Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1693: The Amount of Muscle a Beginner Can Put on in a Year, the Value of Tricep Kickbacks, How to Get Stronger Without Increasing Calories & More
Episode Date: November 26, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about how much muscle an average genetics beginner can put on in a year assuming they’re following a MAPS program, whet...her tricep kickbacks are effective, if it is possible to get stronger while eating at maintenance, and why PT certification companies focus significantly on the idea of V02 max as the greatest indicator of health and for program training. The guys talk all things hormones. The signs of low testosterone, why we are facing an epidemic, and a space to go to talk about it and get help. (4:00) Opioid deaths are exploding! (21:57) Peter Attia on the best practices for longevity. (25:23) Fun Facts with Justin: The plagues strike Egypt. (29:23) Are we currently experiencing the worst times? (32:19) Is crypto here to stay? (39:38) Would you drink genetically engineered milk?! (41:53) Psilocybin and its use to treat depression. (47:30) #Quah question #1 – From your experience, how much muscle could an average genetics beginner put on in a year assuming they’re following a MAPS program? (1:02:01) #Quah question #2 – Are tricep kickbacks effective? (1:09:16) #Quah question #3 - Is it possible to get stronger while eating at maintenance? (1:16:31) #Quah question #4 – Why is it that some PT certification companies focus significantly on the idea of V02 max as the greatest indicator of health and tool for program training? (1:21:18) Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Fitness Products Black Friday Sale is LIVE! **Promo code “BLACKFRIDAY” at checkout** MP Hormones Mind Pump #1610: Testosterone… The Hormone That Divides Men & Women With Carole Hooven Mind Pump Hormones Facebook Private Forum How the pandemic helped spread fentanyl across the U.S. and drive opioid overdose deaths to a grim high | Opinion #1735 - Peter Attia - The Joe Rogan Experience | Podcast Plagues Strike Egypt: Sudden Floods, Then 4-Inch Scorpions Called Deathstalkers Crypto.com buys naming rights to Lakers’ Staples Center in a $700 million deal ‘Cow’s milk without cows’ start-up raises $13m in seed funding Mind Pump #1682: Bacteria For Muscle Gain, Fat Loss & Health Compass Pathways COMPASS Pathways granted fifth US patent for crystalline psilocybin Cybin - Psychedelics to Therapeutics™ Visit MASSZYMES by biOptimizers for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP10” at checkout** Stop Working Out And Start Practicing – Mind Pump Blog Association of Grip Strength With Risk of All-Cause Mortality, Cardiovascular Diseases, and Cancer in Community-Dwelling Populations: A Meta-analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies NCI Certifications x Mind Pump Mind Pump x NCI Mentorship Coaching Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Carole Hooven (@hoovlet) Twitter Peter Attia (@peterattiamd) Instagram
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 Pumped. By the way, happy Thanksgiving everybody.
If you're listening to this on Thanksgiving, it's because you value your fitness and health, and you consider us a part of your family.
Except if you didn't give us any stuff in your turkey,
so what the hell?
Anyway, today's episode, we answered people's fitness
and health questions, but the way we open the episode
is with an intro.
So we talk about current events,
talk about scientific studies,
we mention our sponsors.
After the 56 minute intro,
we get to answering the fitness question.
So here's what went down in today's episode.
We started out by talking about hormones, testosterone deficiencies in particular in men,
and in women, there seems to be a declining trend.
Definitely in men, we've noticed now for the last six decades or so.
So we talk about the symptoms of low testosterone, what it means,
and what testosterone replacement therapy means
and who it's probably good for and not good for.
By the way, if you have any questions
and you wanna talk to an actual doctor,
we recommend regenerative and sport medicine.
They're the place that we work with.
And right now, you can actually go to Facebook forum
and join for free for now.
So it's free for now.
It's mind-pump hormones.
And on December 8th and December 20th,
we'll have Dr. Rand, Dr. Todd,
and other doctors from regenerative and sport medicine
answering all of your questions.
By the way, it's that 5 p.m. Pacific on both those dates.
They'll answer anybody's questions,
or as many questions they can related to
hormones and hormone replacement therapy.
Then we talked about how opiate deaths
jumped 29% this year, just kind of crazy.
Yeah, it's.
Then we talked about Peter Etia
and the interview he did on Joe Rogan,
really cool conversation.
Justin brought up some scary news from Egypt.
Looks like they're still doing the plagues over there.
Yeah, sorry to alarm everybody.
Really crazy.
Adam brought up some supply chain issues,
maybe some myths surrounding it.
We talked about how crypto.com is the new name
of these staples, arena.
They only paid $700 million for that.
That's a good deal.
Then I talked about engineered milk.
This is milk, but not from cows.
It's actually made from bacteria.
From the TD of bacteria.
And then I brought up some studies on psilocybin and depression, groundbreaking.
Then we got to the questions.
So here's the first fitness question.
This person wants to know how much muscle the average genetics beginner male can expect
to gain in a year, assuming they follow good workout programming
like one of our maps workout programs.
The next question this person wants to know
about tricep kickbacks, are they good,
or are they canceled, a little bit of a debate
in that part of the episode?
The third question, is it possible to get stronger
while eating at maintenance calories?
And then the final question, this person wants to know
why some personal training certifications focused significantly on VO2 max as a great indicator of health and
why they don't focus on other metrics necessarily.
Because they're inferior.
Also, the Black Friday sale is going on right now. It ends on Monday and it's crazy. Ready
for this? 60% off all maps programs and bundles. 60% off site wide.
So just go to mapsfitinistproducts.com and then the code is Black Friday. Black Friday gets you 60%
off. Anything use the code as much as you want. By the way, apparel is also on sale.
We have huge discounts on our clothing.
You can go to mindpumpstore.com for that.
But the Maps workout program sale is crazy.
Crazy.
60% off everything again.
MapsFitnessProducts.com.
Use the code Black Friday for that discount.
All right, so here's a crazy fact.
Men's testosterone levels have been declining about 1% a year since the 1980s.
So there's a bit of a testosterone deficiency
or low testosterone epidemic.
By the way, the signs of low testosterone in men
look like this, right?
So low libido, low confidence, low motivation,
excess fat gain from where you might not know
where it's coming from, and muscle weakness.
Now, here's something else that's crazy. It looks like a lot of women are suffering from this as well.
Low testosterone women, and believe it or not women need testosterone as well, the signs are very
similar. Low libido, low motivation, low confidence, muscle mass going down, excess body fat that seems
to be unexplained. There are things you could do naturally to raise your testosterone, but there are also
pharmaceutical ways you could balance out your hormones.
All right, let's talk about this here.
This is a big issue.
Yeah.
This has been an issue for a while, too.
And I think it took me a while to figure that out with clients.
I remember, and it would only happen after I'd have a client who would go back and
see their doctor and get blood work, and then they'd come back and they would tell me their
testosterone levels. But I remember having clients that, you know, man, they seem to be following
everything I said on the diet. They seem to be training. And, you know, again, we talked about this
before where we were a young trainer, you think they're lying to, you know, like this client just
got to be lying. They They gotta be sneaking Snickers bars
or not doing the workouts I'm telling them to
or they gotta be lying
and because they're not, they're,
their weight isn't changing.
They're not losing the body fat.
We seem to not be putting muscle on really.
I've got all my things in line that I think I'm supposed to
but they're just, they're not moving the needle.
And then they would finally go see a doctor
and get blood work done.
And then I'd find out like my, know 50-year-old engineer is at
like you know free test is like get one one something you know they're at the
floor as far as their testosterone levels. And it plays a huge role. And then of
course going through what I went through from using testosterone, using
steroids for so many years on and off. And then deciding okay I'm gonna go off completely. Let's see if I can naturally get myself up to a healthy place.
And I did that for almost three years, shared that story on the podcast. And man, it's,
when you go through it yourself, especially being someone who's in the space and a fitness
professional, a boy, can I tell what a difference it is when you have low testosterone
versus when it's just optimized. You know, like my hormone therapist right now, we're not
taking a high dose at all. I just keep myself to where...
Yeah, you're taking what therapy to go. So this is in bodybuilding?
Yeah, so it's doesn't, I don't feel like crazy strong. I don't feel like I'm taking a lot.
I just feel good and I can see huge difference on the way my body responds. When I, you know, turn the knobs, start training consistently,
dial in the diet, my body composition changes relatively quick versus when it was low.
It seemed like I could be perfect for weeks and see little to no change. And then the slightest mishap or off the diet
and I would put on all this body fat.
It's crazy, it's like a vital indication
whether or not you're in balance and you're healthy.
And it's one of those things that I had to rethink
about testosterone because growing up in playing sports,
it was so demonized, it was so look down upon
in terms of like
exogenous, you know, hormones and, you know, at this point,
because of the change of the environment,
because of lots of factors,
remember Carol Hoven kind of brought this up in her book,
and it just really set off alarms,
like we're just in a different landscape now
that we really need to consider, you know,
we're like, go getting checked checked, where are my levels at?
And what's the healthy ranges I should be considered?
Yeah, testosterone was unfairly demonized, right?
It was demonized because it's been used
as a performance enhancing drug.
And just like lots of medicines or prescriptions
are abused, but testosterone really got demonized And just like lots of medicines or prescriptions or abuse,
but testosterone really got demonized
to the point where it's like bad for you.
It's always bad for you.
The truth is there's a range of levels of testosterone.
By the way, we should get into that, right?
We should get into what that range means,
but there is a range going below that range
is very bad for your health.
I mean, increases your risk of cancers,
dementia, diabetes, increases your risk of obesity,
heart disease, even prostate cancer,
which is sensitive to testosterone.
When your testosterone is too low,
they show that aggressive prostate cancers
can start to develop.
So it shouldn't be demonized.
It's also a very safe hormone to use,
unlike other hormones that we prescribed like insulin,
for example, which you got to be very careful with.
So it is quite interesting.
Now, as far as the low testosterone epidemic is concerned, there's been lots of speculation
as to why, and this has been observed now for decades.
For decades, we're just seeing these declining levels.
And they're like, okay, we're less active, we're more obese.
But even when you count for those factors and you control everything, it doesn't account
for how much it's gone down.
And they think it has more to do with environmental factors, xenoestrogens and heavy metals and
palatines.
Pollutions.
Yes, exactly.
There are teenagers.
This is true now.
I was researching this.
There are teenagers now that are showing up with testosterone levels that 80-year-old men
are supposed to have.
Teenage boys.
Isn't that what that viral article,
there were that article that went viral was about,
was I think that they compared testosterone
in like 20-year-old men today is at the same average level
as a 60-year-old man just like 50 years ago
or something like that.
Yeah, and that's crazy.
Yeah, and the way I feel about, and the way I feel about testosterone
is the way I feel about all medical interventions.
Does it improve your health
and doesn't improve your quality of life?
And in that case, then yes, I think it's something
that could be beneficial.
This is for all medical interventions, right?
And I do think it's important that you try to lead
a healthy life so that your body is optimized naturally, but in many cases you do that and you're still like you
had experienced Adam or like clients have had in the past, still really low. And so now
it's a matter of quality of life and health in which case, okay, it makes sense for supplemental
testosterone. And women, testosterone was demonized for men. It's even more so for women,
right? It's like, oh my god, if you take testosterone, you're going to change your gender,
you're going to grow a penis. Which is so funny because I remember when I was a kid, my mom, when she
had her his direct to me, that's, they had to put her on testosterone. And it's prescribed all the time.
Special cases. Much lower dose. Yeah. But the signs for women are also now here's this is just that anecdote
But I know someone now who's a female
Who has gotten TRT right so she's gotten hormone replacement therapy
testosterone primarily has gone through a doctor now where she's about eight weeks in and she's like
I wish I did this ten years ago. I feel so much better
I have way more and she was a fit healthy person so she wasn't like
This isn't like a couch potato week like garbage and then decides to go on testosterone. She was doing everything and she was like man
I just couldn't understand I thought it was because I was getting older
She went on testosterone and again they bring you within a healthy range or not. They're not the super physiological crazy doses
And she's like I would have done this before had I known how I would feel I would have done this before. Had I known how I would feel, I would have done this before.
So this is a big deal.
And I think we're gonna see, I predict testosterone
is gonna get rescheduled.
Right now it's scheduled.
I think it's a schedule three drug
and it's kind of tightly regulated.
I think they're gonna loosen up
because they can see how it's loosening up already.
I mean, it wasn't that long ago
that the only way you get it was through your general practitioner
and they didn't want to do it unless you were deathly sick
from low testosterone.
And now you're starting to see these HRT clinics popping up
all over the place.
So I think the pendulum is starting to swing back that.
And the conversation has changed.
There used to be a stigma around it
that was really bad.
Oh my God, steroids bad,
you know, I think they all drug commercial.
It's so crazy because this is how interesting it is, right?
Women go on birth control all the time, no big deal.
Which is, these are estrogen or progesterone type
hormones that they're taking.
Man demonized, stigmatized for taking testosterone,
which is a far, by the way, it's a far safer hormone
to take that's the irony of it, isn't it?
Well, it just shows you how the power of media,
and the way that we can promote something,
or demonize something by the conversations
that we're having, or how we structure those conversations.
And I want to believe that it's changing.
I mean, I'm really excited for,
I mean, the first time that we brought it up
on the show years ago, I was blown away by the amount of young men that were DMing me
That said that heard heard me talk about my experience. They wouldn't got their blood work
They're 23 25 and they're like oh my levels were 240 or my levels were 180 and like these numbers that were so low
For someone that young and I just I'd never seen that in my previous 10 years
of being a personal trainer.
That wasn't a common thing that I heard.
I saw that in my 50 year old engineer
and my advanced age clients had hormone stuff
as they naturally decline as you get older,
but I didn't see that in these young men.
I see that now today.
And so I think because of that,
I think you're gonna see this space grow rapidly.
It's already exploded.
It's so much bigger already.
And I love, I love, you know,
I'm really excited for our audience,
for the things that we're putting together,
you know, to help and support people that are unsure
or curious about it that wanna learn more.
And that we always lead with that, right?
So adding value first.
And so, you know, we opened up this forum a couple of months ago. We don't really talk about it.
It's an MP hormones forum on Facebook. And it's, we were going to originally do it private for
anybody that's going through the hormone therapy. And as we talked more and more about it, you know,
what we're getting so many questions related to this that instead of us, you know, only helping out these people that are already going
through the hormone therapy that have the doctor.
Why don't we open the forum up?
Let's see if we can get Dr. Rand and his team to come in and have these conversations
and live.
Yeah, so regenerative and sport medicine is the clinic that we work with and we work with
them because we like them the
best. They know their stuff the most. They're also very keen on and they really pay attention
to how people feel. So here's the challenge with in the past with hormone replacement therapy,
at least testosterone. The range of what's considered normal is huge, right? It's 300, depending
on the lab you go to, but generally it's about 300 to 1100. So that's the range. And so if you're at 330 or 340 in the past, your doctor
was like, well, you're within range, you're okay. Even if you have all the symptoms of low
testosterone, or let's say you're at 400 or 500, and you have all these signs of low testosterone,
they'd be like, yeah, you don't need testosterone you're somewhere in the middle.
What we know now is it's much more complicated than that,
right?
You have Androgen Receptor Density,
which makes a big difference.
In fact, it was a study that compared testosterone levels
and men and strength gains.
And they found that so long as a testosterone
wasn't like too extreme, there wasn't any difference
in strength gain.
What they found the difference in strength gain was due to
was the Androgen Receptor density.
So 500 testosterone, which is lower to testosterone,
than let's say 800.
If you have 500 B, you have a lot of Androgen receptors.
You're going to feel way better than someone
with 800 with really low Androgen Receptor density.
So what regenerative and sport medicine does is they say,
OK, here's your levels.
Let's look at all these other hormones as well and all these other symptoms
And then how do you feel?
How do you feel? Do you feel okay? Are you noticing a difference?
If not then let's see if we can move this up to the point where your quality of life
You know is back to where you want it to be now. I think it's important
No, I know you've been kind of overseeing this side of the business and you have got them to come on
Is it twice a month? They're gonna start coming on the forum?
Yeah, so I haven't written up here.
So, okay, so we have a forum on Facebook called MP hormones.
It's actually mind-pump hormones.
Excuse me, mind-pump hormones.
And it's a Facebook group and we have opened it to everybody.
Okay, so I don't know how long we're gonna keep, by the way,
it's open and free for anybody.
If you get in now, you're in there for life for free.
Don't know if we're gonna keep it that way forever.
But nonetheless, you can get in there, it's free.
And on December 8th and December 20th at 5 p.m. Pacific, Dr. Rand and Dr. Todd, those
are both doctors from regenerative and sport medicine are gonna get on there.
And they're going to answer any questions at all.
People have about hormones, hormone replacement therapy.
This is for men and for women,
so you can get on there, it doesn't matter,
and you can ask them whatever questions you want,
and you'll be talking to, in our opinion,
the best people in the business.
Yeah, I know there's just a lot of reservations out there
because I don't think people really understand.
I mean, it's complex, it's a complex topic,
talking about hormones, so I'm sure there's tons
of questions before.
You want to really make a first step to try and get,
you know, some kind of help in therapy
in that direction.
So, you know, that's why I think it's important
to have the conversations first,
and this is a great place to do that.
Dude, it's totally a quality of life thing.
What you're not going to do is you're not going to go
and get, you know, and this is just for people who might not know.
Bodybuilding doses, the kind that are demonized
or what demonized testosterone,
very different from therapeutic doses.
So a high-ish therapeutic dose of testosterone
would be around 200 milligrams a week,
maybe every six days or something like that.
That's a high-ish replacement therapy dose.
Bodybuilders do not take 200 milligrams of testosterone.
They're taking 1,000 plus other antibiotics steroids, plus growth hormone, or more.
This is not the same at all.
You're not in that kind of bad, dangerous levels of hormones where you get these things you
get to watch out for.
What you're doing with a hormone replacement clinic, that's really good, is they're just
optimizing.
And again, this is for people who are just like, look, in my opinion, the best candidates
for this are people who are already health conscious and have a history of, you know, being
relatively fit and are just like, what is going on?
Why do I feel, I mean, for men and for women, leads to depression.
And sometimes, like, why do I feel so depressed?
Then they'll go on other drugs to help with depression when it's a hormone thing that they
could solve through supplemental testosterone.
And again, women, same thing.
I don't want women to be afraid.
It's just a much smaller dose, but again, they keep you within that.
Well, I'm glad you said my, that's my recommend to,
I'm getting so many DMs and I'm so glad
that you set this up for them.
And that's it, it's not just these two dates, right?
Is this something you got them to commit?
These are the first two dates,
but we're gonna be doing, we're gonna be doing two
every month as the goal.
Okay, okay, because I'm just getting flooded by these questions
and I'm just like, I'm not qualified to be answering
or telling you or directing you.
The one thing that I have recommended to everybody, it's the same thing that I did first
before I did, which is I do think that the responsible thing to do is to kind of check the
boxes yourself first naturally to make sure that you're not just masking other issues.
So if you have chronic stress and you have chronic bad sleep and you eat like shit,
eat like shit, and you just, you've got a lot of things else going on with you.
And then you just decide, oh, I'm going to throw testosterone on that.
And it will help. It'll make you feel a lot better.
But you're just masking other issues. I think it's important that you kind of assess those things first
and see, hey, if I never get good sleep, what happens when I get good sleep for a week,
maybe you feel a lot better.
I'm so glad you said that.
It's such a good point because testosterone
is a feel good hormone, no matter what.
So you go on testosterone,
even if you live a shitty lifestyle,
you're gonna notice that, oh, I feel a lot better.
Oh, my libido is a lot higher.
Here's the one of the potential drawbacks
of hormone replacement therapy.
And I've had this experience with clients.
Natural testosterone levels fluctuate
based on your lifestyle.
So if you're a healthy man with good testosterone,
let's say you're a healthy guy,
testosterone's pretty consistent, 800, 900.
You've got good androgen receptor density
and everything's great.
But then you just, you know, let's say you have a baby,
and you're just not sleeping,
and you stop working out,
oh my diet's going to crap.
Well, now your testosterone might dip down to 500
because everything's all right.
It's not a mic, it's almost certain, right?
Right, right, but just I'm using a hypothetical.
Now let's say you're on hormone replacement therapy.
No matter what you do,
your testosterone's gonna be high.
So it could mask a shitty lifestyle.
And this is where I've seen people, like for example, I had a client, he was 45.
And we did the same, Adam, very similar to what you said.
We were training, we were looking at his diet, doing everything.
And he's like, man, I used to, like, five years ago.
He's like, I used to respond so different.
And I'm like, as a trainer, I'm trying to figure everything out.
Luckily, he's one of those clients that just did everything I said. So it was like, perfect, because I could say, okay, well used to respond so different. And I'm like, as a trainer, I'm trying to figure everything out. Luckily, he's one of those clients
that just did everything I said.
So it was like perfect, because I could say,
okay, well, it's not this, it's not that.
So then I said, well, on your next physical,
let's get your hormone levels checked
and see what's going on.
So he did, he went, got his hormone levels checked
and they came back at about,
I think it was like 300 or, it was like at the,
at the bottom.
He went on hormone replacement therapy, felt amazing, and then he made this big mistake.
He decided, oh, that means I'm going to double or triple the volume of my training now
because.
And I'm like, no, no, no, that doesn't work that way.
Let's stay the course, see how you feel.
It's not a magic pill or potion, and you can over train and still make yourself feel
like crap, even though your hormones now are optimized.
So it's not magic, but you'll still feel better,
but it's not magic.
But if you do everything good,
and then your hormones aren't optimized,
and then you optimize them,
I mean, it's a huge, nice,
nice eye-seeing on the cake.
Huge improvement in quality of life.
Well, along the lines of this drug talk,
I'm just gonna keep us in the drug space,
where we're here, did you guys see the opioid deaths?
So deaths from things like
exploded. 29% increase over the last 12 months. Is this a bit of a fentanyl? It's because of the
lockdowns and the stressful environment. Oh, how dare you tell that. No, you can justify for that.
All suicide. All suicide exploded. All suicide. Crossport, kids suicide.
Yeah, this isn't even technically suicide.
This is just in general, right?
Or like, no, this is over, over, over.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is like everywhere, like there,
because I know there was some place,
I don't know if like in the Midwest,
it was becoming like really a big problem,
like the opioid crisis there,
and then fentanyl was a big part of that.
Well, there's different places in the country that the restrictions or the ability, I guess,
to get a hold of it is easier or more difficult.
So I compare the...
I know.
I heard Florida has got a really good...
Yeah, Florida was really loose, which makes sense, right?
You have a lot of people in the world.
It's like the oldest population is in Florida.
They're probably the most likely the
best people will go to one doctor, get a prescription, go to another doctor, get a prescription. That's right.
And that's been a hustle for quite some time. The law is over here, a lot stricter than over there. And I'm sure it's
state-to-state. It varies on how much they crack down on that. It's very similar. It's you see marijuana.
Marijuana in California, not a big deal. If someone's gets a prescription walking down the street with marijuana, it wouldn't be a big deal.
You go somewhere else in the country and it's people freak out.
The difference is there's never been an overdose of marijuana.
Well, yeah.
Yeah, you're going to die for marijuana.
The only way you'll die for marijuana is if someone drops like a thousand pounds of it on your head,
otherwise I don't think you can.
You could die from it, but it's all suicides have gone up.
Alcohol use, cigarette use, junk food, all that,
because it's been a very stressful time, lockdowns,
uncertainty, fear, and so it just drives this,
you know, self-medication.
Yeah, it's interesting too, that it's not a constant
conversation that we're having,
because I think it was the same article, maybe a different one, but I was going down the rabbit hole.
And I didn't know that we have been on a 26 year run
of record breaking years every year.
So for 26 years straight, we can see.
For opiate?
Yes.
Yeah, it just keeps going up and going up and going up
and going up and going up.
Nothing.
No.
It's crazy though that it doesn't get talked about as much as a lot of other things get
talked about.
What upsets me is that when we pass public policies and laws, we only look at one metric
and we don't consider potential other downstream effects or side effects.
Like if we say, shut everything down,
lock everybody down, reduce infection,
but then we don't consider,
well, are people gonna feel isolated?
What about people on the brink?
There's a lot of suicides that jump in suicides
isn't happy people who committed suicide.
It was people who were kind of on the line
and they were a little bit like,
oh, I'm not good and I'm kind of depressed.
And then this happens and it pushes them over the edge.
And that's what you see.
You see all those people over the edge,
not get pushed over and then stuff like this happens.
So it's like the psychological ramifications
of all these things, like I really wish
that the policymakers would spend a little more time
thinking their way through.
They don't.
You know what it reminds me of?
It's kind of similar, but obviously different topic.
I listened to you, the podcast with Joe Rogan and a T.I. Did you guys listen to this? I haven't listened to that one yet
So really good dog Peter T.I. He's an exercise nutrition scientist
I think if you wouldn't mind looking up his anyway, really smart guy
I love hearing hearing the guys you know take on exercise and health and fitness. Super smart guy. But the only critique I have is
the same critique I have for other scientists and scholars. Yeah, in the fitness and health
space is that when they give their advice, they don't consider the context of the average
person. Like behaviorally. Yeah, they don't. Right. So he's on Rogan and he's talking about
like the best ways to improve longevity. And and this is really interesting Doug. What is this? He's a physician. Okay, so so he basically is doing research
He science very smart guy. Okay, so it's what I thought
So when you're when you're when you're advising people on the best practices for health and fitness a
Scientist or a researcher tends to give you the most effective thing that research has shown.
They don't consider, is it appropriate,
or people gonna do it, is this actually gonna work?
It's basically just like, so here's what he said, right?
He said, first of all, I found this very interesting.
Being fit reduces your all-cause mortality by five times,
which he said there's no medical intervention
that even comes close.
In fact, being fit and having a good diet,
so fitness with good nutrition will reduce
your all-cause mortality more than smoking will increase it.
And then to take it a step further,
if you just exercise and are fit
and have good athletic performance,
that'll reduce your all-cause mortality
more than diabetes will increase it.
So that's how powerful being fit is.
But then when he gets into the exercise recommendations,
he's like, yeah, you know, like three hours a week
of super intense cardiovascular training
to improve your VO2 max.
And this and that, and I'm like, listen,
no one's gonna do that.
A lot of these biohackers love that
because it's like all about like the short window,
I can get cram in as much as possible.
It's like easier to sell.
Yes, and it's just, and it's also inappropriate
for a lot of people.
I'm not gonna have.
It is.
The average person max out on a stationary bike
and sprint like crazy,
because it's totally inappropriate for them.
Plus, we don't know the levels of stress
and is it gonna contribute to that?
So that's the one critique I have,
is that he's communicating in that way.
What's out, I mean, that has major message
was pushing high intensity cardio. What's that, I mean, that his major message was pushing high intensity cardio.
Hard intensity cardio, strength training,
and then it was like, you know,
can you hang from a bar for two minutes
and, you know, high intensity with resistance training
because studies show that that's what's best.
Okay, wait a second.
If he's advocating for three hours of cardio,
where's the resistance?
So you add more.
Oh, and you're talking five days, six days a week of or oh.
Yeah, good luck.
Yeah, I know, that's the thing.
Yeah, this example I always give is like,
if you ask a researcher, an expert who researches fitness
nutrition, you say, what's the most effective form
of exercise?
They're going to tell you what the research says.
If you ask an experienced coach or trainer,
they're going to ask you first,
which form do you enjoy doing the most?
Exactly.
Because we know that's the one you're going to be consistent doing.
Yeah, it's all about behavior for longevity.
What you're going to adapt to and stick with.
Yes.
Long-term versus what plays out well in a lab
and that you can see kind of the metrics of it,
but that's not sustainable.
No, it's also quality of life.
Eating perfectly on paper would improve your longevity,
for sure, right?
Right, amount of calories, right around protein,
perfect proteins, perfect calories,
like I said, carbs, fats, nutrients, all that stuff.
But what if eating perfect was a major stress on your life?
What if it was dysfunctional?
What if you, you know, didn't have relationships
with people around, you didn't go to events
and isolated yourself to eat perfectly?
Then is it gonna improve your longevity?
No, now it's probably, there's a detriment
to, you know, what you're doing.
That's why I said important.
Yeah, I wanna take his back to the apocalypse.
Just because I'm concerned with the world.
And especially because like, you know, places like Egypt, you know, these are like biblical
places.
You're just like, wow, they still have plagues, apparently.
What?
Yeah.
What do you mean?
So they just went through this.
There's this place called Aswan, I'm probably pronouncing it wrong, but there's a city in Egypt that just experienced this crazy flood and lightning and storms.
So meanwhile, they were trying to just focus on COVID vaccines, all this kind of stuff.
They had to shift completely because this storm basically knocked out everybody's power.
And as a result of that, they got these these crazy, like, infestation of scorpions
and like some snakes. And it's been, it's stung like 450 people, three people died. They don't have
enough antivenom to treat, you know, these people. And like they're telling people, like, steer
clear of anywhere where there's these, like palm trees or things where they live and then Because they're just out in numbers and drove so I imagine it's the weather in the storm
It's bringing them in for shelter and so they're trying to find shelter and they're like invading
You know these poor people's houses you imagine a bunch of scorpions just come out nowhere like out there
Well, and I imagine the ones over there look like crazy ones not like the little ones we see here in you know
California, yeah, they're like little tiny things.
See now this is terrifying, like if you told me,
yeah the locust are coming next to.
Yeah, oh no.
Yeah, by the way, look at some boils and, you know,
like we know, we know the story.
Pink, pink, what do they,
would you put above your door,
like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah shit like that, right? 500 people, hospital.
Yeah, 500 people are hospitalized.
That would terrify.
That's a lot, dude.
I would have seen those videos of the Lucas,
like when there's a certain time of year
when they all travel from one direction,
have you ever seen those clouds in them traveling?
They look crazy.
Yeah, there's like billions of them.
They'll just decimate crops or whatever.
Yeah, see this would terrify me.
If there was all of a sudden like,
oh my god guys, there's a scorpion plague coming to San Jose this see this would terrifying me if there was all of a sudden like oh my god guys
There's a scorpion plague coming to San Jose like that would get me to move. I would
But you wouldn't even believe it like no, that's not true. That does not happen
Yeah, I feel like the the whole murder hornet thing You know had me had my cackels up a bit but nothing really kind of happened with that
But if that would have been a thing well, it's a murder hornets are like everywhere know, had me, had my cackels up a bit, but nothing really kind of happened with that, but if that would have been a thing,
well, I said murder hornets are like everywhere you're walking and stinging you.
That'd been a problem.
Yeah, it wasn't there like a, isn't there a time of year in some places in Australia where they get so infested with spiders,
that the trees and the plants are all covered?
Oh yeah, I sure that picture on here one time. Right. We talked to the webs and everything that it's just it takes over like areas, the ground,
and all the trees. It's like a whole park is just covered in webs. Yeah. Yeah. That
would freak me out. No thanks. I'm cool. That's when you see me with the
flamethrower. Yeah. Would you say because you've been on this earth
longer than all of us. Would you would you say this is one of the weirdest times ever?
When you look at our economy,
when you look at scorpion stinging
and killing people here,
like just everything that's going with housing prices,
stock market stuff going in crypto, NFTs,
is it comparable to any other time?
Is there anything that you could go like,
well, it was kind of crazy during this time.
Okay, I haven't lived that long, by the way.
You know, you're just like,
you're just like, you're just like,
was that weird?
Well, in 1929, when the stock market crashed,
that was pretty traumatic.
No, the truth is, it's crazy right now.
I've never seen it like this.
I mean, I feel like we're in a really bad movie
where they took all these different plots and said, hey, let's make one movie. Yeah, let's throw it like this. I mean, I feel like we're in a really bad movie where they took all these different plots
and said, hey, let's make one movie.
Let's throw it all together.
We're in some video game with a,
like a 13.
The simulation is glitching.
Yeah, there's like a 13 year old playing us right now
and he's like, I'm bored.
Yeah.
Maybe that's what meta versus all really about is like,
we're already in it.
And it's like, this is how we're gonna reveal it to people,
is make them think we create it.
And then one day we'll be like, just kidding, you're already in it. Okay, but like, this is how we're gonna reveal it to people as make them think we create it. And then one day we'll be like,
just kidding, you're already in it.
Okay, but you know what though?
You're creating yourself.
If you're being objective, if you wanna be objective,
the truth is this is nowhere near the craziest
that's been in the last 60, 70 years,
the differences were so aware.
Like you had, first off, the Cold War,
where there were moments where we were one button away
from thermonuclear global war.
Right.
And that happened quite a few times.
Then you had the oil embargo where if your car ended, if your license ended in an odd
number, you could get gas on these days. If it ends in an even number, you can get gas on these
hours-long weights in line, unemployment through the roof. Like, I feel like we feel like this is
a crazier time, but
I don't maybe it's just because we're more aware you think that I think this even now
is worse than then you don't you don't think so how do you think people respond if right
now the government say or you can't get a lot easier yeah before that I think that's
probably part of it because we're just taking on too much of everybody.
I mean, I don't disagree with that. That plays a huge role in the panic
and then how everybody feels about what's going on.
But I mean, I don't know, like with COVID and everything,
like I just feel like that is...
How do you think people will respond today
if we had a Cuban missile crisis, but with China?
What if all of a sudden Biden gets on and, you know,
he's like, hey, we've located Chinese nuclear missiles.
I feel like a new partner would be like,
yep, this was coming too.
Yeah, logically, yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, that's why I prefer the revealing
of the alien invasion.
That'd be my first.
Doesn't there are an Olympics that we banned?
We couldn't go to because terrorists kidnapped a bunch of Olympic athletes and was that the Berlin?
Maybe I'm not sure there was some type of a
No starts with the letter M what the they don't bother with a soccer player
I don't know
The Munich story. I was just there was a lot we had people getting assassinated all over the place. Like you had celebrities and political leaders
getting assassinated.
I don't think it's great.
We had civil disobedience that makes what we have now
look like nothing back in the 70s.
Well, if you think back, we did have two world wars
in the 20th century.
So that's pretty, I mean, we're fortunate
not to be doing that right now.
And we don't have a draft.
I don't know anybody that was forced to go.
And that also, to your point, like,
imagine if we went through a World War with social media right now,
I'll fucking weird with that.
Oh, everybody would be crying.
Right. It would be a lot different than probably what it was like back then.
I couldn't imagine if they just said right now,
hey guys, you can't get gas on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays,
if your license ends in an odd number.
Or I couldn't imagine would be like to go get gas
and have to wait two hours.
How do you think people will react right now?
If you had to go get gas and wait two hours in line
to get gas.
Well, you've already seen it,
people filling things up.
And every time something happens where there's
a supply chain thing, you just see people in droves,
like, didn't we just hit a record?
How we did?
Yeah, aren't we at an all time,
how the average for $84.
Did it?
Yeah.
All time high.
I know.
It's not slowing down.
Although I on a positive note of all this drama
we're talking about right now, I did hear that the supply chain
issues is supposed to be loosening up and that the fear of shelves
are going to be empty for Christmas and so
that is not true.
Like, you know, like target some of your big places
are saying that we're up, you know,
17 plus percent inventory and we have more than enough
to carry through the holidays.
Yeah, so that's the rumor is that it's not gonna be
as scary and as bad as what people are thinking.
I learned a hack, by the way, for holiday shop.
Oh, I saw the Jason's in that to you too.
I think so.
The 30 days with Costco.
Yeah, so like Black Friday, right?
There's like big sales.
I mean, one of the challenges is like,
you go to, you know, Best Buy or Costco,
the computer and the TV that's super cheap.
If you're not there in line first, it's gone.
They're gonna have like 10 on the floor and they're gone.
That's why people fight over them.
So what this lady said, which I thought was brilliant, is most of these stores have a price matching,
30-day price matching guarantee. So buy it before Black Friday, spend extra money. Then when it goes
on sale, you just tell them, hey, I want to pay the the cheaper price, the refund to the balance.
So I saw that, right? And then the thing that I thought right away was like, yeah, but you know what?
I bet you like if you go to a better...
Gotta make it a hassle for you to come back to life.
Well, so this is how I think they would make it a hassle,
is let's say, you know, TV, since that's one
of the most popular ones, right?
And you go, oh, I'm gonna do, I'm gonna go buy the new
Sony, whatever, you know, HD 80 inch for, you know,
five grand or whatever right now.
And then when the Black Friday sale comes,
I'm gonna go trade out.
Except for that Sony 10X5 model is the, now the Black Friday sale is, I'm gonna go trade out. Except for that Sony 10X5 model,
is now the Black Friday sale is on the Sony 11X6 model,
and your model is not the one that went on sale.
So when you try and go do the-
Oh, so you guessed the wrong one?
Yeah.
Or it didn't even have the one that they sell just
for Black Friday.
A lot of people hold whatever it is
that they're going to launch or release or sell on-
Why are you gonna to ruin this?
Yeah, because I mean, in theory, I thought it was really cool.
I got the same, I got the same text message.
I was like, oh, that's really smart.
But it's like, oh, yeah, well, how, that's, I know that these companies are smart.
They probably go, what we'll do is we'll launch something different on the actual Black Friday
date.
So then you think you're being all clever.
You got yourself a little expensive TV.
Don't get it. I've. I bet that's the thing.
TV, the ones that you don't normally sell.
Yeah.
You know what, though, TVs are way cheap compared
to what they used to be.
I saw some.
It's crazy.
I did go to Costco recently.
Super thin, incredibly clear.
Do you guys remember when the first, like,
quote unquote, flat TVs came out?
And they were like 15,000.
Yeah, $10,000, $15,000 for like a little 40, 50 inch.
Yeah, I just bought not that long ago. I bought a 40 inch little like LCD screen for my bathroom
for like one of the thing in a bath I told you guys about that. It's like little 40,
there's ways like a pound it's so light. I think I paid 200 bucks. Yeah, it's so crazy. That's
it's way crazy. 200 and it's like good quality, it's nice. It's like I always have reservations about buying electronics
because it's just like...
You can't ever win though.
You can't ever win, yeah.
You wait and wait and then the new model comes out
and it's always cheaper, me neither.
Like the next day.
Dude, sure.
Did you guys see the news on cryptocurrency.com
or crypto.com, that company that's getting popular? I don't know if you guys have seen the company. Or the chains are named to crypto.com or crypto.com, that company that's getting
I don't know if you guys have seen the company.
They changed their name to crypto.com.
That's the staple center.
Staple center paid 700 million dollars.
Someone paid them.
What do you mean?
Who paid 700?
No, crypto.com paid staple center, 700 million dollars to change the name to crypto.com.
Is it cryptocurrency or cryptocurrency?
I have it in my nose.
It says crypti.
Oh, that's just that right.
That's someone that might be a type of crypto.
Crypto.com.
Yeah, crypto.com.
$700 million to have that.
And I'm seeing the commercial.
I don't know if you guys, my ads on my YouTube channel, commercials, when I'm watching
streaming, it like Bitcoin cryptocurrency.
Did you know there's one place, I think one or two places in the world were businesses
and people prefer to use Bitcoin over the currency.
Where?
El Salvador and Venezuela where people prefer because the cash is the money so messed up
over there.
Yeah.
That they actually prefer that you use Bitcoin.
That makes sense over that.
Yeah.
When you're currently.
Cryptos here to stay. I just don't know.
Which one?
I mean, I think we could safely say Bitcoin is the goal.
Yeah, but who's buying Bitcoin?
It's 50,000 or 60,000?
60,000 now.
No one's buying Bitcoin.
I mean, the rich are.
Not one.
You're buying pieces.
Yeah, I mean, I don't,
and even then I don't know if there's a lot of people today.
At least in my circle of people that I know,
everyone's speculating on the XRP's
and all the different coin.
The ice coin.
Yeah, the sheba, the like coins, the...
Yeah, because they're still playing that game.
I'm talking about just, I would bet
that the one that's gonna stick around,
the one that's most likely to be used as currency,
the one that's most likely to be liquid, is Bitcoin The one that's most likely to be liquid is Bitcoin, right?
That's the safest bet I think is.
Okay, now like, let's see if I got trolled or not,
but somebody told me that there was like a Let's Go brand
in crypto.
It's like no way, dude.
No way.
That's what I heard.
I heard that.
Did I bring up on the podcast, the five,
the top five songs in the,
in the ideas, okay, I would say, I did so crazy where that's going yeah the whole
Let's go brand and think I can't like to make currency out of this to this is this is crazy
Hey, I did you guys hear that they're now engineering milk?
They're gonna make milk without cows. I've heard of this. We just saw billboard on the milk
That's not it's called not milk. Is that what it is? No, no, no. They're saying is milk.
How is that?
Oh, there's a brand callsically possible.
There's a brand called not milk.
And I saw a massive billboard on it when we were,
were we just heading out?
We were thinking about something.
So it's a startup company, there's a startup company that raised $13 million
to make dairy products not from animals, but rather from micro organism.
Well, how's it considered dairy then?
So it's a Tel Aviv based startup called Imaginary.
Imaginary.
Nice job, guys.
That's clever.
So listen what they're going to do.
I'm going to read this to you.
Instead of milking a cow to get cow's milk,
the scientists of the company insert DNA instructions
for the production.
We milk that bacteria.
For the production of way in case
you're into micro organisms.
So they have chosen these two components
as they are principal milk protein.
So they take DNA, put it into these microorganisms,
the microorganisms then produce way in casing.
Then they add plant-based fat, sugar,
and water to the mix, and boom, you got milk.
Imagine.
Real milk, no cows, imaginary. You know what I'm gonna start up right now? It's crazy. It's a. Real milk, no cows. Imaginary.
You know what it's like to start up right now?
It's crazy.
Yeah.
It's a Tel Aviv based company.
What are your tastes like?
No, because it's got the plant-based kind of like fats and everything else, it's obviously
not the same, but it's got way in casing made from bacteria.
How wild is that?
It's wild.
I know.
I'm not going to lie.
I have a different advance.
I have a different view on things like this now
after our conversation with our buddy Zach and Zybiotics.
Yeah.
I do have a different look on it.
Like just, I don't know enough,
or I didn't know enough about GMO to really,
it has such a bad name attached to it,
at least in the health and wellness space.
Yeah. Anti-Everything GMO, but when listening to him talk about It has such a bad name attached to it, at least in the health and wellness space.
That there's anti-everything GMO,
but when listening to him talk about
where that science is going and how amazing
it potentially can be, it's...
Dude, you could theoretically,
you could program bacteria to do all kinds of crazy stuff.
Yeah.
So you'll program bacteria to make medicines and drugs
and...
It's hard to find them.
Foods, it's gonna be be it's kind of weird
I mean how do you feel I do at least I my outlook on it is different after that conversation
Okay, so here's here's what I think I first off
There's there's real benefit in the fat that comes from dairy and the sugar that comes from dairy is different
They may be the ones from plants. I don't think it's gonna be completely equivalent. However
if getting bacteria to produce way in casing protein becomes extremely inexpensive and makes it easy, easily accessible to the world, we could solve some serious problems. If you're in a part of the world where it's hard to come by quality protein and you're nutrient deficient or whatever and actually having
cows, milking cows, cost X amount of dollars and you could say 50% of that by doing it
with bacteria.
You get artificial fats and you get all the protein.
If you can have all that from the production from bacteria, that's pretty damn interesting.
Yeah, I was scared of you though.
If you're like a dairy farmer and that's your livelihood and it's been that way
for multiple generations.
What if seeing news like this?
Yeah, what if the future is gonna be like this,
like wealthy people,
like you're gonna go to a super expensive restaurant
and they're gonna be like,
this still have the real meal.
Yeah, that's how it's gonna be.
House meal, please.
I do believe it's gonna be like that.
That's what I'm saying,
they're gonna give you a piece of steak
with a picture of the cow.
This actually came from a real cow.
This was not grown in a lab.
This was alive, you know.
And you're like, this is real.
I do think it's gonna get like that, dude.
I think it's gonna get,
for all good reasons though, right?
To your point, like, I think we're gonna solve hunger.
I think we're gonna be able to get to a place
where we can make so much food,
that at least people can survive off of it, right? So they're not gonna die from starvation and be able to get to a place where we can make so much food that at least people can survive off of it.
So they're not gonna die from starvation
and be able to feed the world.
But then you're gonna have this huge gap.
You're gonna have that stuff that's extremely cheap
and that you can live off of and survive,
which I think will be good for a lot of people
that are in poverty.
But then you're gonna have, you know, oh, you want to.
I want real, yeah.
It would be cool to just have a cow as a pet.
Yeah, that's it.
What are you gonna do?
They're just down.
So you're like a real boss then.
Yeah.
Put a strap on something to ride in.
We used to eat these before we grew it in a lab.
It's gonna be kind of weird.
Cow races.
Let's go way down now.
Let's go to the future and let's get crazy with this.
What about when like this DNA into bacteria technology
becomes easily accessible.
Now the average person with internet access can figure out how to do this.
Now you can program bacteria to do all this stuff for yourself.
So now rather than buying.
Give me an example.
Give me an example.
Like what we just said, theoretically, if this tech gets easily accessible to people, and
it's easy to do do people could do it themselves
Oh, I have yeah, I have a vat of bacteria in the back that makes
Casey in a way and I'll yeah, I grew some I grew some bacon in my 3d printer lab
Dude back to it just seems like it's like the building block, you know
It's great. I still am convinced now that we are bacteria in the human suit
Well, I mean we we are we're more we have more bacteria cells than anything else, right?
No.
All right, we?
Or one to one.
It's one to one or more.
Oh, I thought it was more.
We're more like one to one.
That's what's access.
He said it's about as many bacteria cells as human cells.
Oh, see, I thought we were more.
I thought I read that we were more bacteria cells.
That's what I used to think too.
Yeah, I thought it was like three to one or something.
That's what I used to quote.
But then he said one to one.
So, and he's the expert on it.
So I'm gonna, you know, I'm gonna listen to it.
Different.
What he said.
All right, so more, some more cool research.
More studies have come out on the use of Silasibon
to treat depression.
And it's blowing the doors off of anything
we've ever done before for treating mental disease.
So this is huge.
There's two companies or one in particular
that is looking to make this into pharmaceutical.
I think it's Compass Pathways is one.
I'm invested in them.
So full disclosure, because I think that this could potentially
completely revolutionize mental health treatments.
Because there's nothing,
if you look at these current studies, these new studies,
nothing comes close to how these things seem to be in terms of their effectiveness.
It's crazy for therapy, right?
Like it's so promising with psilocybin, but also isn't there a value to MDMA for like post-traumatic stress?
I've seen some studies around that that are really encouraging as well.
Aren't they similar to psilocybin though when it comes to therapy?
Or is MDMA, are they both for different things?
So psychedelic research refers to all these drugs,
MDA, Scybin, LSD, what's that other one, that tranquilizer?
Oh right.
What's that tranquilizer?
I know it's a horse tranquilizer,
but you actually use it as anesthesia.
I can't think of the name, maybe Doug.
We just talked about it on the show the other day.
I don't know why I can't remember.
It's literally on the top of my tongue.
Anyway, the studies are done on all of those drugs
and they're coming out and showing lots of benefits.
Silasibons probably one of the preferred ones
because it's so safe, but I've also read studies
on the other ones as well.
And again, the results are mind blowing.
Like, it's like you have treatment-resistant depression.
You do therapy with
psilocybin after a few sessions, your depression is relieved.
Ketamine. Ketamine. Thank you.
You don't have to see, you don't have to go back for months. So it's like you do this therapy
and you're cured for a long time. Like six months or a year.
Yes, some of these are one session.
That's what I thought. I thought the PTSD study they did was like 80 something percent,
like one session, I thought, it was something crazy.
Bro, look at this.
So here's a recent study, right?
So the study found that patients who took
a single psychedelic dose of psilocybin, 25 milligrams,
in conjunction with therapy, by the way,
this is very important.
They're not just taking psychedelic.
You guys are getting higher than doing whatever.
No, in fact, you can go in the opposite direction.
You could have a bad experience
and actually give yourself worse symptoms. But anyway, so it's in a control
environment with a really good therapist. So they reported in almost immediate and significant
reduction in depressive symptoms that lasted weeks compared with patients who were given
a placebo essentially. So 29 patients or 36.7% who took the 25 milligram dose,
showed a 50% or more reduction in symptoms
in three weeks after the single dose.
And again, at three months, this is insane.
24% who took the highest dose were still in remission
three months later.
Can you think of any drug that treats
this kind of depression that way?
It gets those kind of numbers.
You do it, like imagine if the future of, you know,
mental health treatments is, oh, every 90 days,
I do a therapy session under the influence of psilocybin,
which is extremely safe on the body.
And we're moving in that direction,
but then the 70s happened and it just became this thing
they could target, like certain groups of people
to stop these protests.
And they're like, we lost all the research.
Lots of studies were done,
we're being done on psychedelics until they were labeled,
you know, enemy number one or whatever
and that was it, it all got shut down.
Here's my only fear, right?
So this is all done in a medical setting.
You're a pharma company, okay?
You're still a company, you need to make a profit.
So you have either antidepressants
that people take every single day, huge markup,
big margins, or a one and done drug.
Yeah, or the three-ney machine.
Or you buy three pills a year,
because you go see the therapist once and then,
like that's the part that makes me go,
huh, how's this gonna work out?
Are they gonna charge you?
Hopefully that gets disrupted.
I mean, you gotta imagine it with the metaverse. Well, how's this gonna work out? Are they gonna charge it? Hopefully that gets disrupted. I mean, you gotta imagine it with the Metaverse.
Well, how?
What do you mean?
Taking the psilocybin going through your therapy
in a virtual setting.
Imagine how wicked that would be.
That's gonna fuck with your mind.
Just like, I wanna take streams, I'll play video games.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just thinking about that first.
Take a big enough dose, you need to go with the Metaverse
for my brain. Oh my God, I just can't imagine with that would be good. You're already in the Metaverse, so you can that. Big enough dose. You need to go to the medivers for my brain. Oh my God, I just can't imagine what that would be.
You're already in the medivers
if you take a big enough dose.
Yeah, yeah.
You're smurfs everywhere.
Ah!
But I think it's remarkable, and I hope
that the research continues, and I hope that they find a way
to make it profitable, because then it'll be easily accessible.
Although I will say this, I'm not going to name any names,
but I do know therapists,
these are, that's psychologist,
but psychotherapists and psychiatrists,
who are working with some of these psychedelics
kinda on the side, because it's so effective.
Yeah.
And it's because they're like, it just works.
Nothing works like this for some of these patients.
Do you think it'll get fast-tracked
because of marijuana kind of paving the way right now,
or do you think because of the,
because of like what you just brought up?
I think the decriminalization will.
The use of it as a pharmaceutical,
they have to find a way to make it profitable.
Otherwise, I don't know how we'll do it,
you know, how it'll get covered,
or why they'll invest in developing these drugs necessarily.
It has to be profitable.
That's a problem.
Now, where's decriminalized places like Oakland, right?
That's a place where it is.
Are we seeing like these little pop up therapy type places
that are clinics that are servicing?
Right, I'm not aware of that.
I have no idea.
I mean, that are on the up and up, right?
I've heard rumors of people that will do it with you
and stuff like that, but I haven't heard of like somebody
who's like advertising or that are promoting that they will take you through.
Wasn't it Oregon?
I think they're full blown legal, right?
No, no, no, still decriminalize.
Yeah, they just decriminalize other drugs.
That's what Oregon did, right?
They got all crazy.
They took everything off the table.
Going to the store and buy some.
Yeah, no, I don't think so.
You know what makes me wonder if in the future, because we've talked about this a billion
times, how much of sustaining weight loss and maintaining a good relationship with food
and fitness is psychological?
It's all psychological, right?
I mean, that was always the challenge with clients.
It's like they know what to do.
I've been helping you.
I've been working with you, but you just, you have this really bad relationship with food or maybe you're using food as a way to
self-medicate. And it's just this is very challenging. What if downstream some of these therapy sessions
could be on other things besides the extreme stuff that we're seeing, which is like depression, PTSD?
What if it was like I'm obese, I can't figure this out, or I can't quit smoking, or I'm an alcoholic.
Actually, I did see studies in alcoholism
and it actually showed a pretty good effect.
What if it's like that?
So you go to the doctor or your therapist,
they give you psilocybin for pretty much any kind of challenge
that you have, and then you come out of it
and you're like, you know what, I wanna take care of myself.
It makes sense of its surfaces, you know,
something there that needs to be addressed
that you've been avoiding,
right? I know it's like effective in that regard. It'd be interesting to see if it had
that same effect because I know too, like some people do hypnotherapy and other treatments
that are kind of unconventional and have had success, you know, being able to break some
addictions, but yeah, it'd be interesting to see if it's...
There has to be a little bit of a self-selection bias though right now.
If people that are willing to do this right now when it's gray market are really, I mean,
if you are doing this now, either one, you have experience with that already or two,
you're really seeking to help yourself or grow, right?
And so you get to be in that mindset.
So I think that mindset going in probably has a lot to do
with the outcome of it versus if it becomes so widely accepted
there, but he goes like, oh, I'll just go try that.
And hopefully that'll fix me.
And then the work part isn't in there or the desire
to really get what I'm saying.
So the people that are doing this now
are willing to do the work.
Right, I've been trying to figure this out,
trying to wear it and they want to put the work in.
Now there's a counter to that, right?
The counter is that they are so far testing this
on treatment-resistant individuals.
Like one of the hardest things to treat in medicine
is treatment-resistant depression.
So hard to work with and solve.
So challenging.
PTSD also.
So if your PTSD is so hard to work with
and to help people.
And it's like, it's such a torture.
And the fact that they're showing these results
on these treatment resistant, kind of challenging individuals,
makes me think that, you know,
and what you're saying is very valid too.
So that's interesting, I even think of that.
But I would guess that maybe we'd see even better results
because now you're dealing with people
who aren't so extreme, they're not that severe. Maybe we'd see even better results because now you're dealing with people who aren't so extreme.
They're not that severe.
Maybe we'd see better.
But I feel like because of that,
they treat it like it's no big deal
and they go in with the same type of effort.
I don't know, I just feel like everything else in our life,
we've learned the important of the journey,
the hard part and the climbing them out
and going through all that stuff.
And if everybody can just fast track
to fixing their obesity problem, fast track to fixing their obesity,
probably fast track to fixing their depression
by getting high one time, I just feel like
you're gonna see those percentages start to decrease.
Yeah, that's not a bad point at all.
Just my theory, I don't, I mean,
cause those numbers are so incredible
that I would have to think that there's probably people,
and it's very, I mean, life changing for those.
But I bet those are people that have tried a lot of different things that have been working really hard to probably try, and it's very, I mean, life changing for those, but I bet those are people that have tried a lot
of different things that have been working really hard
to probably try and fix it.
I think that attitude alone going into something like that
that is opening up the mind
and making those new pathways.
So I've been reading the theories on,
and they know what's happening in the brain, right?
It's opening new pathways, it's getting different brain,
parts of the brain, it's getting sort of connecting
other parts of the brain.
But the way that they explained it was like this.
Okay, so I'm gonna try and bring it back
to what we've experienced working with clients.
You're working with someone,
they have an issue with obesity.
Maybe it's a lie.
Let's paint the picture.
This person's dealt with being overweight the whole life.
So you have the client who is an overweight kid,
overweight teen, overweight adult.
Now they hire you and they're 40, very challenging to get this person to change these behaviors
It's been how they've lived their entire life
Until they're willing to go deep and acknowledge those challenges and acknowledge why they have this things and face the pain
It's very hard to get them to change. So the theory behind a lot of these psychedelics is they open you up to the point where you're okay,
you forgive yourself and you face your pain. I was reading one on PTSD and one of the challenges
is getting this, let's say the soldier who has PTSD to walk through what happened, go through it
and not be angry with themselves and what did I do but rather forgive themselves and be open.
And that's the big part of why they think some people think these things are so effective.
So that part right there makes me hopeful.
Yeah, and you'd think that some of these government programs would get behind it because
like even my dad, like as he was in the Vietnam, like I got exposed to Agent Orange, and
it was like such a problem way later on.
But besides the trauma and everything else
of just being in war, just to like him having to go
to these treatments and then they have to like cover that.
These insurance companies, you know, from the Vets side.
Like you'd think that this would be something that it's proven,
it's got a track record, it works.
Like saves money.
saves money because there's so many different visits you need to take to kind of treat. and it's proven, it's got track record, it works. Saves money.
Yeah.
Because there's so many different visits you need to take,
to kind of treat.
You know, more soldiers die from suicide now than from war.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's been like that now for a little while.
What has been the latest, I mean,
what's been the latest big news in this space?
I mean, you brought up a while back with the decriminalization
in some of these states, but has there been anything else
that we've made like huge headway? Like a lot of stuff we're talking about right
now, we've kind of known for a little bit now.
Yeah, no, the biggest one was there was a company, let me see if I can find the name that
had that created a synthetic version of Silas-Ibane. The company is called C-Ibane. Sibon. Very inexpensive.
I invested in them too because I thought this is interesting. Good way to head your back.
Yeah, and what they did is they created a drug
that was like psilocybin, but obviously a pharmaceutical,
makes it easy to patent and whatever,
and they also had positive results from the...
So the kids, yeah, concentrate and have replicable dosage.
So it's like, because I would imagine that,
if you didn't even get mushrooms,
you don't really know
the potency of it.
That's a good question too.
Is psilocybin similar to marijuana where the same size of a mushroom could be dramatically
stronger or weaker than other?
Yes, but when they do these in studies, they standardize the psilocybin.
So they're giving you...
So when they grow, the whole process is the same. Then they take out the cellosybin. So they're giving you... So when they grow the whole process, the same,
it's getting the same results.
Then they take out the cytosybin
and then they make sure you get the exact same dose
as the next person.
So they're not just giving you a mushroom to eat,
where you could get a higher dose or a lower dose.
They're standardizing the dose.
So now the reason why a synthetic version is interesting
is because now you can patent it.
Well, yeah.
So you say the sideband grows naturally.
So they have to find creative ways to patent.
And relatively inexpensive, too, right?
I mean, it grows on cow shit.
Yeah, for free.
Yeah.
Again, back to the cows.
Hey, real quick, I hope you're enjoying the podcast.
Look, if you're watching this podcast,
if you're watching the show, or listening to the show,
you're very interested in your health, you're interested this podcast, if you're watching the show or listening to the show, you're
very interested in your health, you're interested in nutrition and fitness.
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All right, enjoy the rest of the show.
First question is from Alex Eun.
From your experience, how much muscle could an average
genetics beginner put on in a year assuming they're following a maps program?
Really good question.
You're more than other programs.
Great commercial for maps.
No, no, okay, so if, okay, good programming, low-in, 40, high-end, 60 pounds somewhere
on their...
Oh, jeez.
Naturally, that's a bold statement.
Okay, so let's say you got a good workout program,
so it's appropriate for your body.
It's geared towards building muscle.
You got good sleep, good diet, average genetics.
I would say it's probably realistic
in terms of lean body mass in the first year for a man
to probably gain anywhere between, I don't know,
10 to 15 pounds of lean body mass in the first year.
All things being equal.
I think that's, what do you guys think?
I think that's sort of a...
If you're talking about a brand new beginner,
I think that's very realistic.
I think you could see even higher numbers that.
I mean, professional body builders would say that,
they could add 10 pounds of muscle in a year
that's like amazing.
But they're already so big in the whole thing.
Yeah, and they've also been training for a long, long time and taking everything already
in their sun.
But when you're new, boy, it kind of, it comes on pretty quick.
So I mean, that's lean muscle.
That's not just overall mass, which I think a lot of people get, they lump all that in together
in terms of what they've gained.
So yeah, we're talking just the lean muscle.
Yeah, I would say 10 to 15.
10 to 15 in about a year, the first year,
with everything being good.
For women, it's probably more like, I don't know, 48,
probably roughly half.
And then each year after that, you'll probably slow down
in terms of your gains.
Now here's the thing, okay.
All things being equal, boy, is there a wide variance
in genetics?
I know people that have gained 30 pounds of lean body mass their first year of training,
and these are just genetic freaks.
Freaks, yeah.
And then I know other people where it's like five, and he got, you know, men, where it's like four
pounds of lean body mass in a year, and that first year was really, really challenging.
So it can really make a big difference.
Well, I think the, most of the stuff that I've read
is between a half a pound to a pound,
like on the good end, right?
On the high end, a half a pound to a pound of muscle a week.
If everything is dialed in a week, yeah.
Oh my God, that would be,
that's two pounds a month, two to four pounds a month.
That's what you just said.
48 would be primo for 56 weeks,
but the reality of that's not.
Then maybe initially, right?
Yeah, yeah, right.
So, and that's, I mean, again, that's the high end
of what someone could potentially anticipate.
Well, I think there's also that novel sort of window
if you're a beginner, right?
You get those sort of new gains for the first few weeks,
for the first few months, and you can kind of,
you know, get a real good jump start.
I was, it's all relative to,'s all relative to your actual size already too.
So someone who is a 200 pound man could gain 20 pounds and it's not that big of a deal.
That's got percent, right?
Yeah, exactly.
A guy who's 120 pounds, total different story.
So, I mean, it depends on the size, depends on the genetics.
So, there is a wide variance here,
but you could put on a decent amount of muscle in,
I know as a young lifter,
I know there was at least a year there
where I had a good 10 to 15 pound gain in the year.
What was your best year?
Probably something like that.
Yeah, probably something 10 to 15 pounds.
My best year was.
Not a non-anabolic, right? So like obviously I've had bigger jumps when
I was on steroids, but naturally probably 10 to 15 pounds.
Mine was when I was 16 and I gained like over the summer. I gained about on the scale 14 pounds.
I don't know if that was, I'm sure it wasn't all lean body mass, but that was over a summer
as a 16 year old kid. I got stretch marks in my legs and in my armpits.
But it's genetics play a big role.
And also when you're a beginner, the muscle gains kind of look like this.
It's almost like a bell curve.
At first your strength goes up quite quickly, but you don't gain muscle very quickly.
And that's from central nervous system adaptation.
And you're learning the exercises.
You're learning how to do them properly.
So you're not really able to maximize the benefit you get from them.
So it starts off from a muscle game perspective, a bit slow, and then it ramps up, then it
kind of peaks, and then it starts to slow down again.
So it's like, if I got a new client, that was otherwise healthy, you know, in an, you know,
let's say the age range of 20 to 40, and they're doing everything right, it's usually
after the second month that we would start to see the muscle gains
really start to come on, you know.
Well, don't you think though too,
like they hit that inevitable sort of tapering off
and plateau because they're not thinking ahead
in terms of changing the stimulus up
and the programming and addressing that.
I think a lot of times that you just feel like
you're making all this progress
and you stay within that same sort of protocol,
whereas this is something that we really were
intentionally drying up with the MAPS program.
Yeah, I read another article that said
that the average man over the course of a long period of time
with good training, good diet,
could gain naturally roughly 20 pounds of lean body mass
above their, what their body would normally carry.
So that was the number that I read.
So if your lean body mass sits around 160,
after four or five years of good training,
be consistent, you could probably carry an additional.
I mean, this would be an awesome commercial for us.
I mean, I'd love to have somebody who owns like four or five programs,
because that's what it would take to get all the way through a year.
And changes up to stimulus every five programs, right? Because that's what it would take to get all the way through a year. And and changes up the stimulus every three months, right?
New program stays tied on their diet and is a new lifter.
And then reports back, right?
You do your body fat tests before just to see kind of your baseline.
Do something that's consistent, whatever one you decide to do.
And then test it in the air.
It'd be really interesting to see what that would be.
I'd love to.
I love the.
A little.
Yeah, sort of. Yeah, I. I'd love to be a leaner. So a little sort of copy.
Yeah, I think 10 to 15 is very, very likely.
I think it's, you'll see some.
I think it's realistic.
It's realistic, yes.
It's really, okay.
Okay, okay, likely is hard because how many
beginners do you know for a year?
Well, okay, yeah, but we're assuming that, right?
We're assuming they are doing a calorie increase.
We're assuming as they start to build, they slowly continue to increase calories.
Calorie work out pro.
Right.
They're following maps, right?
They're following maps all the way through for an entire year.
An adequate recovery.
Yeah.
Well, it's built into the programming, right?
So they're following maps perfectly for a whole entire year.
They are eating accordingly, meaning that as they gain muscle, they're continuing
to scale the chloric intake up from where it was before, and they do that consistently
for entire year.
I think 10 to 15 is more than realistic.
I think you should expect that for if you're doing all things.
I would love to see somebody squeeze that even further, like see how far you go.
I had some, I had some, I mean, I got DMs all the time.
I had a guy, getting 20, you know.
And it's probably up a little bit better on the genetics.
At the time point, he was young, he was in his 20s.
But he gained 20 pounds of, I think almost all lean body mass
as body fat percentage of facts stayed the same.
I think he only gained a couple pounds of body fat with that.
So I've seen it from some of our people.
You know, it's funny is the longevity effects
that they're measuring from muscle
are really coming from the strength.
So it's the strength increases that they've connected
to longevity, not necessarily muscle,
but strength is a great way to correlate to muscle.
So just a side note.
Next question is from Kenzie Benzie 00,
our tricep kickbacks effective.
The internet says they're canceled.
You know it's funny.
I like that.
It's easy, Benzy.
Okay, here's one of my favorite things about following resistance
training and exercise for as long as I have exercises are like,
it's like clothes, they fall into fashion,
they fall out of fashion, into fact, in the 90s,
it was super unpopular to squat.
Nobody freaking squat it.
Everybody laid press and hacked squat it.
Now everybody's starting to squat again.
Deadlifts didn't exist.
Nobody deadlifted in the gym unless you were a power lifter.
Overhead presses were all behind the neck with a barbell.
Nobody did military presses like we talk about now.
Tricep kickbacks have been popular, unpopular,
popular, unpopular.
Do I think they have value?
I absolutely think they have value.
What I put them in the same category is like dips
or close grip bench presses or skull crushers know.
But if you do a proper tricep kickback,
where you really pull the elbow up real high,
pin it to your side, and then focus on that squeeze
when you bring the dumbbell up to almost nothing cramp
your tricep like a tricep kickback
because of the shortened
position of where you're out.
I mean, you can easily convince me it's worthless.
It's just, here, you're like by analogy.
If we're going to stick with the clothing analogy, we're going to stick with your clothing
analogy of falling in an hour and a half.
I want to hear you guys out, though.
Listen, if we're going to stick to the clothing analogy that these things fall in and out
of favor and the tricep kickback is someone that, then the tricep kickback is the chums of clothing or apparel.
You could do without them.
They're not that big of a chums are.
Chums are the ones that go on your sunglasses.
Hold your sunglasses.
Nice accessory.
We're cool for a little while.
They actually still sell them.
I took a picture at a gas station.
It's all being sold for like early 90s reference.
No, no, no, no, no.
I'm gonna make my case.
Okay, tricep kickbacks, I put it in the same category as cable press downs with the rope,
those types of what bodybuilders call finishing exercises.
If you've done at the end of your workout, a really well done tri-ship kickback, and it's
really important, you keep your elbow high, pin it your side, and focus on full squeeze.
Almost nothing will cramp your tri-sicep like the I swore to God
I mean, I guess if cramping the the tricep is what builds muscle than that would be no, come on
Don't be a smart try it and see for yourself. It's it is
It's on that level. I mean I would not work
I would not take for a long time. I was all into him and it was probably in the early 2000
Yeah, I don't know.
They don't make it, I can't tell you how long,
and if I were to do them now,
okay, if I were to do them,
once you won't probably catch me doing them,
I would actually do them on a cable and not a dumbbell.
I really think they're worthless with a dumbbell.
So most people let their elbow drop too much,
they use momentum, you've got about a six inch of window of movement where
it's actually effective at all.
That's what's such a different feel when you do with the dumbbell, it's all about the
squeeze.
The whole that way up there, oh my god.
I think it's canceled in my book.
I was definitely, if I was going to do it, I'd grab a probably like one of those single
ropes and then I would pull back with it.
So that way you least are keeping the system more tension on at the entire time
through the movement.
Yeah, no, it's not a, I think it's,
it's not canceled.
There's all it.
I mean, it's one of those pumping exercises,
like the other ones that people do.
Look, I tell you what, try them out.
Here's a deal with your elbow far back and pinned your side.
So your elbow's a little bit higher than your body.
The long head of the tricep is shortened.
Then on top of it, you squeeze like crazy at the top.
It's an interesting feel that I haven't really replicated
with almost any other exercise.
I'm not saying.
I mean, you're getting that elbow position in a dip.
No, you're not.
You're not getting it at the top.
What I'm talking about is that full squeeze at the top
with the elbow higher than your body.
It's a very shortened position for the- still up, but you're locked out.
You don't get that in a lot of movements.
No, you don't. Now with that full squeeze, it feels very interesting.
Now again, I'm not placing it in the category.
It's, you'll find it in I think one of our workout programs, maybe as a focus session.
Did we?
Maybe.
Yeah, the focus session is a static or split.
But yeah, it's definitely in there
as just like your single joint.
Like this is where hyper focused on just the tricep,
like any angle possible, right?
Yes, but it's not canceled.
I think it's got some value like other pumping exercises.
It's not canceled, like I said.
If we were to go back to how we always talk
in order of operation of exercises,
as far as all the tricep exercises are out there,
it is towards the bottom, if not the as all the tricep exercises are out there, it is towards the bottom,
if not the very bottom of tricep exercises.
In fact, give me a tricep exercise that's worse.
Oh, easy, supinated push downs.
Easy.
Well, what, because you're comparing it to pronated,
and that's just the way,
how many tricep exercises you see
when it's in your wrist position?
Yeah, they're changing the wrist position,
do you want to sell the stupid stuff?
No, no, it's better than that.
You're the elbow.
Yeah, if you do three exercises for your triceps
and the last one is a finisher,
where you're getting a pump, swap it out for kickbacks,
try it out.
Do the squeeze at the top, go light,
hold the squeeze at the top, watch what happens.
I feel like he's defending it just because he was doing it
like he's going to do it.
I actually have him most of the time.
I saw he was in the gym.
Yeah, he's doing that. And then what's this one called? We haven't finished it today. I saw he was in the gym. Yeah.
He's doing that.
And then what's this one called?
We go like sideways.
Yeah, that's the, what's the name?
No, I can't because it looks like
it's the Michael Hurley.
Michael Hurley.
No, no, no, no.
It's like there's the elbows out and it does.
I'm not doing anything,
but I'm trying to emulate.
I have a dumbbell right here.
I'm coming the inside.
What am I going to do?
And then I'm extending this way.
I mean, we've said this before.
No exercise is technically
a worthless exercise and everything has some sort of value.
If you work out all the time and you do a lot,
you've done all the tricep movements
and you never do tricep kickbacks,
would I concede this argument?
Like, okay, yeah, okay, you could go there.
Just, I think that it'd be hard for me to name an exercise
and I don't like your reverse grip tricep push downs
because if you did that and you didn't do pronated,
it's not a bad movement.
It's just a silly movement if you do pronated
then it's a silly move.
No, I think it's, I think it's super.
I'll tell you what, I haven't done it for a long time,
but I have done it in the past and they use the word canceled.
No, it's not canceled for a pump and for a squeeze
as the last exercise in your group of exercise
for triceps, I think it's got some value.
Will it replace dips, close grip bench presses,
skull crushers, overhead triceps.
I mean, you get another exercise
besides that reverse grip push down
that it's not worse than.
All the cable weirdness that people do for triceps.
Oh, I do it this way, I do it this way, I do it this way,
I grab a rope, I grab a bar, like okay,
what's really important with triceps?
Elbow position, right?
In front of your body, over your head, down by your sides,
name a tricep exercise with the elbows behind your body,
almost.
Well, yeah, not at the peak,
because you start there in the dip, right?
In the dip, your elbow.
But you don't finish with your elbow up in that back position.
Yeah, I mean, you can make that, you can make that case. So, um, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, perverse push down is not bad. I don't know. All I want is Andrew to put in here score. It's down one.
Everyone else is down.
You get like a point of a point.
Next question is from Hannah Fit Lift.
Is it possible to get stronger while eating at maintenance?
Totally, of course.
Strength is a skill.
I've gotten stronger, not added any muscle at all,
just because I was able to fire better,
and just control the weight better
and have better skill and technique with it.
Well, this is where a lot of the
sensual nervous system doesn't come into conversation.
We've tried our best to kind of describe it,
which is hard to do to people,
but really just going through that process
of being able to recruit and intrinsically
produce more force creates a stronger situation where you can now have access to more strength than you did before, but not necessarily you're not going to gain size.
Well, that's why I've always loved the analogy that Sal gave, because I never heard it before. We all got together, which was the speaker and amplifier analogy. And I think it just works in so many examples.
It works here again.
If you are investing in your amplifier
to get more power to your speakers,
you don't necessarily need more calories or more strength.
You get better skill at a movement
and you're increasing your amplifier.
You're making your amp better, which is true.
Yeah, so you don't necessarily need
to have higher calorie to do that and or add a bunch more muscle
in order to get a bigger amplifier for your muscles.
And that's why I love that analogy because that's an example in my opinion of the CNS
here is that you, by practicing and getting the movement down really well, you are investing
in a better, stronger amplifier for your speakers.
I'll give you an example that completely illustrates
what we're talking about.
If you take two groups of people, and you already know
what their maxes are, nobody's gained in any extra muscle,
and then they go and test their maxes again,
but you give half of them caffeine,
and the other half, no caffeine,
you will see a statistically significant,
maybe 5% or 3% increase in strength in the group
that took caffeine. Did the caffeine make them build more muscle? No, caffeine is a
CNS stimulant. So it just got their CNS to fire harder and they were stronger. Can you
do this without taking supplements or chemicals? Yeah, you could train your CNS. You know, when
they do studies on Olympic weightlifters, Olympic lifters are, they can summon something like 95%
of their actual potential.
So you have 160 pound Olympic lifters.
Because of the way they train.
Have you ever seen that?
Because we've talked about this, right?
We've touted that before.
Have you ever seen that compared
to what the average person is?
Average person is something like 40 to 50.
Is it really that low?
Yeah, I knew it would come closer, actually.
No, in order for the average person to generate
their true potential of strength,
they have to be under extreme stress situations.
This is like the story of the adrenaline
or yeah, it sort of overrides a lot of the governing
that's in place.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know if you guys have ever experienced
that yourself or you're like, you're in danger,
your kids in danger and you do something.
And afterwards, like, for me, I definitely lift weights and stuff, so I'm sure I'm higher experienced that yourself, where you're like, you're in danger, you're kids in danger, and you do something, and afterwards like, for me, I definitely lift weights
and stuff, so I'm sure I'm higher on that range
than the average person, but I by no means
train like an Olympic lifter, and I definitely don't train
plyometrics and explosive power.
I do a little bit now because of Justin's influence,
didn't do in the past, but I'll never forget,
my son, my oldest, he was two at the time,
he was at the top of the stairs, and he was was saw me and he was just ready to jump off the
top.
And I leaped, I grabbed the rail, I ripped it off the wall and leaped to the top of the
stairs and caught him.
No way I could have done that naturally.
You couldn't have painted it.
And I pulled the mat and I ran it.
I do the same thing.
My son was falling down at the end.
I pulled my hamstring really bad because it's just, boom, I, you know, exploded.
And that's why your body doesn't let you do that.
It's got those governors, but yeah, you could totally,
if you just get better at a lift,
you can lift more without gaining any muscle.
Now, is that beneficial to building muscle?
Yes, because as you lift better,
and you get stronger because you lift better,
now you're able to apply more stress to the muscle
and get more out of that exercise.
Well, this is why the advice that we give so often
to people is just, you know, look at your workouts.
Go to the work gym and just practice.
Just practice and get good at the movement
because that in itself, forget adding weight to the bar
and trying to sweat harder and increase intensity.
Just go practice getting good at the movement
and watch the carryover you'll give.
You know, there was a Soviet method of training
that did that where they would take athletes
and let's say the athlete could squat,
let's say they could squat, 315 for 20 reps, for example.
They would have the person squat 315 for like 15 reps
or 10 reps every day.
Even if they got stronger, so 10 reps at one point
kind of feels like,
oh, I could do another 10,
but then the next few times, like,
whoa, I feel like I could do 25.
They kept them doing that for three months,
and then they would test their max,
and you'd see this huge boost in strength.
And it was all because they were practicing.
Next question is from Kev Petrishan.
Why is it that some PT certification companies
focused significantly on the idea of VO2 max as the greatest indicator of health and tool for program training?
Because that's that's what the studies center around. So one of the challenges that I have with a lot of certification courses is also a lot of their strengths, which is they focus heavily on data. And when you look at the studies on physical performance and health, there's lots of studies
done on VO2 max and endurance.
Very little studies done on strength.
And they're all athlete driven, which has no real relation to like everyday average
people.
Yeah, so it's also very, it's one variable that you're looking at versus like measuring strength.
It's like muscle-strawl.
Yeah, but there's a lot of moving parts
when it comes to that.
As far as somebody's, somebody's rest
could have been good for a day,
so their strength is down or up, so things like that.
Well, we do know how studies on strength,
and they are very simple.
They use a grip strength test,
and it's actually a better predictor
of all cause of mortality than other single metrics.
It's my favorite way to do it.
But it's just there were no tests like there were no studies.
All the studies were done on stamina and endurance.
If you were if you were a research in the 1990s or before and you wanted to study the correlation
between physical fitness and longevity, you would almost always pick some type of endurance
metric.
So there's a lot of studies that are done on that.
There's very few done on that are done on that.
There's very few done on flexibility or strength, although now we're starting to see
a lot on strength and starting to show that there's a huge connection between strength
and longevity.
So this is why they do that.
Now, here's the flaw on that.
You're training average everyday people and you're a new trainer and all you're looking at is VO2 max and you ignore mobility, you ignore strength,
you ignore how well they are able to fire
particular muscles and posture in movement
because you're just focused on VO2 max.
Plus, training VO2 max is a bit inappropriate
for a lot of clients, right?
Like if I have a 60 year old client,
it's never exercised, like, probably not a great idea to push them
to max out their VO2.
It's also really easy to manipulate and to improve.
I don't know if you guys have read the stuff on it.
Like you could improve your VO2 max every day.
Every day, you can improve it.
And it's a pretty fast adaptation.
Yeah, it's a very fast adaptation.
So it's like, I don't know, I'd rather focus on something
that I think that's gonna take a little bit more skill, more time, and better behaviors, and get
that in my client before. I mean, I could put them on two weeks of every day doing some
intense cardio, and by the end of two weeks, we're going to have a huge difference in their
VO2.
What's the most protective? And we've seen multiple studies now coming out about muscle
being one of the best things to pursue because of
the strength and the protective qualities it has for all kinds of things, even with prevention
of disease, protects your organs, so many benefits to that.
And then also just like eliminating aches and pains for the long haul versus you focus
on cardiovascular output, that repetitive stress,
that oxythe stress, all that stuff accumulates. And if that's your only focus, like you're
going to end up in a bad position.
Yeah, to be fair, improvements in any metric of physical health within a particular range,
right? So we're not going extreme. So improve your endurance or improve your mobility or
improve your strength, like all those things are going to improve your health and your longevity.
So to be fair, they all contribute. But here's the part that gets very challenging is there's other things that they sometimes don't include in the studies.
For example, if you get stronger, you're less likely to lose your balance and fall. So I'd like to see a study that shows
the correlation or connection between strength
and falling down and breaking your hip.
Or how about pain?
If you get stronger, you're less likely to have pain,
which means you're less likely to take.
Pain medications, which have their own negative side
of the same major factors.
That can cause issues, right?
So it's much more complicated.
And also, if you really want a good indicator
of health, you're never going to use one metric anyway, even strength is by itself is flawed.
You want to look at multiple metrics to give you a whole picture and then look at behaviors
and quality of life. One of the reasons why we work with NCI, for example, is NCI actually
takes that into account. They really take into account behaviors
and context of the client.
They're very science focused, but then they're also like,
but also look at the person, also consider
what they're gonna be consistent doing,
what they enjoy, what their quality of life is,
and what it can potentially mean downstream.
And then here's how you apply it
to this particular individual.
I think that's so important in a lot of certifications
miss that, because they just go off of the research.
Look, if you like our information, head over to MindPumpFree.com and check out all of our
free guides.
We actually wrote a bunch of guides to help you with all kinds of fitness goals.
Again, it's MindPumpFree.com.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So Justin is at MindPump Justin.
I'm at MindPump Salon.
Adam, is that MindPump Adam?
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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