Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1746: What to Do If Your Body Isn’t Changing on a Low Calorie Diet, Keys to Making a Bodyweight Only Program Effective, How to Train in the Gym to Improve Athleticism & More
Episode Date: February 9, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: The best exercise for your lagging body part is the one you’re NOT doing for it. (4:21) With M...agic Spoon, you get what you pay for. (12:40) Fun Facts with Justin: African clawed frogs and regenerating limbs. (21:39) Is fasting coming back into favor? (23:56) L-Dopa supplementation for improved erections in men. (28:00) Whoopi Goldberg and how cancel culture is eating itself now. (31:57) Did you know Ned has a subscription service? (35:55) #ListenerLive question #1 - Are bodyweight-only programs as effective as ones with equipment? (39:42) #ListenerLive question #2 - What can I do if my body not changing on a low-calorie diet after coming off a bulk? (48:04) #ListenerLive question #3 - How can I incorporate resistance training to gain explosive strength for boxing? (1:03:56) #ListenerLive question #4 - How can I improve my athleticism in the gym? (1:14:23) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com February Promotion: MAPS Performance and MAPS Aesthetic 50% off!! **Promo code “FEB50” at checkout** Mind Pump #1745: How To Pack On Muscle To Your Lagging/Stubborn Body Parts Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Lab Frogs Regrow Limbs, Opening Door for Regeneration Studies Drug mimics beneficial effects of fasting in mice Valter Longo - ProLon® Fast Eating Fat, Lifting Cows, and Preventing Seizures — An Intro to the Ketogenic Diet (with Dom D’Agostino) L-DOPA Supplement — Health Benefits, Dosage, Side Effects Whoopi Goldberg suspended from 'The View' Commanders is new name for Washington Football Team Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP” at checkout** Fit Mom Bundle | MAPS Fitness Products MAPS Fitness Anywhere Mind Pump #1565: Why Women Should Bulk MAPS Fitness Anabolic MAPS Powerlift The Key to Fitness Success is Self-Love – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #463: Olympic Medalist Tony Jeffries & Kevan Watson Of Box ‘N Burn Mind Pump #1437: The Unfiltered Truth About MMA With Phil Daru MAPS Prime Pro Webinar MAPS Prime Webinar Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Tony Jeffries (@tony_jeffries) Instagram Phil Daru (@darustrong) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, please 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, today's episode, a live one.
People called in live, asked this question, and we got to coach them on air.
By the way, if you ever want to be on one of these live episodes,
email your question to live at mindpumpmedia.com.
Today's intro portion was 35 minutes long.
After that, we got to the live questions.
So here's what went down today in the episode.
We opened up, I talked about the best exercises
for your lagging body parts. Then
we talked about how I hooked my friends on Magic Spoon. No, it's not a drug. It's serial,
high protein, serial with no sugar, it's grain free. It's way protein. It's amazing.
The macros are great. And it tastes like the serial eight when you were a kid. So if you
want to try it out, head over to mypumppartners.com. Click on Magic Spoon.
Use the code, Mind Pump Get $5 off.
Then Justin talked about African Claude Frogs.
This is something super into at the moment.
I talked about the new fasting drug
that they experimented on mice.
I talked about a supplement that boost dopamine.
We talked about whoopie Goldberg
and how cancel culture is eating itself now.
Uh oh, then we talked about the Washington commanders.
That's a new name.
That's pretty cool.
Sometimes I go commando.
And then we talked about another one of our sponsors,
Ned.
Now Ned makes the best CBD hemp oil products anywhere,
anywhere, like you feel their products.
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Now with Ned, you notice, anxiety is down, energy is up,
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Go check them out.
Head over to mindpumppartners.com, click on Ned,
and then use the code Mind Pump for 15% off.
Then we got to the question.
So here's the first one, Ashley called in from Montana.
She said, look, our body weight only exercise programs as effective as ones with equipment.
Sorry, Missouri.
She called in from Missouri.
Then I talked to Nicole from California.
She says, look, I'm eating low calories. I'm working out a lot. My body's not changing. What do I talked to Nicole from California. She says, look, I'm eating localities,
I'm working out a lot, my body's not changing.
What do I need to do?
The next question was from Jessica from Wisconsin.
She wanted to know how to lift weights to punch harder.
She's gonna be competing in a boxing tournament.
Then we talked to Holly from Canada,
wanted, you know, look, she's having a hard time, excuse me.
She wants to train in the gym to improve athleticism. In other words, she's having a hard time, excuse me, she wants to train in the gym to improve athleticism.
In other words, she's having a hard time improving her athleticism with just workouts in the gym.
What can she do?
Also, all month long, we're running a sale on two very effective maps workout programs.
The first one is maps performance, train like an athlete, look like an athlete, perform like an athlete.
That's what that program is all about.
The other program that's on sales maps is aesthetic.
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out your body, work on symmetry and aesthetics.
So both programs are 50% off.
Here's what you got to do if you want to sign up.
For maps performance, go to mapsgreen.com and for maps aesthetic go to maps black dot com the code for 50% off for both programs is
f e b 50 so f e b five zero no space for that discount
teacher time and it's t-shirt time
oh shit though you know it's my favorite time of the week.
I'm gonna ask you what that is.
We have five winners for this week.
We have three from Apple podcast, two from Facebook, the Apple podcast winners are
Joey Seahack and Jay Montoya 0267 and raw Furny truth.
And for Facebook, we have Jennifer Zayner
and Jennifer Lynch.
All five of you are winners in the name I just read
to iTunes at Mind Pump Media
and include your shirt size and your shipping address
and we'll get that shirt right out to you.
Look, the best exercise for your lagging body part
is not the one that you're doing for it.
How do you know that?
That's a big deal.
You know what it is, is that there are,
here's a challenge with lagging body part.
First of all, it's challenging because it's a body part
that doesn't respond like the rest of your body.
We all have that, right?
But the challenge is.
Glutes are a very common one.
They are, except for you.
Yeah, it looks right.
Glutes respond exceptionally well. On the exception., except for you. Yeah, it glutes. Respond exceptionally.
On the exception.
The problem is that we have a lagging body part,
and then we pick what's typically known
as the best exercise for that lagging body part,
and then we keep doing that exercise,
and it's not working, and we're like, what's going on?
Not realizing that there are muscle recruitment patterns,
there are ways that muscles fire and connect
to many of these exercises,
most of them being compound lifts.
And so we keep doing them,
and we keep developing the wrong muscle groups.
Like for example, I'll use an easy one, right?
Let's say your chest is a body part that's lagging,
and you're like, well, bench press.
Bench press is a great exercise for chest.
And you keep benching, you keep benching,
not realizing that you're benching a lot with your shoulders and triceps
And so those develop really well
Chest never really catches up but because you're stubborn about it and doing the same exercise over and over again
Nothing's working. It's like a mystery. Why the hell isn't my lagging body part responding?
I think this is like a single topic episode because it's I think it's more nuanced right?
There's a lot more there's a lot to it. Yeah, I think it's more nuanced, right? There's a lot more things. There's a lot to it.
Yeah, that could be potentially going on, right?
I would agree that a majority of people,
it's a poor exercise selection.
I also think just the attention to it.
One of the biggest things that I think made a difference
in my lagging body parts was prioritizing it in the workout
and in the week, right?
So like, for example, as a young kid that was lifting,
like when I would lift in the past, I would,
and you know, because everybody is consistent
and then we all have our moments where you fall off
for a little bit, if I fell off and I returned,
I always returned starting back up
with the muscle groups I love.
It's never one, yeah, my favorite one.
And the ones I'm stronger or more developed
because you like to do that.
And you'd never miss that one.
But the ones that were lagging or that I hated to train,
I never, and that, when you've been lifting for a long time,
that starts to compound.
It makes a big difference.
And simply going, okay, if I fall off for a week
or even a few days, and when I go back,
you just, I always start back.
And I started doing that.
So even when you have, let's say, a four day break, you have a routine where you're training
four or five days a week consistently for a long time and you don't miss very long but
you just miss four days.
Technically most people would probably just keep pick up right where the routine is.
I wouldn't.
I would start back with my lacking body part.
So anytime I gave myself a break longer than three days
in a routine that I was following,
by going back and always starting,
the next day I lived again with the lagging body part
as a focus, that really helped bring out that.
That's really good advice.
But some people do that.
They do all the stuff, they do all the volume,
they do the priorities in terms of training that body part first and all the stuff, they do all the volume, they do the priorities in terms of
training that body part first and all that stuff.
And I guess not working, like, to be more clear, right?
You can squat, you can do a barbell squat
and make it mostly about your quads.
You can barbell squat and make it more about your glutes.
You could bench press and make it more about your shoulders
and triceps than your chest or vice versa.
You can row and make it more about your biceps in your forearms
Then you're back and not realize it right not realize it because that's the way you've been practicing that exercise for so long and
Oftentimes what it requires if you don't have a coach who can watch you and say wait a minute
I know why your glutes aren't developing right you're this is you're using all quad you can't feel and see that yourself
Sometimes what you need to do is change the exercise.
Let me do something else and really focus on feeling
that muscle group, develop it a little bit,
then go back to this other exercise.
Oh my gosh, now all of a sudden, I feel more.
Yeah, sometimes you need to adjust things,
like even your posture, like you're not even
given alignment yet to be able to really tap into
that response from that muscle group that you're trying
to incorporate in that exercise.
So if you go back and you look at the limitations of your range of motion, and you know, you
might have to do some work to even place yourself in proper position to then get it to respond.
But definitely taking the time to really slowly work and isolate that muscle group and get
it to respond and then bring that over to the compound list.
Now being honest, Justin, have you ever even gave a shit about this before?
Have you ever...
No, seriously, like, I'm gonna be very honest right now, like, I know you understand what
needs to be done.
Like, you understand the science stuff behind it, but have you ever cared enough to put that
much emphasis on a lagging bar?
Have you ever looked at yourself and go, oh, I need to bring this up.
And so I'm going to shape my programming around that
or do you just going to chalk it up as I don't give a fuck?
Yeah, I mean, it's a fair question.
I'm definitely more movement-focusing
in the broad scale of it.
But if I do see myself and I do some checkups in terms
of like, I know that my chest hasn't got works in quite a bit, and so I'll put some emphasis there.
I feel like really to me, it's more of a scale of like,
my pullups are really hard and that pisses me off.
And so I'll go in that direction or, you know,
it's really more of a like what I'm not touching
in terms of like, what I'm not incorporating in my programming,
because all, whether you do it or not,
you do fall into patterns of what your strengths are, right? And so I try to incorporating in my programming, because whether you do it or not, you do fall into patterns of what strengths are.
And so I try to challenge myself to see
where the areas I haven't been focusing on,
but in terms of something that's not responding,
I would probably look at it differently more like,
well, you said it perfectly,
but you're more performance bit.
You look at and go like,
oh, I'm not very strong here.
I need to address these things there.
So I'm not going to focus on that.
Yeah, I got to do more pulling, right?
Or I notice that I'm losing some of my shoulder mobility.
So I'll say, do you incorporate more stuff like that?
So it's interesting, you know?
I used to do this thing where,
at some point, I was like a great,
to be honest, a sales tool.
And I would have a potential client come in.
And if they were relatively, you know,
kind of sharp and
I could explain things to them in a particular way.
I used to do this example where I'd say, okay, you have Forward Shoulder, which is like 90%
of anybody that I would meet that didn't work out, especially here in Silicon Valley,
everybody working on the desk, right?
And Forward Shoulder is exactly how it sounds, right?
Shoulders come forward.
And I'd say a good exercise to correct that is a cable row, right?
So I would sit down and I'd show them the cable row and I'd show them like what we're gonna
do is we're gonna focus on pulling the shoulders down and back, work on what's called scapular
retractions, strengthen the muscles that hold the shoulders back.
Once those get stronger, you'll have better posture and I would explain all the benefits.
Then I'd sit them down, I'd have them do the cable row, and I'd put them in good position, have them do it right,
and they'd be like, oh my God, that feels really good.
Then I'd take my hands off of them,
and I'd say, do six more reps.
And we're talking lightweight, this is a lightweight.
And then their form would slowly start to change
and go back to their old recruitment pattern.
Then I'd stop them and say, hold on,
let me fix your form again, and I put them in position,
they go, oh my God, I didn't even notice that my shoulders
started doing that and I said, okay,
although the cable row is an excellent exercise
to correct forward shoulder,
you can still do a cable row in a way
that makes forward shoulder wrong.
And because you don't necessarily feel that yet,
I'm gonna be here correcting your form
making sure that you pull those shoulders back.
But if I wasn't here, eventually what you would end up
doing is pulling with this forward shoulder position.
Not really, and I'm exaggerating,
but it would be more like that.
You would actually strengthen the forward shoulder.
And so then here you are working out for six months.
You're like, I'm doing this exercise to fix my posture.
It's not working.
My neck still hurts, what's going on.
And it's like, you're not doing this in a way to achieve the particular result you're
looking for.
And this is what happens with a lot of lagging body parts.
People press, pull, squat, whatever, in a particular way to where that lagging body
part is playing a secondary role.
Will you fall to your default patterns?
And I think it's really like if you were to, if you don't have a coach, a coach is the
best way to do this
to get that external feedback,
but if you video yourself and your objective
about your form and your posture,
it'll do wonders for you if you are in that position
where your muscle isn't responding properly.
Yeah, totally.
I gotta tell you guys a funny story.
So I have a buddy's investment banker
or like a stock broker.
Super smart guy, really cool,
India exercise, so he's into working out.
And we were talking about nutrition.
And he always struggles with getting like, really lean.
Now he's done a good job,
he's lost a certain amount of body fat,
very consistent, he's also kickboxes, he does some weights.
He's like, man, I just can't get like to the point
where I can see my abs or whatever.
So we're talking about diet and all the challenges with it.
And I'm like, what's your, what are your most challenging foods?
And he's a 40-year-old guy.
So this was hilarious.
He's like, cereal.
Like what?
He goes, yeah, dude, I have cereal in the house, capped in crunch or pops or whatever.
And he goes, and I just go to town with it.
And I'm like, well, have you thought about not buying it?
He goes, I do, he goes, but then I love it.
And I got this weird relationship with it.
So of course, I'm like, dude, come to the studio.
In our back room, we have all this magic spoon serial
that we work with.
It's a company and, you know, high protein,
low sugar, serial, whatever.
I'm like, come to the studio, let me give it to you.
He's like, no way, dude.
He goes, high protein, like, no sugar, serial. me give it to you. He's like no way dude. He goes high protein like no sugar cereals
It tastes like crap like trust me. It does sound like it would taste horrible
I'm like trust me dude. Let me give you a box if you like it
I want you can come back and I'll hook you up on more whatever anyway. Give him a box
Dude I get a text from the sky. First of all I wake up in the morning. I see this text midnight
He takes me at midnight and he's like, and he obviously is eating magic spoon at midnight.
He's like, bro, I just ate the whole box.
Okay, well, you might be doing this wrong.
As if at least you got a lot of protein.
He's like, what do they put in this stuff?
I'm like, it's really good.
So anyway, he came back the next day.
I hooked him up with a bunch of new boxes, but it's hilarious.
He's super sold on magic spoon.
I did have to explain to him though that if you eat a box of it,
you're probably not going to get lean so you're just doing way too much.
I mean, it's still not that crazy. I actually just got into it with my cousin who was talking about
it and he's like, dude, it's so overly price. If I hear that one more time from somebody in my
audience who says that, and it's my family, so you should know better, I'm going to strangle you.
It's so funny to me when people, they look at that,
and they instantly go, they compare it to regular cereal,
and they go, oh my God, regular cereal is like,
literally a couple bucks for a box, this stuff,
it's five times a price.
Yeah, and it has five times a protein,
and that's what you're paying for.
Anytime something is really expensive when it comes to food,
one of the number one reasons why it is more money
than another meal.
They say they're gonna put protein.
Protein's expensive.
And so you have to look at that.
It's the same hustle and scam that people used to do
with protein powders.
You say you have to deal with this all the time with clients.
I would tell them, I want you to get this, do this,
and like I'd have the brands that I wanted them to work
with back them.
And then they get the...
And then client comes back and they would be, and I'd be looking at what
they, what they're using.
And I'm like, why did you get that protein powder?
I told you to get this one.
Oh my God, it was so expensive.
I found this one.
$15 for five pounds.
Yeah.
And it was so much cheaper.
I go, well, then I had to turn it around.
Yeah, forget that too, by the way, which is, you know, if it's an off brand like that,
there's a chance that's happening. But I'm like, by the way, which is, you know, if it's an off-brand like that, there's a chance that's happening But I'm like do the math if you look at the servings and what works the reason why I make you eat this is for the protein
I'm not I'm not telling people to have magic spoon cereal because it's you just I just want you to eat magic
Serial it's I'm trying to help you get a higher protein intake in your diet and in breakfast foods
There's very little meals that have lots of protein
Yeah, so you have to look at it like that, and then look at, like, okay,
if you look at a protein powder label that the protein's only $20,
and I'm trying to get you to buy the 71,
but then when you look at the serving size and the amount of protein,
it's like 13 grams per serving,
where this one's like 50 grams of serving.
So if you divide that by the entire bottle,
it's like splitting hair difference of the price.
And so people get that way sometimes when they look at management,
they instantly go,
oh my God, that's so over-priced cereal.
It's like, okay, yeah, if you're comparing it
to car-bloded sugar cereal,
which it's really easy to bump calories
through carbohydrates and sugar,
then it is to actually do that fruit protein.
Carbohydrates, especially grains like corn and wheat,
are very inexpensive.
We've done a great job of making those inexpensive.
We grow lots of them.
GMOs allow us to spray this shit out of them with pesticides
so we can just make it really cheap.
They're also subsidized.
Sugar often comes from corn,
so high fructose corn syrup, super cheap.
Protein is not cheap.
So you can very easily make a processed, heavily
processed carbohydrate based, especially corn or wheat based food with sugar and whatever
make it taste good, even add some cheap fats to it, cheap, throw some protein in there,
especially way protein. It's going to be way more expensive.
And that's comparing it to powders, I compare it to meals. I go, okay, you're serving
in a half to two servings
of magic spoon, let's do the math
on what the dollar amount that is.
Tell me where you're gonna go buy a meal
that has that much protein.
Always.
Yeah, for that price.
You're not gonna find it, you're gonna pay that or more
if especially if you eat out.
Now, okay, if you buy your meat in bulk
and then you get up and you have eggs in meat for breakfast,
like, yeah, okay, you could save a little bit of money,
but I'm not, I'd rather
you do that than even have magic spoon.
Don't do that.
If you're going to make, get up and have some ground beef and eggs and actually make a
good balanced breakfast like that, like I would rather you do that.
But if you're going to do something quick and fast or order out or someone like that,
or you want to eat fruit loose, but you don't want all the sugar.
Yeah, it's like, come on.
I, you know, you know what you're in mind when you said the, the serving size thing,
you know when that first hit me, I'll never forget.
So you guys remember that like when weight gainers were like
all the rage back in the 90s and early 2000s,
nobody really takes weight gainers anymore,
at least it's not a big part of the supplement market.
But I've seen a few commercials though,
which it's interesting to see like, they're talking,
and they actually like included some women in it too,
of like them wanting to gain weight.
Really?
Yeah, I thought that was interesting.
Maybe it's gonna come back around.
Yeah, I think it's like the fitness issue.
Slowly kind of going that direction.
But dude, in the late 90s, definitely in the 90s
and in early 2000s, but definitely 90s,
weight gainers were everything.
Like it wasn't about pure, you wanted, you know,
mega mass 2000 heavy weight gainer, 900,
lean, you know, super gainer,
a lot of mass, whatever.
So as a kid, skinny kid wanting to gain weight,
I would buy weight gainers,
because I'm like, that's, you know, crash gain
or they'd have crazy names.
And I remember, I think weeder,
it was weeder that had mega mass 2000.
So that was at the time the biggest number.
I would always look at the number.
I'm like, I can get twin labs gainer,
which is a thousand, or this one's 2000.
Why would I go with a thousand?
I'm going to go with 2000. I want the strongest stuff right by that
Yeah, the scoop comes no dude. I didn't even piece it together. Yeah fucking bucket
Yeah, I didn't piece it together sand bucket. So I had mega mass two thousand and yes
It came with this big ass scoop or whatever and then we'd or came out with mega mass four thousand
And I'll never
It's like six minute abs. Yes
I came out with seven minute ads.
Andrew, can you please put that clip from that movie
in there right there?
That's like in my favorite.
What about somebody comes out eight minute ads?
Yeah.
They're not gonna come out eight minute ads.
Dude, so I saw this.
I saw this in the back of Flex Magazine or whatever.
I'm like, megamass, 4,000.
Oh, I gotta get this, right?
So, saved up my money, went to the supplement store,
Mega Mass 4000, and it came in what looked like a paint bucket,
like a small paint bucket.
Okay, so this was the thing, which made it even more impressive
to be like, oh dude, this is serious.
This is serious.
I'm geared up.
I'm gonna get jacked, right?
So, I remember picking the bucket up,
and then I saw the Mega Mass 2000,
which no longer was interested,
you know, I was never interested in the moment. 2000s for babies. And then I remember I was kind of sitting there, and I saw the Mega Mass 2000, which no longer is interested, you know, I was never interested in one of them.
2000s for babies.
And then I remember I was kind of sitting there
and I like to study this stuff, right?
And so for whatever reason, I turned them around.
And I looked at the,
I didn't look at the serving size.
I just looked at the calories.
I'm like, oh yeah, it's 4,000.
This one's whatever.
And I'm like, wait a minute.
This bucket's got eight servings.
I'm like, wait, is that right?
Eight servings in this whole bucket.
Now look at the serving size, like the weight.
I'm like, it's double Mega Mass 2000.
Like these motherfuckers, they just double the size
and call it Mega Mass 4000.
Now I still bought it because I was a kid
and I wanted it, you know, whatever.
But I remember throwing that in the blender
and it was just huge.
So it was a bucket with clumps.
Like all chalky.
Cump, though, I turned, yes, you turn on the blender
and my mom has, she's got the heavy duty,
like, remember, she makes sauce.
This is like pre-ninja and pre-like the Big Ben,
this is like, they were powerful.
The old school, yeah, the old school blenders
would do this.
I blew out her blender because in order to get
4,000 calories, I don't tell you this,
you have to add whole milk.
So you put like,
what else is yet, dude?
Cause I added all kinds of on top of that.
Peanut butter and raw eggs.
Yes.
Yeah, everything.
Yeah, and you turn it on.
So you put the whole team, you fill it up with
hell of milk.
It's like a quarter milk.
That's like 15 or 15 calories right there.
Then you throw out the big ass juice and you throw
in this stuff, then you hit blend and this is a sound
that makes, bleh.
Yeah.
And it doesn't even, like you don't even see
the whole thing spin, you're just
seeing this little quick sand.
Yeah, this little thing, and then you gotta drink it,
and I'd sit over the sink and like,
and then my mom's like, you gotta hurt yourself.
Oh, no, I'm fine, mom.
Yeah.
Boot.
Yeah, that was the whole deal with that kind of stuff.
Dude, so I've been trying to pay attention to
like any kind of scientific discovery, breakthrough,
whatever, I don't know.
I just feel like everything's been accelerating
on all levels of technology, science, aliens, whatever.
Right?
So there's this study with African clawed frogs.
Yes.
And they have a name.
African clawed frogs?
Clawed frog.
That's a name that they have.
I guess they have claws.
But really what they're studying was how to regenerate limbs, which
is like something I've always was curious about if we'd ever get to the point where we
could actually figure that out.
And like, I knew like, at some point they're going to like mess with genetics and being able
to kind of splice things and whatever, but this
was more of a cocktail of like growth hormones and drugs, I guess. And so they put like this
silicon cap over the limb and they have this like time release of these drugs that actually like
over like 18 months have stimulated new growth and has actually worked. And it grew something that
was similar,
but not quite like perfect to the limb.
Oh, that's kind of weird.
It's really weird.
You grow your hand back, but your thumb's like too long.
Yeah, it's like all like, I don't know, like a flipper.
Remember Deadpool when he,
because he's got regenerative ability.
His little baby hand.
That's the only bad thing.
Dude, I'd die if you did that.
If you could regrow a limb, people are like,
that would be cool.
Dude, there would be a longer time there
where you'd have this little baby limb.
Right, you gotta give it at a quick time.
I mean, somebody that doesn't have a hand
would probably still appreciate a baby hand.
Of course.
I don't say, let's be honest.
Yeah, you know?
There was this meme I should have.
Can't you have no hand?
Or can you have a baby hand?
It's like, there's this meme I shared
where it's this man and woman, like they're about to kiss.
It's like this really romantic picture.
And it's like, oh, you know, the sunset's beautiful.
And then if you look closely,
it's just like a little baby hand holding her face.
So you don't see it too closely.
That's what a baby think about.
Yeah, the other movie, I think it was,
oh god, it was like the one that makes fun of like horror movies.
Oh, okay.
Like, you don't remember that one.
Don't be a friend. What's that? Scary movie. Scary movie, thank you. Yeah. The one that makes fun of like horror movies. Oh, okay. Like, you don't remember that one?
Don't be a friend.
What's that?
Scary movie.
Scary movie, thank you.
Yeah, and he just keeps like rubbing people's faces.
Oh, mixing the mashed potatoes.
That's so creepy, but.
I read a study, interesting study, where they, this was a drug study they did on mice,
where they came up with a drug that mimicked the effects of fasting on the mouse.
So the benefits of fasting are kind of interesting mainly because there seems to be some applications
for cancer.
Fasting, I know Dr. Walter Lungo did this right where he had people fast or do what's
called a fasting mimicking diet with very, very little low protein, low carbohydrates,
and very low calorie, leading up to chemo.
The chemo was more effective because they fasted
and the chemo killed or harmed less healthy cells
as a result, because fasting causes healthy cells
to hunker down and strengthen,
whereas cancer cells seem to be pretty...
You have a neurogenic effect or neurogenesis.
Well, here's what's weird.
When people fast, you're organ, I don't know if you need this, your organ strength.
You know that?
You're everything's storage is compresses.
They just sheds off old stuff.
And then when you refeed, everything kind of grows back, which is kind of interesting.
But anyway, this drug does this, and the way it does it is it blocks the effects of
organine, which is an amino acid that's essential or needed for certain functions?
So essentially, and here's where I get little skeptical,
it's a drug that starves your cells
because it blocks certain amino acids
from doing what they're doing.
May not be a good idea.
Yeah, that's not,
it's not a good idea.
May not be a good idea.
That's how I always feel when we're doing it.
There must be new news that's coming out right now
I'm fasting because I've seen a lot of people posting about it.
We got questions, we just answered a question recently
about it.
I saw Lange going hard on it again.
So is there something right now that's in the community
that's like coming out like a new study or a new product
that everyone's talking about?
No.
Doesn't it feel like fasting's being talked about?
A little more right now than it was just a few months ago.
I do feel like that.
I think the big thing that we're going to see
the fasting is, or it's effects on cancer.
Did you guys know this?
I talked to my uncle, my uncle's,
he's a certified Chinese herbalist, right?
And I, years ago, five years ago or six years ago,
I talked to him about the studies on fasting and cancer,
and he goes, oh, that's Chinese medicine.
One of the things they'll do for tumors
is they'll starve the cancer by having you not eat.
And it shrinks the tumor, which I think is not a practice for a lot of things for them.
Fasting has been incorporated for not just cancer, but for other issues too.
The first medical applications of lifestyle change or whatever was the observation.
And I forgot who did this. I wanna say it was Hippocrates, I don't know.
It's one of the early, I guess, the founders of medicine
or whatever, found that fasting prevented,
they didn't call it seizures, but in children
who had epilepsy, they noticed when they didn't eat,
the seizures would stop.
And so they said that, oh, this is a great way to treat.
And obviously what was happening was,
we know with epilepsy, through many forms epilepsy that if you don't eat
ketones, your body starts to use ketones and for whatever reason that prevents seizures,
they didn't know that. So that was the one of the first like medical applications of
a period. Wasn't that, uh, didn't that come out from the Navy SEAL with what, um,
our buddy did? Dom Diagos. Yeah.os. Yeah, is that with that research came out?
Yeah, that's where he,
because they weren't even doing it for that, right?
They were trying it,
or they were trying to figure out why the divers
were having the seizures.
Yeah.
And then they decided to sort of,
what made him, do you remember what?
That's what it was.
So that research.
Yeah, he knows that,
because it's old, this is old medicine,
but ketogenic diets and fasting helps with many forms of epilepsy
prevent seizures.
And what he was saying was when they were working
with these seals, the Navy seals,
they use what are called, I think re-breather's.
So they go underwater and they can't have
normal breathing apparatus because it makes a bunch
of bubbles and basically lets the enemy know
that you're there.
So it makes very little bubbles or no bubbles at all,
but the oxygen concentration, it gets really high,
I guess gets really high, and for some people that can cause seizures, and so they're like,
how can we keep these guys underwater longer without that happening? And so then he looked at
ketogenic diets and it definitely helped, which I think is kind of interesting. All right, more
cool, science stuff. You know, I taught how I brought up that drug a while ago, that increases dopamine.
One of the side effects was that men were able
to have multiple orgasms.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's kind of cool.
Yeah, great side effect.
Yeah, anyway, I'm like, is there a natural way to do this?
There is, there are supplements that increase dopamine
in the brain significantly.
El Dopa is one of them.
El Dopa.
That's a supplement that's been around for a long time.
It's beneficial for certain neurological issues, like Parkinson's, because more dopamine
helps.
And it does raise dopamine.
And so I read about it.
It's been around for a long time.
Some pre-workouts include it, which kind of makes sense.
I haven't tested it yet, but I think I'm going to try it out.
You guys know.
Now, what's your thoughts on doing something?
If you do something like that consistently,'t it wouldn't the body start to
Produce it less because you're taking it
You're in taking it versus the body doing it. So I would imagine that you're I'll be worried about you down regulate receptors
Right, yeah, so maybe while you're taking it cool
I get this great feeling but now I have to take it forever to get that same time
We're trying to like yeah get pregnant or whatever and like supplementing ahead of time to increase your loads.
That's really good.
I mean, somebody has to say it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I think it would be,
I think it would be like a short-term thing.
Yeah, you take it for like, you know, a couple months
and then probably have to go off
because that's how most herbs at least work for me.
Or you just want a really cool weekend.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, like do it for a week before.
Yeah, yeah.
Honey, we're gonna, you know, what are you taking? Don't worry about it. I'm getting ready for that. Get ready want a really cool weekend. Yeah, yeah, like do it for a week before. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Honey, we're going to remember. You know, what are you taking? Don't worry about
it. Get ready for that. Get ready for Cabo. Yeah. That makes me want to. There's a company that's
been coming after us for a while. That at first glance, I kind of just blew them off. They send us some
stuff. It's in the studio. So I'll have you take a look at it. I'm curious of maybe that's in it
then. So it's not. No, you already looked at it. I did. What they, what they, I don't want,
we don't want to obviously call them out or talk about what they are, but they have compounds
in there that improve blood flow.
And then one compound that has been shown in Man 2 to improve erectile quality and libido.
I'm going to be honest with you though.
How do you measure erectile quality?
You want to know what they do?
Yeah, I do.
This is true.
First of all, there's surveys.
So they'll ask people, hey, did you notice harder erections?
Yes.
Which is that is so unbelievably subject.
I know.
I take a ruler and then it's just shh.
How many whittles can you hang up for?
Forget that it had anything to do with maybe the sound.
Maybe the sound.
Maybe the one she was wearing earlier that day or some shit.
Why was your erectile quality so good on Sunday?
That's when I was with my other girlfriend.
No, it's, there's, then they do studies
where they actually put a device,
like a ring that measures pressure around your penis.
And then they'll measure the force of the erection
when you're, you know,
and they'll show you like erotic film and stuff like that.
What a terrible way to make that leap, dude.
That's such a terrible leap.
I mean, anybody or any guy has to know that like how that much,
so many different factors can make that fluctuate.
I just feel like that.
Don't masturbate for two days in a row
and then see the difference of that.
Or masturbate earlier that day and then have sex later on that night.
Like, forget if you have the supplement or not,
I guarantee that it'll be way like.
I feel like, could you imagine being in a study like that,
like the scientists are like,
we're gonna put this ring around your penis.
And they're observing, they're like, ooh, quality.
Yeah, I feel like some guys will get better erection.
I feel like some other guys are not gonna get any.
Oh, people are watching me, not at too much pressure.
Some dudes would like to.
Why could syndrome?
It's so crazy that we take some sort of a study like that
and then make leaps in correlations
and then supplements to try and that's what the,
the poor consumer man has to be so careful
when looking at stuff like that
because I feel like that happens a lot
in the supplement industry is that we take a study
like that that at first glance, maybe that sounds good
but when you kind of deem like quality, what does that mean?
How would you measure quality?
Oh, you measure it by that?
Like, well, what?
Don't I know that there's a lot of other things
that you've been playing with that?
Like, how do they tease out all this?
Oh, they didn't tease all that out,
so it's like, it could just be a complete crap shoot
that they got that result.
They're speaking of vaniness,
so you guys heard about the green M&M.
For the M&M, so they're transiting.
Oh, yeah.
You're gonna make it more more inclusive, right?
Cause I guess it's like a female sexy Mem. They're just M&M's I know
So what okay, I could you know how much did you look into that because I've actually seen all the
Short shit on it and all the memes and crap around it, but I haven't dug enough into it like what's really happening
It's it's along those lines like oh, you know the green M&M was the sexy one this kind of stereotypical like girl
Like high heels or whatever. Yeah, so to make it more inclusive.
And then there was this meme that came out
that made fun of it.
It's like, now that we've taken care of M&M's,
is someone gonna get rid of the dick vein
on Snickers bars.
Because that's, that's super.
That's pretty good.
It is.
Yeah, dude.
It is.
It is.
It is.
Oh, I never thought of it that way, man. I never have either. You just said it. You said that on a Snickers bar. I like Snickers.
That's the layer.
It is a fame of.
You know what?
I tell you what, I did smile a little bit yesterday.
I can't stand this cancel culture right now, but every once in a while there's a win.
Well, everyone's so wild.
The queen of canceling gets canceled and then it's just, you see what would be Goldberg would happen to her? stand this cancel culture right now, but every once in a while there's a win. Well, everyone's so wild.
Everyone's so wild.
The queen of canceling gets canceled,
and then it's just, you see what would be
goldberg would happen to her?
Her suspended.
Suspended for two weeks, and she had to come out
and apologize.
She made a comment about the Holocaust,
saying it had nothing to do with racism and other stuff.
And so she got booted.
Wow.
Yeah, they eat themselves.
The whole culture, eventually they start to
turn on each other because nobody's
ever perfect enough or whatever. I feel bad for her. I'll be honest, I don't like her.
I think that whole show. You feel bad for her? I feel bad for anybody that gets caught in
those crosshairs. I don't. She's part of the people that promote those crosshairs. I don't
feel bad for other people. I feel bad for people that are not pro all this cancel culture,
but she is very pro cancel culture.
I mean, she's more of a media.
I mean, that's her job is to point people out
and try and get rallied groups to go get them removed
from whatever they're doing.
I mean, I don't like her.
I don't like how she communicates what she says.
I think she's been noxious.
I think that show can be very obnoxious.
I watch it anyway because I try to hear
their points of view and stuff sometimes.
I know, I know.
I think it's like three or like a minute.
But it's just, it's a movement that's hurt
and it's killing itself and that's what she got.
Yeah, what is it?
I was off air talking to you guys a little bit about,
there's, there's something that Jordan Pearson
and I didn't have the words to put together
the way he explains it, but this is one of his things
that why he says this is such a terrible road to go down
because you just keep making more subcategory,
subcategory, and it'll never end.
You go down this hole, and it'll just give.
It disintegrates.
It's about separation, not about unity,
and you can always separate more and more soul psych
Yeah, oh, I'm you know, you know, I'm Hispanic and you're Hispanic, but wait a minute
You're a man. Yeah, and I'm a woman wait a minute, but you're a gay man
I'm a woman. What does that mean? Wait a minute. I'm also handicapped. Yeah, and you just keep going down this crazy
Path and it's it's self-destructive. It totally is. You guys see that the Washington Redskins changed their name?
Oh, I mean, for a while it was just the Washington.
That's what they got.
No, they got rid of, so did they actually come up finally with the logo and the commanders.
The commanders.
The commanders?
I know.
Somebody like zoomed into this building and then there was like the logo, the new logo there
and so that leaked.
Does it, they have an idea what the logo, what's the logo look like?
Well, it was just the name, so they didn't see like,
right now they changed the mascot,
and they got you now on there, right?
So it got rid of, I wanna imagine it would look like
a maybe a Washington kind of character guy.
What's that look like?
I don't know, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I just imagine it.
I don't know, man, commanders,
it sounds a little white supremacist to me.
Command, I don't know. She's been the Caucasian. Yeah, I feel like that messed up. I don't know, man, commanders. It sounds a little white supremacist to me. Commanders.
I don't know.
She's in the Caucasian.
Yeah, I feel like that.
That's not going to get mad.
Yeah, they got to change it to something else.
So I don't know, man.
Oh, wow.
That's not good.
Yeah, let's see.
Anyway, so I was on the phone the other day
with one of our partners.
I was talking to the founders of Ned.
Love them, by the way.
Love them.
Aren't you guys talking about potentially
formulating something?
Is that what you're doing? We were talking about potential future
formulations and you know what we would want to
see in a cannabinoid base product. I love the guys
because they're super smart. They know their stuff.
They of course, of course they deliver.
But I didn't know this. So did you guys know they
have a subscription service?
I knew they have, but I'm not signed up for it.
So I don't know exactly how.
No, I wasn't aware. Okay. So I have some here, okay, so check this out.
So this is, I remember when we first got this,
so this is Ned, Nutritive Erbels Salt.
It's good, man, I've had that.
Okay, well, when we first got this, I remember thinking,
I told them, I was honest with them,
I said, when we first got your salt,
I thought, what the hell are you guys doing,
making salt?
You guys do hemp oil products?
Like, what is this?
And then I used it and of course we fight over this
because it tastes so damn good
and there's so many, you know, whatever.
It's got a lot of healthy things in it.
Tastes really good.
But I said, what is that?
How's it going?
Because it is really good,
but it's kind of weird that you guys want to,
and he says, well, those are one of the products
that we use for our subscription model.
So when you subscribe,
let's say you subscribe to a monthly,
you know, hemp oil to come every single month.
Yeah.
They throw free shit in there all the time.
And you'll get free stuff like this
or other products that they make
for the subscription model that you don't pay extra for.
Oh, that's cool.
Which makes sense.
That makes a lot of sense.
Yeah.
I'm sure it's, you can get that for pretty cheap.
Yeah.
So you're not gonna get rich off of trying
to probably sell a salt product like that.
So unless you're selling it for a ridiculous price.
It's the best, I'm not exactly.
That's really good, dude.
It's got, so it has sea salt, dandelion greens,
nettles, chives, dill, cilantro, parsley,
lavage green garlic, and it tastes like
good seasoned salt.
Yeah, we fight over it.
So can you, are you allowed to share, I know that this is like the second or the third
company now that you've had calls with our partners and they're all interested in potentially
doing a collaboration on a product and they're wanting your input.
Can you give us a little bit of insight on what it might be or what you're leading towards
or what they're leading to?
No, I can't because nothing's been decided there was some ideas around, but I will say this dude.
I am living the dream right now for me.
My dream has always been to be able to talk about fitness, have good time with it, and to help make supplements.
I did not want to own a supplement company. I don't want to deal with that.
But we work with companies that sell products
that now want my, we put.
Day that's gone by where you haven't brought
your big old supplement back.
Let's not talk about my dysfunction.
I'm just saying.
They're asking me, they're like,
hey, what do you think we should make?
What kind of ingredients should we put in?
And I'm just like, you want to talk about
quality of erection.
Man, I am excited when I hear this kind of thing.
No, that's quality.
I am like, I'm gonna go ahead and take your word for it.
Yeah, I'm not gonna say that.
Trust me, I broke the ring.
Let me just tell you.
No, but it's great.
It's very exciting.
I feel like, I know, I feel honored
to be asked these kind of questions.
And I'm excited to see what these companies come out with.
But I have, I've met with a few of our partners
and the last one I just talked to was Ned.
So I'm excited to see, you know,
what comes out in the future.
Oh, very cool.
Sweet.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Ashley from Missouri.
Hey, Ashley, how can we help you?
Hi, guys.
First, I just want to say thank you so much
for taking my call.
I've been following you guys for a little over three years,
and I recommend you to everyone I know.
And I'm actually a licensed therapist,
and I refer you to some of my clients.
So first, just want to say thank you.
So quick back story. I bought the mom
bundle that you guys offer when I was about seven months pregnant. I ran anabolic two times. I
absolutely love it. I ran eight weeks postpartum just to kind of like get back into movement and then
around eight months postpartum and saw significant strength gains on all sorts of ways. I'm very excited to run it again.
I also ran hit.
I loved it.
It was very different for me because as you guys have referenced,
I for so many years did hit the wrong way.
And doing it your way was hard for me at first,
but I loved it.
My question is anywhere, maps anywhere
was also in that program and that bundle that I got.
And I have kind of
paused on ever running that because I have access to pretty much all of the
equipment I could want in our home gym. And I just didn't know if running a
bodyweight program would be beneficial because I've never run something like
that before. Or if I should run something different because I have access to
everything and save anywhere for when different because I have access to everything
and save anywhere for when I don't have access
to all that stuff.
So just kind of wanted your guys' guidance on that.
Yeah, that's a good question because a lot of people
confuse equipment-free workouts
with it being maybe a substitute,
a cheap substitute for better workouts.
In other words, it's like, you know, it's instant coffee.
It's not good, but it gets the job done type of deal.
That's not actually, that's not the case.
In fact, when we created maps anywhere,
now we knew that the way we would market it
and the way that people would want to give it a shot
was specifically around the fact that it could be done anywhere.
It's if you travel, if you don't have access to equipment.
But when we wrote the program, we said specifically, look,
let's create a workout program that stands on its own.
That's effective like programs that include equipment.
Because what we're not trying to do is just create
a cheap substitute, although it's used as a substitute,
which is totally fine, it needs to stand on its own.
And that's exactly what we did with Maps Anywhere.
And just something interesting happened during the pandemic
with Maps Anywhere and that, lots of people
bought the program and ran it because they were forced
to try to work out without equipment.
And the feedback we got was extraordinary.
Everybody was like, oh my gosh, it's a great workout
by itself.
I had trainers contact us and say, this is one of the best program to workouts I've ever done. So it totally
stands on its own. And the way I would use it is I would run it like you would run any programs.
You do maps in a ball, then you could do maps anywhere, then you could do maps performance.
And it's just, it's different. It's totally different. Lots of closed chain exercises. There's
It's different. It's totally different.
Lots of closed chain exercises.
There's isometrics involved.
There's different movements.
You're not going to find another program.
And so you're going to get other benefits from maps anywhere that you won't necessarily
get from other programs.
So my advice would be to at least run it one time by itself.
And then after that, I would use it as like a supplemental thing.
And the reason why I would say that is because to kind of what Sal's point is, and something
that you said, which is you've never done it, the fact that you've never trained that way,
the fact that it's novel, I think you're going to get some great gains from it. I think
you're going to, you're going to see things that you probably didn't expect and, um, and
get some great benefits from it. Um, and then after that, I could maybe just,
because personally, I don't use it anywhere that often,
because I love traditional weight training.
I love to pick up a barbell and dumbbells and do machines.
I could just enjoy that more than I do body weight stuff,
but I do recognize there's tremendous benefit
to doing body weight exercises.
So the way I do it is, when one, I'm either short on time
or I'm short on equipment in a hotel, yada, yada, yada. So that's how I would use in the future.
But I do think there's tremendous value in just running it one time to see how you feel.
I think you would actually probably really enjoy it. And we built it to where you could scale
it as far as the intensity.
Yeah, so it can get really hard.
So the idea was, could we write something
that all levels of fitness could get good benefits from it?
Even if I got an advanced lifter
who's been lifting for a really long time,
then also, and they run anywhere,
could we write something that's body weight and band only
and still give them great benefits?
And the way we did that was by building in these intensifiers
that you could do on the off days of your foundational days. And that gives you as the consumer
the ability to scale it up if you want. Like if you feel like, oh, this is a little easy,
then you can pick exercises that are way more difficult. So I think I think you'll find
you'll really enjoy it.
Okay. Awesome. Yeah. And I had a feeling that's what you guys
were gonna say, I just kind of needed to hear it
because I mean, as all of you have referenced
and some of you are all dads, but newer parents,
and I think it's just a mom.
I've like really put on some strength after having our baby.
And I'm just like, that fear of like losing it all,
but maps anywhere, and I think it's shorter in terms
of the other ones, it's only four weeks.
So I think I have to get out of my head that you're not going to
lose all of the strength that you got, like you guys just said, it's totally different.
So I'm hoping that I will see some benefit from it.
So I appreciate that.
I feel trained in a lot of different directions with this too.
It'll benefit the whole.
So when you go back to traditional weight training, you're going to notice some of those
things that maybe you weren't stabilizing quite as effectively
if you were after that program.
So there'll be a lot of unintended benefits you'll see.
Yeah, and keep in mind, strength is a skill too.
So if you stop barbell squatting
and barbell deadlifting for four weeks,
will your strength go down on the specific exercises?
Possibly, because you're not practicing the skill anymore,
but that's okay, because usually what happens
when you train differently, and especially when you're
addressing parts of the body or planes of movement,
you don't normally address, is you might dip a little bit
and because of this lack of practicing a specific skill,
but then you get back real quick and then you surpass it.
So you actually start to break plateaus.
So, you know, like I said, when the pandemic started, we had all these people following maps anywhere that normally wouldn't follow a program like that, just because it's
equipment free.
And the one of the top comments was, oh my God, it's so effective.
And many people now run it on an intermittent basis, like every three or four
months, they'll throw it in there because I saw so many benefits.
So I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.
Okay, awesome.
And then after that, would you recommend anabolic again,
because it again will be something different,
or would you switch over to hit, or something totally different after that?
You can do anabolic again.
Mass performance would be good too.
Hit would be fine.
I think any program that's different would be totally fine afterwards.
Okay. All right. Awesome. Yeah, thanks for calling it. Thank you guys. Thank you so much. Awesome.
All right. Yeah, when we we do that, that would be one of our harder programs to sell. Totally.
And you know, the irony is, of course, we had it. And it was the least popular program, specifically because of
what she's talking about. Yeah. The feedback was always amazing.
Then the pandemic hit.
It became our top something to go away the gym.
Yeah.
And it's like, this is an option.
It's a valid option.
And then you go through it and you realize, oh, wow, man, there's so much benefit to this.
And I got all these strength gains in different directions.
It is because it's hard to believe that you could get great results like you can with
equipment without equipment, but you can. so long as the process be planned out.
Yes. Well, I think what you said too is important that she
she goes in with the right mindset because what happens sometimes is people hear
I say that then she goes back to Ambalak and she goes to squat the first day and she's like,
oh shit, I'm down 50 pounds from my previous. It's like that's totally okay.
That happens. What I would predict will happen is she'll see a little bit
of a step back on the big movements,
like the squat that dead left in, overhead press.
But then by the end of anabolic or whatever program
she runs, I bet she hits PRs.
I bet she surpasses where she currently is at right now
and those benefits are gonna be attributed
from the work that she did anywhere.
Our next caller is Nicole from California.
Hey Nicole, how can we help you?
Hey guys, I really appreciate you guys.
First of all, taking my call, I started listening to you guys about a year ago.
And I stayed for not only the fitness content, but you guys are just super entertaining.
So I really appreciate everything you guys do.
Thank you.
Thank you. So I'll start with a little do. Thank you. Thank you.
So I'll start with a little bit of background about three years ago.
I decided that I want to lose some body fat.
So I started doing, you know, you're typical like orange theory classes and then I finally
got into resistance training.
And so that led me into a bikini competition, which I did about two years ago, which was
literally right before COVID hit. So about two years ago, which was literally right before COVID hit.
So about two weeks later, COVID happened.
So I found myself dealing with a lot of like binge and restricting type of eating and
a little bit of like body dysmorphia.
And so after fast forward a little bit after that, listening to you guys, I decided to bulk
to speed up my metabolism
because I was still eating pretty low calories.
And so I was, when I did the bulk,
I got up to maybe a little under 2000 calories
and I had put on a lot of unwanted body fat.
So I did that for a couple of months
and decided that I just felt really uncomfortable
that I wanted to cut.
And so about four months ago or so, I decided that I just felt really uncomfortable that I wanted to cut. And so about four months ago or so,
I decided to cut.
And when I did that,
I was starting from about 2000,
so I didn't really have a lot of wiggle room.
And I went down to about 1700 at first,
and then slowly progressively went down.
And for the last six weeks or so,
I've been around, I would say,
anywhere from 1200 to no more than 1400 calories. And I've been around, I would say anywhere from 1200 to no more than
1400 calories, and I've been doing consistent resistance training. So I've been
doing your guys is a maps and a ballic. And so I kind of feel like I'm stuck
because I'm not seeing any more progress. And I don't want to add any more like
cardio because I'm already doing about 15,000 steps a day. And I don't want to
obviously cut my calories because it's already pretty low.
So I'm just feel like my, so my question is I'm pretty stuck at what I should do because
I know I maybe should do another bulk or reverse diet, but I don't want to put on more body
fat because I still want to lose about 15.
And so I just, where do I go from here?
And should I stick with anabolic or try a different
program? Yeah. Nicole, when you did your bikini competition, you said that was I see wrote
up here as about two years ago. Do you? How long was your prep and do you know what your
calories ended up with at the end of that prep? Like what were you eating, you know, right
before the competition? How long did it take you to get?
I don't know, stage ready.
Yeah, so before I did competition,
I was just like a regular client with my coach.
I did, I was on a diet,
just counting my macros.
And so my prep, so I went straight from that into a prep,
and in hindsight, I should have reversed out of that.
But so I was doing the prep for maybe four months.
I think my calories at the end of my prep were anywhere between like maybe 800 to 1000 calories,
maybe even lower.
I was doing hours of cardio on top of resistance training six to seven days a week. And so that, and then coming out of that,
I just, my metabolism was all over the place.
And so, yeah, it was fairly low.
Okay.
Yeah, so we'll give you some good news and some bad news.
So, we'll start with the bad news first, okay?
Okay.
All right.
You went from counting macros to a prep period,
which was four months long,
which really was just an extension of your diet.
It just got more and more severe
because you said you were counting calories to begin with.
Then you add lots of cardio, lots of cardio, lots of exercise.
And now you're dealing with kind of the consequences of that.
Okay, so that's the bad news.
The good news is you can come out of it.
It's gonna take some time.
It's gonna take some time.
There's some, I remember talking to Jason Phillips
about this, he's the founder of NCI coaching.
He deals a lot with people in this category
and he says, he feels like the body,
the central nervous system kind of has a memory.
And you have to get your body the point
where it feels like it doesn't need to hold on to everything. So it might take longer than you think and
you're going to gain body fat unfortunately in the process. Otherwise you're
going to be stuck here for a long time and it could potentially get worse. Now how
do we minimize the fat gain? We slow it down. It might take a while but we go real
slow. So a reverse diet for someone like you
would look maybe something like this. Right now you're eating, you know, 12 to 14 intercalories.
I wouldn't increase your calories yet. I would just reduce your cardio and your steps. Start with that.
Slowly cut it. Maybe cut it down by a quarter. See how everything works. When you feel comfortable,
cut it down by another quarter. To the point where you're not doing any deliberate cardiovascular activity, still
eating 12 to 14 hour calories, then I would slowly raise your calories by maybe a hundred
a week at the most and watch what happens.
But you're probably still going to gain some body fat, your body still needs to feel safe
and comfortable.
It may be a long process.
I had a client that I did this with over a year.
It took us over a year to kind of get her body out of what had happened.
But at the end of that year,
man, things were working a lot differently.
She was eating eight to nine her calories more than she was before.
She stopped her twice daily cardio sessions.
We were only lifting weights three to four days a week, which is very different than what we had started with so
That's what we're kind of working with so you're gonna have to you're gonna have to kind of go through that process
Otherwise, you're gonna be stuck where you're at and it's gonna be like this until you back out of it and and you know
I don't know which one's worse for you right sticking where you're at now or
Moving out of it and maybe setting yourself up a little differently
in the future.
Yeah, I would wanna dive in a little bit too
on the body dysmorphia and your experience
when you gained weight.
Did you happen to test your body fat during that time
when you went on your bulk?
When I was doing the prep,
I was maybe around 6% after that.
I never tested it. I had a bad, I didn't around 6% after that. I never tested it.
I had a bad, I didn't like the scale at all
after I went on prep when I came off.
So I saw the scale increase and I knew it was going to happen.
But in my head, I just didn't like the way that that felt.
So I gained obviously some weight I needed to,
but I didn't test my body fat
after the prep or after the competition. But I did gain weight but in my head it
was too much and so I kept trying to like slow it down but I couldn't because I
kept eating and then restricting so I dealt with that cycle for a while.
Yeah, so this is the tough part about,
you know, this is like a situation where, you know,
I wish you were a client of mine
and we were talking through this.
I literally was just talking to a client of mine
about a similar thing.
She wasn't in a bikini competitor,
but she has these extremely high standards
for what her body should look like.
And she puts on, you know, two or three pounds extra on her body.
And she all of a sudden starts telling me
how out of shape she is.
And I said, you're not actually, you're incredible shape.
I said, and you get to have glasses of wine here and there,
and you get to go out to dinner,
and you don't do hours of cardio,
and you're able, and you're in your 50s,
and you can maintain this body.
I said, a lot of this is in your head, and the way you're able, and you're in your 50s, and you can maintain this body. I said, a lot of this is in your head,
and the way you view yourself,
and what I'm wondering is,
you actually might have been on the right track.
When you decided to bump your calories,
and you started to gain a little bit of weight,
and the reason why I asked about the body fat percentage,
because this happens with some of my clients,
they put, let's say say 10 or 15 pounds on,
and maybe their jeans are feeling a little tighter
or whatever, and they start freaking out,
but then I body fat test them,
and of those 10 to 15 pounds, you know,
80% of it was muscle,
and yeah, we put a couple pounds of body fat on there too
along the way, but most of it was muscle,
which means I'm moving you in the right direction
towards speeding your metabolism off.
And I would tell that client, like,
hang tight, we're doing the right thing right now.
I know this feels a little uncomfortable for you.
I know you look at yourself in the mirror
and go, oh, I don't like the way I look
and I'm putting on too much weight,
but you gotta trust the process.
We're gonna lean out,
we're gonna come back the other direction.
But right now, I need us to speed our metabolism up
because we're not in a healthy place for long term.
And so you might have already kind of been on the right track.
I wonder how much of that weight that you put on
was actually as bad as you think it is
and how much of that is just in your own head
of thinking that you were just putting on too much weight.
Yeah, the other thing, too, Nicole,
is sometimes
I'll get a female client that's 12% body fat
and she gained weight through a reverse diet
and went up to 19% body fat and freaked out.
19 is healthy, 12% is not to maintain, you know what I mean?
And we tend to have those standards.
Let me ask you a question Nicole,
do you think you could focus on purely on strength
and performance? If you took your mind off. Do you think you could focus on purely on strength and performance?
If you took your mind off of how you looked,
forgot everything else, do you think you could just
focus on getting stronger at the bench press,
the deadlift, and the squat?
Would that be a possibility?
Definitely.
I think that, well, when I was doing the bulk last year,
I felt myself getting stronger, obviously,
but I also saw myself, like my clothes weren't fitting.
I was gaining weight, but I did get rid of the scale
because I didn't want to associate that with,
like how I felt.
So I did, I did like the way that I feel
and I was lifting.
Now I'm obviously not lifting so much in my head.
I feel like I can do it, but my strength is just not there.
So I would love to get back into focus on that.
So currently I am doing anabolic.
I don't know if you recommend me trying something else
for that while I am increasing my calories.
Yeah, let's put you on max power lift.
I was just gonna say, I'm glad you went down.
Because let's say anabolic is fine, totally fine.
But I think power lift would be good for the mindset.
It's pure, all the metrics.
Yeah, all you're thinking about is getting a stronger bench, getting stronger deadlift. Yeah, so I love that we're suggesting. Yeah, try this try following
Maps power lift and if you're able to for the next three months
Just see how strong you could get in the major lift and Nicole have some or not. Oh, sorry
I have some compassion for yourself too like to know that if you are getting stronger in the gym, you're building muscle.
And initially, if you put on a couple pounds of body fat along the way, it may feel new,
it may feel uncomfortable.
You may be comparing yourself to when you were shredded in lean.
You got to get out of that space and kind of trust the process because it does take some
time to speed this metabolism up.
It's not going to be overnight. And we are going to put a little bit of body fat on along the way, but that's okay
when we get you up to eating seven, eight hundred more calories in your use to and then we cut
you back down four or five hundred calories, watch how fast that body fat goes.
Thanks, guys. I really appreciate it. It's been, that's a, I've been thinking about doing that
maps the program, so I'm glad you guys suggested that,
so thank you.
Yeah, we'll send that over to you.
Follow it and just focus on getting stronger
and feeding yourself for at least the next three months.
So if you could do that, I think at the end of it,
you'll see some positive results.
Awesome, thank you guys so much.
Thanks, Nicole.
Well, it was Nicole.
Yeah, it does was scrolling up and down over
there and I thought he scrolled on somebody else's name when I. You got right. I tell you
what I think I've said this before. I think stage presentation competitions are the worst
for most people. I mean, if you have any, any body image issues at all,
you're gonna get on stage and get judged
by how you look with other people.
And judges are very blunt.
That's what they're supposed to do.
You're gonna tell you, oh, your glutes don't look good.
Which track me from wrong,
but it seems like the majority of people
that sign up have underlined it.
It attracts those people.
It attracts those people.
And I knew it right away.
I mean, she didn't track her body fat.
She said it already she was getting stronger
she was at six percent when she was competing that's that's beyond unhealthy
and probably right on the right track
she probably jumped all the way up to twelve or fourteen percent which is still
lean as fuck you know it got stronger and metabolism was going in the right
direction but freaked out freaked out because still comparing herself to this shredded lean body
that she once had when she was on stage,
not realizing that she's probably healthier, stronger,
and in a better position when she was increasing the couch.
Yeah, you know, this reminds me of like,
when you guys, you know, back in the day with Michael Jackson,
people would look at him and say,
what doctor, what plastic surgeon continues to do surgery
on his face when he approaches them?
Like, what lack of integrity?
Who isn't telling him,
you're, this is a problem we're doing too much.
That's how I feel about these idiot coaches.
You're training this lady, this girl.
She's already dieting.
She says, I wanna do a show, yeah, no problem.
And you beat the crap out of her,
and have her 800 calories a day.
That's about the money, dude.
Yeah, you, like, it's about the end.
It isn't even that much money in it.
Like, how big of a...
Well, I mean, you have to be.
Yeah, but I mean, trainers love it because it's,
you're committed to me for three to six months,
depending on how long we do the prep for, what do I thought.
And it's...
You project your own shit on other people.
Yeah, it's absolutely terrible.
I mean, never coach someone that much.
It's flooded.
It's flooded with this. I mean, it was a that much. It's flooded. It's flooded with this.
I mean, it was a, obviously at the beginning,
we used to talk about this all the time, right?
When I was in the thick of all of it,
it was probably a conversation
in every other podcast early on
when we first started the show.
But yeah, no, it's more common than not.
It would be a rare, I would run into a coach in that space
that I was like, oh, he or she's telling,
given really good advice.
For the most part, it's shit advice,
and it's to the wrong people.
It's like the worst people.
It's like the people that do not belong competing
at all right now.
On many levels, not just body dysmorphia
and understanding nutrition, not enough experience
in lifting yet.
It's like, you take somebody who's been lifting for a year
or less, haven't even put muscle maturity, doesn't have a physique they've built yet, it's like, you take somebody who's been lifting for a year or less, haven't even put muscle maturity, doesn't have a physique they've built
yet, and then throw them on extreme diet to get on stage and then compare
themselves. So they're crap out of them. Yeah, it's just like, yeah, come on.
This is the process. You sign up for one of these events. You hire a coach who
doesn't understand health and really has probably their own body image issues.
Then you have to send them pictures,
I don't know, every week about a view
in your underwear looking at the camera
and then they're gonna break your body down every week.
And then on top of it,
you're gonna be competing amongst a bunch of people
who have their own issues.
And then you have a bunch of judges
who are just gonna be very blunt
and then you're gonna put yourself on stay.
Like you want to talk about the perfect storm
for creating problems.
Like whenever I, I have yet.
It's insecurities even further.
Oh, I have yet to meet someone who's told me,
hey, do you think I should compete?
I have yet to meet someone and be like,
yeah, it's a good idea for you.
It's almost always.
It's almost like a Hollywood of this fitness space.
Yeah.
It's just for the most part, it's a fucking cesspool, dude.
There's very few people that are doing it well,
doing it right and are thinking about it. And by the way, it's a fucking cesspool, dude. There's very few people that are doing it well, doing it right, and are thinking about it.
And by the way, it's a sport.
It's impossible for it to be truly healthy.
Most sports are extreme, aren't they?
Right, and it was something that I used to talk
to my audience about, my little audience that I had back
when I was doing that, and it would be, okay,
I did this as healthy as I could.
Here we are heading into the final two weeks.
I know, and letting you know that this is not something
anybody should go and do because it's not healthy.
It's not ideal, but it attracts the people that struggle
with this the most.
And I think it just perpetuates the problem.
Our next caller is Jessica from Wisconsin.
Hey, Jessica, how can we help you?
Hi, guys.
So great to meet you.
Thank you so much for having me on.
I'm really excited to be here.
And thanks for all you doing the fitness space. My question is
around, I think you had a question about this a couple weeks ago, but around
building power for boxing. So just a little bit of background. I just turned
40 years old last month and I have been training and boxing mostly for fitness
at first, but I hired a trainer and have been practicing boxing
for a couple of years.
And I actually am going to compete in my first boxing
bout in April.
I'll tell you.
Look at you.
So really excited about that through our,
it's a charity event called White Color Boxing.
So I work with an amazing coach on my skills.
I run four to five times a week for cardio, for conditioning,
but I'd really like to be able to build up some power
in my punches and would love to know
what you'd recommend as far as a maps program
or other programming for strength
to kind of compliment the rest of my training.
Yeah, so how many days a week are you
are training boxing specific right now?
Three to four. Sometimes four to five depending. It's usually pretty low key. We're just really working
on footwork and that sort of thing. But yeah, we do, we do get lots of practice in.
All right, and then do you spar? Are you sparring right now? Yeah, we spar one to two times a week.
Okay, full head gear, the whole deal, and you guys are hitting each other.
Yeah, well, hey, gear, although we are using 16 ounce gloves, so.
Okay.
All right.
So once a week, once a week a resistance training is going to be plenty.
Maps performance.
Yes, your flamens, please.
Yeah, that would be your best bet.
I would do pick one foundational workout, because the program has got three foundational
workouts a week.
That's way too much for what you're doing.
I would go one foundational workout a week, pick your choice, whichever one you want,
and go through masterformance,
and then the mobility sessions,
you could throw those in wherever,
but once a week is gonna be plenty
with what you're currently doing,
any more, and you're probably gonna overdo it,
and maybe even take away your ability to practice
what's most important right now,
which is your boxing skill.
Yeah, and I mean, generating more ground forces is something that I would recommend as a
focus and how you do that is really like connecting your entire body, so like connecting
your hips, your legs involved with your upper body.
So that's a big focus of driving through from your foot to your
hip snapping and getting that rotation, getting everything super connected and be able to
drive as much force as possible all the way up into your shoulder and your arm on release.
So it's this whole fast loose approach.
You have to kind of, it's complicated, right?
Because athletics you're always dealing with like,
you know, how much force I can create,
but then also control.
And so, you know, there's the control aspect to it
of being loose, but also being tight when you need to be tight
and being able to generate, you know,
that muscle contraction to really like whip
that arm across and connect the arm with the hip.
So, you know, there's stuff in maps performance,
you'll see with the stick where we do this,
laterally, and we really drive it into the wall.
And these types of exercises really help you to focus that
and channel that type of power from your hips.
Yeah, by the way, when you get close to your actual match,
for at least two weeks leading up to it,
I wouldn't do any resistance training.
So I wanted to say that.
So you can do resistance training in about two weeks
before you want to cut it out and focus entirely
on what you're going to be doing with your coach.
And strength and muscle definitely play a role in power,
but technique and speed play a bigger role in power.
So a much smaller guy can hit a lot harder than a bigger guy
just through technique and skill.
I'm sure your coach, if you've asked your coach this,
they'll tell you the same thing.
They'll tell you, look, you know, you can be big strong,
but if you don't have the speed and the technique,
you're gonna lose all that power.
So most of it comes from there.
So what you're gonna get from the strength training
is just more security.
More security and your joints,
there's gonna be a protective element,
maybe more stability.
I noticed in your question,
you wrote down that you have some hyper mobility
in the shoulder and elbow,
so it might kind of help with that.
So yeah, a mass performance,
that would be the perfect program. One foundational workout a week, and just leave it at that. And then you can
even go through the phases, you know, phase one, two, three, and four leading up to your match.
And again, two weeks before I would stop all resistance training.
I don't have much to contribute to what the guys already said. I agree with everything said,
except for I would add, I would defer to some of our friends that are experts in this.
If you're not following Tony Jeffries
and Phil Darryu, I think they put out
tremendous content that's completely centered around
punching and fighting.
So yeah, they're far more knowledgeable
and that's we've actually had both of them
on the show before, so you can search them back
if you want to listen to the episode.
But they both put out a lot of good content on both Instagram and YouTube, both Phil
Darryu and then Tony Jeffries.
So check out what they have, have the offer.
And then like the guy said, I think the one day week foundational training from performance
is great.
And then the way I would dictate how much of the mobility sessions I do, it would reflect how much work I'm putting in boxing that week.
So let's say it's, I heard you say sometimes it's five
or six days a week of boxing.
So if it's an intense week of boxing,
I may only do a mobility day or none,
just the one foundational day.
If you have a lot of light work,
like a lot of light footwork and speed drills,
but not nothing really intense.
I might add two or three mobility sessions to that.
So use the mobility sessions to complement your workload
that you're doing,
because you're not gonna get huge gains from that.
I think it's more about helping you recover
and staying mobile and connected.
So use that based off of your workload
that you're doing a boxing, boxing comes first.
One day of training as
your foundational for weightlifting and then mobility intermittently thrown in there based
off of your load.
That's great. And just a real quick fall up to that as far as mobility work, should I be
avoiding the mobility in my arms and shoulders? Because my right shoulder, you know, I've
hyper extended it a couple times, I popped it out. It's actually a real fun story at the gym because I'm the only girl and I didn't cry when it happened.
And, you know, I've hyper-extended my shoulder a couple of times. So, should I be avoiding that
and not to keep it too mobile or should I more lean into that to make functional mobility?
Yeah, think of it less as a range of motion increase and more of gaining strength in that
range of motion.
So taking that incrementally and being able to generate tension there, so having an isometric
focus where we're kind of squeezing our way through it and just really gradually going
through each checkpoint of each angle.
So that way, you're able to stabilize it properly.
Yeah, proper mobility work includes strengthening, connecting. point of each angle, so that way you're able to stabilize it properly.
Proper mobility work includes strengthening connecting, so that means it'll help your
situation.
You're not doing lots of stretches or just trying to move through different ranges of
motion without connecting.
That would make things worse.
You've got to stay tense and connect through the mobility work.
Remember that when you're looking through the mobility work. So remember that when you're looking through the mobility sessions.
A good example that have you seen,
just have you seen the Maps Prime Pro webinar
that I did that was free?
It's been a little while.
I watched it probably six months ago,
so I need to go back.
Okay, so do that.
A good example of what the guys are saying right now
is I think the second or third exercise I do
is handcuff with rotation.
And when you hear Justin and Sal talking about,
creating tension the entire time through the movement,
watch how I do that movement and how I coach it.
And all of your mobility work should reflect that.
It should have this kind of intense, slow,
staying connected time movement.
Think of it less of like a stretch
where you're trying to get a greater,
longer range of motion.
And like Justin said, you're being,
you're more connected through the whole range of action.
Yeah, Adam gives really good cues for that.
And I think if you take those cues
and then you also apply it to the one I did for,
you know, checking, you know, with our compass tests
in prime, it's just, it kind of goes through very specific ones
for the shoulder.
That would be helpful as well, but you do have to have that kind of intensity applied to
to make sure it's, you know, the focus is right.
And by the way, that's a great way to kind of prime the body before you go into any of
your stuff.
So if you're getting ready to go throw punches, if you're getting ready to do your workout,
you could prime with those movements heading into it and you're only ready to go throw punches, if you're getting ready to do your workout, you could prime with those movements heading into it,
and you're only gonna be better connected,
throw better punches, be stronger when you lift.
So those are movements that you can do
for recovery on days that you're not training.
You could also do that as priming stuff
to get you ready before you start throwing punches.
Awesome, that's great. I'm very excited.
Thank you so much. I wasn't sure which direction to go.
I have several of your programs,
but I don't perform it.
So really excited to dig in and get going with it.
Thank you so much for your time.
We'll send that to you. Good luck.
Best of luck to you.
All right. Thanks, guys. Have a great day.
You too. Yeah.
The whole like how to add resistance training to heavy intense sport, you know,
training, it's supplemental, right?
When strength training becomes the focus is when you're a strength athlete.
So, you know, if you're a boxer, a football player, a baseball player, or a sports officer,
you can devote it completely to that.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Good point, very, very good point.
But, you know, she's focusing so much on boxing,
she's amateur, she's new with this,
that you know, one day a week, one day it's plenty,
it's plenty, it's gonna give you enough strength.
You can do a lot.
You can give you some stability if you do it right,
and compliment kind of what she's doing.
Well, like you said, if the strength training at all,
even in the slightest way, impedes on her current boxing training,
then it's only gonna hurt her skills.
You know, so, and the better you are at throwing a punch
and the faster you are throwing a punch,
because K-O, right, she was looking for,
she wants a K-O somebody, which is great, right?
So, that's her goal, and so her speed and technique
is gonna play a much bigger role in that
than her increasing her bench or deadlift or shoulder breast.
Totally.
Our next caller is Holly from Canada.
Holly, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey guys.
Hey.
Okay, so if you read my question, like I said,
I feel like I'm super fit.
I feel really strong and good when I go into the gym.
I work out with like good form.
I have been running pretty much solely maps programs
for the last four years.
I've done aesthetics, probably two or three times,
split, twice, power lift, strong, anabolic.
But I just don't feel very like athletic.
If I, for example, I recently started skiing again, and I just feel
like so uncoordinated, and if I ever play sports with friends or something, I just don't
feel like I can run fast or move in a really athletic way, and I just don't know how to
make myself be more of an athlete.
If only we wrote a program that was specific to performance athletes, I wonder what you should follow.
Where are you going?
Come on, Holly.
Now, you know what, Holly, let me tell you.
I can't hear you guys at all.
Can you hear us now?
Doug, why don't you answer this one?
This one.
This one.
Yeah, Doug.
You know what I'm doing?
Doug's got this.
Yeah, so yeah, you've missed it.
Yeah, it's all due.
Yeah, here's a deal.
I can't give you a long answer, but I can give you
a very short and succinct answer
You mentioned a lot different programs you've done. Have you done maps performance?
Okay, so I have maps performance and I've run it halfway through once and then I started it again at the beginning of last month before the gyms in Ontario closed again and
beginning of last month before the gyms in Ontario closed again.
And no hate on you guys programs because obviously I love them,
but I just personally find performance kind of boring for me.
And I'm not really able to stick to it very well.
Well, okay. So we're gonna challenge you.
You go here.
Yeah.
As you said, well, you can't, you, you want to have your cake and eat it too, right?
You, I don't like to train like an athlete either.
I think that's boring.
I like to train like a bodybuilder and look like a bodybuilder, but every once in a while
I want to play basketball.
So it requires me doing the boring, multi-planar type of movements that I don't like doing,
but it's going to translate on the court better than anything else.
It's kind of like, okay, well, you kind of know what you're
supposed to be doing. You don't like doing it very much, but then you want the results
from that to translate onto the field or whatever sport you're playing. So that is the
program. And it's like specifically designed for someone just like you to perform better
in their sport. If I might ask, you said you ran it kind of almost halfway
through, like what part was boring for you?
I mean, obviously the mobility session,
the one that's gonna provide you with the most impact
for being athletic, okay.
Yeah, you know what, holy crap, but.
Let me jump in here real quick. Okay. Yeah, you know what? Holy crap, but. Let me jump in here real quick.
Sorry.
A lot of times people confuse fitness with athletic ability.
Now fitness plays a role in athletic ability,
but a big part of athletic ability is skill and coordination,
which comes with practice.
So I'll give you an alternative answer.
I think that performance is the perfect program for you.
But I do think if you want to get better at certain sports, you should just practice those sports more often.
Play more basketball, play more baseball, do more skiing, and you'll get better at those
things. No amount of fitness in the gym is going to give you the type of coordination specific
to the sport you're trying to get better at than practicing that sport itself.
Now that being said, if you want to do something in the gym that's going to translate the
most into sports, mass performance, mass performance, that program is written.
And every part of it is written to specifically address all the things that an athlete needs,
all the attributes that a general athlete, just like yourself, soccer, what do we say?
Soccer, skiing, what's the other one that we got baseball?
You know, that's why that program is so perfect.
It's not just for basketball players
and not just for somebody who wants general strength
in all different directions, good mobility, flexibility,
endurance, stamina, all the things
that you want to be good in sports.
Yeah, and here's the other side of it too.
Athleticism can be quite specific,
so just because somebody's really good
with strength exercises and not good in a traditional sport
doesn't mean they're not athletic,
it just means they're not athletic for a particular sport.
So maybe you just don't like it.
You want something but you don't like it, who cares?
Be good in the gym, keep healthy, and you're totally fine.
But if you still want that athletic ability, I mean, the advice is the same.
Maps performance in the gym, and I would practice those sports more often.
And if you really don't want to do athletic training in the gym,
you like traditional resistance training in the gym, still practice playing sports outside
of the gym, because that's sports outside of the gym,
because that's gonna give you more of that athleticism.
You can't expect to get more athleticism
without doing that.
This hits home for me right now a lot.
Okay, so I've been telling Katrina Offair
just her night talking.
I say, I really wanna get back into playing basketball.
I miss playing ball.
It's one of my favorite pastimes to do that.
Now I know I'm in no condition to play basketball.
Does that mean I'm strong?
I can lift a lot of weight right now.
I'm not in bad shape.
I'm just not in basketball shape.
And I know the exercises that I need to do
to prepare myself to go play basketball.
And even like what's sounds like,
nothing's gonna get me better playing basketball
than playing basketball.
But I do know there are specific exercises
that I should do to prepare myself
to get ready for that.
And because I also don't like training that way,
match performance is one of my least favorite programs too,
because I like split and aesthetic and strong
and more body builder type focused programs.
I won't let myself play basketball
because I'm not doing the work I should do
to prepare my body to go out there and perform.
And I do that because I'm getting older
and I know I'll hurt myself because my mind will say I can do that because I'm getting older and I know I'll hurt myself
because my mind will say I can still play like I'm 20,
but I know I can't.
And so my sacrifice is, well,
I don't deserve to go play that sport right now
because I'm not doing the work in the gym
to prepare my body for that.
And so it really comes down to asking yourself,
Holly, what do you really want to do?
Yeah, you know, I got a little bit of a compromise
for you, Holly.
What if you did one foundational workout a week from performance and then two foundational workouts a week
from another maps program that's maybe something along the lines that you enjoy more, maybe
like a map centabolic or a map systetic. So you're getting some of the athletic training,
but then most of the week you get to do the stuff, the fun stuff run map systetic and then
do the mobility sessions in between instead of focus sessions. Yeah, you can mix it up that way.
Okay, yeah. Yeah, that's what I was going to ask is like if there's a way to it,
sort of incorporate performance into another program without having to fully do performance since
I've found like it hard to adhere to them. Maybe steps. Yeah, you could totally do that. You could
totally go one foundational workout a week
from performance to from aesthetic or all from aesthetic
and then do only mobility sessions.
And you can kind of mix it that way
and the mix will determine what you get more of.
You know, the aesthetic version,
the types of results or the more of the athletic types
of results.
But I will say this, Holly, training for athleticism
doesn't reduce your aesthetics.
I think you might be
especially for someone who if you've never trained that way, I think you might be
surprised that you actually get you might actually look better because now you're
doing things you normally don't do. Yeah, all right. All right. Well, thanks for
calling in. Okay. Appreciate it. All right. Thanks guys. No problem. Yeah. That was great. Yeah, I know.
guys. No problem. Thank you. Yeah, that was great. Yeah, I know.
I was like, uh, math performance. I appreciate. I appreciate that she was honest, because here I literally, this is close to home for me right now.
I'm not kidding that I've been wrestling with this idea of going back to
playing basketball so much in the last year. Like I really miss it.
But I've had a couple times where I go out there to go try and play and oh,
boy, my body is not ready.
I can go deadlift or bench press right now, no problem.
But I, to go laterally move, left or right,
really fast and explosive, I'm scared.
Most people in the gym, yeah, they're not doing
what's gonna promote, you know,
really good explosive boobment.
And that takes the actual work that's very specific.
So, you know, it may be challenging mentally
to do things that are outside your comfort,
but you're really, if you're really serious about
becoming a better athlete or having more athleticism
or just moving better in general, that has to be a focus.
Well, so this is the accountability piece
that I'm having with myself.
Like, I won't go play ball unless I'm willing
to put in the steps that I know are going myself. Like I won't go play ball unless I'm willing to put in the steps
that I know are going to protect me from getting hurt. I know I'm not putting that word. And for some
reason I'm having this hard time because I used to love that way of training as a kid. I just don't
care. I don't like doing that. And I know part of it is it's hard. I'm gonna suck at it for a while,
you know. I don't feel like. And so, you know, she's in the same exact dilemma right here where obviously the program she listed off,
she's definitely more focused on strength and look, right?
And probably it feels good because she's looking good.
Right.
But yeah, it's just her movement probably.
Yeah, and then I bet when she did like,
the lunch matrix and did some of the single leg movements,
we have, she probably had to go way lighter.
Yeah, which is a total attack on ego, from what you've been doing.
If you're going to, especially if, I don't know, we didn't ask her age, but, you know,
especially you start getting above 30 and stuff like that.
If you want to be athletic and play sports like that, I mean, performance is the program
for you.
I mean, that's the thing.
We really tried to kind of cover all aspects of all sports to give general strength and
stability to those people.
Well, we took the elements of what creates and athlete, the fundamental principles.
You need to be able to generate force. You need to be able to control that. You need to be able to
keep your joints healthy and stable and be able to, in order to move explosively, you need to be
able to figure out how to move explosively and also be able to control that.
And so completely different pursuits
than just generating strength.
Yeah, and you gotta be honest with yourself too.
I want this thing, but I don't wanna do anything
that gets me to this thing.
That's what I call their out on.
Well then, you want your cake and eat it too.
Yeah, well then you don't want it.
Like if you do, then you'll do it.
Now it's different when I'm doing the things
that I think are supposed to help,
and nothing's happening,
in which case we could look and view and see, okay, well, what's going on,
but when the answer's there, they know the answer, they don't want to do it. The question is,
do you really, do you really want it? And I think the problem is a lot of people want
to want something. And so they say it, but your actions speak a lot of the words. And so it's okay. Look,
there's nothing wrong with being a gym fit person
and not being able to go play baseball or football
with other people.
There's nothing wrong with that,
but you have to accept that because being good
at certain things requires you to do specific things.
And if you don't want to do those things,
then accept that as long time ago.
That's right.
I'm just sexy.
That's it.
That's it.
Sports balls for the birds.
That's it.
Yeah. Look, if you like our information,
head over to MindPumpFree.com and check out our guides. We have all kinds of guides that can help
you with all fitness and health goals. You can also find us all on Instagram. So Justin is at MindPump
Justin. I'm at MindPump Salon. Adam is at MindPump Adam. Thank you for listening to MindPump. If
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