Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1724: How to Stop Big Bodyweight Swings, the Perfect Number of Exercises to Maximize Your Gains, How to Workout When You Are Short on Time & More
Episode Date: January 8, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: How workout partners might be killing your gains. (4:01) Some new information regarding “fart ...girl.” (14:07) The ultimate flex with your Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT. (19:25) The guys share their experiences with the Oculus. (21:13) How tech companies have now entered the electric car market. (31:24) The guys make some clarifications on previous statements made in past episodes. (34:38) Joe Rogan’s power in media. (41:41) How weight loss can help you with COVID. (44:44) Mind Pump Kitchen, brought to you by Butcher Box. (45:16) What Mind Pump is watching on TV. (46:21) Crazy News with Sal: Why a Chinese couple could not conceive. (54:06) #ListenerLive question #1 – How do I know if I am hydrated properly during a workout? (57:46) #ListenerLive question #2 – How do I maximize my results when I’m short on time? (1:04:50) #ListenerLive question #3 – What is the ideal number of exercises to maximize your gains? (1:13:19) #ListenerLive question #4 – What is the method to build back your metabolism after going through big bodyweight swings? (1:26:41) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com January Promotion (#1): NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS SPECIAL BUNDLE OFFERS January Promotion (#2): MAPS Anabolic 50% off **Code “JANUARY50” at checkout** Mind Pump Partners Reality Star Who Earned $200K From Jarred Farts Hospitalized for Severe Gas | Complex Sales of Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs jump past $1 billion amid heightened interest from celebrity collectors Go Courtside in VR with NBA League Pass Games in ... - Oculus Sony Vision-S: The Entertainment Giant Looks To Build An Electric Car Toyota dethrones GM to become America’s top-selling automaker in 2021 This color-changing concept BMW will mess with your head Mind Pump #1722: Predicting 2022 Fitness Trends: Will In-Person HIIT Training Continue To Be As Popular? Mind Pump #1720: The 8 Worst People To Take Diet Advice From Joe Rogan's Ratings Crush Mainstream Media Substantial weight loss can reduce risk of severe COVID-19 complications, study finds: Successful weight-loss intervention before infection associated with 60 percent lower risk of severe disease in patients with obesity -- ScienceDaily Watch The Alpinist | Netflix Watch Cobra Kai | Netflix Official Site Marvel's 'Shang-Chi' is now streaming on Disney Plus Couple Couldn't Conceive Because They'd Been Having Sex the Wrong Way for Four Years Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP” at checkout** Gatorade: The Idea that Launched an Industry Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! MAPS Aesthetic MAPS Fitness Anabolic MAPS Strong The Key to Fitness Success is Self-Love – Mind Pump Blog Intuitive Nutrition Guide | MAPS Fitness Products Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Stephanie Matto (@stepankamatto) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) Instagram Alex Honnold (@alexhonnold) Instagram Marc-Andre Leclerc (@mdre92) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right? In today's episode we had live questions.
We've actually called in, asked us some questions, and we coach them live on air.
By the way, if you ever wanna ask us a question
on the show, you can email your question to live
at mindpumpmedia.com.
Now we open the episode with a 51 minute intro
where we talked about current events,
scientific studies, and we talked about some of our sponsors.
So here's what went down in today's episode.
We opened up by talking about how workout partners
might be killing your gains.
Then we did a little follow up on fart girl, she's a person selling Farts in jars, today's episode, we opened up by talking about how workout partners might be killing your gains.
Then we did a little follow up on fart girl, she's a person selling farts in jars, something
else happened to her.
Adam brought up the board ape yacht club and FT club.
Then we talked about Adam's new tech toy, kind of cool to the Oculus.
We talked about the Sony electric car and the new BMW car that changes its color, then we did a little clarification on our stances on cardio
and on doctors and one more clarification.
In the past, we talked about Caldera Labs products.
They have a serum and a moisturizer for your skin.
By the way, great products.
They're very effective, all natural.
But we had said before we used the moisturizer
before the serum, actually it's the other way around,
it's the serum, then the moisturizer.
By the way, if you wanna check out Caldera
and get a discount, go to our partner page,
it's mindpumppartners.com,
and then use the code MindPump for 20% off your first order
on Caldera.
Then we talked about Joe Rogan and his power in media,
it's massive.
I talked about a study showing how weight loss
can help you with COVID.
I talked about how I did the slow cooker
with some butcher box pork butt,
it was amazing, butcher box delivers healthy meats
to your door.
So they're inexpensive, but they're also grass fed,
grass finished, or if you get pork, it's heritage pork,
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there's an awesome deal that includes ground beef, chicken thighs, and pork butt for free
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It's a huge, huge deal.
Then I talked about the documentary, the Alpenist.
We talked about Cobra Kai, Shane Chi,
and then we talked about the Chinese couple
that couldn't conceive for four years,
find out the painful reason why.
Then we got to the live questions.
The first person asked us how to hydrate perfectly
for the best workouts.
The second question, this person wanna know what to do
when they were short on time,
but wanted to maximize the results.
The third question, this person wanna know
what the perfect number of exercises was in a workout.
And then the final question,
this person's body weight has been fluctuating up and down
and wants to know how to stop those fluctuations.
Also, all month long, we're running a huge promotion.
So it's January, a lot of people getting started
with their fitness or getting serious with their fitness.
So here's what we did.
We created three bundles of workout programs.
Okay, so that means we have three bundles
that include multiple maps programs.
In fact, all three bundles include nine months
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Now, the first bundle is for beginners.
The second bundle is for people who are intermediate
and the third bundle is for advanced people.
So each one of those bundles is perfect
for the right person.
Again, nine months of exercise programming
and those bundles are discounted heavily.
So if you're interested, head over to mapsgenuary.com also.
If you just wanna try out one of our programs,
try out the flagship maps program,
maps in a ballpark right now that's 50% off.
If you're interested in just that,
go to mapsfitinusproducts.com
and then use the code January 50,
that's January 5-0, no space for that discount.
Working out with a workout partner
is probably killing your gains.
Ooh, hot take.
Oh yeah, hot take.
Little controversial.
Yeah, I know a lot of people like to work out with workout partners and I definitely think
that there's sometimes value, right, like the motivation aspect and someone to kind of
check your form and all that stuff.
But I think more often than not, what a workout partner tends to do is you work out either
more intensely than you should,
use weight that you shouldn't be using,
do exercises that might be ideal for yourself,
or on the other side, you waste time,
you're not doing much of a workout.
You're not consistent, yeah, you fall into their patterns,
not your own pattern.
Yeah, somebody is always losing in the relationship.
Yes.
Somebody's gaining, somebody's losing in relationship.
Because you're following their workout.
Right, there's always, there's always,
whether the partner that is showing up
that's listening right now and they're like,
that is not true, it's benefit.
Okay, well then you're the one benefiting,
you're fucking your friend.
Yeah.
So somebody's getting fucked.
Like somebody is having to rest.
You're fired, buddy.
Change or do what the other person wants or needs,
and it's not what's ideal for that person.
It's impossible for two people to be following
the workout routine and it's perfectly ideal
for both of them at that time.
Yeah, now I do wanna be, look, I wanna be very clear, okay?
If you love working out with a workout partner,
you guys match up pretty well,
it helps keep you concerned.
You're the same protein shakes.
You've got a good vibe going on.
There's nothing wrong with that at all.
I mean, the social aspect of exercise can be amazing.
It's one of the reasons why fitness modalities
that CrossFit exploded and introduced people to exercises
that a lot of people weren't doing before.
It was that social aspect.
It's a very powerful part of fitness for a lot of people.
But what you don't want to do,
and I think this is the real lesson of what I said.
And I know the way I opened it was kind of
to get people's attention.
But the real lesson is don't forget that
you need to train yourself, it's your practice.
I remember, I've taken a few yoga classes,
and that's funny to say, a few,
but I remember, there was a really good one
in the instructor said, this is your practice.
So if this hurts, or if this is too hard,
move into this pose or pause,
and I thought that was really good
because when you're in class,
you can kind of get carried away.
It's your journey, and I think initially, especially in the beginning, accountability
is something that you're really seeking that and you want to be able to find that and
so having a friend around and like doing it together, it sounds like a great idea and
it is initially we've got to evolve, pass that and really like take ownership of your own
efforts going forward.
Well, it does contradict a bit of what we say, right? We say that a inferior workout program
done consistently is better than a superior program done in consistency.
Right. So if you are the type of person that won't show up to the gym unless your friend
is meeting you there, then continue on. You know, do your thing. Meet with your friend,
get your workout partner.
But the truth is, that's, you want to want to evolve beyond that.
You want to evolve to a place where you don't rely on somebody else.
That's the key, by the way.
You don't want to need a workout partner.
Right.
You want to, it's okay to have one,
but you don't want to be in a position where you need a workout partner.
Because now, the potential inconsistencies are higher. If they miss or if something happens to them
and what would happen to me quite often and by the way this is one of the reasons why we don't work out
together. I mean we work out together but not together. Like we're all working out at the same time.
Together but not together. Yes. But we're not doing the same exercises and you know, doing set my set.
Hold hands or anything like that.
No, no, that's tough.
No, only one time.
But mainly here's why.
It inevitably, I compromise my technique
or inevitably I train a little more intensely
or I do an exercise that may be not ideal for me
because one of you guys is doing it, so I'm jumping in.
And so there's a bit of a compromise there.
And I can see some value in that sometimes,
but I think if you get to the point
where you need a workout partner,
and you're compromising your technique,
and you're form, and you're going harder than you should,
and using weight you shouldn't lift, and all that kind of stuff,
then you're hurting your progress.
Well, and also, I just think a lot of the,
a lot of times I'll see the workout partner is sort of the spotter.
Yeah. And so this is, I used to think that was essential but a lot of times I'll see the workout partner is sort of the spotter, right?
And so this is like, I used to think
that was essential when listing heavy,
like I had to have a spotter and I had to make sure
that somebody was there to be able to dig me
out of a bad situation, when in fact,
I actually got hurt because of my spotter.
So learning the proper technique to bail
and be able to get rid of weight and have the
safety attachments now that they have for racks and all these kinds of things.
But I mean, it does play a lot more into like, you go a little bit more intense than probably
you should.
You're not really listening to your own body signals.
You're trying to push through that.
Well, I'm glad you went that way because the person I think that needs the drop, the workout partner the most, is I think my younger self, who you're trying to push through that. Well, I'm glad you went that way because the person I think is, that needs to drop the workout partner the most,
is I think my younger self,
who you're looting to as was your younger self,
which is the kid who trains with somebody,
and the reason they train with somebody
is because they need a spotter for every lift,
because every lift they're taking the failure.
And we talk about that all the time
about going to failure,
and that is not ideal for you,
especially to be going to failure consistently.
Maybe it intermittently makes it into a routine
here and there on your workouts,
and there's some value to that,
but training to failure almost every workout,
which is what I was doing.
So what I was doing always was having a workout partner,
and at least one or two sets, I had needed my spotter,
helped me with this lift.
It was more weight than I should be doing
or could do on my own
and having them spot me through workout.
And you're just, you're not applying the correct intensity
and the dependence on having someone to work out there.
It's kind of like a two-pronged issue.
Yeah, you know what I used to hate?
I used to hate this like when I was a workout
and I'd have a workout buddy with me
and I know that I'm gonna stop the set here.
No, no, you got two more, man.
It's like, go away. I don't wanna hear, you know what I mean? You got it, you got it? Come on, you're almost there. No, no, you got two more, man. Yeah, yeah. It's like, go away.
Yeah.
I don't wanna hear, you know what I mean?
You got it, you got it.
Come on, you're almost there.
No, no, I'm doing my thing.
Did you see that meme the other day that went around?
I thought it was hilarious, maybe not.
90% of, no, it said, you ain't got it, bro.
No, what do you say?
It said it should be.
90% of the time when your spotter says you got it,
you don't got it.
Yeah, that's all right, yeah.
You didn't get it.
Yeah, no, I didn't get it, bro.
I'm gonna go back to what you said, Justin,
and I used to teach my clients this as well
when I would train them,
because my goal as a trainer was to set them up
so that this is something they could continue lifelong.
And that require me, just like we're saying right now,
you don't wanna be in a position
where you'd require a worker.
Oh yeah, this applies to a client and a trainer
the same way.
Yes, and what I would teach my clients is,
how do you get the dumbbells into position?
How do you dump the weight when you can't lift it anymore if that ever happens to you?
Because although going to failure is too much intensity most of the time, sometimes it could be
used appropriately, so you need to know how to fail if you do fail. If you fail on a squat,
what does it look like? How do I get rid of the bar? If you fail on a bench, do you know how to use
the safety? Most benches now have safety. Or there's actually a technique for failing on a bench press. If you have no
safety, and you could bring the bar down and you know how to get up with the bar, I don't
recommend that for most people, but there is a way to do it. So learning these techniques
is important for safety. Relaying on a spot, spotter all the time, you could put you in
a position where one workout, we don't have a spotter,
then you push yourself past a certain point,
don't know how to bail on the weight
or don't know how to dump a squat.
And now you're in a bad position.
I've seen people before, do that with a squat
where they get to the bottom.
And they're uncomfortable dumping the weight
and they start to grind and then their back starts to round.
And then they fail forward.
You ever seen that where they fail forward
and the weight goes forward?
They turn it to it.
Well that's what happened when one of my friends
was help spotting one of my heavy squats
and was trying to help me,
but actually kind of leaned into me and pushed me forward
and literally squashed you, the weight on my back
as I fell forward.
It was awful.
I can't believe I didn't blow my knees out.
Oh.
Yeah, I think it's one of those things.
It doesn't get talked about at all, really,
in terms of how to bail and how to safely
kind of make your way through.
You know, I'm gonna put it,
I'm gonna say it a little bit differently,
because I guarantee those people who are like,
oh my God, my workout partner's the best.
I love them, this is great, whatever.
Finding a good workout partner is almost as hard
as finding a great business partner or a great spouse.
It's true. Like this
person has to not inflate your ego but rather keep your ego in check. So if you work out
with somebody and you feel your ego inflating, probably not a good idea, right? This person
needs to make you feel like you could train more appropriately, need to be able to help
you with your form and technique when you need help on it, be able to kind of match with your similar goals,
help with the motivation and consistency,
not the opposite.
I'm so consistent with my workouts
that if a workout partner showed up,
five minutes late, seven minutes late,
like I'm going and you can go work out by yourself now
because I'm gonna do my thing.
So it's really hard.
Now I guess when you do find that perfect partner,
it's probably amazing, but boy, that's a hard. Now I guess when you do find that perfect partner, it's probably amazing.
But boy, that's a hard thing.
I think the reasons that people like workout partners are the reasons why I don't like workout
partners, which is most people would say like, oh, I get the best workouts or they push
me when I have a workout partner.
And I need that extra push or else I'm not gonna train as hard.
External motivation.
And that is the reason why I don't like workout partners is I know now when I go into a workout
What level of intensity how much volume I need to be trained with but I'm also very competitive and
It's natural when I'm with my buddies that they're lifting if he's getting after it
It's really easy for me to fall right into that well
I'll do another set or go and throw another 25 on there
I got this when I know or at very least I not going to take the plate off to do my set.
Oh, right.
And I know that.
I know that I know what I need when I go into my workout.
And it's not always this crazy intense,
crush myself in my routine.
And I know that if, now that being said,
there are times two when I think there's some value in that.
I know I haven't trained really intensely in a long time.
Maybe I'm going to get into workout with Justin or Sal.
And I know that when we work out together, we're going to push each other that way. But that's not something I want to intensely in a long time. Maybe I'm gonna get into workout with Justin or Sal and I know that when we workout together,
we're gonna push each other that way,
but that's not something I wanna do on a regular basis.
Reminds me of that white snake song.
You know what I just want.
Here we go again.
Go get him.
Yeah, dude.
That's that one he's going to the gym.
I saw my playlist.
This is Irohka.
It's a two-lea-everybody right now.
He's gonna be leaving their workout partner a message and singing that song. Dude, I gotta, It's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's she was a reality star, it's a little backtrack. Oh, okay, that was a story.
She was a reality star.
She had a bit of a social media following
and she was selling, she was farting in jars,
sealing it, selling the farts
and she made something like half a million dollars
in a month was making tons of money.
Okay, so obviously she must have got proposed by some fan
like one time and then was like, hmm, you know, like this market
here, like this market must be bigger than we realize.
You know what, make fun of her all you want.
She's the smartest like booty pick girl I know of because there's a lot of these people
that sell images and whatever.
So she's not images, they try to make money afterwards and they can't.
She's capitalizing.
She sells the functional booty.
Yes.
And she capitalized. Like, you hear what happened? Yes, she had like a like a mild heart attack or something.
No, no, she has. So what happened? She felt like she was having a heart attack or stroke.
So she was eating, no, I got a chili. I got a theory, by the way. And I just read something that
comes first. Heron protein shakes. Yes. So she was eating foods that were produced more gas,
so that she could fart more. And eggs.
So lots of being-
To meet the demand.
Do you think about the stinkiest
like dangerous supply demand right here?
She's like, pojish.
She's the sulfuric, you know,
like combination, she was just like,
I'm not, I imagine that though, right?
Like you've got such a high demand for it.
Oh, you've got a golden ticket there.
Yeah, you've got all this money you can make within you just can't produce anymore
This booty is a factory. Well, let's back up for a second. Look at the business status the margins on those farce
We're just incredible
Okay, wait a second. How okay?
90% I would have thought the same thing you said a bit of a reality started
She has a bit of a social media phone. She's got to have millions. I don't remember how many
Can you look for a duck? Yeah, she's got to have millions. I don't remember how many people. Can you look for a drug compound? Can you just gotta have millions to be able
to sell 50,000 dollars to the person?
Yeah, no, 500,000.
Five, she's got enough of these thirsty weirdos.
Yeah, what was it's like per jar,
because let's do, I wanted to figure this out,
like she has to have a pretty big following to sell that.
Yeah, what was she selling you to?
Unless she was selling for thousands of jars.
Unless they're like a hundred, 200 bucks.
Well, okay.
But no one's paying for a bar.
I'm gonna guess that it was expensive because if you're the kind of person that buys a
fart online in a jar, you're probably willing to spend.
So I disagree.
I think it's a low price point because I can see myself doing it even as like a prank
sent it to a buddy.
You know what I'm saying?
You buy someone else's fart?
Why don't you just make it?
For 20 bucks?
It's funnier, you know? else's fart, why don't you just make it? For 20 bucks. Cause it's funnier, you know.
It's got her picture on it. And I didn't have to actually go
through the process of catching my fart in that way.
You told Justin to fart a jar for you.
I've been storing them in the back.
You know, so here's what happened to her.
So what this is the story. So she was eating all these
gas producing foods. And then she started getting all the
stomach pain. And she said it started traveling up, gave her
anxiety. She thought she was having heart attack, went to the hospital
and they confirmed that it was just gastro issues.
And I talked to Courtney a bit about like this happens a lot.
People think out of heart attack and it's just gas like all the time.
I got this great side business idea.
Hey babe, here's what you need to feed.
What if we took what we took. We know that you need to feed. Here's what this is. Babe, what if we took what we had to say?
You were bored and stayed at home all the time.
That's a good one.
So we're going to sign this little side hustle.
You're going to make a lot of money.
She's got, where you at with this Andrew Doug?
Come on, give me some numbers.
She's got to be big.
She can't be.
Well, she's got to be now.
She's probably bigger.
Well, I mean, of course she is.
I mean, she's got,
I've got a number of numbers here.
For her TikTok, she has 108,000 followers.
That's not much.
TikTok, that's a decent amount.
No, Instagram, 282,000 followers.
Okay, that's decent.
And then YouTube, she has 375,000 subscribers.
Okay, she's not even the million, okay.
So, okay.
That's impressive to do a half a million in Farts
and what she's selling per jar.
A thousand dollars a jar, right?
Told you, whoa? Told you.
Whoa.
Told you.
Yeah.
Told you.
You know why?
Nobody who's interested in buying a person's fart is looking at the price.
They're weird.
That's a lot of jars.
100 people spent a thousand dollars to freaking.
Did you really do the math real quick?
Yeah.
Yeah, he's your father with the math.
No, he's contemplating the future of the business. Oh, I got
look at her page. Far jars by Stephanie Maddo. Wow. Look at that. 5,000
far. Oh, no, don't damn it. You ruined my what I was going to say, Doug. Do you
get different? That's Andrew. Oh, Andrew.
I wonder. Back up for a second. Back up for a second. I want you guys to come to
the same conclusion I did. She said she went to the hospital, almost got a heart attack for producing real farts.
I can't do this anymore.
Now, what is she selling?
NFTs.
Fart NFTs.
Okay, what do you mean?
What's your theory on that?
It was all a publicity stuff.
She didn't go to the fucking hospital
or maybe she did and she was bullshit
but it was all about like,
I'm sorry, I can't make real farts anymore
but I'm gonna sell you these NFT farts
which she's apparently selling. How are you? So they're gonna say, I can't make real farts anymore, but I'm gonna sell you these NFT farts, which she's apparently selling.
How are you, so?
They're gonna say, I don't understand.
It says, imagine the smell.
You imagine it.
It's just hilarious.
Dude, this bubble is going to just,
bro, they're selling NFT fart jac-
You see the, okay, you guys follow the,
we need to stop for a second and, like, NFT fart jars.
Yeah, I know.
The board ape yacht club
Are you guys following that one? No, so they have
1000 apes maybe Andrew can correct me if I'm wrong. I believe there's a thousand of these apes
They've sold they've made a billion dollars
face right now a billion dollar selling a thousand of these and also all these famous people have it
So it's like and what it's turned into is almost like just
Cloud that I can't your flex like yeah, I can and because the cheapest one was like $260,000
Whoa, yeah Steph Curry got all these big name people that have these board apes and it's now what's smart about them is it gives you access
So you got famous people and wealthy people that are willing to spend this kind of money.
Then what do you do? So what right now I think they can meet up.
Well I imagine that's the future of it. They can't do it. And maybe Andrew, do you know anything
about them? Do you follow them at all? I'm looking at the website right now. There's $10,000.
$10,000? Oh there's $10,000. There's a thousand. They've been a billion dollars though. They've
made a billion dollars. That's insane selling these board apes. So okay, so if we go back to fart girl, whatever her name was, brilliant because what
she's doing, she's literally taking advantage of the stupidity of the whole thing. She's poking
her finger at people and saying, not only did you buy my real farts, which was stupid, pulling her
finger. But now she's, now you're going gonna buy my fake farts and it's NFTs.
How many more hints do we need that this is a huge,
crazy bubble?
Huge bubble, dude.
Huge, huge.
It is fart bubble.
Okay, now certain things like this, okay,
because they're exclusive, I think that.
We're missing the boat here, dude, guys.
I swear to God.
What are we doing trying to provide good fitness information?
Why are we trying to provide valuable,
like informative information?
We need like, we got at least between the three of us nonsense.
Couple billion dollars worth of parts.
Well, this is for you guys.
I mean, this whole metaverse thing is, now what did you think of the VR, right?
So we haven't talked about that.
Oh, you're off-screen.
Yeah, so for Christmas, I got the Oculus.
Now, let me tell you, the reason why I asked for it for Christmas was,
they have a thing with the NBA and they do it probably, I would say once every couple of weeks, I can watch court side a game
through Oculus.
And I'm very interested to see what that experience was like, enough that I wanted to buy it.
So I asked for Christmas Katrina Bada for me.
That was my original intention.
Now, because I have it, I got on there and said,
let's check some of these games out.
Was blown away.
Yeah, that's pretty wild.
I was blown away by how immersive it was
and how I did not expect the graphics to be at that level.
I didn't expect it to feel that real.
I would never considered even getting one,
so you had me like, check it out.
And I was like, wow, this, it's totally the
progression of video games where just like the excitement, like when the Wii came out,
that was so like different because you're like interacting with it. This is on a completely
different level of interaction. The one game that you had me try the scary one, what's
it called? Resident Evil. Oh, I love that game. That's a good time I mean that's how real this was was I got that that was one of the first games I bought it's like this is true right 10 o'clock at night
I think I'm going through you don't like scary movies. I put it I put them on and it opens up and I just fuck this
I'm not playing this right now like I literally wouldn't play it like that's how fucking real it fell
I was scared dude. I scared myself up It was dark and like, this feels way too real.
I don't know what to expect.
I need to wait till like one of my friends is here to test.
You imagine the prank you could play on Adam
if he's playing that doesn't know you're gonna do.
And then just grab his, grab his,
yeah, just tickle his side case.
I mean, I just didn't know that I didn't know
that they were at that level yet.
Like Justin, you bring up the Wii.
Like that kind of expected something we like, but you have goggles on. So maybe it's just, Justin, you bring up the Wii. Like, I kind of expected something Wii-like,
but you have goggles on.
So maybe it's just, I just felt like it was a...
Locky kind of character.
Yeah, I thought it was gonna feel more like,
I don't know, kind of 3D with...
No, you're in it.
Yeah.
And you move your hands.
Okay, so there's a whole...
You can see your hands.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, just look at your hands, was it true?
Okay, so there's this well-known experiment.
I don't remember the name of it.
Maybe you guys have seen videos on it
where they take a...
The divider between the hands.
Yeah, so they'll have a hand.
You put one hand out and there's a rubber hand
that comes out and there's a mirror reflecting your other hand
and they tickle your, or they touch your real hand
and it looks like it's touching your fake hand,
the rubber hand.
Without realizing your brain assumes that the rubber hand, without realizing your brain assumes
that the rubber hand is yours. Then what they do is they keep doing
this and you're like, oh wow, this is so weird. You feel it.
It feels like you're touching my whatever. And then they what they do
is they they stab it with a knife and scare you and people always
jump and freak out like they felt like they were getting stabbed.
There's another one where people where they also use that for
therapy too, right?
For phantom limbs syndrome.
For phantom limbs syndrome.
Yeah, they have those, the haptic metaverse gloves now.
Well, so here, hear me out,
because these are old studies that we've done for a long time.
There's another one where people put on glasses
where they're looking through an image
and it's a doll, a doll's lower body,
and it looks like it's their lower body,
and they do the same thing.
They tickle the leg, but they tickle the real leg.
So they feel like they become the doll
and the people talk about how strange it is
and how the brain makes them feel like their legs are small
or whatever.
So when you are in the Oculus and you put your hands out
and you see the fake hands or whatever, without,
you can't even stop it.
Your brain starts to connect and make you feel like
those are your real hands.
I don't know.
I mean, yeah, when you play that Resident Evil, right? you kind of turn it over and you're kind of going like,
it's weird.
That can't help but make me think about like voodoo dolls.
Yeah, like some weird, like you're sort of manifesting all these ideas of that's gonna affect me
just because you believe it.
So weird.
So I don't think the the court side stuff's gonna take off because and here's why maybe you guys are,
you've been to more games than I have. I've only been to zero. So here's why I think it would be, here's why I think it going to take off because and here's why maybe you guys are you've been to more games than I have I've only been to zero so here's why it would be here's why I think it would take off I feel like the experience of watching the game live is more about the
that your live because you can't watch the game as well as when you're watching on TV right I mean yeah okay so there's there's two sides of that right so I mean on that way with a lot of sports, I actually like watching on TV.
You get to comment.
You get to comment.
You get to commentating, you get to replay,
you get to zooming into the camera.
Like, I mean, you have sea fights, dude.
I have special UFC fights.
I hate UFC fights.
Now, okay, I went to, I saw Chuck Lidell beat up Jeremy Horn,
which was one of the, I've been to a lot of UFC fights.
That was one of my favorite.
And I actually had pretty bad seats.
I set up in the second level.
But that was so amazing because it was such an epic fight.
And everybody was on their feet the whole time.
I watched a Lakers and Kings Game one time.
And I was in the very last seats in the rafters.
And that was amazing because the energy in there.
But unless you're in like some like epic game like that
where you can feel the energy in the place,
to me, it's like it's better to experience it. Unless you're sitting like court side where you're like right there on or
everything's visible. You have to have everything visible though otherwise like and that's what I
mentioned because like the cage itself like you get certain angles I had I missed a lot of things
just because of where I was sitting. But here's the thing though and then what I don't know yet
because I signed up for and I missed actually, because we were busy or something,
but I signed up for a game, and I'll tend one.
I don't know how much it costs yet.
It didn't tell me, just said,
I have to do this thing where it's like a lottery
or something for me to even get accepted
to potentially purchase.
Where it's gonna be cool is if it gives people access
that would never have access to that.
I mean, courtside seats, dude.
I mean, I feel like it's not-
I mean, I finally got to do that for the like first time
in my life way late in my life.
A lot of people never experienced that
because it's like four or five grand a ticket.
That's what I mean.
I feel like you're gonna do it once
and then you'd be like, that was cool, but I'm not gonna do it.
Well, maybe for someone like me who could go down there
and do that, but if you could never experience that,
imagine how cool that is for somebody
who maybe it only costs 50 bucks.
Like, I don't know how much it costs,
but if it's reasonable and now you have people that would never be able
to afford that experience that get something close to it.
Now of course, it's not as good.
Do you think that these companies may actually end up
like paying some of the players
and incentivizing them to interact with it,
like say in between break?
No.
The reason why is I don't,
I mean, they're the opposite, right?
Like, they'll throw people out interacting with players. Like, I mean, although there's,
there's relationships like people like Drake and stuff that will be
talking, hugging players, high-fiving, they're cool like that, right? But
for the most part, they don't let the, they don't want the, the, the people
affecting the game. The game, people are too serious about sports. And if
you have people fucking around and talking and interacting, you're
going to, you're going to mess it up. Now, the video game stuff was
interesting.
I could see how that would be really fun.
I don't know how long it would be fun for,
if it's a novelty thing as well.
Hardcore gamers so far haven't adopted these things,
like with their PCs and whatever.
But who knows, I mean, the next level
is obviously gonna be hologram shit.
So the thing that I did not see happen,
so Katrina and I, we almost bought a treadmill
that was gonna be our gift to ourselves, right,
for lame gift, I know for a lot of people.
But that was gonna be our gift for ourselves for Christmas.
And I told her to hold out, wait, let's wait till afterwards
and let me see what I can work out,
maybe I can find a deal instead of going paying full price.
Well, now I'm not going to because the boxing,
I am like fucking drenched in sweat. If I do three fights, which is
there are only three rounds each, which is basically nine rounds of boxing, but it is
so real that I mean, I'm sore right now. My shoulders are sore, my core is sore because
you were throwing like real punches while you're doing this. And it's so, uh, just make
sure there's no one around you. Well, yeah, you know, you got to, you have a, the thing
does a boundary or you didn't do it because I just gave it to you. I saw the boundary you set that boundary
Oh, so you can set it a tight circle. You can do a big open circle and when you step around by and when you step
Well, yeah, no, it's and that's actually that's been something that's happened before where Max comes running up
And I'm in the middle of it and I've knocked him upside the head
I know and I told get you know, I'm like you got to tell me if he's coming around me when I'm doing that. So, and you've seen all kinds of viral.
Some guy faking it.
Well, luckily I wasn't boxing.
Like, I'm really careful,
because I'm throwing real punches when I'm boxing.
Where I kind of hit him like,
when I was playing like a game where I was just moving my hands
and I didn't know he was near me.
But when I box, like, yeah, no,
I go upstairs by myself in this room,
and I get, but I love is that it's so engaging and fun.
And I'm like, it's drum drenched in sweat.
So I get like this great little cardio workout.
And I took a train, I would way rather do that
than go sit on a treadmill or walk on a treadmill
or ride a bike.
So, well, yeah.
And I remember a long time ago,
they had a Kickstarter for that Omni treadmill thing.
Where it's just this dish that,
now, you can run and have, I had little grooves in it
and so you could actually run and like turn to the side and run and it felt like you're just
running player one hit it out the park after now my I thought that was so much further in the future
for us than then like soon but now after experiencing it myself and knowing that those those
things exist and they're going to be probably hitting the market for the average person soon.
That should, the player one is like right here.
It is, and again, it's not gonna be for everybody.
And I know that I'll be somebody who probably dips in it,
it has fun with it, like I didn't play it the last two nights,
or whatever, so I'm not like,
I haven't done anything longer than maybe an hour on it at one time.
I know Andrew told me, we were talking about it,
because you own it, right?
He said he had a stop because he was, he caught himself playing for a few hours and he said he felt
the back of his brain felt like he was throbbing you said right? Yeah, so he said as like the back of
his brain was like throbbing and so he's like he hung it up that guy. I don't want to get that
checked out but I don't know if that's the all right. That sounds like something. You know what though?
Might be gas. What felt really weird is I only tested it for five minutes when I took it off,
the real world felt weird. My brain had already adapted to
the to that virtual world. Yeah. To the point when I took it off, I had to to adjust to the real world
for a second. Now do you predict and then we're going to see some unintended consequences?
Hold on a minute. Oh, you think so. Oh, yeah. I mean, 100%. Just like you will with anything that's
mass adopted that we didn't evolve using. I don't know what those unintended consequences,
I mean, I could guess, but I think it's gonna be
there's some equilibrium things in the future.
I mean, you and I both felt like we were fine afterwards,
but then again, we-
But the time length, I think, might make a difference.
I mean, you gotta remember,
this is getting in the hands of kids
who will mock out on this thing for nine hours straight.
And so-
That's the bad one.
I don't know what that looks like.
Hey, speaking of tech, did you guys see that Sony is releasing
an electric car?
What?
Sony, electric car and a SUV concert of the PlayStation.
Yeah, so the electric car market,
you're getting all these tech companies
are entering the market, right?
Apple is talking about it, Sony,
who else was saying that they were gonna do it?
Obviously, have Tesla.
We have all the major car manufacturers.
And all the major car manufacturers.
What, this is interesting.
Like the car market hasn't been,
you know, long the car market has been
like the same damn companies for sale.
Did you know that for nine years straight
that GM has been the number one car sold in the US?
90 years straight.
It was just disrupted this year.
Wow, who beat it?
Toyota.
Oh wow. Toyota. First time in 90 years that it out was just disrupted this year. Wow, who beat it Toyota? Oh wow
Toyota first time in 90 years that it it outsold outsold outsold I wasn't for the only one that didn't have to take any money, you know from oh
The bailouts happen. That's a good. That's a good point. Yeah
It's a GM definitely to go. Yeah, but and they had a big comeback this last year, too
It's it's really getting weird and then BMW unveiled a car that changes color with the touch
of a button.
What?
What?
Yes.
Maybe Doug can find it.
So it's like it's an LED screen or something?
No, it's the paint.
No, it's the paint.
Yes, it changed the paint guy.
I've seen communion paint, but it's because of the way the sun reflects.
No, he's talking about it it has to be LED, Sal,
it can't be real paint.
Same people fucking also spray paints itself.
No, it's not the same kind of paint, but it's paint.
I would, it's got to be some sort of a LED screen.
Maybe Doug can find this, because it looked very,
very, it was very interesting,
the way that it changed.
Well, I mean, does that make sense?
So it would be like a big monitor.
It's just that the outside is like you have video.
I don't know. I got a link for it right here, Doug.
If you haven't found it yet, and I'll send it over to you.
And you can check this out.
I can blow my mind because it, yeah.
But it literally went from white to black.
And it changed, it just changed.
And it's not like a bunch of screens surrounding the car.
It's like Wally. It looks like a normal car.
Blue is the new red.
It was very interesting.
So now think about that, right?
You have a car that has five colors that you could change.
Well, what car is it that has the big solar panel
on the top of the car?
Is it a solar panel?
Yeah, it looks like a,
I know there's a car that's been made
that has a solar panel on top.
And it looks like just normal glass or,
I'm assuming.
Doug, can you put a display?
It's a fairly very temperature sensitive.
Watch this, watch.
Oh, it's temperature sensitive.
Watch.
And it, oh, it's like the mood ring stuff.
You know, like, we're gonna be here.
Yeah, but look how much it changes.
So do you see that?
So do they heat?
That's what it is.
It's got a heat up.
The heat is very serious.
Look at it, black to white.
Did you see that?
And that's like the worst of black.
I don't see black. In the beginning, now you see the paint's going all the way is very good. Look at black to white. Did you see that? And that's like the worst of black. I don't see black.
In the beginning, it should now,
now you see the paints going all the way through the car.
Isn't that wild?
Just to show how easily it changes and conflictuate.
Yeah, it's gotta be like the mood rings, right?
Were they, were they changed the color?
I think it's just kinda
technology than the mood ring from the 1960s.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm sure it's dim from that.
Yeah, it's, it's, it's,
that's what it all started.
It got better.
What's next, the pet rock car?
Yeah, let's go off of 60s tech or whatever.
Yeah, dude, it's really interesting what we're going to see you this next decade, I think.
Interesting.
A lot of stuff.
So I wanted to do something real quick on the show.
I wanted to clarify a few things that we've said in past episodes, because there's been
a little bit of confusion, I'd say. One of them has to do with a recent episode
where we said, don't try to burn more calories manually
as a strategy to lose weight, okay?
A lot of people took that as a St. Cardio's bad,
and that's not a good thing.
Here's the reality, studies will show this
that without dietary changes,
just trying to burn calories,
this doesn't work very effectively at all.
And then number two, the adaptation stuff
that we were talking about,
cardiovascular activity over time by itself
as the sole primary form of exercise
along with a caloric restriction,
results in a slower metabolism.
This is proven time and time again.
In studies, this is why we said resistance training
is a better option because it speeds up the metabolism up.
That is not saying that cardio is not healthy.
There are health benefits regardless of those adaptations.
And it doesn't mean you shouldn't do that kind of stuff.
We never not say that.
I know.
I just want to clarify, this is so annoying to me because I feel like we have to cover this
everywhere.
It's the knee jerk people.
I was just talking about how I'm doing cardio.
I'm boxing for cardio right now.
I felt like no one's anti cardio. It's just that so how I'm doing cardio. I'm boxing for cardio right now. It's not like no one's anti cardio.
It's just that so many people use it incorrectly.
They apply it with the idea that it is a good way
to get fat loss.
It is not, it's not a good strategy.
It's a terrible strategy.
And the people that want to come on here
and argue all the fucking time
with all the people that are addicted to cardio,
fuck outta here with that.
You know, saying that, that's why I'm talking about this.
That's not a question about this.
Well, no, we talk about this so much
and I'm passionate about it because I believe we all would agree
that this was like one of the biggest mistakes
that clients would make.
Is they would go to lose weight,
they would go from the holidays,
cause it's perfect time to have this conversation.
They would go from these holidays, eat over-consuming,
eating shitty food, being lazy, lazy watching TV sit by the fire
Now it's New Year's resolution. I need to lose 30 pounds. What's the first thing they do reduce their calories and get on a treadmill?
That's it fucking terrible half bad. That's a bad strategy and the studies show that a good chunk and some studies show half the weight loss
This muscle that's that's because your body is adapting to this new
Stimulus and making you more efficient at that particular.
Much better strategy.
And at the end of this strategy,
cardio can definitely come in and play a nice role.
Plus, and it's also healthy.
So that we're not saying don't do it
because it's unhealthy, it's, it makes-
In general, it's healthy.
You know, like activity, like making sure
that you have enough activity throughout the day
is the main thing.
Listen, if you're happy with your body composition,
okay, if you're happy with your body composition,
if you're happy where it's at currently,
hell yes, do cardio.
Enjoy it, do it, it's good for you.
But if you're somebody who's trying
to change body composition and your method of doing so
is cardio, it's stupid, it's terrible.
I'm gonna continue to say that on this podcast
because we've trained enough people
that that is one of the first mistakes that everybody makes
when they get back towards getting an effect.
There you go.
And the second thing I wanted to clarify
was on the episode about the eight worst people
to take advice from.
And the first category was doctors.
It was a couple of people that DM me,
doctors are, you know, this,
to clarify, doctors are amazing at their field,
at their specific field.
So you talk to a hormone doctor, they're incredible.
You talk to a doctor that deals with the brain, they're incredible in that particular category.
Now there are medical professionals that are professionals in diet nutrition.
They know a lot about diet nutrition.
But generally speaking, doctors who are experts in other fields know very little about nutrition,
but the danger is that we assume that they know a lot because they of the appeal to authority because their authorities
We assume that they must know what they're talking about and also
dietary changes to be successful
Require consistent coaching along the way. So it's not just here. Do this. It works
It's do you get that coaching and doctors just don't do that, that's not what they're supposed to do.
So, there's a second thing.
Well, I mean, and again, we did clarify that in that episode.
It's just people like conveniently see the title
or see us list things out and then they don't hear
it all the way through.
Well, listen, I mean, the audience that's been listening
for a long time knows that about us.
We've already covered this a thousand different ways.
And really what ends up happening is we title things
that are controversial so we can get more looks,
more views, and then we can explain what we're talking about
to benefit us on YouTube.
That's the fact, right?
So we say things that we, like that is gonna spark people
to listen and get.
That's true, but we say it in a way that you're gonna get
to attention.
But what ends up happening when you do that,
you get so many new, thousands of new people
that are listening to us for the first time.
And then we listen to all they hear is that one sound by it. And then they assume a lot and they get on there.
Totally.
Keyboard, keyboard, keyboard warriors and start firing away a bunch of stupid stuff.
Now one more thing. We had talked about Caldera. It's one of our sponsors a while ago and talked about the serum and the moisturizer.
And we said, put the moisturizer on before the serum, it's the other way around.
Serum before moisturizer.
I had like 10, what are they called?
Aceticians?
DM me?
I was like, no, no, oil and then moisturize, not the other way around.
Now what is actually Caldera say on the website, Doug?
They say something, they say like a morning and a night routine and they have it.
Yes.
Right.
So the morning you used to clean slate, which is the cleanser.
Yeah, which is.
And you follow that up with the base layer,
which is the cream.
In the evening you used to clean slate,
the cleaner, the cleanser,
and then you follow it up with the serum.
So not at the same time.
Not at the same time.
However, if you go to cosmopolitan.
Well, they got the best of the best of them.
Yeah.
Then with the two. They say start with your cleanser and they have a big list. However, if you go to cosmopolitan, well, they got the best of us to material. Yeah.
They say, start with your cleanser and they have a big list.
They have eight things you can do in the,
do people order, do all eight of them.
So it's cleanser toner, serums,
eye cream, spot treatments, moisturizer, face oil,
sunscreen, so if we break it down for caldera,
exfoliator, it'll be cleanser, serum, moisturizer.
Wow, look at that.
That all that stuff they recommend to put on your face.
Why is beauty so complicated?
It's a very powerful market.
It's a lot of work to stay beautiful.
Hey, hold on a second.
Hold on, you know what I'm gonna compare to that?
Actually, no.
Like the supplement market for,
yes, for free.
Is that one to build a capsule?
Tattoo to all these things.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's the same thing.
Here's your morning supplements. Here's your pre-workout, intro workout, post workout and then take patchy to all these things. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's the same thing. Here's your morning supplements.
Here's your pre-workout, intro workout, post workout,
and then take this before you go to bed.
You got all these different.
So that's why I could never talk crap to somebody
who uses all this stuff.
Because if they know me, they'll be like,
they're like, I mud mask, I serum, I exfoliate.
The person who did correct me, it did make sense
because they're saying that the oil opens up the pores
and you don't want to walk around and leave it like that. So you don't do this. Oh, you mean the cleans oil opens up the pores and you don't want to walk around and leave it like that.
So you don't do this.
Oh, you mean the cleanser opens up the pores?
No, no, no, because they say serum first
and then the moisturizer, right?
I think it's to fill in to make sure the pores have oil,
to fill in, and then the moisturizer on top.
Seals it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that's what it is.
Keeping it open is what I'm saying.
It doesn't seal it, so the moisturizer is supposed to seal.
Is that what's going on? I think so.
Yeah.
Wait until my foot feels like you're the prettiest face.
So you should be all the beauty.
Well, thank you for that.
Although yours is now, look at that, dude.
But you've been using it the longest.
I have.
It's shiny.
You know what I mean?
It's glowing.
Yeah, it looks very good.
Are you pregnant?
Hey, you guys see the stats on Joe Rogan?
What's going on?
Do you see all the hubbub that's going on?
Right now.
About his downloads? He gets 11 million, I gotta bring this up 11 million per episode
episode makes me feel like a punk. I just shared our four million downloads in a month a month
Yeah, it gets it gets 11 per episode
Yeah, episode can can can can someone pull that up. There was an actual like
Yeah, I want to yeah, cuz I saw the graph versus like mainstream media and like all the like ABC CBS MSNBC Fox
All that stuff like and it was it just dwarfed all of them combined right?
He's so much bigger than all of them. Maybe Doug can find which is funny because they're they're coming after him right now
Which I think is really balsy. Yeah, they're going after me wait. They're going after him because
I think is really balsy. Yeah, they're going after him.
It doesn't have any weight.
They're going after him because he does a lot
of the counter narrative stuff, lately, especially around
COVID, which by the way, pay attention.
The media and the politicians are now doing a 180.
They're reversing some of the stuff they said.
Did you know the CDC now says, go back to work,
even if you test positive so long as you don't have symptoms.
Yeah.
And they also say, There five days in the pandemic.
Yeah, maybe, maybe we can double check just to make sure this is correct.
They also said that five, five day quarantine no longer 10 day.
People representatives have said cloth masks are a total waste.
Sorry, we're not going to control even seeing an ice up with something out there
about cloth masks. You're not being a fake dude.
But that says five to seven million.
No, that's million.
There was an actual picture chart that showed,
you know, what the downloads were.
But anyway, he dwarfs mainstream media
with the amount of views, completely dwarfs mainstream media.
And they're going after him.
They don't like him because he doesn't really bow to,
no, okay, bad strategy, smart strategy.
What do you think?
To go after him from the mainstream media,
well, I mean, I think to maintain relevancy,
they're gonna have to come out.
Yeah, the more I think about it,
I was sitting here talking, I'm thinking,
you know what, it's just like the media going after Trump.
Trump has such a large pool of people
paying attention to him
that going after him makes headlines.
So going after Joe Rogan because of his pool
and how big he is, is probably,
first thing that I was-
First thing that I was gonna vilify, am I guarantee it?
Because he's getting too much attention.
Look at this.
So this is according to Nielsen and Spotify.
So this is viewers per show, 11 million for Rogan.
The next closest is Tucker Carlson at 3 million.
Okay, that's how much bigger he is in the next guy.
Which is another real controversial show.
Look at CNN, go to the bottom, CNN Prime Time, under 1 million.
Wow. I feel like we could hang with some of these big name ones right here.
Dude, he's so big, they can't touch him, going after him, I think is a losing strategy.
Just shows you how much media is changing, right?
Totally. There's a major shift there.
Major, major shift, it's really crazy Totally. There's a major shift there.
Major major shift, it's really crazy and it's a predictor of kind of future things to
come.
These are the people that are going to be controlling.
I don't want to say controlling, but the gatekeepers to the narrative.
They have the lines.
I'd love to see the moderate sort of views be propelled past all these extremist ideas.
And speaking of the narrative, the other study came out showing that weight loss
is really helps with the potential severe symptoms
of COVID.
There was a study that showed that severely obese people
who had gastric bypass, not even the healthiest
way to lose weight.
So gastric bypass, 60% reduction in severe COVID symptoms
or potential of all these.
So they're gonna be put,
they're gonna be pushing the weight loss, I think now,
as a big thing or fitness and health finally.
Welcome to our world.
Oh no.
Did you guys know that Joe's actually a sponsor
to partner it up with Butcherbox too?
You know that, we share a couple of sponsorships
and he's been with them for a long time.
Dude, I did the slow cooker pork butt in the other day.
Unbelievable. I know you guys do it all the time. No, in the other day. Unbelievable.
I know you guys do it all the time.
Yeah, Doug does that all the time.
Yeah, Doug does that one all the time.
I've done it, but Courtney's the one that does that.
Okay, so we did it.
So we do it, I don't know all of the steps,
but I know that Jessica cut it in a few pieces, it's big, right?
You get this big old pork butt, which is not the butt.
By the way, that's the shoulder.
No, it's the shoulder, yeah.
Yeah, I don't know what a pork butt.
That's such bad PR.
Let's name the shoulder of the butt. That doesn't make any sense. Yeah, they call it a pork butt. That's such bad PR. Let's name the shoulder of the butt.
Doesn't make any sense.
Yeah, they call it that.
I have no idea why.
Nobody has the history on that?
No, I'll look it up.
It's good with it, duh.
Yeah.
So anyway, we cut it up into just a few big chunks.
We really shunned it and put it in tacos.
Well, what we did is we seared it in the cast iron.
So it was seared on all sides.
And then we threw it in there with a little bit of,
I think bone broth and olive oil.
We insulted it the whole thing.
Oh man, it fell off. Literally, we picked it up and there was a bone in there. It fell bit of, I think bone broth and olive oil, we insulted it the whole thing. Oh man, it fell off, literally we picked it up
and there was a bone in there, it fell right off.
And it was so good, we made tacos.
That sounds like a great idea.
Really good.
Super, super delicious.
That I haven't done, that would do that.
That actually sounds like a real...
Yeah, Corey makes those for us all the time.
It's really, really good.
Really, really good stuff.
Adam, you mentioned a documentary a while ago
that I finally watched, the alpinist.
Oh yeah.
Finally.
Have you guys seen this?
No, I cut like a little bit and it just was like,
I mean, my hair stands straight up
when watching this guy cry.
You're gonna watch whole faces.
I was like, holy shit.
Dude, I didn't get that.
Why do people like this exist?
I mean, it's that whole frontal,
yeah, I think they need a dread,
they don't produce adrenaline and have to.
How for something like that?
So, do you remember,
what was the guy's name, the guy who did free solo?
Alex, Alex, Moze, Alex.
Alex, Huddled, Huddled.
Something like that, right?
And it was crazy to watch him climb,
El Capitan or whatever the face, nothing, right?
Something like nobody can do.
That's how his reaction was like, okay,
that's how I found out about this was Alex
was the one who talked about him being this up and coming.
Kig his kids only like 25.
Mark something.
Yeah, he was only like 25 years old.
This guy, okay, free soloed, a fricking mountain,
the snowy icy mountain.
Yeah.
And he not only is climbing the mountain,
he's climbing the ice, so no ropes, ice. So he's no ropes, nothing.
So he's going up.
The maniac.
He's climbing it and then changing it.
There's a big ice waterfall.
That's how I got to get up.
Then he pulls out gear, changes his shoes
while he's on the freaking mountain
and then climbs the freaking ice and switches off.
Like what he did makes like rock climbing.
Yeah, that's for, you know, basic people.
Oh, I'm gonna do it on ice.
I couldn't believe it.
There was one that he had to climb.
I can't remember what it was.
It was like one of the biggest peaks, I don't remember where.
Snow, ice, whatever.
He was waiting for a break in the weather.
He goes up, almost makes it to the top, gets hit by a blizzard.
Yeah.
Has to scale down.
He's been on the side of a mountain, barely hanging on.
No ropes or anything like that.
And you get hit on the blizzard.
This is me, exciting. He did. And you're on like one of the like craziest mountains that. And you get hit on the fizz. It's just me, exciting dude.
And you're on like one of the craziest mountains
that no one else could climb on like a regular day.
Oh my God dude.
Oh dude, that's, that's not, no I've been watching
my favorite dude soap opera.
What?
Yeah, yeah, a cober guy.
Oh, it literally is a soap opera, you guys.
Just talking about how, it's so cheesy.
How bad it is, but then how much I keep coming back.
If it wasn't so much.
It's so nostalgic for Karate Kid, I wouldn't watch it,
but because I grew up with Karate Kid.
Dude, I love the throwback.
Oh, I guess this is one episode where,
so basically Danny and Johnny,
they both have to train each other's methods.
It is so funny.
Is it really?
Yes, everything is so cheesy and the acting is, you know, it is what it is.
It's not very great, but you just get into it because you love these characters and then
they still have all the cheesy fighting, you know, moves that like, you know, after watching
the UFC and then watching Karate Kid moves, you're just like, face palm. Yeah. Like it's awful. I mean, like Doug said, I think you're so true.
I think Johnny makes that show, right? It's because all the political,
all the politically incorrect stuff that he says. Like I feel they did a really good
job of doing that, especially in this climate right now where everybody's so
team, everyone's going woke in the other direction and trying to be so PC.
It's like, let's throw this character in there that is the complete opposite of that,
and I think they do a good job of making a light of it
and having fun with it, and so that's enjoyable to me.
I think the way it's written is character.
You make sense, Danny, up to get his ass kicked,
bro, these guys playing hockey.
Yeah, I love this.
It's funny, I hated them in the original Crotic,
he was a dick, growing up and watching it.
I was a big Johnny fan.
Oh my God, of course he worked. Yeah, oh, you what you when I watched it you guys watch that actually enjoyed was the
The new Marvel on the Shanghai Shanghai. Oh, shing chi. Yeah, good, huh? Yeah, it was good. Yeah very
Yeah, did you know either no? I was the one that brought it up. Yeah, yeah, I just finally watched it what's funny too?
Yeah, it was good all around but um
Yeah, I just finally watched it. What's the, too?
Yeah, it was good all around, but what is that?
Like all the different worlds and characters and animals.
Like what is like, like, like, Narnie.
It's like fantasy.
Yeah, like fantasy.
It was very fantasy.
It was not what I expected from like a traditional
kind of Marvel movie, but it was good.
It was, and he's a cool superhero.
He's a fun one.
Yeah, if you read about him in the comic books,
he's a pretty cool superhero.
Yeah, I didn't even know about all these different
characters.
It's such a big, expansive universe.
You know, that's why, you know,
part of the theory on why Disney,
I mean, it's so brilliant on Disney
to buy the rights to Marvel and Star Wars
and then to build all these.
It's almost endless content.
Oh, it is.
And then so smart because there's cult-like falling
for both.
Marvel and Star Wars.
You're talking about millions of people.
And that in itself will solidify them as one of the number one
streaming services.
And then they remember when they announced last year,
they're gonna do, there's a ton that are coming down here.
How would you love to see DC's box office numbers
versus Marvel?
That's close, right?
DC, nowhere. However, right? DC nowhere, like, yeah.
However, on an individual basis,
DC, Batman is like,
DC's got the,
Well, Batman's awesome.
I think that was their only, like, gold mine.
What else do they do good?
I'm gonna do even good, I'll be careful.
Well, the last thing that they did
that was just cinematically just excellent was the Joker.
That was,
and I'll tell you what,
you know what,
and here's a thing, those were all good.
And here's a thing that's,
that's Batman's too, I feel like that's all.
It is, yeah, you know what I'm saying?
It is, but it's DC, right?
But what they still haven't fully captured,
and I hope they do,
if you read the comic books, the DC comic books,
the Joker is beyond maniacal and evil.
He's like a really Satan, I mean,
that's what the model is.
Terrible, terrible person.
Like if they really capture that in a movie,
it's gonna be a horror movie.
Like it's gonna be like science of lambs.
That's the Joker in the comic books.
And they kind of,
I don't you feel like they kind of set the table
for that in that last one where he just is tortured inside
and kind of starts to make sense
why he's this kind of person.
Yes, yes.
But that's it though.
I mean, I would consider that Batman still.
Even though it's Joker, it's within the Batman story.
Is there any other DC ones? Like the Watchman sucked like watchman was good? Oh, I thought it sucked
What I thought was pretty good. Did you like it? I wanted to like it. No. Yeah, I wanted to like it too
I thought it sucked out. No, no
It's like a lot of that stuff though
Following Doug will step in
Those of you on YouTube if you like watch me
No, it's it's it got good reviews
And it's got like a cult like following well. Yeah, I mean, I think both DC and Marvel have that cult like falling
So you're always gonna get some people that are fanatic how the spider-man work Sony owns them
But moat but Disney owns Marvel like has that all work out because doesn't Sony own spot
Is it just the spider-man alone?
The strange marriage that they do like how does that work?
I didn't even know Sony was involved in Spider-Man.
Yes. Oh really?
Uh-huh.
Is that true Doug?
It says yeah, 1999 Sony acquired the film rights to the character.
Yeah, but how does that work?
Is that the only thing Sony has the rights to as far as characters?
Is that like a like a I didn't even know that was that for their
interest in making video games initially? Oh, probably. That's a good that's a good theory
Yeah, so you endro over there's waving his finger. He knows is that why is that what it was?
Yeah, oh I see
So Disney has not but then they do the Marvel movies with Spider-Man
So they must pay Sony to use the character's memory
Yeah, so Sony holds the rights to Spider-Man instead of Disney
So that's why they don't appear on Disney plus
Oh, that's interesting. I didn't is that the only one that Sony owes as they have they acquired any other characters like
Venom Venom sucked. I watched it. Yeah, it wasn't good
And made me sad because in the comic books Venom is also terribly evil
This is yeah, and this is one of those I think it just doesn't translate well in film like well
You have to be careful you're giving it to kids. So there's probably a fine dance, right?
I've like okay, how evil we're gonna make it so evil. It's like a rated R movie and kids can't watch
Your office are so cheesy though like you just don't you don't buy into it. No. At all.
No.
All right, so real quick, I gotta say this.
I went and looked up like crazy news.
You guys might hear something ridiculous.
This is a true story.
There was a Chinese couple who could not conceive for years,
went to a fertility doctor and the fertility doctor
was able to figure out why they weren't conceiving.
And this is a true story.
You ready for this?
Oh, okay. They were only doing anal sex.
Jeez.
Shut up.
I swore to God, this is the truth.
And they didn't know.
They didn't know.
They were from China.
They didn't know.
I guess you're not sure it was in North Korea.
No, I swear.
And they were not doing it properly.
The doctor explained what to do.
They went home in a month later.
Come on, send me that article.
You've got to be more to this story, right? It's the story. That's the story
Is this how over there? Okay, listen was it is this the guys idea?
Yeah, no honey. I'm sure it's this one. Oh, it's just so weird. It's not working. I'm sure
I've been doing this wrong the whole time. It's that I don't want to have I don't want to have
Can't it's a ultimate hustle. Let's just make this happy like come on doc like you know you got my back here
Right did you find an article about it back? Yes, I did but this is back in 2018. Yeah, so with the old news
Yeah, right new me yeah, four years dude. She's like you can't have butt baby four years four years
He was he was having butt sex with her,
and she was not figuring this out, dude.
The woman admitted that sex was unusually painful.
Ha ha ha ha.
Wow.
Wow, you're like, that's how it always starts.
Wow.
I mean, how naive do you have to be, like sexually...
Why are you pretty damn naive?
They're young.
They're okay, how young were they?
They're in the 20s, dude. 26 and 24. They're young. They okay, how young were they?
They're in the 20s, dude.
26 and 24.
Well, I mean, let's shelter your kids.
This isn't so outside the scope
because you know, there's still that whole thing of like,
I'm still a virgin.
Yeah, but you know you don't get pregnant.
Yeah, but I mean,
but you're doing that intentionally, right?
Like, and so I remember girls when we were in school
that were, you know, we're virgins,
but then they had anal sex,
right?
We knew who they were.
They were very popular.
They were very popular.
They were.
They were.
Who was it that brought up that way that I guess there's these Mormon kids are having sex?
So apparently it's against the rules for them
to do so they go in and then they hold it.
Yeah, they don't pump.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what it, yeah.
That's what it God, I don't know they call it,
but that's what it's like.
There's actually a term for it.
Yeah, they do long, there is something out,
they do some other stuff too.
They do a bunch, they've found some creative ways.
That's what I'm saying.
If you make, if you make,
you make, you make rules around sex,
kids are gonna find a way to do it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, I was a kid, right? So I was a virgin school, but I was doing all the other stuff. And it's just, when you're a kid and you brought up in a religion like that, where it's called
soaking, Justin.
Yeah, I know.
It's soaking.
Yes, I knew there was a name for it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Hey, babe, you want to soak?
Let's get those super soakers out.
Hey, one of our favorite partners is Organified.
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They make plans for the kids. They make plans for the kids. They make plans for the kids. They make. Yeah. Okay. Hey, baby, what a soak. Let's get those super soakers out.
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Well, here comes the rest of the show
Our first caller is Garrett from North Carolina.
What's up Garrett, how can we help you?
Hey, so I have a question about hydration.
You guys have talked about it a lot
and just the benefits behind it,
but I'm talking specifically during a workout.
I see guys in the gym have those full gallon jugs
or have those Amazon bot ones, the giant lids,
and they're chugging them between sets.
And I personally only go to the fountain
maybe two, three times during a workout,
and it's not even me feeling like I need water.
It's just, I'll have a second or two,
I should go take a quick drink and come back.
And so I didn't know if there was something
during a workout I was missing
with these guys that are chugging this water
or if what the meaning behind that was.
Yeah, no, good question.
So here's an easy test to see if you have enough hydration.
If you're urine is salty,
nah, I'm just kidding.
Don't do that.
No, it's the color.
No, no, no, no, here's a deal.
Hydration makes a huge difference.
You know, some of the first studies
done on adequate hydration and athletic performance
were actually, well, not first studies,
but one of the most popular studies
was done at a University of Florida
where they were giving their athletes sodium infused,
electrolyte infused water with a little bit of sugar,
and they saw this dramatic improvement in performance.
This later on turned into gatorade.
This is where the name gator comes from,
gatorade from University of Florida.
It actually makes a huge difference,
but here's the thing, you gotta make sure
that your electrolyte balance is good as well,
because if you just drink a bunch of water,
and you don't have enough sodium,
sodium is one of the most important electrolytes
for sweating athletes, it's not gonna do a whole lot,
you can actually start to reduce your performance.
So try something like this, Garrett.
If you're working out and you're sweating a lot
and you're drinking, make sure you drink water,
make sure there's some, maybe a little bit of sea salt
in your water or even better element.
T is a company we work with that has an electrolyte powder
that has adequate amounts of sodium.
And had you asked me this question a year ago,
I would have answered it maybe a little bit differently.
The big difference now is I've actually tried
Elemente which actually has a thousand milligrams
of sodium in a packet, and I noticed a big difference.
And I always thought was my, as someone of myself
to be well hydrated.
So, give it a shot.
I would pour one of those packets in, you know,
a nice big bottle of water,
maybe two times the size of a normal bottle of water,
and drink half at the beginning of the workout,
and then drink the rest or in the workout,
and see if you get a better pump and better performance.
So far, the messages I've been getting from people is,
they do see a big difference.
And again, the studies do support that.
Well, I think the benefits,
but aside from the help of it,
if it's right, the keeping the joints lubricated,
I told you before when I was feeling that thing in my quad
that was always popping, and then I started drinking
that made a huge difference, energy level.
So obviously there's health benefits to you
drinking adequate water, but my favorite part about that
was what you're talking about with the pump.
I remember when I started carrying that jug around,
and I made it like a goal, I would
get a half gallon down before I even went into my workout and then I'd end up doing another
quarter to a half gallon during my workout.
I had better pumps from the water than I did from any other Supplement, in-0, to explode
or any subcreative, any other supplement that I've taken.
I got a better pump from just making sure I was hydrated
like that.
So I love that in itself and that played
into better workouts.
Well, yeah, I also, from a performance perspective,
I noticed, well, like what's out
of saying in terms of having electrolytes and that being
a real advantage in terms of performance,
but also, I remember that one study
where they're talking about cooling your core temperature.
And so that has to play a bit of a factor in there as well
in terms of having a cool water
to bring your core temperature down to recover a bit
more effectively.
So that was something that I did notice
if I was constantly hydrating,
whenever I'd had time off the field
and it was nice and cold, it did kind of bring me back.
Now along those lines though, Justin, isn't it recommended
that you do lukewarm or room-tipature water,
not ice cold water?
Better to be absorbed, but there's this perceived,
I guess improvement and performance,
and maybe some of it's anecdotal
when people will drink cold, right?
Especially if you're hot.
That's what I'm careful about.
I'm pretty sure it's anecdotal at this point,
but for me, when I had it just a bit colder than, say,
you know, my internal temperature,
I was able to bring that down a bit
and felt more recovered.
Yeah, Garrett, I would say experiment,
see how you feel.
And you'll probably notice an improvement
in just how you feel and performance-wise.
I would always recommend my clients, you know,
drink water before and after. The longer your workouts are, the hotter you get during a workout,
the more that you sweat. All three of those things mean you're going to need more hydration than
somebody that's not experiencing those things. So if you have a short workout and that's sweating
a ton, it's not really hot. It's not going to make as big of a difference. But if it's a long workout, man
I tell you, you'll notice a profound improvement in your performance by making sure that you're adequately hydrated.
Gotcha. I appreciate it. Yeah, no problem. Garrett. Thanks for calling in.
Absolutely. Yeah, this is this is one that I ignored for a long time. Yeah, like water, let me take a supplement. You know what I mean?
Let me eat more carbs.
And it made such a huge difference
that it's one of those things you look back
and you wanna slap yourself.
Like, why didn't I do this simple thing?
Well, the other thing that I like too
is just most people I would train
didn't get enough water in their day.
So when I had to have somebody,
just like we talk about protein,
like when people start tracking
and paying attention, they realize like, oh shit, I guess I don't drink
that much water.
I don't eat that much protein.
And what I've found is when you're working out
and you're sweating and getting hot,
and you have little rest breaks in between every set,
that's actually one of the best times to be able
to hit your water intake glyph of the day.
And so I found that having a client carry a half gallon
or one of those leader bottles or something
into their workout and setting a goal to chip in a way
at a bulk of that during the workout,
they were more likely to hit their water goals in the day.
And so I think there's huge value just in that alone.
This is one of those pieces of advice
or one of those topics where we were advised as kids
so opposite.
It's ridiculous.
We weren't allowed like water breaks just because of the mental toughness and discipline aspect
that was crazy because, you know, like just going back and kind of revisiting that, I
just noticed like how much better my joints felt to your point about lubricating and just
like retaining the amount of water, if you retain like proper amount of water in your cells, you perform better.
It's a fact.
It's a fact and I was even worse for me.
I remember specifically being told by PE teachers, oh, you have a side stitch or a cramp.
Don't drink water.
It makes it worse.
Like the opposite of what you should do.
Oh, you're getting a side stitch because you drink too much water before running the
mile or whatever. As a kid, I'm like, okay, I should not drink any water while
I run. So ridiculous. Our next caller is Felix from Louisiana. Felix, what's going on,
man? How can we help you? Hey, first off, I wanted to say thank y'all. I really appreciate
the opportunity to ask you all this question. But one of the questions I wanted to ask you is I'm
kind of running through the maps aesthetics right now.
And the program does take a good bit of time.
About 90 minutes, if I do all of the movements
and exercises and sets and so forth.
And I currently am a data for.
And so time is not a lot of it.
So I'm trying to condense the workouts down.
And I was wondering if using supersets is something that is recommended or
or you can do in a
Maps program and I've seen some of the programs and only a few use supersets so they use
Agonist supersets not antagonist and so forth
And so I was just kind of interested to see which I thoughts were to cut down on time, length of the program, or just removing
movements altogether. So it's curious about supersetting exercises in the
programs. I know you don't ideally want to edit programs. So yeah, no, well,
actually, ideally, you do want to modify programs to fit your individual body and
needs. However, it's a good idea to go through the programs first,
the way that they're laid out, and then start to,
because here's a deal, we create programs for the masses.
So it's never going to be as good as an individualized workout.
That being said, you got to figure it out and learn how your body responds,
and don't just change the programming on the fly,
because anytime you change the programming,
you run the programming,
you run the risk of making the program less effective.
Again, that being said, you might be in a situation
where you gotta do that anyway.
And so it's okay sacrificing some of the programming
because it just doesn't work with your schedule.
Hey, kids are more important.
Yeah, so that's okay.
I would say this, you're probably better off
just shortening the rest times overall
rather than doing super sets.
Super setting is more of a program change
than cutting some of the rest period short.
You could also try something like this.
Maps aesthetic is a three full body day workout
and then you have focus sessions.
You could try saving some of the exercises
for the focus sessions.
That's what I would do.
I mean, the focus sessions are only like 20, 30 minutes long.
So what I've done with clients that don't want to miss anything that's in the program
is, hey, take two or three of those exercises on the foundational days, move them over
to your focus days, and then you'll still end up hitting everything you want.
Also, the reason why too, I think Sal's not recommending to superset right now because
that might be an option in another program.
This program actually has that.
So I think it's phase three.
Yeah, it is.
Phase three, you're going to get into a lot of Super Sets and the idea is that you, it's
novel when you get into that so you don't want to be doing it for the entire program, not
that we couldn't.
And then the other thing is also, I don't know if you have any other programs, but there's
other programs that are probably a little more conducive for, you know,
a dad who's got a lot on his play.
Well, let's fall you, man.
Yeah, and I mean, you can, you can build
an incredible physique running Maps Antibolic,
and that's only a three day a week type of a program.
I just, I think we all tend to go towards the one
that, you know, is the body builder inspired
or changing aesthetics and then, you know,
think that you need to train six days a week in the gym,
and it's just not true.
I mean, I run more of an anabolic style routine most of the time.
So there's nothing wrong with you, you know, switching out using the program or modifying
it like we like, Sal said, or putting it on the focus days. I like that a lot.
Yeah, I would just clear of like, yeah, changing the kind of adaptation we're seeking. So
that's like, if we're doing superet, we have that intentionally in phase three.
So you focus on that.
But like in terms of, you know, if it's a time issue,
you know, kind of scaling back
and maybe taking a bit of the volume out,
but sticking with the same type of, you know,
rest and rep range.
Yeah, and now you did mention supersets
with Agonist and antagonist.
So, yeah, so my background
stuff was a personal trainer for six, eight years and then I made a career change. And so I've always
understood I think I've seen y'all talk about compound sets where supersets. My mind always was
supersets could be antagonist or agonist muscles. And so I was thinking with this more so not so much
the same muscle groups but doing you know like a chest like a chest back for the sake of saving time. So that's more of what I was thinking.
And you know, the reason why I chose maps black is because I've always been a performance-driven
person sports athletics. And so I wanted to try something I've never I've never done any type of
bodybuilding program. And so I wanted to try something different. Yeah, good. And that's why I chose
this one. So, yeah.
Well, Felix, okay, with considering your background,
which means you know some stuff,
and what you said about antagonist supersets
or otherwise known as maybe compoundsets,
that's less of a program change
than a superset for the same body part.
Now that strategy at all.
Yeah, so I do that sometimes.
The only challenges your stamina, you know,
might be a bit of an issue, but going from bench press
to barbell row is very different than bench press to fly,
right, for the day.
So you can definitely do that.
You can definitely try that out.
It doesn't change the programming or the adaptation
nearly as much as a super set for the same body part.
And again, I do that sometimes.
We'll all go back chest, back chest, you know,
bicep tricep, bicep tricep, you know, type of deal.
Okay.
And as far as other programs go, just curious
for a dad of four, what would be some of the other ones?
Maybe you would recommend a run after this.
Yeah, yeah.
Maps out of all of them are Maps strong.
I bet you would love Maps strong.
That is a great, that is such an underrated, great program
for building muscle.
With your athletic background too, I think you'll love it.
Okay, okay. I appreciate that.
Do you have access?
By the way, do you have access to MapStrong?
I'll just give it to you.
I just purchased it during New Year.
So, what about Maps at a Balook?
Let me give you something. What do you got?
I do not have Maps.
I do not have Maps in a Balook.
For sure, because Anabolic is another great one.
That's a three day routine.
And being a busy dad myself, I tend to fall back on that one a lot. I think all of us do, to one. I mean, that's a three day routine. And, you know, being a busy dad myself,
I tend to fall back on that one a lot.
I think all of us, dude, to be honest,
I think that's a common program for all of us.
Yeah, I'll send that over to you, all right.
Well, I appreciate that, guys.
Thanks Felix.
All right, thank y'all.
You got it.
I like this question, because this is kind of,
this is, it was neat, because obviously he knew
what he's doing, right?
He's not like completely
Newbie at all
And I think we have the people of this idea that you have to follow the programs to a tee and
You we actually and we don't say it as much
We used to say a lot when we first started that we recommend that you modify you run through it one time as
Close to it as possible and then you start to to modify it for you your body your time all these things and
Really all the suggestions that we said and he said none of them are wrong, right?
You know, it's really just it's playing around with that and seeing what works best for you and you know
Yes, the programs are our best. I think ran if you run it to a T
But let's be odd none of us do that.
I mean, nobody in here pulls out their phone
and runs Maps and Obolic or aesthetic
exactly how it's laid out.
Most of us follow the programming
and then modify it a little bit how it is.
Yeah, I think there's this conflict that people have,
which is I want to do the most effective possible programming
for my goal, but they don't put in their goal their lifestyle, which programming for my goal,
but they don't put in their goal, their lifestyle,
which well, my goal is also,
I gotta be at it here in 60 minutes,
maybe I'm more tired or I have pain in this particular joint,
or here's a muscle group I wanna develop a little bit more.
That's all part of your goal.
So modifying your workouts means optimizing your workout
for all of that.
Not just like what's the best for bodybuilding or what's the best for, you know, body sculpting
or performance. You got to look at all of it and that's okay. There's trade-offs, but
there's nothing wrong with that because like with Felix, you know, he's got, he doesn't
have a lot of time. He's got kids. So that's part of it. So is he going to build less muscle
as a result? Maybe who cares? Like this is obviously important to him. So, is he going to build less muscle as a result? Maybe? Who cares?
This is obviously important to him, so change the workout.
Yeah, it kind of highlights one of those parts of our business that we started to work
on and people don't really understand that we have modifications available to.
If you have different types of pursuits and you want to be able to incorporate those
within our main staple programs, we do have maps, mods and that's something that we are planning on expanding upon as
well.
But yeah, our intention was always to be able to integrate your specific needs and make
it more individualized the best we could.
Our next color is Angela from New York.
Angela, what's going on?
Hi, how are you guys?
Good, we're great.
All right. Thank you so much for having me on. I really appreciate it. Angela from New York. Angela, what's going on? Hi, how are you guys? Good, we're great.
Thank you so much for having me on.
I really appreciate it.
So my question for you guys is,
see if you could possibly explain
the ideal number of exercises per workout.
I just finished the aesthetic, which I loved,
but I was a little surprised at how many
exercises were in each full body, which I get it obviously you're doing
everybody part you're hitting.
But you see so many things online,
focus on the basic exercises get stronger at them
so it's just looking for a little bit of more input on that.
Is this your first program you're antivirus?
Yeah.
Now what did you do before this?
How long were you consistent with your workouts before following Maps aesthetic?
What did those look like? Like, how many days a week were you working out before?
So, I've worked out five or six days a week for probably ten years maybe.
I've worked with a trainer. I've done, you know, fitness competition.
I'm actually certified as a trainer, so I typically just do
on my own programming, but I do, I've done split, I typically do a few full body days a week,
but usually I would say like the cast stuff, the shrugs, things like that, on the smaller
body part, I wasn't always including in my workout.
Okay, now how were your results with aesthetic? Were you pleased with how your body responded and how you felt?
Yeah, absolutely. Okay. Yeah, and I want to ask those questions because sometimes people who follow like maps aesthetic for example
they go for the program with more volume and it's not really the right program for them but being that you worked out
you've been working out for so long, consistently you competed, it sounds like,
you said you're certified, so you know what you're doing,
and it worked for you.
I think that your answer's kind of right there,
because the answer to this question is really hard,
it really depends on who I'm talking to,
and it depends on the performance
and the results that they get.
Maps aesthetic includes three full body workouts
that have a lot of volume,
but that's only three workouts in the week.
The other two workouts are these focus sessions
that last like 20 minutes.
So really, if you look at the total amount of volume,
it's not crazy in comparison to other types of splits.
Now, as far as total exercises in a workout,
again, that really does depend.
You know, I know people say,
oh, don't work out more than 45 minutes or an hour or whatever
That's that's totally not true. It really does depend on the person and you really have to base it off of
How you feel and how it's working for you and if it worked well for you and you got good results
I think you're on the right track. Well, that's part of why the first question
I asked was if you'd ran any other maps programs and a probably a better question is what
Sal said which is asking you what your experience was and
Normally I would tell a client don't start on maps aesthetic. It's one of our highest volume programs
And so we wrote them in the with the idea of people following
Antibolic performance and then aesthetic so you know taking them almost nine months to actually get to that type of volumes
They work up to it. But
Like Sal said, you've been training for your your an exception to the rule war if you are a client of mine
So yeah, we could go into a static first now
I don't think it would have hurt you though to go
Antibolic performance and then aesthetic either. I think that
Still has tremendous value even for an experienced person like you
But you're a case where it would still be okay. Whereas if you were a brand new person, you just started lifting and you jumped
right into aesthetic, I'd be telling you, oh, well, that's a terrible program. That's
too much for someone like you because you haven't been training, but that's not you. So
it's okay. The other thing is, aesthetic can be long workouts. They can take some people
almost 90 minutes to get through it. Nothing is wrong.
We just actually had a question similar to this,
but the issue with them was time.
They just, it's a long time to be in the gym.
And so there's nothing wrong with you taking a few of those.
For example, you've talked about the shrugs and calves,
maybe some of the smaller musk groups.
Nothing wrong with you moving those over to focus days,
which are only 20 minutes long,
and extending the focus days
to more like 45 minutes to an hour, and so you have an even hour workout or so for every
day of the week versus these higher volume, longer workouts Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
and then the other days, focus days are only 20, 30.
Nothing says that you can't take some of the exercises from the foundational days and
move them to focus days.
And you know, here's something to maybe pay attention to.
And you're a perfect person to talk to about this
because you've been training for so long.
So you're likely already in touch
with how your body feels and performs.
I know I'm doing too much in a workout.
If I start to notice that my pump is my ability
to get a pump starts it starts to fade.
And also, if it starts to feel like an endurance workout versus a strength workout. Like if I'm,
you know, two thirds of the way through the workout, and I'm like, oh my god, I have, you know,
four more exercises, and I gotta like mentally get through it, and it's gonna be grueling,
and it's more like I'm, you know, just kind of toughing it out. Then I know this may be a little bit too much.
And the other one is how you feel after the workout.
If I feel like I need to lay down afterwards
or take a long break because I'm wasted,
I probably did too much.
If I feel good after my workout,
like what I aim for is when I'm done,
I feel more energized than I did going into the workout.
Then I know it was enough.
So I give that advice to someone like you because you're better suited to judge those things.
Really hard when somebody's a beginner.
Like you say that to someone who starts and they're like, well, I kind of feel like I'm
grueling, you know, toughing through the workout from the beginning or what do you mean energized.
You know, I'm tired all the way through and who knows.
But for someone like you, I'd say, look for those things.
And if you do notice that, oh man, I don't feel so great,
you know, about two thirds of the way through the workout
or afterwards, I feel like I need to lay down.
Just try this, cut one set off of each exercise.
Start like that.
So you're not cutting exercises, you're just cutting volume
overall and then see how you feel.
You might be surprised, you might find
that cutting the volume might actually get you better.
Well, not to mention, one of the first things that you'll see if you are, if you are doing
too much volume is a plateau.
And again, another reason why Sal probably asked you that, how are your results?
And if you would have responded, oh, they were okay.
Or I didn't really see any strength gains.
If that was your response, then we probably would suggest you probably need to cut back
a little bit.
But if you felt great and you saw great results from it, whether that be body composition or and or changing strength or strength going up, you're probably right where you should be.
Because I, well, like you said, they would take me anywhere from 75 to 90 minutes on the full body, but the focus I'm still doing at least an hour when I'm there.
So I'm probably maybe doing a little bit too much volume there.
But when I ended, so the last set obviously was the Super Sets the last three weeks.
And I didn't go too much later, but I definitely didn't go heavier for those obviously because
I'm super sending them.
So then I kind of felt like, okay, well, my squat's not going up.
My dead looks not going up.
So, you know, should I back off and try and increase,
you know, basically just the volume.
Yeah.
As far as those basic exercises.
That's new information right there, right?
So, okay, now the answer changes a little bit.
So, focus days are only supposed to be 20, 20, 30 minutes tops. So, if you're
spending an hour in the gym and you're doing all those foundational days of, you know, 90
minute workouts, you probably are doing a little too much. And my recommendation would be,
follow the focus days as they're written. And if you're going to add anything to the focus days,
take them from the foundational days. It sounds like to me, you're doing everything the program
saying, plus you're adding more on those focus days. The goal, the idea days. It sounds like to me, you're doing everything the program saying plus you're adding more
on those focused days.
The goal, the idea is this, you want to do
the optimal amount of volume, not the amount of volume
that you can tolerate maximally.
It sounds like you're going to the limit
and going as far as your body will allow you to go.
You're only gonna get results slower as a result of that.
You're not gonna hit your full potential.
And of course, you're probably teetering if not bouncing back and forth between overtraining
and not overtraining.
Considering your background, that's probably your tendency.
I don't know.
You did focus sessions for an hour.
Sounds like you're adding a bunch of stuff.
Try following the program as it's laid out.
Trust the programming and see what happens.
I would bet you that you're probably going to see better results.
Thank you.
That sounds good.
And then last question is, what would you recommend a due next?
That's a good question.
It's probably better.
Yeah, maps strong will be good.
Do you have access to that, by the way?
No.
All right.
We're going to send that to you.
So, and one little add to that, okay?
If based off of how you feel when you finish aesthetic would be the difference if I directed
you towards strong or anabolic.
So I may push you back towards anabolic or even performance, to be honest, because those
programs have a little less volume.
So if at the end of this workout, maybe you give me feedback as a client and you say,
oh Adam, my joints are hurting a little bit or my deadlift and squat have been stuck on a plateau
for a while. I might not go to strong. I actually might pull you back a little bit on the
volume and go towards anabolic or performance. But if you feel great and you love the static,
it's all great results, feeling good from it, no issues, then I would go to strong next.
Okay. Yeah. I mean, I definitely feel good. This morning I just went and did
like five exercises and I went up like 10 pounds on everything. Yeah, that's great. First,
like five to seven reps, not much, but I just wanted to see if I could do a little bit more. So,
I mean, I feel good. My body feels good. I definitely do feel better and more energized when
I complete the workout.
And I know you guys have millions of colors to call
and say, well, I'm not gonna back off.
And that's kind of where I call.
So, but I appreciate that.
Thank you very much.
No problem, Angela.
Awesome.
Yeah, you know, the other thing to use,
when you're like this advanced,
and this, you know, you enjoy working out so much,
you can sometimes fool yourself a little bit.
So you can be like, oh, I went up in 10 pounds on my squat,
but there went up in 10 pounds
from the last couple workouts which over train them.
Overall, they're not up.
They just took a little break, saw themselves go up,
oh, I'm on the right track now.
You know, these are things that really pay attention to
because if you're a fitness fanatic
and I'm speaking from experience, I do this too.
I tend to push my body to what it can handle.
Almost always.
Almost always.
I mean, I would say 90% of the time,
if you're experienced, you're advanced,
or you've been consistently lifting for years,
you probably have a tendency to overdo it.
If you're brand new, never really trained, you're probably afraid to do too much.
So you don't do very much.
And so it's almost always the opposite is true.
But what I love about these live calls is here we are talking to her.
We all give some tips and answers.
And it was literally after we all went round, rob and answering, then we find out the
information that comes out.
Yeah, that all of a sudden you say, then we find out the information comes out. It's basically.
Yeah, then all of a sudden you say, and you're doing hour long focus sessions.
Listen, we wrote those focus sessions to be single joint movements, you know, cables,
bands, I guess.
There's so much recuperative.
Yes, they're not designed to hammer the body.
And if she's telling me she's doing an hour, she's getting after it.
And if there's any, if she's plateauing at all, or there's any issues at all, there it is,
is she's doing 90 minute workouts on foundational days,
and then she's coming back to the gym
and doing another hour,
and I bet the exercise selection
isn't the best time.
That's cool, because you get some of this,
and I've had a lot of clients like this
to get really into it,
and this becomes a bit of an obsession,
and it's fun, and they're getting results,
but honestly, at the end of the day,
what's your goal?
Where do you go from here?
And I always have to reiterate that
because we're at such a high volume right now.
To me, it's always about bringing them back
so that way we can work our way back up
and keep this fluctuating approach.
You know what this reminds me of?
It's like, this is so common, right?
You get a client and you're like,
do you have any areas of pain on your body?
Oh no, I feel good.
But you know, you have to go through
from the head down to the feet, step by step,
to get the real answer.
Your neck doesn't hurt.
What about your shoulder?
Oh yeah, my elbow bothered.
Oh yeah, yeah, my neck doesn't hurt.
You've got nothing to ask a lot of questions.
Right, because I literally asked her
what her workouts were like.
And she told us, what I failed to do
was to go through each piece
and ask her more specifically.
Yeah.
Because then you start to get the real answers.
Right.
Thankfully, she gave us a little bit more information
at the end, which allowed us to change the answer.
And to be honest, now that we have all that information,
if she was my client and she put all her trust in me
to allow her to guide her, I would probably actually make her go to Annabelle.
That's what I mean.
For not only for, it's probably discipline of us.
Yes, probably better for a body, but also so I can show her.
Like, watch this.
We're only gonna train three days a week on your off day.
You're gonna do these little rubber band,
easy exercises, follow it to a tee.
And I'm not even worried right now.
What you're seeing, strength, this is just,
this is what I think your body needs. Then let me take you to strong or let me take you to another
program and then watch your body respond, knowing now what I know from what it is because she's
definitely somebody who probably leans on doing too much volume. Our next caller is Ali from Illinois.
Ali, what's going on? How come I help you? Hi guys. How to click question.
I first want to say thank you for taking my call, my question.
But a while back, I was listening to an episode in
its first thought that although I know about
macros and having a pretty good idea of how to track,
I don't have a good idea of what it's like to build metabolism. I think I specifically heard you, style talking about how you helped
your wife build metabolism and stay lean with increasing her calories. And that's
definitely something that's been difficult for me. So I wondered what is the
method for that? Yeah, no good question. But do you mind if I get into a
little bit more? Yeah, so a little bit more.
Background stuff. Detail, because I'm looking at your question here. The one
that you wrote in, do you mind if I go through some of this more. That's a background stuff. Detail, because I'm looking at your question here, the one that you wrote in,
you might if I go through some of this, Ali?
Yeah, no problem.
Yeah, it says so you grew up as a gymnast,
and you've been working out for a long time,
and you've seen your body weight go up and down quite a bit,
so you've seen some big fluctuations in body weight,
is that correct?
Yeah, definitely.
Usually a diet phase down to 140 and then just more recently, having difficulty getting
back down.
Okay, Ali, I'm going to get maybe a little bit more personal, okay?
If that's okay.
I know the sport of gymnastics, especially for women, is one of the most challenging in
terms of body image issues.
It's just really hard because, yes,
you are judged by your performance,
but body size is often talked about quite a bit.
I've known, I've coached some athletes
who've actually had their coaches weigh them
before practicing all that stuff.
And so we've had to deal with some of the damage
of that after.
Do you feel like you've had some body image issues
as a result of that, or is this something that is not an issue?
I'd say a mix. I feel like I also coached so I can have that
like mental space to help other athletes get through it, but definitely as a child it was there to like that pressure to
look a certain way and perform a certain way. Okay, absolutely. Yeah, and the reason why I'm asking is when you see big weight fluctuations, that usually
points to a relationship with food that's this kind of come or go restrict or everything
goes type of attitude because we're talking about a pretty big swing and body weight.
So when it comes to tracking, I'm always hesitant to recommend that someone
in this maybe a situation like yours goes and really starts to measure and track things
because what that tends to contribute to is what you've maybe been experiencing, right?
Your track and so everything's like on point. And then you get sick of tracking for whatever
reason, maybe because it's maybe motivated by self-hate or maybe
you're just done with it and then you go way off in the other direction. So I would recommend for someone like you to not pay attention to those things and rather look at behaviors instead
and performance. So I would, in your workouts, what brings you joy in your workouts? What
party of your workouts do you really enjoy the most? Is it the strength or the stamina or the body control? Do you have anything specific like that?
I think definitely more of the body control. I also just like the melodic of it,
like increasing weight, seeing that progress. And then like workout just, I guess,
yeah, seeing games and strengths. Perfect. So there's another thing that you're not asking or that I think is important, right?
So if she doesn't have body image issues and that's not a problem, the other thing that
I see with gymnasts is their dedication to training and consistency and intensity is
can be a way over done.
We have that, and that's just athletes in general.
It's just a switch.
And so if you have been applying that mentality
for most of your weight training life,
I would be, that's what I would be looking at right away.
So let's just say there's, I mean, for sure,
Sal was right to look into body image issues.
If there's anything there that you feel yourself conscious
and maybe that's driving some of your behaviors,
but let's say it's not, then the other thing I would say is your athletic background may
be driving the way you're programming, which means are you the person who's training, you
know, six, seven days a week and you're doing cardio sessions for an hour for three to
five times a week and also cutting calories down below 2000.
If that's you, then that's your way over doing it.
And if we're going to rebuild your metabolism,
it's gonna look something completely different.
I'm gonna cut your cardio sessions.
I'm gonna make you only train three days a week,
doing something like math, Santa Ballack.
If you need to move and we need to find a way to counter
some of the calorie increase that I'm gonna do to you,
I'm gonna ask you to walk.
We're not gonna do any intense cardio and we're going to focus on building strength.
And I'm okay with you tracking if you don't have the issues that Sal is saying.
If Sal is hitting something that you feel is on point, then I think he's right.
Then going towards a more intuitive way of paying attention like versus weighing and tracking
and getting out of control
with being super hyper focused on that.
But if you feel confident that there isn't
insecurity stuff going on or body image issues going on
and it's purely, I'm just trying to figure out,
I'm not, what am I not programming right
to in order to build my metabolism,
then I would be looking at the amount of volume intensity that you're
doing in your training and how little you're eating in comparison to your body size.
And I would want you to be up towards 25 to 2700 calories, not right away, but that would
be the goal is to get your body size and type up to that with you not training six days
a week with a ton of cardio on top of it.
Yeah. And you know, here's some nutrition advice that doesn't involve specific tracking.
You can try something like this, Ali. You could try just a few things. One,
avoid any heavily processed food. So eat only whole natural foods. And then
eat in this order, protein fat, and vegetables and carbohydrates. So I would go like your meat, then your vegetables,
and then if you have room and you're still not satisfied,
then eat your carbohydrates.
That alone typically gets somebody's eating
a little bit more appropriate,
and then focus on your performance in the gym,
focus on what's making you feel good,
and what's making you stronger.
And that should bring you to a fast metabolism
in a healthy way, healthy in the sense
that it doesn't cause more dysfunction down the road
or this boomerang effect at the end where you're
everything's on track and then you kind of go off track
with everything.
Are you following any of our programs at all?
I do have access to maps and
of all like and I my program before
was loosely kind of based on that.
So I've adapted some of the trigger
sessions into what I was already doing.
Okay. So you're working out what five days a week then?
Yeah, five to six.
And how long your workouts typically?
Maybe hour and a half, including a warm up.
Okay. And so okay, I appreciate your honesty.
I would, so go maps and a ball look as it's laid out.
Yeah, follow it to a tee.
Just follow it to a tee and then do the things I said
with nutrition and then start from this too.
Before you eat the sound silly,
but I swear to God, it makes a huge difference, right?
Literally, you have your meal,
make sure you sit down to eat it, you're not distracted.
And then ask yourself,
is this going to nourish me in a healthy way?
That's it, and then eat your food.
Sound silly, but what it does is
to bring awareness around what's going on,
and do this before you eat anything.
I think what we tend to do, especially when we see
body weight fluctuations, is we don't do that
around the foods that we don't want to be around,
away around, so I'm not gonna do it right now
because I'm gonna eat this sleeve of Oreo cookies
or I'm gonna overeat this, whatever.
So just try doing those things
and then kind of allow this process to work.
So based off everything we said, again,
if you feel like that was your tendency in the past,
I would go in that direction
and it'll definitely move you in the right way.
Those are some of the details I left out
when I talked about my wife
in speeding up her metabolism.
She had some of those issues before,
and I did coach her through them,
through working on behaviors, and it was hard.
It took a year of her to really,
finally, mentally understand,
what was going on because she wanted to go back
to what she was doing before. Allie, is anything striking a chord for you?
I mean, is anything sound like it's possible to you?
That we're talking about.
Yeah, I feel like it's maybe halfway.
Like, I definitely do have the tendency to be like more driven in like just my past.
Like, it has to be this way.
I have to train this way and eat this way.
Um, and then maybe a little bit of the body,
self image as well, just like,
I definitely try to be aware when I eat,
but I know that it's just tendency I slip on my phone
and don't think about it.
And then I go to the kitchen to put something away
and I pick up a handful of whatever.
And it doesn't go in, so.
Definitely a bit of both.
It seems to be a bit of intensity there. I think, you
know, sort of relieving that from you will go a long way and just
kind of, you know, being able to not be so hyper focused on
what's good, what's not good, and just try to find things that
will help nourish you and have you feel good in your
performance. Yeah, you know, you know, you know, Ali, you're,
I'm going to make a guess here. You said you're a coach. I bet you are an excellent coach to the people
that you work with.
And I bet the advice I'm giving you,
or we're giving you right now, is what you would tell
one of your athletes if they came to you.
Yeah.
And this is true for all coaches and trainers.
I'm gonna say this right now, maybe not all,
but 90 to something percent of us,
we're way better with our clients than we are with ourselves.
I have practices I do with myself
that I would never tell clients to do,
and I'm fully aware of this.
It's very challenging.
So one of the things that I do
before I do certain things,
I say would I have a client do this?
How would I advise a client
if they came to me with the same challenge? And that
usually gives me the best answer. Doesn't always mean I'll listen, because sometimes
or often I don't want to listen myself, but it does give us the best answers. So give
that a shot. Say to yourself, okay, if I was a student coming to me saying this, what would
I tell them?
It's also important that you recognize that the greatest challenge that you're going to
have doing this is,
you probably will see a little bit of weight gain.
I mean, we're trying to increase calories,
you're trying to get stronger,
we're hopefully gonna be building muscle.
I'm glad you said that, because that's a tough one.
Yeah, so one of the things that you've got to trust
this process, and this is always the most difficult part,
is you talk to these guys that give you advice
about speaking of metabolism,
we tell you something like, hey, reduce all the volume of training you're doing
and also let's increase some calories.
And then you're getting on the scale every day
and you're like, oh my God, I've gone up three to five pounds
and you freak out and then you go back to your old behaviors.
But you're gonna trust the process here and stay.
And if that means that you stay away from the scale
for a while, then do that.
I'm okay with the tracking scale stuff.
So long as you got the self-awareness to know that,
to know that this could be a tendency
or the things that it sounds kind of alluding to.
But just be aware of that,
that's going to be the first major hurdle
is you're going to probably see a little bit of weight gain,
but don't be focused on that, focus on your strengths.
Focus on your, I'm looking, what I'm looking for
is you to get stronger and to tell me things like, don't be focused on that focus on your your strengths. Focus on your I'm looking what I'm looking for is
you to get stronger and to tell me things like man Adam I'm I'm getting hungry now my appetites
kicking up like these are all positive signs that we're moving in the right direction regardless
of what we're seeing on the scale. Ali I'm gonna send you the intuitive nutrition guide if you
don't have it. I think that'll help you. Okay I don't but thank you. All right thanks, Ali. Thanks
for calling in. Yeah thanks guys. How great day. You too. Did she say she had anabolic? I don't, but thank you. All right, thanks, yeah, thanks for calling in. Yeah, thanks guys, how great day.
You too.
Did she say she had an oblique?
I didn't know.
She said, you know what, Doug, let's send her that too,
if you don't know.
I think she said she had it.
I'll put it in there.
I think she did say she had it.
Yeah, I think she did.
You know, I tell you, man,
and I could tell as we're talking her,
I can tell we're hitting maybe some, you know,
some nerves.
I've trained X gymnasts.
I've trained X like synchronized swimmers and divers.
Figurescaters.
You trained synchronized swimmers.
Yeah, and they are, they're really,
I tell you, you over watched that,
that's an interesting stuff.
I was a random on my life.
Yeah, I can't say, I've actually trained a lot of gymnasts.
Have you?
No, I had a client.
I trained Batchy Ballers.
That was directed at me.
I actually had a client who was an alternate
in the Olympics in synchronized swimming.
But that growing up in that environment,
you, I swear, when they came to me,
it was always like, we got to deal with this,
these old behaviors, this body image issues.
It's really, really challenging.
And then what you said, Adam, so true, they have the switch that they've trained so hard
where they can literally turn it on,
ignore pain, ignore tiredness, ignore body signals,
and just go, because that's what got them successful
when they were at the laser on them.
I mean, they're the center of focus.
And like you had brought up,
in terms of weighing in, and then also,
you got to look a certain way,
you got to move your body a certain way,
you know, that sticks with you. Like that, that kind of intensity and pressure you place on yourself,
you know, it's just tough because a lot of times you don't see that about yourself.
You don't see that, you know, that may be causing you, you know, a bit of struggle.
I 100% of the time it's either either one of the things that we were talking about or a blend of both.
Yeah, right? 100% of the time, it's either one of the things that we were talking about, or a blend of both.
It's either we've got major body image issues,
and that's driving your behaviors
and your training and your dieting,
or you still got that athletic switch in your head
where whenever you go after your workouts or dieting,
you apply the same type of mentality.
All or nothing.
Yeah, as an Olympic athlete,
it's just like so different when we're talking
about health and longevity and body composition,
like it's a different ball game.
So I have found that training clients like this,
it is either one of those things we talked about
or a blend of the two always.
No, totally, and I do,
I wanna say this to about athletes like this,
because I've had people ask me this question and say,
well, if training too much is detrimental,
then why are gymnasts and divers and athletes like that,
right, maybe ice skaters?
Why are they training so many hours during the day?
Aren't they overtraining?
And my answer is they are, however,
those sports are so technical that the frequency
and volume of training really is about
Perfecting their skill and technique. It's less about training their bodies. They're fit as hell already if anything
They have they end up losing some of their fitness and strength because it's so much training
But it's about if you watch a gymnast yes, they're explosive and strong
But look at their lines their body control that comes from so much nuance that comes from doing
Well, sports aren't healthy for you.
Yeah, that's true.
They're not.
That's actually the first.
That level definitely.
No, I mean, all sports, they really are not healthy.
But does that mean that you can't incorporate some of the sports that you love and have a healthy
life?
That's not what I'm saying.
But competitive sports, especially at the high level, is not healthy.
Any of them, you are doing well.
And you have to recognize that and be able to move forward
and live a lifestyle where, you know,
it's totally different than that going into long-term.
You have different goals.
When you're competitively playing a sport,
I don't give a shit if my body fat person
is up or down or I'm getting great sleep
or my health or my libido.
All it cares is I'm better at my sport today
than I was yesterday.
And so, and sometimes that means I'm training five hours a day to get to that level.
It doesn't mean that it's bad or wrong.
It just means you have different goals.
And so, you get these athletes that were highly competitive and good at their sport, and
they try and apply that same mentality towards getting in shape or being healthy.
And they're two different worlds.
You know how many female athletes I've trained who didn't get their period until they stopped.
Yeah.
They're competitive sport because their bodies were so hammered all the time.
So it's just, it's one of those things.
Look, if you like our information, head over to minepumpfree.com and check out our guides.
We have guides that can help you with almost any fitness goal and they're totally free.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So Justin is at minepump.
Justin, I'm at minepump. So Justin is at Mind Pump Justin.
I'm at Mind Pump Sal, Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
By the way, Adam and I shadow band on Instagram.
So you gotta type out the full name
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But if you find us, good for you, give us a follow.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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