Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1743: How Stretching Can Build Muscle, the Truth About Supplementing With Protein Powder, How to Make Gains With Bodyweight Training & More
Episode Date: February 4, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about progressing using bodyweight training, the pros and cons of using a lifting belt, how much protein powder is ideal,... and the pros & cons of stretching before and after workouts. Mind Pump Fit Tip: How sometimes getting smaller, makes you look bigger. (4:22) Jake Paul, the ULTIMATE troll. (13:18) Justin’s wild weekend in the snow. (19:27) Congratulations to Christina Rice. (25:08) When things get taken out of context. (27:24) Joe Rogan’s art of interviewing. (33:20) Causing more problems with overreactions. (37:34) When one crisis wains, another begins. (41:13) Why did China change the ending to Fight Club?! (44:50) Does red-light therapy help with acne? (47:33) Is Scottie Pippen a hater? (50:34) #Quah question #1 – How can you progress using bodyweight training and still make gains? (58:59) #Quah question #2 – What are the pros and cons of using a lifting belt? (1:05:39) #Quah question #3 - How much protein powder should I supplement with? (1:13:58) #Quah question #4 - What are your opinions of stretching before and after workouts? (1:20:25) Related Links/Products Mentioned February Promotion: MAPS Performance and MAPS Aesthetic 50% off!! **Promo code “FEB50” at checkout** Morning Report: Jake Paul invests in UFC’s parent company Endeavor with the goal of fixing UFC fighter pay from ‘within’ Khabib Nurmagomedov says he offered Jake Paul an Eagle FC contract: 'We're waiting on his answer' Visit Caldera Lab for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout for the discount** Manifestation Mastery: How to Shift Your Reality & Co-Create with the Universe – Book by Christina Rice Ben Carpenter Post on Max Lugavere – No good and bad foods. Mind Pump #1420: Counting Calories Makes You Fat With Max Lugavere JRE #1769 – Jordan Peterson Everything you need to know about Joe Rogan's Spotify controversy over COVID-19 misinformation Canadian trucker protest: Border blockade in Alberta new challenge: LIVE UPDATES Mind Pump #970: Dr. Jordan Shallow On Training, Travel & Vaccines (With Guest Ben Greenfield) 'Fight Club': China changes cult classic movie's explosive ending to make the authorities win Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Light-based therapies in acne treatment Scottie Pippen book: Bulls star whines about Michael Jordan Visit MASSZYMES by biOptimizers for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP10” at checkout** Mind Pump #1630: Ten Ways To Break Through A Plateau The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1220: The 4 Best Sources Of Protein Which is Best - Mobility or Stretching? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Jake Paul (@jakepaul) Instagram Dana White (@danawhite) on Instagram Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Ben Carpenter (@bdccarpenter) Instagram Christina Rice (@christinathechannel) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) 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.
Alright, in today's episode we answered four fitness and health questions that were asked by our audience.
But we opened the episode with a current events intro.
So that's 54 minutes long, after that 54 minute intro,
where we talk about current events and studies
and talk about what happened our lives,
then we got to answering the question.
So here's what went down in today's episode.
We open up by talking about how sometimes getting smaller
makes you look bigger.
So all you guys, especially guys out there
trying to look bigger and more muscular,
sometimes you just gotta get smaller to do that.
Then we talked about Jake Paul,
the ultimate social media troll,
just in talked about his skiing weekend,
we talked about dry and oily skin
and how Caldera serum balances them both out.
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I talked about how I visited my friend, my friend, Christina Rice,
for her book release. So proud of her. She's kicking ass over there. We talked about somebody
on social media trying to poke fun at our friend Max Lugovere. Big mistake. Don't mess
with our people. Then we talked about the interview Joel Rogan had with Jordan Peterson,
great interview. And then we talked about how looks like people are going after Joel Rogan.
That's another big mistake. We talked about the Canadian trucker protest
that seems to be blacked out by the media right now.
It's incredible.
We talked about the next crisis, right?
So fear from the pandemic is kind of waning.
What are they gonna get us all scared about next?
I talked about how in the movie Fight Club,
China released it but had to change the ending
so that they could show
their people.
I talked about how red light therapy reduces acne.
By the way, if you wanna get red light therapy
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Then we talked about Scotty Pippin and the crappies talking about Michael Jordan. And that's it.
Then we got to the question. So here's the first one that we answered. First question,
this person wants to know how to progress using just body weight and continue to make gains.
The second question, this person wants to know the pros and cons of using a lifting belt.
The third question, this person wants to know the pros and cons of using a lifting belt.
The third question, this person wants to know how much protein powder they should use
every day.
And the fourth question, this person wants to know what we think about stretching before
and after workouts.
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Do you want to look bigger?
Sometimes you have to get smaller to look bigger.
So would you tell the ladies?
Yeah.
What?
Is that what you tell the ladies?
No, you know what?
We got to talk about this because I know as a kid,
I was obviously, I was skinny,
I was trying to bulk all the time, trying to get big.
And the first time I actually got really lean
because I didn't get lean, lean lean for a long time.
So I just, I didn't want to lose any weight on the scales.
I super insecure about that, right?
So, I think I was in my 20s,
and it was the first time I got below 10% body fat,
and of course, my weight on the scale was lighter,
because I'm leaner.
And it was the first time, one of the first times,
people actually approached me in the gym,
was like, oh my gosh, you look so huge.
You're huge.
And then I realized, it's because I'm leaner
and I have more definition
that I look a lot bigger and it's funny, right?
So to look bigger.
You never think that, I mean, I would never think that.
All my entire goal was just always get big, get big.
To tell me that like to cut down, it was not gonna happen.
I know you had a similar experience.
Exactly.
The funny part about it is how driven we are
by our insecurity to look this certain way,
in search of our peers telling us how great we look
or how buff or how big we look,
and then the first time that you decide to go in this cut
of shrinking down, getting leaner, getting smaller,
you get the most, oh my God, you look big
compliments than I had in my entire life. So that was the irony in it was I spent at least
a decade of bulking consistently and never cutting to finally go on like, okay, well,
let's see what happens when I lean out. And then all the, you get, and by the way, too,
I vividly remember
when I was going through that phase,
even though I was getting those compliments
inside my head, I still felt smaller
and I still had, I struggled with the insecurity
of not filling my shirts out, right?
As you lean out, I start to look like a coat hanger
in my Excel shirts.
And so I remember that messing with my head going like,
oh my God, I'm getting smaller and smaller,
but then people were telling me, oh my God, you'm getting smaller and smaller, but then people were telling me,
oh my god, you look so big.
I literally had people come up to me in the gym.
This is what blew me away,
is they would come up to me and say,
man, you put on some serious size.
Yeah.
How much muscle have you gained?
I'm like, I've gained nothing.
Yeah.
I'm actually 10 pounds lighter than I was before.
Like a 16 inch arm on somebody who's lean,
single-digit body fat, is way more impressive in real life than an 18 inch arm on a who's lean, single-digit body fat is way more impressive in real life
than an 18 inch arm on a dude that's body fat is,
you know, in the high teens.
This is just a fact.
So, and by the way, this goes both ways.
A lot of people who are constantly worried about,
oh my gosh, I can't gain a single pound.
When they gain a little bit of muscle,
all of a sudden they look leaner.
How many times have you had that, right?
With a female client, where they gain a little muscle,
and they're like, my husband says they look cleaner,
but I'm actually three pounds heavier.
So they're all like optical illusions, basically.
It is, and I think the moral of the story
is your insecurities, which we all kind of have.
We all have a little bit, right?
Your insecurities create a filter
and you don't have like an objective view of yourself.
Well, it's always subjective,
but it's really tilted in one direction.
So you'll look in the mirror,
but like, oh my God, look terrible.
And then wonder why people are coming up to you saying,
you look healthy, you look fit, like what's going on.
I feel like part of the size one too has to do.
I mean, I remember being a teenage boy
and like, you measured your bicep.
Like that was the thing, right?
Like if you're all, we all started working out,
everybody was starting in the gym.
It's like the measure of the success of your training was how big
is your bicep? And that was like, that was it. There was no any other measurements we
were paying attention to. It was like, as you're, as you're bicep grown a half an inch to
an inch over the last year or two that you've been lifting. And that's how we all decided
whether you were successful or not or looking good, right?
It's funny because my, I introduced the movie Fight Club
to my son a couple of years ago,
quickly became one of his favorite movies.
So like he likes to show his friends, right?
And they're watching it and he actually had some friends
over, they're watching the movie.
And one of his friends comments like,
man, what's the name Brad Pitt was buffed in Fight Club.
Did he was so jacked?
He was like 150 pounds in that.
Yeah, he was really lean.
He was just really lean.
Yes, so just shredded to the, to the gills.
Yeah, and it's, you know, that definition really create,
and now what's the moral of this, right?
If, again, your filter really distorts things a lot of time.
So if you're on this like permanent bulk all the time,
because you're always trying to look bigger,
get lean and see what happens.
And again, that reverse is true.
Also, for people who are always so afraid to gain in this, more, usually more true for
women, but there's guys that do this as well.
They're so afraid of gaining any body fat that they're always restricting their calories.
And really when they gain a little bit of muscles, when they really get the look that
they're looking for.
Well, this doesn't support your case at all, but like, because I'm trying to get like these
high school kids out of that mindset of like'm trying to get like these high school kids
out of that mindset of like always trying to be ripped
in the beginning.
It's different.
Dude, but this is such a thing that wasn't a thing
back in the day.
Like we just wanted to get big and jacked
and that's really not something that's very commonly
found anymore, like because they always want to like
show off the muscles and like do the beach muscle thing
and nobody's really into like stack and plates.
As high schoolers, huh?
Yeah, I don't really do think.
It wasn't like that when I was a kid.
That didn't happen until like 20s, you know?
I think they're more aware now
because of social media, maybe?
Yeah, I think that's definitely gonna be true.
Now the difference with that obviously
is in football, your mass plays a big role
in your momentum.
Exactly, that's why I'm motivated.
I'm like, I need more calories, please.
And that way, we're just gonna have a more effective
body to deal with all of that trauma
and stress that we're gonna place in these games.
And so you need to have a resilient, strong body.
I don't really care if you have abs.
No, there's a weight to strength ratio that's important too,
but there's no weight class, not like wrestling,
where, you know, if you pack on a bunch of weight,
now you're just wrestling a bigger dude,
like on the field, you know, and you're hitting somebody,
if you have 10 more pounds on your body
and you've got a good strength to weight ratio, right?
So it's not making you super sluggish or slow.
Yeah.
You stay just as fast, but you gain 10 pounds.
You hit some with that same speed, it's gonna hit much harder. Yeah. And let's say you stay just as fast, but you gain 10 pounds. You hit some with that same speed, it's going to hit much harder because you're much bigger. So that's
totally different than what I said at the beginning of it. Yeah. That's a good point though.
D railed. No, no, that's a very, very good point. When you play sports, you want to consider
that kind of stuff. And the weight class sports, people need to consider that as well.
Like I know guys, I knew guys that would take
performance enhancing drugs to gain muscle and strength
and but they competed in weight class events.
So in the problem with that is you're taking gear
to move up a weight class.
Now you're bigger and stronger,
but now you're going against guys that are naturally
at that heavy and comfortable at that weight.
Comfortable at that weight, naturally at that weight,
you're gonna get your butt kicked. Yeah, and naturally and comfortable at that way comfortable at that way. Naturally at that way, you're going to get your butt kicked.
Yeah.
And naturally have a bone structure, ligaments,
intendons that support that size where you've artificially inflated your muscles
to give that size, which you've just got that part.
You're missing the skeletal structure of that 240 pound guy or whatever.
Oh, dude, a fit.
A fit.
A fit and strong geared up 240 pound guy
versus a fit and strong natural 240?
Totally different.
Do you know what use,
and if you know, if you pay attention
to what these guys walk around like off season,
the ones that are normally the most dominant,
there's always exceptions to the rule
that are like great fighters with that.
But the guys that are normally dominant their way class,
walk around naturally like 30, 40 pounds. Yeah, they cut way down. Have you, and they had to cut really, really hard to get with that. But the guys are normally dumb in their way class. Walk around naturally, like 30, 40 pounds heavier and they had to cut really, really hard to get down that. So a guy
who walks around, let's say the way class around 210 walks around 250 cuts down to get into 210
way class versus a guy who is a 180 guy, juice out of his gills to get up to 210. I bet on the guy
that walks around 250 all day. Yeah, all things are equal. Yeah, exactly. Obviously fight skills make a big difference in that,
but for the most part, that guy has a huge advantage.
Yeah, but when it comes to aesthetics, right?
So we're not talking athletic performance,
just aesthetics.
Definition plays such a big role in how muscular and fit you look.
Like I said, I've lost weight, but because I'm leaner,
I get comments like you look like you put on muscle and mass.
And then on the flip side, I remember this used to happen
all the time, especially with female clients,
where they want to lose weight.
I was the number one goal for most people.
And I would obviously talk to them about speaking up
to metabolism, we would bump calories a little bit first,
lift weights to build some muscle,
so that we had a nice base to work with
when I would have them cut later on. And sometimes on the scale, they would gain a couple pounds, right?
So they'd lose a little bit of body fat, but maybe gain more muscle than they lost at first because we're bumping their calories.
And they would always come to me and be like, this is so weird.
I've had three co-workers come up to me and ask me how much weight I've lost.
And I've actually gained two pounds on the scale.
And like, well, the muscle gives you shape, it gives you this sculpt.
And so the appearance, so aesthetics is so different than just the scale. I'm like, well, the muscle gives you shape, it gives you that sculpt. And so the appearance, so aesthetics
is so different than just the scale, right?
Or it's so different than just what the tape measure says.
It's much more than that.
And we often get our own way
because of our own insecurities.
You guys talking about fights and stuff.
Did you guys see what Jake Paul just did?
No.
He just bought, I don't know if he bought outright or bought into.
I think he's invested in heavily invested in the holding company over UFC.
What?
So he is trying to influence fighter pay and fuck with Dana White.
No.
Yes, dude.
He dude, he's, he asked, okay, he's going down.
How big of an event like is he like, does he have like a check out?
Check it out. Two owns you see like, well,, does he have like a check out? Check it out, check it out.
Two owns UFC like this.
Is it Zoufah?
Well, the Lazar brothers or whatever,
that are the ones that I believe own it.
So the way I read the article was,
it was not them.
There's a holding company that has the UFC
or has something to do with the insurance
and the fighter pay and medical stuff, right?
Okay.
He is bought and invested into them
with the intentions of being able to influence
their retirement plan, their pay, here it is right here.
Invest in UFC parent company to fix fighter pay
from within and troll, date it white.
Okay, but I think it, I think what matters a lot
with that is how much he's invested because
I can invest in a parent company too,
but I could have no barely any say
because my investments, peanuts compared to...
I don't think it's peanuts, so I'm pretty sure it's a,
it's a healthy chunk.
I don't know if he could, I don't die doubt
he owns majority, but I'm sure he got himself a board seat.
Who's the fighter that he just, he's, he's not fighting the UFC,
one of the most dominant fighters, really good wrestler.
What's his name?
He's from, he's Eastern European.
He's the wrestler bearers, come on.
Yeah.
What's his name, dude?
Why is nobody know what's going on, right?
Old, old, old, old, old.
No, no, no, he's a recent.
Yeah, he's a more recent fighter wrestler.
He just, he's one of the most dominant fighters.
Kabeep, yeah, thank you.
Thank you very much.
Jesus Christ, I know.
I'll help you.
Yeah, I think of a monster heavyweight.
I know, I know.
I've got no sleep this week.
So if you said the first letter of his first name
and last name, I would've known.
Anyway, so he apparently sent Jake Paul,
a contract or like stipulations to fight.
Like here's what I'll do if we fight or like stipulations to fight.
Like here's what I'll do if we fight or whatever,
an MMA fight.
Like literally fight could be.
Potentially.
What?
Yeah, maybe you could look at that.
Well, he's calling out Canelo right now.
Oh my God.
Yeah, he just called out Canelo recently too.
I mean, he's like, what do you do with this guy?
He's the ultimate troll, right?
Yeah.
I mean, what he's doing as far as keeping media, I mean, he's like the Donald Trump of like fucking YouTube stars. Yeah. He's
he is trolling the shit at a day in a white. And he's he's trending all over all the time.
Oh, there you go. So he could be offered him an Eagle FC contract. Now, Jake Paul's team
is saying that that didn't happen. So that that could be super weird. You know what he's
done, which is interesting. I don't think that would be a good super weird. You know what, he's done, which is interesting.
I don't think that would be a good fight at all.
I mean, that's, if it's MMA rules, he would just get it.
That would never happen.
But is any way bigger than could be?
He is, but he wouldn't do it.
He, first of all, he wouldn't do a MMA fight period.
And he most certainly wouldn't pick Kabea,
but his first MMA fight he would do.
He wouldn't do that.
He's just trying to get all these guys to blocks.
And that's the big knock on him is that he's taking wrestlers
and jiu-jitsu guys and he's boxing them.
And it's taking their strength away from him
and trying to put him in the same.
Regardless, I mean, you gotta give the kid credit, though,
for what he's done.
I mean, he's literally wedged himself in.
And they ignored him, but it's hard to ignore him
because he keeps doing stuff like that.
Well, he's just like the heel for like all sports now.
Well, this is why I think this move is really interesting.
If he actually got a seat on the board of the parent company
of UFC and actually has some attention.
Well, now we've got influence over Dana.
And I mean, even if that's the only one you know.
Even if it goes nowhere, just purely to fuck with Dana.
Why it's gotta be so annoying, dude.
If you're Dana, why you, you know, oh my god
Keep imagining him at night just like getting that news and like you probably broke a few phones
Well, you know because what you're in a weird position. Do you let him in and fight and in well he he's his validate the big thing
He's campaigning right now. Yeah more than anything else is the fighter pay which by the way
I'm curious to your guys this thought on this because there's, it's
really easy to be sitting on the outside as a viewer and go look at boxing, compare boxing,
which has been around forever and established the amount of money running through there
and be like, here's a boxer who just got $30 million for a fight.
Right, they have way bigger purses.
That's like the whole entire fight.
Descored on a UFC fight is less than one main event.
Yeah, so I have a strong opinion on that.
So that's true.
However, we are looking at the top boxers
and looking at and forgetting the fact
that almost no one else makes any money in boxing.
So with the UFC, although the top fighters make a lot
of money, they don't make as much as top boxers,
there's lots more opportunity for all these other fighters.
Like, you tell me- That's an interesting thought, so your theory is that there is way more discrepancy
in boxing, so there's a bigger gap in between boxers and there is UFC fighters. It's just the way it's
the way it's put out and promoted. You know what it reminds me of? It reminds me of how music was
when before YouTube and before Apple iTunes,
where you had music labels
and you had these musicians making shit tons of money.
But if you're like, if you're not that good,
but you're good enough to make some money,
you had nowhere to go.
Whereas today, there's a lot of musicians on YouTube
that they maybe wouldn't get like a normal record label
like they would have in the 90s,
but they're good enough on YouTube to make millions of dollars. So, the total, so if you look at the
total, I bet you, you're more opportunities in MMA to make some money than there's unboxing,
whereas unboxing, you either make a shit ton or you do nothing.
That's an interesting thought. Yeah. Yeah. You know if that's true, you just, you're just
speculating. That's from, from the information that I, in the research I've done, that's
what I believe to be true now
I'd love for somebody model. No, there's nothing on that
But I would love someone to you know, who's this random person?
No more snappling in friends now. This year's your zoo friends again. Give me a fucking fight advice. Hey, that's such an old
Come on
Fortune cookie or something. Yeah, something a little more relatable.
Nobody knows snabbling.
Hey, how was you guys weekend, by the way?
Did you guys all have a good week?
I know you were up with your friends skiing.
It was wild, it was a wild, wild time.
I mean, I forgot that like,
I just have no endurance for like,
partying or anything.
I'm such an old man, like, I just can't even, you know,
like I just don't have the, so it was wild
because I took a lot of the guys up
that were part of my initial poker group
and we have fun and it's like,
it's one of those environments where it's just like
a constant roast, right?
So like everybody is just like, you know, up for grabs
and it starts out really funny and like everybody's digging
each other and then it becomes like exhausting.
Yeah, it's like, okay, what are you gonna say next?
Like, yeah, you got me?
Yeah.
So you're just like always on edge.
Yeah.
Like who's coming at me?
Oh man.
But it was funny.
I took him out of their comfort zone
and brought him to the ski slopes.
And it was great because they had,
you could tell it like,
how many of them could ride
and how many could not of the seven?
So there was, yeah.
So there was me and then, yeah,
three other guys. So four of us went and snowboarded. Oh, not of the seven. So there was, yeah, so there was me and then, yeah, three other guys.
So four of us went and snowboarded.
Oh, not all the guys went.
Not all the guys went.
So you have them say back and yeah, or three.
And so, yeah, so we went, we went up there
and it was funny because at first of all,
we didn't have like gear for everybody.
And so my friend Bo, you showed up and it was like 20 degrees.
We was freezing.
Like it was like just that, that kind of like bitter cold
in the morning, where you're like,
oh, and he's just wearing shorts.
What?
How do you do?
Gangster.
I was like, oh, yeah, he's totally gangster.
Well now, was it because he's cool in shorts
or because he's just one of those guys that does the right thing?
He ride well enough to where it shorts is okay
Cuz lots I don't like you know in like the ski school movies
Yeah, like the guys are just rocking like you know tank tops and all that I'm like is he gonna pull this off
You know like but he he knew he was gonna have to get pants at some point
But yeah, you'd initially like showed up wearing shorts and that I was like dude you're a man. Did he last?
No, no, he had to get pants.
You know when you go to buy them there,
they're like a million dollars.
Yeah, I'm sorry, bro.
They're like really outrageous here.
Like you're totally screwed.
He's like, what's the return policy?
Yeah, exactly.
Right on what the fuck.
We should have flipped into the back.
Dude, we should have figured that out.
Every time I go up there though,
I get so freaking dried out.
And then we had sun, I didn't wear any sunscreen.
You didn't bring your caldera?
Dude, no, I did.
So that was the only thing that helped.
It was almost like, if I was the driest of dry sponges
and then put a couple drops of water on it
and it's just like,
it's stuck in there.
This is what I felt like on my face.
Dude, my lips are still just like,
so what, okay, this is the part that I don't get.
And I think I brought this,
I brought this up to one of you guys,
this is off air, we were talking about this.
As a kid, I went up to Tahoe all the time.
Never once do I remember having issues with my lips cracking
and it being super dry.
Now that we live, we have a place up there,
we go up there a lot.
It's so bad.
Yeah.
I don't understand it.
As we get older, there's some,
you just weak sauce now.
Stupid.
No, really though.
Do you remember skin just getting thrown out there
when you were a kid?
Yeah, I don't remember being all dry.
Not like, I mean, it's so bad.
Kids are moisture.
Like, I remember to pack the caldera.
I remember, as soon as I get there, I put the humidifier on.
Like, I do all that stuff or all some, I'm fucked.
It's that bad.
You know what?
I think sometimes, I think A, you get older and your body just, you're older.
So hurt more, you're drier, more.
You like notice things more, I think.
And that's the oblivious.
I think the other thing too is when you're a kid, you don't even notice certain things.
Like, really?
That's what I think.
I think you said that to me, and I'm like,
I don't know, bro, like, I mean, my lip will split.
And like, you can't not think about that the whole time
you're there.
Every time I bite something, it splits open more,
and it's bleeding.
I don't know.
So you want to know what's interesting.
When I used to train, I used to train a lot of surgeons
at one point, and one of them told me that
When you do surgery on kids, he goes so strange because you'll do a surgery on an adult and they'll sit in the freaking bed
Yeah, I need more pain medicine. Can I take two weeks off? And then with kids they'll hop up and run away
You have to stop them and he's like they don't know yeah that they're supposed to be in bed and hurting
Have you ever seen a kid like that? I remember when I was a kid, we would play outside.
You almost never would come home without being scraped up from falling on the concrete
or whatever.
I don't care.
It's a little mindset.
I think that's a big part of it.
A lot of it.
A.G. makes skin more susceptible to dryness.
Dry skin and older dolls can be simply sign of age-related skin BOOM. I'm coming in with the science today.
Well, I was looking at it.
I was trying to give Sal like a science lab right there.
I thought I'd need to have the answer.
I have no studies on that.
I thought you'd have a good explanation.
Hey, this is in, you know, it's getting old, bro.
He's tired today.
Hold on a second.
The name of this website is today's geriatric medicine.
So, I mean, how old are they talking here?
I don't know if this is a good excuse for you, I think.
You know, it's okay. So back to the sponsor, Caldera,
so you know what's interesting about that?
You and I could not have any more different skin.
Obviously, different sides of the shade spectrum.
Yeah, yeah.
But also, you like humidity, like I hate it.
My skin is oily, it just is.
It's just very, very oily.
Your skin is more on the dry side.
We both use the same product.
I was afraid at first use Caldera
because it's a serum, it's oil.
I'm like, why would I put oil on my oily ass face?
I'm gonna look like.
Don't roll it up on oil.
Yeah, I'm gonna look like a stereotypical olive oil,
you know, Sicilian walk around.
No, it actually balances out my skin.
So it's got like this balancing effect,
whether you're oily or dry,
which is I think one reason why it's super popular.
Anyway, we went down to San Diego,
oh, a couple things.
So first off, it was the first time
we'd been away from the baby.
Oh, how did that go?
Okay, so who was,
remember you guys asked me this?
So who was the first parent to like give in
and check in on the baby?
I mean, we were both kind of checking.
It wasn't a big deal. Jessica did so well.
I thought maybe she would kind of worry and freak out.
Wow, that's awesome.
Now, the good, one of the factors that probably contributed that was the, you know, he was
with my mom.
So when they're with someone that you really trust and whatever, I think that kind of takes
away some of the nerves, but no, it was a good time.
So we went down there for Christina Rice.
So she launched her book.
She's in that spiritual kind of realm now where
she talks about manifesting your future and it's which is I don't understand much of it,
but I do really appreciate Christina. And I was there and it was a big event, right? So like,
you know, I don't know, 100 people were there. And they were all there to see her and she does
this speech or whatever. And I'm watching this and she's still,
I think she's still in her 20s,
so she's still a young lady.
And I remember when we first met her as a kid
and I remember we called it.
We saw her as a, and a lot of people don't know this.
We met her.
She's a little closer.
We met her.
So we like 19.
No, she was in her early 20s, I would say.
Oh, really?
Yeah, I'd say like 21, maybe or 20.
Oh, yeah, she was a baby, yeah.
She was a kid.
I thought she was even old enough to drink.
I thought when we first met.
Maybe 20, right? So we, great stories. So I don't know, six years ago, yeah, she was a baby. She was a kid. I thought she was even old enough to drink. I thought when we first met maybe 20, right? So we great store. So I don't know six years ago,
five, six years ago, early days of mind pump, one of the strategies to grow the show show was to get
on as many podcasts as possible. Yes. And we used to do these podcasts. Yes, we do these podcasts
runs, right? So Adam and I went down to LA and scheduled like seven podcasts in like two days.
And we're going to be back back. And one of them canceled.
And I remember, you know, our assistant calls us,
hey, you got a cancellation.
Do you guys wanna just take that break?
We're like, no, find someone else.
Well, Christina had this little podcast at the time
and had been contacting us.
She's like, do you wanna get on this girl's podcast
that's small?
And we're like, yeah, let's do it, whatever.
We show up in this kid in her little apartment,
answers the door, two big- big ask grown men and she was super
assertive. No, like she wasn't shy or intimidated, sat us down, ran the whole podcast and Adam
I don't ever forget we left. We made, we became friends with them. We left and we're like,
she's gonna do something one day. It's great to watch her, you know, do that stuff.
So it's really really cool to watch. You know, we had a good time down there.
I know. I wish I would have been there. I was in play.
Speaking of our podcast friends,
I have to bring up the dumb kid
that decided to go after Max Lugavir this week.
Oh, God.
What?
God, I have him with that.
Oh, you didn't see that?
No, I was in a whirlwind.
So, you know, he made a mistake.
So, well, this is really popular, right?
Where you do like a clip of, you know,
somebody else talking.
Oh, and you roast them.
You wrote and you basically make face right pick a pick it apart.
Yeah.
And so there's this kid.
I forget his name.
Maybe Doug can pull it up the BD carpenter beat something like that.
Yeah.
So we'll look, we'll put it.
We'll put in the show notes and then we'll definitely have a clip right here.
The Andrew can put up so people can see exactly what he did.
But I mean, it was Max on our show and it was Max talking, it's Sal and Max were talking about good and bad foods, you know, is there such a thing and
why is this whole movement is just say there's no such thing as bad foods and that's in like what why is that and so it's literally like a 15-second clip that somebody had clipped of him. Yeah, so it's missing context. Oh, yeah, it's missing an hour and a half of context, right?
That's annoying.
And so this kid is pretty much picking the whole thing apart
and roasting max about it.
And so I mean, I got on there, I think,
saling it up, getting on there.
And the thing that I just don't like about this,
and I remember, and I said this on my story,
that you remember when we were gonna do this?
Remember when we shot all the green screen in here
and we were gonna go through YouTube channels?
Yeah, there are YouTube channels,
see their techniques and like, kind of break it down.
Right, and we did a handful of them.
And when we watched them, we all just didn't like it.
We all did.
Yeah, it felt negative.
Yeah, it felt douchey.
It felt like all we were doing,
and we don't know who these people are.
And of course, the original thought
comes from a good place,
as I think this kid is coming from.
I think that he's coming from a good place.
He's trying to educate his audience,
but here's the problem.
When you go around and you cherry pick
15 second clips on, people's coming.
You have no idea, he grabbed,
and you grab somebody who I happen to have a lot of respect for.
And I know they think there's like a bias there because he's a friend like, no, if I have a friend, who I think to have a lot of respect for. And I know they think there's a bias there
because he's a friend's like, no, if I have a friend
who I think is giving me that advice and you roast him,
I can say, next look of yours a good guy.
You know the space, he's one of the good guys.
Yes.
So it's the wrong person to take something at a context
and try and it's just stupid.
It's BD Carpenter.
Is that what it is?
Is it a guy's name?
Yes.
So by the way, I hate, I know where they're coming from, the whole,
there are no good foods, there are no bad foods.
It's like, oh, it's everything you want it to be.
No, no, no, that's, that's baloney.
There are good and bad foods, paying only for food.
And you know what they're saying,
oh, this creates bad relationships with food.
No, it doesn't.
The bad relationship does not come from objectively saying,
that's bad and that's good.
The bad relationship comes from saying,
that's bad, I did that, I ate it, therefore I'm bad.
Now that's the bad relationship.
It's not that that's, you can objectively look in the mirror
and say, ooh, I'm overweight.
Some people would say that contributes to a bad relationship
with yourself.
You're not overweight, it's all shapes, we're all this, no.
You can be obese, you cannot be obese, That's okay. That's called being objective. The problem
is when you say, when you identify with it and say you're a bad person because of it,
that's the issue.
Well, and the problem that I had with this was that this is exactly what we discussed
in the podcast. I mean, on the podcast, we go into depth about that. And the thing that
annoys me is I know that the kid who's putting out,
he's got his contents pretty good.
Like he's smart, you can tell he's a smart kid.
He's with Sohee Fit, member Lane Norton's old partner.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So they're a couple, right?
They've been together for like two years.
Science-based kid, smart, giving out good information,
but the way he's doing it is just,
I think it's tacky.
I think it's a cheap way to get views
and people looking at you at the end of the way I don't like it
is, and I don't feel sorry about getting on there
and roasting the kid either because it's like, listen,
that's the risk you take by doing shit like that.
If you're gonna pluck a 15 second clip
and you make a fuck a mistake,
then you're gonna get it, you're gonna get it.
You're gonna get it from somebody who knows that person
and actually knows the content they put out,
read their books and is gonna defend that person.
You know what the problem is?
The big problem is that a lot of people,
all they have in their sites is growth,
grow my audience, get more attention.
But really if you're in the space,
and not everybody can be this way,
but I hope that the best people in the space
really are looking for good intentions
for people at large, right?
That's kind of like what we try to do.
So when you pick things apart,
be very careful because what you might end up doing
is confusing the shit out of people
to make your stupid point.
Like if I say, you know, barbell squats
are one of the best lower body exercises,
and then some idiot gets on there
and he's like, oh, I'm gonna counter this,
get a lot of views.
Squats are not good for everybody.
What if you have this polymorphism in your femur bone?
And but, okay, technically, yeah,
what does that apply to?
And you know what you just did?
You just convinced a bunch of people
that find squats hard, that they don't have to squat anymore.
They don't have to do anything to get better squats.
And so to make your point,
based on like a fractional percentage of people
that might have like, that kind of a discrepancy.
Well, the truth is this. There's this movement that's happened in a lot of spaces,
and it's starting to try to enter into the fitness space, and it's this non-objective,
everything is good and bad depends on how you look at it. Call it what you will,
woke-as-m that's trying to come into fitness, where they're saying things like,
will woke us up that's trying to come into fitness where they're saying things like, you know,
healthy and overweight or,
and you can be healthy and overweight
or that it's healthy to be overweight, even worse, right?
Or there is no good and bad or no, no, no,
the key is to be objective except it,
but then don't identify with it.
You're not a bad person because you don't eat perfect,
nobody does, you're not a bad person because you struggle with certain things. Everybody does. But that's okay to say, hey, look, you know,
doing cocaine on the weekends. Probably not good for you. It's not a good thing, right? But if
you do, that doesn't necessarily mean you're a bad person. I know what you've just heard.
Jordan Peterson talking to Rogan about like this kind of stuff. Yeah, about how like culture is dissolving because of like a lot of these, you know, normal like sort of standards that, you know,
everybody sort of agreed upon or now, you know, like there's all the fractional considerations
and all the other angles that then, you know, sort of it just dissolves. And then once it dissolves,
you know, it spawns out even further and then the culture completely disintegrates.
Yeah, what a great interview, by the way.
It was, it was, it was,
it's a long, a long halfway through, right?
You know, four and a half hours.
You know what I like about it?
It's one of the things that highlights
Joe Rogan's talent, because he's very different, right?
As an interviewer.
But one thing that he does very well
is he develops a chemistry with the person
who's interviewing. He mirrors really mirrors really and he makes them really comfortable
And so they just go off into conversation. There's such an art to that too, by the way. Yeah off air
We've kind of debated and argued this a little bit. I think he's a brilliant interview some people talk shit
Oh, he's a meathead guy and all he does is he goes off on tangent. Yeah, but I mean, I think I think you're more of a fool to think that
He doesn't know exactly what he's doing.
I think he's, he prepares, he's been doing this
for a really long time.
You don't get the size of audience he has,
but I just wing it.
He's also curious and he's open.
Even if he disagrees, he'll ask questions
and likes to hear different sides.
By the way, this made him, and behind the scenes here,
we called it.
I could see what he was doing, and I'm like,
he's gonna be targeted.
Sure enough, he is now a political target.
Because...
Hard right now.
Because people are flocking to him
because all other media is so narrated and controlled,
and they don't want anything that counters their message,
the story is. Did he just look at him as a threat and dangerous? narrated and controlled and they don't want anything that counters their message the
narrative what what the story is.
They just look at him as a threat and dangerous.
He is a threat.
He's free to speak however he wants.
He doesn't fit into a box.
So he's a big threat and he talks to lots of people and it's ridiculous and they're going
after him which is crazy.
It's ridiculous because he has people on both sides.
I mean he's had a Tulsi Gabbard on there.
He's had Bernie Sanders on there.
He's had plenty of like left wing people, right wing in the middle.
Like I agree, he's just curious.
And he's, and it's funny though,
when he has someone like a Jordan Peterson,
like all of a sudden we want to cancel it.
Well, then it's the good ideas, win, right?
Like don't you need to like sift through all that
to figure out like which way to go?
It's such a pussy thing.
Like okay, you disagree, get on there and debate.
Make your own choice.
That's it, like come in with better facts then.
You know what though?
Rogan is very hard to cancel because he's,
he's been very open and authentic from day one.
Oh yeah, that where he's got tens of millions of fans.
And because his fan base grew with him being authentic
in the mail.
If you kicked him off a platform,
you would only make him a martyr.
He would only grow in his popularity.
Because now it's gonna justify the whole life.
He's the counterculture.
He's telling the truth.
It's kind of crazy when you think that he sold
and went to Spotify and probably what would have been
happening to him on YouTube right now.
How do you been on YouTube as his main platform right now?
Yeah, totally de-platformed.
Don't you think so? I think that he would have,
he would have, I bet they would have been pulling stuff.
So it's kind of crazy that I wonder if that was stuff
that was said to like behind the scenes,
like when he's talking to them about,
because he had to see the right on the wall.
I mean, he moved from California, like he was already pulling
some of his episodes on YouTube when he was on there.
And he got, he was trying to work through that,
you know, what the reasons were.
And it was super vague.
And they didn't have any like real distinctive points
like of contention where they're like,
listen, this is what you said.
For sure that was talked about there.
Yeah.
So it's like, you know, you probably saw like patterns
with that and was like, you know, I don't like this.
Yeah, it's, I don't know, man.
It's these artists.
What was his name, Neil Young? Nobody cares.
I'm not gonna put my music, okay.
That was, yeah, that was an interesting one.
Like it's so random.
Yeah, the same guy.
What's his famous song?
Something in the freedom?
Yeah, oh, go on.
It's the...
The rock, keening, the freedom.
Not really.
Yeah, I mean, it's, I think it's ridiculous
to try to cancel him.
That way you're getting kicked off.
You're starting to see the,
the mob of people who are all following the same narrative.
Oh no, we gotta get Joe Rogan off the air
because tell us who to get next.
Yeah.
So since we're talking about political stuff,
you cue me in on what's going on up in Canada right now.
Is it like one of the craziest protests we've ever seen
as far as the size of it?
I think it was like over 50,000 truckers or trucks.
Yes.
I don't know what's true, right?
I've just, you know what's weird about that?
You did true, though, actually get COVID and leave
or is it just hiding in there?
I don't know, that's such a convenient time.
But I tell you what, it's been almost media blackout,
which is really weird.
It's one of the largest, most organized,
peaceful protests ever.
And consider this, only 15% of the truckers in Canada
were unvaccinated.
So that with their protesting or vaccine mandates,
not the vaccine, but the mandating.
Exactly.
And it's way less than the 50,000 trucks that showed up,
which means you have vaccinated and unvaccinated working together
against these mandates.
So it's a super organized
protest. I've getting lots of messages from Canadians where like this is awesome.
It's tyrannical. I mean they shut down gyms again and didn't give a date where they were going to
lumbly reopen. There's still so many people that are pro all that though, dude.
So the warriors just played the nets this week? Can we give them their own state? I don't know.
So that we live in.
I know that's right.
My bad.
The warriors play the nets this weekend
and the nets have Kyrie Irving.
Kyrie Irving is one of the players
who has decided not to get vaccinated
and he is from New Jersey, right?
So New Jersey, New York, California,
some of the hardest rules when it comes to the mandates.
And so he is not allowed to play in his own home court.
So he can't play at home games.
And so he only plays away games
because of how straight and he,
because he's decided to stick to his guns
and so that they've just figured this out.
This is like never happened like this in history
where a player can't play as the best player in the team.
And so we just played them in California, right,
at Golden State, and they did a poll on,
you know, should they have allowed Kyrie to a play this?
Cause California has the strict rules also,
but they allowed him to play in the away game.
It's us.
And over 73%, said he shouldn't have been able to.
Wow.
I think that, yeah, the fact that he's decided not to give
the, that's the thing that they should keep him from getting paid
and keep him from-
We did an old episode, I forgot who we were with.
I might have been Jordan Schallow
and this topic came up and it was old.
This is before everything that went down.
It was Schallow.
And our stance is we're exactly the same
and there's follows.
If you're a private organization or company,
you're free to do that.
If you own a business and you say,
you can't come in here unless you're vaccinated,
it's you're free. You're free to them to associate with whoever you want. You're free to do that. If you own a business and you say, you can't come in here unless you're vaccinated, it's your free, you're free to associate with whoever you want,
you're free to associate.
Absolutely.
And that's a kind of fundamental law
of being in a free society.
But it also means if two people voluntarily
want to meet or work together,
that's none of your fucking business.
And allowing the same entity that can jail you
or find you or legally kill you,
the power to force you
or coerce you and do injecting something in your body.
Really do we really need to argue this?
Like just look historically at all the crazy shit
that they've done in the past.
You're just gonna ignore completely the Nuremberg
is that you pronounce it?
Yeah, I don't, like that's a bad idea.
And you know what's funny?
Okay, so here we are two years after it,
after everything has gone down,
compare the states with the strictest laws
to the states with the looser laws,
by the way, compare total deaths,
not just infections and whatever.
And what you'll find is almost no difference.
You have higher suicide rates, you have higher rates
of depression, you have economic problems,
which cause more deaths.
We caused more problems than we were trying to solve
with our overreaction.
I'm gonna stand by that always.
And I think more people are realizing it.
So, so the other thing that's happening right now
that I wish that you would have said publicly on the show
is I don't think you brought it up on the show.
I know we talked about it off air many times,
was as soon as the narrative started to change
around COVID
and that we were starting to get less.
The fear is waning.
Yeah, and people were being less and less fearful
about what's going on.
You were saying that this, we're gonna go to war.
We're gonna have, the next thing is gonna be,
we're gonna blow the horns for some other country.
It's the next button that you can add.
Here we are, here we are now talking about.
Literally sat in here, off camera, and I literally said that so the fears
waning they're going to start international foreign threat because that
gets everybody together start beating the wardrobe yeah because it war is
really effective way of getting or the threat of war gets everybody behind the
whatever the administration of the president you know is saying and sure
enough that's kind of what they're doing and And by the way, the shit that's happening,
Ukraine's been happening for a long time,
but now we're beating the drums a little bit.
And it's just, that's what I think.
I think it's political.
Like, hey, midterm's coming up.
Let's get everybody behind us to scare them
a little bit more.
It's crazy that we even want to,
because it's a bordering country to Putin, right?
And that's whole, and why would we even want to go in there?
And I love how we try and make it look like it's him who's the crazy bastard, but here
we are parking our shit like right next to his borders. Imagine if that was done to us.
Like imagine if people started, they did try to do that in Cuba.
I know. Well, and then we're going to happen, right? So that's my point. And we try and
make Putin look like he's this awful person. I'm not defending the man whatsoever. But
the point is, we are by coming in into the
Ukraine, we're encroaching on them more than they're encroaching on us.
The Ukrainian president actually said that. He actually said, I know more about what's going
on. I'm here and the US president is politicizing. I mean, something along those lines. He said
that, you know what the truth is, the Cold War showed us this. We will not go to war with
another nuclear armed country.
It's just not gonna happen.
If it would have happened, it would have happened
in the Cold War.
Believe me, it was a close call.
But nobody wants to do that.
Nobody wants to go to war because nobody wins.
Everybody ends up dust.
So this is a lot of posturing, I think,
is kind of what's going on.
For sure.
Not to mention, a lot of European countries
rely heavily on Russian fuel and energy.
So I think Germany's like 50% of their natural gas comes from, I think it's more than that.
Or maybe even more.
So that's a big vulnerability type of deal.
So I mean, I'm always anti.
I'm almost always.
By the way, if you look at all the pretenses for, or kind of how we start lots of wars,
it's a lot of lies that lead up to a lot of them.
I mean, there really is manipulation just to get in there and just support. Yeah, it's just kind of, I start lots of wars. A lot of lies that lead up to a lot of them. I mean, there really is.
There's manipulation just to get in there.
Yeah, and just support.
Yeah, that's just kind of, I don't know.
I mean, don't you feel though,
I mean, with not only the fear of COVID,
but then also where the economy's going,
I almost feel like that it's there,
they're definitely going to push that way.
Like when you said it, I totally,
oh yeah, I could see that happening.
We're now I'm like, oh yeah, it's gonna happen.
Yeah, I feel like that's with,
you know what I'm afraid of?
I'm afraid that they're gonna take this
because I highly doubt we're gonna do a war with Russia.
At most, it'll be proxy, like we'll support Ukraine
with like weapons and stuff.
But here's why, here's what I would be afraid of.
We would never fight.
I don't, we very unlikely that we go full on war
with Russia, two nuclear armed countries,
same thing with China, right?
But I could see us using that to target Iran,
which we've been trying to mess with for a long time.
Iran's not nuclear powered,
and we'd love to go in there and,
you know, based off of how they've talked in the past,
and because they're kind of allied with Russia,
I would, it would be interesting to see them twist it
into something to Iran.
Well, I mean, look how we did that with Iraq
in Afghanistan, which is pretty, you know, pretty funny. Well, I mean, look how we did that with Iraq and Afghanistan
Right, which is pretty, you know pretty funny. Anyway, we'll see we'll see what happens
Speaking of which did you guys read this article? Did you guys see that they changed the ending of fight club in China?
What?
Okay, wait
You told me about it. You never like fulfilled me in on that remind me the ending. I can't even
So what happens? Yeah, so remember at the end he
I can't even pick up what happens. Yeah, so remember at the end, he shoots himself
and kind of kills the alter ego, which is Tyler Gurdon.
So he knows when he's sitting up at the top of the building
and he's in the chair, what are the things?
And then he sits down and then the girl comes up
or whatever, and then they watch the buildings
of the credit unions or whatever credit comes explode.
So at the end of it, he does cause anarchy or whatever.
Well, the Chinese government said,
we won't release this in our country
unless you change the ending.
And in the ending, what a shitty ending.
The authorities win.
He gets caught by the authorities.
But the authorities...
Hahaha!
Yeah, dude.
You'll never get away with it.
Yeah.
You're under our thumbs, yeah.
Did you guys know that that's happened?
That movie endings have been changed
in different countries before? You wanna know... I didn't know that that's happened? That movie endings have been changed in different countries before?
You wanna know.
I didn't know that was a thing.
That's funny, dude.
One of the ones that I was aware of as a kid,
I was a big Godzilla fan as a kid,
made me so watch all the Godzilla.
Oh, I heard about this.
Yeah, it was because it was so,
it's Japan, right, that has,
Godzilla is Japanese, right?
Yeah, so like, and then King Kong is American.
And so like, in America, they showed King Kong winning, and then, you know, Japan Yeah, so like, and then King Kong's American. And so like in America, they showed King Kong winning
and then, you know, Japan just, of course,
of course, competitive.
Yeah, it's not funny.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
So you could, I've never seen the version
where Godzilla wins.
I've always tried to find it.
I wonder, okay, so they have to, like,
you have to like negotiate that before you, right,
before you play it or the rights to that.
Like you can't just take somebody's art like that
and change it and then sell it in your country.
Maybe the few more owner knows that.
They have to.
And then they create that.
They sell it.
I'm sure it happens is that someone like Japan
or China whoever decided comes in and says,
listen, we're not going to play this in our country
or we will give you $30 million for the rights
to bring in our country.
But then we're going to change.
We're going to change in.
I'm sure they go, okay.
Well, I know that Godzilla one was made in Japan,
and they wanted to sell it in the US,
so they made the alternative ending,
thinking it would sell better in the US.
Oh, so they did it for us.
They did it for us.
With China's done some interesting stuff, though,
they've done stuff with a like,
replace this African-American doctor with a Chinese doctor,
because we want to make sure that the doctor's Chinese,
or this anti-government speech right here, cut this out, or whatever. uh... this african-american doctor with a chinese doctor because we want to make sure that the doctors chinese or
uh... this anti-government
you know speech right here cut this out or whatever
and that they've done that to lots of movies so that's that's rogan movie you
remember the one not the dick to the end one the the one where they're north
korea
oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i'm like i'm so surprised that yeah interview that
that was still released but was there like a lot of contention
especially like right around that time too.
Yeah, North Korea was getting all heated about it.
I know, that was great.
It was like, it was funny.
It was, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was fun.
The Hayes Cuisine.
Anyway, I gotta bring up a study
that I think is very interesting.
So Jessica got back.
So we had the little Juve Go unit,
the small one that you like, use on your face.
She gave it to her grandma for a while,
and we got another one for herself.
So now she has it again, she's using it again.
And I can always tell after about a week and a half,
two weeks if we're using it regularly,
like you could see it in her face.
She did, like, less, it just looks more supple or whatever.
And it's like, good word.
Yeah, and she's like, I think she goes,
does red light affect acne?
Cause every once in a while she'll break out,
she has a little bit, you know,
you can't really tell, she's got a really good skin, but she's like, I feel like it affects
acne.
I had no idea.
I looked it up.
Red light therapy reduces inflammatory acne by over 60 percent in studies.
And non-inflammatory type acne like whiteheads and blackheads by over 50 percent.
That's huge.
Explain the difference of acne.
So there's whiteheads and blackheads, which is essentially clogged, like a clogged pore
or whatever, cause a problem.
Then when it becomes inflamed, there's like a small amount of bacteria that causes an infection.
So that's when it gets kind of red or whatever.
Yes.
So reduced inflammatory, because it reduces inflammation, speeds up the healing process, kills some
of the bacteria apparently.
So over 60% reduction I read in a study,
with red light therapy.
I did not know that.
I'm acne.
That's interesting.
That's so many benefits to me.
Well, that's a big deal because try and find an over
the counter market that reduces acne by 60%.
Yeah.
You're not going to, especially not if you have cystic,
you know, at...
Yeah, well, you guys have, I saw you got...
We have the big one.
Yeah, the big one mounted in your room, which I want to I want to do the same thing
I don't mind like leaning against something. I want to mount it like that
Does she use that one to or use the go one and like what's the I mean obviously the goes nice because you probably prop it up
Where she's ever she's sitting and it hit it on her it she mainly uses the go because she likes to use it on her face
Yeah, I don't cast you the cast you when she does all computer work for us
like to use it on her face. Yeah.
That's how Cassie uses it.
Cassie, when she does all computer work for us,
she just sets it up on her desk, like right here,
while she's working, and just rotates it from left to right,
like that, and just blast while she's doing it.
Oh yeah, yeah.
But the big one, I'll use sometimes for recovery.
You know what the issue is,
you have to use it consistently.
You're not gonna get anything up at one.
You don't notice it unless it's been a long string.
You put it in your routine, 10 minutes,
maybe every other day or every day.
I swear, I can tell, I'll come home.
I don't even know what she's been doing.
I'll look at her face, you've been using the juice again.
You're like, oh yeah, you could totally tell.
I've won it.
What I want to do, and I wonder if there's a listener who's done this, is I want to
mount it in the bathroom by my shower.
I want to do it where I'm like naturally getting naked
all the time, where all I'd have to do
is maybe stand there for a few,
because I'm already showering and I have glass
for my thing so I can be shooting it on me
while I'm showering, then drying off,
and then when I get ready, just maybe a few more minutes
I wait there, and if I do that like every single day,
because that's the only thing, sometimes I'm really good
about being consistent with it,
and then other times I fall off for a little bit,
and I definitely know the difference.
You can tell it's not one of those things where you do it
and then it's like you get the benefits
and then they stay with you forever.
It's like you have to stay.
It's like exercise.
It's kind of one of those consistent things.
I want to ask you, you had brought this up last week
about there was a new book, Scotty Pippen had written it
and you had talked to him about Michael Jordan.
Yeah.
Did you learn any more about this?
So I mean, so that there's a lot,
there's a lot of theories that that's why he did it, right?
Because he's got a book and then he has something else
that he is coming out.
You just in the last dance and the rest.
So the rumor is that that's part of what made him upset
is the way Jordan talked about him in the last years.
What do you think?
I never watched him in that back.
I totally don't agree with you guys.
So it's hard to like even even explain where he's coming from.
It's just the way that they talk about Pippin
as the other guy versus how important he was
to all those titles, which he was.
I mean, he was a very important player.
But your team, it was Jordan.
Right.
And I honestly, I don't feel like Jordan
has ever not given him credit. But everybody else makes it so much about Jordan that
It's made him so what did he say in this book and stuff like what's he talking?
I mean I haven't read the book so I don't know the exact
Exactverbidge that he used but he was basically just talking shit about Jordan and just that he's a ego maniac
And it's all about him and like and like what all he did and that he didn't get any credit for it.
And so all of it I think is a ploy to get people to buy his book.
He's been irrelevant for a drama some long time.
And so I think getting some controversy,
anyone who sees the cover of that book,
Pippin, Pippin, how much of that?
Do you think was directed by, you know, the publishing company and wanting him to know that's it. That's an that's an interesting thought like you know
What they do something like that what they ask him to do that
There's a most people think he he's been bitter in sour
But at the end of the day he's responsible. Well, yeah, he's got a name on the book
Yeah, I'm saying he's absolved of that
But I'm just like like him like trying to think of some ways to get an angle of like controversy
I think it was his idea.
I think he's been bitter in sour for a long time
and it's been said about that about him
because he's made comments like in interviews
before like subtle comments before where people
like oh that was kind of a hit or comment
why would you say that?
So I think that I actually think it came from him for sure.
I think and then with the last dance
just coming out what a couple of years ago
it probably is all about Jordan Bay.
Yeah, because a lot of the critics are going like,
what the fuck bro?
This is your boy, you guys, I hate that man.
It reminds me of when Jose Gonzaco came out
and was talking crowd about everybody.
And yeah, I know.
Listen, and when people were like, you know,
with Lance Armstrong, it's like, man,
you aren't a team together.
Like what happened to loyalty?
You know what I'm saying?
If you do a bunch of, you're all there doing it with them.
Like, here's a bottom line.
You do a bunch of dirt with your friends
and you're part of it.
You don't get to say shit later about your friends.
You can talk about yourself all you want.
But talk about your, you were there with them
when you were doing this.
Just as you're less successful or like,
didn't have as many accolades, you know.
You're gonna throw everybody else in the-
I lose so much respect.
You know, like if you wanna talk shit about yourself
and what you did in the past, that's fine. But you talk about the dudes and people you ran with in the past and you all did it together
You just sound like a weak. I mean just these athletes, okay most of them right?
I'm obviously over generalization to say all of them, but most of them have massive egos
Yeah, they were all the best of course where they came from yep, and when you are a guy like Scottie who what who is arguably one of the best ever like he's a great great player. Right. And you got to play in the shadow
of the greatest of all time. Sure. You know, it's tough on the ego. And everybody whenever
they talk about those bulls those championships, it's always Michael Jordan, Michael Jordan
or Michael Jordan and the rest of the team. It's never Scottie Pippin and Michael Jordan
took on all the stuff. And so, yeah,
but that's, I bet that's been eaten away with them. Now the irony is this Scotty Pippin was
actually paid more in the final years of playing for the bulls than Jordan was. Has Jordan
signed an earlier contract before the contract started getting really crazy. So I can't remember
it was like a 10 year or a while, but it was a bigger, it was a bigger contract earlier
that Jordan had. And Pippins came up later,
after they had won some of the championships.
And so he was being paid more.
So that's the part that I think is really annoying.
It's like, bro, you're making more money than Jordan.
And you don't hear him bitching about,
I didn't get paid as much as Pippin did.
Like that he's all sour about it.
It's like, dude, you got paid, dude.
You know it's funny.
It's like, you know how many good,
you know how much good music, art, innovations,
or whatever, we missed because of egos
when it comes to teams,
like how many bands broke up
because they got popular
and they can't handle that the lead singer
gets all the attention and the drummer's like,
what about me or whatever, you know, it's ridiculous.
Like you wouldn't even be here
if it wasn't the fact that you guys are a team, just work together.
And again, the loyalty part is really weird to me.
It's like, there's no loyalty left.
And the ego, he goes a very, very, very powerful thing.
It is.
You know what though, I have to say this though.
I'm saying this is a 42 year old man.
These guys were in the prime popularity,
what, in their 20s?
Yeah.
I mean, I wasn't very, I definitely wasn't very,
well, I mean, it's grounded in balance.
We say it all the time, if this would have started,
if we were 25, it wouldn't be where it's at today
and all of that has to do it.
It wouldn't have to do with us being good
or not good trainers, or even our experience,
most of us had enough business experience
under our belt, it's literally the ego.
We would, you know, it's really easy when you're broke
and or you're a rookie, right?
You're just coming in and you're,
and we have this common goal to be great,
to make lots of money, to be successful.
And then when you reach that goal,
that's where things get like all crazy
because it's like we didn't think beyond that.
When we were, we were so tunnel vision on winning.
We were so tunnel vision on scaling this company.
It's like, I don't think that we would have,
there would have been any mishap between us,
if we were 25 in the first couple of years
while we were building, we would have had our heads down
and like grinding, we just are actualizing
some of the success of it.
That's right, that's the same thing goes
for like these athletes.
It's like when you're nobody, when you just get drafted,
when you're early, it's like, we all have this common goal then success happens then the money comes in and now it's more than just that because you've reached that
And so now you have to look deeper within when I want and a lot of these guys don't realize oh wow
It really wasn't about winning. I want the knowledge. I want to be known as the guy who built this
I want to be known as the the leader of the team like so that's
Know the irony that is, as you get,
I don't know if this is true for everybody, but as I get older,
like way less, that's way less, not only is it less important,
I'd rather not, I'd rather be, I'd rather not be,
that's your wisdom. Yeah, I'd rather be behind the scenes.
That's your wisdom going like you've seen what all that
attention causes as I do too. I think all of us,
all of us are like, I don't want to be that guy.
Yeah. We talk all the time about, man, when we get to build
this thing big enough that we can fucking get away, he's a walk away, get behind. So nobody has access to us, all of us are like, I don't want to be that guy. We talk all the time about, man, when are we gonna build this thing big enough that we can fucking get away?
We can walk away, get behind so nobody has access to us
because you see what happens to a lot of these people
that want that attention so bad.
It's like, then they get it and they're like, oh, fuck.
You know, this is not cool.
This is one of the number one reasons why I think
one of the worst thing that could ever happen to a young kid
is to get famous.
That's gotta be one of the worst things ever.
Famous or just a windfall of money, right?
Like just a huge amount of money.
You've got your 18, 19,
and all these people fawning over you, telling you everything.
I mean, imagine when you were 18,
if everybody told you that everything you said was great.
Yeah.
How little you would have grown.
You have nothing to keep you grounded and balanced
or anybody checking you on your bulls eye.
No, and then when it's too much of power too early.
Yeah, and then inevitably when you're not as popular,
how crushing that would be when you're a kid
and you grow up with that, now, you know,
you were a child star, oh, you're so cute,
you're so great, oh my God,
and then you go through puberty,
oh, nobody pays attention to you anymore
because you're going through the ugly stage
which happened a lot of child star.
And then they get on drugs and they get,
they commit suicide.
Not cool, man, people think it's great, but nope.
It doesn't work that way. Overrated.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
First question is from Jamie Mendes PR.
How can you progress using body weight training
and still make gains? This is actually a good question because I how can you progress using body weight training and still make gains?
This is actually a good question because I'd say the challenge with body weight resistance training
is exactly that. Like how do you progressively load the body? How do I increase the resistance
when my body weight is no longer sufficient? It's for the exercise. I think it's only a difficult
question when you think in the context of progressive overload is
always adding more weight.
There's many ways that you could progress.
Overload the body without, and we did a whole episode by the way dedicated to this.
I think it was like, called nine different ways to, I think it was like nine different ways
to progressively overload the boat.
Something like that, maybe Doug could look it up while we're talking, but that's why this seems like a difficult problem.
I was like, oh god, what am I gonna do?
Keep wearing sandbags.
I was like, you don't have to overload the body
all the time with that.
Here's one, slow down, slow down the tempo.
Wait a minute.
Slow the tempo down or incorporate isometrics.
Do slow down the tempo, pause the bottom
and hold for five seconds, increase the reps.
Speed, go something that's explosive.
So there's a lot of different ways
that you can overload the body.
Chasing the angle, get more gravitational forces,
we're gonna against you.
That's right.
Yes, so you do have to get a bit creative.
It seems because it's not just like just adding a load
is gonna go ahead and provide that type of progressive overload.
You have to work with the other, acute variables, the other factors there, tempo, intensity
with holding in like you mentioned with isometric training and with difficulty that way.
Yeah, I do want to add something else though, because I think that's part of it, but I don't
think that's the main thing actually.
I'm going to disagree a little bit, not that you guys are wrong something else though, because I think that's part of it, but I don't think that's the main thing actually. I'm gonna disagree a little bit.
Not that you guys are wrong, they're totally right.
But I think the big one is that most people don't know
more than the basic calisthenic exercise,
their body would exercise.
So people know push-ups, pull-ups, sit-ups, lunges.
But they don't realize that with a pair of rings,
there's a whole bunch of
very, very challenging high tension, high resistance body weight exercises that you could do.
And there's just a whole bunch of them. So I would say like, okay, yes, there's your traditional
exercises. And yes, you could progress. So it's like I could go from a body weight squat to like
a pistol squat, for example, which dramatically increases
the load.
I could do pushups elevated, bring them all the way down to the floor, maybe even elevate
my feet.
That's one way to do it.
You could have a pair of rings which are very inexpensive or you could use just suspension
trainers which are very similar.
Now you've opened up a whole plethora of different exercises where you can really make
the resistance high
in advance.
I mean, look at gymnastics.
Yes.
That's probably your best example of how they figured out how to make the intensity, increase
the intensity and also like progress you into moves that you couldn't achieve before.
So you know, now I can do a muscle up,
just from starting off being able to do good pull-ups
to where I could get my body up higher and higher
or get ring dips where I have to go super low.
So I can work on all the transitions,
which then builds strength to then accomplish even new feet.
So I really think this is just a lack of understanding how you can overload the body
because I see this even, forget body weight.
This is a question that I think the average lift
or gets and their answer always is a different machine
or adding load all the time.
So, I mean, you could keep squat, push up body row
or pull up and manipulate that so many different ways
to keep overloading the body,
you want to need to get creative.
You don't need to go do any crazy exercises.
You can incorporate like I was saying,
isometric's in there, you can incorporate tempo,
you can incorporate applyometrics and explosiveness.
It combines some of those variables.
Like all, I mean, you could literally not mess
with the handful of bodyweight exercises
and just manipulate all those variables and continue to see results in the body.
And the reason why I think that's the problem is because I see this even with people that have the gym membership and have access to all the equipment.
We always think that, oh, to get stronger, and I gotta just keep adding weight to the bar, and that's not true.
Yeah, I mean, you make a really good point. Yeah. Because at some point, even with traditional free weights,
the answer is not to add more weight, right?
At some point, the risk versus rewards ratio starts
to become a little bit not so great.
When I was squatting 150 pounds for 10 reps,
and that was a real intense set for me,
going up to 160 and then 170,
like that's, there's a lot of reward to risk, right? Once you get up to, for me at least, once I got
up to 350, 400 or more, I could add 10 more pounds if I'm stronger, but now the risk versus reward
ratio doesn't look the same. Now, if my form's off a little bit, which sometimes it is, my chance of
injury goes up. So now, you know, once you get to a certain little bit, which sometimes it is, my chance of injury goes up.
So now, once you get to a certain level,
you're gonna have to look at all these different things.
Like, yeah, you could add 10 pounds to your 600 pound deadlift,
but you might be better off slowing down, pausing,
doing, you know, changing the way that you do the lift
to make it more challenging.
Here's something that really good lifters know how to do.
They can take an exercise that they could do
for 15 reps to failure, and they can fail at five reps
if they wanted to.
Just by changing the feel and the squeeze,
I did this today, doing pull ups.
I think if I go max out pull ups and just rep them out,
I can get close to 20, but if I really stretch,
really squeeze it in hell it head held hard.
Yeah, squeeze your body, like super hard,
doing these, making like a more intense, like,
full body tension work out on it.
You can do a lot to these exercises.
Yeah, so you just gotta get creative
with some of that stuff.
I, some metrics is a big one.
I tell you what, like, especially if you have something
that's in, like, immovable, like if you have chains
attached to the ground or something,
you're driving against that. Like, the force you generate, the force you generate chains attached to the ground or something and you're driving
against that, like the force you generate, the force you generate, you get stronger, you
just generate more force.
As long as the chain holds steady, you're progressively overloading every time you do a max effort
with isometrics, and that's a very overlooked part of resistance training.
But isometrics, I believe in the future, is going to make a resurgence like everything
old that's good does, and people are going gonna rediscover the value of it and you need almost no equipment to do it. In fact within
intrinsic tension, you need no equipment at all. But if you're more advanced, like I said,
you could use something movable, which is requires so little space and you get tremendous benefits.
Next question is from Helen Ack. What are the pros and cons of using a lifting belt?
Oh good.
See, usually the question is, do I need one,
or why should I use one or not?
But I like this, pros and cons.
I do think there are pros and cons to a lifting belt.
So the obvious one is, well, if you're gonna compete
in an event that allows you to use a lifting belt,
you should train one because there's a skill
and technique to it and you just wanna get good at it.
But now let's talk about the pros and cons
for the average lifter.
One of the cons of using a lifting belt is that it's a different form of core stability
or to put it differently.
It's a different muscle recruitment pattern with core stability with the belt.
So when you wear a belt, you've got this external force or external thing around your waist.
And the way that your core develops or creates
stability with a bell as it pushes out against the bell.
And then that creates more stability.
When you don't wear a bell, it's a little different.
So it's a lot of activation of the core in both of them because the argument used to be
all you wear a bell, you get less core activation, not true.
You get just as much core activation.
It's different though.
I mean, the argument you can make though, Sal, it's a lot different.
It is. It's a complete opposite. One of the argument you could make though, Sal, it's a lot different. It is.
It's a complete opposite.
One of them, you're training to push the core out.
Trying in embrace.
The other one, you're teaching to draw
in what your different skills.
It's different skills.
So that would be a con, right?
Like, why would you want to get stronger in a way,
in the gym, that you're not gonna be able to really apply
as much in everyday life?
So there's one con.
Now I'll give you a pro.
The pro is it can allow you
because it does provide some more
core stability and probably generate on your own.
It does allow you to overload
some really strong body parts, like legs.
So like squats with a belt.
You'll be able to add 10, 15, 20.
Some people can add 30 more pounds
when they know how to use a belt really well.
Dead lifts, you can use more weights
and they can overload the back a little bit more.
Overhead press for some people,
it allows them to lift 10, 15 more pounds
with their shoulders.
So there's that argument there.
So, you know, that would be, I guess,
the two pros and cons.
I will say this, I almost never had a,
everyday client use a belt, almost never, but also
full disclosure, I use a belt.
I use a belt when I squat and I deadlift, and that's just because I trained that way since
I was a kid, and I'm too lazy to train out of it.
Other than, yeah, competing, I mean, I have pretty much all cons, but in terms of, I was
trying to think of that, in terms of like breathing or like belly breathing. If you didn't have a belt on where it's advantageous
to focus on pushing out and bracing in that fashion.
I don't know if that correlates
which I don't think it does.
I can't think of a real life application without the belt
where you're trying to promote that type of a mechanism.
But yeah, like for the most part,
I just, I think it's good, like,
let's say in a situation where you're really
Pressing yourself to kind of go beyond your your natural limits
To acclimate to a belt and then start to build that type of
Strengthen in support because it does I mean here's the thing when you have really heavy weight, you
don't want to have to be conscious of too many things at the same time. You want to kind
of have that aid and support when it's a competitive environment. So I definitely see some benefit
to that.
Well, another pro, when you walk in worrying about, you look serious. Yeah.
Especially for names on it. Yeah. I mean, especially if your name's on it. Yeah.
Yes.
Beast.
I mean, it's, yeah.
Yeah.
You make a name or your last name on the back of your belt
when you walk in.
Not many people think that it's your first time in the gym.
So there definitely is a little bit of street cred
that comes with carrying it all, as far as a pro.
Honestly, I'm kind of like, I don't use it as much as Sal does,
but I have trained myself to use it.
So I do like to pull it out every once in a while.
Not very often though, like I have to be chasing a PR
or like really going heavy for the day for me to pull it out
and just kind of see where I'm at.
And the truth is what I know now,
if I were to, if I was starting all over on my weightlifting
journey knowing that I have no desire to be a powerlifter
and get into that category at all, I probably would never use one.
I agree.
Same thing.
Yeah, I mean, I just, but I have used it enough times and I know how to use it.
And so it's an advantage, right?
So like I can deadlift in squat and overhead press more weight with the belt than I can
without.
So it's purely an ego thing.
Sometimes I feel like getting in there and pushing more weight than I normally would push.
And so I know I can strap the belt on and I know I can get an extra 3% to
5% out of my lift. And so I do it. But if I were to train a client or train myself from
from the base up again, I wouldn't use it because it doesn't have to your point, Justin.
It doesn't have any real application in the real world. And in fact, if anything, it could
crutch you because you're used to pushing out on that. And if you were in the real world. And in fact, if anything, it could crutch you
because you're used to pushing out on that.
And if you were in the real world,
been able to pick the couch up or my son
or do something and I were to try and brace that way,
I could potentially hurt myself instead of
bracing inward and supporting myself
like you're supposed to.
Yeah, I gotta ask you, if this is still a thing
in the physique world in terms of wearing the belt as sort of a waste-shape
in the industry.
Yes, yes.
It's part of the justification for them to defend themselves
when they get caught doing a tricep pushdown
on the cable machine.
So if you catch a men's physique bodybuilder guy
doing tricep pushdowns or cable curls
and they have the belt on.
You're almost certain that they are doing it with the intent of they have it sucked in
really tight like a waist trainer and they think they're shrinking their waist.
I've seen people wear weight belts on seated machine exercises.
Yeah.
Well, it became a very popular fashion statement in the last decade or so.
It wasn't that I don't remember it being that popular when we were first
like lifting.
You know who popularized it for a second?
Charles Glass.
By the way, one of the best bodybuilder trainers ever.
And I had to say that because there's a difference
between a bodybuilder trainer and a, if you trained
everyday average person.
When you're training these highly developed,
extremely gifted genetic anomalies
who are on anabolic steroids on that stuff,
then sometimes this kind of stuff
makes sense, it's an extreme sport.
And that's what he did.
He would put his athletes in a weight belt
because remember the issue started happening in the 90s,
where bodybuilders get so big,
they'd get that distended belly.
And so he says that it helped,
I don't know if it did or not,
but that's kind of why it became popular,
why you would see them wearing a belt
when they did seated bicep curls and stuff like that.
The irony of that though is I would actually make the case
of that probably made it worse because again,
like you said, it trained,
it trains the court to push out versus drawing
the vacuum maneuver and teaching bodybuilders
to do the vacuum or I think would have tremendous value,
because then you naturally kind of hold your stomach in the form.
And also, you don't activate the core less
by working out in the belt.
You activate it the same amount,
it just activated different, totally different.
Yeah, you know, here's the thing, like for me,
I started using it as a kid
because I got introduced to it by power lifters
who taught me how to squat,
and they told me you got to wear a belt, so I did.
Now years ago, I used to use wrist straps a lot
when I would work out,
because bodybuilders did, so I read the magazines,
so I did.
It took me a year, maybe a year and a half,
to get my grip, to catch up to my back strength.
I had to go through this whole process,
getting my hands stronger, getting rid of the belt now,
would take me another year or two,
to really get comfortable.
I just don't mind lazy to do it.
This is why I still use it.
And I have a very interesting relationship with a way belt.
It's become like my cape, you know, like I pull it out.
It's the same one I've had forever.
In fact, I gave the one I had when I was 16
away to one of my clients,
because it was so tattered and beat up.
And did you start coming out to a dramatic movie theme song
music?
No, I'm not like Lane.
No, but I had this belt forever, and I gave it
when I finally stopped training clients,
when we went full time with my pump,
I gave it to him as a gift and whatever.
And I still have another one that I got when I was 19.
It's the one I still, the blue one I still use.
So I got this interesting thing with Wapebelts,
but what you said is so true.
If I could go back in time,
I would have never used it because there's no need.
Yeah, you're not gonna be a power of either a my,
I know intentions to do that.
And so then it really has no real reason why
you would want to train with it.
Next question is from corn on the cob 2733.
How much protein powder should I supplement with?
I weigh 240 pounds, so eating 240 grams of protein
is very difficult each day.
The short answer is, as much protein powder
as you need to make up the difference.
Now, here's a long answer.
I have experimented with this myself.
I've done this with clients.
For whatever reason, and I know people are gonna argue
with me and they're gonna pull up studies and protein is protein.
I have never gotten as good of results
eating half of my protein from protein powder,
even if all things were equal,
then if I got all my protein from food.
I agree with that.
And you were really, yeah, I agree with that.
Meticulous about that.
I did a whole time, one show where I allow myself
to use bars and shakes as much as I wanted.
Even if I had to get, even if I'm in,
I had two bars and two shakes in a day
to make up most of my protein.
And then another time where I went all Whole Foods
and I just, I felt better, I felt I looked better,
I thought I leaned out better,
all on the Whole Foods, it felt better.
And I know that's just my experience with it,
but I specifically tested it because I was
curious.
I really thought, because I had already speculated on it, like I'd seen like my, my
body just didn't look the same.
And when I, whenever I'd hit my protein intake from all whole foods, I just seemed to
build more muscle.
It just felt better.
And I don't know what it was.
And you know, I totally calories and everything.
Yeah.
Would you attribute that more to the digestion,
differences, or the assimilation?
What I would attribute it to is that I think it's the unknown
still for us.
There's still value in real food that we still,
we act like we know everything.
It's so funny sometimes how arrogant we are
like with science, right?
Because we've come a long ways and we do know a lot.
We know a lot more today than we did 50 and a hundred years ago when it comes to nutrition. But there's still a
lot of things. And just there's probably something in a whole piece of chicken or steak that
I'm getting that is that is helping me out more than just some dehydrated powder that
you know condensed diversion of that where you know and they've and they've tried to fortify
it to be as natural
parings of like potential nutrients in there.
So you're 100% right Adam, because we only know what we know.
So we can make something as perfect as we think,
we can make it based off of our current knowledge.
It's like baby formula.
100%.
There's another example right there.
That's something very well studied that they've been,
there's a massive market there.
So you better believe there's a ton of fucking research
to try and make baby formula to be just like breast milk.
And yet we still learn.
And yet we still don't.
Every, every year a new study comes out showing us
something different or new about breast milk
that we didn't know before.
Same thing with food.
We discover a new thing about food, this new compound,
this new bioflavanoid, this new, whatever,
that's in this particular food that does this thing,
that we didn't know about before.
So I agree with that.
Now where science is amazing is,
I did that show where I had four shakes and bars
almost every day making it up from stuff like that.
I still look badass.
I still got lean.
It's still, calorie wise, it didn't throw off my tracking.
So we've got it close enough that you're going to be okay.
But boy, it just seems to be better when I get it from whole foods.
And I noticed that I could get away with maybe not hitting.
So for example, if, like let's say 240 is the number, and I got 200 grams of all whole
food, but I didn't get the other 40 grams.
And then another example, I get 240,
but 120 of it came from the protein powder.
My body seems to have respond,
will respond better to even a little bit less protein,
but coming from whole foods,
then overloading with the protein,
but almost all of it coming from powder to the bars.
Now, here's what the question is.
Yes. Now here's the real question.
Is are you better off missing by a big amount
and not supplementing with protein powder?
No, I think.
That's why I use example 240.
Yes.
Because if I was, if you were like 150.
Yes.
So that's 100%.
So I think the key with protein powder is this.
You have it.
And you have it. And you use it when you miss your target. That's 100%. So I think the key with protein powder is this, you have it and you have it and you use it
when you miss your target.
That's it.
I personally, I used to tell clients
and I still kind of stand by this is like,
one shake a day is probably okay, you know?
Like one shake maybe have it when it's most needed
and convenient tends to be post workout
because post workout people in a hurry
and I gotta have the shake real quick or whatever.
Personally, personally, shakes for me
are always best at the end of the day.
At the end of the day, it's eight o'clock at night,
I'm gonna go to bed in a couple hours
and I don't really feel like eating.
So let me see, oh, let me kind of loosely figure out my protein.
Ooh, I'm off by like 80 grams.
Let me throw a 60 gram shake or 50 gram shake in there.
That's how I like to use it.
And that's how I recommend it.
That's how I've used it.
You will not supplement still, will not replace whole natural foods.
The goal is to get as close as you can with whole natural foods.
And whatever you miss, then you can use supplemental protein.
There's one last thing I want to address on this question because we don't know.
We're assuming this person that's trying to hit 240, they're 240 pounds,
we're not assuming that we know that, they tell us that.
But where your body fat percentage
makes a difference too on how detrimental
missing the 240 marks.
Yeah, if you're trying to hit 240,
and you're 25% body fat, you don't need to hit 240.
Right, you're okay, if you're short.
Go off of your lean body mass.
That's right.
But if this person is relatively lean,
say they're 5% body fat and they're 240,
well that's more than relative.
You're ready.
Yeah, but there's a big difference, right?
You just want to use extreme analogy.
That person, you want to be hitting 240 first share,
because otherwise you're not maximizing
the full potential of building muscle.
But if you are higher body fat percentage
and your lean body mass is say only around 170, you know, 180, well then you're okay following closer to 190.
Now, now the next question, I know this isn't part of the question, but I'm sure people
watching this are going to wonder what's the best protein powder in that case, which
one should I take?
It really doesn't matter unless your protein is low.
If you're eating low, if there's a low amount of protein in your diet, then the protein type
makes a bigger difference.
Animal proteins are better than plant proteins, generally.
But if your protein intake is high,
it really doesn't make that big of a difference.
We're really literally splitting hair.
So you can get your protein from plant sources,
animal sources, way, eggs.
It's all good.
As long as it's high, it doesn't make that
a big of a difference.
Next question is from the entity known as Manny.
What are your opinions on stretching before and after workouts?
You know what, I'm gonna talk about the after workout.
Okay, so static stretching.
So we'll talk about static stretching.
That's when you hold a stretch for a long period of time,
is that traditional type of stretching.
It's what most, I guess the average person will think about
when you say stretching.
Post workout, especially when your muscle is pumped, there's some evidence, actually there's
decent amount of evidence that deep stretching induces muscle hypertrophy.
Now the hypertrophy that you get, it's a bit of a short gain, so you'll see this immediate
gain and then the kind of plateaus.
Nonetheless, I've experimented with this where I'll work a body part and then I'll do a
really deep stretch of that same body part at the end of the workout when it's really pumped.
And I do notice some beneficial effects.
So I'll start with that.
I think post workout, stretch, and you don't have to worry about the CNS at that point,
you know, making a muscle maybe disengage a little bit who cares you're done with your workout.
Static stretching post workout, especially in the muscle that's been worked and pumped
and warm, it's actually kind of cool.
It's an advanced technique, give it a shot.
I think that stretching in general is fantastic.
I just think that it's applied incorrectly.
Yeah.
You know, we used to say stretch with purpose, right?
So if you're
going to don't just stretch to stretch. And I think that I think stretching has been promoted
for so long as it's, you know, so beneficial. So you should stretch all time. And I think
there was this idea that you should definitely stretch before you go in and work out. And
it's been applied incorrectly. When you hold a stretch, and I'm speaking specifically
to static stretching, which is'm speaking specifically to static stretching,
which is the most common way of stretching,
which the average person is used to sing.
So if you hold a stretch for 30 seconds and beyond,
it doesn't matter what it is, you could be stretching anything.
And then you go into an active workout, not a good idea.
You basically relax those muscles, relax that body,
and then you're gonna go call upon it
to do something either explosive or heavy,
and that's just not smart, dangerous, not a good idea.
Doing something more like mobility,
that where you're, or an active stretch,
where they're short holds,
and you're basically just kinda warming the muscle up,
pumping blood and fluid into there
to get it warmed up and prepared,
or get better connected.
That's a great way to start your workouts.
And then post, I agree with what you're saying, Sal, incredible to stretch post, incredible
to stretch throughout the day, the rest of the day too.
There's nothing wrong.
When you're watching TV, get down and, you know, in the pigeon or in a 90-90 and do a nice
hold and stretch, I think that's phenomenal for you.
But before you go into a workout, you're not wanting to send the signal to body to relax.
You want to be active and alert and ready to go.
And when you static stretch before you go into a workout,
that's exactly the signal you're sending to the body.
Yeah, I mean, would you guys really do a static stretch
anymore before a workout?
Never.
Right?
I mean, unless there was like some serious, serious limitation
that was limiting you from even being able to do
these types of movements and get into positions. But other than that, the whole intent of working out
adding load is to create tension. And then I see it more as in post to then relax the entire system and be in that state.
And even if I work to static stretch,
to like get a muscle to get out of the way
so I can do something else, for example.
Which is easy for correctional exercise, I would.
Right, so like, okay, so,
but even then I would do something dynamic or active afterwards
to kind of, for example, okay,
like someone trying to stretch their chest out, right?
Or warm their chest up before a bench press,
but their shoulders are so tight and pull forward.
Maybe you would do this static stretch
on the anterior delt to relax the shoulders a little bit
so you can then do this kind of...
Open you up.
Yeah, open you up so then you can do this
kind of dynamic warm up for chest,
but then I would still do something dynamic
to reactivate the shoulders.
So I get them to relax
so I can get into a deep stretch on the chest.
I ain't still need support.
So it's not just the passive.
So I would never just do a pure static stretch by itself.
I think a better example would be,
I would do this with clients sometimes.
There was so tight in the front of their body
that they couldn't do a proper row
because literally it kept their shoulders forward.
So then I would do a static stretch of the chest, which would just get it out of the way,
and then we could do a better row.
And since the chest is not involved in the row,
it wasn't really that big of a deal.
So to kind of break this down a little more,
here's what happens when you do a static stretch.
The reason why you improve the flexibility in that short term,
when you hold a stretch, by the way,
your muscles don't get any longer,
and they don't become more pliable
like if you warm rubber up or something like that's not what happens.
What happens is you're sending a signal to the master of muscle contractions which is
your central nervous system.
And the signal is saying, hey, it's cool, you can relax a little bit, stop keeping this
muscle so tight.
That's why when you hold a stretch, you find like, oh my God, I can go move a little forward.
Oh, I got a little bit more range of motion. Because the CNS is literally starting to relax.
One more part of that, okay?
And this is actually, this came to me today
because I was taking Doug through some stretches
this morning while he was working out.
If your goal is to do a static stretch
to increase range, you know, that range of motion,
let's see, at the end of a workout,
you have to relax and breathe through the stretch
because if you keep your face tense and tight and you're trying to hold, you're sending a and breathe through the stretch because if you keep your
face tense and tight and you're trying to hold, you're sending a conflicting signal to
central nervous system.
You're saying, relax the muscle, but wait a minute, the rest of me saying, keep everything
tight because I'm in a lot of pain.
And I learned this in yoga.
I remember I doing a Yin yoga class.
You get a breathe through it.
Yeah, and it was like tensing and the lady comes over and she'll start breathing.
Relax.
Your body's not going to loosen up if you're, up if you're, oh yeah, it makes perfect sense.
I just gonna sat in it, opened up a little bit,
and it totally worked, but yeah, pre-workout,
dynamic stretching, mobility work, priming,
post-workout, static stretching,
and I think that's kind of the winning formula.
The winning formula, yeah, absolutely.
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 or health goal.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So Justin is at Mind Pump Justin.
I'm at Mind Pump Sal and Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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