Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1873: The Difference Between Yoga & Mobility, How to Eat & Train on Vacation, the Best Thing You Can Do Between Sets & More
Episode Date: August 5, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday’s Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page. Mind Pump Fit Tip: The BEST healthcare i...n the world is FREE! (2:58) Sal clarifies his statement on nicotine and why vaping is a problem. (9:23) The things we did in the past and their lingering effects as we age. (16:22) Why Mind Pump works with Caldera Lab. (20:42) Is fluoride dangerous? (25:40) Why is protein being demonized? (28:37) Mind Pump loves Mike Matthews. (30:25) Why it’s important to have skepticism. (32:06) Does having tattoos impede your ability to sweat? (36:39) So, you say you want a Ring? (40:10) Science once again proves the mind-muscle connection. (43:08) #Quah question #1 - What are some tips for getting better at barbell squats when you have long legs/femurs? (47:11) #Quah question #2 - Can yin yoga be used as mobility training or is it different? (53:26) #Quah question #3 - How do you guys approach training and nutrition on vacation when not actively cutting or bulking? (59:07) #Quah question #4 - What are some of the best uses of your time when taking long breaks between sets? (1:05:10) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Caldera Lab for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout** Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout** August Special: TOP SELLING PROGRAMS COMBINED FOR ONLY $99.99! FDA to seek drastic cut in cigarettes' nicotine content E-cigarettes: Facts, stats and regulations Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 Science | Caldera + Lab FDA Authority Over Cosmetics: How Cosmetics Are Not FDA-Approved, but Are FDA-Regulated Enhancement of aluminum digestive absorption by fluoride in rats Eating Too Much Protein Makes Pee a Problem Pollutant in the U.S. CDC Worked Hand In Hand With Big Tech To Control The COVID Narrative, Emails Show Skin tattooing impairs sweating during passive whole body heating Police Can Access Your Ring Camera Footage Without a Warrant Science Proves the Mind-Muscle Connection Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** MAPS Prime Pro Webinar @mindpumpadam Squat Mobility Primer The BEST Single Leg Exercise You Are Not Doing! (TWO VARIATIONS) - Mind Pump TV MAPS Prime Webinar Is Yoga Effective for Improving Mobility? - Mind Pump Blog Which is Best - Mobility or Stretching? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1612: Everything You Need To Know About Sets, Reps & Rest Periods Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Paul Saladino, MD (@CarnivoreMD) Twitter Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram Patrick Bet-David (@patrickbetdavid) Instagram Paul Carter (@liftrunbang) Instagram Ben Patrick (@kneesovertoesguy) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 listeners questions, but this was after a 45 minute introductory
conversation. We talked about fitness or lives, current events, studies and much more.
By the way, you could check the show notes for timestamps.
If you want to click on them to fast forward to your favorite part.
Also, if you want to ask a question that we can answer on an episode like this one, go
to Instagram at MindPupMedia.
And each Sunday, we post a qua meme.
That's QUAH.
So we post that on Sunday.
Underneath post your question, if we like it,
we'll pick it and you'll hear us talk about it here
on shows like this one.
Now this episode is brought to you by our sponsor,
Caldera Lab.
So they make skincare products that are all natural,
very effective at reducing inflammation,
the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles.
It's very hydrating, good for dry skin or even oily skin.
So it's great products.
I use their stuff all the time.
It's incredible.
Go check this company out.
Head over to calderalab.com.
That's C-A-L-D-E-R-A-L-A-B.com forward slash mind pump,
user code mind pump for 20% off.
This episode is also brought to you by another sponsor, Legion. They make athletic performance
enhancing supplements, muscle building supplements, supplements that can help you with weight loss,
endurance, strength, all of it. It's a great company. It's one of the best ones around when it comes to
supplements. It's owned by our friend Mike Matthews. Go check this place out. They're very popular because
they're effective, because they're clean, they're efficacious,
and they have third party testing.
Head over to byleagion.com, that's BY-L-E-G-I-O-N.com,
forward slash mind pump, use the code,
mind pumping at 20% off your first order
or double rewards points if you're a returning customer.
Also, we have a, this is a crazy promotion
of running this month.
This is, I've never seen anything like this before.
This particular promotion I'm about to talk to you about
doesn't last all month, it ends on the 14th,
so check this out.
We went back, right?
We went back in the last few years.
We looked at the most popular combination of programs.
So whenever someone got two programs together,
what were their favorite combinations?
For example, one of the common ones is maps aesthetic and maps split, right? Two bodybuilding workout programs. So we have a lot of combos
like that. Here's what we did. We put together the most popular combos and we made them $99.99,
which is normally less than the price of just one program. So you can get two for the price of one
essentially. So if you want to go check out what combos we put together, sign yourself up for your favorite ones.
Head over to mapsogust.com.
Let's see, it's mapsogust.com for the August special,
which ends the 14th, so go check it out.
All right, here comes the show.
All right, check this out.
The best healthcare in the world
in terms of effectiveness is free.
It doesn't cost you a dime.
I like that.
Yes.
You know, if you and I was gonna sound silly and obvious,
but boy, I tell you, the data is super crystal clear on this.
Okay.
Nothing, there's in a drug, there's an combination of drugs,
there's in a medical procedure
or a combination of all of those things
that comes close to the chronic disease,
fighting effects, the anti-cancer effects,
the heart disease, fighting effects of simply exercising
and eating right.
You do those things and you crush everything
and it doesn't cost anything of anything,
it actually saves you money because of the cost of health.
You need your own advocate for health
and being preventative about it.
I mean, nobody likes to talk about the preventative measures
to maintain this healthy thriving body,
but that's like the most effective approach
that you can have hands down.
Yeah.
That's the irony of that statement is that,
a lot of people believe that
healthcare should be free and it's a right that everybody should have that and the truth is it yeah, it is and
We all have it and it's your choice to make those decisions and make those and the thing is that everybody wants to wait
Until they have a condition or they they got check engine lights come on on. And then they want the, okay, the free health care,
it's like, well, it was free the 10 years before that.
You could have done something about it
by making better choices.
And I know it's a tough pill to swallow for a lot of people,
but it's the truth.
It's the only pill you should swallow.
What's the, what's the, what's the,
you don't even need pills.
Yeah, exactly, what's that saying?
I'm telling you all about, what's the, what's the, you need pills? Yeah, exactly. What's that saying? I don't know.
Man, you know, mankind, they sacrifice their health
to gain wealth and then they sacrifice their wealth
to gain back their health.
Yeah.
Isn't that the story?
It's the conendrum, right?
That we tend to do.
And you know, what's funny is, I know we're selling it
in terms of like health and later on, you're
not going to have heart disease at nearly the same rates and it's great for anti-cancer
effects and chronic disease effects.
But here's the other part of this.
It's not just preventative later on, it also improves the quality of your life now, right
now.
So think about it this way.
So for anybody watching this right now, think of everything
you do in your in your daily life, everything, good, bad, fun, hard, stressful, whatever.
Now imagine yourself with better fitness and health doing all of those things. Has it improved?
All those things? Yes. Everything. I don't care what you're talking about. Raising your
kids, your job, sleeping, sex, watching a movie.
Like I don't care what it is, a more fit, healthy version
of you makes it.
All of those things much better.
So it's a dramatic, again, and I'll say this as well.
There's nothing that'll improve the quality of your life
in its entirety like doing those things.
So it's not just about preventing disease,
it's also about just living better right now.
It's pretty crazy.
Yeah, I know, I probably pissed some people off saying
what I just said because I understand that there's
things that are hereditary and that people couldn't avoid, right?
And you know, what about them?
But to your point right there is that, I mean,
by taking care of yourself, even if you were destined
to get something in the future
because it was passed down to you
or whatever the quality of your life would still be
dramatically improved even with that condition.
Not to mention, that is not a majority of what
overwhelms our healthcare right now.
Our healthcare system is overwhelmed
with a lot of preventable things that are happening.
It's chronic disease.
Yeah.
It's the chronic disease. Yeah.
It's the chronic disease.
You look at the cost of healthcare.
By the way, I don't care if it's single-payer healthcare, like you live in Europe, and you
pay high taxes in order to pay for this healthcare system, or you have this weird, unholy
combination of capitalism and government intervention here in the US, or whatever.
The cost is still the cost.
If you look at the cost,
where a majority of the cost goes,
it's the last like 10 to 15 years of life.
It's that chronic disease treating,
I gotta take these pills to do this,
and I gotta go get another stint in my heart,
and I gotta go do this other thing,
and I got the chemo, and I survived,
and then I got, I got, it came back again.
It's that last bit that costs so much damn money
and so much of it is preventable.
And then of course, there's things like you said, Adam,
that are not predictable, either genetic issues
or I don't know, you're walking across the street,
drunk driver hits you with their car
or something, you fall down on accident,
you're painting your house and you fall off a ladder.
Imagine yourself handling those things in a more or less healthy version of yourself. So you're just, you're better suited just because you're more fit and healthy.
Mental health is one that's interesting to me because for a long time we would have never
considered being more physically healthy, contributing to better.
We separated those forever. We did, but the studies are very clear on this,
just mild to moderate depression,
which is the most common forms of depression.
Exercise is as effective or more effective.
When you follow studies, the longer you follow the studies,
the more effective exercise is for treating those things.
Why?
You don't get receptor down regulation.
Like you take a medication, your
body starts to adapt. And those adaptations make those medications, tend to make them less
effective, or you got to change medications. Exercise, if you do it right, it's effectiveness
in terms of health improves over time. So it's just one of those things. And if you could
sell a pill that did everything that proper exercise nutrition did,
oh my God.
I mean, you moved, I mean, think about how much better
your outlook is on life and like your relationships
with people and just your interactions are when you feel good.
If I'm a state where I'm in pain, I'm constantly inflamed,
and I'm not really motivated to move around,
I'm not really wanting to get up and hang out with my friends.
I don't want to have these kind of interactions that I would have if I have a healthy, able body, but
it's a mood elevator. There's just so many effects to maintaining this, this healthy body
that, you know, transcend beyond just like me looking fit in health, speaking of healthy
things that we can do. So what were you doing recommending cigarettes to kids?
What?
What?
What the hell's gonna bring that up?
What did this happen?
We got an angry message, you know?
Yeah, I got an address list.
I got it, I got an email.
I didn't personally say it.
And I normally don't actually even bother you guys
with this, right?
Katrina every once in a while, it'll wake it's,
first it hits Cassie, Cassie then normally,
if it's like a big deal or something like that,
or something like she doesn't know how to respond,
she'll then forward it up to Katrina.
And then Katrina sometimes will involve me and say,
what do you think about this?
And she read me this long old email that someone said,
this lady was very pissed, right?
Referred to us as a bunch of bros and then said that,
what were we doing promoting nicotine
to, I think she even referenced young people as healthy.
And I thought,
I said, what is she talking about?
I said, when did we even talk about,
I couldn't even recall,
it's a long,
we talked about nicotine a long, long time ago.
Remember when it was really popular,
we were hanging out.
And it's neutropic effects. Yeah, yeah. So there Remember when it was really popular, we were hanging in it.
It's a neutropic effect.
Yeah, yeah.
So there's a lot of guys over.
I remember at the on-it crew dudes
where like put the nicotine packets in their lip.
That's well known by the way.
Yeah, but we would never be like, hey kids.
Yeah, I mean, that was like the last time I talked about it.
She goes, no, it was like a super recent episode.
And so I actually asked Andrew,
I'm like, could you pull it up and tell me what was said?
I said, I imagine it was Sal.
So I'm sure he said something related to nicotine.
And it was, but I don't recall him recommending people.
And then that's what it was.
There was a clip where we were talking about the negative effects of cigarettes.
And you made, you said, it's not nicotine.
That's the negative thing.
And there was literally like the statement you said.
Like that was, that was really it.
So all our chemicals involved in the matter. Yeah, that was it. That was really it. All our chemicals involved.
Yeah, we were talking about cigarettes.
Yeah, we were talking about cigarettes.
How they were reducing.
There was a law that they're passing the regulation
that's going to cut the nicotine amount in cigarettes
drastically down or make it a limit.
Like they're currently going to be so much nicotine.
Yeah, so we were speculating on what would happen.
And yeah, so what I was saying is,
you're just people are just gonna smoke more cigarettes
to get the same amount of nicotine,
which is far more dangerous because nicotine itself
really isn't, now it's a,
it's got addictive properties, okay?
So that's true.
And in some cases nicotine can be inflammatory
and in some cases it can go,
but really nicotine,
of all the things that are in cigarettes
and nicotine is the safest thing,
that's not the bad thing for you,
it's all the other stuff that's in the cigarette.
So now you're going to make people smoke more cigarettes.
You say, man, nicotine, you're going to cause more problems.
That was my point.
Yeah. No, I thought your point was to do with kids.
I thought your point was completely fine.
And even I mean, but that what you just said, I think it'll probably even
piss this person off again, because I think she that we were, you were downplaying
the negative effects of nicotine. And I you didn't,'t I mean you didn't fear monger everybody around no
It's addictive so you know any addictive type proper you know product or compound can potentially be negative just from the behavior
Effects of it right especially when it's paired with lighting paper on fire and inhaling
Yeah, you take too much ibuprofen your fuck. Yeah. Yeah, you know, we go down that rabbit hole's my only point, right?
Yes.
Like compounds.
Yes, caffeine's addictive too.
Very addictive.
Anybody who's ever tried to stop drinking coffee will tell you.
But nicotine by itself, believe it or not, there may be some negatives.
There's also some positives.
nicotine has been shown to help with preventing dementia.
There may be some brain health effects.
There's some neurotropic effects.
That's not the problem in cigarettes.
Now, that's the part that brings people back.
It's the feel good from the nicotine.
But the negative stuff from cigarettes is all the tar and the carcinogens that you're inhaling
when you burn plants and then suck them into your lungs.
So when you limit the nicotine, just like if I made every cup of coffee
limited to 20 milligrams of caffeine,
people would just drink three, four cups of coffee
to get this in effect.
Now people are gonna smoke cigarettes
to get the same effect.
And so that would be awesome.
Do you think that we are smoking more or less
for the same as a population?
And before you answer quickly,
because I know you'll say less
because we saw a huge decrease in
cigarettes over the last decade or so. But we've also seen the introduction of vaping and the,
you know, marijuana becoming popular now. So you want to count all of that? Yeah. So you think as
a whole, as it shifted a bit. Yeah. Sometimes I don't know if I'm convinced that we've really
improved generally. I think we've just we've've subbed out the drop in cigarette smokers
and we've now transferred that percentage
or that number of people are now,
because I see vaping, I feel like I see more vaping
and the combination of vaping and cigarettes
than I saw of just purely people smoking that's growing.
It's growing.
Okay, so we have to break each one down.
We know that we know the negative effects of cigarettes.
That's dropped considerably.
Vaping wasn't a thing until relatively recently where that started to grow.
Yeah, find me some vaping stats, though.
But vaping has its own risks, not because of the nicotine again, but rather you're inhaling
the oil there.
Other solvents and things in the vaping, and there's not a lot of studies to show
what this could potentially do.
Anytime you breathe something in into your lungs,
you could cause problems.
And in vape cartridges and stuff, they tend to have,
like I said, solvents and chemicals.
And who knows if the heat generated by the vape
is causing some of the plastics to release chemicals.
And so there's a lot of unknown there.
It's also addictive. So your kid isn't smoking, but now they're plastics to release chemicals. And so there's a lot of unknown there. It's also addictive.
So your kid isn't smoking, but now they're addicted to vaping.
So there's always, you know, those dysfunctional.
And the idea that it's, you know, quote unquote,
healthier for you or better for you
than also probably promotes you doing even more.
That could be it too, yeah.
It's kind of like the whole diet soda versus regular sodas
because you know there's no calories attached to it.
So you end up drinking six of them a day,
whereas if you were drinking regular coke,
you just have ones.
Marijuana use has gone up for sure in certain populations from negative effects.
Marijuana has some negative effects.
Lung cancer is not one of them.
It hasn't been shown to cause lung cancer, although it's full of carcinogens, the smoke
is, but the speculation is the anti-cancer effects of the cannabinoids.
It's like could net zero.
Yeah, so it's like you're not really getting cancer and your lungs from it because of those,
but there's other negative effects.
What does that say, Doug?
Well, there's a bunch of stats here regarding vaping in 2020, 19.6% of high school students
and 4.7% of middle school students used e cigarettes but that's a big drop from
the prior year. What year was it? 1920 so that's as recent.
A couple years ago. Yeah. Okay so it went up and then it went back down.
Back down. You mean it went down when there was nobody at school?
That's probably partly that. Yeah. Nobody's watching.
That makes a lot of sense actually.
I'll be right back. I'll be right back.
They're like oh huge reduction in kids smoking at school.
School's closed.
Huge speakers around.
It's interesting.
E. liquids contain 60 chemical compounds.
There you go.
E. cigarettes contain 47.
Yeah, see.
That's and there's a lot of those unknown.
Like we don't know what they're causing and I would venture to say, probably not good.
You want to talk about breathing things in.
So I was with my dad the other day,
and I told you guys, you just got over COVID,
but he still has this like lingering cough.
And he goes, it's so weird, so I was, when I get sick,
it always attacks my lungs.
Now, my dad has worked in construction
and with his hands, you know,
and that kind of worked his entire life.
Never wore, I mean, especially in Sicily as a kid.
Never wore, you know. Sood dust, asbest kid. Never wore sawdust, asbestos,
he's just breathing all times.
Just even the cement and the thin set and the glue
and the whatever, the lime, you know, the powder,
I mean, when I used to help him as a kid,
I would breathe that shit in,
nobody would warn anything.
So I was telling him about that and he goes,
oh, he goes, I guarantee you.
So he had his uncle passed away from lung cancer
in his mid-70s, never smoked.
And the doctors were like,
oh, it's because you worked with his bestos.
When my dad was a kid,
he worked in his bestos factory, right?
Or was it the same with his bestos?
Oh, that's his bestos, I don't know.
Which one am I saying it right?
Or whatever.
He worked where they would make these big tubes
and these fireproof, whatever.
And now he wasn't in the factory factory,
but he would use them when he'd make them.
And every once in a while they'd have to cut one and a half
and it would create a dust.
And he goes, yeah, nobody did anything.
We didn't cover our face.
Then he told me about this factory in this town in Sicily
by where he grew up where they were like the top factory
for making these products.
And because they're making it, the dust is everywhere.
And he goes, all of a sudden, you know,
the owner, the workers there, started getting lung cancers and diseases, making it the dust is everywhere. And he goes all of a sudden,
the owner, the workers there, started getting lung cancers and diseases,
then their spouses, then their kids,
because they would come home with all the powder
on their clothes, and the wives would wash the clothes,
and the powder, and he goes, they shut everything down,
and he goes, this town became a total ghost town
because of it.
He goes, but we didn't even know.
See, there's so much back then,
they didn't know anything about these chemicals.
Like my grandpa died at early death,
and I still, they were attributing it to like
high cholesterol, because he had a heart attack,
but I was like, there's something else there.
And it wasn't his diet and, you know,
going back and thinking about it,
he worked at like a chemical plant.
And it was like for a pesticide, you know, company.
And we know now like all of the warnings
and things that we've found from glyphosate
or any of these type of like insecticides
and just like my brain just keeps,
I get hung up there because it's like,
how much do we really know from a lot of these things
back in the day that infected us till now?
What about the stuff now?
Yeah, we're doing now.
What do you think is worse?
You think breathing in something, or potentially, I mean, what skincare and makeup stuff
was just like 20 years ago where you're rubbing chemicals on your face every single day,
once or twice a day, you think, they get tested more at least.
Oh, really?
They do.
They have to go through different, more vigorous.
I'm just not perfect testing.
But has it always been that way or is that like new? Oh really? They do. They have to go through different, more vigorous, and it's just not perfect testing, but.
Has it always been that way or is that like new?
Like, cause it's been more that way than not.
I don't know what it looks like now.
I know now when you work with compounds that you may inhale
is like if you work in construction and stuff,
there's new regulations and they're much more aware
because of asbestos, I think that's probably
what caused it all.
But for a long time, it was, it's funny.
Like I said, I was talking's funny, like I said,
I was talking to my dad, I said,
what about the cement that you, the bags of cement,
that you guys breathe in when you open it up?
And he laughs, and we're driving in his van
because we were moving some couches,
and we get to the house, he had a bag in the back.
And he goes, what's that right?
And his big ass cancer's warning sign on it.
And he starts laughing, he goes,
it's been on the back!
But we breathe in, and nobody says that. So what do's been on the back here. Are we breathing it in?
Nobody says that.
So what do you think is worse?
Do you think the breathing ends something like that?
Or do you think skincare type stuff
that you apply once or twice a day every single day?
What do you think is?
Depends on what it is.
Have you ever heard of the women that got cancer?
There were these watches that were made for a long time,
and they would put radioactive material on the
Our hands on the watch. I heard about that because they would glow
I don't remember it was called and they actually and all these women they would use little paint brushes to paint the watches
Use their tongue create a point. Yeah, and all got cancer. Yeah, they all got cancer later on
I remember like that happened with licking envelopes a long time ago too
I thought something happened on those lines something like that happen with licking envelopes a long time ago too, I thought something happened
on those lines, something like that.
I don't know.
I know my mom used to tell me that when she was a kid,
they would tell the kids, like the urban legends were,
they'll put acid on the envelope.
Don't lick it, you're gonna go and trim it.
But yeah, skincare stuff is a big one.
And a lot of the stuff we put on our skin,
we don't really even pay attention to.
One of the reasons why we work with Caldera
is that everything that have in there is natural.
There isn't synthetic chemicals and weird stuff
and everything's got clinical studies
and it's been around for a long time
and it's been used for a long time.
Look at your skincare stuff, read the back.
Like how much of that has been tested?
It's a sponge, man.
It's a huge organ.
Well, are they applying chemicals on?
Are they regulated like supplements where it's very...
Supplements aren't regulated?
No, that's why I mean.
That's why I mean what?
Are they not regulated really?
Like it's like, you know, could you buy a skincare thing
and it say, oh, this, this, and this is in there
and it's like, yeah, none of that shit's in there.
Oh, no, they're regulated.
They are.
Yeah, they are regulated.
You know, it's not very regulated.
So how weird is that?
That skincare is regulated, but then supplements are not.
Yeah, I know.
I don't know if I'm pro,
I'm not really pro regulating supplements either though,
because I know what happens when they do that
in these markets.
It's not necessarily a...
No, I don't think any of us are.
I just find that interesting that something
that you would ingest and you would take,
like a pill or a powder, they're not regulated,
but then there's, if you put a cream on your face, that's more regulated.
I believe in 1994, there was an assoupliment act or something, maybe Doug can look it up,
that made it so that supplements could be sold so long as they make no medical claims
without having to go through and be regulated by FDA.
So long as it's not like toxic or hurting anybody, so you can still be liable.
But I can't remember what I want to say, it was an act in 1984 to supplement freedom
act, or I don't know, maybe I'm making that up, maybe you could find it.
So I wonder why skin care can't fall into the same category of supplementation.
Oh, it was.
1984 Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act.
So prohibit dietary supplement manufacturers and distributors for making false claims, such as natural and therapeutic, however,
it also regulates them differently than, like, drugs and stuff like that.
So it's wide open in the sense.
Can you look up how beauty and skin care is regulated
that I'm just curious to, like, how stringent it is?
And, you know, I know Caldera, they do all kinds
of, like, studies on the stuff that's inside there.
If you go on their website, there's tons of studies. And it's like, you know, I know Caldera, they do all kinds of like studies on the stuff that's inside there.
If you go on their website,
there's tons of studies.
And is that, I would assume that's part of why
the cost is higher than normal,
is that they are proactively probably doing that
and they don't have to technically do that?
Cause yeah, I don't see that with every product out there,
where you see all these crazy studies
to support what's inside of it.
Yeah.
So I would say, I would think so.
Yeah. What does that say, Doug?
So the law does not require cosmetic products
and ingredients other than color additives
to have FDA approval before they go in the market.
Wow. But they are FDA.
But there are laws and regulations
that apply to cosmetics on the market
in interstate commerce.
Don't know what that means. Oh, that's weird. So I guess if you sell it, that apply to cosmetics on the market in interstate commerce.
Don't know what that means. Oh, that's weird.
So I guess if you sell it across state lines
and it's regulated more,
so if you're buying skin care,
that it's only sold in your state,
you might want to be careful.
Why don't you sell another state?
Flag there.
This stuff is great, man.
I get high when I rub it on my face.
Yes.
Well, the FD&C Act prohibits the marketing of adulterated or misbranded cosmetics in interstate
commerce.
So, I mean, it's very great.
You know, it's very great.
It's very great.
Okay, so just to freak everybody out even more.
So, here's what's weird, right?
So you could have an ingredient that's been tested.
By the way, when they test something,
they don't test it for five or 10 years.
They test it for three months, six months, whatever.
Okay, so, because there's a difference, right?
You could use something for three, six months,
nothing shows up, five, 10 years later,
maybe something does show up.
So that's one.
But then number two, there's no,
they don't test combinations of things.
So I could use,
I could use a product that has 50 ingredients and the combinations of these greens have never
been tested. Only things that have been tested are each individual by itself. So when you combine
them, is there a cumulative effect? Is there a synergistic effect? Yeah, reaction you're going to
receive as a result. Yes. Like all these Zenoestrogens that have kind of
estrogenic effects in the body, on their own,
on the doses that are tested, maybe not,
or super mild, undetectable for, you know,
six month periods.
But then you've got 15 of these things
in the same product that you use every single day
then maybe there is.
Yeah, it sounds like you do me.
Yeah, it sounds like there's no level of it.
I feel like it's kind of common sense. They're by themselves, and like you do me. Yeah, sounds like it's not a whole list. Well, I feel like it's kind of common sense.
They're by themselves, and like you said in a study,
not such a big deal, but then when you start to look at
all the places that you are,
you're getting all this low level stress or insult,
you know, nobody would be the receipts
and then your hair product, your skin care product,
what you're breathing in, or smoking,
and the combined everything.
Yeah, you start combining everything, and it's like, okay, we're the studies to show
like, if somebody is doing all those things for weeks and months and years, how good or
bad could that potentially be?
Like, there's no studies.
There is no, yeah.
There isn't anyone with that.
I know, it's kind of weird, right?
Yeah, that's why, you know, it's another one.
Do you know that one thing that Alzheimer's, patients having common are typically high levels
of aluminum in their system?
Yeah, and you know, it has aluminum,
anti-perspirance, a lot of anti-perspirant
deterrence, aluminum in them.
This is why some pregnant women will avoid
using anti-perspirant deterrence.
You know what else makes your body retain aluminum?
I just learned it the other day, fluoride.
Maybe you can confirm that dog.
I don't want to be one of those fluoride.
You know, fluoride.
You just heard that, just fluoride from tap water.
There is a viral, there's a viral TikTok thing
and it's made its way to reels.
I don't know who started it first
but I think it's really funny.
And it's like some guy starting off his day
and he's getting ready to bite into cereal.
And then like another screen pops
up and it's like a real popular fitness health expert or influencer that is like cereal is
the worst thing you could do to start you to any like spits out the cereal. Then it goes
over to make some I think it was like make some sort of like fruit and vegetable thing and
then it goes over to Paul Saladino talking about how bad fruits and vegetables are.
He spits that out.
Then he goes over to, he goes to brush his teeth and then some doctor pops on there and
talks about how dangerous fluoride is for you.
So it's a really funny little viral TikTok thing that's going on.
Like every day average person experience, just any influencer telling them something.
And then it's like contradicts this. It's so good because it's a great perspective.
I know.
Because we obviously didn't, we were inundated the same way
that, you know, a 20 year old kid is today
with all of these.
And they're all, what they do good is they're all,
you know, either, either a pro or a pro.
No, back those, there's, there are, you know.
That's right, they're either credible people.
I mean, you're talking about someone,
a friend of ours, Paul Saladino.
And I know where he's coming from when he says that
But you know, it's such a cool perspective for like imagine being that 17 year old kid who's trying to figure out
What do I eat? What do I do, you know?
Interesting thought because when we were growing up
It was like you had standards and you had things mainly like sent from you know government or other like major institutions
And it was like rock solid like this is truth and you know, the government or other like major institutions and it was like rock solid like this is truth and
You know, there wasn't a lot of like competing ideas and information that like people were were diving through
It was like this is just how it is and like we find out later is wrong
And so now we're just in this chaotic world of information. It's like what we talk about the pendulum
Yeah, it was like what on this side where it's like you said, you know, the government put it out one way,
the only way and then we find out later,
okay, that's a bunch of bullshit, that's not true.
And then now we get inundated with like every 15 seconds
a TikTok video telling you what you should or shouldn't do.
And so it's like, what do I do?
It's funny because I like more information.
I like having to sift through.
Most people don't.
Most people, just like when you hire a client,
or when I want a client, I would do it.
Oh, you're our first and yet, no.
They just want the simple, give it to me
in like a real digestible form.
Yeah, no, so, so,
Flora does increase the absorption of aluminum
in your system, so I wasn't wrong.
Cool, right, so,
speaking of weird information,
I hate how much everything has become politicized these days,
including science, there's a publication called Scientific American.
I love them, but recently I'm reading some of their stuff
and it's just making me shake my head.
So I'll read you the title of this article.
I sent it to you guys today, in fact.
It's one of the most ridiculous things
I've ever read in my entire life.
Here's the title.
Eating too much protein makes pee,
so you're
you're in a problem pollutant in the US. So I don't
know if you guys need this or not. You called that. If you
eat too much protein, you're you're harming the
environment with your heart. You call that you'd have to
go back to that clip. I mean, that goes all the way back to
our previous studio, I think when you when you said that
that protein would be yeah, we were speculating on the
future of the fitness industry industry what would be next to
be demonized and you did say protein.
I guess protein, but for different reasons.
Yeah.
I thought it'd be protein because we were going down the list of macronutrients, fats, carbs,
and well, well, nexus protein, but, you know, I was right, but not because of that.
It was because, this is, so that's harm in our environment.
That's what I'm saying.
It's political now.
It's insane.
How can we, and why is it political?
Because there's definitely a political power, I should say,
in getting people to not eat animal products.
There's definitely a divide right now.
And so protein being connected to that.
So now they're going to, they're going to need a nice protein.
Wow.
Life of save is in everything.
Birth control is in our tap water.
Right?
But my piece bag is I mean protein.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Right.
Gotcha.
Again, though, just imagine being a young kid who's like into health and fitness and you're
trying to sift through all this stuff.
Like what, what do I believe?
What's the worst?
Like, I was just on, I was on Mike Matthews podcast. So Mike Matthews found
her. I'm sure there's a few rants. I walked in. They were
recording. And I knew he was recorded with Mike. So I picked my
head over and I could tell they were like in deep
conversation. Like Mike was going on a ranch or whatever. And
then I sat down and put the headphones so I could listen. And
they were already like,
going down the conspiracy round the whole dude.
I was like, oh my God.
I love Mike, one of the smartest guys in our space,
he's the founder of Legion,
so one of our supplement sponsors, great products, right?
Great friend too.
Super smart guy, super smart guy.
He's one of those people that will read something
and remember it forever and him and I.
A lot of integrity too, you know?
That's part of why we work with Legion and him
is because the guy operates from a really, really good plug.
Well, he won us over when we talked to him
about the supplement industry and how honest he was
about the whole thing.
Well, it was honest business guys like we've met.
Yeah, and he was like, look, I could charge less,
but then I'd have to do this and I'd get my products from here
and here's why I don't.
And we were like, oh my God, you know, that makes sense. So my margins are smaller, but then I'd have to do this and I'd get my products from here and here's why I don't.
And we were like, oh my God, that makes sense.
So my margins are smaller, but now my products
have what they say they do.
And then he would show us 30 party testing.
This was way before we even talked about working together,
just very honest guy, but yeah, he was going off
and we were talking about, I guess there was this,
like Operation Trust in the Soviet Union.
I had the truth. I think it was.
The truth it was. Yeah, the goal was to basically put out,
just confuse the shit out of people to the point where they just have to sit back
and I got to trust what you guys, I don't know, I don't know what to say,
I don't know what to think. So I'm just gonna wait for you guys to tell me.
And you're telling me the steps that they took and I'm like, oh my gosh, that sounds very parallel.
That sounds very speaking of which,
you guys see what just came out,
that the CDC worked with social media companies
to censor COVID vaccine, what they said, disinformation
during the whole pandemic.
So that CDC actually went, the Department of Justice,
approved this. Sorry, the DOJ, the department of justice.
Yes, it's, it's, because I mean,
this was speculation.
We kind of knew that, right?
This was conspiracy, this was all those things
because I mean, unfortunately, like,
if you have that kind of, you know, skepticism,
it's like, no, let's shut down any of your skepticism,
like any thoughts in that direction
because we have to push this.
It says right here, so this is a trove
of internal communications obtained by American,
America first legal, it was a CDC, sorry, CDC,
regular officials regularly communicated
with personnel at Twitter, Facebook, and Google
over vaccine misinformation.
At various times, CDC officials would flag specific posts
by users on social media platforms as example posts.
And basically they said, hey, you guys,
all you guys, this is, this is okay,
this is not what's okay.
And they worked with them and agreed.
So, you know, all the speculation of like,
all these people getting blocked and all this,
so I can't even say this and what's going on.
I mean, that's true.
Now, how do they get, like, what are the laws
that even exist anymore in that regard?
In terms of that, but they can't, you can't do it.
Unlawful.
Well, they can't, well, not with a private company
like that either, right?
I mean, it's their choice to send,
technically, Instagram and those platforms,
so they just base enough like an emergency act
and so it's absolves them of, yeah.
Yes, after crimes that commit.
After September 11th
We passed acts like that laws like that where if they consider it a threat to national security
Which is a very broad yeah category that they can go in the government can go and regulate these things
And they can also tell you that you can't tell anybody
So they could go in they could tell you if they think it's national, and there's no oversight in the sense that there's no judge, trial, jury, no warrant, and
they could tell you, you can say this, you can't say that, by the way, you can't tell anybody
we told you this, and if you go against what we say, here's all the potential penalties
and issues.
I mean, it's just screams, why it's important to have skepticism.
Yeah. Right? Like, when you see shenanigans, if you feel shenanigans, obviously there might be something
there.
I know.
It's crazy.
It's such a weird, weird dance because you got to think that part of that was, that was
done in Obama, right?
No, no, no.
Oh, you mean after September 11th?
Yeah.
That was Bush.
Oh, it was Bush.
Yeah.
Okay.
You got to think that like part of that was that the process to be able to prosecute
somebody was so took so long that potentially other bad things could happen.
I know.
I mean, but there's no evidence of that ever.
It's baloney complete baloney.
That's not true.
It was it was a take advantage of a situation and pass things that give us more power
and less.
You know, look, look, it's in, it's always that it is.
It's in every level.
Look, it's inconvenient.
If you're, I feel like it's always that.
And if I can tie it to, if I can justify it with some sort of means,
then it's, it's all green light.
Yeah.
It's like, if I, if this attached it to Christ, if I'm, if I'm,
if I'm part of the government, it's like, oh, we can, we can gain more power
and, and more potential money
by creating more departments.
You ever see how they, you ever see how they spend the bill?
And we can justify where people will go,
oh, that makes sense.
I think they've got into every war.
If you go back in history,
just look at like what started the war?
Yeah.
Most of the time, it's something that wasn't even true.
A lot of times.
And yeah, and look at the spending bills.
They'll pass the spending bill.
And what's attached to it is all this other stuff.
And sometimes these bills are so big,
they'll give them to a senator.
And they'll be like, we need to pass this now.
People need money now.
We need this help right now.
And they're like, I can't read all this.
They can pass it anyway.
Patrick Bette, David, just did a clip on his Instagram.
I thought was really good that any of you was talking about,
you know, the
most ideal perfect candidate for our country to get us out of this situation or move us
in the right direction.
And he went over all the list of things that they would have to do as far as the shrinking
government and cutting this out and nobody is going to vote for that.
I know.
Literally you could not campaign on that.
Like the perfect man or woman to take us in the right direction, the perfect
situation, economically, socially, all those things, what they would have to campaign on
in order to win.
They couldn't campaign on that.
Brute will work.
Isn't that crazy?
I think that.
I know, it's so funny.
Yeah, that's where we're at.
All right, I'm going to take us in another direction.
I just read an interesting study on tattoos that this is really fascinating to me. So, you know your body,
how important your body's ability to sweat is for your health, right?
Have you guys ever worked with anybody
who had a disorder where they didn't sweat?
Yeah, I forget what it's called.
There's a name for it, but I haven't worked with it.
So, you had, yeah, yeah, we're in a client.
Really dangerous.
Yeah, no, actually that same client,
she almost passed out one time.
Yeah.
So, and I was a very young trainer at the time.
I actually don't even think I knew that she had it up
until this point.
And I was using, you know, like how she was sweating,
or in this case, the lack of it,
that I wasn't pushing hard enough.
And I kept increasing the intensity,
increasing the intensity.
It's the point, she ended up just getting light-headed
and having to lay down, but I was like, damn,
I didn't think you were having a hard time with sweat,
right, and seeing her sweating. And I'm like, we were doing a lot of...
I had a client like that too, and they told me ahead of time, because I did a whole assessment
or whatever, they're very dangerous.
They overheat, they could die, because it's a very important thing that we sweat, right?
So check this out with tattoos.
Did you know that having tattoos reduces your ability to sweat?
They did studies on people with one arm,
fully tattooed versus the other one,
and it was like a 50% reduction in sweating.
And the side that was tattooed.
I'll have the next workout, I'll take a look.
I was just gonna ask you,
because you guys, you're right versus the other one.
Yeah, yeah, no, I've never really paid attention to that,
but the next time I get a real sweat.
I mean, it makes kind of sense, right?
You're like damaging the...
Well, yeah, you're injecting ink into your pores, right? I think it would clog it up a real sweat. I mean, it makes kind of sense, right? You're, you're, you're, you're, you're like damaging the, well, yeah, you're, you're injecting ink into your pores,
right?
I think it would clog it up a little bit.
I don't know if it's the, I don't think it's clogging.
I think it has to do more with the, the,
the nervous system and how it,
or the adaptation process of your body now is becoming like
something, but it's such a weird thing, right?
Like, so being fully tatted, that could,
that could, maybe it's closing it up,
because you're, you're basically,
when you're tattooing your shooting ink into these pores. pores. So maybe the body adapts and says like, oh my God, I'm
taking in this potentially harmful shit. So I'm going to I'm going to not allow it to
be more.
I'll read the bowl or okay, here's here. I'll read it right here.
I'll get him the wall right now. Yeah.
Yeah.
So there's only one study. This is only one study. It's ever done it. Now everybody's
like, oh shit, we gotta learn more about this.
So the heavily tattooed people may be more at risk
of heat related injuries as their bodies are not able
to expel heat as quickly.
And it has to do the maximum sweat rate that could be attained.
But there's no speculation as to why,
like why or how, you know, this may be caused.
So I don't know.
I mean, it obviously is, it can't be that bad because if all the tattooed people were dropping
like flies because of, oh, it's damaged just sweat glands within the skin.
Yes, sweat glands.
So it was just the actual physical damage.
It could be drag in the needle.
Mm-hmm.
It should be.
Yeah.
I know.
I know.
That's weird. I know. I'll watch now. Now I would be all curious of when I work out
and see if one side is sweating more than the other side.
Yeah, well, I mean, it was, you know,
when I was, like I said, when I had that client,
I had no idea.
And she's like, yeah, I don't, she's like, I don't sweat.
I'm like, okay, I've heard people tell me that before.
I'm like, no, no, I literally have a medical condition
where I don't sweat.
And I could totally overheat and die while we're working out.
Oh, holy shit.
That's a weird thing.
I found, as I've aged, I sweat more in different places.
Like, so like, my lower back is like more sweaty than it was previously.
That's weird.
It's weird because you have a tattoo there too that doesn't even think of a sweat.
I don't know.
That's the unicorn jumping over the rainbow one.
No.
Yeah, that's a really good one. That's right. That's a really good No. Yeah, that's really good.
That's really good.
That's right.
I know you moved us away from government stuff, but I did you guys see the article that
Jackie sent over to us that had to do with ring?
Oh, that they can access your ring camera without a warrant and just watch through your
shit.
Wait, what?
Yes.
So if you have ring, right? I have a ring.
Okay.
The supposedly cops can access that without getting any sort
of warrant.
Yeah.
How dare they.
Yeah, that's my place.
Yeah.
Wild, right?
Do you know why?
Okay, so, okay.
Remember when we were not seen lawful to me?
Remember when we were in Cabo and, you know,
we put the baby to bed.
Yeah.
And Jessica had a monitor, but we couldn't go very far
with the monitor because we have a monitor
that it's like wireless and you're like,
oh, you gotta get the one we have
where it goes through the Wi-Fi
and I could watch it on my phone or whatever.
So I'm like, why don't we have that, right?
So I told Jessica, I'm like,
why don't we get the monitor, the baby monitor,
so I could watch it from anywhere.
She goes, no, she's a huge problem with them being hacked
by weirdos. They'll
hack the camera watching your kid. And then there's been cases where people will hear, people
talking through the camera to their kids through these freaking cameras.
We don't know.
I've picked up stuff like that before where you pick up somebody else to say, no, and you
hear, you hear something through it.
It's all hell freaking out.
The fun part is, is if you have somebody like, we had somebody watching our house and our vacation,
and then, you know, yell at them through the ring,
did you really?
When they're taking the dogs out, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, but yeah, I mean, it's,
so they don't need a warrant to access that
for like evidence, they just have it accessible.
So you're talking, yeah.
I'm gonna lose something about that. Is there another company that's competing?
Yeah, so what I didn't, I don't remember when I was reading the article, it's like all
these companies are like that, or just in particular, Ring has some sort of contractor deal.
Do you ever go to a friend's house and they have the little camera on their computer taped
over on their phone?
I do.
I freak out. Yeah, because someone could hack in and watch your shit. They have the little camera on their computer taped over on their phone. I do.
I freak out.
Yeah, because someone could hack in and watch your shit.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Well, I just feel like that's just the case with any camera even on your phone.
It's just like it.
You're just opening that up for any kind of person to even like I I don't know.
I speculate a lot with like the the whole voice in the in Alexa and all that kind of
so they've been busted too with like Alexa being gathering
a bunch of data on people.
Well, you guys saw that clip that Joe Rogan just posted up
not that long ago of your agreement clause or whatever.
The agreement clause for TikTok.
All the things they have accidentally, if you get TikTok,
you've given them permission to spy everything on your phone.
Go everything.
Your keystrokes, your files, and your notes.
Your photos, everything.
And even, and then the part that was crazy to me was that they're even allowed to
phone ID, to yeah, IP, phone ID, all that stuff, to get in through another computer access.
Like, there's a computer nearby, they can still access like what the
I know it's so crazy. I'm gonna take a fitness. I'm gonna take a fitness podcast. So I just read
some cool studies on my on my muscle connection. I actually have so oh good I'm glad you go
to the stretch because I have something related to fitness. So check this out they used
you know, I think it's is EMG, whether they measure muscle activation. Yeah, yeah.
On people working out, doing a compound lift
like a bench press, and the person is doing the bench press,
and they measure the EMG of the triceps, shoulders,
and chest, then they tell the person,
focus more on your chest, focus more on your triceps,
focus more, just by thinking how much it changes.
And it did, it did change it.
Significantly, just by focusing on it through,
so we have proof now of what bodybuilders
have saying forever,
which is concentrating focus on the muscle.
Okay, I'm so glad you went this direction
because I got tagged yesterday in some fitness influencer
chick that was saying that it said,
high-perture fee training is best for building Billy Muscle like not not for I mean excuse me
Machines are best for Billy Muscle not free weights and it's and you know who she was
Referencing was the who's the guy that you went back and forth?
You don't let lift lift run bang
Oh, right. Yeah, and he's that guy does not yet
You know he doesn't get angry and upset. Well, I want what I wanted.
So because I got tagged and I know we've addressed this
on the show again, but I, you know,
I think it's something that we should address again,
like that the thing when you,
and because a lot of these smart guys,
the smart guys that are saying that
he's not a dumb guy, right?
And he uses studies to try and make his point.
But the thing that they're not,
they'll take like a study again,
that's like eight weeks long and they'll try and prove this point, or they'll take the EMG, oh muscle activation,
therefore it's better for, yeah that's not the Bialindal.
But you also got to think part of the adaptation process is the learning curve.
And this is what we've talked about before.
So it does not take very long to get under a leg press and the body to adapt to that because
of how easy it is for the body to do it.
When you compare that to a barbell back squat.
So the adaptation process is longer.
Therefore, some of the benefits and carryover
that you will get in terms of building muscle slash burden.
Gradually increase.
Yeah.
So maybe in a shortened study, you may be able to show,
oh, there was more muscle activation in here,
and then they make the leap.
Therefor builds more muscle than this barbell back squat.
But I would make the argument that if you took two different people and for a year's
time or say two years time, one always leg press, the other one always barbell back squat,
and then you compare those.
This squat would win.
This squat would win.
And you're right, you're right.
At the gates, the leg press might produce
a little bit faster in terms of hypertrophy
because you don't have to learn to balance,
stabilization, the technique.
It's easier to get that mind muscle connection.
Very easy to focus on that.
And then you have the MG studies that are going to support
that too because you're going to show someone,
oh look, or the hax squat,
which everyone loves to use that one.
Oh, it's lighten the quads of like crazy.
Oh, this person doing barbell back squat,
it kind of isn't. There's like glute, there's quad, a little bit, it's lighten the quads up like crazy. Oh, this person doing barbell backsquad, it kinda isn't.
There's like glue, there's quads,
a little bit, there's even bat, little backs stuff going on,
like, oh, it's not as focused.
So if you wanna develop your legs,
the barbell backsquad isn't the best thing.
It's like, well, you're not telling the whole story.
So I got tagged on that again,
and that's kind of making its waves
through the space of this idea that machines
are better
for eye hypertrophy than free weights are.
No, the best is both.
Yeah, it's such a simple answer.
Yeah.
All right, check this out.
This company we've been working with for a very long time
called Organify.
They have high quality ingredients.
They're very convenient, great tasting.
They have super food blends that make it easy and enjoyable
to add more variety and nutrition to your day.
They have green juices, gold juices, red juices,
all organic.
They have plant-based protein powders
and much more great company, all organic,
all third-party tested.
Go check them out.
Head over to organifi.com.
That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I.com, forward slash mind pump
and then use the code Mind Pump and get a huge 20% off.
All right, here comes the rest of the show.
First question is from Ali McLeod.
What are some tips for getting better at Barbell Squats
when you have long legs slash femurs?
Well, the average.
The guy with the longest legs in here is Adam.
He's busy.
Actually, there was a huge challenge for me, but why it was a challenge has less to do with
the long femurs and more to do, I think, with poor ankle mobility, right?
So that, and I use that kind of as an excuse why I didn't squat below 90 for the long
time.
I was like, oh, I'm a real tall, long guy. Therefore, I have to have this major, major forward lean when
I squat. So I had a low bar set up. I would let my chest fall forward a lot more. And I
would only hit about 90 degrees. And it was because I had long femurs, you know, when
in reality, what it really was was that I had poor ankle mobility and working on the ankle mobility allowed
my knees to travel further over my toes, which then allowed me to get deeper into.
100% deeper than most of them.
When you have long legs, that's the thing. You need to have more travel with your ankles.
Sort someone who's short, typically isn't going to have his mind.
Right, and by the way, hopefully I didn't come off that I'm knocking this person for saying that they have long,
that it is because you have longer femurs,
exactly what you said, you need more room to be able to travel,
it needs to travel over.
And so if you don't work on that ankle mobility.
Well, a good tell for that, right, is if you elevate your heels
and you find yourself easier to get down and further in depth.
Yeah.
And, you know, comfortably.
So if that's the case, then you definitely would want to look
into income mobility.
And I think that's a okay thing to do, right?
I think there's a couple camps in this area of like,
you know, some people, all those, the,
the, um, squat shoes are a crutch or, you know,
it's elevating your heels on one of those platforms
as a crutch and you're not, I think you can do both.
I did both.
So while I was working on my ankle mobility and because I wanted to just get deeper in my
squat, I was using squat shoes.
But then I would still do the ankle mobility work.
And then over time, I got more and more comfortable in that deep squat position.
Now I'm in a place where I can actually sit, ask to grasp, barefoot, and loaded with
my max weight that I move.
That's just it.
You can use these things to allow you to do a full squat, but then continue to work on
the barriers as to why you can't squat in your most natural state, which is with flat
shoes.
Because it'll benefit you.
It benefits you to have more control over greater ranges of motion, of course,
within reason of all of your joints,
including the ankle joint.
If you have a greater control
and you're able to flex and extend it
and have control over these greater ranges of motion,
it's gonna make you more functional in everyday life.
It's gonna make you more effective at lots of different
exercises and stronger
and less prone to injury because I mean, how many times people hurt their ankles because
they're running or moving or they move laterally and because the ankle moves outside of a range
of motion, they own, they lose stability right away and they roll their ankle or hurt themselves,
right?
But that's gotta be the main thing.
Now, you can also throw maybe thoracic stability and strength there, although that's not a tall person issue
per se.
That's a lot of other, you know, a lot of logic.
Well, I don't have less to do with your femurs.
Yeah, so we're talking about legs and ankle mobility,
but if you're just talking about, in general,
being a tall person, what are some of those?
Well, shoulder mobility too, we're just like,
like you're saying, if you're trying to load
a little bit lower in your back.
Yes.
For instance, to kind of counterbalance if you find that forward lean is a problem.
That may be something to address as well.
My favorite, and I made this up.
I had never seen anybody do this, but I ankle mobility, and then priming like my thoracic
region was huge to getting in this more upright, deep squat position.
And after time of working on both of them
to where I could finally kind of get in that position,
my favorite, how I primed now is so different than what I used to.
I used to have to like break up all the joints
and then spend a bunch of time on each one individually.
Where now I can sit down all the way in the deep squat
and then I grab a band. I have a video on my
Instagram and so I'll have Andrew show that clip or whatever of this is how I prime now or I
actually just get down in the squat position. I have a band around the squat rack and then I'm
priming the thoracic so that it helps me get my chest more upright and prime that upper back.
In addition, I'm also it's hard for you to see because you can't see exactly my feet
and what's going on intrinsically,
but I'm actually trying to push my knees forward,
open up my hips.
I'm trying to grip the floor at the same time,
and then I'm also doing these rear delt flies
kind of in that position.
But there's a lot of good exercises you could do also
if this is real challenging for you
working on your ability to be able to squat properly. Any split stance exercises, essentially, it's almost like a squat,
right?
The split stance squat.
So lunges, forward, step, back, step lunges are really good.
Bulgarian split stance squats are really good.
Step ups are also really good.
These are all great exercises that you can do while you're working on your ability to
squat better.
I love that idea too.
I think the knees over toesize shows this, right?
Where that's a great point, Sal, is like not only working
on the ankle mobility as far as the priming stuff,
but then when you're doing like a lunge,
like when you do the lunge, you take your time in that lunge
and every time you lunge forward, you try and drive that knee.
Yes.
Which is kind of counter-intuitive,
because we were taught so differently.
Yeah, I mean, I remember as a trainer,
I used to actually stand with my hand,
lined up with their toes,
and then when they would lunch,
yeah, I would tell my clients,
as soon as you fill my hand,
you would shift your weight back into your hips,
and oh, you don't want your knees to go over your toes,
it was so bad, you know,
looking back now on that advice.
And so the opposite is true is if I was working
on someone's ankle mobility, I would move to a lunge.
Well, it's not bad, but it was just different application,
right?
So if you were to then, you know, focus on getting
that knee further forward, it'll help, you know,
it's more conducive towards the squat
because that's where you want your trajectory
to end up.
Next question is from like event Fastenhout.
Can Yin Yoga be used as mobility training or is it different?
Okay, so let's describe Yin Yoga first.
So Yin Yoga is a form of yoga where you get into a position, usually a stretch type position or pose.
And you hold it for very long periods of time, while trying to breathe through it,
while trying to relax your body.
So it's almost like static stretching.
There's a lot of static stretching involved in yoga.
So it's like you get into pigeon position
and you hold that position for like three minutes.
Okay, so is that by itself good mobility work?
No.
As part of a mobility routine, it could be though.
Now why isn't it by itself good mobility?
Because static stretching or long stretches increase range of motion, but they don't do anything
to give you better connection over that new range of motion. So just because now I can stretch my
arm further back, that doesn't mean to have more mobility in the sense that I don't have strength
over that new range of motion. In fact, if I move into that new range of motion,
doing an exercise with weight on me,
my risk of injury actually goes up.
So now how is this help with mobility
as part of mobility routine?
Well, if you're really tight
and you work on increasing range of motion,
but then you combine it with ways
of connecting to that new range of motion,
now you've got a good mobility approach.
So if I'm to understand, because I've never done a Yen Yoga class, I hear you talk about
it like, what?
Frequently.
I know, mind blowing, right?
Like, I look like a total Yen Yoga guy.
Yeah.
I wear the shirts and everything.
But you like to happy baby.
Yeah.
In terms of it being a little bit more in the passive side versus active in terms of these poses,
like how much emphasis is on kind of creating that
in intrinsic tension?
It's not.
So it's much more passive.
So like, whereas traditional yoga, I'm in a pose,
and I'm creating tension.
Like if you really do proper yoga,
you're creating tension and support.
You're not allowing the mat to support you or just sitting in the box with your joints.
You want to stay active.
Yin yoga, you're getting these positions, like I said, like happy baby or pigeon or different
types of position on the ground.
You're trying to settle into the position and stress.
It's more parasympathetic.
That's where the in comes from.
Not only that, but, and by the way,
if I had a client that was doing in yoga,
I would totally be like, keep doing it,
especially if you like it,
because there's mental benefits that come with that too.
Huge, yes, thank you.
So there's other benefits that come with something like in yoga.
And I think it's an incredible practice.
And if I had a client that loves doing it,
I would totally promote them doing it.
And then if they, but if they were to ask me something like,
so Adam, does this count as my mobility exercises
that you were wanting me to do?
I would say no.
And the reason why I'd say no is that mobility
is ideally supposed to be targeted for what you need.
Right, where you're taking a Yen yoga class,
you have some teacher up there
who doesn't know any of your imbalances
or where you lack mobility. They're just going to teach this really cool organized flow of movements.
That's going to help relax you and calm you down and put you in some nice static stretches,
which is all positive.
But you may have, for example, I've taken some yoga classes and there wasn't a lot of
emphasis on a specific ankle mobility exercise. There were some things that required a little bit more ankle mobility, and there wasn't a lot of emphasis on a specific ankle mobility exercise.
There were some things that required
a little bit more ankle mobility,
but it wasn't very direct, right?
That was an area I needed to be hyper focused on.
So I could have done a thousand happy trees
and downward dogs and all these things like that,
which are all beneficial, positive things for you.
For your names, though.
But if I wasn't doing my combat stretch in there, I was really limiting my progress of
working on my deep squat, hence the last question that we just talked about.
So mobility, ideally, is more targeted.
The more targeted, you could be the more frequent you can do that.
If I found, let's say, three mobility exercises that I knew really made a huge difference on my client.
So they have really rounded shoulders,
they have poor ankle moody,
and they have like really locked up hips
and they have terrible external rotation.
Well, 90, 90s combat stretch,
and then like the zone one test,
or like three movements, I want them to religiously do.
And I would way rather than spend a whole hour
in those three movements
that spend an hour of 12 random movements.
Yeah, it makes sense.
And it also sounds to me like it's completely in contrast with mobility.
Being that it's more passive, it's more access of range of motion with more flexibility being the focus in terms of being able to be loose.
And calm your system down, address all the stress and the tensing mechanism,
whereas mobility is more focused on bringing in that strength support system,
that stability around the joint.
And that's why we do add that bit of tension,
but it's focused tension around the joint for support.
Yes, more range of motion does not necessarily mean
you have better mobility.
In fact, in some cases, it can mean worse mobility.
I've used this example before.
Like a baby has tremendous ranges of motion.
You take a baby and you can take their feet
and you can move them all over the place,
but they have really bad stability, which means they're not very mobile. I mean, they move,
they can't move very well on their own. And if you do put them in a position where on their stretch,
you put any load on them, they'll hurt themselves. Not that I suggest you put load on a baby,
but that's just the easy example to understand. First, the kids with cigarettes now.
Smoke cigarettes and do squats for babies. We're gonna piss six month old babies, yeah.
Next question is from Grant Satisfyth.
How do you guys approach training and nutrition
on vacation when not actively cutting or bulking?
That's changed for me in my journey.
I think I was way more stressed out about this
and I would either one, go way off the rails
and put on a bunch of that way,
or be crazy and bring my food
and be counting macros still on vacation
where I think I have a much more loose approach.
And one of the things, although this is more recent,
that has really promoted that.
Like the Cabo Trip we just took made me feel this way
is when we brought up that study that we've referred
to multiple times now that I thought was really fascinating
by the people that took an entire week off
of training completely, still that sell the same progress
as someone that was training consistently every single day.
And I thought, you know, having a week of like not weighing
measuring, tracking food, or you know, potentially maybe hitting my protein,
missing my protein and take a little bit here,
it's not going to be the end of the world.
And so as long as I don't like eat like an asshole,
like I say all the time on this trip, I'm actually going to just,
I'm going to just enjoy myself and not stress too much because a week of off
the diet a little bit and not training is not stress too much because a week of off the diet a little bit
and not training is not considered.
It's if you go extreme is where it's really gonna hurt you.
Yeah, the key is how you go into it.
If you're super restrictive going into a vacation,
like I gotta eat just as many calories,
I gotta just do this perfect thing
and oh my God, I can't wait till I go on vacation.
When you go on vacation,
you're gonna deal with this opposite direction,
being in bed.
Well, you're not even enjoying what you're eating or anyone enjoying the process of vacation,
it's like impulse just took over.
Yes.
So how you go in makes a big difference.
The only thing too is like, what do you value?
Why are you on vacation?
Now this may be not true for someone watching, but for most people and in my experience,
when I go on vacation, I'm there to enjoy the people I'm with,
to connect with the people I'm with,
to get out of my routine, to relax,
which also means I'm not gonna pay much attention
to my nutrition.
Now, that doesn't mean what I said earlier,
which is I binge because I was so restrictive,
because I go into it with more of a balanced approach also.
So then when I'm on vacation, it's like,
oh, I didn't eat breakfast, not a big deal
because we're over your hiking or at the beach.
And then, oh, lunch comes cool.
What are they making?
I'll have some of that too.
You just, I'm not worried about it.
Like, what a wonderful way to ruin your vacation.
It's to go in either crazy direction
where you go so extreme binge that when you get home,
you're like, oh my God, that vacation. I really gotta turn things around and you go so extreme binge that when you get home, you're like, oh my god, that vacation.
I really gotta, you know, I gotta turn things around
and then you go back on restrict.
Or you, you know, you're not going places
and enjoying yourself because you're like,
I need a protein bar because we're gonna go on this trip,
this hike and I'm not gonna have food in the next hour.
Or, you know, just, that's vacation is,
there are health benefits to vacation.
They have nothing to do with getting ripped
or bulking or building muscle. The health benefits to vacation. I have nothing to do with getting ripped or bulking
or building muscle.
The health benefits come from other things.
Well, I think that's what you really need to assess.
It's like, what do you get out of vacation?
What are you trying to get out of vacation?
And having some kind of mindset going in beforehand.
So, some of those things aren't just like,
it's to completely like shut off
like all of my barriers in terms of like the way
that I eat normally.
So now I'm allowed to like, you know, just go crazy
and impulsive or, you know, am I trying to relax
and I'm gonna try to come back refreshed
and you know, apply certain practices
that I've learned to love doing just because it's
part of my like everyday active routine. Like I try and stay active while I'm on vacation
just because I enjoy how that makes me feel. But not can like use that as kind of an adventure.
So I go see things but then also I want to decompress. So I also like manage that time. So I'm like
sitting around. I'm not doing anything. Listen, building and losing muscle is a very slow process.
Losing body fat and gaining body fat
is actually a pretty slow process.
Where it gets accelerated and crazy is the extremes.
If you actually spent seven days and all seven days,
you overrate, but not crazy overrate.
You just overrate by five to 700 calories every day,
which means, every meal you're eating a little more unusual,
you're having dessert,
or maybe you're having a couple of alcohol drinks
in the day and stuff like that,
and you're enjoying your vacation.
It ain't gonna be as bad as you think it is
where it is, and I love your point, Sal,
of how you go into it is so important.
And I think that is the most common mistake,
in fact, I have a client right now
who's asking me for advice right now, getting ready to go on a trip. And she's
like wanting to be hardcore heading into it, right? And get his best shapes, can she's restricting
hell hard and increased volume and all the stuff is going up right now, which I'm not against
that, but you have to be careful of what that sets you up for potentially, especially if
you're going to go the opposite, you're going to go like, all right, now my vacation,
no rules apply. And because you are restricting so hard
and pushing through so much leading into it,
it really promotes that swing in the opposite direction
versus you kind of cruise into vacation
of your normal lifestyle of making good choices
and doing an exercising and training,
and then vacations here, and now the difference is like,
okay, maybe I will or won't lift weights,
but I'll probably be active, go for walks,
go for hikes, do things like that.
And then I'm gonna enjoy a drink,
I'm gonna eat out, I'm gonna do those things,
but I'm not gonna stuff myself.
The difference for me on vacation is my daily structure
is different.
My daily structure when I'm on vacation,
it's very structured because I have a family,
I got kids, I got work, so I work out at 6.30 AM
and I go to work and then I come home and I eat it this time
just because I have all this busy stuff.
When I'm on vacation, I have those responsibilities,
that's the biggest difference.
Is it just when I have the structure,
I could wake up later, work out, maybe,
maybe not if I feel like it, eat,
yeah if I feel like it, you know.
I used to-
Blacksibility there.
Yeah, I used to be, I used to be like,
I would go and binge like crazy on vacation
because it was like oh
This is it. This is real one time all year to do this right? Yeah, it's crazy
Next question is from Micah 2 4 4 8
What are some of the best uses of your time when taking long breaks between sets rest nothing?
This is funny. I know when I used to have clients that were like what do I do? Well, I'm sitting here
I mean, I don't know right a book
I used to have clients that were like, what do I do while I'm sitting here?
I mean, I don't know, write a book.
Think about it.
I don't do whatever you want.
Just don't do any exercise.
There's two versions of this for me personally,
and how I would probably advise a client.
And that is like, my goals are very important
to how I would answer this.
So if I'm on like this kick where I'm trying to make moves
and I'm really trying to get after my workouts, I'm trying to make moves, and I'm really trying to get after my workouts,
I'm trying to be consistent.
I wanna be super into my routine.
So my phone is not with me.
I'm listening to music, but it's not in my hand.
Between sets, I'm not scrolling on Instagram,
I'm not working, I'm not doing anything.
I'm like sitting there, I'm letting my heart rate come down.
I'm already visualizing the next set.
I am into my workout. If I'm trying to maximize results, and I'm letting my heart rate come down, I'm already visualizing the next set, like I am into my workout, like if I'm trying
to maximize results and I'm on a serious case,
now I'm not that way right now, right now,
I'm maintaining health and staying balanced
and so between sets I work and I would never recommend
that to somebody, I get on my, I answer an email,
I do things that I would totally teleclient
who is trying to make progress in their training
journey.
That's not a good strategy for you, but hey, if you're in a place in your life where you
know, this is part, you never miss workouts, you're consistent, you're not trying to really
make any progress right now, just trying to stay healthy and balanced and strong.
Then, well, there's, you know what they're looking for?
They're looking for more exercise.
I think that's what it is.
Yes.
Oh, God.
You old like, I guess. You rubber band a rest. Yes. In between, that's what it is. Oh God, yeah. The old like, I was, the rubber band arrest.
Yes, in between.
That's not arrest.
Yes, like what's the most effective?
How do I make my workout more effective?
I got these minute windows in between exercises.
So the best use,
so that would go to my first version of me, right?
If you are trying to make the most gains in your workout,
then it's not doing something necessarily physically.
It's actually visualizing.
And like, being very focused, not letting any of the outside distractions get in your head
and you are, if that's music for you or silence, whatever, but you are already, you're visualizing
the next set.
And you're thinking about your workout and how it felt and how your muscles feel right
now, like, and bringing your heart rate down by breathing in through your nose.
That's a big one, yeah.
In terms of like, so anything when I'm coaching athletes
is like how quickly can we get that heart rate down?
That's right.
How masterful are you at getting to that calm state?
Because that's the top tier athletes,
just have that ability.
So even within the most like extreme environments
where they have to perform at a really high level.
They could be doing these crazy intensive bouts,
but then find themselves to that calm state
and then be able to perform again.
Because I mean, if you're really trying to squeeze out
on a performance end of it,
if you think in those terms about focus,
heart rate lowering, breathing, that's where I would stay.
You know they've done studies on some of your high performing athletes,
and that's one of the most things, one of the things they have most in common in these crazy
high pressure situations, or they're getting ready to do like a double back flip with a dirt bike,
or something, and their heart rate is like 50 beats per minute.
Their common athletes are at the top.
Just, calm, so we're something like one of us would be like racing like crazy,
panting because you got, if you have that ability one of us would be racing, like crazy, panting, because if
you have that ability to do that in your workouts, you're going to get the most at every one
of your sets.
And rest in between sets is extremely important when it comes to building muscle and strength.
Not resting in between sets means you're basically turning it into an endurance cardio workout
in which it's just fine if that's what you're looking for, but when it comes to the muscle
building effects of strength training, the rest in between is very important.
I would say that's one of the worst things you could do
in between sets is a bunch of activity in there.
I mean, that's worse than being distracted.
You're ruining the work out.
Yeah, you're nutting water.
Absolutely.
Look, if you like our information,
head over to minepumpfree.com and check out our guides.
We have guides that can help you with almost any health
or fitness goal.
You can also find all of us on social media.
So Justin is on Instagram at my pump Justin.
Adam is on Instagram at my pump bottom
and you can find me on Twitter at my pump cell.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body,
dramatically improve your health and energy
and maximize your overall performance,
check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com
The RGB Superbundle includes MAPSANABOLIC, MAPS PERFORMANCE and MAPSISTEDIC
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by SAU-ADEMANJUSTIN to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is
like having Sal and I'm in Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction
of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee and you can get
it now plus other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com. If you enjoy this show,
please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is MindPump.