Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1959: How to Improve All Lifts With Priming, the Truth About Detoxes, What to Do When Strength Plateaus & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: December 3, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Here’s the key to LONG-TERM fitness success, hard things will make you the happiest. (2:04) Sa...l started another movement! (17:29) Shout out to The Cheese Shop in Carmel, CA. (20:28) The FDA is a racket! (25:13) We don’t choose supplements because they are cheap! (32:29) Sal’s ultimate dad hack. (36:33) Who’s the strictest father out of the Mind Pump crew? (39:11) Going down the conspiracy theory rabbit hole. (43:28) Public Goods goes the extra mile to align with their values. (56:20) Shout out to @JailhouseStrong on Instagram. (57:06) #ListenerLive question #1 - Are the sets in the MAPS Programs total sets or are they working sets? (59:20) #ListenerLive question #2 - Will a 21-day detox ruin my metabolism? (1:10:11) #ListenerLive question #3 - How should I start back into the MAPS programs with my goal of building muscle in mind after being so low volume for a couple of months? In what order should I do the programs I have? (1:21:35) #ListenerLive question #4 - Coming off a stint of heavy-weight training, could you recommend an approach to take me thru the next few months/year of programming? (1:28:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Cyber Monday Sale: ALL MAPS Fitness Products & Bundles 60% off! **Promo code CYBERMONDAY at checkout** (Code expires Friday Dec. 2nd) Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP15 at checkout for 15% discount** Visit Public Goods for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Receive $15 off your first Public Goods order with NO MINIMUM purchase** Mind Pump #1792: The Secrets Of Happy People With Arthur C. Brooks Home | The Cheese Shop Inc. Telefèric Barcelona | Authentic Spanish Restaurants FDA Releases Final Guidance on Enforcement Discretion for NAC FDA Halts NMN Supplement Approval, Citing Pharmaceutical Potential The FDA's cozy relationship with Big Pharma - American Thinker Mind Pump #1945: How To Formulate A Supplement That Works With Shanais Pelka Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** MKUltra - Wikipedia Operation Mockingbird - Wikipedia Watch Orgasm Inc: The Story of OneTaste | Netflix Mind Pump #1480: How To Find Peace & Meaning Amid Chaos With Bishop Robert Barron Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Priming Exercises You Should do Before Lifting Weights – Mind Pump Blog Dr. Cabral Detox MP Holistic Health Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks) Instagram Alex Hormozi (@hormozi) Instagram Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Jailhouse Strong (@jailhousestrong) Instagram Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right? In today's episode, we answered live caller's questions
that this was after a 57 minute introductory conversation where we talked about fitness,
current events, or lives, studies, and much more.
By the way, you could check the show notes for timestamps
so you can fast forward to your favorite part.
Also, you want to be on an episode like this one live,
email your question to live at mindpumpmedia.com.
By the way, these are the final hours for Cyber Monday.
This is when all maps programs,
all maps work out programs,
all maps work out program bundles.
Everything is an additional 60% off.
This is the biggest sale of the year.
We only do this once a year.
If you're interested in signing up for a program
or multiple programs or a bundle,
now is the time to save a lot of money.
You can get this all at maps, fitnessproducts.com,
but you have to use the code Cyber Monday for the 60% off discount, and you can use that code multiple times.
Now, this episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
The first one is Paleo Valley.
They make Paleo-inspired supplements and products that will improve your performance and health.
My favorite is their bone broth protein, chocolate flavor.
It's the best tasting protein I've ever had in my entire life.
And it's the easiest to digest.
It feels like drinking water.
It's amazing.
Go check them out.
Go to paleovali.com-flour-slash-mind-pump.
Use the code Mind Pump 15 for 15% off your first order.
This episode is also brought to you by Public Goods.
This is a company that provides you with household products
and goods at discounted prices, harsh chemical free and environmentally friendly.
It's a great company.
Go check them out.
Save a lot of money in the meantime.
Go to public goods.com forward slash mind pump.
Use the code mind pump to get $15 off your entire order, even if it's a $15 order.
Basically get $15 with a free stuff.
All right, here comes the show.
All right, look, here's the key to long-term fitness success.
You have to realize all of the benefits of fitness
that have nothing to do with building muscle,
burning body fat, or improving physical performance.
There are tremendous benefits in the challenge
and the struggle in overcoming obstacles
in accepting your body, accepting your limitations.
Those are the real benefits and part of the reason why fitness provides those is because
it's hard.
So believe it or not, things that are hard and challenging will actually make you happiest.
Do you believe that you have to connect those dots in order for it to be, like is it mandatory
to connect all those dots to make it a life long pursuit?
A healthy life long pursuit.
Yeah, because if you're just-
Otherwise, you're tortured.
100%.
If you're obsessed with just the-
Because look, building muscle, burning body fat, health benefits, physical health benefits,
the physical performance benefits, those are all real benefits, right?
Those are real.
But if that's all you ever focus on, oh my god, what's that going to look like in 10
years, 20 years of you working out when your older
or life challenges happen, you're not gonna hit PRs,
you're not gonna be as lean as you can,
you're not gonna look the same way or you end up,
it ends up becoming this really unhealthy.
Do you guys remember meeting?
Just depressing.
People in advanced age that still struggle without,
that like they're, they,
let's say they're fit and they're in shape,
but they're still connecting it to vanity.
Yeah, it's like mostly,
we usually see a lot of like cosmetic work.
Yeah, like lots of like added plastic surgery
and like injections and it's just like whatever they can do
to kind of slow down the process of, you know,
how they aesthetically look versus, you know,
finding other values
that they should put in.
I saw it in ex-athletes, models, celebrities.
Those are where you see it most.
Yeah, people that were put on pedestals earlier on
and they're age.
Their identity became how they looked.
And that's a hard thing to let go of.
Yeah, yeah.
But I feel like most of my clients that were like,
you know, average Jener Joe,
person know what that nobody knew of.
By the time you got to your 50s or 60s
and if you were pursuing health and fitness,
I can't, nobody jumps out to me right away
of like somebody who was really strong.
You're right, the vast majority of people
who do this forever, the reason why they just scrubbed that, right?
They figured out.
Yeah.
Actually, I'm inevitable.
Yeah.
In fact, you don't even have to be 50 or 60.
I think you just have to do it for like 10 years.
Like if you do it for 10 years, you end up, you have to come to these realizations that,
okay, wow, I'm getting a lot of value because I learn how to overcome challenges.
Like, here's what I mean by that.
When you start working out, you suck at stuff.
You just do.
And you're going to continue to suck at things as you try new things.
And as you are encounter new challenges with your body or your lifestyle or you lose your
job or you have a baby or you get old or whatever, you start, you figure out how to overcome
these challenges, how to use fitness as a way
to improve the quality of your life,
meaning that your fitness changes and molds itself,
and then you start to value that,
and you go, wow, this is really cool,
this is something that just makes life better.
There's a lot of acceptance too.
You may start off with, and most people start off
this way, with these real cosmetic goals,
and you may idolize someone, like you may look at,
like for me it was like, you know,
I looked at Arnold Schwarzenegger, I wanna look like that.
I wanna be a bodybuilder.
Let's some point I realize, like,
I'm never gonna look like Arnold.
I just, I don't have his genetics, I don't have his build.
I'm not gonna do what he did to look the way he did.
But then I continue anyway, right?
So I accept it, and I continue moving on.
And it's also the, think of how little value exercise will provide you guys,
because you guys been to this for a long time.
How much less value would you get if it was easy?
Like if you went out there and there was no challenge, no struggle, no pain,
no hard sets, no heavy weight, no burn, no gasp for air, like how little value
it would provide you.
Well, anything worth doing is difficult.
Always.
Yeah.
Always.
It's the, it's like a life, it's like the conendrum
that we have to face.
Arthur Brooks is an expert on happiness.
It's literally part of the formula of happiness
is the challenge.
It's also, too, it's like in small doses,
in terms of what you can handle.
So it's like, well, you can obviously do a really difficult
workout and try some real new difficult skill
in that direction.
But I think it's just a great way to just train your mind, win-facing real life, like crazy
challenges that come your way, because of all the experience that you've just accumulated
by overcoming one little thing, the next thing, and it just gets, you know, more, you can
actually handle more and more, you get stronger mentally as a result.
Why do you think evolutionary that we want that?
Oh boy, it's because it forces us to evolve and grow.
Because life is gonna kick you in the teeth,
no matter what.
So we had to evolve, I mean, that's the prevailing theory.
We had to evolve requiring challenge
in order to feel purpose meaning and actually feel happy, because
if we didn't, then we would die.
We would suffer, die, crumble, and fold.
Life is always hard, right?
We make certain aspects of life easier, and then we have this terrible realization where
it's like, actually, it's not, it's actually still hard, like, what's going on here?
I have air conditioning, I have easy life, I don't have to, it's just a different hard. It's just, well, actually, it's not, it's actually still hard, like what's going on here. Like, I have air conditioning, I have easy life,
I don't have those.
It's just a different heart.
It's just, no matter what.
It's like that scene is one of my favorite scenes
from the Matrix, which there's a lot of philosophy
in the original Matrix, but there's that scene where
Morpheus is sitting, they captured him, right?
Agent Smith captured him and he's like,
they're trying to crack into his brain
to figure out the codes to Zion.
And Agent Smith says, you know the first Matrix trying to crack into his brain to figure out the codes to Zion.
Agent Smith says, you know, the first matrix that we created
was a perfect utopia.
Life was easy and everything was amazing.
And he goes, we lost entire crops of humans
because your minds couldn't comprehend life being that way.
And he has his own theory, but the philosophy behind that is
it's totally true.
We have to have struggle and challenge in order to have value.
Now, why is this so valuable?
Because if you start to understand that value,
you're gonna wanna pursue your workouts.
If it's all about how you look,
all about muscle and body fat,
at some point you'll stop, or you'll kill yourself.
You'll develop this terrible relationship
with exercising, you'll kill yourself.
You know what's interesting about that?
Is that most all religions have a belief that the
after world or after life or heaven is this paradise of like everything being perfect.
And if we believe that now that we desire the struggle, we want that to feel good, to
have purpose, all those things, why would we even want an after life of eternity that's
all good?
Well, you ever thought about that?
I do. And I think that we don't, I think that we. I think it's misinterpreted. and want an afterlife of eternity that's all good. You ever thought about that?
I do, and I think that we don't,
I think that we,
I think it's misinterpreted.
Yes, I think so too.
I think that, I mean, I think a lot of, you know,
I don't think we can comprehend that.
I think a lot of religion has been misinterpreted.
It's what we decide that we think is it's supposed to be
and in reality, it's like,
we can't even truly fathom it.
So just wasting your time thinking that you know
what it's gonna be like is kind of ridiculous.
It's like that saying when you raise your kids,
like you can either change the world for your kids
or you can make your kids strong for the world.
Which one's, which one are you gonna succeed at
or more likely to succeed at?
Exactly, I mean, I've been kind of milling this over a lot
because I know that
you kind of get like two different types of mentalities where one is very drawn to safety and one's, you know, a little more risk adventurous and like we'll kind of go in that direction. But
honestly, like safety is an illusion. It's something that we seek it a lot,
but at the end of the day,
like a meteor could blow us up.
And it's about being fit and feeling like
you're able to withstand challenges
and be strong in that direction.
But honestly, we could do whatever we want to feel safe,
but it's a feeling.
It's not real.
I'm gonna add to that because someone may be saying, well, you should wear a seat belt, you shouldn't speed, that's not but it's a feeling. It's not real. I'm going to add to that because someone may be saying,
well, you should wear a seat belt,
like you shouldn't speed.
That's not what Justin's talking about.
It's not what I'm saying.
Yeah, I'll give you an example of the illusion.
You could say to yourself, working out,
that takes a lot of time, it's hard.
I got to pay for a gym membership, so it costs money.
So that makes life harder.
Is it, or is it harder to be unfit, unhealthy,
and develop chronic disease? Is it more expensive to pay for a gym membership and to buy, let's
say, food that is really healthy or supplements that are really sourced really well, for example?
Is that more expensive or is it more expensive to pay for heart disease, heart attack, cancer?
Right? So, it is a total illusion. It's a complete illusion. The safety illusion, the ease illusion.
Like, oh, life is easier because I watch TV,
I'm relaxed, I don't have responsibilities.
Is it really though?
Well, on every time we try to solve problems
like that and make our life easier,
we also create problems.
And it's just sort of like that double edged sword
that it just, it seems like always our pursuit to make things easier
and have ease towards work that's in front of us,
but really the work is, that's part of the journey.
That's what you need to experience.
So what I find, we talked about the software,
we didn't talk about this on the podcast,
but because of what you're talking about right now,
don't you find that interesting that we had,
we have this kind of attack on the privileged as if the privileged is a better place to be.
I mean, that's assuming a lot, right?
That, oh, you have a head start.
Oh, you have this opportunity.
You're making an assumption that they're privileged.
Right.
Because that's what I'm saying.
You're assuming that having all the opportunities, having all the money, having the big
house, having all the private, that's the money, having the big house, having all the private,
that's technically a better life.
It's assuming a lot.
And I thought about this a lot
because I went through a phase in my life
where I definitely thought of myself as a victim, right?
Definitely felt sorry for myself.
And then as I got older and I saw the growth
and everything that happened
from going through those things in my life.
I looked back now and I go, if I was asked,
hey, if you were brought up in a home like X, Y, Z,
and there was a time when I used to think,
oh man, like if I had the head start that my buddy had,
or if I had the parents that my buddy had,
I'd be here, here, and here,
and I had that attitude for a portion of my life.
And now I look back and I go, I wouldn't want that.
I wouldn't want that position because I recognize
that all those things that I had to go through
built the character that I have today
and I like that character and I don't want,
I wouldn't want it any other way.
And so I actually now view the hardships and challenges
in my life or the setbacks or the less privileged part
of my life as being more privileged.
Yeah, well, judging, I mean, just to even say that and I get, yes, you could objectively be like,
well, it's easier if this and it's harder if that. And I know there's extremes where that makes a lot of sense.
But that's a very arrogant assumption. Oftentimes it is because you could look at somebody
and be like, wow, they drive a nice car, they make a lot of money,
and not know they're on two different antidepressants
that they have tons of anxiety
that they're struggling with,
maybe mental illness.
I feel like we have such a great example of this
when we look at celebrities.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, when you look at alcoholism, drug abuse,
suicide, anti-depression, I mean,
it runs rampant in the most wealthy, most
privileged people.
So, the idea that we don't even have good examples of that to me is silly is it's like
you, and then we all idolize those people ironically.
I know.
It's wild.
It is crazy.
But again, bringing it back to the pursuit of fitness, which I've said before is a great vehicle for personal growth.
And I used to do this with my clients
in the second half of my career,
as I would point out all these other values,
just like with nutrition, it's like with food.
We all understand that there's a hedonistic palatability
that comes with certain foods, and that is a value.
Oh my God, this tastes so good, right?
Cheetos, ah, they're so pleasurable.
But there's so many other values to food, and if you don't acknowledge and realize all those values,
the only thing you'll ever chase is palatability, which we know what that leads to, right?
If the only thing you ever chase with fitness is getting lean, getting muscular,
athletic performance, looking good, you're going to miss out on 95% of the other tremendous values and it will lead you down a terrible dark path.
You're gonna take this incredible tool,
which all tools are like this,
all valuable tools in life are double edged.
Everything that's valuable in life can either make you
or break you, that's what makes it so powerful.
And if you don't understand all of the other values,
like wow, I overcame that challenge,
wow, I'm able to move better.
Oh my god, I wake up in the morning now,
and actually I've structured to my day because I exercise.
Wow, this is me caring for myself
or as before, I really didn't do that.
And now I am, right?
Wow, that was so hard for me, and it's still hard for me,
but my relationship with hard is different now.
Now, I don't cringe, and I'm not fearful
of the burn of the pain.
Now, it's like, I embrace it. And that's a huge piece of growth. Once you understand all of the
value of exercise, wow, it becomes this incredible tool. But if you don't and you only value
how it makes you look, you're going to be screwed. I promise you. Either you won't stick to it
or you're going to hurt yourself or cure yourself or find yourself in a very dark place.
Yeah, you really learn how to reframe a lot of these like hardships and challenges
and look at it as an opportunity to learn, to grow, to get to the next level. It's the
same kind of way I look at the feeling of being excited versus being anxious. You could
either have that kind of negative connotation towards it or look at it as a positive
and really like lean into it.
Yeah, I remember the first time, and I say first time because this happened several times,
I know you guys have two because we've talked about this before. The first time I had a new client,
this always happened with somebody who never experienced like who really never exercised or never
played sports. So it was like total deconditioned average, you know, person, typically they'll hire me
in their 40s because they're like, oh, I got it healthy and fit. And then they'll hire me in their 40s because they're like, oh God, I got it healthy and fit.
And then they'll hire me and we'll do an exercise
and they've never felt what like muscular,
like good muscular pain feels like.
They perceive it as pain.
And I remember the first time this happened to me,
and it's happened before.
I had a lady doing tricep press downs
and I don't remember what rep she got.
She let go of the bar and the way crash.
She heard my triceps.
And I'm like, what's matter? She's like, oh my God. You heard my triceps. And I'm like, what's matter?
She's like, oh my god, I think I hurt myself.
And I'm like, explain to me what you feel.
And she's telling me, and I'm testing her,
and I'm moving on, I'm like, oh, that's just a muscle burn.
It's a burn.
And I remember the first time that happened when she left,
I like sat, had a little break,
and I sat there thinking about it.
I'm like, does she feel more pain
from a tricep press down than I do?
And I said, no.
I said, first off, she was nowhere near failure.
I can push myself to failure and beyond.
I mean, the difference.
I'm familiar.
The difference is my relationship to the pain.
That I feel the same pain she does.
Actually, I feel more pain than she does.
My muscles are bigger.
I'm pushing myself harder.
I can go much further.
But my relationship to it is different.
So I'm not so scared of it that I drop the bar as I go through it.
That is a tremendous value that you get from exercise.
I actually hear that from women, especially when they'd say that they felt more confident
because they got under a heavy bar and struggled through lifting something heavy.
And then every day life, they're like, man, I feel so confident. I feel so much more confident with just, you know,
moving around and taking it all on. Totally. Absolutely. So anyway, important lesson that I think all of us should learn.
So, hey, I want to talk about,
we're supposed to mention Paleo Valley today,
the protein, the bone broth chocolate.
Oh my God, I'm getting tagged all over the place.
Hold you.
And all of you started.
It is, it's the best tasting protein
I've ever had a time on.
I'm intentionally not gonna have some now.
Just such a wrap. Two, yeah, it's a lot of chocolate. I'm intentionally not gonna have some now. Just such a...
You're such a rapper.
Two, yeah, it's two populations in case.
You want to be cool.
Yeah, I don't want it.
That's cool for me to do that.
People are going nuts.
Yeah, no, I see it.
I mean, I see it all over people now.
They're totally loving it.
And I was trying to get some more and...
You're such a good salesman, didn't tell you?
No, it's real.
You're a good guy.
It's real, dude.
It tastes like chocolate donuts.
I'm not making that up right now. Well, Doug Cosine for you.
So I trust him for sure.
So I actually haven't been having to do protein
protein powder lately.
I've been pretty consistent with getting,
but I mean, I was back to, although today
I didn't, I'm saying that.
Are you bringing your food?
Yeah, I'm back to bring.
Whenever I, if I prepare, I'm good.
It's when I'm not prepared when the shakes and the bars
and the things like that, I feel like become necessary as when I'm not prepared, but if I'm prepared
I've got my meals made. You know why it's because
Food is so accessible and easy that when you're not prepared
It's super easy for you to just I'll just get this yeah, I'll order that. Yeah. Yeah, no totally
And protein in protein is hard. It is
No, even even what even I brought this up not that long ago
Even when you order out what we would consider a protein meal
Restaurants don't serve you well the guy your size, you know, you're probably looking for what 50 grams of protein for
Yeah, what you're talking about you ain't gonna get 10 to 12 ounces of a meat
Yeah, and you'll get one third of that. Yeah, you get four ounces is kind of the standard serving size for
You'll get one third of that. Yeah, you get four ounces is kind of the standard serving size for eating out for protein.
And that's eating something that you would look at and go, oh, this is a protein, chicken,
rice bowl, and vegetable.
Like, oh, that's a healthy, good choice.
But you're sitting on four ounces of meat.
Like, I had to eat nine of those for me to hit my protein.
Was it you that pointed out at Chipotle?
Yes.
You don't tell them after they've given the scoop.
The first scoop. You know, that's funny. You know, that's after the after they've given the scoop. Yeah, you wait.
You know, that's funny.
And I've been talking about that for a long time.
I've actually seen all kinds of stuff on Instagram viral about that.
Yeah, no, I've totally, in fact, I think I actually watched Alex
Ramozy talk about it in a video not that long ago where he was telling
people that's a strategy.
I mean, I've been saying that for a long time.
Like, I remember going there and like, wait a second.
The you tell them double meat first and they give you little tiny portions.
You do them after the weight.
You wait.
Oh, wait real quick.
That would be the same hack for five guys.
You order another fry after they give you the first one.
Because they always do like a five guys, you give you a small fry and then they fill the
whole bag up.
You order your fry and you go back, okay, get another fry and then you get like, totally amount.
Versus if you were to get two small fries,
it would end up being the same as if you were to.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, I don't know that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a fry hat.
But I've never ran into situations where I need,
I know, I've never had, I've never needed more fries
from five guys.
They've never even tried to figure out those fries.
Right here.
I cannot, I cannot stop eating.
Send the standard over.
French fries are potential chips. I can't stop eating the standard over French fries or
potato chips. I can't stop eating that is your that's your
kryptonite. I do see all eat it. I'll eat them until I hate
like beyond hate myself. I'll just just as cheese your fries
or chips. Yeah, I'm ice cream for sure ice cream or cake. Yeah, I
blame you for introducing me to that cheese shop in Monterey.
I'm occurring online now. Oh, are you serious?
Yeah, bragging like cheese wheels.
Hey, at least you're doing it.
I swear to God.
Oh, yeah, but at least you're getting like legit.
I mean, they have everything in that place, cool.
Wait a minute.
They'll deliver it to your house.
Yeah.
When they delivered over here, or they have to be in Santa Cruz.
Yeah, they'll deliver it here.
Really?
Yeah.
So I'm a huge, I love, I see.
It's cool that I loved about that place.
Shout out to, it's a cheat, I think it's cool that I loved about that place shout out to it's a cheat
I think it's called the cheese shop right in Carmel and
You they have every cheese in the entire world and then they have somebody behind there. What's a what's a
Somalia, that's what you call the wine. Yeah, the wine. Yeah, but they're a cheese one. Well, they yeah
They actually they show you how to pair
Well, yeah, they actually, they show you how to pair, pair all these cheeses from all over the world
with like the appropriate wine to go.
If you have the time, yeah,
you definitely want to hang out there
because they'll take you through that,
like pairing with wines or they'll just let you try,
like basically any of the cheeses you want,
like they'll give you a little piece
and so I'm just there for you.
You know that hour, like,
whoo, that is.
I don't think about it.
This part of the reason why we moved out there
was because of this experience and if you get a chance and I've actually had several people
DM me and I've pointed them in this direction like one of the most epic weekends that
Katrina and I would create for ourselves all the time would be going to the sanctuary
which is one of the best places in California to stay on like stay on the beach you've all stayed
there is a lot of good restaurants down there. Well's beautiful. You go down to Carmel, which is 15 minutes up the road.
You go to the cheese shop, you get yourself, you know.
There's a lot of good restaurants down there.
Well, no, this is what, this is the hack for us,
is to do that.
Go get a cheese.
Bring it back.
Bring it back and wash the sunset from your room.
It is like, you know, we did that after you said that.
I mean, that's what made us live out.
I mean, we were doing that so often
because it was such an incredible night or weekend
that we'd stay there. And we like, we have to, we're doing that so often because it was such an incredible night or weekend that we'd stay there.
And we're coming out here so much,
like why don't we just move out here?
But I love that.
It's such a cool date or experience.
You know, real cheese connoisseurs,
like the stronger the cheese is better.
I'm assuming you're that way, Justin.
So you like cheddar, but you like extra sharp,
more than, yeah, I'm saying here.
Yeah, all the way.
Even though it's funny,
because my kids, I just had them try blue cheese
and I'm like, you know, you just ate a bunch of mold.
You know, but dude, I would have like,
been grossed out at that when I was a kid,
but like, I remember the first introduction to it
was on a steak that I had, I think in college,
and then that just like blew my mind.
Change your life.
I was like, okay, I'm going like all in on a cheese.
I told you about the famous cheese from Sardinia, right?
It's got actual like, yeah, that's great.
Oh, maggots in it.
I mean, you'll eat the maggots.
I don't get limb burger and all of the real stinky stuff.
I've never tried limb burger.
Yeah, I've used it for pranks, I haven't actually.
Now, have you, since you've been doing this,
have you been introduced to one as anything new
that like you've never seen or heard of, and then you had, you're like, damn, this is, have you found you've been doing this, have you been introduced to one as anything new that like you've never seen or heard of
and then you had you're like,
damn this is have you found anything like that yet?
Well I mean I'm stuck right now in Mimolette
because it's like it has these like salt crystals in it
and it's a real hard cheese.
Oh I love hard cheese.
Have you tried that, Doug?
I have it.
I'm going to though.
I love hard cheese.
I love hard cheese.
It's the best cheese I've ever had.
And now is this the kind of cheese
that you grate on stuff or you're supposed to eat it?
You just have to slice like,
it's kind of hard to slice, but yeah.
Doug's writing it down.
I am.
Yeah, it's,
do you like, now do you like pecorino
and like the really hard,
oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
I like that.
Yeah, but some of those like,
do you have to kind of grate them
to be able to get access to?
Doug, what's the name of the restaurant
that you just introduced us to
that you took Mike and Justin, all of us to?
Yeah, telepharic.
Telepharic.
Or telepharic.
I'm not sure the penloste.
In Los Gatos.
Do they have more than one or is that the only one?
They do.
Well, they have one in Barcelona.
They have one at the pre-welvent.
It's Bartholona.
Okay, well.
Is that what you say?
Is that Bartholona?
Is it supposed to say Bartholona?
No, it's the Spanish pronunciation.
Sal is attempting.
Yeah. Yeah. Shot's coming. I was attempting Bartholomew. No, it's a Spanish pronunciation salad's attempting. Yeah. Shot's coming.
I was attempting.
There's nothing more awkward than somebody,
like just throw it like just one word accent.
Like everything else is normal and they're like,
but then, they go back to like talking normal.
That's just to stop.
Yeah, I'm very torn about that with like Japanese,
like for example, kombucha, right? I try to throw a Japanese pronunciation on kombucha
Pretentious right dinner with your girl. Yeah, I really enjoy this nice drink kombucha
Or karaoke, right? Cut okay, cut okay.
I like that, I'ma use that.
No you're not.
I'm shit.
I remember it.
Hey, so you gotta go try that restaurant, I will.
Yeah, yeah, I have written out.
You guys will like that for sure.
So dude, I gotta tell you guys about some fuckery going on
with the FDA right now.
You know the FDA, that wonderful regulatory agency,
that's totally not corrupted.
Never.
Somebody, okay, mess with us.
I wish we had that, somebody showed me like a,
so they're so annoying. How many people were connected to that? It's all big. They never corrupted. Never. Somebody, okay, I wish we had that. Somebody showed me like a,
they're so annoying.
How many people were connected to that?
It's all big.
It's all, it's a joke.
So check out what they're doing.
So they started this.
The first time I heard of this was during COVID.
So during the whole COVID, you know,
debacle or whatever.
They, there's a supplement called an AC,
an assistal, an assistal system. But by the way, it's been sold as a supplement for NAC, an acystyl cysteine,
which by the way has been sold as a supplement
for like two decades.
And what it does is you take it
and it raises glutathione levels in the liver.
So it's a great antioxidant,
you know, boosts antioxidant levels in the blood.
Well, they found in studies that NAC may be
an actual great supplement to take
when you have respiratory illness, like COVID,
because it prevents severe issues in the lungs.
Okay, so they showed this in studies.
Well, lo and behold, FDA comes out and says,
hey, supplement company, stop selling NAAC,
we're gonna regulate it because there's this weird,
like provision in US law that says, ready for this,
it bars ingredients from being marketed as supplements
if they were ever first approved
or even investigated as drugs.
In other words, if a pharmaceutical company puts out a paper
that says, hey, vitamin C, you know,
that may be something that could treat the common cold.
And then they're like, ah, we're not going after it.
The FDA could go back and, hey, 30 years ago,
Pfizer said this and now we need to regulate vitamin C.
What?
So they tried to do this with NAC.
They're trying to do with NNN.
Let's eliminate all competitions.
So NNN, it raises NAD levels in the blood.
Well, now, because there was some paper that was written, and it wasn't even NNN.
It was like this, like a derivative of it or something like that, was investigated as a pharmaceutical drug at first.
Now the FDA is coming out and saying, oh, you know what we need to do? We need to regulate this. like a derivative of it or something like that, was investigating as a pharmaceutical drug at first.
Now the FDA's coming out and saying,
oh, you know what we need to do, we need to regulate this.
So basically based off of this provision,
any supplement that's ever been mentioned
by a pharmaceutical company,
especially if it's got any efficacious applications
because they're not gonna regulate shit
that doesn't work, right?
As soon as it looks like it's starting to work
on do something, they're gonna jump on it
and they'll say it needs to be regulated.
Why? Because the FDA sure they have lots of functions,
but one of their functions is to protect
their friends and the big farm companies
because you can't have supplement companies
selling a product if it's-
Lupert even to do so.
It's such incredible bullshit.
It's crazy to me that we're like one of the only countries
that even allows medicine to be advertised
and marketed like that.
That's not funny.
It's ridiculous.
I mean, what's so crazy about it is that we're one
of the only countries that do it.
And then that's like 80% of all.
Of all.
Yeah.
I mean, that's like huge difference.
It'd be like one thing of like,
oh, we kind of allow a little bit of this
or we allow certain drugs to do be marketed
or talked about.
But it's like, no, everything's fair game.
And most of all of our advertising money
is spent in that direction in the entire country.
So that's fucking wild.
So I want to go, I mean, I'll go a step further, right?
So, and I understand why the FDA exists.
So I get why they exist.
I think that it could be totally,
I think they could do a much better job
and it could save us a lot of money
in terms of how much we spend going through them.
But a lot of the people that work in the FDA
used to work in big format.
Either they were executive.
I've seen somebody do a post
that shows all the, how they're gonna,
it's interesting how like some of it runs in the FDA
then all of a sudden gets hired by some of the pharmaceuticals
or yeah, and it's just interchangeable. Yes.
So what that means, it is interesting.
It's like a political game.
Well, it doesn't guarantee that they're shenanigans,
but it does.
So come on.
Potentially, there could be lots of conflicts of interest.
And so what'll happen is they see a supplement
that's efficacious, like, oh shit.
This is really treating osteoarthritis.
And then they can go back and they can try
and find some obscure bullshit. And then they can go back and they can try and find some obscure bullshit and then they can say,
oh, sorry guys, that actually belongs to this company.
Did you hear what the guy said on all in about the FTX guy
that was doing all the regulating for FTX
like 10 years before was doing like some shady gambling stuff?
I forgot what that was.
I so don't, I can't remember what he,
but he was the one who was like putting all the helping them
with all the regulation structure of the business for FTX.
Meanwhile, 10 years ago, he had got caught up
in some like crazy scandal.
So my big issue with this is.
Is that not like a massive red flag?
Oh, it totally is.
Yeah.
So, and now here's a big issue.
Then you get people who say, well, the supplement industry
needs to be regulated by the FDA because there's lots of supplements out there that lie, they put, you know, they don't put what
they say is in the label in the actual bottle or they have other stuff in there. This is all true.
There's lots of companies that do this. But what you need to consider is, is it better than the
alternative? Because if the FDA were to regulate supplements, first off, you wouldn't have 90%
of supplements that are out there because it would be way too expensive
to even pursue putting them out there.
So your choices would go way down.
Then you'd have even more control over an industry
that tends to protect these big farmer companies.
So you don't want that.
Now, again, people always say,
well, what about supplements?
There's lots of these, and there are tons of companies
that are shitty, that are what,
but that doesn't necessarily mean they're not regulated. There are regulations. There's lots of these, and there are tons of companies that are shitty, that are what, but that doesn't necessarily mean they're not regulated. There's, there
are regulations. There's consumer regulation. The supplement doesn't.
Which by the way, that's extremely powerful in today's society. You do something wrong.
Or you, you cheat somebody on the internet today. It moves back. I mean, you got, within
minutes, it seems like you've, you, which that was never like that in history.
No. So there's, so there's that, but then there's also this.
There's all these third party regulatory agencies because there is a market for regulation
where they could go to this company that has nothing to do with this company.
It has nothing to do with, so if I'm, you know, a supplement company, A, I go to this
third party company, I say, test us for glyphosate, test us for the fact that we have what we say we have in
there, test us for impurities.
And these are third party companies, and they'll do it.
And the third party company's interest is in being accurate.
Do you think that should be, do you think that that should be how almost all markets
are ran is instead of having any regulation whatsoever, you just have companies that figure
out them going out of their
way to pay for third-market-
So market advantage for them to do that?
That's right.
I don't you think that the many-
I'm trying to get one that would-
That's why I asked you to.
Many markets.
I haven't heard a compelling argument for regulating environmental stuff just because
sometimes the timeline on that could go out 100, 200 years.
But for like products, I definitely think so.
I think it puts it in the hands of the consumer.
These third party companies exist.
And so here's a deal.
If the FDA, if something slips through the regulation
or they don't protect consumers,
they get more money.
It becomes an incentive to get more.
So the FDA says, oh my God,
these drugs came out that actually turned out
to cause heart attacks. You know why? Because we're not funded enough. to get more. So the FDA says, oh my God, these drugs came out that actually turned out to
cause heart attacks. You know why? Because we're not funded enough. We need more money.
And they'll get more money. Now, if a third party regulates a supplement company and then
it turns out the third party actually messed up, do they get more money or they go out of
business? Yeah. So the incentive, the incentive for the third party regulatory agencies
is to be accurate and honest,
because they mess up once they're done.
Nobody trusts them anymore.
Now, this does put the responsibility in the consumer.
For example, sometimes we get criticisms
when we promote a supplement company.
For example, we just co-branded a kind of pre-workout,
energy supplement.
I was wondering if you were gonna say something about it.
I knew, you know what, shame on the audience, right?
To come after you or to make comments about peak performance,
the supplement that you just, it's like calling your baby ugly, bro.
Yeah.
What do you guys, like, seriously?
And you did not think you didn't think
Sal was going to say something like, come on.
I knew that was coming.
Well, no, so, so getting a lot of good reviews,
but there was ugly people who are like, oh my Well, no, so getting a lot of good reviews, but there's ugly things.
People are like, oh my God, it's so expensive.
Well, first off, since day one,
our priorities were never to be the cheapest.
We never work with, if we look at a company,
we never said that.
We never look and say, are they the cheapest or whatever.
We look at quality, are they,
are there lots of third party testing?
Do we like the owners?
Do we like their direction?
Like all that stuff?
We don't care.
Like, if I'm gonna promote a supplement,
you're gonna take on a regular basis,
it's gotta be amazing.
And if it's expensive, then don't take it.
Well, that's a little more.
Our message has always been that if it's expensive,
we've always pushed whole natural foods
as the way to go.
And if you wanna save the most amount of money,
then do that.
Right.
So peak power, it's,
they make sure that it's organic, so that's tested. Then they make sure it's gly it's, it's, it's, they make sure that it's organic.
So that's tested. Then they make sure it's glyphosate, residue free. That's tested.
There's 30 party tested that tells you that what's in the bag is actually in the bag.
That costs money too. So what you're paying for is a supplement that actually says, has
what it says it has made. It isn't just the stems, you know, it's the actual
fruiting body. You could go find something that says it's similar, that costs you half as much, okay, you
can roll the dice if you want to.
Or you could pay.
So that's the whole point that I'm trying to make, that it goes on, it's on the consumer
and they exist.
These regulations do exist out there in the supplement industry.
You don't want these blanket, FDA, believe me, it'll be much worse if you went, you know,
in that direction.
What do you think people's desired outcome is making comments like that?
I
Think that the supplement industry has
Conditioned people to value price above all else. They say things like we have the same thing
But we're cheaper and we're doing this like race to the bottom and people don't I think it's in all markets
No, and a lot and a lot of markets, but the supplement industry is done that like a ton and people don't... I think that's in all markets, no? In a lot of markets.
But the supplement industry is not like a ton,
and people don't consider, you know,
because you don't know, you're taking a supplement,
okay fine, it's got something there you don't want,
you might not notice for 10, 15, 20 years,
and then you may never actually connect it
to the supplement that you're taking.
Or the placebo effect, yeah.
You know what's funny?
It's that I was talking to Mike Matthews about this,
and you know what a common common hustle is would be to that
Some of these some of the companies will do is they will give a competitive product like that for
It cost or at a loss in order to drive you into their network to sell you some bullshit. That's like margins are crazy
Yeah, I mean that's that's such a that's a hustle is to get somebody. It's I mean when you think about it's smart
I mean it's a smart strategy for making money,
but it's unfortunate because as a consumer,
it's so hard to figure out like,
if I'm getting duped or if I'm getting a great product,
does this really work?
It's like, yeah, totally, 100%.
So, for me personally, if I'm gonna take something,
it's gonna be good.
Otherwise, I'm gonna stick to whole natural foods.
And also, what are they comparing it to?
In terms of the, like, so it will be something
that's a lot cheaper, but just go back
and read those reports of all those companies
that had, like, fillers in there that had, like,
heavy metal toxins in there, like, just look,
like all the stuff is out there in terms of, like,
the cheaper options, it's there.
The protein powders that had the highest
heavy metal content when they did that study
were organic vegan protein powders.
So you're a consumer, like, oh, it's organic,
it's vegan, it's good for me.
But they're not going out of their way
to test for heavy metals.
And you were literally consuming
potentially toxic amounts of heavy metals,
not even knowing.
Just to, you know, again, you're the consumer,
it's your responsibility.
And that's the way it should be.
It's your responsibility, nobody else.
Yeah, yeah.
Anyway, stuff cracks me up.
I wanna hear who had the dad hack, is that you?
Oh, that was me.
Oh, dude, I got it.
So we've talked about this before.
Jessica taught me this, and I wish I knew this
as a younger dad.
So, you know, I'll paint the scenario, right?
So I'm trying to do dishes and a railiest, he wants to play with me. And so I'm trying is a younger dad. So I'll paint the scenario, right? So I'm trying to do dishes and Aralius,
he wants to play with me.
And so I'm trying to keep him occupied
while I'm doing dishes real fast so I can stop
and then go play with him.
Instead, and this is just, you know,
I told my cousins who are new dads this
and I showed them a video.
So I have a video of me washing dishes with Aralius.
Like instead of doing your chores super fast,
you can go play with your kid while your kid
is waiting for you and being crabby or whatever,
make the chore the game and have fun.
And so that's what we do with everything.
Washing clothes, dishes, sweeping, it's just,
it's a blast.
So, I really, he does what he can.
He's only two.
So, he'll hand me something or I'll give him soap
and he'll, but it becomes the game.
I'm so curious how that's gonna,
like, especially someone like you has,
you have two kids that are much older
and you didn't do some of these things now you're doing it.
And so you will you be able to see,
be able to compare and contrast the behaviors and stuff.
Cause we do that with Max too and I always wonder like,
you know, are we setting him up really good for
when we do have chores and things to take care of?
Like it's just been built into him since day one.
And so he just accepts it,
or why I still get pushed back,
or would have not made a difference.
I'm really curious.
Obviously, I know in the now that it's already a hack, right?
It's already a hack that, like you said,
like I'm rushing to do these dishes done,
and so my son can play, or he's distracting me,
or with that, why not just integrate him into the process
and have fun with it and do that with,
like that's a no-brainer.
But I even wonder, like, okay, take that a step further.
Like building that routine in them.
Cause he maxes the dishes, he's done laundry,
he does the washing the car with me,
picking up the dog poop, like all of that's been that.
So, you know, will I carry this on to where
when he's a teenage boy,
he's just like, he's just known to keep doing all that stuff.
I'm really curious to see if that's gonna happen.
I think so. I also think it makes them if that's gonna happen. I think so.
I also think it makes them feel like they're contributing.
You know what I mean?
That's what it means.
Like it's just, this is what we do.
You know what I'm saying?
It's not a chore per se.
It's like we are, we all help to keep the house in order
and clean and this is just what we all do.
And like will he just accept it?
That's, I mean, that's kind of like what I've been trying
to do the most is just like this is just what we do
on a daily basis. Cause like the whole been trying to do the most is just like this is just what we do on a daily basis
because like the whole chore thing to me,
it just seems like now you're putting all this like
negative energy like in that you have like anytime,
I don't know, I've been looking back,
I've grown up like a lot of things like I had to do
where we're promoted by force, you know?
And I'm like how can I,
how can I do this in a different way
where it's not like I'm just imposing this
and my what I want like on my kids versus like,
you know, pulling them in and selling it a little bit better.
So yeah.
So along these lines, I have a question for you.
I wanna try and be better at this.
You know everyone's well when I do the,
ask me a question or what about that?
Sometimes people ask like really good questions
that I wanna propose to you guys.
I answer it, but I wanna hear what you guys think.
And someone asked, who is the strictest father
of the four of us?
How would you order the four of us?
I know how I ordered us, I'm curious
how you guys would order us.
Oh man.
Doug, you have an answer for it right away?
I'm probably the most lenient.
I had you last.
Yeah.
I'd say, well, I don't know,
Sal, are you the most strict?
I'll say the order I had. Yeah.
Justin.
Sal, me, you.
Yeah.
You know what though?
That's a tough one because we're all consistent.
That's what makes it fun.
Yeah, no, but we're all consistent.
You know what I mean?
So, okay, lenient strict, but we're all,
whatever we do, we're consistent.
It's not like you say to Max.
Sure, and I think that's why I was fun and questioned
because I don't think what they're proposing there
is if one is better than the other,
whatever, it's like, whose style is more like that?
I agree, we're all very consistent
with the way we father it, right?
So we're all pretty close though.
I think Justin's the most stern in straight this.
I think Sal is next.
And for different reasons, the way you guys do it.
Yeah, different.
Yeah, like Justin's more hard straight line
and conservative about his values and views
and he's gonna stick to his guns
and like he's very consistent with that.
You are like to me, very like a protective father
and always thinking like that
and it's like I'm looking for out for you
and that's the way you deliver that message.
I kind of feel like maybe I'm a balance of the two of you guys
a little bit that way, and then Doug, I feel like
is probably the most easy going.
I would say too, like just in terms of words,
in like just the way that you already have like
natural gift of like cell, selling, and so for me,
it's like very cut and dry, you know,
and so that's why it might come off like that.
Sure.
Because I'm just like, I'm just very economical with the way
that I'm like trying to address issues.
No, you're actually a great way to explain it.
You know, I don't need to sell this.
I'm your best.
No, exactly.
I'm not going to see you're in the fluff out.
That's a great way to compare the three of us is that you,
it is that way.
Sal and I are selling the idea
Your paint the vision always
Yeah
You don't have a choice
But then our kids are like well, I don't want to do it still well actually still have to do it. I'm just telling you why
I mean would you guys order it that way?
Do we probably accurate?
Yeah, that's pretty close.
You know what's funny is that the whole thing with Doug
and the dad thing, he was like that with us
without us realizing it when we started the show.
Totally.
Very much so.
Let us do our stupid shit.
And that's saying much more Zen about it.
Letting us figure it out, that's wisdom right there.
We use the oldest dad, so.
Yeah, no, he's for sure the most patient, I think,
when it comes to stuff like that.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I've definitely been checking my own self with a lot,
because that was like something that affected me,
I could tell, because of just like everything I wanted to do,
there was always like, it was implemented on me through force.
And I'm trying to like get better better about finding another way to present it.
That's something I'm challenging myself to do.
You know what Jessica does really well?
I don't know if it's going to work because your kids are a little older now.
I don't know if you could do this now if it'll work anymore, but she's really good at giving
two options and both options are desirable for her. So she'll say, you know, she'll say to Aralius,
hey, do you want to brush your teeth now
or do you want to brush your teeth after
we play with your blocks?
And then he'll, she'll pick.
And it's just because what it does,
it gives your kid like a family.
It empowers them, but at the same time,
too, you're controlling it.
Totally.
Totally.
She's really good at that.
Like, really, really good at that.
Whereas, you know, I tried it a couple of times,
I remember my oldest son, and he was really sharp
at a young age.
I remember he did it to me.
I think he was three, and he comes up to me and he goes,
but can I have one popsicle or two popsicles?
I'm like, huh?
Like did you just use my trick on me?
No popsicles.
No popsicles.
Just become the master.
I know. It's so funny.
Anyway, I got something cool to bring up.
I got to end down a rabbit hole yesterday on some videos on social media.
So Adam, you're familiar with MK Ultra, right?
Yeah, you guys have talked about it before.
Have you heard of Operation Mucking Bird?
Mucking Bird?
I have both of them, but you had to remind me which one is which.
So MK Ultra? I know they were originally government conspiracies that we now know or
no longer. It's not a conspiracy. This is what they actually did. MK Ultra elements were
experiments using psychedelic drugs. This is during the Cold War. To see if we could use psychedelic
drugs to as part of a process of brainwashing, programming, programming, conditioning, so like, could we take somebody
and turn them into an assassin without them knowing,
or get them to obey orders with a trigger word,
or whatever, through this, and we did some pretty crazy tests.
This is the stuff that they revealed to us.
And then Mockingbird was the CIA trying to put operatives
into media and Hollywood
because they recognize it as being
as subliminal messages and all kinds of stuff.
Yeah, so I went down this rabbit hole.
Do you know how many videos there are of celebrities
like acting hell a weird, like freezing?
Yeah, all of a sudden or somebody says a word
and all of a sudden they go,
and they like for 30 seconds,
it was freeze like their robot or they'll act super strange.
Have you seen some of those videos? I've watched, there's a few montages out there where you're gonna see like your Katie Perry's
You're gonna see your al rooker's you can see all these people like all of a sudden like something they'll just freeze
Like not really the right thing. It seems like an attorney. It's like 17 seconds or like 30 seconds
But they literally like you don't even blink. They're just like frozen dude
It's so what is that called though. Dude, it's so weird.
What is that called though, where you,
there's so many examples or something,
it's really easy to, like it's like when people predict
when the world's gonna come to an end
and they have like all these great like,
because this was said here and then this had one.
It's just weird, because there's a name,
there's a term for that.
Is there where we're-
Confirmation bias?
No, no, it's more elaborate than that.
That's like, that's basic.
Like this is like, you can cherry pick all this data because there's so much of it that it's more elaborate than that. That's like, that's basic. This is like, you can cherry pick all this data
because there's so much of it that it's,
it's all, it's all.
You're making connections that you
aren't necessarily connections.
Yeah, I don't know, man.
There's a term for it.
There was one with Drainmond when you're boy.
Yeah, yeah.
And he literally, it looked like someone froze the screen
for a while.
He just sat there, weird.
I've never seen someone do that in real life.
That's weird.
I mean, well, to that point too, because we see this from celebrities and pro athletes
where they have all the eyes on them.
The pressure is quite more substantial in your everyday average person than when they're
put on the spot.
I can see how maybe their brain might short circuit a bit
like when they're delivering some kind of speech.
But I mean, sometimes though, you're just like,
that's weird, it's almost like they're about
to have a seizure with some of these videos
where they just get these kind of ticks
and weird things happen with their eye twitching
and it's just like, I don't know,
do you know how to explain it every time?
Like it's weird.
Well, plus I'm good on gravel.
I'm gonna give this a Dremons one of the good ones.
So I can't be, so that's why I can't be true.
That's why they did a good job.
We did a good job, bro.
You believe you do.
Yeah, I don't know.
It's pretty funny.
Like that was like back in the day
when I used to go down all these like,
conspiracy holes.
And MK Ultra was a fascinating one
because there's some truth to it.
But then you can get some people that take that information
and then they apply it to so many other things.
Like, all of these major celebrities go through
some kind of ritual thing with some secret society
and then they come back and then they're just,
I mean, how much, because that's a lot of people
have speculated on.
I mean, Kanye came out and alluded to it
just not that long ago,
even though we know how crazy he is.
What, where do you guys stand on that?
Like, do you believe there is this underground cult
that gets together and dark black capes
and they slice you know,
slice each other's fingers and then they all chant
and the underground and tell everybody how we're all
gonna be billionaires and take care of it.
Hasn't happened.
Yeah.
I believe it.
Yeah, that's fair.
I don't know about it going as far as you're saying.
Yeah, I think there's, that's the part.
So okay, I don't over exaggerate it. That's what I think. I think I don't think it looks like skulls, the movie. I don't think it far as you're saying. Yeah, I think there's, that's the part, so okay. I don't over exaggerate it.
That's what I think.
I think I don't think it looks like Skoles, the movie.
I don't think it's gone to that level,
but I do think that, I mean, look at,
we see an example that we see this
that is more obvious and accepted is internet marketing.
Internet marketers that are extremely successful,
figured out a long time ago.
Hey, even though we have competing products,
there's so many people in the world for all of us to reach
so we can all get rich.
So let's cross for them.
They create syndicate.
Yeah, they create syndicates,
and they all take care of each other.
So I do believe that it looks something like that
in the music world.
Or underground network.
Well, let me, okay, so I'll give you two examples of why.
And I think it's, I think it's been painted
as this crazy dark.
I'll give you two examples of why I think I think it's getting, I think it's been painted as this crazy dark. I'll give you, I'll give you two examples of why I think
that there's some of this stuff going on.
Who was that producer that finally it came out
that he was sexually abusing all these actresses
and was it Harvey Weinstein?
Harvey Weinstein, okay.
That's happened for decades.
Yeah.
And he got cut and everybody covered up for him.
Yeah.
Everybody kept coming.
And there was one actress or musician that said,
hey, watch out for this guy, don't, you know,
whatever in interviews.
And then all of a sudden her career took a tumble.
But he was seen with Oprah and all these people,
holy shit, you're great guy.
This shit was happening forever.
Why did they allow it to happen?
Because he held the keys to fame and success.
So here's the second part.
You have a bunch of people,
when you're talking about celebrities,
who tend to be more on the narcissistic,
tend to be more arrogant,
and are also willing to sell their souls
for what they worship, which is fame and fortune.
So it's not hard to imagine at some point,
they get to a level where they get these wealthy executives
who are like, hey, here's a deal.
You just signed an NDA, so everything I say right now is...
See, I think it's less of selling your soul and it's more like internet marketing syndicates.
I think it's more like that.
It's like, hey, you're in the Good Old Boys Club now.
Let us show you how things work around here.
When things, when news comes out about us or some of this, we make sure we take care of
we get our brothers and sisters back.
Here's a politician, do you support? Here's the position.
I feel it's more like that than it is like this.
Like you're gonna sell your soul to me.
And this is, if you wanna get in the club,
this is, I don't know, bro.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
But I do know that I think we're,
we conveniently kind of dismiss a lot of old rituals
and like ancient
practices that some people still subscribe to like there's some people that really do
Research back and they find their way into some weird
like
Setting where people have now kind of attached themselves to certain belief systems and
rituals and things that, like,
for instance, we talked about this cult recently where this lady was like started out just
fingering people.
Oh, or guys, and make it.
Yeah.
Right.
And then what she did, she started taking, oh, you watch it.
I watch it.
Yes, she started taking other rituals, other parts of different religions kind of piecing it together and putting
it into this thing so she could elevate the practice and create some kind of beliefs.
Bro, look at Epstein.
Epstein.
Literally.
Okay, all that should happen.
Nothing else has happened.
He was in a cell with surveillance cameras and guards.
Oh, surveillance cameras turned off.
Oh, guards were looking.
Hung himself.
Hmm.
So is it, is it the power of statistically,
though, is it the same as the entire population,
and it's, and as it is in that select group,
because what I'm saying is like,
remember when we talked to Bishop Barron
about the whole,
oh, I hear you're saying like there's,
there's crazy people,
there's, there's, there's,
there's devil worshipers,
there's crazy people,
there's all these people in as a percentage
of the entire world. Yeah. And celebrities, there's millions of celebrities. I think it's devil worshipers. There's crazy people. There's all these people in as a percentage of the entire world. Yeah, and
celebrities. There's millions of celebrities. I think it's a higher percentage. Okay, so that's the part I'm asking. Yeah, I think it's I think it's a higher percentage because people who seek that
Do you think that we get highlighted so much because they're already in the limelight and when something like that happens
It gets talked about like crazy. All it takes is one Kanye West to go off the rails
and it's the headline to every single thing.
And now it's like, everybody is conspiracy theorist.
Yeah, well now like two guys.
I think there's a couple maybe that are like really into it,
but they like cross pass and circles a lot.
I mean, I get associated with some of the bad seeds out there.
But I mean, even look at a Bohemian grove.
That was real.
What about, what do they call it,
spirit dinners or something like that?
Yeah, exactly.
Spirit dinners where they eat off of people
that are naked and they throw blood on.
Or they eat soups made with blood.
Like there's some weird shit that we don't get talked about.
There's a video, there's a literal video of like,
it was like a party and as much as the celebrities there
and they have this body on a table and it's like,
it's food but they made it look like a human
and it with entrails and everything,
they're eating from it.
Yeah.
And I'm like, why?
Why are you guys, that's gross.
And honestly, I think it's a novelty thing
because like you get all this fame and attention
and like, I do weird shit.
Yeah, you just get into weird things and like
you get tron into like gurus.
Yeah, so you're gonna get pulled in by some guru out there
that's like doing weird shit.
Who's that one baseball player that video that came out
is farting on the, what was that guy?
He's out, he was like Chuck Berry.
Yeah, you got Chuck Berry dude.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, it's getting blasted.
Yeah, because he did all the normal stuff.
He got bored.
I mean, it's a good point you may just in that it is and say they, they're just seeking
novelty because when you make that much money, you have that much access.
You've done all the things that most people dream and, and hope to do one day.
You've already done all of it.
So it's like, oh, I gotta do some weird ship.
That no one's thought of.
Yeah.
We do some shit that no one's thinking about that because I've already done everything else.
Let's try this out.
That makes, I mean, also like the whole,
the theories around Epstein was that he,
if in order to be a part of the crew,
you or group, you came and engaged in some of these behaviors,
but then they had video of you.
Now they have blackmail.
Yeah.
I think a lot, that, see, that's another point to it.
I think that, you know, like, deviously, like, I think it's just a way that people always have
something on somebody else.
Like, especially in the political realm,
I feel like to get in there, even in the network,
to get in the network, like, they want to be able
to have some dirt, some information on somebody,
a potential candidate or somebody.
So that's why I believe it's kind of like the Good Old
Boys club where you just, if, let's say like Epstein's kind of like the good old boys club where you just
if let's say like Epstein's house where I thought if you're there you're part of the you don't
necessarily need to be part dissipating in any of the crazy shit's going on but you're part of the club
which means you can't say anything about the people that are and so you're on the list now. Yeah and
then I think that he was one of those people that saw an opportunity to blackmail all these people
that are part of the circle or he worked for a group right he was a toy now that's an opportunity to blackmail all these people that are part of this circle. Or he worked for a group. Right. He was a toy.
No, that's taking it to the next level.
Stuff like that.
Again, I, what's that thing again, the Razer's lot, what's the, it's the, it's the,
Occam's Razer.
Occam's Razer.
I think again, it's the, it's the more simpler answer.
It's just like, listen, you get to that level.
Yeah, you get to that level.
There's definitely a good old boys club.
We see examples of this, even in the, in the fair game playing world of internet marketing and stuff like that. You're part of it. We take care of you. Somebody
bashes you in part of that group. We're all going to protect you in that way. If anything bad happens
within our group in our circle, we don't ever rule each other on the bus. It's like, and then you
have an example like this of somebody that was intertwined with some of the most powerful people
and saw an opportunity because he's greedy and wants more and more and more. I think Adam just wants to get invited.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's trying to be cool so that they invite him.
I saw it all, but I wasn't part of it.
Yeah.
Then he'll say no, but he'll come back.
Because you'll see this in fraternities, sororities.
So it's not uncommon that they want you
to go through some weird initiation
or some kind of like ceremony or something.
So that way it's like, you're part of the group.
And so I think that could get exaggerated
in the pageantry of it, they could just add blood now.
And then now everybody thinks it's crazy,
it's a Satanic ritual.
Yeah, see I think it's more like that.
And I think it's a great analogy too,
it's bringing up the fraternities and stuff.
And again, another great example of how we see that play out,
it out in the open, I mean, I've seen where you go to
a big company that's got thousands of employees,
and conveniently, there's hundreds of those employees
that all went to the same school,
because they're all connected.
I'm going to be the worst.
I know you guys are the same way.
We'd be the worst people to invite to one of those things.
I know of you, because we're already dicks
when we go somewhere, and everybody just kind of like
claps at the same shit, and all of us are like,
oh God, everybody's the same.
I know, oh.
Did you imagine?
I did, I'm like, get us out of here.
Yeah.
Anyway, I gotta mention public goods.
I didn't know this.
Did you guys know that their bottles are made from sugar cane?
What?
That's how biodegradable.
Can you eat them?
I never, I don't know if you think.
I don't think you can, but they're biodegradable.
They're really made, sugar cane.
That's what they say.
The little white plastic all of it?
That's how biodegradable they are.
No, it's not cool.
They're totally biodegradable.
It's so disintegrated at some point.
That's it.
Wow.
It feels like plastic.
I know.
Wow.
Isn't that great?
Yeah, that's really cool.
I did not know that.
I had no idea.
It's so time we've been working with them.
I never, I never even heard that.
They even go the extra mile to, you know,
align with their values, which is to have minimal impact
on the environment and of course, and provide products
that are free of, you know, harmful chemicals.
But that I just learned today, which I thought was really cool.
Hey, I want to stay consistent with recommending
somebody that one of us is listening to, reading,
or whatever, does anybody have anything to go to something?
Oh, I was going to bring up Jill Howe Strong,
which is a great page that you like them.
I like them.
I'd like to refer us to old power lifters, old strong men,
and I don't think they follow.
It's on Instagram.
Yeah, it's just got really cool references
You know Mike Tyson Henry Rawlings like a lot of like cool quotes and just like lots of real bad-ass people
I don't know. It's a fun page to follow. No, I love that. I mean that's I that's what I'm I mean selfishly part of why I would do this one
I want to obviously add value to the audience and and provide them some of the stuff for because we all how often you guys get asked
Where are you reading this or where you're that?
And I wanna include, Sal, so you know,
cause I know you're big on the forums and the place,
that counts too.
It doesn't necessarily have to be a person,
it could be anything from Instagram, YouTube, blog.
No, what a great one, you picked, Justin,
I love this page.
Yeah, I'm not even following, I'm gonna fall.
Oh, bro, they got, it reminds me of all these
old bad asses that were super strong like some of their old lifts and everything. So oh yeah
You're gonna see strong strong men from the turn of the century from the 60s to 70s. Yes, it's cool
I'm on a bill cast my other some great bill cast my are clips on there
Which he's keeping in my opinion one of the
Goods. Yeah, oh dude. I met him when he was 60-semit years old and he rolled up a frying pan right in front of me.
Yeah, right in his hands.
I held the frying pan or anything.
You're like, this is gotta be fake.
No, it was real, bro.
And he just rolled it up as a part of a demo.
And did a bunch of them in front of people.
That's wild.
Hey, check this out.
There's a company called Ned
that makes hemp oil extract products,
high in CBD that you actually feel.
So these are CBD products that are also full spectrum,
so you get all the cannabinoids of the hemp plant,
and you feel this, it's not like those other crappy CBD
products that you're taking, like is it actually doing
something? This one you actually feel,
in fact, one of my favorite products is their brain blend.
This is a blend of cannabinoids and botanicals
that improve cognitive function and produce a euphoric,
motivated feeling. I was a part of this formulation.
It's a great product.
It's our favorite one now.
Go check them out.
They have a lot of other stuff as well.
Go to hellonad.com.
That's H-E-L-O-N-E-D.com forward slash mine pump.
And get yourself the mine pump discount.
All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Matt from Indiana.
Matt, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hi. Thanks for having me. I'm Big Fan of Show. My brother put me
for Fermi to you guys about three, four years ago and yeah, ends up a
little together ever since. Good deal. So my question is, so in your programs, I
have a couple of them, anabolic, symmetry, and kettlebells as well.
And I noticed that in the sets, is it total sets or the warmup sets, but it's like working
sets, are you warming up to the working sets?
Because I've done warmup sets and the working sets and I've done over training
So I just want to get the insight on that. Yeah, that's a good question when we put the sets in a program those are work sets
So it doesn't count
What you need to do to warm up or prime do you have maps prime by the way? I do I'm I have prime and prime bro
So I try to
And I do mobility girls all the time a lot of my sword parts is
my shoulder but I think I have a fly-set then and I just saw a flight problem
but I've been doing I modified the ketoblostor aesthetics to almost look like
If I had the ketimals for aesthetics, the almost look like math 15,
could I do it at home?
Good deal.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, it's worksets.
It's worksets.
And the amount of time that it takes you to warm up
to get to your worksets is going to very tremendously,
depending on the lift, how strong you are and the individual.
For me, for example, it takes a long time
to get to work sets when I'm doing like a deadlift or a squat.
I have almost no, it takes me almost no time
to get to a work set to like a curl or a lateral,
or even an overhead press usually,
because usually by the time I get to overhead press,
I've already done some kind of bench press or incline press.
So you got to feel ready to get into the work sets, but we list the work sets.
Now we created Maps Prime to help people get ready to lift in those work sets better and
more effectively because traditionally what people would do is they would just do a
bunch of warm-up sets of the exercise that we're going to do.
And that's not necessarily bad, but it doesn't really individualize what your warm up or priming should look like
because, you know, if I'm going to bench press and let's say Justin is going to bench press,
you know, we could both do a bunch of bench press warm ups, which is okay, but him and I may
have different needs, you know, we may have different shoulder mobility issues or, you know,
maybe mid back activation or stability that we need to work on.
So, Prime was designed specifically to individualize that and get you into the groove faster so that your
work sets are more effective. But yeah, there's a pretty wide range of individual
out. And you may even find this for yourself, Matt. You find that sometimes, it just takes you
longer to get to where you feel like you're in the groove of your sets
versus other times where you feel like you can kind of jump in and you feel good.
Yeah, a lot of it.
My lower body responds pretty quickly, but my upper body is still like my shoulders,
responsible, slower.
So it takes me a little longer to get in my working position with my shoulders, especially
because I have in my right shoulder,
I think in five to ten nights, so I go a lot lighter and a lot slower, so it doesn't take me
a little longer.
Yeah, so someone like you, you're a perfect example, like I'd want to do either, like a zone
one wall test to get you going or handcuff with rotation, that's what I would do with you
to prime you, and then we go into your shoulder movements. And then hopefully you can get right into your working
sets within the first set, if not the second set right away.
So, and to Salis Point, like there's certain people
that they're gonna be able to get right into a squat
and by the second squat, they're already in the groove.
There's other people that are gonna take three,
four sets or they're gonna have to do a bunch of combat
stretch and 90, 90 stuff, like. And that was a lot of me.
I had to do a lot of that work before I could really get into a working set.
Now what's cool is if you're diligent with the priming and you don't not only do you
prime before you do those lifts, but you get good about priming those shoulders all the
time, even when you're not training, you'll have to do less and less of it to get in the
groove.
So what I just squatted yesterday and I literally had to get down,
do like a couple of minutes of priming, and then I'm like working into my squat
right away.
But before that was like a two or a three minute before that's 20,
30 minutes to get me to, I had to get it 90, 90, I know it was growing stuff.
Frog, I mean, I was spending 20 minutes to get into my squats,
where, but I was consistent with that for a couple of years.
So to a point, to where now I just, you I was consistent with that for a couple of years. So it's a good point.
To where now, I can warm up,
prime real quick, and get right in my squats,
which I wasn't like that just a couple of years ago from me.
Yeah, that's a really, really good point, Adam.
To make is that the better you get at this,
the less of it you end up having to do
as you continue to progress.
And if you find that you need more and more warm-ups,
more and more priming, as you and more priming as you continue.
Usually means you're not addressing the root cause.
It usually means you're doing some kind of band-aid work, right?
So I used to do this with foam rolling.
Like foam rolling can be a great part of proper priming, but by itself it's really a band-aid.
And when I first did foam rolling, I thought it was magic.
But then I found as I continued to work out time and time again, I have to foam roll more
and more and more.
And that's when I realized, okay, like I'm not really addressing kind of the root issue.
You know what's your bicep tendon inflammation aside from the shoulder mobility, static stretching,
not before your workout, but afterwards during between workouts will really help.
So bicep static stretching and lat static stretching. Sometimes tight
lats can cause issues in the shoulder when you're pressing and that can
manifest with bicep tendon inflammation.
Three. Yeah. What are you going to follow after this? Because I would like to see you
follow symmetry. Well, no, he's got symmetry. Do you have map strong?
I don't have map strong. I have three
three catabels and a higher pound sandbag at home with some dumbbells as well.
Yeah, I like map strong for you afterwards. Maps performance would be great as well if you don't
have that. I think those are two programs that would be good follow-ups to what you're doing.
Probably performance because he's working out from home. First, yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
Well strong, you could do quite a bit of it if you have a barbell and dumbbells.
I think you could do most.
I did at home.
Yeah, as long as you have a barbell.
Yeah, yeah.
So let's say.
I don't have any alcohol.
Yes.
Okay.
Okay, well, well, math performance then.
We'll send that over to you.
Sweet.
I appreciate that guys.
No problem, man.
Thanks for pulling in.
Thanks.
You know what's funny about this is that the, as individualized as a workout needs to be,
warm ups are even more individual.
Of course, of course.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Which is the flip of what people think.
It's not something people consider a lot.
No.
And I'm glad actually this question was asked because it's a very common one in terms of like,
is this an actual work session?
Because if you get really good at this
and you're able to identify those areas
that you need to add in and warm up,
especially for stabilization
or putting in a good position,
it's really gonna get you right into the mix
and get you to write to the work sessions if you do right
Yeah, this is an area where not everybody agrees in our space
Yep, there's there's this idea in the strength community but from very intelligent
Experience lifters that the this idea of priming or doing shit before you work out as a waste of time
And you just need to do the exercise.
Do the exercise more squat more
and that'll warm me up and do that.
And I don't agree.
I just feel like, can you, yes, will that work possibly?
But if you don't do what you said self,
you don't address the root cross.
For example, I had really poor ankle mobility.
I could have just kept squatting more, squatting more.
And that would have improved my squatting.
I'd be a little bit better at it.
But because I put so much work even outside
of getting ready for my squat, doing it at home,
I increased my range of motion on that.
Now, when I get ready to go squat,
like I can literally get right into a squat
and do it right away, and it be effective
versus if I always would have just had the whole,
this mentality of, oh, let's just squat more more or shoulder press for three warm-ups sets before. It's like I'd be in
the same position. I wouldn't have increased my range of motion. Yeah, so the reason why I think
that there's a lot of strength coaches that are smart, smart people that just say, oh, just do
the exercise and warm-up is because there is some truth in it. Now the challenge is, first off, if you're experienced,
you could identify like, oh, I need to press my knees out
as I go down more, or oh, I need to pull up on my toes
as I go down to work on ankle mobility.
So you could theoretically do that just by practicing the squat.
But if you don't have that understanding experience,
it's gonna be really hard.
You'll just keep doing the same squat and you'll get a little warmed up
and you're not really addressing, you know,
some of those reclaws versus getting into positions
that illuminate it, right?
That make it obvious.
Like, oh, I don't have any extra work here.
That's such a good point, Sal,
because the guys that make the argument
are in girls that make the argument are, like,
biomechanically, like experts.
That's right, I mean, so they can totally feel
and they often work with other high level
athletes. Yeah, with the average person. Correct. Doesn't quite know how to connect the micro
adjustments. Yeah. On the spot. And I mean, like, to the other point, like, for me, if I do do
the priming, but I still feel like, you know, maybe I'm not quite as stable, like, I have an
account for all these things as I'm going into the exercise.
I might do like, you know, one set
where I'm like really feeling my way through
and even pausing and connecting to it,
but that's all I need.
And then I get right into the work sessions.
Yeah, and it depends on the exercise.
It depends on the person.
I've worked with people that jump right into a squat.
I'm not one of those people.
A squat for me takes a while.
A deadlift, a little less, but still takes a while.
You know, you give me an overhead press.
I could warm up one set, and I'm ready to rock and roll.
Other people, it's like that guy we just talked to.
For him, it's all upper body exercises.
And it's funny because in our space,
people think that the workout needs to be the most
individualized thing, and that the warm up
is this generalized thing.
In reality, they're both individualized,
but if I had to pick one to be more individualized
as the warm up, of course.
That's the most, that's why Maps Prime
was so hard for success.
This is why when we created Maps Prime,
it was by far the most challenging program we ever created.
We were stuck for a day and a half on some of the problems
that we had to solve with that because it's like,
how do we create something that allows people to individualize to solve with that because it's like, how do we create something
that allows people to individualize it
to the point where it's effective,
not just giving people general warm-ups.
Our next caller is Ed from California.
Ed, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, it's great to be on with you.
I know your time is extremely valuable.
I see how big Adam's bets are on his Instagram,
so I'll just dive right in.
I see how big Adams bets are on his Instagram, so I'll just dive right in. I'm 41, 5 foot 10, 190 pounds, and I started strength training about 10 months ago.
So I'm newbie to it.
Before that, I was a typical cardio guy.
So I had a Dexascan last week, and it showed I added about 7 pounds of muscle since I started
strength training.
Nice.
But my body fat percentage is also up.
It's at 25%. So I'm mentally committing to losing 15 pounds of fat over the next year. And I was thinking
of doing Dr. Cabral's 21-day detox to kind of prime my body. It'd be my first detox ever.
But I'm concerned that the detox will crash my metabolism. My BMR is about 1800 calories maintenance is about 2500 and I'm in the middle
of nap centabolic. So any advice on how I should run a detox to kind of kick off long-term
weight loss without crashing sort of my hard earned metabolism?
Yeah, it's unlikely that it'll happen in 21 days that you'll cause that kind. People
who really, I don't know, for lack of a better term because it's not like people are
breaking their metabolism. Their metabolism is doing, because it's not, it's not like people are breaking their metabolism,
their metabolism is doing exactly what it's supposed to do,
right, it adapts.
Usually that comes from weeks and weeks and weeks.
Chronic for a long time.
Yeah, chronic diet and chronic overtraining,
you know, long periods of time,
women are more susceptible to it than men as well,
men tend to rebound a little bit better than women do.
I wouldn't worry about it.
And you're in a good place.
Yeah, and really Dr. Crabral's,
you know, their goal is to make you healthy.
So being in a healthy place is going to set you up better.
So I wouldn't worry too much about it.
I wouldn't try to make PRs or anything like that
during that period of time.
After that, then you can go back to, you know,
trying to eat the way that you feel like you need to
to build muscle and burn body fat.
But 21 days is, that's not, that's not.
I love this idea.
I think this is a great, I mean, you have a great goal
that you set for yourself.
I think it's a great way to kick it off,
especially if along the way part of your goal
is to try and get closer to understanding what foods
maybe disrupt your digestion versus what foods don't.
This is kind of how I like to restart.
If I were to go into a kick right now,
I'm like, okay, I wanna get shredded or get lean right now.
The very first thing I would do
is do a two or three day fast right away
for the same type of a concept.
And then I would slowly introduce foods
to kind of pay attention to what foods are agreeing
with me and which ones aren't.
You having cabral actually take you through this
is even better than that.
So I love this.
And I think you're in a good place.
I think you're eating 2500, 2600 calories for your size.
You've put on some good lean mass recently.
So I think you're in a great place for this.
I would love to hear how it goes.
Yeah, I mean, I've just been following
what you guys have been talking about.
So I'm all in, you know, built up my metabolism slowly
over the past year.
It's been great.
Excellent.
How much longer do you have of anabolic?
And what's your plan as far as the programs?
What are you following?
Yeah, so I have the RGB bundle.
And after anabolic, I was thinking of doing performance.
But it was going to just depend on how I felt with this 21.
So I was going to do the detox after I finished anabolic.
I didn't want to do anabolic well,
and the detox at the same time. You I didn't want to do anabolic well, and the detox
at the same time.
You know what actually you know, be good to go with that is the
is our maps 15. Yeah. So while you so while you're doing the
detox,
that's 15 would be really well, we'll send Matt's 15 over to
you, switch over to that because that'll be like lower volume.
So you're still lifting, staying active, but you're more
focused on the diet, the detox side,
and then transition into, if I was coaching you,
that's what I'd see.
I'd say, hey, let's run 15, maps 15,
while you're doing the detox,
and then I'll transition you over to performance after that.
Don't get too caught up on any lean body mass
or body fat percentage changes during this 21-day period.
Because really the idea with this is to reduce inflammation,
reduce the stress load on your body, identify food intolerances,
that kind of stuff.
So water rate can fluctuate.
That shows up as lean body mass sometimes.
Inflammation can change.
If you do lose a little lean body mass, it comes right back because of muscle memory. So I wouldn't get caught up during
that 21 day period. I wouldn't get caught up too much on, you know, performance, strength
and muscle. I would just focus on it. Totally. 100%.
Okay. Cool. Now that sounds like a plan. Thanks. And you know, my experience with maps
on a ball like is like, it's worth 10 times what you guys charge for the entire RGB bundle
Wow, yeah, I'm gonna use that clip. Yeah, let's do that
Everybody gets mad I used to go to your gym. I used to go to your 24 hour fitness gym. Oh, did you really? Yeah, yeah on Keto
Oh, I'm saying all my time avoiding you because you'd walk around with this like huge yoga ball
And like just like try and talk up people and I see'd see you bring them into the room to do the yoga.
Wait a little second, you were actually working out there when I was managing it?
I did, yeah.
You'd be there at the front desk with the associate and greeting people and you'd offer to spot
people.
You stood out in my mind because it was a manager who was doing all these things. And, but yeah, we tried to avoid you most of the time.
Because we couldn't, we couldn't lift.
We were intimidated by the big buff guy
who was like, you know, walking around trying to take a blow.
So it's ironic.
That's all you know.
Yeah, Sarah Togo was this tiny little club.
And wow, Sarah Togo.
I was only there for a few months
that because before I went to Sunnyvale
and then became a general manager.
But it was kind of like a test.
I was so young.
I was 18 and they were like, wow, you remember that.
That's awesome.
Yeah, yeah, because we had the past.
You kind of go to every once.
We also went to the Sunnyvale one as well.
Oh, I could do that.
Did I ever sell you?
Did I ever sell you anything?
Did you ever buy anything?
No, we were super shy.
Like I just go straight to the cardio machines.
You avoided you, dude.
Yeah, we avoided you.
I don't want to embarrass myself on the yoga ball with Sally. Hey, listen, I played the long game. I played the long machines. You avoided you do. Yeah, we avoided you. I don't want to embarrass myself on the yoga ball with
Sal. I played the long. I played the long. I got you. You are now 12 years later. He got you.
Yeah, it's like 20 years later. I want it because you stand out like and I'm calling you now.
So did you so did you? Did you find the show and then piece that all together or did you actually find
him because of that? How did you? How did you? Yeah, so I found the show and then piece that all together or did you actually find him because of that? How did you how did that? Yeah, so I found the show and then I piece it together because like this guy looks really familiar
You know, and then and then you started talking about 25 hour fitness like oh, and then you mentioned keto
And then you also mentioned that there was a hot tub that never worked and like that's that's the one
Wow, what a small world
He looks just like this guy and he looks at me more hair.
I tell you, I tell you what, and if you're ever in the area with your buddies or what
I like that, you want to come watch a live recording, send us an email, and then send
you to your nearby.
You can come stop by and say hi.
It'd be great to catch up.
Thanks for calling me.
Yeah, I love to because I feel like you guys have done so much.
You know, I just want to find a way to thank you guys, you know.
For sure.
You did, you did.
Come say hi, Ed.
Thanks, Ed.
We'll do. All right, man. Thanks very much.
That's that's the location.
Wow.
I think he remembers it's so great.
That's 20 years 20 years ago, bro.
Years later.
I was such an aggressive kid too, back then.
I was literally I walk around.
Oh, you know, it's funny.
That's so aggressive that he remembers
such as some yoga.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Leave me alone.
Hey, do you take supplements? I, uh, that's the location where somebody passed out. Let's do some yoga. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, leave me alone.
Hey, do you take supplements?
That's the location where somebody passed out in the jacuzzi, and I had to squat down and
pick up this like 250 pound wet dude out of the jacuzzi, put him on the floor, ambulance
came and everything, you know, he was okay.
But I was a kid.
I was 18 years old.
Like, somebody gonna die.
You know, my watch is like.
Wow.
Tiny little club.
It was a tiny little club.
They don't even own anymore.
They sold it.
Oh, they don't own a city.
Yeah, I was a tiny, tiny little location.
I remember it.
I didn't know they sold it though.
Yeah, it was really small.
Oh, wow.
I didn't know that.
Wow, it's so great.
I mean, so back to his question,
what we really, what he called in for.
I love this.
I'd like this idea of why.
Yeah, so do I.
Because I mean, this is, we've talked off air about when we kind of get on these kicks, I just did
it recently. It was just a month ago or so when I did my little three day fast, like,
I love to reset myself before I go into like, okay, I'm going to get focused, start prepping
my food again and I think it's a great idea for people to do that.
Yeah, I think it brings a lot of insight.
Yes.
This if you're coming in with, I just want to get healthier kind of mentality with that.
And also, I mean, it's pretty similar to like,
I think anybody should do like an elimination diet
at some point, you know?
So this is kind of in line with that way of thinking.
Yeah, and you know what,
we should be clear because working with a functional medicine
practitioner or functional medicine team,
like Dr. Cabral's team,
is not the same thing as 90% of the detox fresh start diet,
whatever, those are all complete bullshit,
they're all terrible and they do cause people problems.
This is different.
So this is a functional medicine practitioner,
they're trying to identify intolerances,
work on stress inflammation, and that's
a great place to get started.
I mean, it's not the same as those other things.
I actually don't like that they use detox.
I don't like that, maybe.
Because it's got such a bad communication.
Because really what it is is a scheduled controlled, supervised elimination diet.
That's a big part of it.
That's what it is.
It's really a controlled by a doctor elimination diet, and I love this for a start. Especially if,
like, one of the coolest parts about running a fast or doing something like this, this detox
for 21 days is as you start to reintroduce foods, if you've never really paid attention to your
body's natural signals of a food agrees with you, not, I think it's so, I think it's so enlightening.
It's illuminating.
Yes.
It's empowering, because now you know,
how to navigate going forward with your food decision.
Well, and I always notice something
that I didn't catch the time before.
That's it.
I always get a food that I'm like,
oh, I thought that agreed with you.
And consider that's you.
Right.
It's an experience.
Right.
So what you're doing, now the average person
doesn't even have your experience,
they get blown away by the stuff that they figure out.
Oh my God, I always eat that.
I can't believe that's the thing that's causing my
hard births or my sleep issues or my skin issues.
And what it is, you know,
some people that have never tried it,
it's crazy because you're so sensitive
because you've kind of, you know,
quote unquote detoxed that when you take in a food
that doesn't agree with you, the signals are much louder.
So like they say you're somebody who has an intolerance,
let's say to wheat and you didn't know it
and you always had wheat in your diet all the time.
And you have up and down days when it comes to your stool
and you don't really know what it's from,
but then also you do this elimination diet
and then the first time you have some wheat
and you're like running to the toilet right away
or you feel like a rock and you're so,
like that is your body telling you,
like it does not agree with it.
It's hard to hear sounds when everything's loud
all the time.
It's easy when everything's quiet.
Then you can hear little sounds and pick things out,
and that's exactly what's happening.
Doug, is there a website we could send,
because I know we have our forum,
but if somebody wants to go to the Dr. Cobrall site
and work with them, let's get that, let's get that site so I can...
Yeah, I have to look that up.
Okay, that's right.
I think it's Dr. Steven Cabral.com-for-slash-minem-pump, and I'll double-check that.
And then you also have the access to the MP-Holistic Health in the private free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- free- and you can ask in there too. So if you're just curious and you want to know more questions about it, like go inside that form.
It's actually stevencobrawl.com.
Fort Sashmime pump.
Steven is S-T-E-P-H-E-N and then C-A-B-R-A-L.com.
Fort Sashmime pump.
Our next caller is Daniel from Texas.
Daniel, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, how y'all doing?
Doing good, man.
I guess first of all, I'll start with the, you know, the
cursory thank you.
I've been an avid listener for about two years or so.
And, you know, the content you guys put out is really, you
know, helped me a lot.
And there I say change my life.
Right on, man.
But so, so I have a tendency to, when I get nervous, kind of
try to make dumb jokes.
So I'll just just stick to the script here.
Hey, we're all, Daniel, tell us about your cock on the wall back there.
Yeah, we're all dads here. We love, we love to say that.
Adam's the first always spot cock.
Yeah, and he's, he's as kind of so much as well.
So this is like employee housing, you know, so that's not my cock and somebody else's cock.
Oh, okay, okay. Explain somebody else's cock.
That's a big one too.
I'll jump in the background.
I've worked out, you know, straight trying not enough for at least 10 years.
But I've been super consistent for probably about 18 months now and a lot of that I can attribute to listening to you guys.
You helped me stay consistent there.
But my wife and I had a baby in September.
And so before that, I worked through anabolic performance.
And then I kind of blended those two for a couple months.
And it did kind of my own deal with those two programs.
And then I got strong and went through that, loved that.
And so then of course after the baby was born, I didn't really have time and consistency
to really get a full workout schedule in.
So for a little bit, I just kind of basically did mobility and some unilateral work, scattered
in wherever I could fit it in.
And then luckily, at that perfect time,
you guys dropped maps to 15 and I picked that up
and I've been doing that for a little while.
And it's been fantastic as well.
It's kind of perfectly with my life right now.
But the baby is basically at the point that it's,
we're lucky enough that he's almost sleep
with the night now and he just started daycare.
And so I'm kind of getting back to where, you know,
pretty soon with the next few weeks,
I'm gonna be like, you know, physically
and schedule wise able to kind of go back
to a full program.
And, you know, of the 18 months that have been consistent,
it's basically almost all been focused on trying
to lose fat.
You know, I did, well, I did strong.
I did, you know, probably four, maybe six week bulk there, but
it really wasn't very successful. I kind of got sick and stuff like that. Anyway, so now
I'm at the point that I kind of want to turn around in the next year, focus on really
building muscle. And so my main goal is over that year to probably put on about eight
to ten pounds of muscle and just not, you'm not gonna lose that while I do that,
but at least try to maintain kind of.
And so my question is,
with that new goal in mind,
how should I kind of start scaling back up my volume
after having two months here where my volume's been very low
and kind of physical stress demand of having a new baby. And should I start back with
antibiotic and kind of run through the program just like I did last time,
antibiotic performance and strong, or should I look at a total of new program,
or how do I set those up to maximize the gains I want to try to make over the next year.
I'm looking at your programs right now that you have.
I would love to hear what the guys have to say,
but I'd love to see you do symmetry,
and I'll have Doug send symmetry to you.
So as you get back in, you're running 15 right now,
I would go to symmetry first, then out, andabolic, then performance,
and then I would run a static after that.
Or power lift.
Or power lift would be great.
Are you doing the advanced version of Master 15,
or the...
I am, yeah.
Yeah, the advanced version.
Oh, yeah, you're gonna be good, dude.
I like symmetry right after that,
so have Doug send you symmetry.
And then I like the power lift or aesthetic
after your, uh, andabolic and performance.
Yeah, no, you're gonna be good.
And, you know, scaling down volume,
which maps 15 does, you didn't stop.
In other words, you went from, you know,
maps at a ball, or whatever, to maps 15 advanced version.
So it's not like you stopped completely.
Is that true?
No, yeah, I stay consistent throughout.
Yeah, you're gonna be okay.
You can jump the volume back up and you'll be,
you know what'll happen is you'll feel, you'll probably get a little extra, you'll get extra sore for the first week, and then you're gonna be okay. You can jump the volume back up and you'll be, you know what'll happen is you'll feel,
you'll probably get a little extra,
you'll get extra sore for the first week,
and then you're gonna be fine.
When you really need to pay attention
to scaling the volume properly,
is when you go from nothing to back into working out.
That's when it really becomes a issue.
So really the thing to pay attention to is the intensity.
So maybe that first week of map symmetry,
just keep the intensity moderate,
and then go into, you know, maybe more intense.
Actually, to be honest, I-
I-I-Sometrics.
You're right.
No, map-perfect.
That's why I think it's perfect.
Yeah, I-I-Sometrics, then go to unilateral world.
Yeah, you're fine.
And then you go to anabolic, and then performance.
Okay, really?
Yeah, so Doug's gonna send you symmetry on us,
and then if there's any programs that you would get later,
I'd say aesthetic and power lift.
Okay, well fantastic.
Thank you so much.
Cool.
So, as far as aesthetic goes, I guess just a side question here.
The reason I didn't do that last time is because I figured that it had a bunch of kind
of cable work and I have a home gym and I just really don't have, you know, cable set
up is that, so should I look toward power lift or is that, is there modifications I can
do to that program? You can modify either one.
Yeah.
You know, with the cable exercises with aesthetic dumbbell exercises can be substituted in bands.
Bands.
And bands can be substituted as well.
And we have that.
The dumbbell mods on that one, right?
Yeah.
And also we have that home blueprint for that too.
If you want to do just the dumbbell version, but yeah, I think he bands will suffice.
Yep.
Totally.
I mean, remember cables, it's not like cables
are like these big compound gross motor movements.
They're really designed to, you know, connect and squeeze
and you can get that with bands, no problem.
Okay, awesome.
Yeah, you got it, man.
And congratulations on the...
Thank you guys so much.
And congratulations on the baby, huh?
Yeah, absolutely.
Having all the fun.
Yeah, man, good stuff, man.
Thanks for calling in. Yeah, that's Good stuff, man. Thanks for calling in.
Yeah, that's a good, you know, I forgot about that.
Symmetry starts off.
I spiritually.
Yeah, props to him for, you know, sticking with it.
Like, I think we literally created Mass 15 for like a new parent.
Yeah, it's the perfect program for that.
Oh, that's the time you get.
Yeah, 15 minutes.
Oh, you get.
Yeah.
And to keep it going and be consistent is going to be so much easier for him to get
right.
I mean, I love to hear somebody who has a story like that who's been using our programs
for the last couple of years, had all these great results, and ended up having a kid, ends
up transitioning into maps 15.
It's like, but never really stopped.
It's keep a beat.
Yeah, one of the biggest myths with fitness and challenges that people encounter is they
think, if I can't do it this way, then it's not worth it at all.
So if I can't do it the way I was doing it before,
then why waste my time?
It is never a waste of time.
Exercise should be molded to fit your lifestyle.
That's how you get all the value out of it.
And if you fall into that, well, if I can't go crazy
hardcore, then I'm not gonna do anything at all.
You're gonna have a rough time with your progress
over the years. In fact, you'll find yourself just taking two all, you're gonna have a rough time with your progress over the years.
In fact, you'll find yourself just taking two steps,
four, two steps back every time.
Our next color is Arturo from Indiana.
Arturo, how can we help you?
Hey guys, happy to be here.
I want to do the thankful bid
of the introduction first.
You've helped me and you've helped me
help my family and friends. So double things for
that, just any of your introductions and even products that you promote are especially good for us.
But in my background, I'm 33, 510, about 88 kilograms, which is like 195, relatively new to weight lifting. As in two years due to
the pandemic is when I started, you know, the cool programs or workouts out there, like the Wolverine
workout or the 300, you know, beginner stuff. Eventually, I started running into your guys' content,
running the ball, like 18 months ago ago and just fell in love with it.
Then got into performance and right before you started promoting power lift or strong,
I started doing five by five mode of training.
Been liking lifting heavy, been getting strong.
I haven't focused much on the weight on the scale as much as the plates on
the bar, how I feel, but that's what brings me to you. I've been feeling pains, I've been feeling
stiffness, some joint issues, I've been running for about 12 weeks now and it's getting to the point
that every plate as little as it be on the bar. I'm like, well, I don't know if this is going to be the one that snaps it or can I keep going?
Because of all the content that you put out there, I know that there's a ton of ways that
I can sort of pivot from here, whether it's like multiple plates of motion or more mobility
or like short of workouts, lighter weights, but I now have analysis paralysis and I have no
idea which way to
go from here and if that's going to be the best one.
Yeah.
First off, I want to say that if five by five, you know, or strong lifts, this is a very
kind of old school tried and in true tested workout program.
And it's good.
It's actually one of the better workout programs.
But like all workout programs, there's positives and negatives and the longer you stay on it,
the more you get the negatives and the less you get the positives.
And one of the things that you're experiencing is quite common.
Training this style, eventually what you start to notice is joint pain.
You start to notice in balances, instability because it's very, it's basic, which is what makes it good, but the
basicness, the working on one plane of motion, is also what starts to cause problems.
So, it's definitely time to switch to something that's going to create more balance in your
body.
I think map symmetry would be perfect.
That would be a perfect program for you to follow.
And then after that, you could try something like map strong or even map aesthetic, you know or split which is more bodybuilding style, but symmetry is gonna
I it's gonna totally tackle all of the issues that are coming up for you right now following
Five by five. I think you've just gone too long on it. That's what that's what's happened
My recommendation would be exactly that would be symmetry and then go towards more because it sounds like we haven't
Spent much time
in the bodybuilding type of mentality, and I think that would serve you right now.
As amazing as the 5x5s are, and amazing as anabolic is, like, those type, that way of training,
I think your body's talking to you now, and it's time to take care of it, symmetry, which
is isometric unilateral work, which I think is going to serve you very well, and then
going to something that's a little bit more bodybuilder focused, like aesthetic or split, I think is the move for
sure for now.
And then you could go back after that, then you could return to like a power lift or a
strong 5x5, but give the body a little bit of rest on the real heavy, heavy 5x5 type
of training, and just see how it responds and see if you notice you feel a lot better.
Yeah, you'll build more muscles, what's going to happen?
Do you have a Maps Prime Pro?
No, I only have the Prime.
Okay, so Prime is good, Prime Pro is gonna get even deeper,
and that's gonna allow you, if you really like
the style of training, because look, this is me, right?
I go in and out of different training styles,
but I like to live mostly in heavy style training.
It's just what I enjoy the most.
So I tend to go there most often.
And Prime Pro allows me to stay in there longer.
Now I'm not saying it's the solution,
like I could just stay in it forever
because I have Prime Pro
because eventually I have to move out of it too.
But it allows me to stay in there longer
so I can do what I enjoy more.
And that's what Prime Pro does.
It allows people to train the way that they love
more often
without having to move into something else.
Not saying that it's an issue moving into something else,
that's what you need to do,
but everybody has a preference.
And that is a value.
Part of the value of training is doing what you love.
And if you want to continue to train this way
a little bit longer, stretch it out a little bit more,
then Prime Pro, I think, would be something
that would help you out.
But we'll send you a map symmetry.
I think that's the start. Yeah, start there. I think everybody agrees. That that would help you out. But we'll send you Maps Symmetry. I think that's the start.
Yeah, I think everybody agrees.
That's the place to start.
Totally.
Definitely.
Thank you.
Yeah, my goal is basically that just strength and mobility.
The aesthetics are not an issue for me.
I like to look good, but I know that's a byproduct.
I do like that feeling of feeling solid, full.
I just pumped with air. So yeah, I really
appreciate the advice and everything.
You got it, man. Thanks for calling in. Yeah, I appreciate it. You got it, I care.
You know what this reminds me of? What's that saying in business? It's like, you got
to do this stuff. You don't want to do. So you can do the stuff you want to do. You know,
I mean, so things you have to do now. So you do the things you want to do later. That's
it. That's the one right there. And it's just if you're going to do this for a long time, I mean, you know, that's what
you have to do eventually. Eventually, the perfect program is not the right program.
Well, what I love about symmetry too is like we have that at phase four. Like you're going
to be able to see what that does literally to a five by five style of training. It's really
going to enhance that. And I think, you know, between any power lift or any strength athlete in general
should really just take that extra time
and go through a phase of unilateral training.
And look, I can't stress this enough.
You will hit PRs doing this.
And I think that the fear, and I know this,
because I'll feel it myself,
is if I move away from the style of tremoloos strength,
I'm not gonna hit that number that I want to hit,
no, it's like, you know, what do they say?
It's like, you know, pulling back a bow, right?
It's like, yeah, you got to take a step back,
but only so you can fire the arrow much further.
And that's exactly what happens.
And I just experienced that now,
hitting, you know, some numbers I haven't hit a long time
because I went through a long period of training in ways
that, you know, I tend to neglect.
Well, you hit it on the head on the thing that's
probably the most challenging for somebody who goes into
symmetry is to especially like this because we tend to
recommend it to somebody like this that would serve their
body well is, okay, I love heavy five by five and go into
isometrics is a dramatic difference.
I mean, it's the complete opposite of the spectrum.
I mean, it's a shell shell.
Yeah, here's no weight, buddy.
You know, just squeeze and work.
So, I think the hardest part is the mental shift
for someone like that.
And then even after they run a phase of isometrics,
then you tell them, oh, you gotta go unilateral.
So again, they're totally different.
Doing a lot less weight than what they're used
to putting on the bar.
So, I think the biggest challenge of symmetry
is disciplining yourself to follow it as it's laid out, but trust the process
because then you get to the phase
where you get to go test what happens
when you actually take care of your body like that.
100% look, if you like, Mind Pump,
head over to MindPumpFree.com and check out our guides.
We have free guides that can help you
with a lot of health and fitness goals.
You can also find all of us on social media.
So Justin is on Instagram at Mind Pump Justin.
Adam is on Instagram at Mind Pump Adam and you can find me on Twitter at my pump
cell. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and
energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle
at Mind Pump Media dot com. The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers, but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee,
and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources
at MindPumpMedia.com. If you enjoy this show,
please share the love by leaving us a five star rating and review on iTunes
and by introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.