like,
because I didn't know that you just puff it and side in up like inhale it. I was just like, because I didn't know that you just puff it and so I ended up like inhaling. I was like, threw up.
But yeah, I wanted to be cool,
because I was there with a much old, you know, rough guys.
I remember the first time my mom made me smoke a cigarette
and it made me, because I asked, right?
I wanna, let me try.
So now you have to finish.
Yeah, yeah, that was the deal.
It was like, okay, if I let you try this,
you gotta have the whole thing.
Okay.
That's something a great idea.
Like when you're a kid trying to get it, right?
I thought was like, seventh or eighth grade,
something like that. Yeah. Oh, I remember throwing right? I thought was I like seventh or eighth grade something like that
Yeah, oh, I remember throwing up afterwards. It was so terrible never wanted. Yeah, I remember thinking like dude
Why do people like this? This is disgusting. That's a it's a good strategy. Yeah
Speaking of does work speaking of alcohol and now we're going to Hawaii together. Yeah, and that's gonna be a lot of alcohol
We need there's gonna be lava flowing.
Oh, do not, please do not forget,
we need to have Z-Biotics there.
I do not wanna do that.
Are they re-stocked?
Doug, do you know if they're re-stocked?
I know that, man, they sold out last month.
I know, it's been high.
I don't know if I, I think they're still waiting list at least,
but let me double check.
Yeah, because I don't know if I told you guys this,
I know you guys don't pay attention sometimes
to this stuff, but they put our advertising on hold
for like pre-order still.
Oh, yep.
Dude, get some.
You know what?
It's one of those things that you try it.
You know, do you guys remember trying all the stuff
of the liquor stores that claim that stuff?
I mean, I tried a bunch of the pills
and the little drinks that they say it's supposed to cure hangovers
Kind of work, but like even then like Advil was better
None of them are none of them work for me and nothing this is like completely different
Nothing worked as well as the the concoction that Sal used to make for us first
So that was that was it was cocaine
Charcoal just kidding cocaine helps bring you back. Yeah, you'll feel better
Just kidding it was it was It was charcoal electrolytes and was advella for once.
Yes.
I'll give it to you.
No, no, no.
Zeybatics is on a whole different level.
A lot of people don't know the origin story
of how we actually worked with them.
There was an article that I read on the podcast
because the author was like, this stuff is crazy
and it's weird and how it works.
And I read the science.
I'm like, this is remarkable.
Then Zio-Arux contacted us because they saw boosts
and sales because we talked about.
Yeah, our audience responded right away.
Then they sent us samples and we literally tested it.
We tested it twice, once in private,
and another time we videotaped it,
it's the famous drinking game that we did.
Oh my God, I can't believe we did that.
And I'm telling you, it's so effective, it's dangerous
because now I enjoy drinking occasionally.
Where's before I just forget it?
Nothing, I feel like shit afterward.
Not was about it, it's not a feel-cated after.
So speaking of partners, you guys just remind me,
something I have to share with you that happened this morning,
it was just kind of laughing about it,
because I think Sal, you were the one that asked me
to start looking for a partnership with meals delivered to your house
like the type of deal.
Yeah, yeah.
And so I've reached out to quite a few companies,
and I'm just in that process of like courting
and trying to see who we really like
and reading up on the company.
And this company reached out to me on Instagram,
like maybe I don't know, like a month ago or so.
And I just glanced at it and said,
okay, this looks interesting enough. I kind of like what I see. So I sent it over to Katrina
to follow up and say, give me on a phone call with the CEO and stuff. And then I can ask
some questions and we could start the courting process or whatever. And so she calls me this
one. I want my way to work. And she goes, hey, did hey, did you call or reach out to that company,
eat to evolve?
And I go, what do you mean?
I said, I sent it over to you to follow up
so I could start the conversation.
And she goes, yeah, I know, they sent me an email this morning
about rescinding an offer.
And I'm like, I didn't make an offer.
I don't even know if there's somebody we want to work with.
I just said, I'll get to take a call
so we can start the conversation.
She goes, really?
And I go, yeah, no, she goes, what about sound?
I said, no, saldened do that.
I said, he got a message from them, sent it over to me.
And I said, yeah, I already reached out to them.
I'm going to have a conversation with them.
And she's like, are you sure?
Are you sure you guys didn't say anything or do you think?
And I'm like, no, she goes, because I've never had somebody respond.
I said, well, ask.
I said, send back to them.
I said, what's the deal?
Like, we didn't even send an offer.
We didn't say we're going to work with you guys.
Why would you send an offer?
Like, just to get some click.
Cause I said, you know what,
maybe it's a misunderstanding.
Maybe they think you're another company or what are like that.
And she just text message me this.
So I get this email back.
Let me read it to you guys.
You guys, you're going to crack up when you hear this.
Oh no.
Okay.
Well, no, I just, I, what'd you do Adam?
I, well, you're actually funny.
What did I do? No, no, funny you say of me, right? So it says, um, no, no, I just I What'd you do Adam? I probably actually funny.
What did I do?
No, no, funny you say of me, right?
So it says, hi Katrina, I decided to
rescind my offer after taking a closer look
at Adam's Instagram, which I'm glad I did,
which I'm going like me.
Like, yeah, that's a sell thing, right?
I haven't seen anything else.
Like really, like, I don't know, I don't
feel like I'm that bad, right?
So in October, like she dug in, right?
So back in October, Adam posted a quote unquote
social justice warriors video.
Oh, no!
As a, listen, at Cartoon, yes.
As a person of color, I do not feel comfortable
entering into a working relationship with him.
As someone who clearly values his right to voice his views,
I'm sure Adam will appreciate me exercising
my right to voice mine. Best regards.
Oh wow.
Do you know what that is?
You know that?
That cartoon.
It was a pure satire.
Yeah, Andrew, you have to post the, post the cartoon up so people can see.
I mean, I, I, and by the way, I don't think the entire, and my caption does, I don't
think the whole thing.
Wait, who the hell gets a fent, first of all, it's a, it's satire.
Yeah.
It's total joke and it's not even making fun of good people.
It's not making fun of people of color.
It's just the fanaticism around being a social justice world.
So, okay, so that, okay, I'm glad you said that,
because that was the first thing that came to mind.
I was like, what does, you,
be you being a person of color, have anything to do with the,
I wasn't even braving the video.
By the way, anytime somebody opens up a conversation and says,
as a man, as a woman, as a person of whatever,
as a whatever, you can almost guarantee the rest of it is,
they identify so strongly with an immutable characteristic
that you know the rest of the message is going to be dumb.
Yeah.
Your opinion, of course, should be based off of your experiences,
but you're immutable characteristics, like, okay,
like, didn't we learn that lesson?
Like, I don't know, decades ago,
that we don't make that our entire identity,
that's crazy, but that's a cartoon, that's so weird.
I mean, I'm so glad we're not pursuing them now,
but I just, it's like, to skim though,
like, and just get like the most surface of surface view
of your character, and just make that assumption right away.
Speaks a lot.
And I've done a lot more offensive shit than that.
Yeah, for sure.
All anybody has to do is listen to three podcasts
to know that we're...
You could do that to anybody, is my point.
That's a bit petty.
Yeah, that just seems crazy to me
that that would be a deterrent for something that could help.
Well, a lot of people, I was telling Katrina,
because she's like, whatever, she's like,
we know, obviously you wouldn't want to work
with a company anyways, I was like, yeah,
but I'm like, you know what's interesting to me is like,
I know that the owners are two guys,
so it's not the owners that are responding back to me.
I'm like, this is somebody who works for them.
Like, I would be pissed if one of our employees
was having an interaction with a company
that I might potentially want to work with,
especially of the size that we are in the fitness
and health space.
Also what we stand for,
just that's so opposite of what we,
I know, it's totally opposite.
That is really, really insane and stupid.
But I will say this, I'm glad because we have a criteria,
I don't know if this will be for our audience.
Obviously you guys know what our criteria is,
but we have a criteria for our partners that we work with. And of course,
number one, one of the criteria is we have to like their product or their service and
we have to use it. It's not just that we like it. We also have to use it. Otherwise, it's
hard to talk about. So we have to really believe in their product. But then there's more.
One of the other criteria is we have to really like the people that we're working with.
I don't care. Your product could cure cancer. If I hate you, it's gonna be hard to work with you because
it's hard to work with partners that you don't like.
And here's some of the criteria the people that we like to work with.
You gotta be thick skinned. You gotta be able to have good discussion, good debate.
You gotta believe in good things, good people.
And you gotta have, you know, good,
I guess good moral compass.
And so this person to me sounds very much like
they're looking for problems that don't exist
off of one post that was satire
that you didn't even create, you reposted,
which is ridiculous.
So it's like, would you even wanna imagine listening
to our podcast and trying to pick it
every little comment and joke.
Imagine what's in my memes that I post every single day with you.
I know that's why, when she said it,
I thought for sure I was gonna get something that you did.
I'm like, well, I tell Salah time,
I mean, those memes, if they don't know you,
you know what I'm saying, they're gonna get really offended,
but that was for me, dude.
I was like, you know what I feel like too,
I feel like, you know, it's like the girl who told me,
I don't wanna go out with you, and I never asked you out.
Yeah, I didn't even ask you out yet.
How can you turn me down?
You know what I'm saying?
Fuck you.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, fuck you.
I didn't even, I did not even ask you out.
You're already like breaking up with me.
That's not even possible.
Like, whoa.
Yeah, I thought that was really funny.
Wow.
Interesting, pretty.
Yeah, that's so weird.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's all right.
Yeah, look, this, you know, it's a market.
Terrible, couple.
They can choose who they want to work with and who they don't.
But man, if I was the owner, I'd be like, uh. Well, that's where I, as you know, as a CEO, this is, you know, it's a market. Terrible. They can choose who they want to work with and who they don't, but man, if I was the owner,
I'd be like, uh,
well, that's where I, as a CEO, I go,
but have you listened to that?
Man, I would be, I would be upset
that somebody took the initiative to go do something like that.
Unless they, they empowered her to do that,
but I'm like, man, that's,
thankfully there's other companies, right?
Not, yeah, there's a lot.
Yeah, that's quite a few.
Which is fun.
I was like, we're not even close yet to even deciding that.
I haven't even tried the food.
It was like, this was like the initial conversation.
It's like, we're not even there yet for you to break up.
Well, this is what I like.
Companies like Basecamp or what was the other ones that,
like, they just don't include any politics.
That's just not something that I've been told.
I think that's gonna be a new movement
for a lot of companies.
I think they're starting to move this direction
of just like, it's become so polarizing
and I think it's so disruptive in the business world.
People are fighting over stuff that's so petty.
It's plain to me how it's any different
than having a religious affiliation
and be like, I don't like your religion,
so I'm, you know, I'm not gonna work with you.
Well, it's weird because, I mean, here's the truth, right?
Most people, they believe what they believe
or vote the way they vote because they want things
to be better for people and themselves.
Most people are good.
Most people don't vote because they're evil
a particular way.
Most people just aren't evil.
Now, of course, they have their own self-interest.
There's nothing wrong with that.
But when looking at people that way,
looking for issues that don't exist,
that can cause a lot of problems.
Here's the truth.
The truth is markets are one of the best peace promoting things that we've ever seen in
humanity because you have people from all walks of life working together and you have
to figure it out for their own common interests.
Like, okay, I don't necessarily know your personal views, but I do know that you make good
product.
I have things to trade with you.
Let's work together.
So you get introduced to each other,
you get introduced to different ideas.
People work together.
That's what part of what makes us,
but it's funny because that post was literally,
it was a joke.
It wasn't even you posting like some crazy opinion.
No, no, it was not even that.
I didn't even think that much into it.
I thought it was very hilarious when I saw it going viral with that, and so I shared it. I thought, oh my God, to go back and do that. I didn't even think that much into it. I thought it was very hilarious when I saw it going viral and what about that. And so I shared it. I thought, oh my God,
to go back and do that. So I tell you what though, no, since humor, you do some bullshit
like that working for me. Your ass is fired. Like that's like, you do not have the, you
do not have the autonomy to go make decisions like that with business relationships that.
And for all you know, like CEO that we may end up have loved the owners of the company.
So, and even immediately mischaracterize us.
Yeah, completely.
I know.
Oh, that's annoying.
That's the first time that's ever happened though.
I thought that was really interesting.
Katrina was like, I haven't had anyone ever
resented offer before, before we even put an offer in.
I was like, well, all right.
I totally thought it was a mistake.
I was like, oh, it must be a mistake.
It's not that. Hey, hey, excuse me, I'm not sleeping some mistake. I was like, oh, it must be a mistake. It's not that.
Hey, hey, excuse me, I'm not sleeping with you.
I ain't even fucking ask you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
But I wasn't going to anyway.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Sorry, E to Evolve.
Yeah.
We weren't going to bang you anyway.
Yeah.
We're not evolved, yeah.
You're not.
Not at all.
Not at all.
Yeah.
Not at all. Yeah. Not at all. Yeah. Not at all. I read a hilarious article on that hilarious crazy article the other day.
A shark vomited on the beach and then threw up a freaking arm.
You an arm.
That's not true.
That is not true.
I'm going to pull up the article.
You have to show me that.
I'm going to pull up the article.
This just came up right now recently.
It was just a great, I don't know if it was recent.
That's gruesome.
Was it like pre-digested or is it like intact? right now recently. It was just a, it was a, it was just a crate. I don't know if that's recent. That's gruesome. Yeah.
Was it like pre-digested or is it like intact?
Oh, here, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna pull it up
right here.
So, you need to go read details.
Okay, here it is.
So during an unassuming day at Kugi aquarium in Sydney,
imagine the guy whose arm that is.
He's like, oh my God.
Dude, you found it.
They're, they're latest attraction,
which was a 14 foot tiger shark,
threw up a human arm sporting a tattoo of two boxers sparring.
So they actually can even tell that it was a tattoo?
Yeah, okay.
Okay, this just came out.
There's got to be a guy who's missing an arm
who got it bit off by a shark that knows it.
I'm trying to read into it a little bit.
This can happen a long time ago
and they wrote about it just now.
Oh, because maybe he finally put it together.
That's my arm. You do imagine that is like
Boo, look at oh, I mean it especially with a tattoo to definitively like are you being oh no?
No, you're being trolled. No, no, here it is. This is an old it was always a long time ago. It was 1935
So check this out. Oh my god. What no, no, hold on hold on your reporting on a 1935
No, this is the raking news. No, no check this out
I'm going to 1935. No, this is breaking news.
No, no, check this out.
Dense pump ahead of the curve.
Yeah, this just did.
We landed on the moon.
Thanks to the distinctive tattoo and fingerprints,
the victim's brother was able to identify the body part
as a left arm of James Jimmy Smith,
a 45 year old England born amateur boxer
who worked at a booze soaked,
billiard saloon in downtown Sydney.
So it's weird. do you imagine that?
I thought you saw the crime.
Pull it up.
Oh, looks like they found the... Okay, wait, Huh? Why is it making the news right now though?
It was it made it find that.
Yeah, they're just writing about it and I read it and I thought that was really weird.
It's really unique and hilarious. Crazy.
Yeah, very...
I didn't know we're pulled articles from 1935 to share.
It wasn't a 1935 article.
It was an article that was now and...
Because, and Tiger Sharks, that's not normal for them, right?
Well, I don't know, I've actually heard that
either it's tiger or thresher sharks,
or whatever it's like in Australia
have been, are a lot more violent than,
great whites.
Really?
But yeah, but great whites are a lot more,
obviously there are huge.
But in more dangerous if they do attack,
but they are less likely to attack.
A 14 foot tiger shark is pretty big.
Well, you're gonna have to fucking well.
And they make it closest to shore, I think.
The tiger sharks swimming, yeah, that they're a lot more likely, you're gonna encounter one.
I did know that. I actually assumed that great whites for the only sharks that were afraid
of that would potentially eat people on you.
No, there's some big ass, there's like a big thing.
One of those make-os can attack people.
One of those can attack people. Tiger, I'm trying to think of other what the other ones are I think those are the only one lemon shark
Is there lemon sharks? Yes, yeah, yeah, Threshers. So you know when I was a kid
I went through like a period of like I was like totally into sharks like a big thing
Did you ever do that just then yeah, dude and then shark week came out? Yeah, that was a little later
I would have been totally into it lemon lemon sharks are the ones that like they look like they have too many teeth
Like the teeth are like looking all crazy.
Yeah, and then kind of sticking out.
Yeah, I've seen that.
But there was a whole pit.
Did you guys ever go through a dinosaur phase
when you were a kid?
Of course, yeah.
This was a thing.
My brain.
My brain is hard.
My son is on that right now.
It's so cute.
So he, wow, is the word he's saying, wow.
And he has this, he has this, it's so cute.
Yeah, he has this big dinosaur book.
Maybe I'll share this with Andrew so he could share the little clip. It's really cute. And he has this big dinosaur book, maybe I'll share this with Andrew,
so he could share the little clip,
but it's really cute.
So he has this massive dinosaur book
that he got from his cousin.
So his cousin Nathaniel gave it to him
because he was starting to get interested in dinosaurs.
It's a really cool book.
It has like, by the way, too,
I didn't even know there was this many dinosaurs.
Like I didn't know.
And it's gone way beyond Brontosaurus,
T-R-X's and like stegosaurus.
That was like our staples.
Right, I'm gonna sound like a complete moron.
I thought there was like 20.
I really didn't really do anything.
There were only 20 dinosaurs.
Yeah, I just, like,
and they have feathers now and all the shit.
Okay, so hold on, so maybe,
so this blue Jessica way shouldn't know this either.
So did you know, let people know this,
did you know that the amount of time
that dinosaurs were on earth,
like the amount of time humans were on earth is like a sliver compared to No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, but that gets a little tricky because they found Gobekli Teppi, which they've actually had paintings with them
with big, huge beasts that look like dinosaurs.
So humans lived with dinosaurs?
It's, you know, it's something to consider.
Well, let's ask the human history.
Doug's been around a long time.
Doug, it's a lot further back than the...
Me and Bam Bam.
Doug, did you write a dinosaur to school or was it a bus?
Yeah, but do. Yes, do. But yeah, when school or was it a bus? Yeah, but do
But yeah, when I told Jessica that she's like what?
Yeah, dude, I didn't like I didn't know that either I was never a big dinosaur guy
I didn't I don't know like micro machines and hot wheels stuff like that like I was into that you were never into like like science stuff
No, really no, no, I actually did not like science, dude. I was not a big science guy. He's always trying to debunk it, right?
I never know that.
I never know that.
But this is bullshit.
Yeah.
You never watched a 321 contact?
I mean, you know, that was a great show.
It sometimes comes off a little religious to me.
That's why.
Maybe that's why I was, you know, it sounds right there.
I was trying to like, one proves the other, you know,
I was always trying to play that game.
Yeah.
Oh, I loved it.
I mean, there is, I think there's quite a bit of faith
in science also.
Sure.
I mean, there's like, even just with your carbon dating,
I mean, for it to be...
No, they can test it, dude.
That's not true.
What do you mean?
They know how fast carbon decays.
They know there's a consistent...
Bro, the fact that there is nobody with anything written
that goes back hundreds of millions of years ago.
That doesn't matter.
What can they prove they existed?
They don't know how they behaved.
That's true.
That's true.
Yeah, and they're always just characterizing them
based off of something they just make up.
Yeah, look, if you still have to have faith,
you still have to believe that that is...
Do you need faith for math?
No, it's not just math, it's math and science.
Okay, science in many respects, not all respects.
You sound like someone who drank a Kool-Aid, dude.
That's what I'm talking about.
What are you talking about?
What?
There is still, there is still.
Bro, your headphones work because science made them.
That's okay, okay, we're talking about carbon dating right now
that goes back hundreds of millions of years.
If there's nothing other to cross reference it with,
you just have to have faith that it's accurate.
Okay, there's a speed at which carbon decays over time.
What is consistent?
What is to how accurate is carbon dating?
To the day?
No, it's not to the day.
Okay, so how much room for air does it have?
Okay.
And does that air grow as the millions of years go?
It does.
Okay.
However, they're not
gonna say this existed you know you know well if you could
ten thousand all over the world too which then they can like they could trace back to
like certain big catastrophic of it oh look at this out carbon dating is unreliable
for objects older than thirty thousand years that's still a long time however
you're in comparison to hundreds of millions out. Hold on.
That's what Google boom, man.
You're anium thorium dating, maybe possible.
Bro, all my point is that it's still relies on some faith, bro.
Still relies on some faith.
Sure, the stuff that we don't know, we have to.
That's right.
That's only a quarter of it.
That's my argument.
My argument doesn't seem to be real.
I'm not trying to say carbon dating's wrong.
I'm not saying that. just like I'm not saying,
I don't think there's a God either.
I'm not gonna come out and say some bullshit like that.
But I will say that you have to rely on some faith with it, bro.
So of course, so that's what, what,
but it's not all faith, it's not, it's not all that.
Just like the, so are religions.
There's a lot of reason.
There's a lot of things in religion that they can prove.
There's a lot of stuff that's historical in the Bible,
but they go back to it.
But you're preparing two different things. Science is based on the
scientific, not the whole thing. No, no, no, no, there's a scientific method. It's two different
things. You can't compare spiritual wisdom to science. You can't compare the two because they're
totally different. They're both very valuable. I'm not saying that what I'm saying is that it still
requires faith. You still are believing in something that you cannot actually cross-reference and prove.
So now, here's the difference.
A scientist will say, this is our best guess.
Exactly.
Okay, so that's the same as faith.
Faith is, this is what happened,
this is what I believe, and that's it.
It's very different.
Scientists will say, we think this is,
and this is our best guess, and here's why.
Very different than faith.
You have somebody with faith, and it's only reliable,
and it becomes law, right?
Because they've tested it over the hypothesis
over and over again, and sometimes it doesn't replicate,
and so then it doesn't become law.
So it's just this constant thing
that I think we should always look into it and reassess it.
But I do think it's a mistake to say
that it's to compare the two two because they're both different.
Yeah, but you don't start the sentence with,
you know, it's our best guess that this is 300 million years.
You say this is 300 million years old.
You say it as if it's a fact.
Well, you don't lead, you do not lead with,
oh, we believe that it's 300 million,
you say it's 300 million years old.
Yeah, I think it's different.
That's why I'm calling you out on it.
Hold on a second, 300 million years. Let's say the error rate is, you know, 10%. It's still 200 million, at
least 200 million years old. Which 30,000 is what the number Doug just pulled up. So that's still,
well, we got to look up what kind of accuracy and stuff. But that's our best, you're right. That's
our best way of testing these things. Well, when when when did the Olmex roam the earth? What is that?
Well, when when when did the Olmex roam the earth? What is that?
Exactly.
Exactly.
Exactly.
They don't know.
They don't know how long they've been on the earth
but they know they existed.
Just to just make his point.
Boo.
So what a fuck science.
Thank you, Justin.
Thank you.
Yeah.
What about the giant humans?
You ever seen those old ruins?
Are they still like these strange things?
Yeah, but now you're getting it into like, yeah,
that's, I mean, that's, that's up for grabs.
My point is, but the Olmex are real. I just, I didn't get into it as a kid as a kid. I didn't I was actually more into
math. I actually liked math. I love math a lot more because I did like you know two plus two is always
four. There's no way other way you can look at it's a fact. You know, it's law right. So I enjoyed that
stuff and then I was into sports and cars and yeah, so I never went through a phase where I mean I'm
more into science now. I'm older, you I'm very interested even though it's all bullshit right
you pay me like that I don't do that I just want to know like the inner
workings of things like how things work like why we're here all that stuff no I
mean I'm very intrigued by it now I mean at the taffa why we get we're all
friends and we we enjoy this and speculating and doing things like that but I
was not as a young kid I was you know I was into playing sports and speculating and doing their things like that. But I was not, as a young kid, I was, you know, I was into playing sports and into cars
and into things like that and baseball cars and shit, you know, did not go through.
No, I went through like a dinosaur phase.
I went through a phase of sharks.
I went to a phase of like the Brumuda Triangle.
Like it was a whole period there where the Brumuda Triangle was like, all I read about
from the long time.
So yeah, and then I got into Colts, which you guys know, like it's just like a past time.
Oh, cults. Yeah, cults.
I thought you were saying cults.
Yeah.
I mean, to me, to me, that's, that's a horse.
You have a horse.
Yeah.
I just, you know, that's a very natural progression.
I feel like because you were somebody who challenged when you were in churches, a kid, right?
Yeah.
Always ask you questions and they weren't very good about like providing answers in terms of like
substantial answers that like were grounded in reality.
So I was always like, ah, like I'm just trying to figure it out.
And so I've been watching this is new series on HBO Max
that I'm loving so far.
It's about heaven's gate.
Oh, I guess familiar with that.
Are those the people that poison themselves,
waiting for the Haleybop comment?
Yeah, so Adam's like, I know,
I just trashed my brain every,
but the Rijneeschen, I don't know how you pronounce that,
but that was another cult that was in Oregon.
Apparently there's a few of them that came out of Oregon,
but this Heaven's gate one was crazy because it had like the most
Suicides in one
One event in the US like it like beat out like everything else
You know, cult wise like this had their number one the number one. They did it
But all these people that without found their way into the cold is really what I'm fascinated by it. Because a lot of them really bright,
like really smart people that are just like,
for some reason, they just want more.
You know, they want to figure out more.
And it's just that bit alone, like the two leaders,
like it's just so interesting how they can take a lot
of familiar information like from Christianity
and then they get into Revelation
where it's a little bit like,
up for interpretation.
And they all of a sudden claim that they're the witnesses, right?
Okay, so now, sudden, they have,
part of that perspective that they can pass on.
And really what was misinterpreted was,
that we weren't factoring in UFOs.
And so now you're bringing in new sort of myth
that is in the social construct
that people can grab onto.
And so this pulls in like intellects.
Well, this is what I feel like
this is what's gonna happen
with this whole woke fitness movement, right?
It's take a little bit of truth and stuff like that.
And then it gets...
It's very cultish with their belief systems.
Absolutely, that's what makes it kind of
dangerous but did they all killed them so they waited for the comment and the
idea was that they killed themselves that they're so they could their spirit could
basically like it's a ride yeah it's a ride it's like like just the logic there
and they drink and was it that they drink poison was out of the drink poison okay
have you ever seen so you don't know this? No, I don't know any of this.
So you've never seen the,
oh my God, this guy has the ultimate cult face.
Bro, like, that's the cult face.
Doug, if you can find, please,
please, please,
Edgy here, please,
Edgy here, please,
let me see what a cult face looks like.
Bro, you gotta watch, that's not right there.
That's very cult face.
Oh yeah, you know what I mean?
I can get down with that.
He's perfect.
But he's not even the main, like,
originator of this cult,
it was a lady.
And I think they named themselves T and Do
as in the two different Do-R-A-Me-Faso,
a lot of these guys that start these cults.
Do you think they have the intentions
of manipulating all these people?
Or do you think they just really believe themselves?
I think you have to believe.
You don't want to tell narcissists. Well, I think you have to believe.
He killed them all narcissists.
Yeah, I think that they believe in their own shit and they're and they're something charismatic
and magnetizing about them, right?
Yeah.
They're charismatic enough to get all these people to believe in what they're saying.
How many people died with this one?
Do you know?
Yeah, that's a dog.
Can you look at it?
It was a substantial number for sure.
Wow. So by the way,
HBO Max again with another great
double show.
By the way, so this is really good so far.
So this is not finished yet.
39 corpses.
39?
So that's the record, huh?
All right.
This is a suicide record here in the states.
It's so, so here's what's funny.
Knowing this about Justin, right,
that he's like super like into cults
and how he's like skeptical of like all this kind of stuff.
Yeah. It makes perfect sense. So when I first met you guys, Oh yeah, like who's there? Justin was super like into cults and how he's like skeptical of like all this kind of stuff. It makes perfect sense.
So when I first met you guys,
Oh yeah, like it was very...
Justin was super like,
who's this silver tongue devil?
I'm not gonna use all weird about it.
Yeah, you see, dude.
That when I see these,
that's what I think,
I'm like, now.
What if this,
I think you got a little bit.
I always, I always think,
what if this cult leader actually shifted this to something
that I bet you that guy could have built
an amazing company because the attributes that it takes to get buy-in
by a large group of people to basically kill themselves
for you.
You could have built the most successful company,
like one of the most successful companies in the world
if you have that kind of power.
You stand, you want to be a wolf and sheep's clothing.
Yeah, that's where it is.
And everybody died and everybody died.
That's crazy.
There was that other guy.
Wasn't that one guy that took a-
Coolaid gets a big hit from all these things, right? That's like you is and everybody died and everybody died. That's crazy. There was that other guy Wasn't that that one guy that took away? It gets a big hit from all these things, right?
Like you think about that like what what bad
publicity for them, you know, I used it, but where does that saying come from it's from a different cult from Guyana the Jim Jones?
Yes, they now he took a bunch of people and where'd they go did they go?
I on South
Guyana South America South America and. And they all built their own paradise
where they would all live and it was a compound.
And then the way that they all killed themselves
was with cool eight, poison, cool eight.
Yeah.
So that's where it comes from.
That's where it comes from.
You're drinking the cool eight.
You're drinking the cool eight.
I didn't know that.
Yeah.
All of these terms come from shit that actually happened,
like going postal.
Everybody should have a nerdy friend like you guys, you know?
I think if you're a cool person out there
and you're watching, you need to find yourself a nerd like Salas. I'm sort of the conduit of like cool guys a nerdy friend like you guys, you know? I think if you're a cool person out there and you're watching, you need to find yourself
a nerd like Salazar.
I'm sort of the conduit of like cool guys and nerdy.
This is Adam's like, how can I say I'm cool?
No, you know what Katrina says?
You know what Katrina says when she,
when we talk about this and up, no, no, she calls me out.
When we talk about this on the podcast,
she goes like, I don't know why you reference,
like you're not a nerd like that,
you were just as much of a fucking nerd to say. She goes, I'm attracted to it.
I said, I'm very attracted to it.
When he has a nerdy side.
You're just nerdy in a different way, that's all.
Do you remember when you were a kid?
Do you remember the acronym for nerd?
Someone said, you're a nerd and be like,
oh, that's okay, because it stands for
Normal Educated Radical Dude.
Do you guys remember that?
Oh my god.
No, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do you, do no, do you, but you're, you're, you're dead, you're dead. Can we make him a t-shirt? No.
No.
Normal, normal, educated, erratic, dude.
I'm making you a t-shirt, right?
Radical, dude.
I want that.
Stop doing my voice, just so.
I don't, I don't sound like that.
I haven't done it at all.
Hey, I got some more cool information on Crate Team.
Let's hear it, nerd.
Crate Team.
Man, you really got him going.
Yeah.
Yeah, by the way, these days nerds run the world.
This is true. This is true. So anyway, the way, these days nerds run the world.
This is true.
This is true.
So anyway, cool information on creatine, some more information.
Number one, I've been reading studies on creatine and depression.
Did you guys know that creatine actually has some antidepressive effects on people?
Man.
So they'll find that one people supplemented that they'll notice a reduction in depressed
like symptoms. Now do you think that just because of the the boost of energy that you're gonna get from it?
Well, yeah caffeine does the same thing
Right, but obviously creatine is very healthy as well. Here's another interesting study
They did a study where they had people who had an injury
Well actually the way they did the studies they had people immobilized one of their arms and they gave the half of them
Crayotein the other half, not creatine,
just to see, because when you don't move something,
let's say you break your arm or whatever,
you lose a lot of muscle very quickly.
Just because they supplemented with creatine,
they lost less muscle and less strength
than people who didn't.
So if you're going into surgery,
or you have a broken bone or an injury.
So for just for preservation.
And you wanna reduce the muscle loss and strength loss that comes from that, supplementing
with creatine is part of a good strategy.
I'm so surprised that we don't see more like food companies like...
It's coming.
Yeah, putting it in.
You know how we saw the protein movement that we called years ago?
Sure.
When are we going to see that with creatine?
It's coming, dude.
Creatine just going to start getting a little...
I can see it like infiltrating like some of the sports drinks,
for sure.
It already has done that.
Yeah, bang has done that.
Yeah, yeah, that's already happened.
That's already happened.
Yeah, that's already, and I'm saying like just normal.
Just normal like.
The way we, the way we are,
yeah, the way we do like vitamins and things in cereal.
Yeah, for sure.
Like when is it gonna be like creatine cereal for your kid?
Yeah.
And it's not really that expensive.
Creatine's one of the cheaper supplements
that you can get out there in bulk
So I would think that they would sprinkle it in there
There are studies not on pregnant women
But they did these with the animals where they gave the animals some creatine and the the baby their babies or whatever when they were born
Came out healthier
And stronger I I think this is gonna be a supplement that they're gonna recommend to everybody
Yeah, at some point speaking of bang you guys ever see a picture of the CEO of Bang?
Of course.
He looks exactly as you would imagine.
Have you ever seen him?
Oh, I've always had like highlighted tips.
Bro, I've tried to create a character around him.
I didn't use it for a video, but like he was like my total muse.
Imagine the guy that invented Bang Energy Drink.
Well, I think you would, I think you would, the job.
What do you think he looks like?
I was that cheap old hair.
I feel like this like Hawaiian shirt and the
Gull chains and watch this. He's like your ultimate
Yeah, he's like I'm bang
He looks exactly like that picture right there in the middle yeah, I remember the first like fitness convention that I went to
When bang was first coming on the market. And they must have had,
first of all they had one of the biggest booth areas
like rented out.
And there must have been 50 people there representing them.
45 of them were girls and booty shorts and bras.
That's it.
I was just like,
every supplement company had sex with monster energy drink.
Then they came out with it.
Yeah, totally.
It's funny that you say that.
You know, it's funny.
A friend of mine did a post on Instagram the other day
and talked about the negativity with media
and it's advertising to women.
And they were saying that it's because it's male controlled
media and it's men doing all the stuff.
And I'm like, no, no, no, man.
They're not, the guys are not the ones buying it.
You know, we, like, just like what you just said
with these girls and booty shorts,
the whole reason why they do that is because it sells.
It'll stop the second we stop buying their shit.
Like if you see a company's marketing,
I recommend people do this.
If you see a company's marketing,
and you say that's not good.
It doesn't really sell though.
I mean, doesn't.
Yeah, I mean,
obviously, I mean, have you ever heard something like,
you know, I picked bang up,
because man, there's like 40 hot chicks in bikinis.
I don't think that you're saying that. I know, but I mean, but it's okay
You're subconsciously you think that's what people are doing. Well, they're buying it because look at the target
More audience, right? You're a 25 year old dude. You want an energy drink. You're walking into the supplement place
Over here is like one with a chart about how effective their supplements are over here
Is it just that the other companies in the space, the energy space have used those marketing tactics
and then he's just trying to be competitive
against those companies?
I think it's just more of like, just marketing roles.
They say it takes an average of like three times
before you see a company, right,
before you make a purchase.
I think that like, you know, it's totally cemented
in my mind that I can picture that walking
into that convention and there was hundreds of booths, guess which one stands out in my mind.
Of course.
So now why did you stand out because of all the girls?
That's right.
Right.
So that's why I think it works, right?
Because it's it's.
I mean, it would, but so would a bunch of naked dudes running around with the bang.
And the road, I don't know, it would be not the same thing.
Yeah.
Okay.
So a naked dude dancing typically doesn't even get the attention of women
They tend to be like I don't get me away from that
The girls tend to sell better to girls
Yeah, we've tried that angle, but my point is this if you don't if you think that something's negative or portraying a negative
What just don't buy their shit if everybody did that man? Oh boy with this shit change very quickly
Well speaking of friends posting stuff. I don't know if you guys saw Ben Greenfield posted
just yesterday and I did not know that Chilly had this.
So I want, so Chilly, our partner, has this gravity blanket.
I believe it weighs 25 pounds, Doug,
you can look it up for me.
Oh, I love weighted blankets.
And, you know, I've actually never tried one.
I've heard all kinds of great things about,
but what's cool about this one is it plugs into your,
your Chilly units so you can either cool it or heat it. Oh shit. A coolie. Now from the top
and the bottom and it's yes. Man, it's a gravity. So I make a nice cold
breed. I'm ordering. Just a nice cold breed of Justin's a steak
breed. Are you looking at it up, Doug right now? What's the weight on? I think it's
25 pounds, right? Is that heavy? I mean, that sounds heavy to me. It It is. I have a 10 pound one at home. And that feel, by the way,
gravity blankets are really good for people with things. There it is right there. Oh, yeah,
they're fantastic. I bought Courtney one for that reason, specifically. What are the,
I can be on the couch with that on and it helps, you know, calm it down or whatever. 15 pounds.
Let's see what size that is. Yeah, there might be different options,
but 15 is even really good.
Yeah, I thought I have a 10 pound.
I thought I heard Ben say 25 pounds
is what I thought I heard him say.
Well Ben's gonna go.
Or higher, I thought I hear,
it was either 25 or like 50, I thought.
I'll have to look back at this.
I have a 50 pound blanket.
I don't know.
I know, I might be a little kid on my chest.
It looks to me only the 15 pound.
Yeah.
Oh, maybe it's a 15, I thought 50.
Maybe that's what happened, bro.
50 pounds would be a little,
and no, it's not my attention.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Honey!
Honey!
What?
I can't get out of bed.
Yeah, that would bother me just.
If it's too heavy, you guys,
I hate when people, what it's called,
short tuck the sheets at the bottom.
You know, because my feet can't do it.
My feet need too big to stretch.
Well, it's not just that, but you don't want your feet
to fold out like this, right?
Or push back, yes.
So Jessica's got like freedom.
She's got ridiculous mobility in this direction.
So she could flex her, is that, no, that's extend, right?
Her ankles.
And she could put them out real, like,
she's got this crazy toe point.
So she'll lay in bed like this.
My feet don't do that.
Should endorse a flex.
Yeah, they pull up like this.
Yeah, and so then you get like cramps in your toes
because it rolls your toes over.
I hate those flexing.
You hate that.
You know what, why don't you like it?
Cause dude, it's just like,
it's not a comfortable state for me.
Yeah, I want, dude, I'm freedom.
You know, just, oh man, I ripped the sheets out.
I'll even hang my feet out.
I can't tuck them in.
I'm a one leg under and one leg over the sheet guy.
I like the sheets in between my legs.
One leg under, one leg over.
Spoon the sheets.
Just, yeah, no, I'm just ready to rock and roll.
Just making love to it.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
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Our first caller is Olivia from Toronto, Canada.
Hi Olivia, how can we help you?
Hey guys, I'm a big fan of your show.
I actually just started listening a few weeks ago and I'm like
binging a few episodes every day.
It's awesome.
Oh, thank you.
I just bought Match Performance.
I've been doing it for, I just did it for a week now.
I'm a weekend to it, but I was wondering
if there's any changes or modifications I can make
to the program to enhance my performance in my sport,
which is football, like American football.
Oh, very cool.
What position?
So I play wide receiver and quarterback,
mainly quarterback in the summer,
and then wide receiver for my university.
Awesome, and then this is full on American football,
so it's tackle, correct?
No, so it's contact flag, I guess I should have specified.
So we block and we have like an online deadline,
but we don't wear equipment.
We pull flags instead of tackling.
So it's more speed related than I guess, shrink.
Okay, so the, so the couple of things I would recommend.
One is continue to practice the skills of your particular sport.
So sometimes the mistake that people make
when they start working out to improve their performance is they trade
skill training with just getting stronger in the gym and this is a this is not necessarily a good idea because
If you get really strong, but you lose some of your skill then that strength on the field doesn't translate very well
So make sure you continue with your skills training. As far as modifying the workout,
map performance is really, really well put together for general overall performance. The
modifications would be, need to be very, very specific to the individual. And I would focus mainly
on areas that you notice you tend to have pain or mobility issues. So if you notice that you have
issues like in your hips or your knees or your shoulders, especially after playing, you know,
really intense game, then I would use a program like Maps, Prime, Pro to identify those areas,
because that will give you the most bang for your buck in terms of the performance on the field.
Yeah, I'm curious as to what you've seen there
that you want to modify a little more specifically
towards football, because it's pretty close
to something I would program to a football player
kind of go in off season, then bring them into season.
There's some things that you can do.
If you are well versed in Olympic lifts
or you can do a hang clean,
that's the opportunity there when we have high pulls programmed in there. That's something
that I do suggest, like some athletes, if they have training already, where they could
substitute and add a little bit more type power lifts or Olympic lifts rather in that direction.
So other than that, I think it's pretty specifically.
Well, what about for that?
What about, what about, I mean,
what do you think Justin about adding
either like some footwork drills to mobility days?
So I could see acceleration, deceleration,
working on and doing like footwork drills
that would carry over into her sport on mobility day.
Sure, I can, yeah, and even in phase three,
I mean, we have like, it's speed power
and so there's a lot of acceleration,
deceleration type, explosive moves,
you know, that you're gonna be working on.
I do see some value in footwork, however,
you know, if you're gonna get more specific
in the endurance part of it,
that's where you can structure it around
You know in time it around the amount of effort that you're gonna put out per place
So you can do more like 50 yard sprints. That's what I'm thinking. Yeah
I'm thinking I'm not like of course the way the programming is set up is to get her better overall and that but I mean very
Specific drills for a wide receiver and a wide receiver or
a quarterback.
So like a throwing drill, like a foot, run your patterns.
Exactly.
Run your patterns, doing the takeoff for wide receiver stuff, accelerating your cuts, and
just in those short bursts and programming that on like mobility days.
Since the program itself on foundational days, they're going to give her the overall strength. Yeah. I would focus on like mobility days. Since the program itself on foundational days
are gonna give her the overall strength,
I would focus on maybe adding those in the research.
And when you do that,
just make sure you don't go too intense with it
over for the mobility days.
There is like, so as you get further in the program,
it actually focuses more on the endurance,
interability portion of it.
So where I would probably add even more
of that. But yeah, just to maintain the skills and the movement, I think that is a good idea.
Yeah, and a big factor that can influence what kind of drills you would do is your experience
with your sport. So how long have you been playing football competitively?
So I played basketball for like six or seven years,
and I got a few like scholarships to the US,
but I had like a bad concussion at the time
and I had to give them up, took a year off,
and then I found football just by chance.
I've been playing now.
I transitioned to football for I think five or six years now.
I was receiver for a long time,
and now they're putting me at like a sort of a running
quarterback sort of thing. OK, and that helps a lot, right? Because if you're if you don't have a
ton of experience, let's say you're athletic, but you don't have a ton of experience playing the sport,
then you're probably biggest value is going to be just playing scrimmages practicing as often as
possible and getting really good at it. But because you've been playing for about five years,
some of these these drills that the guys just mentioned
would probably provide you a lot of value.
Just remember that.
Remember, when you're following math performance,
what you can expect is strength, power, durability.
But what you won't get from it is improvement in scale.
So practice the skill along with following the program.
What you don't want to necessarily do,
and I want to stress this, is get really strong,
but also lose skill,
because then you'll find yourself on the field,
not necessarily in a better off,
even though you're stronger,
because you've lost some of your skill in your testing.
That's why I envision,
I mean, if you're a client of mine,
this is what I envision.
I envision having three mobility days,
and I imagine that you have access
to one of your wide receivers, one of your friends.
Yeah.
Okay, so I would go down to like a field somewhere outside with one of your wide receiver
friends and I would do start the day with mobility work.
So both of you do some mobility drills to warm up and work on your mobility and then you
go right into your footwork drill.
So run in little routes and plays and drop them back
and that's what the rest of the day would look like.
I think you doing that is going to continue to increase
your skills in the sport and then the programming
will take care of everything else.
Yeah, and if you don't have maps prime pro,
we'll send that over to you Olivia
because I think that you're gonna find a lot of value in that,
especially for the areas that tend to bother you
after playing or practicing really hard.
So you'll pick the area that tends to bother you
and then practice the movements that are in Maps Prime Pro
for those areas, and that should help you quite a bit.
Thank you so much, that's awesome.
I just have one more part of the question.
So I just finished actually a month ago
or two months ago, a 15-week
progressive overload, like lifting program that I sort of found online. And I
put on 10 pounds, like, you know, some muscle, whatever. But I kind of hindered
my progress with overtraining and whatnot. But I still had some progress.
And but because I've put on 10 pounds,
I'm noticing I started doing what you guys did.
I put on this strength, but not skill specific.
I'm feeling it a bit on the field when I'm going to jump and stuff.
So I've been trying to be in a calorie deficit a little bit
to shed some of the weight for my summer season.
Can you do maps performance well in a calorie deficit
and what you guys not gonna matter?
Sure, great idea.
You totally can.
I just wouldn't do too big of a deficit
when training really hard.
But here's the other thing too,
is that I don't know what your program was before.
You said progressive overload.
I'm assuming it was very strength
and muscle building focused.
Yeah.
Just practicing your skills,
jumping lateral movement.
You can actually take that strength
and start to convert it to more performance-based strength
because you can get really strong
from just doing barbell squats and build muscle.
And for most people, that'll make them jump higher
and move faster.
But if you were an athlete before
and you moved really well,
and then you built that muscle,
but you didn't let the skills follow it, you would not actually lose a little bit of that
ability because the weight to strength ratio or explosive strength ratio might change
a little bit.
So sometimes you don't necessarily need to lose the weight unless it was body fat.
Sometimes all you need to do is train that new weight in ways that make it more beneficial
for your sport. Okay, yeah, sure. That makes sense. Get used to my new, my new X-Trate pounds.
Exactly. Exactly. Thanks for calling.
Okay. Thanks so much for having me and things. Thanks for everything. You guys are awesome.
No problem. All right. Yeah, I remember back in the day when I was with compete and grappling
that I've always loved resistance training way more than
I loved anything else, right?
And I would go through these phases where I would put on muscle and I would only do like
one day a week of judo or jujitsu.
And then I'd go back to training real hard in those sports.
And although it was bigger and stronger, I wasn't really performing any better.
And I was just like, and I knew why it was because I lost skill
But I gained strength. I mean skill is if you were to list in sports performance skills number one
Then all the contributing factors to skill follow but skill has got to be number one
I mean, I feel like and Justin correct me if I'm wrong because I don't think this is bad the three of us
This meeting is being recorded. It's being recorded now. Thank you.
I think of the three of us.
I don't think this isn't my expertise,
but I've trained many clients like this.
And my recommendation would be,
at least three days of the mobility work
with the skills training, with the foundational days.
If I saw that her strength and or her training
was starting to hinder her movement on the field,
she's getting slower, her reaction time isn't there, she's not improving on her skill.
I would scale back another day off the foundations and increase
to another mobility and skills training day.
Yeah, definitely. I think that's smart. I do evaluate to whether or not they're a beginning
athlete, if they've already established a good foundational strength
to work with, or if this is somebody that's a little more
seasoned, and a lot of times, you don't really need to add
a lot more strength to these athletes.
I think that's something that is pushed a lot on athletes,
but it does tend to, the focus gets shifted in terms of,
if they just focus more on their
skill or on their overall quality of their movement, it may aid even more in their performance
than previously.
So I think it's really, and I had the same experience where I gained weight because my
position had changed.
I had to be like an inside-backer versus an outside-backer.
So I had to gain like 20 pounds.
And coming back was very difficult because it had maintained all the skills training that went with that
added weight. So just getting acclimated to the new body, you know, that took time on its own.
Yeah. And one more thing, athletes don't usually understand this until much later. The biggest
bang for your buck that you'll get with sport, especially if you play pretty consistently year after year
It's just preventing injury. Right. Yes. Just focus on if you just the real game if you just focused on preventing injury
The high level at the high level. That's all that's more the experience
That's it. Especially at the high level. Yeah, once you once you get to you know college pro and so that they don't that's it's all about injury
Prevention our next color is Sean from California. What's up Sean how can we help you?
Hey guys I just wanted to first say I really appreciate all the content you put out and really enjoy a lot of the podcast episodes. So just to give you some background. Yeah just to
give some background. I played a lot of water poll and I was swimming when I was growing up
and I do have a little bit of a background in strength training that right now I'm coming
off a training protocol for a half-iron man.
So just wondering which of your programs would you recommend?
Just wanting to go as I transition out of kind of endurance training, I know you guys
talked about the benefits of resistance training and strength training.
So just on which program do you guys would you recommend that would be a good one to start with?
I mean, I know you guys have math starter obviously, but I already do have a pretty strong background in
strength training with, I mean, this is the form technique of a bench squat deadlift. So I was a
chair if maybe I could go into math performance or math synthetic or something or, or if any of those
programs would be suitable
to maybe combine with the occasional cardio
or during training with at the swimming or running.
Maps and a ballic.
Yeah, so actually quick question, Sean,
you just finished your half marathon.
How long ago?
On half Iron Man training, so it was about three weeks ago
and I did kind of a mock half Iron Man
just because all the races had been canceled for the past year.
So I just do it on the semi-on without the actual sanction event.
Okay.
And then for people who don't know, half-iron man's in sane, it's just a really, really tough
group of group...
...grueling type competition.
Do you...
Would you say you're more likely to over-train or under-t train your body? I definitely have a tendency to over train. I've had that issue in the past, so I know you guys have
talked about like kind of welcoming people to change parts of the training plans, but I know that
I kind of have a tendency that I might overdo it, so I was wondering if you do have a certain one
I might overdo it. So I was wondering if you do have a certain one
that may be better for combining with occasional cardio
versus something that's maybe like a twice a day training.
I know that wouldn't be good for me right now.
Yeah, I would, okay.
So we definitely want to scale back for a little while.
They've actually done studies and shown that when people train
for really intense physical performances,
it actually can take the body as long as months
to get back its recovery ability.
So it actually causes issues for people.
And now, as somebody like yourself who trains real hard,
you're used to the way it feels
and you, you know, any improvement feels good.
So you're like, oh, I can push myself.
So it's gonna be very important that you pay attention to that.
So Adam said, maps and a ball,
I think that's the perfect program for you.
It's not going to over train your body.
It's going to build lots of strength.
Now, if you want to train in a way with resistance,
that's more athletic minded,
then I would go maps performance.
Maps performance will also build a lot of strength
and muscle on your body,
but there's a lot, there's a special emphasis
on athletic performance.
So if that's like what you like to do,
yeah, but I still think he would be,
if he was your client and you had the choice,
what would you do?
You know, anabolic, wouldn't you?
It depends, right?
Because performance also has the mobility.
It depends on what he did for the Iron Man training
and also what he's gonna stick to.
Maps and a ball, it's definitely very straightforward.
Muscle building performance has a little bit of athletic. Yeah, I'm kind of in that hybrid. I love the Maps and a ball, it's definitely very straightforward, muscle building performance as a little bit of that athletic.
I'm kind of in that hybrid.
I love the Maps and a ball, in terms of phase one,
and I love that protocol.
However, I do love mobility training sessions in between.
But I mean, you do get a lot of benefit
from the trigger sessions in anabolic
for that specific reason of recovery,
but I would like you to focus a bit more
on reinforcing your joints
and really going through that recovery process, because I'm like you to focus a bit more on reinforcing your joints and really
going through that recovery process because I'm sure there was a lot of stress and potential
underlying issues that may result in the future.
The reason why I'm still going to keep pushing in a bulk is that I think this is not only
does he need this physically, I think he also needs it mentally.
I think if he has a tendency to over train and this is what's, and not to mention,
we all know what we was ideal for the next program.
So the ideal order would be anabolic right now,
followed by performance.
So we will address mobility,
but right now you're going from this super high level
amount of volume of training.
One of the best things that he could possibly do
is to reduce that down to two
or three days of foundational training.
If you want, and if it was a client, and this is where our programs are not perfect,
right?
So maybe to Justin and Sal's point, I would make you run anabolic, but instead of trigger
stuff, I would have more mobility-type-focused things.
There's nothing wrong with that, right?
So you can modify even our programs.
So because you guys all, I think we all agree that mobility should be focused
and recovery and that's where he should be thinking.
But I also am thinking just the volume of training.
And performance definitely ramps up from Annabalik
as far as the volume goes up.
And I think he needs to go all the way down to Annabalik
and I think it's gonna be very hard for him.
I think he's gonna have to mentally challenge himself
to stick to the programming.
And then I would move to performance.
Two to three days a week is gonna be a tough shift.
Yeah, I mean, you make a really good case at him.
So, so do you have access to maps and a ball look?
I don't know because I was looking at both maps and ball look and performance, but I know,
I mean, recovery of a huge component to muscle building and getting strength back and just
with all the gym being shut down to the past year.
So I haven't really only been doing body weight training.
So I was leaning towards anabolic, but I just wanted to get some advice from you guys.
Okay, so we'll give you maps and a ball.
On the trigger session days, focus on mobility.
Focus on joint movement and making your joints feel healthy.
In other words, treat those days as active recovery days
throughout the whole program.
So three month program, and that should be good.
At the end of that three months,
you should feel pretty strong and good,
and then mass performance would definitely be a good follow.
I would love to see you do maps and a ballic,
and then follow the webinar that I did
on primeprowebinar.com. So go to primepro, it's free, and literally follow the webinar that I did on PrimePro webinar.com.
So go to PrimePro, it's free,
and literally follow that routine.
I think that routine is a great routine.
Two goals on the days of the week.
That's right, do those on the days in between.
So follow Maps, Antiballic,
to a T, the way it's structured,
on the trigger session days,
follow that mobility routine that I created a webinar around.
I think that's a really good place for you to be,
and then after you get through Antiballabolic, then I would transition you into performance.
To me, that would be the most ideal.
And again, I'm going to challenge you on the mentality part because I know you're an athlete,
I know you're going to want more, and you're going to have to resist that.
Yeah, definitely get that.
My parents have been telling me the same exact thing for years, and I'll definitely appreciate
all your help guys.
Awesome. No problem. Thanks for calling. So I definitely appreciate all your help guys. Awesome.
No problem, thanks for calling.
You guys familiar with the distances of...
It's long, bro.
So I looked it up because Iron Man shit is really shit.
Because you got to swim, you got to bike,
you got to run, it's ridiculous.
Well, here it is, I just pulled it up
because I don't remember the,
I've trained, let me think, five people
who trained for a half Iron Man and then one of them went on to do a full Iron Man. But trained for a half Iron Man,
and then one of them went on to do a full Iron Man.
But here's a half Iron Man.
Just so people know what we're talking about,
it's a one and a half mile swim,
a 56 mile bike ride, and a 13 mile run.
So this is a half Iron Man.
Just get an idea of,
which is a half marathon and a,
what's considered like the long distance for bike?
Oh, what a century, yeah, a hundred miles. So it's more than half a half a
month, right? Right. So one more than a half century, more than a half a marathon, and then also the swim all come on.
It's insane. It's so when I that's a half marathon, so a half-iron man. So when I trained, I had a one guy that I used to train that was just really,
he was actually, he was an ear nose and throat specialist in a surgeon. Really smart guy, high-performing,
everything you did, really high-performing.
He hired me for the half-iron man's
and we really had to feel things out, right?
Because it was really hard not to overtrain him
because he was doing so much biking, swimming,
and running all the time.
You know what it turned into?
One day a week of resistance training.
And a lot of those days were moderate intensity.
I would say probably one to two workouts a month, we pushed the intensity.
The rest of them were like mobility and stuff like that.
I mean, first of all, a lot of people don't even finish those iron bands.
Oh, the goal is to finish.
Yeah, exactly.
The goal is, can you just complete it?
And have you ever seen some people crossing the finish line on those iron bands?
Like, like crawling to like finish it.
Body's like all shaking. It's crazy. Yeah, because so when I trained the guy, I was like Man's, they're like croaking. Crawling, finishing bodies like all shaking, it's crazy.
Yeah, because so when I trained the guy, he would notice,
decreases his performance, and so I had to scale it so far down.
And then finally, we hit the magical number, which is-
Well, I'm saying, it takes all of your focus.
That's the thing, the endurance part of it is going to make up
the majority of what you're doing because you have to.
And this is why I'm pushing towards Anabok so hard because, let me tell you, it's going to be so hard for this guy to make that switch.
I mean, the mental discipline it takes to train for an Iron Man is like the opposite spectrum of what I'm asking you to do to go train two foundational days or three times.
And that's actually one of the reasons why I said performance at first because because one of my fears is it'll be easy off a little bit.
Yeah, because it's going to be such a big dip.
Like he'll do it for a few weeks and it's like screw it.
I don't want to do this anymore.
Yeah, this is, I mean, that's a fair point.
It's a fair point, but I think we can all agree that we know what his body needs the most.
Yeah.
What his body needs the most is something more like anabolic, you're right.
Yeah.
He might be so addicted to that crazy training, maybe letting
easing him off, you know, instead of almost feeling like
you're cutting cold totally.
Our next caller is Kelly from Mississippi.
Hi Kelly.
How can we help you?
Hi.
Thanks so much for talking to me today.
Super excited to get your take on my question.
OK.
So once upon a time, I was a Jim Rat, a qualified qualified gym rats that all the time in the gym really
loved cardio, which I know you guys love.
I was a Zumba instructor, half marathon runner, to thought I hit you name it.
And then really got into strength training, realized the benefit of strength training
tracked away from so much cardio.
Also formerly had a pretty terrible eating disorder,
and I think I actually moved into more of like ortho-exia. And so that went on, really
started to pay more attention to nutrition until I got really sick and was sick for about
two and a half years with an undiagnosed medical condition. But then very recently, as of eight months ago,
was diagnosed.
I'm now a medication.
It's controlled.
But I am basically starting from scratch.
And I know I've read your book,
Sal loved it.
It's a lot of really fantastic advice.
I needed to hear a lot of it.
But I'm basically starting from scratch.
And as much as I hate that,
I'm really looking at this as a clean slate
to do nutrition right, to do rest right. I'm now back in the gym exercising
with a little bit more weight trying to build some strength and build that muscle back.
But I would really love all of your opinions on what is the, what if you had somebody that it was like clean slate they
have muscle memory they know their way around the gym what would be your best advice for
somebody who wants to really tackle this with a lot of smart technique to really make sure
that they're getting as strong as they can for life.
Okay Kelly you're amazing by the way.
I think just yeah this, this is great.
This is really, really great.
And a couple of things before our salad,
let you take off.
One, shout out to Zumba, because Justin's a huge fan.
Yeah, my Zumba Zumba.
And then, and then, Sal, if you could break down
what orthorexia is before you get into your rant,
and then I'll let you take it from there.
Yeah, so orthorexia is where you're just,
you're really obsessed about eating clean or healthy.
So it's a bad relationship with food,
but the driver is, I wanna eat perfect.
I wanna eat perfectly healthy.
It can cause people a lot of stress.
It could, very common in bodybuilding, right?
It is, and it can take away from your relationships
with other people.
It can make, essentially what you eat
takes over your life with other people. It can make, essentially what you eat takes over your life
in many respects.
Okay, so I want to help you, but I think I could best help you
if I know what the condition is that you've been diagnosed with.
Now, if you don't want to say, okay, go ahead,
tell us what it is.
Yeah, so I have something called
Mass Cell Activation Syndrome,
and it calls the spontaneous CSF leak.
Okay, so can you go into a little more detail with that?
I'm assuming that affects your central nervous system and causes your...
Yes, okay.
Yeah, so a CSF leak is when you tear a hole in the juror around your spinal cord.
So your spinal fluid leaks out into the body and it causes your brain to st.
down on top of the spinal cord. It causes a really horrible headache.
It's really hard to diagnose them.
The mast cell activation syndrome is your immune system attacking your
connective tissue so similar to an autoimmune condition, but not an autoimmune condition.
Okay, this is okay.
That really helps a lot.
Okay, so in my experience, okay, now of course I want to
disclaimer, I'm not a doctor.
In my experience, I've trained a lot of people with
autoimmune issues that affect the body.
And in all of those situations, what you don't want to do
is train the body harder or longer than you need to,
because that tends to trigger autoimmune reactions.
So if I'm training someone who, you know, they get really inflamed, for example, I would
notice like their inflammation would kick up.
So if they say the average person I trained a little too hard, they're just sore for a
little longer, not a big deal.
With somebody who has an overactive immune system, that can turn into weeks or months of
getting back to recovery. So my number one
piece of advice to you is go really slow. Now this may be hard for someone like you with your
background, right? Because you're used to working out hard, you have a bit of a skewed
perception of intensity, you know, you know, I can go low. So I'm gonna say, I love starter for this.
Always, yeah, always air on the side of going easy.
And I would like you to treat your exercise like practice,
don't ever treat like a workout.
So when you go to the gym,
forget that you're training your quads
or your hamstrings or your shoulders.
Think to yourself instead,
I'm gonna get really good at shoulder presses.
I'm gonna get really good at leaning
into the technique of all these exercises.
That's it, just treat them like skills, 100%.
Go to the moderate to low intensity
and just get better at the skills.
That will give you way more dividends
than going to work your body out like you're gonna do
a workout.
Adam said, map starter, I agree.
I think map starter is a great way to get going.
And again, I can't stress this enough.
Air on the side of less, okay?
It's better.
Okay.
It's better that you progress slower
because you're doing too little
than doing too much and knocking yourself
into a case where now you have to stay at home
and sit in bed for the next couple of months
because you've caused the flare up.
So really go easy, really go slow,
and just remember that too much intensity
or working out too hard or too long,
it's not just gonna be like,
oh, I need to take next week off or go easier.
It could turn into months of being into a flare up.
And be competitive with yourself with the technique.
Like, I mean, watch the model in the videos and the goal should be,
can I make the form look even better, more controlled and better?
So you can still have this kind of athletic competitive mindset,
but just switch it from sweating and burning and trying to hurt and put pain on yourself
to more like, can I make this look better
than the model performing the exercise
and be competitive with yourself in that?
Slowing the repetition down and being very meticulous
to how you move the weights and the position of your body
as you do the exercises.
And that's where I like starter, starter,
it's got stability ball stuff on there,
there's a lot of stability exercises.
So there's a lot of things that are gonna just challenge
your balance, inform, and technique,
really air on that side.
And even as you progress and move out of starter
and maybe into another program like Annabelle,
do not leave that mindset.
I just, this is actually how I train my clients,
most of my clients for most of my career
is, you know know lay that solid foundation
of just getting perfect at all the movements. Be more focused on that than adding weight
to the bar or repetitions.
Okay, I like that. I like it. I like it. I actually heard you say that about practice on
a previous episode and I really appreciated that it's not something that I had ever really
thought of as a person who I've always really respected
weight and really respected technique and foreman have always strived for that. But the thought of
really approaching that as practice had never occurred to me. And so even this morning when I went to
the gym I thought, okay, we're just practicing shoulder presses. We're just practicing that. And it
really did change the workout. I love that it
buys so much. So I'll gear my competitive nature towards myself at just getting really, really
good at practicing all of the techniques. Yeah, because you know, the key is going to be to control
that inflammatory response. Right. And you need some of an inflammatory response. That's part of how the body adapts.
But in your case, the inflammatory response can trigger
a remission.
It can get you to the point where you're like,
oh my God, it starts to kind of get out of control.
The other things I would look into are eating in ways
to reduce the inflammatory response.
Sleep is probably going to be really important.
And then, and this again, I'm not a doctor, so I'm just going to encourage you to look this up for yourself. to reduce the inflammatory response, sleep is probably gonna be really important. Yes.
And then, yes.
And this again, I'm not a doctor,
so I'm just gonna encourage you to look this up for yourself.
But I would look into cannabinoids
and how that may help with your body's inflammatory response
and your immune response,
but also talk to your doctor.
I'm assuming you're on immune suppressing drugs.
So talk to your doctor before you try anything to help yourself out.
Okay, great.
Great.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
No problem.
And by the way, we're going to send you Map Starter if you don't already have it.
Oh, I don't.
Thank you so much.
I actually was looking at the programs that you listed in the book, Sal, and was thinking,
you know, would this be something I should do?
Or so that's great.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, you actually the programs in the books will do you just find as well,
but Map Starter also, but you go and start with Map Starter,
since there's videos that great.
Okay, okay.
Okay, that's great.
Thank you so much.
No problem.
Awesome.
Why do I, why do I love her so much?
Is it the act?
Is it the great mentality?
Is that what it is?
I can't tell if it's the accent or maybe you're a great attitude.
No, she does.
I mean, you could tell that she's done her homework, you know, saying, and you could tell
she's got a great attitude towards health and fitness, like really cool.
And talk about very unfortunate situation to be in.
I don't think I've trained a client with that condition.
Not that, that's super rare, but I've trained lots of people with issues that flare up
when the intensity gets too high, you know, fibromyalgia,
you know, being one of the multiple sclerosis
and other one like this.
It's like exercise can be the best medicine,
resistance training in particular,
can be the best medicine, but like any medicine.
It's all about the dose.
Yes, too much becomes poison, literally.
So you have to air on the side of less
and just allow that medicine to do its job,
and it's hard, right?
Especially when you're someone like her
who, you know, what she did before.
You want it, you're like, you know,
you're gonna change what it, you know,
the definition of working out totally.
Our next caller is John from Arizona.
Hey, what's up, John?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, thanks for taking my question.
I was listening a couple of weeks ago,
and you had talked to somebody about splitting your
workout sessions in half.
And my question was, should I take my exercises and do like the first five exercises in the
morning and the second five in the afternoon or should I take all the exercises and kind
of split the sets in half and do all the exercises in the morning, half the sets,
and then the second half of the sets in the afternoon.
Yeah, this is a really, really good question.
And fun one.
And fun one.
So the old school way of doing it, it's called a double split routine is the old body
builder style.
And this was a routine that got popular in the 70s.
You see guys like Arnold and Franco and all those bodybuilders back then,
what they would do is they would do
the first option that you said, right?
They'd come in the morning and they'd do chest and back
and then later on they'd come in the afternoon
and do shoulders and biceps or something like that, right?
Now, when we look at Olympic lifters
or other types of lifters, it's a little bit different.
They tend to do the second option
where they're practicing, rather than doing 10 sets
of squats all at once, they'll do five in the morning
and five in the evening.
Now I've personally experimented with both
and I do have a preference.
The preference I have is for the second option.
I've gotten stronger, better.
I did not, you're gonna go that way.
By splitting the workout, absolutely.
So rather than doing four sets know, four sets of,
you know, let's say I have to do four sets for chest,
four sets for back, four sets for shoulders,
I'll do two of each in the morning and then in the afternoon.
And the reason why I changed my opinion,
because I would have said the first option before,
is because I started experimenting with these all day workouts
where I would do, you know do three sets of the same exercises
every other hour all day long.
And I noticed some very interesting things.
I actually got stronger as the day progressed
and I was able to do this tremendous amount of volume.
And I noticed I got like built muscle
very quickly from doing it.
And I think most people benefit from that practicing
the movement kind of more frequently
than they would from just hammering a muscle
with more volume all at once. So I'm gonna lean more towards the splitting up the sets
for this particular question. I did not think you were gonna go that way. I did not think you're gonna go that way at all
You know, so and I don't disagree with you. My answer would have been like there's no wrong answer here and
I would encourage you actually to try both.
I mean, just because the only drawback
I would think of for the way you're explaining right now,
Sal is somebody getting into the groove, right?
So if you like, let's say squats, right?
So let's say you have four sets of squats
and you're only gonna do set two sets of squats
in the morning.
I mean, sometimes I feel like it takes me
till my second or third squat.
That's immediately what I would have thought.
It was like, yeah, sometimes you might need that third set to really like get into, you know, I feel like it takes me till my second or third squabble. That's immediately what I would have thought. It was like, yeah, sometimes you might need that third set
to really get into the feel of it
and really get into that sweet spot.
But yeah, I've noticed the same thing, though,
splitting it up and working on the second two,
latter half of the day.
It's just nice because now we're just reiterating
on that signal you were sending earlier
and your body just feels the difference of that.
I mean, I guess this is why I knew it would be a fun question
because I don't think there's a wrong answer here, right?
So it's really up to the user.
It is, and you know, it's funny.
It's like, I've done the double split stuff before,
and I didn't notice a huge benefit
aside from the fact that, you know,
maybe if the workout was too long
all at once that I have a little bit more stamina if I rest for a few hours and then come
back.
It wasn't a huge benefit, but when I did the set split and I would do the same exercise
again later in the day, I noticed a much bigger benefit.
It was like, it wasn't just cutting the workout.
I see, I feel I disagree.
So I feel like when I was able to, so what happens to me when we do like a full body routine,
right, is you know, legs and back and chest, they really, they really tax you.
They're big muscles.
And so I did feel like, you know, whatever comes after legs or back just doesn't quite
get the same intensity towards that.
Where if I got to break it up or the morning time, I might do legs or back
and then I go chest and shoulders and other,
later on, I felt like I could give more
towards my chest and shoulders
because I got that rest.
So, again, I don't think there's a wrong answer here, John.
I do think that this is gonna be a personal preference thing.
It would be very interesting
and I'd like to hear you play with both
and hear what you say.
Now, you know what, the little bit more information I'd like here.
How many hours in between the two workouts are we talking?
Right now I'm getting up and working out about five o'clock.
I've been doing the RGB bundle for the last year.
And it'd probably be around the same time in the morning and there would probably be the earliest
would probably be three in the afternoon.
So what's that about 10 hours
between the two workouts?
Okay, so that's good.
That's a pretty big gap.
And the reason why I asked is Adam made the comment
that it takes him a few sets to get into a squat.
Well, actually find with studies that if you prime your body,
that effect lasts for a few hours,
but you're well beyond that. So you might actually find that, you might actually find that if you prime your body, that affect last for a few hours, but you're well beyond that.
So you might actually find that,
you might actually find that if you did half your squats
in the morning, half your squats in the afternoon,
you'd still need to prime and stuff
just like you did in the morning.
So that's actually something to consider.
But I swear to God, it is very strange.
When I do the same volume, but increase the frequency,
in other words, rather than doing four sets
of bench press in the morning,
if I did one set of bench press,
four times throughout the day, for example,
I just get this like, it feels very anabolic.
This is where trigger session concept
kind of even came from.
So I will, you know, experiment with both
and see how you feel.
I think you'll know pretty quickly.
Like you'll do one workout one way,
do the next one, the other one, the other way.
And I think you'll figure it out pretty quickly,
which one your body likes better.
John, do you own a maps prime by chance?
Um, I believe I have prime pro.
Okay, so I'm going to, I'm going to have Doug send you maps prime because if you do it
south way, my recommendation then would be to make sure that you prime before you leave
Sure.
Because then at least at least that will combat my challenge with it.
So my challenge with it is the whole getting in the groove,
taking me a couple sets just to get in the groove.
And exercise, if you do your due diligence
and do a really good job of priming your body
before you go into each, both your morning and evening workout,
then Sal's way may be more favorable.
But I definitely would recommend utilizing prime
for that. That's really what it's designed to do.
So we'll shoot prime over to you when you do sales ways, when you do it sales way,
well, you should do it no matter what, both ways I should say.
But I mean, that's definitely, I would put more emphasis on that.
All right.
Thank you guys.
I appreciate that.
No problem, John.
Thanks for calling.
Yeah, it's really weird. You know,
when I did those workouts, it was it was such a fricking trip. Yeah, but you also had
shorter breaks though. I did, but I've also done it where I have long breaks. And I actually
experiment exactly with what he said. It is so fricking weird. And the reason why I said
you'll feel it right away is because I did right away. I did it. And I was like, this feels
very different. Yeah. One thing that I did it, and I was like, this feels very different.
And my body.
One thing that I did notice too,
it is like maybe four or five hours
of difference between the two sessions,
it was just wasn't as taxing.
Like I felt, I was less likely to have that feeling
of overtraining where you would with the four sets in a row
where I'm like, oh, you know,
like sometimes I'll push it a little too far.
If I'm not checking myself versus splitting like that, it just felt like both sessions were
like, no charge.
Now, so when you did that, are you giving yourself a, you know, like let's say you go into
a shoulder press in the morning and the evening time, are you giving yourself like a just moving
the bar set that doesn't, it's a non-working set?
Are you going right into a working set?
No, no, no, no.
I would do, I would still do like a five to 10 minute warmup
and then I'd go into the workout, both workouts.
If the gap was big.
Now when I did the all day workouts,
this was the weird, this was really weird.
It was every other hour.
I would only have to prime for the first workout.
Well, yeah, that makes sense, right?
Because you're like you said, you're already pretty warmed up,
you're in good posture, you're connected there,
it's not a big gap.
So that makes sense that you wouldn't have to prime before.
But if you got a nice, you know, 10 hour gap
between the workouts, I would imagine it's almost like
restarting over again and you got to kind of prime the body,
warm up set and then go into it.
Yeah, I would love to experiment just,
and this is just, I don't think this is practical for most people, but, you know,
obviously, we, this is what we do for a living, and so we could make this happen.
I would love to do, like, instead of doing a full body workout in the morning,
three sets each exercise, do one set each exercise three times that day.
So one work on the morning, one workout in the afternoon, one workout in the evening.
And just, no, just see, is there a difference?
It's the same total volume, same work.
Is there a difference in how my body responds?
Well, the second way is what reflects kind of how I train now,
with us having a gym here and now that I have this set up
in my house, yeah.
I, you know, you guys will see me sometimes I just do
a few things here.
Well, that's not my complete workout.
I go home and I do a few more things.
I do the same thing.
Our next caller is Damien from Minnesota.
Hey, what's up Damien, how can we help you?
Hi, it is so awesome to be talking to you guys.
This is kind of unreal.
Yeah, huge fans.
Anyway, so I've gone through a little context.
I've gone through a number of your programs now.
I think about five coming up,
but I found my way to powerless recently, really been loving
it over halfway through.
And I've worked in the past to be able to pass all three compass tests in that prime.
And I prime regularly, you know, work on mobility when appropriate and stuff like that,
but I've developed some kind of intense left hip flexor pain
that pops up not while I list,
but kind of after I list that day or the next day.
And I've never had hip flexor issues in the past.
I've had some issues with tight hamstrings
and a little bit of a self diagnosed posterior pelvic tilt
that I've worked on correcting. So I've never had hip flexor pain before and just kind of strikes me
as a potential issue down the road if I want to keep powerlifting, which I do. So
I'd love your thoughts on maybe what's causing that and what I could do to
prevent injury in the future if I keep lifting heavy. Yeah great question,
Damien.
And it's so funny that you just asked this this question.
So I was just talking to Marlon Shamal.
He's one of our trainers on our YouTube channel,
really, really smart guy, really strong guy,
tremendously strong for his body weight.
You also competed in powerlifting recently.
He puts us all the shame.
And I just had a conversation with him the other day.
He knows his shit very good.
And he sends me a message and he goes,
you know what's weird, he goes,
I was having hip issues, I couldn't figure out what it was.
And what it was was my hip flexors were weak.
Now this is not common.
Usually hip flexors are tight in people.
You find weak hip flexors and people that are generally weak,
but people that tend to lift or train often,
you typically don't like work on strengthening their hip flexors.
It tends to not necessarily be a solution.
But in his case, it was weakness in his hip flexors.
He strengthened them and the pain was gone.
Now the reason why I'm communicating this to you
is because you did the Compass test very well,
you don't have mobility issues, you've followed
all of our programs.
I bet I can guess you've never really tested
your hip flexor strength, most people don't.
So I'm wondering if you actually have a weakness
in your hip flexors.
And then the second thing I would say
is to look at core stability
because they're so closely connected.
Look at those two things,
is your core stable and strong enough to support the
rest of your body and do you in fact have a weak hip flexors? And if you do strengthen
the hip flexors, that might actually solve your issue.
Well, I can add, I want to add to this, Damien, have you ever squatted barefoot and looked
at your feet?
I've squatted barefoot at home, like with dumbbells, body weight, pistols, stuff like that, but
not at the gym with a heavy barbell.
Well, I don't need you to load it heavy, but I would love to see you record your feet.
And by the way, I'll have dogs, and I sound like you have most of my problems.
And I'm always trying to get foot videos in the gym.
Yeah, real fetish.
Yeah, this is not for my fetish, Damien.
I promise. I'm going to have
Doug give you access to our private forum because this is how we use the forum all the time.
And I'm always very careful to try and assess somebody over the podcast because this is very
nuanced and very tough and I mean, especially for this. Yeah, exactly. And especially for someone
like you who seems to know his stuff, right? So I'm not going to just take a while, guess, and say that
something's weak or tight or there's something's wrong unless I could see you move.
But what I would want to see is I would love to see your feet in a really deep
squat and see what happens. Now, what could also be causing this is something
very similar because I have a very similar issue. And it comes from actually, my left foot will actually
pronate when I get really deep in the squat.
And that pronation also internally rotates the femur, which
makes it really tight.
And when I'm loading the bar really heavy, I'll get some
pain in that hip flexor on that side more than the other side.
So I would actually want to see your feet and see if there's
any discrepancy from the left to right
before I just assume that you have a weak hip flexor.
So if you could do that,
that would help me assess even better.
But I agree with Sal,
you could also test what he's saying.
Yeah, that would be great out.
I'll send that right away.
All right, perfect.
Thanks, Damien.
Thank you guys.
Thank you for all you do.
I'm a personal trainer and I say I get
I got certified to race, but I actually learned stuff from mind pumps. So thank you, guys.
Oh, awesome. Thanks, man. Yeah.
Yeah, it was it was such a weird way. I heard it from Marlin and then it made sense, right?
He's like, I would have never because I mean, let me ask you guys, how often have you?
No, has an issue been solved because you strengthen someone's hip flexors, right?
It's very rare.
It's rare to even check that.
Yes.
And I think I'm trying to remember exactly what drill,
that was it really exposed that for me.
And I think it was where Dr. Brink placed a book
on my stomach and I held my knee in and then lifted my leg up
and then tried to keep that from separating
and just using that to really try and like,
isometrically squeeze and close.
Oh, I've never even heard that.
So you brought your, you had a book on your explain that again.
So you have a book that you're trying to smash into
your stomach, your ribs basically.
And then now I'm like extending my leg out.
Oh wow.
And then back in and try not to separate the two.
And you saw a difference between right and left?
Yes, there's a discrepancies.
Oh, well, it's.
What a great assessment.
I mean, I can feel that just by pushing on my thigh
and then doing that, you can feel it.
You sit down on your butt and then,
we'll have to do a video.
Yeah, because if you're hamstrings.
Make that a big shot of video,
write that down and do that.
That's what it'll be great for.
Yeah, because if your hamstrings are tight
and your hip flexors are trying to stabilize
and so you're pulling against each other,
I mean, believe it or not,
it could be weak hip flexors. Not common, but and so you're pulling against each other. I mean, believe it or not, it could be weak hip flexors.
Not common, but if he's got like all these great mobility,
he's doing all the, the company passes.
That's all the marks otherwise.
And he hasn't looked there.
I'm like, well, look there and see what's going on.
I would also, though, always look feet first now.
Of course.
That is something that I did not do as a trainer
for a very long time.
It wasn't until hanging out with Dr. Brink,
did he completely just blow my mind
on how much of the stuff that we have going on all up here,
all stemming from my feet.
And that actually is, so it's my left side,
and it's because my left foot pronates,
and I still battle with it.
So I have to really be cautious of not allowing that to happen.
Now here is the difference with him,
is he says
he has a posterior pelvic tilt.
I know you have an anterior pelvic tilt.
Yeah, do you think he really has a posterior pelvic tilt?
Well, that's what he said.
And he has a trainer.
So you can trust him.
I have to trust him.
I need to watch a video, right?
Because a lot of times two people can term it.
And confuse the two.
But because he's a posterior pelvic tilt is very normal to me.
It's very, very rare and it looks really, really weird.
If you've never seen one of you, I mean, it's like,
I mean, how often do you guys see it?
Do you see it?
Well, because you're right.
You're right, nothing's better than seeing a video of him.
Do you see it?
But because he's a trainer and the way he was talking,
and if I took his word for it,
posture your pelvic tilt,
passes all the compass tests,
pain in his hip flexor,
I mean, could be the issue that I said.
But again, there's no way of knowing until
I was kind of speaking to a weakness there.
It does a little bit, so we'll see.
Look, if you like our information,
if you like the podcast, go check out our free guides.
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You can find Justin at MindPump Justin, me at MindPumpSal, and Adam at MindPump Adam.
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