Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1893: The Best Way to Get Better at Push-Ups, the Truth About the Accuracy of Fitness Trackers, the Importance of Training the Core Through a Full Range of Motion & More
Episode Date: September 2, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday’s Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page. 1893: The Best Way to Get Better at Push-...Ups, the Truth About the Accuracy of Fitness Trackers, the Importance of Training the Core Through a Full Range of Motion & More Mind Pump Fit Tip: If your kids are fat, it’s your fault. (3:20) Italians go HARD! (21:16) NFL athletes are NOT normal. (23:17) You wouldn’t put it past Donald Trump. (32:25) Taking a problem and adding more to the problem. (33:52) How Public Goods is meeting the demands of their customers. (42:57) Felix Gray taking over the Mind Pump households. (46:28) An interview with Harry Soza of CAREMINDr. (48:53) #Quah question #1 - What’s the best way to get better at push-ups when you can barely do them? (1:11:44) #Quah question #2 - How important are core-specific exercises if you always brace your core while lifting? (1:14:58) #Quah question #3 - How accurate are trackers, such as a Fitbit, at measuring NEAT and calories burned? (1:19:23) #Quah question #4 - Do you target a postural problem or a weight problem first with a client? (1:26:31) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Public Goods for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Receive $15 off your first Public Goods order with NO MINIMUM purchase** Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! CAREMINDr x Mind Pump September Promotion: Skinny Guy Bundle (MAPS ANABOLIC // MAPS AESTHETIC // NO B.S. 6-PACK FORMULA // INTUITIVE NUTRITION GUIDE // OCCLUSION TRAINING GUIDE.) HALF OFF!! Also, the Fit Mom Bundle (MAPS ANYWHERE // MAPS ANABOLIC // MAPS HIIT // and INTUITIVE NUTRITION GUIDE.) HALF OFF!! **Code SEPT50 at checkout** US life expectancy continues historic decline with another drop Kids today run slower than their parents did, study finds Italian man tests positive for COVID, monkeypox and HIV Trump accused of burying ex-wife Ivana at his golf club for tax break Biden announces $10,000 student loan forgiveness plan: who qualifies Monthly car payments hit record high of $712 in May - ABC News Health Center Program Uniform Data System (UDS) Data CAREMINDr Overview 2022 – 3 min. video Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! How To Get Good At Push Ups (REGRESSIONS) - Mind Pump TV The RIGHT Way To Do Push-Ups (PERFECT FORM) - Mind Pump TV Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Robert Oberst (@robertoberst) Instagram Jen Cohen (@therealjencohen) 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.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we answered listeners questions, but this was after a 70 minute introductory
conversation.
We're talking about fitness lives, studies, current events,
and much more.
In fact, we had somebody on a paid conversation
on the show.
I'll get to that in just a second.
By the way, if you want, you can check the show notes
for timestamps and fast forward to your favorite part.
Also, if you want to ask a question
that we answer on an episode like this one,
go to Instagram, go to mymputmmedia, and each Sunday we ask a question that we answer on episode like this one, go to Instagram, go to mymputmedia,
and each Sunday we post a meme that says,
quawquhunderthatpushaquestion, and if we pick it,
we'll answer it on an episode like this one.
Now, this podcast is brought to you by some sponsor.
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He's the CEO of CareMinder.
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It's a cool opportunity, but of course, there's risks.
Anytime you do that, and again, full disclosure,
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All right, here comes the show.
All right, some truth time.
If your kids are fat, it's your fault. Go on, guys.
Back me up on the road. Don't run away. I just puckered up. I don't want to get hit for
that one. You know what? I'm going to tell you guys a story. Wow. Yeah. About this.
You're in a mood today. No, it's true, though. I have empathy, by the way. I'm I know it's
truth there. I know I made a statement. Sounded very pointed. It's a true statement. And it's going to hurt people's feelings. It's true, though. But I'll tell you guys the way. I know it's truth there. I know I made a statement that sounded very pointed.
It's a true statement,
and it's gonna hurt people's feelings.
It's true though, but I'll take a story.
I remember once I had a client who hired me
to help her lose weight,
and I was working with her,
and it was like, I don't know,
we've been maybe training for a couple of months.
Nice lady, you know,
we're working through food relationship issues,
and I'm trying to get her stronger, like the whole deal.
And she came in one day with her son, who was eight, I won't say it was eight years old. And then comes in, and she comes
in with her boy. Now she was like 60, 70 pounds or away and the kid was eight and he was,
he was, you know, overweight little guy too. And he came in real cute kid and he had his little
12 piece nuggets and he's eating right. So she brings him in. Sal, this is my son. Whatever,
what's up buddy? High five. Whatever he sits there. And she she brings him in, Sal, this is my son, what's up buddy,
high five, whatever he sits there.
And she goes, all right, Sal, you tell him,
explain to him why chicken nuggets are not good for him
and why he shouldn't be eating that.
And I looked there, I said, no.
I said, you bought him for him.
I know he didn't go to McDonald's
to buy these chicken nuggets.
I said, I don't need to tell him anything.
I said, this doesn't work that way.
I said, the reason why he eats this way
is because it's what you buy him.
And that was, it was like, and part of the reason was, I could feel need to tell him anything. I said, there's gonna work that way. I said, the reason why he eats his ways, because it's what you buy him. And that was, it was like, part of the reason was,
I could feel the discomfort of a little kid
because she put him on the spot to me.
So I put it back on her and it was,
and that's just the truth.
I have a story like that.
I'll never forget because it's like,
maybe the only time that I can recall
where I like got really angry at a paying client
and like laid into them.
I had this couple they came in one time and they hired me to train their son.
Their son had to been, I don't know, I'd say around nine years old or so, cute little kid man.
And he's probably, you know, he's definitely 20 pounds or so overweight for a nine-year-old kid,
which is a decent amount of weight for that age because he doesn't have a big frame yet.
overweight for a nine year old kid, which is a decent amount of weight for that age. Because he doesn't have a big frame yet.
And he used to wear these glasses and he had like the, like the, the, the, the, the
the spandych chums around his head.
And this kid was, he was, he was a, one of the only kids I actually remember I liked
training because I've told you guys before I was not a big fan of training kids, but this
kid worked so hard.
You could, you could tell like, um, and, and for whatever reasons, I don't know if they were good reasons
why he was ingrained in him to work hard,
that was just his personality or what,
but this kid would just bust his ass
and training sessions with me.
And I didn't know this until like our third or fourth session.
And this is at San Matrice,
so you remember the gym parking lot,
McDonald's is on the corner.
And his parents would bring him to the gym to his workout with me.
And then they would go to McDonald's and sit in the parking lot
and eat McDonald's.
And then that kid, after he just got done sweating his ass off
for an hour with me,
and I didn't know this until I walked him to the car one time.
So he signed out and he said,
oh, my parents are in the car, I'm going to go there.
I'll walk you out there.
And they opened the car and it like fucking smelled
like McDonald's french fries, which everybody knows that smell.
You know, and reeked of french fries.
And I was so angry.
I remember the next time that they came in,
I had pulled the dad in the office and had this like,
I was just like, dude, you guys are coming in here
and you want your son to make changes around the way he eats.
But then while he's working out,
you have the audacity to go to McDonald's
and eat it in the car and then he's gonna smell that one.
Especially right after a workout
because it creates a really bad relationship with exercise.
He just burned calories so now you deserve.
Yeah, what are you doing?
And regardless if you let him have some or not,
I don't even care, like at that point,
it's like, what message are you sending him?
I wanna be clear too, because like, we all have kids.
I have three, I got one on the way, so it's gonna be four.
It is hard raising kids, it is hard,
and it is hard raising healthy active kids today
in modern times.
First of all, getting a kid to be active
is you have to structure it now.
It's not like when we were kids where
the only way you could see your friends
was to go outside and play.
Now, you have to kinda, you have to punish them almost.
It feels that way, right?
To get them to do certain things.
Diet is a healthy diet.
It's very hard for everybody because food is super convenient.
People don't cook. It's inexpensive. And, you know,
kids eat the way their parents do. And so if, if our obesity goes up, then our children's obesity
is going to go up. Even our pets are becoming obese, by the way. You can look at studies and see
dogs and cat obesity rates are going up as well because they follow the lifestyles of their owners.
So I understand it's challenging.
I understand it's challenging to get your kids
to do almost anything that's healthy.
But a lot of what our kids do is model our behaviors.
So you can tell your kids all you want,
but there's nothing as powerful as them watching it.
So what's normal, dude, as I say, not as I do.
Yes, of Montre, which, you know,
I think it's easy for parents to see like a problem,
like within their kids are like look elsewhere
other than themselves in terms of like,
oh wow, this is kind of getting out of control
or I need to fix this with my kid versus like,
really like taking that hard pill
and realizing, you know, where it's coming from,
which is coming from the source,
where it's modeled to them.
That's so interesting to me
that someone would think that way.
I had a really cool conversation with our friend,
Mike Slemming, came in yesterday,
and he interviewed me,
and most of the interview was around dad,
because he's about to be a father.
He was really interested in my journey of that
and that transition.
And one of the things we got to eventually
in the conversation was my purpose in life.
And I was like, man, that's such a cool, unique question
for me because I thought I had purpose
or knew what my purpose was before I had a kid
and that's completely changed after I had my son.
And not only has it changed, but never has it felt so clear and right what that purpose was.
Like before, like, yeah, I want to do this and I want to, this is my purpose and that was like motivating for me to say it.
But it's like, no, I feel it in my bones now.
What it is is that I'm looking
at my legacy, right? And him growing up. And I'm at one point going to pass on, you know,
whether that's 80, 90, 100 years old, whatever. And I'm never going to be here anymore. And
the only bit of me that will live on will live on through him. And my thing that I ask
myself every day is the way I am as a partner in business with you guys,
the way I am as a father at home,
the way I am as a husband with my wife
and the way I treat her in front of him.
Everything I do, one of the things
and I was telling him is that I ask myself now,
is like, what do I want to pass on to him?
Because I am modeling, how I take care of myself. never in my life and I has this happened where I go to work out and part of the motivation to work out
It's because I want him to see me do that when I don't want to do it
And it's less about the pomp or how hard I'm training or what program routine. It's just like I'm I don't feel like it
I'm tired and with the arjick I haven't trained for two or three days in a row.
I need to do it.
My son's here right now.
It'd be an easy excuse to like, oh, I'll just play
with him instead.
I'm like, no, you know what?
He needs to see his dad do this.
And so I bring him out in the garage and I do these things.
So it has given me this.
So this idea that people that have kids
that don't think that way is foreign to me.
I don't understand how you can, and I tell you right now, it doesn't mean I'm perfect
because I make bad decisions and wrong decisions all the time.
But boy, do I feel it?
Like fuck, like, I, you know, I do not want him to see that or feel that or take that, carry
that side of me on after I pass on.
And so nothing will make you grow like that, right?
Cause I mean, I do the same thing.
It's like, there's behaviors that I have
that I never really would look at and care about
until I'm like, what I want my kids to do this kind of stuff.
And then I'm like, okay, I gotta be the example.
It's really hard.
And again, I have empathy for parents
because you know, both parents working or your single parent, it's really hard and again, I have empathy for parents because, you know,
both parents working or your single parent, it's hectic. You got more than one kid or you have little ones and it's like, in gosh,
everybody, look, I am the furthest from perfect that you could get with a lot of
the stuff. So I understand, but if you are blaming other factors on your
child's obesity, like their genetics, which that's not the case,
or society, no, you ultimately have the influence here.
If you yourself are obese and your kids are obese, well, this is what's happening.
They're following your lifestyle.
And you have the control.
And what it's going to take, and this is what I've told parents many times, is if you're
dealing with a child
who's got some of these issues,
the best way to help solve it
is to fix them within yourself.
And it's gotta be the whole house,
it's gotta be a lifestyle.
Like a lot of parents will make the mistake
of feeding one kid differently than the rest
because maybe the other kids get away with it,
they kinda crappy or whatever
and then you get the one kid that's a little overweight.
So they're like, no, sorry Timmy,
you can't eat like your brother
or you can't eat like I can't.
Like, whoa, you wanna talk about creating a situation where this kid's
going to feel like an outcast. So, um, and by the way, this is coming up because we're
getting data now that's showing some very scary stuff. First off, uh, this was scary.
I remember when I learned this, when I first got certified as a trainer, type two diabetes
was not called type two diabetes. It was called adult onset diabetes. That was the name of it
They changed the name because kids started getting it
So it used to be a form of diabetes you got as an adult through poor lifestyle
Kids started getting it like we got a change the name to something else because it's not adult onset anymore. So that happened
Relatively soon after I became a trainer right now. We're seeing for the first time in a long time. I think
for it became a trainer. Right now, we're seeing for the first time in a long time,
I think, in a very long time, life expectancies
for this generation coming up is gonna be lower
than the current generation.
So we've been on this trajectory of living longer,
and now it's not only flattened out,
but it's actually gone backwards a little bit.
And then there was an article that you shared, Adam,
that today's kids run a mile 90 seconds slower, so a minute and a half slower
than their parents did.
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
That's a big difference.
Yeah, that's not like,
I mean, we know a big deal of that article
is like even 30 seconds, I'd be like,
what about that?
By the way, that's average.
So what that means is you have the few athletic kids,
because there's still kids at athletic,
but what's throwing it above,
one a minute and a half over in the average,
is there's a stream. There's a big extreme of kids that can't even
run 50 yards. Yes. And if you see some of their movement, even you can tell that even
like if you watch an adult run who hasn't run for 10 years, you can see it in their movement.
That I used to never be able to see that in kids. When I go to the park, I'll see kids running
and I'm like, they never run.
These kids never run and they're so young.
So, this is a big problem,
and we have to take responsibility as parents.
So, I know, I might hurt your feelings.
Again, I know it's hard,
but if your kids, battling with this, it's your fault.
It's also, you can also say it's your fault
if your kid does a good job.
You can also say, hey, it's a good job.
And look, I know there are cases where you do everything right
and they still encounter challenges and problems,
I totally understand that.
But for the most part, you know, it's on you,
it's how you guys live, it's how your household is,
it's the foods that you buy, they don't buy them.
I mean, I don't even know if I buy that, you know,
because I know people say that.
And I know there's examples of quote unquote good parents
that I've seen have kids that end up being shit kids
for whatever reasons, but those shit kids
turn shit kids for other reasons, right?
Like whatever it may be.
When we're talking about what we're talking about right now
with like health and taking care of yourself,
I have yet to see somebody who models health in their house.
Unless they do it the wrong way.
Yeah, you're right.
Right? So like it's dysfunctional in the other part. That's right, because you can be dysfunctional in the wrong way. Yeah, you're right. Right.
So like it's just function on the other person.
That's right, because you can be dysfunctional in the other place.
Way too authoritarian.
That's right.
It can become very authoritarian.
And I'm about to image folk.
I got into this a little bit with some of my family members when talking about Max and
sugar and cookies and candy and things like that.
And they're just like, you know, if you do that, he's going to rebel.
And he's going to, he's going to just go over a, and then Ben just like, no, he's not because I'm that, he's gonna rebel. And he's gonna, he's gonna just go over a,
and then he's like, no, he's not,
because I'm not saying he's never gonna have a cookie
or he's never gonna have candy.
I'm just not gonna fucking give it to him right now
when the kid can't even ask for it yet.
Yeah, when he asks for it, when he doesn't even,
he's not showing him your value system
of what you prioritize.
That's right.
He doesn't, you know why?
Because he doesn't see his dad eating candy.
He doesn't see his dad eating cookies. He doesn't see his dad eating cookies.
He doesn't see his dad eating cake.
It doesn't exist in his world yet.
So I'm not gonna introduce it yet until I have to.
And then when I do introduce it,
and by that time, you'll be able to have a conversation.
And then I can have a really healthy conversation
around why dad doesn't eat it all the time.
And let him know how it makes me feel
and understand how these foods can make us feel and still allow him to be able to make that choice.
So there is a big difference.
That's another thing with these things, this conversation, Sal is that I find this really
difficult for parents that are making, and I do have a lot of empathy for parents that
didn't find health and wellness until later in their life and journey.
And they already have kids that are 7, 8, 9, 10.
Oh, that's a hard to choose.
Do you still have your, you got to turn that shit?
Turn it around is very different.
I have a tremendous amount of empathy for them.
Now, if you're a new parent, if you're,
you got your kids young and you're already,
you care about this, taking care of yourself
and you want to set good habits and be able to,
you have a huge opportunity, I feel, to really model that behavior and set the trajectory of what
their health and fitness is going to look like. It is much more difficult to take, you know,
put what you say all the time, put the toothpaste back in the tube after you've let it out,
you know, because, and I'll tell you, and I've watched it firsthand with my friends that have kids
that are just a year or two years older than Max.
Boy, once you use that candy as a bribery tool
or that cookie as a bribery tool
or a treat that they get to have it now and then,
good luck trying to take it back away.
It's especially challenging once they reach teenage ages
because as teenagers, their influences become,
they become more influenced by their peers
than they do by their parents.
And you've already built this kind of like culture.
So you have a 13 year old or 14 year old
and you're like, I just lost 60 pounds.
I wanna change how we eat in the house.
You got a kid who's already in the rebellious age anyway
and you're like, sorry, we don't buy those foods anymore.
Now we're gonna exercise like screw screw you, mom and dad.
I'm not doing any of this stuff,
or it can make them feel isolated, you know, or challenge.
And you know, another thing, Doug just put this up there.
I think it's a good thing to comment on too.
There's a lot of kids growing up in dual households
where mom and dad are divorced,
and they live 15.
And one parent is healthy, the other one's not.
And this is really hard.
This can be two different messages completely.
Yes, it can be really hard.
And the best thing you can do,
obviously if you have a good relationship with your ex
and you can try, ideally what you wanna do
is trying to make both households as consistent as possible,
at least on the things you agree upon.
But I mean, reality is oftentimes,
exes don't have a great relationship in that way.
And the best thing you could do
is just model it in your household,
and then they see the other way in the other household.
And then hopefully your kids are wise enough
as they get older to say,
oh, the way dad does it is better.
I think it's better.
They will, and here's why they will.
And I've shared this before on the show,
and I think you guys have all agreed
that you're the same way too.
And everybody I know that has experienced this
and been aware of their own behaviors will agree to this too.
When I'm eating healthy, when I'm exercising
on a regular basis, I am a better everything.
I'm a better dad, I'm a better husband,
I'm a better helper around the house,
I'm a better business owner.
And so if you do those things consistently
and you model that, teenagers are smart.
Again, they don't listen, but they watch and they observe.
And if you live in two households and you have one parent
that doesn't give a shit, eats whatever, I guarantee,
it will reflect and there's behaviors,
there attitudes, there's some things they do.
And if you have a parent who models health
and taking care of themselves, it will reflect
and the other aspects of their life.
And those kids are smart by that time.
They're smart enough to see the difference
between mom and dad and which one of them
is taking care of their health and stuff of that
and how that sort of trust me.
They will see that.
And there is a clear difference in myself
when I'm doing those things
and when I'm not doing those things,
on all aspects, not just the way I look.
Yeah, totally. My performance in I look. Oh, totally.
My performance in the gym.
Oh, I mean, it's funny.
Jessica understands this hack now with me.
If she wants me to like change something, a behavior, she finds a way to basically communicate
to me like, you're an example for the kids.
And do you want them to be this way?
Now, she's in a state direct like that.
Yeah.
Because she's smart.
Obviously, she's a woman.
So she's got incredible communications skills,
but she'll kind of find a way to say that,
knowing that there's almost nothing
that'll motivate me to make a change like that.
Like some of the hardest changes.
And I can be like, I'm a naturally impulsive individual.
I'm gonna tell you right now,
if it wasn't for my passion, health and fitness,
boy, I could go really,
you know, I can go in the wrong direction for sure.
But yeah, this is a big one.
This is a really big one.
And there's a lot of things you model to your kids.
We're just talking about obviously diet and activity
and that kind of stuff.
But you model everything, including impulsive behaviors
around substances, your sleep behaviors,
how you, you know, the one you said Adam,
which is a big one, is how you treat your spouse.
That's a big one to me.
It's like, would I want my son to think it's okay to yell,
you know, or to add a, at his wife, or what I want my daughter to marry someone and think that's
okay because my dad did that. So this is a normal relationship. Like, that's a, that's a really big one.
Anyway, I'm going to change the subject on something very interesting. I read this article today
and I couldn't help but laugh very sad, but also I want to see
what your guys' reaction is.
So an Italian man came back from a five day vacation in Spain and he's like, I got a sore
throat.
What's going on here?
Goes to the hospital and they do a bunch of tests.
Ready for this?
He tested positive for coronavirus, HIV, and monkey pox,
all the same time.
Oh, what the trifecta.
All the same.
Any guess is what he was doing when he was there?
A lot of things.
He did a lot of shit.
All three.
That's a wild night.
All three at the same time, dude.
What was he doing?
Is it almost guaranteed that he's in a gangbang?
I mean, something.
You're out of rave because they've already.
What is the percentage right now, which is actually transmitted?
And monkey pox is mostly sexually transmitted.
It's like 90 something percent.
Yeah, and actually there was an article that said that it's probably sex that's spreading it,
not close contact, but rather sex.
Yeah.
So yeah, dude went five for five days in Spain. Yeah, but rather sex. Yeah. So, yeah, dude went five, for five days in Spain.
Yeah, a good time.
Apparently.
Came back with everything he's married.
I don't know if you're married.
Yeah, I was gonna say, she's got some questions.
But I had people, I had people sending it to me
because it's an Italian guy.
So everyone was like, hey, check this out.
Oh, bro.
Italian's good, hard.
Bro.
I wonder if they like, do they cancel each other out?
What happens with all those things at the same time?
I'll stick it.
He just had a sore throat too, by the way.
You think that's all we had, that's what made him go in.
Yeah, he's a sore throat.
Which one do you address first?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, which one is the worst?
Well, definitely, COVID's probably the best
under those three.
Yeah, obviously.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let's get to it.
COVID go. Although HIV treatments are incredible now, Well, definitely, COVID's probably the best under those three. Yeah, obviously. Yeah, that's good. Yeah, COVID's good.
Although HIV treatments are incredible now,
magic Johnson has to be the healthiest
ex pro basketball player I know of.
That guy had HIV for a long time.
There's been a lot of advancements there for sure.
Speaking of funny things, did you guys,
the video I showed you guys,
I wanna share this with the audience,
they made casts of pro NFL football players' legs.
And they made them so you could walk up to them
and put your leg in it to show the size.
That's what I'm having.
Yeah, so you could go in like kind of staying next to it
and see, you know, I've seen it.
Dude, they are monsters.
Yeah, forget where it's at.
It probably in some basketball hall of fainting.
Like, they do that with like NBA players in their hands.
And you could, oh, I had a book actually,
that's where I see it, is I had a...
Oh, I saw that.
I had a Michael Jordan book
that I had a long time, it was like a big book.
And you see how big their hands are?
And you had, yeah, I see it.
My hands, okay, and I'm not a small guy,
and I have good sized hands, not like Spruke.
So my longest right, so my middle finger,
it didn't even go past his palm.
Yeah.
That's how big his hand is.
Bro, you can slap your front face.
You're gonna mine you, yeah.
Like these anomalies, it's not normal.
Like, I mean, when you get to that level,
I was like playing at the college level
and then you just started to see the guys
that were at the college level and you're like,
well, holy shit, I'm done.
Like, I'm over. I'm over.
You know, like, these guys are way bigger, way faster, way stronger.
And it's like, you go to the pro level.
Now, that's the 1% of just that population of guys playing the game.
Hey, how hard was that for you?
Because I know how competitive you are and how hard of a worker you are.
And what pissed me off?
Like, I didn't have, I mean, I had natural athleticism in terms of like, I could move well, I could pick up.
If you modeled something to me,
I could probably do that movement.
And I was pretty good at it,
but I wasn't like naturally gifted with speed,
naturally gifted with like this unrealistic strength
or anything where I was just like super dominating,
but I had to work on just like every day training
for speed, training for strength, training,
like the one advantage I had was I could break down film
and I was smart enough to know like what I would recognize
and I would see it and then I would react
so I'd get there before most of the other guys could get me.
So it was like, you know, in terms of game smarts,
like that's all I had, but then once you're at a level where everybody's got the game smarts and then they got the
genetics and they got, you know, all these other traits that are like, I just was like,
I'm done.
Do you remember the first time that hit you?
You just say, off air, you and I have talked about this because we both experienced this
in sports. I don't remember when you told me what age you were when you, when that first,
when that first humble, how old were you, when that first happened where when you were humbled like that, like, oh, it was probably when I
was 20, yeah, because I mean, I just happened earlier for me. Yeah, I was, well, because I
still again, I was, well, I was out to get the world. Yeah, I thought exactly because I
was, we were really successful and we kind of dominated a lot of teams at the high school
level. And it was pretty easy because it, I don't know, we played like two teams that were
matched and then one of them was better than us.
And so it gave me this unrealistic perspective.
I was like, I had to, I'm fucking awesome at this, you know.
And then I get into the college level and it was like, whoa, not only was it more
difficult, I was still like kind of competing, but my best was matching somebody else's average.
You know, like they have an okay game,
but I was like,
I'm putting like everything into it.
I was like, this isn't gonna last.
Like I'm having fun, but this isn't gonna last.
Yeah, that was sophomore year high school for me.
Was it in the game or did you just play with it?
No, I transferred schools.
So I came from the original school.
Remember I came from a very small town when I was in elementary junior high and then
went to high school in my first year of high school. My freshman year, I was in a division
three, smaller school. And on the basketball team, I was a star player. I was a high score,
a score led in assist, steals like all categories. I was a star player. I was a high score, a score led in assist,
steals like all categories. I was a star player for sure. And then we got, I got transferred.
My parents moved to a little bit bigger town. And now I'm moving up to a division two team,
which is just one level up. It's not even that crazy of a difference. So there's like multiple
levels of this. And I rode the bench the next year. So I went from being star player to, I couldn't even get on the court
because the guy, the guy two guys that were ahead of me
were my parents had such a hard time with us
and that was so embarrassing for me
because my mom and dad were yelling at the coach
about how good their son is.
And I'm like, they are so oblivious to the levels
to this game.
They just, they saw their son getting all this
playing time and everyone's celebrating and on the man over
this one school and then I get to the other school and then
I'll send this and then they think it's the coach, you know,
oh my god.
I'm embarrassing as I had that for baseball.
My mom like trying to fight for me to get on the field.
All my friends like bailed because like this coach was just
not going to play us.
And I just, I rode the bench the whole season.
And she's like, I'd like fight them.
Like bro, I still have nightmares about it.
I still wake up in cold sweat.
No, no, yes.
Bro, I was like, that was like one of the most terrifying, awful mo, I mean,
so I remember it so.
It's ego shattering.
Yeah, well, no, it's less, no, no, no, that's not the part that it's terrifying.
It was my mother coming down and doing that.
That was a part that was so awful.
Terrible. I was okay with it.
Like I've always been had that person.
I like, oh, I need to work harder.
Yeah, exactly.
Like this kid's, these kids, I knew the kid was better.
Oh, you felt embarrassed.
Yeah, like really quickly, I was like, I was humbled.
Like Justin, I was like, I thought I was a shit.
You know what I'm saying?
And then I got playing with guys that were better than me.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh wow, there's levels to this.
Like I'm, I'm the shit in my little town,
but here I'm like average at best.
And so it also instilled great work, I could think of me,
because I was appointed in my life in sports,
where I was like, I mean, probably like Justin,
I was probably a little gifted enough to be,
you know, and he was probably better than I was,
but I mean, I was good.
And then when I got that root awakening early on, I was, but I mean, I was good. And then when I got that rude awakening early on,
I was like, oh shit, I gotta work.
I got to really work in order to get this paint time.
But my parents thought I just deserved it
because, you know, I was so good at the other school.
And they knew the last thing you want your friends to see
is your mom talking to the coach and being like,
ah, like get him on the field.
I can't believe this.
He's so good.
And you're, I was like,
Mom, you're so mad dude.
Like, oh my God dude, it was the worst.
I got the first time I felt like,
I started to realize that I was,
I was 17 and it was the first time,
now granted I started working out at 14.
It was the first time I could do a push press with 135,
which is a lot of weight for a 17.
That's really good for a 17. My dad comes home from work. It's like five o'clock and I
is all tired, you know, construction or whatever. He comes out and like, dad, come here. Watch
this. I want to show him how strong I was and I fucking pressed it and he goes, wow,
that's pretty good. He goes, let me see. And he cleaned it with one arm, like literally
squatted down and cleaned it. The whole barbell long as barbell went on and he threw it down.
He's like, that's not bad. Good job. And I remember being like, wow, that sucks.
I really suck. Then I remember in the gym working in the gym, I had a client that I trained.
And he was this older guy, but he was super strong. You should play college football. And he
had a 15 year old son.
And he says, Hey, I want my 15 year old
to come on one of our workouts.
And I'll never forget this 15 year old kid,
who like he just started working out like a few months ago.
We're working out bench press
and the kids thrown up to 25.
And he was a big kid too, but 225 then I'm like,
Oh, okay.
There's completely different level of humans.
There's so many levels to it,
because I remember that was my high school experience
of like realizing that early on
and going like, oh wow, there's levels of this game.
And then I know Justin's talking about his college experience.
And then I remember our adult experience together.
He was working with me.
I was when he played basketball.
Oh yeah, we played basketball,
which not even there's four.
Where we're both considered ourselves pretty good at.
Yeah.
Against a bunch of NFL players.
Competitive.
And you're talking about like, like, they're not even basketball players.
No, not only they're not.
Basketball, you're linemen.
Like 300 pounds and like, you know what I'm saying?
It's like, just jamming up.
Oh, just.
They could shoot it from half court and drain.
Like, it's just a dunking and four steps.
They're all the way up the court.
I mean, it was just...
Remember when we had Robert...
So I opened.
Remember we had Robert Overson here
when we were filming Map Strong.
So people don't know, he's a strong man compared.
One of the top in the world,
and he helped us create Map Strong, right?
So it's a strong man inspired workout program.
Anyway, we're filming videos with him in here.
And he's doing demos of the exercises.
And then in some of the demos,
they're like, these athletic drills, because he said that some athleticism is important.
Latter drills.
Yeah, yeah.
So some of this is important for strong man competition.
If you watch strong man competition, you realize it's definitely very different than power
lifting.
You need to have some of these athletic skills.
This guy's running and doing ladder drills and he's nimble on his feet.
Like he's 125 pounds.
Like, he's super athletic.
And then, and then he sprinted.
I don't remember where we were.
Maybe when this we were creating the program and he sprinted and you've you ever seen
a 350 pound monster run faster than anybody you've ever seen before terrifying.
It was actually a terrifying thing to see.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was like, okay, this sucks.
Yeah.
Yeah. I was like, okay, this sucks. Yeah. Yeah. It's just like, okay, I'm done. Yeah.
I have some crazy stuff to share that I got to go down. I just right before going on the podcast,
I saw it and it was like, what? I have to share this. And I will go down the rabbit hole of fact
checking. So somebody, somebody doesn't before me, please share. But I just saw this clip on Donald
Trump. And of course, like he's in the news like crazy right now because of the Mar-a-Lago thing
and everything that's going on, right?
And so everyone's talking about his money and tax evasion
and all this stuff, that.
So you know that this fool
buried his ex-wife on his golf course for tax benefits.
Oh, what?
And I guess in the state of New Jersey,
if you have a cemetery, then you're exempt
of like sales tax, property tax, all these different taxes.
And so it's him simply using the golf course for a quote unquote cemetery.
He can write it up as it's a cemetery that versus a golf.
Now you don't know for sure if you did this.
Yeah, as he says, is this confirmed or is this?
I so I have that.
I mean, that law is, I think, real.
And I wouldn't put it past it.
I mean, so I wouldn't, yeah, I wouldn't put it past it.
Any, well, and that's the thing.
It's like, if there's some kind of way of like,
Doug, maybe we could look it up.
Look up Donald Trump, Barry actually.
Oh, is it good?
Wow.
Wow, wow, dude.
By the way, you know, crazy.
Yeah, so there are lots of legal ways to pay more or less taxes.
Yeah.
So it's the law system.
But I had, so I did some posts on Twitter.
I was just, I was in one of my moods.
And so I got a whole bunch of, you know, back and forth.
And it was about the student loan debt forgiveness that they're going to do, like $20,000 per
student who makes less than
$120,000 a year.
So I don't even know that was poor, all of a sudden that's poor.
And then couples making less than a quarter million dollars a year, qualify for this student
loan forgiveness.
And I'm so annoyed about it because number one, the reason my colleges are so inflated
is because of federally backed guaranteed loans.
So it's like free money.
Of course, colleges are gonna be super expensive.
Now you do have anything you're gonna inflate the cost.
And number two, these people knowingly took on
involuntarily took on a loan for something
they deemed valuable and then they changed their mind
and now they wanna vote for someone
that'll promise that I'll pay for their loan,
which is an always a shit out of me.
So I'm writing about that
and then people on their leaves just transferred.
They're about.
Yeah, what about corporations getting their tax breaks?
I said, hold on a second.
That's very different.
One is you are forcing me to pay for your debt.
The other one is they're just keeping more
of the money they earned.
It's very different, very, very different.
So you can be upset about the tax code
and believe me, I am too, because it's complicated
on purpose for a reason, but keeping your own money
is not the same as taking money at the end of a barrel.
Two different mindsets completely, totally.
What are we also, how are we conditioned?
Well, inflation is going up by the way.
What are we conditioning our society too?
Like we are punishing those that worked hard
and knocked out their debt and got ahead,
and we are rewarding those that are dragging their feet
on their debt.
And you're punishing people who didn't even go to college.
And then this is tax money.
The government doesn't have it.
So I mean, it's just, you have to take it so.
It's interesting when you pull back.
And I get it.
Granted, there's definitely people that this is going to help.
Right?
Like I have family and friends that I know
that still have student loan debt. They make under that 120,000 mark. that this is going to help, right? Like I have family and friends that I know
that still have student loan debt.
They make under that 120,000 mark,
they will be able to apply for this.
And then being family and friends,
I still totally disagree with this.
This is another way to buy votes.
It's like the oldest thing ever, right?
It's 100% of that.
It's a promise things and it speaks
to certain
demographic out there like, oh, this is going to help me.
What? But you don't look at the bigger picture of what that actually tells.
Well, what a judge doesn't understand economics. They don't understand that you first
have to first understand that nothing is for free. And people have heard that statement
as like a talking point. And so a lot of people like just deaf ear like, oh, nothing's for free.
I've heard that. Like, no, this is going to help me out.
And that's as far as they look to it.
It's like, no, it's, people are still going to pay for that.
And that's still going to even impact you.
Yeah.
It will inflate things.
And so you're going to even pay for it in just, in another way.
And, and I think one of you made the joke that I'm like,
you know, what they're probably going to,
what we're going to see in the next couple of years
is to wish and go. 10,000. years is tuition goes up 10,000 dollars.
10,000.
That's gonna happen.
Yeah, well, I mean, they're expensive
because we made these loans.
So that the car.
We said everybody has to get an education.
We did it's federally back loans.
We had all this free money.
It's no different than imagine if the government said
everybody needs a car.
So everybody's guaranteed to get a loan if they ask for one and we have federally back loans.
No, everybody be driving BMWs and Mercedes if that was a case
because car manufacturers are competing for lots of
free money.
We're in that right now.
And we're getting there to some point.
Oh, we absolutely are.
That go do the, okay, the average car payment,
I brought it up on the show a couple weeks ago,
the average car payment is what, $713 and what?
Yes, but here's a difference.
If you don't pay back your car loan, what happens?
They repo it.
They repo your car.
So they have, there's an asset there.
There's a collateral.
That was the same way with the house.
Collateral.
Collateral, right?
Yeah, but the difference with houses, you're right,
but the difference with houses is, again,
the federal government has stepped in,
it's that everybody deserves a house
and has inflated the shadow.
This is why we had 2008.
You had all these banks who were like, well, we can loan all this money and if it doesn't,
if you don't get the money back, it's just going to give us the money, the government,
which is what they did.
They bailed out.
In 2008, that's exactly what happened.
You had people getting loans.
Remember, do you remember applying for, I did, I remember applying for a home loan 2008?
The banks were just like, how much you make.
Yeah, yeah.
I could have said anything.
Five million dollars whatever
Yeah, yeah, how much of a loan do you want all right here you go?
Why because it was really that they were backed by the government? So what we're doing is we're taking a problem
And we're getting we're adding more of the problem to the problem
So the problem is the price of higher education is inflated to hell
So what we're gonna do is we're gonna inflate it more
It's crazy and illusion that there's no consequences.
Yes.
And then the false equivalency thing annoys a shadow me
because they're talking about the PPP loans,
which I have two opinions on that one.
The government forces you to shut your business down.
There's a little bit more rationale to get alone
because you can't open it because you're forced to.
But I will say this, and I remember when this happened,
when they pushed those PPP loans through, which was politically expedient, do you guys remember how easy it would have
been for anybody to get it? You remember us sitting down? We qualified for, I think, 180 or
190,000. No, we said no, because it was against our integrity, and we didn't need the money,
but we could have. Well, fact, I mean, it didn't the policies acquire a PPP loan lot of
politicians, a hell of people that I think I've seen some stats on like more than
half were bullshit. People that didn't really need it and people that just, yeah,
I mean, which are always going to get free step out like that. There's going to be
people that are going to learn to hack and work the system. That's the thing. Yeah,
it's like it's, that's the frustrating parts because it rarely goes in the
direction you want it to go. And there's no transparency or accountability. Once you start, you know,
getting these things approved. No, you if you give out a quote unquote free money,
what you're doing is just sending a false signal to the market and then the the the demand that
that money would normally go to or that it now goes to goes up, which means the price
of that thing goes up.
So if we do this with anything, computers, it could be with cars, it could be anything
where you'll season inflated costs.
And schools is as expensive as it is in this country precisely because it's very easy
to get a federalty back loan.
Now if they allowed the market to be, especially today without technology is,
if they allowed the market to take care of higher education,
you'd still have expensive colleges,
but you'd have a lot of other options
because people still need to be educated.
It's required.
I mean, I've had a lot of other options.
I feel like it's hanging by the thread right now.
I really do.
I mean, we are so close, in my opinion,
to just a total revolution with education.
Yeah, 100% agreed. I mean, I are so close, in my opinion, to just the total revolution with education.
100% agreed.
I mean, I was just having this conversation with a friend of mine about how wild it is.
Actually, it was Jen Cohen, I think, and I were talking about this.
And how wild it is that this generation coming up, like just how you would learn something.
I vividly remember reading subjects that I was so not interested
in, I didn't want to learn it, but I had to because I had a test coming up or a port that
I had to do and then I had to go dig in my old social studies book and find what chapter
it was and read all of you out there and take notes. It's like, you can now find somebody
on YouTube who did a TED Talk specifically to that timeline or that topic.
And their waycare, more cares, mad.
Way more interesting.
And it's, and it's the algorithm is designed to populate it at the top if it's like the
most and you got the great, most, so it automatically pushes the best speaker on that topic to
the top.
So it's like everybody now has access.
You know, everybody has their stories,
like in our generation that talks about like that teacher
that like impacted them so much
because they were so charismatic
and they had all these passionate,
they were so passionate and they changed the way
you-
They're just so effective.
They're great communicators, right?
You now everybody has access to the best of the best
on all topics by searching on YouTube. It's there.
It makes no difference.
Look, here's your evidence right here.
You go to go to a university, take a course, and then there's required reading.
And they'll say, you need to buy these three books.
And each book costs you $300 each or $200 each, huh?
Where the hell does a book cost $200?
Especially in the era of streaming,
where I could stream that information for pennies.
Only in a place where it's so controlled and regulated,
and they get so much free money
that they can charge ridiculous prices for the stuff.
And the way that we try to solve it
is by throwing more money at the problem,
which is exactly the problem.
It's exactly the issue.
This is why kids go and get degrees for things
that have no market viability.
Like why are you in $100,000 in debt
with a liberal arts degree,
which will earn you nothing in the market?
Or art history?
Great subjects, if you're interested in them,
you can learn for them for free,
but why would you get debt for a degree
that is worth nothing in the market?
You wouldn't do that if you couldn't get these free loans.
If you had to pay out a pocket,
you'd be like,
ugh, I'm not gonna learn this, you know, I'm not gonna, you know,
learn anthropology when the only options I have
to make money with anthropology are like a professor.
Otherwise, there's nothing like it doesn't make any sense.
You're in the direction of demand.
Yes, absolutely.
You know, secure.
Anyway, speaking of demand,
I'm gonna talk about one of our sponsors, public goods,
because I think they're really meeting some demand
in the market right now,
and I'll read to you what's on their website,
which is pretty cool.
So because we're America so wealthy and successful,
consumers now are demanding things like,
not only do I want good products that are inexpensive,
but I want them to be good for the environment.
I care more about the kind of chemicals
that are in my products. So check this out, I didn't know this, but okay, them to be good for the environment. I care more about the kind of chemicals that are in my products.
So check this out.
I didn't know this, but okay, so public goods
is a company that you can buy household products, goods,
there's some food stuff that you can get on there.
And what they do is they try to give you
really good prices and they do,
but also very environmentally friendly
and they don't have chemicals known
to have issues in the human body.
And the way they do that is by keeping a very minimalist
type of labeling and direct to consumer type of a business.
So I didn't know this.
Did you know that their bottles are made from sugar cane?
Oh, really?
Yes.
So they're, yes, they're biodegradable.
So the bottle?
The bottle.
Yep.
Technically, it's not plastic.
It's like some kind of sugar cane.
Sugar cane.
Every shipment? Do you like to eat it?
I don't know if you can eat it.
I don't know. I wonder.
You can try.
You can definitely try.
I'll probably go right through you.
Every shipment is carbon offset.
So they plant a tree for every order.
So that's another thing that they do.
And then every order, every order is offset.
And then their products are free of parabens, sulfates,
and toxic chemicals that are known to have,
you know, xenoestrogenic type properties in the body.
So it's like it's really, really conscious company
that also has got great prices.
So as I read this, I was like, holy cow,
this is cool because you can tell consumers are wanting this.
Yeah.
Have you guys converted, I mean,
I've converted my whole house to it.
Like, I like the minimalist look too.
It's all organized.
It does, I think it looks better.
I like the look of it. I mean, I was just yesterday refilling the, and it's super user-friendly.
I actually, this is the first time I did the lotion. Katrina normally does it. And I was,
uh, so the lotion was out and underneath our sink, we have, they give you the big refillables,
right? So the lotion bottles, like this big, the sugar cane one you're talking about,
and then they have the big refills, and it's this, and you unscrew it,
and then you just squeeze it in.
And they design it to where it fits in like,
perfectly, you get every bit in there.
Yeah, so nothing, I thought, like, oh man,
I hadn't done it yet, and so I was like,
oh, this is gonna be interesting,
it's gonna be a mess when I do it,
I'm like, oh no, hell, it easy.
And the way the bag is designed,
it kind of has like this kind of suction,
so it doesn't just like pour out and go everywhere,
you have to kind of squeeze it out, and then when you stop squeezing, it will stop. Fill the lotion up nice and easy.
Like, it's...
Yeah, we've been on a mission of just going through all the products that may potentially
have Xenoestrogen-type chemicals or thermos and disrupting chemicals in there. Just a
clean sweep of everything, you know, and just...
What's rad is there are products now
that are kind of serving that,
especially cleaning products,
the big one that we had to like get rid of.
Well, they were doing it before, it was just so expensive.
You go to like some,
there's a small market.
Yeah, you go to like a hippie-dippy store
and you'd have to pay $9 for a bar sale.
Hippie-dippy.
Let's see if you can.
No, it's true though, you know, saying like,
and I remember when it first got popular
because I was a single guy.
It was like those big baskets of just soap, just okay.
Yeah, and that ain't an impact.
Nine dollars for like one bar or whatever like that.
And it's like, man, my Irish spring is only like
for getting 75 cents.
Like this is crazy.
Right, dude.
I know.
So it's so nice to actually have a brand that is, you know,
way more competitive
than some of those little small stuff.
Speaking of sponsors, so I told you guys,
I'm gonna start pushing the blue light blocking glasses at home.
So I started really pushing again because my son,
he really, I mean, he's like me, he could be a total night owl,
he can get stimulated and then I see him come home from school,
super tired, I'm like, what's the matter?
Oh, I had trouble sleeping. So I went, got the Felix Grey tired. I'm like, what's the matter? Oh, I had trouble sleeping.
So I went, got the blue, got the Felix Grey's.
I'm like, you have to wear these every day.
Like, you have to wear these at night.
And I'm checking on up.
He's 17 years old, so I'm sure it's annoying the shadow.
Yeah.
But I'm gonna find out how much it's impacted.
It's like, I know in the past when I've done that,
he's got better sleep.
So.
You need to get it like the chums.
I told you chums are back in style again.
So those are cool again.
Just tie it around. Yeah, yeah those are cool again. Just tied around.
Yeah, yeah, put them around.
Put them around.
It's kind of funny,
because Everett's kind of the fashion trend setter
of his class.
You know, he's just always.
That's cool.
And it's like, it's just kind of who he is.
I'm not like, you know,
trying to kind of promote that or anything.
He's just like, he'll be the kid with like the Mohawk
and then all of a sudden, like off mohawk and be like,
okay, I'm gonna change my hair completely now
and do it a different way.
And I'll wear this wild shirt that doesn't make sense
and every little rest of the kid.
So he started wearing his glasses to school
and I'm like, okay, that's pretty cool.
But, which one doesn't care?
We're gonna have to affiliate him,
bro, get some commission for him.
I know, it's like, we need some new frames because they're small on him now. I'm like, I don't know, we're gonna need to affiliate him, bro, and get some commission for him. I know, it's like, we got some new frames,
because they're like small on him now.
Like, I don't know, we're gonna need some cooler ones.
Do you know which ones, yes?
I think they're the Nash,
but they're like the tiny kid version.
So he needs to get like,
that's the one that the bigger ones.
Those are the ones that we have.
Yeah, yeah, the Nash ones.
I mean, they look cool though, it's just kind of funny,
because like I was growing up,
I remember like, I wanted to wear a glass
just because it looks like cool,
but you couldn't just apply it back then
because it was like either you have a problem
with your eyes or you don't or you just a like a phony.
Did you guys have kids in your school
when you were in high school that were like hustled
the candy on the side?
Yep.
Was that you?
No, I didn't do that.
I didn't do that.
We need to put our butt in.
But I bought from him all the time.
Yeah, the King's size Snicker bar.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
You got a dollar for a kid.
Yeah, you'd be like a dollar or whatever for it.
And then you'd probably buy a Nick Costco,
getting it at $0.35.
That was a great hustle.
So they were banned at my school.
Yeah, they didn't do that.
But there was a kid.
Yeah, yeah, it was behind me.
They were banned at our school too,
but you still, that was the hustle, you know what I'm saying?
It was like, one level, you know,
it's like, you don't buy drugs off of the off-cute.
But I'll buy candy balls.
Yeah, yeah, no, 100%.
Yeah, I was picturing that
because I'm thinking of like, ever it with like the field of
sprays.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm going to get them hustling.
It's not bad.
Yeah, yeah.
I'll be like, two, I'll get you one for free.
Hey, speaking of hustling and stuff, I see you've been a lot on a lot of podcasts at
them.
And I know that one of your passion topics is investments and stuff.
And I saw the names of some of these podcasts.
Are you being interviewed about?
Yeah, what's happening is like, you know, people that can't get to you,
they're like, well, I guess we'll take Adam. Listen, now we take some of them now.
The next best. This is true now. The man who loves you. The journey man's too busy. I guess
we'll take the other guy. Yeah, that's a thousand workout, tiny beard. So they interview
the whole time.
So what do you think Sal would say about the?
Shut up. No, no, I have lately they have Katrina's ramped up.
I've told her I was like, I feel like I have a little bit of time.
So let's start getting me on some podcasts.
And so we've been doing more of them lately.
I've done a lot actually this week.
And most of them have been geared.
And I think I don't know that's just because
we talk about it more, I guess recently,
than we used to in the past.
Like in the past when I would do these interviews,
they were always around coaching and training
where now the conversation is getting steered more
around either real estate or our investment arm
and like the business.
And so I actually really enjoy those conversations.
And so it's fun for me because obviously we've been talking
fitness forever to talk about some of the other things
that I'm excited about that we do.
And obviously the investment arm and the companies,
a lot of people don't know that we're angel investors
and eight different companies that we've talked about
on the show briefly, but that's a lot of what I've been
chatting it up with these people.
Yeah, I think the same skills that you apply
to consistency with health and fitness,
they apply to finances.
Obviously it's different, but it's the same thing, right?
Be consistent, disciplined, kind of think long term,
understand your, I guess your risk tolerance,
you know, that kind of deal, so.
Yeah, no, I'm really excited.
And we have Harry today that's coming in and I want to introduce yeah, yeah, I want to introduce them to the
audience. This is the first and we get this a lot. So that's why I'm excited about it is a lot of
people have been curious about like where our investments and what we're doing and a lot of times
companies unless you're an accredited investor, you can't, not everybody can throw money at it,
but there are sometimes opportunities where they do this,
like, I don't know if it's called cloud sourcing,
or whatever that, where they allow, you know,
in almost anyone.
Oh, it's a pretty market.
So, care minder, one of the companies
we're already currently invested in,
Harry, the CEO, and one of the founders of that,
is here today to share with our audience an opportunity
for them to actually invest in something that we're invested in.
Now consider this as always a huge risk any time you invest.
Yes.
This is pre-market.
It's not a public company.
So you're kind of like a small angel investor.
But you know, with risk, they'll hire risk, hire potential returns, but always.
No, I'm glad you said that because I think it's important that our audience knows too
that by no means do I think any of us think that we are these brilliant angel investors.
What we have done is we've tried to stay in our lane for the most part.
Most all these are in the health and wellness and at slash medical space, which I would call
a sister industry to us. I think that we've tried to stay
in things that we have some sort of understanding and grasp on. And it makes sense because we
are this health and fitness podcast. And if we really like the company and or potentially
doing advertising with them, it's kind of a win all the way around for us. Otherwise,
it's very high risk. I mean, the likelihood that you're gonna hit one
that ends up being a unicorn and making tens of thousands
or hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars
off of it is rare.
So, we risk some of our money,
but not all over a lot of our money.
And so it's important that the audience knows
that angel investing is very high risk, but to your point, it can be massively hard.
And for disclosure, we're investors in care minder and they also sponsor the show. So full
disclosure, this is, you know, so, so, so let's talk to her. She's going on.
All right, Harry, thanks for coming on. You just has a little bit about care minder,
like what, what it is, what you guys do. So we can talk a little bit about, you know,
sure, sure, sure. Caremiders technology company and we work in healthcare. We work in a very
specific area of healthcare where we're providing technology not to be the care, but to help the
people who provide the care connect with patients to make it more accessible for patients to be able
to communicate openly with their doctors, counselors,
nurses. So we developed a program where part of it is what the patient has, which is an app in
their phone. Part of it is what the health center has, the people that take care of them, and it's
a portal, it's a cloud that they're able to view how many to be able to see many patients at
the same time.
So our job, somebody described this when I was showing it to them, they said,
well, it's an A to Z solution.
I said, now it's like B to Y.
They're A, they're the ones that start the patient on what we call journey, a care plan.
And they're Z, they're the ones that do something when the data is brought back.
I tell people we perform critically important
mundane tasks. We go and we get data and we bring it back to the doctor about things
like, how you're doing today? What's your number? Is your temperature? Your weight, your
blood sugar? We bring back data like, do you have your prescriptions? Do you have any
problem with refills? Are you having any trouble getting down to the office with transportation?
All of the normal kinds of questions that a doctor would want to know on an ongoing
basis, but it's hard to get it regularly, like every week, or maybe even every day if it's
important.
You're getting that data, it's coming right back to the doctor, and it's being delivered
quickly so that somebody can act on it if there's a problem.
We're the B to Y.
So who are your customers then?
Who's paying for your services?
Is it the hospitals?
Is it the doctors?
How's that work?
We work for a very specialized set of clients today
and they're called the Community Health Centers.
Community Health Centers is a program.
It's a safety net program that was established by the,
by federal funding over 50 years ago.
Now there's 1,400 of these centers, but because
they serve primarily the underserved populations of our cities and towns and states, you're
talking about people that are overwhelmingly below 200% of the poverty line, okay? You're
talking about veterans, you're talking about the homeless, you're talking about folks,
that this is the last place that they can go to and they can go there for free. Uninsured
people can get coverage at community health centers. This is a very well established program
last year. They got $12 billion in funding just to be there and do the things they need
to do to help these people. Those 1,400 centers are one-stop shops. They have doctors
and nurses, they have dentists, they have their own pharmacy, they have a lot of facilities,
they do not necessarily have specialists. Maybe they have some pregnancy specialists because
they deal with a lot of single moms and teenage moms, that kind of world. But they mostly
deal with working class folks,
people that have jobs, maybe they have multiple jobs,
maybe they're immigrants, maybe they're people
that are on hard times and they're just trying
to hold it all together, agricultural workers.
These places are in towns and cities,
the 1,400 of them, or they're 14,000 sites.
They're in tiny little towns out in nowhere land on tribal lands.
They are the safety net of the healthcare system.
If they weren't there, your hospital emergency rooms would be overwhelmed.
Those are our clients.
So Harry, normally what makes a business really successful is how big of a problem that they
are solving.
And so before care minder,
like how did this stuff get done?
And what major problem are you guys solving
that was there before?
It's very interesting.
This particular group of people,
because they get government funding,
they have a report card.
And it's called the universal data set.
And it's about 100 factors that they have to report on.
So they can tell anybody can look this up.
It's right there on a search engine.
If you type in the HRSA and then space, UDS,
that's the universal data set of the group
that runs all of these health centers, the funding for them.
You look at those and you'll see,
this group here has, well, like one of our
clients down south has like 11,000 hypertensive patients. 11,000 people have been diagnosed with
high blood pressure. There's a measure of that and they can say, well, we have about a 48%
in control. So they've got over 5,000 people that have high blood pressure and it's not under control.
So they've got over 5,000 people have high blood pressure and it's not under control.
We're the ones that try to move that needle,
get that better, every one of these goals.
How many diabetics you got?
We got this many, we have 2,000, we have 100,
we have smaller groups, we have 800, okay?
How many of them are under control?
Oh, about half, 400, 500.
It's a number, it's there.
Every single center has this number.
We look at that and we say we can help you move that.
We can get people who are, we call it the red zone.
The people that are in the wrong place,
we can get them back across the line
to be under control into the green zone.
That improves their health.
It reduces the chance that they're going to the hospital
with a stroke or a heart attack
or they're gonna go blind from diabetes or something terrible.
We reduce that problem, which helps the society of the community they're serving.
Community health centers are regionally bound and responsible for a specific area of people.
And anybody who comes in there is their community.
They're trying to help them be as healthy as possible so that they can live
lives and be productive and not have to go to the hospital. And they're it's helping those people
and you guys are having success because of basically how much you've simplified the communication
between the patient and the doctors. Now have you guys done this enough and long enough
to actually have some measurables like okay you, you know, when we come into a place
that's 50% of the people are in the danger zone or whatever, like how much is care minder really
moving the needle? Right. We have programs now that have been on for a year. Last year was pretty
ragged. I mean, the pandemic made it very hard to launch programs, but it got going. And we have
programs where we have data,
and we've shown it to them, they were ecstatic
when we showed it to them about a week ago,
where we looked at their entire first year
and said, you know, you started out,
and here's a set of people that we were able to focus on.
We took the data cut off at the end of March this year,
and now there's a new data cut off that's been added.
But as of the March data, you
had people, you started off with a population that was about 45, 46% in the green zone.
Now they're 69%. Wow. It's a big step. Wow. And it's that kind of number. And we expect
that we can drive them. There's actually a measure put out by the American Heart Association, where they call you
a champion of hypertension if you can get to 80%.
Now we looked at the list from last year.
There's only like four or five health centers that have ever made it.
Out of these, how many do you have?
1400.
Wow.
And we think we can bring almost all of our clients to that point.
Wow.
Because it's possible.
How many of these health centers are you currently working with?
We have about, well, we just signed up a bunch more.
We have about three dozen that we're on, but we're beginning to market out further.
And we believe this data from the first year is going to be the real key to convincing them
that they should get on board with us.
Because we think that the idea that we can honestly move the needle
in a way that you can see it is what can make the whole thing work the best for everyone.
Now, because this is federally funded, they just, they want to see results, but I'm assuming
they also want to see savings, right? Like, are we saving money through helping more people?
Are we able to show that as well? Well, we can't show the savings because that's,
there's actuaries that work that side.
But they know that if you take a population
of 1,000 people that have diabetes and 500 were,
and if you could take the 500 to 750 or 800,
they can put a number on that.
Because they can say statistically,
we know that that group of people would have been in the hospital.
It would have cost a lot of money. We also know there's societal cost of people who are now
unable to work. And just the, the, the, the dominoes that fall when you have breadwinners,
the families, all of that stuff, there's people that analyze that well, but it starts with the domino
of,
can you get them into the green zone?
Can you get them out of the danger zone
into a safer place?
Statistically, a big number will change, a big, big number.
Yeah, interesting. I mean, this is why we were investors
in what you guys do.
But now that you're allowing other people to invest
who can now invest in the company,
you're not a public company, so this is like my stock.
Yeah.
So how does this work first off?
How do investors invest?
And then what do they get for that?
And let's talk about that process.
And why you're raising money in the first place.
Okay, we're raising money to be able to go out
and to address the rest of this market.
Where we have a beach head, but we understand
there's an enormous need out there
all across the country,
and we wanna reach out to them.
I have been in the business of being an entrepreneur
for a very, very long time,
and I've raised money in many different ways,
but a new vehicle came out in 2016,
I think is when it was launched,
when this ability to have kind of a public private offering where ordinary
people could come in, it used to be you had to be a sophisticated investor and pass all
of these statements of how how sophisticated you were in terms of having a large amount
of money, assets, net worth, that's all been left out.
The new model is an ordinary investor, an ordinary person that just has a job and wants
to get in early on a company.
There's new vehicle for them and it's called Reg CF.
It's Security and Exchange Commission.
It's highly governed and you have to go through one of the portals.
So you ask, how do you do this?
The largest portal in this particular niche, the
largest broker, if you will, the kinds of people that you might buy stock from on them.
There's about a dozen of them. The biggest is called start engine. That's the one that
actually approached us in January and said, you know, the rules have been changed. You
can raise a lot of money now. Would you like to try this? Well, we had never heard of them. We investigated it, said, this is a really interesting way
to let ordinary folks invest a few hundred, a few thousand dollars, whatever is comfortable for them,
but get in early when the company is going to grow greatly so that that money, it doesn't move
in small numbers, we hope, but it actually
grows rather rapidly into big numbers that were never available to the ordinary investor.
So basically, if you're interested in investing, you just go to Start Engine and you look up
CareMinder.
So it's just StartEngine.com slash CareMinder.
And at that point, you're going to see all of the information.
You'll see a video that we actually, you guys helped us make the video.
My little section was recorded right here in the studio.
But then our video guy got in and did all the magic that he does.
But you'll see a three minute video about us.
You will see an awful lot of information on there about the market, about the team,
about the product, about our financials, about updates that we've been sending.
Everything on there was run through compliance attorneys, just like we were a public offering.
It was a painful process to have to every number we mentioned we had to provide backup,
research, information so that the attorney that I've never met
It's just a name to me that they would be they would have on hand the evidence that we're talking about something when I said
1400 I had to prove it was 1400 when I said it was $12 billion in funding
I had to send them a link to show them where they could look that up. When I said that this is a 50-year-old program, they wanted to see a link that was a 50-year-old program. Every single fact in there
has been double-triple checked. So an investor can believe that they're reading something that is
truthful and detailed and tells the story very accurately. And you can get in early.
Is there a minimum? There is. It's on the sheet there.
It's below $300.
But it's on, when you look on there,
there is a set of terms.
They're right there on the first panel that you see.
You have to scroll down to read all the information.
But if you look at that first panel,
it will show you that.
It will show you the price per share.
It will show you the minimum investment.
It will all show you that there are bonuses, incentives
that if you invest a certain amount that you get extra stuff.
So there is a larger number that you might get a few percent on top, so your money goes
further.
Got it.
So essentially, you invest, it gives you a certain amount of shares, then at some point
there's an exit strategy,
company either goes public or sells,
and then those shares are worth more
than the person reaps the benefit correct.
That's how the exit works.
Otherwise, their money's there and they don't,
and that's the risk, right?
Well, no, that's not quite.
You're exactly right with what you said.
No, somebody can actually potentially buy out
your shares at one point.
So if somebody comes in and says,
after a year that we close out and this, this, this particular
funding will be closing in at the end of September. After, and there
is a time period, it's like a year, there will be a secondary
market. So let's say we're doing great and we're in the news. And
one of the people holding shares wants to sell some, they're
allowed to in what's called a secondary market.
And the same people start engine runs that market.
So even if we haven't been acquired
or sold or gone public,
and believe me, that is part of our corporate goal someday,
even if that hasn't happened,
there's still going to be some availability
for liquidity for these investors.
It's a really, I think from that standpoint, it's a really good system for ordinary investors
who can't hold their position forever and may have something they want to cash out on.
Not only that, and correct me if I'm wrong here, isn't it common in a situation like this
where, you know, like you said, you guys start to get national attention and then a big firm comes in and they want to make a
Major contribution and part of making a major contribution. They want to swoop up a lot of the small
Very well could make an offer to the investors. Yeah, that that has happened in other companies that I've been involved in that they want they want
More complete control,
maybe they only want the employees to own,
they will make offers to outside people.
Right.
And that will be something that will be done
then if that were to happen.
Right.
Awesome.
Well, I mean, again, full disclosure,
we're invested in your company
because we like what you guys are doing.
We'll believe in what you guys are doing.
But of course, again, full disclosure,
anytime you invest as an early investor
in a company is always high risk, right?
The risk is that the company doesn't do well,
or there is no exit, in which case you lose your investment.
However, like with all investments, high risk,
typically means high return if there is success.
But nonetheless, again, we like what you guys doing,
we support it for sure, and I appreciate you coming on.
Yeah, well thank you.
The only thing I'd add is that the team you look at
when you see the pictures of us and stuff,
one thing we can say is we've been through this rodeo before.
We have started companies.
We have had successful exits.
I have had successful exits.
My kid's college fund is delighted with that.
But the bottom line on it is that,
this is probably the most important work
I've ever done in my career.
It gives back to people that need to be given back to.
It advances the technology of something
that's fundamental to all of our lives,
the technology of healthcare.
It makes everything work better for the patient,
makes people who have to deal with something
that lasts for a while,
whether it's one of these conditions or a pregnancy
or even a spout of depression that they've got to handle.
It makes that easier to get solved.
And so this is obviously I'm very excited about it,
but it's not just a corporate side.
It's also this idea that within a community,
we're giving the right things back to them.
One last thing actually before we wrap up,
because we didn't touch on this,
and I do believe that there is a little bit of urgency
around this for these investors,
because doesn't this round close in September?
It does close.
It closes on to September 29th.
That's on the sheet.
You'll see it there.
And so we're trying to encourage you
that if you think about it, read the information,
look at all the things on there.
There's a set of updates.
We ascend an update out every week, maybe a couple of times.
There's a big one coming out shortly
that's gonna be up there or maybe it just went up
because we deal that we've been working on for a long time got concluded.
So you'll see the Michigan announcement.
I think it's up now.
But please read all the information,
feel comfortable with it.
And if it makes sense for an investor to get in, get in.
You guys, we believe in the stuff you say
about health and fitness and that that is as much
and emotional and psychological step forward as
it is a physical. We think it's the same thing in the world we're working in.
Agreed. Thank you again. Thanks, Harry. Thanks, Harry.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first question is from randomly Randy, what's the best way to get better at pushups when you
can barely do them? Okay, so this is actually actually quite simple. Of course, all things being
equal. So if you're healthy, you know, pain, injury, that kind of stuff. First off, find a version
of pushups where you can do at least five to eight reps
with moderate intensity.
So you have your traditional push-ups
where you're on your feet and hands.
You can go to knees, you can do elevated push-ups
where you're using like a bench or a counter.
So find a version of push-ups that you can do.
So obviously scale it back.
Be able to do five with modern intensity and
then literally practice them every single day. Once those five become super easy, do 10.
Once that becomes super easy, then move to a more challenging version of pushups until
eventually get down to the floor and then you start practicing traditional pushups.
I've had clients that had this issue and I couldn't even do an elevated push-up.
So we would even do it on the wall to start.
So there's just scale of intensity in terms of what angle
will be appropriate.
And if it's really, is it the risk that's the issue
that you're putting pressure on?
Is it the lack of strength?
These are all things that I would start to consider and scale that.
I mean, even one good one too, which I never used this machine, but I used it for this
one purpose alone, which is a machine.
Smith, thank you.
Oh, yeah.
I even forgot the name of it.
It's because it's so useless to me.
We all did pushups on that.
Right. But I mean, you can set it up, I even forgot the name of it. It's gonna be all the useless to me. We all did push-ups on that right But I mean you can like you could set it up and then they can actually grip it
I think the important part for that is like establishing a good firm grip
Yeah, and then making that fist and then starting in that direction
So that way that you can kind of divert a little bit of the pressure on the wrists. Yeah, so technically on the most qualified to answer this yeah
Based off the push-up king. I mean well based off of I have the most viral video answer this. Yeah. Based off the push up king.
I mean, based off of, I have the most viral video around push ups of the three of us on YouTube,
John.
Oh, you do.
I'm gonna get the popcorn out.
So, that's just because you're super handsome.
No, no.
Actually, it is one of the more viral videos that we did.
I did it on basically, like, the perfect push, and how to regress it and progress it.
So if you haven't watched that video, I know I see Doug over there
searching for it right now.
So if you go to mind pump and then I think perfect push up,
type in most viral push up video.
He's actually just altering my mind pump.
And then I think perfect push up, maybe Andrew, but what we'll get it,
I'm pretty sure that will get it. And then you'll, yeah, that's it, right?
And then I show regressions to you guys this point from my knees, I talk about going to the floor
and hand release and then make pulling your shoulders back.
Like, it's a good video.
Yeah, I think it's a really good video.
By the way, you made a comment about gripping something.
Here's a tip for pushups.
If your wrist bother you when you're on the floor,
when you have your hands on the floor,
don't just relax your wrists and allow the joints
to support you, grip the floor. Actually create tension like you're trying to grab the floor, don't just relax your wrists and allow the joints to support you. Grip the floor.
Actually, create tension like you're trying to grab the floor.
I'm going to push out like in a spiraling kind of a...
Yes.
So grab the floor and like you're trying to twist.
You don't actually twist, but create that tension and then watch how much more stable
you feel with your pushups.
Yep.
Next question is from Kim and Lexi Adventures.
How important are core specific exercises if you always brace your core while lifting?
I mean, I don't know, like how important are bicep exercises if you only do back or
how important to try to set exercise if you only do shoulders.
In fact, I would say it's even more.
The power lifting argument.
It is.
I would say it's even more important because unless you do core specific exercises, the core
is definitely getting stronger with certain exercises,
but the core is not being trained
through a full range of motion.
So it's really being trained
as this stabilizer, this static stabilizer.
And in real life and everyday life,
you're gonna be put in positions
where you're not in this perfect position to stabilize.
So you're gonna bend over to get something,
you're gonna have to sit up off the floor.
And if you don't train your core through those ranges of motion, the
strength difference between stabilizing and actually going through full range of motion
is actually kind of large. So I've done this with people where they're good squatters,
good deadlifters, they never really train their core, then we go do a real like fisiobal crunch
and they're shaking as they go through the full range of motion. So it's important to train
your whole body through all the ranges of motion. So it's important to train your whole body
through all the ranges of motion.
That's interesting.
You think it's actually more important?
I don't know if I would agree with that.
I don't know if I'd agree that.
I think it's more important.
You know why?
Because I would think that somebody who is become
a really good squatter and deadlifter,
obviously you built some good core stabilization strength,
which is better than the person who's doing neither one.
Well, no, no, I mean, it's okay.
So I use the example of like biceps,
not working your biceps even though it's great analogy,
I think. It is.
But the difference is when I'm doing rows,
I'm at least training my bicep through a range of motion.
It's not just stabilizing, it's what I'm saying.
When you're using your core as a stabilizer,
you're strengthening in that position.
You're more like a lift, right?
Yeah, you're not using it through its full range of motion.
No, I mean, it's not that you're not right to your point of like,
like, it's, they're different.
I mean, your time out of the whole different adaptation.
Like, but I mean, somebody who's gotten really good at squatting deadlifting
and they're lifting a good way and they can brace and stabilize their core,
I think has a lot of value and carryover and to just protecting your spine
and your low back in like every day life.
It doesn't mean you have a very strong quote unquote core
because you're not training it through full range of motion
and it's only really good at stabilizing.
But I still think that that person is in a way better position
than somebody who is not training.
Of course, of course.
I was comparing it to the bicep argument.
I mean, you take that power lifter
and I've seen people like this,
stick and squat and deadlift a lot.
And then they hurt their back,
like twisting to pick something up. Exactly, a lot, and then they hurt their back,
like twisting to pick something up.
Exactly, that's, I mean, that's really where I'm at too,
when you get so strong in that one direction,
you're even more vulnerable at,
you know, some of those everyday average movements
that you're gonna get caught up,
just lifting something like you could easily lift
and then rotating it or just losing your balance slightly and
The compensation that happens and occurs because your muscles fire so hard
You could you could tear something so if I were to if I had an order of operation on this person right who like trains dead lifting and squatting and
Good core bracing, but then not training their core. I actually would prioritize rotation first. Yes
good core bracing, but they're not training their core. I actually would prioritize rotation first. Yes.
Agreed.
Because I think then rotation and then doing what you're saying, full range of motion
crunches, but their their highest risk is for sure doing something where they're rotating,
rotating, rotating and bending.
Returning up is less likely like a you're going to experience that, especially if they've
already kind of built some sort of stability in the sagittal plane with that, right?
They have some strength and stability,
even though they don't have good full range of motion,
they're not weak and unstable in that situation.
So they're at least, but rotating.
I would say rotating, rotating and lateral flexion
and extension because the QL, that's a muscle
that's often pulled.
Okay, let me paint a scenario.
Strong guy works on the gym.
He could deadlift 500 pounds, he could squat 400 pounds.
He goes to move his couch and it's a heavy couch.
It's a 250 pound or 300 pound couch.
So he can lift it because he's really strong.
He's moving it, he steps a little wrong, his body twists.
He was able to lift it, but he wasn't able to stabilize it
while rotating because he never trains that.
Boom, hurt himself.
Why be this?
Or is it one side lower?
Yes, or is that lateral stability issue?
Like you said, the QL leaves that completely susceptible.
Yes, so you can have isometric strength
and just carry over to range of motion outside of that,
but it doesn't carry all the way over.
So you definitely want to train everything
in full range of motion.
Next question is from MT Rafe.
How accurate are trackers such as Fitbit at measuring neat and calories burn?
Oh, this is a great.
I'm going to, I'm going to say something controversial in response to this.
They're extremely accurate.
Super accurate compared to what?
What's fact check?
Well, here's, here's why I'm going to say that.
Okay.
It's people want to tear them apart on where they're inaccurate to their current metabolism
or in this person's asking about their daily need.
That part is irrelevant to me.
What they're really good at and very accurate is consistently reporting that data based off
of you.
In other words, if I get it, what I don't care about,
so like let's say a client gets the Fitbit
and it's their first week of wearing it for me
because I used to use it all the time like this.
And they're like, hey, it says I'm burning on average,
1800 calories.
I don't give a shit if it says 1800 or 2700 to me.
That's irrelevant.
What I care about is that what it's saying consistently now,
and then the things that I decide to add or take away in their routine and or diet in
relation to their food. So you're looking at what you're saying, in other words, is the
trend. You're watching the trend. That's all I'm using going up. Is it going down?
That's where they are. And they are insanely accurate for that. Yes. Like, let's say you go for a walk for 500 steps, you know, and let's say the steps
are actually off and you really took 527 steps and the and the calorie burn says it was 500
calories, but it was really 523. It doesn't, that doesn't matter.
It's going to measure the same. every time you take those 500 steps,
it's going to repeat and measure it the same way.
So it's gonna give you a very consistent report
and feedback on your daily activity and your burn.
Where people fuck up is they do it,
and then they see what it says,
your quote unquote, burning in the day,
and then they eat a quote.
They try to eat and match those calorie burns,
which is like completely wrong.
Yeah, I totally agree.
I think, yeah, if it does its job, which it does well,
is if you're less active for that day,
it will show that in your number metrics
that it's succumbently.
Yeah, it's the trend that's,
you know what it reminds me of body fat testing?
Yes.
Everybody freaks out, well, I don't know,
body fat tests can be off by 4% or 3%.
Well, that doesn't matter,
but if you test your body fat every other week for a year,
you'll see a trend and the trend is pretty damn consistent.
It's going up or it's going down, same thing with these.
So forget the total calories if that's accurate
because they're not super accurate on that
or as accurate as you know,
going to Stanford and have them hook you up
to some of the most sophisticated machinery.
Well, there's a argument too.
It's like the arm swing versus actual steps.
And this is like again, to that point, it's just, that's pretty much irrelevant as
long as it's like patterning your overall movement.
Yeah, because it's going to figure that out, right?
So that's a great example.
Like Katrina used to always be like, it's not fair.
Your Fitbit register is so much more like, because you talk with your hands.
You know what I'm saying?
You always talk with hands.
Right.
But I always talk about it as soon as you do. I always do that. And that does burn calories. You always talk with hands. Right. But I always talk with my inses.
I always do that.
And that does burn calories.
I'm not technically walking.
And so it's what registering incorrectly.
Yeah, but it doesn't matter.
It'll show if you're more or less active.
That's right.
And that's all I care about is that it's gives me a baseline of, and so the actual number
that everybody gets hung up on and then how accurate is that number to my who cares
It's not how you should use it the way you should use it is eat a certain way consistently and just choose somewhere where you think
Is your maintenance level you don't even have to be perfect
But or if so it says 2000 calories you don't gain or lose at your maintenance
So eat it 2000 calories consistently for a week while you wear your Fitbit. If you did a good job of finding your maintenance, you shouldn't see any fluctuation of weight
up or down.
And then whatever that thing reads and tells you steps and calorie burn, use that as this
is my baseline.
When I eat 2000 calories and I move this much, it maintains my body.
Now, when I add this many more steps in the day and or push this thing to say it burns
500 more calories. If I keep my calories the same, I should have a 500 calorie deficit now. Or if I
keep my activity the same and then but but reduce my calories by 500, I should now have a 500 calorie
deficit. Don't get hung up on that. Oh, this thing is inaccurate. It says it by the way, to be very
clear, 95% accuracy at measuring a metabolism,
mammalian metabolism is extremely complex.
That's amazing.
95% accuracy is incredible, but that's still 5%.
5% over the course of six months or a year is a huge amount of calories.
It can make a huge difference.
So it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter.
They could be 98%.
Still, 2% makes a big difference over the course of a year with some importance of trend.
And the trend is consistent.
And if you, unless you drastically changed the way you walk,
so like you normally walk like this,
and then tomorrow you're like, I'm gonna trick this,
I'm gonna walk like this.
Listen, let me, yeah, now you're gonna see like,
I'm a huge proponent of these things.
So listen to me when you, you think that's inaccurate.
You wanna know what's even more inaccurate?
You telling me how active you are.
You telling me how much food you ate without fucking tracking.
And you can tell me you think you know and you think you're really good.
You know how off you are?
You are so off.
You're so off on your steps.
You are so off on your movement.
Way beyond this thing.
So it's an incredible tool for feedback to get closer to having an idea of what your body probably burns.
I suspect that's probably one of the biggest factors
for messing up that whole formula
for figuring out your maintenance calories, right?
Because people like over assume how active they are.
Yes, and it's like it gives you
like these options of like slightly active, very active,
like you're incredibly active. If very active like you incredibly active if you
I'm incredibly if you work a desk job, okay, so eight to ten hours a day you sit at a desk and
The only time you're active is one hour workout every day seven days a week
You work on a maniac you're an athlete you train hard seven hour a day seven days a week
You're sedentary but you're sedentary. Yeah, because that's one hour at your time. It's crazy, but that's true. Yeah, but that just shows you how off we are at estimating ourselves that
Well, it is we compare ourselves to everyone else. Well, I work out every day and John doesn't so I'm super active compared to him
I mean, I these these tools I
Credit those tools that gave me the ability to to compete to to to at that level like I don't know if I could have
done it without that. I think you could I faith in you. Maybe now. Maybe I believe I could do it now
because I've been through all of it. I've learned a lot. I agree. Those tools gave me incredible
feedback. Yeah, try to get down to three percent body fat without having trends that you could follow.
Like oh my god, you're guessing.
You're guessing at best.
And this is where that whole strategy of like, you know, not really focusing on the cardio
to, you know, increase the number of, like, now you can actually have this data to then
pull from like, okay, I just need to be more active throughout the day and I can do that
in a way where I am affecting my body fat in a way where I'm not like just adding more cardio,
which is what everybody does.
They just throttle down on cardio to burn it off.
Next question is from Nicholas Costa 3517.
Do you target a posterior problem
or a weight problem first with a client?
Well, let me change the question a little bit
just before so we don't get into the weeds
or get controversial with posture problems because that's kind of a controversial statement.
Would you work with a person's movement first? In other words, getting them to move better
and to have more stability first or get them to lose weight first, movement, movement first because
the process of getting somebody more fit and stronger is also the process of you do it right
of speeding up the metabolism,
which also aids in weight loss.
And also weight loss is much more complicated
than strength training.
In the sense that when you meet with me three days a week,
we're strength training, you're doing what I'm telling you.
The rest of the time you're not with me,
that's what deal, that's the weight stuff.
So I never take a client,
well I don't care what you're doing, work out, we're gonna make you lose weight first.
Yeah, I know you're moving wrong, I know your back hurts, whatever. You got to focus on that stuff first.
I think, yeah, and I read this question as like if you're a new trainer, right, and you're kind
of going through this, like what's the most important thing, especially if somebody is in like,
if they're overweight, they're obese, and they have like some bit of joint pain,
but it's like, you know,
and you know that you could kind of take them through,
you know, more of the movement and the mobility
and that side to really help kind of get towards
that, but it's gonna take a bit of time to get there
versus you thinking as a trainer,
like maybe if we just should wait, it's gonna now,
like some of these problems are gonna resolve
and this pain is just gonna sort of go away,
which is like in my experience going through this,
it's never been the case.
Like this is just an underlying issue
that needs to be addressed and also like incorporated
as you are working your way
towards strength training in that direction.
I'll tell you what's wrong with this question, is this comes from a place of still
measuring the effectiveness of a workout
by the calories it burns in the workout.
Like that's so insignificant.
Yeah, the workout is the workout.
Like if I trained somebody,
so let's just use,
so we can be very practical here
and like give someone a visual kind of example of like,
okay, so very common
Upper cross engine right rounded shoulders forward head
Um, I can address that while also
Writing a quote-unquote weight loss program for this client, right? So like and that's the individualized part of the work
Oh, yeah, and and doing mobility and doing
You know seated row and retraction and, you know, supine scorpions
and, you know, movements that are going to benefit their posture is burning calories and
is building muscle. Therefore, it's still a, a program that is being designed to hopefully
get this person to lose weight. And the only thing that could be potentially more superior
towards the weight loss, quote unquote, goal,
would be if you were intentionally doing more activity
to try and burn more calories in the workout.
You know what I'm saying?
Otherwise, it is a weight loss program.
Like, I get a client who wants to lose weight
but also has all kinds of posture issues.
So I write a program that's designed to build them muscle,
speed up their metabolism while also doing exercises
that are going to correct their posture.
Yeah, I see.
I see this person asking with the thought process
of like hit training or something being
the best program for weight loss, right?
That's exactly what I think too.
Yeah, look, look,
because you're thinking about calorie burn right now,
which get rid of that.
Totally. So numbers thing. Okay, look, look, because you're thinking about calorie burn right now, right, get rid of that. Totally, so.
So numbers thing.
Okay, so workouts become much more specific
in terms of goals, the more advanced a person gets.
But initial clients, initially your goal is weight loss.
Okay, great, your goal is to get stronger and a deadlift.
Okay, great, your goal is to move better, fine.
You want to be more athletic, fine.
You want to build a lot of muscle, fine.
When you're a beginner, I'm going to look at you
as an individual and there's, I'm going to look at you as an individual
and I have to start with getting you to move better
before I can do anything else.
Now, if you're training with me for a year
and you want to get a better squat,
then we start to get more specific with the training, right?
But the weight loss one's interesting to me
because a weight loss workout is the same
as a muscle building workout.
That's right.
There's no difference.
In fact, all workouts with strength training should be-
And by the way, that client is being trained the same way, ironically, if they want to build
muscle or lose body fat and or have bad posture or not, like you're just going to incorporate
those preserving muscle and building muscle. That's right. And the only little bit of a
difference maybe is like, if I had a client who had perfect posture, which never happens, but
let's pretend like this for this conversation happened,
then there might be some corrective exercises
that I don't integrate into the training percent.
Well, now you're talking about the individualization
and that really doesn't change anything, right?
Yeah, it really doesn't.
You're still gonna program in that way.
And by the way, most people have a lot of the similar issues,
have problems retracting and depressing their shoulders,
have some sort of an anterior pelvic tilt,
have knees that are caving,
a lot of these issues are similar.
So when you start building a lot of these routines
and you start putting in exercises
that are going to help them in those areas,
it looks the same for every type of client,
whether it's a muscle building, a fat loss
or whatever, you're gonna integrate things
into the program that are going to address those things.
And you're not, it's not a subpar program.
You're not sacrificing, like, oh, they're not right weight loss because I'm addressing
their posture stuff.
Like, no, we're working on building muscle and we're doing that.
Totally.
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