Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1849: Ways to Build Muscle With Minimal Equipment, the Best Way to Track Progress in the Gym, Using a Deload Week to Build More Muscle & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: July 2, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Here is an easy way to lose weight, drink a gallon of water every single day! (2:47) Being socia...lly aware and saying less. (9:17) Sal recommends the Golden Era of Bodybuilding on YouTube. (16:46) Why Justin is a little disappointed with the Star Wars franchise as of late. (21:45) How the crypto/NFT craze resembles the dot-com bubble. (22:51) The guy’s favorite Vuori summer styles. (27:18) PT-141 makes you horny. (30:58) How Public Goods is comparable in price or cheaper, refills that save you money directly to your door! (33:38) Ranking the countries that pollute the ocean with the most plastics. (35:07) What culture has the best bodybuilding food? (41:23) #ListenerLive question #1 - How important is a deloading phase in a fitness program? (43:23) #ListenerLive question #2 - What is a reasonable timetable for muscle building or body fat percentage change? (57:06) #ListenerLive question #3 - What is your nutrition advice for a client who is trying to lose weight, following my meal plan, but not seeing results? (1:05:05) #ListenerLive question #4 - Is it possible to continue to build muscle in the lower body with light weights? (1:18:40) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Public Goods for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Receive $15 off your first Public Goods order with NO MINIMUM purchase** Special Launch: MAPS Cardio, plus two special e-books for $77! (Ends 7/3) **Promo code CARDIOSPECIAL at checkout** Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Golden Era Of Bodybuilding - Documentary - YouTube Albert Beckles Obi-Wan Kenobi | Disney+ Originals Dot-com bubble - Wikipedia MP Hormones PT-141 | Review of Benefits, Dosage, Side Effects, and More Ranking the Countries that Pollute the Oceans With the Most Plastics Visit LivON Labs for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Effects of periodic and continued resistance training on muscle CSA and strength in previously untrained men Prime Bundle | MAPS Fitness Products Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1245: Why Meal Plans Suck Mind Pump #1847: Five Reasons Your Fat Loss Has Stalled Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake MAPS Suspension Training Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Bear Grylls (@beargrylls) Instagram Dexter “The Blade” Jackson (@mrolympia08) Instagram Eugene Teo (@coacheugeneteo) Instagram Rad Dad (@raddad) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind,
there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health
and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we answered live caller's questions,
but that was after a 40-minute introductory conversation.
We talked about fitness, studies,
current events, and our lives. It was a lot of fun. By the way, you could fast forward. You could
click on show notes and fast forward to your favorite part. So click on the timestamp, listen to your
favorite part of the episode if you don't want to listen to the whole thing. Also, if you ever want
to be on an episode like this one where we answer your question live on air, email your question
to live at mindpumpmedia.com.
Now this episode was brought to you by one of our sponsors,
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Head over to public goods.com, forward slash mind pump.
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Also, the new program, we just released Maps Cardio.
There's two days left for the launch sale.
Okay, so after two days it goes to retail price,
but right now here's what's happening.
You can get Maps Cardio for $77.
Now it's gonna retail for $117,
but right now for the next two days,
you can get it for $77.
What comes with that are two eBooks for free,
which we will normally sell later on.
So later on each eBook is $47, but right now,
here's what you get for free for signing up for Maps Cardio.
The first e-book is the VO2Max Boost Book.
So this teaches you how to improve or increase your VO2 Max.
The second e-book is eat for performance.
This is all about nutrition to maximize your stamina
and endurance, okay?
So here's the rundown one more time.
New launch, new program, maps cardio.
For the next two days, get it for $77
and get those two e-books for free,
included just for signing up.
So if you're interested, go to mapscardio.com
and then use the discount code for the $77 price
and the two free e-books,
use the code cardio special with no space.
All right, here comes the show.
Here's the easy way to lose weight,
drink a gallon of water every single day.
What?
I know, everyone's gonna be like,
what, how?
Super-conscious.
Water burns body, no, it doesn't.
It's, here's so simple.
Now this is bro science, right?
So bodybuilders have been talking about forever.
Drink a gallon of water a day,
and what do they say?
Flushes out your body, helps your body flush out fat.
No, that's not what happens.
None of that.
What really happens is this, it's a behavioral thing.
So, when I would do this with clients,
and by the way, it turns out that these guys would do that as well,
when I would have clients drink half a gallon
to a gallon of water every single day,
they drink less soda, less juices,
they-
It's alcohol.
It helped with appetite.
Sometimes, believe it or not, oftentimes cravings
are connected to just needing more fluid.
Yep.
And it kept them aware of what went in their mouth
because they would typically have a bottle
or something that held, let's say, a quarter of a gallon
or half a gallon, and they would watch it
throughout the day.
So they were just aware of what was happening.
And that made a big difference.
And they took an additional thousand
of two thousand steps a day because they had to piece so much.
You know what's funny?
That is true.
It is true.
Have you ever tracked them with steps?
Yes.
Especially, okay, if you've never tracked water
for 500, my opinion.
And you've never made an attempt to drink a gallon of water.
The first time you do it, you are going to the restroom
like every 10 to 15 minutes.
It's all day long, you feel like you're gonna,
so it increases your steps by the time.
Now, I do want to say this,
you're gonna drink a lot of water,
make sure it's mineral water and not water
that doesn't have.
This is still water.
Just still can be dangerous.
Yeah.
Because it'll flush all the electrolytes out of your body,
sodium, the secret.
You say make sure it's mineral water?
Mineral water.
Mineral, yeah.
Yeah, because you want to have some minerals in there.
Obviously, you know, I work out a lot.
I don't eat a lot of heavily processed food.
So I use salt in my water or more accurately element tea.
It's an electric company we work with.
So it's like flavored with some Stavia salt, magnesium,
potassium, put it in my water.
But nonetheless, whenever I would have clients do this,
and again, it was bro science. And the bodybuilders recognized the value, they just explained it wrong.
Yeah. They just came up with an explanation that that's not what happens. But the
reality is, when I would have a client, literally, no joke, I would do this
sometimes with people, I'd say, we're not going to do anything with your diet.
All I want you to do is aim for, you know, half a gallon of water a day,
depending on how much the order you're drinking, or a gallon of water a day. Yeah, when much the order you drink. Or a gallon of water a day.
Yeah, when that's somebody's priority,
it's just that they're seeking that out constantly
throughout the day.
And it's like all these other normal opportunities
for grabbing some kind of a craving
or just sitting around.
A lot of times, it's idle hands.
It's the worst when you're just sitting there.
You end up finding something to make you feel good or, you know, or just like,
you know, make yourself busy with something.
I had, I actually had it down to a number.
The average client, when they would go, when they would be consistent with this,
would lose, no joke, between three to five pounds.
Yeah.
Three to five pounds on a scale, just from this alone.
Yeah.
Was what I would not have.
I mean, it goes right back into my philosophy
around nutrition with my clients too,
where when I first start out with any client, fat loss,
most of it doesn't matter.
I first want them to, I want to see what they're doing
and then I want to add to the diet,
even if you want to lose weight,
like I would find somewhere where you're lacking nutrient wise
and then tell them to add what,
now add to their diet.
Now many people would be like, what that's crazy, I wanna lose 50 or 100 pounds,
you're telling me you're gonna put food into my diet?
Well, yeah, because I know what happens
when I assess someone's diet, they're lacking
in so many different things, fiber,
they're having too much sugar, not enough healthy fats,
not enough protein.
And so I pick something and then I add to the diet,
what naturally ends up happening.
Cut those stuff off.
Yeah, the other stuff ends up falling off, right?
And just naturally happens that way.
The same thing I feel like with the waters,
they're telling a client like,
oh, don't have this soda, oh, don't have your glass of wine.
Don't do this, just like, hey, our goal is to drink
this much water.
They're so focused on hitting that
that those things naturally just fall off.
Psychologically, it works because,
I mean, just to put it more, you know, clearly, I guess, you're not telling them not to do something.
Yeah.
You're not telling them to take something out.
You're saying, add this thing and then they automatically take it out.
So,
If you want to get treasure hunt, then a punishment.
Kind of.
I guess.
I don't know.
That's treasure hunt.
Yeah, did you see?
Seeking it out.
Yeah, there's water.
We were so do for, we were so due for one of your terrible analogies again.
We were way over there.
It's been like since Ram water since the last time.
That's all it's cool.
Since we got something good like that.
You can drink a gallon of water, but first follow the clues.
You gotta get a sec.
Trust me, you guys just like a treasure hunt.
Treasure hunt.
It's a water.
What's this riddle on thirsty?
You can't open it.
You're gonna stay there.
You guys, by the way, speaking of water,
do you guys know where, let's say,
let's say like something terrible happens
and there's no water, no water coming out of faucet,
you have no drinking water.
Do you know in your house where you have safe drinking water?
We're toilet. Not in the bowl in the top part. Oh, the top, oh, I shouldn't drink it in the water. Do you know in your house where you have safe drinking water? Where toilet?
Not in the bowl in the top part.
Oh, the top, oh I shouldn't drink it.
Oh no, I'm not.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it.
I'm not drinking it. I'm not drinking it. I'm not drinking it. I'm not drinking it. I'm not drinking it. I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don out of it though. Well, yeah, that's right. I mean, if it was freshly cleaned and then nothing done and it would be just as clean
Yeah, I would think it would be just as clean as the back now. How do the survivors? What's that guy's name? Is it bear girls?
Yeah, you know he's drink his pee. How does that work? He does yeah
Or did you go straight? No, he drinks it straight because a percentage of your what 80% of your pee is water, right?
Really? Yeah, so he just drinks it straight. Yeah.
That's like a survival tactic.
If you had no water and you were on the desert
and you're in the desert and you're peeing,
like that would be one of the ways
to somewhat stay hydrated.
So I saw a-
You two would pee on like one of his shirts
and he'd wear as like a rag over his head
to try and cool himself down.
Keep him cool.
Yeah.
Which yeah, that helps as well.
Because evaporate is much water from within.
Like 10 years ago, there were all these memes with bear grills
and it was like, I would be like a problem at the top
and at the bottom the answer was always drink your pee.
Every single one of us.
All us yells.
Yeah, after a couple of people, a lot of gross stuff.
Dude, yesterday I went to my parents house.
And so there's this thing that,
you know, I'm gonna be stereotyped,
a little stereotype, okay?
But I think this is true for Italians,
maybe just Southern Italians in general, okay?
But I go to my parents' house and I can hear my dad,
I can hear my dad, he's in the house,
but I can hear him at the front door.
And I know he's on the phone, okay?
So I walk in, oh, hey, Sal, talk to your cousin.
Now he's got the iPad in front of his face, with FaceTime, right? Oh, look, hey, Sal, talk to your cousin. Now, he's got the iPad in front of his face,
with FaceTime, right?
Oh, look, hey, look at myself.
How you doing over there?
And I'm like, that's why I'm so loud on the phone.
Jessica goes, why did your voice get so loud
when you're on the phone?
And I'm like, because I'd learned it from my parents.
They're always like, oh, they can't hear you.
I don't think it's just a phone thing for you.
I think it's in general.
You never heard me on the phone, I'm without it.
I know, I know.
I just imagine you like answering something
in a movie theater or being like,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, from you.
Oh, no, they're so loud.
And so I told my finally, I was with my prouds
cracking up, right?
So I said hi to my aunt or my cousin somewhere
and I don't know half my family.
And we're talking then my dad hangs up,
and I go, why are you guys so, like, you're loud anyway?
And I get that, it's fine, we've got a busy house,
why are you so much louder when you go on the phone?
And then of course, my mom's like, no, we're not.
And I said, yes, you are.
I said, excuse me for calling you,
and then we're back and forth,
and then my mom goes, oh, you know why?
When we used to call people in Italy,
back then, you know, when they first came here,
the phone connections were so bad.
And a lot of people didn't have phones.
So my grandmother didn't get a phone too much later.
She had to go to a neighbor's house,
these are phones.
They had to yell in the phone
so they could hear them properly
and it just became a thing.
I thought it was like a rock you where they'd be
end up like yelling to the next building.
He's like, hey!
Come out!
Oh, that's the one where he's like,
oh, I'll tell your brother, you're gonna be homeless.
Yeah, yeah, I'll tell him, he doesn't do.
What of your traits that have been passed down
from your family does Jessica get the most annoyed
or what does she has to check you the most on?
Oh, the noise.
There's nothing.
There's no general.
Just your loud, everything you do.
Everything.
You don't do anything quiet.
And so when she met my family and she went
to a family function, she's like, oh, I get it.
Because like now, by the way, I appreciate it.
So I never understood new the difference
because I grew up that way, right?
I appreciate it at my house when the sun goes down,
she dims the lights and we talk much quieter.
And I used to think it was silly.
I'm like, who cares, right?
When I was a kid, lights were bright
and we were yelling until the time to go to bed.
She goes, no, do this, it's better for sleep
or whatever and she's totally right.
So now I see the difference much more.
Now here's the thing I told her this, I said,
now if you think my family's loud, here,
you go to Sicily and they are 10 times louder.
So my family here has brought the volume down.
You go to Sicily and I swear to God,
if I'm at my grandma's house or my aunt's house,
I can hear the conversation, I swear to God,
across the street or down the street
from the neighbors that they're having for dinner.
You can hear what they're doing.
If everybody, I've done that before,
and we hear what they're saying across the street.
That's how loud everybody is.
That's a buddy.
Over there, I know.
But that's the thing that annoys her the most.
I think.
Or the morning. Or know, I know. But that's the thing that annoys her the most. I think. Or the morning.
Or both.
Every time.
All day.
All day.
All day.
Can we just turn it down a few minutes?
Yeah, no, I get up.
And now I'm really good about it.
But I mean, you guys know, especially
we first started working together in the morning
when I wake up.
I'm like, you know, loud so.
Yeah.
I get constantly checked for the same thing I know you do, too,
because you do it to me and you do it to other people too and we both have this a tendency and I blame that on you know for many years
We we led people right first point senior. Oh, yeah, Doug would say that right the first born syndrome
I actually said that yeah, Doug told me that before I so I know I'm guilty and I realized how bad I was when we started
I started working with South
Oh, this motherfucker
More than I do
This is a weird bit of here. Yeah, it's been a great reflection for myself, right? Which is I tend to experience bad I was when we started working with South. I was like, oh, this motherfucker. More than I do.
It's been a great reflection for myself, right?
Which is, I tend to explain things all the time to like Katrina
when she just need me to explain it to her.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I'm always teaching her, can't help it.
And she gets really mad, you know what I'm saying?
And I feel bad because it's like, I don't mean it
in like a disrespectful way.
Like I just, I have, most of's like, I don't mean it in like a disrespectful way. Like I just, I have most of my career,
I spent teaching trainers and telling them,
like, you were also the oldest of them.
And I was the oldest.
So I always would do that with my sibling.
So it's a different transition for me.
I so I become more mindful of how that must feel.
It's also how, okay, for me, it's also how I learn.
So if I'm explaining something,
it helps me to remember it and learn it and then a lot of
times I anticipate more discussion back but oftentimes people don't say anything back. So I'm like,
okay, I'll just keep going but I like it's the back and forth. My mom used to let me argue a lot
when I was a kid. Believe it or not. Well, I don't think I ever realized how annoying it was
until I worked with you because then you would do it on with you, because then you would do it to me on things that like, I, well, you would do it to me on stuff like I know, you know,
like you know, basketball actually.
Yeah.
I really, so I catch you.
I'm like, oh, that's what she means by what I do.
Yeah, that's what she's talking about.
That's okay.
So learning to be like, you say less, dude.
That's been like a big thing for me for, I don't know,
I'd say the last five to 10 years
of trying to be better about say less.
I spent the whole half, first half of my life,
like speaking up, being candid, being direct,
like using, in leadership roles.
And so this last or this back half
have been trying to teach myself on, like, say less.
Be more like Justin.
Mine's a complete opposite, right? So yeah, mine is all like, I've been trying to teach myself on like, say less, you know, be more like Justin. Mine's a complete opposite, right?
So yeah, mine is all like, I just do things
and like, don't have to explain myself to anybody.
That's just how it's been my whole life.
And now it's like, flipped on its head,
which, you know, has been amazing.
And like, so there's been a good and a bad sight
to this in terms of like, where am I now, right?
So I've been able to communicate myself very clearly.
And Courtney is like appreciative that like, I can say
what's on my mind.
I can explain what I'm doing.
I can, you know, really articulate myself a lot better.
But I literally cannot sit there and listen to her tell
a story without jumping in.
Oh, I just, I've evolved into this because I just have to get it in there
because if I don't get it in there, it's not gonna happen.
I got a buddy like that, dude.
Yeah, where he, I'm not gonna tell us
see too much as he'll hear it.
She gets so annoyed when I do that.
But maybe she does this.
He'll tell a story and he tells you all kinds
of superfluous information.
I don't need to know, like oh,
let me tell you what happened yesterday.
And as I woke up in the morning,
you know, I got a coffee,
and it was, nothing to do with coffee
I'm waking up in the morning,
but he's gonna start the story that way.
And he goes on forever.
And so what I used to do to him when he would do this,
is I cut him off and I'd say,
to make a long story short.
And he gets so pissed.
He gets so pissed.
I wish I had that music.
You know, they used to do that with like a...
The Catholic words.
Did it, did it, did it, did it.
And then like pull them off stage.
Start the music, stand to come off the stage.
Yeah, you know.
I was, that's, but yeah, I know I do that with a,
when I talk, so, whatever.
What are you gonna do?
I'm good and better though.
I feel like I have really, maybe,
I mean, maybe Katrina will check me and say otherwise,
but I think the first step is just to become aware
that you do that, you know.
And the hard part is that,
like you were just alluding to Justin,
is that there's pros and cons to it.
Like there's, it's a strength of mine to be able to do that,
but then being socially aware of your environment
and knowing like, okay, this person doesn't want that.
Like, even though I have this to give to them,
I need to hold back and then just wait for them
to ask for versus like that initial jump on it right away.
It's just something. Hey, so I watched something really cool on YouTube yesterday, right?
Say it all this time because I'm no kids. No wife. I'm like, hey, to watch stuff on YouTube.
You watch that stupid show again. No, no, I tried again. Euphoria. It's too disturbing.
I'd say I'm done. Forget it. You see on YouTube. I might try again today, but I'm done.
It's done. I watched. So I went on YouTube and, okay,
so Pumping Iron, one of the best bodybuilding document,
the best stop bodybuilding documentary of all time.
They made another, not Pumping Iron,
but another bodybuilding documentary,
not nearly as good, but cool for me,
because I'm a big, I'm into bodybuilding back in the day.
It's called the Golden Era of Bodybuilding on YouTube.
And it's in the 80s.
So Rich Kasparis on there, there's Leigh Haney,
Albert Beckles, like all these bodybuilders.
And show you the made way back then.
It was.
Oh, it was.
And I like watching it.
Okay, so I like watching it,
not necessarily because of the bodybuilders,
although I did grow up looking at some of these guys,
and all these guys are so cool, or whatever.
What I like watching about it are the gyms.
So while they're working out,
I'm paying close attention.
These were the top bodybuilding gyms in the world.
And now what they highlighted was gold gym,
which a lot of people know, Joe Gold started gold gym.
Then he sold it to some business developers.
Then he got back into the business of gyms,
and he opened World Gems.
So World Gems was owned by Joe Gold, Gold Gems then was sold to someone.
I think he owned World Gems.
He did.
Oh, I don't know.
Dade Draper owned the one in San Cruz.
Yes, and then it was a franchise in here.
So anyway, I'm looking at these Gems and the Gold Gems, the way that they had it in the 80s,
from what I saw, you could tell that the guys who bought it understood a little bit about
business and commercializing the Gems. They lay out was different and I could hear some tell that the guys who bought it understood a little bit about business and commercializing the gym.
They lay out was different and I could hear some music in the background.
It must have been one of the first gyms that played music in the background.
Now the world gym that Joe Gold opened, he was totally different.
He's walking around the gym floor like old school.
If you looked at, if you read about gyms in the 1940s and 50s, the few that existed, the
owners would walk around the gym
and coach people.
So like Vince Garando would walk around,
you're doing that wrong, get out,
they would act like that.
No, you're either in or you're out, right?
Joe Gold is doing that.
He's walking around the gym, keep going, go harder,
and he's doing this type of thing.
No music, and then afterwards they interviewed him,
and he goes, I don't, he goes,
only serious people in here.
If I see someone messing around, I kick him out.
I'm like, that's why World Gym didn't do well. And that's why I called you.
Did really well.
But it's really cool to see the equipment, the layout,
and the way that they trained,
they've trained with a really good range of motion
in those days.
Like, Richka Sparry.
Full range of motion.
Barefoot too, like, no, no.
There was one bodybuilder in there I forgot all about, which I said his name, Albert Beckles. Did you guys know that I got? I want to say
second, second place in the Mr. Olympia at 60, 60 years old. He was 60 years old. So they
are now, of course, back then the standards were a little different. They didn't take
the drugs. I mean, Dexter Jacken, Jack Jackson has been landing in the top five and he's
what? 50 something. Yeah. Albert Beckles up until he was, so he's 84, I think it's still alive now,
but there's pictures of him in his 70s rip because that was like, oh my god,
this guy's crazy. So they're showing him train, working out and he's, you know,
he's kind of balding and you're kind of like, is he, because he looks young too,
and then he says his age. And I'm like, oh my god, he looks incredible.
Yeah, speaking of age and like trends and stuff like that,
it was so interesting the other day, was that him?
Yeah, so that picture, that color one in the middle there,
I think he's like 60 in that picture right there.
Wow, or older.
That's crazy.
Pretty crazy, right?
Looks phenomenal.
Phenomenal.
Anyway, go ahead.
Uh, no, oh yeah, 61 right there.
Yeah. Wow.
Wow, it's, that's super impressive.
Um, no, I was just talking to, you're reminding me of the conversation that we just recently had with Eugene and
Really highlighted the age gap that we have. Oh, yeah, you know, I didn't realize how much younger he was than us
Super intelligent guy very smart listening to his experience around like squatting and deadlifting. I know was so foreign to me
I'm like what are you talking about?
I thought, oh, dude, this is what, he's 10 years later.
And what I remember was being in gyms
and nobody squatting and deadlifting.
But you got to think at his age
when he was at the same level as you are.
By the time he was 16, 17 working out.
Yeah, CrossFit was already coming on.
Yeah, and squats became a thing.
Yeah.
I know it's weird.
We're all old enough to see them go out of favor
and into favor, right?
Because that's how it was in the 90s,
like nobody squatted, nobody dead lifted.
Then all of a sudden it came in favor.
And then before the 90s, everybody spotted it.
It's perfect to make sense because of that.
Totally.
And after having that conversation with him,
it really opened my eyes of like where he's coming from
because he definitely didn't see the same wave that we saw before
We just have it we have a whole other decade on him of training people
Obviously, you can tell how how smart he is when it comes to training clients like everything
We we addressed in that episode like I didn't disagree with what he was saying
Yeah, but I did this the the way he's been influenced is different
It makes sense because he's pretty Pretty funny and this has nothing to do
with working out in gyms,
but in terms of the age gap
and the different generations and how they receive.
I've been getting hit up all the time.
Why aren't you talking about Kenobi?
You know?
I personally like it, I want to like it,
but I'm not super into it.
And it's because I was never really into the prequels.
That's all the young generation.
In most of staff and like I was talking to Geo about this
and like some of the other guys like their generation,
like that was so so much of an imprint on them.
Like because it came out right,
you know, when they were in that pressure production.
That was an introduction.
Yeah, and so they like remember these characters
and they're getting excited about that
and then seeing it all kind of play out and like
I think where my disappointment has been with the whole franchise as of late was like
Dude like the most impactful character for me was always Han Solo and they just totally just destroyed him
Yeah, yeah, and they haven't been able to do anything
I said some like I keep waiting, you know for something, but like it's just interesting
Be like what people like really attach themselves to or get that kind of imprint totally, you know, for some, but like, it's just interesting, like, what people like really
attach themselves to and get that kind of imprint.
Totally.
With, you know, that, I mean, along those lines,
it reminds me the conversations I keep having with
these kids that are, that are so drawn to the NFT culture
that's happening and cryptocurrency culture
that's happening right now.
And it so closely reminds me of the dot com bubble.
But I mean, if you're under 30 years,
if you're 30 or under, you don't remember the dot com bubble.
No, in those times, anything dot com made money.
Or you thought it would make it.
Yeah, well, and to defend the dot com during that time,
it was, it did change the way we did business
and internet for the rest of our lives.
It was that revolution.
As revolutionary as I think NFT and crypto currency is going and blockchain is going to
be 100% agree with that.
That's not my argument on that.
It's that, but if you recall all the like your points out, anybody, if you, if you owned
dot, if you had animals dot com books dot com,. If you own a popular name.com, people were throwing money at you.
Because everyone was like, oh my god,
this is gonna be brilliant.
And so 99% of business made from that.
That's still here.
No, 99% of those businesses that were gone.
Amazon and eBay are the only two that I'm familiar with
that are unicorns that made it out of that.
So what I try to explain,
so there is I think 80,000 NFTs now,
and like 16,000 or more or 18,000 cryptocurrencies.
If you just do the math, if statistically
it's gonna be like that, the percentage that end up.
The problem is,
the likelihood that you're going to gamble and bet
on the right NFT or the right cryptocurrency?
It's a lot of ticket.
Yes.
The problem is that they're betting on crypto,
which is good.
The problem, now here's the problem with that,
is that they're going with these specific companies.
These are still businesses.
So crypto, great, internet, great.
We love the technology of it.
Individual businesses.
Ooh, still 80% fail. Yeah. That's what people are like. Oh businesses. Ooh, we love it. Still 80% fail.
Yeah.
That's what people are like.
No, those are like, I had that argument, right?
And so on and so on.
No, no, no, the ones I know they're doing,
you should see the utility of it.
The utility is amazing.
That's all blockchain argument.
Yeah, it's exactly the utility of it's amazing.
It's like, okay, still doesn't matter.
It still has to build like a normal company.
And the likelihood that this company will be, listen,
where we're at right now,
and they predict, I think predicting the next 25 years,
like over 65% or 75% of the S&P 500 will be completely turned
over.
These are publicly traded companies that are in the millions
and billions of dollars, and even they will be turned
over by then.
So this idea that you think your cryptocurrency or your NFT
that it's attached to this great business plan
or idea is going to be here in 10 years and make you a thousand X. I hope so, bro.
What was that one meme? Because they're getting hammered now, right?
There was that one meme that's got such a dick-brought-me-like.
I was throwing gasoline on it. I know, I know.
What was that one that's like with my, I sold our house for crypto currency.
Yeah, and now I own a crypto house in a crypto car.
So, I posted that meme.
It was a guy, I was saying his crypto house,
his crypto food and his crypto car are still good.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, we're good, honey.
Yeah, yeah.
It's messed up, dude.
You're honey, have another serving of blockchain. we're good, honey. Yeah, yeah. It's messed up, dude. You're having another cervical blockchain.
I know you're hungry.
Oh, damn.
I mean, I, I, okay, a part of that, like it's not like I want
to see people lose money, that's not.
But I've had a lot of debates back and forth
with people in my DMs.
And so that's what you see for me.
Like when I start posting stuff like that,
and I, when I tend to go hard on it in one way,
it's because I've had to argue back and forth
with so many people for the last couple of years.
And it's just way too confident.
You gotta like, you know,
bring yourself to reality on some level here.
Well, it's also the generational thing,
but that's why that's how this got into this conversation
that you reminded me of that,
because if you weren't around to see that,
this is so like, everybody always thinks, okay?
And I'm always 30, right?
He's so cool.
Somebody who's 50, 60, 70 years old.
Well, they don't think that the rules
of business apply anymore.
They still apply.
Or that this doesn't, like, we don't have cycles.
Exactly.
That's what I mean.
And every time, it's different.
Every time.
No, at this time, it's so different.
Not this time, it's not going down this time.
Yeah, but there's some fundamentals that always play out.
That's why when people invest in companies
and because it's tech or because it's new technology
or advanced, they don't think that the rules
of business still apply.
You know, like, exciting, but you gotta look
at the fundamentals.
You do, 100%.
Anyway, so I'm excited because I'm going shopping
with Justin after this.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So you're having a little bit of a date
to dress you like this.
You get back is that was his wife list? Yeah, currently. No, we're going to go to, little bit of a date dress you like Is that his wifeless?
Currently, no help me shop. We're gonna go to so we're gonna help you shop
Yeah, you can look at see how I'm making my fits at fury with my new
Trunks, you know, yeah, come back to like dumb and dumb or is it you and Doug gone triple time?
Just in this might be this might backfire
Yeah, I come back in a
T-Tool suit and you're head suit him and might be this might backfire. I don't know. I could back you in a, but Tiel suit. Don't let him get your head, bro.
Him and Doug, I got him.
I got him.
I got him.
I got him.
I got him.
I got him.
I look awesome.
No, it's me.
No, see, they go out all the time.
Now, Justin, I'm not gonna go.
This is just, that's right.
Look at Justin, Doug and I.
Hey, guys are hanging out.
I got to tell you what's happening.
Differences, Doug and I are working.
Oh, hey, we're working it too.
I'm working it.
Yeah.
No, we're gonna go get some, like, some summer stuff or whatever. So the one at St. Tana Roe. Oh, yeah, you've been there, of course, was there working it. No, so we're gonna go get some summer stuff or whatever.
So the one at St. Tana Row.
Oh yeah, you've been there, of course.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I love that.
By the way, that location is great.
Great setup.
They got everything in that location.
I love it right across.
If I go online and can't find something,
I go there and I find it.
I swear to God.
I like going in person, too.
Again, it's one of those things.
I want to support businesses like the physical physical yeah businesses because like I still want that to
Exist like I'm so just tired of buying online. Do you each have like a favorite that I mean they have so many different styles of shorts
Do you not shorts because I don't really wear a lot of shorts, but I can't get over the the pants that I'm wearing right now in these polos
They're just so professional. I think it's the core ones that I really like.
So, is that you two does?
Is that a kind of sweat material, like lighter?
Yeah, like lighter?
Yeah. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I just want to see the new styles because I have plenty of their shop for another man.
I'm sorry.
Last thing I'll do.
All right.
Keep your shoulder rough.
I'm going to advise you that.
I follow this Instagram page.
I think it's called Rad Dad.
And there's this.
He did it like a post like a while.
I think it went viral.
And it was like, you know, that awkward feeling
when your wife hands you like her purse to hold.
Oh yeah.
You just have to hold it.
Yeah, how do you hold it?
You like wrap it up, you put it on your armpit like this.
Oh, I grab, I don't grab strap.
You grab and pinch it at the end.
Yes, it's like it's, it's a dirty, away from you.
Like it's a dirty diaper.
Yeah.
Somebody take this from me.
Those are the core ones.
Yeah, those are nice.
Yeah, like those are like bathing suit.
You know what, swimming in that?
Is that what you're doing?
I mean, I can swim in any of them.
They all have that kind of material where I've actually,
I've actually gotten the pool and all of them before.
Yeah, I mean, I'm looking for something, you know,
well, some of them have the,
does that have the,
that's a liner, the liner inside.
So yeah, that's one of the liner inside.
Yeah, the green one.
That means you don't have to wear underwear with that.
That's exactly what I told you.
I go into Kabul, we only need two pairs of underwear for the whole week.
That's it.
That's it.
I remember I said that to you, you're gonna be like,
damn, shit, it's day four, Adam's right.
Boy, who are one pair underwear?
What we don't know is you wear the same two pairs every day.
I like it extra breezy.
It's not your wear one, turn it inside out, wear it again.
No, that is one of the trips that I have done over and over.
And every time I go, I come back.
You know why?
Because you think, oh, going out close.
You do.
The truth is, you go to places like that,
everybody goes out and flip flops.
Yes, and combo pants.
You exactly, and combo shorts and a tank top
and flip flops are fine everywhere you go.
You can go to the nicest restaurant
on the pier.
It's business attire.
Yeah, it's time to make sure you're doing some. 90% of the tire. Yeah, and the end. Sure, you'd be really strong.
90% of the time, if you're like a place where we have a pool,
you're gonna be in the pool or laying around the pools.
You're gonna be in your swim trunks.
So as long as you have like two pairs of swim trunks
to rotate, so you can let them dry out and go back and forth.
Yeah, dude, I gotta test some.
I gotta, so you know, I've been experimenting
with some of the peptides from, you know,
who we work with at npHormons.com.
Testing them out, obviously under Dr. Supervision.
I use the Ibutamorum for a little while. I tried that. That raises growth hormone. Definitely
notice that. That's like a, I think it's more of a muscle builder than anything. That's what I
noticed from it, right? But I stopped that because, you know, I don't necessarily need it, but I
stopped it and maybe I'll do it again later. Then I tried a peptide called PT141.
Okay.
PT141 makes you horny.
Yeah.
That's a peptide that makes you horny.
It literally sounds like a droid.
No, it's a peptide that literally makes you horny
and it works on men and women.
And it's a libido booster.
It is not like Viagra, doesn't increase blood flow.
It literally increases libido and desire.
And it didn't you say like darkens your skin a little too?
So it increases one of the hormones
that cause a skin pigmentation.
So if you take it, that's what it originally was designed for
to help people get a tan
without getting something in the sun.
Yeah, I look at my look real good.
It's also done with insulin needles
so you could jab your wife when she's not looking.
What?
Don't not recommend it. Don't do it. Just claim her. Definitely not. It's also done with insulin needles so you could jab your wife when she's not looking. What?
It does not recommend it.
Just claim her.
Definitely not.
Just say it.
No, but anyway, it works on women.
But these men and women,
so these peptides I wanted experiment with some of them
because they'll be recommending them to certain clients
that go over there from Mind Pump.
So I tried it.
So the side effects I got were a little bit of skin flushing.
Then I tried taking a smaller dose,
but a couple days in a row instead of taking one larger dose
once, holy cow.
That is very strong.
Speaking of that.
Like it works, you actually, you feel it.
Yeah, good.
Did you guys put together a peptide stack?
Did you guys put that together?
We're working on it and there's gonna be an episode
where we talk about different ones.
You're always working on something.
You know, I'm gonna finish anything.
Organify your working on stuff,
peptide your working on stuff,
see if it can.
It's a secret.
Too much shopping.
He's one of you.
He's one of you.
Shame seed here, right?
Hey, listen, what,
when you, here's a deal,
I want to tell the audience this,
you can get peptides
because I know people will go online.
They sell them online as research chemicals.
So it's like a gray area.
You don't want to do that,
not regulated, not doctor supervised. I would never do anything like this if it wasn't through doctor supervision
and with I don't think we should recommend to anybody. We're just going to be real
and tell you that. I'm saying. Yeah. That's how I feel. No, no, don't try this, but I'm
trying it. Yeah. No, no. What I mean by that is if you're going to utilize peptides for
what? Boosting growth hormone, speeding up healing, recovery. There's one for obviously one for libido. You do it and it's done
through a pharmacy and you work with a doctor to supervise. So that's the only
way I would do it. But anyway, I tried it and it's effective. Yeah, it's really
weird too. Doug, I think I told you guys, I don't know if I brought this up on
the show, but this is like the new hustle with inflation
is to shrink the size of products.
So obviously everybody sees prices,
like it's consumer.
I've seen this all over the place.
Consumer goods are now.
So the price stays the same.
Or up like 10%.
So what some of these companies are,
they're like, they're jumping five percent,
but then they'll knock off like two or three ounces.
And so I was actually looking at,
so if I don't have my public goods toothpaste,
I use Tom's.
And Katrina was asking me the other day,
like if I wanted her to buy more
Tom's or buy more public goods.
I said, oh, get more public goods.
I'm pretty sure it's cheaper.
Do you know the price difference
between those two products?
Take a dollar or two.
Is it?
Yeah, I looked it up.
What's it?
And the ounces are the same?
Are they the same?
No, they're the same.
I'm gonna pull it up. I think public goods is six ounces they the same? Are they going to say? No, they're the same. I'm going to pull it up.
I think public goods is six ounces for the toothpaste.
Okay, so five and a half.
Yeah, so five and a half for seven dollars from Tom's
and six ounces for five dollars.
So it's two dollars cheaper.
You know, the thing about public goods is
you get good comparable prices are cheaper typically.
The refills you save a lot.
So what happens is if you buy soap, you guys obviously
know the spam telling audience, right? You buy soap and a soap to spence their hands soap.
Then when you want to refill, it's a bag with minimal packaging. The material of the bags, it's
designed to break down and compost. And so you use the refill to fill. So it's really good for
the environment. And that's where we start to save is through the refills and the subscription
is where you really start to save.
You know, speaking of environment stuff,
I was mentioning this off-air,
and I want Doug to check my numbers
because I don't want to be wrong.
He's all what's one plus one.
Is it two?
Is it?
But I can't, I wish he's.
I don't remember where I heard this,
but okay, we all know like plastic in the ocean, right?
That's like the thing that we always,
that we always talk about.
Or people always talk.
There's like a literal island of plastic.
Yeah, it's like so bad.
I've seen the videos and pictures and so
about that, it's terrible.
But I saw somebody gave me the breakdown of like,
who's responsible for that?
And you know the...
Yeah, do you know the United States is like,
like a tiny fraction of this?
Yeah, I know.
I'm not that I'm, I'm condoned that any is good.
Okay, I'm not saying like, you know, but I didn't, I assume as much as you hear about it here,
yeah, that we were like major contributors to that.
And it's not well developed nations.
It's still really bad about it.
Yeah.
No, well developed nations like the US, what is it?
It's not really, really good.
But yeah, it says 0.2% of the world's ocean plastic, despite making up over 3% of the populations
from the United States.
And it's because,
that's crazy, not even a percent.
We have really good waste management,
very well developed waste.
We don't,
Thank you Tony Suprano.
Good, good regulations.
Good regulations.
But you go to other countries developing nations,
or like China, for example.
Asia is 81%.
There you go. Wow. Asia is 81%. There you go.
Wow.
Africa is 8%.
South America is 5 and a half.
North America 4 and a half.
Europe's 0.6.
Good job, Europe.
Yeah.
And wait, Europe's 0.6, we're 0.5.
We're 4.5 for North America.
That includes Mexico and Canada.
And Canada.
If you go to the US, we're almost 0.2.
Yeah, 0.2.
So, US is better.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, we can't control this. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US.
We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go to the US. We're not if you go it's not. We do a pretty good job. We do a pretty damn good job.
I know it's the information that you hear is scary
and then you feel very, very responsible.
That's it.
Now we should do what we can here.
Well, it's interesting to me,
because the pollution talk always comes up.
Yeah, nobody wants to point fingers
in any other direction but here.
But yeah, you start thinking about that
and where all of the world's factories are,
like the majority of it.
You know, it's like, we outsource that a lot,
which that is like the biggest of gross pollutions
is like these massive facts.
Well, yeah, and here's the way I look at it as like this,
and it's, and my point of bringing that up
was actually is not to like point the fingers
at the other countries,
I made a joke about that right there.
It really is to highlight, like sometimes in our country,
dude, we get so hard on like a blaming list for it.
What a shitty job we do at everything.
We're so bad, we're at all this stuff.
And it's like when you look at everywhere else
in the country, we're actually, we're actually,
sorry, everywhere else in the world,
we're doing a lot better than they are.
Well, you got a lot of different areas.
Well, you look at, when you look at the numbers,
when you have a country that's developing,
the main focuses of that country are,
we need cheaper energy, we need to feed our people,
people need to be able to have houses and products,
and we need to be able to make our labor
from super hard, inefficient, to easier, more efficient.
And so you see that process,
and so they don't prioritize waste, they don't prioritize pollution. It's like, we, look And so you see that process. And so they don't prioritize waste.
They don't prioritize pollution. It's like, we look, if you're living in a third-world
nation or developing nation, and you're like, listen, I don't care about CO2 emissions
because I can't feed my kids. Like, I just want to feed my kids right now. So that's
what they where they start. Then when they become developed and they start to become wealthy,
as they become wealthy and those minimum needs
are met and surpassed,
then you start to see more focus on the environment,
pollution on social justice causes
through businesses or whatever, right?
Because you can.
So that's, you gotta look at it in a fair way.
Like if you look at the countries that pollute the most,
they don't give a shit about pollution
because they're worrying about like, we got to make this shit.
Yes, we got to make this happen.
It's on a base level.
Right, but that's my point is I'm talking about like the narrative around us.
The narrative that, because when they make you feel that way, they manipulate you.
So a lot of that comes from politicians and then media influences that.
So when you're reading something, if they tell you, hey, we're doing a great job,
don't worry about it. I can't choose. Versus you ask your average kid or whatever in school.
They think we're the biggest of worst. They would say us. Yeah, and that's my point. That's my
point of bringing that up is that I think that we've, I don't know, we rag on us on so many things,
like we're so awful and we're failing so much as a country, but it's like, man, there's a lot of
things that we're doing pretty well. And we're but it's like, man, there's a lot of things that we're doing pretty well.
And we're moving in the right direction.
And there were a lot of the way there on some areas, like, of course, we still have things
that we need to get better.
But Jesus, where we were just a hundred years ago to where we were today.
Oh, very different.
Like, oh my God.
Like, come on.
But you got it.
Where's the positive spin ever?
Yeah.
No, that's true.
But the other thing too is this is that the campaign, the positive stuff, I guess.
Well, the other thing too is economically we that campaign the positive stuff. I guess well the other thing too is economically
We're still the the superpower of the world China's coming up, but we're still a superpower and also
We are the the largest by far media exporter meaning
Other countries in the world are far more aware of American media and culture than we are of the rest of the world
So we automatically become the center narrative, automatically.
Like when our presidential elections go on,
the whole world talks about it.
I don't know when other elections tend to go on,
unless it's a country that like,
that they're telling us to really focus on type of deal, right?
Look at celebrities and that kind of stuff.
So it's because we export so much media.
So it makes sense that they're gonna put so much focus on us
in that way.
Well, we're gonna do it on ourselves too.
We're one of the few countries that do an election
like every four years though, right?
Like most people stay in power for a long time.
Like China, Russia, places like that.
Oh, you get in power, you stay in power for a long time.
Yeah, no, you have to be out in four.
Europe is pretty good, but I think there's a way
that they can stay.
I know here you have limit.
You have limit.
Yeah, eight's it.
Yeah, our government was founded
by people who are super, super skeptical of power.
Like they obviously designed it.
Just like power, yeah.
They're like, and they did the best they could
to make it impossible to impose tyranny,
although there's always a way.
There's no way.
There's no way, there's no way.
Hey, so I want to go back to fitness here real quick
because I ate something yesterday,
heading in a long time, and then it dawned on me
that this is the perfect bodybuilding food.
What, I'm gonna ask you guys,
what culture has the perfect bodybuilding food?
You guys already saw the note, so you know my answer.
Peru.
Oh, I didn't see it.
Peruvian?
Peruvian, really?
Yeah, the potatoes in the meat, dude.
That's pretty good.
Yeah, white potatoes in meat, dude,
you could get a whole cup of. Bro, Mediterranean or Persian food. It's all like ke the meat, dude. That's pretty good. Yeah, white potatoes in meat, dude, you can get a bowl of purple.
Bro, Mediterranean or Persian food.
It's all like kabobs, chicken, steak, rice.
I had Persian food yesterday and I looked at it all.
I'm like, this is what a bodybuilder would want to eat.
I eat it when I went to Peru.
That's how I, I mean, the plate, they give you this massive serving
and it's like white potatoes and steak.
That's true.
It's true.
Oh, yeah, this is perfect for me.
That's true. That's true. That's true. Oh, yeah, this is perfect for me. That's true.
That's true.
That's pretty good.
What about you, Justin?
Yeah.
He's like, I don't care about bodybuild.
I don't care.
I don't care.
That conversation we had in the day.
He was thinking about bodybuilding.
I carried him the last time.
Justin looks like he's smelling a fart the entire episode.
So it looks like.
I am.
That's pretty cool.
He's real pretend like you're like,
Oh, we're talking about getting shredded?
Yeah, I know.
I was like, oh god.
Like, I roll after every statement.
He has to be the most man man I've ever met my life in.
Oh, you want to look pretty.
Ooh, yeah.
And abs, dude.
I could punch something.
I can't hide it.
Yeah, sorry.
Good balance.
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That's L-I-V-O-N-L-A-B-S.com forward slash MP for that hookup.
All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Justin from Georgia.
What's up, Justin? How can we help you?
It's going on, guys.
Hey, first off, I wanted to wish you guys
all a happy Father's Day.
You know, I really appreciate what you guys do
for every one of us as a community that listen in
and you know, you guys definitely deserve that time
to spend with your family and love hearing about it.
I'm getting married at the end of this year and hearing about all of you guys and managing
your business and personal lives and with kids, it's really inspiring for someone like
me that wants to be there as well one day in the future.
Awesome, man.
Thank you, great.
Of course.
So, just to kind of give you a little know, where I'm coming from and then this will help lead into the question
We'll be better answer that as well
On 30 years old I've been in and around different scenes in the fitness industry
professionally
The last like five years or so a personal training nutrition coaching
Things like that.
But most of my background really started with
powerlifting and Olympic weightlifting,
which more recently kind of became more like a body building
or power, I guess you could say,
power building as some people might be calling it nowadays.
But my main question kind of revolves around
deloting and the importance of that
and that built around it, or excuse me,
maybe between phases or at the end of a training program.
And if that's something that is recommended for somebody
who maybe doesn't have experience or maybe
you can kind of go into detail about the importance
of that building that into your training programs
and how it can be more efficient for me.
Yeah, good question.
By the way, congratulations on your upcoming marriage.
I appreciate that.
Yeah, that's great.
So, D-loads, typically what I'll tell people
with a D-load week is to base it off of field.
Now, there's a problem with that.
Most people are terrible when it comes to
taking that kind of advice.
So I would say the more consistent you are,
the more your volume, the higher your volume is,
the higher the intensity of your training is,
the more valuable taking a D-load week is every eight
to 12 weeks or maybe even 14 weeks, okay?
So if you're super consistent with your workouts, you
don't miss a workout, you like to push yourself, you're really pushing progress, your volume
is pretty high compared to most people's training, then deload weeks are extremely valuable.
And what you do in a deload week is you're active, but you basically work out at like 40,
50% intensity, you're in there just to kind of move
and get a pump and stretch a little bit.
And studies will show that
D-load weeks actually contribute quite a bit to progress.
Now with people who are not consistent,
people who miss workouts and aren't working out very much,
I typically don't schedule D-load weeks,
but I do tell them to take a D-load week
if they start to feel
excessive stiffness, soreness, fatigue, or if they notice any sleep issues. But generally speaking, I would say every eight to 12 weeks or so, it's probably a good idea to take a D-load week.
I've actually changed my opinion on this recently, or in the last year, right? Whenever it was,
when we first came across the study
that they did that we've talked about multiple times,
and I don't know if you've heard us talk
about the study where they had the two groups
where somebody trained basically every single day
consistently through I think three months,
and then you had another group that every third week,
they took a whole week off.
Have you heard us talk about the study?
I'm actually going to be news so I have not.
Okay, so this this was a really fascinating study for me and what ended up happening. So there's
a group. Okay, one group stays consistent all the way through for three months or six months.
I don't remember what it was. I think it was three months. It was, and I don't, I don't, it wasn't
every day workouts, but it was a consistent routine. Yeah, consistent routine, right? And basically
not any scheduled days off other than the normal days, right?
So you have consistent group for 12 weeks.
Another group, every third week,
they take an entire week off of training.
At the end of the study, both groups
progress the same amount.
So it just highlighted how men missing every third week,
a whole week, doesn't even set you back to.
Since that, I'm probably more pro doing a D-load week,
even if you don't think you need it,
because it just highlights,
as long as you're consistent, like Sal's point is true,
like if I'm talking to a client who, you know,
that we can't even string two or three weeks together
with them not missing a workout,
I'm a little less worried about doing it,
because they naturally will end up
deloting because they're not consistent.
But for someone maybe like you,
who's dialed in, you follow a program,
you don't really miss any days.
Now, and even if you felt good at the program
and ready to roll on them,
I actually would encourage a delo week.
I would encourage a week of just mobility
or maybe training doing some cardiovascular work
or just working a lot of just mobility or maybe training doing some cardiovascular work or just working
a lot of stretching, like, or just reducing, like Sal said,
you're lowed by 40% and just going really like a skill
and just, you know, working with that with low low.
Yeah, so, and that, in the past, I would say,
hey, if you feel good, you don't feel sore,
you're not, your joints aren't aching,
your strength is still going, I'd say,
roll right in the next program,
but after reading that study
and seeing how beneficial it was for someone
to take off a whole week every third week
and still progress as good as somebody who is going,
now I'm like, damn, there's gotta be benefits
to just taking that week off.
And I think for us people that are fitness fanatics,
we probably tend to overreach and stretch ourselves more than
we're probably taking off. So for someone like you or for someone like us, I
would say after the program, take that week and do a D-load week.
Yeah, and now the key here though, what's important is that you don't... Now you can
take it completely off and do nothing. I don't think that's a good idea though,
because the benefits from being active and exercise
and training are far reaching.
It's more than just strength, muscle and fat loss.
There's also mental wellness that comes from it.
There's health effects, benefits from moving consistently.
So I don't think you should take it off completely
and do nothing, I think you should go and do something,
just really reduce the intensity,
make it just and hit the nail on the head.
I like skill training.
I like to go into the gym and really perfect my form.
Get a little bit of a pump, go real easy.
Mobility, if that's something that you need to work on,
that's a great thing to focus on during that week. I don't think it's a good idea just to take it off unless
you are really fatigued, really burnt out.
I 100% agree. Just focusing on your skill-training mobility will do wonders because you're still
going to be stimulating those muscles in a similar way, but now with a lot less demand
and load. So, you know, your body, you don't want to cut all that momentum, all
of that effort that you've been putting in and to completely shut it off and just rest
and not do anything, you know, it's going to take a bit more than, you know, the following
week to then, you know, start that ball rolling against.
Yeah. I think it's definitely good for the body to, you know, go to that active recovery.
Yeah. And again, we, I can't overstate this this. You know this, Justin, you've been in fitness
for a long time.
How important are the mental benefits
from just working out consistently, right?
So if you take a week off completely,
maybe you won't lose muscle or strength
and maybe you recover better,
but you're not getting in the mental effects now.
So that's why I think it's important
to still do something, just go way easier
and go in with the mental focus of delode.
This is a easy recovery week.
18 year rituals and habits.
Along those lines though,
I also think like,
we always talk about building muscle burning body fat as like the
focus, but overall general health, the fear is so much bigger than that.
So if I'm talking to one of my fitness fanatics, I'm also like challenging them on their spiritual
health, their relationship health.
And so maybe if I was dialed in on my training and I'm all about that right now, maybe that
week, I'm actually kind of thinking
about those things.
So that maybe means I'm doing mobility stuff.
Maybe I'm doing practices that's gonna work
on my relationship.
Maybe I'm doing some stuff to work on my inner self.
We do it fast.
Yeah, maybe a fast.
Maybe things like, maybe I'm gonna look at the rest
of this fear and think about like,
where can I grow or where can I improve in those areas
that isn't necessarily in the weight room.
I know right now we're discussing all the weight room stuff like oh mobility, skills training,
oh this, but hey, maybe that week you still have an hour practice so you don't stop the
consistency of being dialed in of like consistently working on yourself, but maybe that hour is
walk and meditating.
Maybe it's taking going out with your future wife and doing something special for her.
Or maybe it's reading. It could be a lot of other things that I think are going to contribute
to your overall health and performance. That isn't always necessarily in the gym.
What do I, could I be doing? To me, that D-load week, personally,
I'm always, you know, the gym is easy for me. I love that. I love lifting weights.
That's an easy go to. The stuff that I have to discipline myself about is the other stuff, the reading, the spiritual growth,
the working inside, the meditating, the things that I probably kind of push to the side or don't focus on. To me, that D-load week,
I'm trying to focus on those types of things. I really like that mindset, like that outlet on that.
That's a great way to, I didn't really think about it
like that, but I appreciate your insight on that.
A lot of where this kind of discussion comes from,
since I'm relatively new, actually,
one of my closest friends shout out,
based on Tim and up, put me on you guys, like maybe like three months ago.
And I started, I have two of your programs.
And I started doing strong.
And then he, I put my buddy,
he wanted to do aesthetic together,
because him and I have, you know,
pretty similar skill level when it comes to the gym
and our level of commitment.
So we started doing aesthetic and I started getting, I got to like week three on aesthetics
so just starting it.
But I had a small screen so I kind of like took some time off and like you guys have been
saying just kind of focusing on some stuff that I can work around with this injury and
just recovering kind of around that injury.
But I guess that
because I was experiencing like, you know,
like you guys say, the volume on that is way higher
than probably a lot of people can handle.
You know, I'm kind of thinking like maybe like after
the first phase, I do like a small,
delo week and kind of focus on some other stuff
and then, you know, jump right into then jump right into face two to where that
one's a little bit bouncing up a little bit. So I think that's kind of, you know, this
is just trying to help me formulate my plan of attack to this program.
You're on the right track. Esthetic is a lot of volume. A lot of people think, oh, I'm
going to do aesthetic no problem. It's a lot of volume for much too much for a lot of
people. So I think you're definitely on the on the right track and don't forget you're in the health space
Health is a lot more than just you know muscle and fat loss and as you get as you as you continue progressing through the space
You'll realize just how important all the other stuff is as well sounds like you're already on the right track though
So do you have I know you're a trainer. Do you have prime and prime pro?
Cause those are the most valuable programs for trainers.
I do not, but those are the two that I've been looking
into more recently.
I hear you guys stand in those all the time.
Some of that's gotta be one for the tool belts.
We'll send them over to you.
Okay, that's a wedding gift.
You got, you got a mass prime and prime pro.
No problem.
Hey guys, I appreciate it.
Thank you so much for your time.
Love what you guys do.
I'm a fan for life.
I'm like, how did I miss this over the last like years
of being in fitness industry?
I appreciate it guys.
You guys are the best.
Spread the word.
Thank you, Justin.
Thanks for following in.
Of course.
And I think you can leave me.
Just easy to see.
Yeah.
Really good point, Adam, because we do often forget that it's a lot more than just workouts.
What a great opportunity when you have a D-load week to look at everything and say, all right,
what some stuff I tend to neglect.
Let me focus on.
The holistic kind of birds eye view, right?
Well, especially with someone like him, like you brought up some points that I think
are very important.
Yeah, average person, it's like a word.
Yeah. If I, most of my clients, I didn't really schedule D load weeks because most of my clients
they would do it themselves.
Yeah, it was, I mean, there's probably a handful, maybe two handful worth of people
that I've trained that could run a full maps program with no days off. We're breaks.
Jumping into the next.
Yeah, and it's rare that I had a client
that was that consistent where they just never miss.
There's some of them, but a handful.
Compared to someone like him who's a trainer.
So as a trainer, I think differently,
he's gonna be like us.
He loves it.
He loves the gym.
And sometimes we're so focused on maximizing muscle or not losing muscle
or losing body fat.
It's like, dude, there's such a whole other aspect of health and fitness and what a perfect
time for you to put your energy there knowing that you're probably not the guy that does
that because I know I'm not.
So I can totally relate.
Our next caller is Andy from Oklahoma.
Andy, what's happening, man? How can we help you?
Hey, how's it going?
I appreciate the opportunity.
Awesome, of course.
So my question is, I guess I got started
kind of helping my fitness and everything
early this year in January.
Online, I can see all over the place that you don't
want to lose more than like two to three pounds of weight per week. And that's like a
good metric to judge progress and keep yourself from going too hard or to hurt causing other
problems. But I can't see what's a good rate by week or month to judge growth?
Like how much muscle can I put on or how fast my body,
my BMI will change or things like that.
So I was interested, what's a good metric
by a week or months for those kinds of things?
Half a percent to a percent a week is what they said.
Body fat, body fat.
But you wanna know about how much muscle
you should gain per week with that number looks like,
is that what you're asking?
Either way, right?
Like I know they're all kind of running in connection
with each other.
I just know that I went from 32% body fat
and I lost a bunch of weight really fast
earlier this year.
I started watching your show, I missed them into you guys
and cut back on the cardio and increased my calories
a little bit because I realized that 30 pounds just based on my scale,
the electric penance on the scale,
I lost like 10 pounds of muscle out of that 30 pounds.
And so I don't wanna keep doing that.
So I'm just trying to make sure I'm keeping a check,
but my progress is obviously slowed dramatically doing that.
So just looking for those reference points.
Yeah, you know what's, so a couple of things First, those are those are general guidelines, you know,
two pounds of body fat a week, right? I've had clients lose more and be okay. It really does depend
on the person and the individual, but generally speaking, it's a good it's a it's a decent
target. Look at body fat percentage. I like body fat percentage more because it tells you much
more than what the weight on the scale will tell you. So like in fact, with your reverse diet, if you're focusing on strength, you may actually find that
your weight go up on the scale, but your body fat percentage actually go down.
That can happen if you do things kind of the right way.
One metric that I really always advise people to pay attention to, especially someone like
yourself who lost a lot of weight in a short period of time, is to focus on performance.
Look at your strength.
Like if your strength is going up
and your body weight goes down a little bit
or the size of your pants goes down a little bit
or stays the same,
like that's a great metric.
And as your strength continues to go up,
usually your metabolism follows,
usually muscle growth follows as well.
So that's one of the most important things.
I would say body fat percentage and strength.
If the body fat percentage trends in the right way
and your strength is going up,
you're probably doing most things right.
Yeah, just because the scale doesn't move,
doesn't mean you're not progressing really good.
I mean, what could potentially happen is,
so you may think your progress is slowing down
because the scale isn't moving one way or the other,
but you may be building muscle.
And what's happening is as you build muscle,
your metabolism speeds up,
and then in turn, you end up leaning out a little bit
so you lose a little bit of body fat.
So you have this nice kind of even exchange happening.
And many times, this is right where I want my clients
to be, the hard part is the mental, the challenge.
Because we're always, we're so married to,
you know, the scale telling us like, oh, I'm building
muscles, so I want to see it go up or oh, I'm burning body fat, so I want to see it go down. But the
truth is, especially I can see you right now. So I see you have a, you're not obese, you're not
super skinny, you have a good frame already. So I would love to keep your, your size about the
same, but we're just a nice little slow exchange of building muscle and losing body fat and you're in a great place.
Do you do circumference measurements at all besides your bioelectric impedance?
I don't know, but that has come up in just like watching you guys and listening and talking to other people and I
certainly think I'm gonna start doing that here. I think it's a good measurement. Just a misdemeanor stone. Yeah, just because in terms of body fat, I think body fat is a great metric.
It's just a really hard one to nail down in terms of the efficacy of that.
So we do like dunk tank, which is the most accurate or a bod pot or something like that, where
you displace air and displace water.
But in terms of just simplicity, I think that your you know, circumference measures will see growth
where you want to see growth and then, you know, decrease where you want to decrease.
So even just, you know, constantly sort of paying attention to your waistline.
And then like South said, your strength gains and, you know, your eating is consistently,
you know, at that same calorie amount, I think you're kicking ass.
Yeah, I want to echo what you just said, Justin.
That is that circumference measurements are so underrated
and they shouldn't be.
It's actually a phenomenal way to gauge progress.
Like if you measured your upper arm,
your chest, your waist, your thigh,
you would get a pretty good idea
of what's happening on the scale
if the scale goes up or down, right?
If the scale goes up, but your waist size goes down or stays the same or stays the same.
Like, oh, you know, we're probably doing the right thing, combine that with performance.
And now you've got a pretty damn good picture.
Body fat percentage is great too, but like, you know, just a minute, a good point.
If you take your body fat test on the scale, your electric impedance, you better make sure
that every time you take your body fat on there, that everything is identical. Same time of day, same amount of hydration,
everything is the same because the amount of fluid in your body, time of day can actually
affect the reading by a few percent. I've actually made mine go up or down by 4 percent
within a hour.
That sounds pretty dramatically.
Yeah, so I like a I like a lot what, what
Justin said, I think at this point in your training to really
focus on performance, I think if you went on a, on a, you know, a
12 week course of just trying to get stronger, I think you would
get, it's just a great time to do it. You've already lost a lot
of weight. There's a great time to, to focus on that. Have you
cut out all the Peloton or you still doing Peloton? I still do it like once or twice a week just because I do really enjoy mountain biking.
That's good.
And I want to stay conditioned for that, but I am running a MAPS in a Bollock now.
I'm on like, start of the Phase One and really enjoying that.
So I'm going to keep pushing on that and start doing my circumference measurements.
That sounds like. Excellent. Well, good deal, man. Yeah, thanks for calling in. I think you're
on the right track. So good question. Yep. Awesome. Thank you very much. Thank you. Yeah, I'm
so glad you said that, Justin. It's got to be the most underrated yet one of the most simple.
You know, one of the things that I got to keep reminding myself is the advice I give. There's like, what's the most efficacious and accurate? And then what's the things that we can- That's all Doug does. I know, and you know, one of the things that I gotta keep reminding myself is the advice I give,
there's like, what's the most efficacious and accurate,
and then what's the one that people are gonna be
the most consistent doing?
Right, yeah.
With the least amount of air?
Yeah, the easiest with no barriers.
Yeah, like circumference, right?
It's a super, super easy, and it does tell you
a lot, especially when you combine it with a professional.
I think Doug keeps even simpler.
You're just doing your waist, don't you?
Just the waist.
Just the waist.
Because here, if you think about this way,
if you think of this way, if you're on a program, and you're just doing your waist, don't you? Just the waist. Because here, if you think about this way, if you think of this way,
if you're on a program and you're trying to build muscle,
you're increasing calories, you're strength training,
and if you're seeing the scale go up,
but you're waist is staying the same
or potentially going down, you're doing perfect.
Yeah.
If you see that the scale is about the same
or barely goes up and your waist goes up,
you're probably, you're raised to go.
You can lose weight in your waist go up.
Right.
And you know, uh, oh, I lost muscle and I gained some body fat.
Right.
After a man, for women, you'd look at hips and waist.
That's those two areas.
Because the one, the one deceiving part about actually measuring like say arms and thighs
and things like that, because you could potentially be leaning out like a little bit too, right?
You might see it now.
It's a little bit of decrease.
So yeah.
So I really like what Doug does, which is just watch his scale weight and measure his waist.
And he knows what he's trying to do, right?
If he's obviously, if he's trying to build muscle,
he's just wanting to add enough calories
that it's not increasing his waist size,
but his scale weight is slowly going up.
That's, I think that's a really good way to gauge that.
And vice versa, when you go the opposite direction, right?
Mm-hmm.
Our next caller is Lexi from Canada.
Lexi, what's happening? How can we help you?
Hi, how are you?
Good. Great.
Great.
So funny. I just came back from the gym and I was listening to you guys there.
So this is so cool.
Thank you.
Okay, so I have a question for a client of mine.
I'm a trainer and a nutritionist. She's 27.
She's 180 pounds,
she wants to lose some weight. We started working together a couple months ago, so I was
making her exercise a nutrition plan. She told me at the time she wasn't dieting at all.
So it seemed like she was probably one of the rare clients who might be able to benefit
from going straight into a cut. So I put her on a three days a week lifting plan and I put
her in a deficit just to kind of see what would happen.
Problem is she immediately got super sick and so she stopped working out and was barely
eating because she couldn't stomach anything.
This lasted for like six weeks and it made me think that like cutting calories wouldn't
be the right move here at all because her weight stayed totally the same.
So I'm thinking that we need to kind of work to heal her metabolism.
Like you guys talk about reverse diet her, live heavy, let her body build and then try to cut.
And she's totally on board for that, which is awesome. But my question is number one,
even though it seemed like she was overeating from like her diet history and that it would work
to put her into a cut, is it possible she was actually under eating
and her metabolism slowed,
or is there anything else that could maybe cause this,
like genetic factors or something like that?
Because it really seemed like it was a classic case
of like a metabolism adapted to dieting,
but it doesn't really fit what she told me.
And then my other question is just in terms of my plan
for her, I was thinking about starting her around 1800 calories
and then slowly upping her by 50 to 100 a week and then just kind of watching to see her body. I was thinking
if we end up around 22 hundred or 23 hundred, spend a couple months there and then try to cut
that. Hopefully, it's your results from that, but I just kind of wanted to get you guys take all
that. So this is where and this is why I actually stopped like giving clients a diet until
first I made them track because one, you already hit what happens a lot of times is they
either under or over report.
Nobody's asking.
They don't, they don't, they don't, they don't, they just tell you, oh, this is what I eat,
that's always fucking wrong.
It's by feeling.
It's always fucking wrong.
I want to see it.
So, before I will even give a diet diet what I say at the beginning of our
Program the next two weeks. This is what I want you to do Susie
I don't want you to try and impress me if you have snickers at two o'clock eat your snickers if you do this do that
Don't what well all I really want to see is I want to see your eating habits from there
I'm going to build a plan from that.
And that way, because she could have been at 800 calories,
she could have been at 2700 calories.
It's too hard to say until you get to see that data.
And then after you see that,
then I take very small changes to her diet.
It's never really dramatic.
There's almost 100% of the time as a coach.
There'll be something very,
especially since you have a nutrition background, you'll see something glaring.
She'll be way under eating on fiber.
She'll be way under eating on protein.
She'll be over consuming, probably sugar.
She's probably not getting enough healthy fats.
You're going to see a ton of things that you could probably help her with.
I pick one.
I pick one and I actually like to add to the diet first.
So even with somebody who wants to lose weight,
I find somewhere where they're probably lacking nutritionally
and I want to increase that.
So instead of telling her no longer,
can you have that Snickers bar,
although it's probably unrealistic that that's probably happy,
but just say that's what's going on.
I'm gonna see that she's under-consuming protein
and I'm gonna focus there before I start to take things away.
I'm gonna say, hey, you know what Susie,
we're only getting 40 grams of protein every single day.
We really need to be somewhere towards
the 90 to 110 at least and the minimum.
So that's what I want you to focus on.
So I want you every day to make sure you have this.
And so, and that's what we're gonna speak to first.
What naturally happens is those other things like
Snickers bars start to fall off
because she's
focused on trying to add to her diet and naturally she already starts to see a good positive
response with it. That's how I start almost every client. Yeah, Lexi, I'm going to tell you something
that I wish somebody told me when I was first a trainer and it's going to really summarize
basically what Adam is explaining. Okay. Most trainers try to coach and guide results. That's wrong. Coach and guide
behaviors and the client, not results because the behaviors are what lead to the results.
Coaching results doesn't always and often at all doesn't result in the behaviors that you're
looking for and then you end up with people who go in and out of fitness and go up and down and
rebound. So what Adam was explaining is entirely based off
of behaviors.
That's why he said what he said.
Now, is that going to get someone faster results
than if they followed your perfect meal plan
right out the gates?
Probably not, but the way he said it,
the odds of them sticking around
and getting long-term success are so many times higher.
The diet plan, the fast result, whatever, results in like an
85 to 90% fail rate within the first year.
Add a couple of years to that and it's almost 100%.
So focus on the behaviors, not the results of behaviors lead to what you want.
Now, in terms of putting someone on a cut right out the gates, even if their calories are
high, here's why I don't necessarily like to do that.
I want to fuel their strength and their performance before I do anything with their diet because
she hasn't worked out, right?
She just hired you.
She didn't work out before.
What you want to do is you want to be able to fuel the strength.
You put her on a cut with the strength training.
She'll get some strength gains.
She'll get some performance gains because she hasn't done it before.
But you're actually reducing those performance gains by a significant amount
because you've automatically put her on a cut.
So those two things right there, I want you to consider.
How do I coach this person's behaviors?
Consider that above all else.
And then how do I get this person's performance to improve,
and then how do I get the client?
And here's back to the behavior thing.
If I can get my client to focus on and appreciate
and love performance gains,
oh, I've done a great thing right out the gate.
Now the person that even focused on aesthetics,
they're like, oh my God, I love being strong.
Oh my God, I love the way that I feel.
And what does that typically lead to?
All the physical changes that they were looking for
in the beginning.
So I hope that makes sense.
Yeah, no, I hear you.
That is helpful. So yeah So I hope that makes sense. Yeah, no, I hear you. That is helpful.
So yeah, so that totally makes sense.
So probably there was something off in my initial information
that I got in terms of her diet history and stuff.
Is it possible though, let's say it was bang on
and a cut in a perfect world,
should have given her some initial results
right at the beginning?
Is it possible to do some people are are there genetic factors where like some people's
metabolism can naturally, like, just be on the slower side?
Yeah, yeah, of course, that definitely, but you know, you're training an individual. So
that person's how their body responds, the feedback that you get, what you notice yourself,
that they may not tell you, but you'll hear or read between the lines, that's really what you wanna
go off of.
I think if you literally make her download
my fitness power fat secret, one of those apps,
and make her input for one week, I bet you'll see
something jump right out of you.
I guarantee it.
Every time, especially somebody who doesn't have
any real history and like nutrition or exercise,
they're always way off and they always under overestimate. They're never on point. So I bet you,
you just have her track one week and you'll see something jump out at you like, oh my god, no
wonder we weren't building any muscle. You were only eating 10 to 20 grams of protein. Your high
day was 60. It's like, and you're in a, think about that for a second.
Imagine somebody, even if her calories are all right,
what she's saying, but she's under consuming protein
by that low, right?
That low of protein, you put her in a cut
and you're strength training her.
She's like, she's gonna build any muscle.
There's no way she's gonna build any muscle.
So I'm material.
Yeah, and all that's really gonna happen
is her metabolism is slow down even more.
So just gonna make an uphill battle for you.
So just have a track for a week.
I bet you will see something glaring
that you can address right off the chest.
Yeah, now also because she's coming back from illness,
I think your focus should be on making her feel good.
I don't think it should be anything centered around
results or fat loss or anything like that.
Just energy and strength.
How do you feel?
Let's get you feeling good. How's your sleep? How's your energy? Let's get you feeling good. Then when she comes
in and she goes, man, I feel like my old self, I feel great. Then you can start moving back
in that direction. But I would have her feeling good first. That might take a while. You
said she was six for six weeks. So yeah, it might take a few weeks, it might take two to
three weeks for that to happen. Yeah, I know, I love that.
So in terms of my second question,
like, offering her calories slowly,
is that a good idea?
And do you think my number is there
that I had on the right track?
Yeah, I like that.
I like a slow increase, 50 to 100 calories.
Yes, and no.
Okay, the only reason why,
so yes, I think you should increase her calories
and do that slowly,
but I would say no
to just throwing a random number out there.
I would want to get her to give me that week first
before I gave you a,
because what you might find out is when she tracks that week,
it's way different than what you thought
or are planning on right now.
So whatever she gives you for a week,
then I would slightly increase it from that
and more importantly, probably
balance what she's having. So let's say she reports and you get an average like, oh, she's eating
1900 calories a day. Okay, so I want to take her to like 2000 to 2100 day. I think it's a good goal,
but more importantly, oh, we need to increase the fiber here. Let's reduce the sugar here. Let's get
more protein here and don't get it all to her at once, adjust one or two of those things and focus on that.
You know what, two Lexi, it might be wise to have her track after she fully recovers and
feels okay, so I bet you if she tracked right now, it wouldn't reflect her normal behaviors
because she's coming out of just being sick, so just another thing to consider.
Yeah, she's still not feeling well, is she good now?
What's where we at?
She says she's good now, she's, doesn feeling well. Is she good now? What's where we at? Um, she says she's good now.
She's, this would be like her first kind of back
at the gym and stuff.
Okay, this kind of weekly good.
Yeah, then you're okay.
Yeah, okay.
Perfect.
No, that's helpful.
No, Lexi, since you're a trainer,
do you have maps prime and prime pro?
I have maps prime because I didn't want to get ripped apart
on this podcast.
And I have, um,
I have, and I have,
but also I have I have
Don't encourage Adam you need you guys need to stop encouraging me. I'm gonna send you prime pro too because I think
Prime pro also extremely valuable so we'll get we'll send that over to you. Thanks for calling
Thank you guys so much. Thank you. You got it. Thank you
Yeah, I
First off, it's hilarious that they say that
Thank you. Yeah, first off, it's hilarious that they say that.
They really are encouraging.
Put the fear on.
Please don't encourage Adam to be more Adam.
No, I'm just kidding.
You know, I can't state that enough.
If you want to accomplish something,
even for yourself, it's the behaviors
that you need to focus on, not the specifics
because behaviors that would drive it all.
So you're training a client or even yourself,
you know what your tendencies are.
Yes, you could follow a script.
Oh, here's what I gotta do, whatever,
but if you don't pay attention
to what your behaviors are and how you wake up,
what makes you feel good,
what makes you feel motivated or driven,
what makes you feel like, you know, wanna do things,
it's gonna be all of utility.
Yeah, here's kind of,
I look at it like memorizing
before a test and doing scoring.
You can score well, you can get results,
but is that gonna last?
Did you retain any of that information?
Are you applying any of that information going forward?
No, you need to really do the work
on really changing the behavioral part of it.
I love getting young trainers like this that we get a chance to have a conversation with
because unfortunately for 10 years of my career, I just wrote diets.
I would do all the calculations and exactly what she probably did, which is get an idea
of her food history and what she likes and what she doesn't like.
Then I would sit down and do all the math
and I would write out, here's where I think you should be,
follow that to a tee.
And it just was, you know who it was effective for?
When I was training myself or somebody who was like me
who like, give me, or an engineer, give me,
I'll do it.
Yeah, I'll do it.
And they just, just like a robot would follow it to a tee
for the next six months, those people. But later on, when I figured the piece out where I was like,
you know what, I'm gonna stop trying to guess
or think and assume that these people
are reporting the right information,
they need to track for me.
And then from, and then what I found was like,
holy shit, these people's diets were so off
that me, writing a meal plan was so different than the way they ate.
The likelihood that they would stick to that forever was ridiculous.
So what I would do is go, okay, this is I've tried and find a way to just slightly
modify what they were already doing because if I threw something completely
different on the likelihood that they would continue doing that forever versus,
oh, I can make a little tweak to breakfast.
This person, she was already eating eggs,
is it hard for you to add four ounces of ground turkey?
You know what's funny about that approach?
If you do it right, within two or three changes,
two or three changes, the client starts
to change things themselves.
Yeah, that's why I meant by not getting rid
of the stickers bar is you keep adding to think
to the meals of what they're lacking in nutritionally.
And they naturally let that draw.
It drops off because now they're more full and satisfying.
I had a Snickers bar in so many years.
I don't know why I said that.
And I'm like, man, I kind of want one.
We're not even sponsored.
Use mine pump as the code for 15.
I'm just kidding.
Our next caller is James from Florida.
What's up, James?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, thanks for having me on the show.
Yeah.
I want to say also, thank you so much for the resources you guys put out there.
As a beginner, the stuff you guys put out, like the video is in the podcast, and it's really
helped me to avoid making a lot of mistakes and stay kind of focused on, you know, what's
important.
So I really appreciate that stuff you guys do.
No problem.
Thank you.
So, I'm 41 years old. I've
never trained in my life. About a year ago, I was 240 pounds of dad bod. And I did the same thing
that most people do. I thought, you know, cardio was the answer. So, I did a month's cardio,
lost 65 pounds, and became skinny fat. So, three and a half months ago, I started lifting.
that. So three and a half months ago I started lifting. I only have access to a set of five to 25 pound adjustable dumbbells for at least the next year or two. And my primary goal
is to build muscles. So for upper body work, I think the dumbbells are going to be good
for that time period. I'm especially if I use things like progressive overload and slow
tempo down to make it feel like it's heavier. But for my lower body, I'm already using both 25 pound for squats and deadlifts.
And I'm getting up into the 17 plus range.
And I know if you go too high, you're getting into endurance training, which is a really
one of what I want to do.
So I guess my question is, is it pointless to squat and deadlift with such lightweight,
if your goal is to build muscles, is it even possible to build muscle
with lightweight like that in the lower body?
Yeah, it's not pointless, tough.
However, we do want to find ways
of increasing the resistance.
So you name one of them, which is slowing down.
So you can really slow the reps down.
You can use isometrics, which is very underrated,
and isometrics.
You're in a lateral training.
You're in a lateral training.
Can I get you to spend 50 bucks on a suspension trainer?
What was that?
Can I get you to spend 50 bucks on a suspension trainer?
I'm not, I'm not.
Okay, I can have our team send you over a link.
I'll have them send over a link for 50% off of a suspension trainer
and then I can give you the suspension trainer program for free, because I think that will really help you.
And because you could do some really tough stuff
for your hamstring and posterior chain on that,
I think you could build a lot of muscle
and there's a lot of variations that you can do with.
It takes up less space than you're supposed to.
Yeah, it takes up no space.
It's reasonably inexpensive.
I mean, that's, and that I think you could get a,
you can get a pretty far with that.
Yeah, great advice.
Yeah, suspension trade.
So if you've seen TRX straps before,
where they hang off of something and then they're like handles,
they almost look like Olympic rings.
They're seat belts, kind of like,
but yeah, it has handles at the end.
And it hooks up to your door.
Anyway, we have a program that uses just those.
And that, there's many, many different ways
to progress resistance with those.
So that's great advice. And then unilateral training at, you know, Justin said earlier, you know,
you could squat with one leg, you could do a one-legged deadlift. That'll dramatically
increase the resistance.
But we have some of that stuff in the suspension trainer, which is why, and it'll help give
him some sustainability. Obviously doing a pistol squat out the gates for somebody who
hasn't.
No, no.
It's really tough to do, you know? Yeah, but I mean, even focusing on Bulgarian squats and, you know, like that'll give you
enough resistance with that light of weight.
So I would focus on that in combination with the suspension trainer.
I think we get a great workout from that.
And then, you know, down the road, you may look at wanting to invest in a bit more of a
weight setup just because, you just because at that point,
when you're really getting serious about strength training, you do need to invest in that
direction.
Yeah.
So I have a question about the unilateral training.
I have tried to do things like lunges and single-edged deadlift and Bulgarian split squats,
but I'm finding that my right leg, I can do it pretty well, but my left leg, I guess
there's a muscle imbalance, so what would be the best approach to fixing that?
Start on the weak side first.
Yeah, let that dictate how many reps you do with your right.
Yeah, even if you feel way stronger
on the opposite side, stick to the same.
So whatever the weak side is,
so let's say we're doing a single leg deadlift,
you said your weak side is your right or your left.
Left.
So start with the left leg and slow down the tempo,
try and get perfect form.
When you start to lose stability or you can't do any more with perfect form, say that's
five reps, stop it there, and then mirror that on the other side, even if you could do
double the reps.
Still stay, let it catch up.
It will.
Okay.
Awesome.
I think you guys answered my question.
Pretty well.
Thanks.
We're going to, we're going to, James gonna, we're gonna send over maps, suspensions.
We're gonna send that program over to you
and then I'll also have our assistant sendover
a coupon code so you can also buy the strap.
Unfortunately, I can't give that to you for free,
but at least hook you up.
I really appreciate it very much.
Cool.
Thanks for calling in.
Yeah.
Yeah, great advice.
I forgot all about that.
Yeah, the suspension trainer makes it, I mean, that makes working out with no
equipment. Very effective. Yeah, whether you're a beginner or advanced,
you could advance the hell out of the difficulty of the angles,
yeah, gravitational forces. It gives you a really good resistance and
relatively inexpensive, right? That's what I was trying to think of. I'm like,
a case simple. Yeah, he's only got like 25 pound dumbbells. So we're
going to run out of progressing that really quick. So like obviously what you said eventually
investing into a whole weight set is ideal,
but if I have minimal money, what am I gonna do,
where am I gonna go, I think suspension training.
Yeah, and he's new to the game.
And so I think it's just like small,
you know, simple, simple like means
to accomplishing it as the way to go first.
Well, that's the other reason why I like the
suspension training because he said he was a new to lifting, the stability component that he's gonna get like means to accomplishing it as the way to go first. That's the other reason why I like the Spitch and Trader
because he said he was a new to lifting,
the stability component that he's gonna get
with the suspension trainer, I think, is be able to.
Yeah, plus the program tells him exactly what he needs to do.
It's got the exercise demos.
You know, what I was trying to do is advise him
on that increases intensity, but that's me telling him,
you know, over the air,
not being able to give him links to exercise demos
and stuff like that, so that was perfect advice. Look, over the over the air, not being able to give him links to exercise demos
and stuff like that. So that was that was perfect advice. Look, if you like Mind Pump, head
over to Mind Pump Free.com and check out our guides. We have guides that can help you with
almost any health or fitness goal. You can also find all of us on social media. So Justin
is on Instagram at Mind Pump. Justin, Adam is on Instagram at Mind Pump. Adam and you
can find me on Twitter at Mind Pump. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body,
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