Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1641: How to Get a Bigger Bench Press, the Pros & Cons of Eating Rice Crispy Treats Pre-Workout, the Dangers of Rounded Back Deadlifts & More
Episode Date: September 15, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about putting on muscle without putting on a lot of fat, eating a rice crispy treat before a workout to get a good pump, ...whether it is bad to deadlift with a rounded back, and ways to get stronger after hitting a plateau on the flat bench press. Are we getting closer to resistance training being the number one form of exercise? (4:58) The high school football update with Justin. (9:30) It’s tomato sauce season with the Di Stefano’s! (13:49) What is Mind Pump’s go-to Ned product? (17:20) Be careful of the scams out there. (20:56) Things in Australia are getting scary. (26:45) The Navy’s new weapon actually stops you from talking! (30:50) Escaping the fires in California and the downstream effects. (36:16) Justin, the goat farmer?! (39:37) Why all exercises are good for you if you can perform with proper form and stability. (42:35) Mind Pump Investments: The guys speculate on Bitcoin being used as legal tender. (46:32) How Caldera is helping with Sal’s baby son’s dry skin. (57:03) #Quah question #1 – How do I put on muscle without putting on a lot of fat? (1:00:16) #Quah question #2 – Does eating a rice crispy treat before a workout give you a good pump? (1:07:30) #Quah question #3 - Is it bad to deadlift with a rounded back? (1:14:08) #Quah question #4 – What do you recommend to get stronger after hitting a plateau on the flat bench press? (1:19:00) Related Links/Products Mentioned September Promotion: MAPS Performance and MAPS Suspension 50% off! **Promo code “SEPTEMBER50” at checkout** Resistance exercise, alone and in combination with aerobic exercise, and obesity in Dallas, Texas, US: A prospective cohort study The Central Mechanisms of Resistance Training and Its Effects on Cognitive Function Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Generation Hustle | HBO Max Originals Australia Has Begun Building COVID Concentration Camps Australia gave police power to compel sysadmins into assisting account takeovers – so they plan to use it Big Brother Australia: You Have 15 Minutes To Take A Selfie And Send It To The Government The U.S Navy’s New Non-Lethal Weapon Can Stop You From Talking – Here Is How Over 60? Don't Make These Exercise Mistakes, Say Experts The big coin experiment: El Salvador becomes the first to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender Visit Caldera Lab for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout for the discount** Mind Pump x NCI Mentorship Coaching Mind Pump #1640: Five Steps To Build Muscle Without Adding Fat GymnasticBodies Jefferson Curl - YouTube How To Incline Dumbbell Press - The Right Way! (GROW YOUR CHEST) - Mind Pump TV How To Do Chest Dips For A BIG Chest! - Mind Pump TV Mind Pump #1630: Ten Ways To Break Through A Plateau Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
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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.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Alright, in today's episode, we answered four fitness and health questions that were asked by viewers and listeners,
just like you.
But the way we opened the episodes
with an intro portion,
this is where we talk about current events.
We bring up scientific studies
and we mention our sponsors.
So today's intro portion was 53 minutes long.
After that, we got to the fitness questions.
Here's what went down in today's episode.
We opened up by talking about another study
comparing resistance training to cardio
for fat loss. If you think you know the results, you're probably right. One of them is superior
to the other. Then we talked about the football program that Justin's running right now and
some updates on that. Then I brought up how over the weekend my family and I made tomato sauce
for the entire year. Oh, it's a good stuff. It's a the sauce.
Also, I brought up how my parents, both my parents now, are using
Ned hemp oil for pain and anxiety.
It's really cool to get my parents set up with that stuff.
They actually love it quite a bit.
By the way, Ned makes full spectrum hemp oil extracts
that you actually feel.
So if you've tried CBD products in the past and not really notice a difference, try Ned.
There's a huge difference in what you feel.
And because you listen to Mind Pump,
you actually get 15% off your first order.
Head over to helloned.com, that's H-E-L-L-O-N-E-D.com,
forward slash Mind Pump, use the code Mind Pump
for that discount.
Then I talked about a new phone scam right now,
trying to get people to give up their hard-earned money
to weirdos overseas somewhere.
Watch out.
Pay attention.
Then we talked about Australia.
Great place, we have a lot of great fans over there.
Weird stuff happening over there right now.
I feel for you guys.
To the citizens, so we brought up some of the weird stuff
that's happening.
Then I talked about the new Navy weapon
that they can literally direct at your face
and make it so that you can't talk.
We hear this is weird stuff.
Just purchased mine.
Then we talked about the fires
that have been happening here in California.
Just then brought up how he's gonna be a goat farmer
pretty soon, literally, a goat farmer.
Yeah.
And then we talked about the exercises
that you shouldn't do over 60,
just kidding, that's a dumb article someone wrote
and we clowned all over it.
Then we talked about Bitcoin,
probably going up in price because a country
now declared it an official form of currency.
And then I talked about how I'm using Caldera Lab,
not just to improve my skin,
but to also help my baby son
with some of his skin issues.
Caldera Lab is all natural.
It's an oil product that can improve
the appearance of your skin.
It's good for oily skin, it's good for dry skin,
it's good for skin issues, it's great stuff.
We love it.
It's actually one of the only skincare companies
we've ever worked with.
Go check them out.
Head over to calderalab.com.
That's C-A-L-D-E-R-A-L-A-B.com, forward slash mind pump.
Use the code, mind pump, for 20% off your first order.
Then we got to the questions.
Here's the first one that we answered.
This person wants to know how to build muscle
without gaining body fat.
The next question, this person wants to know
if eating a rice crispy treat before a workout
gives you a better pump.
The third question, this person wants to know
if it's bad to deadlift with a rounded back.
And then the final question, this person wants
some advice on how to break through a plateau
on their bench press.
Also, all month long, two programs, two workout programs,
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Oh!
Teacher time!
And it's teacher time!
Oh, I should've done you know it's my favorite time
with a wheel, that was hard. That was hard. I think somebody
was strangling him. We have two big winners this week, one for Apple podcasts, one for
Facebook. The Apple podcast winner is Doug is cute 69. I have no idea. Why'd you pick? And we have Jay Meilow for Facebook.
Both of you are winners, and the name I just read
to iTunes at mindbumpmedia.com,
include your shirt size and your shipping address,
and we'll get that shirt right out to you.
I am loving the studies that they're doing right now
on health and fitness, because,
so one of the main reasons why resistance training lifting weights, right?
Strength training, whatever. One of the main reasons why it's not typically talked about in
mainstream medicine as a way to improve your health and why it's typically been relegated to like
just bodybuilders and stuff is because they just weren't a lot of studies. They just never did a lot
of studies on resistance training.
All the studies were either athletic performance and that's it.
And then if there was a study on exercise, it was done on cardio.
That was just how they did it.
So doctors never recommended it.
The only advice you would get around resistance training for health came from people who actually
work in the space and say, actually, it's a superior way of working out for all these
reasons.
Well, anyway, studies are piling up now, right?
So it's been like the last five years,
and we called it, and I told you guys,
I feel like there's gonna be a,
that's why I named the book,
The Resistance Training Revolution.
I feel like it's gonna happen regardless
that people are gonna start paying attention.
Well, studies are coming out.
They did a huge study on resistance training
versus cardio for fat loss, and it was a long study.
So I actually tracked, I think, 100,000 people over six years.
So it's a long time.
It's a big study.
And these were all active people.
But some of them chose cardio as their form of exercise and others showed resistance training.
And in the average was two days a week of resistance training.
And the average for cardio was two or three days a week of cardio.
So it was pretty similar.
And what they found was that resistance training
was connected to better outcomes for fat loss and for health.
So in that long, six years, over a six year period,
they found it to be, and we know this, right?
We found it to be superior for fat loss and for health
in comparison to what's typically the form of exercise
that people are referred to for those things,
which is cardio.
Do you think we're really close to being like
on normal cable television scenes?
Within five years.
I'll give it about five years before you really start to see
it be promoted
that way. Then there was another study that came out on strength training and cognitive
function. And what they found was across the board improvements in cognitive function.
Now they found in the past that just exercising in general improves cognitive function, but this particular
study showed that there's probably a, it leans towards a better effect with resistance
training. And my theory is that, you know, because muscle is so insulin sensitive, that
in one of the, there's a strong connection between insulin resistance and dementia and
Alzheimer's, that that may be why
Resistance training is so good for brain function. So there's another study
So now we're having studies showing it's great for range of motion injury prevention heart disease fat loss
brain function
Hormone, you know balance like a men testosterone women estrogen and progesterone
We're getting close to the point where that becomes the main form of exercise that people
are recommending.
It'd be great if that all kind of found its way back into the school system and they focus
more on resistance training instead of just, you know, walking around the track and doing
aimless movement.
From.
Give it 20 years.
The school system gets like ridiculous.
Yeah, mainstream advice is like, take 10 years, right?
And add another 20 for school.
Yeah, but to that point, and in terms of it being popular,
don't you think that they'll probably try to make
whatever machine that does it all,
like the both flex kind of a situation.
Like that might have a resurgence.
Like it's like the one stop shop for resistance training.
It'll cost taxpayers so much money
when you could just buy like dumbbells.
Exactly.
You just buy that, but it's like you got to be educated.
But it's still, I tell you what,
I was having this conversation with my son.
We were talking about, he has now,
I don't know what class it is,
but they were talking about nutrition.
So we're talking about macro nutrients,
how they affect the body.
And he goes, yeah, he goes saturated fat,
just clogs your arteries.
I said, hmm, so we're having this conversation.
I'm like, it's way more complex than that.
And no, it sounds like they're teaching you
outdated information and so my son's like debating me
because he learned from us, whatever, his teacher.
I said, no, here's how it actually works.
So there's still backwards.
There's still totally backwards with the stuff
that they teach. Just that so they got everything else really well though.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Speaking of high schools, I wanted to talk to you Justin, so I went to my nephew.
He's a freshman at Sierra, which is Tom Brady's high school.
And we went and watched him play his first game.
Dude, the systems they have in place there are crazy.
So, and what I mean by that is how they can track the kids
and how much effort that they're putting towards practice.
So they, oh yeah.
So they have like,
I got money there.
Yeah, right.
So they track when they show up to practice,
how long, like statistically how many plays they make
during practice, everything's videoed
and then uploaded online so that the kids can access and then study film and then they
can track through their IP address how much time this to so here you come to practice on
Wednesday and I see oh man Justin spent two hours studying film in the last two days and
then you've got you know the other kid is the slack off who spent a whole total five minutes or no time studying film
and they actually weigh that into like-
Really? Yeah.
Or they can just leave it on, you know, home.
See, we have a lot of that like,
Axisou Huddle is like,
all the coaches use now and the kids
and they all kind of are able to have access to videos
and be able to watch like upcoming teams and kind of break
down tendencies.
But a lot of times these teams are stingy with the film that they upload.
And so like for instance, we're going in this weekend and the team the kid coach didn't
want to give us any film like give us like something from like two years ago.
And it's like, dude, really?
Like come on, like we're, we're about to give them like 18
film of like our recent, even our jamboree.
And like we haven't been able to play the first two weeks
because of this whole COVID stuff.
That I didn't even know if I updated you guys
on all this debacle, but.
No, no, no, no.
I mean, I've, I've had to self-quarantine for like 10 days
because of the district's policy as a coach even.
And so one of the kids had exposure at school.
And so the policy is like, even if you have exposure
and you test negative, you have to then,
you're out for 10 days regardless.
So you can't play football, you can't do any extra
cricket or activity, but you can go to school,
which is kind of hilarious to me.
Like, how does that make any sense?
You can go sit in the classroom school.
Inside, you know, with every single other kid,
but you can't go out on an open field in the sun
and play a sport.
And so anyway, so we lost like one of our best players
because their parents were so pissed off with this whole thing
And so like transferred over to like a rival school. Oh, no
And it's so anyways like there's just been one thing after the next and so a lot of our volunteer coaches are gone now
They can't come back because unless they become hired by the school
Which is what I had to do now. So I'm an employee of the school
Oh really just so you guys know wow do. Now I'm an employee of the school.
Just so you guys know.
Wow.
I'm taking on two jobs.
I think we have a clause in your contract actually.
Yeah, I don't think you could do that.
I think there's no moonlight here.
Listen, I'm moonlighting up and being up and honest about it.
I don't remember the contract.
We split your salary now.
Yeah.
So you're not working.
Yeah.
So just so that way, now I gotta be tested like twice a week
and then anyway, so it's just, it's been a complete headache
for this whole season.
We've missed two of our first games,
which now we moved one for the buy-a-week,
we're able to kind of play them again during the buy-a-week,
so we saved that one, but dude, poor kids, man.
Like it's just been a rough start.
It's a lot of stuff that they do doesn't make sense.
Did you guys see, I don't remember where it was,
big wrestling tournaments or whatever,
might've been college.
The rules were that the kids wrestling can't,
you know, before the maps of shakans.
Not allowed to shakans.
Would you get a wrestle with that?
The wrestling.
Does that make any sense?
No, this is so much, it's so
illogical. What the fuck? It's like, it would be like, you're shooting a porn. Hey, guys,
everybody, cause of COVID, no kissing. Okay, everything else is fine. You're just being
each other. It doesn't matter. But you know, don't let your lips touch your lips. You
can kiss or, you know, but hold, but don't kiss your face. All right. Here we go.
I'm a policy that makes sense, but the ones that don't, it's just like, come on, I'm
a slappy. Super frustrated. Yeah. See, well, all right. Well, I'm going to talk about some
fun stuff, just to change the mood. Thank you. I was, uh, this weekend was the annual
sauce make. Yeah, that's how you guys turned us down. We invited all you guys to the beach
and nobody showed up in New York's use was, uh, sauce canning. I gotta do it. I gotta
do. So every, you know, it's funny. Courtney made something up for me. I don't even know
what it was. Yes, yes, yes, to do. I need to tell them something. No, um, I gotta do so every you know it's funny Courtney made something up for me I really know
Yes, yes to do to tell them something. No
You know it's funny with the internet. I'm now you're seeing a lot of people now share videos and pictures of
Their families making sauce which is kind of cool
So it's now it's like people are aware of it because when I was a kid nobody you know
I tell my friends about you do what? Yeah, you guys get together and make sauce like that's a making sense
We make a sauce.
But I see people sharing it all over Instagram now,
which is kind of cool, because it's like I said,
it's a big thing, but we all got together.
And we did, I think we did like 800 pounds,
which is not a lot for us.
We've done as much as 2,000 pounds of tomatoes,
but we did 800 pounds of tomatoes,
and we finished it all in one day.
You guys getting lazy now or what's to do?
No, it's because, so the family, as it grows, people start to have kids and then their
kids, right?
And so then you can't possibly have everybody together.
It's just too many people.
So we tend to break up now, right?
So this was my mom's family and her kids, my aunt and her kids.
And then, and I think that was it.
Yeah, that was it. So we all got together. But if you include my other aunts, my uncle, so then, and I think that was it. Yeah, that was it.
So we all got together.
But if you include my other aunts, my uncle,
so they're just way too many people.
Are they now doing their own sauce?
Yeah, they'll do their own.
Okay, so they'll do their own.
Okay, so you guys just divided it up.
Yeah, so we get to, but the kids get involved, right?
So my daughter's outside, cutting tomatoes,
my son's inside, and so the way it works is like,
my dad will go buy all the tomatoes,
and then he'll bring them back.
So everything's ready in the garage.
There's like a setup where you have to first cook the sliced tomatoes, then you put them
in this machine, you stuff them in the machine, it spits out the sauce, spits out the skins,
then you take the sauce, and then you put them in jars, you boil it, and it's this whole
process, and then when you're outside, you wash the tomatoes, cut them.
So all the kids are like helping.
I got my little nephew, who's six years old,
and I'll show you guys pictures and stuff.
He's like squatting down, he's like washing,
he's not really helping, he thinks he's helping, right?
He's washing every once in a while, throwing at me.
And I'm like, Frankie, don't throw tomatoes.
I mean, you gotta help, okay.
Are there, you know, are there rules?
Are there like family, because there's a tradition
that's been going for so long as there's like
expectations or rules by the family that,
oh, we start at this time.
People claim certain jobs.
Yeah, yeah, like have you guys built like rules around this?
Maybe unsaid ones, right?
So when it comes to the heavy lifting,
the washing, the cutting, that's usually me
or my dad will be out there.
Although now my dad manages more than doing that kind of stuff.
When it comes to like the jarring of the tomatoes, that's usually my mom and then the kids will
help with the machine because it's kind of easy.
Like you sit in front of the machine, you just kind of stuff the tomatoes down.
Or you sit outside with me and then like I said, like my little nephew Frankie was helping
me wash the tomatoes.
After about three hours though, he was a little squirrely.
We gotta hire your family to come over.
I don't know if I tell you,
we got like a orchard of different fruit trees
in our backyard, yeah, like all these like,
everything from pairs, apples, grapes, like,
like you name it dude, it's like,
I was like, what do we do with all this stuff?
And you have to like, you have to get rid of it.
Otherwise, like the tree falls over, dies.
Oh, you know?
So you have to like continually harvest it
and like prune it and stuff and I'm like, oh my God.
You hire somebody for do out, too.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, that's to figure that out.
Well, so here's what's funny, right?
So I get there and, you know, Ned has the,
the hemp oil and capsules and my dad's been using it. And he loves it.
He loves it for his back. He says it makes him feel good. His
pain is good. So I get a bottle of it and I bring it over
there to my mom. And my mom, she takes it and like, she kind of
like hides it. I'm like, what are you doing? She's like, well,
you know, it's like, mom, it's not weed. It's hemp. You know,
it's the way she's treating it like she's like, and she's like, I like it.
I'm like, my mom's using it.
I'm like, what do you mean you like it?
And she goes, you know, I feel really good.
When I take it at night, take it and your dad and I,
and you know, we watch TV together and we hang out.
You're like, it's enough information mom.
Can't have this been the mood.
Yeah, whatever, okay.
But it was funny the way she demo, it's hemp.
It's not weed.
You need to hide the bottle of the net. But she likes it. She said it helps her with her, like, it's not weed. You need to hide the bottle of the net.
But she likes it, she said it helps her with her,
like she's got anxiety, so it helps her with anxiety.
And then my dad with his back, so now they're both,
you know, hemp oil.
Now what of Ned's products?
Which one do you personally use the most?
I like, so I like mellow a lot.
That one's really good.
Yeah, but what do you most consistent of all the one all their products?
Honestly the old school hemp oil I go back to that all the time. Yeah, I love I just it's really
You feel really good. You just feel you actually feel it. I don't know if you guys if you guys use other CBD like
You don't feel them. No, you take them and you don't notice anything. What about you Justin?
What do you? Yeah? Well, I was using the sleep. Yeah, you used to sleep a lot
Yeah, but then I kind of stopped because there's you can actually overdo it
And I have and the next day I was just like so groggy. Yeah, you know, but like
It totally works and I I love it for if I've my mind's racing and I have just like a constant couple days
where I've just been trying to hammer things out
and I'm like all just crazy energy
and so it just helps me just get knocked out
and recharged.
But then Mello for me has been a lot more manageable
in terms of like continually using it
and then being able to kind of chill out
and then get ready for sleep, it's been helping.
Well, mellow doesn't work with the cannabinoid receptors.
So it's just, you know, it's those forms of magnesium,
a little bit of GABA.
The hemp oil obviously has all the cannabinoids
and they're including CBD, you know, CBG, CBC
and all the other ones, minus the THC.
And when it comes to the cannabinoid receptors,
they can start to change how they're regulated.
So they can down-regulate or up-regulate.
So yeah, you could consistently take lots of cannabinoids
and like, not unlike caffeine, you'll find
that your tolerance will start to build.
So that's just, but for people who,
so cannabinoid deficiency syndrome is something
that they're starting to research.
That's a thing.
Yes.
So they're researching it because they find,
there's definitely people who have tremendous benefit
from supplementing with phyto cannabinoids,
cannabinoids from plants.
And they just notice this huge benefit.
And these are the same people that tend to suffer
from a little bit of anxiety,
or they'll have pain, or, you know, their moods a little off. And basically what it is
is that their bodies may not be producing adequate amounts of, for whatever reason, endocannabinoids.
So they call that cannabinoid deficiency syndrome. And in that case, then taking a regular supplement
probably would benefit. Now do you believe the opposite is true,
where is there some people that are just non-responders to it
don't feel like they get any benefit whatsoever?
I'm sure there is.
I mean, there's always an individual variance
kind of with everything.
So anyway, I want, oh, here's something I want to ask you guys
about.
You know, you guys have very calls where I'm sure you do,
where people are scammers and they're starting
to get really smart.
That's all right.
We're getting that a lot right now.
Right now, right? Yeah. And get really smart. That's all right. We're getting that a lot right now. Right now, right?
And text messages too.
That's crazy.
Every day I'm now getting at least two to four of these,
and it's everything from UPS to tax,
to Wells Fargo, to the Walmart,
to your phone, Walmart, Amazon.
I get a text from one of them all the time,
but oh, you have this package, whatever.
It's to get you to click on it.
They're really smart.
So what they're starting to do,
and I'll tell you the last one in a second,
that my buddy showed me, and I thought it was
freaking brilliant and hilarious at the same time.
What they're trying to do now is they're almost like
they're targeting people, not specific people,
because I'm sure they blanket this out,
but they're targeting people who already
are probably a little bit paranoid with certain situations.
So I'll give you one example that happened a while ago to a buddy of mine.
I don't want to call them out because they make fun of them to this day.
But he got called.
He got a phone call saying it was from the IRS.
And they said, hey, you owe this much.
We know that you lied on your taxes.
There's a huge fine.
If you pay it right now, then we're okay.
We'll settle it.
If you don't, we're gonna do it in an auto.
Now, because this guy that I know,
did a little bit of lying on his taxes,
he's already freaked out.
And so he actually went and paid them,
and then later on found out he got scammed,
which is hilarious.
Yeah, go down, get a cashier's check.
Yes.
I'm like, bro, the iris give cards.
Yeah, that's what we take into the iris. And they threaten to take him to jail. I'm like, bro, the irony is gift cards. Yeah, that's what we take it to our arrest.
And they threatened to take him to jail.
I'm like, bro, the IRS isn't calling you like that.
They're not gonna take him to jail over.
They don't do any homie hookups.
So he got ripped off, but the reason why I fell for it
was because he's already cut us.
Right, yeah.
Okay, so here's the latest one.
I thought this was so brilliant.
I took a picture of it because I'm like this.
I could see how some people would totally fall for this.
So here's the scam.
He gets a text from random number.
Just received a call, he just received a call from US Customs.
So this is him telling me, apparently I have a load of drugs
that are sitting down south and I need to contact them.
So here's what they did.
They called them and said, hey, we caught a package
of yours down here and it's contraband.
And you're not gonna get it and here's what we need to do.
So obviously, if you're somebody,
that's waiting for drugs.
You're shitting your pants and you're probably gonna
do what they tell you to do.
So he's laughing because he's like, fuck that.
That's how my consumers mom and I were talking about.
She's good.
And my theory is they're just setting them out
by the tens of thousands.
And there's gotta be a percentage of those people
that just happen to be stressing about their taxes.
And then, or that they got some drugs.
I mean, if that was you.
They insticated, I think Courtney got one where,
yeah, they said something was off at the bank.
And then it leads you, it has a whole link that looks like something,
something case.com slash whatever.
And then it directs you to this total fake
chase web, but it looks real, looks exactly the same.
It's designed for you to put your in the password.
Yeah, and then it started to ask her for Social Security
and I was like, and she's like Social Security.
And so that's where finally she got tipped off,
but they almost got her.
I'm like, no.
Don't do it.
I got one from Instagram.
I got DM and the page literally was Instagram.
It said Instagram on it.
And they DM me and said,
hey, your account looks like it's getting hacked.
Please log in, change your password.
And I knew it was bullshit,
but I just want to see what it looked like.
I clicked on the link and it looks like an Instagram page. And then what you do is you go to log in, of course, now you give them your password and I knew it was bullshit, but I just want to see what it looked like. I clicked on a link and it looks like an Instagram page.
And then what you do is you go to log in,
of course, now you give them your password
and they go in and they fuck with your phone.
I wonder how much this is increased in social media.
You think it's like quadrupled it?
Oh yeah, time.
This, you know what, the scamming's changed though.
Like, remember that documentary watched
the scam wrapper or whatever?
Oh yeah.
I feel like now you get people to voluntarily give you their money.
So it's such a gray area.
I'm so sure to try and catch these people or punish them.
It's like, you know, that guy told that story
about he pretends like he's a hot chick
and then he gets someone to buy a plane ticket.
It's like, you didn't, I didn't steal your credit card.
You willingly.
And they're like ashamed that they would do it.
And so they won't pursue any kind of... Totally.
So I wonder how much of this is like really going on right now
if it's way worse than it's ever been.
That's one of the number one strategies
is that you get somebody to do something
that they'd be ashamed of, so they'll never report you.
It's like when a stripper would take someone's credit card,
charge him way the hell up,
and the dude's not gonna go fight because he's like,
I don't wanna get back to his wife.
Yeah, I don't know, I don't wanna go back
and try and fight him.
And even if it's not crazy like that,
just knowing that you willingly gave your money up
for a scam, you feel kind of like an idiot.
So even if it's not something to do to you.
You just chalk it up.
Yeah, I just like, fuck, I should've known,
but I don't do anything.
Yeah, so when I get calls like that,
if I have the time, what I like to do
is I like to just keep them on the phone forever.
And I've done this in front of my kids before.
So I'll play along, and then I'll be like,
hold on a second, when you go get my credit card
and I'll put them on hold, and then we'll go do something.
And I'll give them 10 minutes, I'll come back on.
What did you need again?
And then just do it for a while, and then eventually,
that you know, I was on the phone with a Comcast guy
for ever, we were dying laughing because,
I don't know if he had some kind of Tourette's or what but he'd said like the same thing over and over and over again he's like excellent
perfect perfect excellent perfect perfect excellent excellent perfect sir I'm still working on it
still working on it you like kept me on the phone I'm like you know you'd be a lot more effective
if you just shut the fuck up and like did your little thing in search Yes, yes, sir. Yes, Comcast great. Yes, excellent. Perfect
It was like and then I brought the kids to listen their dying laugh and we're just like yes, excellent
Perfect and we just like repeat it back to him poor guy, but probably only job is ever
Yeah, he's really excited and I'm just sitting all over him. He's doing the best job that he can
Hey, did you guys did you guys see the news?
I think in Australia, they are starting these,
what they call well camps or wellness camps.
Quarantine camp.
Yes.
Is this real?
Yeah, so there's a second,
I can't remember what part of Australia?
Queensland, I think.
Yeah, and if you have COVID,
now I don't know if they force you,
but I think they do, then they take you to a wellness camp for and if you have COVID, now I don't know if they force you, but I think they do,
then they take you to a wellness camp for quarantine
and you have to go.
Yeah.
So it's only gonna be a couple days.
I swear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know.
Well, here's another one.
Scary, dude.
They passed the bill, so I just saw,
people send me this kind of stuff, right?
Because, you know, they know, you know,
kind of my positions or whatever.
So they passed the bill and I gotta find,
oh here you go.
So here's, it's called the Australian Criminal
Intelligent Commission and there's a new power,
there's three new powers that they've given police.
So now they can, they have what's called
a data disruption warrant.
It gives the police the ability to disrupt data
by modifying, copying, adding or deleting your social media and whatever. So now they have the power to disrupt data by modifying, copying, adding, or deleting
your social media and whatever.
So now they have the power to do that.
There's also a network activity warrant,
which allows the police to collect intelligence
from devices or networks that are used
or that are used or likely to be used
by those subjects of the warrant.
So now they can go in and pretend to be you
and start collecting shit.
And they can also take over all of your...
And they want to show you.
So resistant about lockdowns here.
Yeah, look at what that could do.
And then here's another one.
So people are sending me this.
So this is somewhere in Australia,
but if you come back from a particular area,
you're obviously you have to do what's called a 14 day quarantine,
but they have this app that you download.
And on this app, this app has geolocation on it,
that at any moment, they can text you.
So, and this is how it works.
You have this app, okay, I'm supposed to be quarantine for 14 days.
I can't go anywhere.
The police will randomly text you.
And within 15 minutes, you have to send them a picture of yourself,
where you're at, and it has to match the geolocation
If it doesn't then they'll send police out to come looking for him to like some helicopter parents, dude
Dude that's crazy bad. That is wild dude. I've heard if you heard from anybody from Australia in your
DMs I haven't heard from anybody in social media from well, you know
We have a lot of listeners over there. Yeah, and I remember it was like all the time
I'd hear from them and now nothing. No, I get I get DM's I have there's a lot of people that don't like it
And then there's some people that support it, but I don't need support that
It's not gonna be a lot of people that support it if this stuff gets passed and goes through right?
I mean enough to where I guess they're not afraid
to pass this kind of stuff.
I mean, they're not a dictatorship over there, right?
So I mean, if there's, I mean, people are voting,
voting it in in a green.
I don't know. They don't have the same kind of protections
that we necessarily have.
Over here, things can get crazy here too.
The problem is, is it's, typically things move
with a slow boil.
And then before, by the time you're like wait a minute
This can't happen and you speak out out of hand now they have the power to take out take over your media
And you can't speak out and you can't organize and that kind of stuff. So throw you in some camps lock. Yeah, what's a little yeah, or
The other thing is that when things are over they typically don't go away. For example, we passed the Patriot Act and NDAA
after September 11th.
That's never going away, you know?
War on Terror, is it ever gonna be over?
Did either one of you guys watch that?
The Netflix documentary on 9-11, yet?
No.
I know it's in the top 10 right now.
It's really?
Yeah, it's coming viral.
I don't know.
I was gonna watch it last night,
but I ended up watching billions instead.
Was that good?
Yeah. I know, and I were so excited.
Billions amazing.
I just love that show.
You too, huh?
I love that show.
I'll watch it when you guys are over it.
You do the same thing with Game of Thrones, right?
We're already over it.
We don't care that you don't watch it later.
I bet you still have it.
Well, you watched the Caitlin Jenner one.
I did.
Did you watch any of the other ones or no?
You're like too much sports.
No, I just want to have to watch. No, it's just busy. No, no, no. Did you watch any of the other ones who know you like too much sports?
No, I got something interesting for you guys just them might like this so the Navy We didn't get to bring something that I might like at the last like 15 in a row been like Justin
You'll like this. I'm not in the
I don't know anything about shoes or sports
You guys still cross paths. I don't know you might shoes or sports. That's not exactly cool shit. You'll still have shoes or sports. You guys still cross paths.
I don't know.
You might actually, this is actually,
you'll think this is interesting.
So the Navy has a new weapon.
It's a new non-lethal weapon that they now have.
Non-lethal?
Yes.
That sound one.
Did you hear about it?
They've had it forever.
The one that's big.
No, no, no, no.
That makes you like, yeah.
Like humvees, it's attached on the,
and they direct the sound. Makes you feel un-m-should. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, this one's even brown note. This one's even
Is that what it's called? I don't know. I think that was it's called is it somebody called it that and it stuck right?
Yeah, like it reverberates your yeah, and it makes you shit yourself
And they can no check this one out. So it's a special electronic device
That is designed ready for this
to make people stop talking.
What?
Yes, dude.
So they, that's super power.
So they can, they can focus it on one person
and they, they focus it on them
and the person's own voice,
the person's own voice is repeated back at them only at them every
time they're trying to talk. Oh my god. And it reminds my first experience of being
high. That was a nut. Bro I'd say I called my best friend crying. You know it was so
fucking scary. Yeah dude that was it. That kept me away from it. Yeah that was I was
20. That's what kept me from that's what kept me from weed for like a decade I think that dude
The experience I tell people what it was like was I remember I got to a point where I was so high that
If I said something it would just keep repeating in my head this on a loop and it would freak me out
So if I try to express that then that would go on a loop
It was like the worst and then things were were happening on a loop. Oh, that was, I was like, this isn't for me.
Hey, so you know the phone. So that that could be, yeah, no, I did. I totally freaked
him out. And the reason why I called him is because he had, he had, he had smoked weed
before me. He smoked when we were in high school. And he never smoked again, because that
was his experience. And so I was like, Oh my God, it's happening to me. So I knew he would understand.
And he came over and was just like, don't talk.
You know what the fear of that was like holding your head straight away like holding me, dude.
Dude, I had a similar, but it wasn't like that necessarily, but it was like I was staring out.
I was out on this deck and I was like looking outside and
Like all of a sudden it seemed as though you know those old movie reels where you have like you know the split
You could see sort of like the scenes kind of like like you're going through a slideshow. Yeah, yeah
So that's what I was seeing like I was like watching the world kind of go on this really trippy slideshow.
And I was like, am I going to get out of this?
I start freaking out and it was really bad.
And I stopped smoking.
So the kind of relationship I try to have with my kids is they can ask me any questions.
So my son now 16 and he's asked me questions about weed.
It's legal, obviously.
What's it do?
And I'm like, well, it know, it's, it's, it's, it's all, it's pretty much non-lethal,
although now they make edibles so strong,
I'm waiting for now when people can actually overdose,
but it's very, very hard to, right?
I said, but that doesn't mean that it's totally safe.
I said, one of the worst things to overdose on is THC.
It's one of the, it's terrifying.
Yeah.
It is so terrifying that it'll stick with you psychologically for a long,
you talk to anybody that's overdosed on Edible.
It'll tell you to fuck them up.
Oh, I kept me at risk for the longest time.
You should share that famous recording of the cop with him.
Oh, yeah.
The cop that did the brownies,
time moving really slow.
Yeah, and he thought he was going to die.
So that he called the cops on himself.
Yeah.
I can give you an update. But dude, so apparently this electronic device, moving really slow. Yeah, and he thought he was gonna die. So that he called the cops on himself. He got it. Yeah.
I'm like a baby, I'm not sure.
But dude, so apparently this electronic device,
they aim at someone and it disorient them so much
that they hear their voice on the phone.
They shut up.
Now here's my, you ready for the,
I would love to have that.
Yeah.
Shut up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Not you guys, but you know,
you get home from a long day. Oh my God, let me tell you what happened.
Watch it TV.
It doesn't even, how does that work?
That's so weird.
Well, yes, very strange and it's obviously effective, but here's where I start to get
a little freaked out.
Like think about the ultimate, like the ultimate protest weapon.
Like there's a protest going on.
You know, you guys can't and they just shut the fuck up
Yep, you know you over there doing the speech getting everybody riled up and all of a sudden
You can't talk anymore. Dude, that's kind of creepy. That is scary
That's a little bit scary. We have in like Twilight Zone. Yeah, stuff dude for sure
So anyway, so what did you do then you guys just went to the beach alone or what yeah? No, I mean we had we had a
Other family right was there. So it was just a small family.
Second place.
Yeah.
First place in my show.
It was a big mess.
No, actually my brother-in-law, he just, he had called us up
a couple of days before.
He said, yeah, it's supposed to be a beautiful day on the beach.
What are you guys doing?
We were in town.
So we just went down there and hung out for the day.
It was nice.
Really, really nice.
I didn't realize that my place, this is the best weather
is this month and next month.
I was telling Justin I'm really, yeah.
That the, you would think like,
because it's hot over here and stuff that it would be.
Falls the best.
Yeah, that's what the locals are out at the beaches.
Well, the smoke, it was getting kind of smoky
in San Jose a little bit this weekend.
But you don't see nothing, right?
No smoke.
No, wow, that's good.
Yeah, no.
It was bad. I mean, it's really bad up north.
My sister had to cancel her trip.
She was, they were playing, I feel so bad
because they're in Reno, so they're right
in the thick of all those fires and stuff up there.
And they have, every year they take off for a week
for their anniversary.
And this year they decided to go up to Oregon
to get away from the fires.
And then like literally like two days before,
like massive fires broke out up there
and then they had a cancel their trip.
So they came down in my place.
They stayed there at Perjaro Dunes now
but they were at my house for a couple of days
for their anniversary.
So my cousin has a place up in South Tahoe
and South Lake Tahoe and they got of course
mandatory evacuation and he went to go get some of his stuff
and he's like dude, it was the weirdest thing. He's like you're driving and you know, it was safe to go get some of his stuff and he's like, dude, it was the weirdest thing.
He's like, you're driving,
and it was safe to go there to grab your stuff.
He goes, but, I mean, you could see the ash and stuff
in front of your face and it's like,
you wanna get out of the car in the house,
back in the car and gone, because it's toxic.
You know, I was thinking about how dangerous and bad this is
right now with COVID going, because that's like a,
I mean, yeah, I'm still convinced that the reason why I got COVID
the worst of all of us is because I smoke out of all of us.
None of us, none of you guys smoke weed,
I smoke weed on a regular basis.
And so I know that's not good or ideal for my long.
So imagine if you are up in the Tahoe Reno area
and you're breathing in the smoke air all time
and then you get hit with a respiratory virus like that,
I'm wondering if we're gonna see like a spike
in like hospitalization and stuff like that
up in those areas.
Well, what you will see is typically places
with worse air, you see downstream events.
So you see like 10% increases in lung cancers
or other types of disorders and disease.
So now the scent really sensitive people,
you'll probably see some stuff.
But if this continues,
because last year we had really bad fires too, right?
This continues, it'll be like,
it'll you'll see the life expectancy of living
in places like California, Structure Drop
because of the quality, because of the poor air quality.
But we'll see what happens, right?
I'm wondering if now, because a lot of,
I mean, that fire is huge, right?
Yeah.
Is that mean it's gonna prevent future fires now?
Because it got rid of so much.
You'd think, but then there's new ones keep popping up, man.
It's crazy.
Well, isn't that one of the theories is that we actually need
those fires. Like, isn't that one of the theories is that we actually need those fires?
Like, isn't that like, you know, the underbrush is, I mean, it's kind of part of the cycles,
but I mean, you, as you saw, there's arsonists out there starting these things.
So it's like, it's all, like, it, and plus, they just don't have the resources they need
to, to fight a lot of them, you know, here because it's been mismanaged so bad.
So, you know, there's a lot of that, dude, there's a lot of that here because it's been mismanaged so bad. So there's a lot of that.
There's a lot of that to consider and there just needs to be better
to use it right.
Yeah, the controlled fires were really good.
They would do controlled fires, right?
To create breaks and stuff.
And a lot of those, they just weren't doing anymore.
Partially because environmentalists said don't do it.
And there's other reasons.
So then over time, you build just like all this basically,
you know, flammable material.
And you're right, in terms of nature,
this is a natural process to have these fires do that.
But it's dangerous.
So speaking of that, like like Scotch broom
and all the stuff that sort of like hangs around underneath
like the redwoods and all that,
like I just got closed over the weekend
that now we're gonna have goats on our property.
What? You're getting goats?
Goats. Awesome.
That's one of the best ways to clean up the property.
Do you know that? Yeah.
Well that's why I got close.
I did not know that.
They basically are like lawn mowers, you know,
for all the underbrush and stuff like on, you know, property.
So I was like, dude, do I need more animals?
You know, goats, chickens, you're gonna have like
a regular old farm right there.
I know, you know, what's happening?
You need a cow too.
You need one cow, milk a cow.
I have a room for a cow, but are they gonna be always there
or are you just getting them to clear it up?
No, they're always there.
They got, there is like a pen for them.
I guess the previous owners had them there
and I didn't know that.
I thought it was like for dogs, but no, it's for goats.
So, yeah.
Did you know that?
So, okay, did you know, I was watching this show
with Jessica, it's like this home renovation,
shot, I remember the name of it,
but this woman goes in and makes these incredible backyards
very talented, drops in goat science right now.
Well, no, this is, I didn't know this, right?
I know people own goats.
I'm not a goat friend. No, here's, I don't know this, right? No, this is, I didn't know this, right? I know people who own goat, not all of them.
I have a goat friend.
No, I don't know you can do this.
You can actually rent, there's people that have goats,
you pay them a fee, they bring the goats to your property
and they clear out your property for you.
They do that with cattle all the time.
I had no idea.
I see them on the freeway doing that every now and then too.
Like this is just the whole herd of goats just, just, I had no idea. I see him on the freeway doing that every now and then too. Like this is just the whole herd of goats just.
Just, I had no idea.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Shads cool though.
Yeah, how many are you doing?
How many are getting?
At least two, right?
But I don't know, maybe more, but at least two.
Because apparently, you need them.
Yeah, you need, I think you need it.
Good amount.
I mean, I haven't been to your property yet to see, like, but from the pictures, it looks
like there's quite a bit of stuff. Yeah. I imagine I need a few of them. Oh, I think it's time to need some. I get, I have a thing to your property I have to see like, but I've from the pictures that looks like there's quite a bit of stuff. Yeah, I imagine I need a few of them. I guess I
get I guess they're cool. Yeah, if you if you domesticate them and like, you know,
feed them, you know, hand bottle them or whatever that you get, I don't know, you have to feel
like a baby. Yeah, are you guys going to get them from like when they're young? Are you going to
yeah, so I guess one of Courtney's friends has them and then is got them pregnant.
So then we're gonna get the offspring from them.
I was excited to get a little farm over there, man.
Now you can eat goat, yeah.
Okay.
Oh, no, dude.
I mean, you can eat animal technically.
I mean, you can eat fat if you want.
I mean, if you got, yeah.
Adam's such a plump.
You can milk him if you want.
He's such a go getter.
You know what I mean?
It's out.
Technically, you can eat anything.
Disguise the limit.
If you believe, you can eat the truth.
Why'd you say goats are assholes?
Oh yeah, they have like, they're like little dick personalities.
Really?
Oh yeah.
They'll buck you and all that.
They're little assholes.
Oh, wait a minute.
Yeah.
Are you gonna put on a helmet and go ham against one?
For sure, dude.
I know it. Yeah, well, it won't piss us off just
get off. Oh, again, three point
nits, they nip a lot and they headbutt like crazy and and buck. Yeah, they're like little
shit. That's crazy. Yeah. So I always wrestle them. I had a couple people send me an
article over the weekend. Did you guys have anybody send you the exercises you shouldn't
do when you're over 60? No. It was, it's
making the rounds and it's, it's, it's one of those articles that like shape magazine
or something stupid. No, eat this, not that. It's another popular. It's not that. And
it's, it's so click bait. Did that, did that grow from the book? Remember that book was
really popular? Eat this, not that. Did it that's a real book. Did it grow from that?
Is that what it turned into?
That's a good question.
Because that thing went crazy.
I know that sold a ton of copies,
and then now it's turned into like an actual publication
or something.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
I know it's a big website,
and a lot of people have sent this to me.
I don't know if it's good.
But it's so infuriating to me,
articles like this because it just perpetuates,
like, you know, myths, right? Yeah.
So what are the ones that you listed?
Well, here's one of them, right?
So one of them says, don't do any lifts in which you're under the weight.
So what?
No bench press, no overhead press.
It makes me, if you're against me because it treats a 60 year old man, you get why it
is, but it's terrible.
Yeah, because you're fragile.
Yeah, exactly.
I better enjoy my last four years. Yeah, you get why it is, but it's terrible. Yeah, because you're fragile. Yeah, exactly.
I better enjoy my last four years.
Yeah, it's over.
Yeah, you're too close, Doug.
Here's another one.
Yeah, that's what it crunches.
Don't do crunches.
No.
People over security.
Well, don't do stupani crunches.
That's good advice.
Yeah, that's good advice for your 60 year old.
Yeah, that's for anybody, any age, dude.
Here's another one.
Moves that put weight behind your head or neck.
Don't do any running.
Don't do, I mean, so, and here's what infuriates me about this
is that if you're trying to improve your fitness,
you're working out, whatever you read this,
and it's all myth based.
And we've said this many times.
Here's the truth.
All exercises are appropriate for you.
So long as you can perform them properly
with good stability, good control.
Would you strengthen the...
That's it.
Like, like, rascal scooter curls.
Or like what?
No, I didn't say it.
Okay.
But it just, it makes me so mad because
if you can perform the exercise,
I'd look, I know 60 year olds
that could do barbell squats and it's a great exercise.
And then I know 20 year olds,
I mean, you shouldn't be squatting right now,
we need to work on your mobility and your control.
So now imagine you read this and you're like,
oh, I shouldn't do exercises where the bar is above me.
And you're avoiding some of the best exercises
that are known to me.
I mean, I've got this from relatives
and people in my family, like even on Courtney's side too.
It's like, you know, every now and then, like,
like my brother-in-law came and he's like,
yeah, my doctor told me I shouldn't dead live
because it's gonna hurt my back.
And it's like, all this is bad for my back.
Like, it's bad for, it's bad for your back.
Is that, is that what he's telling you?
Is that right?
You know, like, it's just like,
it's because it's that whole thing.
Like it's just perception.
It's like if you're picking something up,
then obviously, you know, that's a bad lever.
And you know, there's only justifications they make
instead of just that it actually strengthens
exactly what your problem is.
Mark my words at some point,
unless we figure this out, at some point,
we're gonna become so sedentary and so unable to perform basic functions that there will be recommendations to not
walk.
Mark my words.
Yeah, at some point, they're saying, listen, the way things are going, they're...
Have you ever seen a graph or chart to show like our activity level and how fast it's
decreased?
Have you guys seen anything like that?
Oh, you mean more time?
Like, you know, 30 years ago,
how active was the average human?
Oh, it's not me, you can.
20 years ago, how active is the average human
to see at what rate we're moving?
I mean, I know just in my short lifetime,
I've seen a dramatic difference,
but I'm wondering if that's just because that's my perception
because I've only been on the earth for 40 years,
and it's been on that same trajectory for the last, you know.
Once Amazon turns into buy in large, you know, from Wally, and then it's been on that same trajectory for the last, you know. Once Amazon turns into buy in large, you know,
from Wally, and then it's, yeah.
Yeah, that sucks.
Solidified.
All right, some financial stuff.
Here you go, Adam, I got some.
Thank you.
Oh, did you know that El Salvador
became the first country in the world
to accept Bitcoin as legal tender?
Wow.
Wow.
It is now a big deal.
You can now use it as legal tender in a tender. Wow. Wow. It is now a big deal. You can now use it as legal tender in a country.
Wow.
Now, so speculation, what do you think?
Do you think this is like?
You know, I go, so I think I was probably the most aggressive
about it early on when we first talked about it,
which is funny, because I feel like I'm the opposite
of all of us now, or I'm a little more reserved on it.
I'm fearful of us being,
doing what it's supposed to do,
which is to keep government
or anybody else having control of it.
And that's the whole idea behind it, right?
What, I don't know if they-
Like a decentralized currency.
Right, and I don't know if the government will ever accept it
or if they do accept it, they're going to want
they want they're going to want their hands in it to metal in it some way or another. So
I'm a little fearful at I still stand by my original statement, which is I don't think it goes away
whatsoever because it serves a purpose for the black market by itself. Yeah. I mean that's in
FOILHAT theory. Okay. Why the good I feel like the government is waiting until they can figure
out how to literally like hack it. Like in order to then now this is the new currency,
but they're waiting until they can have that kind of control over it because right now
it's you know it's it's totally decentralized. Well because cash is still harder to it's
still harder to follow cash than it would be something that's digital.
Am I right?
Right.
So hard assets for me, like, that's where I lie.
But yeah, it's, to me, I would love, I love the idea of crypto.
I love it.
Because it feels like, you know, it gives power back.
It takes away from the centralized bank system, you know, but at the same time, like, I just,
like, the future of it is so unclear,
like it's pretty gnarly.
Well, the second, you know, big countries ban it,
then what's it gonna do?
Yeah, now they're totally not your thing.
Not your thing.
The only way I could see it overcoming that
is if the country's own banking system collapses,
which that would be a bad, that'd be a bad,
you know, scenario all the way around.
But yeah, interesting.
So is it gonna work with other monies
or are they trying to replace?
Like what's the goal, you know?
No, I don't.
I just think that the government said
you can accept this is like official currency.
Not their official currency.
I don't think it replaces the currency,
but it's another competing currency.
Interesting.
You know what's interesting about, you know in the past,
I don't know if you guys knew this,
did you know maybe Doug you could look this up
because I wanna make sure I'm correct.
At one point, it might have been in the Netherlands
that tool ups for a short period of time,
people were starting to trade them like currency.
Have you guys heard about this?
I think you've brought this up before.
Maybe Doug you could look this up
and because I don't think I had heard that before
and then I think you did.
People were trading tool ups and there were becoming
kind of a currency and then the price of them inflated like crazy and then they had this crash
This huge crash where people lost tons of money because they had invested all this money in flouting
You know speed of things that you know
Baseball cards are on a run like that again right now. Do you guys know that? I think you oh my god
It's getting out of control paid attention and I have like three like good friends and my cousin that are like, we're all on a thread
and that's all their post.
I wonder if any of my old King Griffey's on that
or what's the other one.
No, those got crushed.
Did you ever watch the documentary on Netflix called,
I think so.
Top's something it wasn't so.
Yeah, so there's a reason why that
that actually card you just referred is like,
is it worth it money?
I was so depressed on that I traded all my stuff for that card? Yeah, it was upper deck
King Griffith. I just think it's really I mean, I think it's really interesting how out of control
It's getting right now where people are buying these cards for thousands and $10,000 for like these young players and
Just the market came out of nowhere. I mean from it dying back in the you know 90s
Yeah, to now all of a sudden this resurgence
and people collecting again.
You know what this all looks like?
To me, these are all, to me at least,
if you look at,
because a lot of things that are happening right now.
It's like not having faith in our dollar
and so everyone's putting it in anything else.
Signs of inflation, right?
Yeah, totally.
People are taking money and lots of people
are putting it towards some of the stuff
and pretty good.
Okay, so Doug brought it up.
So it was the Dutch Republic of the 17th century
where they were using tool-ups as currency in some place.
Now was it, was it something to do with medicine?
Like you could use it for something?
Or is it just because they were rare?
They just, people just started valuing them.
Yeah.
And then the prices got speculated.
Two, through the two loops.
Through the roof.
And then there was a crash, of course,
because then at some point people are like,
I don't want these anymore, and then the market.
So random.
That they picked that.
I mean, you think that could happen
with all these different big coins is like right now.
I mean, everyone's valuing them,
and so they're all driving up that way,
and then one day everyone just decides like,
oh my god, this isn't that valuable.
Yeah, all it would take would be people being like,
I don't want this.
I don't want it anymore, and now it's screwed.
But like you said, there's always a black market. That's
the main currency on the black market, right? On line.
That's why I do believe it's not going anywhere. I mean, if you're a drug dealer and you're
big enough to where you're doing anything outside of your state, that's one of the hardest
things is to be traveling with even cash. Cash, you're saying that isn't very traceable, but it's also a pain in the ass to
mail and ship or carry a duffle bag full of hundreds of thousands of dollars. That's more
deposited. They'll report you. Yeah, no, so that becomes a major problem for sure.
So, yeah, so that sounds insane with the money. And so we'll see if there's going to be a crash
with the cryptocurrencies. I know there's a few.
Is it Bitcoin or did they make their own?
Did you say that?
No, it was Bitcoin.
So it is Bitcoin that did actually.
It is Bitcoin.
Yeah, in fact, I read an article that the IRS did a sting
on someone who sold, because you're supposed to pay taxes
on your realized gains from Bitcoin.
So if you buy it for 5,000, sell it for 10,000,
you make 5,000, you not supposed to pay taxes on that.
Well, they did a sting on somebody who sold,
I don't remember like a half a million dollars
with a Bitcoin.
Yeah.
And they were posing as the buyer,
and then the person never reported it, and then boom.
I heard a room, that's why the IRS is so backed up right now,
is they're trying to track down all this,
all the Bitcoin money that people are making
by trading and selling because it's not as regulated
and there's a lot of people that are getting,
because you still gotta pay capital gains on that.
If you bought Bitcoin at $5,000
and you sold it at the peak,
or at that, that's capital gains,
you go, but I guess it's just harder for them to track it
or newer for them to track that.
And so a lot of their scrambling
and there's people supposedly that have made
$100 million plus off of this Bitcoin. So they're trying to track that all down. That's been a
main focus. I don't know how, if there's any truth to that, you know, anything about that dog?
I don't, but that's pretty low-hanging fruit for them. Because it's like, okay, this is what you
sold. We can prove that. Now you're UOS. I mean, isn't it supposed to be really hard for them to
trace though? That's the part that I don't understand. Well, that'd be the challenge, I think. Not the, not the, what do they call the transaction? Yeah, you're U.O.S. Yeah, I mean, isn't it supposed to be really hard for them to trace though? That's the part that I don't understand. Well, that'd be the now and Joe.
Not the, not the, what do they call the transaction?
Yeah, if you're using coin base or something, it's very fairly easy.
I think that's where the, yeah, that's what Snowden said is the problem.
Right.
Like, oh, Bitcoin, all those things, that that's really hard to track.
But if you hold it anywhere in a wallet, which is what you have to do,
if you're going to make any transactions with it or do anything with it,
then that part of it is really traceless.
That's a really clear, yeah.
So doesn't that kinda defeat the purpose of it?
I mean, isn't that, I don't know.
There's gotta be other ways, just more complicated ways, right?
So like, I guess you probably can store it somewhere,
but you gotta do all this, like,
most people aren't gonna go through all those hoops,
you know, unless you're like a big time.
I mean, the way I look at it is,
I threw some money at it, I leave it alone,
I don't think about it. I think it's very, I think it's pretty, I think it's pretty, I think it's pretty, I think it's pretty I look at it is, I threw some money at it. I leave it alone, I don't think about it.
I think it's very...
I don't even have...
You think it's been excess if you wanted, though, right?
Yeah, I know, I bet.
That's it.
It hits why I don't...
That's the best buy and hold strategy over my life.
Yeah, forget your password.
Yeah, yeah.
That's part of what, I mean, that's the part of my fear
of not dabbling.
I have friends that, like, they're making money,
trading and doing all this stuff,
and I just find it risky.
I don't know enough, and I'm not confident enough
in that to know what it's gonna look like.
And so, I mean, if you, I gamble,
so we might say not to do things like that,
but that's how I look at it, is gambling.
Look at that article right there.
The IRS is coming for crypto investors
who haven't paid their...
Yeah, see, this is what I heard.
I read a few articles around this,
and I don't know if that's connected to why
the IRS has
been so slow the last two years or so.
I feel like it's been really backed up.
But as many people as I know that are trading, I mean, you guys all got to know people that
are trading this and doing this on a regular basis.
Well, you know that they're bolstering the IRS that crazy right now, right?
No.
Oh, yeah, they're investing quite a bit.
And there's talks about tax increases that are also retroactive.
So the reincreaser taxes and then go back and collect taxes from the past year or two.
And so they need a big strong IRS in order to do all this because that's a lot of people that are gonna owe taxes.
Money. Yeah, that's the they're really good at that, aren't they? Yeah, they're really good at that.
Get that money. Are they teaching this stuff at schools?
Like, I mean, like, your kids
that have really nice private schools,
he getting like an education around crypto currency
and do they talk about it at all?
I wonder like in high school, you'd think they'd start
being interested in it.
No, they learn it from YouTube and stuff.
So my daughter talks about my daughter.
What?
12.
She talks about crypto, okay?
Yeah, not like she's she knows what they right
So she'll say something like trying to get informed. Yeah, so she was talking about
YouTube celebrity she wanted to buy some merchandise from some YouTube celebrity and so this whole conversation started
I'm like oh my god
It's so weird that you want to buy a t-shirt from a YouTube celebrity and she goes well when you were a kid
You would buy it off of the you know the artists that you saw on TV or listen.
I said, no, you're right.
You're not certain you buy it in person.
Yeah, I said, it's the same exact thing.
Yeah.
I said, it's just now, it's just a different platform.
It's really weird to me.
And then I said, how many subscribers
does this person have?
And she goes, well, he's got half a million subscribers.
She goes, you know, if you have like 100,000 subscribers,
you can make a lot of money.
So I'm like, I want to see what she knows, right? So I'm talking about like, how do you make, you know, if you have like a 100,000 subscribers, you can make a lot of money.
So I'm like, I wanna see what she knows, right?
So I'm talking about like, how do you make,
you know, like, how does that work?
And she goes, well, YouTube pays you for advertising.
You can sell merchandise.
She's going you right here.
Yeah, she's just telling me,
which is, she's 12.
I thought this was really cool, right?
So we're having this coming.
And I said, what are other ways that these YouTubers
and stuff make money?
She goes, oh, some of them make money in crypto.
I'm right.
So I'm like, what?
She goes, yeah, like Bitcoin.
I said, do you know what that is?
She goes, I think it's like money,
but I sort of she really didn't know.
So we're having the soul.
But the fact that she's hearing it already is wild.
I know.
I have to ask my older son, yeah,
because he's about the same age.
I wonder if he's researching the same stuff.
Oh, it's a, oh, speaking of kids.
So I started using Caldera on my baby son.
Oh, yeah, so.
Really?
Yes, so he has a slight reaction to eggs.
So we'll give him egg yolks sometimes,
and then I'll notice you'll get a little bit of dry skin
on his elbow or kind of behind his ear.
I haven't even thought about using it with max,
and max kids, that stuff.
Okay, so we talked to the doctor and the doctor.
It's all natural.
Yeah, so the doctor recommended that we give him a tiny bit of
egg yolk every single day, which is new advice.
In the past, it would say don't give him to him at all.
Now they're saying, unless it's a really bad reaction,
you give it to him a little bit every day and then slowly,
the immune system kind of gets used to it and then maybe,
you know, he doesn't end up developing
like a full blown allergy to eggs.
But nonetheless, he'll get a little bit of dry skin
on his arm and behind right here in the crease of his ear
and sometimes he'll scratch it.
And so Jessica's like, maybe we can put something on it
to make it feel better.
I'm like, let's dry Caldera.
Dude, it works like a charm.
Oh wow.
Yeah, I put a little bit on my finger.
No, I told you that.
I mean, the original way I felt when I was using it for my psoriasis.
And I totally dampens it down.
Doesn't make it all itchy and stuff.
Doesn't burn your skin.
Doesn't burn.
It keeps it, and it keeps it like,
I mean, that's the key with like psoriasis
because it dries out really fast.
So even when I put the creams or lotions,
I mean, the creams that are prescribed,
they do a good job.
But then you're using like a steroid type of a cream
where Caldera, I feel like,
does just as good of a job and it's all natural.
So that's actually how I started using that.
Yeah, so he's not like, he's pulling his ears much.
Oh, I'm interested.
Yeah, and it lasts a long time.
Of course, I use it so I like it.
And then I've said this many times,
because it's an oil, I was like worried
of using it on my skin, because I have oily skin,
but it totally balances me out.
So it keeps my skin from getting too oily.
It's, you put on dry skin and it does the opposite.
I refer to it as our sleeper product.
It was like one of those products that I remember when we, you guys weren't even really interested
in.
I was like, I really wanted to.
I didn't know for honestly being so serious.
Yeah, and you did, I was like, well, I know I'm using it like crazy, so I'd like to share
it.
If we can work a partnership out, we'll just see where it goes.
And it was super well obviously well received
I mean we've been now
Past a year on track for them. So you know, yeah
It lasts a long time too. Yeah, it takes a little bottle takes a little bit of that forever. Yeah
Hey real quick. I hope you're enjoying this episode if you're a coach or a trainer or you want to be a trainer
And you want to be successful you want clients to get great results But you also want to earn a good living you want to be a trainer and you want to be successful, you want clients
to get great results, but you also want to earn
a good living.
You want to make good money following your passion.
This can be very difficult.
The fitness industry is a hard industry
to make a good living doing, but it is very rewarding.
And of course, you have a passion for fitness.
Well, we have a solution for you.
If you head over to mindpump NCI.com, there
are coaching opportunities. In other words, you will talk to people who know how to build
successful fitness businesses like us. We've been doing this for a very long time. We train
people for over two decades. And we've actually partnered with NCI, which is run by Jason
Phillips. And the goal is to teach coaches and trainers
how to be more successful. So if you're interested, again, head over to mindpumpnci.com.
All right, enjoy the rest of this episode.
First question is from Dan Grinucci. How do I put a muscle without putting on a lot of facts?
The million dollar question. This is a secret. This is a big one because part of putting on muscle,
or part of the formula for putting on muscle
has to do with increasing your calories, right?
You wanna be in a surplus of calories
to provide your body with the nutrients it needs
to build muscle.
Now the challenge, of course,
is will this surplus be shuttled to muscle,
or will it just be turned into body fat?
And again, that's a tough question. The fact remains that storing body fat is an
automatic function of the body. If you take in extra calories and do nothing else,
your body very easily will take those calories and turn them into body fat.
So what we have to do is figure out insurance policy.
What exactly, 100%.
And so we have to figure out what can we do
to ensure that these extra calories go somewhere else?
Cause remember, extra calories don't just evaporate
into thin air, they have to be converted and stored
into something else.
Again, this is a rule of physics and thermodynamics.
Now, the first thing, and I'll focus on this one,
that you need to do, is send a proper muscle building signal.
If your body wants to build muscle
because of the workout that you provided in your life,
the workout sends the right signal, everything's appropriate,
then those calories,
or at least the portion of those calories, will get turned into muscle.
If that signal doesn't happen, the default is to store more body fat.
For that point, that's why I love to change my routine while I'm also switching over
into like a bowl.
Send the loudest signal.
Yeah, so if I'm getting ready to switch over into a bulk or transition out of a cut or
a maintenance phase, I also like switch over into a bulk or transition out of a cut or a maintenance phase
I also like to transition into a new program. So it's just a whole new stimulus and that way I
Inch almost, you know, I don't guarantee you but I better insurance that the extra calories muscle-preserving effect
Right. We'll get allocated over into building muscle instead of storing body fat
But it's if you're in a bulk, it's really, and if you're measuring on a daily or weekly basis,
it's almost impossible to add muscle without putting a little bit of body fat on.
Now if you measure every three weeks to a month and you stretch that out long, it's actually
very reasonable if you do like many cuts and many bulks in there, right?
So if you run in a surplus for a couple of weeks and then you have a two,
three day cut and then at the end of the month,
there's a really good chance that maybe the scale stayed about the same and you
gained two pounds of muscle and you lost two pounds of body fat and you've done
exactly what you're trying to do.
But if you get hung up on measuring every single day or every week,
even, uh, and then you freak out because you see the body fat
go up a little bit.
I mean, that's going to happen when you're watching that.
Yeah, wouldn't you say, I mean,
drawing this out for an elongated period of time
versus like trying to do a more extreme approach
to this would make a big difference as well
in keeping the body fat low.
Yeah, and it really does depend on the individual
and the circumstances, typically yes,
but there is evidence to show that sometimes
a shorter, more aggressive bulk
might actually be more beneficial.
It really does depend on the individual.
You know, here's the truth,
and this is what makes it so challenging.
You don't need that many extra calories
to add muscle to your body.
Now, some of you might be thinking,
how does this make any sense?
I thought you had to dramatically increase calories.
Okay, first and foremost, if you're the,
like most people, you're an average lifter,
you're working out, okay,
let's just imagine you're doing everything right.
Gainy one pound of lean body mass in a week is a lot.
Okay, that's a lot of lean muscle.
That's four pounds in a month over the course of two months.
That'd be eight pounds of lean muscle.
That's pretty aggressive.
That's actually probably expecting more than what most people can achieve,
except unless you're a beginner and you get those kind of new beginnings.
But just for the sake of argument, let's say that you're gaining a pound of lean muscle in a week.
Now, if you do the math in terms of how many grams of protein and calories that requires, But just for the sake of argument, let's say that you're gaining a pound of lean muscle in a week.
Now, if you do the math in terms of how many grams of protein and calories that requires,
it's not much at all.
We tend to think we need to have all kinds of extra calories to make that happen.
Now, here's where the challenge comes from.
Extra calories on top of that, also, believe it or not, sends a small muscle building signal.
Just adding calories when you're working out, even above and beyond what you need,
also might trigger a little bit of extra muscle. And then the second part that makes it hard
are the strength gains. Extra calories will make you stronger in the gym, even if you don't gain
extra muscle. This is why you see power lifters oftentimes have higher body fat percentages than
bodybuilders even in the off season because
adding body fat, I've done this, right?
Where I'm gaining weight on the scale and I'm probably not gaining a lot of lean body
mass, but my strength keeps going up.
It's all the extra calories, extra energy, body fat can change leverage, make joints feel
more secure, some lifts respond better to this than others.
Like if I just gain weight, my squats tend to go up
no matter what versus my dead lifts,
which not necessarily, and it could be different
from person to person.
So this is kind of the balancing act and the challenge.
Now the leaner you are, the more likely it is
that you're gonna need to gain body fat just to gain muscle.
So if you're, and I'll use an extreme example,
if you're 5% body fat in your mail, you're shredded, right? You got like ripped abs and you might have veins in
your quads and all that stuff, your body may need to gain body fat just to gain
muscle because that lean of a body fat percentage for a lot of guys isn't
optimal for building muscle. So also consider that. Now what if you're really
overweight? What if you're, you know, body fat is a man, you're 20% body fat?
Well, you could probably get away with not gaining any
body fat and gaining muscle.
In fact, what oftentimes happens, if you do it right,
you might actually lose a little body fat while gaining muscle
because you've got so much extra stored energy
on your body.
But I think the keys are this, right?
Make sure you're doing everything right.
Getting good sleep, your workout is really effective.
You're not overdoing it. You're not underdoing it. You're noticing strength gains. It's appropriate. Like Adam said, you change the phase that you're in to kind of send the loudest muscle building signal. And then increase your calories, but do it minimally. I would say probably, you know, two to three hundred
above maintenance is probably more than enough to get that lean body mass to come on your
body. And then the last thing I'll say is to be patient, what always used to screw me
up with bulks was one pound, you know, if I gained four pounds in a month on a bulk, that
was too slow for me. Even though, even if it was all lean body mass, I'm looking at the scale going,
oh, I could gain more than that.
And I would aim for twice as much in a month.
It would be easy for me to put on 10 pounds
on the scale in a month.
Was that muscle?
No, it was just a bunch of bloat and body fat
from really being aggressive with the bulk.
So those things, I think, we'll give you,
that we just talked about,
we'll give you the best chances of gaining lean body mass
without putting on too much body fat.
Next question is from Elsa Vasquez.
Does eating a rice crispy treat before a workout
give you a good pump?
You know where this comes from?
The bodybuilding, bro.
So this is the bodybuilding community right here
in pop-tars.
And I did all this stuff by the way too.
It's less about the rice crispy treat
or the gummy bears or the Pop Tarts.
And it's more that you're shuttling, you know,
60 to 90 grams of carbohydrates right before your work.
And this is especially true with somebody
that's in a calorie deficit or runs lower carbohydrates
on a regular basis and then all of a sudden you take in 50 to 90 grams of carbohydrates,
30 minutes to an hour before a workout and yeah, no, you're definitely going to get a nice pump
from that. It is, you know, the theory behind this pair, that was lots of water, too.
Yeah, all right. Oh man, Let me tell you something right now.
Water was a bigger game changer for me
for a pump than carbs ever were.
And then add some sodium to that.
And it's like, remember, the pump is mostly water anyway.
Carbohydrates can help with that, which
is probably why people feel what the carbs.
And of course, carbs will increase performance.
That's what studies show.
So why the heck are they recommending rice crispy treats?
Well, there's two reasons.
One, is it sounds crazy,
so it's gonna get you a lot of attention.
You know, oh, so-and-so bodybuilders, Jack,
and he said he, you know, gummy bears or rice crispy treats.
Who doesn't like rice crispy treats?
This must be a secret.
You know, in the 70s and 80s,
what was kind of this like underground secret
was to have a little alcohol,
because it gave you a better,
it gave you more vascularity before going on stage.
As long as you do how fast it converts into sugar
and gets into your system, alcohol is the fastest,
so that's probably where that came from.
But would that be a good idea before you work out?
You might feel like it while you're doing the workout.
Oh, this is a great way to deal with it.
Terrible idea.
So why do they say rice crispy treats?
Okay, rice crispy's are made out of rice.
So it's a fast, acting type of carbohydrate,
and then you make it with marshmallows and lots of sugar.
So, oh, fast, acting carbs, this is gonna be the best.
Honestly, just the bowl of rice will be,
just as effective at giving you carbohydrates,
better for you, not gonna develop
some weird relationship of food
or give yourself an excuse to eat garbage.
You wanna eat rice crispy treat, go ahead and do it,
but don't create this weird justification
that I'm doing this for fitness.
Like the whole reason why I'm eating gummy bears,
it's not because I'm eating gummy bears
because I like them.
So many of these things, like donuts and dead lifts
and there's just like a whole movement around
trying to figure out how to entice people through
like these types of foods that are somewhat taboo, right?
It's like, oh, well, we can use them here
because we're shuddling it in right before the workout,
which gives us a performance boost.
It's all about justifying,
and this is problem with a lot of the mainstream
or popular, say fitness industry,
is what they do a good job of, which is terrible,
is they justify bad behaviors and cloak it,
they kind of cover it in this like sheath of,
this is for fitness, performance and health, right?
So I played with all this stuff, right?
So I did a lot of this when I was competing.
I was tracking everything and you already,
you hit it perfectly, which is,
if you, it's really about the fast acting carbs
and the amount of carbs before the workout
that's giving you this feeling.
So if you just take out that and instead of having 70 grams of carbs from rice, crispy
treats and you have 70 grams from rice, you'll get the exact same feeling from that.
And the reason why I didn't like, and I did, I did the pop tarts, I tried the donuts,
I did all these things like messing around with it.
And what I don't like about that is that now I would crave that stuff more.
Totally. So if I was on a really strict diet like I was and then I'm like,
oh, you know what?
I have 70 grams of carbs and 500 calories allotted right now.
I'm gonna go crush a couple of pop tarts right now for workout.
Oh, amazing.
Oh, great workout.
But fuck, now I'm craving pop tarts.
You know, four hours later in the next day,
now I want it and I found myself having a hard time resisting
those foods outside of what I was just using it for.
So that's what you got to be careful with this stuff, is that, okay, yeah, sure, you could definitely do a donut.
Yeah, you could do a rice crispy treat. Yeah, you could do the whole gummy bear thing.
But you could also do that same, get that same effect by eating good whole foods, and
doing it, timing it maybe a little bit sooner than the faster acting carbohydrate, get the same pump and benefits from it,
and then now you're not craving this hyper-palatable food
that was engineered for you to want more.
Yeah, or creating this false connection
between health performance and food that are unhealthy.
Totally. You know what this reminds me of?
I had a client once, very smart person.
By the way, intelligent people are the best at fooling themselves.
I'm just gonna say that right now.
Yeah, justifying things.
Oh, they're really good.
I had a client, she was a scientist, very intelligent,
and she would have two glasses of wine every single night.
And then she, so at one point, she wanted a track
and do all this stuff, and so I said, okay, we could track,
and I'd see the wine on there, and it said,
well, you know, if we cut the wine out,
actually, we'll give you more room here.
And this is what she would tell me.
You know, Sal, I drink the wine
because I show their studies that show
that wine has got some antioxidant benefits
and some resvera troll.
So it's a handful of grapes.
Get the fuck out of here.
I'm thinking about my longevity here, Sal.
That is not why you're drinking the wine.
You're drinking the wine because you like the wine,
and now you're justifying it with health.
It's like people who fast for health, but the reality is they just don't want to eat
for long periods of time and now they're making themselves feel better by saying their
studies that support fasting.
It's the same thing with this kind of advice right here.
So if I hear a fitness person who's saying that they're eating crappy food because it's
good for performance and health, I want to slap them in the face.
That's not why you're eating gummy bears and rice cre- You're eating them because you like them, they taste good.
And now you're finding a way to justify it.
Just be honest, I like rice crispy treat.
Right.
And it gives me some carbs, so cool, I get to have a treat
and get some far.
And trust me, take in consideration the behavior aspect of this.
Totally, because I mean, I did it and I got in phenomenal shape,
doing all those things I just said,
but then what I found I struggled with was that,
man, now I want it all the time.
By the way, I'm going to, this is some advice I'll give most of you
who want to try this.
Don't do this right before you work out.
One of the worst things for a workout is poor digestion
or feeling bloated.
You want to do whatever you do with your carbs
about an hour or two before you work out.
And a lot of these, like you said, donuts.
I've seen that too, right?
People will do donuts and then get, you know,
digestive issues.
That's gonna give you a terrible workout.
So white, plain white rice is easier to digest
for most people than a rice crispy treat.
So consider that as well.
So you wanna not cause inflammation in your gut,
you wanna have good digestion and get those carbs.
You're still probably better off grabbing, you know, just plain white rice instead of the crispy treat.
Next question is from Geico Lizard 420 blaze it.
Okay, is it bad to deadlift with a rounded back?
You know, we addressed this a lot at the beginning when you first started posting videos of your deadlift
because people hear this, right?
And then they see that you kind of have this upper back
rounding when you dress it.
So people freak out and go like, oh my God,
look at your back rounding is so bad.
But they don't realize that that's not,
the lumbars, what we're most concerned about
when it comes to rounding,
and that's what you gotta be careful.
And so absolutely, a rounded, you know, lumbar spine is very bad when you are deadlifting.
But if you're keeping that in a fixed position, then a little bit of natural upper back rounding,
especially if your posture is kind of fixed that way, is not bad at all.
Yeah, and I'm going to use an example to kind of illustrate, you know, in a little more detail,
what is bad and what isn't bad. So I'll use my wrist as an example because it's really easy.
So if you look at my wrist, if you're watching this, you can see that I can flex it about
that far.
So that's as far as my joint will allow me to go in that direction.
And then I can extend it about this far.
So this is as far as my wrist will allow me to go, my joint will allow me to go in that
direction.
Everything in between is not the limit of my joint, okay?
So can I support resistance here and here and here?
I can, here's the problem.
If it goes all the way to the end range of motion
and then what is supporting the weight
is no longer the muscle but rather the limited range of motion
of the joint.
So if you look at the spine, even the lumbar spine,
right, it's got a bunch of joints, if it rounds a little bit, okay, but it's not at the end of its range of motion.
You're okay. As long as the muscles are supporting that, you're totally fine. The problem
is when the lumbar rounds, and then what's supporting you is not the muscle, but rather
the limitation of the joint. So it's pressure on the joint and the discs, and then you're
loading that and lifting as much as you can, and the muscles are no longer being supportive. That's where
the problems come into play. So a little bit of, you know, bend or whatever, it's totally
fine so long as it's the muscles that are supporting it, not the range of motion of the joint.
Yeah. And with that said, too, like you're going to run into situations where you have
different, like, shaped objects that you're going to run into situations where you have different like shaped objects
that you're going to have to move around and pick up from the ground.
It's not going to be so nice and balanced out like a barbell where we're going to grab,
you know, like a bag of dog food or like a big heavy stone.
And guess what?
You're going to be protecting your shoulders forward.
You're going to be rounding that up or thrashing a bit, but you have to be able to pick it up and do it with good biomechanics,
and you do have that stability and support if you train it properly. So it's all a matter of
like, you know, introduction to that, be able to brace properly and support your spine and
have strength in that move. Totally. There's an exercise that was widely used by Greco-Roman wrestlers.
In fact, if you go, there's videos on YouTube of Soviet era Greco-Roman wrestlers doing
this particular exercise called a Jefferson curl. So Jefferson curl.
That's all ways controversial.
Yeah, you're standing straight up and you literally with resistance roll all the way down.
So it's like rounded lower back, rounded upper back,
all the way down like you're touching your toes
and then you roll all the way up
and people who don't understand by all mechanics
and control will look at that and be like,
oh my god, why would Greco-Roman wrestlers do this?
Well, if you watch some of some Greco-Roman wrestling matches,
you'll notice that there are positions and moves
where one guy's flat out on the ground.
The other guy's got this grip on him.
And then what they do is they literally lift him up
off the ground.
So the Ranger Motion is ridiculous.
You're going from flat on the ground,
but you're standing over the guy,
lifting him and flipping him over your back,
trying to gain points.
In fact, there was a Russian wrestler
who was just undefeated.
They called him the Russian Bear,
a camera man's name, who was just known for doing this.
And they don't get injured because they have stability
and strength within that full range of motion.
They've trained it.
Yeah, and am I saying you should deadlift this way?
No, what I'm trying to illustrate is so long
as it's muscle that's supporting the position,
and you're not relying on the end range of motion
of a joint, you're okay.
So what does this mean for most of you?
For most of you watching this,
that means that you want your lumbar spine
to remain in perfect position
because you probably don't have
the strength and stability to even allow
a little bit of flex and bend.
Now for advanced lifters, this can change.
I've seen some very high level dead lifters
who get a little bit of lumbar flexion.
Of course, we're not going to range emotion,
to end range emotion, but they have a little bit of a flexion or a little
extra extension with load, but it's totally under control. They're really strong and they're
totally safe. So I think that's where this comes from because you see now a little bit of this
debate in the fitness world. Next question is from BK Prodigy 309. What do you recommend to get stronger
after hitting a plateau on the flat bench press?
Yeah, what were some game changers?
Game changers for you guys on flat bench?
For when I went to incline and just started to focus on that,
now mind you, the reason why that was so beneficial
was because of how much I neglected it.
Right, so I, for much of my lifting career, I was always into flat bench.
Flat bench or decline with my buddies because we could lift more weight with decline.
And the reason why we avoided incline was because it was fucking hard.
It was hard.
I was much weaker on the incline bench press than I was the flat or decline.
And I was like, well, if hitting flat bench hits most of my chest, why do I need to do an incline that often?
Plus, that's the one you brag about.
Right, totally, right?
So I avoided it.
I shouldn't say I avoided it, but I did it rarely in comparison
to how much I did flat and decline.
And I remember I just made it a goal at one point,
like, you know what, I'm gonna get my incline bench press
up to what my flat bench was.
And then for probably a good year and a half, consistently training incline bench press up to what my flat bench was. And then for probably a good year and a half,
consistently training incline,
incline dumbbells, incline flat bench,
and everything came up.
And I saw huge development in my chest that I hadn't for,
so that was a big game changer,
or plateau breaker for me was actually just focusing
on a good chest exercise, exercise that I don't
do very often and making it a goal to get good at it.
Watch what that does.
So that incline was for me, but this person could be asking this question, maybe you don't
fly very often.
Maybe you don't ever do dips for it at all, like something like that.
So yeah, so to piggyback off that, the dips for me were a huge game
changer in really working on even pausing down at the very bottom and digging my way out.
So I was always working on getting a little bit further and deeper so I could gain more
range of motion, more strength in that position because when I go to bench, that was always
a sticking point for me at the very bottom.
You really have less support, there less force production in that position, but training
that to be able to generate more force there, where I needed it, it was huge.
Then on top of that, just having proper mechanics
and stabilizing my shoulder joint was tremendous.
Because that was always something I ran into inevitably
because when you add more load,
it's gonna expose what your body's naturally gonna do
to be able to use whatever it can
by any means necessary to get the weight off of you.
And so I was not using the same, you know, go to like solid mechanics, like once the weight started
to increase. And so that was a lack of stability in my shoulder that I exposed, which, you know,
rotational pressing and, you know, more rotational type of mobility practice really contributed to a solid joint
for me to work with.
For me, and those all those made a difference for me, but the biggest differences I noticed
was one was frequency, how often I bench pressed.
For most of, well, for a lot of my early lifting career, I would bench press once a week,
because I hit chest once a week, I'd go to failure, get my chest sore, you know the whole thing.
And I could not get to three plates on the bar.
I just could not get to three 45s, three hundred and fifteen pounds.
I was a huge goal of mine for the longest time.
And then I had this employee that worked for me that just had this incredibly strong bench
press in particular.
And I noticed that he would bench press all the time.
But he didn't do anything to failure.
It wasn't like he was doing a workout.
He would just go out to the workout floor in between clients or whatever.
And he would throw some weight on and practice benching.
And he said this got him super strong.
So I tried this out.
I stopped benching to failure.
And I just started benching three or four days a week
and I literally, not only did I get to three plates
but I surpassed it.
It was like this huge jump in my strength,
just from practicing the lift rather than like always trying
to hammer my chest and go to failure.
And then the second time I saw a big jump
was when I used progressive resistance.
This is the first time I used resistance bands on my bench.
Literally, I set up my bench press
and then I attached bands to the end of it, anchored them.
And so the resistance was higher at the top of the bench
than at the bottom and I could overload the lift
very differently.
And that got me to jump big time as well.
Those two things were probably the biggest.
But I think the key is,
everything that we're saying, if you're stuck at a plateau,
you definitely have to do something different. So whatever you're doing, obviously,
isn't working and just change it. Sometimes that means doing more. Sometimes that means doing
something different. And sometimes that means doing less than what you're currently doing.
Doug, didn't we do an episode that was titled like how to like eight ways to break through a plateau
or something like that?
We did do something on that some time ago.
Yeah, I mean, and this is just go down that list because I don't play it all this.
Right, because exactly.
We went through all these different ways to progressively overload the body.
And you know, when sometimes we always get so focused on the simple stuff like the weight
and the wraps, right? Oh, I've done every rep range, I've done all this weight, I've increased my
weight to the most I can, I can't get anywhere. There's other ways by messing with tempo, with technique,
like just we can overload the body in a lot of different ways. And we get into that in the episode
and just I would go down that list and look at all the things that you have currently tried and things that you haven't and
then add them up so you haven't.
That's episode 1630.
Perfect.
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I'm at Mind Pump Sal and Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
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