Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1887: Why You Shouldn’t Ask Your Doctor About Diet & Exercise
Episode Date: August 25, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover five reasons why you doctor is likely not the ideal person to ask for diet and exercise advice. Some of the WORST advice that clients would bring about die...t & exercise would come from their DOCTORS! (2:39) The importance of consulting and asking for clearance from your doctor. (5:33) In the defense of ‘good’ doctors. (7:13) Five Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Ask Your Doctor About Diet and Exercise. #1 - Their education is largely specialized (almost none on training or diet). (9:38) #2 - They have no experience coaching people through the process. (18:52) #3 - Their tool kit is great for acute issues or symptom relief (not chronic issues). (25:11) #4 - They have a drug for that. (32:36) #5 - They don’t have time to walk you through it. (37:58) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Chili Sleep 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 #1835: Why Resistance Training Is The Best Form Of Exercise For Fat Loss And Overall Health Vitamin D and its role in psoriasis: An overview of the … – PubMed MP Holistic Health Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dr. Becky Campbell (@drbeckycampbell) Instagram Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
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This is Mind Puppering.
In today's episode, we talk about why you probably shouldn't ask your doctor about specifics when it comes to diet and exercise.
I know that sounds crazy, but we explain it all in this episode and I promise you it's all going to make sense.
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Some of the worst advice that clients would bring to me when it came to diet and exercise actually
came from their doctors, real doctors. And it was also some of the most challenging ones to overcome.
You guys remember encountering some of this stuff? You just been trying to start fighting the
issues. No, I mean, we'll look through the horusness. No, this is true.
And it was, so a couple of things.
Very frustrating.
Yeah, I would get clients who get really, really bad advice
from their doctors.
Like, I'm gonna do this HCG diet.
That was one where they went $500 lifting
because it's gonna hurt your back.
Yeah, or don't squat anymore, don't move anymore,
don't do this thing anymore.
I actually had clients, many times coming to me with these liquid diets that their client, that their doctors would put them on where they would just have shakes to lose weight.
And it was so hard to overcome or to talk through because I'm countering their doctor.
Yeah.
And there's two challenges to that. One is you have to be very careful because the way regulations work, if you don't wanna say something that,
you never wanna say anything that'll hurt somebody,
but if you say something that counters a doctor,
you could be quite liable, regardless of what that is.
And number two, because doctors are held
to such a high standard, for some very justifiable reasons,
the ultimate authority.
If you tell your client, no, I don't think you should just
have powder liquid calories
for the next 30 days to lose weight.
It was hard to overcome because they're like, well, it's my doctor.
This is my doctor.
They know what they're talking about.
They've gone to a lot of school.
You know, I've been seeing them for a long time.
It's like, well, how do I, how do I overcome this?
Yeah, this was really hard for me, especially considering I don't think I have a silver tongue
like you do.
So I think I struggle with this for most of my career because they already put in that
authority position and unless you can articulate your argument better than the doctor can,
it's a really, really tough one to overcome.
Even if you know better, right, I would know better about the advice they're given and
you give a perfect example of, you know, oh, do these shakes for the next 30 days and
that, that, that became a thing for a second.
You guys remember that?
It was super common.
Yeah.
Well, because what happened is like, okay, you get,
you get clients and there's exceptions to this rule, right?
And I understand where it came from, right?
If, if a client was so morbidly obese that,
it was like an emergency.
Yeah, like, it's an emergency to get this weight off.
Obviously, this person has struggled most of their life
if not all their life with weight,
and probably tried all kinds of different diets
and weren't successful.
So it was like, this is an emergency way
to get weight off of them
because it was a life or death matter.
So to me, there are exceptions to the rule
where I understand where that logic came from,
but that wasn't a majority of the people.
That was not most of my clients.
Most of my clients were in a manageable place. It wasn't life or death where they needed to
get that weight off. But they did need to. I mean, it was life or death as far as, you know,
they continued on this path. They were going to die, but it wasn't like if they didn't do,
they didn't figure this out next week, they were going to die.
Yeah. Now, I want to be clear. I have tremendous respect for physicians and doctors. I have
a lot of friends that are doctors at one point, I trained a lot. Now I want to be clear, I have tremendous respect for physicians and doctors. I have a lot of friends that are doctors.
At one point, I trained a lot.
And I always ask for clearance.
And I would always consult with doctors because what they do know, they know very, very well.
And you need some of that information.
So that's really, really important.
But when it came to exercise and nutrition, general exercise and nutrition, aside from
their specialties, their advice was typically not that great.
And it could cause a lot of problems
because there's such high positions of authority.
So I would get clients that would come to me
either with these prescription diet pills
or they'd be on, or the doctor would say something like,
don't squat anymore.
Now, if it wasn't coming from their osteopath
or someone who specifies in that,
you know, it was specific in that particular field,
I'd be like, what do you mean your general practitioner told you
not to squat anymore?
Because your knee hurts and I say,
well, I think, I know, I think I know why your knee hurts.
You have this dysfunction here, we can work on that.
Yeah, yeah, but they said,
I shouldn't do any lower body exercises.
Then you're putting a really tough position
because as a trainer, you require doctors clearance.
So I would actually, this happened quite twice to me.
I'd get on the phone with a doctor
and I'd have to explain myself and say,
well, here's why we're gonna squat,
here's how we're gonna squat, here's what's gonna happen.
And thankfully, through the conversation,
the doctor said, okay, you know what you're doing.
I trust you.
But it was intimidating. Well, and it's addressing the symptom.
I mean, it's like, it's an easy way for them to avoid the pain of the symptom of the
pain, but we're not addressing anything, you know, going into the future in terms of
strengthening and supporting the body to bring it back to, you know, alleviate completely.
So before we get into hammering doctors right now, I want to defend, defend them
also because I think in their defense, there are probably more bad trainers. You could make
the case. There's more bad trainers than there are bad doctors. And if you're a doctor
and you hear your client is training with some young trainer and your knees hurt.
You are probably gonna lean on the...
Great point.
You know, I'm gonna be,
I don't know who this kid is.
He doesn't know who Adam is training a client.
And then probably have experience
with their patients getting hurt from crappy.
Right, and so listen, don't listen to this young kid
who's telling you you need to squat all this way.
That's great, yeah, good point.
You've got to heal completely.
Right, so in their defense, and remember, we were a part of the real big wave of training, like
the popularity of trainers.
We were on the front end of the beginning of that wave, I would say, and through a majority
of that, and of course, still doing that in our career today.
And so early on, trainers were not as knowledgeable and as skillless they are today. And so, you know, early on, trainers were not as knowledgeable and as skill as they
are today. I mean, I watched that evolution happen in my career, like where trainers became
very, very knowledgeable.
Yeah, it started out with just trainers were just people who trained themselves and were
fit. Yeah. And it's right. You didn't mean the certification courses were not what they
are now. Yeah, my very first certification was IFPA. So this is before even 24-hour fitness,
I was already looking into becoming a trainer and the national
Cert that I had, which was nationally recognized, was IFPA. It was literally a
take home test that I could fill out and send in. Oh, well, so you literally could look up all the answers, fill it out, and then I was
I was technically a certified personal trainer after that. So that's what I think and so you got to know that doctors
a little trainer after that. So that's what I think.
So you got to know that doctors saw that, remembered that, felt that, and probably experienced
that.
And so I do want to defend that.
Now, I also think that we're in a totally different era now.
Trainers now, and this is, again, an over-generalization would be to say that they're all great, because
there's just as many probably bad ones today.
But the education level of trainers, because there's more money there now that that wasn't a that wasn't a career path
20 something years ago. You didn't hear kids in junior high going like when I grow up I want
to be a personal trainer one day like that wasn't a thing until later on. Now it's a legitimate
career path. It's more it's more competitive. So you need to be better to do what you do. There's
better information. I know that's a really, really really good point And you know, I have really good relationship with a lot of doctors
You know, I've said many times at one point I trained quite a few
Physicians and doctors and one thing that struck me was
First off, we all know that doctors are highly educated becoming a doctor
Especially in a spec especially when you're specialized or you're a surgeon
It's a tremendous amount of formal education especially when you're specialized or you're a surgeon.
It's a tremendous amount of formal education
and it weeds out a lot of people that just can't hack it.
It's a very challenging job.
They're also extremely intelligent.
I was surprised to see the hobbies
that a lot of these doctors had were,
like I couldn't believe they had first off hobbies
because if you look at the hours of like the typical surgery
or where do they fit that in?
It's crazy.
But they'd be like, oh yeah, I'm also a classically trained pianist
and I do that on the side.
Or, oh yeah, I learn Latin or whatever.
I'm like, okay, these are.
I'm a pilot.
Yeah, I'm a pilot.
Really, really intelligent people.
And then also, I had this perception of doctors as a kid
that, oh, these are people that make a lot of money.
So maybe people go into this field to make money.
That's not true. Now, the only time I kind of encountered
that little bit was when I trained plastic surgery. But the other doctors, they were all
passion driven, totally passion driven. They loved what they did, many have volunteered
their time on the side to help and that kind of stuff. So tremendously intelligent, very
educated, smart, you know, people, but very specialized.
This is what people need to realize is that they're very, very specialized. And their education,
when it comes to exercises zero, and when it comes to nutrition, I believe is a semester
or a course. I think it's one course semester. Now, so this is largely just in Western medicine,
right? Because in Eastern medicine,
they look at medicine differently,
more holistically than we do.
And so I think because of our advancements
and how good we are at handling acute issues,
we've become very specialized,
which is unique to our country, right?
I tell you that everywhere.
It is, but if you work with like an Eastern medicine
specialist, they will work with nutrition differently in movement differently. It's a very different practice. They tend to focus
more on, it's holistic and more on kind of root cause type of stuff. I'm not saying it's superior.
I think in some cases it is. I think in many other cases it's not. But Western medicine doctors
are very, very specialized in what they do. And if you look at the required courses that they take in nutrition, it's small.
It's very small.
It's like, I think it's a semester if I'm not mistaken, in most cases.
And it would have come to an exercise or is none.
I've had a few doctors that have, you know, had his clients that were saying that they
just breeze through the nutrition section.
And typically it was like the general practitioner is because you get so many patients every day and
it's like it became kind of this thing, like this pattern of
like how much information can you really relate to each
patient and then what was most effective with that. And so,
you know, nutrition was very brief, like even if they
bring it up as an option.
So it's totally brief and what they tend to communicate or what they would communicate
to clients of mine was more of what you hear when you go online about losing weight.
So they would say things like, oh, you just eat less and just move more.
It would be their typical advice or go sign up for a class, you know, workout class
or I would have, I would have clients come back.
Well, my doctor said cut carbs and I say, cut carbs and cut carbs and the doctor and I will yeah it worked really well for him
So that's what he told me to do. I'm like okay. Well you're getting advice
That's a little bit maybe you're from a smarter more educated person the average person but the average but the advice is coming across
the same and
Because again they have such a that authority it was really hard to counter it. In fact, oftentimes I would not counter it.
I'd let it run its course.
You okay, you're just told.
No, how to, you kind of had to sometimes.
I mean, at the end of the day,
we're still in a service business
and these people are hiring and paying you.
And then if you're sitting there arguing with them
and fighting with their doctor the whole time.
So you a lot of time, they'll lose.
Yeah, you'd have to submit.
A lot of times you'd submit, say,
okay, we'll do it your way first. And then, as we go through, I'll explain to you why this is time, it'll lose. Yeah, you'd have to submit. A lot of times you just submit, say, okay, we'll do it your way first.
And then as we go through, I'll explain to you
why this is happening, what that's happening
and why we're not seeing the results that you wanna see.
So, you know, what was really illuminating
was when I would train a lot of these doctors
when I first started getting,
so I would train one and then they started referring
to each other.
And so then I started training quite a bit,
is that they would come to me, I would do my assessment,
like I would always do with anyone.
And because they know anatomy much more than the average person
and they understand the terminology,
I would be able to speak to them in a particular way.
And then they would inevitably say something like,
I can't do any squatting or I can't bend my knee below
more than 45 degrees, no ever had pressing for me.
And they would tell me why, you know,
I tore my infraspinatus,
I have some AC joint problems,
I had it resected a few years ago,
or yeah, I can't squat below 45 degrees
because I have congemalatia,
and they would have all the reasons why,
tell me why they can't do it.
And it was very illuminating to me
because I'd hear this, and I'd know,
because I've worked with many, many people in this situation. I know like, well, we'll
see, we'll see how your movement works and through strengthening the body, it's very
likely you'll be able to do more than you think. And I would tell them that it's very likely,
but we'll take it very slow and we'll see what's happened with your body. And they would
be blown away. I remember one lady in particular, she's like, I can't squat below 45 degrees. I
got all these problems and she listed her issues. I mean, six months later, we're doing
full squats. And she was like blown away. But it was good about this is that they started
sending me their patients because they saw like, Oh, it's, there's much more to this than
I thought.
Well, a lot of the, you have to think it's probably like the national certifications,
right? So when you get it, I remember that having this moment too, where you had gone through multiple national certifications and then a lot of
the stuff that they were teaching as far as form and technique was stopping at 90 degrees
and not going below parallel on your squatting and nothing behind your neck, like all these
kind of basic rules that like I feel are not true. But the reason why they do that is because
obviously the risk
of someone potentially hurting themselves, they may be liable for teaching that. So I
imagine doctors are held to the same standard where it's like, you tell your doctor, oh,
my knees hurt or this bother me and I'm getting ready to hire this personal trainer.
What can I can't do? They're going to go like, uh, don't squat, don't do this, don't do
that because if they say, oh, you should squat, it's really good for you, or you should deadlift,
it's gonna be really good for you.
And then they go do those movements,
and then end up getting hurt.
I imagine that they're held liable for that.
And so that's probably another reason why
they push that so hard.
Yeah, and also when you go and you get a procedure done,
like a surgery of some type,
they, you'll get the standard answers.
Like, okay, now that we've repaired your ACL,
no more lateral movement or no more whatever,
you know, no stopping quickly or, and, you know,
and we know as trainers that if you don't rehab
and strengthen, that's true.
Okay, that's good advice.
However, you're gonna lose the ability
when you never practice that
and you're just gonna decline even faster. And I do to say by the way that it's it's changing quite a bit
Yeah, I'm starting to see the advice for to change a little bit like the reluctance to have people use a cane or a walker that didn't happen
Early in my career. It was like oh you fell use a walker now
I you know now I'm hearing people say my doctors trying to prevent me from going on my walker because once I do
Then I'm going to change my movement patterns.
It's going to be stuck on it type of deal.
Yeah, you see there is a bit of a shift and you see some more integrative type of approaches
and holistic type of approaches and functional medicine is a thing now that wasn't really
when we were trainers way back when.
And so there's definitely been a big shift
in the medical community to start kind of incorporating
some of these practices and getting in touch
with the physical therapists and training
and kind of creating that opportunity
to send their patients in that direction, which is,
so I see glimmers of hope.
Yeah, also because it's such a highly regulated field,
so medicine is extremely, it's very, very highly regulated
and I, of course, understand why.
A lot of the information that they get
is through the regulatory process, right?
So doctors were advocating low fat, for example,
for a long time, when low fat was the official,
like this is the cause of obesity, it's too much fat, right?
They were advocating for the use of vegetable oils
instead of traditional or natural oils
for a very, very long time,
because these are, this is the official guidelines.
They would not advocate for strength training
for a long time, because strength training
didn't have any studies to support its benefits,
mainly because there were no studies that were done on strength training for longevity have any studies to support its benefits, mainly because there
were no studies that were done on strength training for longevity. So the forms of exercise, so I'd
get clients that were obese that their doctor would send me and the client would say, my doctor said,
I need to focus on cardiovascular activity. And that strength training. Yeah, I don't need to do
strength training. I need to focus on cardiovascular activity. Well, that's because that's the official
narrative. And that's the information they get through their channels through the regulatory process.
So, you can be behind, you basically can be behind
on what's actually happening and working.
Like, when I'm training people,
I see what's happening, what's working with my experience.
So I know like, oh, this method's actually
far more effective than the official narrative.
Well, I mean, that brings to your next point of that,
they just lack that experience.
It's the same thing that when I see these online coaches and trainers who have never coached
somebody in person and there's just, you can have all the knowledge, you know, you could
read all the books and even understand that it actually gone through the nutrition and
certifications, but until you go out there and you actually apply it to clients and help
them through that process, I mean, that's not, it takes that before it comes full circle
for you
on the ability to communicate
because the books don't address
like all the behavior stuff.
No.
And we know that that's the bulk of it.
The bulk of it is adherence.
Can I even get this person to do X, Y, and Z?
Even if I know scientifically,
this is the best answer for them
or what they should do.
The reality is if what they should do,
if you know, because you've
actually gone and coached enough people that the the fail rate on that is 90%. Well, then it's no longer
the most ideal thing we should do. Because yes, it's backed by sciences the best answer for that
situation. But if 90% of the people that attempt that best answer and fail at it, it's not successful.
So I have to think of other ways
to get them to that same desire.
Well, when you're working with diet and exercise,
it's not just plugging in numbers.
Like, okay, calories, proteins, fats, carbs,
here's your workout, here you go and go do it.
If it was that easy, we'd have no obesity issue at all
because the answers are out there.
What it is is the coaching process and working with people through that process and helping
them develop behaviors and helping them change the relationships with their bodies, change
their relationships with nutrition.
So they don't reach for food, for comfort or to numb themselves or they understand the
real values of food and they change how they perceive it, how they enjoy it, or they don't enjoy it,
and with exercise the same thing.
This is a long process.
It's not here, follow, look, as a trainer,
that's what I did early days.
Early days as a trainer, I just did meal plans
and gave people workouts.
Here's, oh, your calories.
Here's your calories, because I know how many you need
to lose weight.
Here's the workout, just follow this.
Well, that fails.
It doesn't work out, so it's a conversation that takes time in coaching
and doctors don't have the time to do that
and they don't have the training to do that.
You know, who's more qualified, I'll tell you something right now.
You could take two years of nutrition education,
two years like specialized nutrition education
or you could go and learn two years of therapy
and become a therapist.
You know, it's gonna be more qualified
to coach someone to lose weight, therapist, for sure.
Because it's behavior, it's not the calories
and the macros that make the biggest difference
in terms of long-term success.
Well, and also too, I imagine there's a bit of doctors
out there that are jaded because of patients
and clients coming in that maybe they do spend a little bit of time trying to describe how to eat healthier
Like you know move and add exercise into the mix and they just don't hear it
They want to just get the pill they want to just get the the answer that's like easy and it's going to solve their issues
To where you know enough times I feel like you know it might be in a place where it's like, well,
I'm not even going to bring it up.
Going back to the psychology of what you were saying, it's how we do diets with people
today, right?
So, early on as a trainer, I made the same mistake.
This client is this big, they want to lose this much weight.
This is their macro breakdown.
This is the calorie restriction I'm putting them on.
Here's a list of the foods they say they like to eat or don't eat.
Here's your meal plan.
Yeah.
And go follow it.
And that is all backed by science.
You know, if they follow it, they'll lose it.
That's right.
We can support this base off this.
We have enough information now that we could figure out pretty close what that person should
be eating from a macro and calorie perspective to get them to their goal.
Problem is, I've done that so many times and have failed so many times, I realize that's
not a winning strategy.
Even though the science supports, that is the answer.
But what really ends up working way better is actually not worrying so much about all those
things, assessing where their diet is and going like, oh, they're lacking in these things. So instead of me taking food away, even
those clients want to lose 30, 40 pounds, I'm actually going to add something
into their diet. Complete opposite of what anything would support
scientifically. Because if you go, hey, this person needs to lose weight from
what they're eating. Your coach and trainer says they want you to add something
to diet. I would fail. I would not as far with that. I would not pass the
scientific test on that.
But the truth is, that's what works.
Is what we know is that when you have a client,
you're playing with their psychology.
You're not telling them they can't do something they can't have.
I tell them I want them to add this into their diet.
You know just by them focusing on that,
naturally other things fall off there.
Look, the answer to alcoholism to stop drinking alcohol.
The answer to a drug addiction is to stop doing the drug.
Oh, you're poor, just make more money and save more money.
Okay, that's great.
Thank you very much.
I appreciate your answer.
Try harder.
But that's not, that doesn't work.
Why?
Because we're not robots.
Okay.
And the coaching process is where the value is.
A really good trainer will tell you this.
Somebody who's been training people for a long time
will tell you that the real success,
the long-term success comes through that process.
Doctors have no experience in that.
So even if a doctor is educated in some of these things
like nutrition and exercise,
and even a trainer, even a new trainer
who's got certifications and some of this stuff,
they're not gonna be effective
because are they gonna coach you through the process?
When you fail, are you gonna show up
and are they gonna say, oh, what will happen,
how's your relationship to food?
I'm like, oh, just eat what I told you, right?
So that's a big reason why doctors are gonna be ineffective
or their advice is gonna be ineffective.
Especially here's the other part,
you have to consider where these are people
that are highly disciplined when they wanna be.
And when you're talking to somebody
who knows how to do that,
sometimes they think you're the same way or it's easy.
In other words, you can hear somebody say,
just do it, just follow and just do it.
Just grind your way through it.
Most people don't work that way.
I know some people do, but most people simply don't.
I remember I had an issue with that
because I'm a fitness fanatic.
So I thought, you know, we'll just get up and work out.
Like what's the big deal?
Just get up and do it.
All you gotta do is just get up and do it.
And it's like, okay, it's not working.
Everybody's failing.
Maybe the problem is me.
Maybe the problem's not them.
So the other thing is that a doctor's toolkit,
we're talking about Western medicine,
is very, very good for acute issues.
Like, Western medicine, okay, if you have an acute issue,
that is the form of medicine you want.
You're dying now, you want a Western medicine doctor.
Something ruptures, like I'm going to the hospital.
Arm breaks.
Yeah, yeah, something's happening now, I need medicine,
I need, like, you want that now.
Chronic issues, Western medicine,
just because of the way it's organized,
is terrible at dealing with chronic issues.
If you have a skin condition,
and the reason why you have a skin to condition
is because you don't get enough sunlight,
you have a lot of stress, you don't get enough sleep,
the diet that you're eating, there's a few food intolerances that you're not aware of.
Yeah. And that's the answer. You ain't going to get that answer
from Western medicine. What you're going to get from Western
medicine is here, rub this cream on it that brings down the
inflammation and it makes the symptom kind of disappear. And
losing weight, changing your relationship to exercise,
becoming active for the rest of your life. This is not a
an acute solution. This is a more of a chronic issue obesity chronic. It takes time
So you have to deal with it in that way and their toolkit just isn't well why is why is it that
Western medicine is so bad for something chronic is it because
It what it will do is is mask
The root cause and then it'll just manifest itself somewhere else.
Is that, because if you're,
if you're, if you're,
if you're dead, let's see your skin issue,
and because I, for example, my psoriasis,
and I went through this process, going through Western medicine.
Here's the, here's the steroid shots.
Here's the steroid creams.
Put it on it.
Oh, when I put it on it, it totally,
totally tempts it down, relief. I don't itches bad, it doesn't look as bad,
but the inflars over here.
Constantly having to do all that stuff,
just to keep it down.
And by the way, my body starts to adapt to those creams
and then I have to rotate through other ones,
same thing with the steroid stuff.
I have to do a different.
You might change it out and now you're gonna have
a different reaction from a different one of those creams.
And so it's like a downstream effect.
So if you're adding some kind of medication to address the symptom, now sometimes you
might also have these other side effects that now you have to treat the side effects alongside
the actual treatment.
And then it just kind of compiles, which I think the chronic issues, that's where the problem
is.
Right.
Never once a conversation around what's my diet like, vitamin D, infrared light or sunlight,
like none of that stuff was ever discussed.
No lifestyle stuff.
None.
At all.
It was literally, in fact, you probably, they probably laughed at me.
I bet you asked.
I did.
I did.
And they laughed at me.
It was years later.
It was actually not until we all got together.
Was it you who sent me to the...
I brought up a study. I said that vitamin D deficiency is very closely connected to psoriasis. It was years later, it was actually not until we all got together, was it you who sent me to.
I brought up a study.
I said that vitamin D deficiency is very closely connected to psoriasis.
And Adam's like, nobody ever told me, started taking vitamin D and it started to get better.
Right away.
Well, then we had, then we, we wouldn't get the test done because I hadn't even been,
I never even thought to test for vitamin D. Didn't even, didn't even dawn on me that
that might be an issue.
Test for it, find out that I am really low.
And I was really low even after taking 5,000 I use.
So I ended up having to bump it up to 10,000
because I was so low.
So, you know, and it didn't, it made a huge difference.
So did the infrared, so did just getting out
and getting sunlight.
So did avoiding foods that my body was obviously
intolerant to.
So there was so many other things that actually
could solve that problem that they weren't even speaking to, they're just going to constantly hammer the steroid cream.
Yeah, the reason why Western medicine is the way it is with chronic stuff is because
Western medicine was extremely successful and was born out of solving acute issues, right?
So when Western medicine really started taking hold, it was like, how do we solve bacterial infections
that killed millions of people all the time?
Boom, antibiotics, like what a breakthrough, right?
How do we solve these viral infections
that are poliole, for example?
Oh, we have a vaccine, massive, massive breakthrough.
Surgery, oh my God, I'm bleeding.
What do I'm gonna bleed out?
What do I do, right?
Anesthesia, surgeries, like repairing bones,
repairing, you know, arteries after heart attacks.
It was brilliant and it worked,
but it was built around that model
of solving this kind of emergency issue.
And so it was never baked into the system
for this kind of, like, how do we solve,
like if you look at the problems today
that Western medicine is really struggling with,
you have like degenerative disorders.
Autoimmune.
Autoimmune issues, right?
Alzheimer's, dementia.
You have all the autoimmune issues,
Crohn's disease, colitis, psoriasis, eczema,
allergies, food allergies, which are going through heart disease, which
is a chronic issue, diabetes.
We have all these chronic issues, and Western medicine, just terrible at working with these.
By the way, a lot of these, we already know the answers to.
A lot of them require total lifestyle changes.
Now, part of the challenge is lifestyle changes are hard, taking a pill is kind of easy.
But nonetheless, it's not organized in a way to work
with those types of things.
So if you go see your doctor, how long do you spend with them?
10, 15 minutes?
What are your symptoms?
What's going on?
Let's do some tests.
Here's a pill or here's a thing.
And I think we can take care of that.
And we already know how difficult it is,
even as a coach to extract the right amount of data
from your client and ask the right questions
to really peer into their actual lifestyle.
Because we always present our best self.
I mean, look at social media.
We're always presenting our best self all the time,
which is not helpful, especially when you're coming in
with an issue that you really need to dive in and
And be transparent as possible. So I also think part of the challenge they have with with chronic issues
Both everything from chronic pain to even like skin and diabetes and things like that is that it's so individualized
So you get like think of it as a trainer like okay, I have a client who has a bad hip a bad hip could be caused
The root cause could be a lot of different things
It doesn't it could be something to do with their foot. It could be something to do with their knee
It could be something to their little back like it could be a do it. It could be inflammation
Yeah, it could be a lot of different. They emotional right there could be a lot of different things that are causing that and they just
They don't have the time and effort to really troubleshoot
all those. It's not their training. Yeah. It's like, oh, you have, you have hit pain. Oh, here's
a, here's a, here's a shot. Here's a shot or here's some pain messages. They're there to solve
or maybe we'll get you surgery. Right. Which to them, it doesn't matter if the root cause came from
your foot or came from inflammation or came from the fact that your right foot is one inch longer
than your left foot. Like that, it's like, oh, you have pain in the area. This will dull the pain for sure. So it
it so it unbrellas everybody, but the truth is if you want to get to the bottom of it and really
solve the problem with chronic anything, you've got to diagnose every individual because every
individual could have, and they go like to psoriasis, my point. Psoriasis could be potentially caused for red meat
or from asparagus for me.
Or then it's dysbiosis.
But then it's avocado and banana for somebody else, right?
Or yeah, you have some sort of issue.
So it could be so many different things
that a doctor is not going to sit there and troubleshoot all
that.
No, and another problem is they have a drug
for most symptoms, right?
Most symptoms, there's a drug that's been designed,
most common symptoms, there's a drug that's designed
to treat that, and drug companies have massive influence
over our medical system.
It's like the supplement industry and fitness, right?
It's the money making part
of that industry. Now, I'm not going to demonize the drug and pharmaceutical industry. And I
know that a lot of people think it's popular to demonize them. Look, I'm going to, I mean,
to be quite honest, the pharmaceutical industry has solved a lot of major issues. They spend
a lot of money on research. Some of that research is brilliant and incredible, but they're an industry like anything else and there can always be things that are better. If something
is not profitable, then it's very hard to fund the research that's needed. It's very hard
to pass through regulations to make a drug even viable. So it's just, again, it's baked
into the system. Then of course, you throw on top of it
that people run it.
People can be greedy, they can be corrupt,
they can be all those different things.
So you mix that all together
and you get a lot of problems.
So, I mean, I'll give you guys,
I was actually having this conversation
with Jessica yesterday.
So my son, my youngest, he was having kind of like some,
like real mild rashes, like in the back of his knee,
his elbow, and his digestion seemed a little off.
Like his, you know, when he would,
when he would, his stool would be a little too soft
or a little bit constipated.
And, you know, obviously we're both in the wellness field.
So we notice these things and so we tell the pediatrician
and we have a great pediatrician, okay.
We have a really good pediatrician, but still,
that's, again, the system is the way it is. And so she goes, oh, she goes, really good pediatrician, but still that's again the system is the way it is and so she goes oh she goes well
Try putting this I'll get you some cortisone cream to put on the rash, right now
Jessica and I are like look. I don't care about the rash as much first of all it's not that bad
It's not like super bothering him, but also
Why does he have the rash like okay? We put the cream on but what's causing the rash?
So then we talked about the god and then you know, yeah, we put the cream on, but what's causing the rash?
So then we talked about the gut,
and then he also had his breath was kind of smelling funny.
So the doctor's like, well, you know what,
we can try this antibiotic.
So wait, we don't know if there's a bacterial infection.
Like, let's not do that yet.
So what I did is I actually had to go through
our friend Becky Campbell, Dr. Beck Campbell,
it's a functional medicine practitioner,
and they operate more holistically.
So we did some testing, We saw some there was some
dysbiosis in his gut. We did a low histamine diet, put them on some antimicrobials, which are natural,
right? Some herbal stuff. And it's all going away. Now imagine if we were like the average parent,
and just rubbed the cream on it, didn't change anything else, right? We would have never solved any of
those issues. And then that led us to another conversation about antibiotics. Now they're different about
antibiotics now because now we have more information. But when we led us to another conversation about antibiotics. Now they're different about antibiotics now,
because now we have more information.
But when we were kids, you said throw it at everything.
Anything, you were sick, any sneeze cough,
it didn't matter, boom, throw antibiotics at it.
Isn't that one of the prevailing theories
on the explosion of autoimmune in our generation?
They think that may play a role,
because it really messes up with your microbiome
and your immune system.
In fact, the microbiome, we knew we had bacteria in our body
but we had no idea in the 80s when we were kids.
They had no idea how it's integrated.
It was, yeah.
None.
So they would throw antibiotics at everything.
My siblings and I, I was able to do so many times.
Some doctors still do this.
I know.
It's still, I mean, we know do this. I know it's still I mean
We know more information about it, but it's still calm. Luckily I have a really good pediatrician who's actually like
Super we that's our last last resort we'd ever do
But there's still some that like that's the first thing they do
Yeah, I mean and you know that a majority for example like a large chunk of when people have like a chest infection is viral
a large chunk of when people have like a chest infection is viral, not bacterial. So you're going to throw antibiotics at it, but that doesn't do anything, right?
And then people get better because they're going to get better anyway, so then they think it's.
But nonetheless, this has led to antibiotic resistant bacteria.
Now we know that this isn't so great. But man, when I was a kid, I must have taken antibiotics
15 different times, my siblings, so many different times.
So, but now they're starting to kind of figure this out.
But my point with that is, is they had a drug for a symptom,
and it was like treat the symptom,
throw the antibiotics at it,
which is not a really dealing with the necessarily
the root cause, maybe they thought they were,
but wasn't necessarily.
And so that's what happens.
So if you go, when you have pain,
look, I tell you what, you go to your doctor
and you tell them you have a lot of pain,
they'll prescribe you a pain killer, you know?
And they want necessarily look at the root cause.
You might have to go through a few specialists
before that actually happens.
Like my head hurts, here's a pain killer.
Keeps happening, well maybe they'll spend you to
send you to a specialist that works with the central nervous
system or with the brain or whatever, but you got to go through a bunch of different challenges.
Yeah, and I was experiencing that and just had headaches, just constant headaches and
had to go through a lot of specialists to finally figure out.
It was like an underlying tumor that was creating these high blood pressure moments when I'd
wake up and would give me this chronic headache headache pain, but to me I could treat it
Right I could always just you know take some et cetera in and then you know
I'd be fine for you know the rest of the day, but then you know what my kidneys my liver like everything else
It's just like so you just got to consider like all the downstream the the long-term effects of like just
are like all the downstream, the long-term effects of just focusing on the symptom.
Yes, and the biggest point is this,
is that the way the system is designed,
they don't have the time to walk you through
and coach you and train you and handle
and work with lifestyle issues.
And it's funny when I, again, I trained a lot of doctors,
we would talk about this.
And I'd say, man, our medical system,
some stuff that's really messed up, and they would agree. And I'd say, man, our medical system, some stuff that's really messed up,
and they would agree, and they'd say, but, tell.
You know how hard it is to get people
to take their medications?
You guys know that it's like a huge percentage of people
just forget to take their life-saving medications,
like blood pressure medication.
He goes, and you think I'm gonna tell someone
to start exercising and eating right?
And they're gonna do that. And I'd say, we don't have the time to deal with that kind of stuff. I'm'm gonna tell someone to start exercising and eating right. And they're gonna do that.
And I say, we don't have the time
to deal with that kind of stuff.
I'm not gonna be able to sit there and coach them.
So, this is the biggest reason why,
now I think a doctor can tell you what not to do,
especially if you've had surgeries
or if you have a medical condition,
like if you have certain blood pressure issues
or if you're on a beta blocker,
I would need to know that as a trainer before checking your heart rate, you know, and
doing certain exercises.
But if a doctor says, yeah, you need to exercise in, in he right, that's good advice.
That's fine.
It's the what, like the specifics that I think you probably don't necessarily want to listen
to.
Well, that's why, yeah, you got to kind of consider, you got to be advocate for yourself,
advocate for your own health.
So you're gonna go to a doctor,
and especially if it's a general practitioner,
to that point, they're not gonna have a whole lot of time
to sit and discuss all those options and troubleshoot.
And there are other options for you to go to from there.
And other doctors, you can get second opinions from
and try to do some slew things, some work there, and some detective
work to kind of dive a little bit deeper.
Yeah, the most important part of this conversation, I really think is that people need to understand
that there's a lot more you can do than what you may think based off of what you've heard
from your doctor, right?
Like, because to all these points that we're bringing up of why. That's true.
And that's what, I mean, this is part of the motivation with the partnership that we have
with Dr. Cabral and their team and why we've provided a free form where people have access
is a lot of clients in my experience just didn't know.
Just were unaware because they're, again, Drcribideth, Dr. Tellzim,
they just assumed that, oh, I went and saw him or her.
It's like a sentence.
They said, I have these issues.
Here's the medication for it.
Here's the steroid for it.
Here's the shot for it.
Here's the prescription for it.
And so therefore, that's what I do.
There was never this conversation of,
oh, there's other things we could also look into, you know?
It's that, so they just are unaware that there is some sort of a root cause this conversation of, oh, there's other things we could also look into.
So they just are unaware that there is some sort of a root cause that you could potentially
either exercise and figure out or change your diet and figure out or do testing and figure
out with your gut.
There's so many other things that you can potentially do.
And I think that that's the most important part of this conversation.
It's less about doctors or bad, trainers are great or it's not that. I understand the reasons
why they do the things they do or they say some of the things that they say. As a consumer,
you need to understand that there are a lot of times, there are a lot more options than
you think there are just based off of all the different research
that we know about chronic pain and chronic issues
when it comes to both diet and movement,
there's a lot of stuff that you can do besides
just take the pill or the shot.
They're really, really good at what they're trained to do.
Outside of that, it's similar to asking someone
who has no training, it's very similar in that sense.
Now, except you're dealing with probably a smart,
a smarter, more intelligent type person,
still they're really good at what they do.
It's like asking your mechanic to teach you
how to race your car, you know?
They might not know how to race a car,
but they know how your car works.
They have all the parts inside, so that's the big point
and the specifics are where you gotta be careful.
But other than that, I think you said you made this comment just and I think it's
very important. You have to be your own advocate and you have to go and do the
reading, find more people, ask more people, and don't give up, especially if you
have a chronic issue that doesn't, you can't seem to have a solution. And it
can take some time. I know people took five years to figure out.
That's the other two.
It takes a long time.
That's also the other challenge is,
you know, when I went like using my psoriasis as an example,
and I got the steroid shot in the cream,
the next day I saw a significant difference.
And so there's this kind of feedback loop of,
oh, this works or this is amazing.
Where if I were to try and address the root cause of it, testing, teasing some foods out,
changing the diet, maybe trying to get more sunlight,
adding vitamin, I mean, there's all these things,
and then even when I start doing those things,
and being consistent, gotta be consistent
with it for a while for the body.
So, you know, that's part of the challenge,
but if you're listening to this and you battle
with any sort of crime and you're not in our free forum,
you have to take advantage of that.
And we have doctors in there too.
Right.
No, we have doctors in there for that
and they're answering questions that get on there every week
and do live stuff.
So if you're not in that free forum, you're missing out.
Which the name of that was MP Holistic Health.
MP Holistic Health on Facebook. It's a free
forum and it's run by Dr. Stephen Cabral, functional
medicine practitioner and his team. So great place. Look,
if you like our information, head over to mindpumpfree.com
and check out our guides. We have guides that can help you
with almost any health or fitness goal. You can also find us
all on social media. So Justin is on Instagram at my
pump Justin, Amazon Instagram, my pump Adam, and you can find me on Twitter at my pump.
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