Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1884: The Value of Undulating Calories to Lose Fat & Stay Lean, How to Prevent Muscle Loss When Cutting, Using Static Stretching to Get a Good Night’s Sleep & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: August 20, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Parents calm down! Climate change is NOT making your kids fat! (3:10) The arcade/carnival game h...ustle. (13:45) The steam room chronicles. (19:26) When you’re feeling your age. (21:18) Sal’s a BIG craps guy now. (23:48) So, buying ‘fake’ property isn’t a good idea? (31:47) Busting the frequency myth. (32:49) Commercials and compliments, brought to you by Vuori. (39:52) The evolution of podcast advertising. (41:47) It’s a competitive market out there y’all! (44:50) The tragedy and brilliance of Disney. (46:33) #ListenerLive question #1 - How many calories should I eat if I am looking to stay lean and healthy after a skateboarding injury? (56:32) #ListenerLive question #2 - Can I pinpoint growth while in a cut or should I just focus on not losing muscle mass during it? (1:08:23) #ListenerLive question #3 - Is static stretching good to do before bed? (1:20:19) #ListenerLive question #4 - How does one transition from being an athlete into leading a healthy, training-based lifestyle? (1:32:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! August Special: MAPS STARTER value $97 or PRIME PRO BUNDLE value $197 you get it for HALF OFF!!! **Promo Code AUGUST50 at checkout** Mind Pump x Spartan Championships, Use code Give-mindpump Kids Less Active Due to Climate-Related Fallout: Study | Time Tips for Throwing the Dice in Craps Mark Cuban, investor in metaverse real estate, says digital land is 'dumb' Experts say it's about how often you exercise, not how much | World News | Sky News Disney Has More Streaming Subs Than Netflix. Buy the Mouse House? I Am Groot | Disney+ Originals Why Parents Aren't Absent in Pixar Movies Like in the Disney Inside Out (2015) - IMDb Visit Oli Pop for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 15% off your first order** How to Undulate Your Calories for Faster Weight Loss & an Improved Metabolism – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake MAPS Symmetry Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Layne Norton, Ph.D. (@biolayne) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump. Right in today's episode, we answered live-colors questions.
After a 47 minute introductory conversation, we talked about fitness and studies or lives, curtain events, and much more.
By the way, you could check the show notes for timestamps if you want to fast forward to
your favorite part.
Also, if you want to ask a question on an episode like this where we could talk to you
on air, email your question to live at mindpumpmedia.com.
This episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
The first one is Organify. This is a company that makes organic plant-based supplements
for health, performance, relaxation, anxiety, and better sleep.
I love their products.
It's one of the sponsors that have been with us the longest.
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Also there's a Spartan race coming up.
If you go to Spartan.com, sorry, if you go to mp Spartan.com, you can sign up and your
fee will go to charity.
So go to that link if you want to race in the next upcoming Spartan race.
And remember, your fee goes to charity.
This race is going on September 24th to the 26th up here in Tahoe.
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All right, here comes a show.
Parenthood.
Parents calm down, everything's gonna be okay.
Climate change is not making your kids fat.
That is going happening.
That's going viral on the news right now.
I can't believe that actually,
as somebody would actually write an article,
saying that climate change is contributing
to childhood obesity in any significant way.
We've hit peak ridiculousness.
It's peak insanity and it's no wonder people are so confused
about health and fitness.
It's no wonder.
I mean, because I know there's people at home
who are all scared about climate change anyway, right?
Because it's this big issue.
And now they're like, oh, so is it?
Okay, I saw this on the news.
I didn't even see the written article.
So it's making its rounds.
So it's not like the argument person said this.
This is parody or something.
The argument is it's too hot for kids to go outside.
Yeah, I read it.
First of all, kids weren't going outside anyway.
Number two, I grew up in the Bay area.
Okay, when it was...
Did we've had heat waves since forever?
We always went outside.
You know what we did?
We just sweat and we spray water on each other
and have water fights and stuff like that.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
It's a dumbass thing ever.
It kids are fat because of the same reasons
why their parents are fat.
It's because they eat a lot of...
A lot of behavior.
A lot of heavily processed food.
So you overeat.
Kids do not play outside like they used to.
Any parent will tell you, first of all,
you don't need a parent, drive through neighborhoods.
When I was a kid, if it was after school
and you were driving through neighborhoods,
you would have to stop and slow your car down four or five times
because there was a game happening in the street,
wait for the kids to move,
wait, kids on their bikes, they're doing this thing over here.
Now you drive through nobody's outside, it's quiet.
And even now, when my kids hang out with other kids,
you know what they do?
They hang out to play video games together
or to be inside together.
They don't go outside.
So that's the problem, it's not climate change.
Now what do you, okay, so what do you guys do
to combat that?
Like what do you got knowing that?
Because you also don't want to like,
I mean the kids video games are pretty rad
and awesome today.
So I don't- Plus that's how they socialize. Right, that's how they, so there's got to like, I mean, the kids video games are pretty rad and awesome today. Yeah.
So, I don't-
Trust that's how they socialize.
Right.
That's how they, so there's got to be this balance of, okay, I recognize that these kids
are just not going to move as much as my generation did, right?
And I'm not going to be the old man who's constantly reminding them of, oh, I was a kid.
So, it's just like, so what do you do as strategies as parents to negate the amount of potential weight gain
that they'll have because they're sitting and they're eating while they're sitting?
Do you guys have rules around how or what they eat?
Yeah, I got rules.
One thing that I did over this week and I was going to bring it up anyway, but was just
to kind of create more opportunities for them to want to go outside and to want to do
things and be active in place.
We have a trampoline, we have like, you know, an outdoor kind of course with like rings and pull up bars and whatnot, but
I just set up a target range outside so that they can shoot their BB guns and bone arrows
and whatnot. And so it's just like, if there's no incentive for them, unfortunately, now,
like we have to create those things for them
to get excited about, they don't just like,
no, to go outside and like, dig and find bugs and whatever.
So you could, Katrina and I were actually talking
about you and Courtney and your family with this
in regards to this, actually.
And I'm actually really curious about what you have to say
more because I think I'm more like you
As far as being a little bit more of a homebody. I enjoy watching the movie like
Justin you and Courtney something I recognize from being traveling with you and being with you guys so much you as adults
Don't even like to sit in the house and sit
Yeah, you guys both have you guys get cabin fever like we'll go to the trucky place all of us together and
you guys both have, you guys get cabin fever, like we'll go to the trucky place all of us together
and I'm completely content with,
I might not leave this house for the next five days
and just relax and veg, like I am like the,
I'm like, where are you, you guys will not spend
more than 24 hours, it's once,
if you spend a whole day sitting in that house,
the next day you guys are for sure out and gone.
So you've done a really good job of modeling that for your kids
and so I'm sure it's a little bit easier for you.
Well, you know what it is, is I think a lot about this
because it's very different.
When we were kids, we went outside
because it was nothing else to do otherwise.
And so they didn't need to be stuff outside to do.
It was, if you didn't go outside, you didn't see anybody.
Right, you didn't play.
And cartoons were not on 24 hours a day.
Right.
So we were kids, cartoons were on Saturday morning.
So there was nothing on TV.
There was nothing else to do.
You could read, which I would do sometimes,
but kids would only do that so much, right?
So you had to go outside and you had to figure out things to do.
So what it reminds me of is how adults used to be active
by default.
Adults used to be active by default. Adults used to be active by default
because work was physical.
All work, in the house work was physical,
outside the house work was physical.
So we were just active by default.
So as kids we were active by default.
So what do adults have to do to maintain activity?
We have to do with our kids as well.
So what is that?
You got to structure it.
Unfortunately, and I know it sounds crazy,
but I think the only way for most parents who have busy lifestyles to do this for the kids
is you sign them up for sports and you schedule stuff. And maybe what you do is you say today
no electronics and you turn off the Wi-Fi and you take everything and then you hear a lot
of complaining, there's a lot of pissing and moaning, and you say, this is just, it's an electronic day
and you gotta figure it out.
And then you'll see that they'll start to do stuff.
But I think you have to schedule it the same way adults
now have to schedule activity.
So is that what you do now?
Is that what I have to do?
Because I think you have a better representation for me.
I mean, I think it's a positive thing,
Justin, by the way, too, is a nice slide at you.
I think it's amazing that you do that,
and I think you've fostered that,
and I think your kids are gonna have those good habits
because you've done such a good job.
I worry about myself because I'm less like you in that area,
and I know I have to model that behavior for my son,
and I do like to relax and sit in the house,
and I'll watch a movie or do something like that.
I'm less likely to be more physical and go out.
It doesn't happen.
Like, think about all the things in your life
that used to happen on their own.
Like before you had kids, you know, when you're married.
Like, oh yeah, we just have spontaneous sex
and we just go out to dinner.
And when you have kids all of a sudden,
none of that happens because your schedule's busy.
So you have to literally,
when people will tell you,
schedule dinners in date nights
and you think, oh, that's ridiculous.
We used to never have to do that.
Well, yeah, you're busy, you're schedule,
your schedule's different now.
Kids now don't spontaneously go and play outside
because no one's outside.
Imagine if you were a kid right now.
I want to go outside and play, you go outside,
you're by yourself.
There's no other kids out there,
no neighborhood kids playing.
So I think you have to literally schedule
or it's an activity.
Yeah, if you change it.
To your point of that, I mean, like the hard labor that we used to have to do for jobs, literally schedule, sports and activities. Yeah, everything's changed. That's just it.
To your point of that, I mean, like the hard labor that we used to have to do for jobs,
it's like we had to recreate that in the gym setting in order to be able to kind of keep
your body, keep it upkeep.
And I think that we don't consider kids as much because they seem to have all this like
boundless energy, but now they're drawn to these electronics.
They're drawn to just kind of hanging out.
And like you said, they communicate all day with their friends on there.
And so it's like, where's the incentive for them to run out and do physical activities?
That's where you see and hang out with your friend.
My grandfather to this day makes fun of me for working out in a gym.
He thinks it's the funniest thing.
You go, you go, you go somewhere to lift heavy things.
You go, I used to lift rocks like we could for work.
So it's weird because I have to schedule work out.
Think about art lives.
How much activity do you guys do outside of your scheduled
exercise, right?
So I think you just have to do the same thing with the kids.
And we're just in that generation now
that has to figure that out.
Well, I guess I'm personally or selfishly curious about you guys
because you guys are so much further ahead than I am.
I know what I'm doing right now, right?
So what I'm doing right now,
was a Sunday was an example that obviously Saturday I was
at a friend's house pool swimming active no television,
no iPad or anything.
So that's easy, whatever, but that's the one off.
But Sunday we came back home and Sunday I even personally was like, oh tired, We went somewhere. I was in the sun all day last two days at a pool
So what that maybe I'll just lay around and our Sunday morning we get up
You know cartoons came on first thing in the morning and I kind of snapped myself out of it and said you know
I there's I the stuff I want to do I wanted to get the cars washed
I wanted a meal prep for the day. I want to make sure I got a training session in. And so I need to do this and then instantly took Max with me
to do all those things, right?
So, yeah, so he literally washed the cars with me.
He did the laundry with me.
He helped meal prep with me.
And so all day we were physical and doing those things.
What's great, and I'm lucky right now
to face his act, because he's not at your guys' kids age,
which they may look at you like,
F you dad, I'm kidding.
To wash your car today, you know, this is child labor,
you know, to get to the table.
Where my son is, so he's so young that he's just so excited.
It's fun.
Yeah, it's very fun.
So I guess I have figured it out for this phase
on how to do that and how to make it work.
And it got, he's so cool to watch.
We did laundry together.
And I told you guys before, it's like, you know,
one at a time.
And he's so funny, dude,
because he's starting to talk more and more
and we're at this new phase where the last phase
we just came out of was, you know,
the words are coming out like crazy.
He's repeating almost anything I say.
But now he's saying things that I didn't even know
he knew or he knew.
That's fun, I love it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like he dropped something, he drops something,
he goes, oh, dropped it.
And I went, without me saying it first,
which that's what's happening right now,
which is really, really cute to watch him.
I love that.
Watch him do that.
I love that so much.
No, it's not climate change though. I'll be honest.
No.
Of all the things, you know, by the way, how many, do you think there's some people that
are buying in that?
Of course.
You know what?
Okay.
Here's how you know, this is what I hate the most, right?
That, and what they're doing is actually hurting the cause.
The cause.
Yes.
Because most people look at that and go, that's ridiculous.
And then what you want to extrapolate is, it's all political and spoolship.
Yeah. But it's like, no, what they're doing. Yes, there is there is political power behind any
Issue and that's what's happening what they're trying to do is make a case so that they could push you in a particular direction and everybody scared now of
Climate change did you hear what it's doing to kids see it's making them fat?
It's like what else can we throw out there make no Susan you buying chips for your kids every day and letting watch TV and play
with you. You're kidding me. You're kidding fat. I'm kidding excuse. I've got I
have got a kid's story for you guys. Okay so I'm with my I went over and visited
my best friends and their kids. They're a little bit ahead always than I am
right and one of our favorite things to do is you know this is I guess of at this phase that we're in our life for a season, we're at, you know, kids finally all go down,
we put them all asleep, and then the adults get to stay up late and kind of talk. And of
course, what do we have? Talk about the kids and crazy stories. And my buddy shares this,
he goes, you know, he's, because again, he's a little bit ahead of me. He goes, whoa,
man, I got my first my first learning curve on arcades
because I was sharing with him how I took Maxi arcade
and like, he was on the motorcycle.
I was like, oh, I saw the video.
Yeah, yeah, and he was like loving that whole experience, right?
So that was a absolute, absolute bass.
And he's like, blast.
He's like, oh, let me tell you my learning experience
with arcades.
So you know the game, you guys, at every arcade has this
and pizza parlor with the claw.
It comes down and never wins the game.
So listen to this shit.
So he takes his boy to go, as he wants the kid wants to do it, right?
So okay, he does it.
He wins the first try.
He goes, this was the worst thing I ever did.
I was winning.
I can.
So then every time they go to the arcade, he wants to go play that and then he fucking flips out when they don't win
He's been with both mom and dad
He's been with his mom is mom's time and Intel story Janice tell a story and she's like oh my god
She goes anytime we see that thing he wants to do it and then when I fail and I can't get it
He cries says daddy. You do it daddy can do it. You're not buying a stuffed animal for $150.
I think you put the money in. I'm like, one of the chances, the first time you do that
game with your little three year old that he sees you win. I will. He thinks you're
supposed to win. I wonder the statistics on like, you know, gamblers that like become
addicts. Like if they won the very first time and then
they're just, I bet you that is that way. I can tell you that I've had experiences like
that, like the first time I've learned, learned certain gambling games and I actually was successful.
Those are the ones I'm my favorite. It's crazy. I mean, I'm an adult in that imprint.
So imagine when you're a child and you don't understand more. It's powerful. That's so cool. I die laughing because I would, I would even thought of like,
that's the worst, but I will, no,
I will intentionally lose the first time on purpose
if I ever do that game with him
because I don't want him to think that we win every time.
I was a hero once because we went to,
we were at a carnival and there was like,
you had to throw the ring on the bottle
and they had this huge stuffed animal pig and my daughter was like,
I want that.
I want she was like six.
I want that.
I want that.
I said, nobody ever wins and I try to explain to her.
They really grease the, it's just, there's a lot of tricks.
Yeah.
And I'm like, to nobody ever wins.
Ships are like a little oval that I've ever.
And then the shapes are off.
No, but I undersold it so hard.
Finally, she's like, please, but I want to say fine.
And I won it.
I was a hero.
Wow. Oh yeah, walking around as big as pig, you know, my daughter's off. You know, that's what they do, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That's fine. And I won it. I was a hero. Wow.
Oh yeah, walking around as big as pig, you know, my dogs.
You know, that's what they do with the basketball hoops, right?
They bend them.
Make a baller.
Yeah, they bend them.
So they're more like an old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, old, Then the ones where you throw the ball in the basket looks like a softball in the basket. Yeah, yeah, okay
You ever do it and it always bounces out. Yeah, yeah, and then the guy shows you that he can do it every time
Yeah, like the guy operating. You know what the trick is what okay the back of it the back of the basket is springy
So you'll throw yours in it always bounces out
So what he'll do is you'll take the one that bounced out, he'll put it in there, be
like watch it's easy and then throw his in there.
And what happens is it hits your ball that was in there, doesn't bounce out.
Actually watch the video.
Wow.
Really?
Explain that again.
So you're trying to throw the ball in the basket.
Yeah.
Always bounce it out.
It's always a big ass prize.
So it's the ball that's bouncing?
No, it's the back of the basket.
So then what he does is you try to throw it in and then he'll pick your ball up, put it back in there
and be like, watch, it's easy.
Then he stands back, but the reason why it doesn't bounce out
is because he put your ball in there first.
Because the ball, oh, I still hit shit.
So it hits your ball, goes into the spring.
I watch the whole video.
Wow.
So I call the guy out after doing that.
So he shows me and he goes, wow, that's cool.
I said, leave the ball in there and I'll do it again.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Oh, no. cool. I said, leave the ball in there and I'll do it again. Oh, 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, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, you get like the perfect throw Yeah, but for the most part like they'll reform and like ballots and and you know not fall off
What's the history of the current trick like where did it like and they're all manipulative like that?
You're so to make you lose of course 80% of the time for all say wouldn't have any make
Brothers, so from I don't know if this is true
Okay, so this is all this is all what I heard so remember I'm a 90s kid
We heard a lot of shit that we think is true, but I heard that they take these people
who are at risk or drug addicts or whatever,
and then they give them jobs, and then they travel around,
and apparently it helps them because they have a job.
I don't know, that's what I heard.
But I believe it,
because so they can just swindle everybody.
No, I don't know.
But where did that, like the hustle?
Was it always like this this carnival hustle
where there was somebody who was doing it
and they manipulated the game from the very beginning?
Yeah, so because they traveled,
but no, I don't know if they, if they're as bad as they used to be,
but because they traveled for town to town,
remember this before internet and stuff,
they could rip you off.
It's like snake whale salesman.
Yeah, they would rip you off and then go to the next town.
Yep, and then everybody got ripped off of them.
You get all mad, but then you're out.
Yeah, the next town doesn't know about that. It's the same them. You get all mad, but then you're out. Yeah.
The next town doesn't know about that.
It's the same thing with that like a cup game in the ball
where they like hide the ball.
Yeah.
And like they're really good at that like on the street
and they just hustle everybody's money.
Yeah.
Dude, I take, oh, I didn't tell you guys.
I got punk so hard this morning.
By who?
Hard, bro.
Three old Russian men.
The punk, the shit out of me.
Lifting?
No.
And the steam room again.
Oh, the steam room. So I'm working out this morning
steam room chronic. I love it and I'm just ego this morning, right?
I'm lifting heavy. It's like raw I feel like an animal. I go in the steam room in this three old Russian dudes walk in and
They're like do you mind if I make it hotter? I say yeah, go ahead say throw the water on the steam
It's like the guy goes you have big muscles. So yeah. Oh, thank you. How long you been working out? So we talk for a second He goes you mind if I add more? So yeah, go ahead throws more water on the steam, and the guy goes, you have big muscles. So yeah, thank you. He's, how long have you been working out?
So we talk for a second.
He goes, you mind if I add more?
So yeah, go ahead, throw the more water on.
So now I'm audibly breathing.
Whew.
He hears me.
And then they start speaking Russian, and he starts laughing.
And he goes, you have big muscles.
That's why you cannot last.
Is it what?
I said, you say I can't last?
He goes, ha, ha, ha.
He goes, I add more.
I said, okay, this fucker added water.
As soon as the steam's done, adds more water.
So it's just constant steam in that freaking room.
Bacon like a crab.
Baking, baking in there.
And I'm like, I can't bro.
They were laughing the whole time.
He goes, you were like, and I'm like,
I can't, I can't add my eyes closed.
I can't open my eyes.
I know it's hot.
I can't open my eyes dude.
Yeah, I know I have the talent for my face. And I'm talking to him, I'm like,. I know it's hot. I can't. I know I have the
talent for my face. And I'm talking to him like, no, like this is too
hot. I'm like, how are you guys doing this? And he goes, you
would like a sports car. And I'm like, what? And he goes, always in
the shop, always broken. He goes, you got you got you got the
practice word I walked out. Like, these people, they were laughing
in their speaking Russian. You know, the hack is you know, the
hack is to put the towel over the head right yeah, so that's the hack
So your eyes my my so you're so part of what gives you that like I got to get out of here
Oh, you're yeah your head heats up so hot and the brain says get fuck out of here
I'm gonna do that next so you put a towel over and just that the temperature of keeping the head down by like 10 degrees
You can push away. That makes a lot of sense. Yeah
So this is on a hack for you. Yeah, yeah, so you can put this.
So this is a sauna hack for you.
So you were spot yours talking about these games and gambling.
So I was in a talk, Tahoe on the Nevada side.
I went there with my cousins and my buddies.
So by the way, I haven't hung out with those guys
like all together for at least,
I want to say eight years maybe.
I didn't realize it was a guy's trip.
I thought it was a family thing you're doing.
No, and they go every year, every other year,
and I always don't go.
So they call me Santa Claus,
because they never come out.
You only come out once a year,
like Santa Claus or whatever.
So I haven't gone a long time.
So I finally went and I'm just too old for that, dude.
I'm just way, bro, midnight hits,
and I'm like planning my escape.
Like I gotta go to bed, dude.
These guys were drinking and just up and gambling.
I'm like, I can't do this.
Which is crazy, because some of them have newborns too, right?
Some of them have, yeah.
I don't know how they, their brother was there, right?
Everybody.
They were just going and I'm like, tired, you know,
10, literally, by 10.30.
I'm looking at my watch.
I'm like, I'm gonna be gone about 30 minutes.
I'm about to smoke bomb this day.
And they know too, I got to go bathroom real quick guys.
You better come back, Sal.
We know you're gonna leave.
I gotta go.
It's like you have the perfect amount of drinks,
like you know, I gotta have a great time.
Yeah, then there's like, dude, have more.
I'm like, no.
I had that argument.
I had that argument with him.
Come on, do a shot.
A shot?
I'm like, I'm 43, bro, I'm just a shot.
Like, I know.
There's no need to ever do a shot.
I'm like, I know just how much alcohol I need all right, dude
I don't want to go more than that. Yeah, but I can't hang dude. Those guys were all night up and you know two o'clock three
I'm like, yeah, well, they must not like have any release, you know
Like it's like the one time to get out of the house and it's like
Maybe I don't know what I was done dude done. I got fried next day wake up. Oh, I'm so tired. What do you do for the hangovers right now?
Oh, so uh, no, you know what saved my ass over there,
was the green juice.
So I did, I did, I did, I did, I did, I did,
during the day because obviously we're in garbage all day long.
And then the red juice, I would have
with a little bit of caffeine and I did some pure in the day.
So during the day I had my, I'd bring a water bottle like we,
okay, so we rented a boat.
Yeah.
And we were out on the lake, which is just spectacular.
Yeah.
Just one of the most beautiful places in the world.
And I was drinking the green juice mixed with pure during the day while we were also.
These guys are all drinking and then you're over there.
You're green juice.
I have my water bottle.
What's in your water bottle?
I just water.
I don't know.
Just water guys.
I'm optimizing right now.
Yeah, but it was, it was gorgeous out there. What a beautiful. How's it weather? I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. which makes me laugh because I'm like you're a bunch of grown man You're gonna sleep on the couch what are you guys doing?
But a bunch of them slept at my cousin's house and then me and my cousin and my buddy
Got some rooms over at was a Harvey's
You were in the casino and then oh you'll be proud of me, bro. Yeah, so you guys know how I never gamble
I'm like gambling. Yeah, so my buddy air you be proud of me bro. I gambled. Yeah
I did your generosity. Yeah, no, no my buddy Erick you'd be proud of me bro. I gambled yeah, I did your generosity
Yeah, no, no my buddy Eric he he plays crap and so and you know, you know
What I've always told you's that I just it looks so complicated. There's so many things on the table
Yeah, I know the gist. You learn how to play so I watch for an hour and while he's playing he's explaining to me
Why why the odds how you bet here why they bet there. I'm like, what's happening over here?
What's happening over here?
So after about an hour and a half, I said, I think I kind of get it.
And I could see how, perhaps actually you get slight odds or in favor of the player.
If you know, like how to play, right?
Well, they're not in favor of the player, but the closest is splitting a 50-50 house odds
is any other game that it's like the best.
Yeah, and he was telling me, and he was telling me, play the odds50 house odds is any other game that it's like the best.
Yeah, and he was telling me, play the odds.
Don't play with your emotions.
That's right.
Yeah.
And he goes and come up with a system.
How much are you going to bet?
Play the odds and stick to it.
So that's what I did, and I won.
I literally won.
That's how I got you asked earlier.
Exactly how I got hooked is I finally learned how to play.
Understood the odds.
Had a system.
Played the system. And one really big the first time and like after that
I was that was done. Oh yeah, I was $700. Oh yeah, 700 bucks. Yeah, yeah, it was about three hours. I know I love the game. I know
I was like, dude, not to mention so the real reason why I switched I used to be a big poker player and
Cassinos don't give you any comps for poker because you're playing players.
Oh.
So you're not really playing the house odd.
They don't win hardly.
They make like they're they make a little bit of the what you call I forget what you call
it.
Every time the dealer scrapes his his couple bucks for every pot or what that but they make
no money off a poker.
So they don't want you playing poker.
They want you playing.
Sloters long right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I get to get $ dollars and play for eight hours
Yeah, poker if you're a good poker player you could do that
So yeah, the casinos don't want you playing that they want you doing slots, which is the fast so slots pay out the best
Crap's pays out really well as the second best what's that one game?
Buck Kai Bao Bao. Oh, hi gal. Hi gal. That one's supposed to have good at well
Well, you push a lot so it's like I play that game so I can get drinks for free.
I hack the system.
I'm here for the drinks.
Yeah, I'm here for the drinks.
You know what I noticed is,
I noticed the amount of superstition
with craps playing.
Oh, I'm very much so that way.
Oh, of course.
So first of all, there was one guy that was rolling
and that's where I was making my money
because I would bet that,
I don't know what it's called,
where you could bet like, oh, he's gonna hit an eight at some
point and you let your money ride and all this stuff, right?
But every time he would get the die, he touched them a particular way.
Then he grabbed them and threw them.
Then my buddy's gonna roll and his superstition is so obvious.
I was almost embarrassed because like, bro, come on, stop doing that.
But everybody does it.
He gets the dice and then he does this with his finger.
He rolls it around until it's on a six and then he rolls the other around thing? It's spiritual, dude. I have to stand up. I have to stand at a certain part of the table.
It has to be a three-two stack.
I rub the table one time.
I grab two dyes.
I rub the table.
That's right.
He's 10%.
100%.
I have a...
Hey, it is just like that.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I It has to be a three to stack. I rub the table one time. I grab two dyes. I rub the table.
I try.
100%.
I have a,
hey, it is just like it.
So by the way, you can look this up too.
Like, so the, the, well, guys that really,
like pay attention to this stuff are,
like some people just kind of see what others are doing
and then they create their own thing, whatever.
But the idea is actually to try and get the dice
to roll the least.
It increases your, your odds. So the more the dice go bounce on all the points, which is why they try and get the dice to roll the least, increases your odds.
So the more the dice go bounce in all other places,
which is why they make you hit the back.
They want you to hit the back so it kicks off
and throws even more rolls.
So when I'm tossing, I'm tossing and I'm trying to land
right before that, so to minimize the amount of rolls,
so you have more control of the dice and consistency.
So that's all you try to do is
to create consistency. Is that really work? Yeah, of course. Of course. Yeah. Is it science?
I'm not even saying that. No, of course. No, there's that. Look at, look it up. I feel like
it's bolstered. No, no, not at all. I mean, it's like, so just like a batter, just like a batter gets
up before it goes to any, it takes its cleats, any, does this whole routine or anything.
It's to get into flow and to get in rhythm.
You're the idea of the sequence of all that stuff
you're doing, everyone being different,
is to get in the flow of the toss,
so the toss is consistent.
So if you're, if you bat and you're trying to avoid a one in 11,
so if you hit a seven, you want to mimic that exact throw.
Do you always have the same number?
Three two, three two, three two, three two, yeah.
See, my buddy was six six.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And everybody has to, and again, the point is,
cause in Craps, you don't want one in a left,
or excuse me, seven, seven, one or 11
when he first come out will pay you,
but you don't want a seven and crap out, right?
So I just want to not roll a seven.
So it's like whatever order your dice are
that you find, when I throw consistent, I don't hit a seven for a long time. So order your dice are that you find, when I throw
consistent, I don't hit a seven for a long time. So that's the idea is that you're trying
to... So I broke a couple cardinal rules because I didn't realize it was so superstitious.
One of what is that say right there? It seems that there is some type of technique to
it. Absolutely. It's a physical skill which requires hours of practice.
I believe so the times arrive one big and I've been really,
really hot and I've rolled the dice for half hour,
45 minutes, which is you're going to make.
If you're betting correctly, odds like you're saying in a system,
if all you have to do is roll for 10, 15 minutes,
you roll for 30, 45 minutes and you,
you could make thousands of dollars because you're,
or if anybody else rolls for 30, that's all I need is a rotation table,
one person to roll for like 15 minutes,
I always recoup my money back.
And if someone rolls for 30 or 45, I'm making big money.
So, and that's what you're looking for.
So I made two mistakes.
One was a casino mistake.
I took my phone out
because I was gonna take a picture of my chips
to send to Jessica. And they're not allowed to take a picture of my chips to send to Jessica.
And they're not allowed to take a picture at all.
Oh, okay, because of cheating or something, whatever.
So then I made a mistake that's more of a superstition mistake.
So I'm asking my buddy questions while we're playing.
And the guy's about to throw.
And I'm like, so you don't want him to throw a snake eyes
and he looks at me and he's like, don't fucking say.
Don't say it, as you go to throw. You don't say it out loud. Well and he looks at me like don't fucking say yeah
Well the dirty looks I got it. It's like don't hit the golf ball in the water People look at me like he said the word
Or your hands hanging over why someone's you probably saw someone do that right when someone's on the dice
There's always that one guy's got his hands. They're like hanging in the pit or what like that?
It's like to get your hands intimidating, bro?
Yeah.
We were earlier talking about like tricks and stuff.
Like, so I found out that, you know,
in Michael Jackson's smooth criminal video
where he like leans really far over.
And it's like crazy.
It looks like he's on strings or something.
Test him.
Well, I guess that he actually had shoes
that besides they're like reinforced on the inside,
but on the bottom of the heel, elevated, had a hook.
Oh, so stuck to the floor.
It had a metal hook and they had a rod
that came up from the ground and he slid his heel on there.
And so that way it allowed him to then push his toes
to the front, no way.
And lean like crazy.
So he cheated. Yeah.
He cheated.
Wow.
But it was a great illusion.
Did you know that the didn't know that?
Did you know that dinosaurs and Jurassic Park are not real?
Stupid.
I'm just kidding.
Of course they cheated bro.
Everything else.
Everything else.
Did you see the list?
They dug right up on all the dice.
Yeah.
All the strategies and the rules and all that stuff.
I think those are written by casinos.
Yeah. You know what I mean those are written by casinos.
You know what I mean to make you want to play.
You know what I'm saying?
Right, yeah.
Throw them like, yeah.
They're awesome.
They're all packed the casinos.
You don't want you not to know.
You know what I'm saying?
You want to talk about some other gambling, okay?
Metaverse, buying real estate in the Metaverse.
Let's talk about this.
Buying real estate in the Metaverse in November,
okay, not even a year ago.
So like, what is that eight months ago or whatever?
Eight, 10 months ago?
The, there was $62 million a month
in metaverse real estate transactions in November.
This past month, it just registered at 600,000.
So down 99% traction.
So what you'reaction is buying fake property
In great investment. Yeah property where there's a limitless supply of real estate. Yeah, it's not a good idea
We heard who to say you know what well if you were somebody who bought in January of last year
You were four and then sold in November. I think that's the ticket.
I think right now the ticket is when they come up with something like this, think to yourself,
I wonder how many morons are gonna jump on this, and that's when you're about to.
If you know that a lot of morons are in, you gotta get it.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaking of morons, speaking of morons, you know what I love more than anything?
You go sales and I talk right now.
So here we go.
I love it.
I love it. I love it. Again, I love it. When we say
something and we get, you know, a lot of people counter us and
ridicule us for years. And we say, no, we stick to our guns. This
is true. This is what happens is what we experience. We train
lots of people. This is the truth. Yeah. And then studies come
out and say, Oh, yeah, you guys are right. Guess what?
Guess what? Another study came about the frequency thing
That's right. That is right. So study came out really good studies showing that
training muscle groups
five days a week
Produced better gains than training muscle groups two days a week with the everything being controlled in other words all things being equal
Volume everything being controlled. In other words, all things being equal, volume,
everything being equal, five more frequency builds more muscle, which is, look, if anybody
who has maps at a ball, or maps aesthetic, this is, those programs are based off that.
Maps at a ball, three full body workouts a day, but you also do trigger sessions on the
off days, which really is about that frequency. Maps aesthetic, you do focus sessions, which is about frequency.
And people always tell us, you don't need to do that.
Study show two days a week is all you need.
Anything more than that.
And we're like, no, it doesn't work that way.
We've experienced this counter study that we recently recently.
Just recent.
Yeah, about there being no difference between like a few days versus.
You know what the problem with that is, if you're hitting chest twice a week hard,
and then another body,
and then another article is showing that you're hitting,
you know, same volume equated, more or whatever,
a lot of compound lifts work a lot of muscle groups.
So it's hard to say,
well, the biceps here that work in twice a week,
be able to also work in them
another couple days a week with back.
So that's where it gets a little iffy. Frequency works every time, I'm not going to be able to do that. I'm not going to be able to do that. I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
I'm not going to be able to do that. I'm not going to be able to do that. three sets a day after, that 24 hour period is like a long rest period and then you're training that body part again.
So it's not enough to be more of a recovery, but rather like
a long rest period and your adaptation signal is what's
really taking over versus not healing, not to mention you
have to factor in skill acquisition. And we know the biggest
thing. And we know this and this isn't debated at all in
sports. Yeah. Getting good at a sport this isn't debated at all in sports.
Getting good at a sport or getting good.
Yeah, getting good.
Anybody would tell you like,
hey, you want to get really good at swinging a golf club.
Should I practice two times a week every week for four hours
or should you go every day for an hour?
Yes.
Like everybody would be unanimous.
Everybody would be like, oh, for sure.
Practicing this year's swing every day for an hour
and golf would be much better for you. The irony in that when it comes to, when
it comes to building muscle, there's this huge debate because of recovery time and the other
thing and your intensity and all that. Yeah, the Soviets, you know, prove that already with
the way that they train their Olympic athletes. Listen, the best studies on strength come from sports
that are highly regulated and where there's lots of and where the results are objective.
Bodybuilding, there's a lot of truths that come at a bodybuilding, but bodybuilding is not
an objective sport.
You win or lose based on how you look, Olympic lifting, powerlifting, it's who lifts the
most weight.
It doesn't matter, who lifts the most.
So their training is so scientific, especially Olympic lifting because you had
whole nations in countries competing on a world stage, especially during the Cold War
when if you won more gold medals, it was your way of showing that your political system
was superior.
It was like a bragging rights.
So Soviet Union spent a lot of money, a lot of science on figuring out how to make their
athletes the strongest.
And they kicked ass doing this for a long time.
When the iron curtain came down,
the lot of the coaches came here.
We started kicking ass.
But frequency man, so you're better off doing,
instead of doing like three hours of workouts
and two workouts or three workouts,
you're probably better off doing 30 minutes a day
where you hit everything, but less,
but so the volume is the same, same total set, same volume.
It's just more frequent.
And I look, I know this, if I want to get good at something or strong at something, that's
exactly what I do.
The biggest challenge I think with that is knowing how to modify intensity.
And it, and it, it, it's really tough because we've, we've promoted this like beast mode
and crush it.
And like these, this like intensity model of
Intensity is what promotes this this growth so much that when people hear these frequency studies that come out go
Oh, okay, I need to train more frequently and I can build more muscle
I know the they think it's got to be they're gonna be it just as exhausted with all those right
That's right, and so it's really hard. And I've challenged with this.
And I know better.
I've read the studies.
I understand the science.
I know what I need to do.
And Tensuyo, yet I still fall into that trap
of being in the workout and being like,
I don't really feel it that much.
I need to get it a little bit more.
Let me do another set.
You know, let me stack a little bit more weight on,
okay, yeah, now I feel the burn.
But then I got to remember,
I can come back tomorrow or the next day and do this again.
And if I'm really sore going into that again,
I'm not allowing my body to fully recover
and I'm over applying intensity.
So what I, and so it requires you to be able to do this
lift and go like, I kind of feel like I worked out a bit
and then the next day be like, oh, maybe I feel my chest,
I'm not sure, but it's okay because you're training it
so frequently, you want to be more like that than you want to feel like, oh, chest, I'm not sure. But it's okay, because you're training it so frequently,
you wanna be more like that,
that you wanna feel like, oh shit, I had just just been there.
Intensity, that's a variable, it's a factor in training.
It's an important one, I'm not saying it's not important.
But just like sets and reps and tempo,
you got to manipulate it and you can overdo it.
You can rely, and intensity in the fitness space is it. You can rely and intensity in the fitness space
is oversold.
Intensities, everything in the fitness space.
That's false.
It's a factor, but it's not the only factor.
And you have to, the intensity is important
when you manipulate it.
Not when it's high all the time.
When it's high all the time, inappropriately high all the time.
You're gonna get fry yourself.
Your body just doesn't progress.
I learned this look, you know,
everybody knows the story, right, with maps and a ball.
What I observed in my blue collar family was that the body parts
that they had that correlated to their work,
like the plumbers and the mechanics,
they're not cranking on shit to failure every day.
They do this stuff, you know, 10 hours a day,
every single day for 30 years.
So it's like this mild kind of low,
but it's like so frequent.
All these people in my family
met huge muscular forums, everything else to look whatever,
huge muscle forums, or the male carriers of my family.
Big old like ripped, defined calves.
Why, because they're walking all day long.
So intensity is great, but use it right.
Frequency is also great.
Use it right, so as volume, so as tempo,
so as all these different things. You put the right pieces together and what you end up with
is phenomenal results, but it's not just about intensity and hate the fact that we glorify that.
So damn much. It causes a lot of people problems. It really does.
You guys see Viori running our ad?
Oh yeah. This is our first time we've, okay, so for people that see,
that potentially see this, and this is a new thing
that we're allowed, and I believe we allowed Viori,
and I want to say organifier, the only two companies
were allowed into this, but they're basically,
they use our pixel, and they go in,
and then pay for advertising for their company.
So they're, we talk about it on the show,
they like what we said, that becomes their ad.
Yeah. I know, that's kind of cool. Yeah, yeah, but it on the show. They like what we said that becomes their ad. Yeah, I know
It's kind of cool. Yeah, yeah, and it's but it's coming. It looks like it's coming completely from us
So we're not we're actually not paying for that advertising
They're paying for that advertising, but they're using our our brand our message to I actually got compliments this weekend on
What I what I had on people were my cousins complimented on it and then actually some random persons like hey
Would you get that sure it's really cool? Yeah, oh your in my cousin makes a joke. Yeah code mine pump or whatever
I could see I should have did I make the mistakes sometimes of like reading comments or whatever
It's just kind of funny. Oh, I was making some dudes uncomfortable because I slapped my ass and that
Question them. Yeah, exactly. I was like wow you kind of shit. The question themselves. Yeah, exactly.
I was like, well, you got some things to work through, guys.
Yeah.
You know, I read less.
They did look good, though.
Oh, where are you guys at?
Yeah, it looks so good.
It makes you question your actuality.
Where are you guys at with the comment reading?
It's about that.
I've, there's comments and then DMs.
I just, I don't read very much more.
Yeah, if it's at all negative
It's like okay, you're dealing with some shit. Well, it's inevitable. You're gonna get negative
Well, so like that's how that's the size of the show now is reaching enough people that I don't care how fucking perfectly
Somebody's gonna be up there's no changing minds anymore. I can always I can always tell when someone didn't listen to the show
So they'll they'll read the headline on like a clip.
Yeah, and then they'll say something that we'd said
in the show.
And so then I'll put underneath, you know,
if I have the time, like, well, actually,
we just caught him at a certain point of the day
where they're just all frustrated.
Speaking of comments, I saw a couple comments.
So a lot of people don't know this, right?
If you're not in the podcasting space,
there's hosting companies where we upload our podcasts,
and then that company puts it out to like iTunes
and you know, all these different podcast apps or whatever,
and they are putting together now where they're,
you know, piloting where they can put an ad in the beginning
and at the end, like YouTube does.
Like if you watch YouTube,
unless you pay for the premium service,
YouTube will play ads, right?
And you don't control the ads, it's YouTube's ads.
Well, we have V Shreds on our YouTube.
Yeah, somebody, we get companies sick.
Oh my God.
No, I got a message from someone who are like,
Why are you guys promoting McDonald's?
Am I flat?
I'm not promoting McDonald's.
I'm not promoting McDonald's.
Well, there's a commercial for McDonald's,
like, was it me talking?
Yeah, me bro.
Yeah, we did it. That's the company. I said, I'm sure at some point, like listen, wasn't me talking? You have me bro. Yeah, we know that.
That's the company.
I said, I'm sure at some point you'll be able to pay
for premium service for a while.
I'm not sure that adds to the wealth.
Yeah, I saw a couple of people,
I saw a couple of people annoyed by that.
And I said, you know, I'm sure that you could see.
You could pass forward by that.
Well, yeah, and also, I mean, it's 30 seconds, right?
And I also think that that's exactly right.
I think Lipson is, this is the beginning phase.
So okay, we have a little bit of a growing phase
everybody has to go through until they have the option
to probably pay.
Yeah.
And then you'll,
because Spotify has that right there.
So does YouTube.
Yeah.
YouTube has that too.
You can pay them now.
Every platform has a,
yeah, the expectation that hasn't been.
So I get it.
Right, they hadn't had the Lipson,
which is one of the largest hosting platforms.
Just didn't do it before.
And they're probably big enough. and they see an opportunity to make a
Tremendous amount of money by doing it. So I totally think that that's the one. I think it's here's why it's a good thing
Here's what I need because I had this conversation with my cousin because we're you know
At the night, you know we're in the hotel room and I put the TV on and I never watch
Regular TV anymore. So the commercials come on, right?
And I'm like, bro, how weird is it to watch TV with commercial breaks?
It's so weird, right?
And he goes, yeah, I was watching TV.
He went on vacation with his kids and commercials came on the kids.
They're like, fast forward dad and he's like, we can't.
This is how it is.
You got to watch the commercial.
I'm like, man, we're spoiled.
And I said, you know, what's cool about this is that we have what these services are doing
is they're allowing you to use their great services
for free and the ads that they put are short.
Like when we were kids, you had to watch commercial
for two minutes every freaking seven minutes of TV.
Not just two minutes.
Each individual commercial is two minutes.
You remember in our TV time,
most television shows
were like actually like 15 minutes long,
and then the...
15 minutes commercial.
15 minutes of commercials broken up every 10 minutes.
You had to...
And I told, and I'm like, you know, it's crazy,
is that they've all these free options,
where you pay nothing, you get a little bit of commercials,
I said, but then they also offer you an option
where you pay a fee, and then you get rid of them.
This is really cool because it's opening up services for everybody.
You pay nothing or you pay a little bit and you don't get commercials.
Yeah, I think it's really cool.
I think it's a great thing.
No, no, no.
I absolutely think it's absolutely brilliant.
You know, speaking of services like that, streaming services, you know something that I predicted
that happened faster than I thought was going to happen happen. But with Disney and Netflix streaming, guess who has more streaming subscriptions?
Disney. Disney is now past. surpassed them. That's right. Was that just everybody
that got rid of it and jumped back on? No, I don't know. It's total. Total subscriptions
streaming services. So yeah, it's not like they had a bigger, bigger month. Now when you
subscribe to Disney Plus, it's just their they had a bigger month. Now when you subscribe to Disney Plus,
it's just their content.
There's no additional anything, right?
I'm trying to think right now.
What do you mean?
It's just theirs.
Amazon Prime right.
Yeah, right.
Although they have, they have the bundles
because they own Hulu and they own National Geographic.
Yes, too.
So what you pay for like the most premium Netflix,
if you pay the most premium Disney,
you're getting like Hulu, Disney,
oh really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Wow, so they're beating already?
Yeah, yeah, maybe Doug could look it up
to give me the exact numbers,
but I read this morning,
this morning, or you're saying morning,
that they just passed them up officially.
Wow.
I don't know.
Wow.
That was quick, dude.
Netflix was like the King of subscriptions.
Like it's competitive market.
That's it, we're gonna see more of this kind of stuff.
Well, what I liked about it is that,
I mean, why I thought it would back then
and is that it's better quality.
Yeah, Netflix is like fast food.
Fast food, yeah.
I mean, Netflix no doubt has got a huge variety
and they put out a lot of content.
But.
Wow, 221 million total subscriptions
across all of its offerings.
That's crazy. Netflix is 220. Yeah, just like they're almost identical, but still they
were they started way late way, way, way, way behind when I brought that up not even a
year ago, they were a legacy, you know, come by the way, have you watched old cartoons on
Disney Plus yet? Like the ones we grew up? You guys know the warnings in the front?
Yeah, yeah.
It's like this depicts whatever, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And I'm like, so I hadn't seen Pinocchio.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
A long time.
Pinocchio is like, that's an old one.
Narly.
I hadn't watched it a long time.
I'm like, oh, and my son sat next to me and you know,
he got Jessica's permission to watch TV
because she's super like anti TV.
I'm like, honey, can I watch it?
Yeah, okay, fine.
So I put it on.
And we put it on and then the warnings come up, right?
And I'm like, oh, okay, who gives a shit?
That's a terrifying cartoon.
What was the last time you watched Pinocchio?
Oh, yeah.
My son was like, I haven't watched it for a pleasure island.
These poor kids being turned into donkeys.
Yeah.
All kinds of weird, the guy kidnapping Pinocchio.
By the way, the worst stereotype of an Italian person
I've ever seen in my entire life.
Also played a huge role in that generation.
Kids being toughest nails.
Yeah, it's gonna shed you, it's gonna shed you.
But that, but that, but that,
it's gonna go to Pleasure Island.
What year is Pinocchio?
That's like 60s or four.
No, wait, earlier the 60s.
Oh yeah, it's one of the oldest ones.
I know it's up there with the,
the Italian guy that kidnapped him. Bro, it's the worst, it's the most racist. Okay know it's up there, but the Italian guy that kidnapped them bro
It's the worst it's the most racist. Okay. I got to watch you
First of all 1940 1940 wow the so this guy who runs the carnival this Italian guy, right?
He gets mad and he babbles in a time. It's not even a time. They just made up a bunch of words
Yeah, I'm on a minute. I'm on a minute. Wow
You guys even use real Italian
This is ridiculous dude. You know what use real Italian, bro. Awesome.
This is ridiculous.
Dude, you know what else?
It's like Snow White was like,
this is back, you know, and that time
was redone with Betty Boop,
and it was like the creepiest version of Snow White.
You've ever seen, yeah,
it had like these ghosts doing things like,
it was like, I was like, wow, no wonder.
Like everything was like terrifying as a kid.
Bro, the way that they used to teach kids back in the day.
1933 dude.
Wow.
That's the Betty Boop wonder.
Yeah.
The way that they used to teach kids back in the day was,
listen to your parents,
don't like do stuff you're not supposed to.
Otherwise, all strangers are fucking like those.
You're gonna get kidnapped and killed or something like that.
Like this is how they talk kids.
Did my mom used to tell me that like if I like trailed off
in the grocery store,
somebody would dye my hair and throw me in a van.
That's what I believed that forever was terrifying.
That's your thing.
It worked, dude.
I'm gonna recognize you anymore.
I'm like, oh my God, no.
The details were going to throw the dying hair in there.
Yeah.
Oh my Jesus.
Well, not just kidnapped.
We will be able to recognize you and find you.
That's the letter.
Is that the order though?
Die hair and then eat them.
Die my hair first, like in the bathroom, throw me in the van.
The way that my mom, mom, sorry, the way that my that my mom would like scare us and like eating your dinner and shit
Yeah, was the mailman so the mailman what?
Yes
So the mailman would come and she and here's the worst part. It was it was it was up
This was like a long setup. It wasn't like in the moment. Yeah, we're outside playing mailman shows up
Oh watch out man. Man's coming. What he's coming. So you'd be careful because if you don't eat, they'll come take you
You know this was during the day
Yeah, we're gonna eat and then she bring it up and I remember the mailman coming during the day coming to our house
Oh, better eat this
I have a delivery
Dude, he's the race kids, oh
Oh, no! That was a good boy.
Dude, he used to race kids, fuck the whole thing.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Well, you know what,
you guys just reminded me of something
that I actually wanted to bring up
and ask you guys his opinions on this.
So I was watching like some of the cartoons
and stuff that Max has on his iPad.
And you know that there's this real popular thing
that Disney does that's actually so brilliant
in so many different levels,
but also concerning for me.
Like if you have cars or toy story franchise
or what's the one with Groot?
Oh yeah, you have Galaxy one,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So he has all these little,
so the new thing is they do these little six minute cartoons
because the kids in a kitchen span.
So they're like little shorts.
I've seen those shorts, yeah, little shorts.
So six minute shorts.
Now what I think is really interesting about it,
because I just,
now I've seen the cars one, the toy story one,
like that one didn't dawn on me
as much of like what they're doing right now,
but then when I saw the Groot one,
because Gardens of the Galaxy is very adult humor.
My son shouldn't ever watch that,
at least until he's like early preteen.
Sure, sure.
For that's a little, I think it's even rated R, right?
Is it Ragnarok?
Yeah.
Is it rated R?
I don't know.
I think it's PG 13.
Oh, isn't like, yeah, whatever,
till he's 13 or whatever.
So they have Groot, you know, the little tree character,
what do I with that?
It's those little shorts about him, right?
You little six minutes shorts about him.
And I thought, wow, how brilliant conditioning that,
how long they can stretch that franchise out.
They start grooming my son at three years old,
little introductions of that character.
And then he gets to all of a sudden,
an older age and then he recognizes it.
And I mean, that thing will...
That's smart.
It's brilliant.
That's really smart.
And they're doing that with cars,
with toy, like Toy Story has like,
you know, the little fork figure and like each character in toy story.
Yeah.
Has these six minute shorts.
And so he's watching these six minute shorts on now.
He can't say he wouldn't sit through an entire toy story movie or he wouldn't sit through an entire
Gardens of the galaxy right now, but he'll watch a six minute short on a character and he knows the character and he's all he's in a
Know all that's really smart.
Yeah, you just you just reminding me by the way.
Brilliant condition. Yeah. Oh, so it's PG 13. You just reminding me right now that we were playing
music with the family or whatever and my son put on the song from up the the montage where he
meets his wife and does a whole thing and crush you in that in that movie, dude. Right out of the gates. My kids, as the music's going on, oh, this is when he finds out that they can't have babies.
This is when they, like, what a terrible, what's the last time you guys watch that?
That little thing.
I only watch Emily one time.
It was enough to destroy me.
Yeah.
I can't do it.
Just listening to the song.
I was sitting there.
That Pixar movies are like, you know, this is finding Nemo.
Oh, don't worry.
As we were watching it, I told my kids,
I said, we're gonna watch Bambi.
You guys ready to cry?
You know what, I know the Tridale.
And I don't know, have you guys ever tried you guys know that, right?
Like, almost every Disney movie starts with like a parent,
losing a parent, stuff like that.
You know that?
Every, almost every, they lose a parent.
Well, some tragic happens.
Well, Lion King dad gets that you know dies.
Neymar.
Bambo.
Well Neymar, oh mom died.
Yeah.
They're almost lose that they almost lose a parent
in every episode.
But so I think some people have like a real sadistic way
of looking at like oh, shame on Disney,
but I think what they were trying to appeal
to kids in that situation and give them hope and give them.
They're just trying to pull your heart strings.
Make you.
No, I think it's, you think you have to have the kids grow up in a blended, in a blended
house or they lose a parent with a B through divorce or death or something like that.
So talk about a cool story, a way to tell that story in a positive light through those
through those types of movies.
Also, the hero's journey.
I mean, that's sort of the way
that they've constructed stories from forever,
is to start out with tragedy and kind of working your way back
to become the hero.
Yeah, but the tragedy is almost always a parent thing.
It's like, look it up, Doug.
I think I'm pretty sure it's a pretty high.
How many parents die in Disney's movies?
Yeah, well, yeah, die or leave.
I'll tell you though, they make movies now.
How many of them like include drugs and drugging,
like, you know, like sleeping beauty?
Oh, I know.
You know, snow white eating apples.
All the ones before 60s.
All the ones before the 60s.
And then like a dumb-o where like they're taking psychedelics
and, you know, like they had a lot of like interesting things.
They did, dude.
Yeah, absolutely did. Yeah, I get sad for different things now lot of like interesting things. They did, dude. Yeah, absolutely did.
Yeah, I get sad for different things now.
The whole bunch of more than half of Disney picks our feature films.
Oh, yeah.
Death or disappearance of the protagonist, mom or dad is a major plot.
You know, you know, which one made me sad too, but only because I'm apparent now.
Uh, which ones, the one were the, were the kid, uh, her emotions and stuff or depicted in her mind?
And it's those characters,
it was like anger, disgust.
Right.
Happiness.
What's that?
I said, picks our movie, I think.
Oh god, I feel like such an idiot.
It was really popular.
Okay.
What is it?
Inside and outside.
Oh, that's the one with the big white.
That's the one my kid like bubble thing right.
I tried.
He was like, no.
Now, it made me sad because it's a girl.
She's a little girl and she's only got a few emotions in there.
Then she's growing up becoming a teenager
and it gets really complex
because the teenagers go, all of a sudden your emotions get comped
and they show this conflict in her mind.
I got a very smart.
I got a girl's becoming a teenager.
I remember watching that,
I was like, oh, I'll have to watch that girl.
I'm like, I'm only gonna have to tear that. I'm only gonna have to tear it.
I'm only gonna have to tear it.
And watch that entire, that's the one with the big white.
Inside out.
Like blow up thing.
No.
Yeah, like one little character.
Oh, I thought it was like, it's angry and he's got like,
what is that?
What is that?
No, that's big hero six.
And then you go.
That's actually really, that's really fun.
Which inside out was the most sad girl character.
The real character.
Inside out.
Yeah, it's actually really good.
Yeah.
But if your kid is growing up,
going through that age and you can see that your kid went
from being like, they're either angry, frustrated,
or happy, all of a sudden,
they're teenagers are complicated.
Oh yeah, I haven't watched this one.
It's really good, dude.
It's really, really good.
Is it Pixar?
Is that what you guys figured out?
Yeah, it's Pixar.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Jackson from Kentucky.
Jackson, what's happening, man?
How come I help you?
I wanna know what's on the roof real quick. What's on the roof right now? Your room is. Yeah, what's happening, man? How come I help you?
I want to know what's on the roof real quick.
What's on the roof right now?
Your room is...
Yeah, what's on the roof?
What is that?
Oh, I just got a couple tapestries.
I'm kind of a hippie here.
I'll give you guys a better shot of what's going on.
There's a lot of Steve here.
Kind of got some pink-floy poster going on.
And yeah.
And different stuff.
And then tapestry on the ceiling. Grateful dead and yeah. And different stuff and then tapestry on the ceiling,
grateful dead and such. Yeah. Yeah.
I'm just leaving one that very cool. So you're a big Justin fan. Yeah.
That's pretty cool. Let's party. I wonder if anyone ever smoked weed in that room.
No way. Never had. Maybe.
Well, last night, that's all good. How are you guys doing today?
Doing good, man. How can we help you, brother?
So, like the question said in the email, I do a lot of things, guys. So, I've been a skateboarder for
16 years. Sorry, I'm nervous. I can't believe it's happening. So, skateboarding for 16 years,
been lifting for probably six or seven now and been a personal
trainer for about the last year and a half.
So I think my calories, I do pretty good around 3,000 and I'm weighing in about 195 pounds,
190 pounds.
I just cut down from 2.18 and I've cut a lot of strength from that cut, but now I'm wondering
where should I be with my calories now?
Back two and a half months ago, I got injured. I took four the ATFL and the CFL in my left foot and
Spray some muscles in my knee, I believe. I didn't have to get an MRI or anything
And I've done a pretty good job with my own rehab, but with this injury
lifting
decently heavy Three or four times a week, skating three or four times a week, and always being on my feet, where would you guys think my calories should be if I'm trying to get the select to heal, perform at a decent level, and still trying to get leaner as time goes on.
I know there's a lot going on right there, but that's why I want you all to help. Yeah, it's a good question and it's a common one, right?
How many calories should I eat for this particular goal?
Now one thing that I think is important to communicate is that the metabolism is never
set in stone.
In the sense that your metabolism is always adjusting and trying to reach homeostasis.
This happens every second. Every second things are changing for it to try to reach homeostasis. And this happens every second.
Every second things are changing for it
to try to reach homeostasis.
So the answer that I can give you,
maybe right now, but might be wrong tomorrow.
So you may be thinking,
well, what the heck am I supposed to do?
The best thing you could do is observe your body,
your energy, how you feel, and track,
and see what those calories correlate to.
So let's say you eat 3,500 calories and that's where you're keeping it.
And you're like, you know, I'm getting a little excess body fat on my body.
Bring it down a little bit.
Or let's say you're eating, you know, 3,500 calories.
And you're like, man, I'm getting lean, but my energy's low.
I'm losing strength.
I don't feel very good.
Well, then maybe bring it up a little bit.
So this is really the best answer I can give you is to pay attention to it I'm losing strength, I don't feel very good, well then maybe bring it up a little bit.
So this is really the best answer I can give you
is to pay attention to it on a weekly basis
and since you've already tracked before,
you kind of have a good general place to start, right?
You kind of generally know where you want to start.
So from there, that's where I would move up or down.
Now, if you were, if you never tracked before
and had no general idea, then I would give this standard answer,
which is track your calories for the next couple of weeks.
If you're losing or gaining weight,
that'll tell you if you need to bring your calories up or down.
I like where you're at right now.
I mean, for your size, and if you're not putting,
if you're actually losing body fat
and hanging around 3000 calories,
like I think you're pretty good.
I'm reading more of your question.
It says that you do like a couple of low days
for like 2000 to 2400, then you refeed up,
is that what I'm reading?
Am I reading that correctly?
Yeah, I've listened to the show for a long time
and you guys were talking about calories cycling
and that was, that's definitely the easiest way
it's been for me because I've noticed like, if I try to do a few low days in a row, which like I train in a bodybuilder's
gym, kind of in the wrong spot, but I'm definitely not the bodybuilder in the gym.
So it's like trying to be lean for a stage or anything.
So I'm just trying to generally be healthy and lean.
So with like two lower days, anywhere underneath 2500 to like 2200 calories.
That's why I find pretty good for a low day.
And that's like, I'm starving, man.
Like that's crazy to me that I've got my metabolism
because I can remember 2500, that wasn't,
you know what I'm trying to say there.
Yeah.
But I think like a maintenance day is around 3,300 for me.
Cause I mean, I'm pretty active.
I'm always out either skateboarding
or taking a walk or something's going on.
And I can never get a chance to really chill out
and rest as much as I'd like to.
Yeah, I mean, I really like where you're at right now.
So long as you're seeing what you want like to Sal's point,
you know, this is still like a weekly
or every other week kind of check in.
And that's kind of when I'm adjusting someone's calories
and their movement, like,
when we have a goal of leaning out or something,
you know, I like to stick to something
for a good solid two weeks before I make any radical changes,
right? So let's say that this is where you and I are at,
you know, and I'd say, okay, cool.
Sounds like you're happy where you're eating.
We feel like we're leaning out a little bit.
Like I'm not, you know, so long as you feel like
you're healing and getting better every few days, you're
getting stronger in your foot and stuff, then I'm not really worried about that.
Then in two weeks, I'm going, okay, let's evaluate where you're at.
Are we still progressing?
Are you still leaning out with the calorie intake?
And then if you are, I might just keep you on that path.
If you feel like, I feel like I've stalled,
then we might adjust and mess with some of the calories
or mess with, you know, in putting in 15 minutes
of hit cardio a couple of times a week or stuff like that.
But I mean, where you're at is a very healthy place
calorie wise.
And if you feel good where you're at,
I would probably keep you there until we start to notice
you slow down a little bit and
you're not seeing the same results and then we would manipulate the calories.
That was a really good one.
I'm really here the going in line that you like to.
The biggest thing I've been trying to pay attention to as well, not only getting
lean but my strength and the gym too, like cutting down from two 18 to 20, I'm definitely
not as strong as I was, but I did lift it for the first time today
and in three months.
And my strength is not far off of where it was.
I'm pretty happy with the strength and such.
And the metabolism, it's staying pretty high.
So I think I'm in a pretty good spot too.
And thank you guys for your opinion.
I really do appreciate it.
I think Asperr performance was a big help with speed and the metabolism up too.
I really liked phase one of a masterformance.
Oh awesome, awesome.
Yeah, that's a dude.
You might not have asked how you hurt your foot,
did you screw up a kickflip?
Was that the movie dude?
Adam Nailside.
It wasn't a kickflip.
If it was a kickflip, I'd have been so much happier than how it happened.
So there was a ramp going up mellow incline and there was a rail coming out of the top almost like a rainbow.
So I was just trying to to slap into the rail and take it across. It wasn't a super big one.
Brand new shoes brand new board. I mean just got to the skate park and I
brand new shoes brand new board. I mean, just got to the skate park and I
I feel like I may have had an imbalance in my hip that day. So I was trying to get mobile and such and I was skating probably before I
was ready to do and the ankle my foot is
Here was my board my foot was just over here and it's allowed it to roll
Like that. Oh, and it was it was so loud. They handed me this wasn't the smartest thing to do, but I was so pissed and
it hurts so bad because I've rolled my ankle a thousand times. This was way more. I knew I was going to be down for a while. They handed me triumphant. But in my flip since the injury the other day, after four or five, it gets tired, but
it felt really good.
So we're getting there for sure.
Yeah, you're in a good place, man.
You're on the right track, my friend.
Yeah, thanks for calling in.
Hey, thank you guys.
This was unbelievable, man.
This is a, I'm not a, a dream, a dream country for you.
Yeah, I know.
Appreciate it, man.
If we ever end up in your area, I want to, I want to come hang out with you in that room right there.
We'll go.
I was, I was in California a couple of weeks ago, man, we're, we're, uh, we're definitely a little bit off schedule on that.
When I wish that could have happened.
I, I thought about it while I was out there, but there's no way these guys are going to want to get
a lift with me or something.
Yeah.
Only if you're not stronger than us, then we'll work on it.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
That's true.
Thanks for calling in, brother.
I did.
That was super great, Dad.
You got it.
It's interesting the types of injuries that each sport
tends to produce, like rolled ankles, basketball,
super common, skateboarding,
super common.
Only because I had friends that,
by the way, not because I played you the sport,
but rather because I had friends that did a lot of
both either sport and it's a super common,
super common injury.
Yeah, we tend to get people that call in,
sometimes that I think they know what to do
and they know what's the first. They want self-affirming, yeah. Yeah, and sometimes I, I think they know what to do and they know.
They want self-affirming, yeah.
Yeah, and sometimes I'm like, I want to make sure
that we help them, right?
Or we give them something or something.
But then sometimes it's like, dude, you're in a great place.
It sounds like he's listening to the show long enough
that he's built his metabolism up.
It sounds like he's kind of in a new place
where he's been able to eat 4,000 calories,
got all of the 218.
Now he's leaning down.
And he's doing,
he's undulating his calorie, which is perfect.
Yeah, feels good.
And he's not lost.
He's obviously he's down from 218 down to,
what do you say, 190 something.
So of course, you're gonna lose a little bit of strength,
but the fact that he's been able to not dead live
for three months, come back,
and then feel relatively close to the same strength.
I mean, dude's in a good place right now.
Yeah, totally.
And then undulating of the calories, I mean, that's that for me was such a, such a big
deal when I first really kind of figured that out.
I do that now.
I mean, my calories Monday through Friday kind of go up and down, but they stay relatively
high Saturday and Sunday.
My calories usually are really low.
And I come back Monday and my appetite's good.
It's back.
I eat more and it really helps me maintain a lean
But yet, you know, I get to keep a lot of muscle type physique versus staying at the same all the time which
Psychologically and behaviorally that that'll mess with you
You know if you're always low or always high you end up finding yourself kind of in this position where you feel like you're you're white
Nuckling the whole thing. So it makes a big difference
I really feel that what you just said attributes to your ability to keep yourself really lean
and fit right now like because I think most people do the opposite. I think most people get
work and busy and going all day long and then they may maybe miss meals or they're like they're
they're constantly they're maybe even lower calorie when they're really active and doing a lot and
probably working out following their routine. And then Saturday and Sunday is normally when people take it off.
They take it off their training.
That's normal.
At least one of those two days, they sleep in more than they normally would or
they might lounge around and watch TV or they're either not as active.
And then they also, this is when they go out to dinner or they have pizza or
they enjoy some drink, some Friday or Saturday or Sunday.
Like so I really, I mean,, that was one of the biggest hacks
for me staying in shape was learning that
if I could win the weekend, like win the weekend,
the weekdays were easy.
I have a routine.
I get up at the same time every single day,
work it so long, like you're moving around,
like, and that's, it's easy for me to eat the same meals
and be consistent.
So if I could just win the weekends
and be disciplined on that,
it would set up the whole rest of the weekend.
I'm stealing that phrase, by the way.
Win the weekend.
All right, our next caller is Chance from Indiana.
Chance, what's happening, man?
How can I help you?
Hey, guys, just wanted to say thank you
for all the content that you guys put out there.
I started lifting about three years ago
and found you guys at the beginning
and really helped me kind of felt like a cheat code
of getting in and missing a bunch
of the crap information out there.
So just get right into my question.
Does it make sense for me to do focus or trigger sessions
to help target a specific body part I would like to grow,
which for me would be my quads and my delts
while I'm cutting. And in other words, can I pinpoint growth or development while in a cut,
where should I just focus on not losing muscle mass during that cut?
Oh, that's a good question.
Yeah, it's okay. So are you running Mapsesthetic right now?
It cut out a little bit, but right now I'm running Mapsantabolic.
Because you're describing Maps Esthetic just so you know. Oh, he said trigger sessions too. Well, yeah. Yeah.
You know, you know, yeah, so I did start off doing Maps
Esthetic, but while I was in my cut, I felt like it was a little bit too much volume.
So I only did about a week or two of that and then I went back to just phase one of maps and a ball like while I was in the cut.
Yeah, smart.
So, okay, there's a saying in boxing, which is the best defense is a good offense.
So when it comes to muscle growth, trying to prevent muscle loss is not a good strategy,
trying to build muscle while in a cut is a better strategy.
So what's the difference?
One of them is you're playing defense,
the other ones you're playing offense.
Your muscles either grow or they shrink.
The best way to prevent muscle loss is to stimulate muscle growth.
Okay. Now this means not overdoing it.
This means good exercise programming.
This means appropriate calories and protein intake and that kind of stuff.
So focus sessions, trigger sessions are excellent
for building muscle, which makes them excellent
for preventing muscle loss.
So the answer is the same, really.
And I would definitely point to the muscle groups
that you wanna develop the most.
Yes.
Because you can't just run endless volume, right?
You gotta be very judicious with volume
and where you're aiming that volume.
So I would definitely aim it on the body parts
that you're most concerned with
or the areas that you really want to focus the most on.
And then do that.
And at worst, you'll just lose less muscle in those areas.
At best, you might actually build a little muscle.
Yeah, I mean,
maps aesthetic was created with this idea
of like this was getting me ready for a show.
So, and every show I had a body part or two that I was specifically trying to develop.
And so, even though I know that I'm in a caloric deficit, and that it would be more advantageous
to be in a surplus, to build the most amount of muscle in that area, sounds exactly right.
Like, at that point, I know I'm cutting, I'm losing,
I'm catabolic.
I definitely don't want to lose in the areas
that I'm trying to develop.
So I'm stimulating and I'm hitting that more than usual.
So yeah, so whether you're running anabolic,
and by the way, still to this day, when I do anabolic,
I don't actually do like this kind of full body trigger session.
I actually always do the muscles that I'm trying
to work on or that I care about the most.
It's just like I'm only doing a little stimulation
for what, eight, 12 minutes.
So I tend to focus on the areas
that I'm always trying to develop.
Yeah, well that's same sort of protocol applies, right?
The moderation of intensity.
So you're making sure you're not treating it as if it's a foundational lift day, right? So even if you're targeting those muscle
groups, you're not trying to overdo it. You're just trying to get a pump and try to get stimulation
there. But you could definitely hyper focus and target those specific muscle groups that
you want to bring up. That's for sure, you know, something that you can do and focus on.
Yeah. After Maps and Abolic, do you plan on running Maps aesthetic
and changing your calories or what's the goal?
Let's leave it up to chance, right?
I'm just too face-fested.
Yeah, a little prone.
I plan on running Maps aesthetic afterwards
is what my plan was,
because I'm only gonna go into a cup for another,
you know, a couple more weeks,
just to kind of get where my goal is,
and then I was gonna run run aesthetic in a bulk.
Okay.
Have you, do you have map symmetry?
Yeah.
I just got out of that one not too long ago.
It's by far been my favorite program.
Excellent.
Okay.
Good.
I was going to have you run map symmetry afterwards.
But since you've already run it, aesthetic or symmetry
would be a good option
after Annabelle.
But I love symmetry.
Yeah, it's the most popular.
I'll probably change it before I actually go into the bulk,
but I keep going back and forth between strong and aesthetic,
but I've never run strong,
so that may be the route that I get to go in.
I just go back and forth.
That's another great option.
So all right, well, cool chance.
Well, thanks for calling in.
I hope we answered your question, all right? Yeah, absolutely. Thank you guys. You got it, man.
Yeah, what?
What builds muscle the best is also what prevents muscle loss the best. That's what people have to understand because they tend to train differently
thinking
You know, oh to prevent muscle I got to do this or to burn more body fat. I got to do this
thinking, oh, to prevent muscle I gotta do this or to burn more body fat I gotta do this.
Lifting weights or strength training
is best at building muscle, bottom line.
So whatever builds muscle, the most effective,
is gonna be what's best for your goal.
Whatever your goal is, whether it's fat loss,
cutting, bulking, building, strength, whatever.
Now that means you gotta change your routine up,
that means you gotta face your workouts,
all the stuff that we talk about.
But if you get into this defensive play all the time, you're going to miss out, you'll
miss out. Well, what about do we have any such a sports analogy? I'm hitting them to do. He is
all that kick right now. What do we what do we have to support like research-wise? Would it be beneficial
to like I'm in a cut, okay, most days. And we just had a caller before this one that like how he underlates his calories
Yeah, and let's say let's just say chance his goal is I don't know his shoulders and something else
I don't remember this is his muscle. Let's just say it's shoulders right so he's gonna make his trigger sessions or his focus sessions
What what benefits would you say are there for someone to make sure that the day he trains or the day after he
trained his shoulders really well, that he's on his higher calorie intake.
Oh, that's a great question, dude.
I don't know if it makes that big of a difference because, and there isn't, I don't think there
is a study or studies to point.
This is like a question I'd love to talk to like Lane about, because Lane loves to talk
about this, the calories, right?
It's all about calories and if it if the calories equate
To a deficit at the end of the week then you're in your catapult you're going down, but okay
Well, what if I what if I run a surplus though for two days and I schedule those two days around
Yes, I'm a targeted group year. Yeah, yeah try to. So I mean, that makes logical sense.
It really does make a lot of sense.
Like I never had any, I never had any,
I don't, that's why I'm asking you,
because I don't, I don't remember or recall ever
reading anything to support that claim.
It just always made logical sense to me.
So I do used to do this.
So when I was,
How did you mess with anything different?
You need a specific growth.
Yeah, did you mess with anything different
to see if there was a difference between the two?
In other words, did you go low calorie on other days?
High calorie?
Yeah, compared to two.
Yeah.
Okay.
And so again, this, that's all anecdotal, right?
So me saying that, oh, I felt or thought I saw a difference, you know, it's, it's hard to say, right?
Because of, you know, everything that I had going on, how consistent I was with everything like that.
Like, what if I didn't do that?
Would it would have made that big of a difference?
I don't know.
But personally, it just made logical sense that while I was in a cut, and I had areas
that I really wanted to develop, when I would train those muscles, I would make sure that's
what I actually fed the most amount of calories, was around those.
So you timed it?
So yeah, I would take logical sense.
That makes logical sense.
Yeah, and you'll be most proficient in your lifts, too, on that day if you're fueling that, I would have soon.
Right, because think of your total calories
for in a seven day period is 21,000 is your maintenance.
21,000 calories is your maintenance.
Well, what happens if I, when I train them,
either the lifts or the muscles
that I really, really wanna focus on,
I put a bulk of those calories around those two or three days,
and then I live in a deficit the other three or four days.
Now, are you doing it?
Because I do something similar,
but I don't know if it's the same.
So I tend to fuel my body before the workout,
not for the recovery.
So I do both.
So what I would do is like,
it would begin on the,
that those, it'd be like two-day refeedalments.
So I would always try and make, okay, I want to be fueled in.
So I'd, I want to have energy, which would be honestly,
it only took a meal or two before that lift.
So I could have been coming from a real low calorie two
or three days, and then I'm getting ready to go hit lifts
that are really important to me or muscles.
I'm going to train.
Like two to 500 calories.
Oh, that, so that, that really depends, Justin,
like where I'm at, at like because my metabolism has been
Yeah, you're as low as 2000 some calories just highs 5,000 so it really depends on where I'm at muscle-wise
So
It would just I would be I would be pushing the calories more on that morning that I'm gonna be training like three four hours later
Yep three or four hours later
So that would fuel that workout good and then I would make sure after that workout,
that was on the higher cali, it doesn't be crazy.
I just don't wanna be in a deficit.
Yeah, so let's say my maintenance was 3000.
That would be the day I wanted to be 3000 or above.
And then the next day I wanted to be at least 3000 or above.
And then I would go back down to say 25.
I had another day of, day after,
and then back on your car.
Yes, interesting. Yeah, I've always done it leading into the workout. say 25 day of day after and then back on your cut. Yes.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm really thinking about it, but I know for sure that I consciously try to lead into
that workout with more calories.
That's always the goal for me.
Which makes sense,
because then you're gonna get after it more.
Yes.
But I was also thinking like recovery wise,
I wanna be fed, I don't wanna be catabolic
right afterwards, right?
I wanna, if I could theoretically prioritize
those nutrients to go to building that muscle,
I just stimulated and said,
hey, we need this,
in this area, right? I just did heavy, hard shoulders. And then, and I had the fuel to really get after it. And then it was, okay, yeah, I'm going to eat a surplus. So those
additional calories go to building. That was my theory and how I, how I dieted when I was training.
It makes logical sense. I would love to see a study that would look at that. They would just have to control a lot of things.
And I do wanna also say this,
for the average person,
this is a lot of splitting hairs,
for the average person.
But if you were that person that's really,
kinda dialing things in, your sleep is good,
your protein intake is good,
your workout programming is good,
you wanna develop your glutes,
or your hamstrings, you kinda know what you're doing.
This is, I think, makes logical sense.
I mean, I'm glad you said that because by no means am I being like,
oh, that was a huge difference.
Like, the huge difference was my sleep, my consistency,
all those other things.
But when you were at the level that I was at,
when I'm competing at the professional level of bodybuilding,
like, I'm now starting to manipulate things like this.
Oh, you're tracking, that's what I'm saying.
Yeah, it's like everything.
It's like, yeah, I'm only gonna be eating 21,000 calories
for the entire week.
Hmm, what happens when I try and make sure I prioritize
those calories around the days on the muscle groups
that I'm most focused on?
And then the ones that maybe I'm not so worried about,
I go ahead and look at that.
I would bet money that what you're talking about
is beneficial, because what you're always trying to do
is tip the scale to anabolic versus catabolic.
Why not tip the scale to anabolic on the days
where you're training the areas of your body
that you're most concerned with?
And you're not worried so much about being a little catabolic
on those other days when, you know,
it's body parts that you're really strong
and that your body tends to hold onto muscle width.
That's right. Makes a lot of sense. Our next caller is Carlos from Texas. Carlos, what's
happening, man? How can we help you? Hey guys, how y'all doing, man? Good, good, man. Hey, first of all,
I want to say thank you for everything that you're gonna do, all the content you'll put out. I know that
thing that you'll do, all the content you'll put out. I know that I was just talking about your other morning to some of the guys and they were asking me where I get all this information
from. And it wasn't the fitness information. I was explaining to them what a brony was,
what a paper was, and stuff like that.
So, what's engine life?
Yeah, really important stuff.
No, I appreciate everything you all do.
And I just got a couple of questions for you.
If you need any background, let me know.
But I don't think for these questions, there's much needed.
The first one I have is, you know, I really enjoy doing static stretching.
And I do it last thing in the evening.
And my thought process on that is, I think I heard you all say that if we do static stretching,
it is our CNS that is telling the muscle to relax.
And so I'm thinking, well, if I want to be relaxed and get a good night's sleep, then that'd be the best time to do that.
What are your thoughts on that?
I love that.
Great idea.
You hit the nail on the head, but there's a caveat there, Carlos.
The caveat is, when you're doing the static stretching, don't hold your breath,
don't push through with intensity.
You want to get into the static stretch and breathe and
Relax into it because that's telling the CNS that can relax
So that's a very important piece of this static stretching
You know issue that you're bringing up. So while you're doing the stretch
You want to continue to breathe and try to tell your brain it can relax tell your CNS to relax
But yet that is the best time. I mean you literally
Should get better sleep doing that. And people who have issues where they jump in bed
or they feel like they have restless legs syndrome
or they feel a little anxiety,
I used to tell my clients to do this
and it worked like magic for a majority of them.
So that's a great way to do it.
Perfect, good.
Yes, and I heard you sell one time, say that
that you were doing, I believe a yoga class and you're instructor,
you know, you were straining or you were tense and she told you, hey, just just relax a little bit.
So I do try to do that when I do my static stretching. Beautiful in the back. I'm going to put it in the back. I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back.
I'm going to put it in the back. I'm going to put your thoughts on that. I'm not sure if that's advice I should follow or not.
I've heard that too.
OK, so there's a couple of pieces here
that we want to break down.
One is, forget body parts for a second.
Look at exercises.
OK.
Certain exercises just cause more damage.
More demanding.
More, yeah, just way more demanding on the body.
So look at exercises over body parts necessarily.
For example, if I use a hand gripper, that's working my forearms.
If I do farmer walks, it's working my forearms.
But one of them is going to be way more taxing on my body, require more recovery than the
other one, right?
So look at exercises.
Number two, we tend to have body parts that tend to be more conditioned naturally than other body parts,
just because of our day to day lives.
Maybe you walk a lot, so your calves are gonna be a little bit
more conditioned than say your upper body.
Like when I would train runners, for example,
man, if I train their upper body with,
anywhere near the intensity that I train
their lower body with, when I'd first get my hands on them,
it was just too much.
So you wanna consider that as well.
Now, as far as I do, some body parts have the ability to recover better than others.
I don't know if it's inherent as much as it's individual.
Like, if you use your hands a lot at work, you're kind of doing little trigger sessions
throughout the day.
You're maybe facilitating recovery just for moving them more and they may already be
more conditioned.
But I think the bigger thing is looking at exercises.
It's exercises more, because I could do leg extensions
way more often than I could do barbell squats,
both of them work my quads.
So I think that's more of a, I think that's a better-
It's always a cab for them and ab thing.
I know.
It's always said, and-
But those are all areas that we use all the time,
and I think for the most part you with those all
Yeah, so I think most people are just conditioned to use those
Those three muscles on a regular basis all the time and so therefore they can handle
More of a consistent beating but I also think that opens up an opportunity for actually strength training those areas
That I think most people neglect that very few people do five reps for forum exercises. Very few people do five reps for calf raises.
Very few people do five reps for abs.
So basically strength training.
So instead of like, oh, I wanna do this every day,
I would normally tell a client like,
listen, you wanna develop your calves,
one of you ever ran a five by five type of block
for your calves and watch what happens.
That was one of the biggest game changes for me when working on my calves was actually switching to five by five because
I actually subscribed to the same theory of I was doing calves every day, but they're
always like 15, 20, 30 reps, supersetting like burn, burn, burn, burn, same thing with
abs crunches.
The most common thing. It's just like it again to the point of it being more demanding.
Like if the focus shifts and now you're loading some of those body parts with exercises you're
not quite as familiar with or you're doing it in a different cadence, like a five rep,
kind of a protocol, you're going to get sore and you're not going to be able to keep continuing
that kind of progress the next day if you're getting that type of a stimulus where it's
really demanding and it's placing those muscles under that kind of strain. So really, like, what
they're talking about for the most part is that they're doing, they're conditioned
already, they're doing, like, multiple sets, they're doing body weight, typically, or it's
really just less demanding on those specific muscle groups.
Yeah, that makes sense. Okay. And I had one more question. So I was wondering if
y'all have any quirks or any odd rituals or anything odd that y'all do while you work
out and I'm going to give you an example. I work out in an old school hoodie and old school cotton sweats.
And the reason I do that, my wife says I'm crazy because in our gym it's about, you know,
it's 100 degrees plus.
But the reason I do that is because it reminds me of Rocky when he was in the meat packing
plant and he was punching those cows and breaking those calories. But I was wondering if y'all had any weird quirks that y'all do while you're working out?
Yeah, well, it's off.
Definitely.
Yeah, I want you to, while I'm answering your question, I want you to think about any
free programs you'd like, because you just mentioned rock and roll.
My heart just swelled with me.
You know what, let me tell you something.
Work out, especially if you work out consistently for years, it's more mental than physical.
So like any athlete, I don't know,
I'm sure you, your athletes will wear the same socks
during games or they got to tap the top of the door
on the way out to the field or, you know,
everybody has these rituals.
Do they play a role in your performance?
Yeah, man, it's all psychological.
Do I have rituals?
You better believe it.
I wear a wife beater every damn workout.
Now, I don't always take off my t-shirt,
but it's always underneath.
Half the time I take off my t-shirt
and then the wife-beater's on.
But it's always on me.
Why? That's how I worked out when I was a kid.
So it's just a ritual. I feel it.
I love it. It just makes me feel good when I'm working out.
I also have rituals with, like, if I'm bench-pressing a lot,
I'm gonna wear a tight cotton t-shirt. I don't know why. That's what I did when I'm working out. I also have rituals with, like, if I'm bench pressing a lot,
I'm gonna wear a tight cotton t-shirt.
I don't know why, just that's what I do when I was a kid.
Now I like wearing a tight cotton t-shirt.
You're under best.
I bet it's like my thunder best.
I mean, I like your athlete analogy
because I think I'm more quirky when I'm training, right?
So I have two modes of, you know, let's say exercise.
I'm either exercising or I'm training.
Sometimes I'm just exercising.
Sometimes I'm just trying to stay healthy.
I know I need to move, I need to go in the gym,
I need to live some weights.
I'm not really getting after it.
I'm really not trying to change anything big in my body.
I'm just trying to stay healthy.
When I'm like that, I'm less ritual.
But when I'm like training and I'm trying to like
improve my physique, I'm trying to get stronger.
Like I absolutely have like how I prep,
how I get ready to go in the gym,
to that down to the outfit that I wear,
down to the music that I listen to.
And I think it's very similar to the athlete, right?
I think there's, I think if I'm a professional baseball player,
every time I get up to the plate or get ready for a game,
I have this crazy routine.
Doesn't mean I can't go out and hit the ball with my son
and I don't have to have that crazy routine, right?
So that's the exercise for training analogy. There's times when I'm very, very ritualistic,
there's other times when I'm like, whatever.
So, but if I'm training, I'm very ritualistic.
What's your suggestion?
Yeah, why do you think I'm in the mace bells, dude?
Cause I'm a Jedi.
Okay.
I'm a Jedi when I am doing mobility flows
and then I'm a Sith when I'm getting after it.
Are you for real?
No, but I'm just not real to them real to shut up you can't take it back I want I bet you're thinking
that you've got the music and shit background yeah yeah yeah anyway see my
head is like I make the noise is the same all that shit I love it men do it
Carlos can we give you a program can we give you anything? Sure. Yeah, I have, actually, I just started anabolic. I mean, I did the pre-phase because I just
started lifting recently, I say recently, about six months ago, before that, I wasn't doing
anything. My most activity was helping with my kids coaching. And so, I just recently started anabolic.
So yeah, just what if you want to have me?
I'll be glad to take it.
Yeah, let's go with symmetry.
We'll send you map symmetry, Carlos.
Do that after a map centabolic.
Perfect.
Hey, and I got one other thing.
And this is for not Justin.
First of all, I want to say, my family's going to,
going to freak when I tell them that,
that I've spoken to the journey man.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Okay, I'm,
I'm tiny beard.
Woo.
I'm still a seer beard.
And Oz.
So yeah, they're going to, yeah.
And for Adam, hey, Adam, anytime you want to throw down on some rib
Do you let me know you and I can go? Yeah, we'll have a contest and yeah, and we'll make you go out
I like it. You do have an edge though. I tell you best best ribs in my life best barbecue my life comes out of Texas
I'm changing my life. Yeah, well definitely yeah, yeah, yeah, Carlos. Thanks for calling it man. I appreciate it. Thank you
Okay, I appreciate it guys. Thank you all for everything.
Take care man.
It always cracks me up when the stuff
that someone takes away from Michelle
has nothing to do with this.
I love it.
I love it.
Yeah.
And by the way, I'm making a journey man shirt.
So it's coming.
Like that is, that is,
it's gone way too viral to not make a shirt on it.
This year. I, uh, um, nobody commented on his go-t there.
I was waiting for somebody saying that was like,
Justin could, that took some time, dude.
Justin's insecure with his tiny beard.
He's like, I see that.
Yeah, but he's, I mean, he looks like a master.
Like, I want to call it a master splinter.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He looked like a kung fu master.
And, and Adam, you, you say outfit when you're talking
about your workouts, you change the work.
Yeah, what?
Yeah, I got my outfit. I'm a winger, bro. Yeah, yeah. Let's say that I'm a winger. What do you call it? Adam you say outfit when you're talking about your workouts you change the work Outfit
What do you call it what is your clothes Jim close my outfit
Every time you say that Justin and I look at each other. Yeah, you're on a runway
I picture you know what call on wait a second. Wait a call you out right now
How is it any different if you throw on your chucks and your and your
Viori pants and your wife beater? How's that not an outfit?
I mean, technically it is. Yeah, but I don't say it's an outfit.
It's like the difference between going to a salon and a barber.
Thank you. You know what? Okay, I'm gonna close.
And I open it up. I want you to go to a salon.
Hey, I want you to be honest right now.
Be honest with me. You're very open.
Do you put your clothes on the bed like you're wearing them to see what they look like
Do you like I don't got to do that anymore that stuff I did I can high school you train yourself enough
I know I know what looks good together
Well, I can do his room and see you. Yeah. Oh, this is tomorrow morning. This is the night's workout
Yeah, good stuff
All right, our next caller is Heidi from Alaska Heidi. How can we help you?
Hi guys
Thanks for having me on. I really appreciate all the knowledge you guys
provide through the podcast as well as your program. So happy to be here.
I'll start with my question and then get into a little bit of background and specifics.
of background and specifics. It's kind of a high level question, but how does one transition from being an athlete into leading a healthy training-based lifestyle? For a little bit of
background, I'm from Alaska, grew up in athletics, played basketball, and Flaud football in high school and then a couple of years of college basketball.
Those are obviously fall and winter sports, so I've always associated those times of year with
training and routine and always having something external to show up for and then having like
an off-season and summer, but now that I'm no longer playing competitively,
it's been a few years I'm not fresh out of college,
but it's kind of ingrained in me
if I wanted to train during those months
and have that consistent routine,
but without that like external driver.
So just doing it for myself,
but the seasonal aspect of it
has led to a little bit of up and down progress
versus just consistently over year.
So yeah, just wondering what your thoughts are
on making that transition from being an athlete
to just living a training lifestyle.
And on the flip side, are there any benefits
of training seasonally?
The woman who loves the journey.
Sorry.
Walking.
Yeah.
Walking.
I was just waiting for it.
No, he's this is sports.
It's shit though.
All those athletic questions, he should have to answer last.
Oh, okay.
I was hoping Justin would start.
I was, you know, I still, I had something to tell you right away.
I'm not going to have anything to call. I'm going to let. I'm going to let Justin to dance to a rift. And then I was, you know, I still, I had something to tell you right away. I'm like, I'm gonna let, I'm gonna let Justin.
I want them to, it's a riff and then I'll give you the real answer.
That's how I'm aesthetic.
Yeah, you get there.
But it's a tough one.
It's definitely tough when a nice struggle, even still to this day because I want a competitive
element to what I'm doing.
And it's just like, it's a shift in mindset, it's a big shift in mindset.
And why I'm joking about the journey thing is because that's something I really had to find
a different way to look at training in general in terms of like, I'm just doing this to benefit
my body, I'm doing this to, you know, for the long haul. And so everything has to change in terms
of like, now how I approach intensity, how I approach different goals that
I set for myself. So I've had to like, you know, parse that out, like which, what's going
to drive me in the gym now? And so it took probably a good two years of transition from being
an athlete. And I had off seasons, and I'm focused like purely on performance and like how
I could, you know, be the strongest guy in the team or like, you know, how that would translate
into like how I'm moving and everything on the field.
So it was like a completely different shift
and I think it's good to introduce yourself
to a completely different training style for a while.
And that's something that I kind of went into more of that
of like hypertrophy, then went into more body weight training
and things that challenged me completely
different in mobility.
But yeah, this is something that you're just going to kind of have to look at sort of the
options and see what draws you in.
What might be scary a little bit because it's completely outside of what you would normally
do.
But I'm now kind of finding myself back in to a healthier way to find competition and still incorporate that.
So I definitely don't say that you need to eliminate that.
Because if you enjoy sports, obviously, you know, that's a great activity to be involved in.
It's just now we have to kind of manage sort of the intensity and your body upkeep in terms of your joint health and everything else.
Listen, Heidi, of all of us that are here, I'm probably the best at this,
I'm just gonna say that.
So, I'm just gonna put that out there.
I will, so here's the thing,
actually being an ex-athlete is definitely to your advantage.
I just think that people use it incorrectly
and to Justin's point or to build on Justin's point
is, and what I learned to do was to take that competitive,
because there's a lot of value in the competitive mindset, the consistency, the discipline,
all those things are going to play into your favor. If you know how to steer them in the right
direction, where people go wrong is they apply that mindset to always intensity, to like my training
session, I have to kill myself, I have to go beyond every every workout has to be better than the last one
and they get competitive in the wrong thing. So get competitive with learning a new craft like Justin said if you've never swung a mace bell before
You know take your athletic mindset and discipline into getting good at that
If you've never done a Turkish get up really really well
Take your competitive mindset and get good at that movement. If you've never been really disciplined and consistent with doing mobility flows every
single day for 20 minutes, get disciplined about that and be very consistent with that.
Those things are all going to serve your overall journey of being what you call a NARP,
but a non-athletic regular person, right?
Is that a real love that you bring that?
Yeah, is that a real term? Yeah, it's a real term.
Yeah.
It's a real term, it's probably a...
It's normies.
I never heard that in college football.
I've never heard that before.
Once the nars come in, all the rest of the students are there.
I didn't know that was...
I had to throw it in there because I saw she wrote that.
I was like, what is a narp, dude?
That's so great.
So yeah, so on your journey to become a Narpe,
I just think that it's, athletes use it incorrectly,
but there's lots of value of you being having an X,
being an X athlete, and just learning how to shift
in the right directions.
The number one mistake is they all just go
the intensity route.
Just think, oh, because I practiced hard,
and that got me so far in sports,
I'm gonna apply that in the weight room
and that's just the wrong way to go about it.
And you can still, like, go after things
with that same competitive, disciplined,
consistent mindset, it's just lay off the crazy,
I have to break myself off in the gym all the time.
That's where the athletes go wrong.
But I love that you said,
like being competitive about mobility
and being competitive about restorative types of stuff
as well, because the tendency is to then sign up
for like OCR race or some kind of marathon
or something like crazy to punish your body.
You know, like so I guess it's just,
you know, using that same competitive spirit
but doing it in ways that are gonna benefit the body
in a holistic aspect.
Yeah, let's go a little deeper though,
because when you're,
except trained athletes,
we're trained quite a few,
and the challenge is a lot of what they're saying,
but the other challenge,
which I think is actually the bigger challenge is,
when you're in season versus off season as an athlete, when you're training, there's a goal in mind.
It's a very specific goal.
I have this game or the season.
I need to beat this other team or I need to run faster than my competitors or whatever.
Then when you're off season, there is no competition.
There is no specific competition.
What it fosters is this mindset of on off, which I'm assuming is what you're being challenged with.
And if it's on, it's on, and there's a specific target,
you actually visualize your competitor,
you visualize the sport that you're gonna compete in,
and when you're off, you're like, oh, it's off season,
I don't have anything to train for.
And the challenge with that is, okay, well,
when I'm not playing a sport, how do I stay consistent with this?
It is a complete
mind, you have to completely shift your mindset. If you ever watch kids play sports outside, not competing, but just playing,
what you'll notice is they're just playing for the sake of playing. They enjoy it for the sake of enjoying it.
This is what you have to figure out for yourself. There's a lot of different ways to do this.
One way is to make you take your competitive nature and to compete in different aspects
of training, like they're saying, or you can compete with mobility, you can compete
with speed or power or recovery, but the challenge with that, the problem with that is you're
still going to be stuck in that competitive mindset. You're still gonna find yourself sometimes being on and off
and always seeking and searching for the next thing
to compete for.
So really what you really want to,
what you really, the ultimately what you want to focus on
is how do I do this for the sake of doing it?
Okay, how do I do this and enjoy it for the sake of itself?
So this is a mindset shift and it really doesn't matter
what you do.
I don't care what you do, it could be lifting weights, it could be running, it could be rowing, it
could be the sport that you enjoyed competing in. But that's what you're going to have to figure
out. And that means you're going to have to be very present in what you're doing and not
think about the next goal. In fact, with people like you, first off, ex athletes were some
of the hardest people to train after they stopped competing because they didn't understand
that. It was either I have an on switch and it's full speed
or it's off.
They didn't understand the in the middle
or how to like maintain this for the rest of my life.
It was really hard thing to do.
But the ones that were successful with it,
were the people that did it because they just enjoyed it.
And in fact, I would tell people like you,
I don't want you to make any goals.
I think that's the opposite of what you should do.
You're, you know why I'm gonna tell you that Heidi?
Because you're gonna make them anyway.
Without even trying, you're gonna naturally have these goals.
You're gonna naturally remember what you did last workout.
You're gonna naturally remember
what your performance looks like.
It's like telling somebody within eating disorder,
I don't want it to weigh yourself on the scale,
even if our goal is to get you, you know, leaner.
I don't want you to weigh yourself
because that's a trigger.
You know it's a trigger for hardcore athletes?
Competition, goals, don't make any.
Yeah, you're gonna make them naturally,
but don't make any.
Instead, enjoy what you're doing.
And what does that mean?
I don't care.
I don't care.
Whatever you're doing, find a way to enjoy what you're doing.
You know what's gonna happen?
You're gonna do it consistently.
You're not gonna stop.
There's not gonna be enough season.
So ultimately, that's the direction that I would aim for. Sure you do. Okay, yeah, that's all great. I definitely do find myself needing some sort of
competition or external driver, but I think focusing on the mobility aspect of it,
that's something I've never really done. So shifting my mindset to that and just focusing on getting better
or the scale of lifting, it's just needed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's inside, it's not outside.
That external driver is not gonna be there.
And if you're constantly trying to create
or find an external driver,
it's gonna be really hard to get out of this
particular space that you're in.
And it's not an easy thing because you've trained yourself
You probably were really successful with external drivers a lot of athletes are so you're gonna have to find that internal that intrinsic
Thing that makes you enjoy what you're doing so I could ask you right now. What's your favorite?
form of exercise if you were just to do a form of exercise and
Forget results forget goals, you just love doing
it.
Could you name what that is?
Oh, it used to be high intensity stuff, but it has shifted to more resistance training
over the past year.
Okay.
So I would say go to the gym and just practice your lifts, get really good at your lifts, feel your body while you're doing it, enjoy the time that you're spending in the gym,
enjoy that present space and develop that new skill. It's a new skill for you. It's not
something that you've developed in the past, but if you develop it, you'll find yourself,
you know, it's not going to matter what you do. You're going to go in and just enjoy doing it.
And then that competitive nature, it's always going to be there. So I would just leave that alone because it's always gonna be there. It's part of who you are now.
Just lean in, lean into what makes you nervous and excited. I mean, you'll find what you love,
as long as you're still kind of focused on things that, you know, and that's the thing about athletes
too, there's always like gonna be a challenge. There's always going to be that mindset's going to be in the back of your head.
It's like not something you're going to erase, but yeah, if you just kind of figure out,
like I really enjoy this, like lean into that harder, you know, and do something that makes
you a little bit uncomfortable and you'll get better at it.
And then you'll get more love towards things that, you know, you're, you're finding enjoyment
out of getting better at it.
What was your, what was your sport of choice?
Basketball. Good deal. Good deal. finding enjoyment out of getting better at. What was your sport of choice?
Basketball. Good deal.
Well, yeah, I mean, do you enjoy playing basketball
even if you're not competing?
I don't mean in the game, obviously within the game itself,
you're trying to beat other people,
but do you enjoy just playing?
Oh, yeah, I mean, I'll just go shoot
that the gym by myself.
That's fine for me.
Oh, so there you go.
That's kind of what I'm talking about.
You know, Heidi, I'm gonna send you a program
that I think, I'm trying to think of a program
that might help someone like you.
I was gonna say symmetry.
I'm starting week three of some of the time.
Yeah, that a girl.
Do you have maps prime pro?
I do not know. Okay, we'll send that to you because that's the mobility aspect. You got it. You got it. Right. Very much. Thank you. Appreciate it. You got it.
Thank you. Thanks for calling in. Yeah. Thank you guys. Yeah. You know, you ever look at, you see like
X pro athletes and a very high percentage of them are really obese. Yeah. Boxers, fighters,
football, all like you said, that's switch. It's all or nothing. Exactly. Yeah. So I, you know,
I didn't want to argue with you why we're still on with her because we were going to drag that
out forever. But I don't know if I fully subscribed to what you said. I do agree with a lot of what
you said. But it's really hard to tell somebody who is in, I mean, I think Justin would be lying
if he says that he still doesn't have that competitive that that I'm saying because I'm
still lying.
Yeah, that'll never die, Sal.
I haven't said to kill it.
I'm saying, don't feed it even more.
So I don't know.
Again, I don't know if I agree with that.
So what made the progress for me in my, my mobility was my competitive mindset.
Like I became obsessed, like an athlete becomes obsessed about a sport, about becoming
mobile because I sucked at it.
I was so bad I couldn't get past 90 degrees.
I agree.
I don't think what you're, I agree with what you're saying.
I think if you have a specific goal, it's very useful.
The point that I'm trying to make is not about a specific goal,
but the point I'm trying to make is,
how do I do this consistently forever without on and off,
without doing long periods of being consistent?
No, I get what you're saying.
I get what you're pointing at.
But what you're saying is true.
I mean, anytime you have a specific goal,
that's going to kick in, and you had that.
You did that with the mobility.
Right. It turned on.
Right.
So I think there's value in that,
but when you're talking to someone who's like, how do I
stay consistent?
Because that's what her question was, like, how does this on season off season thing, it's
like, okay, for that, specifically, don't make it, don't, don't feed into that, that's
going to happen anyway.
Well, I need that on my own.
So that's, that's kind of how I've stayed consistent my whole life.
I, what I've learned to do is to shift the focus on something different.
All the guys have pie, right?
So like if I'm, I was so heavy in the performance chunk
of the pie, and now I'm just looking at a different part
of that where it's like, okay, I could really lean
into the mobility, I could really lean into power speed,
like you're kind of mentioning those different aspects
and elements of overall health, wellness, and fitness.
So it's just like, it's taking a broader picture
of the whole thing and not just staying so
hyper focused in that one realm,
but you can be competitive in any one of those
and keep it rotating indefinitely.
You can, and that's what I'm trying to say.
I'm not taking away that at all that element.
I think that's an important thing.
I know, but it comes off that way when you tell her
to completely, you would tell her
to completely shift her mindset and then just do what you love. And it's like, that's
cause I'm talking to her. I know. I, I, I, I, that's why I didn't, I didn't want to argue
with you while you're on with her because I think you made some good points that I think
are important, but I don't fully subscribe to that. I just, I, I, I have remained a competitive
athlete, uh, since the, since the day I picked up a ball and played sports. And I I just, I, I have remained a competitive athlete since the, since the day I picked up a
ball and played sports. And I've just, what I've learned to do is to see the things that
the, the addictive behaviors of the bad things that it can lead to, like you, you're, you're
alluding to and the on and off, because I absolutely went through that phase. And what I've
learned now to do is to just shift that focus to Justin's point of looking at, you know,
being healthy and fit as this big sphere,
and it's not this little tiny pie,
it's this massive giant pie,
and that, okay, I'm just gonna be competitive,
and sometimes being competitive
is being competitive with recovery.
Yeah, totally.
You know, like, I'm gonna be,
so I'm about to get competitive with myself,
where I'm waiting for this cold plunge to get done,
and you bet your ass, I'm already formulating
a competitive goal with myself of how I'm gonna use it.
Oh yeah, I just, I mean, that's,
I think that's a winning strategy.
If you were talking to you,
back when you were struggling with the on-off, right?
Maybe when you were in your 20s, I don't know.
When you were struggling with the on-off,
Yeah.
That would be, the discussion might be a little different.
Now, who you are now is very different. You've been doing this for a very long time. You you figured
it out. You're obviously very consistent now, but you went through that period of on off.
It's like, look, it's like talking to somebody about body composition, who has body image
issues. Usually what I'll do is I'll say, don't look in the mirror, don't analyze your
body, don't weigh yourself. Does that mean there's no value in looking
in the mirror and weighing yourself?
Of course not.
It's just in that period of time,
we gotta figure out how to develop a different relationship.
And then you can go back and it's gonna be there.
The competitive part of you, and look,
I get very competitive too,
and I didn't compete in traditional sports,
but I get also very competitive with things
that I'm doing with my train.
I change it all the time.
But I'm talking about all of it.
I think we both agree on the destination
that we want to go to, and I think we're,
we don't completely agree on how to get to that destination.
So I don't necessarily, again,
I don't necessarily fully disagree with what you're saying,
because we both agree on the desired outcome
that we're trying to get.
I just have a different approach to it.
I would just communicate that to somebody like her
consistently, and just, you're right, at that age, you know, she may not have that completely, she hasn't come
full circle like I have at 40 years old, but I don't know if necessarily trying to stifle
her competitiveness would be the way that I would do it.
Also, keep in mind, you guys already talked about that. I'm adding on top of what you guys
said. So if you had you not said what you said, I would have definitely thrown that in because
I think that's all part of it,
but I think it's a balanced, has to be a balanced.
I'm gonna kind of add to your point, Sal,
like in terms of like that transitional period.
So for me, it was, there was a bit of an on-off
where it was, like I was like,
I don't know what to do.
Like there's this transition of like trying to find yourself
because you identified,
so strongly with being an athlete. I think that you challenge her mindset to then shift into
just being in the gym is a valuable part of the process, just showing up. To then take you back
into then, I can focus on something and have that drive again and use it towards things
that are gonna benefit me in long term,
but there's that window I had to really have
that crazy hardship because I was such a strong,
identified athlete.
Oh, it's one of the hardest,
some of the hardest clients ever trained were ex-athletes
because of that.
Yeah, I would agree with that.
I mean, athletes are, it's really tough to get them
out of the intensity mindset.
Athlete mindset, yeah.
And I think we all did point on something and said it in different ways that, you know,
go in there and focus on an exercise or a movement and be competitive with getting good at it.
Totally.
Like that, I mean, and part of getting good at it is, you know, you got to lighten the load and you work on technique,
and you slow down the reps and you analyze the form.
And can I be competitive in my mindset?
Yeah, I get this to the point
where I just enjoy doing it for the sake of it.
Right, right, totally.
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